Schurz Library Speaker Series |
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The Schurz Library Speaker series provides speakers of intellectual
interest to the university and the community on topics related
to the campus theme. All Schurz Library Speaker events are
free and open to the public. 2008-2009 February 26, 2008: Radical Evolution and Revolutions in Thought (Podcast can be viewed by clicking on the quicktime icon below): For hundreds of millennia, our technologies have been aimed outward at altering our environment in the fashion of fire, agriculture, or space travel. Now, for the first time, we are increasingly aiming inward at modifying our minds, memories, metabolisms, personalities, progeny and possibly our immortal souls. Radical Evolution is about altering human nature -- not in some distant tomorrow, but in the next 10 or 20 years thanks to the technological possibilities of genetics, robotics, information, and nanotechnology (also known as the acronym GRIN). In Garreau's presentation he will discuss the possibilities of these four technologies and the potential outcomes for humanity.
October 8, 2008: Revolutions in Thought: Individuals Making Things Better (Podcast can be viewed by clicking on the quicktime icon below). The event featured four members of the community who have made a major impact in Michiana and beyond: Dr. Roland Chamblee, Sr., Health Officer of St. Joseph County; local businessmen Jerry Hammes and LeRoy Troyer, and IU South Bend student Aleah Wilburn. The panelists shared what motivated them to give back to the community.
2007-2008 October 9, 2007:
The Power of One: How You Can Embrace and Communicate the Environmental Ethic. Herman Miller's Director of Environmental Affairs, Safety and Sustainability, Paul Murray, says many of the company's most significant green initiatives have come from employees "who knew we could do better." Due to countless individual insights and efforts, Herman Miller today stands as a noteworthy example of how good business and environmental stewardship go hand-in-hand. [Podcast] 2006-2007 March 26, 2007: One Book, One Campus speaker event. Dr. Neil Ernst and Dr. Peggy Philp, two of doctors who cared for Lia Lee, the child at the center of this year's One Book, One Campus title, The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman, discuss the book and their experiences caring for Lia. October 24, 2006: Writing Through the Looking Glass: Conflicting Representations of Hmong Refugees in the United State featuring
University of Notre Dame professor, John Duffy. [Presentation Slide] 2005-2006 March 14, 2006: Body Politics: Gender and Identity in Israel. Dr. Rebecca Torstrick, Director of Women's Studies and Associate Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, discussed gender and identity politics and how women present themselves throughout Israel. Dr. Torstrick spoke of how women’s dress leads to their being "tagged" or "judged." For more information, please visit Dr. Torstrick's web site at: http://mypage.iusb.edu/~rtorstri/. October 19, 2005: "Mutable Bodies and Philip K. Dick." A presentation by Philip K. Dick scholar Dr. N. Katherine Hayles on the 2005-2006 One Book, One Campus title, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick. 2004-2005 October 19, 2004: The Embedded Reporter featuring
South Bend Tribune reporter, Fred Dodd. 2003-2004 October 3, 2003: The Patriot Act and the Challenge
to Academic Freedom. A day-long forum with presentations
by Doug Archer, reference and peace studies librarian, University
of Notre Dame, Nancy Kranich, senior research fellow at the
Free Expression Policy Project, and Clifford Ong, director
of Homeland Security for the Indiana Counter-Terrorism and
Security Council. March 16, 2004: Identity
by the Chopsticks-Fork Principle, A presentation and book
signing by author by Cathy Bao Bean. 2002-2003 October 14, 2002: Meeting the Maasai: Cultural Understanding
through Art and Artifacts, a joint project of the
Schurz Library and the School of Education, with presentations
by Helen Ruchti, donor of the Maasai artifacts, Marsha Heck,
Assistant Professor, School of Education, IU South Bend, and
Kwadwo Okrah, Director of the Center for Global Education,
IU South Bend. 2001-2002 October 18, 2001: For your Amusement and Instruction:
Children's Literature in the Lilly Library Collections
by Elizabeth Johnson, Associate Librarian and Head of Technical
Services, Lilly Library, IU Bloomington.
September 14, 2000, James Whitcomb Riley: A Life.
A presentation and book signing by author Elizabeth Van Allen.
Co-sponsored by the IU Press.
March 2, 2000: Going About Your Business: Accessing
Information on the Internet: a workshop for
the Michiana business community by Linda Fisher,
Associate Librarian and Head of Government Publications, IU
South Bend.
September 11, 1998: Your Teaching, Your Research,
and the Meaning of Copyright and Fair Use by Kenneth
Crews, Director of the IU Copyright Management Center, IUPUI.
November 6, 1997: Political Re-Education: German
POWs in the United States by James Ruchti, retired
diplomat in the U.S. Department of State. |