Monday, October 23

SEES BROWN BAG LECTURE
"The Western Influence on Present Day Russian Literature." Igor Vishnevetsky, Russian Studies. 12:45 p.m. 362 Dobbs Center. 727-6582.

BLOOD DRIVE
1-4:15 p.m. Rooms 125, 127, 131, School of Nursing. 727-3327.

ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE
"In Defense of the Concept of Dreamtime." Howard Morphy, University of Oxford. 4 p.m. 206 Geosciences Bldg. Free. 727-7518.

FRENCH COLLOQUIUM
"Histoire d'un corps." Alain Buisine, University of Lille III. 4 p.m. 419 Candler Library. Free. 727-6431.

OXFORD STUDIES
"Science, Scientism and Faith." Kent Linville, philosophy. 7 p.m. Oxford College Chapel. Free tickets required. 784-8361.

SEES FILM
"Unfinished Piece for Player Piano." 7:30 p.m. 110 White Hall. 727-6582.

Tuesday, October 24

EMORY WOMAN'S CLUB LECTURE "Publishing a First Book." Jake Ward, dean of alumni. 9:30 a.m. Houston Mill House. Free childcare provided. 985-4816.

WOMEN'S SEXUALITY DISCUSSION GROUP
11:30 a.m. Women's Center. Reservations required. Free. 727-2000.

PHARMACOLOGY COLLOQUIUM
"Melatonin Biosynthesis in Retinal Photoreceptor Cells." P. Michael Iuvone, pharmacology. Noon. 5052 Rollins Center. Free. 727-5983.

FRENCH GRADUATE SEMINAR
Alain Buisine, University of Lille III; Philippe Bonnefis, French and Italian; and Françoise Gaillard, University of Paris VII. 1-3:30 p.m. 419 Candler Library. 727-6431.

FLU VACCINATIONS
1-5 p.m. University Health Services, 1771 Uppergate Drive. Free to EmoryCare participants. $12 for others. 727-7535.

FRENCH LECTURE
"Archeaologie de la modernite;." Francoise Gaillard, University of Paris VII. 4 p.m. 419 Candler Library. Free. 727-6431.

NEJL FILM
"Girlfriends."A film by Joel Kaminsky. 4 p.m. 207 White Hall. Kaminisky will be present. Free. 727-2697.

CHAPLAIN'S TEA
"Literature and Social Change." Saralyn Chesnut, Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Life. 4:30-5:30 p.m. 202 Cannon Chapel. 727-6226.

REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH SEMINAR
"The Breast Exam: It's Never Too Early to Learn." 4:30-5:30 p.m. Women's Center. Reservations required. Free. 727-2000.

MUSEUM WORKSHOP FOR TEACHERS
The art of the Inca and landscape as historical document. Rebecca Stone-Miller, art history. 4:30-6:30 p.m. Tate Room, Carlos Museum. $12 members, $15 nonmembers. Registration required. 727-2363.

ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE
"Ancestral Connections." Howard Morphy, anthropology, University of Oxford. 5:30 p.m. Reception Hall, Carlos Museum. Free. 727-7518.

HUGHES UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM LECTURE
Isiah Warner, Louisiana State University, will discuss his previous experience in chemistry and his vision for graduate education. 7 p.m. 303 Geosciences Bldg. Free. 727-5126.

SEES FILMS
"Aura," "Toro," "The Summer Heat." 7:30 p.m. 205 White Hall. 727-6582.

Wednesday, October25

ETHICS PANEL DISCUSSION
"When Character and Intelligence Embrace:Promise and Accountability in Theory-Practice Learning." 11:45 a.m.-1:45 p.m. Rooms 1 and 2, Cox Hall. $3 buffet. Reservations required. 727-1789.

HEALTHY WOMEN 2000 BROWNBAGLECTURE
"Contraception for the 90s: A Woman's Issues." Joyce King, nursing. Noon-1 p.m. Women's Center. Reservations required. 727-2000.

LAW AND RELIGION LECTURE
"Prospects for Communal and Ethnic Peace and Conflict in India." Asghar Ali Engineer. 4 p.m. Tull Auditorium, Law School. Free. 727-0699.

REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH SEMINAR
"Date Rape: Raising our Consciousness." 4:30-5:30 p.m. Women's Center. Reservations required. Free. 727-2000.

MURDER MYSTERY WRITERS PANELDISCUSSION
"Murder, They Write, Part II." Mystery writers Kathy Hogan-Trocheck, Joan Hess and Deborah Adams. 6 p.m. Cox Hall Ballroom. 727-2245.

CAREER CENTER LECTURE
"JobSmarts for TwentySomethings: A Street-Smart Script for Career Success." Bradley Richardson, author and entrepreneur. 7-8:30 p.m. Winship Ballroom, Dobbs Center. Free. 727-0512.

Thursday, October 26

PIANO LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION
Pianist David Deveau. 2:30 p.m. 208 White Hall. Free. 727-6666.

PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM
"An African Epistemology: the Knowledge/Belief Distinction and Yoruba Discourse." Barry Hallen, W.E.B. DuBois Institute, Harvard University. 4:15 p.m. 101 White Hall. Free. 727-6577.

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES LECTURE
"One Scholar's Perspective on Research in Colonial Mexican History." Susan Deans-Smith, Univ. of Texas. 7 p.m. 323 Bowden Hall. Free. 727-6562.

WOMEN OF ASIA GATHERING
"Asian and Asian American Women and Sexuality." Mary Krueger, University Health Services. 7-9 p.m. Women's Center. Free. 727-2000.

L/G/B POETRY READING
Ken Anderson, English, Floyd College, and Ami Mattison, graduate student. 8 p.m. 220 Dobbs Center. Free. 727-0272.

Friday, October 27

WELLNESS LECTURE
"Low-Fat Lover's Guide to Eating Out." Dietician Nancy Anderson. 12:15-12:45 p.m. Well House, 1735 Lowergate Drive. Free. Registration required. 727-9355.

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES LECTURE
"Divided Memory: The Nazi Past in the Two Germanies." Jeffrey Herf, Mt. Holyoke College. 2 p.m. 103 White Hall. Free. 727-2255.

PIANO RECITAL
"A Program of Classic Viennese Piano Music, 1773-1828." David Deveau. 8:15 p.m. Cannon Chapel. Free. 727-6666.

Saturday, October 28

MUSEUM CHILDREN'S WORKSHOP
"French Oil Painting, with Class!" Registration required. 10 a.m. Tate Room, Carlos Museum. $5 members, $7 non members. 727-4280.

GOSPEL CONCERT
Voices of Inner Strength. 7 p.m. Cannon Chapel. Free. 727-6226.

Sunday

UNIVERSITY WORSHIP
William Sloan Coffin, former pastor of Riverside Church, New York. 11:15 a.m. Cannon Chapel. 727-6226.

MUSIC AT EMORY
"Sisters of the South: A Song and Story Tour." See page 6.

RELIGION ROUNDTABLE
"The God I Believe In and The God I Don't Believe In." William Sloan Coffin, former chaplain at Yale. 7 p.m. Church School Bldg. Free. 727-6278

Oct. 23-28

SPECIAL TOUCH BREAST HEALTH CLASSES
One-hour class on the importance of clinical breast exams and mammography. Oct. 23 and Oct. 24 at noon, Oct. 25 at 3 and 6 p.m. and Oct. 28 at 10 a.m., Winship Cancer Center. Free. 778-7744.

Oct. 24-26

CANDLER SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY WOMEN'S WEEK
"Women, Authority and Ministry." See page 4.

Oct. 26-28

RELIGION LECTURES
Hidden Histories: Sensing Religion in American Experience
, a series of lectures by Lawrence Sullivan, Harvard Univ. Center for the Study of World Religions. "The Pilgrim's Chapel and the Shopper's Mall: Spaces that Shape Religious Experience." 4 p.m., Oct. 26; "Notes on Music from Shaker Hymns to Coltrane and Mickey Hart." 8 p.m., Oct. 26; "The Rites of Easter and the Dances of Martha Graham." 1 p.m., Oct. 27; " Knowledge Viewed Through the Lens of Painting and Photography." 4 p.m., Oct. 27; and "Religious Experience and the Convergence of Meaning." 8 p.m., Oct. 28. Harland Cinema, Dobbs Center. Free. 727-7596.

To submit an entry for the campus calendar, send a brief written description of the event to: Matt Montgomery, Emory Report, News and Information, fax to 727-0646, or e-mail to mmontgo@ unix.cc.emory.edu three weeks before the publication date. Dates, times and locations may change without advance notice.