|
March 12, 1999
This calendar lists selected Purdue events during the next four weeks. Events are
free and open to the public, except where noted, and all are open to news media coverage.
New or updated listings have two asterisks (**).
All events in this calendar, plus many others, are listed in Purdue's on-line calendar
EVENTS
Tuesday-Wednesday, March 23-24. 85th Annual Purdue Road School. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Stewart Center. More than 1,200 people, from street commissioners to mayors to highway
engineers, will explore ways to make Indiana's roads and highways more reliable,
enjoyable and efficient. Free and open to the public. Attendees may register in Stewart
Center beginning at 7:30 a.m. the first day.
Tuesday, March 30. Lecture and dinner with Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, presented by
Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne. Lecture at 7 p.m., dinner at 8 p.m.
Allen County War Memorial Coliseum. Speech topic is "Leadership: From the War Room
to the Board Room." Tickets are $25 per person for the speech only, $75 for the speech
and dinner. For reservations, call (219) 481-4101.
** Wednesday, April 7. Annual women's basketball awards banquet, sponsored by the
Lafayette Lions Club. 6:30 p.m. Purdue Memorial Union Ballrooms. Tickets are $20
at the Purdue Athletic Ticket Office, (765) 494-3194 or (800) 497-7678. Event will
be broadcast live on BTVLive!, which airs on channel 18 of University Residences Television
Antenna System.
** Saturday, April 10. The 11th annual National Rube Goldberg Machine Contest. 11
a.m. Elliott Hall of Music. Teams of students from colleges and universities across
the nation build machines that use at least 20 steps to tee up a standard golf ball.
The contest, sponsored by the Purdue chapter of Theta Tau, is free and open to the public.
Saturday, April 17. Expanding Your Horizons in Science and Mathematics, a career
conference for girls in grades 6-9. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Wetherill Laboratory of Chemistry.
Registration limited to 350 participants; deadline is March 31.
Cost of $15 includes conference materials, lunch and a T-shirt. There will be workshops
about 14 career fields, from animal health science to sports and fitness, from business
and finance to physical sciences. Information and registration materials available from Kathy Hyman, (765) 494-2758 or (800) 359-2968, Ext. 92H; kfhyman@cea.purdue.edu
ENTERTAINMENT
Monday, March 22. Trip to Fort Wayne lecture by Spike Lee. Bus leaves the Black Cultural
Center at 3:30 p.m. for a trip to the Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne
campus for "An Evening With Spike Lee." The film producer, writer and director will lecture at 7:30 p.m. at the Gates Sports Center. The lecture is free, but the
bus trip will cost $5 per person. Registration deadline is March 15; call the BCC
at (765) 494-3091. Part of the BCC Cultural Arts Series.
Wednesday, March 24. Free Purdue Bell Choir Spring Concert. 7 p.m. University Church,
320 North St., West Lafayette.
Wednesday, March 24. "The Odyssey," Aquila Theater Company of London. 8 p.m. Loeb
Playhouse. Tickets are $19 for the public, $13 for Purdue students, at campus box
offices or by phone at (765) 494-3933 or (800) 914-SHOW. Artistic director and classics
scholar Peter Meineck will present an "Informance" at 7 p.m. in Room 212, Stewart Center.
(It originally was scheduled to be a post-performance discussion.) Part of Purdue
Convocations' Patron's Choice series.
Thursday, March 25. Poetry reading by Sporty King. 7 p.m. Stewart Center, Room 206.
This Chicago poet will take a look at self-esteem with a free poetry reading of his
original works entitled "Spoetry: Life ... love ... and laughter." Part of the Black
Cultural Center Cultural Arts Series.
Friday, March 26. Haraka Fest: "Image-nation." 7 p.m. Matthews Hall, Room 210. The
Black Cultural Center's Haraka Writers will read original poetry and discuss the
image of African-Americans in the new millennium. Free event is part of the BCC Cultural
Arts Series.
Friday, March 26. Jazz Bands free concert. 8 p.m. Loeb Playhouse, Stewart Center.
Saturday, March 27. Glee Club/Black Voices of Inspiration Concert. 7:30 p.m. Northrop
High School, Fort Wayne. The Black Voices of Inspiration from the Black Cultural
Center join Purdue Musical Organizations' Glee Club in this preview of the "Voices
of America" show the two groups will take on an 18-day tour of Australia, New Zealand
and Fiji in May and June. Tickets are $8 at the door.
** Saturday, March 27. Ray Drummond's All-Star Excursion Band. 8 p.m. Loeb Playhouse,
Stewart Center. Tickets are $22 for the public, $15 for Purdue students, at campus
box offices or by phone at (765) 494-3933 or (800) 914-SHOW. Part of Purdue Convocations' Jazz Set Series.
Sunday, March 28. University Choir, free concert. 8:30 a.m. Evangelical Covenant
Church , 3600 S. Ninth St., Lafayette.
Sunday, March 28. Cinema Now: "The Truce." 7:30 p.m. Fowler Hall, Stewart Center.
Tickets are $4 for faculty and staff, $3 for Purdue students. Presented by Purdue
Convocations.
Wednesday, March 31. 8 p.m. Glee Club All Campus Serenade. Purdue Memorial Union
Ballrooms. The Black Voices of Inspiration from the Black Cultural Center join Purdue
Musical Organizations' Glee Club in this free preview concert of the "Voices of America" show the two groups will take on an 18-day tour of Australia, New Zealand and Fiji
in May and June.
Thursday, April 1. Panel discussion about the novels of Toni Morrison. 6 p.m. Black
Cultural Center. A group of graduate students will discuss the "Creative Production
of Toni Morrison: Preservation of African-American Culture and History." BCC Librarian Dorothy Ann Washington also will discuss the Afro-centric approach to literary criticism.
Part of the BCC Cultural Arts Series.
Saturday, April 3. The Black Voices of Inspiration spring concert, "A Tribute to
Motown." 7 p.m. Loeb Playhouse, Stewart Center. Tickets are $5 for students, $7 for
the public, available at the Loeb Box Office, (765) 494-3933. This presentation by
the Black Cultural Center performing arts ensemble is part of the BCC Cultural Arts Series.
** Wednesday, April 7. Purdue Musical Organizations' University Choir free concert.
8 p.m. University Church, 320 North St., West Lafayette.
** Wednesday, April 7. Violinist Joshua Bell. 8 p.m. Loeb Playhouse, Stewart Center.
Tickets are $23 for the public, $13 for Purdue students, at campus box offices or
by phone at (765) 494-3933 or (800) 914-SHOW. Part of Purdue Convocations' Loeb Music
Collection Series.
** Thursday, April 8. Arlo Guthrie concert. 8 p.m. Loeb Playhouse, Stewart Center.
Tickets are $20 for the public, $15 for Purdue students, at campus box offices, (765)
494-3933 or (800) 914-SHOW. Presented by Purdue Convocations.
** Sunday, April 11. Purdue Musical Organizations' Bell Choir free concert. 10:45
a.m. Bethany Presbyterian Church, 3305 Longlois Drive, Lafayette.
** Sunday, April 11. Windworks II free concert. 2:30 p.m. Long Center, 111 N. Sixth
St., Lafayette. The Varsity, Collegiate and University Concert Bands join for a special
performance of concert band music.
** Sunday, April 11. Voices of Native America, celebrating the music, dance and
culture of Native America. 3 p.m. Elliott Hall of Music. Tickets are $16 for the
public, $11 for Purdue students, at campus box offices or by phone at (765) 494-3933
or (800) 914-SHOW. Part of Purdue Convocations' Patron's Choice Series.
** Sunday, April 11. New Directional Players spring production. 3 p.m. Fowler Hall,
Stewart Center. This play by the Black Cultural Center performing arts ensemble will
showcase the contributions of young African-American men and women. Tickets are $5
for students, $7 for the public, and may be purchased the afternoon of the show at the
Loeb Box Office. Part of the BCC Cultural Arts Series.
LECTURES
Monday, March 22. A discussion on gender and the movement for self-determination
for indigenous peoples in Bolivia. 4:30-7 p.m. Room 114, Stanley Coulter Hall. Discussion
leader will be Maria Eugenia Choque Quispe, an Aymara Indian from La Paz, Bolivia,
who is a fellow in the Department of Native American Studies at the University of
California-Davis. The discussion, conducted in conjunction with a seminar on Latin
American Feminisms, will be in Spanish only. Part of the Purdue celebration of Women's
History Month.
Tuesday, March 23. A Women's History Month open discussion on feminist pedagogy incorporating
students, staff and faculty. Noon. Room 112, Purdue Memorial Union. Bring your own
lunch.
Wednesday, March 24. Jewish Studies Noon Lecture and Discussion Series. 12:30 p.m.
Anniversary Drawing Room, Purdue Memorial Union. Speaker: William R. Shaffer, Purdue
professor of political science and associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts.
Topic: "Norwegian Egalitarianism and the Rights of Jewish Citizens"
Wednesday, March 24. Women's History Month brown-bag discussion. 12:30 p.m. Stone
Cellar (Room B2) Stone Hall. Topic: "Women Artists of the American West: An Internet
Course and Online Visual Art Archive." Speaker: Susan Ressler, Purdue professor of
visual and performing arts. Bring your own lunch.
Wednesday, March 24. Conversations About Teaching. 3:30 p.m. East and West Faculty
Lounges, Purdue Memorial Union. Speaker: Jay Akridge, professor of agricultural economics
who has led workshops in Central and Eastern Europe and South America on agribusiness management education and who is in charge of Purdue's new executive MBA in agribusiness
program. Sponsored by the Office of the Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs
so that award-winning Purdue faculty can share their creative approaches to teaching.
Wednesday, March 24. Women's History Month presentation. 4 p.m. Krannert Building
Auditorium. Speaker: Playwright and director Joanne Pottlitzer. Topic: "Turning -'s
into +'s: Women and Change, Metaphor and Democracy in Chile: 1973-1990." Presentation
will include slides, videos and music.
Thursday, March 25. Philosophy Colloquium Series. 4:30 p.m. Room 117, University
Hall. Speaker: Robert Gooding-Williams from Northwestern University. Topic: "Between
the Masses and the Folk: Du Bois, Culture, and Political Leadership."
Friday, March 26. Krannert Executive Forum. 11:30 a.m. Krannert Building Auditorium.
Speaker: Roger C. Stewart, vice president, Global Treasury, Procter and Gamble Co.,
Cincinnati. Topic: "Global Treasury Managing Risk in a Volatile Environment."
Saturday, March 27. 16th annual Herbert C. Brown Lecture Series in Organic Chemistry.
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Class of 1950 Lecture Hall. Four lectures on new developments in organic
chemistry by internationally recognized researchers. Free and open to the public. The lecture series was established in 1984 to honor Purdue Nobel Laureate Herbert
C. Brown, who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1979 for his work in hydroboration
and organoboranes.
Tuesday, March 30. Women's History Month illustrated lecture. 12:30 p.m. Room 112,
Purdue Memorial Union. Topic: "Confidence Means Kotex: Learning to Be a Woman Through
Menstrual Hygiene Advertisements." Speaker: Sharra Vostral, Department of History,
Washington University.
Thursday, April 1. Women's Resource Office Leadership Lecture Series. 9:30-11 a.m.
Room 210, Stewart Center. Topic: "Leadership Issues for Women of Color." Speaker:
Evelyn Hu-DeHart, chair of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder
and director of the Center for Studies of Ethnicity and Race in America. Her lecture will
address issues in the Asian-American and Latina communities.
Friday, April 2. Krannert Executive Forum. 11:30 a.m. Krannert Building Auditorium.
Speaker: John E. Barnes, chairman and chief executive officer, Materials Processing
Inc., Logansport, Ind. Topic: "Entrepreneurism, a Way of Life."
** Tuesday, April 6. "He Said -- She Said," a program about date rape presented by
national speaker Katie Koestner, an outspoken date-rape survivor. 7 p.m. Loeb Playhouse,
Stewart Center. Co-sponsored by the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association. Event will be broadcast live on BTVLive!, which airs on channel 18 of University
Residences Television Antenna System.
** Thursday, April 8. Jewish Studies Lecture Series. 4:30 p.m. Room 161, Mechanical
Engineering Building. Speaker: Professor Sarah Blacher Cohen, Department of English,
State University of New York at Albany. Topic: "The Jewish Mirth-Right: An Overview
of Yiddish, Jewish-American, and Israeli Humor."
** Thursday, April 8. Philosophy Colloquium Series. 4:30 p.m. Room 117, University
Hall. Speaker: Michael Rea from University of Delaware. Topic: "How To Be an Eleatic
Monist."
** Friday, April 9. Krannert Executive Forum. 11:30 a.m. Krannert Building Auditorium.
Speaker: Rear Adm. David S. Belz, U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters (G-SEA), Washington,
D.C. Topic: "Drug Trafficking: A Transnational Threat for the New Millennium."
EXHIBITS
March 15-19. Exhibit of works by Joanne Beck, candidate for a Master of Fine Arts
degree in art and design. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Beelke Gallery (Room 206, Creative Arts
Building 2).
March 22-26. Exhibit of works by Shu-Chaun "Emily" Chen and Meng-Chau "Robin" Huang,
candidates for Master of Fine Arts degrees in art and design. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Beelke
Gallery (Room 206, Creative Arts Building 2).
March 29-April 2. Exhibit of works by Ali Broach, candidate for a Master of Fine
Arts degree in art and design. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Beelke Gallery (Room 206, Creative
Arts Building 2).
March 26-April 30. Chieko Misumi: Ito-e (Thread Pictures). Krannert Drawing Room,
Main Floor, Krannert Building. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Gallery reception 5-6
p.m. Friday, March 26. Misumi's exhibit honors Nobel Laureate Herbert C. Brown, Purdue
professor of chemistry, who has said: "Her work brings a whole new expressiveness to
the field of fine arts. She is truly one of Japan's national treasures."
March 29-May 2. Doris Steider: Painter of the Passing Moment. Stewart Center Gallery,
West Lobby, Stewart Center. A nationally recognized egg-tempera artist, Steider draws
inspiration from the deserts, mountains and ghost towns of the Southwest and from
her travels to far-flung corners of the globe. Gallery receptions 5-6 p.m. Monday,
March 29, and 7-8 p.m. Wednesday, April 7. Gallery hours: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and 7-9
p.m. Monday-Thursday; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday; 1-4 p.m. Sunday. (Gallery is closed
April 4 for Easter Sunday.)
MEETINGS
Monday, March 22. University Senate. 2:30 p.m. Room 302, Stewart Center.
Friday, April 2. Board of Trustees. 1:30 p.m. Room 304 (Anniversary Drawing Room),
Purdue Memorial Union. (Date changed from March 26.)
OTHER
** Through April 8. International Dinner Series presented by food service management
students in Purdue's Department of Restaurant, Hotel, Institutional and Tourism Management.
5:30-7 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday. John Purdue Room, Stone Hall. Call (765) 494-6845 for reservations or information.
Coming up:
March 16-18, Closed (spring break).
March 23, New England; March 24, Greek; March 25, Korean.
March 30, Middle Eastern; March 31, French; April 1, German.
April 6, Southeast Asian; April 7, Southwestern; April 8,Mexican.
Monday, March 22. Classes resume after spring break.
Compiled by Frank Koontz, (765) 494-2080; e-mail, frank_koontz@purdue.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; e-mail, purduenews@purdue.edu
To the Purdue News and Photos Page
|