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Internationally famed street artist J.R. has created a global participatory art project that gives anyone a chance to make a statement, with their picture.\\xa0 The INSIDE OUT project has traveled around the world and now to Fordham University. \\xa0On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations, Host Robin Shannon discusses the project with Fordham Professor Rosemary Wakeman, Associate Professor of Visual Art Mark Street and members of The Inside Out team.
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Author and Fordham Professor Dr. Mary Bly discuss her class \\u201cPublishing Theory and Practice.\\u201d It introduces students to the world of publishing. She also offers advice for writers looking to become published author.
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The International Dyslexia Association defines dyslexia as a specific learning disability that is neurological in origin.\\xa0 But members of a boarding school for dyslexic students in Dutchess County, New York don\\u2019t use the term \\u201cdisability.\\u201d \\xa0\\xa0They prefer to call it a \\u201cway to learn differently.\\u201d\\xa0 On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we discuss the issue of dyslexia with three people who have first-hand knowledge of the condition. Fordham Alumn, Kevin Pendergast is the Headmaster of the Kildonan School, a boarding School that empowers students with dyslexia. Dave Flink is the Executive Director of Eye-to-Eye, a national grass roots mentoring program. August Hunt is in his senior year at Kildonan
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Qatar is considered one of the wealthiest countries in the world and traditionally one of the most conservative. Yet western culture is beginning to influence younger generations, especially when it comes to news.\\xa0\\xa0 Dr. Everette Dennis is helping train the next generation of journalist in the rapidly changing field of cross-platform media. He is Dean and CEO of Northwestern University in Qatar. Dr. Dennis is also former chair of the Communication and Media Management Department at Fordham University\\u2019s Graduate School of Business. On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we discuss teaching journalism in a conservative country.\\xa0 We also discuss an NU-Q study on entertainment consumption habits in the Middle East, including the popularity of Hollywood content and its perceived morality \\u2013 or lack thereof.
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They hide under the bed, lurk in the shadows, and scare us half to death. But is there more to bring a monster than screams and frights? WFUV\'s Chris Williams sits down with Fordham University Professors Rebecca June and Paul Levinson to talk about medieval monsters, real life monsters, and more.
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On this week\\u2019s show wehear from Nat Horne, an original member of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. \\xa0He shares his experiences growing up in the segregated south and his move to Broadway.
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\\nElaine Congress is the Associate Dean for Continuing Education and Extramural Programs in the Fordham Graduate School of Social Service andAllan Luks is the Director of the Fordham Center for Nonprofit Leadership.\\xa0 They discuss The future of non-profits and the skills needed to run them.\\u201d
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\\xa0
This week Robin Shannon sits down with Fordham Professor Dr. Emily Rosenbaum and Albert Einstein College of Medicine Assistant Professor Dr. Earle Chambers. The professors collaborated on a study that identifies how public housing may affect the health of Latinos living in the Bronx.
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Fordham University Instructor Stefanie Vuotto is one of the principal investigators of a new study that highlights the role of homelessness and the crime of human trafficking.
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There are a lot of opinions about the news media, the future of broadcast journalism and what constitutes professional reporting. On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we explore these questions and more by listening to past interviews from former hosts. Fordham Professor Dr. Bill Baker talks with Mary Wilson on how to save the ailing print industry. Then, News legend Sam Donaldson talks with WFUV\\u2019s Claudia Morell about citizen journalism and its questionable influence on the new industry. Finally, WFUV\\u2019s Lauren Naymie talks to Fordham Alumni Lynn Neary about how she got her start in radio.
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Sandy was the deadliest and most destructive storm of the 2012 hurricane season. It was also the second-costliest hurricane in U.S. history. Monday marks six-months since the Superstorm struck our area.\\xa0 On this week\'s Fordham Conversations we hear from Fordham alum Kendra Newkirk.\\xa0 A few days after moving into her new house in Queens, Sandy hit, washing away almost everything Kendra owned. We talk with Kendra just after the storm hit and again a-half-a year later.\\xa0 But first we also hear from Fordham Professor Mark Naison. He spearheaded an outreach effort to help Kendra recover from Sandy\'s wrath.\\xa0
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WFUV\\u2019s Strike a Chord campaign is examining the need for more emergency housing during times of crisis.\\xa0 Housing is just one of the major challenges that remain for Haiti, following a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that hit the Caribbean country in 2010.\\xa0 Fordham Professor Dr. Marciana Popescu knows firsthand about the struggles facing the people of Haiti.\\xa0 She designed a course that takes Fordham students to different countries, where they receive on-site disaster-aid experience. \\xa0On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations, Dr. Popescu shares her observations from one of her many trips to Haiti.
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Author and Fordham Professor Dr. Mark Naison discusses so-called food desert, his research on health and food disparities in the Bronx, and how the borough is a prime location for cultural tourism.
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Today we showcase stories and interviews that WFUV student reporters at Fordham University have produced, including gay homeless teens, safety and bike sharing program, conversation with musician Dion, and discussion with author Ernie Palladino.
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Author and Fordham professor Dan Zevin discusses his comic memoir \\u201cDan gets a Minivan: Life at the Intersection of Due and Dad. In addition, WFUV Reporter Alen Kanlic takes a look at how crowd-funding has changed the video game industry.
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Tina Maschi, Ph.D., president of the National Organization of Forensic Social Work and professor of social work, discusses social stigma and the forms it can take.
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A discussion with Emmy Award winning filmmaker\\xa0Helen Young who\\u2019s producing a documentary called \\u201cThe Bangor 5.\\u201d\\xa0 It follows the case of five unlikely commandos, all over the age of 60, who executed a bold break-in at a military bases near Seattle that stockpiled nuclear weapons.\\xa0 We also hear from Fordham Student and WFUV reporter Lucas Bifera.\\xa0 He examines the diverse and growing number of New Yorkers who are studying the world\\u2019s most spoken language -- Mandarin Chinese.
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Fordham University recently launched a research center that looks at how marketing can improve consumer\\u2019s lives.\\xa0 On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we hear from the Executive Director of the Center for Positive Marketing, Dr. Dawn Lerman and the Director of research, Dr. Luke Kachersky.\\xa0 We also hear from WFUV\\u2019s Connor Ryan on what the new Citi Bike sharing program mean for safety on New York City streets
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WFUV\'s Strike a Chord campaign on electoral engagement continues on Fordham Conversations.\\xa0 Alumnus Dr. Konstantin Augemberg discusses his study examining the influence of personal values on political engagement.\\xa0 Also, Reporter Jacob Anderson looks at a survey from the group Headcount that examines how music fans may differ in political allegiances and shared values.\\xa0
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Author and Fordham Alumnus Robert Hinkley talks about his book \\u201cTime to Change Corporations: Closing the Citizenship Gap.\\u201d In it, he details ways to make corporations more socially responsible.\\xa0 Then WFUV\\u2019s Jake Neher gives us a listen to the Really Terrible Orchestra of Westchester, a group that is proud to be musically disadvantaged.
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The late newsman Mike Wallace once said a journalist\\u2019s responsibility is to "bring both the heat and the light." In fact, Heat and Light is the name of a book Wallace co-wrote with Journalist and Fordham professor, Dr. Beth Knobel.\\xa0 It\'s a guide full of advice for the next generation of news gatherers.\\xa0 On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we revisit an interview in which Dr. Nobel discusses \\u201cHeat and Light: Advice for the next generation of Journalists\\u201d As well as her relationship with Wallace before he passed away April 7, 2012 at the age of 93-years old.
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Once a year, a number of selfless New Yorker\\u2019s spend a cold winter\\u2019s night canvasing city parks, subways and other public spaces to count the number of people living on New York City streets.\\xa0 On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we discuss the annual Homeless Outreach Population Estimation also known as the HOPE Count with the Dorothy Day Center for Service and Justice Director, Sandra Lobo Jost. We also talk with Fordham Junior Jillian Abballe who\\u2019s served as both a HOPE Count\\u2019s volunteer and group leader.
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As part of WFUV\\u2019s Strike a Chord campaign this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations focuses on financial literacy.\\xa0 Our guests include Donna Katzin, Executive Director of Shared Interest. This non-profit organization raises capital in the U.S. to help small businesses in South Africa. We also talk to Fordham Junior Katy Raymond. Katy will be visiting South Africa as part of Fordham University\\u2019s first study abroad program on the African continent.\\xa0
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The Faux-real\\u2019s All-Male version of OEDIPUS REX has been called cutting-edge, classic, serious and seriously silly.\\xa0 \\xa0Director and Fordham Professor Mark Greenfield, along with actors Steve Johnson, Jason Scott Quinn and Rafael Miguel discuss how they infuse this classic play with humor for a modern audience.
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Eliot Spitzer was cut from CNN\'s prime-time lineup this week.\\xa0 Spitzer spent less time as a TV host than he did as governor of\\xa0 New York.\\xa0 As many await word on Spitzer\\u2019s next move,\\xa0 today\\u2019s\\xa0 Fordham Conversations will take us back to an interview\\xa0 between director of the Forum on Law, Culture\\xa0and Society at Fordham Law,\\xa0Thane Rosenbaum and Eliot Spitzer.
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Fordham Professor of History Dr. Richard Gyug discusses what happened during a study tour in northwestern Spain along the historic and modern Camino de Santiago.\\xa0 Plus, A veteran discusses how making the GI Bill into law is one thing, but making the law work is another.\\xa0 Then, Fordham Senior Kate McGee travels New York City talking to amateur and professional piano players enjoying a community art project.
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Director of the Forum on Law, Culture and Society at Fordham Law (http://www.forumonlawcultureandsociety.org/) Thane Rosenbaum speaks with Former New York Governor, political commentator and CNN host Eliot Spitzer.
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Global Outreach Director Paul Frances, Global Outreach Team leader Christine Gosney and program participants Nicole Deters discuss Fordham University\\u2019s Global Outreach service program. An opportunity for students to travel and learn about issues of social, economic, political and environmental injustice and what they can do about it.\\xa0
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On Fordham Conversations for Saturday, March 13th\\xa0 we\\u2019ll hear from Benjamin Cole, an assistant professor of management at Fordham who once worked for Toyota in Tokyo. Dr. Cole discusses Toyota\\u2019s recall troubles and the company\\u2019s corporate culture. Listen to Fordham Conversations on 90.7 WFUV-FM.
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Twi is one of the most widely spoken languages in the West African nation of Ghana.\\xa0 Beginning this summer Fordham will be the only University in New York City to teach it.\\xa0 On WFUV\\u2019s Fordham Conversations we learn about the Twi language and Ghana\\u2019s cultural influence from Professor Mark Naison, who Chairs Fordham\\u2019s department of African and African-American studies and Kojo Ampah, Founder of The African Cultural Exchange student group at Fordham.\\xa0 You can hear Fordham Conversations every Saturday at 7am on 90.7 WFUV-FM and WFUV.org.
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On this week\\u2019s Fordham Conversations, Marjuan Canady discusses the history of African-American Images in film.\\xa0 The actress is a 2008 Fordham Graduate who holds degrees in theatre, African and African-American studies. We also find out what parents and kids have to say about the controversy surround the new Disney Film \\u201cThe Princess and the Frog.\\u201d
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Vaccinations are more than just a necessary \\u201couch\\u201d for kids\\nand flu-avoidant adults\\u2026they\\u2019re a major public health issue, especially right\\nnow. We talk with Fordham economist Troy Tassier about what we know, and what\\nwe think we know, about epidemics and\\nvaccines. Also, saying goodbye to one of the Bronx\\u2019s most high-flown residents.\\n
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Hello, Clarice! From Sam Spade to Hannibal Lecter, we look\\nat crime novels, that thing they do to us, and what they say about the way we\\nlook at families. Lenny Cassuto, Fordham english professor and the author of\\n"Hard Boiled Sentimentality: The Secret History of American Crime\\nStories", joins me in the studio.
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We talk about angels\\u2014and why they\\u2019re probably not what we\\nthink\\u2014with Fordham theologian Clair McPherson. Also, getting to know Brooklyn\\u2019s\\nHasidic community with Fordham anthropologist Ayala Fader.
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Before waterfront redevelopment, and before waterfront\\ndecay, New York\'s waterfront was a world of its own. As part of WFUV\'s new Strike\\na Chord campaign, we look at that world--New York\'s longshoremen, organized\\ncrime, and how it inspired a classic film. Our guest is James Fisher--his book "The Irish Waterfront and the Soul of the\\nPort", is forthcoming from Cornell University press.
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With the advent of new therapies, people with HIV and AIDS\\nare living longer, healthier lives than ever before. But that happy result is revealing\\nsomething far less promising, and the group that seems to be affected more than\\nmost is right here in New York City.\\nWe talk with Fordham psychologist Monica Rivera Mindt about the situation, why\\nit\\u2019s developed and what can be done about it. Also, visiting the AIDS quilt.
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When you see the latest teen pop vixen, you might worry for\\nthe future of teen girls...but maybe they\'re savvier than we think. We talk\\nwith Fordham Anthropologist Oneka LaBennett about how one group of girls, West\\nIndian teens in Brooklyn, use pop music, TV\\nand even their accents to their own ends.
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With the Catholic church struggling to recruit and retain\\nclergy, it may be harder than ever for those "in the religious life"\\nto explain their decisions to the public, and to their families. David\\nRanghelli\'s film "The Calling" explores this question. This week on\\nFordham Conversations, we speak with Ranghelli about his film and its\\nsubjects.
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We all joke about stalking people or having stalkers...but\\nwhat, actually, is stalking? And how can we stop it or at least reduce the risk\\nthat it will escalate into violence? We speak with Fordham psychologist Barry\\nRosenfeld about his work with stalking offenders.
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The economy has many of us thinking hard about what we buy,\\nwhy, and
\\nthe place that buying stuff occupies in our lives. We talk with
\\ntheologian Tom Beaudoin about consumption and faith--Beaudion is the
\\nauthor of the book "Consuming Faith: Integrating Who We Are With What
\\nWe Buy." Also, a look at consumer needs and the Sabbath.\\xa0
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Comic books today are a bigger part of mainstream popular\\nculture than they\'ve been for a very long time. But comics have often\\nbeen both subversive, and scandalous! We speak with author David Hadju about\\nthe comic book scare of the 1940s and \'50s, and we talk about the relationship\\nbetween horror comics and political protest in Brazil.
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What\'s the point of marriage? Well,\\nsure, there\'s love...but in many places and times marriage has served lots of\\ndifferent purposes, from making business contacts to playing politics. We talk\\nwith historian Carina Ray about the complexities of love, marriage and commerce\\nin the Colonial British Gold Coast, and we travel to Queens\\nand the
\\nvillage to look at how young South Asians are looking for love.
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When we settle in with our fried snacks and beer to watch\\nthe BIGGEST FOOTBALL GAME OF THE YEAR tomorrow, what will we really be\\nlooking at? We speak with Fordham anthropologist Hugo Benavides about why we\\nlove football so much, and what that says about the way we think about race,\\nmanhood and war.
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When you see the latest teen pop vixen, you might worry for\\nthe future of teen girls...but maybe they\'re savvier than we think. We talk\\nwith Fordham Anthropologist Oneka LaBennett about how one group of girls, West\\nIndian teens in Brooklyn, use pop music, TV and even\\ntheir accents to their own ends.
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We look at the idea of \\u201cgreening\\u201d New\\n York, through green space and green architecture.\\nAlso, a look how one guy is using New York\\u2019s\\nalready-existing park space.
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