Liss and Schiffrin Featured on CBS
Holly Schiffrin and Miriam N. Liss, professors of psychology, recently published their book, “Balancing the Big Stuff: Finding Happiness in Work, Family, and Life” and discussed it on CBS’s Virginia This Morning program. They talked about the ways in which we all define “having it all” and how we can obtain it for ourselves through a better evaluation of what we want from ourselves, our families, our jobs and each other.
Check out the video: Two Mary Washington professors explain what it means to “have it all”
Kraus’ Recording Accepted for Streaming on Pandora
Piano Instructor Andrew Kraus’ performance with Raleigh-based Soprano, Jennifer Paschal, of Benjamin Britten’s “On this Island,” currently available through iTunes, CD Baby, etc., was just accepted for streaming on Pandora. An update will be posted when streaming begins after classification by Pandora’s Music Genome service. Tracks from his CD, Music from the Golden Age of the Piano continue to stream on Pandora as well as being available for download through the usual digital providers.
Two Mary Washington Professors Explain What it Means to “Have it All” (WTVR)
Farnsworth Featured in More Than 100 Media Outlets
Stephen Farnsworth, professor of political science and director of the University’s Center for Leadership and Media Studies, was in considerable demand as a political analyst during the Medicaid expansion standoff in the Virginia General Assembly and the federal corruption trial of former Governor Bob McDonnell. His commentary on Virginia politics appeared in more than 100 media outlets, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, on WAMU, Washington’s national public radio affiliate, and on MSNBC’s program “Now with Alex Wagner.”
Al-Tikriti Discusses Humanitarian Affairs, ISIS and Islamophobia
Over the course of two Rappahannock Rotary Club morning meetings, Professor of History and American Studies Nabil Al-Tikriti discussed current humanitarian challenges, the rise and spread of the “Islamic State” (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria, and related issues concerning American and European fears concerning Muslims in their home societies.
In the first meeting, on Aug. 27, Al-Tikriti began by summarizing his involvement in humanitarian affairs with MSF/Doctors Without Borders USA, initially by presenting the growth and evolution of the medical humanitarian agency since its founding in the late 1960s. He then discussed challenges facing NGO actors in the world today, particularly with recent conflicts in Gaza, Syria, Iraq, Central African Republic, and South Sudan, as well as with the rapid outbreak of the Ebola epidemic. In the course of the Q&A, fears were expressed concerning the intentions of Muslim communities in both Europe and the United States. Al-Tikriti, in the course of offering his own perspective on such fears, encouraged the audience to explore the following information sources:
Reach of War 5 minute video on MSF in Syria:
http://vimeo.com/101446661
Vice News Documentary on ISIS (Difficult Material):
https://news.vice.com/video/the-islamic-state-full-length
Syria map:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0ByQl9HGZDeRXYU5rZVJZVDVlZkU/edit
ISIS threatening ancient burial sites:
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/middle-east/13461-isis-threatens-iraqs-ancient-past-the-lost-city-of-nineveh
Patrick Cockburn, “The Jihadis Return”
As a result of points raised in the first discussion, a second presentation on related topics was felt to be beneficial for all concerned. For that reason, on Sept. 17, Al-Tikriti explored further the background causes and political motivations for the rise and spread of ISIS in Iraq and Syria, attributing the phenomenon primarily to the regional collapse of the state monopoly on violence in the course of the past generation. Following a summary of Western involvement in the region since the Great War, Al-Tikriti cautioned that no easy outcome for regional developments should now be expected. Following that, Al-Tikriti turned to fears concerning Muslim communities in Europe and the United States, pointing out that prominent Muslim leaders have spoken out against ISIS on several occasions, that extremism also exists in several self-identified Christian groups throughout the West, and that some of the same groups harassing American Arab and Muslim communities appear to have also been harassing Mardi Gras revelers in downtown New Orleans. He closed with a discussion of the “Andrew Berwick” manifesto of 2011, pointing out that the author in question was also responsible (as Anders Breivik) for the Oslo massacre of the same year. In the course of the discussion, audience members were urged to investigate the following sources of information:
Iraq Displaced Populations, according to Relief Web International:
http://reliefweb.int/report/iraq/iraq-displacement-humanitarian-snapshot-06-september-2014-enar
Muslim Leaders Speak Out Against ISIS:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/13/term-islamic-state-slur-faith-david-cameron
Malta Boat Sinking Kills 700, mostly from Gaza:
http://euobserver.com/justice/125652
ISIS Issues New Education Curriculum:
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/islamic-state-group-issues-curriculum-iraq-25513767
ISIS Bans Evolution in Curriculum:
http://www.addictinginfo.org/2014/09/16/islamic-tea-party-isil-bans-teaching-of-evolution-in-schools/
Clarion Project Website Addresses “No Go Zone” in Dearborn:
http://www.clarionproject.org/analysis/dearborn-no-go-zone-where-islam-rules-and-christians-are-stoned
Detroit Free Press Article and Slides on Same 2012 Dearborn Protest:
http://www.freep.com/article/20120616/NEWS05/120616015/Christian-missionaries-with-pig-s-head-taunt-Arab-Americans-at-Dearborn-festival
ABC News Story on same 2012 Dearborn Protest:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2012/06/christian-taunts-and-violence-mar-arab-festival-in-michigan/
Same (or similar?) Protesters at Mardi Gras:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asRcUresCBQ
Article Tying 2003 Iraq Invasion Supporters to Calls for Muslim Deportation, Conversion and Violence:
http://www.loonwatch.com/2014/09/radical-right-wing-christians-who-supported-the-iraq-war-want-to-convert-deport-and-kill-muslims/
Original Call for Muslim Deportation, Conversion, and Violence (referred to in previous link):
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:UWvb-YtDzE0J:https://defendchristians.org/commentary/im-islamaphobic-are-you/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=firefox-a
Op-Ed Argues that ISIS Shaped by Western Philosophy:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/sep/09/isis-jihadi-shaped-by-modern-western-philosophy
“Andrew Berwick” manifesto calls for European Independence against Islamic threat (see pdf p. 54 for Nabil Al-Tikriti citation):
http://fas.org/programs/tap/_docs/2083_-_A_European_Declaration_of_Independence.pdf
Denver Post Picture Gallery on Anders Breivik (aka Andrew Berwick) 2011 Oslo attacks:
http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2011/07/27/brutal-terror-attack-in-norway/4531/
Wittman, Mosher Find Little Common Ground in 1st District Debate (Inside Northern Virginia.Com)
Creationism is just the Start: How Right-Wing Christians are Warping America’s Schools (Salon.Com)
Wired Article Highlights DTLT’s Known Pilot
An article in yesterday’s Wired about the open source blogging application Known mentioned the pilot work being done in UMW’s Division of Teaching and Learning Technologies. Known provides a space where students can manage and publish their posts for various social media sites through their own application, controlling the archival copy of their work. It rethinks the users relationship to ownership of their data across sites like Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, SoundCloud, etc. Right now, Jim Groom’s Digital Storytelling course and Zach Whalen’s Introduction to Digital Studies are exploring this application.
One of the points made in the Wired article, that reinforces some of the possibilities of the Domain of One’s Own project, is that the campus can quickly and easily pilot new, cutting edge applications that are defining what many refer to as the Indie Web Movement.
Hanna and Student Publish Historical Markers Study
Stephen Hanna, chair and professor of Geography, and Fariss Hodder ’14 co-wrote an article based on a Fredericksburg historical markers study completed while Hodder was a student. The article, “Reading the signs: using a qualitative Geographic Information System to examine the commemoration of slavery and emancipation on historical markers in Fredericksburg, Virginia” is now available in “cultural geographies,” an international journal of peer-reviewed scholarly research.
Hanna and Hodder also co-authored a chapter for “Social Memory and Heritage Tourism Methodologies,” a methodology book that will be published by Routledge in February 2015.

