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August 23, 2002
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9/11
update
At 8:46
a.m. Bloomington time Wednesday (Sept. 11), singers from the
IU School of Music and the Bloomington community will begin
a performance of Mozarts hour-long Requiem at
Recital Hall as part of the Rolling Requiem, a worldwide tribute
to those who lost their lives a year ago as a result of terrorist
attacks in the United States. More than 15,000 musicians and
singers are expected to participate in the global musical
tribute, organized by the Seattle Symphony Chorale. The first
concerts begin in New Zealand and will roll throughout
a 24-hour period around the globe. For information on participating
in the Bloomington performance, go to this Web
site.
To read
about the Rolling Requiem, go to this Web
site.
Other
IU remembrances
Luminaries
will light the walkways at the IU East campus in Richmond. Faculty,
staff and students will participate in a blood drive in Indianapolis
and students will be painting watercolor memorials in front
of University College. In South Bend, a peace pole will be planted
near the campus library, painted with a message in 12 languages:
"May Peace Prevail on Earth." For a look at some of
the events planned on IUs eight campuses, go to this Web
site.
Two archival Home Pages Conversations online,
recorded last year, relate to the 9/11 tragedies. Rabbi
Harold S. Kushner discussed the content of his books, When
Bad Things Happen to Good People, and Living a Life That
Matters, with Kathleen Gilbert, an IU family studies professor.
New York Times chief art critic Michael
Kimmelman talked about memorial art in the wake of tragedy
with Betsy Stiratt, director of the SoFA Gallery in Bloomington.
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Rickety Rix, 06!
Welcome,
IU Class of 2006. Meet the IU Class of 1906. If history does indeed
repeat itself, perhaps theres something to learn from the
naughty six that preceded you by a century.
Article
A beautiful mindset
Since 1998, Wisconsins
Beloit College has come u p
with a first-year student Mindset List that suggests the touchstones
and benchmarks of culture and experience that annually define
the traditionally aged generation newly arrived to campus. The Class
of 2006 Mindset List will be released next week.
Article
People movers
The latest innovation
in IU campus transportation is the People Mover, an overhead rail
connection that, when completed, will connect Methodist Hospital
and hospitals on the IUPUI campus. IUs Arthur Foley, a turn-of-the-20th-century
physics professor, was one of the first Bloomingtonians to purchase
a people mover that ate gas instead of grass. (Need
an IU campus map? We have them online)
Article
Current campus
maps
Higher education and retirement
The newly formed international Association
of Retirement Organizations in Higher Education will hold its inaugural
conference on the IU Bloomington campus Oct. 15-17. The organization
hopes to promote the development and sharing of ideas that will
result in new models for retiring from the field of higher education.
Article
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Prostate
Cancer Awareness Week Sept. 15-22
Article
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280 new medical students receive their
lab coats
Article
A campus as a work of art
Article
Applications for Bloomington/Monroe
County Leadership available
Article
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Photo illustration by David Bricker and
Rick Cameron
The “arms race” between predator and prey, in this case a western
U.S. garter snake and a mega-toxic newt (above), is the subject of
research appearing in this week’s Science magazine. IU Bloomington
biologist Edmund Brodie III directed the research project, which links
evolution, ecology and physiology in that ever-changing dance called
the food chain. Article
Today's feature
Autumn in academe
The new semester will bring a round
of formal ceremonies that traditionally mark the life and
times of a great university.
The nearly 60-year-old freshman
induction ceremony at IU Bloomington is scheduled Wednesday,
Aug. 28, at 4:30 p.m. at Assembly Hall.
The
tradition of freshman induction
The formal groundbreaking for
the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Hall, the new home of the Herron
School of Art at IUPUI, is Friday, Sept. 13, at 4 p.m. on
the Indianapolis campus. Herron is celebrating its centennial
year and the $24 million transformation of the former IU
School of Law-Indianapolis building will triple the size
of Herron’s current facility.
Eskenazi Hall, future home of the Herron
School of Art: architectural
drawing
Herron
groundbreaking information
Herron
centennial calendar
Also ahead: the installation of
IU South Bend Chancellor Una Mae Reck and the dedication
of IUSB’s new Student Activities Center (Sept. 27) and the
installation of IU Southeast Chancellor Sandra Patterson-Randles
(Oct. 15).
IU Ceremonies calendar
of events
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