College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Honor Choir to perform Jan. 28 on UI campus

Thursday, January 17, 2013
The University of Iowa will host the Honor Choir Festival at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 28, in the Main Lounge of the Iowa Memorial Union on the UI campus. One hundred students from Iowa high schools, nominated by their schools’ conductors, will compose the Festival Choir.
Sam Becker portrait, 2000

Old Gold: Sam Becker, Mr. University of Iowa

Wednesday, January 16, 2013
With 70 years of association with the University of Iowa—as an undergraduate student, a graduate student, a faculty member, an administrator, and a volunteer—the late communication studies professor Sam Becker more than earned the unofficial, honorary title of Mr. University of Iowa.
This is a Roman intaglio, or engraved gem, dating from A.D. 212 and held in the treasury. This is a Roman intaglio, or engraved gem, dating from A.D. 212 and held in the treasury …

UI researcher says lost items reveal Roman bath activities

Monday, January 14, 2013
A new study by UI researcher Alissa Whitmore, a doctoral candidate in archaeology, shows that items lost down the drains of bathhouses during the Roman Empire are evidence that these spaces served as social centers where people snacked on finger food and did needlework, among other activities.
Portrait of UI film studies graduate Spencer Gillis

UI film graduate goes to Sundance

Monday, January 14, 2013
Spencer Gillis left Iowa City for New York City in 2006 to pursue a dream career in the film industry and has since worked as a freelance camera operator on dozens of TV and film projects. His directorial debut recently was selected to be screened in the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.

Loewenberg to read from memoir Jan. 24

Monday, January 14, 2013
Gerhard Loewenberg, University of Iowa professor emeritus and former dean, will read from his new memoir, "Moved by Politics," at 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 24, in Prairie Lights Books in downtown Iowa City. The reading also will be streamed live on the UI Writing University website.

'West Africa Before the Boats'

Thursday, January 10, 2013
"Western Africa Before the Boats," an exhibition at the African American Museum of Iowa in Cedar Rapids, brings alive pre-colonial Western Africa—and the School of Art and Art History and UI Museum of Art are playing an important role.
mammoth tusk being wheeled into the museum

A rare find

Wednesday, January 9, 2013
A team of researchers led by the University of Iowa says a third mammoth has been located at a dig site in southern Iowa. The mammoths—at least two of them of the woolly species—roamed Iowa some 14,000 years ago. The team—including several UI undergraduates—is cleaning the bones at the UI's Museum of Natural History and preparing to resume digging in the spring.
A mother talks on her cell phone, ignoring her young son.

UI's Noonan shares hard truths about telecommuting

Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Mary C. Noonan, associate professor of sociology at the University of Iowa and co-author of the recent study "The Hard Truth About Telecommuting," shares insights about the impact of telecommuting on family time and employee productivity.
Roberto Ampuero

UI's Ampuero serves as a literary ambassador

Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Roberto Ampuero, a UI assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese who is on leave to serve as the Chilean ambassador to Mexico, is also a best-selling novelist and the creator of Cayetano Brulé, one of Spanish-language crime fiction's most traveled modern private eyes.
UI professor Armando Duarte dressed in a Carnival costume in Brazil.

UI International Programs

Monday, January 7, 2013
UI professor Armando Duarte, a choreographer at the UI since 1993, was inspired to create a three-week study abroad program in his native Brazil to share the culture of Carnival with UI students. He is currently in Brazil with 20 UI students so they can study the unique culture firsthand.
 A fruit fly auditory organ

UI researcher learns mechanism of hearing is similar to car battery

Monday, January 7, 2013
University of Iowa biologists have advanced their knowledge of human hearing by studying a similar auditory system in fruit flies—and by making use of the fruit fly “love song.” Results featured on the cover of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
A solar prominence erupts into the sun's atmosphere, or corona. Credit: NASA.

UI-led team confirms 'gusty winds' in space turbulence

Monday, December 17, 2012
Why is the atmosphere of the sun far hotter than the surface of the sun? The answer, scientists believe, lies in the concept of turbulence, a phenomenon directly measured in the laboratory for the first time by a research team led by the University of Iowa.