From jsis@u.washington.edu Fri Dec 3 15:31:27 2004 Received: from mxi2.u.washington.edu (mxi2.u.washington.edu [140.142.33.12]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.13.1+UW04.08/8.13.1+UW04.08) with ESMTP id iB3NVQkJ050432 for ; Fri, 3 Dec 2004 15:31:26 -0800 Received: from mxout2.cac.washington.edu (mxout2.cac.washington.edu [140.142.33.4]) by mxi2.u.washington.edu (8.13.1+UW04.08/8.13.1+UW04.09) with ESMTP id iB3NVPkO006023 (version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA bits=168 verify=NO) for ; Fri, 3 Dec 2004 15:31:25 -0800 Received: from mailhost2.u.washington.edu (mailhost2.u.washington.edu [140.142.33.2]) by mxout2.cac.washington.edu (8.13.1+UW04.08/8.13.1+UW04.09) with ESMTP id iB3NVOQJ013200 for ; Fri, 3 Dec 2004 15:31:24 -0800 Received: from BEVERLYW (D-128-95-200-98.dhcp4.washington.edu [128.95.200.98]) by mailhost2.u.washington.edu (8.13.1+UW04.08/8.13.1+UW04.11) with SMTP id iB3NVO36019119 for ; Fri, 3 Dec 2004 15:31:24 -0800 Message-ID: <01ef01c4d990$33cd5830$62c85f80@jsis.washington.edu> From: "Jackson School of International Studies" To: "JSIS - Calendar" Subject: The Jackson School Calendar (HTML) Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2004 15:31:23 -0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/related; type="multipart/alternative"; boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01EB_01C4D94D.25949460" X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2800.1437 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1441 X-Uwash-Spam: Gauge=IIIIIII, Probability=7%, Report='__C230066_P1_2 0, __C230066_P5 0, __CT 0, __CTYPE_HAS_BOUNDARY 0, __CTYPE_MULTIPART 0, __CTYPE_MULTIPART_ALT 0, __EXTRA_MPART_TYPE_1 0, __EXTRA_MPART_TYPE_N1 0, __HAS_MSGID 0, __HAS_MSMAIL_PRI 0, __HAS_X_MAILER 0, __HAS_X_PRIORITY 0, __MIME_HTML 0, __MIME_VERSION 0, __SANE_MSGID 0' This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_01EB_01C4D94D.25949460 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_NextPart_001_01EC_01C4D94D.25949460" ------=_NextPart_001_01EC_01C4D94D.25949460 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable the=20 JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - December 4, 2004 A brief look ahead. Scroll down for complete details. * Unless stated otherwise, all events will take place on the main = campus of the=20 University of Washington, Seattle. The Jackson School sponsorship of an event does not imply that the = School endorses=20 the content of an event. =20 Click here to receive the JSIS Calendar by email December 4 Northwest Girl Choir: Holiday Sing-Along =20 Liber unUsualis =20 December 5 Seattle Pro Musica: Northern Lights =20 December 6 Televisionary Sexualities and Transnational Identities: The = Cultural Politics of Feminism and Homoerotics in Neoliberal Nicaragua =20 Understanding Israeli Strategy: A Palestinian Perspective =20 Neighbor Power: Building Community the Seattle Way =20 December 7 Southerners and Northerners, Book Reading by Lee Ho-chul =20 December 8 Who Rules, and Which Virtues: On Religious Bonds, State = Boundaries, and Legalism =20 There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale =20 December 10 Passionate Voice =20 December 11 Seattle Children's Chorus: 'Let Heaven & Nature = Sing' =20 Northern Lights Music for the Holiday Season from the Baltic = & Nordic Countries =20 =20 Mexican Christmas Traditions of My Childhood =20 December 13 Prisoners in the Caucasus: A History of Kidnapping =20 Talk of the Times: UW's New President Mark Emmert =20 December 17 Seattle Girls' Choir: Holiday Concert =20 December 19 Northwest Chamber Orchestra: Carnival of the = Animals =20 Bacchus' plays Tango =20 December 28 Seattle Sings Messiah =20 January 4 Golden Gate/Gilded Cage: Immigrant Activism and = Latina Cultural Citizenship in San Francisco =20 January 15 Iraq and the Global Rise of Religious Violence: A = Report from Baghdad =20 February 17 Iraq and the Global Rise of Religious Violence: = A Report from Baghdad =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Full Listings 2004 =20 December 2 =20 Technologies of Terror and the Crisis of Power: Military States = in the 1970s and 1980s. 1:30-3:00 PM, 317 Thomson Hall. Speaker: = Victoria Banales. A feminist reading of Latin American University of = California-Santa Cruz. Visit Coordinator: Angela Ginorio = ginorio@u.washington.edu=20 =20 December 2 The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism, New Books in Print = Series. 3:30-5:00 PM, 202 Communications. Speaker: Tani Barlow, = Professor, Department of History and Women Studies, University of = Washington. In this history of thinking about the subject of women in = twentieth-century China, Barlow illustrates the theories and conceptual = categories that Enlightenment Chinese intellectuals have developed to = describe the collectivity of women. Demonstrating how generations of = these theorists have engaged with international debates over eugenics, = gender, sexuality, and the psyche, Barlow argues that as an = Enlightenment project, feminist debate in China is at once Chinese and = international. Sponsor: Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the = Humanities. For more information, contact (206) 543-3920. =20 December 2 Factional Politics and Credible Dis-inflationary Policy in China. = 3:30-5:00 PM, 317 Thomson Hall. Speaker: Victor Shih, Assistant = Professor, Department of Political Science, Northwestern University. = Sponsor: The China Studies Program. For more information, contact = abernier@u.washington.edu, (206) 543-4391. December 2 What does it mean to be a global citizen? United Nations = Association Social. 6:00-8:00 PM, District Lounge in the Best Western = Hotel, 4507 Brooklyn Ave, U District. We are a diverse group of young = professionals and UW students with members from many countries and = cultures. We want to build a big, diverse and multi-national social = network of friends to establish global culture here in Seattle. We aim = to support the UN and friendly relations between people of all = countries, to establish professional networks, and to have good times. = Music, food, and drink. Check out the Calendar at unaseattle.org for = other events. United Nations Association of Seattle, PO Box 85682, Seattle, WA = 98145-1682 206-568-1959 unaseattle.org info@unaseattle.org=20 December 2 Danger on Peaks. 7:30 PM, Elliott Bay Book Company. Speaker: Gary = Snyder. Pulitzer-Prize winning poet and essayist Gary Snyder reads from = Danger on Peaks, his first new collection of poems in over twenty years. = Booklist says "In these poems of his sixties and early seventies, Snyder = often works such magic, in poems as compact as those of the Japanese = masters he has long studied and in prose-and-verse pieces as crystalline = as those in the famous travel books of Basho." Snyder is associated not = only with the beat writers Ginsberg and Kerouac, but also with Black = Mountain Poetry. He has been called the modern-day Henry David Thoreau. = Proceeds benefit Copper Canyon Press. Tickets are $10 and available at = Elliott Bay Book Co. Call 206/624-6600 for tickets and more = information.=20 December 3 Ancient Chinese Etymologies. 3:30-5:00 PM, 101 Thomson. Speaker: = Zev Handel, Assistant Professor, Asian Languages & Literature, = University of Washington. Sponsor: Linguistics Department Colloquium = Series. Refreshments follow the presentation. For more information, = contact (206) 543-4996. December 4 Northwest Girl Choir: Holiday Sing-Along. 1:30 PM, Town Hall, = 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. The award-winning Northwest Girl = Choir, under artistic director Sara Boos, returns for a festive choral = concert featuring the holiday musical traditions of North and South = America. The concert features an audience sing-along and a visit by a = special holiday guest. Tickets are $12/age 5 and under free. Call = 206/985-3973 for tickets and information.=20 December 4 Early Music Guild presents: Liber unUsualis. 8:00 PM, Town Hall, = 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. A Christmas program of medieval = songs, carols, and noels, along with work by DuFay, is sung by the = Boston-based vocal trio, Liber unUsualis. This group, specializing in = unaccompanied Medieval and early Renaissance music, has won several = awards and is thought by some to be the successor to Anonymous 4. = Tickets are $32/$27 Town Hall members, seniors/$10 students. Call = 206/325-7066 or visit www.earlymusicguild.org for tickets and more = information. December 5 Seattle Pro Musica: Northern Lights. 2:30 and 7:30 PM, Town = Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. Director: Karen Thomas. = This highly regarded choral ensemble returns to Town Hall for two = performances of its annual holiday concert. This year's performance = showcases music from the Baltic and Nordic regions and covers a = millennium of music from medieval chant and traditional carols to = contemporary choral works by Arvo Part, Einojuhani Rautavaara, and = others. The matinee performance is especially suitable for families. = Advance tickets are $18/$13 seniors/$10 students. $21/$16/$10 at the = door. Call 206/781-2766 or visit www.seattlepromusica.org for tickets = and more information. December 6 =20 Televisionary Sexualities and Transnational Identities: The = Cultural Politics of Feminism and Homoerotics in Neoliberal Nicaragua. = 3:30-5:00 PM, 226 Communications Bldg. Speaker: Cymene Howe, Human = Sexuality and Studies Program, San Francisco State University. Visit = Coordinator: Priti Ramamurthy priti@u.washington.edu=20 =20 December 6 Understanding Israeli Strategy: A Palestinian Persective. 7:00 PM, = 220 Kane Hall. Speaker: Michael Tarazi, legal adviser to the Palestine = Liberation Organization. Co-sponsored by Palestine Solidarity Committee, = Voices of Palestine, Arab Student Union, Friends of Sabeel, Muslim = Student Association, Palestine Concerns Group, Middle East Center. Info: 206-633-1086.=20 =20 December 6=20 Neighbor Power: Building Community the Seattle Way. 7:30 PM, = Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. Jim Diers, former = director of the Seattle's Department of Neighborhoods, talks with = Seattle City Council Member Richard Conlin about his new book (UW = Press). In his 14 years with the department, Diers oversaw many = important community projects, earning a national reputation for = Seattle's urban neighborhoods. He distills his lessons in the new book, = with a book signing to follow. Presented by UW Press, Elliott Bay Book = Co., and the Town Hall Center of Civic Life. Tickets are $5 at the door = only.=20 =20 December 7 Southerners and Northerners, Book Reading by Novelist Lee Ho-chul. = 6:30-8:00 PM, =20 A-102 Auditorium, Physics-Astronomy Bldg. Speaker: Lee Ho-Chul, = Korean Novelist. Shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War, Lee = Ho-Chul was drafted into the North Korean army. "Southerners, = Northerners" (Namny k saram pungny k saram) is a fictionalized account = of his inglorious yet dramatic experiences as a raw recruit and, soon = afterward, as a prisoner of war. Beginning with some fascinating = vignettes of North Korean high school life and ending with a narrow = escape from death, the story offers a unique perspective on the early = phases of the war and its everyday realities, from the tragic to the = farcical. While this and other works of Lee Ho-Chul have been = translated into many languages, this is the first time a complete novel = by this major figure in contemporary Korean literature has been = published in English. The novel won the prestigious Daesan Literary = Award for Fiction when it was published in 1996. The English = translation has been prepared in close consultation with the author. = Lee Ho-Chul was born in Weonsan, in what is now North Korea, in 1932. = He served in the North Korean Army in the Korean War until taken = prisoner. He made his way South by boat in 1950 and worked in the = mid-1950s as a guard at a U.S. Army base. He debuted on the literary = scene in 1955 with his short story "Away From Home," embarking on a = remarkable literary career that has now moved into its fifth decade. = Lee is a member of the Republic of Korea National Academy of the Arts = and the recipient of numerous awards, including the prestigious Modern = Literature Award for "Panmunjom" and the Dongin Prize for "Wasting = Away." Lee Ho-Chul has lived in the South, forcibly separated from his = family in the North, for over fifty years. Lee's fiction movingly = portrays the social and political conditions he has lived through and = has made him one of Korea's leading literary figures today. Sponsors: = The Korea Studies Program, the East Asia Center and the University Book = Store. For more information, contact abernier@u.washington.edu, (206) = 543-4391. December 8 Who Rules, and Which Virtues: On Religious Bonds, State = Boundaries, and Legalism. 3:30-5:00 PM, 202 Communications Bldg. = Speaker: Prof. Gad Barzilai, Tel Aviv University. December 8 There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale. 7:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th = Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. Speaker: Sean Astin. The Lord of = the Rings star Sean Astin (Samwise Gamgee) reflects on his film career = and the movies that changed his life. Astin, the son of Patty Duke and = John Astin, made his film debut at the age of 13 in the 1980s classic = Goonies. Presented by University Bookstore. Tickets are free with = purchase of There and Back Again from University Bookstore, otherwise = $5. Call 206/634-3400 or visit a University Bookstore for more = information.=20 December 10 Passionate Voice. 8:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca = Street, Seattle. Singer/Songwriter: Lisbeth Scott. Celebrated for = co-writing and performing solo vocals for the score to Passion of the = Christ, Lisbeth Scott appears at Town Hall performing ethereal sounds = from her latest solo album. She is backed by a band including four = members of the Seattle Symphony. The event is presented by Seattle's = Sarathan Records as a benefit for Agros International, a non-profit = organization that enables rural families in Central America and Mexico = to escape poverty by purchasing agricultural land for sustainable = agriculture. Tickets are $12/$10 seniors and students. Visit = www.ticketweb.com or call 1/866468-7623 for tickets.=20 December 11 Seattle Children's Chorus: 'Let Heaven & Nature Sing'. 1:30 PM, = Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. Over 200 children and = youth from four levels of the Seattle Children's Chorus return to Town = Hall for their annual Christmas concert. Tickets are $12/$9 students. = Call 206/542-5998 for tickets and information. December 11 Northern Lights Music for the Holiday Season from the Baltic & = Nordic Countries. 3:00 PM & 8:00 PM, Chapel at Bastyr University, 14500 = Juanita Drive NE, Bothell. Seattle Pro Musica presents showcases Baltic = and Nordic music, evoking the northern lights of the winter season. The = program covers a millennium of Baltic and Nordic choral music. General = admission $18 in advance, $21 at the door, Seniors $13 in advance, $16 = at the door and Student tickets are always $10. For more information = please call (206) 781-2766. =20 December 11 Mexican Christmas Traditions of my Childhood: Bilingual Narration = of Mexican Traditions & their History with Christmas Songs from Mexico = and several other Latin-American Countries. 7:00 PM, BENAROYA HALL, = Illsley Ball Nordstrom Recital Hall. Tickets: $10 (call 425-742-1466 for = selling locations), or call Ticket Master 206-292 ARTS $10.00 + fees. To = buy at the door (206) 215-4806 Proceeds go to Ronald McDonald House Charities of Western = Washington (Housing for families with children being treated at = Children's Hospital, Seattle). =20 =20 December 13 Prisoners in the Caucasus: A History of Kidnapping. 3:30 PM, 317 = Thomson Hall. Speaker: Bruce Grant. Beginning with a fabled narrative = poem by Aleksandr Pushkin from 1822, entitled "Prisoner of the = Caucasus," Grant explores how the idiom of kidnapping, in the ritual = seizure, taking, and most importantly, giving of bodies across perceived = cultural lines, has been central to Russia's understanding of its = troubled relations with the mountainous land holdings to its south for = over 200 years. By juxtaposing classic ethnographic sources on Caucasian = bride-kidnapping and the hostage taking of military figures as proxies = in ritualized violence, with multiple renderings of Pushkin's good = prisoner story in poetry, prose, opera, ballet, and film, these = seemingly apolitical artifacts of Russian popular culture work to = generate a powerful symbolic economy of Russian belonging in the = Caucasus Mountains. Bruce Grant is Associate Professor of Anthropology = at Swarthmore College and currently a Member of the School of Social = Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Sponsored by = REECAS, History, and the Graduate School. For more information, contact = REECAS at 206-543-4852 or email reecas@u.washington.edu.=20 =20 December 13 Talk of the Times: UW's New President Mark Emmert. 7:30 PM, = downstairs at Town Hall, enter on Seneca Street. Dr. Emmert sits for an = interview-in-depth with Times higher education reporter Sharon Chan and = Times Executive Editor Michael Fancher, with audience Q&A to follow. = Tickets are $5 at the door only. December 17 Seattle Girls' Choir: Holiday Concert. 7:30 PM, Town Hall, 8th = Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. . Join the girls for their 23rd = annual festival holiday concert with music from around the world = performed by all six choirs. Under the direction of Dr. Jerome Wright. = Tickets are $15/$12 students and seniors. Call 206/526-1900 or visit = www.seattlegirlschoir.org for more information. December 18 A Festival of Lessons & Carols. 8:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue = and Seneca Street, Seattle. Performance by the Northwest Boychoir. = Continuing a 25-year tradition, the Northwest Boychoir presents a = holiday concert patterned after the Christmas Eve observance at King's = College in Cambridge, England. The performance consists of nine holiday = readings, each followed by a traditional carol performed by the choir = and a congregational carol. There will be a family recital of the = younger choirs from 7:00-7:45 PM. Freewill donation at the door. Call = 206/524-3234 or 206/528-0250 for more information. December 19 Northwest Chamber Orchestra: Carnival of the Animals 2:30 PM, Town = Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. Ralf Goth=F3ni conducts = the Northwest Chamber Orchestra in its Town Hall debut performing a = holiday program featuring Saint-Saens' Carnival of the Animals. Martin = Brookspan, voice of "Live from Lincoln Center," narrates and Krassimir = the Mime and Mime Puppettheatre act with other delights for the whole = family. The audience is invited to a holiday party after the show. = Tickets are $25/$10 senior, student/age 17 and under free. = Call/206/343-0445 or email boxoffice@nwco.org for tickets and more = information. December 19=20 Town Music presents: Bacchus' plays Tango. 5:00 PM, Town Hall, = 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle. This local trio features Margery = Kransberg-Talvi, Mara Finkelstein, and Judith Cohen. They are joined for = this concert by pianist Ralf Goth=F3ni, music director of the Northwest = Chamber Orchestra and perform tango-inspired music by Finnish composer = Aulis Sallinen and Argentine composer Astor Piazzolla. Advance tickets = are $16/$13 Town Hall members, students & seniors only at = www.ticketweb.com. $18/$15 at the door. Downstairs at Town Hall, enter = on Seneca Street. December 28=20 Seattle Sings Messiah. 7:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca = Street, Seattle. Seattle Outreach Arts presents the eighth annual = "Seattle Sings Messiah," featuring a professional orchestra and = soloists, and an audience/chorus of enthusiastic singers of all ages. = Louis Magor, the popular conductor who founded the nationally televised = "Sing-It-Yourself Messiah" at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, = leads the audience, orchestra, and soloists in performing Handel's = entire magnificent oratorio. Advance tickets are $9.99/$12 at the door. = Visit www.ticketwindowonline.com or call 206/365-6500 for tickets and = visit www.seattlesoars.org or call 206/706-2669 for more information. January 4 Golden Gate/Gilded Cage: Immigrant Activism and Latina Cultural = Citizenship in San Francisco. 3:30-5:00 PM, 226 Communications Bldg. = Speaker: Kathleen Coll, Harvard University. Visit coordinator: Angela = Ginorio ginorio@u.washington.edu=20 January 15 Koolhaas, and the Obsolete Book. 1:00-3:00 PM. Seattle Central = Public Library, Conference Room 2. Speaker: Meredith Clausen, = Professor of Architecture. Does Rem Koolhaas' new Seattle Central = Library predict the future? What does it tell us about the relationship = between architecture, books, and society in the 21st century? Meredith = Clausen, Professor of Architecture and Art History, will give a = fascinating lecture on the meaning of Koolhaas' new building, comparing = it to other great library structures around the world. She will also = situate Koolhaas' work in the context of contemporary architectural = trends in Europe and questions about the future of the library itself. = Open to the public, no tickets necessary. Sponsored by the Center for = West European Studies. For more information, contact = cwes@u.washington.edu or 206-543-1675. February 17 Iraq and the Global Rise of Religious Violence: A Report from = Baghdad. 7:30 PM, 110 Kane Hall. Speaker: Mark Juergensmeyer, = University of California, Santa Barbara. This is the Founders Annual = Lecture in Comparative Religion and Contemporary Life. An expert on = religious violence resolution, Juergensemeyer is author of Terror in the = Mind of God: The Global Rise of Religious Violence based on interviews = with violent religious activists around the world. Visit Coordinator: = Loryn Paxton lpaxton@u.washington.edu=20 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Abbreviations and Web site addresses for more detailed = information: =20 Asian L&L=20 Department of Asian Languages & Literature =20 =20 CANSTUD=20 Canadian Studies Program/JSIS = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/canada/canada.html =20 =20 CASG=20 Central Asian Studies Group/NELC=20 =20 CIBER Center for International Business Education & Research =20 =20 CSDE=20 Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology=20 =20 CPHRS=20 Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation =20 =20 CWES=20 Center for West European Studies, JSIS = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/cwesuw/index.html =20 =20 EUC=20 European Union Center = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/europe/euc.html =20 =20 GEOG=20 Dept. of Geography =20 http://depts.washington.edu/geog/news/colloquium.html=20 =20 GTI =20 Institute of Transnational Studies = http://depts.washington.edu/tayloruw/seminars.htm =20 =20 GTTL=20 Global Trade, Transportation & Logistics Studies =20 =20 IGRSS=20 Inst. For Global and Regional Security Studies =20 =20 IIP=20 Institute for International Policy =20 http://www.iip.washington.edu =20 =20 IS=20 Center for International Studies/JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/is/is-ctr.html = =20 JSIS=20 The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies =20 =20 LAS=20 Latin American Studies Program/JSIS =20 =20 MEC=20 Middle East Center/JSIS = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/mideast/events.htm =20 =20 NELC=20 Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization = http://depts.washington.edu/nelc =20 =20 REECAS=20 Russian, East European, and Central Asia Studies, JSIS = http://depts.washington.edu/reecas=20 =20 SEAS=20 Southeast Asia Studies/JSIS = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/seasia/seasia.html =20 =20 Slavic L&L=20 Department of Slavic Languages & Literature =20 =20 SMA School of Marine Affairs=20 =20 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - The Jackson School Calendar is updated and e-mailed weekly. There = is no charge for subscribing. To subscribe to the on-line Calendar, or = for further information, please post a message to: = jsis@u.washington.edu. Thank you "The University of Washington is committed to providing access, = equal opportunity and reasonable accommodation in its services, = programs, activities, education and employment for individuals with = disabilities. To request disability accommodation contact the Disability = Services Office at least ten days in advance at: 206-543-6450/V, = 206-543-6452/TTY, 206-685-7264 (FAX), or dso@u.washington.edu."=20 =20 =20 -------------------------------------------------------------------- =20 Copyright =A9 2001 University of Washington, including all = photographs and images, unless otherwise noted. Questions? Email jsis@u.washington.edu. Send inquiries = regarding the website to jsishelp@u.washington.edu. Last Updated:12/04/04 =20 =20 Your browser does not support script ------=_NextPart_001_01EC_01C4D94D.25949460 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

the

JACKSON  = SCHOOL

CALENDAR

 


 

December 4, = 2004

 

A = brief look=20 ahead.  Scroll down for complete details.

 

* = Unless stated=20 otherwise, all events will take place on the main campus of the=20

University of=20 Washington, Seattle.

 

The = Jackson School=20 sponsorship of an event does not imply that the School endorses=20

the=20 content of an event.
 

Click here to receive the JSIS Calendar by=20 email

 

December 4

Northwest Girl Choir: Holiday=20 Sing-Along

 

Liber unUsualis

 

December 5

Seattle Pro Musica: Northern=20 Lights

 

December 6

Televisionary Sexualities and = Transnational=20 Identities: The Cultural Politics of Feminism and = Homoerotics in=20 Neoliberal Nicaragua

 

Understanding Israeli Strategy: = A=20 Palestinian Perspective

 

Neighbor Power: Building = Community the=20 Seattle Way

 

December 7

Southerners and Northerners, Book = Reading=20 by Lee = Ho-chul

 

December 8

Who Rules, = and Which=20 Virtues: On = Religious Bonds,=20 State Boundaries, and Legalism

 

There and = Back Again: An=20 Actor's Tale

 

December 10

Passionate Voice

 

December 11

Seattle = Children's=20 Chorus: 'Let Heaven & Nature Sing'

 

Northern Lights Music for the = Holiday Season=20 from the Baltic & Nordic=20 Countries
 

Mexican Christmas Traditions of My=20 Childhood

 

December 13

Prisoners in the Caucasus: A History of=20 Kidnapping

 

Talk of the Times: UW's New = President Mark=20 Emmert

 

December 17

Seattle Girls' Choir: Holiday=20 Concert

 

December 19

Northwest Chamber Orchestra: = Carnival of the=20 Animals

 

Bacchus' plays = Tango

 

December 28

Seattle Sings = Messiah

 

January=20 4

Golden Gate/Gilded Cage: = Immigrant Activism=20 and Latina Cultural Citizenship in San = Francisco

 

January=20 15

Iraq and the Global Rise of = Religious Violence:=20 A Report from Baghdad

 

February=20 17

Iraq and the Global Rise of = Religious Violence:=20 A Report from Baghdad

 


Full=20 Listings

 

2004

=20

December 2 

 

Technologies of Terror and the Crisis of Power:=20 Military  States in the 1970s and 1980s.  1:30-3:00 = PM,=20  317 Thomson Hall.  Speaker: Victoria = Banales.  A=20 feminist reading of Latin American University of California-Santa = Cruz.=20  Visit Coordinator:  Angela Ginorio  ginorio@u.washington.edu=20

=20

December=20 2

 

The Question of = Women in=20 Chinese Feminism, New Books in Print Series.  = 3:30-5:00=20 PM, 202 Communications. Speaker: Tani = Barlow,=20 Professor, Department of History and = Women=20 Studies, University of Washington.  In this history of = thinking=20 about the subject of women in twentieth-century China, Barlow = illustrates=20 the theories and conceptual categories that Enlightenment Chinese=20 intellectuals have developed to describe the collectivity of = women. =20 Demonstrating how generations of these theorists have engaged with = international debates over eugenics, gender, sexuality, and the = psyche,=20 Barlow argues that as an Enlightenment project, feminist debate in = China=20 is at once Chinese and international.  Sponsor: Walter = Chapin=20 Simpson Center for the Humanities.  For more = information,=20 contact (206) 543-3920.

=20

December=20 2

 

Factional=20 Politics and Credible Dis-inflationary Policy in = China. =20 3:30-5:00 PM, 317 Thomson Hall. Speaker: Victor Shih, = Assistant=20 Professor, Department of Political Science, Northwestern=20 University.  Sponsor: The China Studies=20 Program.  For more information, contact abernier@u.washington.edu, (206)=20 543-4391.

 

December 2

 

What does it mean to be a global citizen? =  United=20 Nations Association Social.  6:00-8:00 PM,  District = Lounge in=20 the Best Western Hotel, 4507 Brooklyn Ave, U District.  We = are a=20 diverse group of young professionals and UW students with members = from=20 many countries and cultures.  We want to build a big, diverse = and=20 multi-national social network of friends to establish global = culture here=20 in Seattle.  We aim to support the UN and friendly relations = between=20 people of all countries, to establish professional networks, and = to have=20 good times.  Music, food, and drink.  Check out the = Calendar at=20 unaseattle.org for other events.

 

United Nations Association of Seattle, PO Box = 85682, Seattle,=20 WA 98145-1682 206-568-1959 unaseattle.org   info@unaseattle.org =

 

December 2

 

Danger on Peaks.  7:30 PM, Elliott Bay = Book=20 Company. Speaker: Gary Snyder. Pulitzer-Prize winning poet = and=20 essayist Gary Snyder reads from Danger on Peaks, his first = new=20 collection of poems in over twenty years. Booklist says "In these = poems of=20 his sixties and early seventies, Snyder often works such magic, in = poems=20 as compact as those of the Japanese masters he has long studied = and in=20 prose-and-verse pieces as crystalline as those in the famous = travel books=20 of Basho."  Snyder is associated not only with the beat = writers=20 Ginsberg and Kerouac, but also with Black Mountain Poetry.  = He has=20 been called the modern-day Henry David Thoreau.  Proceeds = benefit=20 Copper Canyon Press.  Tickets are $10 and available at = Elliott Bay=20 Book Co.  Call 206/624-6600 for tickets and more information. =

 

December 3

 

Ancient Chinese=20 Etymologies. 3:30-5:00 PM, 101=20 Thomson. Speaker: Zev Handel,  Assistant Professor, Asian Languages &=20 Literature, University of Washington. = Sponsor: Linguistics Department Colloquium=20 Series.  Refreshments follow the = presentation.  For more information,=20 contact (206) 543-4996.

 

December 4

 

Northwest Girl Choir: Holiday Sing-Along. =  1:30=20 PM,  Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, = Seattle.=20  The award-winning Northwest Girl Choir, under artistic = director=20 Sara Boos, returns for a festive choral concert featuring the = holiday=20 musical traditions of North and South America.  The concert = features=20 an audience sing-along and a visit by a special holiday = guest. =20 Tickets are $12/age 5 and under free. Call 206/985-3973 for = tickets and=20 information.

 

December 4

 

Early Music Guild presents: Liber = unUsualis. =20 8:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, = Seattle.  A=20 Christmas program of medieval songs, carols, and noels, along with = work by=20 DuFay, is sung by the Boston-based vocal trio, Liber unUsualis. =  This=20 group, specializing in unaccompanied Medieval and early = Renaissance music,=20 has won several awards and is thought by some to be the successor = to=20 Anonymous 4.  Tickets are $32/$27 Town Hall members, = seniors/$10=20 students.  Call 206/325-7066 or visit www.earlymusicguild.org for = tickets and more information.

 

December 5

 

Seattle Pro Musica: Northern Lights.  = 2:30 and=20 7:30 PM,  Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, = Seattle. =20 Director: Karen Thomas.  This highly regarded choral = ensemble=20 returns to Town Hall for two performances of its annual holiday = concert.=20  This year's performance showcases music from the Baltic and = Nordic=20 regions and covers a millennium of music from medieval chant and=20 traditional carols to contemporary choral works by Arvo Part, = Einojuhani=20 Rautavaara, and others.  The matinee performance is = especially=20 suitable for families.  Advance tickets are $18/$13 = seniors/$10=20 students. $21/$16/$10 at the door.  Call 206/781-2766 or = visit www.seattlepromusica.org = for=20 tickets and more information.

 

December=20 6 

 

Televisionary = Sexualities=20 and Transnational Identities: The Cultural Politics of Feminism = and=20 Homoerotics in Neoliberal Nicaragua.  3:30-5:00 PM, =  226=20 Communications Bldg.  Speaker: Cymene Howe, Human = Sexuality=20 and Studies Program, San Francisco State University. Visit = Coordinator:=20 Priti Ramamurthy  priti@u.washington.edu =

=20

December=20 6

Understanding Israeli Strategy: A Palestinian=20 Persective. 7:00 PM, 220 Kane Hall. Speaker: Michael = Tarazi,=20 legal adviser to the Palestine Liberation Organization. = Co-sponsored by=20 Palestine Solidarity Committee, Voices of Palestine, Arab Student = Union,=20 Friends of Sabeel, Muslim Student Association, Palestine Concerns = Group,=20 Middle East Center.
Info: 206-633-1086.
=20

=20

December=20 6

 

Neighbor=20 Power: Building Community the Seattle Way.  7:30 = PM,  Town Hall, 8th Avenue=20 and Seneca Street, Seattle.  Jim Diers, former = director of the=20 Seattle's Department of Neighborhoods, talks with Seattle City = Council=20 Member Richard Conlin about his new book (UW Press).  In = his 14=20 years with the department, Diers oversaw many important community=20 projects, earning a national reputation for Seattle's urban = neighborhoods.=20  He distills his lessons in the new book, with a book signing = to=20 follow.  Presented by UW Press, Elliott Bay Book Co., and the = Town=20 Hall Center of Civic Life.  Tickets are $5 at the door only.=20

=20

December 7

 

Southerners and=20 Northerners, Book Reading = by=20 Novelist Lee Ho-chul. =20 6:30=968:00 PM

A-102 = Auditorium, Physics-Astronomy = Bldg.=20 Speaker: Lee=20 Ho-Chul,=20 Korean  Novelist. Shortly after the outbreak of the = Korean War, Lee=20 Ho-Chul was drafted into the North Korean army. "Southerners, = Northerners" (Namny k saram pungny k saram) = is a=20 fictionalized account of his inglorious yet dramatic experiences = as a raw=20 recruit and, soon afterward, as a prisoner of war.  Beginning with some fascinating = vignettes=20 of North Korean high school life and ending with a narrow escape = from=20 death, the story offers a unique perspective on the early phases = of the=20 war and its everyday realities, from the tragic to the=20 farcical.  While this = and other=20 works of Lee Ho-Chul have been translated into many languages, = this is the=20 first time a complete novel by this major figure in contemporary = Korean=20 literature has been published in English.  The novel won the prestigious = Daesan=20 Literary Award for Fiction when it was published in = 1996.  The English translation has = been prepared=20 in close consultation with the author.  Lee Ho-Chul was born in = Weonsan, in=20 what is now North Korea, in 1932. =20 He served in the North Korean Army in the Korean War until = taken=20 prisoner. He made his way South by boat in 1950 and worked in the=20 mid-1950s as a guard at a U.S. Army base.  He debuted on the literary = scene in 1955=20 with his short story =93Away From Home,=94 embarking on a = remarkable literary=20 career that has now moved into its fifth decade.  Lee is a member of the Republic = of Korea=20 National Academy of the Arts and the recipient of numerous awards, = including the prestigious Modern Literature Award for = =93Panmunjom=94 and the=20 Dongin Prize for =93Wasting Away.=94 =20 Lee Ho-Chul has lived in the South, forcibly separated from = his=20 family in the North, for over fifty years.  Lee=92s fiction movingly = portrays the=20 social and political conditions he has lived through and has made = him one=20 of Korea's leading literary figures today.  Sponsors: The Korea Studies Program, the East Asia Center and the = University Book=20 Store.  For more information, contact = abernier@u.washington.edu,=20 (206) 543-4391.

 

December = 8

 

Who Rules, and = Which=20 Virtues: On Religious = Bonds, State=20 Boundaries, and Legalism. 3:30-5:00 PM, 202 = Communications Bldg. Speaker: Prof. Gad=20 Barzilai, Tel=20 Aviv University.

 

December 8

 

There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale.  = 7:00 PM,=20  Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, = Seattle. =20 Speaker: Sean Astin.  The Lord of the Rings = star Sean=20 Astin (Samwise Gamgee) reflects on his film career and the movies = that=20 changed his life.  Astin, the son of Patty Duke and John = Astin, made=20 his film debut at the age of 13 in the 1980s classic = Goonies.=20  Presented by University Bookstore.  Tickets are free = with=20 purchase of There and Back Again from University Bookstore, = otherwise $5. Call 206/634-3400 or visit a University = Bookstore  for=20 more information.

 

December 10

 

Passionate Voice. 8:00 PM, =  Town Hall, 8th Avenue=20 and Seneca Street, Seattle.  Singer/Songwriter:=20  Lisbeth Scott.  Celebrated for co-writing and = performing=20 solo vocals for the score to Passion of the Christ, Lisbeth = Scott=20 appears at Town Hall performing ethereal sounds from her latest = solo=20 album.  She is backed by a band including four members of the = Seattle=20 Symphony.  The event is presented by Seattle's Sarathan = Records as a=20 benefit for Agros International, a non-profit organization that = enables=20 rural families in Central America and Mexico to escape poverty by=20 purchasing agricultural land for sustainable agriculture. =  Tickets=20 are $12/$10 seniors and students. Visit www.ticketweb.com or call=20 1/866468-7623 for tickets.

 

December 11

 

Seattle Children's Chorus: 'Let Heaven & = Nature=20 Sing'.  1:30 PM,  Town = Hall,=20 8th Avenue and Seneca Street,=20 Seattle.  Over 200 children and youth from four levels = of the=20 Seattle Children's Chorus return to Town Hall for their annual = Christmas=20 concert.  Tickets are $12/$9 students. Call 206/542-5998 for = tickets=20 and information.

 

December 11

 

Northern Lights Music for the Holiday Season = from the=20 Baltic & Nordic Countries. 3:00 PM & 8:00 PM, Chapel = at Bastyr=20 University, 14500 Juanita Drive NE, Bothell. Seattle Pro Musica = presents=20 showcases Baltic and Nordic music, evoking the northern lights of = the=20 winter season. The program covers a millennium of Baltic and = Nordic choral=20 music. General admission $18 in advance, $21 at the door, Seniors = $13 in=20 advance, $16 at the door and Student tickets are always $10. For = more=20 information please call (206) 781-2766.

=20

December=20 11

Mexican Christmas Traditions of my Childhood: = Bilingual=20 Narration of Mexican Traditions & their History with Christmas = Songs=20 from Mexico and several other Latin-American Countries. 7:00 = PM,=20 BENAROYA HALL, Illsley Ball Nordstrom Recital Hall. Tickets: $10 = (call=20 425-742-1466 for selling locations), or call Ticket Master 206-292 = ARTS=20 $10.00 + fees. To buy at the door (206) 215-4806

Proceeds = go to=20 Ronald McDonald House Charities of Western Washington (Housing for = families with children being treated at Children's Hospital,=20 Seattle). 
=20

=20

December=20 13

 

Prisoners in = the=20 Caucasus: A History of Kidnapping. 3:30 PM, 317 Thomson Hall.=20 Speaker: Bruce Grant. = Beginning with a=20 fabled narrative poem by Aleksandr Pushkin from 1822, entitled = =93Prisoner=20 of the Caucasus,=94 Grant explores how the idiom of kidnapping, in = the=20 ritual seizure, taking, and most importantly, giving of bodies = across=20 perceived cultural lines, has been central to Russia=92s = understanding of=20 its troubled relations with the mountainous land holdings to its = south for=20 over 200 years. By juxtaposing classic ethnographic sources on = Caucasian=20 bride-kidnapping and the hostage taking of military figures as = proxies in=20 ritualized violence, with multiple renderings of Pushkin=92s good = prisoner=20 story in poetry, prose, opera, ballet, and film, these seemingly=20 apolitical artifacts of Russian popular culture work to generate a = powerful symbolic economy of Russian belonging in the Caucasus = Mountains.=20 Bruce Grant is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Swarthmore = College=20 and currently a Member of the School of Social Science at the = Institute=20 for Advanced Study in Princeton. Sponsored by REECAS, = History, and=20 the Graduate School. For more information, contact REECAS at = 206-543-4852=20 or email reecas@u.washington.edu.=20

December 13

 

Talk of the Times: UW's New President Mark = Emmert.=20 7:30 PM, downstairs at Town Hall, enter on Seneca Street.  = Dr. Emmert=20 sits for an interview-in-depth with Times higher education = reporter Sharon=20 Chan and Times Executive Editor Michael Fancher, with audience = Q&A to=20 follow.  Tickets are $5 at the door only.

 

December 17

 

Seattle Girls' Choir: Holiday Concert.  = 7:30 PM,=20 Town Hall, 8th=20 Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle.  .  Join the = girls for=20 their 23rd annual festival holiday concert with music from around = the=20 world performed by all six choirs.  Under the direction of = Dr. Jerome=20 Wright.  Tickets are $15/$12 students and seniors. Call = 206/526-1900=20 or visit www.seattlegirlschoir.org = for=20 more information.

 

December 18

 

A Festival of Lessons & Carols. =  8:00 PM,=20 Town Hall, 8th=20 Avenue and Seneca Street, Seattle.  Performance by the = Northwest Boychoir.  Continuing a 25-year tradition, = the=20 Northwest Boychoir presents a holiday concert patterned after the=20 Christmas Eve observance at King's College in Cambridge, England. = The=20 performance consists of nine holiday readings, each followed by a=20 traditional carol performed by the choir and a congregational = carol. There=20 will be a family recital of the younger choirs from 7:00-7:45 PM.=20  Freewill donation at the door. Call 206/524-3234 or = 206/528-0250 for=20 more information.

 

December 19

 

Northwest Chamber Orchestra: Carnival of the = Animals=20 2:30 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street, = Seattle. =20 Ralf Goth=F3ni conducts the Northwest Chamber Orchestra in = its Town=20 Hall debut performing a holiday program featuring Saint-Saens' = Carnival of=20 the Animals.  Martin Brookspan, voice of "Live from Lincoln = Center,"=20 narrates and Krassimir the Mime and Mime Puppettheatre act with = other=20 delights for the whole family.  The audience is invited to a = holiday=20 party after the show.  Tickets are $25/$10 senior, = student/age 17 and=20 under free.  Call/206/343-0445 or email boxoffice@nwco.org for = tickets and=20 more information.

 

December 19

 

Town Music presents: Bacchus' plays = Tango.  5:00=20 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca = Street,=20 Seattle.  This local trio features Margery = Kransberg-Talvi,=20 Mara Finkelstein, and Judith Cohen. They are joined for this = concert=20 by pianist Ralf Goth=F3ni, music director of the Northwest = Chamber=20 Orchestra and perform tango-inspired music by Finnish composer = Aulis=20 Sallinen and Argentine composer Astor Piazzolla.  Advance = tickets are=20 $16/$13 Town Hall members, students & seniors only at www.ticketweb.com. $18/$15 = at the=20 door. Downstairs at Town Hall, enter on Seneca Street.

 

December 28

 

Seattle Sings Messiah.  7:00 PM, Town Hall, 8th Avenue=20 and Seneca Street, Seattle.  Seattle Outreach Arts = presents=20 the eighth annual "Seattle Sings Messiah," featuring a = professional=20 orchestra and soloists, and an audience/chorus of enthusiastic = singers of=20 all ages.  Louis Magor, the popular conductor who = founded the=20 nationally televised "Sing-It-Yourself Messiah" at Davies Symphony = Hall in=20 San Francisco, leads the audience, orchestra, and soloists in = performing=20 Handel's entire magnificent oratorio.  Advance tickets are = $9.99/$12=20 at the door. Visit www.ticketwindowonline.com=20 or call 206/365-6500 for tickets and visit www.seattlesoars.org or = call=20 206/706-2669 for more information.

 

January=20 4

 

Golden=20 Gate/Gilded Cage: Immigrant Activism and Latina Cultural = Citizenship in=20 San Francisco.  3:30-5:00 PM,  226 Communications = Bldg.=20  Speaker: Kathleen Coll,  Harvard University. = Visit=20 coordinator:  Angela Ginorio  ginorio@u.washington.edu =

 

January=20 15

 

Koolhaas, and the = Obsolete=20 Book.  1:00-3:00 PM.  Seattle Central Public = Library,=20 Conference Room 2.  Speaker:  Meredith Clausen, = Professor=20 of Architecture.  Does Rem Koolhaas' new Seattle Central = Library=20 predict the future?  What does it tell us about the = relationship=20 between architecture, books, and society in the 21st century?=20  Meredith Clausen, Professor of Architecture and Art History, = will=20 give a fascinating lecture on the meaning of Koolhaas' new = building,=20 comparing it to other great library structures around the world. =  She=20 will also situate Koolhaas' work in the context of contemporary=20 architectural trends in Europe and questions about the future of = the=20 library itself.  Open to the public, no tickets necessary.=20  Sponsored by the Center for West European Studies.  For = more=20 information, contact cwes@u.washington.edu or = 206-543-1675.

 

February=20 17

 

Iraq and=20 the Global Rise of Religious Violence: A Report from Baghdad.=20  7:30 PM,  110 Kane Hall.  Speaker: Mark=20 Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa Barbara.  = This is=20 the Founders Annual Lecture in Comparative Religion and = Contemporary=20 Life.  An expert on religious violence resolution, = Juergensemeyer is=20 author of Terror in the Mind of God: The Global Rise of = Religious=20 Violence based on interviews with violent religious activists = around=20 the world. Visit Coordinator:  Loryn Paxton lpaxton@u.washington.edu

 

 


 

Abbreviations and Web = site addresses=20 for more detailed information:  =20

Asian L&L=20

Department of=20 Asian Languages & Literature   =

CANSTUD=20

Canadian Studies=20 = Program/JSIS          &= nbsp;         =20 http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/canada/canada.= html   =

CASG=20

Central Asian=20 Studies Group/NELC

CIBER

Center for=20 International Business Education & Research  =20

CSDE=20

Center for=20 Studies in Demography & Ecology =

CPHRS=20

Center for=20 Public Health Research & Evaluation  =20

CWES=20

Center for West European Studies,=20 = JSIS           &nb= sp;        =20 http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/cwesuw/index.h= tml   =

EUC=20

European Union=20 = Center           &= nbsp;        =20 http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/europe/euc.htm= l   =

GEOG=20

Dept. of Geography   =

http://depts.washington.edu/geog/news/colloquium.html

GTI =20

Institute of Transnational=20 Studies         &nbs= p;         =20 http://depts.washington.edu/tayloruw/seminars.htm<= /A>   =

GTTL=20

Global Trade,=20 Transportation & Logistics Studies  =20

IGRSS=20

Inst. For=20 Global and Regional Security Studies   =

IIP=20

Institute for International Policy=20 =             &= nbsp;      

 http://www.iip.washington.edu   =

IS =

Center for International = Studies/JSIS

 http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/is/is-ctr.html=    =

JSIS=20

The Henry M.=20 Jackson School of International Studies  =20

LAS=20

Latin American=20 Studies Program/JSIS  

MEC=20

Middle East Center/JSIS =20 = http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/mideast/events.htm<= FONT=20 color=3D#000080>   =

NELC=20

Department of Near Eastern Languages &=20 Civilization=20 =             &= nbsp;      =20 http://depts.washington.edu/nelc   =

REECAS=20

Russian, East European, and Central Asia = Studies,=20 = JSIS           &nb= sp;        =20 http://depts.washington.edu/reecas

SEAS=20

Southeast Asia=20 = Studies/JSIS          &= nbsp;         =20 http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/seasia/seasia.= html  =20

Slavic L&L=20

Department of Slavic Languages & = Literature=20      

SMA

 School of Marine = Affairs=20


The Jackson=20 School Calendar is updated and e-mailed weekly. There is no charge = for=20 subscribing. To subscribe to the on-line Calendar, or for further=20 information, please post a message to: jsis@u.washington.edu. Thank=20 you

"The University of Washington is committed to = providing=20 access, equal opportunity and reasonable accommodation in its = services,=20 programs, activities, education and employment for individuals = with=20 disabilities. To request disability accommodation contact the = Disability=20 Services Office at least ten days in advance at: 206-543-6450/V,=20 206-543-6452/TTY, 206-685-7264 (FAX), or dso@u.washington.edu." 

   

Copyright =A9 2001 = University of=20 Washington, including all photographs and images, unless = otherwise=20 noted.

Questions? = Email jsis@u.washington.edu.  Send inquiries regarding the website = to=20 jsishelp@u.washington.edu.

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Updated:12/04/04

 

 

 

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