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| A Cuban flag waves atop the national museum in Havana. |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – About 10 Cuban photographers, economists,
writers, scientists, poets and other professionals are scheduled
to visit The University of Alabama campus to join with Latin American
experts from UA and across the nation for the Alabama-Cuba Conference
Nov. 17-20.
“The conference will give substance and add momentum to the
developing relationships between the American and Cuban peoples,”
said Dr. Lawrence Clayton, professor and chair of the history department
at UA and chair of UA’s Cuba Committee.
In areas ranging from baseball to the mambo, and from drinking
water standards to economic conditions, conference participants
will exchange ideas about differences and similarities between the
two cultures.
The conference begins in UA’s Bryant Conference Center on
Monday, Nov. 17 at 6 p.m. with baseball experts discussing the strong
Cuban connection to the so-called American Game. The keynote event,
from noon until 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19, also in the Center, is
a presentation on the Cuban mambo, its sound, its look and its place
in the world, featuring Dr. Robert Farris Thompson, professor of
art history at Yale University.
Conference registration and check-in begins Nov. 18 at 8:30 a.m.
and will be available again at 5 p.m. and continue each day of the
conference. Registration and many of the programs will be held in
the Bryant Conference Center on the UA campus. The registration
fee for all or part of Cuba Week is $25 per person and is non-refundable.
UA faculty, staff, and students may register free but are encouraged
to go through the registration procedure.
Each of the three optional luncheons is $15 per person.
For details on each of the 23 sessions and for on-line registration
information, see the web site www.cuba.ua.edu
or contact Clayton, in the College of Arts and Sciences, at 205/348-7103
or e-mail lclayton@bama.ua.edu.
Sessions will focus on a wide range of subjects including: Improving
drinking water standards; the art of bookmaking; Cuba’s economics
and politics; poetry; photography; economic connections between
Alabama and Cuba; links between Mobile and Cuba; archaeology of
South-Central Cuba; aging populations; health care; religion; science
fiction; mental health; water resources; and biodiversity.
A Cuban film festival will be offered each night throughout the
conference at 7 p.m. at the Ferguson Center, a photography exhibit
from Cuban government archives will open Nov. 18 at 6 p.m. at Smith
Hall and an exhibition of the work of a Havana printmaker and painter
will be on display on the fifth floor of the Gorgas Library from
9 a.m.-5 p.m. throughout the conference.
The University of Alabama has a longstanding presence in international
activities and is striving to become a regional and national center
for Cuba-related research and study. UA’s Latin American Studies
program was founded in 1967, and numerous faculty members have been
working with their Cuban counterparts for several years.
In 2002 the University received an academic travel license from
the U.S. Department of the Treasury which permits travel to Cuba
for the purpose of educational development. Groups of UA administrators,
faculty and students have traveled to Cuba over the past two years
to begin building academic partnerships with educators in that country.
The second Alabama-Cuba conference is scheduled for March 2005
in Havana. The conference is made possible, in part, by the Cooper
Cuba Initiative, which is partially funded by a gift from a member
of The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. The Initiative allowed
some UA faculty, staff and students to study, teach and conduct
research in Cuba. Trustee Angus Cooper and his brother, David Cooper,
of Mobile, have given $50,000 to kick off the program.
Initiatives ongoing between UA and Cuba include a program where
nursing and medical students, medical residents, and students in
the Rural Medical Scholars program will work with the University
of Havana Medical School to observe their health care system. A
host of other projects include engineering efforts within the area
of water and the environment and preparations for providing English
language training to Cuban engineers through UA’s English
Language Institute.
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