From jsis@u.washington.edu Fri Oct 20 08:37:51 2000 Received: from jason05.u.washington.edu (root@jason05.u.washington.edu [140.142.8.54]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW99.09) with ESMTP id IAA212952 for ; Fri, 20 Oct 2000 08:37:50 -0700 Received: from homer05.u.washington.edu (jsis@homer05.u.washington.edu [140.142.15.39]) by jason05.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW00.01) with ESMTP id IAA15250 for ; Fri, 20 Oct 2000 08:37:49 -0700 Received: from localhost (jsis@localhost) by homer05.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW99.09) with ESMTP id IAA151182 for ; Fri, 20 Oct 2000 08:37:49 -0700 Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2000 08:37:48 -0700 (PDT) From: Jackson School of International Studies To: jsis-uw@u.washington.edu Subject: The Jackson School Calendar, October 20, 2000 Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII the JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR October 20, 2000 ALL EVENTS ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC & ARE FREE UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED. *New Events (or changes) not previously listed are indicated by an asterisk* Abbreviations: Asian L&L = Department of Asian Languages & Literature CASG = Central Asian Studies Group/NELC CIBER = Center for International Business Education & Research CSDE = Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology CPHRS = Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation CWES = Center for West European Studies, JSIS GTTL = Global Trade, Transportation & Logistics Studies JSIS = The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies LAS = Latin American Studies Program/JSIS NELC = Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization REECAS = Russian, East European, and Central Asia Studies, JSIS Slavic L&L = Department of Slavic Languages & Literature SMA = School of Marine Affairs ________________________________________________________________________ October 20 Preserving La Habana. 6:30 pm, Architecture Hall Auditorium Room 147. Speaker: Eduardo Luis Rodriguez, author, critic, historian and Director of Arquitectura Cuba magazine. Sponsors: College of Architecture and Urban Planning; LAS/JSIS. Info: 543-7679. Human Rights, Justice, and International Lending Organizations: The Case of Guatemala. 12:30 - 2:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Jesus Tecu Osorio, indigenous Guatemalan human rights activist, Bufete Popular (People's Law Firm), Guatemala. Sponsors: Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala; LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. Note that Mr. Osorio will be also give community talks in the greater Seattle area on October 20 - 23. For more info contact 325-7182 or 524-3525. Film: "When the Mountains Tremble" (Subtitled). 1:30 pm, Kane 23B. Guatemalan history as told by Nobel Peace Prize honoree Rigoberta Menchu. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. Union Disruption in Norway. 12:30 - 2:00 pm, Parrington Commons Room 308. Speaker: Sigve Tjotta, Dept. of Economics, University of Bergen, Norway. Sponsor: CSDE. Inside Kazakhstan's Hospitals and Other Observations. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speaker: Nancy Nersveen, Head Nurse, Oncology, Swedish Hospital. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. October 20 - 22 Contemporary Canadian Writers at the Vancouver International Writer's Festival. Earn 8 credit-hours on this field trip to the Vancouver International Writer's Festival with Dr. Nancy Pagh, Pacific Northwest writer and Adjunct Faculty in Canadian Literature at Western Washington University. Accomodations, breakfast, tickets to the events, credit-hours: $100.00. Limit of 10 participants. Sponsors: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Center for Canadian-American Studies, Western Washington University. Info: 543-6269. October 22 - 25 Conference: "Rethinking the Line: The Canada-U.S. Border. Waterfront Centre Hotel, Vancouver, B.C. Sponsors/Hosts: Policy Research Secretariat, Ottawa; Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; University of British Columbia. Cost: $525 Canadian. Info: (604) 730-2500 or email October 23 Losing House and Home: Development, Evictions and Human Rights in Bogota, Colombia. 3:30 - 4:50 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Margaret Everett, Anthropology, Portland State University. Sponsor: Anthropology. Info: 685-1811. Book Reading: "Motibas Tattoos: A Granddaughter's Journey Into Her Indian Family's Past. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Author Mira Kamdar, Senior Fellow, World Policy Institute, New York. Sponsor: South Asian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4800. October 24 & 25 * Canada for Kids! - a presentation for elementary school children. 10:00 - 11:30 am, Thomson 317. Speaker: Jan Maxson, Communications. Sponsor: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-6269. October 25 Vanishing Borders: Protecting the Planet in the Age of Globalization (book reading by the author, Hilary French, Vice President for Research, World Watch Institute). 5:00 pm, Elliott Bay Book Company, 101 South Main. Sponsors: World Affairs Council; Elliott Bay Book Company; Earth Day Network. Cost: $5 members, $10 non-members. Info: 441-5910. October 26 Alien Nation: Zombies, Immigrants and Millennial Capitalism in South Africa (Part of the UW Walker-Ames Lecture Series). 7:00 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speakers: Jean and John Comaroff. Sponsors: Program on African History; History; Geography; Anthropology; Comparative History of Ideas. Info: 616-1825. Tradition, John Dewey, and Hu Shih: Research Methods of the May Fourth Movement in China. 3:30 pm, Communications 202. Speaker: Han-Liang Chang, Prof. Of Comparative Literature and Chair, Modern Languages, National Taiwan University. Sponsor: Comparative Literature. Info: 543-7542. October 27 Open Secrets: Edo Era Politics in Their Own Terms. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Luke Roberts. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program. Info: 543-4391. Film: "The Silence of Neto." 1:30 pm, Kane 19. Story of a Guatemalan boy's coming of age amidst the events fo the mid-1950's. Admission restricted to UW students, faculty, and staff. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. Pursuing Greatness: Marianne and Rousseau, Bettina and Goethe. 3:00 - 5:00 pm, Mary Gates Hall 284. Speaker: Mary McAlpin, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. Sponsors: CWES/JSIS; Division of French and Italian Studies. Info: 543-1675. New Publications in Kazakhstan: Review of Books and Periodicals. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speakers: Prof. Isle D. Cirtautas and Graduate Student Talgat Imangaliev, NELC. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. October 28 South Asia Colloquium of the Pacific Northwest (SACPAN). 9:00 am - 4:30 pm, 1855 West Mall, C.K. Choi Building, Institute of Asian Research, University of British Columbia, Conference Room 120. A reception followed by a no-host dinner will be held at 6:00 pm the evening of October 27. Speakers: Carey Watt, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; I.V. Edirisinghe, Senior Lecturer, Colombo University; Ian Kerr, Dept. of History, Univ. of Manitoba; Madhav Badami, Doctoral Student, Centre for Human Settlements, UBCOA. Sponsors: South Asia Center/JSIS; Univ. of British Columbia. Info and reservations: 543-4800. October 31 Ladino Literary Culture in the Levant, 18th - 20th Centuries. 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Reception to follow, dietary laws observed. Speaker: Aron Rodrigue, Lokey Professor of History, Stanford University. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4243. * Title to be Announced. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, location tba. Speaker: Ajiza Magno, E. Tomor labor and women's rights activist. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. November 1 Millets and Minorities: Non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire. 1:30 - 3:20, Parrington Hall, The Commons. Speaker: Aron Rodrique, Lokey Professor of History, Stanford University. Sponsors: Middle East Center/JSIS; International Studies Center/JSIS; Center for the Humanities. Info: 543-4227. Cross Back from Cross-Dressing: Beyond Hegemonically Defined Hierarchical Gender Roles in Menchu's Me Llamo Rigoberta. 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Laurie Kempen, French and Literature Instructor, Co-Chair, Global Education Design Team, Seattle Central Community College. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. * Issues Facing Contemporary India (A seminar for K-12 educators featuring South Asia Center Director Frank Conlon, Outreach Coordinator Keith Snodgrass, and a panel of UW students from India). 4:00 - 7:00 pm, Tacoma Public Schools Central Administration Building. $10 registration fee, dinner provided, clock hours at no extra charge. Registration deadline October 27. Sponsors: South Asia Center/JSIS; World Affairs Council. Info and registration: (206) 441-5910. November 2 Diversity, Security, and the Contradictions of Freedom in America. 7:30 - 9:00 pm, Kane Hall 110. Speaker: Orlando Patterson, John Cowles Professor of Sociology, Harvard University. Sponsors: Center for Ethnic Conflict and Conflict Resolution; Center for International Studies/JSIS; Sociology. Info: 685-2707. New Publications in Kazakhstan: Review of Books and Periodicals. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speakers: Prof. Isle D. Cirtautas and Graduate Student Talgat Imangaliev, NELC. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. APSIA Graduate Admissions Forum. Admissions officers from 16 top U.S. graduate schools of International Affairs will meet with prospective students to discuss admission requirements, curricula, financial aid, joint degree programs, and career opportunities. Panel 3:00 - 4:00 pm, Kane Hall 210; Admissions Fair 4:00 - 6:00 pm, Walker Ames Room, Kane Hall. Info: 543-6001. November 3 Explaining Postcommunism: Geographic Diffusion and the Transformation of Postcommunist Europe and Asia. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Jeffrey Kopstein, Dept. of Political Science, University of Colorado (Boulder). Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Spatial and Temporal Reconfigurations of Israel in the Wake of the 1967 War: A Comparison of Jerusalem, Hebron, and the Sinai. 1:30 - 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Gershon Shafir, Dept. of Sociology, UC-San Diego. Sponsors: Middle East Center/JSIS; International Studies/JSIS; Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 685-2354. New Publications in Kirghizstan: Review of Books and Periodicals. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speaker: Jipar Duyshembiyeva, graduate exchange student from Kirghizstan. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. * Current State of the Japanese Economy. Noon - 1:30 pm (brown bag lunch lecture), City Centre Building, 1420 5th Avenue, 4th Floor Conference Room. Speaker: T.J. Pempel, JSIS. Sponsors: CIBER; Japan-America Society. Registration required. Info: 685-3433. * Film: "Men With Guns" (subtitled, 128 minutes). Part of LAS Friday film series for students, faculty and staff. 1:30 pm, Kane 23B. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. * Display and Identity at the Paris Colonial Exhibition. 3:30 - 5:30 pm, Kane Hall, Walker Ames Room. Speaker: Steve Ungar, Chair of Cinema and Comparative Literature, Univ. of Iowa. Sponsor: CWES Politics and Society Colloquium/JSIS; CWES Culture Colloquium; Walter H. Simpson Center for the Humanities; Division of French and Italian Studies. Info: 543-1675. November 6 Developing Citizens: The Subject of the State on an Indonesian Periphery. 3:30 - 4:50 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Cathryn Houghton, Anthropology, Yale University. Sponsor: Anthropology. Info: 685-1811. November 7 * Current State of the Japanese Economy. Noon - 1:30 pm, City Center Building, 1420 5th Avenue, 4th Floor Conference Room. Speaker: T.J. Pempel, JSIS. Sponsors: CIBER; Japan-America Society. Registration required. Info: 374-0180. * The Ottowa Convention: Efforts by the International Community to Eliminate Anti-Personnel Mines. 9:30 - 10-20 am, Thomson 101. Speaker: Christopher Kirkey, Dept. of Canadian Studies and Political Science, Bridgewater State College. Sponsor: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Canadian Consulate General. Info: 543-6269. November 8 Alternative Routes to State Transformation: A Relational Approach to Politics, Culture, and Society in the Ottoman Empire. 1:30 - 3:20, Thomson 317. Speaker: Karen Barkey, Columbia University. Sponsors: Middle East Center/JSIS; International Studies Center/JSIS; Center for the Humanities. Info: 543-4227. Study Abroad in Latin America. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Panel discussions and Information sessions with study abroad students and representatives of the Office of International Programs and Exchanges. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. November 9 New Publications in Uzbekistan: Review of Books and Periodicals. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speaker: Ilse D. Cirtautas, NELC. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. * Book Reading: "Ho Chi Minh" by author William J. Duiker. 7:00 pm, University Book Store, U-District Branch. Sponsor: University Book Store. Info: 543-9477, ext. 443. * Conference: China eCommerce 2000. Time tba. Bell Harbor International Conference Center. Sponsor: Washington State China Relations Council. Info: 441-4419. November 10 * NOTE: The Following Event Has Been Cancelled: Incorporating Canadian Multicultural Literature into the Classroom. November 13 Sherpa Yak Management in Mount Everest National Park, and the High Costs of Mountaineering. 3:30 - 4:50 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Barbara Brower, Geography, University of Oregon. Sponsor: Anthropology. Info: 685-1811. First Annual Comparative Religion Lecture on Religion and Contemporary Life: "The Force of Faith in the Contemporary World. 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 220. Reception to follow in Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Eugene Webb, JSIS. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4243. November 14 * NOTE: FOLLOWING EVENT POSTPONED: Incorporating Canadian Content - Ideas and Opportunities for Faculty. Reflections on the Women of Afghanistan. 3:30 pm, Thomson 403. Speaker: Ms. Shirley Taraki, a resident of Kabul, Afghanistan for 30 years. Sponsor: South Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4800. November 15 New Fronts in Worker Power: The Challenges of Immigrant and Temporary Labor Organizations in the Northwest. 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Brian Peters, UW International Studies major and intern with Seattle Union Now (SUN). Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. * Dams, Floods and Migrants: "Development" in Northeastern Thailand. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, location tba. Speaker: Charles Keyes, Anthropology. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. November 16 (Title to be Announced). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Dorothy Salinger. Sponsor: China Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. Lithuania on the Threshold of the New Millennium. 7:00 p.m., Faculty Club. Speaker: Vytautas Landsbergis, former president of Lithuania and current chairman of the Lithuanian Parliament. Sponsors: Baltic Studies Program in the Dept. of Scandinavian Studies, Jackson Foundation, World Affairs Council, UW Press, REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. New Publications in Uzbekistan: Review of Books and Periodicals. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speaker: Ilse D. Cirtautas, NELC. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. * A Conversation with the Ambassador. 3:30 pm, location tba. Speaker: Ambassador Luis Alberto Moreno, Colombia's Ambassador to the USA. Presentation followed by Q&A. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. November 17 Lithuania and the End of the Soviet Union (A Roundtable). 9:30 a.m., Parrington Hall Commons (Parrington 308). Speakers: Vytautas Landsbergis, former president of Lithuania and current chairman of the Lithuanian Parliament; Paul Goble, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty; Herbert J. Ellison, Jackson School of International Studies, UW. Moderated by Stephen Hanson, REECAS/JSIS and Political Science. A coffee reception will follow, with Vytautas Landsbergis signing copies of his new book published by the UW Press. Sponsors: Baltic Studies Program in the Dept. of Scandinavian Studies, Jackson Foundation, World Affairs Council, UW Press, REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Ports, Marine Transportation and Economic Integration in the Baltic Region (A Workshop). 2:30 - 6:30 p.m., Parrington Hall Commons (Parrington 308). Participants include Anatoli Alop (Vice-Rector, Estonian Maritime Academy), Zofia Sawiczewska (University of Gdansk, Poland), Paul Goble (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty), Vlad Kaczynski (Marine Affairs/JSIS, UW), Nathaniel Trumbull (Geography, UW) and Marc Hershman (Marine Affairs, UW). Vytautas Landsbergis will attend, and a reception will follow in the same room. Sponsors: REECAS/JSIS, School of Marine Affairs, Global Trade, Transportation and Logistics, Baltic Studies Studies Program in the Dept. of Scandinavian Studies. Info: 543-4852. Uzbek Movie: "The Orator" (1999). 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 123. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. * Film: "Todos Santos: The Survivors" (subtitled, 58 minutes). Effects of guerrilla warfare and government reprisal in Guatemalan village. 1:30 pm, Kane 19. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. * Story of a Sickly, Effeminate Mama's Boy, or How Proustian Readers Are Made to Question Their Own More "Manly" Endeavors (A lecture in the series "Text, Gender and Society"). 3:00 pm, Mary Gates Hall 284. Speaker: Greet van Belle, Columbia University. Sponsors: CWES/JSIS; Division of French and Italian Studies. Info: 543-4692. November 19 The Quest for Peace and Justice in Colombia: Current Issues and Lessons from the Past. 5:00 pm potluck, 6:30 - 8:00 talk, Woodland Park Presbyterian Church, 225 N 70th Street. Speakers: Diana Leal & Gigi Peterson, Seattle Colombia Committee. Sponsor: Fellowship for Reconciliation. Info: 789-5565. November 20 Maps, Metaphors, and Meanings: Boundary Struggles and Village Forest Use on Private and State Land in Malawi. 3:00 - 4:30 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Peter Walker, Geography, University of Oregon. Sponsor: Anthropology. Info: 685-1811. November 21 * Laying Claim to Power: Justifying Rebellion in the Tay Son Era. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: George Dutton, Ph.C., History. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. November 27 Reconfiguration of Responsibility: Ethical Orientations on the Commons in Liangshan. 3:30 - 4:50 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Nayna Jhaveri, Geography, UW. Sponsor: Anthropology. Info: 685-1811. November 29 * Cartoons and Comic Strips as Native Malay Discourse on Modern Malaysian Civilization. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Ron Provencher, Dept. of Anthropology, Northern Illinois University. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. * Teach for America: Service and Opportunity. 1:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Connie Phegley (B.A. Spanish, UW 1991) served with Teach for America for two years. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. November 30 Shaking off the Post-Soviet Hangover: Latvia's Mass Media 10 Years after the Revolution. 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., Thomson 317. Speaker: Karlis Streips, Dept. of Journalism, Univ. of Latvia, and independent radio and television journalist. Sponsor: Baltic Studies Program in the Dept. of Scandinavian Studies, REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. "Kokand's Mahallas" (Neighborhoods). 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Denny Hall 215. Speaker: Mark Reese, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG. Info: 543-9963. December 1 The Rising Rainbow: Emergence of a Gay Community Where There Was None Before (Latvia). 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., Thomson 317. Speaker: Karlis Streips, Dept. of Journalism, Univ. of Latvia, and independent radio and television journalist. Sponsor: Baltic Studies Program in the Dept. of Scandinavian Studies, REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. * Films: "Daughters of Ixchel: Maya Threads of Change" (29 minutes), Maya weavers in the context of cultural globalization; and "Cases of Violence against Native Communities in Chiapas" (53 minutes, subtitled). 1:30 pm, Kane 19. Part of LAS Friday film series for UW students, faculty and staff. Sponsor: LAS/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. * Race, Writing, and Fighting: European Identities and Nationalisms in Rhodesian War Narratives, 1965-95. 2:00 pm, location tba. Speaker: Luise White, Univ. of Florida at Gainesville. Sponsors: Program on Africa; JSIS; CWES Politics and Society Colloquium; History. Info: 543-4499. December 2 * Canadian Multicultural Stories, First Nations and Quebecois Literature - Teaching Diversity and Cross-Cultural Understanding through Canadian Stories and Myths. All-day workshop for K-6 educators/librarians - 8 clock hours available. 8:00 am - 5:00 pm, Thomson Hall. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins, and box lunch). Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Info: 543-6269. December 4 Sustainability and Conservation Debates in the Case of Madagascar's Tropical Forests. 3:30 - 4:50 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Lucy Jarosz, Geography, UW. Sponsor: Anthropolgy. Info: 685-1811. December 12 Writers Rivka and Ben-Zion Dorfman ("Synagogues with Jews - and the communities that built and used them,") speak at 7:00 pm in Kane Hall. Info: 545-9477 ext. 202. 2001 January 18 * Chinese Characters as the medium for transmitting the vocabulary of modernization from Japan to Vietnam in the early twentieth century. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, location tba. Speaker: Vinh Sinh, Dept. of History, Univ. of Alberta. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. January 19 * International Health Care in the 21st Century: A Canadian and American Perspective on the Future of Health Care - Political and Ethical Issues in Health Care. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm, Thomson 317. Moderator: Kieran O'Malley, Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Affiliated Faculty, Canadian Studies/JSIS. Sponsors: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Canadian Embassy, Washington, D.C. Info: 543-6269. February 2 * Contemporary North West Coast Art & the Work of Susan Point, Coast Salish Artist (a dinner/lecture). 6:30 - 9:30 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Gary Wyatt, Curator, Spirit Wrestler Gallery, Vancouver, B.C., and editor of "Susan Point: Coast Salish Artist, 2000." Cost: $30 (includes dinner, wine and lecture). Sponsors: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Center for Canadian-American Studies, Wester Washington University; the Canada-America society; the Pacific North West Canadian Studies Consortium. Info: 543-6269. February 3 * International Cultural Documentary - Using Film to Teach About International Education (Workshop for Middle/High School Teachers). 8:00 am - 5:00 pm, Thomson Hall. Workshop Leaders: Carol Hermer and Mary Barber. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins & box lunch). Sponsors: JSIS Educational Outreach Centers. Info: 543-6269. February 10 * Teaching Canadian History & Culture Through Canadian Art - A Workshop for Middle/High School Teachers/Librarians (8 clock hours available). 8:00 am - 5:00 pm, Thomson Hall. Workshop Leadsers: Dr. Nancy Pagh and Dr. Douglas Jackson. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins and box lunch). Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Info: 543-6269. February 24 * Experience Canadian Art: An Educator's Field Trip to the "Cornelius Krieghoff: Images of Canada" Exhibit at the Vancouver Art Gallery. (Two clock hours available). 7:30 am - 10:00 pm. Trip leaders: Dr. Douglas Jackson and Nadine FabbiShushan. Cost: $60 includes Amtract round-trip to Vancouver, breakfast and a sandwich dinner, and admission to the Gallery. Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Info: 543-6269. May 9 * Canadian Film and Filmmakers - Dinner/Lecture. Part of the series "International Trends and Transitions in Your World." 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Speaker: Darryl Macdonald, Director, Seattle International Film Festival. Cost: $22, checks must be received at least one week in advance of event. Info: 543-1675. ****************************************************************************** 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 To request disability accommodations, contact the office of the ADA Coordinator, at least ten days in advance of the event. 543-6450 (voice); 543-6452 (TDD); 685-3885 (FAX); access@u.washington.edu (E-mail). The Henry M. Jackson . School of International Studies University of Washington Box # 353650 Seattle, WA 98195-3650 Charles Paxton,Secretary to the Director Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies Box 353650, University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195 Ph: (206) 543-4372 .