Archive for September, 2008

An Event a Day … This Week’s Recommendations

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008


So many choices, so many events to attend! Let’s assume you are a busy person, bound by the conventional laws and time and space, unable to attend three events at once. Which to choose? Here are some recommendations for one event per day. Go do it!


November 1 — Celebrate El Día de los Muertos the best way you can. In the US, we binge on candy and costumes on Halloween. By contrast, most Catholic cultures around the world celebrate the day after our Halloween, “The Day of the Dead,” when the spirits of departed friends and family members are commemorated by the living. Several institutions are hosting Día celebrations, intended not only to help us appreciate Mexican culture, but also to help everyone examine their own ways of marking death, and perhaps to synthesize new celebrations for a new culture. No one celebrates El Día de los Muertos better than Mexicans, and no place around Indy celebrates the Mexican celebration better than the Indianapolis Art Center. Enjoy a day of music, dance, and food. Join processions through the shrines and altars that local artists have constructed through the Center’s galleries and ARTSPARK. Or go to the Eiteljorg for a kid-centered exploration of Mexican rituals. Or take the kids to the Indiana State Museum for hands-on activities such as making sugar skulls. Most importantly, use this occasion to remember joyfully the special people who are no longer with us.


November 2 — Exploring Imagination”: A Spirit & Place Public Conversation. So a female African American filmmaker, an ultra-peppy evangelical minister, and a conservative gay Latino social critic go to a theatre to discuss “exploring imagination.” No, this isn’t the opening of a multicultural shaggy dog story. It’s an invitation for you to join the 2008 Spirit & Place Public Conversation. This year’s Public Conversationalists are: film producer Julie Dash; Pastor Brian McLaren (named by TIME as one of America’s top 25 evangelicals); and journalist Richard Rodriguez. Expect a wide-ranging discussion of the limits and possibilities of public imagination and social creativity. 2:00 PM, Butler University, Clowes Memorial Hall. Free, but get tickets from the Clowes boxoffice early!


November 3 — Hear how Rotarians have nearly wiped out polio, and if we can finish job. Says Bill Gates: “When Rotary started talking about polio, people listened.” Today, the world is 99% free from poliomyelitis, a paralyzing disease, thanks to the efforts of Rotary International. In 1985, Rotary, a volunteer service organization of 1.2 million men and women, made a commitment to immunize the world’s children against polio–with extraordinary results. How has Rotary’s success been helped by partnerships with such organizations as the United Nations, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the World Health Organization? What lessons from these ongoing efforts can be applied to other areas of global health? 3:30 PM, IUPUI University Library Lilly Auditorium. free!


November 4 — Spend Election Day with President Benjamin Harroison. Could it really only have been 120 years ago that Delaware Street was the center of the political universe on Election Day? Relive Indianapolis’s glory days of presidential politics by visiting the Benjamin Harrison House on Election Day. (You can’t get a beer until the polls close, what else is there to do?) 10 AM - 3 PM, The President Benjamin Harrison House, 1230 North Delaware Street Indianapolis. Not free.


November 5 — Hear competing versions of the story of Abraham’s willingness to murder his son. The terrible story of how Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son on God’s orders rests at the core of the three Abrahamic faiths. Judaism, Christianity and Islam each claims the story as its own. Hear several story-tellers from these faiths tell their version … and ask them: “Why would you want that story?” 6:00 PM, Room 166 Christian Theological Seminary 1000 W. 42nd Street Indianapolis. Free!

October 11 — Indiana Climate Change Summit

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

We are a long ways form oceans and melting icecaps … so is Indiana sheltered from the consequences of global climate change? Not really. Learn about what is happening, and what we can do to cope.

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November 18 — “IU in the Global World and a Global World at IU: 21st Century Challenges”

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Patrick O’Meara, Vice President for International Affairs at Indiana University
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October 22 — “Is Indiana Competitive Internationally? Beyond the Rhetoric”

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Michael Hicks, Director, Ball State University Bureau of Business Research
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September 23 — Race, religion, and politics in 2008

Friday, September 19th, 2008

A group of Indianapolis’s finest faith leaders will help the community address he impact that race and religion will have on the election.
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December 28 — Chinese Shadow Puppetry

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Possibly the most popular story in the world is the Monkey King … Chinese shadow puppets will tell the story at IMA.

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September 28 — Taiwanese puppets perform “The Black-Bearded Barbarian: Rev. George Leslie Mackay”

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Let’s proceed in ascending order of bizarreness. The story of a 19th century Canadian missonary. Who wrote about puppet-shows among the Fomosans he was trying to convert. And who is a hero in 21st century Taiwan. Told in the Hoklo Chinese dialect. By a traveling puppet troupe. OK, at a certain point we get so much bizarreness stacked up that it becomes a must-see event.

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October 18 — ACLU-IN conference theme: “The Fight for Free Speech in America”

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

It might say a lot about a person what tense she’d discuss “The Fight for Free Speech in America”: past, present, or future? Chris Finan has written a history of the fight, and thinks the big battles are just starting. He’ll explain at the ACLU of Indiana 2008 Annual Student & Membership Conference.

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October 7 — Encountering the Living Lord Through Preaching

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Even if you are not a preacher, even if you are not churched or faithed, understanding preaching is essential. A form of rhetoric and communication of unmatched power … knowing how it works helps know what moves people at some times and in some circumstances. No wonder the most important reforms in America have almost always been launched by preachers.

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October 3-5 — The Natural Living Festival

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Green is the new black. You want to do your part in creating a world where we all can live in harmony with each other and with nature. You want to be a more thoughtful consumer by informing your self with options and doing business with companies who believe in helping all of us make a better world for everyone and everything. The Natural Living Festival is the place for you.
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