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Clark Center for International Education| Newsletter Clark Center for International Education| Newsletter Spring 2016, April 5 – April 20 In this issue: “Russia and its Role in Contemporary Eastern Europe”, Wednesday, April 6, at 4:30 PM Brockway Hall, Jacobus Lounge “East, West, and In-Between: Universities in the Arab World”, Thursday, April 7, at 12:00 PM, Old Main Colloquium “European Union Day Keynote Speaker: The EU and Belarus: From Confrontation to Dialogue”, Tuesday, April 12, at 4:30 PM, Sperry Room 104 “Brazil's Rio Olympics: Sport Management, Socio-Economics, and Refugees”, Wednesday, April 13, at 12 PM, Corey Union Fireplace Lounge “Discoveries from Rapa Nui (Easter Island): New Species and Novel Ideas”, Thursday, April 7, at 7:00 PM, Sperry Room 105 “A Conversation with Ethan Young”, Wednesday, April 6, at 4:30 PM. Sperry Room 205 “India's Barefoot College: Women and Community Solar Energy Development”, Tuesday, April 19, at 4:30pm, Biotechnology Building, G-10 Central Campus, Cornell University Scholarships: Study Abroad in Transylvania at Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj- Napoca, Romania Foreign Films in SUNY Cortland’s Library: “Daresalam” Follow the Clark Center on Facebook Contact Information International Events at SUNY Cortland “Russia and its Role in Contemporary Eastern Europe” Lecture by: Talk by Dr. John Ryder, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Student Success/ Provost & Professor of Philosophy, American University of Ras Al Khaimah, UAE Sponsored by: the Project on Eastern and Central Europe (PECE) and the Clark Center for International Education. With additional support from ASC and the Faculty Development Committee Small Grants Program Dr. Ryder is a former professor and alumnus from Cortland who has Chaired the Philosophy Department and served as Dean of Arts and Sciences. His talk, ‘Russia and its Role in Contemporary Eastern Europe’ deals with the changing role of the nation in a post-soviet Europe. He has previously written a book on American thought from a Russo- Soviet lens. Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2016 at 4:30 PM Location: Brockway Hall, Jacobus Lounge “East, West, and In-Between: Universities in the Arab World” Lecture by: Talk by Dr. John Ryder, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Student Success/ Provost & Professor of Philosophy, American University of Ras Al Khaimah, UAE Sponsored by: the Project on Eastern and Central Europe (PECE), the Asia-Middle Eastern Studies Committee (AMES), and the Clark Center for International Education. With additional support from ASC and the Faculty Development Committee Small Grants Program Dr. Ryder is a former professor and alumnus from Cortland who has Chaired the Philosophy Department and served as Dean of Arts and Sciences. His talk ‘ East, West, and In-Between: Universities in the Arab World’ discusses the Arab universities through his unique lense as Date: Thursday, April 7, an American professor working as Vice 2016 at 12:00 PM President of the American University of Ras Al Khaimah, UAE. Location: Old Main, Colloquium “ The EU and Belarus: From Confrontation to Dialogue” Lecture by: Dr. Larissa G. Titarenko, Belarusian State University Sponsored by: the Project on Eastern and Central Europe (PECE), and the Clark Center for International Education. Dr. Titarenko is a visiting Fulbright Professor from the Belarusian State University. Her talk delves into the complex relationship between the Republic of Belarus and the European Union. Specifically the talk deals with the complexities of Belarus’ status as a buffer state between the European Union and Russia, as well as the political issues inherent in EU-Belarus cooperation. Date: Tuesday, April 12, 2016 at 4:30 PM Location: Sperry, Room 104 “Brazil's Rio Olympics: Sport Management, Socio- Economics, and Refugees” Panel by: Dr. Flavia Dantas of the Economics Department, Dr. Genevieve Birren of the Sport Management Department, and Dr. Justin Lovich of the Sport Management Department. The Panel is moderated by Dr. Alexandru Balas, Director the Clark Center for International Education, and Coordinator of the International Studies Program Sponsored by: Date: Wednesday, April The Olympic Games will be organized for 13, 2016 at 12 PM the first time in South America, and for the second time in Latin America. This Location: Corey Union, panel will tackle issues related to sport Room 219 governance, organizing mega-events, Fireplace Lounge socio-economic impacts of such mega- events on the local communities, and also with the first Olympic Games in modern history where refugees can participate as independent athletes. "Cortland’s Red Scare: Immigration, Radicalism, and Civil Liberties in the Post World War I Period" Lecture by: Dr. Randi Storch, Chair of the History Department Sponsored by: Cultural and Intellectual Climate Committee Americans barely paused to celebrate the end of the Great War when the nation jumped right back into conflict. This time the battlefield was in industrial workplaces and urban neighborhoods throughout the country. Discontented with the high rates of inflation, low wages and diminishing government protections, unprecedented numbers of workers walked off their job throughout Date: Tuesday, April 5, 1919. Culminating in a coordinated 2016 at 4:30 sequence of eight bombs exploding simultaneously in various cities at the Location: Sperry, Room end of 1919, labor’s post-war uprising 104 came to a quick, crushing defeat in the form of a sweeping national red scare, resulting in hundreds of arrests, and deportations and crushing a fragile and newly established labor movement. Cortland’s Red Scare: Immigration, Radicalism and Civil Liberties in the Post World War I period will tell the story of the city’s newly arrived Ukrainian immigrants and how they got implicated in statewide crackdown against radicalism. “Discoveries from Rapa Nui (Easter Island): New Species and Novel Ideas” Lecture by: Dr. Jut Wynne, Assistant Research Professor at Northern Arizona University and Research Scientist with the SETI Institute, Carl Sagan Center. Sponsored by: the New York State Master Teacher Program, The Center of Innovation for Education at SUNY Cortland, and the Science Teachers Association on New York State. Dr. Wynne's talk will tell the story of how, approximately 800 years ago, Rapa Nui (Easter Island) underwent a massive ecological shift, transforming from lush, palm-dominated woodland to grassland. This shift, timed with the arrival of the ancient Polynesians, resulted in island- wide extinctions of most native plant and animal species. However, starting in 2008, several native invertebrates – all Date: Thursday, April 7, new to science and restricted to Rapa 2016 at 7:00 PM Nui caves – have been discovered. Join us as Dr. Wynne discusses how these Location: Sperry, Room animals were able to survive 105 underground and the efforts underway to protect some of the most imperiled cave animals on the planet. “A conversation with Ethan Young” Lecture by: Ethan Young, author of Nanjing: The Burning City Sponsored by: The President’s Office, the Haines Fund, and the English Department Join illustrator and graphic novelist Ethan Young for a discussion of his graphic novel Nanjing: The Burning City. The novel deals with the tragic World War II invasion of Nanjing by Japan, and deals with themes of war, loss, and defiance. The Burning City was an Honorable Mention in Publisher Weekly’s “Best Graphic Novels” of 2015. Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2016 at 4:30 PM Location: Sperry, Room 205 International Activities in the SUNY Cortland Area “India's Barefoot College: Women and Community Solar Energy Development” Lecture by: Sanjit Roy, Meagan Fallone Sponsored by: Syracuse University South Asia Center, Atkinson Center; AWARE (Advancing Women in Agriculture through Research and Education); International Programs/CALS; South Asia Program TFI Funds; and the Tata-Cornell Initiative. This South Asia Program (SAP) event is a public lecture by Sanjit “Bunker” Roy, Founder of internationally acclaimed Barefoot College of India and CEO of Barefoot College International, Meagan Fallone. The only college built by and for the rural poor with a focus on decentralising and demystifying technology, placing it in the hands of those most in need. Its "Barefoot Approach” to empowering communities towards self-sufficiency is grounded on Date: Tuesday, April 19, the lifestyle and work style of Mahatma 2016 at 4:30pm Gandhi. They will speak about the “barefoot solutions” that have Location: Biotechnology transformed rural people—especially Building, G-10 Central women—into powerful agents of change Campus, Cornell in their communities. From solar energy, University water, education, and health care to rural handicrafts, the “solutions” are unique and exemplified by the award- winning architecture of the College itself—designed and built by villagers for villagers. (Cornell University) Fellowship, Grant & Scholarship Announcements Study Abroad in Transylvania at Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania Fall 2016 Semester 1 Scholarship: Round-Trip Flight + Monthly Stipend Paid by the European Union’s Erasmus+ Key Action 1 Program Deadline: April 15, 2016 Babes-Bolyai University is the largest university in Romania. Courses offered in English. You can also take courses in any of these other languages: Romanian, Hungarian, German, and French. Who is eligible? Undergraduate Students in the following disciplines: International Studies Political Science Finances and Banking / Management /Business Administration Journalism / Communication Public Health Modern Languages
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