Monthly Archives: April 2016

ACE Opportunity for Graduating Students

I wanted to reach out to you and let you know that ACE is hiring tutors to serve for the 2016-17 school year. This is a great opportunity for students who don’t know what they want to do after graduation but would like to gain professional experience and stay in Austin!

If you know of any students who are looking to commit to a year of service as they apply for grad school, a career in non-profits, education, or want to practice their Spanish, please feel free to send them my contact information and this video to help them learn more. They receive an education award of $5,775 that can go towards grad school or student federal loans. 

Click here to read the tutor position description and click here to learn about our application process. To learn more about ACE and the life-changing experience they would have as a tutor, watch the ACE video or visit the ACE Blog to learn what tutors have to say about their experience.

PS. Several LAHers have participated in ACE and enjoyed the process.

“Witchcraft In Their Lips” Performance

“WITCHCRAFT IN THEIR LIPS”: A new play featuring the women of Shakespeare’s histories

The women of Shakespeare’s history plays tell their own stories in this new play, featuring an all-female cast that includes both UT undergraduates and Austin favorites. The words are all Shakespeare’s; the players are all women. Get to know Margaret, the cunning queen who dominates England; Joan of Arc, the legendary peasant warrior; Doll Tearsheet and Mistress Quickly, the lovable tavern wenches; and many more inspiring, indomitable, rule-defying women. This production is part of an honors thesis project to examine the unique roles that female characters play in the masculine-dominated worlds of the histories. 

SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 8 PM

SUNDAY, MAY 1, 2 PM

THURSDAY, MAY 5, 8 PM *talkback featuring cast & crew

FRIDAY, MAY 6, 8 PM

SATURDAY, MAY 7, 8 PM

THURSDAY, MAY 12, 8 PM *talkback featuring UT professors

FRIDAY, MAY 13, 8 PM

SATURDAY, MAY 14, 2 PM & 8 PM

>>Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/577014129122272/ 

>>Tickets available at untamedshx.brownpapertickets.com 

>>For more info visit untamedshx.wordpress.com 

CAST INCLUDES

Rachel Abbott

Jennifer Rose Davis

Kendall DeBoer

Kristen Hall

Leanna Holmquist

Ehigbor Idonor

Renae Jackson

Lucy Junker

Maria Latiolas

Georgia McLeland

Becky Musser

Kenzie Stewart

CO-DIRECTED by Stephanie Donowho & Nell McKeown

PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS Elizabeth Hamm, Kate McLaughlin, Lily Pipkin, Mandy Whited

WITH SUPPORT FROM Foot in the Door, The Broccoli Project

Teaching English Abroad PANEL presentation April 22

Teaching English Abroad: Panel Presentation

Friday, April 22, 4:30-5:30pm

MEZ 2.124

 

Learn about Teaching ESL/EFL from a panel of professionals in the field. 

Topics include: rewards and challenges of teaching English abroad, how to get a job, 

what to know before you go, and how to get a CELTA certificate at UT-Austin.

 

All Majors Welcome!

Apply Now for Peers for Pride/Queer on Campus!

Want to make a difference on campus, meet community, & build teaching skills?

Looking for classes on intersectional LGBTQA+ justice?

APPLY NOW to join Peers for Pride 16-17

& facilitate the Queer on Campus workshops!

No experience required!

  • Take two WGS/S W/T D/AFR/MAS classes in ’16-17 with Dr. Kristen Hogan
  • Learn about LGBTQA activism and oppression
  • Name how LGBTQA oppression is interconnected with racism, classism, ableism
  • Create & facilitate performance-based Queer on Campus workshops around UT
  • Make campus safer for & among LGBTQA folks
  • Have fun together!

Contact Dr. Kristen Hogan: hogank@austin.utexas.edu

Apply Now: tinyurl.com/PfPFall2016

Peers for Pride is a project of the Gender & Sexuality Center

Division of Diversity & Community Engagement

Peers for Pride is supported by the Center for Women’s & Gender Studies

 

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& come experience what this is all about!

Queer on Campus: LGBTQA+ Justice Workshops

By Peers for Pride, Gender & Sexuality Center

5/2, Monday, 4:30-5:30, SAC 2.120 & 5/4, Wednesday, 3:30-4:45, SAC 1.106

Join us for an engaging workshop by undergraduate peer educators performing and facilitating discussion of fictional and realistic scenes of experiences of queer students on campus. This workshop will build your capacity to witness, describe, and practice bystander intervention in intersectional oppression of queer people on campus in order to make our campus safer and more inclusive.

Kristen Hogan, PhD; pronouns: she, her, hers

Education Coordinator

Gender & Sexuality Center

The University of Texas at Austin

“The fact is that there is no other work but the work of creating and re-creating ourselves within the context of community.” – M. Jacqui Alexander, Pedagogies of Crossing (Duke 2006)

Clements Center Upcoming Events

On Thursday, April 7th, at 12:15pm in the Eastwoods Room at the Texas Union, the Clements Center for National Security will host Mary Beth Long, former Assistant Secretary of Defense, who will give a talk on the Middle East and Terrorist Financing, as part of the Women and National Security Speaker Series. Mary Beth Long is the first-ever Senate confirmed female Assistant Secretary of Defense and worked directly with Secretaries of Defense Rumsfeld and Gates on the Department’s highest priority issues. She represented the Secretary of Defense with his foreign counterparts, and at the National Security Council and the White House and was one of the Secretary’s key advisors. This event is co-hosted by the Strauss Center for International Security and Law and the Women in Foreign Affairs student organization.

 

On Monday, April 11th, at 12:15pm in the Bass Lecture Hall at the LBJ School, the Clements Center for National Security and the UT Alexander Hamilton Society are hosting Professor Colin Dueck of George Mason University and Dr. Josh Busby of UT for a lunchtime discussion on Obama’s Foreign Policy. Dr. Dueck will discuss his recently published book “The Obama Doctrine: American Grand Strategy Today.” Dr. Busby will challenge his assertions and look back at the President’s foreign policy successes and failures.

 

On Wednesday, April 13th, at 12:15pm in SRH 3.122 at the LBJ School, the Clements Center, Intelligence Studies Project, and the Strauss Center are pleased to welcome Dr. Gregory Treverton, Chairman of the National Intelligence Council and advisor to the Director of National Intelligence, to speak on “Thinking About Global Futures.” Dr. Treverton previously held several leadership positions at RAND, including director of the RAND Center for Global Risk and Security, director of the International Security and Defense Policy Center, and associate dean of the Pardee RAND Graduate School. His work at RAND has examined terrorism, intelligence and law enforcement, as well as new forms of public–private partnership.

 

On Tuesday, April 19th, at 12:15pm in the Eastwoods Room at the Texas Union, Clements Center for National Security will host Professor Daniel Sargent of the University of California, Berkeley for a talk titled “A Superpower Transforming: Power, Agency, and the Evolution of the Pax American.” This talk will assess key inflection points in the superpower career of the United States, especially the 1970s, and it will ask how American decision-makers have tried—and failed—to comprehend, corral, and command the forces that have transformed world politics since 1945.

 

On Thursday, April 20 at 5:15pm in Bass Lecture Hall at the LBJ School, the Clements Center for National Security and UT’s British Studies Program is pleased to welcome Dr. James Williams, Director of the National Churchill Museum, to give a talk on Winston Churchill’s Iron Curtain Speech.

 

And finally, on Monday, April 25th at 12:15pm in SRH 3.122 at the LBJ School, the Clements Center for National Security and the UT Alexander Hamilton Society are pleased to host Mr. Wess Mitchell, President of the Center for European Policy Analysis. Mr. Mitchell will be talking about his latest co-authored book titled “The Unquiet Front: Rising Rivals, Vulnerable Allies, and the Crisis of American Power.”

Clements Center Undergraduate Fellows Program

The Undergraduate Fellows Program provides teaching, mentorship, professional development, and research opportunities for UT-Austin’s youngest aspiring statesmen and scholars. Fellows will convene monthly throughout the academic year to participate in discussion groups, be mentored by the Clements Center’s affiliated scholars, meet with distinguished guests and visiting speakers, and exchange ideas on their course projects. Each year will also include at least one field tour of a nearby historic site related to diplomatic and military history. Preference will be given to undergraduates whose coursework and/or extracurricular activities bear directly on American foreign policy, military and diplomatic history, and international security. A competitive application process will yield each academic year’s class of 15-20 Fellows. The deadline for the 2016-2017 academic year applications is Monday, April 18.  Please go to our website for more information and to submit your application!

Summer Student Development Fund

The Summer Student Development Fund awards funds to undergraduate and graduate students who secure unpaid summer internships in the fields of national security and foreign policy. Applications for Summer 2016 are due Monday, April 25th. Awards will be granted to those students whose summer work best reflects the mission and goals of the Clements Center. Past recipients have interned with the US Department of State, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the McCain Institute for International Leadership, the Project on Middle East Democracy, and the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs. Please go to our website for more information. Because internships in foreign and defense policy can be an essential part of professional development and career opportunities in national security policy, the Clements Center wants to help UT students in identifying and pursuing internship opportunities. We have created an Internship Database containing information on a broad range of internships in foreign policy, human rights, international development, international economics, and intelligence/security. This is an excellent resource for students that can be found on our website.

Help in recruiting student volunteers

University Events is looking for volunteers, specifically first and second-year students, to help with an event on Saturday, April 16, 2016 from 12:30-4:00 PM.  Honors Day is an event where upperclassman at the top of their school are recognized at the Frank Erwin Center. Volunteers are needed to help with check-in, passing out programs and various other tasks.

If interested in helping, please sign-up here!

Shakespeare and Medicine

Shakespeare and Medicine

Guest lecturers: Craig Hurwitz and Margaret Wardlaw

Thursday, April 7th, 7 p.m.

Craig Hurwitz and Margaret Wardlaw are Austin pediatricians. 

Drs. Hurwitz and Wardlaw will visit the Joynes Reading Room with several special guests for a short lecture on Shakespeare and Pediatric Palliative Medicine. The lecture will be followed by a pediatric performance from Richard III featuring star performers from “Play’s the Thing,” and a panel discussion. Unknown