Fall 2001

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calendar 75th anniversary events please visit the scripps college web site (www.scrippscollege.edu) for the most up-to-date calendar listings.

special events January 26 Ceramic Annual 2002: 58th Scripps Ceramic Annual Opening Reception

7:00-9:00 p.m., Bixby Courtyard at the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery

February 7 Aaron McGruder Boondocks cartoonist

7:00 p.m., Hampton Dining Room Malott Commons 12 Intercollegiate Department of Black Studies Lecture Integrated Worlds: Race, Science, Community

Speaker: Dr. Gail Wyatt, Associate Director of the UCLA AIDS Institute at the UCLA Medical School, will present “Stolen Women: Our Sexual Legacy for the 21st Century” 11:00 a.m., Hampton Dining Room Malott Commons 13 Fine Arts Foundation Lecture and Tea

Speaker: Polly Roberts ’81, chief curator, UCLA Fowler Museum of Culture & History 1:30 p.m., Humanities Auditorium Clark Humanities Building 21 Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery Art Lecture

Janet Koplos, senior editor, Art in America, will give a presentation in conjunction with the 58th Scripps Ceramics Annual 7:30 p.m., Humanities Auditorium Clark Humanities Building

March 7 Intercollegiate Department of Black Studies Lecture

Speaker: Jack Travis, founder of JTA (Jack Travis Architect), Harlem, New York, will present “BArch: Degree of Difficulty” 7:00 p.m., Hampton Room Malott Commons

Top, Professor Andrew Aisenberg discusses the history of humanities at Scripps. Bottom, Professors Gayle Greene and Cheryl Walker present “How Our Work has Changed and Why.” Both events were part of the Blaine Faculty Lecture Series this fall.

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brad and mary anne blaine faculty lecture series Former history professor and current trustee Brad Blaine and his wife Mary Anne are underwriting a series of faculty lectures during the 75th anniversary year in order to “honor the outstanding Scripps faculty,” according to Professor Blaine. Below are the scheduled lectures through spring quarter 2002. All events are in the Hampton Room, Malott Commons.

December No lectures scheduled

11 Kathleen O’Brien Wicker, Mary W. Johnson and J. Stanley Professor in the Humanities and professor of religious studies Gold Coast Representations of Europeans and Euro-Africans

7:00 p.m. 14 Alan Hartley, Molly Mason Jones Professor of Psychology The Camel’s Nose: The Amazing Women Who Sneaked Social Science into the Scripps Tent Disguised as What Every Gentlewoman Needs to Know and How They Avoided Detection for Decades

Noon 18 Thomas P. Kim, assistant professor of politics Why Women Lead Asian American Politics

January 31 Gail Abrams, professor of dance The Dancer as Mother: Effects of Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Motherhood on the Dancer’s Life

Noon

February 4 Eric T. Haskell, professor of French and director of the Clark Humanities Museum Sites of Seduction: The French Garden and ‘Scripps College for Women Under Construction’

7:00 p.m. 7 David Lloyd, Hartley Burr Alexander Professor in the Humanities and director of the Humanities Institute The Role of the Humanities in the 21st Century

Noon

7:00 p.m. 21 Sara M. Adler, professor of Italian Strong Mothers, Strong Daughters: The Representation of Female Identity in the Writing of Vittoria Colonna

Noon 25 Gretchen Edwalds-Gilbert, assistant professor of biology Making Sense of the Human Genome

7:00 p.m. 28William C. Lengefeld, professor of music The Beat Goes On: Music of Kenya

Noon

March 4 Nancy Macko, professor of art Lessons from the Hive: Artists Who Work with Bees and Bee Media

7:00 p.m. 7 T. Kim-Trang Tran, assistant professor of media studies Amaurosis: A Portrait of Nguyen Duc Dat

Noon 11 David B. Claus, Robert B. Palmer Professor of Classical Studies Narcissus in Love: Reflections on a Literary Genealogy

7:00 p.m.


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