Daily Archives: March 21, 2016

Summer 2016 Study Abroad Scholarship Opportunity

The Senate of College Councils has a $1,000 study abroad scholarship to give out for the Summer 2016 semester.

The Summer 2016 Study Abroad Scholarship offers a merit-based $1,000 scholarship to a qualifying student to pursue his or her education around the world through programs offered through UT’s Study Abroad Office.
Eligibility: Open to all UT Austin students, including international students, studying abroad in Summer 2016. Maymester study abroad students are NOT eligible. Applicants may apply for the Academic Enrichment Study Abroad Scholarship as many times as they wish, but once an individual has been awarded the scholarship, he/she may not be awarded the scholarship a second time.
Deadline: Friday, April 1st at 11:59pm. Completed application and one page resume sent to:
senateae@gmail.com

Upcoming Joynes lecture, with free books for honors students

Dirty Secrets: The environmental impact of factory farming”

Thursday, March 31st, 7 p.m.

Joynes Reading Room (CRD 007)

(512) 471-5787

Will Potter is an award-winning investigative journalist and author based in Washington, D.C. He specializes in dissident politics and culture, the policing of dissent, and civil liberties post-9/11. His work has appeared in the world’s top media outlets, including the Washington Post, CNN, National Geographic, WIRED, NPR, the History Channel, and Rolling Stone. His award-winnning book, Green Is The New Red: An Insider’s Account of a Social Movement Under Siegeexposes how non-violent animal rights and environmental protesters came to be classified by the FBI as “eco-terrorists.” This year he was selected as a TED Senior Fellow, and he recently was appointed the Marsh Visiting Professor in Journalism at the University of Michigan. The Joynes Reading Room has a limited number of free books by Will Potter which we will give away to interested honors students who inquire in person at the front desk, CRD 007. 

Local Field School in Historical Archaeology

Field School in Historical Archaeology Focuses on Local African American History

This summer the Department of Anthropology will offer a field school located in the nearby town of Buda (about 15 miles south of Austin). The research will focus on the archaeology of formerly enslaved African Americans, or “freedmen”, and their descendants. In the late 1860s, freedmen founded an all-black settlement in Buda that they named Antioch Colony, which still exists today. The site’s earliest settlers were families who purchased land adjacent to one another, and most of these households made their living as farmers. During the 1870s, the colonists built a church and school, and established a cemetery. Over the years, Antioch Colony’s close-knit community was successful in educating its children, strengthening social networks through marriage and church, and living off the land. There are still descendants of the original settlers living in Antioch Colony, and in 2011 the Texas Historical Commission acknowledged the significance of the community and its heritage by granting Antioch a Texas Historical Marker.

The 2016 summer field school (June 2 to July 7) will focus on the survey and excavation of the remains of a house once occupied by Kate Friend Bunton (b. 1872, d. 1954) and its associated trash midden. Students will be instructed in basic field and lab methods, and will learn about local African American history.

For more information about this field school, please email Dr. Franklin at mfranklin@austin.utexas.edu. Students must provide their own transportation to and from the site. (Note: in the past, students have carpooled to the site, so this may be an option.)

An information session will be held on Monday, April 4, from noon-1pm in SAC 4.120.

*Please note that if you already have credit for ANT 662, it may be repeated for credit on the pass/fail basis only.

Maria Franklin

Associate Professor

Graduate Advisor

Department of Anthropology 

Courtesy Appointment, Department of African and African Diaspora Studies (AADS)

Affiliated, Warfield Center of African and African American Studies (CAAAS)

Friar Society Invitation

The Friar Society is the University of Texas at Austin’s oldest honor society and is dedicated to recognizing student who have made lasting and significant contributions to the University. More than 600 projects have been undertaken by Society members since its inception in 1911. From the Friar Centennial Teaching Fellowship to the construction of the Student Services Building, the Texas Union, and the Student Activity Center, Friars have left their mark on the Forty Acres.

We invite you to apply today at www.friarsociety.org! The application is open to any graduate and undergraduate student who has at least 75 hours. Applications are due by Friday, March 25 at 5:00pm. 

For

any questions regarding the Friar Society or the application process, please contact Abbot Carl Thorne – Thomsen (friarabbot@gmail.com) or Councilors Charlie Adkins (ctadkins@utexas.edu) and Christle Nwora (christle.nwora@gmail.com). Check out our Facebook page to learn more about the Friar Society and our membership!

Schwarzman Scholars Info Session

Inspired by the Rhodes Scholarship, Schwarzman Scholars is a highly selective international scholarship program designed to prepare future leaders for success in a world where China plays a key global role. The program will give the best and brightest young leaders from around the world the opportunity to develop their leadership skills through a fully-funded one-year Master’s Degree at Tsinghua University in Beijing – one of China’s most prestigious universities. Scholars chosen for this highly selective program will live in Beijing for a year of study and cultural immersion, attending lectures, traveling and developing a better understanding of China. Applications this cycle will open in April of 2016.

Schwarzman Scholars is pleased to host the following campus information session: 

 

Schwarzman Scholars Information Session at The University of Texas at Austin

Date: Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016 

Location: College of Liberal Arts Building (CLA) 1.302B 

Session Time: 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM