patience 14.02.06, 01:27 terra.blox.pl/html/1310721,1114114,13.html?873202 ) Odpowiedz Link Zgłoś czytaj wygodnie posty
drf linX 14.02.06, 02:02 scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=sv&lr=&client=firefox-a&q=cache:LhLJG2JD79QJ:www.indiana.edu/~jsp/JS%2520Fall%2520News3.pdf+Taube+Foundation+for+Jewish+Life+ __________________ texty Detta är html-versionen av filens www.indiana.edu/~jsp/JS%20Fall%20News3.pdf. G o o g l e skapar automatiskt en html-version av dokument när vi söker igenom webben. Google har ingen anknytning till författarna av denna sida och är inte ansvarigt för sidans innehåll. Dessa söktermer har markerats: taube foundation jewish life Page 1 T H E R O B E R T A . A N D S A N D R A S. B O R N S J EW I S H S TUDI E S P ROGR A M A n n u a l N e w s l e t t e r V o l u m e 2 2 F a l l 2 0 0 3 30 TH A N N I V E R S A RY E D I T I O N P A S T A C C O M P L I S H M E N T S , F U T U R E D I R E C T I O N S Page 2 I n d i a n a U n i v e r s i t y 2 Anniversaries are a time for celebration, stock-taking, decision-making, and renewal. The Borns Jewish Studies Program (JSP) at Indiana University (IU) has just reached such a milestone. We turned 30 this past year and have lots to feel good about as we review our past accomplishments and also much still to do as we look ahead to the future. Our program has now reached a level of institutional size and maturity that could not have been envisioned when it was inaugurated in 1973. Who would have thought that Bloomington, Indiana, an attractive but relatively small midwestern college town, would come to house one of this country’s major academic centers of Jewish learning? Probably very few, including many at IU itself. As those who have been to Bloomington know, however, and as others who read this newsletter will quickly see, the Borns JSP has grown to be precisely such a center and annually sponsors a range of scholarly and cultural activities that is almost unmatched in its richness and depth. It is small wonder, then, that students now come to IU in record numbers—and from 26 different states and several foreign countries—to do Jewish Studies (JS). This past year, we counted 87 JS majors, 79 JS area certificate students, 16 Hebrew minors, and 11 graduate students with Ph.D. minors in JS. In sum, among the more than 1,700 students at IU who take our courses each year, we now have a sizable core devoted to doing concentrated work in JS. And not only are their numbers growing year by year, but so, too, are the seriousness of purpose and potential for achieving real excellence among so many of the young people we now see in our classrooms. Our students are the centerpiece of the Borns JSP, and we make special efforts to provide them with the kinds of educational opportunities they need and deserve: a curriculum of 50 courses a year taught by a large and talented faculty, including 6 endowed chairs; a first-rate library, which houses an excellent Judaica collection; significant scholarship and fellowship support as well as other kinds of financial aid; expert academic counseling and mentoring by a full-time and outstanding student advisor; a vibrant academic environment, which provides constant intellectual stimulation; an appealing variety of social and cultural opportunities; professional career guidance; and more. To pursue JS at IU, in short, is to be part of a comprehensive and unusually caring program of studies, carefully built over three decades, which encourages students to focus rigorous attention on Judaism and the Jews. We take pride in the accomplishments of our students during their years on campus and eagerly follow their personal and professional activities once they leave IU. It is especially gratifying that large numbers of our alumni continue to pursue JS beyond Bloomington or go on to careers in Jewish institutional life in communities throughout the country. Meeting these students and teaching so many of them over the years has been a joy. And leading the Borns JSP as its director since the program’s inception has been a privilege beyond measure. As the program enters its fourth decade, it will now pass into the capable hands of new leadership. I am confident that my successor, Professor Steven Weitzman, will prove entirely up to the task of sustaining the many strengths of the Borns JSP and also take it in some new and exciting directions in the years to come. An outstanding scholar and teacher in his own area of biblical studies, Professor Weitzman, who holds the Irving M. Glazer Chair in Jewish Studies, has knowledge of our field in its broadest dimensions. Moreover, he is deeply committed to the flourishing of higher education in America’s public universities and to the vital role that a vibrant JSP can play in such institutions. My colleagues and I know how fortunate we are to have him at IU and are thrilled that he will be the next director of the Borns JSP. He has our complete trust and full support as he takes up his new position and progresses with his important work. As for my own future work, I plan to continue it at IU, in ways that are described elsewhere in this newsletter, and also at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, in Washington, D.C., on whose governing Council I am privileged to serve. Meanwhile, I want to offer my heartfelt thanks to the many people at IU and in the broader community who have generously supported the Borns JSP and given me the honor of guiding the program in its development over the past thirty years. Alvin H. Rosenfeld Director I N T HIS I SSUE 3 New Director/Associate Director 4 Institute for Jewish Culture and the Arts 5 New Faculty 6 Programs 10 IU Press 11 Friends 12 JSP Advisory Board 12 Donor Honor Roll 13 JSP Endowments 13 Student News 18 Graduate Study 18 Alumni News 20 Course Offerings 21 Faculty News 24 Faculty and Staff Alvin H. Rosenfeld, Outgoing Director Page 3 N EW JSP D IRECTOR S TEVEN W EITZMAN Since the days that Moses turned things over to Joshua, Jewish culture has recognized that moments of transition bring both challenges and opportunities. As the Borns JSP begins its fourth decade, it will be my honor and pleasure to serve as its director. Since my arrival at IU ten years ago, I have felt privileged to be a member of this program. My research in the fields of biblical and early Jewish literature has been deepened through interaction with colleagues. Thanks to wonderful students, I have known many joys as a teacher. I could not ask for a more supportive staff. The alumni and donors I have met are incredibly admirable and indefatigably supportive. And in Professor Alvin Rosenfeld, I have a mentor, model, and dear friend. I am both humbled and deeply honored to lead such a distinguished and flourishing program. For the last three decades, the Borns JSP has benefited from Professor Rosenfeld’s vision. He has done a remarkable job building the program and cultivating the community that sustains it. What will happen now that he is stepping down as director? Professor Rosenfeld’s foresight ensures a smooth transition. Throughout the past year, he has been a generous and wise mentor and will continue to offer guidance. The program he has directed is marvelously positioned for the future, and we will continue to work together closely to realize its potential. The JSP is planning to celebrate Alvin Rosenfeld’s many contributions (we will be posting details on our website as our plans crystalize). But that will hardly mark the end of those contributions. I am especially excited about his role as the director of a new Institute for Jewish Cul Odpowiedz Link Zgłoś
wikul Re: Kto jest największym przyjacielem Izraela? 14.02.06, 02:15 A B P R A L L !!! Odpowiedz Link Zgłoś
drf Re: Kto jest największym przyjacielem Izraela? 14.02.06, 02:25 hehe )) a ja mam na imie Mohamed i jutro Archaniol Gabrys zesle mi dalszy ciag KoRONu)) Odpowiedz Link Zgłoś
jaceq Re: Kto jest największym przyjacielem Izraela? 15.02.06, 00:18 drf napisał: > jutro Archaniol Gabrys zesle mi dalszy ciag KoRONu) Z KuRoNiEm po KoLęDzIe? _____________________________ Piątek, świątek czy niedziela, Po VIP taxi - do Jurgiela! Odpowiedz Link Zgłoś