"Smuggler-Spies, Farmers and the State: Senegalese Black Markets in the Age
of Neoliberalism"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Donna Perry, Western Oregon Univ. Part of the Program in Agrarian Studies.
"Head Start and Child Welfare: Collaborating for Children"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Yale Center in Child Development and Social Policy talk by Patricia Doolan, director, Head Start; and Melita Joiner, supervisor, Dept. of Children and Families. Info.: (203) 432-9935.
"Milosevic in The Hague, The Politics
of War Crimes Tribunals"
12:30-2 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Human Rights Workshop with Gary Bass, Center of International Studies, Princeton Univ. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)
Master's Tea
2 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Arianna Huffington, author, "Pigs at the Trough, How Corporate Greed and Political Corruption are Undermining America."
"Pigs at the Trough, How Corporate
Greed and Political Corruption are Undermining America"
4 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Arianna Huffington, author, will discuss her book. Book signing after talk.
"The Voice as an Image:
On the Genesis of Roar, China!"
4 p.m. Rm. 200, Old Art Gallery, 56 High St. Tang Xiaobing, Univ. of Chicago.
"FDR: Deceit and Triumph"
5 p.m. Historical Library, SHM. Dr. Steven Belinkie. (The Beaumont Medical Club)
"Louis Kahn and Yale: The History of the Yale Art Gallery's Landmark Building and Polshek and Partners Renovation Design"
5:30 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall, YUAG. James Polshek. Reservations required: kathleen.derringer@yale.edu.
Saturday, Feb. 22
"Romantics and Revolutionaries:
Regency Portraits from the
National Portrait Gallery"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour.
Sunday, Feb. 23
Pre-concert Lecture
12:15 p.m. BAC. Charles Rosen, musician, scholar and writer will give a lecture on Romanticism. Concert will follow at 3:30 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 24
"War Is A Coward's Escape
from the Problems of Peace"
3:30 p.m. Lecture hall, SML. William Sloane Coffin, former Yale chaplain. Coincides with the current exhibition in the SML Memorabilia Rm., "'Give Peace a Chance': Selected Documents from the Antiwar and Disarmament Movements."
"Medicine and the Berkeley Cyclotron"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 401, HGS. Prof. John Heilbron. Part of the Program in the History of Medicine and Science.
Health Policy Seminar
4:30-6 p.m. ISPS. William Darity, Univ. of North Carolina.
"Law, Religion and Morality:
Are They Inseparable?"
6:10-7:40 p.m. Rm. 128, SLB. Father Richard John Neuhaus, editor-in-chief, First Things magazine; president, Institute for Religion and Public Life. (Yale Law Sch. Federalist Society)
"David Adler to Mies van der Rohe:
The Persistence of Classical Tendencies in Twentieth-Century Chicago Architecture"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Thomas H. Beeby. (Sch.of Architecture)
Tuesday, Feb. 25
"The Tobacco Industry Internal Documents: What They Are, How the Public Got Them, What They Tell Us, How to Search Them"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. S-216, CHMC. Norbert Hirschhorn. Info.: Jane Murray, (203) 974-7591 or jane.murray@yale.edu.
"Celebrating the Legacy
of Edward Bouchet"
Noon-1 p.m. Lecture Hall, SML. Prof. Curtis L. Patton. Part of the "Wake the Dream" program. Info.: (203) 432-1810; www.library.yale.edu/training/newdream00/Bouchet.html. (Library Human Resources)
"A Different Kind of Modern: Vanessa Bell's Interpretation of Domesticity"
12:30 p.m. BAC. Art in Context talk by Karen Go, Cambridge Univ.
"Classical Taste in American Furniture"
2 p.m. YUAG. Gallery Talk by Dennis Carr.
"Economic and Monetary Union:
The Role of the European Commission"
2:30 p.m. WHC. Yves-Thibault de Silguy, senior executive vice president, SUEZ; former member, European Commission for Economic and Monetary Affairs. Part of the "Managing the European Union: A View from the Inside" lecture series. (YCIAS/Council for European Studies/Program on European Uion Studies)
Master's Tea
2:30 p.m. Silliman College master's house. Poynter Fellow Margaret Carlson, columnist, Time
magazine.
Public Lecture
3:30 p.m. Location TBA. Hoover Brooks and Peter Howell. Info.: john.nolon@yale.edu
Working Research Group:
"Healthy Behaviors and Lifestyles"
4-6 p.m. ISPS. Topic TBA. Info. and reservations: Carol Pollard, (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"The Coming of Photography"
4-5 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Prof. Peter Brooks presents the seventh DeVane Lecture in the series "Visions of the Real."
"The World and America: Du Bois' Souls
of Black Folk One Hundred Years Later"
4 p.m. Rm. 119, McDougal Center. HGS. Prof. Paul Gilro will deliver the next "In the Company of Scholars" lecture. Reception will follow in the McDougal Center common rm.
"The Early Leo Strauss and the
Theologico-Political Conundrum"
4 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge, 82-90 Wall St. Michael Zank, Boston Univ. (Program in Judaic Studies)
"Impractical Worldly Benefits:
Traditional Religious Sites in the Modern Neighborhood of Akasaka, Tokyo"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Steven Heine, Florida International Univ.
"Healing: Gassner's Patients
and Their Reports"
4:30 p.m. Luce lecture hall. H.C. Erik Midelfort, Univ. of Virginia, presents the second Terry Lecture in the series "Exorcism and Enlightenment: Johann Joseph Gassner and the Demons of 18th-Century Germany."
"Terrorism, Technology and the
Changing Reality of Personal Privacy"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 127, SLB. Martha Barnett, Holland & Knight, LLP, will present the Preiskel-Silverman Lecture.
"Becket and the Aesthetics of Martyrdom"
5:30 p.m. BAC. Paul Binski, Univ. of Cambridge, will deliver the first of four Paul Mellon Lectures.
Wedesday, Feb. 26
"Designing to Care: Professional Researchers and Research Professionalism in the Global Health Scene"
Noon. Suite 1B, CIRA, 40 Temple St. Center for Interdisclipinary Research on AIDS Bioethics Workshop with Philip Alcabes, Hunter College Sch. of Health Sciences; and Prof. Ann Williams. Info. and reservations: shallini.kapoor@yale.edu.
"Life Under Pressure: Mortality and Living Standards in Europe and Asia, 1700-1900"
Noon. Rm. 211, HGS. James Lee, California Institute of Technology.
"Sustainable Forest Management in Canada: What Reality, What Fiction?"
Noon-1 p.m. Sage Lounge. Yale Forest Forum lunch with Peter Duinker, Dalhousie Univ.
Master's Tea
2-3 p.m. Silliman College master's house. Poynter Fellow Leslie Kaufman, reporter, The New York Times. (Poynter Fellowship in Journalism)
"A Critical Conversation
on Race and Society"
4-6 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. Prof. David Mayhew, Prof. Mary Ting Yi Lui and Prof. Gerald Jaynes. (African American Studies)
"Public Health Research in Russia: Challenges and Opportunities"
4-6 p.m. Rm. 208, WHC. Rita Lipson, Dr. Michael Merson, Prof. Robert Heimer and Prof. Kaveh Khoshnood. (Center for Interdisclipinary Research on AIDS)
"Two American National Security States: Comparing Eras of Assumed Difference"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 103, Luce Hall. International Security Studies colloquium with Anton Orlich.
"Common but Differentiated Responsibilities: The Case of the United Nations Framework Climate Convention"
5 p.m. Bowers Hall. Donald Goldberg, senior attorney, Center for International and Environmental Law.
"Self, Knowledge and Space: Informal Prose in Late Choson Korea"
6 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Postdoctoral lecture series with Jiwon Shin. Informal dinner at 5 p.m.
"Imagining War"
6:15 p.m. Peabody Museum. Prof. Jay Winter. Part of the O.C. Marsh Program. Fee: $10. Registration: (203) 432-5099.
Thursday, Feb. 27
"Romantics and Revolutionaries:
Regency Portraits from the National Portrait Gallery"
11 a.m. BAC. Gallery Talk tour.
Public Forum
11 a.m.-noon. BRBL. Howard Dodson, chief, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Refreshments will follow.
"Classical Taste in American Furniture"
Noon. YUAG. Dennis Carr.
"Documenting Mass Murder
in East Timor, 1975-1999"
2:30-4:20 p.m. ISPS. John Taylor, Rui Gomes and Aderito Soares. Part of the Genocide Studies Program "Genocide Today: Fieldwork and Analysis."
"The Idea of Outcome in Sociology"
4-5:30 p.m. Rm. 107, Williams Hall. Andrew Abbott. Info.: www.yale.edu/ccr. (Center for Comparative Research)
"The Traffic in Watches in Natsume Soseki's Gubijinso"
4 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Ken Ito, Univ. of Michigan. (Council on East Asian Studies)
Public Lecture
4 p.m. BRBL. Lecture on a 13th-century calendar in the Beinecke collections by J.P. Gumbert, Univ. of Leiden.
"Beyond the Pole: Jews and the Imperial University in Fin-de-Siecle, Russia"
4 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge, 82-90 Wall St. Benjamin Nathans, Univ. of Pennsylvania. (Program in Judaic Studies)
"New Threat to North American Hardwood Forests? The Potential Impact of Exotic Wood-Boring Insects on Forest Ecosystems and Forest-Based Economies"
4:30-6:30 p.m. Bowers Aud. Public forum.
"Catholicism and Human Rights"
4:30 p.m. St. Thomas More Catholic Chapel and Center. Mary Ann Glendon, Harvard Law Sch. Inaugural Judge Guido Calabresi Fellowship in Religion and Law.
"Architecture, Morality and Emancipation"
5:30 p.m. BAC. Paul Binski, Univ. of Cambridge, will deliver the second of four Paul Mellon Lectures.
"Violence and Adolescence"
5:30-7:15 p.m. ISPS. Dr. Dorothy Otnow Lewis, Dr. Lawrence Vitulano and Catherine Yeager, New York Univ. Sch. of Medicine, will speak to the working research group "Children Under Stress." Info. and reservations: Carol Pollard, (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"The Maya Murals of Bonampak:
Windows on an Ancient Culture"
5:30 p.m. Aud., Peabody Museum. Prof. Mary Miller. Free with museum admission: $5; $3 for children and seniors; free with valid Yale I.D. Info.: www.peabody.yale.edu.
"Syntactic Landscapes"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Peter Latz. (Sch. of Architecture)
"The European Moment
Between the Two World Wars"
7 p.m. Rm. 208, WHC. John Horne, Trinity College, Dublin. Part of the "When Was Europe?: A Series of Conversations with Europeans About European Identity" series. A reception will be held prior to the lecture. (Council on European Studies/WHC/Dept. of History)
Friday, Feb. 28
"New Threat to North American Hardwood Forests? Strategies for Increasing Awareness and Education Within the Forestry Community About the Potential Impact of Exotic Wood-Boring Insects
on Forest Ecosystems and Forest-Based Economies"
8:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Marsh Hall. Workshop. Registration: Page Bertelson, (203) 432-5117 or yff@yale.edu.
"Village Territories: The Delimitation
of Locality in Twentieth-Century Central Africa"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Achim von Oppen, Centre for Modern Oriental Studies, Berlin.
"The Role of the Juvenile Court
in the Child Welfare System"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Carmen L. Lopez, judge, Child Protection Session, Superior Court. Info.: (203) 432-9935.
"Determinants of Land-Use Change
in the United States, 1982-1997"
Noon-1 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Ruben Lubowski, natural resource economist, United States Dept. of Agriculture. Part of the "Natural Developments: Towards Certification of a Code" series.
Human Rights Workshop
12:30-2 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Molly Beutz, Minnesota Advocates for Human Rights, and Eric Friedman, Physicians for Human Rights. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)
Council on East Asian Studies Colloquium
4 p.m. Rm. 217A, HGS. Ayako Kano, Univ. of Pennsylvania.
Pre-Concert Conversation
7 p.m. Rm. 403, Leigh Hall, 435 College St. Conversation with Yale Philharmonia Orchestra conductor Peter Oundjian. Concert follows at 8 p.m in Woolsey Hall.
Saturday, March 1
"The Romantic Print
in the Age of Revolutions"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour.
Sunday, March 2
Catholic Faculty Series:
"Life as a Scholar and as a Believer"
6 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel Hall. Dinner discussion with Mary Tyrrell.

T H I S
W E E K ' S
S T O R I E S

New director of Equal Opportunity Office named


Former CIA head: In war, liberty and security can conflict


Students chosen for All-USA College Academic First Team


Adrienne Rich wins prestigious Bollingen Prize for poetry


Kannan has been appointed to Lanman chair


Activists urge students to join 'struggle' for social justice


Symposium to honor 'Yale's greatest scientist'


Symposium to explore rebuilding post-conflict states


MEDICAL CENTER NEWS

Journalists Carlson, Kaufman to be next Poynter Fellows


Lecture series offers inside perspective on 'Managing the European Union'


Celebrating Black History Month


Three-day conference explores the musical traditions of Greece


Biologist John Trinkaus, expert on cell migration, dies


Friends recall life of graduate student Tom Casey, who died in kayaking accident


Digging the snow


Norbert Hirschhorn honored for pediatric research


Organ student Paul Jacobs garners music award


Connecticut-based ensemble to perform in campus concert


Yale Books in Brief

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