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Spring 2016

Be Kind to Animals

May 13, 2016 by Michelle Bryant

Old illustration of two overworked horses pulling a trolly cart in a crowded street with onlookers.

Since Janet Davis’ early childhood in Honolulu, Hawaii, she says she remembers a life surrounded by animals: chickens running around the yard, horse rides, caring for her pet dogs and cats. “It was a world saturated with animals, the formation of my moral consciousness, if you will,” says Davis, associate professor of American studies at The University of Texas at Austin. […]

Remaking ‘Roots’

May 13, 2016 by Michelle Bryant

Photograph from the remake of the miniseries, "Roots." Anika Noni Rose (Kizzy) and Laurence Fishburne (Alex Haley).

“This is a historian’s dream,” says Daina Ramey Berry, an associate professor of history at The University of Texas at Austin, who served as a technical adviser for the remaking of the television miniseries “Roots.” It will premiere on Memorial Day, airing over four consecutive nights. The A&E Networks’ HISTORY, A&E and Lifetime channels will […]

Not Just the Funnies: Exhibit explores the comic world of Jackie Ormes

May 13, 2016 by David Ochsner

Comic book panel from Jackie Ormes' "Heartbeats" (1950's).

For more than a century comic strips have provided a light-hearted diversion for newspaper readers, although a few were groundbreaking for the insights they offered about society. Peanuts captured Cold War anxieties with the existential musings of chronically depressed Charlie Brown, while the anthropomorphic Pogo and his friends in Okefenokee Swamp provided the era with […]

Architecture of Coexistence

May 9, 2016 by Alicia Dietrich

Stephennie Mulder at the mosque of Nasir al-Mulk in Shiraz, Iran.

Stephennie Mulder, an associate professor in the Departments of Art and Art History and Middle Eastern Studies, was invited to Tehran, Iran, in February 2016 to receive the country’s World Award for Book of the Year from the Iranian Ministry of Culture, which was to be awarded in a ceremony by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. Her […]

An Education for Life

May 9, 2016 by Emily Nielsen

Portrait of Michael Stoff in his office located on the UT Austin campus.

Michael Stoff was raised in Merrick, New York, and was the first in his family to graduate from college. He received a bachelor’s in history and American studies from Rutgers College, and a master’s of philosophy in history and doctorate of philosophy in history from Yale University. He has taught at UT Austin for 36 […]

Humanists Make Great Doctors

May 9, 2016 by Emily Nielsen

Portrait of Dr. Kimberly Monday standing next to a colorful plastic model of a brain.

Dr. Kimberly Monday is a Plan II alumna, the 1988 Texas Parents Association’s Outstanding Female Student and a Dean’s Distinguished Graduate from Huntsville, Texas. She attended Baylor College of Medicine and completed her neurological residency there before taking a fellowship at Emory University. She is the owner of the Houston Neurological Institute and president of […]

No Stone Unturned

May 9, 2016 by Emily Nielsen

Portrait of Zachary Stone in the Plan II Honors suite.

Zachary Stone is a Plan II senior from Dallas, Texas. He has served as the chief justice of UT Austin’s Student Government, been published in the Sunday edition of The New York Times and will be attending the UT Austin School of Law on a Massey Scholarship, the school’s top merit award. Why Plan II? […]

The Campaign for Your Vote: Just Add Brand Power

May 9, 2016 by Rachel White

A tongue-in-cheek photo of a smiling woman holding a brightly branded "Vote" box against a red background. The box reads, "The Campaign for Your Vote: Just Add Brand Power!" (America's Choice).

After months of being bombarded by pollsters, campaign ads and the most outlandish sound bites on repeat, the moment will come for you to finally cast your ballot. Whom will you choose? “The presidency is the one office that represents the American people: all their wishes, dreams, desires, hopes, fears and everything else,” says history […]

What’s So Funny About the Liberal Arts?

May 9, 2016 by David Ochsner

Stylized illustration of a young man in the pose of "The Thinker," looking deep in thought as onlookers point and mock him.

We’ve all heard the jokes about liberal arts majors, inspired by stereotypes that students in the humanities, social sciences and languages are destined to lives of underemployment: The science major asks, “Why does it work?” The engineering major asks, “How does it work?” The business major asks, “How much will it cost?” The liberal arts […]

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