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Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Fairfield University's Women's History events continue into April

Image: Fairfield UniversityFairfield University continues its celebration of Women's History Month into April with six events. They are sponsored by the University's Program in Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies (WGS).

Take Back the Night, April 3, 6:30 p.m., Barone Campus Center(BCC) - Take Back the Night is a candlelight vigil in memory and protest against the violence women have experienced physically and sexually, especially at night. Students will meet at the campus center information desk for stories and performances, ending in a group discussion about prevention on campus and in the greater community.Women's Day, April 4, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., BCC lower level - Come discover and celebrate women through presentations from campus clubs, arts and crafts, baked goods, a Bead-for-Life jewelry sale and performances throughout the day."In the Works" Faculty Talk, April 4, 6 p.m., BCC 206 - WGS faculty will share their current research on women, gender and sexuality.Film screening: A Question of Habit, April 8, 7:30 p.m., DiMenna-Nyselius Library multimedia room - Filmmaker Bren Ortega Murphy, Ph.D., screens her award-winning documentary about the depiction of Catholic nuns in U.S. popular culture.

Fairfield hosted more Women's History events in March, including an alumnae panel discussion on transitioning from college to career. For more information on these events, visit www.fairfield.edu/wgs.

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Media Contact: Meredith Guinness, (203) 254-4000, ext. 2950, mguinness@fairfield.edu

Posted on March 21, 2013

Vol. 45, No. 231


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Monday, March 4, 2013

Flagler College History Honor Society to Hold Talk About Sept. 11

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September 9, 2011

The Phil Alpha Theta History Honor Society at Flagler College will host a faculty forum on the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on Monday, Sept. 12, at 7 p.m. in the Flagler Room.

The forum is entitled, "Sept. 11: Did it really change everything?" It will be chaired by Dr. Brenda Kauffman, and panelists will include Dr. Jim Pickett, Dr. Jim Rowell, Dr. Art Vanden Houten, Dr. Hugh Marlowe and Dr. Felix Livingston.

The discussion is free and open to the public.


View the original article here

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Women’s History Month in March

Fitchburg State University will observe Women’s History Month in March with a celebration of the special contributions that Italian and Italian-American women have made to American cultural life.

The program begins Monday, March 4, with “Cooking with Nonna” from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at the Falcon Hub in Hammond Hall. Come enjoy fabulous Italian cooking with some very special Italian nonne (grandmothers). We will be celebrating Women’s History by sharing some Italian cooking secrets and having many different dishes to try. Everyone who attends must bring a favorite homemade Italian dish! Prizes will be awarded for the best offerings. Buon appetito! Sponsored by a grant from the Gallucci-Cirio Foundation.

On Wednesday, March 6, and Thursday, March 7, the Communications Media Department’s theater program presents “Talking with …” by Jane Martin and directed by Kelly Morgan from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Percival Auditorium. These extraordinary monologues include idiosyncratic characters that amuse, move and frighten, and always speaking from the depths of their souls. They include a baton twirler, a fundamentalist snake handler, an ex-rodeo rider and an actress willing to go to any length to get a job.

On Monday, March 18, from 3:30 to 5 p.m. there will be a panel discussion on “The Women of Italy” at Ellis White Lecture Hall in Hammond Hall. This interdisciplinary discussion about the diverse contributions of Italian women to modern culture will feature professors Rala Diakite , Joe Moser, Teresa Thomas, and Susan Williams.

On Wednesday, March 20, from 3:30 to p.m. there will be a Women’s History Month Tea at Presidents’ Hall in the Mazzaferro Center. Celebrate Women’s History Month with tea and dainties. Professor Susan Wadsworth will speak about “Italian Women Futurist Artists: Pioneering Modernism.” Known for bucking tradition, these women were often aviators of merit, and abstracted aerial landscapes were some of their favorite subjects.  Blending the flat planes of Cubism with color, movement, and sensuality, these artists may have foreseen some of the ideas that later led toward animation, as well as forms that reflected their own courageous pioneering of modernism.  Come hear stories of their exploits – in the air, in the bedroom, and on canvas. The tea is sponsored by WITS and the university’s Economics, History and Political Science Department.

The celebration concludes Tuesday, March 26, with a screening of the film “Letters to Juliet” at 7 p.m. in Ellis White Lecture Hall in Hammond Hall. This romantic movie is set in Verona, Italy, the place where Romeo and Juliet first met.  Sophie is part of a group that responds to letters written to Juliet for love advice. By helping one special correspondent find the love of her life, Sophie will find herself in a sequence of love events as well. The screening is sponsored by the Student Government Association and the Office of International Education.

The planning committee for Women’s History Month at Fitchburg State University includes students Jade Bryant, Dayna Larson, Kassandra Laskarides,  Lindsay McLaughlin, Chris Robinson, Jessica Roy and Nathan Timm, under the supervision of faculty adviser Dr. Susan Williams.

For more information, contact Williams at 978-665-3085 or by email at swilliams@fitchburgstate.edu.

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Sunday, February 3, 2013

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Flagler College History Honor Society to Hold Talk About Sept. 11

Email to a Friend

September 9, 2011

The Phil Alpha Theta History Honor Society at Flagler College will host a faculty forum on the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on Monday, Sept. 12, at 7 p.m. in the Flagler Room.

The forum is entitled, "Sept. 11: Did it really change everything?" It will be chaired by Dr. Brenda Kauffman, and panelists will include Dr. Jim Pickett, Dr. Jim Rowell, Dr. Art Vanden Houten, Dr. Hugh Marlowe and Dr. Felix Livingston.

The discussion is free and open to the public.


View the original article here

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Monday, January 28, 2013

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Sunday, January 27, 2013

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

ENC Welcomes Dr. Ben Cater, Assistant Professor of History

Published: 2013-01-22 Ben Cater

ENC Provost Dr. Timothy Wooster is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ben Cater as Assistant Professor of History and director of the Boston Semester program.

Dr. Cater, a native of Southern California, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University, where he studied American history and literature. He received the A.B. Hammond Fellowship for Western American Studies to study at the University of Montana, Missoula, where he wrote a master's thesis that examined Episcopal Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle in post-Civil War Salt Lake City. Cater's research led him to pursue a Ph.D. in American history, as well as a doctoral minor in Latin American Studies, at the University of Utah. His dissertation explored the socioeconomic and religious dimensions of public health and medicine in Progressive Era Salt Lake City. During his research, he published several book reviews and articles in journals like the Utah Historical Quarterly, which awarded him the 2011 Nick Yengich Memorial Editor’s Choice Award for Best Article. In 2010, he received the university's coveted Floyd O'Neill Scholarship in Western American Studies, while from 2007 to 2009 the Simmons Media Fellowship and a host of grants from the Department of History and First Presbyterian Church, Salt Lake City, allowed him to continue his studies. At ENC, Dr. Cater will teach survey courses in American history and government, advanced seminars on a variety of topics, and courses on the history of colonial and modern Latin America.

Dr. Cater will live in Quincy with his wife, Anne, and daughters Vera (age 5) and Eden (age 2).

Related at ENC: Department of History


View the original article here

Monday, October 22, 2012

Luther Bean Museum display includes snapshots of university history

Over a month ago, Adams State University celebrated with campus and community the transition from college to university. The university’s rich and diverse history includes five name changes, the local community banding together to raise money to open the school, and thousands of graduates who continue to enrich their futures with degrees from Adams State.

The Luther Bean Museum assembled a display reflecting the history of Adams State for the Great Stories Celebration. This display continues through October. Enhanced by loans from Nielsen Library Archives and other departments on campus, the museum presents photographs of student activities through the decades and the growth of Richardson Hall. Rarely seen examples of the original plans for the building and museum are included.

A friendship quilt, by Ruth (Curtis) Gilbert ’35, with signatures by Ira Richardson, Beryl McAdow, and Luther Bean; a photo collage of the first graduating class and faculty; and objects representing past commencement programs are highlights in the Adams State history display.

The Luther Bean Museum encourages school groups and the local community to visit the museum. Along with the temporary display, the museum’s permanent collections represent largely regional and local arts and historical objects. On view are: Native American pottery including pots by Maria "Marie" and Julian Martinez and from the Acoma and Santo Domingo Pueblos; Rio Grande weavings, including a work by Eppie Archuleta; paintings and works on paper by Stephen Quiller, Woody Crumbo and William Moyers; bronzes by William Moyers (1939 ASU Alumnus); and a bronze by Allan Houser.

The museum recently added a display on Major Lafayette Head, Colorado’s first lieutenant governor, U.S. Indian agent, and early settler of Conejos County.

A display of items featuring former Colorado Governor and Adams State University's founder William H. "Billy" Adams is also on view.

The museum is open to the public 2 p.m. until 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Please call 719-587-7151 for information.

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