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Keyword: emoryuniversity

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  • Outside Group Stifles Horowitz Speech at Emory U.: Emory gets a black eye, which it doesn’t deserve

    10/26/2007 6:37:19 AM PDT · by rface · 50 replies · 93+ views
    Emory University - Emory Wheel ^ | 10/25/2007 | Salvador Rizzo
    Conservative commentator David Horowitz was forced to cut short his speech on “Islamo-Fascism” in the face of repeated interruptions, heckling and catcalls from some audience members in a packed lecture room in White Hall on Wednesday. The event played out like a tug-of-war between two groups: protestors who shouted questions or anti-conservative taglines after every few sentences Horowitz spoke and another faction in the audience who became increasingly vocal about their desire to hear him speak uninterrupted. When the disruptions peaked about 20 minutes into Horowitz’s speech, Senior Vice Provost for Community and Diversity Ozzie Harris stood up at the...
  • Rushdie reveals Valentine's tradition: a fatwa reminder

    02/14/2007 1:20:45 PM PST · by LibWhacker · 4 replies · 525+ views
    Wednesday, Feb 14, 2007 (CBC) - Award-winning author and essayist Salman Rushdie got back into the classroom on Tuesday, teaching his first world literature class at Atlanta's Emory University. In addition to counting Rushdie as its writer-in-residence for the next five years, Emory is now also the holder of his literary archive, which includes journals, letters, e-mails, photos, unpublished works and manuscripts - including more than 1,000 typewritten pages from his 1988 novel The Satanic Verses. Asked why he chose to donate his archive to Emory, a school which he had only visited once before for during a 2004 lecture...
  • DNA of Voles May Hint at Why Some Fathers Shirk Duties

    06/10/2005 4:18:16 PM PDT · by neverdem · 23 replies · 604+ views
    NY Times ^ | June 10, 2005 | NICHOLAS WADE
    Some male prairie voles are devoted fathers and faithful partners, while others are less satisfactory on both counts. The spectrum of behavior is shaped by a genetic mechanism that allows for quick evolutionary changes, two researchers from Emory University report in today's issue of Science. The mechanism depends on a highly variable section of DNA involved in controlling a gene. The Emory researchers who found it, Elizabeth A. D. Hammock and Larry J. Young, say they have detected the same mechanism embedded in the sequence of human DNA but do not yet know how it may influence people's behavior. Voles,...
  • After a Shower of Anthrax, an Illness and a Mystery

    06/06/2005 8:26:38 PM PDT · by TrebleRebel · 50 replies · 1,355+ views
    New York Times ^ | 6/6/05 | Scott Shane
    ANNAPOLIS, Md. - During the anthrax mail attacks in 2001, Bill Paliscak, a gung-ho, hockey-playing postal investigator who had missed 3 days of work in 11 years, removed a filthy filter above a mail-sorting machine to preserve it as evidence. Anthrax-laden dust showered down on him. Skip to next paragraph David Scull for The New York Times Bill Paliscak cannot live at his home until an elevator is installed. Enlarge This Image Agence France-Presse Workers in October 2001 cleaned the Brentwood postal facility in Washington, where employees like Mr. Paliscak were exposed to anthrax. Four days later he began to...
  • Emory Professor Calls President a Despot, Voters Stupid.

    12/14/2004 10:32:58 AM PST · by groanup · 117 replies · 2,842+ views
    The Atlanta Journal and Constitution ^ | 12/14/2004 | Perry Treadwell
    The nation of commoners Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin were skeptical about the common man and government. By PERRY TREADWELL Tuesday, December 14, 2004 This has been the year of Alexander Hamilton, with a new biography and a museum exhibit in New York City. All that I remember about Hamilton from high school senior history taken more than a half-century ago is a quote attributed to him, "The People is a Beast." More recently, a poem Hamilton may have read by a 17th century Italian cleric, Tommaso Campanella, has appeared. The first stanza goes: The People is a beast of...
  • Return of the King: Spoilers

    01/25/2003 11:14:18 AM PST · by artios · 26 replies · 534+ views
    Check it out: http://www.kojiroabe.com/rotk/
  • Wanna Save The World

    01/24/2003 9:27:36 PM PST · by thelastonestanding · 23 replies · 299+ views
    Credenda Agenda ^ | 06/2002 | Nathan Wilson
    <p>Wanna Save the World?</p> <p>When you read Tolkien's trilogy, which characters, if any, do you relate to? Do you want to be Tom Bombadil? Do you have a lot of things in common with Fanghorn? Aragorn? Frodo?</p> <p>Tolkien crafted his story in a very Christian way. The heros are unrelatable. Not for all people, but for most. One of the modern complaints that movie makers had to work around in producing their film is the completely unrelatable character of Arwen. She is the pure, immortality-sacrificing elf maiden who cannot marry any mortal lower than a king of all of the West. She doesn't have much in common with your average female viewer.</p>
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] Of the Silmarils and the Unrest of the Noldor

    01/24/2003 4:51:48 AM PST · by JameRetief · 3 replies · 508+ views
    Tolkien Online ^ | November 08, 1999 | Mark-Edmond
    A Tolkien Virgin: Of the Silmarils and the Unrest of the Noldorby Mark-Edmond The Journey ContinuesAt long last! The Silmarils! Tolkien titled this volume "The Silmarillion," so something tells me these little fellas are going to be even more important than Feanor. But, at the same time, since he created them, whatever happens, he will have a hand in it. For without Feanor there would be no Silmarils...and therefore no Silmarillion. Perhaps this great deed, the creating of the Silmarils, is his supernatural act. Perhaps, this is why he sapped so much strength and energy from his mother at...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] Strange as news from Bree...

    01/23/2003 12:32:50 AM PST · by JameRetief · 4 replies · 522+ views
    Suite 101 ^ | December 3, 1999 | Michael Martinez
    A discussion of Bree's significance and probable history in the Third Age. [ Published prior to the first Lord Of The Rings movie ] Strange as news from Bree...Word has it that we won't see much of Bree in Peter Jackson's "Lord of the Rings" movies. Bree is the little village east of the Shire where Frodo and his companions meet up with Aragorn (who is known there as Strider). I expect most of the Bree scenes will deal with how the Hobbits come to travel with the Ranger, and the movie will just move on. Will we even see...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] The Undefinable Shadowland

    01/22/2003 2:56:49 AM PST · by JameRetief · 3 replies · 1,010+ views
    Barrow Downs ^ | July 2, 2000 | Leif Jacobsen
    The Undefinable ShadowlandA Study of the Complex Question of Dualism in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the RingsLeif Jacobsen In memory of John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, to whom I owe so much The Road ever goes on and on Down from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone, And I must follow if I can Pursuing it with weary feet, Until it joins some larger way, Where many paths and errands meet. And whither then? I cannot say. Introduction "I dislike Allegory - the conscious and intentional allegory - yet any attempt to explain the...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] Who were the real heroes of Middle-earth?

    01/21/2003 4:09:11 AM PST · by JameRetief · 7 replies · 418+ views
    Suite 101 ^ | November 12, 1999 | Michael Martinez
    Who were the real heroes of Middle-earth?Probably the most moving story in all the Tolkien legendarium is that of Beren and Luthien. They are the true heroes of Middle-earth, the first and only people among Elves and Men to achieve any palpable result against Morgoth in the ill-fated War of the Silmarils. They are also the only heroes of the First Age to actually be given any significant consideration in the pages of The Lord of the Rings.Many Tolkien fans know that Beren and Luthien were a metaphor for the romantic relationship between Ronald Tolkien and Edith Bratt, but seldom...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] A Tolkien Virgin: Of Feanor and the Unchaining of Melkor

    01/20/2003 4:22:04 AM PST · by JameRetief · 3 replies · 461+ views
    Tolkien Online ^ | October 25, 1999 | Mark-Edmond
    A Tolkien Virgin: Of Feanor and the Unchaining of Melkorby Mark-Edmond The Journey ContinuesFeanor seems almost supernatural. Something is going to go down. It's going to be nasty. And Feanor is going to have his hand in it. That much is clear. But, is it just me, or is he supernatural? He's special. But the way his mother withers away and dies (as much as that is possible for an elf) after his birth, he would almost seem even greater (not in the "good" sense of great). We don't know why (his birth alone?), but we can tell he's an...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] A Tolkien Virgin: Of Eldamar and the Princes of the Eldalie

    01/17/2003 5:24:43 AM PST · by JameRetief · 5 replies · 439+ views
    Tolkien Online ^ | October 20, 1999 | Mark-Edmond
    A Tolkien Virgin: Of Eldamar and the Princes of the Eldalieby Mark-Edmond The Journey ContinuesAt this point, I'm hooked. The story of the Elves up to this point has been sweet and sad, but Tolkien has me, and I like it. He's addicted to complexity, and I like that too. He couldn't have had all the Elves pick up and go to Valanor/Aman, that wouldn't be Tolkien, and that wouldn't be interesting. All along the way some are lost. Some flee Orome at the very beginning and were lost. And as the Teleri finally arrive on the shores of...
  • [ Daily Tolkien / Lord Of The Rings ] Beyond The Movie: Myth and Storytelling

    01/16/2003 4:48:18 AM PST · by JameRetief · 3 replies · 566+ views
    National Geographic ^ | 2002 | Not Cited
        The door to the Mines of Moria Viking-era carvings on Sweden's Sigurd Rock   Viking ship post (circa A.D. 850)(Photograph from National Geographic Television) Stonehenge, one of the many ancient British ruins that inspired Tolkien(Photograph from National Geographic Television) A transcript of Tolkien's lecture “Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics”(Photograph from National Geographic Television and Jane Chance) Akseli Gallen-Kallela's 1891 painting “Aino Myth,” which depicts a passage from the Kalevala, a compilation of old Finnish ballads and poems(Photograph courtesy Art Museum of Ateneum) Ian McKellen as Gandalf(© 2001 New Line Productions, photograph courtesy New Line Cinema)  ...
  • [ Daily Tolkien / Lord Of The Rings ] Beyond The Movie: Author and History

    01/14/2003 6:28:04 AM PST · by JameRetief · 15 replies · 1,393+ views
    National Geographic ^ | 2002 | Not cited
        Dominic Monaghan as Merry (left) and John Rhys-Davies as Gimli Grimspound ruins, Dartmoor National Park, England           World War I's Battle of the Somme (Photograph by Corbis)   Battle scene from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (© 2001 New Line Productions, photograph courtesy New Line Cinema)   Factory in Birmingham, England (Still image from National Geographic Television)   English countryside (Still image from National Geographic Television)   Mordor, seen in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (© 2001 New Line Productions, photograph courtesy New...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] A Tolkien Virgin: Of Thingol and Melian

    01/13/2003 1:22:36 AM PST · by JameRetief · 3 replies · 519+ views
    Tolkien Online ^ | September 20, 1999 | Mark-Edmond
    A Tolkien Virgin: Of Thingol and Melianby Mark-Edmond The Journey ContinuesHere we have Tolkien's first take on love in the Silmarillion. Thingol is drawn by the beauty of her singing, but it isn't love till he sees her. Love at first sight. She's indescribably beautiful, sings wonderfully, and has the light of Aman in her face, but what does she see in him? Tolkien doesn't really say. She's a type of goddess, a Maia, existing before Ea, while he's an elf, born in Middle Earth. It seemed strange to me that she would "stoop" to the level of a Quendi....
  • 'Lord' of racism? Critics view (Rings) trilogy as discriminatory (everything is racism barf alert)

    01/12/2003 10:54:58 AM PST · by republicman · 120 replies · 975+ views
    Chicago Tribune ^ | January 12, 2003 | David Ibata
    `Lord' of racism? Critics view trilogy as discriminatory `Two Towers' film reflects tone of book Happily for fans of J.R.R. Tolkien, director Peter Jackson stayed true to the fantasy author's artistic vision in "Fellowship of the Ring," the first film in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy. Unhappily, in "The Two Towers," Jackson may reflect the "Rings'" racial view of the world as well.
  • The 'Ring' and the remnants of the West

    01/10/2003 5:18:36 AM PST · by Forgiven_Sinner · 78 replies · 3,012+ views
    Asia Times ^ | January 11, 2003 | By Spengler
    The most important cultural event of the past decade is the ongoing release of the film version of J R R Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. No better guide exists to the mood and morals of the United States. The rapturous response among popular audiences to the first two installments of the trilogy should alert us that something important is at work. Richard Wagner's 19th-century tetralogy of music dramas, The Ring of the Nibelungs, gave resonance to National Socialism during the inter-war years of the last century. Tolkien does the same for Anglo-Saxon democracy. Tolkien well may have written...
  • [ Daily Tolkien ] A Tolkien Virgin: Of The Coming of Elves and the Captivity of Melkor

    01/10/2003 2:46:30 AM PST · by JameRetief · 21 replies · 460+ views
    Tolkien Online ^ | August 23, 1999 | Mark-Edmond
    A Tolkien Virgin: Of The Coming of Elves and the Captivity of Melkorby Mark-Edmond The Journey ContinuesThe thing that first struck me about this section is the creation of the Orcs. Tolkien has done something brilliant here. He established with Aule that none of the Ainor or Valar could create beings--things that exist apart from their creator. Illuvatar alone can truly create beings. So in order for Melkor to have a race of followers, he takes elves and breeds them into hideous creatures--the Orcs. For the Orcs to be descended from Elves is really a fascinating concept. If Tokien is...
  • Tolkien Teaches Us to Take Courage

    01/09/2003 8:29:39 AM PST · by ksen · 66 replies · 369+ views
    Tolkien teaches us to take courage Tom ShippeyThe Daily Telegraph Monday, January 06, 2003 J.R.R. Tolkien was not a professional author nor, for much of his life, even a much-published one. He had a certain success with The Hobbit in 1937, when he was 45 -- enough for his publisher, Stanley Unwin, to ask for a sequel. But though Tolkien dutifully began to write one almost immediately, it was 17 years before the first volume of The Lord of the Rings was published, by which time Tolkien had almost reached retirement. For much of his life he was haunted by...