Saturday, September 6, 2008

Happy Birthday: the Art Gallery Presents Artie Vierkant




















The Philomathean Art Gallery Presents

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

A solo exhibition featuring the work of Artie Vierkant

Opening Reception
Tuesday, September 9th
7:30 PM
Come celebrate the opening of this aptly-titled exhibition with a reception on the artist's birthday. Refreshments will be provided.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY will be on display in the Philomathean Society Art Gallery until October 7th.

for more on the artist, visit www.artievierkant.com

for more information, please contact the Art Gallery Committee Chair, Miss Joyce Lee at helloitsjoyceslee@gmail.com.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Preliminary Tea Schedule--Fall 2008




Design by Miss Joyce Lee

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Herman Beavers Lecture Audio Posted

Here.
Take this as our token that the last lecture of the 2007-2008 academic year was one to be remembered.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Herman Beavers Lecture Announced (note the date change)

The Philomathean Society Announces
a lecture by
Dr. Herman Beavers
entitled
"Bigger Goes to the Movies: Turbulence and Spectacle
in Wright's
Native Son"

Wednesday, April 30, 2008
6:00 P.M.
The Philomathean Society Halls,
(see www.philomathean.org for directions)
Refreshments will be served.



Biography from Professor Beavers' website:
Herman Beavers came to Penn from Yale University, where he received his doctorate in American Studies in 1990 with a specialization in African American Literature. He is the author of Wrestling Angels into Song: The Fictions of Ernest J. Gaines and James Alan McPherson, which was published in 1995 by the University of Pennsylvania Press. He also has a chap-book of poems, A Neighborhood of Feeling (1986) from Doris Publications. His poems have appeared in Black American Literature Forum, Whiskey Island, Rain, Cave Canem I and II, Dark Phrases, and the Cincinnati Poetry Review. Professor Beavers teaches courses in African American and American literature, including courses dealing with the South and (along with Professor Elisa New) African- and Jewish-American literature. He values dialogue in classroom settings and thinks it is important for students to talk to one another about writing and literature. He also believes that his courses are much more about questions than static answers, especially when it comes to matters of race, gender, and class. And despite having very well-defined ideas about the kind of literature he enjoys, Professor Beavers likes to think he is open to persuasion.




Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

"Dead Hoosiers" are re-animated at the Philomathean Society, April 2nd

The Philomathean Society Presents:
DEAD HOOSIERS

A Lecture by Dr. Daniel Traister,
Curator, Research Services, Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg Rare Book and Manuscript Library
on
April 2nd, 2008
at Six O'Clock P.M.
in the Philomathean Halls (4th Floor College Hall, see www.philomathean.org for directions)

Light refreshments will be served, as always

Daniel Traister, a curator in Penn's Rare Book and Manuscript Library, has long been interested in why some books live and others -- most of them -- die.

"Dead Hoosiers" concerns some books written by Indianans that didn't make it. Traister is not an Indianan. He comes from New York, and his degrees come from Colby College (Waterville, Maine), New York University, and Columbia University. He occasionally teaches classes for the Department of English at Penn and for the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia.

For more information, one is directed towards Traister's home page: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~traister/







Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Karen Detlefsen Audio

The audio from Dr. Karen Detlefsen's lecture can be found here.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Karen Detlefsen Lecture Announced


The Philomathean Society Presents
A Lecture by Professor Karen Detlefsen entitled
"Custom, Authority and Cartesianism: Mary Astell's Philosophy of Education"
March 5, 2008
6:00 PM
The Philomathean Halls

For more on Professor Detlefsen, see her website

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Lecture Audio: Dr. Elisabeth Camp

The audio from Dr. Camp's lecture can be found here.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Terrorism Panel Audio

The audio from the panel on terrorism, bio- and otherwise, is available here.

- Subcomandante Kincaid

Monday, February 18, 2008

U of P Middle East Center Sponsors Philo's Terrorism Panel


Many thanks go to Penn's Middle East Center for sponsoring Philo's panel on "Terrorism: The Science, Weapons, and Politics of Fear" .

Check out their website for more information and events on Middle Eastern politics, history, and culture.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Elisabeth Camp Lecture Announced

BETWEEN THE LINES: Imagining Perspectives on Fiction and Life
A Lecture by Dr. Elisabeth Camp (Philosophy)
Thursday, February 21st, 2008
6 PM
The Philomathean Halls, 4th Floor College Hall (see www.philomathean.org)



Dr. Camp receieved her PhD from the Philosophy Department at UC Berkeley in 2003. She spent the next three years at Harvard, in the Society of Fellows, and joined the Department of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania in the Fall of 2006. She went to to college at the University of Michigan, and graduated in 1993 with a double major in Philosophy and English. Her research focuses on mental states that don't fit the usual philosophical model of propositional thought, and in the expression of such states.



Friday, February 8, 2008

Philomathean Oratorical Contest

The time has come, the Walrus said, to talk of many things,
Of shoes, of ships, of sealing wax, of cabbages and kings…

Behold:

IF I WERE KING

The Philomathean Society’s Spring Oratorical Contest

What would you do if you were in charge? Would you come up with a better health plan than Hillary's as President of the United States? Take over Google as CEO of Microsoft? Create a Free Student Ice Cream Day as President of Penn?

Tell us and our panel of distinguished faculty judges what you'd want to be in charge of and what you'd do in five minutes or less and win $100!

The Contest will be held at the Philomathean Halls on Wednesday, February 27 at 6.00pm. Any undergraduate at Penn may compete. The event itself is open to the public and delightful refreshments, both spiritual and comestible in nature, will be served.

Entry is absolutely free and open to all undergraduates at the University of Pennsylvania. So, there's no reason not to enter now! This is a great opportunity to polish your eloquence and wit, as well as to win fun cash prizes! Tell all your friends to come and witness your performance – or better yet, encourage them to participate as well! The more, the merrier!

Got questions? We've got answers at oratory@philomathean.org.

The text of the lecture given by Dr. Guthrie P. Ramsey can be accessed here.

- The Phiphth Column

Friday, February 1, 2008

Dr. Vitalis's Lecture Audio

The Phiphth Column, in an act of audio subversion, presents the audio file recorded at the lecture given by Dr. Bob Vitalis. Enjoy.


- Subcomandante Kincaid







Saturday, January 26, 2008

Being of sound mind: Philo presents Ramsey and Bernstein: two lectures on music

On February 7th and February 13th, the Philomathean Society will present two lectures on the study of music.

February 7th-- Can the Object Speak?: The Visual and the Audible in African American Music


A lecture by Dr. Guthrie P. Ramsey Jr.,
associate professor of music history and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He specializes in African-American and American music, jazz, cultural studies, popular music, film studies, and historiography. His book, Race Music: Black Cultures from Bebop to Hip-Hop, was named outstanding book of 2003 by IASPM (International Association for the Study of Popular Music), U.S. A. His current projects include books about jazz pianist Bud Powell and singer/songwriter Curtis Mayfield. He has published in Black Music Research Journal, The Musical Quarterly, Journal of Popular Music Studies, The Black Scholar, Callaloo, American Music, American Quarterly, Journal of the American Musicological Society, The New York Times and The Village Voice. Ramsey has held visiting professorships at Harvard University and Princeton University. His band, Dr. Guy’s MusiQologY, released Y the Q? in 2007 and has toured internationally performing its unique brand of soul, pop, and fusion influenced jazz.

February 13th-- Johannes Ockeghem and the Sands of Time: Musical Texture and Cultural Change



A lecture by Dr. Lawrence F. Bernstein, professor of Music, and specialist in music of the Renaissance.

Bernstein's research has focused primarily on the music of Johannes Ockeghem and Josquin des Prez, and on the French chanson of the 16th century. More recently, he has begun to work on the 18th-century symphony, concentrating on the symphonic finales of Joseph Haydn and on the latter's influence on the music of such composers as Antonio Rosetti and Ignaz Pleyel. A retrospective collection of his essays on the chanson is to be published by the Centre d'Etudes Superieurs de la Renaissance in Tours.

He served as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the American Musicological Society (1975-77), as a member of the editorial board of the New Josquin Edition (1982-94), and as the founding editor of AMS Studies in Music.



Both lectures will begin at 6 PM in the Philomathean Halls (4th Floor College Hall). Refreshments will be served.



Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Symposium on Terrorism Announced

The Philomathean Society
presents



Terrorism: The Science, Weapons, and Politics of Fear

A multi-disciplinary symposium featuring:
Dr. M. Susan Lindee (History & Sociology of Science, Author of Suffering Made Real: American Science and the Survivors at Hiroshima.)
Dr. Ian Lustick (Political Science, Author of
Trapped in the War on Terror)
Dr. Stanley Plotkin, M.D. (Wistar Institute, Author of "Vaccines")
Dr. Harvey Rubin, M.D. ,
(Director, Penn’s Institute for Strategic Threat Analysis and Response)

February 20th
6:00 P.M.
in the Philomathean Halls (4th Floor of College Hall, see website for directions)


Dr. M. Susan Lindee is a native Texan who received her undergraduate degree in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin. She was a journalist for ten years before she pursued graduate study at Cornell University, where she earned a Ph.D in History and Philosophy of Science. Her research focuses on twentieth-century biological and biomedical sciences, particularly radiation biology, human genetics and genomics. Her books include Moments of Truth: Genetic Disease in American Culture (2004), Genetic Nature/Culture: Anthropology and Science Beyond the Two Culture Divide (2003), The DNA Mystique: The gene as a cultural icon (1995), and Suffering Made Real: American Science and the Survivors at Hiroshima (1994). She teaches about science and gender, science and war, and the history of American science. She is a sea kayaker and birdwatcher.

Dr. Ian S. Lustick is Professor of Political Science and Director of Graduate Studies in the Political Science Department at the University of Pennsylvania where he holds the Bess W. Heyman Chair. He has authored or edited more than twenty books. His latest book is Trapped in the War on Terror (2006). His other books include Unsettled States, Disputed Lands: Britain and Ireland, France and Algeria, Israel and the West Bank and Gaza (1993); and For the Land and the Lord: Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel (1994). His articles have been published in leading journals, including Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, World Politics, American Political Science Review, International Organization, Middle East Journal, Journal of Israeli History, and Middle East Policy. He is a recipient of awards from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Social Science Research Council, and the United States Institute of Peace. Dr. Lustick is a founder and past President of the Association for Israel Studies. He is the originator of the PS-I computational modeling platform and a leader in the application of agent-based modeling techniques to problems in the social sciences. He has worked in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research and has been a consultant on Middle East and national security affairs for each of the last seven American administrations.

Dr. Stanley Plotkin is currently an advisor at the pharmaceutical firm Sanofi Pasteur and is an emeritus professor at the Wistar Institute where he conducted research on the rubella vaccine. He is also an emeritus professor of pediatrics at the Univeristy of Pennsylvania. He has served senior assistant surgeon with the Epidemic Intelligence Service, United States Public Health Service; director of Infectious Diseases at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; and associate chairman of the Department of Pediatrics. Dr. Plotkin investigated the last known outbreak of inhalation anthrax prior to the terrorist events of 2001 and helped demonstrate the efficacy of the current anthrax vaccine. He has also written “Vaccines,” a standard reference book. Over the course of his career Dr. Plotkin has been awarded the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, the Sabin Foundation Medal, the French Legion Medal of Honor, the Clinical Virology Award, the Pan American Group for Rapid Viral Diagnosis, the Distinguished Physician Award, the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and the Bruce Medal of the American College of Physicians.

Dr. Harvey Rubin is a Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and holds secondary appointments as Professor in the Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine and as Professor of Computer and Information Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. He is Associate Dean for Student Affairs in the School of Medicine, Chair of the School of Medicine Committee on Appointments and Promotions, a member of the School of Medicine Curriculum Committee and won the Donald B. Martin, MD Teaching Service Award in 1996. He is also the Director of Penn’s Institute for Strategic Threat Analysis and Response (ISTAR). His research focuses on the genetics and metabolic networks of tuberculosis.


Thursday, January 3, 2008

A Lecture by Professor Robert Vitalis, January 31st

The Philomathean Society announces a lecture by Professor Robert Vitalis of the Political Science department entitled:

Race, Empire, and the Origins of American International Relations
or
Why Do All the White Political Scientists Sit Together at the Professional Meetings?

January 31st 2008
6 o Clock PM
Refreshments will be served.


Professor Vitalis is the author of America's Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier and When Capitalists Collide. He teaches classes on American Foreign Policy, Middle Eastern Politics, and International Relations. He is the recipient of fellowships from The American Research Center in Egypt, the Social Science Research Council, the Woodrow Wilson Center, the American Council of Learned Societies, The International Center for Advanced Studies, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Shelby Cullom Davis Center. In 1996, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations awarded him a Bernath Prize for his work on Egyptian political economy (from his website).

This is sure to be a fantastic event. Below are some articles on and by Professor Vitalis:

"No 'Miracles' in the desert" by Tim Hyland (Penn Current article on Vitalis' research on American empire)

"In Princes' Pockets" by Tariq Ali (London Review of Books review of America's Kingdom)

"International Studies in America" by Robert Vitalis (part of the Social Science Research Council's Roundtable on Rethinking International Studies in a Changing Global Context)






Wednesday, January 2, 2008

A Stone in Philo History

According to the University Archives' Record Center's description of the Philomathean Society,
The most notable achievement for the Philomathean Society in its first fifty years was the 1858 publication of the Philomathean Rosetta Stone Report, the first complete English translation of the Rosetta Stone. Philo members Henry Morton, Charles Hale, and S. Huntington Jones took nearly a year to complete this work. Their work met with worldwide praise and recognition, resulting in such high demand that publication quickly went into a second edition.
In 1988, the British Museum, home of the Rosetta Stone, bestowed the honor of including the Philomathean Rosetta Stone Report in its select bibliography of the most important works ever published on the Rosetta Stone. But, even though this event played such a large role in the history of the Society, few members or guests have seen a full copy of the report.

Fortunately for us, during the Moderatorship of Andrew Daniel Trister (Φ '02?), the Society took an copy of the Report that was falling apart to the Rare Book Library who graciously made an electronic copy of the Report.

The Report can be seen on the Penn Libraries’ Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text & Image (SCETI) here: http://dewey.library.upenn.edu/sceti/printedbooksNew/index.cfm?TextID=rosetta

I encourage you all to see it. It is beautifully lithographed with Egyptian-style designs in colour by Henry Morton with the authors' handwritten text.

Here is the first page of the Report: