Monthly Archives: September 2011

Dinner for Theater Majors and Minors (Actual or Potential)

Theater Department Dinner & Meeting for All Majors and Minors (Actual or Potential)
Sunday, Oct. 2, 7 – 8:30 pm, Frear Ensemble Theater

Professors Allen Kuharski, Elizabeth Stevens, Laila Swanson, and Matt Saunders will be attending, along with members of the Department staff.

The meeting will be a chance for all majors and minors in Theater to meet each other, meet the regular faculty, hear the Department’s plans for the year, ask any questions about advising, honors, study abroad, summer funding, student employment, internships, etc.

Pizza, salad, drinks, and dessert will be provided.

RSVP to Allen Kuharski (akuhars1@swarthmore.edu) appreciated, but not required.

Peace One Day film screening marked the International Day of Peace

To mark the International Day of Peace on September 21, Swarthmore students and faculty gathered in the Science Center to view the film, Peace One Day, that documents the journey of Jeremy Gilley as he lobbied world leaders and organized grassroots supporters to formalize an international day of peace under the auspices of the United Nations.

An introduction and a presentation by Gilley are available below.

Peace and Conflict Studies Professor Jennifer Magee and students appeared in the “This Week in Pictures” coverage of the event in The Phoenix.

The Phoenix covers peace and conflict studies

The Phoenix

The Phoenix, the student newspaper at Swarthmore College, has covered several stories related to Peace and Conflict Studies recently:

Lakey database released ten years after 9/11

On the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, as a decade of violence from New York City to Afghanistan came to a close, a group of Peace and Conflict studies students and teachers offered a new solution to the conflict: nonviolent action. read more…

Remembering the legacy of Alice Paul, women’s rights

Imagine a woman in her mid-thirties standing before a gold, white and purple banner, sewing a 36th star onto the double row of stars which runs down the middle. This woman was Swarthmore graduate Alice Paul ‘01, 91 years ago, preparing to celebrate the passing of the 19th Amendment, and that star represented the state of Tennessee — the final state necessary for the passing of the amendment. Paul was a leading activist in the fight for women’s suffrage and one of the critical players in the push for the 19th Amendment, which allowed women the right to vote. read more…

Peace One Day film screening to mark the International Day of Peace

Peace and Conflict Studies Professor Jennifer Magee and students appeared in the “This Week in Pictures” section of the paper.

Prof. Jennifer Magee

AUDITIONS for Directing Workshop Projects!

Sunday, Sept. 25, 7-9 pm

Frear Ensemble Theater (Room 1 LPAC)

—auditions are open to all students (no prior acting experience necessary)

—sign up for a time on the bulletin board next to the Theater Department Office (13 LPAC, Lower Lobby Level)

—come prepared with a monologue of up to three minutes (memorized or not) or to do a cold reading of a monologue we provide that day

—projects will be directed by Sebastian Bravo ’13, Jeanie Noto ’13, & Meryl Sands ‘13

—if you are cast, the rehearsal commitment is for six hours/week + in-class presentations on Friday afternoons

—some projects will only rehearse through Oct. 28 (total of three weeks of rehearsal)

—some projects will rehearse through the end of the semester and be part of the Department’s Fall Night of Scenes, presented on Dec. 7 & 8 (reading week)

—Projects in the final Night of Scenes will be 15-20 minutes in length.

—those cast that have already taken Acting I or are currently enrolled in Acting I are eligible for academic credit if the project becomes part of the Night of Scenes.  Contact Prof. Allen Kuharski for details (akuhars1@swarthmore.edu)

—this is a great way to get involved with the Department of Theater with a small project.  Check it out!

 

Emma Cape of Courage to Resist to talk about Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks

Monday, September 19, 2011

4:30 p.m.

Room: Science Center 199

Swarthmore College (maps and directions)

The WikiLeaks have raised valuable questions about foreign relations, human rights, security, and how each of these things operate in an increasingly digitized and interconnected world. Private First Class Bradley Manning, a 23-year old Army intelligence analyst, has been charged with leaking a number of these files, including the infamous “Collateral Murder” video, along with the Afghan War Diary, the Iraq War Logs, and numerous U.S. diplomatic cables. Since May 2010, Manning has been held in solitary confinement awaiting trial for charges ranging from fraud to aiding the enemy.  His imprisonment has lead many to ask: Is unveiling the human cost of war and the inner-workings of the governments that wage them a crime or simply the right of an open and democratic society?

Courage to Resist staff member and Bradley Manning Support Network organizer Emma Cape will be presenting Courage to Resist’s new book on recent war resisters, About Face, which features the case of Bradley Manning. The discussion will focus on the contents of the leaked documents—mentioned in over a third of all New York Times editions of the past year—and the WikiLeaker’s motivations in publicizing the documents as well as attempted UN investigations into Manning’s alleged torture in Quantico, Virginia as well as ongoing international efforts to support him.

Cosponsored by Students for a Democratic Society, Peace and Conflict Studies program, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Department of Political Science

Swatties arrive in Northern Ireland

Hannah Kurtz ’13 (a special major in Peace and Conflict Studies) and Josh Satre ’13 arrived in Northern Ireland today to begin their semester of study at the Irish School for Ecumenics (Trinity College Dublin at Belfast) and other community-based coursework. They met with Laura Couser at the Bytes Project.

They are pictured here in the Bytes HQ with Northern Ireland Semester adviser, Adree Wallace, and Laura Couser of the Bytes Project.

(Photo credit: Denise Crossan, Northern Ireland Semester adviser)

Hannah Kurtz '13 and Josh Satre '13 at Bytes Project