CAMPUS MAP

Upcoming and Current Events

From lectures and forums to the performing arts, New College offers a wide range of public events, many of which are free.  Here is a look at some upcoming happenings on campus. 

For more information about any of these events, contact Greg Hite, College Events and Conferences Coordinator, at (941) 487-4155 or events@ncf.edu.

The New College Chorus Semester-Ending Musicale
Monday, May 12, 2008

7:30 pm
Mildred Sainer Pavilion,
Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota
Free

 

The New College Chorus will present it's semester-ending musicale
Monday, May 12, 2008 at 7:30 pm in the Mildred Sainer Auditorium with

Daniel Moe, Conductor, and Virginia Bray, Accompanist.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Israeli Palestinian Conflict
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
7:00 pm
Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota
Free

Norman Finkelstein will be delivering a lecture on the ongoing conflict
in Israel and Palestine. Finkelstein received his doctorate in Political Science in 1988 from Princeton University. His thesis examined the
theory of Zionism. He is the author of five books and most recently taught political theory at DePaul University in Chicago.

 

Commencement 2008

Friday, May 23, 2008

7:00 pm

College Hall Bayfront

5800 Bay Shore Road

 

New College's 42nd Annual Commencement is scheduled for Friday, May 23, on the bayfront behind College Hall.  This year's class of approximately 170 seniors continues the College's tradition of academic achievement, with five seniors already having been named Fulbright Scholars for 2008-2009. 

 

Click here for complete details on this year's Commencement Week festivities: Commencement 2008.

 

Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall and the CIA.
Friday May 30, 2008
7:00 pm
Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota
Free

Melvin Goodman is a Senior Fellow at the Center for International Policy, a nonprofit educational and research organization promoting a US foreign policy based on international cooperation, demilitarization and respect for basic human rights http://www.ciponline.org/. He is also adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University. Mel served as a senior Soviet analyst at the CIA from 1966-1986, and intelligence adviser to the SALT delegation in 1971-72. His book, co-written with Craig Eisendrath, Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neo-Conservatives Are Putting the Nation at Risk (2004), examines how the Bush administration has rolled back over half a century of foreign policy accomplishments and what must be done to restore America's reputation. His newest book is The Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA. Other books include The Phantom Defense: The Case Against National Missile Defense (2001) and The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze (2001). His articles have appeared in Harper's Magazine, Foreign Policy, Washington Monthly, Foreign Service Journal, New York Times, Washington Post, the Christian Science Monitor, to name a few.

Recent and Past Events

 

 Syesha Mercado at Ca’d’Zan

Friday, May 9, 2008

3:30 to 4:00 pm

Ca’d’Zan Terrace at the Ringling Museum of Art

 

American Idol finalist Syesha Mercado, a graduate of Sarasota’s Booker High School, will be giving a live performance – to be recorded for national television Friday, May 9 at 3:30 pm on the terrace of the Ca’d’Zan at the Ringling Museum of Art. The event is free to the public, and all New College faculty, students and staff are invited to attend.

 

HOWEVER, members of the campus community should expect heavy traffic and possible delays crossing US 41 and using Bay Shore Road between the hours of 1:30-4:30 pm on Friday afternoon. If possible, we recommend using pedestrian walkways and bicycle routes, rather than automobiles, during these hours.

 

  New Music New College: The JACK Quartet - "Inventions of Memory"
Saturd
ay, May 10, 2008

8 pm; Pre-concert discussion, 6:45 pm

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 for the public; Free for New College students, faculty and staff

 

The JACK Quartet will perform contemporary music that engages the issues of modernity and history, the persistence of memory and the imperative of transformation. The program includes works by Iannis Xenakis, John Zorn, Wolfgang Rihm and Charles Wuorinen. Comprising violist John Pickford Richards, violinists Ari Streisfeld and Christopher Otto and cellist Kevin McFarland, the JACK Quartet has been praised for their "power-house playing" by the Chicago Sun-Times, and maintains a steady appetite for today's most demanding string quartet repertoire.

 

 The Open Door: Sharing Islamic Sacred Spaces
Monday May 5, 2008
7:00 pm
College Hall Music Room
351 College Drive
Free

New College of Florida will host a public lecture by Dr. Anna Bigelow, Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at North Carolina State University, on how Muslims share holy sites with Hindus, Sikhs, and Christians in India. Describing her talk, Bigelow says, “Shared sacred sites hide in plain sight all over India…More often than not, even amid the highly charged religious politics of India, the encounter between religions is not only peaceful, it is convivial.” Her teaching and research focus on Islam in South Asia, with interest in Religion and Conflict, Performance Studies, Sacred Space, and Comparative Religions. She has authored several articles, including, “Saved by the Saint: Refusing and Reversing Partition in Muslim North India” in the Journal of Asian Studies and “Unifying Structures, Structuring Unity: Negotiating the Sharing of the Guru’s Mosque” in the Radical History Review. She is currently completing a manuscript entitled, Sharing the Sacred: Pluralism and Devotion in Muslim North India, which is under advance contract with Oxford University Press. She was recently awarded the Carnegie Scholars Program Fellowship.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

 Bay Neighbors Program: Stormwater GIS for Indian Beach/Sapphire Shores
Tuesday, May 6, 2008

12:30 PM
Caples Carriage House, Caples Campus

375 Caples Drive, Sarasota

FREE

 

From 2004 – 2006, the New College Environmental Studies Program and affiliated faculty utilized grant funds provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to develop a research and educational outreach program called “Bay Neighbors.” The primary mission of Bay Neighbors is to educate residents in the Indian Beach/Sapphire Shores (IBSS) neighborhood, which is located directly south of New College, about direct linkages between homeowner landscaping practices and non-point pollutant loading into Sarasota Bay. Original research for the project included delineation and digitization of the neighborhood’s stormwater drainage infrastructure within an integrated geographic information systems (GIS) database, measurement of stormwater runoff volume intercepted through the canopies of various native tree species, and characterization of runoff nutrient concentrations associated with different landscaping practices. This presentation will briefly outline basic GIS methods used in the project, highlight important results, and suggest ideas for future stormwater research, retrofits, and outreach in the IBSS neighborhood.
 

  Writing the New at New College: A Celebration of Innovative Writing
May 1-3, 2008

Hamilton Classroom Teaching Auditorium (HCL 8) and Cook Hall

FREE

  • Thursday, May 1 @ 7pm HCL 8: Charles Bernstein "Poetry  Rules!:The Concept of Poetry." With reception to follow in Cook Hall

  • Friday, May 2 @ 7pm HCL 8: Reading by Catherine Daly

  • Saturday, May 3 @ 3:30 in Cook Hall: Student Poetry Reading 

  • Saturday, May 3 @ 7pm HCL 8: Charles Bernstein: "The Attack of the Difficult Poems: Poetry Reading and Performance"

New College of Florida will host a three-day celebration of innovative writing, May 1-3.  Charles Bernstein, the Donald T. Regan Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania and the author of 40 books and pamphlets of poetry, essays, and libretti, will give both a lecture and a reading from his own work.  In addition, there will be readings from Catherine Daly, Adjunct Assistant Professor and Writer in Residence at New College and author of six books, as well as New College student poets.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Lecture: Toward a Political Conception of Human Rights

Friday May 2, 2008

2:00 pm

College Hall Music Room

351 College Drive, Sarasota

Free & open to the public.

 

Ken Baynes is a professor of Philosophy and Political Science at Syracuse University.  He works primarily in social and political philosophy, with a special focus in critical theory (the "Frankfurt School") and modern and contemporary German philosophy. He is a co-editor of After Philosophy: End or Transformation? (MIT Press), and Discourse and Democracy (SUNY Press), and the author of The Normative Grounds of Social Criticism: Kant, Rawls and Habermas (SUNY Press). His current interests are in the normative or obligatory character of rules and practices, attempts to ground moral principles in practical reason, and the relationship between democracy and basic rights, including "multicultural rights" (if indeed there are any!).

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

  Cruising the Caribbean
Saturday May 3, 2008
1:00 pm
Heiser Natural Sciences Building
Soo Bong Chae Auditorium

500 College Drive

FREE

Jack Corey was chief engineer for the Morgan Yacht Corporation when it was one of the largest yacht builders in the United States. He also was production manager of the spar shop at JSI for many years. He worked on designing and building cruising and racing boats for 35 years. He and his wife circled the Caribbean on their Morgan sailboat for three years and this talk covers their experiences.  This talk is sponsored by the New College Sailing Program.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Maya Trauma: Some Brief Thoughts on Cognition, Memory and Trauma on South Florida's Maya Immigrants
Friday, April 25, 2008
11:00 am
Anthropology Lab
FREE

J. P. Linstroth, of Nova Southeastern University, will examine the social identity, social memory, and episodic trauma, and coping strategies of the immigrant Maya in the United States, especially the part of the population directly affected by the Guatemalan Civil War of the 1980s. It is argued that cognitive theory in relation to anthropological analysis illuminates aspects of biography and group identity among the immigrant Maya by illustrating 'mental maps' related to past and present formations associated with conflict. Cognitive theory, unlike other anthropological theories of violence, captures mental modes of belonging and survival and a means for comprehending traumatic episodes of Maya lives.

 

New Music New College: "The Florida String Quartet Plays Music by New College Composers"
Saturd
ay, April 26, 2008

4 p.m.

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

 

For the past seven years, selected New College students create music for a resident chamber ensemble of the Florida West Coast Symphony, and hear their music rehearsed throughout the year and benefit from the guidance of the symphony's experienced musicians. In 2007-08, the Florida String Quartet worked with Alejandro Castano, Adele Fournet and Brian Oberlander, and at this concert, performs their compositions.For the news release, click HERE.

New College of Florida Senior Art Exhibition
April 7-12, 2008
Mack b Projects
500 Tallevast Road, Suite 107
Sarasota, Florida 34243

FREE

Opening Reception: Thursday, April 10; 6-9 PM

The New College of Florida Department of Art presents the New College of Florida Senior Art Exhibition featuring a selection of work from the students’ final year of studies. The exhibition is on view at Mack b Projects from April 7-12, 2008. The exhibition showcases a wide view of sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, installation, video, kinetics, robotics, and performance art. The event is free and open to the public.

Participating artists include: John Dillon, Christine Dormoy, Kristin Eschenroeder, Paloma Ferreyros, Katie Gemmer, Kalen Jennings, Chloe Kendall, Melanie Kielich, Alexis Kohilakis, Lina Maslo, Melissa Soforic and Dylan Terry.

Mack b Projects is an independent arts space located at 500 Tallevast Road, Suite 107, Sarasota, Florida 34243. Phone: (941) 359-0654.
Gallery Hours: Wednesday-Friday 12-6 pm, Saturday 12-3 pm

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Learning To Be White: Money, Race and God in America
Tuesday, April 8, 2008 at 8 pm
Hamilton Center Teaching Auditorium
5845 General Dougher Place

FREE

On Tuesday, April 8 at 8 pm, New College of Florida will host Dr. Thandeka, senior research professor of theology and culture at Meadville/Lombard Theological School. She will lecture on the issue of race in America drawing upon her new book Learning to Be White: Money, Race and God in America. Dr. Thandeka has taught in the philosophy department at San Francisco State University and the religion department at Williams College. She has also been a Fellow at the Stanford Humanities Center and Stanford University, and a visiting scholar at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. Before receiving her doctorate in theology, she spent 16 years as an Emmy award-winning television producer. An ordained Unitarian-Universalist minister and theologian, Dr. Thandeka was given her name in 1984 by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The name is Xhosa and means one who is loved by God.
 

According to traditional studies of racism, the rejection of one's own view in order to be loved or approved by a parent or an authority figure leads first to placing the group's view into one's own system of values and then to prejudice. Dr. Thandeka argues that children “cannot help but acquire the suspicions, fears, and hatreds that sooner or later fix on minority groups because of the ways the child learns these feelings: discipline, love, and threat." Her approach to the problem of race in America is interdisciplinary, drawing on historical theology, contemporary self-psychology, race and class theories, gender and cultural studies. In addition to anecdotal evidence, Dr. Thandeka uses a wide variety of secondary sources.
 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Introduction to Non-fiction Publishing featuring John Byram and Amy Gorelick
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
2:00 pm
Cook Hall Conference Room

All faculty and students are welcome to attend this introduction to the world of scholarly and non-fiction publishing. Ms. Gorelick, Senior Acquisitions Editor, University Press of Florida, and John Bryam, Editor-in-Chief, University Press of Florida, will discuss the basics of getting your work published; submitting a proposal, when to submit a full manuscript, the review process, the production process, marketing and selling works of non-fiction, and things to avoid when working with a publisher. A question and answer period will follow the brief presentation, with an opportunity to meet and discuss your own work in detail with Ms. Gorelick.

The
University Press of Florida, established in 1945, is the largest publisher in Florida and the second largest university press in the Southeast. UPF's mission is to serve all universities in the SUS system, to answer questions, offer advice, and possibly publish your work.

 

  2008 Senior Thesis Showcase
Friday, April 18, 2008
2:00 pm
Sudakoff Center

5845 General Dougher Place, Sarasota

FREE

Students, faculty and the community are invited to come and celebrate, support and honor the capstone accomplishment of a Novo Collegian -- The Thesis! The Showcase also exists as a “tool” for students to work on presenting their research prior to “BACCing” or defending the thesis to a panel of faculty. The Showcase is informal and designed to allow for open discussion of all research. Have fun with it! Not yet done? No problem! The Showcase is about interaction, not the final product. Whether or not you are writing one yourself, Come see what it takes to do a thesis, ask questions, and support your fellow Novo Collegians.

 

Click here for more information on this year's Senior Thesis Showcase.

 

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Yayoi Kusama, Barbara Kruger & Louise Bourgeois

Monday, March 31, 2008

3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Museum of Art, Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free

 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An 'Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

 

New College Culture Fest 2008
Saturday April 5, 2008
Noon to 6 p.m.
East Campus, New College of Florida
General Dougher Place

FREE

The New College Culture Fest 2008 celebrates diversity through a variety of cultural experiences shared by students and community members. Attendees will enjoy art, foods, and performances from different cultures around the world. This event is sponsored by the New College Student Alliance, Student Affairs, the Division of Social Sciences, the Department of History, Gender Studies, and the Provost's Office. Highlights include: Bajo Contro, a Capoeria demonstration, Dembe Drums, New College Dance Club and Acappella. This event is free and open to the public.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

CANCELED Julie Barlow: "The Future of the French Language-Où va le français?"
Sunday, April 6, 2008


PLEASE NOTE: Julie Barlow has canceled her April 6 lecture for health reasons.

 

  Welcome the Sunrise Easter Celebration

Sunday, March 23, 2008
7 am
College Hall Bayfront, New College of Florida
5800 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Everyone is welcome to come, bringing music and words of meaning, to this year's annual sunrise service on the bayfront behind College Hall on the New College campus! Since the dawn is predicted for 7 a.m., that's when we'll begin. Whatever your campus, or even if you just live in the neighborhood, we want you to join us for this special Easter morning gathering. Wear casual clothes and bring a lawn chair or blanket as we come together for this annual participatory worship service. The Rev. Dee Graham, campus minister, will welcome participants to this ecumenical event. David Kling and other members of the New College Jesus Club have volunteered to bring music and readings. Everyone attending is invited to share meaningful song, scripture, readings, prayer or silence.

Since there are no provisions for inclement weather, the service will be cancelled in case of heavy rain or storms. Otherwise, prepare for an outside experience and the beauty of the Florida outdoors.

Sarasota Campus Ministry is a non-profit organization serving Ringling College of Art and Design, New College of Florida, the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee, and the Ringling Museum's Florida State University programs. For more information, visit the campus ministry website at geocities.com/sarasotacampusministry.

 

 Native American Imagery: Beyond the “Souvenir Shop”

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Mildred Sainer Pavilion

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

FREE

 

Artist Christopher Olszewski, an active member of the Chippewa of Mnjikaning First Nation, has developed his aesthetic from the creative visual language of the Northern Woodland people. His work is rooted in western painting traditions, the modernist/postmodernist philosophy of art and the ancient Native American world and how it interacts with current times. His goal is to develop the Native American image beyond the “Souvenir Shop” and to depict actual people struggling with the encroachment of the dominant contemporary culture. His cultural identity is one of the focal points of his work. He defines himself as a completely assimilated Native American and his paintings are a philosophical inquiry and contemplation of this existence. The investigation of his cultural identity is based on superficial, mass consumed imagery, and his work, he draws connotations to the disparate images of Native American stereotypes. Juxtaposing images of United States currency, automotive brands, and professional sports logos with images of Native Americans in ordinary settings develops a consciousness of a thriving culture beyond the caricature. His paintings weave an intricate line between propaganda and advertising with an emphasis on the abuse of the word LIBERTY.

 

  Turkish Folk and Sufi Music and Poetry, featuring Sufi Musician Latif Bolat.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

7:00 p.m.
College Hall Music Room

FREE

Latif Bolat is a native of the Turkish Mediterranean town of Mersin. After receiving his degree in folklore and music at Gazi University in Ankara, Turkey, he taught traditional music throughout the country. He then went on to manage Ankara Halk Tiyatrosu, a musical theater company, which performed traditional musical plays. Mr.Bolat also received further degrees in Turkish History and Middle East Religion and Politics from Ankara University and an MBA from San Francisco State University. For more information, email Professor Chad Seales at cseales@ncf.edu

 

  Forum: "The Power of Women in Media, Communications and Entertainment"

Carol Flint, television producer

Cathy Guisewite, syndicated cartoonist

Leslie Glass, journalist, playwright & novelist

Susan Burns, editor, Biz 941 (moderator)
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

4 p.m.

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$25 donation (proceeds benefit scholarship fund for New College women); Free for New College faculty, staff and students; Complimentary reception follows.  Reservations: New College Foundation, 941.487.4800 or email Pow!@ncf.edu

 

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Alice Neel, Orlan & Anna Mendieta

Monday, March 17, 2008

3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Museum of Art, Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free

 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An 'Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

 

  New Music New College: "The Great Learning, Paragraph 7 - Music of Cornelius Cardew"
Saturd
ay, March 15, 2008

8 p.m.

mack b gallery

500 Tallevast Road, Sarasota

$10 for the public; Free for New College students, faculty and staff

Born in England, Cornelius Cardew entered the continental music scene during the late 1950s, and served as Stockhausen's assistant and was associated with John Cage. Cardew's setting of the seventh paragraph of Confucianism's canonical book, The Great Learning, for large vocal ensemble is one of the most influential experimental compositions of the last 40 years. It will be performed by New College students under the direction of Stephen Miles, with community members invited to participate. For the news release, click HERE.

  2008 Duke TIP Scholars Weekend
Saturday, March 15 through Sunday March 16, 2008

8 p.m.

New College of Florida

For more information: (941) 487-4112


March 15th and 16th, New College will host the 2008 Duke TIP Scholar Weekends. The Scholars Weekend Program provide opportunities for academically talented students in grades 8–11 to take short courses  taught by New College faculty. Courses introduce topics that might not be available in students’ local schools and help students define pathways to college majors and careers. In addition, they provide a glimpse into the collegiate experience and an opportunity for students to interact with similarly motivated students. This years course include: 1066 & All That: The Norman Conquest of England, taught by History Professor Carrie Beněs, Puzzles, Proofs and Paradoxes taught by Mathematics & Computer Science Professor Karsten Henckell, Discover Entomology: The Study of Insects taught by Biology Professor Elzie McCord Jr., Person and Society: Introduction to Sociology through Social Psychology taught by Sociology Professor Chavella Pittman.

For program information, full course descriptions, and to download an application visit the New College Duke TIP website.

 

The Art of Richard Heipp and Public Art Practice in Florida

Friday, March 14, 2008

3:30 p.m.

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

New College of Florida will host a lecture by Richard Heipp, Professor of Painting and Drawing at the University of Florida, on Friday, March 14 at 3:30 pm in the Mildred Sainer Pavilion. Mr. Heipp will present a two-part lecture. The first will focus on his personal artwork and its relationship to his public art practice. Part two of the presentation will elaborate on his experiences as a public artist and provide information on how to locate, apply and propose public art projects in Florida. An exhibition of his recent work is on display at Mack b Projects in Sarasota through the end of March. The talk is free and open to the public.

 

Lecture: Women of Color and State Violence
Thursday, March 13, 2008
6
p.m.
Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Dr. Andrea Smith, Assistant Professor of American Culture and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, will speak on her work with INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, a national grassroots organization that utilizes direct action and critical dialogue. Dr.  Smith is the author of Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide. She has also edited and contributed to The Color of Violence: The INCITE! Anthology.
For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Hot Topics: "The Future of Medical Care: Costs, Availability, and the Impact of Technology -- Dr. David Habif, M.D., Retired
Wednesday, March 12, 2008

4 p.m.

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 per person

Reservations: New College Foundation, (941) 487-4800

 

Lecture: "2008 Elections and the Potential Effect on the Stock Market, Taxes, and Global Geopolitics"

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

2 pm

Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

New College Foundation, (941) 487-4800

 

Gregory Valliere, Senior Vice President and co-founder of the Stanford Group Company's policy research group, will speak on the economic and political ramifications of the 2008 elections at New College of Florida.  Mr. Valliere has more than 30 years of experience providing political, economic and industry research for institutional investors.  He is a regular guest on a number of cable news shows including: "Ahead of the Curve," "Moneyline," "Market Wrap," "Your World with Neil Cavuto" and "Nightly Business Report." The talk is free and open to the public.  In addition the event will be simulcast on the New College home page

 

COLLOQUIUM XVI: "What About the Supreme Court?"

Mar 10-12, 2008, mornings

College Hall Music Room

315 College Drive, Sarasota

Further Information: New College Foundation, (941) 487-4800

 

Over the course of three days, guest speakers will explore the structure, organization and function of the Supreme Court, understanding the Constitution, and the power of the Court and its impact on society.  Richard Marcus, M.D. is the moderator for the series, which is presented by the New College Library Association.  Attendance at this members-only event will be open to the public pending availability.  For cost and availability, contact the number above.

 

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Florine Stettheimer, Claude Cahun & Leonor Fini

Monday March 10, 2008
3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free
 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An 'Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

New College Conference on Medieval & Renaissance Studies

March 6-8, 2008

Sudakoff Conference Center, New College of Florida

5845 General Dougher Place, Sarasota

Free for all undergraduates, New College faculty and staff

Local Sarasota residents $10, all others $60

 

The New College Conference on Medieval & Renaissance Studies is a biennial event covering all aspects of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.  This international Conference brings together scholars from across the United States and abroad for 45 panels and over 130 speakers on topics relating to European and Mediterranean history, literature, art, and religion from the fourth to the seventeenth centuries.  For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

Click here for more information on this year's conference

 

 Lecture: “The Library of Njoya: The Dream from which I write”

Saturday March 8, 2008
7pm
Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota
FREE

 

Noted author and scholar, Patrice Nganang will speak on the politics of African literature. Originally from Cameroon (he left Cameroon in the wake of the protests in the early 1990s that came close to toppling the regime of Paul Biya), he holds a doctorate from the University of Frankfurt and is currently on the faculty of SUNY Stonybrook. He has published 3 novels, a collection of poetry and a series of short stories and novellas, a monograph on contemporary theatre, and essays and studies on contemporary African literature & film. His work is very political and inspiring. His fiction touches on issues ranging from the social manifestations of political oppression in Cameroon to the silenced history of the Bamileke genocide that followed Cameroon’s independence. Because he is most interested in creating a space for silenced voices to be heard, he weaves stories that are compelling, poignant and vibrant with humor. His essays are very political – whether challenging the passivity of African elites in the face of political violence or the self-important attitude of literary critics who judge African literature. This winter he traveled to The Hague to witness the trial of former Liberian president Charles Taylor.

 

The talk is free and open to the public; a reception will follow.

 

For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of
Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

 1st Annual New College Boat Donation Program Auction

Saturday, March 8 and Sunday, March 9
11 am - 4 pm
New College Sailing Club
Caples Campus Waterfront (enter just south of the Ringling Museum)

 

Each day we will discuss the sailing program boat donation program and boats that we have for auction at New College and we will be available from 11:00 am to 4:00 pm to show the boats to prospective buyers. Other activities planned will be boat building demonstrations, boat rides and a fun sailboat race. All activities will be announced during the day.
If you are interested in buying a sailboat or have a friend that might be interested, this is an auction that you will not want to miss. The boats range from 10 feet to 27 feet and some could take you down to Key West with no problems.

For more information, contact Tom Mayers at 941-383-6598 or email landsendmarina@mac.com

 

Click here to view a flyer for this event

Lecture: Breaking the Wall of Silence: Addressing White Privilege
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
7p.m.
Mildred Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex
FREE

Peggy McIntosh is founder and co-director of the National S.E.E.D. Project on Inclusive Curriculum (Seeking Educational Equity and Diversity). She consults widely throughout the country and the world on creating gender-fair and multicultural curricula. McIntosh authored the ground-breaking "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through Work in Women's Studies." This analysis and its shorter form, "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack," have been instrumental in putting the dimension of privilege into discussions of gender, race and sexuality. McIntosh is a highly-sought-after speaker on these topics. For more information please call Greg Hite in the Office of Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155 or email events@ncf.edu

 

 

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Hannah Hoch, Sonia Delanay & Romaine Brooks

Monday March 3, 2008

3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free
 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An 'Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

 

  Environmental Lecture: "Ivory-billed Woodpeckers"
Thurs
day, Feb. 28, 2008

7 p.m.

Mildred Sainer Auditorium, Caples Fine Arts Complex
5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

 

Mike Collins of Annandale, Virginia, will lecture on "Ivory-billed Woodpeckers in the Pearl River Basin," for the Fedder Community Lecture Series, which is sponsored by New College Environmental Initiatives and the TREE Foundation. Collins, a scientist at the Naval Research Laboratory since 1985, studies the populations of ivory-billed woodpeckers in wetlands of Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida. In 1997, he took a 12,500-mile trip throughout North America and has also gone on birding adventures (usually solo) in Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Mexico, Australia, and Europe, but searching for the ivorybill has been the most exciting adventure of all. A reception will follow at 8 p.m.
 

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Gabriele Muenter, Kathe Kollwitz & Jeanne Mammen

Monday, Feb 25, 2008

3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free
 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An 'Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

 

  Get EmPowered Alternative and Renewable Energy Symposium

Friday, Feb 22, 2008

9:00 am to 5:00 pm

Sudakoff Center at New College of Florida

General Public $50; Free for New College Students, Faculty, Staff
Reservations Required - www.scgov.net/getempowered

 

Riding a wave of enthusiasm for alternative and renewable energy solutions, Sarasota County and New College of Florida are organizing Get EmPowered 2008. The symposium will be held from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 22 in the Sudakoff Center on campus. Attendance is free for New College students, faculty and staff, although reservations are required. (Cost to the general public is $50.) For reservation information, visit the Sarasota County Government website at www.scgov.net/getempowered. We hope to have a big campus turnout at Friday’s event!

For more information, visit the New College website at:
Get EmPowered Symposium

 

  Manasota Immigrant Rights Coalition

Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008

7 pm

Fish Bowl in Hamilton Center, New college of Florida

 

An organizational interest meeting of the Manasota Immigrant Rights Coalition will be held on Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 at 7 pm in the Fish Bowl at Hamilton Center on the New College of Florida campus, 5800 Bay Shore Rd, Sarasota. The first meeting will define the specific short-term and long-term goals and objectives of this student-led group. Everyone is invited. Questions or concerns, please contact Jose Manuel Godinez Samperio at (813)-600-0004 or email: jose.godinez@ncf.edu.

  “Women Artists Through the Ages:" Artemisa Gentileschi & Angelica Kauffmann

Monday Feb 18, 2008

3:30 to 5:00 pm

Ringling Library Education Building, Room 1003

Free
 

New College Art History students will present short lectures on women artists. These lectures were originally prepared as papers for Professor Cris Hasssold's course "An' Other’ Story: Women Artists through the Ages." Each session will cover two to three artists. All lectures will be held in the Ringling Library Education Building Room 1003. from 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm. This lecture series is free and open to the public. However, seating is limited so please call for reservations (941) 359-5700 "1" ext. 2701 or 2702.

 

  Candlelight Vigil to Honor NIU Shooting Victims
Friday Feb 15 , 2008

6:30 p.m.

Jane Bancroft Cook Library Courtyard

 

New College of Florida will host a candlelight vigil tonight in remembrance of the students killed in yesterday’s shooting rampage at Northern Illinois University. The event also will honor the nearly two dozen students injured during the tragic event. After opening remarks by campus minister Dee Graham, participants will light candles and walk to the bay front behind College Hall. The general public is invited to attend. The Jane Bancroft Cook Library is located at 5800 Bay Shore Road in Sarasota.

 

  The Vagina Monologues
Thurs
day Feb. 14, & Friday Feb 15 , 2008

7 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

Free

 

In an annual Valentine's Day tradition, the students of New College of Florida present, The Vagina Monologues, the well-known play by Eve Ensler. This student-acted, -directed and -produced performance comes to New College on February 14th and 15th. This year's production is also a fundraiser for abused women of Sarasota, Bradenton. Both performances begin at 7:00 at Sainer Pavilion on New College of Florida campus. Sainer is located at 5313 Bay Shore Road. The performance is free, with a suggested donation of $10.

For more information about the New College production of The Vagina Monologues, please contact Greg Hite, Special Events Coordinator in the Office of Public Affairs at events@ncf.edu or New College Public Affairs at (941) 487-4155.

 

  Lecture: Women in War: From Darfur to Iraq

Saturday, Feb 16, 7 pm,

7 pm

Sudakoff

Free

The Program in Sociology, the Social Sciences Division, and the Gender Studies Program are pleased to announce a talk by New College alum, Sarah Chynoweth.  She will be speaking about her work as the Reproductive Health Program Manager at the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children. Sarah works to improve the lives and defend the rights of refugee and internally displaced women, children and youth and works to ensure that their voices are heard from the community level to the highest councils of governments and international organizations. Her professional experiences include projects in Egypt, Jordan, Malta, Nepal, Palestine/Israel, Romania, Sudan (Darfur, Thailand (Burma border) and Tibet.

 

  “Into the Blue: Five Years Well Wasted in the South Pacific”
Darrell Nicholson, Editor of Practical Sailor Magazine

Saturday, Feb. 9, 2008

1 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

No reservations; seating limited, first-come, first-served
Information: New College Special Events 941.487.4155

It’s safe to say that most sailors, at one time in their lives, dream of exploring the South Pacific by boat. Each year, many sailors follow through on that dream and set out across the world’s largest ocean in a small boat. What does is it take to sail across the Pacific Ocean?How does the dream of exploring the South Seas by boat measure up to reality? Darrell Nicholson, the editor of Practical Sailor magazine, will answer these questions and more on February 9 during his talk and slide presentation “Into the Blue: Five Years Well Wasted in the Pacific Islands,” hosted by the New College of Sarasota.

 

  Forum: "The Power of Women in Education"

Esther Barazzone, PhD, President, Chatham University

Amy Wick Mavis, Exec Director, PACE Center for Girls, Manatee

Fiona Crawford, Associate Director, Roskamp Institute

Maribeth Clark, Associate Provost, New College (moderator)
Tues
day, Feb. 12, 2008

4 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$25 donation (proceeds benefit scholarship fund for New College women); Free for New College faculty, staff and students; Complimentary reception follows

Reservations: New College Foundation, 941.487.4800 or Pow!@ncf.edu

 

Click here to view a live simulcast of this Power of Women lecture.

 

Hot Topics: "Climate Change and Global Warming:

What Every Floridian Should Know"

Dr. Meg Lowman, New College Professor of Environmental Studies and Biology
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2008

4 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 per person

Reservations: New College Foundation, 941.487.4800

 

  Arts Day - Sunday, Jan 13, 2008. 

 

Visit the New College booth in downtown Sarasota, and get a free frisbee --while they last--along with everything you've always wanted to know about Florida's award-winning honors college. More information about Arts Weekend at www.sarasotaarts.org.

 

  New Music New College: Lecture/demonstration by pianist Kathleen Supové
Fri
day, Jan. 18, 2008

3 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Free

 

New College of Florida presents the ninth season of its contemporary music series, New Music New College, which began Sept. 15 and runs through the spring semester. Kathleen Supové is one of America’s most accomplished champions of contemporary music. For the news release, click HERE.

 

  New Music New College: "Digits" - Kathleen Supové, pianist
Saturd
ay, Jan. 19, 2008

8 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 for the public; Free for New College students, faculty and staff

Kathleen Supové is known for continually redefining what it means to be a pianist/keyboardist/performance artist in today's world. Her concerts are a multimedia experience using electronics, theatrical elements, vocal rants, performance art, staging and collaboration with artists from other disciplines. Her "Digits" concert takes its title from a featured composition for piano, soundtrack and video by Neil Rolnick. For the news release, click HERE.

 

  Dedication: Dr. Helen N. Fagin Holocaust Collection

William Parsons, Chief, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Sunday, Jan. 20, 2008

2 p.m.

Sainer Auditorium, Sainer Pavilion

Caples Fine Arts Complex, New College

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

Reservations Limited:  New College Library Association, 941.487.4600

New College of Florida will dedicate a book collection to honor an educator and Holocaust survivor, Dr. Helen N. Fagin of Sarasota. William Parsons, chief of staff of the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., is scheduled to speak at the dedication. The collection project, which aims to make Cook Library a major source in Florida for Holocaust research, was begun by individuals with the Sarasota-Manatee Arch Family Holocaust Education Center and Holocaust Survivors Group to honor Fagin. Donations for the collection may be made by check payable to the New College Library Association and sent to the NCLA at The Keating Center, 5800 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota, FL 34243-2109. For more, click HERE.

  Judaic Studies Lecture: "The Archaeology of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls"

 Jodi Magness, Author, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Monday, Jan. 21, 2008

7 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex, New College

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

FREE

Sponsored by The Klingenstein Chair of Judaic Studies and The Jay Rudolph Endowment

 

Hot Topics: "Economic Outlook: boom, Bust, or...?

 Tim McGee, Chief Economist, U.S. Trust
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2008

4 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 per person

Reservations: New College Foundation, 941.487.4800

 

Hot Topics: "The Writer's Brush, Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture"
Wednes
day, Dec. 5, 2007

4 p.m.

Sainer Pavilion, Caples Fine Arts Complex

5313 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota

$10 per person

Donald Friedman, author of The Writer’s Brush, Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture by Writers, and curator of the recent New York exhibition of writer art will speak at the New College Foundation's "Hot Topics" seminar Dec. 5. Friedman spent decades in research, locating the artwork of 200 of the world’s most famous writers, gathering images from several continents, unearthing paintings and drawings from contemporary writers, from estates of deceased writers and from private collections, museums, libraries and universities. He interviewed such notable writer-artists as Kurt Vonnegut, Tom Wolfe, John Berger, Donald Justice, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Derek Walcott and many others. The result is a book with more than 400 images of work by such writers