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Reunions |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Sabato 6/4/05 - Larry Sabato ( |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Blind Spot: The Secret History of American Counterterrorism 6/4/05 - Timothy Naftali, associate professor of history, teaches one of the College |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Aging 6/4/05 - Aging is inevitable for nearly all living organisms, and despite the proliferation of anti-aging therapies, there is no escape. Tim Salthouse and Debbie Roach each do research on aging and are beginning to understand why aging is inevitable, and how to quantify the aging process and the changes that occur in individuals as they age. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Remarks by Dean Ed Ayers, Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences 6/4/05 - Dean Ayers updates participants on the state of the College and its ongoing projects including the South Lawn, the Arts Grounds, and science initiatives. Learn how Jefferson |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Nation-Building in Iraq6/4/05 - David Waldner, associate professor of politics and director of the Middle East Studies Program, speaks on America's ambitious experiment in nation-building in Iraq. Achieving success in Iraq and expanding the new Iraqi model to other nations in the Middle East has become a core element of American national security policy. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: How We Got Here, and Where We’re Going6/4/05 - Edward Murphy, assistant professor of astronomy and Director of education and public outreach, traces the history of your atoms from the Big Bang to the present day. Where did the atoms in your body come from? How did they get here on Earth? What will happen to your atoms in the long-distant future? You'll discover the many interesting places that you've been, from the core of a star to the deep cold of space. Murphy also briefly discusses the history of the McCormick Observatory. |
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The College of Arts & Sciences Reunions Forum: Honoring Jefferson's Vision: University Contributions to Homeland Security 6/4/05 - The Honorable Nathaniel Howell ('61 COLL), former ambassador to Kuwait, discusses that for more than four years before 9/11 and since, the Critical Incident Analysis Group (CIAG) has conducted interdisciplinary research on threats to democratic institutions and values, including those posed by international terrorism. Through worldwide networking and conferences, diverse University faculty have been in the forefront of efforts to understand the nature and consequences of the challenge of terrorism. |
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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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