Southwestern University
2001-2002 Catalog

Academic Calendar

Southwestern University: A Statement
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Brown College of Arts & Sciences
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Sarofim School of Fine Arts
 Art
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  CULTURAL ACTIVITIES

CULTURAL ACTIVITIES
AND SPECIAL CAMPUS PROGRAMS




Southwestern University sponsors a number of cultural activities and special programs to enhance the quality of life on campus, provide access by students and other members of the campus community to persons and issues which will stimulate their own reflection, and support and contribute to the academic environment of the institution. These various activities are designed to interrelate academic activity and the social and everyday life on the campus and reflect the institution’s commitment to the education and development of the whole person.

The Artist Series

Each year a series of outstanding musicians, actors, dancers, and other artists are brought to campus through the sponsorship of the Artist Series. In recent years, such well known performers as the Manhattan String Quartet, Victoria de los Angeles, Eugene Fodor, Jose Greco, P.D.Q. Bach, and the Juilliard String Quartet have performed on the stage of Alma Thomas Theater.
In addition, a full range of artistic and cultural activities is carried out on campus through the sponsorship of the School of Fine Arts. Art exhibits are brought to the gallery of the Alma Thomas Fine Arts Center at regular intervals during the year. Various University groups, such as the Mask and Wig players, the Southwestern University Chorale, the Southwestern University Wind Ensemble, and the Southwestern University Chamber Orchestra, present plays and concerts on a regular basis.

Lectureships and Symposia

In an effort to provide students at Southwestern University access to major issues of life and culture, the University presents a series of lectures and other academic occasions during the year.

THE JESSIE DANIEL AMES LECTURE SERIES
The Jessie Daniel Ames Lecture Series focuses on the professional and civic achievements of women. Established in 1985, the lecture series is named for Jessie Daniel Ames, a 1902 alumna of Southwestern University who championed the causes of voting rights for women, prison reform, and anti-lynching legislation. A business person and leader in the national suffragist movement, she was a founder and the first president of the Texas League of Women Voters and was one of the first women delegates to the state and national Democratic conventions.

BROWN SYMPOSIUM SERIES
Through the generosity of The Brown Foundation, Inc., of Houston, the Brown Symposium Series has been established to bring to campus persons of national and international repute in areas represented by the holders of endowed Brown professorships. Distinct from the traditional lecture series, these symposia are integrated into the regular curricular design of the University, and the members of the symposia participate in a total education experience. Symposia have been on such topics as “Cosmology: the Changing Philosophies of Science,” “Benjamin Britten and the Ceremony of Innocence,” “Pandora’s Box: Computers in Everyday Life,” “Africa and Afro-America,” “Punctuated Evolution: The Slender Thread of Life,” “Discoveries of America,” “Macrohistory: New Visions of the World,” “Global Climates: Past, Present & Future,” “Communities,” “Drawing and Crossing Boundaries: The Roots of Texas Music,” “The Human Genome Project: Advances, Repercussions, and Challenges,” “España y América: Cultural Encounter—Enduring Legacy,” and “Shakespeares!!”.

THE LURLYN AND DURWOOD FLEMING SCHOLAR IN RESIDENCE
IN RELIGION PROGRAM
Through an endowment established by St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, Houston, in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Durwood Fleming, the Scholar in Residence Program exists to bring to campus distinguished visitors to enrich the University’s academic program. This program is designed to emphasize close and significant interaction between students and distinguished scholars in the field of religion.

GLOBAL ISSUES FORUM
In 1979, Everett and Margueritte DuPuy established the “Global Citizens Fund” at Southwestern to promote the responsibility that global citizenship brings. The focus of the Fund has been to enhance world peace and international cooperation by supporting both on-campus and off-campus activities which lead to international understanding. The Global Issues Forum is a part of that effort.
Presented several times during the school year, each Global Issues Forum explores a global issue of significance with internationally-known guest speakers.

THE ROY & MARGARET SHILLING LECTURE SERIES
Established in 1999 by The Brown Foundation Inc. of Houston to honor the 13th president and first lady of Southwestern, the Roy & Margaret Shilling Lecture Series presents internationally prominent speakers on topics relating to ethics, public service, and public policy.

THE SLOVER-SOUTHWESTERN LECTURESHIPS
This lectureship series represents the joining of an endowment given by the German Mission Conference to Southwestern University and an endowment left by the late Reverend George S. Slover, DD. Each of these endowments was given originally to establish annual lectureships. Since 1978, they have been combined to provide one lectureship a year in the area of values and social questions.

THE A. FRANK SMITH, JR. DISTINGUISHED LECTURE PROGRAM
In 1988, the law firm of Vinson & Elkins honored its former managing partner and longtime Southwestern University trustee, A. Frank Smith, Jr., through an endowment which established this lecture program. These lectures bring to campus distinguished guest speakers in the fields of law, history, government, political science, and public service.

THE WILLSON LECTURESHIPS
The late J.M. Willson and Mrs. Willson of Floydada, Texas, alumni of Southwestern University, established in 1948 an annual lectureship to be known as the Willson Lectureship. The lectures are directed at the student body and seek significantly to relate religious questions to social life and experience.