Parking improvements, new decks require rate increase CMS
Transcription
Parking improvements, new decks require rate increase CMS
InsideIllinois F o r F a c u l t y a n d S t a f f , U n i v e r s i t y o f I l l i n o i s a t May 6, 2004 Vol. 23, No. 19 U r b a n a - C h a m p a i g n Changes to strengthen College of Communications By Craig Chamberlain News Bureau Staff Writer T here is a future for the UI College of Communications – and potentially a very bright one, according to its interim dean, Ron Yates. After more than a year of uncertainty and examination – during which disbanding the college and other severe options were discussed by two committees – the college officially has been told by the campus administration that it will proceed intact, Yates said. “The college is not only here as it was before, itʼs going to be bigger,” Yates said. One major initiative will be the creation and development of a broad and strong media studies program, building on existing college and campus strengths in that area. One emphasis of the program would be to offer courses on the media available to undergraduates throughout the campus and to establish a strong media studies major. The college comprises the departments of journalism and advertising, the Institute of Communications Research and the Division of Broadcasting, includ- ing WILL radio and TV stations. All of its academic units have continued to be ranked among the best in the nation, Yates said. His comments came in the aftermath of a meeting April 30 with tenured faculty in the college, during which campus Provost and Interim Chancellor Richard Herman discussed steps the college should take in moving forward. Herman also announced that he was appointing Yates as the permanent dean, pending approval from the universityʼs board of trustees. Hermanʼs recommendations came in a four-page letter to Yates that was written in response to the report from a 19-member college task force, chaired by journalism professor Walter Harrington, who recently was appointed interim head of his department. The task force, which met throughout the fall semester and reported in February, had been asked by Yates to address concerns raised last summer by an ad hoc campus committee. That committee cited what it saw as serious communication and budgetary problems. Among its recommendations were that the provost consider disbanding the college, SEE COMMUNICATIONS, PAGE 2 CMS announces decision to reopen bidding process By Sharita Forrest Assistant Editor In This Issue The Department of Central Management Services announced May 3 that it will reopen the bidding process for health-insurance carriers for the coming fiscal year, which begins July 1, following an outpouring of protests by lawmakers, state employees and other concerned citizens who were upset to learn that Health Alliance Medical Plan would not be offered next year. CMS announced recently its decision not to offer Health Alliance in FY05 after reviewing bids from Health Alliance and other insurance carriers. CMS officials agreed to conduct the bidding process for FY05 health-insurance carriers again but did not indicate a time frame for that to happen, said James Davito, director of benefits at the Urbana campus Benefits Center. Neither did CMS officials commit to extending the Health Alliance contract for a particular period of time, although some media reported that the contract was being extended for several months, Davito said. CMS officials did say that the recent bidding and selection process had taken six monthsʼ time. However, they said that much of that time was preparatory work that would not need to be repeated, perhaps shortening the time required for a second round of bidding and selection. Thousands of UI employees and retir- ees remain in limbo, wondering whether they will be able to remain with their Health Alliance HMO health plan next year. Health Alliance, based in Urbana, provides health-care coverage to about 90,000 state employees, retirees and their families, including about 7,000 faculty and staff members at the three UI campuses. Health Alliance has an exclusive contract with Carle Clinic and Carle Foundation Hospital, Urbana. People affected by the decision to drop Health Alliance rallied outside the state capitol on May 3 prior to a meeting on health-care-benefit selection by the House of Representatives State Government Administration Committee. UI staff attended the committee meeting to provide information and respond to questions about the impact of this action on UI employees. “We have communicated to the stateʼs Department of Central Management Services that this decision is a concern for many of our employees and for the University of Illinois, and we have encouraged a review by CMS of the decision to drop Health Alliance,” President James J. Stukel said in a May 1 e-mail to the campus. Norman Denzin, chair of the UrbanaChampaign Senate Committee on Faculty Benefits, had urged people to contact Health Alliance, Central Management Services, Gov. Rod Blagojevich and SEE HEALTH ALLIANCE, PAGE 9 Fostering success The Irwin Academic Services Center has become an important resource for the more than 550 student athletes representing the UI campus. PAGE 4 photo by Bill Wiegand Moving forward Ron Yates says the College of Communications is proceeding with changes that will improve and enlarge on what it offers, following a year of external and internal reviews. Yates, the college’s interim dean since September, has been appointed to fill the post permanently, pending approval by the UI Board of Trustees. Parking improvements, new decks require rate increase parking program and finance construction of parking decks around campus to meet Give ʼem an inch and they may try to the ever-growing demand for parking. Administration chose not to enact the park in it, especially if that inch is in a conparking planʼs recommended rate hikes in gested area of the Urbana campus. FY03 and FY04 because And beginning July 1, the campus community permission to park in that FY05 Parking rate already was feeling the spot will cost a bit more, increase: pinch of the stateʼs lagaccording to new rates 7.5 percent ging economy, said Bob recently announced by the New annual rates: Kelly, director of parkFacilities & Services parkFaculty/Staff: $370 ing. ing department. Students: $312 However, Kelly said, Rates will increase 7.5 7.5 percent increases percent next fiscal year, to $370 annually for faculty/staff permits are unavoidable for FY05 and FY06 to and $312 for school-year student permits. keep pace with rising operating costs, Permits for departmental/24-hour spaces, fund renovations of two parking decks in evenings and motorcycles will increase as central campus and finance construction of well; however, charges for bagged meters the parking deck just east of the Beckman and day meter tags will remain unchanged, Institute that is scheduled to open in June. “Now that weʼve got this deck coming as will costs for metered parking and parkon board, weʼll pick up a $1.4 million bond ing citations. Since 1995 faculty/staff permits have debt in FY05 that we didnʼt have last year,” increased from $225 to $345, and some Kelly said. “And even though we will use faculty members think that is too much, some of our reserves to help pay for that, although campus officials say those rates weʼre still going to be short next year.” The $26 million north campus parking are barely covering the costs of the parking program and are far lower than motorists deck comprises six levels with more than 1,500 rental spaces, including 150 metered pay at peer institutions. Parking rates on campus have been the spaces. Negotiations are under way with same for the past two fiscal years, despite various retailers and restaurants to lease recommendations in the parking master 20,000 gross square feet of commercial plan, which indicated that permits should space on the ground level of the deck. “Leasing of those spaces will not only increase by at least 12.5 percent annually through 2009 and that metered parking provide much needed services to the north should be raised to a dollar in order for the campus, (it) will help defray the debt costs campus to cover operating costs for the SEE PARKING, PAGE 12 By Sharita Forrest Assistant Editor Campuswide honors Awards for excellence in teaching and advising were presented at the Honors Banquet on April 26. PAGE 8 INDEX ACHIEVEMENTS BOOK CORNER BRIEF NOTES CALENDAR DEATHS 11 9 & 14 15 16 3 On the Web www.news.uiuc.edu/ii InsideIllinois PAGE 2 May 6, 2004 Trustees meet by phone in executive session By Sharita Forrest Assistant Editor The Executive Committee of the UI Board of Trustees, meeting by teleconference on April 30, awarded a contract to the search firm of Baker-Parker and Associates to assist in the selection of a successor for President James J. Stukel, who will retire Feb. 1, 2005. Clients of the Atlanta-based firm have included Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University and the NCAA in addition to various high-profile private sector companies. The contract costs, which may vary depending on candidatesʼ actual travel expenses, include a professional fee of $105,000 plus $29,000 for estimated travel expenses. The costs will be covered by gift funds. The boardʼs consultative committee, which comprises Trustees Devon Bruce, Frances Carroll and Robert Vickrey, recommended Baker-Parker after viewing presentations by the firm and three other prospects. In other business, the committee autho- rized the Springfield campus to confer an honorary doctor of humane letters degree to Stukel at the campusʼs May 8 commencement ceremony in recognition of his service to the university and his personal and professional achievements. Students at all three UI campuses will have better health insurance benefits next fiscal year, but some will pay higher premiums, according to plans that were approved by the executive committee. A self-funded health insurance plan will be implemented for Chicago students with services except emergency care provided by UIC Medical Center. All participating students will be covered at the rate of $363. The plan will provide more comprehensive coverage than students have had under Mega Life Insurance, and the self-funded program will help contain costs, according to the proposal. As they have been for the past seven years, participating students at the Urbana campus will receive coverage from Mega Life Insurance. However, premiums will increase 7 percent, to $166, for under- graduate students and 9 percent, to $233, for graduate students. The university is initiating a contract with The Chickering Group to provide coverage for participating Springfield students at the universal rate of $270, a 39 percent increase for students under age 35 and 9 percent decrease for older students. Enhanced benefits and escalating costs for health care in general explain the premium increases for the Urbana and Springfield campuses, said Mike Provenzano, senior assistant vice president for business and finance. The committee approved the purchase of a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometer and cryoprobe for UICʼs new Structural Biology Instrumentation Building. The $5.04 million contract, which includes the equipment cost and installation, will be wholly funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, said UIC Chancellor Sylvia Manning, who described the equipment as “a kind of jewel in the crown” for the building. Biomedical researchers can use the 900 Mhz spectrometer to examine the structure and dynamics of proteins, nucleic acids or small molecules of drugs or other inhibitors. Board approval for the purchase had to be expedited because the vendor, BrukerBiospin Corp. of Billerica, Mass., has only one system available and “the public announcement that they have built it to these specifications will create interest on the part of other universities,” Manning said. “If we donʼt get this one, we will have a waiting period of a year before another one can be manufactured.” The purchase of a new scoreboard for Assembly Hall on the Urbana campus was also approved. The $1.6 million system, which will be purchased from Daktronics Inc. of South Dakota, will include a center-hung scoreboard with four large video screens and four scoreboards as well as two side auxiliary display boards. The Assembly Hall and the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics will share the costs of the system, which they plan to install before basketball season begins in the fall, Provenzano said. ◆ Senate discusses NCA meeting, parking and benefits issues By Sharita Forrest Assistant Editor Stephen Kaufman, professor of cell and structural biology, presented at the April 26 Urbana-Champaign Senate meeting a letter he said was sent to North Central Association officials and signed by him, Frederick Hoxie, professor of history and director of Native American House, and Carol Spindel, a lecturer in the department of English, raising objections that individual faculty members had not been scheduled to meet with NCA representatives who were on campus last month. “Weʼve had this issue with us for 15 years and when this opportunity that is now before us with the NCA is being bypassed, as an educational institution that thrives on information and resolution of problems, I would have hoped that this could have been arranged otherwise,” Kaufman said, in presenting the letter to Priscilla Yu, vice chair of the senate executive committee. Yu explained that the senate executive COMMUNICATIONS, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 establishing a separate school of journalism, and disbanding the department of advertising in favor of a possible advertising track in the new school. In response to the collegeʼs task force report, however, Herman recommended mending the college rather than ending it. “The chancellor has basically accepted the meat of our report,” Harrington said. “Weʼre going to be moving ahead here doing the things that we promised and forging even better programs.” “Thereʼs still a lot of water to be carried” in addressing some problems and issues, Yates said. But he called Hermanʼs response to the task force report a positive outcome. “It validates the college and its academic role on this campus,” he said, and the task force process “helped us understand ourselves more than we possibly could have otherwise.” A key point for Harrington was that Herman “was convinced that we did belong together (as a college) – that there was an educational and philosophical rationale.” Herman did accept almost all of the task forceʼs recommendations, though not without qualifications in some areas. “I recognize there is desire in your college to bring this process to a speedy end,” he wrote in his letter, “but we both appreciate that some matters need to be more fully understood before sound decisions can be made concerning them.” Among other immediate steps recommended by Herman, largely in concert with recommendations from Yates and the task force: committee did meet with NCA representatives as the elected representatives of the faculty. Ken Andersen, senate observer and representative to the faculty advisory council of the Illinois Board of Higher Education, reported that the Senate Executive Committee had met with NCA officials for 45 minutes. The senate approved the nominations of James Anderson, professor of educational policy studies, and Vernon Burton, professor of history, as possible chairs of the search committee to advise the president on the selection of a chancellor. President James J. Stukel will appoint one of them as chair and the other as a committee member. The senate also voted on nominees for the committee. Elected to the committee were May Berenbaum, entomology; Norm Denzin, sociology and communications; Mary Mallory, head of the government documents library and associate provost; Rolando Romero, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese; and Jane Loeb, educational psy- chology. Also elected were Paula Kaufman, university librarian; Pam Hohn, executive assistant dean, College of Fine and Applied Arts; and Franci Miller, staff secretary in the Office of the Chancellor. Parking policies and an increase in permit rates evoked much debate and prompted two resolutions at the meeting (see parking story for details). ■ Senators passed a resolution urging the administration to oppose any reduction in health care, dental or vision benefits as well as any increase in premiums or co-payments for faculty members. ■ The senate approved an amended policy on information security that would allow users to share usernames and passwords in certain circumstances. Once the modified policy has been approved by all three campusesʼ senates, it will go to university administration for action. ■ Senators approved academic calendars for 2006-2007 and 2007-2008 and a policy for implementing a review system for campus units that function in the manner of academic departments. ■ Barclay Jones, chair of the Budget Committee and professor of mechanical engineering, reported on the state budget, saying that the committeeʼs recommendations to the provost would include opposition to any benefit reductions. The capitol budget recommended by the governor was “better than anticipated,” Jones said, and any decrease in state appropriations would be significantly offset by the FY05 tuition increases. Jones asked senators for letters describing how the budget reductions have affected their instruction. ■ Yu presented Cantor with a resolution of appreciation for her service to the Urbana-Champaign campus. ◆ ■ Work toward resolving leadership and communication problems within the department of advertising under an interim head, waiting perhaps two years before launching a search for a permanent head “of the caliber the department will need for the long term.” Yates recently appointed Steve Helle, a former head of the department of journalism, as the interim head of the department of advertising. Helle also holds a faculty appointment in advertising. ■ Expand immediately the undergraduate courses offered by the Institute of Communications Research, in part as a means for making the institute more financially viable. ■ Produce a report by this fall that explores the possibilities for a broader media studies program, involving connections between the Institute of Communications Research and units outside the college, most prominently in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ■ Explore a move toward reconfiguring the faculty of ICR as a department, perhaps with the title of media studies, while still continuing a unit called the Institute of Communications Research. ■ Produce a plan by June 1 for allowing “more meaningful and extensive student experiences for academic credit” at the WILL stations. ■ Address needs for better advising for “pre-journalism” students in LAS. (The College of Communications currently is a two-year college that students enter in their junior year.) Herman wrote that “I understand and appreciate some of your arguments for a four-year college,” but also noted it was “a complex issue with implications that need careful consideration and discussion.” ■ Proceed with a thorough examination of development efforts within the college. Both Yates and Harrington credited the thorough work of the task force in making the case for the value of the units within the college, for the value of keeping those units together and for seeing new possibilities that might build on college strengths. They both also commented on what they thought was a surprising lack of rancor and dissension in a difficult process. “I said it early on that I looked at this whole thing as an opportunity,” Yates said, though not discounting the extreme discomfort in such a thorough self-examination. “I wouldnʼt wish this on anybody,” Harrington said. “This is a matter, though, where the gain will be worth the pain.” ◆ InsideIllinois Editor Doris K. Dahl 333-2895, [email protected] Assistant Editor Sharita Forrest Photographer Bill Wiegand Calendar Marty Yeakel Student Assistant John Loos News Bureau contributors: Jim Barlow, life sciences Craig Chamberlain, communications, education, social work James E. Kloeppel, physical sciences Andrea Lynn, humanities, social sciences Melissa Mitchell, applied life studies, arts, international programs Mark Reutter, business, law Other business Inside Illinois is an employee publication of the Urbana-Champaign campus of the University of Illinois. It is published on the first and third Thursday of each month by the News Bureau of the campus Office of Public Affairs, administered by the associate chancellor for public affairs. Distribution is by campus mail. News is solicited from all areas of the campus and should be sent to the editor at least 10 days before publication. Entries for the calendar are due 15 days before publication. All items may be sent to [email protected]. The campus mail address is Inside Illinois, 807 S. Wright St., Suite 520 East, Champaign, MC-314. The fax number is 244-0161. Inside Illinois accepts advertising. Ad sizes are full, half, quarter and one-eighth page. Inside Illinois also will accept pre-printed inserts. Ad space should be reserved two weeks in advance. Camera-ready ads are due by 4 p.m. one week prior to the publication date. A multiple insertion discount is available. For rates and exact ad dimensions, contact the editor or visit Inside Illinois on the Web, www.news.uiuc.edu/ii/ iiadv.html. www.news.uiuc.edu/ii May 6, 2004 InsideIllinois PAGE 3 Like ozone hole, polar clouds take bite out of meteoric iron co-authors of a paper that appeared in the April 16 issue of the journal Science. First deployed over Okinawa, Japan, to Polar clouds are known to play a major observe meteor trails during the 1998 Leorole in the destruction of Earthʼs protective nid meteor shower, the Illinois lidar system ozone layer, creating the springtime “ozone uses two powerful lasers operating in the hole” above Antarctica. Now, scientists near ultraviolet region of the spectrum have found that polar clouds also play a sigand two telescopes to detect laser pulses nificant role in removing meteoric iron from reflected from the atmosphere. The system Earthʼs mesosphere. The discovery could was moved to help researchers the Amundsenrefine their modScott South Pole els of atmospheric Station in late chemistry and 1999. global warming. “SimultaneUsing a sensious observative laser radar tions of the iron (lidar) system, layer and the laboratory expericlouds revealed ments and comnearly complete puter modeling, removal of iron UI researchers atoms inside the and colleagues clouds,” Gardner from the Universaid. “Laborasity of East Antory experiments glia in Norwich, and atmospheric England, studied modeling done the removal of by our colmeteoric iron by leagues at the polar mesospheric University of clouds that they Laser radar The UI Fe Boltzmann East Anglia then observed during temperature lidar is currently installed in showed that this the summer at the the Atmospheric Research Observatory at the phenomenon South Pole. Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, where it could be ex“Our measure- is used to characterize the upper atmosphere plained by the ments and models temperature structure throughout the year. efficient uptake have shown that of iron on the surfaces of ice crystals.” another type of reaction that takes place in Polar mesospheric clouds are the highthe upper atmosphere – this time related to est on Earth, forming at an altitude of ice particles – plays a very important role in about 52 miles. The clouds form over the the processes that influence the chemistry summertime polar caps when temperatures of metal layers in this region,” said Chester Gardner, a professor of electrical and com- fall below minus 125 degrees Celsius, and puter engineering at Illinois and one of the overlap a layer of iron atoms produced by By James E. Kloeppel News Bureau Staff Writer UI commencement ceremonies take place May 16 The UIʼs 133rd commencement will be In 1998, Guinier became the first black held in two ceremonies May 16 at Assem- woman to be appointed to a tenured probly Hall. fessorship at Harvard Law School. Before The speaker at both ceremonies will be joining the faculty at Harvard, she was Lani Guinier, a civil rights activist, author a tenured professor for 10 years at the and Harvard Law University of PennSchool professor. sylvania Law School. Commencement Ceremonies She and seven others During the 1980s 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m., May 16 will receive honorary Guinier was head Assembly Hall degrees at the cerSpeaker: Lani Guinier of the voting rights emonies. project at the NAACP Other ceremonies: At the 10:30 a.m. Legal Defense Fund www.news.uiuc.edu/news/04/ ceremony, candiand had served in the 0429commencement.html dates in the colleges Civil Rights Division of Applied Life Studduring the Carter adies, Communications, Law, Liberal Arts ministration as special assistant to Drew and Sciences, and Veterinary Medicine; S. Days, who then was an assistant U.S. the Institute of Aviation; the Institute of attorney general. Labor and Industrial Relations; the School Guinier came to prominent public attenof Social Work; and the Graduate School tion when she was nominated by President of Library and Information Science will Bill Clinton in 1993 to head the Civil Rights receive degrees. Division of the Department of Justice, only Candidates in the colleges of Agricultur- to have her name withdrawn without a al, Consumer and Environmental Sciences; confirmation hearing. Guinier turned that Business; Education; Engineering; and Fine incident into a powerful personal and politiand Applied Arts will receive their degrees cal memoir, “Lift Every Voice: Turning a at the 2 p.m. ceremony. Civil Rights Setback Into a New Vision of Doors will open at 9:30 a.m. for the Social Justice.” morning ceremony and at 1 p.m. for the All graduating students and their guests afternoon ceremony. After all students and are invited to a reception hosted by univertheir guests are seated, the remaining seats sity President James J. Stukel and Chancelwill be available to the public. Shuttle buses lor Nancy Cantor from 8 to 9:30 a.m. May also will stop at various locations on cam- 16 in the gardens of the presidentʼs house. pus, including Assembly Hall, from 9 a.m. Academic attire is encouraged. to 6 p.m. The first floor of the main library will be All students who have earned bache- open from 1 to 4 p.m. May 15 and May 16 lorʼs, masterʼs, doctoral and professional for visitors and students to view the Univerdegrees and advanced certificates during sity Honors Bronze Tablets. the preceding year are honored at the anMany individual UI units have schednual commencement. uled additional commencement ceremoWILL-AM (580) will provide on-air and nies. A complete schedule is available on online coverage of the 2 p.m. ceremony. the Web. ◆ the ablation of meteoroids entering the atmosphere. “At such cold temperatures, the iron atoms stick when they bump into the ice crystals,” Gardner said. “If the removal of iron is rapid compared to both the input of fresh meteoric ablation and the vertical transport of iron into the clouds, a local depletion or ʻbiteoutʼ in the iron layer will result.” Polar clouds UI researchers and their colleagues from the To examine whether University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, spent their the observed bite-outs summer at the South Pole studying the polar mesospheric could be fully ex- clouds. plained by the removal of iron atoms by ice particles, John Plane, a The researchers answered this question professor of environmental sciences at East by carefully modeling the size distribution Anglia, and graduate student Benjamin of ice particles as a function of altitude. Murray measured the rate of iron uptake They concluded there was sufficient surface on ice. area to remove the iron. In their laboratory, Plane and Murray “Our results clearly demonstrate the first deposited a layer of ice on the inside of importance of ice particles in the chemistry a flow tube. Iron atoms were then generated of this region of the atmosphere,” Gardner by laser ablation of an iron target at one end said. “Not too many years ago we learned of the tube. At the other end, a second laser how important polar stratospheric clouds measured how much iron made it through were to the chemistry of the ozone layer. the tube. Now we are seeing something very similar “By changing the temperature in the happening at higher altitudes.” tube, we could compare how much iron In addition to Gardner, Plane and Murwas absorbed by the ice and calculate the ray, the team included research scientist sticking coefficient,” Plane said. “Once we Xinzhao Chu from the University of Ilknew how efficiently the iron atoms stick linois who made the measurements at the to the ice, our next question was whether South Pole. there was enough ice surface in the polar The National Science Foundation, the clouds to deplete the iron and cause the Royal Society and the Natural Environmendramatic bite-outs revealed in the lidar tal Research Council funded the work. ◆ observations.” deaths Donald L. Agans Jr., 50, died April 18 at his home in Sidney. Agans worked for the Housing Division and the Division of Operation and Maintenance for 25 years, first as a kitchen laborer then as a building service worker and later as a groundskeeper. He left the UI in 1998. Katherine Van Cleave, 84, died April 18 at Carle Foundation Hospital, Urbana. Van Cleave worked for the Alumni Association for 33 years, retiring in 1989 as a typing clerk III. Memorials: Multiple Sclerosis Association. Michael A. Drews, 60, died April 20 at his home in Champaign. Drews worked for the Division of Operation and Maintenance for 32 years, first as a building service worker, then as a campus transportation operator and later as a truck driver. He retired in 1999. Memorials: St. John Lutheran Church, 509 S. Mattis Ave., Champaign. Marguerite R. Fisher, 86, died May 1 at ManorCare Health Services of Champaign. Fisher worked at the UI for 33 years, retiring in 1982. She worked for the English department and was an administrative aide at the Presidentʼs Office at the time of her retirement. Memorials: First United Methodist Church, Urbana, or the American Cancer Society. Nesbit Roe Siems, 87, died April 16 at the Champaign County Nursing Home, Urbana. Siems was a secretary for educational research and psychology for 19 years, retiring in 1980. Roy A. Smith, 79, died April 15 at Carle Foundation Hospital, Urbana. Smith was a building service worker for O&M for 21 years, leaving the UI in 1969. Cleo Syfert, 88, died April 14 at Methodist Union County Hospital, Morganfield, Ky. Syfert worked for O&M as a building service worker for 13 years, retiring in 1982. Memorials: Gideons International, c/o Carolyn Either, 202 S. Morgan St., Morganfield, KY 42437. Clifford E. Waller, 86, died May 2 at Carle Foundation Hospital, Urbana. Waller worked at the UI Physical Plant for 34 years. Memorials: St. Johnʼs Lutheran Church, Champaign. ◆ job market Academic Human Resources • Suite 420, 807 S. Wright St., MC-310 • 333-6747 Academic Human Resources maintains listings of academic professional and faculty member positions that can be reviewed during regular business hours or online. For faculty and acpro employment opportunites: www.ahr.uiuc.edu/jobs/index.asp Current UI employees and students can receive e-mail notification of open positions by subscribing to the academic jobs listserve: www.ahr.uiuc.edu/#acjob Personnel Services Office • 52 E. Gregory Drive, MC-562 • 333-3101 The Personnel Services Office provides information about staff employment online at www.pso.uiuc.edu. Paper employment applications or paper civil service exam requests are no longer accepted by PSO. To complete an online employment application and to submit an exam request, visit the online Employment Center: https://hrnet.uihr.uillinois.edu/panda-cf/employment/index.cfm InsideIllinois PAGE 4 May 6, 2004 InsideIllinois May 6, 2004 Center offers services to help student athletes succeed academically By John Loos Student Intern L ocated in what was once the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity house, the Irwin Academic Services Center has fostered its own version of student camaraderie through the extensive educational assistance it provides to the approximately 550 student athletes representing the UI. The center promotes academic excellence, health and wellness issues, community outreach and inter-sport socialization. “The center [provides] an opportunity for our student athletes to have a place where they can get some productive studying done,” said Tom Michael, the assistant athletic director for academic affairs. “We have computer labs here; they can meet their tutors here; we have academic counselors here. And, it gives an opportunity for athletes to intermingle.” Most of the services the center provides begin with one of its six academic counselors. These counselors are divided up by sport and, along with advising on class choices and basic schedule-shaping, they interact with a studentʼs departmental adviser, assist them in finding resources on campus, and open up communication lines between the students and their professors. “Weʼre basically a liaison between the academic departments and advisers and professors,” said Kathy Kaler, a counselor who also serves as the life skills coordinator for the center. “Itʼs important for those professors to know who (the student athletes) are, that they care about the classes and that they really want to do well.” The center is equipped with 45 computers and several study areas designed to give the student athlete an optimal study environment. There also is a career area with information on companies interested in hiring student athletes as well as information on writing resumes and tips for being interviewed. The center places a strong emphasis on helping student athletes find a career upon graduating, Michael said. While the center opened its doors in 1998, its genesis was in 1995 when the UI, having purchased the old Kappa Alpha Psi house at 402 E. Armory, received a $1.5 million gift from the Irwin Family Foundation intended for the consolidation of all academic services for student athletes. “Itʼs been unbelievable what kind of support the Irwin Foundation has been able to give this facility and to provide those benefits for the student athletes that put them in a position to be successful,” Michael said. The center also receives support from the community in the form of professionals who volunteer their time to lead workshops for student athletes. The workshops cover everything from nutrition to time management to financial planning to ballroom dancing or dinner etiquette. Each is designed, through consultation with the stu- Balancing act Kathy Kaler, academic counselor and life skills coordinator for the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics, talks with a student in her office at Irwin Academic Services Center. Kaler, a former coach at a community college, said she loves the competitive spirit of student athletes and how hard they have to work to balance their academic careers with their sports careers. To design programming that meets the needs of the campus’s student athletes, Kaler gathers input from coaches as well as students. photo by Bill Wiegand Under the direction of Tom Michael, assistant athletic director of academic affairs, the Irwin Academic Services Center brings together student athletes from the 19 sports offered at the Urbana campus, offering academic support as well as health and wellness programs, life skills training and community outreach. Michael, a former UI basketball player, understands the kinds of pressures faced by the UI’s 550 student athletes and said that one of the center’s most important functions is that it enables athletes to socialize with people other than their teammates. UI scientists studying vaccinia virus, a close relative of smallpox, have determined that a gene necessary for virus replication also has a key role in turning off inflammation, a crucial anti-viral immune response of host cells. The discovery, reported last month in the Journal of Virology, potentially broadens the knowledge base of how all poxviruses cause disease and how they may be outwitted by improvements in vaccines against them, said Joanna L. Shisler, a UI professor of microbiology in the College of Medicine. “If we can find out how the virus evades immune responses and learn more about the signals the virus sees as necessary for replicating within the host cell, then we can figure out how to inhibit them and halt the viral replication,” she said. Post 9-11 fears of bioterrorism by means of the deliberate introduction of smallpox have spawned renewed interest in new, safer vaccines against the deadly disease, which was eradicated as a naturally occurring danger in 1977. Some U.S. medical workers and military personnel have received vaccinations made of the live vaccinia virus, but while this tamer relative of smallpox normally doesnʼt cause disease, complications, including death, are possible especially among immune-compromised individuals. The vaccinia virus genome is 97 percent genetically identical to the smallpox genome, making it an ideal model virus to use in the laboratory to understand how smallpox and other dangerous poxviruses function, Shisler said. In their research, Shisler and Xiao-Lu Jin, a research specialist in microbiology, research news Thomas Siebel (left), chairman and CEO of Siebel Systems Inc., and David Daniel, dean of the College of Engineering, unveiled the Thomas M. Siebel Center for Computer Science at the facility’s dedication and grand opening celebration, which began April 29 and continued through May 1. The $80 million center, which will accommodate almost twice as many faculty and students as the previous computer science facility, was created with a $32 million gift from alumnus Siebel and support from the state of Illinois. The 225,000-square-foot building unites the faculty, researchers, graduate and undergraduate students in the department of computer science under one roof for the first time. The center’s leading edge digital technology forms a “computing habitat,” a living laboratory where physical and digital infrastructures are coupled with humans to create an integrated ecosystem. The center, which is being called the world’s most advanced “sentient building,” utilizes UltraWideband technology to track people and equipment in real time. The Siebel Center will form one anchor for a new information technology quadrangle on north campus in conjunction with a new building that is under construction for the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. photo by Bill Wiegand Not only do the student athletes recognize the center as a helpful resource in their college careers, but they also use it far more than had been envisioned at its inception. Still the size of a basic fraternity house, a structure that generally houses about 50 people, the center must accommodate 550 “members.” This results in study areas and computer terminals filling up rapidly on any night. “We are tight on space right now and thatʼs a direct reflection of the number of student athletes using the building,” Michael said. “Thatʼs a great problem to have.” One unique and self-created side effect of the extensive use that the center sees is a distinct camaraderie developed between athletes and teams of different sports. Michael, a UI basketball player in the early ʼ90s, recognizes such opportunities are created by having all of the student athletesʼ academic resources under one roof. “Now student athletes support other student athletes at their events,” he said. “Itʼs not just your small group of teammates you interact with, now you get to know other people in other sports. And I think thatʼs as important as anything we provide here.” ◆ Gene that plays key role in replicating viruses halts inflammation By Jim Barlow News Bureau Staff Writer Siebel visits campus for grand opening of new computer science building Academic support dent athletes and coaches, to help students learn about a topic that may be pertinent or helpful to them in their post-collegiate careers and lives. There also are workshops for incoming freshman athletes designed to acclimate them to life as a college athlete. “Weʼll cover alcohol and sexual responsibility, budgeting, dealing with the media … anything that we think might help them make a successful transition to the life of a college athlete,” Kaler said. Another unique feature to the center is the 39-member Student Athlete Advisory Board. With representatives from each of the 19 UI sports, the board typically meets once a month and functions as an outlet for discussion of problems and concerns in the life of a student athlete. This is one direct way that the center strives not to create more pressure in the student athletesʼ lives, but to make the weighty obligations a student athlete has easier to carry. “There are a lot of demands on the student athletes to begin with and we donʼt want to add to that,” said Kaler. “We want to help in their growth and their development while they are here. So itʼs really important that they see us as a resource for them as well as to their team in any area.” found that a 5.2 kb segment of vaccinia virus DNA containing six genes was responsible for inhibiting a key cellular transcription factor called NF kappa B (NF-kB). NF-kB serves to turn on other host cell genes involved in anti-viral immune responses and inflammation. The researchers then sought to determine what specific genes in the segment inhibit NF-kB activation. To carry out the study, they introduced individual genes from the 5.2kb segment into a mutant poxvirus vector that activates NF-kB. They infected human and rabbit cell lines with the new recombinant viruses and detected NF-kB activity levels. They found that the recombinant virus containing the introduced K1L gene prevented degradation of the cellular inhibitor of NFkB, therefore inhibiting NF-kBʼs ability to ignite immune responses. Since the 1980s it was known that K1L was necessary for vaccinia virus replication. The additional function of K1L, as determined in the new study, suggests that poxviruses may need to turn NF-kB on and off at crucial times to regulate replication. Understanding the molecular machinery involved may make it possible to eventually manufacture safer vaccines for smallpox and vaccinia-based vaccines for HIV by specifically manipulating genes, Shisler said. Because the K1L gene inhibited NFkB activation in numerous cell lines tested, it suggests that its activity is global. Since this study was completed, the researchers subsequently have found a second protein that inhibits NF-kB, suggesting there may be multiple genes at work, Shisler said. “These viral proteins are present in smallpox, monkey pox and many other poxes, and they are very homologous,” she said. “If we know how these proteins function, we can start figuring out why smallpox and monkey pox cause disease.” The Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust of Muscatine, Iowa, funded the research. ◆ PAGE 5 Photographs by Bill Wiegand Ad removed for online version Ad removed for online version PAGE 6 InsideIllinois May 6, 2004 T he John Philip Sousa collection on the Urbana-Champaign campus is marching to the beat of a different drummer, and by all appearances, it is a quick march. The drummer in this case is an archivist, Scott Schwartz. On board as the new Sousa archivist since last fall, Schwartz has wasted little time in reorganizing Sousaʼs large collection at Illinois and organizing an ambitious celebration of and for the beloved American band leader-musician-composer known as “The March King.” In five months, Schwartz has reenergized, refocused and renamed the archives – a major band music collection and museum. The new incarnation is called the Sousa Archives and Center for American Music. Schwartz also is well into plans for a monthlong celebration of American music in November in honor of the 150th anniversary of Sousaʼs birth. An archivist and classical guitarist, Schwartz also is an author with wideranging interests. He has written extensively on the business and music practices of Duke Ellington and on the music and culture of the Appalachian serpentand fire-handling believers of eastern Kentucky. Previously at the Smithsonian Institutionʼs National Museum of American History, Schwartz said he sees the new job as “an opportunity to grow a program from the ground up, to turn a diamond in the rough into a world-class archive and repository.” His plan is to expand the Sousa collection from “what might have been described as a shrine to Sousaʼs legacy, instruments and papers, into a vital repository.” He also wants to use the revitalized repository as a base from which to “show the breadth of American music.” Although ambitious, these ideas are do-able. Schwartz discovered that Illinois has hidden treasures in “three major music collections”: wind band material – the Sousa Archives being the core; electronic and computer music; and “an incredible ethnomusicology collection.” “These three collections,” Schwartz said, “make us truly unique, and are the reason why we now have a mission statement that defines us as collecting American music and documenting the legacy and heritage in these three areas.” Schwartz said he believes that “being an outsider who has represented a national and international perspective” at the National Museum of American History has helped him see the various pieces of the puzzle – that is, the music collection strengths at Illinois – and how they could be put together to make a world-class center for American music. “Thatʼs the reason they brought me here. Thatʼs the reason I moved my family – and my sailboat – from the Chesapeake.” Schwartz already has taken several steps toward realizing his goals, the first step being to begin developing close working collaborations with people across campus. “The School of Music, the Library, University Bands, Intercollegiate Athletics and many other units, divisions and schools across campus will have to work together if we are going to create a center for American music,” Schwartz said. Similarly, Schwartz has begun developing collaborative relationships with the other major U.S. music repositories that document American music. He believes that this kind of linkage eventually will lead to a sharing of resources among archives, museums and research centers both within and outside Illinois, including the Library of Congress and the National Museum of American History. “The idea is to become a confederation, so to speak,” Schwartz said. “We canʼt – and shouldnʼt – try to collect all aspects of American music. That canʼt – and shouldnʼt – be done by any single repository. Sharing is the name of the game.” Already, Schwartz and his staff – three graduate students and three undergraduates – are inventorying and processing Sousa holdings and redesigning the Web site. He also is planning the physical renovation of the archive and small museum, including the creation of a researcher-friendly reading room. Moreover, he is tapping friends and colleagues across campus and the country to help put together a first-rate Sousa Sesquicentennial Celebration in November. The timing couldnʼt be better, Schwartz said. November also is American Music Month, “so the Sousa Sesquicentennial will be a celebration of Americaʼs music.” Already booked are Illinoisʼ University Band, which will re-create a Sousa concert; the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, a concert and one-day residency to give master classes; Alan Jabbour, the past director of the Library of Congress Folklife Center, the keynote lecture on preserving Americaʼs music legacy; Alison Brown, a Grammy award winner for the five-string banjo, and Andrea Zonn, recently named one of country musicʼs top 10 acts, a talk on women in music and a performance on “the music mama taught me”; Sousa and American music exhibits and displays at the National Museum of American History and three sites on the UI campus. “So weʼve got jazz, weʼve got traditional, weʼve got wind band, and Iʼd love to see us connect with a gospel group to highlight a part of Americaʼs religious music heritage,” Schwartz said. “Our intent is By Andrea Lynn News Bureau Staff Writer photo by Bill Wiegand American music Archivist Scott Schwartz is reorganizing the library’s John Philip Sousa collection and band archives, which he has renamed the Sousa Archives and Center for American Music. Schwartz plans to expand the collection into a vital repository representative of the breadth of American music. He also is organizing a monthlong celebration for November, which is American Music Month, to mark the 150th anniversary of Sousa’s birth. to illustrate the incredibly diversified nature of Americaʼs music. And what we donʼt get this year, weʼll get next year.” Schwartz said he also would like his colleagues across the country to follow suit, SOUSA AND THE UI at Illinois? The answer The UI holds 74 percent is friendship of the extant Sousa materi- and profesals. The collection includes sional admioriginal scores and parts, ration. published music and manuIn the scripts, personal papers, early 1900s, photographs, programs, Sousa struck news clippings, broadsides, up what would become a memorabilia and one of 30-year friendship with Sousaʼs batons, a pair of his A.A. Harding, Illinoisʼ first white kid gloves, which he director of bands. always wore while conductAccording to Paul ing, his music stand and Bierley, the primary Sousa podium. biographer, Sousa greatly Why are Sousaʼs papers admired Hardingʼs work and believed that “the University of Illinois Band was the best college band in the world.” Sousa even composed a “University of Illinois March” in 1929 and performed it on the Illinois campus the next year; on that occasion he was made an honorary conductor of Illinoisʼ concert band. Sousa promised Harding he would bequeath most of his band music library to Illinois, and following his death in March of 1932, his widow kept that promise: 18,000 pounds of music in 39 trunks were delivered to the campus. Among the manuscripts UI Sousa Archives for Band Research are the band parts for Sousaʼs Christmas Day By Andrea Lynn News Bureau Staff Writer “so this becomes a huge national effort – and all on the anniversary of Sousaʼs birth. How much more American can you get? Sousa and America and American music.” ◆ 1896 composition “The Stars and Stripes Forever,” which 101 years later would be declared the national march of the United States. The Sousa Archives and Center also has a good selection of band instruments and uniforms, Native American instruments and some unidentified instruments. The collection, in the Harding Band Building and under the aegis of the University Library, has grown to include the music, instruments and artifacts of many former Sousa band members, including first cornetist Herbert L. Clarke and vocal soloist Virginia Root. Sousaʼs biographer described Sousa as “an incredible genius” and “truly an American phenomenon.” “He was to the march what Johann Strauss was to the waltz,” Bierley wrote. Over his lifetime, Sousa composed 137 marches – including “The Washington Post March” and “Semper Fidelis,” later adopted by the Marine Corps. He also wrote 15 operettas, five overtures, 11 suites, 11 waltzes, 13 dances, 28 fantasies and 322 arrangements. The son of immigrants and the third of 10 children, Sousa was born Nov. 6, 1854, in Washington, D.C. When he was 13, he tried to run away from home to join a circus band, but his father apprenticed him to the U.S. Marine Band. At 24, Sousa became leader of that band, and held the job for 12 years. Sousaʼs band, which stirred hearts for 39 years, made annual transcontinental tours from 1892 to 1931, four tours of Europe and a world tour in 19101911. But being a concert band, they only marched seven times. Sousa also wrote seven books. He was an athlete who adored baseball, a husband, father and selfmade millionaire. Sousa died on March 6, 1932, in Reading, Pa., following a band rehearsal. The last piece he conducted was “The Stars and Stripes Forever.” ◆ PAGE 7 Roger Ebert to donate papers to UI Library New Sousa archivist revitalizing collection, planning monthlong musicfest By Andrea Lynn News Bureau Staff Writer InsideIllinois May 6, 2004 Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, will give his papers to his alma mater, the UIʼs Urbana-Champaign campus. Ebert, widely regarded as the most visible and the most influential U.S. film critic, announced his intention to leave his papers to Illinoisʼ Library at the kickoff of his sixth annual “Overlooked Film Festival” in Champaign on April 21. An Urbana native, Ebert earned a bachelorʼs degree in journalism and communications at Illinois in 1964. He also did graduate work in English at Illinois. Ebertʼs papers will be housed in the University Archives, which also is home to the papers of many UI alumni who went on to great achievement, including Olympics administrator Avery Brundage, playwrightscreenwriter Samson Raphaelson, journalist James “Scotty” Reston and sculptor Loredo Taft. Ebert began his career in journalism in earnest at age 15, as a sportswriter for the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette. He continued writing for that paper during his junior and senior years in high school and his freshman year at Illinois, moving from sports to the city desk and later to the state desk. In the summer of 1961, Ebert joined Illinoisʼ student paper, the Daily Illini, writing a weekly column and working one night a week as night editor. In his junior year at Illinois, he served as news editor, and in his senior year, as editor-in-chief. In 1967 – the same year he became film critic for the Sun-Times – Ebert published a book titled “Illini Century: One Hundred Years of Campus Life,” (UI Press). The book is a social history of the universityʼs first century, based on the files of the Daily Illini, which also are in the University Archives. Ebert began his movie review television show with co-host Gene Siskel in 1976, and Ebert has been nominated for an Emmy many times during his career. He won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 1975 for his film reviews the previous year. Ebert is the author of several books, many about the cinema, including “A Kiss is Still a Kiss,” an anthology of his reviews. He also has written screenplays, including the screenplay for the cult classic, “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls” (1970). Ebert has contributed to many of the countryʼs top magazines and newspapers. He also is a lecturer and an artist. Details about the contents of the new Ebert collection, as well as plans for acknowledging his gift, will be announced at a later date. According to university archivist William Maher, who will process and oversee the new collection, the University Archives already owns some Ebert material. In 2001, the film critic gave the Archives some 22 cubic feet of one-inch videotapes of “Siskel and Ebert,” the syndicated series he and Siskel hosted co-hosted for more than 20 years and under various program names, and of “Ebert & Roper,” the series he and Richard Roper currently co-host. Siskel died in 1999. Ebert documents – in the form of personal and business-related correspondence – can be found in the Archivesʼ Daniel Curley Papers. Curley was an English professor at Illinois, an acclaimed writer and the editor of the universityʼs literary magazine Ascent from 1975 to his death in 1988. He also edited the magazineʼs precursor, Accent, for several years. Curley was Ebertʼs professor at Illinois and mentor, and later, friend. In 1986, they photo by Thompson-McClellan Ebert collection Roger Ebert (center), a UI alumnus and Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, talks with guests at a reception held in his honor hosted by UI president James J. Stukel and his wife, Joan. Ebert announced at the event his plans to donate a collection of his papers to the University Library. The event also kicked off the sixth annual Roger Ebert Overlooked Film Festival. Jack Valenti (right), president and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, and Darren Ng, creator of the short film, “The Scapegoat,” were festival guests. co-wrote the book “The Perfect London Walk,” which was based on strolls they took around London in the mid-ʼ60s when Ebert visited the Curleys, then on leave in London. The book is still in print. Maher believes that Ebertʼs correspondence yet to come will be “a great boon” to researchers and writers, and Maher said he hopes that Ebertʼs papers will include material from the period “when he was shifting from a news reporter to a critic.” “His correspondence with Dan Curley in the early 1960s as he first experienced London and South Africa and then struggled to find a niche in Chicago is quite fascinating,” Maher said. Ebert spent a year at the Ad removed for online version University of Cape Town, on a reading program through a Rotary fellowship. Curley, who in his correspondence variously addressed Ebert as “Roger,” “The Jolly Roger” and “Rajah,” once described his protégé in the ʼ60s as “the finest young man I have met in the past 10 years. He has personal and intellectual qualities which would make for success in any field he chose to enter. “He was in my classes at all levels of undergraduate study, literature and writing,” Curley wrote. “I could well wish that more of my colleagues were men of his alert mind.” ◆ InsideIllinois PAGE 8 InsideIllinois May 6, 2004 Faculty and staff members honored for excellence in teaching and advising Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (faculty members) Stephen P. Altaner geology Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (instructional staff members) Jeffrey S. Moore chemistry Robert M. Skirvin natural resources and environmental sciences Excellence in Graduate and Professional Teaching (faculty members) Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (graduate teaching assistants) ■ Eric A. Dunn, electrical and computer engineering ■ Rebecca C. Harris, political science ■ Marina P. Levina, Institute of Communications Research ■ Roberto Sanchez, history ■ Jody L. Shipka, English John David Anderson English Ricardo B. Uribe electrical and computer engineering book corner ‘Remarkable people’ who shaped the UI featured Gail E. Hawisher English Richard W. Burkhardt Jr. history Scott D. Johnson human resource education Paula A. Treichler Institute of Communications Research Excellence in Off-Campus Teaching photo by Bill Wiegand University Distinguished Teacher/Scholars photo by Bill Wiegand F ourteen UI faculty members, three academic professionals and five teaching assistants were honored for excellence in teaching and advising April 26 at the annual Instructional Awards banquet in the Illini Union. Faculty winners of the Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching are Stephen P. Altaner, geology; Richard W. Burkhardt Jr., history; Gail E. Hawisher, English; Jeffrey S. Moore, chemistry; and Robert M. Skirvin, natural resources and environmental sciences. Instructional staff winners of the award are John David Anderson, English, and Ricardo B. Uribe, electrical and computer engineering. Graduate teaching assistants who received the award are Eric A. Dunn, electrical and computer engineering; Rebecca C. Harris, political science; Marina P. Levina, Institute of Communications Research; Roberto Sanchez, history; and Jody L. Shipka, English. Scott D. Johnson, human resource education, and Paula A. Treichler, Institute of Communications Research, will receive the Campus Award for Excellence in Graduate and Professional Teaching. The awards recognize professors and graduate teaching assistants who display consistently excellent performance in the classroom, take innovative approaches to teaching, positively affect the lives of their students, and make other contributions to improved instruction, including influencing the curriculum. Faculty members who are selected for the award receive $5,000 and a $3,000 raise; instructional staff members receive $4,000 and a $1,500 raise; graduate teaching assistants receive $3,500 and a $1,000 increase in their stipends. Others honored at the banquet: Bruce Litchfield, professor of agricultural engineering, and Thomas Schwandt, professor of educational psychology, were recognized as Distinguished Teacher/Scholars. The program promotes excellence in teaching by honoring and supporting outstanding faculty members who take an active role in enhancing teaching and learning on the UI campus. During the past year, these honorees utilized their skills to mentor other faculty members. They will retain the title of University Distinguished Teacher/Scholar throughout their Illinois careers. Donald Briskin, professor of natural resources and environmental sciences, and Neil D. Pearson, professor of finance, received the Award for Excellence in Off-Campus Teaching, which provides $4,000 to each recipient. Dorothy Espelage, professor of educational psychology, received the Campus Award for Excellence in Guiding Undergraduate Research, a $2,000 award designed to foster and reward excellence in involving and guiding undergraduate students in scholarly research. Kathryn Martensen, assistant director of the LAS General Curriculum in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Donna F. Nichols, professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, received the Campus Award for Excellence in Advising Undergraduate Students, which provides $2,000 to each recipient. Shelly J. Schmidt, professor of food science and human nutrition, received the Campus Award for Innovation in Undergraduate Instruction Using Educational Technologies. The award provides $2,000 to the recipient. ◆ PAGE 9 Perhaps any large public research uni- Genius: The Life and Science of John versity could tell the same basic story, but Bardeen” (Joseph Henry Press, 2002). it is unlikely that any other telling would The book also makes clear the lengths be richer or deeper. to which the great baritone William WarfThe story is in fact 21 stories – historical ield, affectionately called “Uncle Bill,” vignettes drawn from one went to welcome, inspire university over an entire and nurture music school century – which together students and colleagues. reveal “how knowledge is “There are endless stoproduced and how great ries recounting his good public universities come deeds,” wrote Ollie Watts to be,” writes Richard Davis, who studied with Herman, UI provost, in his Warfield and has been a preface to the new book, professor of voice at Il“No Boundaries: Univerlinois since 1987. sity of Illinois Vignettes” Katherine Sharpʼs Her(UI Press). culean efforts and vision Herman, who began to hew a library school working at the university and a major library out of in 1998, commissioned the Illinois prairie in the the book after hearing 1890s also is told. Sharp story after story about “the was a protégé of “the re“No Boundaries: University of remarkable people who Illinois Vignettes,” edited by Lillian doubtable” Melvil Dewey, Hoddeson (UI Press) fashioned this institution and often worked with across the generations, “uncontrolled energy,” across so many fields of learning, and who wrote Donald Krummel, professor emericontinue to remake it in new ways.” tus of library science and of music. “Not “There is a nobility of purpose here and until well into the 1960s were any other a legacy to be preserved and built upon,” major American academic libraries headed Herman wrote about the Urbana campus. by women.” The impression “No Boundaries” The title of the book is taken from leaves is that Illinois always has been a something Isabel Bevier wrote after visitmagnet for visionaries and risk-takers, as ing the UI campus in 1900, to interview for Herman says, and always has been a cradle the new position of professor of household of academic invention, creativity, pioneer- science. ing – even from its earliest days and across “I thought I had never seen so flat all decades. and muddy a place: no trees, no hills, no The new book, edited by Lillian Hod- boundaries of any kind.” deson, a professor of history at Illinois, But, as Paula Treichler, director of contains a few familiar stories, freshly re- Illinoisʼ Institute of Communications told, and many previously unknown tales, Research, wrote in her essay on Bevier, newly revealed. Most of the contributors “the place had character, and as Bevier are current or emeritus Illinois faculty considered all that she had seen and heard members; all of their subjects are Illinois at Illinois, the landscape became for her a faculty and staff members, now deceased. powerful metaphor for the institution she “This is a book about people whose was about to join: its openness to new work shaped, and was shaped by, the Uni- ideas, its support for co-education, and its versity of Illinois,” Hoddeson wrote. commitment to the land-grant mission that “This book is also a kind of environ- linked theory to practice, learning to labor, mental history in that it deals with the role and science to the problems of the world of ʻplaceʼ in a universityʼs production of where men and women live.” knowledge, culture, and well-educated Other profiles include Roger Adams, people.” the powerhouse head of chemistry; OsIn the book, enriched with photographs, car Lewis, the anthropologist of poverty; readers are reminded of John Bardeenʼs Charles Osgood, the pioneering psychotravails and triumphs on the road to win- linguist; and Stuart Pratt Sherman and J. ning two Nobel prizes while at Illinois. Kerker Quinn, who together, helped put Hoddeson, who specializes in the history the young campus “on the American literof 20th century science and technology, ary map,” wrote Bruce Michelson, a UI wrote the Bardeen essay and the introduc- English professor and contributor to “No tion to the book. She is the author of sever- Boundaries.” al books, including the most recent, “True – Andrea Lynn, News Bureau www.news.uiuc.edu/news/04/0504campushistory.html Bruce Litchfield agricultural engineering Excellence in Guiding Undergraduate Research Thomas Schwandt educational psychology Donald Briskin natural resources and environmental sciences Excellence in Advising Undergraduate Students Neil D. Pearson finance Innovation in Undergraduate Instruction Using Education Technologies HEALTH ALLIANCE, FROM PAGE 1 other legislators to voice their concerns in an April 29 e-mail message to faculty and staff members. The UIʼs Benefits Centers at the Urbana and Springfield campuses reportedly received lots of calls from people who were upset by the announcement that Health Alliance would be dropped. UI members of Health Alliance will have the planʼs coverage through June 30 but will have to pick another carrier effective July 1, unless the decision to drop Health Alliance is reversed. Alternative health plans for Urbana campus employees would be PersonalCare Insurance of Illinois, Quality Care and HealthLink Open Access plan. ◆ Important Numbers Dorothy Espelage educational psychology Kathryn Martensen assistant director of LAS General Curriculum Donna F. Nichols professor of mechanical and industrial engineering Shelly J. Schmidt food science and human nutrition Health Alliance 217-337-8000 Central Management Services Director Michael Rumman 217-782-2141 CMS Group Insurance Office 217-782-2548 or 800-442-1300 Gov. Rod Blagojevich Citizens assistance 217-782-0244 Office of the governor: 312-814-1943 www.illinois.gov/gov/ contactthegovernor.cfm Senator Rick Winkel (52nd district) 217-782-2507 [email protected] Rep. Naomi Jakobsson (103rd district) 217-558-1009 Other legislators: Senators: www.legis.state.il.us/senate Representatives: www.legis.state.il.us/house InsideIllinois PAGE 10 May 6, 2004 May 6, 2004 Disciplines unite to improve East St. Louis neighborhood By Melissa Mitchell News Bureau Staff Writer Although they typically function independently from each other, architects, landscape architects and urban planners sometimes cross paths while engaged in community development or urban renewal projects But rarely do they begin working together as a team from the outset, according to Lynne Dearborn, a UI architecture professor. “So many of the firms Iʼve worked for donʼt work that way,” she said. “Instead, we find things out late in the project … things that go wrong, that end up costing more money to resolve.” With more communication among all the players early in the process, such cost overruns might be avoided, she said. Helping students of architecture, landscape architecture and urban and regional planning appreciate how professionals from all three distinct, but interrelated disciplines, can benefit from a more cooperative approach was just one of many lessons to emerge from a course Dearborn co-developed and co-taught with urban and regional planning professor Stacy Harwood and landscape architecture professor Laura Lawson. Clients, too, may be better served by such arrangements, the students learned. The studio-based course, “Envisioning the Future in the South End Neighborhood,” recently received one of two 2004 Education Honor Awards from the American Institute of Architects. The award was presented at the annual meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture in Miami in March. The AIA award recognized the course as “an exceptional model of instructional and educational excellence in classroom, studio, community-based service learning, or laboratory work.” The course was offered during the spring 2002 and 2003 semesters, under the auspices of the universityʼs East St. Louis Action Research Project. Founded in 1990 and administered by the UI College of Fine and Applied Arts, ESLARP promotes the revitalization of distressed areas of East St. Louis by creating partnerships between university students and faculty members, and members of neighborhood organizations. The university and community groups work cooperatively to identify problems and apply design and planning solutions that best address the needs of targeted neighborhoods. “This city has dramatic needs for technical assistance and no existing city-level agency to provide needed design, planning or community development support for non-profits,” Dearborn, Harwood and Lawson noted, adding that most municipalities have their own planning staffs. Over the years, they said, one thing that has become apparent to ESLARP faculty members is that the “complex, nested relationships within East St. Louisʼ neighborhoods require very close interdisciplinary collaboration.” Lawson explained how those layered, complex problems require coordinated solutions involving more than one discipline: “The South End neighborhood is the traditionally African American neighborhood of East St. Louis from the period of residential segregation. It was developed with narrow lots for shotgun-style houses. Now, two-thirds of the lots are vacant. The community wants new development to happen, but the lots are not amenable to current lifestyles. Proposals for wider lots and new homes have implications for street and sidewalk design. In addition, there is a problem of illegal dumping on vacant land. To solve those kinds of problems calls for multifaceted solutions involving planning and design, as well as legal and policy solutions that no one discipline can handle.” Two primary goals for the studio-based course, “Envisioning the Future in the South End Neighborhood”: “To provide technical assistance to the (East St. Louis) South End New Development Organizations, with the ultimate goal to produce a neighborhood plan proposal; and to teach university students about community-based design and planning.” The teaching team developed two primary goals for the course: “to provide technical assistance to the South End New Development Organizations (SENDO), with the ultimate goal to produce a neighborhood plan proposal; and to teach university students about community-based design and planning.” Those goals were achieved, in part, during class trips to East St. Louis, where students surveyed residents, analyzed Census and other data, participated in work weekends, met with SENDO members and sought their input. “The folks involved in SENDO made this project possible,” Harwood said. “They welcomed us into their homes and churches.” In the end, students from the 2003 class delivered a planning document to SENDO that serves as a working framework for change. That document remains a “work in progress,” according to Harwood, who said ESLARP staff and research assistants have facilitated the transition from planning to implementation by using the planning document to identify new projects, some of which are under way in the neighborhood. Dearborn, Harwood and Lawson acknowledged that the entire process of trying to challenge students from separate disciplines to think and work outside the lines was in and of itself a challenge – and more time-consuming than theyʼd originally an- ticipated. But some of the blood, sweat and tears shed along the way was worth it in the end, since students from each discipline picked up insights that will be useful to later as working professionals. “Weʼre incredibly proud of what was accomplished,” Lawson said. Some of those accomplishments went beyond the courseʼs original goals, and were more subtle. For instance, “architecture students were encouraged to contextualize their ideas at the street, neighborhood and city scale,” said Dearborn, who noted that architects frequently work in a vacuum, designing a structure without taking into consideration the bigger picture of how that building fits into a community or a neighborhood. “Something else we all learned,” said Harwood, “was that we began the course speaking three different languages, and if you include our community partner, thatʼs four. Oftentimes we could not understand each other even though we were saying the same thing.” Just learning how to communicate more effectively will be a plus for these students someday when they encounter colleagues from other disciplines in professional settings, she said. Detailed information about the course and the studentsʼ community design plan for SENDO is available on the Web at www.arch.uiuc.edu/events/news/ 04_08_04. ◆ achievements InsideIllinois PAGE 11 A report on honors, awards, appointments and other outstanding achievements of faculty and staff members communications engineering liberal arts and sciences Cliff G. Christians, professor in the Institute of Communications Research, was recently honored by the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Christians won the 2004 Paul J. Deutschmann Award for Excellence in Research for distinguished research in journalism/mass communication will be presented at the associationʼs convention in Toronto on Aug. 6. Christians will address the Deutschmann Award Session on “Ethical Theory in Communication Research.” The professional organization was founded in 1912 by professors to promote excellence in journalism education at colleges and universities in the United States. A documentary by Jay Rosenstein, professor of journalism, will soon be broadcast internationally. “In Whose Honor? American Indian Mascots in Sports” has been licensed for three years to a television network in New Zealand, giving the independent film its first international broadcast audience. The film also recently was screened at a film festival in Norway. Rosenstein wrote, produced, directed and edited the 7-year-old documentary that focuses on the debate regarding Chief Illiniwek and other Indian sports symbols. Brian DeMarco, professor of physics, has received a 2004 Outstanding Young Investigator Award from the Office of Naval Research, one of only 26 such awards given in all branches of science and engineering this year. The Young Investigator Award is intended to honor outstanding new faculty members at U.S. universities, to support their research and to encourage their teaching and research careers. Award recipients are selected on the basis of past performance and the quality and creativity of their research proposals. DeMarco will use his award to begin an experiment in quantum control of trapped ultra-cold atoms. Robert W. Ghrist, professor of mathematics, received the 2002 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the nationʼs highest honor for professionals at the outset of their independent research careers. Fifty-seven researchers were honored in a ceremony May 4. The young scientists and engineers receive a five-year research grant to further their study in support of critical government missions. Eight federal departments and agencies annually nominate scientists and engineers at the start of their careers whose work shows the greatest promise to benefit the nominating agencyʼs mission. Ghrist was nominated by the National Science Foundation. Eugene Giles, professor emeritus of anthropology, was recently honored by the American Academy of Forensic Science. The academy awarded Giles the Physical Anthropology Sectionʼs T. Dale Stewart Award at its 56th annual scientific meeting, held in February in Dallas. The award is given for distinguished service in forensic anthropology. John Lynn, professor of history, gave three invited lectures on constructing historical models at Ohio State University in April. Also in April, he gave invited lectures to the School for Advanced Military Studies and to the Command and General Staff College, both at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. In March, he gave an invited lecture at the Military Classics Society in Washington, D.C. Earlier this spring, he presented a paper on the “Problems and Complexities of a Cultural Approach to Military History” at the Presidential Session of the American Historical Association, and also a series of lectures at the National Institute for Defense Studies in Tokyo. On May 21, he will give the keynote lecture at the annual education Mildred Trent, director of educational career services, was awarded the Priscilla A. Scotlan Award for Distinguished Service by the American Association for Employment in Education at the associationʼs recent 70th national conference in San Diego. This is the highest award given by the association and honors a member who has made significant contributions to the organization during several years. Trent was recognized for excellence in leadership and service to the profession and to the association. fine and applied arts Kimiko Gunji, director of Japan House, has received the Foreign Ministerʼs Commendation from the foreign minister of Japan. The commendation recognizes meritorious service of individuals and groups who promote friendly relations between Japan and the world and to provide further public awareness and understanding for these activities. Along with Gunji, nine other individuals and organizations were honored with this award in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of U.S.-Japan relations. Robert I. Selby, associate director for graduate studies in architecture, has been elevated to the College of Fellows of The American Institute of Architects. The College of Fellows was founded in 1952 by the Institute to stimulate fellowship among architects, promote the purposes of the institute and advance the profession of architecture. With the exception of the Gold Medal, it is the highest honor a member can receive. Selby will be invested into the College of Fellows at the 2004 national convention on June 11 at the University of Chicago. meeting of the Society for Military History in Washington, D.C., on the topic “Is There Any Value in the Theory of a Western Way of War?” Brigit Pegeen Kelly and Jean Thompson, professors of English, have been invited to teach and read at the Indiana Universityʼs Writerʼs Conference on the Bloomington campus from June 27 to July 2. Kelly will teach poetry workshops while Thompson will lead fiction workshops. ncsa The National Center for Supercomputing Applications was awarded the Dell Centers for Research Excellence Award by computer company Dell Inc. on April 28. Dellʼs president and chief operating officer, Kevin Rollins, came to the UI campus to present the award. public safety Sgt. Roy Acree was named Police Officer of the Year 2003 at the UI Police Departmentʼs awards ceremony April 30. Acree was nominated by his peers who cited him for his outstanding leadership qualities and his ability to inspire those around him. Officer Barb Robbins received the Valor Award for aiding in the apprehension of a homicide suspect. Other UI award recipients: Marksmanship: Officers William Smoot (first place), Jeff McCracken (second) and George Sandwick (third); Cecil Coleman Award: Ilene Harned, health educator, Counseling Center; Citizen Commendations: John Horton, assistant to head, crop sciences; and Rob Russian; Excellence in Community Policing Award: Officers George Sandwick and SEE ACHIEVEMENTS, PAGE 12 Technique uses humidifier to create nanocomposite materials By James E. Kloeppel News Bureau Staff Writer In what may sound like a project from a high school science fair, scientists are using a household humidifier to create porous spheres a hundred times smaller than a red blood cell. The technique is a new and inexpensive way to do chemistry using sound waves, the researchers say. In the home, ultrasonic humidifiers are used to raise humidity, reduce static electricity and ease discomfort from the common cold or cough. In the lab, UI chemists are using the devices to make complex nanocomposite materials that could prove useful as catalysts in applications ranging from refining petroleum to making pharmaceuticals. The procedure is both simple and efficient. “Normally, the chemical effects of ultrasound (called sonochemistry) are due to intense heating of small gas bubbles as they collapse in an otherwise cold liquid,” said Kenneth S. Suslick, a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry at Illinois. “But in this case we are looking at using ultrasound to make very small liquid droplets and heating them while they are separated from one another in a heated gas. Itʼs the inverse of what we do sonochemically.” To create their novel nanocomposite materials, Suslick, graduate student Won Hyuk Suh and research fellow Yuri Didenko start with a solution of chemical reactants and surface-stabilizing surfactants. The solution is turned into a mist using a high-frequency ultrasound generator – an ordinary household ultrasonic humidifier the researchers purchased at a local discount store. The resulting droplets are carried by a gas stream into a furnace, where the solvent evaporates and the chemicals coalesce into inorganic-organic composite materials nanometers in size. The particles are carried to a second, hotter furnace, where the organic part burns away, leaving behind porous inorganic nanospheres. These nanospheres are then trapped in a liquid and collected by centrifuge. The entire formation process takes only a few seconds. “Each tiny droplet serves as its own microscopic chemical reactor,” Suh said. “The micron-size mist results in particles a few hundred nanometers in size.” Among the materials the chemists have created with their ultrasound induced mists are porous nanospheres that could be useful for catalytic reactions, and encapsulated nanoparticles with potential drug delivery applications. They also have formed metal balls within ceramic shells, reminiscent of decorative, hand-carved concentric ivory spheres from China. The nested nanoballs could prove useful as molecular sieves. “Because the outer sphere is porous, we can selectively dissolve some of the core, which frees the inner ball from the shell,” said Suh, who will describe and present early results from the pyrolysis generated porous nanospheres at the 227th American Chemical Society national meeting, which was held March 28-April 1 in Anaheim, Calif. The work was funded by the National Science Foundation. ◆ research news photo by Bill Wiegand photo by Bill Wiegand Chemical catalyst UI chemist Kenneth S. Suslick, a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry, and his colleagues are using ultrasonic household humidifiers to make complex nanocomposite materials that could prove useful as catalysts in applications ranging from refining petroleum to making pharmaceuticals. Graduate student Won Hyuk Suh presented early findings from their work, which is funded by the National Science Foundation, at the 227th national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Ad removed for online version Ad removed for online version InsideIllinois PAGE 12 May 6, 2004 May 6, 2004 InsideIllinois PAGE 13 Book on Christo and Jeanne-Claude focuses on new ‘Gates’ project By Melissa Mitchell News Bureau Staff Writer M Ad removed for online version photo by Bill Wiegand Building spaces The $26 million North Campus Parking Deck, located just east of Ad removed for online version Ad removed for online version PARKING, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 for the deck. In turn, that helps us fight rate escalations,” said Thomas Skaggs, coordinator for capital development in the Facilities and Services parking department. In addition, a $5 million renovation program for the parking decks at Fifth and Daniel streets and Sixth and John streets begins in mid-May. The deck at Fifth and Daniel will be refurbished this summer, with completion expected in late August, and the deck at Sixth and John will be renovated during summer 2005. The refurbishments will include brighter lighting, windowed stairwells and other safety enhancements in both structures. Permit holders will be relocated to nearby lots temporarily during renovations. To cope with some of the traffic congestion on campus, administrators also are investigating proximity-based parking programs, a system used at some other institutions whereby permit fees are based upon the distance between usersʼ workplaces and the facilities they choose for parking. A presentation on proximity-based parking programs by Pam Voitik, director of campus services division for Facilities and Services, at the March 29 UrbanaChampaign Senate meeting prompted two resolutions from senate committees and much debate at the April 26 meeting. A resolution sponsored by the Senate Committee on Faculty Benefits called for freezing parking rates at current levels, rejected the implementation of a proximity-based plan and proposed differential rates based on usersʼ salaries and whether they park in structures or open lots. After debate, the resolution was remanded to the faculty benefits committee for clarification. The Senate Committee on Campus Operations also presented a resolution, which was amended during debate and ultimately ACHIEVEMENTS, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 Eric Vogt; Team Excellence in Community Policing Award: Tim Hetrick, Tony Micele, Robert Murphy, Jose Ortiz and Eric Vogt; Deborah K. Kloth, secretary, Planning, Construction and Maintenance; Daniel R. McCue, business intelligence specialist, PCM; Larry S. Bonebrake, R. Daniel Davis and John G. Ragland, construction project coordinators, PCM; Division Commendation: Officer Tim Hetrick; Merit Award: Officer William Smoot; Director of Public Safety Recognition Awards: Officers Eric Cook, Todd Short; Lt. Jeff Christensen; Mark Briggs, campus risk manager; Vicki Strom, secretary, Public Safety; and Dick Justice, associate dean of students, Housing; Civilian Employee of the Year Award: Jennifer Payan, public safety telecommunicator. Service recognition and student honors also were awarded. voted down, that demanded administration obtain Senate input on parking operations, including concurrence with the programʼs budget, rates and penalties and decisions to usurp parking lots for new construction. With space for growth limited on much of the campus, parking lots often have been the most feasible sites for new construction, and over the past five to 10 years more than a thousand parking spaces have been consumed by development, most recently the lot west of Bevier Hall where the Institute for Genomic Biology is being built. Over the next few years, several hundred more spaces probably will be consumed as the campus continues to grow, Skaggs said. The parking master plan, which was developed in 2001, calls for construction of a parking deck in central campus in the vicinity of the C8 and C9 open lots along Sixth Street between Chalmers Street and Armory Avenue; the university is in the early stages of planning. “Our hope is to build something around 2006 and 2007,” Kelly said. “That may not happen if the economy doesnʼt pick up. If the campus tells us thereʼs no way weʼre going to be able to raise rates 12-13 percent, (then it) wonʼt happen for a couple of years or itʼs going to be put off for a long time. If these decks donʼt happen, and they still take the surface lots away from us on the core of campus, that means we wonʼt have parking. Thatʼs the ultimate problem weʼre facing.” The parking master plan indicated that at the time of the study in 2001 the campusʼs parking supply was “barely adequate in most sections,” with about 9,700 spaces available and a demand for more than 11,340 spaces. The plan also indicated that campus growth would necessitate the addition of 5,088 more parking spaces by 2010. ◆ social work Mark Testa, director of the Children and Family Research Center, was invited to present a poster at the Institute for the Advancement of Social Work Researchʼs 10th anniversary poster session and reception on Capitol Hill in March. Testa was one of 15 researchers chosen to address the broad areas of social work research. His poster, “Illinois Subsidized Guardianship Waiver Demonstration: An Experiment in Family Permanence,” presented information on the transferal of 6,822 Illinois children from state custody to private guardianship. university library Priscilla C. Yu, professor of library administration, delivered a lecture, “A Crown Jewel: The University of Illinois Library System,” at the National Library of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, on March 29. She was invited by the director general of the National Library of Malaysia and the president of the Library Association of Malaysia. ◆ photo by Bill Wiegand the Beckman Institute along University Avenue, is scheduled to open by early June. The six-level deck adds more than 1,500 parking spaces to the supply on campus and contains more than 20,000 square feet of commercial space, which will be leased to tenants, such as retailers and restaurants, to help defray construction costs. ore than a quarter of a century after they first proposed outfitting New Yorkʼs Central Park with 1,000 fluttering, saffroncolored fabric panels, artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude will at last see an even grander, larger-scale version of their dream realized next February. The park wonʼt be transformed for several more months, but a drum roll of sorts for the massive outdoor art project is sounding already inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art, located on park grounds. On view at the museum through July 25 is a prelude exhibition, “Christo and Jeanne-Claude: The Gates, Central Park, New York, ” featuring drawings, collages and other preparatory studies, as well as a sample of one of the gates. Also generating advance interest in “The Gates” project is a new book by Jonathan Fineberg, the Gutgsell Professor of Art History at the UI. The book, “Christo and Jeanne-Claude: On the Way to the Gates, Central Park, New York City” (Yale University Press), doubles as the exhibition catalog and includes photographs by Wolfgang Volz, and reproductions of collages and drawings associated with the project, many of which have not been published previously. Fineberg also documents the many obstacles the artists had to negotiate – beginning in 1979 – before city officials finally granted them permission to mount their monumental work in the park. Weather permitting, “The Gates” will be installed Feb. 12, and will remain on view through the end of the month. “ ʻThe Gatesʼ is a remarkable story of artistic vision, persistence in the face of long odds, years of hard work, and a creative collaboration that seems to grow more interdependent with time,” Fineberg wrote. “This temporary work of art will consist of about 7,500 custom-made rectangular frames, 16 feet tall, placed at approximately 12-foot intervals and spanning 23 miles of walkways in Central Park. In February, the coldest part of the New York winter, when the light tends to be sharp and clear and all the leaves h a v e fallen from the trees, the thousands of shimmering panels will be the most colorful Jonathan Fineberg sight in the landscape, and every viewer will see them in a different way.” In addition to focusing on “The Gates,” Finebergʼs book relates the larger story of two unconventional artists with a shared vision that has caused people the world over to question and redefine traditional concepts and definitions of art. In the bookʼs first 60 pages of introductory text, Fineberg treats readers to a richly illustrated history of the coupleʼs work leading up to “The Gates” project – from Christoʼs early wrapped bot- “The Gates, Project for Central Park, New York City,” Collage detail (2000) Unconventional artistry “The Gates,” a temporary work of art that will consist of about 7,500 custom-made rectangular frames, 16 feet tall, placed at approximately 12-foot intervals and spanning 23 miles of walkways in Central Park, is the vision of artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude. A new book by Jonathan Fineberg, the Gutgsell Professor of Art History at the UI, focuses on the project but also tells the larger story of two unconventional artists with a shared vision that has caused people the world over to question and redefine traditional concepts and definitions of art. The book, published by Yale University Press, doubles as the exhibition catalog for a show on view through July 25 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. That exhibition is a prelude to the Christos’ February 2005 installation in New York’s Central Park. tles, packages and oil cans, to the coupleʼs more elaborate, highly orchestrated projects in which they directed the wrapping of major buildings and even a section of the Australian coast. Other projects documented in the book – which have generated considerable public interest – include “Valley Curtain, Grand Hogback, Rifle, Colorado, 1970-72”; “Running Fence, Sonoma and Marin Counties, California,” 1972-76; Surrounded Islands, Biscayne Bay, Greater Miami, Florida,” 1980-83; and “The Umbrellas, Japan-USA, 1984-91.” Additional insights on what motivates, inspires and even frustrates the artists emerge through the bookʼs transcripts of interviews with Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Fineberg draws out lively, behind-thescenes stories about the evolution of various projects, as well as explanations of how and why the artists insist on financing their work entirely through self-generated funds. The most recent conversation took place last year; the first, in 1977, when Christo visited the Illinois campus, at Finebergʼs invitation, to participate in a lecture series organized to celebrate the centenary of the School of Art and Design. “Iʼve been interviewing him for nearly 30 years,” said Fineberg, whose previous books include “Christo: Surrounded Islands, Biscayne Bay, Greater Miami natural environments in which they are Florida, 1980-83,” published in 1986. “On installed. Yet, the art-history scholar in him the Way to the Gates,” he said, is “the most detects a common thread. comprehensive” book written to date about “Works of art are important for society,” the artists and their work. he said, “because they get us to examine And much has been written over the things emerging in our culture before we years in both the popular and art presses have words with which to discuss them. about the eccentric couple whoʼve elevated This work will open peopleʼs eyes to many into art forms both their penchant for fight- things about New York, about our culture, ing bureaucracies and for spending their and about ourselves.” ◆ own money – rather than collecting it, as most successful artists do. Judged by what has been written, their work remains an enigma for the masses. According to Fineberg, each of the artistsʼ major projects has been driven by different goals and motivations, and Informal discussion Christo, left, and Jonathan Fineberg, the shaped largely Gutgsell Professor of Art History at the UI, chat with students on the UI by the unique, campus in this archival photo from 1977. Flash index of Illinois economy breaks 100 barrier for first time in three years After three years, the UI Flash Economic Index has broken through the 100 level, the dividing line between a sluggish and vigorous economy. Aprilʼs reading of 100.3 suggests that the Illinois economy is undergoing a sustained expansion. This was the first time the Flash Index has been above 100 since April 2001. A year ago in April, the index was at 96.0 “There are numerous signs of growth in the state and national economy,” said J. Fred Giertz, the UI economist who released the data May 3. “One sign is the growth of corporate profits reported in the first quarter,” Giertz said. “Another is the shift by stock market investors from a concern about a lackluster economy to a fear that interest rates will rise because of the strength of the economy.” All three components of the Flash Index were up compared with the same month last year. Individual and corporate income-tax receipts were especially strong last month. The Flash Index is a weighted average of Illinois growth rates in corporate earnings, consumer spending and personal income. Tax receipts from corporate income, personal income and retail sales are adjusted for inflation before growth rates are calculated. The growth rate for each component is then calculated for the 12-month period using data through April 30. For a graph of the index, go to www.news.uiuc.edu/news/04/ 0503flash.html. ◆ InsideIllinois PAGE 14 May 6, 2004 book corner Philosophers reflects on Wagner’s ‘Ring’ cycle Ad removed for online version In todayʼs landscape of popular culture tend to do when left to their own devices: the name Richard Wagner appears on few wax philosophical on subjects theyʼre passionate about. In this case, the subject was billboards or marquees. But thatʼs of little concern to the many music – and more specifically, Wagnerʼs “Ring” cycle. Wagnerphiles out there who Among other things, are buying tickets to this their discussions focused springʼs Metropolitan Opera on the philosophical ramiseries featuring all four parts fications of the workʼs text, of Wagnerʼs epic musical characters, themes and mudrama, “The Ring of the Niesic. As they continued to belungs,” or arranging their compare notes, both became Saturday-afternoon errands convinced that beyond the and activities around the grand spectacle and stirring Metʼs radio broadcasts. But musical highpoints of the why should they – or anyone “Ring” lay some fairly deep else – care about this 17-hour considerations about the huoperatic extravaganza, with man experience. its assortment of heroes, giThatʼs hardly surprisants, gods, dwarves, Rhineing, Schacht said, since maidens and even a dragon? “Finding an Ending: Reflections Wagner was interested in Richard Schacht and on Wagner’s ‘Ring,’ ” by Richard philosophy, was initially Philip Kitcher think this Schacht and Philip Kitcher (Oxford captivated by the secular question has a good answer, University Press) humanist Ludwig Feuerfor devotees and neophytes bach, then became an ardent follower of alike, which they spell out in “Finding an the arch-pessimist Arthur Schopenhauer, Ending: Reflections on Wagnerʼs ʻRing,ʼ ” published this month by Oxford University and even befriended the young Nietzsche, Press. Schacht is a professor of philosophy who subsequently became one of the most and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and influential German philosophers of the 19th Sciences at the UI, where his academic century. What has been more surprising, the auinterests focus on the thought of Friedthors admit, is the fact that the “Ring” conrich Nietzsche and other developments in tinues to this day to fascinate so many “reamodern European philosophy. Kitcher is sonably sane and quite intelligent people.” the John Dewey Professor of Philosophy at In the book, the authors discuss WagColumbia University, where he specializes nerʼs treatment of themes such as judgment, in the philosophy of science. authority, freedom, heroism and love. And How did two philosophy professors they offer a new interpretation of the mythic come to write a book about opera? taleʼs spectacular, dramatic ending, in “Philip and I are both singers – amawhich the storyʼs heroes and gods all perish, teur singers who take singing seriously,” and their world is destroyed. Schacht said. Over the course of several – Melissa Mitchell, News Bureau years, the pair did what philosophy scholars www.news.uiuc.edu/news/04/0407wagner.html Professor outlines case for media reform Ad removed for online version Robert McChesney and other reformers with the notion that the current system is have been talking for years about media somehow “natural” or the product of a free politics, but few were listening. market. “Itʼs not a free-market system, but In 2003 that all changed, as the public in fact a system that was created by and run revolted, from across the political spectrum, by government policies and subsidies.” against Federal Communications CommisIn the early decades of the republic, sion rule changes allowing those policies and subsidies for increased concentration supported a diverse range of of media ownership. media, McChesney wrote. “For the first time in genThe idea of a free press erations,” McChesney writes was that it should serve the in his new book, “media needs of democracy, and not policy issues were taken the profit motives of media from behind closed doors owners. Key among those and made the stuff of demosubsidies was a significant cratic discourse and political discount for delivery of engagement.” newspapers by the post ofEncouraging that disfice. course and engagement “The problems we have was a principal motive in with the media today … are writing “The Problem of in fact the result of highly the Media: U.S. Commu- “The Problem of the Media: U.S. corrupt policy-making that nication Politics in the 21st Communication Politics in the 21st lets a handful of commercial Century” (Monthly Review Century,” by Robert McChesney interests have inordinate (Monthly Review Press) Press), said McChesney, a power,” McChesney said. professor in the UI Institute The governmentʼs policies of Communications Research. He also is a and subsidies, especially in the area of co-founder of Free Press, a group organized broadcasting, largely serve those commerin 2002 to promote greater public participa- cial interests. Although the public owns tion in media policy-making. the airwaves, for instance, commercial “This book is basically, ideally, a way broadcasters use them at no charge from the for citizens to understand how the system government, he said. works so they can change it effectively,” The products of the current system, from he said. its “deplorable journalism” to its “hyperThe book also is a work of scholarship, commercialism,” are a logical result of the “the culmination of work Iʼve been do- policies upon which it is based, McChesney ing for a decade,” McChesney said. With said. A change in the policies will produce significant new research on the history, different results. politics and policies behind the U.S. media “The most important struggle is simply to system, he addresses what he says are eight convince people that the media are political common myths that often keep the public forces that can be shaped, not natural ones disengaged. that must be endured,” he wrote in the conTo understand the case for media reform, cluding chapter on the “uprising of 2003.” according to McChesney, means dispensing – Craig Chamberlain, News Bureau www.news.uiuc.edu/news/04/0405mediabook.html May 6, 2004 brief notes University YMCA Get ready to ‘Dump and Run’ For the third year, the University YMCA will collect reusable items students moving out might otherwise throw away in an attempt to reduce litter and raise funds by providing inexpensive items for students to purchase in the fall. The “Dump and Run” program will run primarily from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. March 14 and 15. Volunteers also are needed. “Dump and Run” is a national program running at more than 15 colleges around the country. Volunteers retrieve items from participating housing facilities or receive items at designated drop-off sites and deliver them to the Y. Collected items will then be sold at the YMCAʼs annual garage sale Aug. 25 through 27 at the UI Stock Pavilion. For more information, contact Amiee Kandrac at 3371500 or aimee@university ymca.org. May ALLY meeting Speaker to discuss rural gay families The May ALLY meeting, set for noon on May 7 in 217 Illini Union, will focus on the research of Ramona Faith Oswald. Her research examines how rural gay, lesbian and transgender people utilize ritual to sustain family ties in the absence of formal supports. She also is trying to establish the timing and prevalence of same-sex commitment ceremonies and to predict which respondents have these rituals. For more information, contact Jane Reid, [email protected], or Anita Hund, [email protected]. WILL-FM ‘Second Sunday Concert’ Guitarist to perform May 9 Guitarist Timothy Johnson will perform classical guitar music at the May 9 WILL-FM Second Sunday Concert. The free concert begins at 2 p.m. at the Krannert Art Museum and Kinkead Pavilion. It will be broadcast live on WILL-FM (90.9/101.1 in Champaign-Urbana) with host Vic DiGeronimo. Johnson, a solo recitalist and chamber music performer as well as a UI doctoral student in music composition, will perform “Caprice de Chaconne,” by Francesco Corbetta; “Etude No. 8 in G major,” by Giulio Regondi; and “Liebesleid,” by Johann Kaspar Mertz, along with several other pieces, including “Elegy (Hommage a de Falla),” by Johnsonʼs former teacher, Jeffrey Van. Violinist Dorothy Martirano, concertmaster of the Champaign-Urbana Symphony, will perform with Johnson on “LʼHistoire du Tango,” by Astor Piazzolla. Johnson also will perform two pieces he composed while living in Portugal, where he taught classical guitar at a conservatory. School of Art 2004 Summer Art Enrichment Program The UI School of Art and Design is sponsoring a summer art enrichment program aimed at children from preschool to 12th grade designed to expose students to a variety of creative art experiences. All classes meet for Monday through Thursday for two weeks. Classes meet from 8:30 to 10 a.m. or from 10:30 a.m. to noon. The schedule: June 14-24: preschool/ kindergarten June 18-July 8: Grades 1, 2 and 3 July 12-22: Grades 4, 5 and 6 July 26-Aug. 5: Grades 7-12 The registration fee is $65. For more information, contact Carol Smith, 333-1652 or [email protected]. Japan House Children’s Day is May 8 In Japan, May 5 is celebrated as Childrenʼs Day. Japan House will open its doors to the public from 1-3 p.m. May 8 for its Childrenʼs Day festivities. The free event offers an opportunity for adults and children to learn about Japanese arts and culture. Activities include origami and calligraphy. Kimono dressing will be demonstrated at 2 p.m. and children will be asked to model the robes. For more information, go to www.art.uiuc.edu/japanhouse. WILL radio ‘Vintage Vinyl’ drop-off sites WILL radio is seeking donations of working stereo equipment as well as used records, tapes and CDs in preparation for its Vintage Vinyl Used Record Sale. Items may be donated May 17 through June 18. To arrange for drop-off of used stereo equipment, call 333-1070. Records, audio and VHS tapes, and CDs may be dropped off at many locations in Central Illinois including: Urbana: ArtMart, Lincoln Square; Busey Bank, 201 W. InsideIllinois PAGE 15 Krannert Center announces 2004-05 performance season A “tidal wave” of talent will be cascading down upon the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts in its upcoming season. Committed to the presentation of distinguished world-class artists whose creative gifts as extraordinary communicators invite engagement and reaction, Krannert Centerʼs 2004-05 Marquee (guest artist) and resident performance season celebrates Mikhail Baryshnikov tradition and innovation with highly acclaimed performers of music, theater, dance and opera. Opening the season on Sept. 10 will be country/folk artist Emmylou Harris and her special guests Buddy and Julie Miller. Other artists who will perform in the weeks and months to follow include Ravi Shankar, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Nancy Wilson, Ramsey Lewis, Laurie Anderson, Herbie Hancock, Rennie Harris, Dawn Upshaw, Ivo Pogorelich, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile. Also featured will be the Chicago Symphony Rennie Harris’ Puremovement Orchestra, Pacifica Quartet, Juilliard String Quartet, National Acrobats of Taiwan and Kodo Drums. The scheduled performances are too numerous to list but are detailed in the new season brochures and on the centerʼs Web site. The new season brochures are now available and the ticket office Emmylou Harris is accepting single event and series ticket orders by phone, mail, online or through visits to the ticket office. Main St., or 1717 S. Philo Rd.; Schnuckʼs, 200 N. Vine St. Champaign: Busey Bank, 909 W. Kirby Ave. and 907 W. Marketview; Hickory Point Bank, 701 Devonshire Drive; Old Main Book Shoppe, 116 N. Walnut Street; Schnuckʼs, 109 N. Mattis Ave.; Prairie Gardens, 3000 W. Springfield Ave. Savoy: Pages for All Ages, 1201 Savoy Plaza. For drop-off sites outside of Champaign-Urbana, go to WILLʼs Web site, www.will.uiuc.edu/pressroom/ vintagevinyldo04.htm. The Vintage Vinyl Sale, which benefits public radio stations WILL-AM and WILL-FM, will take place June 26 at Lincoln Square Mall in Urbana. 2005 Jan. 17: Martin Luther King Jr. Day May 30: Memorial Day Two floating holidays can be taken anytime during this fiscal year; however, the scheduling of these holidays is subject to departmental approval. Because many university activities must continue throughout the holiday period, some employees may be required to work on days designated as holidays as well as the prescribed work days in order to provide necessary services as determined by their supervisors. WILL-AM documentary Students examine C-U desegregation Seven African-American students from Champaignʼs Franklin Middle School explored the history of desegregation and integration in local public schools, producing a 60minute radio documentary that will air on WILL-AM (580) at 5 p.m. May 15 with a repeat at 6 p.m. May 17. “Our Journey: Stories of School Desegregation and Community in Champaign-Urbana” weaves together stories about school, family, church and civic life in Champaign-Urbana as told by African Americans between the ages of 40 and 91. WILLʼs Kimberlie Kranich, Dave Dickey and Shawyn Williams coordinated the project along with Will Patterson, project co-director and a UI visiting professor in the AfroAmerican Studies and Research Program. After it airs, the documentary can be heard at WILLʼs Web site, will.uiuc.edu. WILL-TV will re-broadcast “The Girls of Franklin: A Live Black Perspectives Special” at 1:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. May 9. The call-in program aired live May 6 with host Imani Bazzell, who talked to the students about what they learned about making a radio documentary, the Brown decision and the challenges they face as young African Americans in school today. Viewers call in during the live broadcast to talk with the students and share their own stories. Fiscal year 2004-05 Holiday schedule announced The Facilities and Services Division has announced the UI campus holidays for the fiscal year 2004-2005: 2004: July 5: Independence Day Sept. 6: Labor Day Nov. 25: Thanksgiving Day Nov. 26: Day after Thanksgiving (designated) Dec. 24: Christmas Day Observed Dec. 27: Day after Christmas (designated) Dec. 31: New Yearʼs Day Observed To order tickets n By mail: An order form is included in each brochure and can be mailed to the Krannert Center ticket office. n By telephone: Call 333-6280 or 800KCPATIX or TTY 333-9714 for patrons who are deaf, hard of hearing or speech-impaired. n By fax: Fax order form to 244-SHOW. n By e-mail: Send order to [email protected]. n On the Web: Fill out an order form at KrannertCenter.com. n In person: Stop by the ticket office (open from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. daily). Information about the 200405 season also is available on the Krannert Center Web site: Dan Zanes KrannertCenter.com.◆ University Primary School School founder to be honored University Primary School will honor its founder, Merle B. Karnes, with a rededication of the playground at the Childrenʼs Research Center from 5-7 p.m. May 6. School alumni and families of all children who have attended the school are invited to participate by planting donated flowers and designing mosaic stepping stones to be placed throughout the Alumni Garden. The event will feature a potluck picnic. Reservations for attendance are required and can be obtained by contacting the school office, 333-3996 [email protected]. University Primary School is an award-winning, early childhood gifted education program affiliated with the department of special education in the UIʼs College of Education. It serves children ages 3 to 7. Krannert Center for the Performing Arts Three plays chosen for Summerfest “The Glass Menagerie,” by Tennessee Williams, “Guilty Conscience,” by Richard Levinson and William Link, and “Parfumerie,” an adaptation of the play “Illatszertar,” by Miklos Laszlo, will be the featured plays during Summerfest 2004. The plays will be performed June 18 through Aug. 1, Tuesdays through Sundays, in the Studio Theater at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. “The Glass Menagerie,” directed by Matthew Reeder, is an autobiographical play that follows the Wingfield family in a drama about responsibilities to oneʼs family conflicting with responsibilities to oneʼs self. “Guilty Conscience,” directed by William Martin, was written by the Emmy-winning writers of TVʼs “Mannix” and “Columbo.” The play follows a devious criminal defense lawyer who plans the “perfect murder.” “Parfumerie,” directed by Peter Reynolds, was taken from the original 1937 script of a classic Hungarian comedy that has inspired such films as “The Shop Around the Corner” and “Youʼve Got Mail.” Tickets are available at the Krannert Center box office or online. For the complete schedule, go to www.krannertcenter.com. ◆ InsideIllinois PAGE 16 calendar of events music 6 Thursday Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Sara Kramer, oboe. 5 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Joonhee Kim, piano. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Junior and Undergraduate Recital. Aaron Brizuela, trumpet, and Kyle Adelman, horn. 7:30 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. 7 Friday Superstate Concert Band Festival. Peter Griffin, coordinator. Noon. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. School of Music. Master of Music Recital. Tracey Ford, soprano. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Maureen Murchie, violin. 7:30 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. 8 Saturday Superstate Concert Band Festival. Peter Griffin, coordinator. 8 a.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. School of Music. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Debra Marsch, soprano. 5:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Master of Music Recital. Taerim Lee, soprano. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. 9 Sunday Senior Recital. Caroline Stuart, soprano. Noon. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Second Sunday Concert. Timothy Johnson, guitar. 2 p.m. Krannert Art Museum. Illini Jazz Lab Band. Ari Brown, leader. 2 p.m. Music Building auditorium. Master of Music Recital. Chanju Park, piano. 5 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Master of Music Recital. Ji-Hye Kim, piano. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Graduate Recital. Marlen Vavrikova, oboe. 7:30 p.m. McKinley Presbyterian Church, 809 S. Fifth St., Champaign. Senior Recital. Raquel Adorno, soprano. 7:30 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. 10 Monday Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Soojin Bae, piano. 2:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Yoon-Kyung Nam, cello. 5 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Project Recital. Ji Yon Shim, cello. 7:30 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital in Vocal Coaching and Accompanying. Kevin Class, piano. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Minnesota. 1:05 p.m. Illinois Field. $ 11 Tuesday Baseball. UI vs. Southern Illinois University. 6:35 p.m. Illinois Field. $ Senior Recital. Andrew Watkins, percussion. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. 12 Wednesday Master of Music Recital. Robert Mirakian, conductor. 4 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Graduate String Quartet. Diana Flesner, coordinator. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. 13 Thursday Master of Music Recital. Jin-Kyung Lim, organ. Noon. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Project Recital. Ji Yon Shim, cello. 5 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Ji-Eun Yun, piano. 5 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Master of Music Recital. Cristina Lixandru, violin. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. 15 Saturday Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Christine Haju Kim, flute. 2 p.m. Music Building auditorium. UI Wind Symphony: Commencement Pops Concert. James F. Keene, conductor. 7:30 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall. School of Music. 23 Sunday A Concert of 17th Century Italian Music. 7:30 p.m. McKinley Presbyterian Church, 805 S. Fifth St., Champaign. Baroque Artists of Champaign-Urbana. films 7 Friday “Son of the Bride” (Argentina). 7:47 p.m. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. Reel World International Film Series. sports To confirm times, go to www .fightingillini.com 8 Saturday Softball. UI vs. University of Iowa. Noon. Eichelberger Field. $ 9 Sunday Softball. UI vs. University of Iowa. Noon. Eichelberger Field. $ 14 Friday Baseball. UI vs. University of Minnesota. 6:35 p.m. Illinois Field. $ 15 Saturday Baseball. UI vs. University of Minnesota. 4:05 and 6:05 p.m. Illinois Field. $ 16 Sunday Baseball. UI vs. University of 18 Tuesday et cetera 6 Thursday Nanotechnology in Homeland Security Workshop: “Building a University Based Research and Education Program at the Department of Homeland Security.” Melvin Bernstein, Department of Homeland Security. 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. College of Veterinary Medicine auditorium. Continues May 7, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Nanoscale Science and Technology. Chancellor’s Council of Academic Professionals Meeting. 1:30 p.m. 404 Illini Union. Chancellorʼs Office and Council of Academic Professionals. 7 Friday Kayak Clinic. 9 a.m. Campus Rec Outdoor Center. Campus Recreation. May Ally Meeting. Rural Gay and Lesbian Families. Ramona Faith Oswald. Noon-1:30 pm. 217 Illini Union. 8 Saturday Horseback Trail Riding Day Trip. 10 a.m.-4 pm. Campus Rec Outdoor Center. Campus Recreation. Children’s Day at Japan House. 1-3 p.m. Japan House. Japan House. 9 Sunday Second Sunday Gallery Tour. “The Social Context of Violence in Ancient Peruvian Art.” Helaine Silverman, guest curator. 1 p.m. Krannert Art Museum. 18 Tuesday “What You Read, What You Hear, What You See.” A panel discussion on current censorship and privacy issues. David Inge, moderator. 7 p.m. Auditorium, Champaign Public Library. Champaign Public Library and WILL. 26 Wednesday Campus Outreach Coordinators Conference. 8:30 a.m.noon. Monsanto Room, ACES Library. See www. ips.uiuc.edu/ io/centers.shtml#funk for a complete schedule. International Programs and Studies and International Outreach Coordinators Council. 3 Thursday Chancellor’s Council of Academic Professionals Meeting. 1:30 p.m. 210 Illini Union. Chancellorʼs Office and Council of Academic Professionals. exhibits “Historic Information on the Ad removed for online version May 6, 2004 Entries for the calendar should be sent 15 days before the desired publication date to Inside Illinois Calendar, News Bureau, 807 S. Wright St., Suite 520 East, Champaign, MC-314, or to [email protected]. More information is available from Marty Yeakel at 333-1085. The online UIUC Events Calendar is at www.uiuc.edu/ricker/CampusCalendar. Note: $ indicates Admission Charge Olympic Games and Avery Brundage” Main hall display cases, Library. “Paris et la Litterature: une promenade sous la pluie” Modern Languages and Linguistics Library. “From Napier’s Bones to Telegraphic Codes: Precursors to Modern Computing and Telecommunications” Rare Book and Special Collections Library. Through May 31. ■ “The Value of University Press Publishing” Main Library. Through May 31. ■ “The American Indian Center of Chicago Celebrates 50 Years of Powwow” Through June 26. Five galleries featuring the cultures of the world. Spurlock Museum, 600 S. Gregory St., Urbana. Noon-5 p.m. Tuesday; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday-Friday; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday. ■ “The School of Art and Design Master of Fine Arts Exhibition” Through May 16. “Social Studies: Eight Artists Address Brown v. Board of Education” Featured Works XVI: “The Social Context of Violence in Ancient Peruvian Art” Through May 23. “Changing Rooms: The Creation of Cinematic Space in the Works of Harry Horner” Through Sept. 19. Featured Works XVII: “From Hand to Lip: The Art and Technology of Making a Greek Vase” On view May 29. “Jamming With the Man: Allen Stringfellow, A Retrospective” On view June 5. Krannert Art Museum and Kinkead Pavilion. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday-Saturday; 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday; 2-5 p.m. Sunday. Free admission; $3 donation suggested. ■ “One Book, One City, One Show” Humanities Lecture Hall, 805 W. Pennsylvania Ave., Urbana. On view May 17- Aug. 15. ■ @art gallery. Online exhibit of the UI School of Art and Design. www.art.uiuc.edu/@art. ongoing Altgeld Chime-Tower Tours 12:30-1 p.m. M-F. Enter May 6 to June 6 through 323 Altgeld Hall. To arrange a concert or Bell Tower visit, e-mail [email protected] or call 333-6068. Arboretum Tours To arrange a tour, 333-7579. Beckman Institute Cafe Open to the public. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. M-F. Lunch served 11 a.m.-2 p.m. For monthly menu, w w w. B e c k m a n . u i u c . e d u / outreach/café.html. Bevier Cafe Closed for summer. Campus Recreation IMPE Bldg.: 6:30 a.m.-9 p.m. M-F, 11a.m.-9 p.m. Sa & Su; IMPE Indoor Pool: 11 a.m.-1 p.m. daily; CRCE: closed for renovations. Kenney Gym and pool will be open to all faculty/staff at no charge during scheduled hours with valid ID card. For more information, call 333-3806 or visit www.campusrec.uiuc.edu. Falun Dafa Practice Group 3:20-4:40 Sunday 404 or 407 Illini Union. 244-2571. Huizenga Commons Cafeteria Serving breakfast. 7:30-11 a.m. and lunch 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. M-F. East end of Law Bldg. Illini Union Ballroom 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. M-F. Second floor, NE corner. For reservations, 333-0690; walkins welcome. Japan House Tours: 1-4 p.m. Thursdays; 1-5 p.m. Third Saturday of the month. For a group tour, 244-9934. Tea Ceremony: 2nd and 4th Thursday of the month. $5/person. Childrenʼs Day, May 8. Krannert Art Museum The Fred and Donna Giertz Education Center: 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Tu-Th; Gift Shop: 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. M-Sa; 2-4: 30 p.m. Su; Palette Cafe: 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. M-Sa, 2-4:30 p.m. Su. Krannert Center for the Performing Arts Interlude: Open one hour before until after events on performance nights. Wine tastings at 5 p.m. most Thursdays. Intermezzo Cafe: Open 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. on nonperformance weekdays; 7:30 a.m. through weekday performances; weekends from 90 minutes before until after performances. Promenade gift shop: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. M-Sa; one hour before until 30 minutes after performances. Ticket Office: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. daily, and 10 a.m. through first intermission on performance days. Tours: 3 p.m. daily; meet in main lobby. Library Tours Self-guided of main and undergraduate libraries: go to Information Desk (second floor, main library) or Media Center (undergrad library). Meat Salesroom 102 Meat Sciences Lab. 1-5:30 p.m. Tu & Th; 8 a.m.-1 p.m. F. For price list & specials, 333-3404. Robert Allerton Park Open 8 a.m. to dusk daily. “Allerton Legacy” exhibit at Visitors Center, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily; 244-1035. Garden tours, 333-2127. organizations Chancellor’s Council of Academic Professionals Meeting 1:30 p.m. First Thursday monthly. Illini Union. www.cap.uiuc.edu. Classified Employees Association 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m. first Thursday monthly. 244-2466 or [email protected]. Contra Dancing www.prairienet.org/contra/ or [email protected]. French Department: Pause Café 5-6 p.m. Thursdays, Espresso Royale, 1117 W. Oregon, Urbana. Illini Folk Dance Society 8-10 p.m. Tu & Sa, Illini Union. Beginners welcome, 398-6686. Italian Table Italian conversation Mondays at noon, Intermezzo Cafe, KCPA. Lifetime Fitness Program 6-8:50 a.m. M-F. Kinesiology, 244-3983. Normal Person’s Book Discussion Group 7 p.m. 317 Illini Union. Read “Tropic of Capricorn,” by Henry Miller for May 13. More info: 355-3167 or www.uiuc.edu/~beuoy. PC User Group For schedule, call Mark Zinzow, 244-1289, or David Harley, 333-5656. Scandinavian Coffee Hour 4-6 p.m. W. The Bread Company, 706 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana. The Deutsche Konversationsgruppe 1-3 p.m. W. The Bread Company, 706 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana. Secretariat 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m. third Wednesday monthly. Illini Union. 3331374, [email protected] or www.uiuc.edu/ro/secretariat. VOICE Poetry and fiction reading. 7:45 p.m. Second Thursday of each month. The Bread Company, 706 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana. Women’s Club Open to male and female faculty and staff members and spouses. 351-9930, [email protected] or http: //wc-uiuc.prairienet.org. ◆ Ad removed for online version
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