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Talk on ISIS is Thursday

Posted at 1:04 pm March 30, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Rihab Sawah

Rihab Sawah

The Islamic State, its historical roots, and the ways ISIS differs from the Islamic religion will be explained in a talk at 3 p.m. Thursday in the City Room (A-111) of the Coffey-McNally Building, Roane State Community College, Oak Ridge Campus, a press release said.

Rihab Sawah, a Syrian native and professor of physics at St. Louis Community College–Florissant Valley in Ferguson, Missouri, will deliver the lecture, a press release said. Sawah holds an M.A. degree in Islamic/Arabic science history. She teaches an introductory course on Islam at Eden Theological Seminary in St. Louis.

Her lecture, presented by Roane State’s International Education Department and the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning (ORICL), is free and open to the public.

More information will be added as it becomes available.

Copyright 2016 Oak Ridge Today. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Filed Under: College, Education, Meetings and Events Tagged With: International Education Department, ISIS, Islam, Islamic State, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Rihab Sawah, Roane State Community College

Roane State lectures to address differences between Islam, Islamic State (ISIS)

Posted at 9:58 pm March 22, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 3 Comments

Rihab Sawah

Rihab Sawah

Scholar Rihab Sawah from St. Louis Community College will discuss differences between Islam and the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, on Thursday, March 31, at Roane State Community College’s Roane and Oak Ridge campuses.

The Roane County lecture will be held at 11:30 a.m. in room 101 in the O’Brien Humanities Building on the main campus in Harriman, 276 Patton Lane. The Oak Ridge lecture will be held at 3 p.m. in the City Room at the Oak Ridge campus, 701 Briarcliff Ave.

The lectures, presented by Roane State’s International Education Department and the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, or ORICL, are free and open to the public.

The presentations will define Islam and the Islamic State and will contrast 12 main points that highlight the diverging point of view of ISIS in relation to Islam. Sawah will also present the historical roots of a movement such as ISIS and explain why the movement misuses Islamic ideology and how it serves ISIS leaders’ aim to establish their influence in the region. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Faith, Front Page News, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Adolf King, City Room, International Education Department, Islam, Islamic State, Middle East, O'Brien Humanities Building, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Rihab Sawah, Roane State Community College, St. Louis Community College, Syria

Memphis detective to speak here on sex trafficking

Posted at 9:22 am October 19, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Barbara Tolbert

Barbara Tolbert

By Carolyn Krause

Human trafficking—forcing people into sex acts or labor against their will—is a growing threat to children, students, and young adults worldwide. It’s present throughout Tennessee and our nation, regardless of economic, social, or racial background.

Teens who run away from abusive homes and those enticed to leave “good” homes by promises of a fun job or an exciting time may become victims of sex trafficking. Other youths are “rented out” as prostitutes or sold into sex slavery by their own parents, especially those addicted to drugs or challenged by economic stress.

Some 300,000 American kids are estimated to be victims, or at risk of becoming victims, of the multibillion-dollar sex trafficking industry. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Churches, College, Community, Education, Front Page News, Meetings and Events, Police and Fire Tagged With: Barbara Farmer-Tolbert, Church Women United, human trafficking, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, prostitutes, Roane State Community College, Roane State International Education Department, Roane State–Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning Intergenerational Lecture Series, sex slavery, sex trafficking, Sex Trafficking: America’s Prostituted Children, Shelby County Sheriff's Office

Cartoonist Charlie Daniel to talk Sept. 3 at Roane State

Posted at 11:31 pm August 31, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Charlie Daniel

Charlie Daniel, editorial cartoonist at Knoxville newspapers for 57 years, will speak Thursday, September 3, at 3 p.m. in the Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building of Roane State Community College, Oak Ridge campus, off Briarcliff Avenue and Laboratory Road.

His talk will open the second RSCC-Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning intergenerational lecture series and ORICL fall kickoff (where catalogs on the upcoming ORICL fall term will be available). Refreshments will be offered after the lecture.

A native of Richmond, Va., Daniel grew up in Weldon, N.C. He attended Weldon public schools and Fork Union Military Academy before serving as a private in the U.S. Marine Corps. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Education, Front Page News, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Charlie Daniel, Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building, News Sentinel, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College, RSCC

Social benefit or Frankenfood? UT scientist cites value of genetically modified crops

Posted at 8:53 am April 6, 2015
By Carolyn Krause 3 Comments

Tessa Burch-Smith and Mike Laman

Tessa Burch-Smith speaks with Michael Laman, dean of health sciences at Roane State Community College. He introduced her talk on genetically modified foods. (Submitted photo)

 

In developing countries where white rice is the dominant food, a half million pregnant women and young children become blind and two million die every year because of a Vitamin A deficiency.

On a mission to use genetic engineering to benefit humankind, scientists have genetically modified one type of rice so the grain, not just its leaves, makes Vitamin A. One published study showed that the improved nutritional content of “golden rice” could save sight and lives.

Golden rice was ready to be marketed in 2002, but critics have been calling it a Frankenfood. Golden rice is still not commercially adopted, even though in 2013, Pope Francis personally blessed its use.

This is one of the examples that Tessa Burch-Smith gave in her recent talk as part of the new Roane State Community College–Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning Intergenerational Lecture Series. An assistant professor at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, she teaches and conducts research in UT’s Department of Biochemistry and Cellular and Molecular Biology. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News, Health, Top Stories Tagged With: Department of Biochemistry and Cellular and Molecular Biology, genetic engineering, genetically engineered food, genetically modified crops, genetically modified food, GM foods, golden rice, Intergenerational Lecture Series, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, rice, Roane State Community College, Tessa Burch-Smith, University of Tennessee, UT

Genetically modified food the topic of RSCC-ORICL lecture on March 26

Posted at 10:21 pm March 14, 2015
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

Tessa Burch-Smith

Tessa Burch-Smith

Golden rice is a genetically modified food that could save the eyesight and the lives of many young children in countries where plain rice is the dominant food.

Yet, in many nations it has been called a Frankenfood. Even so, Pope Francis has blessed golden rice. Why?

This question and other issues regarding genetically modified foods will be addressed in the second in a series of lectures sponsored by Roane State Community College, Oak Ridge Branch Campus, and the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning.

The lecture, which is open to the public, will be delivered at 3 p.m. Thursday, March 26, in the Large Lecture Room (Room 107) of the Goff Health Science and Technology Building at Roane State in Oak Ridge. Refreshments will be available after the lecture. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News, Health, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Bob Olson, Department of Biochemistry and Cellular and Molecular Biology, genetically modified food, Goff Health Science and Technology Building, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State, Roane State Community College, Shirley Raines, Tessa M. Burch-Smith, University of Tennessee

ORICL to show three film classics on Tuesdays

Posted at 7:50 pm January 12, 2015
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning will present three movie classics to the public on the three remaining Tuesdays of this month. The showings are free.

The movies will be shown at 1 p.m. in the City Room, or A-111, in the Coffey-McNally Building of the Oak Ridge campus of Roane State Community College at 701 Briarcliff Road.

The movies are “Maltese Falcon” on January 13, “Amadeus” on January 20, and “Doctor Zhivago” on January 27. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Education, Entertainment, Front Page News, Movies Tagged With: Amadeus, Doctor Zhivago, film classics, Maltese Falcon, movie classics, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College

Register for ORICL courses, trips by Jan. 7; term starts Feb. 2

Posted at 11:55 pm January 4, 2015
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

ORICL Tours ORNL Manufacturing Demonstration Facility

Uri Gat and other ORICL members enjoy a tour of Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Manufacturing Demonstration Facility. Here, they observe and handle items produced at MDF by its 3D printers. (Submitted photo)

 

Want to know how to improve your bidding in the game of bridge? Analyze your dreams? Identify area birds? Play the guitar?

Would you like to better understand how 3D printing works, how to write computer code with the software Scratch and how people mine data of importance to you? Or do you just want to learn how to relax?

These are among the courses offered during the winter-spring 2015 term of the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, starting February 2. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Education, Front Page News Tagged With: Laura Bowles, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College

New RSCC-ORICL lecture series opens with Thursday talk on Lincoln

Posted at 11:36 pm September 17, 2014
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

James L. "Jamie" Cotton Jr.

James L. “Jamie” Cotton Jr.

Roane State Community College and the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning are jointly launching a free intergenerational lecture series open to the public.

James L. “Jamie” Cotton Jr., author of the book “The Greatest Speech, Ever: The Remarkable Story of Abraham Lincoln and His Gettysburg Address,” will give the first lecture in the inaugural series at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the lecture room in the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology building on RSCC’s Oak Ridge campus.

The lecture, titled “Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: The Greatest Speech, Ever” will be preceded by refreshments at 3 p.m in the new building’s lobby. It will be followed at 4:30 p.m. by an optional tour of the Goff Health Sciences and Technology building.

The lecturers selected will appeal to multiple generations, including Roane State students and the more than 400 retirees who take ORICL classes in RSCC’s Coffey-McNally building on the Oak Ridge campus off Briarcliff Avenue.

ORICL will supplement RSCC’s budget for a lecture series with funds from the John Million Bequest made to ORICL two years ago.

The opening lecture will take the place of ORICL’s fall kick-off. Catalogs and forms will be available for those wishing to register for classes for ORICL’s fall semester, which begins Sept. 22.

Judge Cotton has served as judge for the General Sessions court in Scott County since 1990. He received the Tennessee Award of Merit for his work in the prevention of teenage substance abuse and the Tennessee Medical Association Community Service Award for his leadership in the prevention of domestic violence.

He is a member of the adjunct faculty of Roane State Community College, where he lectures on Lincoln and the law. Judge Cotton is donating profits from all direct sales of his book to two charities—Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) for children and the Scott County Christian Care Center.

The late Howard H. Baker Jr.—U.S. senator from Tennessee, chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan and ambassador to Japan—wrote these words in a preface in the book: “Judge Cotton’s book is not only a fascinating and scholarly assessment of the Gettysburg Address and its impact on America but also an absorbing look into Abraham Lincoln’s life—this is a must read for anyone interested in America’s history.”

Thomas Mackie, director of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum at Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, wrote that the book “demonstrates that Lincoln’s mythic Gettysburg Address continues to be required reading for American citizenship. We are reminded that this very brief but well-crafted speech defines our ideals and national purpose.”

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News Tagged With: Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg Address, James L. "Jamie" Cotton Jr., John Million Bequest, lecture series, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College, RSCC, The Greatest Speech Ever: The Remarkable Story of Abraham Lincoln and His Gettysburg Address

Register for ORICL courses and trips by Aug. 27; semester starts Sept. 22

Posted at 10:44 am August 17, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

 

Decorative Barn ORICL

ORICL members visit this barn on the Appalachian Quilt Trail. (Submitted photos)

Submitted

How would you like to see 10 award-winning films from 10 countries? Find information on your ancestors on the Internet? Learn about female Pharaohs in ancient Egypt?

Better understand tax law changes, Medicare, long-term care services, and investment fundamentals? Get a new perspective on Jesus, the Trinity, and the Quakers? Learn to analyze dreams and play better bridge?

You can take courses on any of these and other topics by registering for the fall semester of the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, or ORICL.

The early registration deadline is Aug. 27 for the fall semester, which starts Sept. 22 and ends Dec. 12. Members should register by Aug. 27 to have the best chance of getting preferred classes and trips. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News Tagged With: courses, Laura Bowles, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College, RSCC, trips

Register for ORICL courses and trips by Jan. 8; semester starts Feb. 3

Posted at 10:56 am December 28, 2013
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

ORICL Wagon Ride at Fall Retreat

More than 30 ORICL members enjoyed a fall retreat at Henry Horton State Park last October. Here, many are ready to take the first wagon ride tour around the park. The tractor driver is the tour guide. (Submitted photo)

Want to know how to improve your bidding in the game of bridge? Play easy songs on the guitar? Take better photos with your digital camera?

These are among the practical courses offered during the winter-spring 2014 semester of the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, starting Feb. 3.

You can also take ORICL how-to courses on drawing, painting with watercolors, designing earrings, using the computer for genealogical research, retiring successfully, and speaking French, German or Spanish.

The early registration deadline is Jan. 8, 2014, for the winter-spring semester, which ends April 25. Members should register by this date to have the best chance of getting preferred classes and trips. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News Tagged With: classes, Laura Bowles, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College

Civil War books author to speak at ORICL kickoff Sunday

Posted at 6:20 pm August 24, 2013
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

Earl J. Hess

Earl J. Hess

A leading author of Civil War history books who was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize 11 years ago will speak here this month at the Fall Kickoff of the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning.

The free kickoff will take place from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at Pollard Auditorium. Fall catalogs of ORICL courses and trips, as well as refreshments, will be available.

At 4 p.m. Earl J. Hess, Stewart W. McClelland Chair in History at Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, will speak on “Appalachia as Seen by Union and Confederate Soldiers during the Civil War.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Education, Top Stories Tagged With: Appalachia as Seen by Union and Confederate Soldiers during the Civil War, Battle of Gettysburg, Civil War, Earl J. Hess, East Tennessee, History Book Club, history books, James I. Robertson Literary Prize for Confederate History, Lincoln Memorial University, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Pickett’s Charge: The Last Attack at Gettysburg, Pollard Auditorium, Pulitzer Prize, Roane State Community College, The Knoxville Campaign: Burnside and Longstreet in East Tennessee, Union

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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