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U-M Library Celebrates Language
Language: The Human Quintessence
- Event Type:
- Exhibition (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- University Library
- Time:
- 8:00 am - 11:30 pm
- Location:
- Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library
- Room:
- Gallery, Room 100
We invite you to browse panels about the scripts of ancient Egypt, indigenous languages of Central and South America, languages of Southeast Asia, and more – including the English language and language used in graffiti and comics.
This exhibit highlights the possibilities for exploration and discovery within the library’s collections, which are impressive on many levels. The sheer number of materials, including more than 8.5 million volumes in locations all over campus, and access to millions of digital books, journals and images, makes it one of the largest university library systems in the United States. The collection encompasses ancient documents written on papyrus, electronic journals reporting on the latest advances in science and medicine, and materials from nearly every period, culture, and way of thought in between.

North Campus Photo Competition
Deadline March 5
- Event Type:
- Recreational / Games (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Living Arts Programming Board
- Time:
- 8:00 am - 11:30 pm
- Location:
- Bursley Hall
- Room:
- N/A
Photo Competition Rules and Criteria
Criteria for entries: -must be a two dimensional image -submitted as a jpeg, gif, or pdf file -resoultion must be at least 300 dpi -image must depict or represent any or all parts of North Campus -Short description of the content and how it represents North Campus
examples of entry:
photograph, photograph/mixed media (2D), photoshop etc..
How to submit entries: -deadline for submission: March 5, 2012 by 11:59pm EST -One entry per person. Up to 3 images per entry, they shall be judged together.
-Submit entries to: NorthCampusPhoto@gmail.com
-add as a jpeg, gif, or pdf file attachment -include Submission Form with entry
Judging Process: The winners shall be selected by a diverse panel of judges. The judges shall select “Honorable Mention” pieces first. Then, from the “Honorable Mention” pool, the judges will select first, second, and third place winners.
Winners/ Prizes: Winners will be notified via email. All Honorable Mention Pieces will be up for display in the Duderstadt connector from March 12 - 16.
Prizes will be as follows:
First Place: $300
Second Place $150
Third Place $75
Honorable Mention will receive a small gift
North Campus

Joints 4tet for Ensemble video installation
- Event Type:
- Exhibition (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Institute for the Humanities
- Time:
- 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
- Location:
- 202 S. Thayer
- Room:
- Institute for the Humanities Gallery, #1010
Video installation by Charles Atlas exploring time-based portraiture, the body, fragmentation, and movement of Merce Cunningham.
Related events: Film Screening of The Legend of Leigh Bowery by Charles Atlas: Monday, February 13, 7pm, UMMA Stern Auditorium, 525 S. State. (Presented in conjunction with UMS)
Brown Bag Lecture by Charles Atlas: “Video in Performance and Video as Performance,” Tuesday, February 14, 12:30pm, 202 S. Thayer, room 2022
Gallery Reception with Charles Atlas: Wednesday, February 15, 4:30-6pm, U-M Institute for the Humanities Gallery, 202 S. Thayer, room 1010
The gallery is open Saturday 11am-3pm and closed Sunday.

Mardi Gras Sale
Computer Showcase
- Event Type:
- Reception / Open House (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Information and Technology Services (ITS)
- Time:
- 9:00 am - 6:00 pm
- Location:
- Michigan Union
- Room:
- Ground Level
Celebrate Mardi Gras all week at Computer Showcase. Get great deals on an 11" MacBook Air or Dell Latitude or take advantage of everyday low pricing on any iPad in stock. Special prices also available for printers, cases and covers.

Mardi Gras Sale
Computer Showcase
- Event Type:
- Reception / Open House (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Information and Technology Services (ITS)
- Time:
- 9:00 am - 6:00 pm
- Location:
- Pierpont Commons
- Room:
- Main Concourse
Celebrate Mardi Gras all week at Computer Showcase. Get great deals on an 11" MacBook Air or Dell Latitude or take advantage of everyday low pricing on any iPad in stock. Special prices also available for printers, cases and covers.

Mark di Suvero: Tabletops
- Event Type:
- Exhibition (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA)
- Time:
- 10:00 am
- Location:
- Museum of Art
- Room:
- N/A
Preeminent American sculptor Mark di Suvero (b. 1933) is best known for his dynamic and monumental works made of industrial steel and salvaged materials that populate museum grounds, landscapes, and urban environments around the world. In addition to countless exhibitions and awards, in March 2011 di Suvero was honored with the National Medal of the Arts by President Obama in a White House ceremony. This exhibition, organized by UMMA and on view exclusively in Ann Arbor, features approximately 15 of di Suvero's rarely exhibited smaller scale pieces, or tabletops, from the 1950s to the present. The tabletops are not maquettes of larger-scale works but an expressionistic and engaging genre all their own, an outlet for exploring ideas relating to the calligraphic nature of form, balance, proportion, and movement. Drawing from numerous private collections as well as the artist's studio, the exhibition offers the opportunity to experience this intimate work in the Museum's ground level, glass-walled Irving Stenn, Jr, Family Project Gallery, adjacent to the two di Suvero outdoor steel sculptures on the Museum's grounds–Orion (2006) and Shang (1984–85).
This exhibition is made possible in part by the Office of the President of the University of Michigan, the University of Michigan Health System, and Laura Lynch and Hugh McPherson.

Recent Acquisitions: Curator's Choice, Part I
- Event Type:
- Exhibition (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA)
- Time:
- 10:00 am
- Location:
- Museum of Art
- Room:
- N/A
This is the first part of a two-part exhibition introducing exciting, recently acquired works from UMMA's collections gifted to the museum during the past five years. Recent Acquisitions: Curator's Choice, Part I presents a first look at artworks, mostly prints, drawings, and photographs by artists as diverse as Annie Leibovitz, Edward Steichen, and Rembrandt van Rijn. Carole McNamara, Senior Curator of Western Art, chose works that focus on some of the enduring and compelling themes that have occupied artists in Europe and America. One is the preoccupation with the human form as an expression of ideas, feelings, and sensations. This selection begins with the tradition of the academic nude study and progresses to embrace different genres, from both secular and religious contexts. Another selection-landscapes and cityscapes-are each opportunities for artists to speak to our relationship to the natural world-both in how we experience landscape as well as how we construct our own urban environments.
This exhibition is made possible in part by the University of Michigan Office of the Provost.

Robert Wilson: Video 50
- Event Type:
- Exhibition (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA)
- Time:
- 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
- Location:
- Museum of Art
- Room:
- New Media Gallery
The tiny dramas that comprise Robert Wilson's Video 50 contain aspects of his hallmark aesthetic: surreal or dream-like imagery, the absence of a linear narrative, the conflation of seemingly unrelated characters and micro-stories, and a mesmerizingly slow pace. Video 50 consists of a randomly arranged set of 30-second "episodes," a few of which feature notable French personalities of the 1970s-perfumier Hélène Rochas stares down a mugger, culture minister Michel Guy struggles to open a dresser drawer-and Wilson thought of these as miniature portraits or character studies. The creator and director of aggressively experimental theater, Wilson first came to prominence with works from the mid-1970s such as The Life and Times of Joseph Stalin (1973) and Einstein on the Beach (1976). These lavish, unusually long productions broke and then redefined every convention of theater. In Video 50 his shorter time-based portraits explore the intersection of narrative and still-life, seductively dissolving the distance between viewer and subject.

Think too Much?
Learn to worry less and live more.
- Event Type:
- Workshop / Seminar (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS)
- Time:
- 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
- Location:
- Michigan Union
- Room:
- 3100
A one hour drop in workshop. Learn skills for managing your worries.

Brown Bag Organ Series: Andrew Mead
- Event Type:
- Performance (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- School of Music, Theatre & Dance
- Time:
- 12:15 pm
- Location:
- Henry F. Vaughan School of Public Health Bldg I and Crossroads and Tower
- Room:
- Community Lounge
Thirty minutes of organ solo music. Bring lunch or purchase at the Crossroads Cafe. PROGRAM: Bach - Prelude and Fugue in A Major; Reger - Chorale Preludes; Reger - Praeludium in D Minor; Reger - Fugue in D Major

What's gone so wrong with Congress?
A Ford School conversation with U.S. Congressman John D. Dingell
- Event Type:
- Lecture / Discussion (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Ford School of Public Policy
- Time:
- 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm
- Location:
- Weill Hall
- Room:
- Annenberg Auditorium, Room 1120
Free and open to the public. Reception to follow.
Join the conversation on Twitter: #fordschooldingell
Hosted by: Richard L. Hall, Professor of Public Policy, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy; Professor of Political Science, College of Literature, Science and the Arts
From the speaker's bio John D. Dingell proudly represents Michigan's Fifteenth Congressional District, which includes parts of Wayne and Washtenaw County and all of Monroe County.
On January 5, 2011, Congressman Dingell was officially sworn in for his 29th full term in the U.S. House of Representatives. As the longest serving member of the United States House of Representatives in history, Dingell serves as the Dean of the House. Dingell's work includes fighting for the working families that keep America's economy going, making health care more affordable and accessible to all families, ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, and protecting our nation's natural heritage.
Congressman Dingell serves exclusively as a senior member on the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over issues pertaining to commerce, energy, environment, health care, consumer product safety and telecommunications. Dingell sits on all of the Committee's six subcommittees and votes on the Subcommittee on Health, the Subcommittee on Energy & Power, the Subcommittee on Oversight & Investigations, and the Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade & Manufacturing.

Sima Qian's Narratives on Assassins / 司馬遷筆下的刺客與刺客外傳
A Confucius Institute Roundtable Discussion
- Event Type:
- Lecture / Discussion (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Confucius Institute at the University of Michigan
- Time:
- 4:00 pm
- Location:
- Michigan League
- Room:
- Room 4 (first floor)
By Chi-hsiang Lee (æçºªç¥¥), Professor of Chinese History, and Dean of the College of Humanities, Fo Guang University, Taiwan
Free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served.
Please note: This talk will be given in Chinese with English translation.
The lecture discusses the biographies of five assassins in Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian (Shijiå²è®°). It examines the reasons for the inclusion and exclusion of certain assassins in Shiji, identifying some narrative strategies that are crucial to the Grand Historian's historiography. In particular, the lecture will address the question regarding Sima Qian's omission of a famous assassin Yao Li è¦é¢, whose name and portrait later appeared on the wall of the famous Wuliang Temple, where six rather than five assassins were honored.
Chi-hsiang Lee (æçºªç¥¥) is Dean of the College of Humanities and Professor of History at the Fo Guang University in I-lan, Taiwan. He has published widely on ancient Chinese history and thought. His publications include two books on Shiji (Records of the Grand Historian), as well as several monographs titled Time, History, and Narrative: Reconsidering the Tradition of Chinese History (2001), The Development of Confucianism from Late Ming to Early Qing (1988), etc. His current projects examine the relationship between the study of Shiji and world sinology.

Time Management Workshop
Daily Common Concerns Meeting
- Event Type:
- Workshop / Seminar (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS)
- Time:
- 4:15 pm - 5:30 pm
- Location:
- Michigan Union
- Room:
- 3100
Time is not easy to manage, especially for students with assignments and commitments to balance. This workshop will help to identify some of the barriers to effective time management, as well as determine strategies for managing your time in a way that works for you.

Black History Month Film Series: “Skin”
Hosted By: Black Psychological Student Association (BPSA)
- Event Type:
- Film Screening (exclude)
- Sponsors:
- Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs
- Division of Student Affairs (DSA)
- Time:
- 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
- Location:
- East Hall
- Room:
- 4448
The Black Psychological Student Association (BPSA) will host a series of film screenings, sponsored by MESA/Trotter, that center on Black history. The films will be a mix of documentaries and cinematic dramas to bring about discussions of justice, race, education, civil rights, and cultural practices relevant to people of African descent. The film screening is following by a moderated discussion. Light refreshments will be served.
About this week’s film “Skin”: Ten year-old Sandra is distinctly African looking. Her parents, Abraham and Sannie, are white Afrikaners, unaware of their black ancestry. They are shopkeepers in a remote area of the Eastern Transvaal and, despite Sandra’s mixed-race appearance, have lovingly brought her up as their ‘white’ little girl. Skin tells the story of a brown girl and her white biological parents.

Pizza and Movie Theme Semester Event
The Linguists (Film)
- Event Type:
- Film Screening (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Language Theme Semester
- Time:
- 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
- Location:
- North Quad
- Room:
- Space 2435 (South Entrance to Building)
Scientists estimate that of 7,000 languages in the world, half will be gone by the end of this century. On average, one language disappears every two weeks.
THE LINGUISTS joins David Harrison and Gregory Anderson, scientists racing to document languages on the verge of extinction. David and Greg’s ’round-the-world journey takes them deep into the heart of the cultures, knowledge, and communities at stake.
THE LINGUISTS world premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. The only film funded by the National Science Foundation ever at Sundance, THE LINGUISTS has since screened at more than thirty festivals worldwide.

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis
Music of Marsalis: Celebrating Wynton's 50th Birthday
- Event Type:
- Performance (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- University Musical Society*
- Time:
- 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
- Location:
- Hill Auditorium
- Room:
- N/A
Under Wynton Marsalis’ direction, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (JLCO) performs a repertoire across the full jazz spectrum — from the music’s New Orleans roots to bebop to modern jazz. By creating and performing an expansive range of brilliant new music for quartets to big bands, chamber music ensembles to symphony orchestras, tap dance to ballet, Wynton has expanded the vocabulary for jazz and created a vital body of work that places him among the world’s finest musicians and composers. On this new tour and to celebrate Wynton’s 50th birthday, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra will showcase a retrospective of Wynton’s music written for big band. The JLCO may also perform the unique repertoire for which it is renowned worldwide: modern jazz renditions of traditional favorites, including tunes by Thelonious Monk; classic Blue Note Records selections by Herbie Hancock, Joe Henderson, Jackie McLean, Lee Morgan, and Joe Henderson; and modern compositions and arrangements by jazz contemporaries. “The audience was weak from applauding and shouting and jumping up and down with the joy of the great music it had heard.” (El Universal/The Herald)

Playing for Change
- Event Type:
- Performance (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- Michigan Union Ticket Office (MUTO)
- Time:
- 8:00 pm
- Location:
- Off Campus Location
- Room:
- The Ark- 316 S. Main St.

Pre-Candidate Recital: Jani Ann Parsons, piano
- Event Type:
- Performance (exclude)
- Sponsor:
- School of Music, Theatre & Dance
- Time:
- 8:00 pm
- Location:
- Walgreen Drama Center
- Room:
- Stamps Auditorium
PROGAM: Chopin - Four Mazurkas, Op. 17; Schumann - Fantasiestücke, Op. 12; Messiaen - Île de Feu I; Ives - The Alcotte from The Concord Sonata; Scriabin - Sonata no. 9, Op. 68 “Black Mass”; McIntyre - Butterflies and Bobcats


