Daniel Handler is the author of the literary novels The Basic Eight, Watch Your Mouth, and, most recently, Adverbs. Under the name Lemony Snicket he has also written a sequence of books for children, known collectively as A Series of Unfortunate Events, which have sold more than 53 million copies and were the basis of a film starring Jim Carrey. His intricate and witty writing style has won him numerous fans for his critically acclaimed literary work and his wildly successful children's books.
http://storyhour.berkeley.edu/
OCIO Presents: Brad Wheeler, VP and CIO at Indiana University, on April 14th at Boalt Hall: Thriving in the Era of Rabid Collaboration
As the discovery phase of the Operational Excellence initiative comes to a close and we begin the solutions design process, it is clear that technology will play a critical role in the enablement of many of the solutions. A key question we need to consider is how cloud computing offerings and community-developed software solutions like Sakai and Kuali will factor into the campus future.
Dr. Brad Wheeler, a nationally respected higher education technology leader and an active pioneer of new models of collaboration that have changed the economics of information technology in higher education, will share his thoughts on this topic. Dr. Wheeler will speak about the opportunities and challenges that cloud computing and collaborative solutions development present for higher education, followed by a conversation between myself and Dr Wheeler on the potential impact related to some of the OE findings as well and an opportunity for audience Q & A.
Dr. Brad Wheeler, Indiana Universitys vice president for information technology and chief information officer, leads IT services for IUs eight campuses. These services include research, educational, administrative, networking, and other shared IT services. He has co-founded some of higher educations most transformative software and service collaborations including the Sakai Project for teaching and learning software, Kuali for financial and other administrative systems, and the HathiTrust for digital copies of scanned books as part of the Google Book Project. These projects are a blend of both open source and traditional development models that have grown to an ecosystem encompassing over $60M of pooled investments from 50 institutions and 22 commercial firms. He is a professor of information systems in IUs Kelley School of Business, and has taught executive programs for corporate and MBA audiences on six continents.
The inaugural CED Berkeley Circus Soiree was held on the evening of March 4, 2011 at the newly renovated Oakland Museum of California (OMCA). Students, faculty, Wurster Society members, alumni, and friends of CED joined the festivities. The ambiance of the Circus Soiree reception was set by live performances by professional circus entertainers from the Kinetic Arts Center in Oakland. During the reception, guests were invited on a guided tour of OMCA's art collections by curator Inez Brooks-Myers (M.A. Design '75).
2011 CED Distinguished Alumni Award Ceremony, honoring Topher Delaney (B.A. Landscape Architecture '73), Peter Dodge (A.B. Architecture '56), and Therese W. McMillan (M.C.P. '84).
Teddy Cruz, Principal, Estudio Teddy Cruz; Professor of Public Culture and Urbanism, Visual Arts Department, UC San Diego
Jennifer Wolch, Dean, College of Environmental Design and William W. Wurster Professor of City & Regional Planning
For more information see http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/events/circus2011
Prof. Kathryn Edgerton-Tarpley (History Department, San Diego State University) invites educators at the 2014 ORIAS summer teachers’ institute on Foodways in World History to consider a cross-cultural comparison of individual, familial, and state responses to famine in Qing China and nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on how cultural and political contexts shape how societies deal with the lack of food.
Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes international lawyer Laurent Cohen-Tanugi for a discussion of globalization and its impact on the geopolitics of the 21st century. Because of the interface between globalization and geopolitics, Cohen-Tanugi argues that there is a resurgence of the global struggle for power not its demise. In the conversation, Cohen-Tanugi reflects on the relative decline of the West, the failure to integrate the Islamic world, and the emergence of new centers of power such as China and India. He also analyzes the major challenges to global order and stability in the new century.
Recorded October 16, 2008
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/iis/Kreisler.html
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/
This course is a seminar on the role of law in the management of international environmental problems. The course will begin with a brief introduction to public international law as it relates to the environment and a discussion of what international environmental law means. Participants in the course will study a range of environmental issues, legal sources, and institutions.
A behind the scenes look at the Cal Bears preparation for the 2006 Holiday Bowl game vs. Texas A&M.
Visit http://CalBears.com for tickets and information.