12 Tuesday, September 25, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Tonight, Tuesday, September 25 in Woodruff Auditorium at 8 pm "Her Huge Shadow" Energy, the Environment and America's Responsibilities to the Globe. Humanities Lecture Series presents University of Kansas Professor of History John G. Clark "It argues that the U.S. and the west in general, must redefine national security to include as a paramount objective the protection of the global environment To move toward this goal will require much greater international cooperation than the U.S. has willingly displayed in the past." —John G. Clark The Hall Center for the Humanities invites all to attend the debut lecture in the 1990-91 Humanities Lecture Series. Tonight, Tuesday, September 25 at 8:00 pm in Woodruff Auditorium. Admission is free, and open to the public. Other Lectures in the series include: Boris Notkin Professor of Rhetoric, University of Moscow, Anchorman Commentator—Good Evening Moscow Spencer Art Museum, October 10, 8:00 pm. "Good Evening From Moscow" Co-sponsored by SUA Patricia Graham Dean, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University. Spencer Art Museum, November 15, 8:00 pm. "Collaborating for Children in Schools: Historical Views" Arnold Rampersad Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Princeton University. Spencer Art Museum, February 21, 8:00 pm. "Four Black American Lives: DuBois, Hughes, Hurston, and Wright" Lawrence Levine Professor of History, University of California--Berkeley. Spencer Art Museum March 26, 8:00 pm. "The Meaning of America: Frank Capra and the Politics of Culture During the Great Depression"