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Friday, July 3
The Indiana Daily Student

Campus events during the final weeks of the semester

There are only two weeks left in the semester, but there are still events to attend on campus. Here’s a few to keep an eye out for.

Thought for Food

5 p.m. Dec. 2, Hutton Honors College Great Room

As part of IU’s Themester, Carey Morewedge of Boston University is coming to IU to talk about the link between thinking about a food and wanting to eat it.

“What did the Great War mean to Indians?”

3 p.m. Dec. 2, State Room East in the Indiana Memorial Union

Rajendra Abhyankar, a professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, will deliver a lecture on World War I’s effect in India.

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“Strange Magnetism ?Exposed by Neutron ?Scattering”

4 p.m. Dec. 3, Swain West 119

Collin Broholm of Johns Hopkins University will give a talk on recent experiments on magnetic excitations as a part of the Joseph and Sophia Konopiski Colloquium Series.

Environmental Science Seminar: “Biomonitoring of Human Exposure to Phthalates and ?Environmental Phenols”

4 p.m. Dec. 4, School of Public and Environmental Affairs Room 276

Dr. Kurunthachalam Kannan from the State University of New York at Albany will speak on biomonitoring human intake of environmental contaminants.

“Hoosier Pioneers”

3 p.m. Dec. 5, Wylie House Museum, 317 E. Second St.

James Madison, a professor of history, will give the talk.

“Latino Family Parranda and Community ?Celebration”

2 p.m. Dec. 6, Grand Hall of the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center

This event sponsored by the Latino Cultural Center, the Latino Graduate Student Association and the Latino Faculty and Staff Council will feature Latino music, stories, food and other traditions. There will also be collections of gift cards and cash donations for Latino families in Bloomington.

Not All Galaxies are the Same: What a Galaxy’s Appearance Tells Us About Its Life History

4:30 p.m. Dec. 7, Swain West 119

Martha Haynes of Cornell University will give a talk on what we can learn about galaxies from their physical appearance.

9th Annual Folklore and Ethnomusicology ?Undergraduate ?Symposium

5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Dec. 10, Folklore and Ethnomusicology Performance and Lecture Hall, 800 N. Indiana Ave

This event will feature presentations from seniors in the folklore and ethnomusicology capstone course.

“Program m i ng and Reprogramming Cell Fate”

4 p.m. Dec. 11, Myers Hall room 130

Ken Zaret of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine will deliver this talk, hosted by the Department of Biology. Refreshments will be served prior to the seminar.

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