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Arts
Shorts
Head
for the Borders
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| El
Inmigrante |
Every year, New York's American Museum of Natural
History presents the Margaret Mead Film Festival, billed
as "the longest-running, premiere showcase for international non-fiction
media in the United States." Last fall, the festival featured films
on topics ranging from Second Life to water privatization to sexuality
in modern Iran. The traveling version of the festival, which the
UO's museum of Natural and Cultural History presents this month,
offers a thematic group of films that this year "illuminate cultural
issues surrounding border areas." China Blue looks at the
lives of young women struggling to survive while working in a jeans
factory in South China. El Inmigrante focuses on the story
of a Mexican migrant who was killed while traveling north. And in
Flock of Dodos: The Evolution-Intelligent Design Circus,
former marine biologist Randy Olson opts to look not at the rights
and wrongs of this testy debate, but at the ways both sides are
communicating with the public. The New York Times wrote that
Olson's film "challenges [scientists] to get off their collective
high horse and make their case to ordinary people with — if
they can muster it — a smile."
The festival begins this Friday, Feb. 8, with China
Blue and continues with El Inmigrante on Feb. 15 and
Flock of Dodos on Feb. 22. All screenings begin at 5:30 pm
at 175 Knight Law, UO. $3, students free. — Molly Templeton
Architecture
Lecture Cut Short
The fifth lecture in the UO architecture department's
Savage lecture series ended early Tuesday, Feb. 5, when lecturer
Azhar Tyabji collapsed in the middle of his talk about rebuilding
the Indian city of Bhuj after a 2001 earthquake. Though Tyabji retained
consciousness, an ambulance took him to Sacred Heart Medical Center.
Series organizer Howard Davis says that Tyabji was given a clean
bill of health and quickly released from the hospital. UO professor
Kenneth Calhoon delivers the next lecture, about the rebuilding
of Dresden after WWII, at 7:30 pm Tuesday, Feb. 12, in 177 Lawrence
on the UO campus. More info available at architecture.uoregon.edu
or 346-3656. — Suzi Steffen
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