IUN Anthropology news & events



1) AT IUN

    1A) One Dollar Used Book Sale

    1B) Anthro Club discussion

    1C) Prosthetic head art display

2) IN INDIANA

    2A) INDY: “Treating AIDS and Poverty in Africa”

    2B) INDY: Bodies, Commodities, and Biotechnologies

    2C) INDY: Melting Mountains, Burning Fields: Global Warming, Science, and Religion

3) ON THE WEB

    3A) for all students & teachers: A Vision of Students Today

4) OVERSEAS

    4A) Field courses in Tropical Biology

5) JOBS

    5A) Temporary Chicago job at Shedd Aquarium in Audience Research and Evaluation

    5B) PhD bioanthro job at Notre Dame



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1) AT IUN

    1A) One Dollar Used Book Sale

The book sale runs from Monday October 22, 2007 thru Friday Oct 26 in theIUN Moraine

Student Center. We have ten thousand books, mostly recent donations, andeach is

only one dollar. We have books of every kind, and especially good selections of

fiction, history, sociology, and anthropology. Hours are 9:30 am to 7:30pm every

day; we open at 9 am sharp on Monday, and close at 1 pm on Friday. We need help,

especially Friday after 1 pm for the strike, all day Monday, and Sunday Oct 21 for

the set up. Anyone who helps us restock, sort, and sell will get a free book for

every hour worked, two books on Sunday and Friday. The Anthro Club officers tell me

there will be bonus gifts too, like chances to win club T shirts, etc. The Sunday

setup is for club members, students, and alumni only; no book buyers willbe allowed,

and no books will be sold on Sunday. The setup starts at noon and shouldbe over by

5 pm.


    1B) Anthro Club discussion. The Club has an activity gathering scheduled for

Thursday November 1 at 7 pm in Savannah 207. Bring your own discussion questions or

draw one from the Vessel of Intrigue. Pizza and soda is free, and anyonecan come

and discuss.


    1C) Stelarc art exhibit “Prosthetic Head” Oct 22-25 at Gallery Northwest in Tamarack

  hours 9 to 7. Learn more about this 3D computer animated head that responds to

questions at:

http://www.stelarc.va.com.au/prosthetichead/index.html

See the artist’s website at: http://www.stelarc.va.com.au/

The artist speaks and has other exhibits at other IU campuses this week; consult your

local campus calendar.



2) IN INDIANA

    2A) INDY: “Treating AIDS and Poverty in Africa”.

Dr Joseph Martin, founder of the AMPATH program in Kenya and professor emeritus of

Medicine at IU, speaks at Butler University.

7 pm EDT Tuesday Oct 23, Atherton Union Reilly Room; free and open to thepublic.

http://www.butler.edu/woodslectures/


    2B) INDY: Bodies, Commodities, and Biotechnologies

Wednesday, November 7th, 7:30 pm, Atherton Union Reilly Room presentationby Dr

Lesley Sharp

Dr. Sharp is Professor of Anthropology at Barnard College and Senior Research

Scientist at Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University. Well known medical

anthropologist and ethnographer of Madagascar, Professor Sharp has most recently

published two major volumes on the culture and ethics of organ transplants: Bodies,

Commodities, and Biotechnologies: Death, Mourning, and Scientific Desire in the Realm

of Human Organ Transfer and Strange Harvest: Organ Transplants, DenaturedBodies, and

the Transformed Self. She will speak about artificial forms of body replacement and

how physicians and patients think about them. Free and open to the public


    2C) Melting Mountains, Burning Fields: Global Warming, Science, and Religion: a

presentation by John Hart

Monday, November 12th, 7:30 pm, Atherton Union Reilly Room

Professor of Christian Ethics at Boston University School of Theology andthe author

of four books, including Sacramental Commons: Christian Ecological Ethics, Professor

Hart has lectured widely on environmental ethics and on the relationship between

science and religion. He will speak on scientific and religious perspectives on

global warming. This lecture is cosponsored by Butler University's Centerfor Faith

and Vocation. Free and open to the public.


3) ON TH WEB

    3A) for all students & teachers: A Vision of Students Today; a self survey by

students at Kansas State anthro dept; thanks to Cameron Griffith for distributing the

link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGCJ46vyR9o



4) OVERSEAS

    4A) Field courses in Tropical Biology

Danta: Association for Conservation of the Tropics and its academic affiliates (State

University of New York at Oneonta and East Stroudsburg University) are pleased to

announce their winter 2007/2008 and summer 2008 field courses in tropicalbiology.

The courses are intended for undergraduates or early graduate level students who are

very interested in tropical biology, but have little or no experience of working in a

tropical environment. Participants may enroll on either a credit or non-credit basis.

    All field courses are held at El Zota Biological Field Station in North-eastern

Costa Rica near the Barro Colorado Reserve. The field station includes approximately

1000 hectares (over 2470 acres) of lush, tropical lowland rain forest. The station is

among the largest of its kind in Costa Rica, and is home to a diverse array of

wildlife. The fauna includes white-faced capuchins, mantled howling monkeys,

black-handed spider monkeys, tapir, jaguar, collared peccary, keel-billedtoucans,

great green macaws, brown caimans just to name a few. The station is designed to

allow students to learn techniques that can be used in field research on ecological,

behavioral and conservation questions in the tropics, and in so doing, toconserve

the property of the research station.

Course Offerings:

    Winter 2007/2008

Primate Behavior and Conservation (December 28, 2007 – January 17, 2008).

Instructors: Kim Dingess, State University of New York at Oneonta and Dr.Julie

Gros-Louis, Indiana University at Bloomington.

    Summer 2008

Primate Behavior and Conservation (June 9 – July 6, 2008). Instructors:Kim Dingess,

State University of New York at Oneonta and Dr. Dawn Kitchen, Ohio State University

Tropical Biology and Conservation (July 15 – August 11, 2008) Instructors: Dr. Nigel

Mann, State University of New York at Oneonta and Dr. Thomas LaDuke, EastStroudsburg

University.

     As much of our advertising is done by word-of-mouth, we encourage you to spread the

word by forwarding this email to students or friends who may be interested in our

programs.

    For more information, please visit our website at

http://www.DANTA.info or email kdingess@danta.info



5) JOBS

    5A) John G. Shedd Aquarium

Title: Evaluation Data Management Assistant

Department: Audience Research and Evaluation

Reports to: Kelly Lidinsky, Manager, Audience Research and Evaluation

General Description: Shedd Aquarium has had an audience research

department for 10 years and is in the process of organizing its reports and data

files. This person will:

# Clean up and spot-checking Excel databases

#Export data from Excel to SPSS, labeling values and producing tables andcross

tabulations (no special statistical background required)

# Produce simple reports based on existing templates

# Scan hard copy reports into .PDF files

# Other organizational duties as required

This person also has the optional opportunity to participate in data collection in

current qualitative and quantitative evaluation studies

Status & Schedule: Part-time temporary position November – December 2007

Two - four days per week. Days are flexible but must be weekdays

Pay: $12.50/hour

Position Specifications:

EDUCATION This is a great opportunity for an undergraduate orgraduate

student or an individual interested in the following disciplines: psychology,

sociology, anthropology, marketing, public relations, education or biology.

SPECIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS

        MS Excel and Word proficiency required; Some familiarity with SPSS also required

If interested, please email your CV or resume and availability to Kelly Lidinsky at

klidinsky@sheddaquarium.org by 5:00 p.m. on October 26, 2007.

Date of Job Description: October 2007


    5B) The University of Notre Dame, Department of Anthropology, invites applications

for a full-time, tenure-track position in biological anthropology at the assistant

professor level. We seek a broadly trained anthropologist specializing inthe study

of the ecology, biology and/or behavior of living humans. Geographic areais open.

The successful candidate will join a

department committed to a four-field approach, with interests in the study of

society, health, development and the environment from a comparative perspective. We

seek someone with a record of scholarly success and teaching excellence. Appointment

will begin August 2008; Ph.D. in anthropology must be in hand at time of appointment.

 Excellent teaching skills, a path toward an outstanding research record, and strong

scholarly promise are expected. The Department of Anthropology is dedicated to

dynamic four field undergraduate teaching that seeks creative collaboration across

disciplinary lines, engaged scholarship, congenial relations, and the ability to

incorporate undergraduates into active learning,

research, and fieldwork. The University of Notre Dame is an affirmativeaction

employer with a strong commitment to fostering a culturally diverse atmosphere for

faculty, staff, and students. Persons of color, women, members of under-represented

groups, and those attracted to a university with a Catholic identity are encouraged

to apply. Information about Notre Dame, including our mission statement, is available

at http://www.nd.edu.

Please send a full CV, a letter of application, evidence of teaching

excellence, and the names and contact information for three references to: Dr. Susan

Sheridan, Biological Anthropology Search Committee, Department of Anthropology, 611

Flanner Hall, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556. Closing date

is November 2, 2007 and candidates will be selected for phone interviews after that date.

http://careercenter.aaanet.org/jobdetail.cfm?job=2654320&keywords=&ref=1






--

Bob Mucci

Associate Professor and Coordinator of Anthropology

Indiana University Northwest

3400 Broadway, Gary IN 46408

219-980-6607


RMucci@iun.edu


http://www.iun.edu/~anthronw


"Education not slogans is our motto"