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Thursday, April 5th

Time Event Title
10:00 am-1:00 pmNSF CAREER Award Roundtable East Campus Union
This training workshop for pre-tenure faculty at UNL will give tips for successfully competing for the National Science Foundation's CAREER program. The workshop will be presented by Lucy Deckard of Academic Research Funding Strategies. More information is available at http://research.unl.edu/events/roundtable/. Registration is required.
3:30 pmSchool of Natural Resources/Agricultural Economics Seminar HARDIN HALL
Michael Roberts from the Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics at North Carolina State University will be leading a seminar on "Food Commodity Prices: Stylized Facts and Prospects for the Future."

Roberts will discuss how climate change, biofuel production and other factors may influence supply and demand of rice, wheat, maize and soybeans in coming decades. He said that these four crops cover about half the world’s arable land and amount to three-quarters of the caloric base of world food consumption.

Before joining NCSU Roberts was with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. His research focuses on the intersection of agricultural and environmental economics, and he has published many papers on the effects of U.S. agricultural policies on production, land use, land values and the size of farms. He is also researching how to design simple, cost-effective ways to buy environmental services such as carbon sequestration from farmers and land owners.

This seminar is co-sponsored by the School of Natural Resources and the Department of Agricultural Economics.
3:30 pmSBS Seminar - Peter Calow HAMILTON HALL
Peter Calow will talk about some of his early work in ecology – and how it relates to contemporary issues involving life cycles, aging and an integrated approach to organismic biology. He will touch on the costs of reproduction, the parasite paradox, reproducing without sex and gametes and the evolutionary enigma of aging. Intriguingly he will also describe how some of his work has been published in Vogue.
5:30 pm-6:30 pmIAS Lecture: NYU Professor C. Daniel Dawson Van Brunt Visitor Center
A multi-talented artist, Prof. Dawson has worked as a photographer, filmmaker, curator, arts administrator, consultant and scholar. He has served as Curator of Photography, Film and Video at the Studio Museum in Harlem, and Curatorial Consultant and Director of Education at the Museum for African Art (NYC). As a scholar, he has lectured worldwide, and taught seminars at Columbia, New York, and Yale Universities. He is a currently a curatorial consultant for La Casita, a division of Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors specializing in presenting international oral traditions, and an exhibition curatorial consultant for Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Some of the most important treasures hidden in the cultural cargo of Africans shipped to the Americas were their ideas concerning music and dance. This is especially true for the people of Central Africa, in particular the Bakongo from the old Kingdom of the Kongo. The Bakongo, and those in their sphere of influence, made up the largest percentage of enslaved Africans coming to the Americas. They in turn had a powerful influence on the musical culture of the Americas. This is clearly illustrated by the fact that numerous musical terms used in the Americas, such as tango, samba, rumba, bomba, and cumbia, are all from Kikongo, a language of Central Africa. Many of the musics of the Americas are characterized by an African based percussive dominance as well as a keenly focused social commentary, in the words of poet Sekou Sundiata they represent "rhythm and news." In addition, we are greatly influence by African ideas about music, such as using food metaphors in reference to music, e.g., salsa, meringue, cooking, sweet, etc.

Using slides, videos and recordings, this presentation will celebrate one of the greatest cultural exchanges experienced by humankind, that is the sharing of African based musics and dances with the planet. This, often unacknowledged cultural treasure from Africa, continues to bring pleasure, beauty and social consciousness into our daily lives.

This lecture is part of the Interdisciplinary Arts Symposium (IAS) Season III, which explores Immigration, Migration, and Transplantation, looking at the theme of transforming, transferring, or hybridizing cultural identity, and its expression in drama, music, and dance. We will look particularly at how immigrants to the United States use performance to tell their stories. For more information about IAS Season III events, please visit www.unl.edu/ias.

The interdisciplinary Arts Symposium is sponsored by the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts, presented, in part, by the Lied Center for Performing Arts, and funded, in part, by the Hixson-Lied Endowment. The 11-12 season is supported by the Cooper Foundation
7:00 pmHonors Forum - Sandi Zellmer, "Water Law for the 21st Century" NEBRASKA UNION
Sandi Zellmer is the Alumni Professor of Natural Resources Law at the University of Nebraska College of Law. For more information, visit: http://law.unl.edu/facstaff/faculty/resident/szellmer.shtml

The Nebraska Colloquium engages the entire University of Nebraska-Lincoln community in thoughtful discussion of issues of overriding importance.
7:30 pm-9:00 pmWET INK! WESTBROOK MUSIC BUILDING
The composition studio of Eric Richards will perform in two recital on Wednesday, April 4 and again on Thursday, April 5, each at 7:30 pm in Westbrook Recital Hall — Room 119.
Both performances are FREE and open to the public

Ongoing Events:

Time Event Title
Jan 6th-Jul 29thExhibition: Tribute to Ardis James International Quilt Study Center & Museum
Jan 13th-Dec 2ndExhibition: “What’s in a Name? Inscribed Quilts” International Quilt Study Center & Museum
Jan 21st-Apr 6th"W" Grades Recorded for Withdrawals
Jan 21st-Apr 6thAll course withdrawals noted with a grade of "W" on academic record Various sites, UNL Campus
Mar 2nd-Sep 2ndExhibition: Jean Ray Laury: Getting It All Together International Quilt Study Center & Museum
Mar 26th-Apr 10thFall Priority Registration Begins
Mar 26th-Apr 12thPriority Registration begins for Fall Semester 2012 Various sites, UNL Campus
Apr 4th-Apr 5thUNL Spring Research Fair NEBRASKA UNION

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