You are cordially invited to the Davis Center Holiday Party...
*Thursday, December 8, 2005*
CGIS South Building
Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
1730 Cambridge Street, Concourse Level, Room *#S030*
4:15 pm - 6:15 pm
Friends and family are welcome.
If you have questions, please feel free to contact Penny Skalnik at
617.495.4037 or daviscrs(a)fas.harvard.edu <mailto:daviscrs@fas.harvard.edu>.
RSVP with regrets only.
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Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
Harvard University
1730 Cambridge Street, 3rd Floor, Suite 301B
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: 617.495.4037
Fax: 617.495.8319
http://www.daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu
*Wednesday, November 9
*
Please join us to celebrate the opening of Harvard College Library's newest
facility, the beautiful H.C. Fung Library, on the Concourse Level of the
Knafel (North) Building of the Center for Government and International
Studies (CGIS), on Wednesday, November 9, from 3-5 pm.
Refreshments and tours will be offered.
Diane Garner, Librarian for the Social Sciences
Erik Zitser, Fung Library Manager and Librarian of the Davis Center for
Russian and Eurasian Studies
Kazuko Sakaguchi, Librarian of the Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan
Nancy Hearst, Librarian of the Fairbank Center on East Asia
Meghan Dolan, Head of Numeric Data Services of the Social Sciences Program
*
1737 Cambridge Street, CGIS North, Concourse Level*
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Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
Harvard University
1730 Cambridge Street, 3rd Floor, Suite 301B
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: 617.495.4037
Fax: 617.495.8319
http://www.daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu
The US State Department and Department of Education have designated
November 14-18 "International Education Week 2005." International
Education Week is an annual initiative to celebrate and promote
international education and exchange. As part of this year's festivities
at Harvard, the Davis Center is sponsoring a film series (details
below). For a full program of Harvard events, please see the Office of
International Programs calendar at
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~oip/calendar.html. *
**
/Worlds Colliding: Soviet and the Other/*
Three films--one each on Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central
Asia--exploring the effects an encounter with a starkly different
culture can have on an individual.
*Tuesday, November 15
*
*"Good Bye, Lenin!" (2003, dir. Wolfgang Becker) 121 min.*
East Germany, the year 1989: A young man protests against the regime.
His mother watches the police arresting him and suffers a heart attack
and falls into a coma. Some months later, the GDR does not exist anymore
and the mother awakes. Since she has to avoid every excitement, the son
tries to set up the GDR again for her in their flat. But the world has
changed a lot...
CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge Street, Concourse Level, Room S050
8:00 pm
*Wednesday, November 16
*
*"Genghis Blues" (1999, dir. Roko Belic) 88 min.*
The extraordinary odyssey of a U.S. musician of Cape Verdean ancestry to
Tannu Tuva, in central Asia, where nomadic people throat sing more than
one note simultaneously, using vocal harmonics. A bluesman, Paul Pena,
blind and recently widowed, taught himself throat singing and was by
chance invited to the 1995 throat-singing symposium in Kyzyl. Helped by
the "Friends of Tuva," Pena makes the arduous journey. Singing in the
deep, rumbling kargyraa style, Pena gives inspired performances at the
festival, composes songs in Tuvan, washes his face in sacred rivers,
expresses the disorientation of blindness in foreign surroundings, and
makes a human connection with everyone he meets.
CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge Street, Concourse Level, Room S050
8:00 pm
*Thursday, November 17
*
*"Window to Paris" (Okno v Parizh) (1994, 87 minutes)*
Nikolai (played by Sergei Dontsov) has been fired from his job as a
music teacher and has to live in the gym until he finds a place to stay.
Finally, he gets a communal room in the apartment of Gorokhov (Victor
Mikhalkov). The room's previous inhabitant, an old lady, has died a year
ago, and yet her cat, Maxi, is still in the locked room, healthy and
fat. Soon, Nikolai and his neighbours discover the mystery: there is a
window to Paris in the room. That's when the comedy begins - will the
Russians be able to cope with the temptation to profit from the discovery?
CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge Street, Concourse Level, Room S050
8:00 pm
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Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
Harvard University
1730 Cambridge Street, 3rd Floor, Suite 301B
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: 617.495.4037
Fax: 617.495.8319
http://www.daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu