Campus Announcements - Week of 10/01/01
Campus Announcements for the week of October 01, 2001
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1. BIOCHEMISTRY AND CELL BIOLOGY DEPARTMENTAL SEMINAR
2. Admissions Office Annual Open House - November 4
3. MAKE-UP ORIENTATION FOR NEW AND READMITTED INTERNATIONAL
STUDENTS
4. Wednesday, October 3: Faculty Lecture by Lorenzo Simpson,
Philosophy: "Alterity and its Discontents." 4:30 p.m. at HISB
5. Pop/Rock Group SUGAR RAY to Headline Stony Brook University's
Homecoming Week Concert on October 16, 2001
6. Marine Sciences Research Center-Friday Seminar Speaker
7. Kevin Noe is Guest Conductor for Symphony Orchestra Concert
Saturday, 8 pm, October 6, at Staller Center
8. New Faculty Reception
9. "Light from Darkness" Baroque Sundays at Three Concert -
Sunday, Oct. 7, 3pm, Recital Hall, Staller Center
10. University Association Ballroom & Swing Dance Club
11. Wednesday 10/3: Jill Bennet "Face to Face
Encounters: Testimonial Imagery and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission." 2pm, HISB
12. CELT Work on Monday, October 8th titled: Top Ten Techniques
for Implementing a Quality Learning Environment
13. Graduateand Professional School Fair
14. Join us at the Stony Brook Distinguished Alumni Awards Dinner
15. Teaching with Technology Workshops for Faculty, Staff, and
Graduate Teaching Assistants - Blackboard & more!
16. Prelude to a Kiss
17. 2nd Annual Careers In The Bioscience Industry Seminar
Series.- Careers in Law and Technology Licensing.
18. An Open World of Physics: Symposium Sunday 7 October 2001
19. Symposium and memorial service in honor of Dr. Thomas
F. Irvine, Jr.
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1. BIOCHEMISTRY AND CELL BIOLOGY DEPARTMENTAL SEMINAR
SPEAKER: Dr. R. John Collier, Dept. of Microbiology &
Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School
DATE: Thursday, October 11, 2001
TIME: 4:OO P.M.
LOCATION: Life Sciences Bldg., Room 434 (*please note new
location)
HOST: Dr. Erwin London
For additional information, please call 2/8550.
Submitted by: Diane Rodriguez/CAS
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2. Admissions Office Annual Open House - November 4
The Office of Undergraduate Admissions will be holding its annual
Open House on Sunday, November 4, 2001. Last year, over 4000
prospective students and their parents attended. Registration
will begin at 10:00 a.m. in the Atrium of the Sports Complex.
If you would like further information about participating in this
important University event, please contact Jackie Andriani at
2-6859 or via lotus notes.
Submitted by: Valerie Regan/Prov
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3. MAKE-UP ORIENTATION FOR NEW AND READMITTED INTERNATIONAL
STUDENTS
The make-up orientation for new and readmited international
students who missed the mandatory orientations will be held on
Wednesday, October 3, in the Student Activities Center (SAC),
Room 306. The Health Insurance session begins at 1:00 and the
Immigration session is scheduled to begin at 2:00 and end at
3:00. You may contact International Services at 632-4685 for
further information.
Submitted by: Rose Cohen-Brown/Grad
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4. Wednesday, October 3: Faculty Lecture by Lorenzo Simpson,
Philosophy: "Alterity and its Discontents." 4:30 p.m. at HISB
This lecture will interrogate the now seemingly unquestioned
opposition between humanism and the promise it holds for mutual
understanding and dialogue, on the one hand, and the implications
of our acknowledgment of difference and alterity, on the other.
By deploying an account of ?situated metalanguages?--or
frameworks for accommodating dialogue across sites of
difference--the talk will argue that this unquestioned opposition
is a false one. In doing so--and in response to postmodernist
social theorists such as Iris Marion Young-- it proposes a
postmetaphysical humanism that is fully at home on the terrain of
social and cultural difference.
Lorenzo Simpson is Professor of Philosophy at the State
University of New York at Stony Brook and has held fellowships
from the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the
Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
http://www.sunysb.edu/humanities/index.html
Submitted by: Deborah Gilbert/GST
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5. Pop/Rock Group SUGAR RAY to Headline Stony Brook University's
Homecoming Week Concert on October 16, 2001
Pop/Rock group SUGAR RAY will headline Stony Brook University's
Homecoming Week Concert on Tuesday, October 16th at 7:30PM at the
Sports Complex Arena.
Tickets for the SUGAR RAY concert are $20 for SBU students and
$30 for the public and are available at all Ticketmaster outlets,
Ticketmaster.com and the Student Activities Center Box Office.
The Southern California quintet SUGAR RAY is best known for the
classic radio hits "Fly", "Every Morning", "Someday" and "When
It's Over". Their performance is presented by the SBU Concert
Committee, Student Polity Association and the Alumni
Association. For more information, call 631-632-6464.
Contact:
Norm Prusslin
SBU Concert Committee
631-632-6820
nprusslin@notes.cc.sunysb.edu
(Thank you in advance for your help in publicizing this concert
event/NP)
Submitted by: Persephone Dacosta/GST
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6. Marine Sciences Research Center-Friday Seminar Speaker
Marine Sciences Research Center will host seminar speaker Dr.
Neal Blair of North Carolina State University this coming October
5th.. Their topic will be "Tracking organic carbon from source to
sink in the Eel River sedimentary system." The seminar will be
held in Endeavour Hall, room 120 at 12:30 P.M. Refreshments will
be served at 12:15P.M. We hope you will be able to attend.
Submitted by: Patricia Corn/MSRC
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7. Kevin Noe is Guest Conductor for Symphony Orchestra Concert
Saturday, 8 pm, October 6, at Staller Center
Kevin Noe, guest conductor, is currently Artistic and Music
Director of the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble and Director of
Orchestras at the University of Texas at Austin. Mr. Noe's prior
conducting appointments include: the Duquesne Symphony Orchestra,
the National Repertory Orchestra in Colorado, the Camapanile
Orchestra in Texas, the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, and the
Tanglewood Festival Orchestra.
Saturday's concert includes Michael Torke's "Javelin"; Keiko
Abe's"Prism Rhapsody" featuring Concerto Competition winner and
percussionist I-Ju Chang. Concluding the evening is Mahler's
"Symphony No. 4". Free pre-concert lecture given by Mark Lederway
at 7 pm in Recital Hall. Tickets available at Staller Center Box
Office: 632-ARTS. ($16 general admission. Students, seniors, USB
faculty & staff: $8). For a free concert brochure, call:
632-7330.
http://www.sunysb.edu/music
Submitted by: Robin Pouler-Mcgrath/CAS
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8. New Faculty Reception
If you are a faculty member new to Stony Brook, please join us on
Wednesday, October 24, from 12 to 2p.m., to meet the Vice
President of Research, the Vice President for Advancement and
Executive Director of the Stony Brook Foundation, and the
directors of the offices reporting to the Vice President for
Research. These offices manage key functions of sponsored
research support, from the initiation of the proposal through to
the final expenditure on the award, as well as the disclosure or
licensing of inventions and fostering of industry collaboration
and new enterprise development. If you plan to pursue sponsored
research activity, particularly if it may involve human or animal
subjects, we especially urge you to attend and meet the folks who
will be facilitating your endeavors. A light lunch will be
served. For more information please call Kris Duryea at 2-9347 or
email kduryea@notes.cc.sunysb.edu.
http://www.research.sunysb.edu/research/ovpr.html
Submitted by: Kristina Duryea/Res
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9. "Light from Darkness" Baroque Sundays at Three Concert -
Sunday, Oct. 7, 3pm, Recital Hall, Staller Center
The Ivory Consort from New York, will present a concert of
medieval music from Spain, France, England and Italy. Featured
artists Margot Grib and Jay Elfenbein will transport us back 800
years to a simpler age where beautiful, haunting music filled
large Gothic cathedrals and rhythmic pulsating dances made
hard-working lives easier to bear. Featured composers include
Guillaume de Machaut and Hildegard von Bingen. Along with music
for voice, the two artists will perform on a variety of rare and
fascinating instruments such as the vielle - a type of medieval
violin, vihuela - an ancient Spanish guitar, psaltery - a
strummed plucked instrument that was the predecessor of the
harpsichord and different types of percussion instruments
Admission is free and donations are appreciated. For
upcoming concerts, visit: www.sunysb.edu/music.
http://www.sunysb.edu/music
.
Submitted by: Robin Pouler-Mcgrath/CAS
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10. University Association Ballroom & Swing Dance Club
The UA Ballroom Dance Club is offering dance lessons in Beginner
Cha-Cha and Intermediate Waltz starting Monday, Oct 8. Starting
on Wednesday, Oct 10, we will be teaching Beginner Swing,
Intermediate Tango and Advanced Cha-Cha. Each lesson is 1-hour
long, once per week, for 4 weeks. They are given at the Student
Union Ballroom and no partner is necessary. Each 4-week dance
lesson is $20/pp.
For more information, please contact: Victor Poon at
vipoon@ams.sunysb.edu or call 631-632-8170 Lin-Shu Wang at
lshuwang@notes.cc.sunysb.edu or call 631-632-8342
Submitted by: Victor Poon/CEAS
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11. Wednesday 10/3: Jill Bennet "Face to Face
Encounters: Testimonial Imagery and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission." 2pm, HISB
This lecture will explore theoretical issues concerning the
performance of testimony (focusing on the manifestation of grief
and remorse) through an analysis of the animation of William
Kentridge and the play, Ubu and the Truth Commission, a
multi-media performance developed as a response to South Africa's
Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It will also discuss a
recent film dealing with the TRC, Long Night's Journey into Day,
analyzing the use of different media in the production of affect
and empathy.
Jill Bennett is a Senior Lecturer in Art Theory at the University
of New South Wales, Sydney. She is currently writing a book on
trauma, conflict and contemporary art and in 1998/9 curated an
exhibition on this theme in Sydney and in Graz. She has published
widely on theories of trauma, affect and sensation in relation to
visual and performance art.
http://sunysb.edu/humanities/index.html
Submitted by: Deborah Gilbert/GST
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12. CELT Work on Monday, October 8th titled: Top Ten Techniques
for Implementing a Quality Learning Environment
Dan Apple from Pacific Crest will continue this workshop theme on
October 8th from 2:00 - 3:30 at CELT, Melville Library room
E1337.
For detailed information and to register please go to
www.celt.sunysb.edu.
Submitted by: Rita Reagan-Redko/Prov
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13. Graduateand Professional School Fair
FRIDAY OCT 5
GRADUATE & PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL FAIR - SAC LOBBY - 11:00am -
2:00pm
Thirty nine graduate schools are sending representatives to Stony
Brook to talk with you about graduate programs and admissions
requirements, distribute viewbooks and give-aways, and answer
your questions about the application process. Among them are
prestigious programs in medicine health care, business,
education, law and liberal arts.
For more information: www.sunysb.edu/career - sponsored by the
Career Center
http://www.sunysb.edu/career
Submitted by: Elena Polenova/OSA
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14. Join us at the Stony Brook Distinguished Alumni Awards Dinner
On Friday, October 19th, we will be celebrating the achievements
of a number of our esteemed graduates as part of this year?s
homecoming celebrations. This elegant event will be held during
the evening at in the Student Activity Center. At least four
distinguished awards will be presented to our esteemed graduates.
These accomplished individuals represent a cross-section by
degree awarded and of the varied academic programs on campus.
One special award, in memory of Hugh Cleland, will be presented
to an outstanding professor.
Please call the William and Jane Knapp Alumni Center at 632-6330
to purchase tickets for this event. They are $75, individually or
in tables of eight. In the mean time we ask that you join with us
in the celebration of the accomplishments of all our alumni and
in commemoration of those of whom we have lost on September 11.
http://www.stonybrook.edu/communicatio/Homecoming
Submitted by: William Dethlefs/HSC
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15. Teaching with Technology Workshops for Faculty, Staff, and
Graduate Teaching Assistants - Blackboard & more!
The Department of Instructional Computing will be offering
various workshops this Fall regarding the use of technology in
the Classroom.
Blackboard workshops scheduled for October so far are: 10/2 -
Tuesday, 11:20 -12:20 pm - Keeping Grades in Blackboard 10/10
Wednesday 3:20-4:15 - Discussion Board in Blackboard - Keeping
your Class talking outside the classroom 10/31 Wednesday,
10:30-11:25 - Blackboard Beyond the Basics: Communication Tools
In addition:
10/15 - Monday, 10:30-11:25pm - What is a PDF file & how do I
make one?
10/23 - Tuesday 2:20-3:40pm - Scanning Images for your Class
For more information on workshops (and to sign up) click on the
following URL.
http://www.sinc.sunysb.edu/Ic/Classes/
Submitted by: Diana Voss/DoIT
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16. Prelude to a Kiss
They want you to believe that anyting can happen, and they are
right! Stony Brook Stages presents Craig Lucas' acclaimed play,
Prelude to a Kiss, October 4-7 and 11-14 at Theatre Two of
Staller Center for the Arts. Show times are 8 pm on
Thursday-Saturday and 2 pm Sunday. Tickets are $10/general
admission; $8 faculty/staff; and $6/students and seniors.
Special group rates are available. Tickets can be purchased
through Staller Center Box Office at 631/632-ARTS. For further
information or to arrange for disability-related accommodations,
please contact the Department of Theatre Arts at 631/632-7300.
Submitted by: Augusta Kuhn/CAS
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17. 2nd Annual Careers In The Bioscience Industry Seminar
Series.- Careers in Law and Technology Licensing.
The Center for Biotechnology is proud to present the 2nd Annual
Careers in the Bioscience Industry seminar series. The first
seminar- Careers in Law and Technology Licensing. Wednesday,
October 10th, 2001. 9 am -11am. Alliance Room. Guest speakers ?
Mark J. Cohen, Attorney, Scully Scott Murphy and Presser and
Barbara Sawitsky, Director, Business Development, OSI
Pharmaceuticals Inc. Hear these distinguished speakers speak on
the ever increasing need for highly skilled life sciences
graduates in intellectual property, patent law and corporate and
academic technology licensing. Complete details on the seminar
series can be found on
http://www.biotech.sunysb.edu/news.html#seminar
Submitted by: Angeline Judex
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18. An Open World of Physics: Symposium Sunday 7 October 2001
AN OPEN WORLD OF PHYSICS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2001
HARRIMAN HALL, SUNY STONY BROOK: PROGRAM
8:30 - 9:00 Pastry and Bagels
9:10-10:05 Maurice Goldhaber (BNL)
A Closer Look at the Elementary Fermions
10:05-11:00 Michael Nieto (Los Alamos)
Pioneer 10: From the Mass of the Photon to the Acceleration
Anomaly
11:30-12:25 Wit Busza (MIT)
Colliding Nuclei at Ultra-relativistic Velocities
12:30-2:00 Lunch
2:05-3:00 Jainendra Jain (Penn State)
The Story of Fractional Charge in the Fractional Quantum Hall
Effect
3:00-3:55 David Goldhaber-Gordon (Stanford)
Interference and Spin in Quantum Dots
4:25-5:20 Alan Guth (MIT)
Inflation and the Accelerating Universe
6:00 Dinner (Student Activities Center)
http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/~sterman/OWP.html
Submitted by: Alfred Goldhaber/CAS
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19. Symposium and memorial service in honor of Dr. Thomas
F. Irvine, Jr.
On Saturday, November 17th from 10AM-7:30PM, the Department of
Mechanical Engineering will host a symposium and memorial service
in honor of the Founding Dean of the College of Engineering and
Applied Sciences, Dr. Thomas F. Irvine, Jr. who passed away in
June. The symposium will be held in the Health Sciences Center,
lecture hall 1 level 2. Some participants may choose to
participate only in the Memorial Service which will be held in
the afternoon.
The symposium will feature presentations in Thermal/Fluid
Sciences and we are accepting abstracts of up to two pages on
this topic.
Pre-registration is requested. Further details are available on
the Mechanical Engineering Web site:
http://me.eng.sunysb.edu
or
by calling my assistant, Ann Berrios at 632 8300.
Sincerely,
Fu-Pen Chiang, Ph.D.
Leading Professor and Chair
Submitted by: Fu-Pen Chiang
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