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By Barbara Rea
Jan. 21, 2004
The spring 2004 Washington University Assembly
Series lectures will begin with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian
and scholar, David Levering Lewis. Lewis will be the keynote speaker
for the annual Chancellor's Fellowship Conference lecture.
The lecture will be held at 11 a.m., Wed., Jan.
28 in Graham Chapel. He will also participate in a panel discussion
from 2 - 4 p.m. in the Ann Whitney Olin Women's Building Lounge,
located just north of Graham Chapel. The lecture and panel discussion
are both free and open to the public.
Lewis is the Julius Silver University Professor
and Professor of History at New York University. He was awarded
the Pulitzer Prize for each volume of his two-part biography on
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, an activist, historian, scholar,
sociologist, and co-founder of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The first volume is titled
W. E. B. Du Bois: Biography of a Race, 1868-1919; the second
is W.E.B. Du Bois: The Fight for Equality and the American Century,
1919-1963.
In addition to the scholarly work on Du Bois,
Lewis has written several critically-acclaimed books, including
King: A Biography, Prisoners of Honor: The Dreyfus Affair, When
Harlem was in Vogue, The Race to Fashoda: European Colonialism and
African Resistance in the Scramble for Africa, and The Portable
Harlem Renaissance Reader. In addition, he has authored many
reviews and articles.
In 2002 he was named a Fellow in both the American
Academy of Arts & Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.
He was also awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur Foundation
"genius" grant.
He received a bachelor's degree from Fisk University
in 1956, a master's degree in U.S. history from Columbia University
in 1958 and a doctoral degree from the London School of Economics
and Political Science in 1962.
The annual Chancellor's Fellowship Conference
is part of the Chancellor's Fellowship Program for African-Americans,
established to encourage African-Americans of high academic promise
to prepare for careers in higher education. For more information
on the conference, call 314-935-6821.
Information on the rest of the spring Assembly
Series events follows. All lectures are free and open to the public.
Continuing the University's major initiative
on the environment is a colloquium on childhood lead poisoning on
Tues., Feb. 3. The morning session will begin at 9 a.m. in Clopton
Auditorium, Wohl Clinic Building on the Medical Campus with a talk
by Herbert Needleman. A professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at
the University of Pittsburgh and a leading advocate against lead
poisoning, Needleman will present both historical context and recent
findings related to the effects of environmental lead exposure on
children. The afternoon session will examine the gap between academic
research and public policy with Needlemen being joined by David
E. Jacobs, director of the Office of Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard
Control; and Neil T. Leifer, an attorney specializing in lead poisoning
litigation. The panel will be held at 2 p.m. in the Bryan Cave Courtroom,
Anheuser-Busch Hall.
Yale University law professor Amy L. Chua will
present the lecture on Wed, Feb. 4, also in the Bryan Cave Moot
Courtroom in Anheuser-Busch Hall. Chua's new book offers a compelling
theory that establishing free markets in developing countries does
more harm than good. Her talk bears the same title as her book,
How Exporting Free Markets and Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred
and Global Instability.
On Wed., Feb. 11, Anglo-American constitutional
and legal scholar Michael Les Benedict will give a talk on "The
People Themselves: The Constitutional Responsibility of the American
People." Benedict has published a number of scholarly works and
teaches history at the Moritz School of Law at Ohio State University.
St. Louis's Rabbi Susan Talve will give the
Rabbi Ferdinand Isserman Lecture at 4 p.m. on Thurs., Feb. 12. Talve
has been widely recognized for the impact she is making in the community
by forging partnerships and emphasizing programs that promote social
justice.
Eminent physicist Charles Falco has applied
his scientific knowledge to artist David Hockney's theory that as
early as the 15th Century master artists such as van Eyck and Bellini
were using optical aids to help them paint. His findings will be
detailed in his presentation, "The Science of Optics; The History
of Art," at 3 p.m. Mon., Feb. 16 in Steinberg Hall Auditorium. Falco
holds the Chair of Condensed Matter Physics and is a professor of
optical sciences at the University of Arizona. Falco is also an
expert in motorcycles, and will present a talk on "The Art of the
Motorcycle" later that evening. More information on that program
will be forthcoming.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has devoted his career
to protecting the environment and has used his legal expertise to
stop polluters. He also serves as attorney for the National Resources
Defense Council and as president of Waterkeeper Alliance. He teaches
at Pace University and supervises its Environmental Litigation Clinic.
He will talk about "Our Environmental Destiny" will be held at 11
a.m. Wed., Feb. 25. (Seating may be limited for the public.)
The Environmental Initiative Colloquium on Thurs.,
Feb. 26 will focus on "Plant Sciences: The Environment and Sustainability."
The panel discussion will begin at 2 p.m. in the Laboratory Science
Building, Room 300, where four eminent scientists will discuss topics
ranging from phytoremediation, the inorganic carbon cycle, carbon
sesquestration, the impact of genetically modified crops on the
environment, and sustainability. They are: Aaron Kaplan, professor
of plant sciences at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Ganesh
Kishore, vice president of technology, DuPont Agriculture and Nutrition;
Francois M.M. Morel, professor of geosciences, Princeton University;
and Jerald L. Schnoor, engineering chair and co-director of the
Center for Global & Regional Environmental Research at the University
of Iowa.
Three renowned scientists will participate
in the next Environmental Initiative Colloquium on "Research in
Aerosols and Air Quality: Impact on Nanotechnology to Global Climate"
at 3 p.m. Tues., March 2, also in the Laboratory Science Building,
Room 300. Subjects explored in this program include wide-ranging
applications of aerosol science engineering, the health effects
of fine particles, and the role of aerosols and their effect on
global climatology. The experts are: Sheldon K. Friedlander, professor
of chemical engineering at the University of California-Los Angeles;
Jonathan Samet, chair and professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins
University; and John H. Seinfeld, professor of chemical engineering,
California Institute of Technology.
Conservative political analyst and best selling
author Ann Coulter will present her views on "Liberal Lies about
the American Right" at 11 a.m. Wed., March 3. All three of her books
have been immensely popular and have topped the New York Times
bestseller lists. Coulter is also the legal correspondent for Human
Events, writes a syndicated column, and is a regular guest on
news talk shows. (Seating may be limited for the public.)
The lecture scheduled for March 17 will be announced
at a later date.
"The D/evolution of Love: The Origins of Elegy,"
is the topic of W. Ralph Johnson's presentation at 4 p.m. Thurs.,
March 18. The location is still to be determined. Johnson, the John
Matthews Manly Distinguished Service Professor of Classics and Comparative
Studies Emeritus at the University of Chicago, is a distinguished
classical scholar and the author of several books, including Darkness
Visible: A Study of Vergil's Aeneid, and Momentary Monsters:
Lucan and his Heroes.
Covering the broad terrain of modern culture,
Susan Sontag has produced many highly-regarded and influential literary
works, both in fiction and nonfiction. Her recent collection of
essays, Regarding the Pain of Others, will also serve as
the title of her talk at 11 a.m. Wed., March 24 in Graham Chapel.
On Tues., March 30, the Environmental Initiative
Colloquium will feature a keynote address by architect William McDonough,
a pioneer in the development of creating ecologically, socially
and economically intelligent buildings. His talk, titled "Ecology,
Equity, Environment and Education," will be held at 1 p.m. in Steinberg
Hall Auditorium, but the colloquium will run throughout the day
offering discussions by architects, landscape architects, university
facility administrators, engineering firms and sustainable practice
consultants. Presenters include: Mark Rylander, William McDonough
and Parners; Keith McPeters, Laurie Olin Associates; Alastair Guthrie,
Arup Associates; and Mark Rosenbaum, Energysmith Environmental Design
Consultants, The discussion featuring these experts will run from
3 - 5 p.m. and will be moderated by Elizabeth Meyer, associate professor
of alndscape architecutre, University of Virginia. Respondents will
be Victoria Siranni, chief facilities officer at MIT, and Washington
University facility administrators.
The lectures scheduled for Wed., March 31 and
Thurs., April 8 will be announced at a later date.
Chemistry and poetry are not worlds apart, according
to Nobel laureate and writer Roald Hoffman. He will give a talk
on "One Culture, or the Commonalities and Differences between the
Arts and the Sciences," at 4 p.m. on Tues., April 13 in Graham Chapel.
When Azar Nafisi was terminated from the University
of Tehran for not wearing the veil, she took her literary knowledge
underground and taught a hand-selected group of students about the
value of Western texts. The result of that experience forms the
centerpiece of her memoir, Reading Lolita in Tehran, which
is also the title of her talk at 11 a.m. Wed., April 14 in Graham
Chapel.
Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton will moderate the
Environmental Initiative Colloquium on Wed., April 21 at 2 p.m.
in Whitaker Hall Auditorium. Panelists for the "Educational Practices
and the Environment" discussion are: Michael M. Crow, president
of Arizona State University; David H. Marks, professor of engineering
systems at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Michael B. McElroy,
professor of environmental studies at Harvard University; and Franklin
M. Orr Jr., professor of petroleum engineering at Stanford University.
TIAA-CREF, one of the largest and most respected
financial service providers in the world, is providing generous
support for the 2004 spring Assembly Series to help Washington University
bring an outstanding array of speakers to the campus during its
sesquicentennial celebration.
For more information on Assembly Series programs,
check the website at http://wupa.wustl.edu/assembly
or call 314-935-5285.
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