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Alumni Engagement/Fundraising |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Evil in Modernity and after 9/116/4/05 - Charles Mathewes, associate professor of religious studies and faculty fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture and the Center on Religion and Democracy, looks at the debates about the language of evil after 9/11, and traces their connections to deeper debates in modernity regarding the appropriateness of this language in an |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Bloody Promenade, Reflections on a Civil War Battle 6/3/05 - Stephen Cushman, Robert C. Taylor Professor of English, leads a discussion of his book, Bloody Promenade. Cushman examines a single famous battle, The Wilderness, to try to understand the Civil War and its larger meanings today. Following Reunions Weekend you are invited to continue to explore the book through an online book club. |
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Rotunda Society Reception - Reunions 2005 6/3/05 - Annual Rotunda Society Reception featuring address by chariman of the Annual Giving Advisory Board Bob Clarke and President John T. Casteen III. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Alumni Legacies and the Admission Process6/3/05 - Marianne Kosiewicz from the U.Va. Admission Office speaks with alumni and their children concerning the admission policies for legacy applications. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Spirituality and Medicine: Ethical Perspectives 6/3/05 - Margaret Mohrmann, associate professor of religious studies and an affiliated faculty member of the Center for Biomedical Ethics, explores ethical issues such as whether research can show the efficacy of prayer or whether doctors should be interested in patients' "spiritual history" as well as their medical history. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: How the Earthquake Bird Got its Name and Other Tales of an Unbalanced Nature 6/3/05 - Environmental Science Professor H. H. Shugart presents important environmental concepts using stories about particular birds and mammals such as the woodpecker that was too picky, the engineering rodent, the rat that hid time in its nest, and others with seemingly quirky traits. Shugart explains what their destinies reveal about the interactions between changes in the environment and the extinctions or explosions of certain species. |
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UVA NewsMakers 4/22/05 - This year's distinguished alumna, Denise H. Geolot, Ph.D., R.N., F.A.A.N. received her award and delivered this address in the Dome Room on April 22, 2005. Geolot is director of the Division of Nursing within the Health Resources and Services Administration, which falls under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. |
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President Casteen Delivers the Annual State of the University Address 3/22/05 - Nobody said raising $3 billion would be easy. With an endeavor of this magnitude, |
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