94-11-04: "ON GROUNDS" CALENDAR PERFORMANCES Nov. 4. The U.VA. WIND ENSEMBLE, directed by DWIGHT PURVIS, will perform works by Williams, Holsinger and Copland at 8 p.m. in the Albemarle County Office Bldg. on the corner of Preston and McIntire. Tickets are $6 for general public and $4 or four ART$ for students. Proceeds from the concert will go toward the Municipal Arts Center fund-raising effort. For ticket and shuttle bus information, call 924-3984. Nov. 4. University Union's Friday Night series will feature an OLD-SCHOOL HIP-HOP JAM from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. in the Student Activities Bldg. Cost is $3. For details, call 924-3286. Nov. 5. The U.VA. JAZZ ENSEMBLE, led by timpanist and principal percussionist ERIC STASSEN, will perform at 8:15 p.m. in the Student Activities Bldg. Tickets cost $8 general public and $6 or six ART$ for students. Nov. 6. A VIOLIN & CELLO CONCERT with symphony principals SUSAN BLACK, violin, and LEE RICHEY, cello, will be performed in Garrett Hall Commons Room with pianist PATRICIA DAVIS at 3:30 p.m. Tickets cost $8 general public and $6 students. For details, call 924-3984. Nov. 8. The Tuesday Evening Concert Series will present the TALICH STRING QUARTET in McLeod Hall Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. The group will perform works by Czech masters Janacek, Dvorak and Smetana. For tickets, call 924-3984. Nov. 9. A free LUNCHBOX RECITAL, with student musicians performing chamber music for flute quartet, pieces for clarinet quartet and a sonata for clarinet and piano, will be held at noon in Newcomb Hall Main Lounge. The series is sponsored by music and University Union. For more details, call 924-3984. Nov. 11. University Union's Friday Night series will feature MOONDANCE, an elegant evening of dinner and dance, from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Newcomb Hall Ballroom. Semiformal attire is required. Tickets are available at Newcomb Hall Main Desk. For details, call 924-3286. Nov. 13. The Artist Faculty Chamber Music series will feature THE MONTICELLO TRIO at 3:30 p.m. in Garrett Hall. Two new members -- violinist ANNETTE-BARBARA VOGEL and pianist EMMA TAHMIZIAN -- will join cellist MATHIAS WEXLER in performing works by Haydn, Ravel and Brahms. Tickets are $10 general public and $8 or eight ART$ for students; series tickets also are available. For more information, call 924-3984. EXHIBITS Through Nov. 29. The third annual Health Sciences Center EMPLOYEE PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW is on display in the University Hospital. For details, call 924-9452. Through May 15, 1995. U.Va.'s branch of the Va. Museum of Natural History is sponsoring the traveling exhibit, GIFTS TO OUR GRANDCHILDREN: PRESERVING VIRGINIA'S ENDANGERED SPECIES, which explains why and how we should preserve our natural heritage. The display is in Clark Hall's Mural Room, open M-Th 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Fri. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; and Sun. noon to 8 p.m. For details, call 982-2780. Nov. 4-Jan. 22. INUIT ART FROM THE CANADIAN ARCTIC: PRINTS & SCULPTURE will be on display in the Bayly Art Museum Tues. through Sun. from 1 to 5 p.m. Although their lives have changed rapidly in the last half century, the Inuit continue to focus primarily on traditional themes in their art: native wildlife; domestic and hunting scenes; and mythological and shamanic subjects. The style of their work ranges from naturalism to abstraction to surrealism, and each community across the Canadian North has developed its own variations. For details, call 924-3592. MISC . . . The WOMEN'S CENTER INFORMATION & REFERRAL HELPLINE is 982-2251. The center provides various resources to the University community, such as lecture series, group sessions and various other support services, including a child-care resource and referral office and a monthly FREE LEGAL CLINIC. For details, call 982-2361. Through Nov. 15. The Virginia Assistive Technology System is accepting applications for the THIRD ANNUAL CREATIVE INITIATIVE AWARDS. VATS will award $70,000 to individuals or organizations with innovative projects that further the independence of individuals with disabilities. For more information, call 924-0041. Nov. 4. Register for BLANDY FARM'S HOLIDAY WORKSHOPS to be held Nov. 30-Dec. 11, which include creating table centerpieces, designing dried floral baskets and making wreaths, gourd birdhouses or birdfeeders and gifts using fragrant dried herbs. For further details, call (703) 837-1458. Nov. 4. This month, the International Center's FIRST FRIDAYS series will feature Turkish culture. The event, co-sponsored by the Friends of Turkey, will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. at the center. For further details, call 924-7983. Nov. 5. U.Va.'s Branch of the Virginia Museum of Natural History is sponsoring a children's program on UNDERSTANDING EARTH'S HISTORY THROUGH FOSSILS at the Northside Library in Albemarle Square at 10:30 a.m. STEPHEN MACKO of U.Va. will explain how and why fossils are formed, and show fossils and dinosaur bones for hands-on exploration. He will also demonstrate how to make a fossil. For further details, call 982-2780. Nov. 7. GAINING PERSPECTIVE: A LOOK AT LIFE THROUGH OTHER CULTURES is the topic of a "With Good Reason" radio show with GMU professor MARY CATHERINE BATESON, who is the daughter of anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson. She will discuss her new book, "Peripheral Vision", about growing up in such diverse cultures as Iraq and the Philippines and how we can learn more about ourselves by learning more about others. The show will air at 7:30 p.m. on WVTF-FM 89.1 and WVTU-FM 89.3. Nov. 8. The WFPA is sponsoring a presentation on INVESTMENT STRATEGIES ON A BUDGET with financial analyst MARY JACOBSON at noon in the Garden Room of the Colonnade Hotel. Nov. 8. Alderman Library will acquire its four-millionth volume during a CEREMONY in Newcomb Hall Theater. A reception will follow at 4:30 p.m. in the McGregor Room of Alderman Library. Speakers at the event include University Librarian KARIN WITTENBORG, U.Va. President JOHN T. CASTEEN III, U.S. Poet Laureate and U.Va. English professor RITA DOVE, and CLAIRE VAN VLIET of Janus Press. Nov. 10. U.Va.'s Air Force ROTC Detachment 890 will hold a WWII 50TH ANNIVERSARY COMMEMORATIVE CEREMONY, beginning with a formation of the ROTC units on the street side of the Rotunda at 4 p.m. NORMAN A. GRAEBNER, retired professor of military history at U.Va. will be the guest speaker. A flag retreat will follow his talk, accompanied by a fly-by of four F-16 fighter planes from the Va. Air National Guard. In case of rain, the ceremony will be held in the Rotunda Dome Room and seating will be by ticket due to limited space. For more information, call 977-7510. Nov. 10. A GLOBAL RENDEZVOUS -- an informal social event sponsored by the International Center and ASU -- will be held from 5 to 6 p.m. in the Chemistry Bldg. lobby. For details, call 924-7983. Nov. 10. The User Group Connection's fourth annual USER GROUP TELEVISION INTERNATIONAL SATELLITE BROADCAST -- a live interactive television broadcast devoted solely to Macintosh -- will air "the test" from 8 to 9 p.m. and "THe SHow!" from 9 to 11 p.m. Apple representatives and third-party vendors will discuss their products, and viewers can call in with questions or try for hundreds of give-aways. The show will air on KU band: Gstar 2 Transponder 5, Downlink Frequency, 11974MHz, Horizontal Polarity; or C band: Telstar 302, Downlink Frequency, 4140 MHz, Horizontal Polarity. For further details, send e-mail to Lori Kressin at lorik@virginia.edu. Nov. 11-12. The BOARD OF VISITORS will meet in open session at the Rotunda from 1 to 5:15 p.m. Friday and 10 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Nov. 15. LEADING DISCUSSIONS is the topic of a 'Bring Your Own Brainstorm' Brown Bag Lunch with JUDE REAGAN from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the Teaching Resource Center in Hotel D. For more information, call 982-2815 or e-mail fsf@virginia.edu.. FILMS Nov. 4-5. THE CROW. Newcomb Theater. 6, 8:45 & 11:30 p.m. both nights. $2.50. (U. Union) Nov. 5. WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY. Newcomb Theater. 2 & 4 p.m. $3 admission includes a chocolatefest -- all the chocolate you can eat. (U. Union) Nov. 9. IF . . . Wilson Aud. 4:30, 7 & 9 p.m. $3. (Filmwatchers) Nov. 10. FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL. Newcomb Theater. 7 & 9:30 p.m. $2.50. (U. Union) Nov. 11-12. SPEED. Newcomb Theater. 6, 8:45 & 11:30 p.m. both nights. $2.50. (U. Union) ---For more information on U. Union films, call 924-7900.--- PLAYS Nov. 4-5 & 9-12. The drama department presents GOOD NIGHT DESDEMONA, GOOD MORNING JULIET in the Helms Theatre. For further details, call the box office at 924-3376. Nov. 10-12 & Nov. 17, 19 & 20. MAGIC MIRROR THEATRE will present Tony Kushner's drama, THE ILLUSION, at the Bayly Art Museum. Shows begin at 8 p.m. each day except Sunday's performances, which start at 7 p.m. The play is directed by Deanna Duplechain, artistic director of Women's Workshop in New York. Tickets are $5 to $10 each day, except Sunday when they cost $5 to $7. For reservations, call 973-2390. SPEAKERS & CONFERENCES Nov. 4. AMERICAN REPUBLICANISM is the topic of a Miller Center forum with MORTIMER SELLERS of the U. of Baltimore at 11 a.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Call 924-7236 to reserve a space. Nov. 4. LEE D. BAKER of Johns Hopkins Univ. will deliver an anthropology lecture on THE ROLE OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF DESEGREGATION, 1938-54 at 1 p.m. in Brooks Hall Library. Nov. 4. PEREZ ZAGORIN of the U. of Rochester will give a history 'workshop' on THE ROAD TO TOLERATION: ROGER WILLIAMS, JOHN MILTON, JOHN LOCKE at 3:30 p.m. in Garrett Hall Conference Room. For further details, call Peter Onuf at 924-6383. Nov. 4 & 5. A law school conference on "DETERRING HUMANITARIAN LAW VIOLATIONS: STRENGTHENING ENFORCEMENT" will feature Judge Richard J. Goldstone, chief prosecutor for the U.N. war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, speaking on a panel at 3:45 p.m. Nov. 4. The conference will take place in the Decker Auditorium at the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's School. For more information, call the Center for National Security Law at 924-4080. Nov. 5 & 6. RECONSTRUCTING THE PAST: THE MYTH OF THE MEDIEVAL is the topic of the seventh annual conference sponsored by the architectural history department. Speakers will include: MARVIN TRACHTENBERG of NYU; TINA BIZARRO of Rosemont College; FRANK KOWSKY of SUNY, Buffalo; and MICHAEL LEWIS of Williams College. For more information, call 924-1428. Nov. 6. A gallery talk on SAMUEL KOOTZ AND THE SECOND GENERATION OF ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM by CAROLINE CASSELLS will be held at 2 p.m. in the Bayly Art Museum. Nov. 7. A Miller Center forum with Ambassador PATRICIA GATES LYNCH on ONE WOMAN RIDING THE WAVES OF CHANGE IN THE 20TH CENTURY will be held at 11 a.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Ms. Lynch will discuss her experiences as Ambassador to Madagascar and her career as an international broadcaster. She will also talk about her time on the White House staff as special assistant to Mrs. Nixon. Call 924-7236 to reserve a space. Nov. 7. Historian EMMANUEL LE ROY LADURIE, former head of the BibliothŠque nationale in Paris, will speak on THE FRENCH 'BIBLIOTHEQUE' FROM THE YEAR 1000 TO THE YEAR 2000 at 2:30 p.m. in the Dome Room of the Rotunda. A reception will follow his lecture in the McGregor Room of Alderman Library. Event sponsors include: the Special Lectures Committee, the Book Arts Press, the French House, the University Library, the University Library Associates and the history dept. For more information, call Olivier Zunz at 924-7146 or Carol Pfeiffer at 924-0502 or cpfeiffer@virginia.edu. Nov. 7, 14, 21 & 28. The Commonwealth Center is sponsoring a conference on "Religion and American Pluralism" with U.Va. faculty and local clergy from 7:30 to 9:15 p.m. in the First Presbyterian Church on Park Street. NOV. 7 the topic will be MORAL DIVERSITY AS CONSEQUENCE OF RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY, with DAVID TRACY of the U. of Chicago, ANDREW TROTTER of the Ctr. for Christian Studies and CORA DIAMOND of U.Va. Preregistration is not required. For further details, call 982-5586. Nov. 7 & 9. Short Story Writer MADISON SMARTT BELL will give a public talk and a reading as U.Va.'s Rea Visiting Writer. Nov. 7 he will give an informal talk about writing and Nov. 9 he will read from his works. Both events will be held at 8 p.m. in room 153 of Campbell Hall. Nov. 8. Writer FRAN€OIS DUCHENE will give a Miller Center forum on JEAN MONNET: DYNAMICS OF EUROPE at 11 a.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Nov. 9. VIGNETTES ON THE HISTORY OF VIRGINIA POLITICS (part II) is the topic of a Miller Center forum with Former Gov. LINWOOD HOLTON and political columnist JAMES LATIMER at 11 a.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Part I of the forum was held in September with Mr. Latimer and William Battle, the 1969 democratic candidate for governor. Mr. Holton was the successful candidate in that election. Nov. 9. U.Va. faculty members Edward Ayers, Margo Figgins, Tanya Furman and Steve Nock will share their thoughts on teaching at a CURRY FORUM at 1 p.m. in Ruffner Hall. For more information, call Jim Kauffman at 924-0763. Nov. 9-11. HATE, VIOLENCE & CULTURAL IDENTITY is the topic of a conference sponsored by the Hillel Jewish Center, the Women's Center and the African-American affairs office. Keynote speakers are: poet CAROLYN FORCH; AMOS OZ, Israeli novelist and peace activist; WILLIAM RASPBERRY, columnist for The Washington Post; and FLOYD COCHRAN, former member of the Aryan Nation. For further details about the event, refer to page 3 or call 295-4963. Nov. 10. The James S. Constantine Lecture on THE SHAPE OF THE ILIAD with MARK EDWARDS of Stanford Univ. will be held at 4 p.m. in Jefferson Hall and is sponsored by the classics dept. Nov. 11. A Miller Center forum on WHAT DOES AN ATTORNEY GENERAL DO? with former U.S. Attorney General HERBERT BROWNELL will be held at 10:30 a.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Call 924-7236 to reserve a space. Nov. 12. The 81st annual meeting of the VIRGINIA FOLKLORE SOCIETY will be held in Campbell Hall room 158 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. This year's mix of music, anecdote, light humor and scholarly papers pays tribute to Gerald E. Parsons of the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. Following the meeting, a reception will be held in Brooks Hall room B001. Call Nan Perdue at 924-6823 for more details. Nov. 14. Former Secretary of Defense DONALD RUMSFELD will deliver a Miller Center forum on RUMSFELD'S RULES: REFLECTIONS ON GOVERNING at 5:15 p.m. in the J. Wilson Newman Pavilion. Nov. 15. The 29th annual Karl G. Jansky Lecture will be delivered by VERA C. RUBIN of the Carnegie Inst. at 8 p.m. in Gilmer Hall Auditorium. The topic of her lecture, named in honor of the scientist who first detected cosmic radio waves from the Milky Way in 1933, is WHAT'S THE MATTER IN THE UNIVERSE? Nov. 16. A panel discussion on MARITAL RAPE will take place from noon to 1:30 p.m. at the Women's Center. For more information, call 982-2361. COLLOQUIA & SEMINARS Nov. 4. GENETIC REGULATION OF CELL FATE & MORPHOGENESIS IN "DROSOPHILA" is the topic of a biology seminar with CLAIRE CRONMILLER of U.Va. at noon in Gilmer Hall room 190. Nov. 4. A Cancer Center research seminar on GENE REGULATION BY NORMAL & MUTANT ANDROGEN RECEPTORS with DR. MICHAEL J. MCPHAUL of the U. of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, will begin at 1 p.m. in Classroom C-1 of the Old Medical School Entrance. Free lunch is served at 12:45 p.m. Nov. 4. Electrical Engineering's Eminent Speaker series will feature DR. J. M. XU of the U. of Toronto who will speak on LATERAL CURRENT INJECTION LASERS -- AN INSIDE STORY at 2 p.m. in Thornton Hall E-316. Nov. 4. U.Va. Composer JUDITH SHATIN will present a colloquium on her COAL PROJECT, a tribute to the people of Appalachia that features a blend of chorus, Appalachian instruments and electronics, at 3:30 p.m. in Old Cabell Hall room 107. The piece will premiere at Shepard College Nov. 13. The music dept. has planned a bus trip to Shepardstown, W.Va., for $22, which includes a concert ticket. All proceeds go to the National Black Lung Assoc. To make a reservation, call 924-6492. Nov. 4. A physics colloquium on COSMIC RAYS: THE MOST ENERGETIC PARTICLE IN THE UNIVERSE with Nobel laureate JAMES CRONIN of the U. of Chicago will be held at 4 p.m. in room 204 of the physics building. Nov. 7. A Reproductive Research Center seminar on RECENT ADVANCES ON THE GONADOTROPIN RECEPTORS with DR. DEBORAH L. SEGALOFF of the U. of Iowa will be held in Jordan Hall room 4-25. DR. RUSSELL FOSTER will highlight research from his lab at noon and Dr. Segaloff's talk will run from noon to 1:30 p.m. For details, call 924-8464. Nov. 7. GARY W. LITMAN of All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg, Fla. and of Harvard Univ. will give a Beirne Carter Center for Immunology research seminar on THE PHYLOGENETIC ORIGIN OF MECHANISMS THAT DIVERSIFY HUMORAL & CELLULAR IMMUNE RESPONSES at 4 p.m. in Jordan Hall Rm. 1-17. Nov. 8. A Commonwealth Center seminar on THE REALITY OF LEGAL CULTURE: RETHINKING THE RELATIONS OF LAW & CULTURAL TRANSFORMATION with DAVID SAUNDERS of the London School of Economics will be held at 3 p.m. in the Lower West Oval Room of the Rotunda. For further details, call 982-5586. Nov. 8. NEURONAL A2-ADRENOCEPTORS is the topic of a neuroscience seminar with KEVIN LYNCH of U.Va. at 4 p.m. in Jordan Hall room 1-17. Nov. 8. DIFFUSE IONIZED GAS IN GALAXIES & THE DISK-HALO CONNECTION is the topic of a joint colloquium of the astronomy dept. and NRAO with RICHARD RAND of the U. of Maryland at 4 p.m. in Clark Hall room 140. For further details, call 924-7494. Nov. 10. A biochemistry colloquium on MOLECULAR DYNAMICS CALCULATIONS ON PROTEINS, NUCLEIC ACIDS & IONOPHORES will be given by DR. PETER KOLLMAN of the U. of Calif. at noon in Jordan Hall room 1-17. Nov. 10. BILL EMANUEL of U.Va. will give an envi. sciences seminar on RISING ATMOSPHERIC CO2 & POTENTIAL CHANGES IN TERRESTRIAL CARBON STORAGE in Clark Hall room 147 at 4 p.m. For details, call 924-0561. Nov. 11. PATRICK OLIVELLE of the U. of Tex. at Austin will give a Ctr. for S. Asian Studies seminar on HAIR & SOCIETY: THE SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE OF HAIR IN SOUTH ASIAN TRADITIONS at 3 p.m. in Peabody Hall room 105. Nov. 11. The James S. Constantine Seminar on SCENE CHANGES & BOOK DIVISIONS IN HOMER with MARK EDWARDS of Stanford Univ. will be held at 4 p.m. in Garrett Hall and is sponsored by the classics dept. SPORTS & HEALTH BLOOD DRIVES will be held in the Primary Care Center NOV. 7 & 9. from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and NOV. 8 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.To sign up, call 977-8956. ---Football Nov. 12. MARYLAND. Youth Day. ---Volleyball Nov. 9. JMU. 7:30 p.m. ---Field Hockey Nov. 4-6. ACC TOURNAMENT. ---Men's & Women's Swimming Nov. 5. CLEMSON. 2 p.m.-men's; 11 a.m.-women's.