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Calendars » Harriot College » Show List
February 2011
  Saturday 2/5/2011 10AM-12PM
     Germany Ascendant
   
Germany has emerged from both the financial crisis and the eurozone crisis as the dominant economic and political power in Europe, in particular setting the tone for dealings with Russia, Eastern Europe and Iran. How important is it for U.S, interests to
  Wednesday 2/9/2011 4PM-5PM
     Agnès Sorel: Beauty, Power, Cleanliness
   
East Carolina University French Program, Women's Studies Program, Medieval and Renaissance Studies Program present Dr Tracy Adams Associate Professor of French Director for the Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies University of Auckland, New Zeal
  Saturday 2/12/2011 10AM-12PM
     Rebuilding Haiti
   
The January 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti struck a country already suffering from widespread poverty and underdevelopment. Did this natural disaster inadvertently provide an opportunity for reassessment and planning a new Haiti? With presidential
  Saturday 2/19/2011 10AM-12PM
     U.S. National Security
   
U.S. national security priorities were expanded after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, to include waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan, tightening border security, pursuing cyberthreats, halting nuclear proliferation and attempting to snuff out
  Wednesday 2/23/2011 4PM
     Who Owns History: Making Fiction from the Facts of the Triangle Fire of 1911
   
  Thursday 2/24/2011 - 2/25/2011 7-8:30PM & 9AM-7:15PM
     Neo-Latin Studies and the Humanities: An International Symposium in Honor of Dr. Charles Fantazzi
   
The two-day symposium, which is free and open to the public, features a host of distinguished scholars and will culminate in a special lecture by Dr. Fantazzi, who is retiring at the end of the spring 2011 semester after 14 years of service to ECU.
  Saturday 2/26/2011 10AM-12PM
     Responding to the Financial Crisis
   
As an immediate response to the financial crisis of 2007?08, governments around the world stepped in to bail out troubled private banks deemed ?too big to fail,? underscoring the interdependence between private and public finances. With the recent eurozo