Today's Message

Tell Students: Still Time to Exchange with National Student Exchange for 2013-2014

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There is still time to submit applications for the National Student Exchange program for the 2013–2014 academic year. Please let your students know of this great opportunity to attend one of the 200 campuses within the United States or Canada. Have them visit South Wing 420 for an application or contact Christine Cali, director of special programs, at ext. 4328 to arrange a classroom visit. Don’t let this great opportunity pass your students by. Thank you.

Submitted by: Christine Frezza

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  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
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Today's Message

Tell Students: Workshop on Staying Motivated

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Motivation is considered to be one of the most significant factors determining success or failure in college or in any other undertaking. This workshop on Wednesday, March 20, from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. in Weigel Health Center 203 focuses on understanding motivation and its importance to academic success. Practical tips and strategies about getting and staying motivated will be reviewed.

Please be punctual. For more information, call the Counseling Center at ext. 4436.

Submitted by: Modupe Akin-Deko

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  • Monday, March 18, 2013
  • Tuesday, March 19, 2013
  • Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Today's Message

African Connections: The Importance of Fulbright Programs

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Any student, faculty, or staff member interested in the multiple possibilities offered by the Fulbright Program is welcome to attend the spring conference of the Western New York and Northwestern Pennsylvania Chapter of the Fulbright Association on Friday, April 12, from 12:30 to 4:00 p.m. on the University at Buffalo's North Campus in room 330 of the Student Union.

The theme of the conference is "African Connections"; the featured speaker will be Abdiweli Ali, former prime minister of Somalia and associate professor of economics at Niagara University. The event is free and open to the public.

For more information, please contact Jean F. Gounard, director of international student affairs and vice president for advocacy of the WNY/NWPA Fulbright Association Chapter, ext. 5331.

Submitted by: Michelle Downey

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  • Tuesday, April 2, 2013
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Today's Message

Lois Palken Rudnick Presents on Mabel Dodge Luhan at the Burchfield Penney on Thursday, March 14

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Lois Palken Rudnick will discuss her new book, The Suppressed Memoirs of Mabel Dodge Luhan: Sex, Syphilis, and Psychoanalysis in the Making of Modern American Culture, on Thursday, March 14, at 7:00 p.m. at the Burchfield Penney Art Center?.

Mabel Dodge Luhan, née Ganson (1879–1962), was a wealthy American patron of the arts particularly associated with the Taos art colony. Ganson was the heiress of a wealthy banker from Buffalo, New York. Her first marriage, at the age of 21, was to Karl Evans, the son of a steamship owner, in 1900. They had one son, and Karl died in a hunting accident two and half years later (1902), leaving her a widow at the age of 23. In the spring of 1904, an oval portrait of her in mourning dress was painted by the Swiss-born American artist Adolfo Müller-Ury for her paternal grandmother, Nancy Ganson of Delaware Avenue in Buffalo. Later that year, she married Edwin Dodge, a wealthy architect.

In this illuminating volume, comprising previously unpublished portions of Dodge Luhan's memoirs, Rudnick analyzes the influential art patron's confessions and places them in an enlivening historical context. Writing in the early part of the twentieth century, the openly bisexual Luhan describes a life of pleasure characterized by numerous sexual partners (married men among them), yet confounded by consequent venereal diseases and the feeling of being "the prisoner of circumstances over which [she] had no control." Rudnick explains how the rampant spread of syphilis through the population affected not only Luhan but many of her contemporaries, who struggled to reconcile Victorian notions of VD ("the sins of the fathers") with a modernist worldview less bound to religious dogma, but still subject to the actualities of disease that accompanied the nascent sexual liberation, courtesy in part of Freud, of the early 1900s. In an attempt to overcome the burden of syphilis and the mixed blessing of sexual freedom, Luhan became heavily involved in psychoanalytic treatment with some of America's most renowned practitioners, an experience she dutifully recounts in detail. Populated by such artistic, cultural, and literary luminaries as Pablo Picasso, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Gertrude Stein, Luhan's diaries are thoroughly engaging in their own right. But combined with Rudnick's enlightening analysis, they become an indispensable looking glass into life during a tumultuous transitional period. (Publisher’s Weekly, July 27, 2012)

Salon hostess, memoirist, social activist, cultural patron, and much-married (four husbands) Mabel Ganson Evans Dodge Sterne Luhan spent her life as a cultural catalyst and creator of utopian communities in Florence, Italy; Greenwich Village, New York; and Taos, New Mexico. To each of these venues, she brought many of the most creative and socially active men and women of her generation, among them, Arthur Rubinstein and Eleanora Duse in Florence; Emma Goldman and Margaret Sanger in Greenwich Village; and D. H. Lawrence, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ansel Adams, Leopold Stokowski, and Martha Graham in Taos. More than any woman of her generation, she became a focal point in painting, photography, poetry, drama, and fiction for writers and artists for whom she embodied the "new woman" of the twentieth century.

Lois Rudnick is professor emerita of American studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston, where she chaired the American Studies Department for 26 years. During her time at UMB, she won three teaching awards, including a national award from the American Studies Association. She has published and lectured widely in the United States and Europe on American modern culture, and most particularly, New Mexico writers and artists. Her books include Mabel Dodge Luhan: New Woman, New Worlds (1984, in its sixth printing) and Utopian Vistas: The Mabel Dodge Luhan House and the American Counterculture (1996, in its third printing, and the winner of three book awards). Rudnick now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

For more information, visit www.burchfieldpenney.org.

Submitted by: Kathleen M. McMorrow Heyworth

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  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
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  • Thursday, March 14, 2013

Today's Message

Today: Year of the City Artist Talk, BPAC Auditorium, 12:15 p.m.

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Artist Mariam Ghani will give a presentation of her works today, March 12, at 12:15 p.m. in the Burchfield Penney Art Center's Peter and Elizabeth C. Tower Auditorium. This presentation is free and open to the public.

Ghani is an artist, writer, and teacher who lives in Brooklyn. Her research-based practice operates at the intersections between place, memory, history, language, loss, and reconstruction. Her work in video, installation, and photography has been exhibited and screened internationally, including at dOCUMENTA (13) in Kassel and Kabul, the Sharjah Biennials 9 and 10, the 2005 Liverpool Biennial, the Beijing 798 Biennial, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, the International Film Festival Rotterdam, transmediale in Berlin, and Futura in Prague. She is currently a visiting scholar at NYU's Asian/Pacific/American Institute.

Statement by the artist on her work
"My work explores how histories, places, identities, and communities are constructed and reconstructed, and the shifting private and public narratives that comprise and contest those constructions. I am particularly fascinated by border zones, no-man's-lands, translations, transitions, and the slipages where cultures intersect; security cultures, archives, architectures of democracy, and national imaginaries; places where nature and artifice imitate and influence each other; and cities in conflict and post-conflict conditions. I work across multiple disciplines and maintain several ongoing, multiyear collaborations (with choreographer Erin Ellen Kelly and visual artist Chitra Ganesh); the constants in my practice are video, site-specific and site-responsive work, database forms (linear and interactive, on- and off-line), and art as public dialogue (and vice versa)."

Submitted by: Sarah B Hinderliter

Today's Message

Buffalo State Dining Wants Your Feedback

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Buffalo State Dining is conducting its customer service satisfaction surveys, and we want your feedback. Stop in the Campbell Student Union Food Court or Resident Dining Hall today to take a survey. Just for participating, you will receive a coupon for a free fountain beverage and also some sweet treats.

If you don't have time to stop by in person, take the survey online.

For more information on Buffalo State Dining, please visit our website.

Submitted by: Marissa L Dinello

Today's Message

Lord of the Rings: The Cassini Mission to Saturn and Its Moons

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The Earth Sciences Lecture Series is pleased to welcome Rosaly Lopes, senior research scientist and deputy manager of the Planetary Science section of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who will deliver the 2013 Jack Mack Lecture in Astronomy and Planetary Science on Thursday, March 14, at 3:05 p.m. in Bulger Communication Center North. She will present some of the amazing results from the Cassini mission to Saturn, including erupting plumes on the moon Enceladus and diverse features on the moon Titan.

For more information, please contact Kevin Williams, associate professor of earth sciences and science education.

Submitted by: Kevin K. Williams

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  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
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  • Thursday, March 14, 2013

Today's Message

Kimberly Blessing to Present in 'Conversations' Series on March 15

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The spring 2013 “Conversations in and out of the Disciplines” series continues on Friday, March 15, as Kimberly A. Blessing, chair and associate professor of philosophy and humanities, presents “Theistic and Atheistic Theories about the Meaning of Life” at 3:00 p.m. in Ketchum Hall 320. A short, informal wine-and-cheese reception will be held afterward. Colleagues, friends, graduate students, and advanced undergraduate students are welcome.

Please also mark your calendars for the final talk this spring on Friday, May 10, when Saziye Bayram, associate professor of mathematics, will present “The Numbers Behind the Kidney: Mathematical Modeling of Renal Dynamics.” Bayram’s talk will also be held in Ketchum Hall 320 at 3:00 p.m.

Submitted by: David N Ben-Merre

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  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
  • Wednesday, March 13, 2013
  • Thursday, March 14, 2013

Today's Message

Education Honor Society Taking Members

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All education majors who have earned a 3.2 GPA or higher are invited to join Kappa Delta Pi, an international education honor society. This prestigious honor society has over 40,000 members worldwide. Please announce to your early childhood, elementary, secondary, and exceptional education majors.

Membership applications are being accepted until March 28. Contact Dr. Shannon Budin (gormlese@buffalostate.edu) for more information or stop by 206 Ketchum Hall.

Our next meeting is on the topic of "Responsive Classrooms: A Proactive Approach to Classroom Management". Pizza and dessert will be served. All welcome! Butler Library room 210, 7:00pm. RSVP to Dr. Budin.

Submitted by: Shannon E. Budin

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  • Monday, March 11, 2013
  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
  • Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Today's Message

Buffalo State Rotaract Club Theme Basket Raffle

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The Buffalo State Rotaract Club will sponsor a “Healthy Spring Break” basket raffle to raise funds for ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease) research. The basket includes a gift certificate to Romeo and Juliet's restaurant, a pedometer, a "Biggest Loser" cookbook, a bento (eco friendly) lunchbox, puzzle books, and more. Tickets are $1 each; contact Stephanie for your chance to win!

Submitted by: Carol A DeNysschen

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  • Tuesday, March 12, 2013
  • Friday, March 15, 2013
  • Monday, March 18, 2013
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