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By KEVIN FRYLING Reporter Staff Writer
Members of the UB community will have an opportunity on Sept. 19 to
participate in a full slate of free lectures, panel presentations,
performances and exhibits focusing on the visit to UB of His Holiness
the 14th Dalai Lama and the message of peace and nonviolence he will
present during his Distinguished Speakers Series lecture that
day. September 19 has been designated a special Day of Learning
at UB. Classes on the North Campus will be suspended for the day so that
faculty, staff and students may attend Day of Learning activities, as
well as the Dalai Lama's lecture at 3 p.m. in UB Stadium. Some units
on the South Campus will hold classes on Sept. 19. John Wood, associate vice provost for
international education, said organizers conceived the Day of Learning
as a chance to turn the Dalai Lama's address into more than a "one-shot"
experience.
"We realized this was an opportunity to build an entire event around
the Dalai Lama," he said. "We wanted to give people incentive to spend
the whole day on campus." Events are planned across the course of
more than 12 hours-from a morning meditation session beginning at 8 a.m.
to a film screening starting after 8 p.m. "These are
opportunities for both the campus and outside communities," said
Wood. Highlights of the morning events include panel discussions
on such subjects as world peace, education, spirituality and other
topics of abiding interest to the Dalai Lama, he said. A panel on
the prospects for peace five years after the terrorist attacks of Sept.
11, 2001 will feature presentations from Bruce Jackson, SUNY
Distinguished Professor and Samuel P. Capen Professor of American
Culture in the departments of English and American Studies; Roger Des
Forges, professor, Andreas Daum, professor, and Ramya Sreenivasan,
assistant professor, all in in the Department of History; and Mark
Nathan, adjunct professor in the Asian Studies Program. Wood said the
scholars will evaluate the current geopolitical situation through the
lens of their specific areas of interest. "Putting Your
Education to Work for Peace" includes a student voice in the mix as part
of a talk about service in the Peace Corps, and the panel on nonviolent
conflict resolution features panelists from organizations within Buffalo
and Western New York, said Wood. He also noted that publication
of His Holiness' latest book, "The Universe in a Single Atom," makes the
panel on spiritual and scientific issues particularly timely.
"What to Expect in the Dalai Lama's Address" and "What the Dalai Lama
Said" offer a bridge between the morning and afternoon in the form of
pre- and post-lecture commentaries on the address by His Holiness. Lama
Surya Das, a UB alumnus whose studies took him to India and Nepal after
graduation to become one of the foremost Western Buddhist meditation
teachers, is scheduled to present the two talks for the Day of
Learning. Organizers are confident activities slated in the
morning are of great enough interest to attract students onto the North
Campus, despite the cancellation of classes, said Wood. Most of
the events after the lecture will take place in the Center for the Arts.
Among the highlights cited by Wood are the performance by Deborah D.L.
Chung, National Grid Endowed Chair and Professor of Materials Research
in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, and an accomplished pianist, as a
one-of-a-kind experience that combines a lecture and music to
communicate its subject: "Science, Music and Life: Lessons from a
Scientist's Quest." Texts, images and artifacts on view in UB
Libraries' exhibits across the North and South campuses also form an
integral part of the Day of Learning. The scope of events at the
Day of Learning are due to the remarkable reaction the steering
committee planning the Dalai Lama's visit received in response to its
call for proposals for activities from faculty and staff, said Wood.
"We had a very positive response," he said. "They really took the
initiative to the call that went out in the spring." For a
complete schedule of events and further details about the special Day of
Learning, visit http://
www.buffalo.edu/dalai_lama/day_of_learning.
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