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Michael Gagarin

Retiring Faculty

May 10, 2010 by Jessica Sinn

James Brow, Anthropology Brow, professor of anthropology and Asian Studies, taught at the university for 30 years and served as chair of the Department of Anthropology from 1995 to 2005. His research focused on social and economic development in South Asia and Sri Lanka. Brow also served as acting director of the South Asia Institute from […]

Composite of Liberal Arts Building.

A Space of Our Own is Closer to Reality

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

The College of Liberal Arts continues to make great strides in our efforts to construct a new Liberal Arts building on the East Mall. By taking advantage of low interest rates and construction costs, we’ve reduced the project’s cost from $100 million to $95 million. We hope to begin construction next year. The new building will contain […]

Sitting from left: Iqbal Sheikh, Charlie Wilson, Zahida Shaikh, Zafar Shaikh, Standing from left: Fouzia Shaikh, Azra Malik, Owais Mailk, Mudassir Shaikh, Junaid Malik, and Asad Shaikh.

College Dedicates Charlie Wilson Chair

May 10, 2010 by Michelle Bryant

Grassroots effort helps create first privately funded chair in Pakistan Studies in the nation The College of Liberal Arts has successfully responded to a $500,000 challenge grant from the T.L.L. Temple Foundation of Lufkin to support the nation’s first privately funded faculty chair in Pakistan Studies. In all, the college raised $536,000 and received significant […]

In Memoriam with black background

In Memoriam: Spring 2010

May 10, 2010 by Jessica Sinn

Shearer Davis Bowman, professor emeritus of history, died Dec. 4 at age 60. In 1986 Bowman began his career at The University of Texas at Austin, where he taught American history for 15 years. He wrote “Masters and Lords” and “At the Precipice,” which will be published this spring, as well as numerous articles and reviews. […]

group gathered at night outside of capital

Tear Down the Wall

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

Students re-enact Berlin Wall destruction 20 years later Students from The University of Texas and other local schools came to the South Mall one evening last November carrying cardboard boxes that evoked the wall that once divided East and West Berlin. Like the eastern side of the wall, one side of each box was bare. […]

pie graph of Texas as a role model for the economy

Texas Politics Project

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

By the numbers In the run-up to the March gubernatorial primary, the Texas Politics Project at The University of Texas at Austin released a poll that not only predicted decisive victories by Republican Rick Perry and Democrat Bill White, but also examined the voter sentiments that shaped those outcomes. Sponsored jointly by The Texas Tribune, […]

Shakespeare at Winedale

May 10, 2010 by Jessica Sinn

Celebrates 40 years This summer, dozens of alumni of the English Department’s Shakespeare at Winedale program will take the stage once again at the Winedale Historical Complex to commemorate the program’s 40th anniversary. Every Saturday and Sunday from July 14 to Aug. 8, they will give special pre-show performances. The summer will conclude with a […]

Nathan Bissonnette of the 89th MP Brigade wipes his eyes after talking to his wife on his cell phone

On a Mission

May 10, 2010 by Marjorie Smith

Working with Fort Hood soldiers, researchers look at what predisposes service members to Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Brian Baldwin, a retired army officer and project manager for the Texas Combat PTSD Risk Project, knows first-hand the consequences of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). His best friend and cousin, a serviceman in Vietnam, took his own life as […]

Sahotra Sarkar

The Environmental Philosopher

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

Professor brings human values to conservation When Conservation International began working with one of Indonesia’s largest energy companies on an environmentally conscious development plan two years ago, the groups looked to a philosopher for guidance. Sahotra Sarkar, a professor at The University of Texas at Austin and leader in the study of environmental ethics, worked […]

Ted Gordon

A Major Step Forward

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

New department focuses on African experience A brand new academic department will focus on the experiences of African Americans, indigenous Africans and people of African descent around the world and, ultimately, will be the only Black Studies department in the South or Southwest that offers Ph.D.s. The Department of African and African Diaspora Studies was […]

green snail with bow tie with French writing underneath

Learning Curve

May 10, 2010 by Michelle Bryant

Texas Language Technology Center develops low-cost textbook alternative With textbooks often costing more than rent, many students will be relieved to know the Texas Language Technology Center (TLTC) is working on an alternative to the bulky old textbook that’s easier on the wallet and offers interactive features and compelling content. The TLTC has won a […]

cover of Segregating Sound

Books: Spring 2010

May 10, 2010 by Michelle Bryant

Oscar Casares’ “Amigoland” Is 2010 Mayor’s Book Club Selection The book “Amigoland” (2009, Little, Brown) is set in a small Mexican border town. It tells the story of two estranged and aging brothers, Don Fidencio Rosales and Don Celestino, who are brought back together by a young cleaning woman and a mystery. The improbable trio takes […]

Willie Tichener (second to left). In the summer 2003, five of Willie's friends traveled to Houston on "The Bus" to keep him company after chemotherapy. The had planned to park it in a mobile home park and stay there, but ended up at the Tichenor's apartment.

Standing on CloverStreet:

May 7, 2010 by Michelle Bryant

Willie Tichenor’s Legacy Rocks On At 16 years old, Dallas native Willie Tichenor joined the band CloverStreet as lead vocalist and journeyed to Austin to perform at the South by Southwest music festival. “My lifelong dream is to travel around the country with five stinky guys in a van and sing for strangers every night,” […]

Screenshot from Paradise Lost online

Literature Electric

May 6, 2010 by Gary Susswein

Celebrated poems of Milton, Whitman come alive for students through multimedia teaching tools Poetry is not meant to be read with the eyes alone, but also with the ears. As University of Texas at Austin English professor and Milton scholar John Rumrich explains, the true meaning of verse can’t be divined just by looking at […]

Russell Poldrak

Studying the Brain, Understanding the Mind

May 6, 2010 by Gary Susswein

Renowned neuroscientist heads up Texas’ brain imaging center More than 2,400 years ago, Socrates pondered the relationship between the human brain and the mind. He asked what role the brain might play not just in how we see, hear and smell, but in how we remember, understand and know. Today, scientists are finally beginning to […]

Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson Center for the Study of Core Texts and Ideas

November 23, 2009 by Gary Susswein

Program fosters understanding of great books and concepts To understand the challenges we face as Americans and to use the extraordinary freedom and responsibility we have inherited, students must first understand the philosophy, literature, religion and science that shaped our society. That basic notion provides the foundation for the new Thomas Jefferson Center for the […]

Monika Merola

Graduation Caps Years of Courage

November 17, 2009 by Jessica Sinn

Monika Merola overcomes brain injury and reaches academic goals Monika Merola was struck by an epiphany eight years ago while walking her 6-year-old daughter, Cecilia, home from kindergarten. “Mommy, why don’t you have a degree?” asked Cecilia. Merola stopped in her tracks and suddenly felt tears well up in her eyes. “I thought, how could […]

"retirement"

Retiring Faculty

November 17, 2009 by Jessica Sinn

Laura Lein (Anthropology) Lein, professor in the Department of Anthropology and the School of Social Work, taught at the university for 24 years. Lein directed the Women’s Studies Program at the university for two terms, from 1987 to 1991, where she coordinated interdisciplinary curriculum, fund development and new programs. She served on boards of many organizations, […]

In Memoriam with black background

In Memoriam: Fall 2009

November 17, 2009 by Jessica Sinn

Pablo Beltrán de Heredia, emeritus professor of Spanish and Portuguese, died Aug. 21 at the age of 92. He taught at the university for 25 years. He was a noted scholar of Spanish art and literature. Recognized as a key figure of cultural and political life in Santander, Spain, Beltrán de Heredia was named the […]

The 1945 UT Debate Team

News & Notes: Fall 2009

November 17, 2009 by Michelle Bryant

Debate and Individual Event alumni looking to reconnect The university’s debate and individual events (IE) teams have an illustrious history on campus. Both groups have won numerous championships and both feature outstanding alumni. Still, there has not been an alumni association for these successful teams… until now. Are you a former debate team member? Did […]

Giant hand trying to fit a graduate into the right-shaped hole: oval, square, triangular...

10 Tips to Land a Career in Today’s Job Market

November 11, 2009 by Jessica Sinn

Liberal Arts career coach discusses what matters most in job hunt Job hunting is tough these days, and in a recession it can feel hopeless. But according to Liberal Arts Career Services Director Kate Brooks, there is hope and there are jobs to be had. The key to finding and keeping a career in tough […]

Black and white photo of chalkboard in a classroom

From Pre-K to Graduation Day

November 11, 2009 by Michelle Bryant

Sociologist separates truth from rhetoric in studies of educational experience Eighteen years ago, the federal government enlisted leading researchers to study the effects of childcare on early development. What the researchers couldn’t have anticipated was that this monumental research would still be going on today. What began as a 10-site study of 1,300 children, all […]

cartoon drawing of woman confronted by her tv with a gun

Crime on the Rise?

November 11, 2009 by Jennifer McAndrew

Public perception of crime remains out of sync with reality, criminologist contends A jarring statistic you’re not likely to hear on the evening news: the homicide rate has been declining since the 1300s. Sociology professor Mark Warr, who has studied social reaction to crime for three decades, offers that up as a reality that doesn’t […]

Poster advertising a passenger line from Hamburg to Galveston

Lessons of the Immigrant Experience in Texas

November 11, 2009 by Jessica Sinn

Museum exhibit highlights Galveston as America’s Forgotten Gateway While riding a ferry to America’s most famous port of entry, Ellis Island, with a group of Texas high school students on a Jewish heritage tour, Suzanne Seriff began to wonder about the lesser-known gateways to America. Her curiosity about Galveston’s largely forgotten history as a major […]

Bible teachers look at a Torah scroll with Rabbi Neil Blumofe at Congregation Agudas Achim in Austin

Teaching the Bible in Public School

November 11, 2009 by Eileen Flynn

Professors guide high school instructors on approaching Scripture as an academic subject What is the latest event in Second Kings?” No response. Professor L. Michael White, the Ronald Nelson Smith Chair in Classics and Christian Origins, had momentarily stumped 21 Texas high school teachers gathered in a second floor Waggener Hall classroom. “You’re becoming biblical […]

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