On Campus Event: Is the Press Still Free? A Conversation with Cynthia McFadden ’78, NBC News, Mon 3/27 @ 7:30 PM

Is the Press Still Free? A Conversation with Cynthia McFadden ’78, H’12 of NBC News

March 27, 2017 | 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM | Visual Arts Center, Kresge Auditorium

Award-winning journalist Cynthia McFadden ’78, H ’12 is the senior investigative correspondent at NBC News. She has reported from hot spots around the world, focusing on human rights abuses. In the last year, her work has helped lead to the president of the Maldives’ release from political imprisonment and to the commuting of Chelsea Manning’s sentence by President Obama. In the past six months alone, McFadden and her team have broken dozens of national security stories relating to Russian involvement in the US election, terrorism, and Yemen. Prior to NBC, she reported for twenty years for ABC News, the last ten of which as co-anchor of Nightline. A summa cum laude graduate of Bowdoin, she holds a JD degree from the Columbia University School of Law. Her work has been honored with Emmy, Peabody, duPont, and Foreign Press awards, among others.

Harriet Fisher ’17 and Marina Affo ’17 will moderate the discussion and facilitate questions from the audience.

Space is limited. Advance registration is required. One ticket per person.

TO REGISTER, GO TO BOWDO.IN/FREE-PRESS

On Campus Event: Watson Fellowship Info Session, Wed. 3/29 @ Noon

Watson Fellowship Info Session
Wed. March 29 12:00-1:00
Moulton Union Chamberlain Room

The Watson Fellowship is a one-year grant for independent study and travel outside the United States awarded to graduating college seniors nominated by participating institutions.
Bowdoin ES majors Teona Williams, and David Bruce received the Watson Fellowship in 2012 and 2013.

On Campus Event: “The Acetylproteome of the Lyme Disease Pathogen: Implications for Host Adaptation and Pathogenesis”, Thurs. 3/30 @ 3:45

“The Acetylproteome of the Lyme Disease Pathogen: Implications for Host Adaptation and Pathogenesis”

(Robert Cluss, Middlebury College
Thursday, March 30 3:45 PM
Druckenmiller Hall, room 020

Borrelia burgdorferi has emerged as the most significant vector-borne pathogen in the United States, responsible for over 30,000 reported cases of Lyme disease in 2014. The spirochete cycles between its arthropod vector, the blacklegged tick, and mammalian hosts.  Much of the research effort in the Lyme disease field is focused on identifying virulence determinants of the spirochete and aspects of host immunity that support productive infection, multiplication, and pathology.

The Cluss group at Middlebury College has generated a catalog of B. burgdorferi proteins that are modified by acetylation, which is a well-established covalent modification of proteins affecting structure and function.

In this talk, several enzymes that are acetylated and moonlight as potential virulence factors will be described.  A potential role for acetylation in the natural lifecycle of the spirochete will be considered.

 

 

On Campus Event: Chris Emdin: “What it Takes To Be a Scientist: Employing Reality Pedagogy To Transform Schools and Society”, Thurs. 3/30 7PM

“What it Takes To Be a Scientist: Employing Reality Pedagogy To Transform Schools and Society”

March 30, 2017 | 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM | Visual Arts Center, Kresge Auditorium

Chris Emdin explores participation and engagement in STEM fields and the ways that the education culture tracks students out of success in these disciplines. He uncovers reasons for youth disinterest in school and the STEM disciplines and how we can look for new educational approaches that foster participation and engagement in STEM without sacrificing rigor and content.

To address these issues, Emdin developed ‘Reality Pedagogy’, an approach to teaching and learning that provides educators with seven practical tools for improving their practice. The tools of Reality Pedagogy are designed to support STEM educators across ANY discipline in becoming more effective in transforming their classroom, and are the pillars of Edmin’s newest book, For White Folks Who Teach In The Hood and the Rest of Y’all Too.

Emdin explores what it takes to be a scientist, how educators, parents, and the general public can hone those skills in youth, and why we have no choice but to re-focus on creating a new STEM generation.

Emdin is an associate professor in the department of mathematics, science and technology at Teachers College, Columbia University, where he also serves as director of science education at the Center for Health Equity and Urban Science Education. He holds a PhD in urban education with a concentration in mathematics, science, and technology; master’™s degrees in both natural sciences and education administration, and bachelor’s degrees in physical anthropology, biology, and chemistry.

Sponsored by the Brodie Family Lecture Fund. Co-sponsored with the Center for Learning and Teaching, McKeen Center for the Common Good, Departments of Chemistry, Math, and Earth and Oceanographic Science, the Environmental Studies Program, and the Student Center for Multicultural Life.

Open to the public and free of charge.

On Campus Event: Friday Field Notes, March 31 1:30-4:00

Friday Field Notes at the Coastal Studies Center: “Plants”

March 31, 2017 | 1:30 PM – 4:00 PM | Coastal Studies Center Farmhouse

Come enjoy being outdoors, and help document the seasonal changes in plants and animals at Bowdoin’s beautiful Coastal Studies Center in our Friday Field Notes series. The theme for March is Tree ID, feel free to bring your notebook, sketchbook or camera. The event will run 2-4pm at the CSC, with a shuttle departing from the Druckenmiller loading dock at 1:30pm.  Email [email protected] to reserve a seat on the shuttle.

On Campus Event: Maine Politics: A discussion featuring Speaker of the Maine House, Sara Gideon (D-Freeport), and State Senator, Roger Katz (R-Augusta), Monday 4/3 @ 7:30

Maine Politics: A discussion featuring Speaker of the Maine House, Sara Gideon (D-Freeport), and State Senator, Roger Katz (R-Augusta)

April 3, 2017 | 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM | Visual Arts Center, Kresge Auditorium
Maine Politics
A discussion featuring Speaker of the Maine House, Sara Gideon (D-Freeport), and State Senator, Roger Katz (R-Augusta)
An opportunity to ask questions on current social, economic, and political issues facing the State of Maine from representatives from both sides of the isle.

Moderated by Jack Lucy ’17 and Marisa O’Toole ’17
Sponsored by the Bowdoin Republicans and Bowdoin Democrats.

This event is open to Bowdoin students, faculty and staff only.

Roger Katz (R-Augusta) 
Serves Augusta, China, Oakland, Sidney and Vassalboro in the Maine State Senate. Has served in the Senate since 2010 following two terms as the Mayor of Augusta. Katz serves on the Appropriations Committee and as Chair of the Government Oversight Committee.

Katz is a longtime activist in his community serving in leadership capacities with such organizations as United Way, Kennebec Valley YMCA, Team Cony, the Augusta Charter Commission and the Augusta Bicentennial Celebration. Has received number awards for his work within the community including the “Business Person of the Year” award from the Kennebec Valley Chamber of Commerce.

A veteran attorney, Katz is a senior partner in the Augusta firm of Lipman & Katz, is a former president of the Maine Trial Lawyers Association and has been named one of the “Outstanding Lawyers in America.” Katz resides in Augusta with his wife, Birdie Newman Katz, and they are the proud parents of two adult children, Jonathan and Shari.

Sara Gideon (D-Freeport)
Is serving her first term as Speaker of the House and third term in the Maine House of Representatives, representing the towns of Freeport and Pownal. As Speaker of the House, she is responsible for presiding over all actions of the House of Representatives.
Her community service, including hours in the RSU 5 schools, on the Town Council and on the boards of the Freeport Community Services and the Freeport Economic Development Corporation, is a major inspiration behind her public service career. Her desire to positively impact the lives of children and empower women and working families is why she ran for office.

Speaker Gideon graduated from the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She spent her professional career as an advertising account executive for a nationally renowned newspaper. Her father is a pediatrician who immigrated to America from India. Her mother is also a first-generation American, whose parents immigrated from Armenia.
She lives in Freeport, with her husband Ben and their three children.

ES Lunch: The Future of Green Careers (3/29)

Join us for a discussion with Patrick Coughlin ’89, a scientist at St. Germain Collins and board member of E2Tech. St. Germain Collins provides environmental management and land development services.  E2Tech seeks to expand Maine’s environment, energy and clean technology sectors.

11:30-1:00, Wednesday, March 29th
Moulton Union North Dining Room

Summer 2017 Job: Lead Summer trips for Overland, Tuesday 3.7 @ 7PM

Employer Info Session: Overland Summers

March 7, 2017 | 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM | Moulton Union, Lancaster Lounge

Overland is hiring exceptional college students to lead biking, hiking, language, service, writing and field studies programs – both domestic and abroad – for students ages 11 to 19. Small groups, carefully crafted programs and inspiring leadership have been at the heart of what we do for the past 30 years. Overland staff spend 10 days training and 6 weeks leading or supporting programs.

Kim Nault ’16 and Nora Gunning present on summer leadership opportunities.

On Campus Event: From soft-shell clams to soft-shell crabs: Two practical solutions for adapting to a warming Gulf of Maine (2/14)

SAVE THE DATE!
“From soft-shell clams to soft-shell crabs: Two practical solutions for adapting to a warming Gulf of Maine”             

Aerial view of the first soft shell clam farm, Heal Eddy, Georgetown, ME Photo credit: John Hagan

Aerial view of the first soft shell clam farm, Heal Eddy, Georgetown, ME
Photo credit: John Hagan

                     
Tuesday, February 14 7:00 pm
315 Searles Hall

The Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99% of the
world’s oceans. The ecosystem is being disrupted,
as are the livelihoods of fishermen along the coast.
While there is hope in the Paris Climate Accord for slowing climate change in the twenty-first century, the key for Maine fishermen is adaptation – developing ways to survive and thrive on the ecosystem that is already here, regardless of Paris. Join John Hagan and Marissa McMahan for an eminently practical view of how to navigate the brave new climate world facing Maine fisheries.

John M. Hagan Ph.D. is president of Manomet, a non-profit dedicated to making the world measurably more sustainable through the application of science. He has over thirty years of experience as a field ecologist, and has studied and published on freshwater invertebrates (bivalves), birds, reptiles, herbaceous and woody plants, and lichens and mosses. Recently, his research has focused on helping build diversified fisheries in Maine, especially soft-shell clams, given the rapidly-warming Gulf of Maine.
Marissa McMahan is currently a doctoral candidate in the ecology, evolution and marine biology program at Northeastern University, and is scheduled to graduate in August 2017. Her research focuses on ecology and fisheries in the Gulf of Maine, including published work on the American lobster and Atlantic cod, as well as extensive research on the northern range expansion of black sea bass. She has conducted field and laboratory experiments to understand population dynamics of crustaceans, such as growth, movement, behavior, distribution, and abundance. She also has an extensive background in commercial fisheries, having grown up in a commercial fishing family in mid-coast Maine, and worked as a commercial fisher for many years. She began investigating the potential for a soft-shell green crab industry in Maine in 2016, and established a network of collaborators spanning academia, industry, marketing, activism and journalism.
This event is open to the public free of charge, and co-sponsored by the Biology Department, the Environmental Studies Program, the Coastal Studies Center, and the Brunswick Community Earth Care Team.