Activist and scholar to lecture on current Romani issues

Hungarian Romani activist Angela Kocze, currently a visiting Fulbright Scholar at Wake Forest University, will be at the University of Oregon on Friday, May 24, to present “Romani (Gypsy) Women and Activism: Challenges and Opportunities,” at 4 p.m., in 204 Condon Hall.

Kocze is a research fellow at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and an affiliated research fellow at the Central European University.

Growing up in a small Hungarian village near the border of Hungary and Ukraine, Kocze experienced first-hand the discrimination faced by Romani families.

False alarm for fire at Lillis Business Complex

A report of a fire at the Lillis Business Complex Tuesday afternoon, May 21, drew firefighters and police officers but was determined to be inaccurate, the University of Oregon said.

University police officers and the Eugene Fire Department responded but there was no indication of a fire, university spokesperson Phil Weiler said.

The complex includes Lillis Hall, which opened in 2003, and Peterson Hall, Anstett Hall and the Chiles Center. The complex is one of the ‘greenest’ business school facilities in the United States.

In Print: Deep Rhetoric

Long convinced that the subjects of rhetoric and philosophy need not be mortal enemies, James Crosswhite, an associate professor of English at the UO, set out to create peace between the two disciplines and move them forward.

In “Deep Rhetoric” (2013, The University of Chicago Press), Crosswhite writes that although their opposition is historical, one need not take sides.

UO students receive Boren Scholarships to study abroad

Two University of Oregon students have landed a prestigious scholarship to study areas critical to national security from abroad.

Alexander Payne and Benjamen DoVale have been selected as recipients of the prestigious David L. Boren Scholarship as part of the National Security Education Program. The scholarship will provide support for their participation in study abroad programs during the 2013-14 academic year.

Payne, a double major in economics and international studies, will study Arabic language, diplomacy and policy at the University of Jordan in Amman.