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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois Vol.
25, No. 18, April 6, 2006

brief
note
IFLIP returns
Foreign language instruction offered
The foreign languages departments will offer the Intensive Foreign
Language Instruction Program from May 15-June 2. Classes will run from
9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday through Friday. No IFLIP classes will meet
on Memorial Day.
The program provides language instruction in Chinese, French, German,
Italian, Japanese and Spanish for two hours each day for three weeks
period. Classes are taught by advanced graduate students or faculty
members. Each class must have a minimum of 10 participants to be offered
and is limited to a maximum of 20 participants to provide for an effective
learning environment.
The classes are open to UI students, faculty or staff members, retirees
and the general public. Children under 18 are not eligible to participate.
No academic credit will be received. Tuition will be $75 for UI students,
$100 for faculty and staff members and retirees, and $125 for the general
public.
Deadline for registration is April 21. For more information and to
register, visit http://services.lang.uiuc.edu/forms/IFLIP2006.htm.
WILL AM-FM-TV
Marimba virtuoso featured April 9
The April 9 WILL-FM Second Sunday Concert features marimba virtuoso
William Moersch performing works he commissioned for solo marimba,
and Argentine tangos with vibraphonist Ricardo Flores.
The concert begins at 2 p.m. at the Krannert Art Museum and Kinkead
Pavilion. It will be broadcast at 7:06 p.m. May 7 on WILL-FM 90.9 (101.1
in Champaign-Urbana).
Solo numbers will include Jacob Druckman’s “Reflections
on the Nature of Water,” Akemi Naito’s “Memory of
the Woods” and Andrew Thomas’ “Merlin.”
Moersch, chair of the percussion division of the UI School of Music,
has appeared as a soloist with symphonic orchestras around the world.
Featured regularly at international percussion festivals, he was the
first marimbist ever to receive a National Endowment for the Arts Solo
Recitalist Fellowship. Moersch is principal timpanist/percussionist
for Sinfonia da Camera.
Flores, a professor of percussion at the UI, is principal percussionist
with the Champaign-Urbana Symphony and is a member of Sinfonia da Camera.
He is an accomplished performer in a variety of jazz and popular music,
particularly on drum set and Latin percussion.
Students, faculty and staff members
Bus service offered to and from Danville
Danville Mass Transit now offers bus service between Danville and Champaign-Urbana
for $6. Buses leave Danville’s Transfer Zone every two hours
from 6:20 a.m. to 4:20 p.m. on weekdays. Service begins at 8:20 a.m.
on Saturdays. The route includes seven stops along University Avenue,
including Lincoln and Goodwin avenues and Sixth Street, before arriving
at the Champaign Illinois Terminal at seven minutes past the hour.
Return trips depart from Illinois Terminal every two hours from 7:22
a.m. to 5:22 p.m. Free transfers to other DMT or CUMTD routes are available.
For complete schedule and fare rate information, visit www.cityofdanville.org or call the DMT at 431-0653 or in Champaign-Urbana, 217-384-3577.
Reference Library
Advanced RefWorks workshops available
The Reference Library is offering advanced workshops for the RefWorks
program at noon April 19 and at 1:30 p.m. April 24.
The workshops will discuss how to search and share files in RefWorks
and other advanced features. Attendees should have a basic working
knowledge of RefWorks. To register, visit http://130.126.32.16/evanced/lib0/eventcalendar.asp andselect the date and workshop you wish to attend.
College of Medicine Urban Health Program
Celebrating blacks, Latinos in medicine
The UI College of Medicine Urban Health Program will host its fourth
annual “Celebration of Blacks and Latinos in Medicine” at
6 p.m. April 18 at the Pollard Auditorium in the Carle Forum, 619 W.
Park St., Urbana. The celebration is free and open to the public. Wesley
McNeese, emergency medicine physician and founder of New Mission Church
of God in Springfield, will deliver the keynote address. A sampling
of cuisine from both cultures will be served.
The event is sponsored by the Urban Health Program and the Student
National Medical Association. For more information, contact Clarissa
Williams, 333-4945.
Office for LGBT Concerns
Events aim to increase awareness
The UI Office for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Concerns will
host a monthlong series of educational events and community-building
activities during April. The series, known as “LGBT Awareness
Days,” is meant to promote and celebrate the lives of lesbian,
gay, bisexual and transgender people and their allies.
Educational programs will challenge the campus community to reflect
on the impact of sexual orientation on other identities such as race
and culture. “Alcohol and Other Drugs” workshops focus
on the mental and physical health issues unique to the lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender community. Other events include a film festival,
Ally training and workshops, lectures, artistic performances and student
organization meetings.
For more information and a complete schedule, go to www.odos.uiuc.edu/lgbt/.
Office of Student Financial Aid
Student employees recognized April 13
April 9-15 is National Student Employment Week, and the UI will be
recognizing the contributions of student employees at the Student Employment
Recognition Event at 4 p.m. April 13 in Clark Hall.
The Student Employee of the Year, the runner-up and two honorable mentions
will be announced. Each will receive a monetary award along with other
prizes. The America Reads/America Counts “Tutor of the Year” awards
also will be announced, and each of the winners will receive a monetary
award. All nominees will be recognized.
These events are sponsored by the Office of Student Financial Aid.
Illinois Center for Soy Foods
Events celebrate Soy Foods Month
The Illinois Center for Soy Foods at the UI has scheduled several events
to celebrate National Soy Foods Month.
A free cooking demonstration and taste test will be from 9 to 11 a.m.
April 22 in the test kitchen at the National Soybean Research Center
in Urbana. Participants will become familiar with tofu, soy flour,
soy milk and textured vegetable protein. Registration for the event
is available by e-mail at chersrd@illinois.edu or by phone at 244-1706.
The registration deadline is April 20.
“Around the World With Soy” will be the theme for a soy-tasting
event April 19 and will feature international cuisine. The event is by
invitation only, but interested consumers can be invited on a space-available
basis. Those interested in securing an invitation can contact Marilyn Nash
at 333-7236 or call 244-1706.
Free soy-enhanced cookies will be available during the lunch hour each
Tuesday during April. The cookies will be available at the Beckman
Café, the Law Commons, the Veterinary Medicine Small and Large
Animal clinics, and the National Soybean Research Laboratory’s
main office.
In addition, all soy foods cookbooks published by the center will be
on sale for 50 percent off the regular price during April. Orders can
be made by phone at 244-1706 or at www.soyfoodsillinois.uiuc.edu. The
cookbooks are part of the Soy in the American Kitchen series and feature
familiar foods made with soy ingredients. There are five cookbooks
in the series.
College of ACES
Farm revenue assurance examined
Farm revenue assurance, an alternative to the current mechanisms for
distributing farm-program benefits, will be the topic of the first
Gardner Endowed Chair Agricultural Policy Lecture at the UI College
of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
“Canada’s Experience With Farm Revenue Insurance: Lessons for Future
U.S. Farm Policy?” will be at 3:30 p.m. April 6 in the Monsanto Room
of the ACES Library. Douglas Hedley, former assistant deputy minister of agriculture
and agri-food Canada, will deliver the lecture.
“With the considerable interest around the state in some form of a farm
revenue assurance program as a possible alternative to the current mechanisms
for distributing farm program benefits, this seminar should be very timely,” said
Robert L. Thompson, who holds the Gardner Chair in Agricultural Policy at the
UI.
“Hedley recently retired from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, where
over many years he played a central role in development of Canada’s farm-income
stabilization and risk-management programs. He also was involved in developing
Canada’s policies on agriculture and the environment, food safety, trade,
innovation and renewal,” Thompson said.
Hedley, an agricultural economist, currently serves as executive director
of the Canadian Faculties of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine.
The event is free and open to the public.
WILL AM-FM-TV
Free tornado-safety seminar is April 11
WILL AM-FM-TV chief meteorologist Ed Kieser will present a free tornado
safety seminar at 7 p.m. April 11 in the Beckman Institute auditorium.
The seminar also will feature a presentation by the Champaign County
Emergency Management Agency about what to expect from local government
in a disaster. Kieser, now in his 16th year of presenting tornado-safety
shows, uses video and graphics to help arm Central Illinois residents
with information to protect them from a storm.
This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Urbana tornado on April
19, 1996. “We’ll revisit that evening and I hope to have
some new video of some of the tornadoes that hit the Midwest in November
of last year,” Kieser said.
Free parking for the event is available in the university parking garage at
the corner of University and Mathews avenues. For more information,
call 244-5072 or visit www.will.uiuc.edu.
‘Teaching About Religion’
Workshop examines study of religion
The Program for the Study of Religion and the Academic Outreach Division
of the Office of Continuing Education will offer a “Teaching
About Religion” workshop from July 10-14 on the Urbana campus.
The workshop is intended for high school and junior high teachers of
subjects that may involve religion, such as world religions, history
or literature courses. The workshop also will be of interest to curriculum
planners, as well as administrators, who are interested in the legal
and pedagogical issues underlying such courses, or who wish to learn
about and discuss ways to incorporate world religions education into
their teaching curriculum. The goal of the workshop is to better equip
teachers with information about world religions and methods for how
best to enlighten their students about traditions of faith.
The fee for the workshop is $295 plus costs for lodging on the UI campus.
For more information or to register, visit www.conferences.uiuc.edu/teachingreligion.
UI College of Law
‘Brain Bender Week’ is April 10-17
The UI College of Law will host “Brain Bender Week” with
three named lectures, April 10-17, in the Max L. Rowe Auditorium.
The event begins with the Paul M. Van Arsdell Memorial Lecture at 2:45
p.m. April 10, featuring “Places of Power: From Renaissance Town
Halls to Guantanamo Bay” presented by Judith Resnik of Yale Law
School.
At 4 p.m. April 12, Robin Wilson of the University of Maryland School
of Law presents “Nanotechnology: The Challenges of Regulating
Known Unknowns” as part of the John David and Elizabeth A. Epstein
Health Care Law and Policy Program.
The week ends with the David C. Baum Memorial Lecture, “Pregnancy
Stereotyping in South Dakota: A Reading of Casey and Hibbs,” at
4 p.m. April 17. Reva Siegel of Yale Law School delivers the lecture.
A reception will follow each lecture in the Pedersen Pavilion. “Brain
Bender Week” is open to the public and admission is free. For
more information, go to www.law.uiuc.edu.
Educational and cultural event
Japan House open house is April 8
Japan House, the educational and cultural facility at the UI, will
host its annual spring open house from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 8. The
event is free and open to the public.
Screenings of a new 10-minute video, “Japan House,” will
begin at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Members of the Illinois Prairie Chapter of the Ikenobo Ikebana Society
of America will demonstrate ikebana, Japanese flower arranging, after
the screenings. Members of the Urbana-Champaign Association of Chado
Urasenke Tankokai will conduct tea ceremonies and an exhibition of
ikebana by UI students will be on view.
For more information, visit www.art.uiuc.edu/galleries/japanhouse/index.cfm.
Women’s Law Society
Symposium looks at women and politics
The UI Women’s Law Society will host the symposium “Poised
for the Presidency? Women and Politics in 21st Century America” at
5:30 p.m. April 6 in the Max L. Rowe Auditorium of the College of Law
Building. The symposium will focus on the changing social and political
status of women and will center on the acceptance and popularity of
potential female presidential candidates heading into the 2008 election.
Among the panelists are former Illinois State Senator and current candidate
Judy Myers along with Kellyanne Conway and Celinda Lake, co-authors
of the book “What Women Really Want: How American Women Are Quietly
Erasing Political, Racial, Class and Religious Lines to Change the
Way We Live.”
The moderator for the symposium is Kit Kinports, UI professor of law.
The symposium is free and open to the public. A brief reception will
follow the program in the Pedersen Pavilion.
Higher education
Conference to look at benefits of diversity
What is the true value of racial and ethnic diversity for a college
campus? What difference does it make not only in educational outcomes
for students, but in teaching, research, curriculum, campus climate
and student life?
Those questions will be the focus of a conference April 21 at the UI,
which comes near the end of a comprehensive two-year project examining
those questions at Illinois.
The purpose of the conference is to discuss the findings and the model
developed from the project and “begin a dialogue that hopefully
will continue to examine diversity not only locally, but regionally
and nationally,” said Denise Green, who headed the project.
Among the speakers will be academics from universities in Illinois,
California, Maryland, Michigan and Wisconsin, and from the American
Council on Education. Most have done extensive research on diversity
issues in higher education, and several have supplied testimony in
court cases related to diversity or affirmative action.
Green, professor of education at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln,
began her involvement in the project while a professor at Illinois.
The project and conference were sponsored by the university’s
Center on Democracy in a Multiracial Society, with funding from the
Ford Foundation.
The conference, titled “Documenting the Differences Racial and
Ethnic Diversity Makes,” comes almost three years after U.S.
Supreme Court rulings regarding the use of affirmative action in admissions
at the University of Michigan.
Conference sessions are scheduled to deal with findings from various
initiatives and to discuss the issues raised, both for Illinois and
higher education in general.
The conference will open with remarks from UI President B. Joseph White
and will close with a two-hour “blueprint for diversity” session
for the campus, begun with remarks from Chancellor Richard Herman.
Pre-registration for the conference is encouraged and available online,
www.conferences.uiuc.edu/diversity, along with the schedule and a list
of speakers. The cost to attend is $15 for faculty and staff members
and the general public. Students may attend for free.
Most of the conference will be held at the Levis Faculty Center.
Center for Advanced Study/MillerComm
Lectures on ethics, and on pesticides
Ethics will be at the heart of the first of two April lectures in the
Center for Advanced Study/MillerComm lecture series at the UI. The
second lecture will focus on the health consequences of pesticide use.
The lectures are the last in the series for the spring semester.
On April 21, Jonathan Lear will speak on “Ethics and the Collapse
of Civilization,” looking at how a group can struggle with how
to live when its values and traditional way of life collapse or lose
meaning. Lear, the John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor in the
department of philosophy at the University of Chicago, will draw from
the experience of the Crow tribe. His talk begins at 4 p.m. in Room
100 of Gregory Hall.
The topic on April 25 will be “Toxic Drift: The Lasting Legacy
of Post-World War II Pesticide Use,” presented by Pete Daniel,
historian and curator from the Division of Work and Industry at the
Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.
Daniel will discuss the failure of government to protect human health
and wildlife from the dangers of pesticide use, and will explore the
implications for recent issues such as mad cow disease and genetic
engineering. His talk begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Knight Auditorium
of the Spurlock Museum.
The lectures are free and open to the public. For more information,
visit www.cas.uiuc.edu.
Library Colloquium Committee
Copyright law developments discussed
The Library Colloquium Committee will present a talk, “To Mentor
or To Monitor, That is the Question: Evolving Roles for Institutional
Actors Within the Copyright Law,” by Tomas Lipinski, co-director
of the Center for Information Policy Research at the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The lecture is from 10-11:30 a.m. April 10 in
Room 314 of the Illini Union.
The lecture will review legislative and judicial developments in the
area of copyright law as well as industry initiatives that are shaping
the role of information intermediaries such as libraries and schools.
For more information, visit www.library.uiuc.edu/committee/colloqm/Lipinski.htm.
Campus Recreation
World Health Day celebration on April 7
Campus Recreation will celebrate World Health Day with an outdoor,
music-filled event from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 7 on the Campus Recreation
Center East courtyard. The day will recognize the value of living a
healthy, active lifestyle.
A sticker and coupon for the event are available at the CRCE lobby,
the Intramural Physical Education Building east wing or the Oasis in
the lower level of the Illini Union. There will be free smoothies for
the first 100 people to bring their coupons to CRCE from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. and from 4 to 6 p.m.
For more information, call 333-3806.
‘Reading the World Festival’
Writers from around the world featured
Distinguished authors from around the world – and the campus – will
take part in the first annual “Reading the World Festival” April
18 to 20 at the UI.
All of the festival events are free and open to the public and will
be held at the Illini Union Bookstore. The format will consist of conversations
among panelists – authors, scholars, translators and publishers – followed
by author readings from their works.
The festival, which is aimed at widening the scope of American cultural
influence, is part of a joint effort to make international literature
available to English speakers and to build an audience for works in
translation.
The featured speakers are William Gass, Sahar Tawfiq and Eloy Urroz,
and from the UI, Marilyn Booth, Rigoberto González, Philip Graham
and Jane Kuntz.
The schedule is online at www.news.uiuc.edu/news/06/0405readtheworld.html.
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