Monthly Archives: December 2011

REU Summer 2012 Program: Immigration, Geography, and Race/Ethnicity in the United States

REU Summer 2012 Program
Immigration, Geography, and Race/Ethnicity in the United States
Population Research Center and Department of Sociology, UT-Austin

The Population Research Center at The University of Texas at Austin, in collaboration with the Department of Sociology, is hosting the Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) program in Immigration, Geography, and Race/Ethnicity in the U.S. for the summer of 2012. This eight-week summer program, which is funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation (but also with significant contributions from the UT Population Research Center, Department of Sociology, Graduate School and College of Liberal Arts), offers eight very selective upper-division undergraduate students from both UT-Austin and from around the country the opportunity to study social demography through course work and a mentored research experience with senior PRC graduate students. The program pays for tuition, room and board, and computer expenses. REU students also receive a $4,000 stipend for participation in the program, which allows the selected students to fully concentrate on their REU experience over the 2-month program. Students register for a 3-hour summer course in during the first half of the summer, then dedicate the second half of the summer to their own projects in collaboration with their graduate student mentor and under the overall guidance of the faculty co-directors, Nestor Rodriguez and Rebecca Torres. Student papers are then presented at the fall meeting of the Southern Demographic Association.  Former students from the REU program are now on the faculties of Johns Hopkins University, Rice University, Pennsylvania State University, University of Texas at Austin, University of Kansas, University of Denver, and more, and currently in social science graduate programs at the Universities of Wisconsin, Chicago, North Carolina, Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, California at Los Angeles, and California at Santa Cruz, as well as Stanford University, Texas A&M University, Pennsylvania State University, and more.  This program is specifically geared toward students with junior standing who are seriously thinking about attending graduate school in the social sciences and, particularly, in sociology, demography, or geography.

The 2012 summer REU Program application deadline is February 17, 2012.

See http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/prc/training-and-fellowships/undergraduate.php for details about the REU program and the program application, as well as information about other research and training programs of the UT Population Research Center

Summer Internship at Ogilvy in NYC

LAH alumni Kim Miller works for Ogilvy and passed along this internship announcement.  Please feel free to contact her with any questions about Ogilvy or New York.

It’s summer intern recruitment season! Please direct all interested current college juniors to bitly.com/ogilvycraftsmen for the OPR Summer Internship application (Job ID: 762BR) as well as the Ogilvy Internship and Associates Program applications. All candidates must complete the initial application online by January 13, 2012 in order to be considered.

Kimberly Miller
Assistant Account Executive
Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide
636 11th Avenue, New York, NY 10036
office: 212-880-5378
cell: 940-594-2606
kimberly.miller@ogilvy.com

Pinto Carver Essay Contest Deadline January 17

The Pinto Carver Essay Contest – 2012

Such tricks hath strong imagination,
That if it would but apprehend some joy,
It comprehends some bringer of that joy.
Or in the night, imagining some fear,
How easy is a bush supposed a bear!
William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act V, Scene 1
“Disorders of intellect,” answered Imlac, “happen much more often than superficial observers will easily believe.  Perhaps if we speak with rigorous exactness, no human mind is in its right state. There is no man whose imagination does not sometimes predominate over his reason who can regulate his attention wholly by his will, and whose ideas will come and go at his command.”
Samuel Johnson, Rasselas, Chapter 44, “The Dangerous Prevalence of the Imagination”
“As a rule, indeed, grown-up people are fairly correct on matters of fact; it is in the higher gift of imagination that they are so sadly to seek.”
Kenneth Grahame, The Finding of the Princess


“You cannot tell from appearances how things will go. Sometimes imagination makes things out far worse than they are; yet without imagination not much can be done. Those people who are imaginative see many more dangers than perhaps exist; certainly many more than will happen; but then they must also pray to be given that extra courage to carry this far-reaching imagination.”
Winston Churchill, talk at the Harrow School, October 9, 1941

The Topic: Write an essay in which you explore what role, if any, imagination should play in a college education.  Needless to say, the more well developed your thoughts, the more specific your language, the better.

Eligibility: Current Liberal Arts Honors Freshmen and Sophomores

Specifications: 750-1000 words, titled, double-spaced, and typed, with your name in the upper-right hand corner.  No cover page.

Awards:

1st Prize: $1500

2nd Prize: $500

3rd Prize: $250

Submission Deadline: Tuesday, January 17, 5:00 p.m. in the Liberal Arts Honors Office.  The judges reserve the right to withhold awards in the absence of prize worthy essays.

Important Dates for Spring

Dear LAHers,

Good luck with finals and have a safe, happy, and fun Winter Break. Make sure to mark down these important dates for the spring semester.

January 5 Thursday 5:00 pm: Tuition payment deadline for undergraduate students who registered for the spring semester by November 4. Tuition may be paid in full or in installments.

January 9 Monday Add/drop for the spring semester for students who have registered and paid their tuition.

January 10 Tuesday Registration for the spring semester for new and readmitted students who have not yet registered. To complete registration, undergraduate students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 13; graduate and law students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 20.

January 11 Wednesday Registration for the spring semester for continuing students who have not yet registered. To complete registration, undergraduate students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 13; graduate and law students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 20.

January 12-13 Thursday–Friday Add/drop for the spring semester for students who registered and paid their tuition before January 5.

Registration for the spring semester for new, readmitted, and continuing students who have not yet registered. To complete registration undergraduate students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 13; graduate students and law students must pay tuition by 5:00 pm on January 20.

January 13 Friday 5:00 pm: Tuition bills due for undergraduate students who have registered but not paid.

January 17 Tuesday Classes begin & LAH Back to Semester Luncheon for ALL LAHers!

Ransom Reading Books Are In!

Books for Ransom Reading Groups are in. Stop by the LAH office to pick up your book before Christmas break. If you have not yet signed up for an RRG, check out the list of books and professors here:
You may now sign up for more than one group, but remember that you must attend the discussion if you are signed up. They will take place at the beginning of next semester

Autry Fellowship at MDC for recent College Grads

The Autry Fellowship is a competitive fellowship for talented and ambitious recent college graduates interested in careers in community change and social equity. It provides an opportunity to work for one year at MDC as a full-time, paid staff member. The Autry Fellowship supports MDC’s mission—to help organizations and communities close the gaps that separate people from opportunity—by developing a cadre of young leaders who have experience promoting economic development, increasing equity and excellence in education, building inclusive civic cultures, and who are poised and ready to apply their new learning to benefit those left behind.

The ideal Autry Fellow is open-minded and compassionate, curious and reflective, and deeply committed to advancing social equity and opportunity. The Autry Fellow is afforded a unique opportunity for experiential learning within an organization that is more than 45 years old. The Fellow begins by working directly with staff on our existing projects, exploring a variety of approaches to creating opportunity, and goes deeper into those approaches that most interest him or her. One Fellow worked to create EITC Carolinas, a program to help low-income families connect with tax credits, others have facilitated conference sessions, written op-ed articles, designed an online equity resource center, and worked with the MDC team to guide the strategic direction of foundations, among many other projects.

Qualifications include:

·         the ability to communicate and work with people who have diverse backgrounds and experiences

·         the capacity to understand complex economic and social issues and communicate those issues clearly and persuasively

·         commitment to MDC’s mission

·         prior work, study, or service in a variety of relevant areas, including public policy, education, economic and workforce development, poverty alleviation, sociology, political science, Southern studies, community development, leadership development, or a similar field

·         demonstration of leadership potential in the areas of interest

·         United States residency

·         candidates must be in their final years of undergraduate studies or have graduated within two years from any accredited four-year college or university

MDC is a nonprofit organization headquartered in Durham, NC. Founded in 1967 to identify and help remove barriers to progress in the South, MDC has been publishing research and developing policies and programs focused on expanding opportunity, reducing poverty, and building inclusive civic cultures for more than 45 years.

The application deadline for the Autry Fellowship is Monday, January 16, 2012. For more information on this year’s application process, see http://mdcinc.org/about/apply.aspx, or contact Max Rose, 2011-2012 Autry Fellow, at mrose@mdcinc.org.

Echo Literary Magazine

This is just another reminder that the Echo Literary Magazine is accepting submissions of poetry, prose, and photography. Winter break is coming up and so we all have time to get our creative juices flowing, so submit and you will have a good chance of being published in this year’s magazine!

For more information check out http://www.utexas.edu/cola/progs/lahonors/student-organizations/echo.php or just submit to echolitmag@gmail.com!