Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University
Four arrests and seven assassination attempts ago, our ally brought forth a new crackdown …
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has suspended his country’s constitution, and, in effect, has declared martial law in one of the United States’ major regional partners. In addressing the country on national television, Musharraf compared himself to Abraham Lincoln suspending habeas corpus during the American Civil War. Dr. Karen Petersen, political science, says, “While we might scoff at the comparison between Musharraf and Lincoln (overall, probably rightly so), Musharraf’s hold on power is tenuous. Large segments of Pakistan are not under government control, and Pakistan’s neighbors are either in worse shape or unfriendly. Suspending ‘democracy’ in a country that was not democratic to begin with should not come as a surprise.”
Contact Petersen at 615-494-8662.
kpeterse@mtsu.edu
Don’t play in the traffic.
Americans for Informed Democracy and the American Democracy Project will sponsor a panel on the issue of human trafficking from 7-9 p.m. tomorrow, Nov. 7, in the State Farm Lecture Hall on the MTSU campus. The scheduled speakers are Colette Berku, founder of Free for Life Ministries; Amber Beckham, former MTSU student and a Network of Emergency Trafficking Services (NETS) coordinator for World Relief; and Theresa Flores, a survivor of human trafficking. According to the International Labor Organization, a United Nations agency, the number of people in bonded labor, forced labor, child labor and sexual servitude at any given time could total as many as 12.3 million people. This event is free and open to the public.
Contact Catharine Broemel at 615-336-1058.
crb3f@mtsu.edu
Food for thought
Gee whiz! What is Cheez Whiz? Why do we crave chocolate? Did you know JELL-O is “America’s favorite dessert?” Julia Child used margarine! Do you prefer sugar or artificial sweetener? What can you find in peanut butter? Why are Just Born Peeps naked? And are red hot chili peppers really red hot? The answers to these and many more questions will be presented in “You Are What You Eat. Are You?,” a Career Professional Development Brown Bag Series luncheon at 12 noon today, Nov. 6, in the SunTrust Room of the Business and Aerospace Building. The speaker will be Dr. Judith Iriarte-Gross, professor of chemistry. This event is a free presentation of the June Anderson Women’s Center at MTSU.
Contact the Women’s Center at 615-898-2193.
jawc@mtsu.edu
TR EXTRA
HERE COMES THE GUV--The Paul W. Martin Sr. Lectureship will welcome Governor Phil Bredesen to MTSU on Wednesday, Nov. 7. The governor’s address, “Exploring Issues in Education,” will commence at 2 p.m. on the State Farm Lecture Hall of the Business and Aerospace Building, and it will be open to the campus community and the general public. Bredesen’s education record includes the creation of the Governor’s Books from Birth Foundation, which provides free books every month to children up to 5 years of age and now encompasses all 95 counties in the state. In his fourth year in office, education funding rose to $366.5 million. Bredesen’s speech is sponsored by the University Honors College in collaboration with the colleges of Liberal Arts, Education and Behavioral Science, Business, Basic and Applied Sciences and Mass Communication. For more information, contact Tom Tozer in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or ttozer@mtsu.edu.
BONJOUR!--Any student whose summer was no more exciting than spending endless hours lying by the pool frying to a crisp can prepare now for an unforgettable summer 2008. There’s no time like the present to register for the annual general education study abroad program in Cherbourg, France, which will run from June 2 to June 27. At this beautiful port town in the Normandy region of northwest France, students will experience the history, art and culture of the area. “With the general education program, a student can spend four weeks in Cherbourg and in Normandy, and they can begin studying French while they’re there if they choose to, but they don’t have to already know any French,” Dr. Anne Sloan, Assistant to the Provost for International Education, says. Contact Sloan at 615-898-5091 or asloan@mtsu.edu or Jennifer Campbell, Director of International Education and Exchange, at 615-898-5179 or jjcampbe@mtsu.edu.
WHEREFORE ART THOU?--MTSU Theatre and Dance will present one of the most famous and beloved of Shakespeare plays, Romeo and Juliet, at 7:30 p.m. and Nov. 7-10 (Thursday through Saturday)on the stage of Tucker Theatre in the Boutwell Dramatic Arts Building. “This is a true classic that students read in high school and people come to the play knowing,” says Dale McGilliard, the show’s director. “They all come with a different expectation, which adds to the wonderful challenge to producing it.” MTSU alumnus Lane Davies—who has appeared in a wide variety of television series including Married with Children, Scrubs and Seinfeld—will guest star in the role of Capulet. Tickets must be purchased at the door on the evening of the performance. Tickets are $10 for general admission and $5 for MTSU staff and K-12 students. For more information, please visit the speech and theatre department Web site at http://www.mtsu.edu/~theatre.
HOME WILL HAVE TO WAIT--MTSU students are sponsoring a Habitat for Humanity home. “The Habitat Blitz Build is moving along very nicely and the home is nearly halfway complete,” says Jacqueline Victory, Director of MTSU’s Office of Leadership and Service. “However, some much needed rain stalled some of our efforts and has pushed our dedication back to (Thursday) Nov. 8.” The dedication originally was slated for Nov. 1, at 6 p.m. Volunteers are still needed. The construction site is located at 446 State St. in Murfreesboro, where teams working in two shifts will labor to build a Habitat home for the Bautista family. The five-member Bautista clan has lived with family, in a basement and in public housing over the years, but never truly had a place to call home. Victory says the MTSU Student Government Association has spent two years working to raise the $50,000 needed to build the Habitat home for the Bautistas. Contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or lrollins@mtsu.edu.
THE SONG DOES NOT REMAIN THE SAME--The Center for Popular Music is celebrating Tennessee Archives Week (Nov. 4-7) and American Music Month with a display in the periodicals section on the first floor of the James E. Walker Library. The Center for Popular Music is an archive and research library with holdings that document 250 years of music in American culture and commerce. Located in the John Bragg Mass Communication Building, research hours are from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Special collection and archival materials may be searched at http://popmusic.mtsu.edu. Contact Lucinda P. Cockrell, Coordinator of Research Collections, Center for Popular Music, at 615-898-5884 or lcockrel@mtsu.edu.
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