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In This Issue
·
The International Student Leadership
Scholarship 2007
· OISS Closed April 6 and
April 9 for Easter Break
Important Information
·
Flag Bearer
information for students graduating May 2007
·
Immigration fees likely to increase
after April 2, 2007
·
Information about 2006 taxes
Upcoming Events
·
Mar 28-Apr 22 -
Photographic Exhibit of
World Heritage Sites in Croatia
·
Apr 4 - English Table with
ELS Students
·
Apr
5 - Easter Egg Decoration
with the Mentors
· Apr 10 & 11 -
"Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet" Documentary and Discussion
·
Apr 13 - 2003 Nobel
laureate Dr. Shirin Ebadi to speak at UST
·
Apr 14-15 - PeaceJam
Conference
·
April St. Thomas
Music Department Events
Interesting Articles
·
Career Development Center Update
·
Hate crimes are not
tolerated at the University of St. Thomas
·
It's National Sexual Assault Awareness Month
·
Registration holds: Fix these or you won't be able to
register
Personal Ads
·
2-bedroom apartment available for rent
·
Car & PC for sale
·
Items for sale
·
Salsa Dance lessons at
the U of M (Word document)
|
2003 Nobel
laureate Dr. Shirin Ebadi to speak at UST
Dr. Shirin Ebadi
|
Friday, April 13th
7:30 pm
OEC Auditorium Dr. Shirin Ebadi, the first
Iranian and the first Muslim woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize,
will give a public lecture, “Defending the Rights of Women and
Children,” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 13, in O’Shaughnessy
Educational Center auditorium. Ebadi will speak with an English
translator.
General admission tickets are $10 and available
beginning April 10 at the St. Thomas Box Office, lower level,
Murray-Herrick Campus Center. Tickets are free at the door for St.
Thomas students, faculty and staff with ID (limit two). For ticket
information, call (651) 962-6137.
Ebadi, 59, is a lawyer and human rights activist
from Tehran who founded and leads the Association for Support of
Children’s Rights in Iran. From 1975 to 1979 she was president of
the city court of Tehran. One of Iran’s first female judges, she was
forced to resign after the 1979 revolution, when it was decided that
women were not suitable for those posts. She now teaches at the
University of Tehran and campaigns for strengthening the legal
status of women and children in her country. She has been credited
for being a driving force behind Iran’s family law reforms and has
campaigned for peaceful solutions to the country’s social problems.
In doing so, she has argued for progressive interpretations of Islam
that value principles such as human rights, democracy, equality
before the law, religious freedom and freedom of speech.
Ebadi received her law degree from the University
of Tehran in 1969. She is the author of several books and articles
focusing on human rights and a 2006 autobiography published in the
United States, Iran Awakening: A Memoir of Revolution and Hope
(Random House), which the Washington Post called “a riveting account
of a brave, lonely struggle to take Islamist jurists to task for
betraying the promises of their own revolution.” The book will be
rereleased in paperback next month.
St. Thomas sponsors of Ebadi’s public lecture
include the Justice and Peace Studies Program and the Office of the
Executive Vice President.
The lecture’s co-sponsor is youthrive (note:
organization does not capitalize its name), the Upper Midwest
affiliate of PeaceJam International. About 250 area high-school-age
youth are expected to attend PeaceJam 2007 Saturday and Sunday,
April 14 and 15, at St. Thomas. Ebadi will speak to attendees at the
Saturday and Sunday sessions. She also will work with youthrive for
a “Day of Peace” with juvenile offenders at the Red Wing
Correctional Facility on April 13.
PeaceJam International is an organization built
around Nobel Peace laureates who work to inspire young people. The
youthrive organization provides youth with leadership and
community-service opportunities, especially around the concepts of
peace building, social justice, anti-racism, human and environmental
rights and ethical leadership. For more information about youthrive,
call (651) 224-3066. |