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Monday, April 16
9:30 AM South Asia/Geography Forum
"Globalization, Governance, and Graduate Students: Navigating Theory and Practice," Dr. Vandana Shiva. HUB 310. The Graduate School, Department of Geography, Critical Asian Studies and the South Asian Studies Program invite you to a special forum with Dr. Vandana Shiva on the questions of how can graduate students engage in and contribute to debates around ecology, politics, and globalization in meaningful ways? How can graduate students, as activists, think about a future in the academy? What kind of methodologies and approaches are appropriate in a post-colonial world? The graduate student community at University of Washington is very fortunate to have this unique interaction with Dr. Vandana Shiva. As an accomplished intellectual and activist, Dr. Shiva will be identifying and discussing substantive issues that have arisen from the current round of neo-colonial globalization, and talking about the potential of relevant and appropriate interventions from within the academy. For questions please contact Sarah Wright or Britt Yamamoto at byama@u.washington.edu.
12:00 PM Women's Center Event
Dr. Cecile Andrews, a visiting scholar at Stanford University, will discuss how Elizabeth Cady Stanton inspired her activism. Federal Building, 915 Second Avenue, South Auditorium. 2nd in the series, "Women for the Common Good." $75 for the series or $30 each session including box lunch. Contact the Women's Center at 206-685-1090 to register with a credit card or for information on how to register by mail., UW Women's Center, 206-685-1090, for more information.
3:30 PM South Asia/Environ,Studies Lecture
"Indegenity and Nature: Towards a Political Ecology of Meghalaya, Eastern India," Bengt Karlsson. Mary Gates Hall, Room 241. Bengt G. Karlsson has a docotorate in social anthropology from Lund University, and is a researcher at the Collegium for Development Studies at Uppsala University (Sweden). This colloquium series is sponsored by the Program on the Environment at the University of Washington, and co-sponsored by the following UW units: The Graduate School, The School of Law, the South Asian Studies Program, the Southeast Asian Studies Program, and the Departments of American Ethnic Studies, Anthropology, Fisheries Science, Geography, and History. The coordinator is Eric A. Smith (Department of Anthropology)Currently he is a postdoctoral fellow at the South Asia Language and Area Center, University of Chicago. His research deals mainly with issues concerning indigenous peoples and environment in India, and his publications include the recent book Contested Belonging: An Indigenous People's Struggle for Forest and Identity in Sub-Himalayan Bengal (Curzon Press, 2000). At present he is also co-editing a volume on the politics of indigenousness in India. This lecture is part of the series "Whose Nature? Conflicting Interests and Perceptions." This colloquium series is sponsored by the Program on the Environment at the University of Washington, and co-sponsored by the following UW units: The Graduate School, The School of Law, the South Asian Studies Program, the Southeast Asian Studies Program, and the Departments of American Ethnic Studies, Anthropology, Fisheries Science, Geography, and History. The coordinator is Eric A. Smith (Department of Anthropology)For further information, send email to whosenat@u.washington.edu.
Tuesday, April 17
3:30 PM Poetry Reading/Latin American Studies
"The Southwest in the Northwest," Demetria Martinez, Chicana author, poet, activist. Miller 301. A reknowned author and poet, Demetria Martinez will discuss her past and recent works. She is also a journalist from New Mexico who was involved with the Central American Sanctuary movement in the 70's and 80's. She was almost imprisoned in the 1980s, indicted by the U.S. government, her poetry used against her in court. In her novel, Mother Tongue, (1994 Western States Book Award), Martinez narrates the struggle of Central American refugees and through her novel exposes readers to the poetry of Latin American poets Roque Dalton and Claribel Alegria and the philosophy of liberation theology through the eyes of a nineteen year old Chicana who is looking for purpose in her life. Demetria Martinez has published two poetry collections. Her first poetry collection, Turning, was published in Three Times a Woman by Bilingual Review in 1989 after winning the nationally acclaimed Chicano literary prize at UC Irvine. Her spirituality filled poetry book, Breathing Between the Lines (1997), has successfully entered the mainstream market. Her literature has been awarded prestigious prizes in the last five years. She is currently at work on two manuscripts, a novel (Mexican Rubies) and a poetry collection. Sponsors: LAS-JSIS, with special thanks to Seattle University Prof. Gabriella Gutierrez and colleagues. For more information please call 685-3435.
4:30 PM Art/English Event
Broken Music/TV Sounds: a program of experimental film and video, Astria Suparak, independent Film Curator. Art 003. This program of short films and videos explores the intersections between film and other arts. It includes videos on experimental music in which a variety of artists put familiar instruments and objects to unusual uses, showing that the seen world is alive with sonic possibilities, as well a video art, experimental film, and an audio composition with an art-school edge, reinventions of 1960's body/performance art and 1980's New Wave aloofness. Sponsored by Comparative Literature, English, Art History. For more information please contact Steven Shaviro at shaviro@u.washington.edu.
5:30 PM Art Lecture
Tim Doud, a final candidate for the Painting faculty position, will give a public lecture. Art 317. Faculty and students are particularly encouraged to attend. For more information, please call 206.543.0970.
7:00 PM Jessie and John Danz Lecture
Vandana Shiva, "Ahimsa--Beyond Violent Traditions of Science and Technology." Kane Hall 130. Vandana Shiva advocates an approach that is based on the principle of ahimsa - meaning non-violence or harmlessness, drawing on the ethics of ecological and feminist thought that promotes diversity and pluralism in knowledge, action, nature and culture. Dr. Shiva is a world-renowned environmental thinker and activist. A leader in the International Forum on Globalization along with Ralph Nader and Jeremy Rifkin, she won the Alternative Nobel Peace Prize (the Right Livelihood Award) in 1993. Dr. Shiva is the author of many books, including Stolen Harvest- Biopiracy : The Plunder of Nature and Knowledge; The Violence of the Green Revolution and Staying Alive. In 1991, she founded Navdanya, a national movement to protect diversity and integrity of living resources. Navdanya sets up community seed banks, supports conversion to organic agriculture, and is establishing direct producer-consumer links for food security and safety. Department Sponsors: Geography, Critical Asian Studies Program, and South Asian Studies Program. A free ticket is required and can be picked up at the University Book Store. For more information please call 616-1825.
7:30 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. The celebrated American director, Jon Jory, revisits this moving and hilarious account of a spring day in a small Welsh coastal town. Three decades ago he began his legendary tenure at Actor’s Theatre Louisville with a production of Under Milk Wood that critics called “dizzyingly inventive.” (The Louisville Courier-Journal) Now he inaugurates his UW professorial career by restaging Dylan Thomas’s poetic masterpiece. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880.
Wednesday, April 18
12:30 PM Latin American Studies Lecture
"Catalina de Erauso: Colonial Power and National Transvestism," Dr. Paloma Martinez-Carbajo (Assistant Professor of Spanish, Pacific Lutheran University). Thomson 317. Dr. Martinez-Carbajo recently received her PhD from the University of Washington, and her field of interest is the (re)discovery of women's voices and presences on both sides of the Atlantic, both in Spanish and Portuguese. Her talk will study the figure of Catalina de Erauso, a Spanish nun who, disguised as a man, actively participated in the conquest of the Americas and transgressed all sorts of gender, social and political borders to become a legend. For more information please call (206) 685-3435 or email lasuw@u.washington.edu.
1:30 PM *MIDDLE EAST STUDIES LECTURE**
"Court and City: The Patronage of Culture in 18th-Century Istanbul," Shirine Hamadeh (Fellow, American Research Institute in Turkey). Parrington Hall, The Commons. Sponsors: Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, Middle East Center/JSIS, and International Studies Center/JSIS. For more information please call 685-2354.
3:30 PM POSTPONED Speech Comm. Lecture POSTPONED
THIS LECTURE HAS BEEN POSTPONED. "On-line Mediation and Decision--Making Between Cultures," Valerie Manusov (UW Speech Communication) and Nancy Rivenburgh (UW School of Communications). Raitt 221. Sponsored by the Department of Speech Communication. For more information please call 543-4860.
3:30 PM Southeast Asian Lecture
"Malaysia's Mad Magazines: Images of Males and Females in Malay Culture," Ron Provencher (Professor Emeritus, Anthropology, Northern Illinois University). Thomson 317. The Southeast Asia Center welcomes Dr. Provencher. His areas of specialization and research interests include: the anthropology of complex societies; folkore and popular culture; rapidly changing urban and rural lifeways in SE Asian cultures; function and meaning of traditional literature and folklore in modernizing SE Asian cultures; and ethnopsychology of SE Asian cultures. For more information please call 543-9606.
4:30 PM Concert
NASM Showcase Recital: Student Recital - Student Showcase Recital. Brechemin Auditorium, Music 126. Featured will be the Brechemin Scholarship Piano Trio, sopranos Alicia Gianni and Sarah Roberts, the Mallet Jazz Quartet, Lucas Robatto (piccolo), the Turkish Music Ensemble, the Undergraduate Trombone Choir, and Dainius Vaicekonis (piano). For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
7:00 PM Reading
Pontoon Poets read from this spring's publication by Peter Pereira. Parrington Commons. Readers include UW's own Andy Gottlieb, and Michael Bonacci, Eugene S. Fairbanks, and Marlene Muller. Sponsored by Watermark. For more information please email dnewman@u.washington.edu.
7:00 PM Art Lecture/Video
Suzanne Lacy, renowned public artist, performance artist, and author will deliver a slide/video talk about her recent works. Kane Hall Room 120. Admission is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Public Art Curriculum/ Tools for Transformation. For more information please email jtyoung@u.washington.edu or visit http://www.studypublicart.org.
7:30 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880. SEE APRIL 17 LISTING.
8:00 PM Concert
Emerson String Quartet. Meany Theatre. Don't miss the conclusion of this season's tribute to Beethoven when Emerson String Quartet brings the "irresistible force of its collective personality" to works by Brahms and Mendelssohn — whose dense compostional structure and rich emotional range echo the extraordinary Beethoven tradition. Program: Ludwig van Beethoven: Quartet in F minor, Op. 95, "Serioso;" Felix Mendelssohn: String Quartet in A Minor, Op. 13; Johannes Brahms: String Quartet in C minor, Op. 51 No. 1. Tickets: $30. Please call the UW Arts Tickets Office at 543-4880.
Thursday, April 19
  **ARTS & HUMANITIES CONFERENCE**
Genres of Reconciliation, a conference examining the role of the arts in creating communication and civic dialogue across social division, will be held at the University of Washington April 19-21, 2001. The conference is designed to explore the unique capabilities of the arts to demonstrate and reflect upon a common humanity at the intersections of starkly different social identities, memories, roles and hopes. A series of panel discussions will be incorporated into a 3-day schedule of performances, films and readings -- all dedicated to understanding processes of social integration and communication following conflict. Speakers and panels will examine the function of narrative, music, theatre, film and dance as these genres attempt to cross boundaries and facilitate inclusion. Sponsored by the Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities in collaboration with The College of Education, the Comparative History of Ideas Program, the Department of Speech Communication, the UW School of Drama, Human Rights Education & Research Networks, and Liberal Studies, UW Tacoma. For More Information, Contact Glenn Willis: 206-543-7333 willisg@u.washington.edu. SEE BELOW FOR INDIVIDUAL EVENTS.
3:30 PM Latin American Studies Lecture
"Cuban-U.S. Relations: What is Behind 40 Years of Hostility?" Jose Luis Noa, Cuban Interests Section. Communications Building 326. A law graduate of the University of Havana, Jose Luis Noa has served for over a decade in Cuba's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and is now Third Secretary, in charge of religious and sports affairs, of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington, DC. He is touring the US to mark the 40th anniversary of the Bay of Pigs invasion, and will discuss a historical perspective and current issues in Cuban-US relations, including grassroots connections. Sponsors: LAS-JSIS, Seattle-Cuba Friendship Committee, Church Council of Greater Seattle. For more information please call 206-685-3435.
3:30 PM International Studies Lecture
"Why Tanzania Has Remained Peaceful in a Region of Ethnically Related Conflict: The Role of Policy," Aili Mari Tripp (University of Wisconsin, Madison). Parrington Hall, The Forum. Sponsors: The Center for the Study of Ethnic Conflict and Conflict Resolution and the International Studies Center/JSIS. For more information please call 685-2354.
3:30 PM **ARTS AND HUMANITIES OPENING PANEL**
Opening Panel Discussion for "Genres of Reconciliation": "The Role of the Arts in Creating Dialogue across Difference." Walker Ames Room, Kane Hall. Participants: James Clowes, Comparative History of Ideas; Valerie Curtis-Newton, School of Drama; Bruce Kochis, Chair, UW Human Rights and Education Network; Christine Goodheart, Director of Iniatives in K-12 Arts Education, College of Education. SEE ABOVE LISTING FOR MORE DETAILS ON THIS CONFERENCE.
7:00 PM Art Movies
Art Movies, Ballet Mécanique (Léger), Entr'acte (Claire), Lifelines (Emshwiller), NY, NY, Les Mistons (Truffaut). Henry Auditorium. When photographer John Gutmann taught at San Francisco State University in the 1950s, he organized a now legendary film series called Art Movies, featuring a dazzling array of short and feature films about art, by artists, or motivated by avant-garde ideas. The Henry reprises a small segment of this series in conjunction with John Gutmann: Culture Shock. Each evening's presentation lasts approximately one hour and a half. $6 general / $4 members and students For a detailed description of films, please call 543-2281 for the flyer.
7:30 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880. SEE APRIL 17 LISTING.
7:30 PM Concert
University Symphony: Ensemble Concert. Meany Theater. Conductors for this concert are Jacob Winkler, Jeremy Briggs Roberts, Conny Chen, and Mark Reczkiewicz, graduate students in conducting under Maestro Peter Eros. Program: Bach: Orchestral Suite No. 1 in C major; Mozart: Symphony No. 29 in A major; Debussy: Petite Suite; Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue (Toshie Ueda, piano). Tickets: $5 Students & Seniors; $8 General Admission; Notecard Event. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
7:30 PM **FILM**
Screening of "Long Night's Journey Into Day." Henry Art Gallery Auditorium. This award-winning documentary on the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission will be introduced by Linda and Peter Biehl, featured in the documentary, of the Amy Biehl Foundation Trust. Part of "Genres of Reconciliation." SEE ABOVE LISTING FOR CONFERENCE DETAILS.
Friday, April 20
  **ARTS & HUMANITIES CONFERENCE**
Genres of Reconciliation, a conference examining the role of the arts in creating communication and civic dialogue across social division, will be held at the University of Washington April 19-21, 2001. The conference is designed to explore the unique capabilities of the arts to demonstrate and reflect upon a common humanity at the intersections of starkly different social identities, memories, roles and hopes. A series of panel discussions will be incorporated into a 3-day schedule of performances, films and readings -- all dedicated to understanding processes of social integration and communication following conflict. Speakers and panels will examine the function of narrative, music, theatre, film and dance as these genres attempt to cross boundaries and facilitate inclusion. Sponsored by the Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities in collaboration with The College of Education, the Comparative History of Ideas Program, the Department of Speech Communication, the UW School of Drama, Human Rights Education & Research Networks, and Liberal Studies, UW Tacoma. For More Information, Contact Glenn Willis: 206-543-7333 willisg@u.washington.edu. SEE BELOW FOR INDIVIDUAL EVENTS.
9:00 AM 11:00 AM **CONFERENCE PANEL DISCUSSION**
Panel Discussion: "Film and Media in the Creation of Dialogue." Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Participants: James Clowes, Comparative History of Ideas; Linda and Peter Biehl, Amy Biehl Foundation Trust; Professor Judy Mayotte, Seattle University and Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation; Professor Ron Slye, Seattle University and Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation. Part of "Genres of Reconciliation." SEE ABOVE LISTING FOR CONFERENCE DETAILS.
12:00 PM 2:00 pm **CONFERENCE PANEL DISCUSSION**
Panel Discussion: "Models of Engaged Performance." South Campus Center, Room 316. Participants: The Richard Hugo House; Intiman Theatre: 'Living Voices' program; UW on Cue, student-run drama group exploring teaching- through-theatre. Part of "Genres of Reconciliation." SEE LISTING ABOVE FOR CONFERENCE DETAILS.
12:30 PM Concert
Kraig Scott, organ: Guest Artist Recital. Walker-Ames Room, Kane. Kraig Scott, chairman of the music department and professor of organ at Walla Walla College, presents a varied program for organ at two performances on April 20. Program: William Byrd: Two Pieces; Herbert Howells: Two Pieces; Glenn Spring: Trifles; Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck: Toccata; Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck: More Palatino; J.S. Bach: Allein Gott in der Höh sei ehr', BWV 662; J.S. Bach: Sonata No. 6 in G major, BWV 530; J.S. Bach: O Lamm Gottes, unschuldig, BWV 656; J.S. Bach: Fantasia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 537. $8 Students & Seniors; $10 General Admission; Notecard Event. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
1:30 PM Middle East Lecture
"Studying Middle Eastern Women's History and Women in Today's Iran," Nikki Keddie (Professor Emerita, History, UCLA). Parrington Hall, The Forum. Co-sponsored with The Center for Women & Democracy and the Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, Middle East Center, Jackson School. For more information please call 206-543-4227.
3:00 PM 6:00 PM **CONCERT/DRAMA PERFORMANCE**
Three Examples of Socially-Engaged Performance. Henry Art Gallery Auditorium. Total Experience Gospel Choir, under the direction of Pastor Patrinnel Wright; "Death and the Maiden," a drama directed by Valerie Curtis-Newton; and "Stevedore," a drama written by Valerie Curtis-Newton. Part of "Genres of Reconciliation." SEE ABOVE LISTING FOR CONFERENCE DETAILS.
3:30 PM Japan Studies Lecture
"Trustbusting in the Japanese Occupation," Eleanor Hadley (Japan Studies Program). Simpson Center for the Humanities, Communications 202. Sponsored by Japan Studies. For more information please call 543-4391.
3:30 PM Linguistics Lecture
Terry Deacon. Smith 305. Sponsored by the Department of Linguistics. For more information please call 206 543 2046.
8:00 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880. SEE APRIL 17 LISTING.
8:00 PM Concert
Kraig Scott, organ: Guest Artist Recital. Walker-Ames Room, Kane. Over the past decade Kraig Scott has developed one of the most active organ studios in Washington State where he serves on the faculties of both Whitman College and Walla Walla College. In addition to his teaching he maintains an active performing schedule on both organ and harpsichord including recent appearances at the Eastman School, Central Washington University, and Batelle Auditorium in Richland, WA. While still a teenager he became the organist at the Holy Rosary Cathedral in Vancouver, British Columbia, and has since held similar positions in Lutheran, Episcopal and Christian Science churches. Since 1993 he has been Music Director at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Walla Walla. His DMA is from the Eastman School of Music where he also received an MA in historical musicology and the coveted Performer's Certificate, as well as the prestigious Jerald C. Graue Fellowship for outstanding work in musicological research. $8 Students & Seniors; $10 General Admission; Notecard Event. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
Saturday, April 21
  **ARTS & HUMANITIES CONFERENCE**
Genres of Reconciliation, a conference examining the role of the arts in creating communication and civic dialogue across social division, will be held at the University of Washington April 19-21, 2001. The conference is designed to explore the unique capabilities of the arts to demonstrate and reflect upon a common humanity at the intersections of starkly different social identities, memories, roles and hopes. A series of panel discussions will be incorporated into a 3-day schedule of performances, films and readings -- all dedicated to understanding processes of social integration and communication following conflict. Speakers and panels will examine the function of narrative, music, theatre, film and dance as these genres attempt to cross boundaries and facilitate inclusion. Sponsored by the Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities in collaboration with The College of Education, the Comparative History of Ideas Program, the Department of Speech Communication, the UW School of Drama, Human Rights Education & Research Networks, and Liberal Studies, UW Tacoma. For More Information, Contact Glenn Willis: 206-543-7333 willisg@u.washington.edu. SEE BELOW FOR INDIVIDUAL EVENTS.
8:30 AM 5:30 PM **ASIAN STUDIES SYMPOSIUM**
Writing Culture: A Symposium of Chinese Calligraphy. Stimson Auditorium, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Volunteer Park. The Seattle Asian Art Museum and the Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities are proud to present the Fifth Annual Chinese Art Colloqquium presented in conjunction with the special exhibition, The Embodied Image: Chinese Calligraphy from the John B. Elliott Collection, on view from March 1 to May 27, 2001. This exhibition, the most important display of calligraphy ever assembled in the West, includes more than sixty hanging scrolls, handscrolls, and album leaves by such luminaries as Wang Hsi-chih, Huang T'ing-chien, and Mi Fu, as well as works by anonymous and little-known poets, scholars, monks, and officials. Preeminent scholars of Chinese calligraphy speaking at the daylong gathering include: Wen C. Fong, professor of art history emeritus, Princeton University, and special consultant to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Keynote Address Lothar Ledderose, professor of Asian art history, University of Heidelberg, Germany, Carving Sutras before the World Ends: Sixth-Century Stone Inscriptions in Shandong and Henan Amy McNair, associate professor of art history, University of Kansas, and catalogue author, After the Fall: The "Mannerist" Calligraphy of Twelth- and Thirteenth-Century China Patricia Embrey, professor of history, University of Washington, Huizong's Imperial Brush Stelae Qianshen Bai, assistant professor of Chinese art, Boston University, and catalogue author, Inventive Copying in Late Ming and Early Qing Calligraphy David Sensabaugh, curator of Asian art, Yale University Art Gallery, Brushing the Past, Brushing the Present: Contemporary Chinese Calligraphy This symposium is also sponsored by the China Program and the East Asia Center at the Jackson School of International Studies, and the Department of Art History.
10:00 AM 12:00 PM **CONFERENCE DISCUSSION**
"Dialogue and Narrative -- Dialogue as Art," a discussion led Professor John Stewart (UW Department of Speech Communications). Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Part of "Genres of Reconciliation." SEE ABOVE LISTING FOR CONFERENCE DETAILS.
10:30 AM 5:00 PM Native Basketry Symposium
Native Basketry Symposium. Burke Museum. Come hear the experts speak on all aspects of West Coast Native basketry: ancient to contemporary, Alaska to California, including Yup'ik, Haida, Salish, and Pomo styles. Makah weaver Teresa Parker will demonstrate wrapped-twined doll-making 12:30-2 pm; demo open to the public. For more information, or to register for the symposium, call 206/543-9681. Admission: $20 general, $15 students, Burke, NNABA, and Native Arts of the Americas and Oceania Council members.
4:00 PM Concert
Chia-Yin Lin, piano: DMA Recital. Brechemin Auditorium. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
8:00 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880. SEE APRIL 17 LISTING.
8:00 PM Concert
Mallet Head Series: Ensemble Concert - Marimba Music II. Brechemin Auditorium, Music 126. Miho Takekawa, Memmi Ochi, David Reeves, Russ Nyberg, Conney Lin, and Lily Yeh, students of Tom Collier, perform contemporary music for marimba by Keiko Abe, Ney Rosauro, Daniel Druckman, and others. $5 Students & Seniors; $8 General Admission; Notecard Event. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.
Sunday, April 22
2:00 PM Drama Performance
"Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, Directed by Jon Jory. Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are $7-10. For tickets please call the UW Arts at 206-543-4880. SEE APRIL 17 LISTING.
2:00 PM Art Lecture
Wolfgang Laib, Elizabeth Brown, chief curator. Henry Auditorium. Chief Curator Elizabeth Brown discusses Wolfgang Laib's work in the intersection of spirituality, aesthetics and the international art world. $6 general / $4 members, free to UW students. For more information please call 543-2281.
8:00 PM Concert
Ann Kjerulf, Flute: Senior Recital. Brechemin Auditorium, Music 126. For more information please call the School of Music at 543-1201.

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