From jsis@u.washington.edu Fri Apr 9 09:06:36 1999 Received: from jason04.u.washington.edu (root@jason04.u.washington.edu [140.142.78.5]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id JAA28922 for ; Fri, 9 Apr 1999 09:06:35 -0700 Received: from saul6.u.washington.edu (jsis@saul6.u.washington.edu [140.142.82.1]) by jason04.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id JAA38864 for ; Fri, 9 Apr 1999 09:06:35 -0700 Received: from localhost (jsis@localhost) by saul6.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id JAA30156 for ; Fri, 9 Apr 1999 09:06:34 -0700 (PDT) Date: Fri, 9 Apr 1999 09:06:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Jackson School of International Studies To: jsis-uw@u.washington.edu Subject: The Jackson School Calendar, April 9, 1999 Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII the JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR April 9, 1999 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 CIBER = Center for International Business Education & Research CWES = Center for West European Studies, JSIS JSIS = The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies 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 ________________________________________________________________________ April 7 - May 5 Conference on Contemporary European Cinema & Ethnicity (A special opportunity for K-12 and Community College teachers). A series of nine films shown over five weeks. Films and discussions will focus on five topics: Cinema in the Post-Yugoslav Republics; Histories of European Jewry; Across Continents/Between Cultures; Race, Romance and the Working Class; and Ethnicity in Action. All films will be shown at 7:00 pm, various UW venues. Teachers who register will receive free clock hours for the sessions they attend. A packet of materials to help with teaching the topic is available for $15. Films and discussion sessions are free. Educators should register by April 2 to hold a seat. Sponsors: The Cinema Study Program; The Center for West European Studies; the Center for the Humanities; the Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies Program; The Department of English; the Goethe Institut. Info and registration: 543-1675. April 8, 9, 10 UW World Dance Series. 8:00 pm each evening, Meany Hall. Featuring Joe Chvala & The Flying Foot Forum (Joe Chvala is joined by Swedish folk-based rock group Hedningarna). Cost: $28 for adults, $19 ages 25 and under. Ticket Office: 543-4480. April 9 The Aesthetics of Fascism in Three Japanese Wars. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Alan Tansman, Dept. of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Georgetown University. Sponsor: Japan Colloquium, East Asia Studies/JSIS. Info: Adria Klotz, 543-4391. International Career Directions. 12:30 - 4:30 pm, HUB 310. Keynote lecture "Culture Crossings in Your Global Career" by Kathleen Sebastion, business etiquette and international protocol consultant. In addition, several Jackson School alumni will share information and insights on working in the international arena. Sponsor: Jackson School Student Association; Career Services Office/JSIS. Info: 543-0176. * U.S. Relations with North and South Korea. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 135. Speaker: Dick Christensen, Deputy Chief of Mission, U.S. Embassy in Seoul, Korea. Sponsor: Korea Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. April 9 - 11 Student and Physician Activism: Tools for Today and Tomorrow (1999 International Conference of Student Physicians for Social Responsibility). 1:00 pm Friday until noon Sunday, South Campus Center. Primary topics to include gun control, disarmament, and environmental protection. Sponsor: Student Physicians for Social Responsibility. Cost: $20 students, $35 resident physicians and non-physicians, $50 physicians. To register, visit the website at or call 860-4868. April 10 Fifth Annual REECAS Conference. 8:30 am - 4:30 pm, Comunications Building, Room 120, UW Seattle Campus. Conference goal: to establish a regional community of scholars, educators, and others interested in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Conference will consist of formal and informal paper presentations, round table discussions, research updates, and related topics. Specialists, including advanced graduate students, as well as business representatives, K-12 teachers, government agencies, and other interested parties are encouraged to attend. Sponsor: Russian, East European, and Central Asian Studies (REECAS) Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Conference webpage: http://weber.u.washington.edu/~reecas/outreach/99conf/conf1999.htm Southeast Asia Mosaic: The Mainland. 8:30 am - 4:00 pm, Thomson Hall 101. Workshop for K-9 teachers focusing on Mainland Southeast Asia and featuring sessions by international experts, experienced teachers and artists. Preliminary program: Thai Storytelling, Burma Today, the Land and People of Vietnam, Classical Music and Dance of Thailand, Folktales Festival. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers and Washington State Council for the Social Studies. Fee: $35 includes lunch and clock hours. Pre-registration required. Special discount: sign up also for Festival MOSAIC on April 24 and pay $30/each. Registration & info: 543-9606. Images of India. Noon - 3:00 pm, Waterfront Activities Center. Speakers: Rajinder M. Abhyankar, Consul General of India; Microsoft General Manager of India Affairs. Sponsor: South Asia Center. Info: 543-4800. * Symposium: "Power and Powerlessness in the 21st Century: The Changing Role of the Individual, Society, State, and Supranational Organization." 9:00 am - 12:30 pm, HUB 310. Featured panelist: visiting scholar Victor Sumsky, Head of the International Relations Section Center, Russia-Third World Comparative Studies, Institute of World Economic and International Relations, Russian Academy of Sciences. Sponsors: Jackson School Student Association; Jackson School Center for Career Services. Info: or . Copies of papers to be discussed: Europeanization and Domestic Change: The Impact of Europe on National Institutions. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 325. Speaker: Thomas Risse, Joint Chair in International Relations, Dept. of Social and Political Science and Robert Schuman Centre, European University Institute. Sponsor: European Union Center/JSIS. Info: 616-2415. April 14 * The Role of the HCI Triumvirate in Korea's Industrialization, 1972 - 1979. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Hyung-a Kim, Australian National University. Sponsor: Korean Colloquium/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. * Women Rising Above the Negative Impact of the Global Economy: Examples of Successful Microeconomic Development Programs in West Bengal, India. 11:30 am - 1:00 pm, Lander Hall Dining Hall Room 134. Speaker: Sutapa Basu, Director, UW Women's Center. Sponsor: UW Women's Center. Register by 4/12. Cost: $17.00. Registration & info: 685-1090. * The M/V New Carissa: New Solutions to Old Problems (multi-media report of the grounding, oil spill, explosion, burning, tow plan, wildlife issues and multi-agency coordination regarding the Oregon coast incident). 11:30 - 12:30 pm, Room 268 Marine Studies Building, 3707 Brooklyn Ave. NE. Speaker: Lieutenant Jim Peschel, United States Coast Guard. Sponsor: School of Marine Affairs. Info: April 15 China Colloquium: "Exemplary Sodomites: Chivalry and Love in Late Ming Culture." 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Giovanni Vitiello, University of Hawaii. Sponsor: China Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. A New Publication Series of Kirghiz Oral Literature. 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Denny 123. Speakers: Elmira Kochumkulkizi and Jipan Dyshembiyeva, NELC. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. * Vietnamese Women's Lives in Translation: A Conversation with Phan Thanh Hao. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Thomson 119. Speaker: Phan Thanh Hao, translator, writer, interpreter. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. April 16 Free Speech and the Political Maturation of Singapore. 12:30 - 1:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Chee Soon Juan, General Secretary of the Singapore Democratic Party. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. Documentaries on the Epic Manas. 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Denny 123. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. April 16 & 17 (corrected dates) Conference on U.S. - European Interactions. 8:30 am - 6:00 pm on 4/16 and at 8:50 am -5:30 pm on 4/17, HUB 310. Preliminary schedule includes 23 speakers from the U.S. and Europe on the following topics: American Influences in Europe, Cultural and Institutional Interactions, Institutional Interactions and Values, East-Central Europe, Norms and Values, U.S. Interactions with West European States, The European Union, and NATO. Sponsors: Center for West European Studies/JSIS; International Studies Center/JSIS; and the Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-1675 or April 19 * The Significance of Korean Classical Poems in Chinese in the Poetic Tradition of Korea. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 135. Speaker: Dr. Sung-Il Lee, Department of English Language and Literature, Yonsei University. Sponsor: Asian L & L. Info: 543-4996. * The Ninth Annual Korean Caravan. 10:30 - 11:30 am, Balmer 143. Speaker: Lee Hong-koo, Ambassador of the Republic of Korea to the United States; Stephen W. Bosworth, United States Ambassador to the Republic of Korea. Sponsor: Korea Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. April 19 & 20 New Faiths, Old Fears: Recent Immigrants and the Challenge of Diasporic Spiritual Practices to North American Norms and Values. 3:30 pm each day in HUB 310. Speaker: Professor Bruce Lawrence, Duke University, American Academy of Religion lecturer. On April 19 the topic will be "North American Religion or Religions?" and on April 20 the topic will be "Is Religious Pluralism a Media Mirage of Hypervisualization?" Sponsors: Comparative Religion Program/JSIS; The Center for Humanities; Comparative History of Ideas Program; South Asian Studies Program.. Info: 543-4235. April 20 * Sino-U.S. Relations in the Wake of Zhu Rongji's Visit. 11:30 am registration, 12:00 noon luncheon, The Westing Seattle, Grand Ballroom Three, Fourth Floor. Speaker: Ambassador Li Zhaoxing, Chinese Ambassador to the United States. Sponsor: Washington State China Relations Council. Cost: $40 members, $45 non-members, $380 table of ten. RSVP by 4/14 to 441-4419. April 21 Southeast Asia: Indonesia on the Edge of Revolution: Crisis and Change (Part of the International Updates Series: Trends and Transitions in Your World). 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Speaker: Daniel Lev, Professor Emeritus, Political Science. Sponsor: Jackson School Outreach Centers; Ciber. Pre-registration is required at least one week before the lecture you are planning to attend. $22/per person for lecture and dinner. Special Series Discount: $132 (must register before Feb. 5). Registration and info: 543-1816. Homicide in Two Colombian Cities: Effect of a Ban on the Carrying of Firearms. 12:30 - 1:20, Thomson 317. Speaker: Andres Villaveces Izquierdo, Dept. of Epidemiology. Sponsor: Latin American Studies/JSIS. Info: 615-3435. April 22 Black Identity in Theory and Practice Colloquium: "American Jazz and German Respectability." 3:30 pm, Smith 115. Speaker: Uta Poiger, Assistant Professor of History (with comments by Michelle Habell-Pallan, Assistant Professor of American Ethnic Studies). Sponsor: Committee for the Study of Race in American Culture. Obtain copy of paper from . Info: 543-7895. "Cuentos de amor y distancia"porque la esperanza sigue viva. (Presentacion en espanol, followed by bilingual Q & A session). 7:00 pm, UW Faculty Club. Speaker: Javier Amaya, journalist, human rights activist. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program/JSIS; Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities. Info: 685-3435. Time Out in Tai Villages (Reflections on Boun Bang Fai, the Laotian Fire Rocket Festival). 7:00 pm, Burke Museum. Speaker: Leedom Lefferts, Anthropology Dept., Drew University. Sponsors: Burke Museum and Southeast Asia Center. Info: 543-5590. Economic Issues of Uzbekistan. (Tentative). 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Denny 123. Speaker: Roza Rahmanbayeva, University of Economics, Tashkent. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. April 23 Small Private Enterprises of Uzbekistan. (Tentative). 12:30 - 1:20 pm, Denny 123. Speaker: Abror Azimov, University of Economics, Tashkent. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. April 24 Festival Mosaic. 8:30 am - 3:30 pm, Thomson Hall. Saturday workshop that introduces teachers in elementary and middle school to new ideas, resources, and activities for teaching about the world beyond our borders. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers; Washington State Council for the Social Studies; Seattle International Children's Festival; Northwest Folklife. Cost, registration and further info: 543-1921. Asian Languages & Literature Graduate Student Colloquium. 9:00 am - 5:00 pm, Gowen Hall Lounge B-1. Now accepting proposals for 20 minute presentations. Anyone interested in participating in the colloquium should send a brief, informative proposal to Charles Exley at or Chris Ratcliff at by Saturday, April 3. April 26, 28 and May 3 Israel Among the Nations: Retrieving Jewish Diplomatic Traditions (1999 Samuel and Althea Stroum Lectures). April 26 topic: "A Light Unto the Nations: Biblical Diplomacy." April 28 topic: "A Nation Apart: Diaspora Diplomacy." May 3 topic: "A Nation Like All Others: Sovereign Statecraft." All lectures will be held in Kane Hall 220 at 8:00 pm, with a reception following the first lecture. Dietary laws will be observed. Speaker: Professor Aharon Klieman, the Nahum Goldmann Professor of Diplomacy, Tel Aviv University, Deputy Director of the newly-established Perres Institute for Diplomacy and Regional Cooperation, andSenior Research Associate at the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Program, JSIS. Info: 543-4243. April 27 Eating Camel and Breaking the Sabbath: Qur'an 3:93 in Early Islamic Exegesis. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Brannon Wheeler, NELC. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program Faculty Seminars: Canons and Canonicity. Info: 543-4835. Copies of papers to be discussed: Environment and Security: The New Agenda for the Post Cold War World. 7:00 - 8:30 pm, Boeing Auditorium, UW. (No-host reception prior to lecture 6:00 - 7:00 pm in Seafirst Executive Center). Speaker: Bill Nitze, Assistant Secretary of the EPA for International Activities, formerly Deputy Secretary of State for environmental affairs. Sponsors: World Affairs Council; Jackson School of International Studies; KUOW 94.9 FM; Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Cost: Free for Council members; $5 for co-sponsor members; $10 non-members. Info: 682-6986. Business Opportunities & Challenges: Navigating the Intricate Web of Asian Economies. 7:30 - 9:00 am, Rainer Tower, 1301 5th Ave., Suite 2400. Cost: $8 in advance, $12 at door, includes light breakfast. Panelists: John Butler, Director of Southeast Asia Center/JSIS and Professor of Business; Anthony D'Costa, Professor of Comparative International Development. Sponsors: Southeast Asia Center; South Asia Center; Trade Development Alliance of Greater Seattle. Registration and Info: Kristi Harness, 389-7255. April 28 The People Power Movement Against Marcos and Its Enduring Significance. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 325. Speaker: Richard Deats, Director of Communications, Fellowship of Reconciliation and Editor of Fellowship Magazine. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. * The State, Democracy, and the Reform of the Corporate Sector in Korea. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Meredith Woo-Cumings, Northwestern University. Sponsor: Korea Colloquium/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. April 29 Roads to Recovery and Rededication: Building Sustainable Communities in El Salvador. (new title) 1:30 pm, Parrington 108. Speaker: Jose Alas, Foundation for Self-Sufficiency. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program/JSIS; Democracy and Globalization Working Group. Info: 685-3435. For information about other local events with Sr. Alas, call 547-7565. American-Uzbek Educational Exchanges. Time and location tba. Speaker: Richard Hawkins, Former Director of ACCELS in Tashkent. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. * Tibet: Peoples and Lands (slide presentation and narrative) 6:30 - 9:00 pm, Maharaja Restaurant, 8518 Greenwood Avenue North. Speaker: Russell Johnson, freelance photographer. Sponsor: World Affairs Council. No-host dinner. Registration & info: 682-6986. * Life After Capitalism: The Post-Corporate World. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Kane 220. Speaker: David C. Korten, author, formerly with the World Bank and the Ford Foundation. Sponsors: Democracy and Globalization Working Group; Graduate School of Public Affairs. Info: 685-3435. April 29 - 30 * 2nd Annual May Day Teach-In on Globalization and Democracy. Begins 1:30 pm in Parrington 108. Speakers, Workshops, Panels. Primary Sponsor: Democracy and Globalization Working Group. Info: 685-3435 and April 29 - May 7 Rescue of the Danish Jews (exhibit and opening day lecture held in conjunction with the meeting of The Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study). Odegaard Library. Dr. Therkel Straede, the Danish Professor of History at Odense University, Denmark, who designed the poster exhibit, will open the exhibit with a lecture on Thursday at 2:15 pm in room 220 Odegaard. The title of his talk is "The October 1943 Rescue of the Danish Jews: Preconditions and Assessment. A reception will follow his talk. The Dept. of Scandinavian Studies is sponsoring the event in its capacity as host this year to The Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study. Numerous other activities are planned, including a full day of documentary films on 4/29 in Kane 110 beginning at 8:00 am. For further info, contact Terje Leiren or Marianne Stoelen at 543-0645. April 30 Reforming the Swedish Model of Welfare Capitalism. 1:30 - 3:00 pm, HUB. Roundtable discussion with Jonas Pontusson (Cornell University), Paulette Kurzer (University of Arizona), Bo Rothstein (Goteborg University, Sweden, and Russell Sage Foundation, NYC), and Karen Anderson (UW). Sponsor: International Political Economy Colloquium. Info: 543-0645. Political Parties in Kirghizstan. Time and location tba. Speakers: Mar Topoyev and Jipar Dyshembiyeva, exchange students from Bishkek, Kirghizstan. Sponsor: Central Asian Studies Group/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. May 1 Women's Rights as Human Rights. 8:00 am - 5:00 pm, The Gallery, School of Social Work. Conference Topics: Women's Health and Human Rights; Trafficking and Sexual Tourism; Violence Against Women and State Accountability. Speakers: Dr. Juliette Engel, MiraMed Institute; others tba. Sponsor: Human Rights Education and Research Network. Info: 352-5421. May 3 Re: White Lady Snake (Lecture/Demo on modern Asian dance theatre). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Mew Chang Tsing, Artistic Director, RiverGrass Dance, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Sponsors: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS; NW Asia American Theatre. Info: 543-9606. * External Relations of China's Provinces. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Peter T.Y. Cheung, University of Hong Kong. Sponsor: China Colloquium/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. May 4 Ancient Arabic Poetry (tentative title). 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Suzanne Stetkevych, Indiana University. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program Faculty Seminars: Canons and Canonicity. Info: 543-4835. Copies of papers to be discussed: May 5 New Challenges in Environmental Planning in Bolivia. 12:30 - 1:20 pm (Brown Bag talk), Thomson 317. Speaker: Jorge Jung Marsical, Humphrey Fellow, UW Public Affairs. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 685-3435. May 7 Between Cultures: Art, Memory, and Identity (lecture and slide presentation). 7:00 pm, Smith 211 (new location). Speaker: Ariela Boronat, Seattle artist. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program, JSIS; Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities. Info: 6853435. May 10 Pramoedya Ananta Toer: Politics & Publishing in Indonesia Today. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 325. Speaker: John H. McGolynn, Editor-in-Chief, Lontar. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. May 12 Latin America: Business, History, and Culture in Mexico: Interesting Intersections (Part of the International Updates Series: Trends and Transitions in Your World). 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Speaker: Carlos Gil, Professor, History and Latin American Studies. Sponsor: Jackson School Outreach Centers; CIBER. Pre-registration is required at least one week before the talk you are planning to attend. $22/per person for lecture and dinner. Special Sereis Discount: $132 (must register before Feb. 5). Info and registration: 543-1816. May 13 The Violent Task of Creativity (new title) (lecture and slide presentation). 7:00 pm, Henry Art Gallery. Speaker: Claudia Bernardi, artist and human rights activist. Sponsors: Latin American Studies Program/JSIS; Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities; UW Human Rights Education and Research Network (HRERN). Info: 685-3435. May 14 Conference on Indochinese Francophone Literature: A Search For Identity. Time tba, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Topics: history of Vietnamese language, identity, nation and narration, (m)other, literature as a response to colonialism. Sponsors: French & Italian Studies Division; Southeast Asia Center/JSIS; Center for Humanities; Comparative Literature; Center for West European Studies/JSIS; Language Learning Center. For times and further info: Elodie Phan, Liberalizing Agricultural Trade?: CAP Reform, US Policy and Trans-Atlantic Trade Tensions. 9:00 am - 4:30 pm, Petersen Room, Allen Library. Speakers from North America and Europe will speak on and discuss some of the most important issues and debates in international agricultural trade. Sponsors: European Union Center; JSIS. Info: 616-2415. May 14-15 Silver Anniversary Symposium for the Journal of Japanese Studies. Times to be announced; Faculty Center and Kane Hall. International panel of speakers. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program, JSIS. Info: 543-9302. Also see web site: http://weber.u.washington.edu/~jjs/25home.html May 15 Eleventh Annual Nicholas Poppe Symposium. Details forthcoming. Info: 543-9963 or 543-0697. May 17 America in the Twenty-First Century: A Reporter's Perspective. 7:30 pm, Meany Hall. Speaker: Tom Friedman, Reporter, New York Times. Sponsor: The Jackson School. No registration or tickets required. Info: 543-4372. May 18 Canon Formation and Critique of Ritual Practice in Early China. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Martin Kern, Columbia University. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program Faculty Seminars: Canons and Canonicity. Info: 543-4835. Copies of papers to be discussed: May 19 Patricia Galvao in the Sao Paolo of the 1930s: 'Parque Industrial' and the Novel of the Forgotten. 12:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Paloma Martinez-Carbajo, UW Division of Spanish and Portuguese. Sponsor: Latin American Studies/JSIS. Info: 543-3435. Economic Interdependence in the Pacific Rim: The Post Crisis Outlook. 7:00 - 8:30 pm, Boeing Auditorium, UW. (no-host reception prior to lecture 6:00 - 7:00 pm in Seafirst Executive Center). Speaker: Dr. John Page, Chief Economist and Director, World Bank. Sponsors: World Affairs Council; Jackson School of International Studies; KUOW 94.9 FM; Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Cost: Free for Council members; $5 for co-sponsor members; $10 non-members. Info: 682-6986. May 21 Ethnic Identity in American Society: the Case of the Greek-Americans (part of the Hellenic Studies initiative). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Charles C. Moskos, Professor of Sociology, Northwestern University. Sponsor: European Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 221-4737. May 21 - 22 Symposium: Black Identity in Theory and Practice. Sponsor: Committee for the Study of Race in American Culture. Info: 543-7895. May 22 Sts. Cyril & Methodius Day Celebration (dance, music and singing). 6:30 - 11:30 pm, St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church, 2100 Boyer Avenue East. Sponsor: Slavic Department; Student Slavic Club; Association of Alumni and Friends of the Slavic Dept. Cost: $5 for students, various prices for others. Reservations and info: 543-3839. Boun Bang Fai Festival (Celebration of Laotian Fire Rocket Festival). 10:00 am - 3:00 pm, Burke Museum. Program: Buddhist blessing, a talk by Karl Hutterer, Director of the Burke Museum, a parade around campus, and performance in Red Square. Sponsor: Burke Museum, 543-5590. The Arabian Peninsula and the Future of Central Asia Conference. 8:30 am - 5:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Speakers: Dale F. Eickelman, Dartmouth; Hal Feiveson, Princeton; Shafeeq N. Ghabra, Director, Kuwait Embassy, Washington, D.C.; Tom Golts, freelance journalist; Amy Jaffe, Rice University; Anatoly M. Khazanov, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Gwenn Okruhlik, University of Arkansas; Jean-Francois Seznec, Lafayette Group, CT. Sponsors: Middle East Center/JSIS; Russian, East European, and Central Asian Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4227. May 24 Translating Texts of Colonial Java: Purpose, Practice, Politics. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 325. Speaker: Nancy Florida, Associate Professor, Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Michigan. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. May 25 >From Codex to Sacred Book: Augustine, Canonicity, and the Shape of Salvation History. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Eugene Vance, UW. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program Faculty Seminars: Canons and Canonicity. Info: 543-4835. Copies of papers to be discussed: How Many People Can the Earth Support? 7:00 - 8:30 pm, Boeing Auditorium, UW (No-host reception prior to lecture 6:00 - 7:00 pm, Seafirst Executive Center). Speaker: Joel Cohen, Professor of Populations, Rockefeller University, New York. Sponsors: World Affairs Council; Jackson School of International Studies; KUOW 94.9 FM; Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Cost: Free for Council members; $5 for co-sponsor members; $10 non-members. Info: 682-6986. May 26 Do Civilizations Clash? Islam, Westernization, and the Dilemmas of Turkish Modernity (Part of the International Updates Series: Trends and Transitions in Your World). 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Speaker: Soli Ozel, Visiting Professor, Business School, and Editor of Foreign Policy (Turkish Edition) and Private View: The International Journal of the Turkish Businessman's Association. Sponsor: Jackson School Outreach Centers; CIBER. $22/per person for lecture and dinner. Info and registration: 543-1816. June 3 5th Annual Global Trade, Transportation, and Logistics Studies Conference. 8:00 am - 2:00 pm, HUB East Ballroom. Info: Greg Shelton, 616-5778. ****************************************************************************** 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 .