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Urban planning leaders to lead panel after screening of documentary ”Envisioning Home” April 12
On Friday, April 12, there will be a free film screening of and panel discussion on Envisioning Home: Building Hope, One Home at a Time. Mark Joseph, associate professor at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences and director of the National Initiative on Mixed-Income Communities at Case…
”Globe and Mail” journalist to lead discussion on whether immigrants really threaten the West
Students, faculty and staff are invited to attend "The Myth of the Rising Tide: Do Immigrants Threaten the West?” This event, coordinated by the Northeast Ohio Consortium for Middle East Studies, will be a lunchtime discussion with Doug Saunders, Toronto Globe and Mail journalist and author of…
Speak out against sexual assault at Take Back the Night April 16
The third annual Take Back the Night event will begin at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, on the Kelvin Smith Library Oval. Hosted by the student organization Sexual Assault & Violence Educators and the Flora Stone Mather Center for Women, Take Back The Night will offer all members of the campus…
Ethics Table attendees to examine ”Zero Dark Thirty," ethics of torture in film
On Wednesday, April 10, attendees at the Ethics Table brown bag lunch series will discuss “Zero Dark Thirty and the Ethics of Torture in Film.” At the luncheon, the ethical basis of patriotism, “torture lite” and torture in film will be examined—among many other topics. The Ethics Table…
Take part in Relay For Life’s virtual survivor, luminaria programs
Relay For Life invites the campus community to commemorate loved ones who have battled cancer through the virtual survivor and luminaria initiatives. A virtual survivor is a person who has been diagnosed with cancer, but cannot physically attend Relay For Life due to distance, time, illness,…
Schedule of events set for Writing Week, April 12-19
The ӰƵ English department and the Center for the Study of Writing  will celebrate “Writing Week” with a broad spectrum of writing, from academic to poetry, fiction, journalism, media writing and scientific communication. From April 12 to 19, CWRU will welcome speakers…
Tin Pan Alley’s greatest hits highlight CWRU’s Popular Music symposium
From Broadway to New York City’s beer gardens, popular songs written between the 1880s and 1930s ignited the American popular music industry. In the two-day symposium, “Sing Me That Song Again: The History and Impact of Tin Pan Alley,” ӰƵ’s Center for Popular Music…
Music department, Church of the Covenant to present ”Enlightenment” April 12
Set in the recently renovated sanctuary of the Church of the Covenant, music groups from the church and ӰƵ Department of Music will present “Enlightenment,” a program of works by composers George Frideric Handel and Joseph Haydn. The performances are Friday, April 12,…
Vanderbilt professor to give talk April 15 on AT&T’s ”Cold War modernism”
On April 15, Mark Wollaeger, professor of English at Vanderbilt University, will give the 2013 Edward S. and Melinda Melton Sadar Lecture in Writing in the Disciplines. His talk, titled “AT&T’s Cold War Modernism: Narrating the Liberal Arts in Times of Crisis,” will be given at 4:30 p.m. in the…
Learn about STRIDES weight loss program at informational discussion
The Prevention Research Center for Healthy Neighborhoods (PRCHN) will hold a discussion on the Steps to Reach Individual Diet and Exercise Solutions (STRIDES) program, led by Eileen Seeholzer, assistant professor at the ӰƵ School of Medicine. The STRIDES program is a…