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Periodically
Home Pages, the newspaper for IU faculty and staff,
brings you audio interviews with notable commentators from
around the world.
- ET, are you there?
- March
2004
UFO sightings, moon walks, Mars roving, perhaps even, alien-inspired
prehistoric art, fascinate, inspire and fuel our sense of
wonder about the possibilities of intelligent civilation
on other worlds. Jill Tarter, research director of
the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute (SETI)
was the Konopinski Memorial Lecturer in Physics this month
at IU Bloomington. Listen to her conversation with colleague
Caty Pilachowski, the inaugural Kirkwood Chair of
atronomy at IU.
- Winona
LaDuke
- January
2004
Winona LaDuke, program director for Honor the Earth,
is perhaps best known for her run on the Green Party ticket
as the vice presidential choice of Ralph Nader in the hotly
contested 2000 election. LaDuke was a visitor to the IPFW
campus as a speaker for Fort Wayne’s prestigious Omnibus
Lecture Series. She discusses politics, the environment
and her activism in the Native American community with IU
radio producer Dave Fleming
- Giovanni,
poetry, Mars and man
- December
2003
IU Kokomo English instructor Carla Farmer Stouse
converses with her friend, the poet Nikki Giovanni,
who talks about her "zoo project"-- a personal
study undertaken while undergoing cancer treatment--of man’s
role in the ecosystem called Earth and in the universe.
Giovanni’s project has included tours of zoos and
preserves and a scholarly assessment of Charles Darwin’s
Origin of Species. Her questions: Are humans not the "dinosaurs
of today?" How do humans conduct their lives, get along
with other life forms and share living space? What role
does "luck" play in species survival? Giovanni
also discusses her current book projects, her passionate
belief that man must travel to Mars before 2020 and her
plans to travel the world by ship in 2006.
- A
marriage of two civilizations
- October
2003
How
can Western norms and Muslim values be balanced? That’s
the question addressed by IU Professor Nazif Shahrani,
director of the Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies Program
at IU Bloomington, and Professor Ali Mazrui, director
of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at the State
University of New York, Binghamton. The two held a topical
conversation during a recent meeting of the Association
of Muslim Social Scientists, held on the IU Bloomington
campus. You will hear first the voice of Professor Shahrani.
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- Lee
Hamilton speaks on America's foreign policy
- March,
2003
Lee Hamilton, a congressional expert on foreign affairs,
discussed the burdens and opportunities that come to this
country as a result of its “superpower” status. He currently
directs the IU Center on Congress at IU Bloomington and
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington,
D.C.
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- Sex
and the Feminist Revolution
- February,
2003
Gloria Steinem was a visitor on the IU East, the
IU South Bend and the IU Bloomington campuses this semester.
If you werent able to hear her speak, tune in to this
audiostream, recorded Feb. 6 on the Bloomington campus.
Steinem gave the keynote address Sex and the Feminist
Revolution in conjunction with the 50th anniversary
of the publication of Alfred Kinseys research on female
sexuality. Answers to questions from the audience may be
heard at the end of her address.
- 'Eco-warrior'
Robert F Kennedy Jr.
- October
2002
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has become known as an eco-warrior
in some circles for the work he has done in successfully
prosecuting governments and companies for pollution of the
Hudson River and the Long Island Sound. Prosecuting attorney
for the watchdog environmental group Hudson Riverkeeper
Inc., Kennedy recently visited the IPFW campus as part of
its Omnibus Lecture Series. While in Fort Wayne, he spoke
with Jennifer Bosk, director of alumni relations
at IPFW.
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- Oscar
Arias on moral leadership and the prospects for global peace
- September
2002
As part of the Patten Foundation Lectures, Nobel laureate
Oscar Arias talks to Scott Sanders, distinguished
professor of English about moral and ethical leadership.
Arias, the former president of Costa Rica who in 1987 negotiated
a peace plan for an unstable Central America, says the motto
of his political career goes like this: “Tell people what
they need to know, not what they want to hear.”
- Wells
meets Shostakovich
- Historical
conversation
In conjunction with the Herman B Wells 100th birthday
celebration, to be held June 7 at the Wells Plaza in Bloomington,
IU Home Pages presents a 12-minute audiostreamed
interview with Wells that was recorded in 1990 and recalls
his trip to Moscow 40 years earlier when he met composer
Dmitri Shostakovich.
- Nature
vs. nurture: the talk in birdtown
- April
2002
- For most
people, the chirping of birds is the language of springtime.
For us, bird song hints of unfolding leaves, blooming gardens,
whispering breezes. But what are these chatty birds really
gossiping about? Well, its not necessarily that poetic.IUs
Meredith West is professor of psychology and biology,
and along with her post-doctoral student, Dave White,
she tells us all about what those birds are really saying.
West studies bird language and behavior at her aviaries
just north of Bloomington. Much of her work has focused
on starlings and their mimicry abilities, and the behavior
of cowbirds, whose parents employ a sort of nanny system.
That is, they lay their eggs in the nests of other birds
species to be hatched and raised. So the question here is,
how do they know theyre cowbirds?
- A
pow wow in Bloomington
- March
2002
- Charlie
Nelms, vice president for student development and diversity
at Indiana University, and Wesley Thomas, an IU Bloomington
anthropologist and organizer of the campus’ inaugural pow
wow, scheduled March 28-30, discuss the event and its importance
to highlighting the history, culture and arts of American
Indian tribes across the country.
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- John
Updike
- February
2002
- Author
John Updike has created some of American literature's
most memorable antiheroes, so wouldn't you love to know
who his heroes are today? Find out in this interview between
Updike and IPFW's Lidan Lin, assistant professor
of literature.
- A
visit with Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee
- January
2002
- What
roles would they have loved to play? How do young African
American actors get started in the business today? Is the
notion of a Black National Theatre practical or even feasible?
These are just a few of the questions John McCluskey
Jr., professor of Afro-American Studies and English
at IU Bloomington, asked award-winning actors and civil
rights activists Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee.
- War
and remembrance
- December
2001
- At
one time, public memorials were built in a grand classical
style well after the event or person intended to be commemorated
had passed into history. In the wake of 9/11, discussion
of public memorial has developed a new immediacy. New
York Times chief art critic Michael Kimmelman
talks about recent memorial art: Rachel Whitebread's Holocaust
monument in Vienna, Maya Lin's design for the National Vietnam
Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., and the Oklahoma
City National Memorial in a conversation with Betsy Stiratt,
director of the IU School of Fine Arts Gallery in Bloomington.
Kimmelman was IU's inaugural Dorit and Gerald Paul lecturer
in Jewish culture and arts.
- When
bad things happen to good people
- October
2001
- Rabbi
Harold S. Kushner discusses the content of his books,
When Bad Things Happen to Good People, and Living
a Life That Matters, in a conversation with Kathleen
Gilbert, a faculty member in the IU Bloomington Department
of Applied Health Science and a researcher on the subject
of bereavement. Kushner was a speaker at the Polis Center-sponsored
Spirit & Place Festival in Indianapolis in November 2001.
The sound of silence...
- April
2001
Marcel Marceau, the world-famous French mime, discusses
his unique art form in an interview with IUB anthropology
professor Anya Royce. Marceau, a legend in his field,
was on the IUB campus in April for two public lectures and
class visits arranged through the Department of Theatre
and Drama as part of the Ralph L. Collins Memorial Lecture
series.
- Wendy
Wasserstein
- March
2001
- IPFW's
Susan Domer in conversation with playwright Wendy
Wasserstein as she reminisces about her life in the
theater. Wasserstein first gained fame in 1978 with her
off-Broadway "Uncommon Women and Others," a saga of her
years at Mount Holyoke College in the late '60s. The play
would propel the early careers of Swoozie Kurtz, Meryl Streep,
Glenn Close and Jill Eikenberry. Wasserstein discusses her
Seven Sisters' years, her "voice" as a writer and her new
book of essays to be published this spring. She appeared
recently at an IPFW Omnibus Lecture.
- If
music be the food of love...
- February
2001
- The Beatles
have been a staple of the young and young at heart for more
than 40 years, and a new album, The Beatles 1, with an associated
interactive Web site, indicate that all things old are new
again. Rock fan Jonathan Plucker, who teaches learning,
cognition and instruction at the IU School of Education
and is a recent recipient of a Mensa Education and Research
Foundation prize for research related to human intelligence,
chats with rock historian Glenn Gass.
Gass, who is a composer, wrote the textbook A History of
Rock Music and originated the nation's first for-credit
history of rock 'n roll class at the IU School of Music.
How does pop music have the power to convey emotion, express
the inexplicable and defy time? Listen to this conversational
duet and find out.
- Anxiety
is your friend! Oh, really?
- December
2000
- Bernardo
Carducci, director of the Shyness Institute at IU Southeast,
and Kathleen Gilbert, associate professor of applied
health science at IU Bloomington, talk about shyness, the
art of "small talk" and coping skills for that demanding
social circuit called "the holidays."
- A
conversation with musician Ray Charles
- November
2000
- Remember
Ray Charles at the piano as the opening credits ran
for the TV sit-com Designing Women? It's a musical moment
on Charles' mind, too. He can't go anywhere in the world
without playing his rendition of IU alumnus Hoagy Carmichael's
Georgia On My Mind. IU broadcast producer Byron Smith
interviews Charles, who appeared in concert on the IU Bloomington
campus Oct. 27.
- Deciding
how to vote
- October
2000
- Why do Americans
vote the way they do? Some reasons may surprise you. Join
IU historian James Madison as he interviews political
scientist Bob Huckfeldt, IU Endowed Professor of
human studies. Huckfeldt has been involved in a number of
national and cross-national studies evaluating the ways
in which citizens process political information in a democracy.
- A
conversation with South African dramatist Athol Fugard
- September
2000
- Bruce
Burgun of the IUB Department of Theatre and Drama discusses
the art and practice of theater in the 21st century with
distinguished South African playwright, director and actor
Athol Fugard who served as the IU Class of 1963 Wells
Scholar Professor. The Fugard papers are housed at IU's
Lilly Library.
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