BLOOD DRIVE
10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Gambrell Hall. 727-6829.
SEES BROWN BAG LECTURE
"Even If You Cut My Head Off: Peasant Resistance to Modernization." Hugh
Hudson, Georgia State University. 12:45 p.m. 362 Dobbs Center. Free.
727-6582.
ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE
"Reflections on the Field of Anthropology." Fredrik Barth, Woodruff
Professor
of Anthropology. 4 p.m. 206 Geosciences Bldg. Reception will follow.
Free.
727-7518.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES PANEL DISCUSSION
"Remembering the Wizard: Booker T. Washington and The Cotton States and
International Exposition." A panel of scholars will commemorate Booker T.
Washington's role in launching the 1895 Exposition and the context for
his
ascendancy as a major figure in American politics and letters. Panelists
include Rudolph Byrd, director of African American Studies; Michael
Harper,
Brown University; Darlene Clark Hine, Michigan State University; Louis
Harlan,
University of Maryland-College Park; Charles Johnson, University of
Washington;
David Levering Lewis, Rutgers University; and William McFeeley,
University of
Georgia. 7 p.m. Winship Ballroom, Dobbs Center. Free. 727-6847.
OXFORD DANCE CONCERT
"Mertle and Gertrude, Two Old Friends," featuring Martha Brim, Columbia
College
and Gayle Doherty, Oxford College. 8 p.m. Williams Gymnasium, Oxford
College.
784-8371.
Tuesday, September 19
PROFESSIONAL SECRETARIES' INFORMATION SESSION
For all office professionals interested in Professional Secretaries
International and the Certified Professional Secretaries rating. 11 a.m.
RSVP
by faxing your name, department and extension to 727-4008, attn. Sonji
Boston.
727-0945.
PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S GROUP MEETING
A lunchtime meeting for professional women. Bring your lunch. 12:30 p.m.
Emory
Women's Center. For details and reservations, call Roberta Carver at
727-7611.
EMORY WOMAN'S CLUB FALL RECEPTION
The Emory Woman's Club fall reception will honor newcomers and returning
members. 1-3 p.m. Lullwater House, 1463 Clifton Road. Parking and
childcare
available. Call Irene McMorland at 315-6428 or Lyndia Curtis at 409-9892.
ETHICS CENTER PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
"Cyberspace and Ethics:`Righting' the Rules of the Net." William Chace,
president; Jim Johnson, vice provost for information technology; Cliff
Cockerham; Association of Emory Alumni; and John Banja, Rehabilitation
Medicine. 4 p.m. Winship Ballroom, Dobbs Center. Free. 727-4955.
CHAPLAIN'S TEA
"Between Traditions: Biography, Autobiography and Scholarship." Gordon
Newby,
professor and chair, Near Eastern and Judaic Languages and Literature.
4:30
p.m. 202 Cannon Chapel. 727-6226.
CONVERSATIONS AT THE CARTER CENTER
President Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter will discuss their work. 7:30
p.m.
Ivan Allen II Pavilion, The Carter Center. Tickets are $6. 420-5104 or
420-5105.
GERMAN STUDIES FILM SERIES
"The Threepenney Opera," directed by G.W. Pabst.7:30 p.m. 206 White Hall.
Free.
727-6439.
SEES FILM
"The Last Stop." Returning from the army to his native Aksuat, a small,
decrepit village on the desolate Kazakh plains, a young man develops a
jarring
new perspective on the life he has always known. 7:30 p.m. 205 White
Hall. In
Kazakh with English subtitles. Free. 727-6582.
Wednesday, September 20
RELIGION AND HEALTH CONNECTION LECTURE
"Faith, Health and Alternative Medicines." Linda Gooding, professor of
immunology. 11:45 a.m. Cox Hall Ballroom, third floor. $3 lunch
reservations
required. 727-6229.
MUSEUM FOOD FOR THOUGHT
A gallery talk about the Nasca Lines created by ancient Peruvians and
pictured
in Marilyn Bridge's aerial photographs in Planet Peru: An Aerial Journey
Through a Timeless Land. Rebecca Stone-Miller, faculty curator. Noon.
Upper
Level galleries, Carlos Museum. 727-4291.
WOMEN'S STUDIES COLLOQUIUM
"Children and Violence: More Problems for Women to Solve." State Senator
Mary
Margaret Oliver, Rosalynn Carter Honorary Fellow. 4 p.m. 110 White Hall.
Free.
727-0096.
WOMEN'S SOCCER
Emory vs. Oglethorpe University. 4 p.m. P.E. Center. 727-6547.
CARTER TOWN HALL
Former President Jimmy Carter will speak. 8 p.m. P.E. Center. Tickets
required.
727-6216.
Thursday, September 21
PHARMACOLOGY COLLOQUIUM
"Discriminative Stimulus Properties of Phenylisopropylamine Drugs of
Abuse: Of
Love and Ecstasy." Richard Glennon, professor of medicinal chemistry,
Medical
College of Virginia. Noon. 5052 Rollins Center. Free. 727-5983.
CUBAN RELIGION AND POLITICS LECTURE
"The Promise: A Video on Cuban Religion and Politics." Julio Ramos,
associate
professor of Spanish, University of California-Berkeley. Sponsored by the
Spanish Department, Institute of Liberal Arts, Latin American and
Caribbean
Studies and ECIS. 4 p.m. 206 White Hall. Free. 727-6562.
Friday, September 22
GEORGIA LICENSES ON WHEELS
Georgia Licenses on Wheels (GLOW), a fully equipped mobile driver
licensing
facility, provides driver's license renewals; lost license replacement;
new
resident licensing; handicapped parking permits; identification cards;
and
written testing for commercial drivers' licenses. 10 a.m- 4 p.m.
Administration Building.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM
"Controlling Chaotic Lasers." Rajarshi Roy, Georgia Tech. 4 p.m. 100
Dental
Bldg. Free. 727-6584.
SPANISH LECTURE
"José Martî: el reposo de los héroes." Julio Ramos,
associate professor of Spanish, University of California-Berkeley.
Sponsored by
the Spanish Department, Institute of Liberal Arts, Latin American and
Caribbean
Studies and ECIS. 3 p.m. Free. Call 727-6434 for location.
Saturday, September 23
MUSEUM CHILDREN'S WORKSHOP
In the Nasca Valley of present day Peru, enormous earth drawings of
animals,
humans, plants and geometric motifs were created by ancient peoples.
These
images, which can only be seen from high above the earth, reflect the
importance of the earth's perspective, rather than the human perspective.
In
this workshop children and their families will view the Nasca lines in
the
exhibition "Planet Peru," and then make their own earth drawings. 10 a.m.
Tate
Room, Plaza level, Carlos Museum. Cost: $5 for museum members; $7 for
nonmembers. Suggested ages 7-12. Preregistration required. 727-4280.
JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY
The Japanese & American Sports and Cultural Exchange Mission will
host a
Japanese Tea Ceremony as a part of Japan Fest 95. The traditional and
spirtiual
ceremony will take place at the Jimmy Carter Library & Museum at the
Carter
Center. 11:00 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3p.m. Free 331-0296
Sunday, September 24
UNIVERSITY WORSHIP
Susan Henry-Crowe, University Chaplain, preaching 11:15 a.m. Cannon
Chapel.
727-6226.
Through November 10
SCHATTEN GALLERY EXHIBIT
"Emory Remembers: Memoirs & Mementos from World War II" will run
through
Nov. 10 in Schatten Gallery in Woodruff Library. Sponsored by Special
Collections and the Association of Emory Alumni, the exhibition will
feature
posters, photographs and other items from the archives of Special
Collections.
Free. 727-0136.
September 18 & 19
CREATIVE WRITING READING PROGRAM LECTURE Poet Thomas Lux will read from his work. 8:15 p.m Sept 18. 112 White Hall. On Sept. 19, a public colloquium will be held at 2:30 p.m. 106 Cannon Chapel. Free. 727-4683.
Sept. 22 & 23
END-OF-LIFE SYMPOSIUM
"Last Rights: Decision Making at the End of Life." Speakers include
Howard
Brody, Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences, Michigan
State
University; Robert Veatch, director, Kennedy Institute of Ethics,
Georgetown
University; and John Stone, associate dean and professor of medicine.
Co-sponsored by the Ethics Center. Preregistration required.Participants
can
also register the day of the event at 3:30 p.m. WHSCAB Auditorium. Free
for
Emory faculty, staff and students. 727-5695.
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.