search IU Home 
PagesResearchTechnologyOutreachHeadlinersHealthArtsFACULTY and STAFF news from the campuses of Indiana University
 
Columns
Conversations
Viewpoint
Browser
Fast facts
Web
mastery
Knowledge Transfer
Photographer's corner


About 
Home Pages
Schedule
Contact
Archives
Awards

Keeping in touch

By Jayne Spencer


Spencer




Elders




Arias




Plath (1932-1963)


IU Home Pages is published monthly online throughout the summer. For those of you who enjoy reading IU Home Pages on the printed page, both paper and online publication will resume Sept. 13. 2002-2003 Home Pages schedule

We'd like to extend our gratitude to those of you who have provided us with support, feature ideas, news and feedback throughout our sixth year of publication. While our main audience is faculty and staff on the IU campuses throughout the state, we find our “affiliative audience"—students, prospective students, alums, colleagues from other institutions and readers from venues around the world— invaluable. We hope you will keep in touch with us: send an E-mail to homepgs@indiana.edu anytime.

I'd like to remind you of some notable visitors who will be in Indiana in the coming months. Dr. Joycelyn Elders, former U.S. Surgeon General, will be returning to the Bloomington campus in conjunction with a conference on gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) youth July 19-21. The conference, “Sexual Minority Youth in the Heartland: Issues and Methods for Youth serving Professionals," is geared to teachers, counselors, principals, social workers, mental health professionals and youth group leaders, particularly those who work in under-served rural settings.

Elder's public address is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, July 20, at Alumni Hall, Indiana Memorial Union. Tickets may be purchased for $20 through the conference's Web site. The tentative title of her address is “Leave No Child Behind...Let's Get Serious." Elders will be joined at the conference by nationally recognized experts on GLBT youth, including Mark Pope of the University of Missouri at St. Louis, president-elect of the American Counseling Association; Terry Tafoya of the National Native American AIDS Prevention Center, University of Washington; Stephanie Sanders of the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction; and Brian Dodge and Bill Yarber of the Rural Center for AIDS/STD Prevention and Research, a project of Indiana, Purdue and Texas A & M universities.(For more information, go to keynote speaker.)

Oscar Arias, former president of Costa Rica and winner of the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize, will return to Bloomington Sept. 22-26 as a Patten Lecturer. Arias, who served as the Costa Rican president from 1986-1990, gave the inaugural address for the formal opening of the Indiana Center on Global Change and World Peace at IU Bloomington in October 1990.

Keep an eye out, too, for a Web site which will be up and running soon for the Sylvia Plath 70th Year Symposium, scheduled Oct. 31-Nov. 2 on the Bloomington campus. The event will be both artistic and literary: “Eye Rhymes: Visual Art and Manuscripts of Sylvia Plath" will feature juvenilia and mature works from the extensive collection of IU's Lilly Library and Plath's alma mater, Smith College, at the School of Fine Arts (SoFA) Gallery. The literary component will commemorate both the 70th birthday anniversary of the American poet and the 40th anniversary of the composition of the poems for Ariel.

And one last note: we extend our congratulations to Lauren Bryant, associate editor of IU's Research and Creative Activity, who received a first-place award in the annual communication contest of the state affiliate chapter of the National Federation of Press Women.

 

 
Indiana University
IU Home Pages
400 E. 7th Street. Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: (812) 855-6494

Publication date: May 24, 2002
Comments: homepgs@indiana.edu
Copyright 2000, The Trustees of Indiana University