Wednesday, September 26, 2012

A Nation in Debt: How Can We Pay the Bills?





Don't Miss out! 
The FINAL event in the Fall 2012 Symposium: The Cost of War is next week!

A Nation in Debt: How Can We Pay the Bills?
A National Issues Forum
Thurs., Oct. 4th —7pm
Ridenour Room
Dauch College of Business & Economics
Ashland University

A short video, researched and developed by National Issues Forum, will explain three possible solutions to the national debt. Louise Fleming, Executive Director of the Center for Civic Life at Ashland University, will moderate a discussion on the benefits and trade-offs of each solution. Judy White, Center for Civic Life at Ashland University member, will record comments which will be available online and will be sent to Ashland’s legislators.  Come prepared to participate!

National Issues Forums (NIF) is a network of civic, educational, and other organizations, and individuals, whose common interest is to promote public deliberation in America. It has grown to include thousands of civic clubs, religious organizations, libraries, schools, and many other groups that meet to discuss critical public issues. Forum participants range from teenagers to retirees, prison inmates to community leaders, and literacy students to university students.
NIF does not advocate specific solutions or points of view but provides citizens the opportunity to consider a broad range of choices, weigh the pros and cons of those choices, and meet with each other in a public dialogue to identify the concerns they hold in common.  This particular forum will focus upon the national debt.

A full issues book is available for download at the NIF Store on the website of the National Issues Forum.  The price is $1.99.  At the meeting, there will be a handout of the issue in brief.


Thursday, September 20, 2012

Did you miss speaker
John Mueller
on Sept. 18th?

Fear NOT!

You can view the entire presentation immediately by clicking on the link below:    



Professor of Political Science at The Ohio State University, John Mueller, discussed his view of war as a phase. He also spoke about the current ongoing fear of terrorism in our country and what it has caused. Don't miss out!! Watch now! 

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The Fall 2012 Symposium Continues

The Ashland Center for Nonviolence at Ashland University
presents:
Speaker 2 in the ACN Fall Symposium: The Cost of War...

Code RED: The Cost of FEAR
John Mueller
Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012
7pm--Ronk Lecture Hall
Schar College of Education at AU
*NO cost; free to all*

John Mueller, professor of political science at The Ohio State University, argues that acts of terrorism are designed to encourage over-reaction in terms of psychological responses and use of resources; that is what the terrorists hope will happen. He examines these reactions and over-reactions as well as ways to politically lessen these fears that terrorism inspires.

Check out Mueller on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart for a sneak preview:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-october-31-2006/john-mueller



Did you miss speaker Paul K. Chappell?
Don't worry! View his presentation through the ACN at the link below:


Also coming soon, part 3 of ACN Fall Symposium: The Cost of War...



A Nation in Debt: How Can We Pay the Bills?

A National Issues Forum

Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012

7pm--Ridenour Room

Dauch College of Business and Economics at AU

*NO cost; free to all*

A short video, researched and developed by National Issues Forum, will explain three possible solutions to the national debt. Louise Fleming, Executive Director of the Center for Civic Life at Ashland University, will moderate a discussion on the benefits and trade-offs of each solution. National Issues Forums (NIF) is a network of civic, educational, and other organizations, and individuals, whose common interest is to promote public deliberation in America. NIF provides citizens the opportunity to consider a broad range of choices.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

     Speaker Paul K. Chappell, 2002 West Point graduate and seven-year army veteran, will be here on Thursday, September 6th at 7pm in the Hawkins-Concord Student Center Auditorium at Ashland University! He is the author of Will War Ever End?: A Soldier’s
Vision of Peace for the 21st Century, The End of War: How Waging Peace Can Save
Humanity, Our Planet, and Our Future, and Peaceful Revolution: How We Can Create the
Future Needed for Humanity’s Survival (publication date: Feb 2012).

“Captain Paul K. Chappell has given us a
crucial look at war and peace from the unique
perspective of a soldier, and his new ideas
show us why world peace is both necessary
and possible in the 21st century." -Archbishop
Desmond Tutu

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

ACN 2012 Fall Programs!


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6TH – Speaker Paul K. Chappell - War is NOT Inevitable, 7:00pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center-Ashland University


Paul K. Chappell graduated from West Point in 2002. He served in the army for seven years, was deployed to Baghdad in 2006, and left active duty in November 2009 as a Captain. He is the author of Will War Ever End?: A Soldier’s Vision of Peace for the 21st Century, The End of War: How Waging Peace Can Save Humanity, Our Planet, and Our Future, and Peaceful Revolution: How We Can Create the Future Needed for Humanity’s Survival (publication date: Feb 2012). He lives in Santa Barbara, California, where he is serving as the Peace Leadership Director for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org). He is working on his fourth book, The Art of Waging Peace: A Strategic Approach to Improving Our Lives and the World.

“Captain Paul K. Chappell has given us a crucial look at war and peace from the unique perspective of a soldier, and his new ideas show us why world peace is both necessary and possible in the 21st century." -Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Paul will also be doing presentations in Columbus, Wooster, Cleveland and Mansfield on September 7, 8, &9. Please contact ACN for details – acn@ashland.edu



TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH – Speaker John Mueller – Code RED: The Cost of Fear, 7:00pm, Ronk Lecture Hall in the Schar College of Education-Ashland University

John Mueller holds the Woody Hayes Chair of National Security Studies, Mershon Center, and is professor of Political Science, at Ohio State University where he teaches courses in international relations.

He is currently working on terrorism and particularly on the reactions (or over-reactions) it often inspires. His recent book, Atomic Obsession: Nuclear Alarmism from Hiroshima to Al Qaeda (Oxford University Press, 2010), suggests that atomic terrorism is highly unlikely and that efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation frequently have damaging results. He has also written Overblown: How Politicians and the Terrorism Industry Inflate National Security Threats, and Why We Believe Them (Free Press, 2006). The New York Times called the book "important" and "accurate, timely, and necessary." His book, Terrorism, Security, and Money: Balancing the Risks, Benefits, and Costs of Homeland Security, written in collaboration with engineer and risk analyst Mark Stewart, applies cost-benefit analysis to issues of homeland security and was published in early September 2011 by Oxford University Press.



THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4TH – A National Issues Forum – A Nation in Debt: How Can We Pay the Bills?, 7:00pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium-Ashland University

A short video researched and developed by National Issues Forum, will explain three possible solutions to the national debt. Louise Fleming, Executive Director of the Center for Civic Life at Ashland University, will moderate a discussion on the benefits and trade-offs of each solution. Judy White, Center for Civic Life at Ashland University member, will record comments which will be available online and will be sent to Ashland’s legislators. Come prepared to participate!

National Issues Forums (NIF) is a network of civic, educational, and other organizations, and individuals, whose common interest is to promote public deliberation in America. It has grown to include thousands of civic clubs, religious organizations, libraries, schools, and many other groups that meet to discuss critical public issues. Forum participants range from teenagers to retirees, prison inmates to community leaders, and literacy students to university students.

NIF does not advocate specific solutions or points of view but provides citizens the opportunity to consider a broad range of choices, weigh the pros and cons of those choices, and meet with each other in a public dialogue to identify the concerns they hold in common. This particular forum will focus upon the national debt.

A full issues book is available for download at the NIF Store on the website of the National Issues Forum. The price is $1.99. At the meeting, there will be a handout of the issue in brief.

This program is co-sponsored by the Center for Civic Life at Ashland University.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Farmer’s Market to Showcase Local Food Producers


Ashland, OH- A Farmer’s market and information fair will be held on March 27th, from 7-9pm in the Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium and surrounding areas.  The film ‘Good Food’ will also be presented twice during this event at start times of 7:15pm and 8:15pm.  This program is sponsored by the Ashland Center for Nonviolence at Ashland University and is free and open to the public.  

Participants of this program include Local Roots Ashland, a unique type of market, first established in Wooster, OH in 2009. An affiliate market to Local Roots Wooster, they will provide a year-round outlet where shoppers can conveniently browse a variety of products from local producers.  When asked, Louise Fleming, an Ashland resident stated that “Local Roots is a wonderful asset in the Ashland Community!  I am so excited to have locally grown foods and local products, including meats and cheeses, available all year round.  Joining the cooperative is a chance for people to make an investment in the community where they live.

Other vendors include Ann’s Raspberry Farm & Specialty Crops (raspberries & other theme-related items), Buehler’s Fresh Foods, Goldberry Roasting Company (coffee), Honey Haven Farms, LLC. (potted herbs & flowers, honey bears, and hot pepper butter), Martha’s Farm, Maple Syrup Vendor, Samaritan Hospital Nutritionist, Trinity Farms and Amish baked goods.
“We realize it is very early in the season to host a farmer’s market; however, we are excited to invest in our community and provide this opportunity to members of the Ashland community”, said Dottie Collura, Assistant Director of ACN, “We’re expecting a great turnout”.

The video Good Food visits the producers, farmers’ markets, distributors, markets, restaurants and public officials who are working together to develop a more sustainable food system for all.  Described by author Frances Moore Lappe as “a film to awaken our taste buds and our courage,” Good Food explores the local foods and farming system in the Pacific Northwest.  With the resurgence of a local food economy in this area, the film explores how this has occurred and highlights specific stories of individuals who are affecting this change.

Good Food was created by Melissa Young and Mark Dworkin, and has received very positive reviews from film critics and other local food economy experts.  It offers the opportunity for individuals to see the success that locals foods can provide for a community, so that other areas can implement similar local food strategies themselves.
The farmer’s market and information fair will take place before, during and after the screening and will consist of several tables with local and neighboring produce, in addition to information regarding healthy food options and sustainable living.  It also will take place in the Hawkins-Conard Student Center, in areas surrounding the auditorium.  

This program is the final one in ACN’s annual symposium on “Creating a Caring Community” which focused their efforts on local foods and building community. Previous events included March 13th’s “Food, Farms, and Community” and February 14th’s “The Emerging Local Food Economy and What It Means for Ashland.”

The Ashland Center for Nonviolence, located on the campus of Ashland University, is committed to exploring and promoting alternatives to violence in ourselves, our families, our communities, and our world.  The center is committed to finding choices when there seem to be none, as well as answering the seemingly unanswerable question, “What else can we do?”  For more information about this event, or to learn more about the Ashland Center for Nonviolence, please call 419-289-5313 or visit us online at www.ashland.edu/acn.  ###



Sunday, February 19, 2012

UPCOMING EVENT: 'Food, Farms, and Community' - Tuesday, March 13


Christopher Norman, Executive Director of Crown Point Ecology Center in Bath, Ohio, run by the Sisters of St. Dominic of Akron, will present “Dirty Nuns and Guerilla Gardening!” An Amish farmer will be presenting “Who is Your Farmer?” 7:30pm on Tuesday, March 13th in the Schar College of Education’s Ronk Lecture Hall at Ashland University. They will be addressing such topics as food deserts, food security, and the current and fundamental role of local foods and farmers in building up our community. A Q&A session will follow the presentation.  This lecture, sponsored by the Ashland Center for Nonviolence, is part of the 2012 “Creating a Caring Community” Symposium. This presentation is free and open to the public.

Norman’s presentation is called “Dirty Nuns and Guerilla Gardening!” This presentation will explore the motives some religious groups have in addressing environmental health, especially sustainable agriculture.  A discussion of Crown Point’s Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and environmental education programming will highlight the challenges and opportunities that re-building the local food system present. 

Following Norman’s presentation will be “Who is Your Farmer?” which will focus on the benefits of a local food economy.  Locally-raised foods, found in places such a farmer’s markets, co-operatives, and some restaurants, solve many problems. Local foods are neighborly, connecting people with the gardeners and farmers who are growing their food. They are fresh and more nutritious, especially if they have been raised organically, and they taste good.  They are “food secure”: every product can be traced to the grower. Awareness of the growing practices assures the consumer that the food is safe to eat and that farmers have taken good care of the soil, their crops, and their livestock. Buying directly assures that the farmer makes sufficient and fair money to assure that unhealthy short-cuts will not be taken. Finally, local foods encourage food independence. Rather than relying on the “global market,” people are encouraged to seek local sources of food, grow their own, and preserve it. 

Make sure to put 'Food, Farms, and Community' on your calendar for March 13th. See you there! 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Creating a Caring Community:
Local Foods and Building Community

Tuesday, February 14 – ‘The Emerging Local Food Economy and What It Means for Ashland’ by Brad Masi, Former Executive Director of the New Agrarian Center, 7:30pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium at Ashland University.

This presentation will look at the growth of sustainable local food system initiatives across Northeast Ohio, covering both broader impacts on the regional economy and on-the-ground examples of innovative communities. A sustainable local food economy directly connects consumers, farmers, local businesses, and institutions. How can food localization comprehensively address nutrition and health, economic development, ecological sustainability, and community vitality?

Tuesday, March 13 – ‘Food, Farms, and Community’ by Chris Norman, Executive Director of Crown Point Ecology Center and David Kline, Organic Dairy Farmer, Naturalist, and Writer, 7:30pm, Schar College of Education, Ronk Lecture Hall, Ashland University.

Christopher Norman will join David Kline to present Food, Farms, and Community. Chris will present “Dirty Nuns and Guerilla Gardening.” David will present “Who is Your Farmer?” They will be addressing such topics as food deserts, food security, and the role of local foods in building community.

Tuesday, March 27 - Video Presentation of ‘Good Food’ and Information Fair, 7:30pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium & surrounding areas, Ashland University.

The video ‘GOOD FOOD’ visits the producers, farmers’ markets, distributors, markets, restaurants and public officials who are working together to develop a more sustainable food system for all.

The information fair will consist of several information tables and representatives from local and neighboring communities regarding gardening projects and healthy food options.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Climate and Agricultural Ethics: 
Winds of Seeds and Change
Presented by:
Dr. Calvin DeWitt
Professor Emeritus, Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Study, University of Wisconsin-Madison and president of the Evangelical Society of Scientists and Ethicists

David Kline
Ohio author and naturalist

Saturday, January 28 at 7 pm

Unitarian Universalist Fellowship
3186 Burbank Rd, Wooster

For more information, see http://uufwc.org/pdf/dewitt_flyer.pdf

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

UPCOMING AREA EVENT NEWS

MANSFIELD - Wednesday, January 18 – Day of Unity, 12:00pm, Ohio State University – Mansfield Campus.

This event is co-sponsored by OSU Mansfield, North Central State College and Ashland University.

CLEVELAND - February 2 – 3 – Bullying Prevention Summit: Changing School and University Culture and Climate, Cuyahoga Community College, East Campus, Highland Hills, Ohio.

Summit details and registration materials available at: http://www.tri-c.edu/enrichment/communityservices/GRIC/Pages/ProfessionalDevelopmentEvents.aspx

Sponsored by: Global Issues Resource Center, Cuyahoga Community College, in partnership with Facing History and Ourselves, Virginia Tech, Cleveland State University, University of Akron, Orange High School, Beech Brook, Cuyahoga Arts and Culture, The Ohio Department of Education and The Office of the Ohio Attorney General.

ACN EVENT NEWS

TONIGHT - Tuesday, January 17 – Video Presentation & *Discussion of ‘Pray the Devil Back to Hell’, 7pm & 9pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium at Ashland University.

‘Pray the Devil Back to Hell’ is the gripping account of a group of brave and visionary women who demanded peace for Liberia, a nation torn to shreds by a decades-old civil war. The women's historic yet unsung achievement finds voice in a narrative that intersperses contemporary interviews, archival images, and scenes of present-day Liberia together to recount the experiences and memories of the women who were instrumental in bringing lasting peace to their country.

You can read more about this extraordinary film here.

*Discussion on the power and possibilities of nonviolence in the contemporary world to follow each video presentation.

2012 CREATING A CARING COMMUNITY
SYMPOSIUM EVENTS

Tuesday, February 14 – ‘The Emerging Local Food Economy and What It Means for Ashland’ by Brad Masi, Former Executive Director of the New Agrarian Center, 7:30pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium at Ashland University.

This presentation will look at the growth of sustainable local food system initiatives across Northeast Ohio, covering both broader impacts on the regional economy and on-the-ground examples of innovative communities. A sustainable local food economy directly connects consumers, farmers, local businesses, and institutions. How can food localization comprehensively address nutrition and health, economic development, ecological sustainability, and community vitality?

Tuesday, March 13 – ‘Food, Farms, and Community’ by Chris Norman, Executive Director of Crown Point Ecology Center and David Kline, Organic Dairy Farmer, Naturalist, and Writer, 7:30pm, Schar College of Education, Ronk Lecture Hall, Ashland University.

Christopher Norman will join David Kline to present Food, Farms, and Community. Chris will present “Dirty Nuns and Guerilla Gardening.” David will present “Who is Your Farmer?” They will be addressing such topics as food deserts, food security, and the role of local foods in building community.

Tuesday, March 27 - Video Presentation of ‘Good Food’ and Information Fair, 7:30pm, Hawkins-Conard Student Center Auditorium & surrounding areas, Ashland University.

The video ‘GOOD FOOD’ visits the producers, farmers’ markets, distributors, markets, restaurants and public officials who are working together to develop a more sustainable food system for all.
The information fair will consist of several information tables and representatives from local and neighboring communities regarding gardening projects and healthy food options.