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Released: 24-Apr-2019 9:05 AM EDT
Fire: The Unthinkable
Wichita State University

Following the recent fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame, Lynne Davis, the Robert L. Town Distinguished Professor of Organ at Wichita State University, has written a reflective piece, “Fire: The Unthinkable.” Davis is familiar with the cathedral and the Great Organ and Choir Organ, having performed two concerts there. Read her thoughts on the history and significance of the Cathedral of Notre Dame and its world-renowned Great Organ.

Released: 23-Apr-2019 10:00 AM EDT
Nature-Inspired Local Folk Art Makes Earth Day Every Day at the Jacques Cousteau Reserve
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The Jacques Cousteau National Estuarine Research Reserve, which is managed by Rutgers University, celebrated Earth Day with new folk art designed and fabricated by local blacksmiths. Representing three habitats found in the reserve – forest, marsh and bay – the three-panel display is a new permanent installation at the Grassle Marsh Interpretive Trail kiosk.

Released: 22-Apr-2019 9:15 AM EDT
Play your way through Reiman Gardens with larger-than-life toys and games
Iowa State University

Reiman Gardens teamed up with an Iowa State University architecture lecturer and design and engineering students to create eight larger-than-life toys and games — each with an ecological twist — for its exhibit this year. Starting April 27, visitors will find some of their favorite games throughout the gardens, inspired by KerPlunk, Connect Four, chess and more.

Released: 22-Apr-2019 7:05 AM EDT
Rick Kinsel Joins NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts’ Board of Trustees
New York University

NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts has announced the appointment of Rick Kinsel to the Institute’s Board of Trustees.

Released: 19-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
WIU Professor Finalist for Pulitzer Prize in Music
Western Illinois University

A Western Illinois University School of Music professor has been named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music, the first in the University's history.

Released: 19-Apr-2019 8:05 AM EDT
Comic Series Brings Science to Life
University of Georgia

A new series of comic books - in Spanish and English - helps kids understand complex scientific processes and ideas

Released: 18-Apr-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Three Faculty Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco cancer biologist Alan Ashworth, PhD, structural biologist Yifan Cheng, PhD, and molecular physiologist Holly Ingraham, PhD, have been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Released: 18-Apr-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Why The Notre Dame Fire Affected Us All
Texas A&M University

The April 15 fire at the 850-year-old Notre Dame cathedral in Paris was met with disbelief and despair by people worldwide. Catholics mourned the damage to their sacred religious center during Holy Week, while others lamented the potential loss of a significant architectural landmark. Hundreds of thousands posted photos of their experiences visiting the cathedral on social media, while others anguished over never having seen the site in person.

Released: 17-Apr-2019 4:05 PM EDT
Pediatric Endocrinologist Gives Iconic “Mona Lisa” a Second Medical Opinion
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Michael Yafi, MD, refutes the most recent hypothesis that “Lisa” had hypothyroidism and psychomotor retardation.

Released: 17-Apr-2019 12:05 PM EDT
Francine Berman Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute computer scientist Francine Berman has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences along with luminaries including former First Lady Michele Obama, author Jonathan Franzen, and gender theorist Judith Butler.

Released: 17-Apr-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Virtual Reality Experience Takes Audience Back to 10,000 BC at This Year’s Tribeca Film Festival, April 24-May 5
New York University

The film experience moves forward while looking backward with the U.S. premiere of CAVE, a shared virtual-reality experience that transports audiences back thousands of years, April 24 through May 5 at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival.

Released: 17-Apr-2019 7:05 AM EDT
American Academy of Arts and Sciences Elects Eight NYU Faculty as 2019 Fellows
New York University

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS) has elected eight New York University faculty as fellows.

Released: 16-Apr-2019 9:05 AM EDT
New conference to focus on lack of diversity in philosophy departments
Binghamton University, State University of New York

A new session at this year's American Philosophical Association's Pacific Division Meeting tackles the issue of diversity and representation in philosophy departments across the country.

Released: 16-Apr-2019 6:05 AM EDT
NYU's Griswold Wins 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Amity and Prosperity
New York University

Eliza Griswold, a Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University’s Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, has won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction for Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the Fracturing of America (Farrar, Straus and Giroux).

Released: 15-Apr-2019 4:40 PM EDT
Wallach Invited to Speak on Continued Relevance of Recording Studios
Bowling Green State University

Dr. Jeremy Wallach, a BGSU professor of popular culture and expert on popular music and globalization, was invited to Venice, Italy, for the annual “Music and Musicology in the 21st Century” conference. He presented on the soulful experience of the recording studio, and why technology cannot replace that personal interaction.

Released: 12-Apr-2019 5:05 PM EDT
UC San Diego celebrates contemporary literature in New Writing Series
University of California San Diego

The UC San Diego Department of Literature’s New Writing Series has introduced hundreds of writers to the greater San Diego community since 1986, and this year’s spring speakers encompass a wide range of up-and-coming and established authors. Poets, novelists, the first campus reading by a new faculty member — plus three alumni returning to the university — this quarter’s New Writing Series is big and diverse, and kicks off April 17.

Released: 12-Apr-2019 11:05 AM EDT
URI History Professor Uses ‘Game of Thrones’ to Help Students Understand Medieval History
University of Rhode Island

Like “Star Wars,” URI Professor Joelle Rollo-Koster has used “GOT” in class to explain aristocratic feuds of 12th and 13th century France and England, including this semester in Western Europe in the High Middle Ages. Simply, she wonders if students’ ability to follow the labyrinth of shifting alliances in “Game of Thrones” can be transferred to following the dynastic intricacies of medieval Europe.

Released: 10-Apr-2019 12:00 PM EDT
Tulane anthropologist awarded Guggenheim Fellowship to study Amazon rainforests
Tulane University

Tulane University anthropology professor William Balée has been named a 2019 Guggenheim Fellow by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to document the historical ecology of the lower Amazon basin.

   
Released: 9-Apr-2019 1:05 PM EDT
CSUMB Set to Host 23rd Annual Social Justice Colloquium
California State University, Monterey Bay

The 2019 Social Justice Colloquium at CSUMB explores the influence of filmmaking and documentaries in social justice movements in Iranian society.

Released: 8-Apr-2019 2:05 PM EDT
From The Stage to The Big Screen: Teaching Digital Costume Design at Rutgers
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Shane Ballard, the costume design artist for Steven Spielberg’s upcoming "West Side Story" remake and the "Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" with Oprah Winfrey – and a frequent collaborator for Paul Tazewell, the Tony Award-winning costume designer for Hamilton – teaches the strange art of digital costume design at Rutgers-New Brunswick’s Mason Gross School of the Arts.

Released: 4-Apr-2019 4:05 PM EDT
International Peace Photographer Reza Deghati to Speak at UC San Diego
University of California San Diego

The UC San Diego Division of Arts and Humanities welcomes international photographer Reza Deghati to campus to discuss his philosophy about bettering humanity. The artist, who simply goes by Reza, will present a public forum and exhibition of his work through April. A renowned Persian photographer now based in Paris, Reza will be on campus as a visiting artist under the Roghieh Chehre-Azad Distinguished Professorship.

Released: 4-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
BGSU to host Batman in Popular Culture Conference April 12-13
Bowling Green State University

In celebration of the 80th anniversary of Batman, Bowling Green State University’s Department of Popular Culture and the Ray and Pat Browne Library for Popular Culture Studies will host the Batman in Popular Culture Conference April 12-13 at Jerome Library.

Released: 3-Apr-2019 4:50 PM EDT
National Portrait Gallery Presents “In Mid-Sentence”
Smithsonian Institution

The Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery will present “In Mid-Sentence,” a selection of photographs from the museum’s collection that, when seen together, showcase the camera’s ability to capture people in dialogue. Featuring more than 25 images of people in the midst of public speeches, intimate confessions, shared jokes, political confrontations and other forms of verbal exchange, the exhibition will explore the power of visual communication.

Released: 3-Apr-2019 2:05 PM EDT
South Dakota poet receives 2018 Whirling Prize
South Dakota State University

South Dakota State University English Professor Christine Stewart received the 2018 Whirling Prize in Poetry from Etchings Press for her book, “Bluewords Greening.”

Released: 2-Apr-2019 12:05 PM EDT
English professor named NEA Creative Writing Fellow
West Virginia University - Eberly College of Arts and Sciences

West Virginia University professor Jenny Johnson has been named a 2019 National Endowment for Arts Creative Writing Fellow. An assistant professor in the Department of English, she is using the award to write and do research toward her second book of poems.

Released: 2-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Opera is Dead...Or is it?
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Here in the United States, the world of opera is shifting, changing, and finding ways to survive through a decline in ticket sales. Experts have attributed opera’s troubles to high ticket prices, an aging audience, and a failure to modernize. A new, younger generation of opera artists and enthusiasts at Rutgers offer insight into the changing landscape of opera, including through Snapchat and Instagram giveaways. And Eduardo Chama, co-head of Opera Theater Rutgers at Mason Gross and a Grammy winning opera composer says there are effective ways to save opera, but it might mean looking to other countries’ success in order to make a foundational change.

Released: 2-Apr-2019 10:00 AM EDT
Alfre Woodard to speak at Tufts commencement May 19
Tufts University

Actor, producer and activist Alfre Woodard will deliver the commencement address to the Tufts University Class of 2019 on Sunday, May 19.

Released: 2-Apr-2019 5:05 AM EDT
Historic Ruin Rises to the Challenge
Menokin Foundation

The NEH awarded the Menokin Foundation a $500,000 Infrastructure and Capacity Building Challenge Grant, one of 22 such grants. The 3:1 challenge, seeking to leverage federal funds against private investment, requires Menokin to raise $1.5 million. Menokin will stabilize the 18th century National Historic Landmark for educational programming.

Released: 1-Apr-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Lecture To Explore “Frontiers in Musical Interactive System Design & Aesthetics”
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute will host a lecture by McGill University’s Marcelo M. Wanderley titled “Frontiers in Musical Interactive System Design & Aesthetics” on April 5, 2019.

Released: 1-Apr-2019 7:00 AM EDT
Sure, Captain Marvel is tough - but look out for Li’l Tomboy
Ohio State University

Not all strong females challenging gender roles in the comics were superheroes like Captain Marvel or Wonder Woman. Some were just regular girls with a bit of attitude and names like Little Iodine, Little Lulu and, yes, Nancy. And at least one – Li’l Tomboy – pushed the boundary even further.

Released: 29-Mar-2019 4:00 AM EDT
European Research Council awards UC San Diego professor 2.5 million euros for music research
University of California San Diego

University of California San Diego Distinguished Professor Jann Pasler was awarded a 2.5 million-euro Advanced Grant from the European Research Council, funding a five-year project that will greatly expand colonialism studies and help develop researchers from the former French empire as well as Europe.

Released: 28-Mar-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Monterey Jazz Festival Presents "Jazz and New Horizons" at CSUMB’s World Theater
California State University, Monterey Bay

SEASIDE, Ca., March 28, 2019 – A special collaboration between the Monterey Jazz Festival (MJF) and California State University, Monterey Bay (CSUMB) brings the 2019 Monterey Jazz Festival Artists-in-Residence Allison Miller and Derrick Hodge to CSUMB’s World Theater on Thursday, April 4, 2019 at 8 p.m.

Released: 28-Mar-2019 8:00 AM EDT
“Ovid and Art,” a Symposium on the Influential Roman Poet—April 4
New York University

New York University’s Center for Ancient Studies will host “Ovid and Art,” a symposium on the influential Roman poet, on Thurs., April 4.

Released: 27-Mar-2019 12:05 PM EDT
$1.5 million Mellon Foundation grant to fund faculty, advance study of race, colonialism and diaspora
Tufts University

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has awarded $1.5 million to the School of Arts and Sciences at Tufts University to hire faculty members in the newly established Department of Studies in Race, Colonialism, and Diaspora (RCD), an interdisciplinary department organized around the historic and contemporary study of colonialism and race in shaping societies and cultures in the United States and the world

Released: 27-Mar-2019 10:05 AM EDT
WFU facilities staff to star in performance this fall
Wake Forest University

Wake Forest University and Forklift Danceworks are co-creating “From the Ground Up” – a dance featuring the movement and stories of custodial, maintenance and utilities, landscaping, construction, and waste reduction employees. The large-scale performance will take place on Hearn Plaza Oct. 4 and 5.

Released: 25-Mar-2019 3:40 PM EDT
SpongeBob Is Not Why Your Child Likes Junk Food, New Study Shows
University of Colorado Boulder

Parents and lawmakers looking to cartoon characters as a reason children choose cookies over carrots may be looking in the wrong direction, according to a new report from CU Boulder’s Leeds School of Business and Colorado State University’s College of Business. The researchers say children choose junk food over healthy food with or without cartoons on the packaging.

   
Released: 25-Mar-2019 11:05 AM EDT
Decolonization and the Settler-Indigenous Relationship
University of California San Diego

In new work by University of California San Diego assistant professor Julie Burelle, the relationship between two groups of people in Quebec, Canada come into play in an important conversation about settler-indigenous relationships and decolonization, deeply adding to the growing field of Indigenous studies.



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