Justice - Syracuse Symposium™ 2007

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September

Binh Danh, Vietnamese photographer and memorist

Thursday, September 6

6:30 p.m., Watson Auditorium

Co-sponsor: Light Work

Suzanne Cusick, musicologist

Saturday, September 15

2:45 p.m., 107 Hall of Languages

Presented in cooperation with the Music, Justice, and Gender Symposium with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and PULSE.

The Harlem Quartet, contemporary chamber music

Featuring a world premiere by composer Judith Lang Zaimont

Saturday, September 15

8 p.m., Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College

Presented in cooperation with the Music, Justice, and Gender Symposium with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and PULSE.

Supreme Makeover:
Inventing a New Model of Judicial Openness on the High Court

Next week’s panel discussion on news coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court now features speaker: Dahlia Lithwick, senior editor and Supreme Court correspondent for Slate.com. Lithwick, one of the leading journalists covering and commenting on the Court and the law, has joined the event to replace ABC News’ Jan Crawford Greenburg, who is unable to travel to Syracuse for the September 18 event because of an unavoidable work obligation in Washington, D.C.

 

Lithwick is a senior editor and legal correspondent for Slate. Her work appears in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Elle, on CNN.com and NPR, and in The American Lawyer. Lithwick has written extensively about the Court's obligation to interact with the public, and the sometimes-tricky issues that attend that interaction. Her most recent column on that topic –– praising Justice Antonin Scalia for his bluntness in revealing his personal feelings about the law –– can be found at http://www.slate.com/id/2170309/. Lithwick is the author of Me v. Everybody: Absurd Contracts for an Absurd World, a legal humor book. As a lawyer writing for a general–interest audience, Dahlia has the burden of knowing more than she writes – but the talent to tell complicated issues in a lively, humorous, and accessible way. Her legal work, outside of journalism, included clerking for a federal circuit chief judge and practicing family law in Reno. Dahlia holds an English degree from Yale and law degree from Stanford.

Tuesday, September 18

4 p.m., Grant Auditorium

Presented by the SU College of Law, the Institute for the Study of the Judiciary, Politics and the Media, and the Carnegie Legal Reporting Program in the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

John G. Roberts, Jr.
Chief Justice of the United States

Wednesday, September 19

2 p.m., Hendricks Chapel

Dedication address for Newhouse III and part of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications’ year-long celebration of the First Amendment.

Roots of Peacemaking: Indigenous Values, Global Crisis

An International Day of Peace at the Birthplace of Democracy

Thursday, September 20

Noon – 7 p.m., Onondaga Lake Park (near Salt Museum)

Shuttle buses will be available from the Schine Student Center and the Warehouse.

Paul Farmer, medical anthropologist
and founding director of Partners In Health

Wednesday, September 26

7:30 p.m.

The Laura Hanhausen Milton First Year Lecture

Simulcast to the campus and Syracuse communities in Stolkin Auditorium, Physics Building.

Live web cast at symposium.syr.edu, available to computers on the Syracuse University network.

Carole Boyce Davies, African and African
New World Studies Scholar

“Of Levees and Limits: Black Women, Leadership and Political Power”

Thursday, September 27

5 p.m., Stolkin Auditorium, Physics Building

Presented by the Department of African American Studies with support from the Ford Foundation.


OCTOBER

5th Annual Human Rights Film Festival

Thursday, October 4 through Saturday, October 6

Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building

Co-sponsor: Breakthrough, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, and the South Asia Center

Judgment at Nuremberg,
film screening associated with Dr. King’s lecture on October 11

Monday, October 8

7 p.m., Watson Auditorium

Co-sponsors: Judaic Studies Program

Judgment at Nuremberg, an Academy award-winning film for best picture and selected by The New York Times as one of the 1,000 best pictures of all time, includes outstanding performances by Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, Montgomery Clift and William Shatner, among others.

Judy Wicks and Alice Waters,
advocates of sustainable food reform

Tuesday, October 9

7:30 p.m., Hendricks Chapel

Co-sponsor: University Lectures

Henry King, Nuremberg prosecutor

Thursday, October 11

6 p.m., Hendricks Chapel

Co-sponsors: University Lectures, the SU College of Law, and Winnick Hillel Center

A Journey Towards Justice

New jazz by composer and musician Bill Cole
with Billy Bang, Jayne Cortez and the Untempered Ensemble

Thursday, October 18

8 p.m., Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College

Screening Free Speech Film Festival

Part of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications’
year-long celebration of the First Amendment.

Friday, October 19 through Sunday, October 21

Joyce Hergenhan Auditorium and Robert Halmi Jr. Screening Room, Newhouse III

Laura Kurgan and Eric Cadora, specialists in justice mapping

Wednesday, October 24

4:30 p.m., The Warehouse Auditorium, 350 West Fayette St.

Co-sponsors: School of Architecture, ThINC Gallery, and the Department of Geography

Soul of Syracuse Traditional Music Festival

Musical traditions of refugee communities in Central New York

Saturday, October 27

Noon – 5 p.m., The Warehouse, 350 West Fayette St.

Presented by the Department of Anthropology and The New York State Music Fund, established by the New York State Attorney General at Rockefeller Philanthropy.

Claudia Orange, Mãori cultural specialist, Te Papa Tongarewa

Tuesday, October 30

7:30 p.m., Shemin Auditorium

Co-sponsor: Syracuse University Library


NOVEMBER

Paquito D’Rivera, Cuban composer and musician*

Includes world premiere of new music by the artist

Thursday, November 1

8 p.m., Goldstein Auditorium, Schine Student Center

Co-sponsor: PULSE

Excelsior Cornet Band

original Civil War music performed on period instruments

Thursday, November 8

8 p.m., Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College

Gail Small, founder and executive director of Native Action

Wednesday, November 7

7:30 p.m., Gifford Auditorium, H.B. Crouse Hall

Co-sponsors: Native American Studies Program, and Center for Indigenous Law, Governance, and Citizenship. Check back for updated information.

Freedom Sings™º

Tells the musical and visual story of three centuries of banned music in America

Wednesday, November 14

7:30 p.m., Goldstein Auditorium, Schine Student Center

Co-sponsors: Tully Center for Free Speech, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications

Amory Lovins,
chairman and chief scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute

Thursday, November 15

7:30 p.m., Hendricks Chapel

A joint presentation of the Geoffrey O. Seltzer Lecture, University Lectures, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems, and Syracuse Symposium

Robert Koolakian, author and advocate

Tuesday, November 27

4 p.m., Peter Graham Scholarly Commons, E.S. Bird Library, First Floor

Co-sponsor: Syracuse University Library

All events are free and open to the public except Paquito D’Rivera.

Seating in Hendricks Chapel for Chief Justice Roberts is by ticket only:

Free tickets available at the Schine Center Box Office (443-4517) starting September 12 (two ticket limit per person). Ticket holders must be in their seats at least 30 minutes prior to the start of the speech. Overflow seating, which is open to the public and does not require a ticket, will be available in Goldstein Auditorium, Schine Student Center. The speech also will be simulcast on campus televisions. A web cast will be available to computers on the Syracuse University network.

* Paquito D’Rivera by ticket only:

Tickets available at the Schine Center Box Office (443-4517) starting August 27

$20/Public, $10/SU Faculty, Staff, and Alumni, and $5/Students with valid SUID

º Freedom Sings™ by ticket only: Free tickets available at the Schine Center Box Office (443-4517) starting October 15 (four ticket limit per person)

Syracuse Symposium™ is hosted for Syracuse University by The College of Arts and Sciences