STORY TIPS This and every University Communications news release is available on the Internet and World Wide Web. Our Web address is www.acs.ohio- state.edu. STUDENTS CHALLENGE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS IN SOCCER--April 4. About 50 students, faculty, trustees and student affairs administrators will take to the field at Ohio Stadium on Saturday at 6 p.m. to see who can claim soccer dominance. The game will be followed by the 7:30 p.m. home opener of the Columbus Crew as the team begins its season against Washington D.C. United. The game is part of an ongoing series of sporting events pitting students against administrators. CONTACT: Tracy Stuck or Jason Graves, Office of Student Activities, 292-8763. STUDENTS PREPARE FOR MASSIVE TREE-PLANTING--April 4. With shovels and muscle, students will help in the Chadwick Arboretum's plan to plant 1,000 trees this spring. Members of Tau Beta Pi, the national engineering honorary society, will meet at 8:30 a.m. on the east steps of the Ohio Union, 1739 N. High St. CONTACT: Tau Beta Pi's Matthew Chidley, 421-9826, or Gene Sirca, 486- 1975. NATIVE AMERICAN SINGER ENTERTAINS--April 9. Jack Gladstone, a singer, songwriter and storyteller who is Blackfeet Indian will perform Native Reflections at 7 p.m. in the Thurber Theater, Drake Union, 1849 Cannon Drive. His appearance, part of American Indian Awareness at Ohio State, includes tales of Blackfeet mythology as well as stories that convey the history and culture of American Indians. CONTACT: Marti Chaatsmith or Dawn Johnson, American Indian Student Services, 292-7521. SEMINAR INVESTIGATES EXERCISE AND HIV--April 10. Thanks to new treatments, people with HIV are living longer. As part of a 15-part HIV/AIDS Research Seminar Series looking at all aspects of research and treatment, Barbara Smith, a professor of nursing at the University of Alabama, and Judy Neidig, research coordinator in Ohio State's AIDS Clinical Trials Unit, will discuss Health Promotion in Persons with HIV through Exercise, 10 a.m.-noon, 244 Newton Hall, 1585 Neil Ave. CONTACT: Martha Shortland, College of Nursing, 292-8222. STUDENTS PUTTER WITH REDESIGN OF GOLF CLUB--Building a better golf club is the goal of an Ohio State class this quarter. Working in conjunction with Dynacraft, the Newark, Ohio-based golf club maker, industrial design students will create new models for a set of golf drivers. Lorraine Justice, acting chair of the Department of Industrial, Interior and Visual Communication Design, says students' ideas for helping golfers will likely include new materials, new shapes for the club head, and new grips. CONTACT: Lorraine Justice, Industrial, Interior and Visual Communication Design, 292-5836. STUDENTS PREPARE FOR NEW SPECIALIZATION IN AGING--By 2030, adults over the age of 65 will make up 21 percent of our population, up from 12 percent today. To build expertise in the care of older adults, Ohio State now offers graduate students a special curriculum that will earn them the designation "specialization in aging." Bonnie Kantor, director of the office of geriatrics and gerontology, says students may choose from nearly 100 courses aimed at understanding how the aging population will impact their respective fields and society in general. CONTACT: Bonnie Kantor, Geriatrics and Gerontology, 293-4815. The person listed as the contact for each item will have the best information about the story. Feel free to call on our news services staff for assistance with these or other Ohio State news stories--Amy Murray, 292-8385; Ruth Gerstner, 292-8424; Tracy Turner, 688-3682; and Emily Caldwell, 292-8309. **Compiled by Amy Murray, University Communications, (Murray- Goedde.1@osu.edu).