BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Springshare//LibCal//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT15M
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART:20250514T190000Z
DTEND:20250514T200000Z
DTSTAMP:20250514T000000Z
SUMMARY:Special Collections & University Archives Internships Final Presentations: Hile on the Hilltop\, A History of Hazing\, and A Spring with John DePol
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the final exhibition presentations by our Special 
 Collections & University Archives Spring 2025 interns!\n\nStart at the 
 Gleeson Library Lower Level for\, Hile on the Hilltop: A Closer Look at USF 
 Basketball's All-Time Leading Scorer by Alana Loya\n\nBoth as a player and 
 a coach\, Mary Hile-Nepfel brought the Dons to the largest stages of 
 women's college basketball\, including the 1980 AIAW National Tournament 
 and the 1996 NCAA Sweet Sixteen. As the first woman to have her jersey 
 number retired and to be inducted into the Hall of Fame\, Hile's story is a 
 reminder of the rich history of women's basketball on campus and in the Bav 
 Area at large. "Hile on the Hilltop" utilizes materials from the University 
 Archives and a conversation with Mary Hile-Nepfel herself.\n\nThen\, follow 
 us up to the Donohue Rare Book Room Foyer on the 3rd floor of Gleeson for\, 
 A History of Hazing: Frosh Initiation at USF and Lone Mountain Women's 
 College by Bella Glastra van Loon\n\nRecent discussions surrounding hazing 
 focus primarily on Greek life or student organizations but these 
 humiliation tactics used to be enfolded into school sanctioned welcome 
 weeks. This exhibit displays a collection of photographs\, newspaper 
 clippings\, and USF ephemera centered around freshman orientation and 
 hazing prominent in USF's history. These objects simultaneously reflect on 
 a period of college optimism while critically examining the violent and 
 traumatic aspects of freshman initial once considered essential to student 
 life.\n\nFinally\, join us in the Donohue Rare Book Room for\, A Spring 
 with John DePol: A Collection of Wood Engravings by American Printmaker 
 John DePol by Egan Walker\n\nThe Donohue Rare Book Room has a collection of 
 one hundred and fourteen [DePol] matted prints and a selection of loose 
 prints\, posters\, and broadsides ranging from 1982 to 1997. DePol’s work 
 is intricately detailed\; the height of his engravings typically ranges 
 from five to twenty centimeters... His work primarily depicts solemn 
 landscapes\, objects\, or interiors with few or no figures (although we 
 have a few of his portraits\, which are also rather serious). The scenes 
 are still and calm\, yet embellish the modest objects of the everyday with 
 pattern and personality.
LOCATION:Archives Display Case – Lower Level\, Donohue Rare Book Room Display Case – 3rd Floor
ORGANIZER;CN="Annie Reid":MAILTO:areid1@usfca.edu
CATEGORIES:Events, Exhibits
CONTACT;CN="Annie Reid":MAILTO:areid1@usfca.edu
STATUS:CONFIRMED
UID:LibCal-14588691
URL:https://libcal.usfca.edu/event/14588691
X-MICROSOFT-CDO-BUSYSTATUS:BUSY
BEGIN:VALARM
TRIGGER:-PT15M
ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Reminder
END:VALARM
END:VEVENT

END:VCALENDAR