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DTSTAMP:20161012T230000Z
UID:1476198624020@events.msu.edu
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
DTSTART:20161012T230000Z
DTEND:20161013T003000Z
SUMMARY:RCAH Wednesday Night Live: Flint Water Crisis Panel
DESCRIPTION:
 At 7 p.m. on Wednesday, October 12, join the MSU 
 Residential College in the Arts and Humanities 
 in welcoming a panel to discuss the Flint 
 Water Crisis at the second Wednesday Night 
 Live of the 2016-17 academic year.\n
 \n
 All are 
 welcome to attend, and doors will open at approximately 
 6:45 p.m.\n
 \n
 ABOUT THE PANELISTS 
 & MODERATOR:\n
 \n
 - Panelist STEVE CARMODY has 
 been a reporter for Michigan Radio since 2005. 
 Steve previously worked at public radio and 
 television stations in Florida, Oklahoma and 
 Kentucky, and also has extensive experience 
 in commercial broadcasting. During his two and 
 a half decades in broadcasting, Steve has won 
 numerous awards, including accolades from 
 the Associated Press and Radio and Television 
 News Directors Association. Away from the broadcast 
 booth, Steve is an avid reader and movie 
 fanatic.\n
 \n
 - Panelist EMILY ELCONIN is a 
 senior with majors in Journalism (with a visual 
 concentration) and the Residential College 
 in the Arts and Humanities. Her area of study 
 that she likes to focus on is social justice. 
 Emily spent a little over three months traveling 
 to Flint at least twice a week to see 
 first-hand what the city was going through. 
 As a staff photojournalist for The State News, 
 one of her first assignments was to cover the 
 protests for the Flint Water Crisis on the 
 steps of the Capitol building in Lansing. From 
 then on, her passion grew for helping to share 
 stories of the world that need to be heard, 
 including Stories From Flint (storiesfromflint.com). 
 What Emily discovered in Flint was 
 more than just a broken city suffering from 
 one mistake -- she discovered what social injustice 
 really means.\n
 \n
 - Moderator SARA FINGAL 
 is an Assistant Professor at MSU with a dual 
 appointment in Lyman Briggs College and the 
 Department of History. Her work to date ties 
 together urban and rural history with an analysis 
 of landscapes and ecosystems that transcend 
 municipal, state, and national boundaries 
 throughout North America. Her principal teaching 
 and research areas are water history, 
 environmental history, North American borderlands, 
 social movements, the Great Lakes, and 
 race and gender in post-1945 U.S. society and 
 culture. Her current book manuscript is focused 
 on conflicts over water access and property 
 rights along the Pacific coastline in the 
 mid-twentieth century. Additionally, she is 
 researching abundant natural resource management 
 and the role of women, children, and scientists 
 in twentieth century environmental controversies.\n
 \n
 - 
 Panelist MELISSA MAYS has proudly 
 lived in Flint since 2002. She supports 
 local musicians, bands and charities. Before 
 the poisoning of her city, Melissa's life was 
 all about music and my family. That changed 
 in January 2015 when she received the TTHM violation 
 notice telling her family that their 
 water had a cancer-causing byproduct in it for 
 9 months and the State had never told them. 
 She realized that every time they had been 
 told that the water was safe, they were wrong.\n
 \n
 She 
 decided to start doing research and 
 contacting environment experts and activists 
 like Erin Brockovich, Robert Bowcock, Scott Smith, 
 Mark Ruffalo, Lois Gibbs and more. Melissa 
 and her husband formed Water You Fighting 
 For and held a huge march February 14, 2015, 
 which helped us launch an educational campaign 
 to hold meetings, rallies, protests, and marches 
 to keep the attention on what was happening 
 to Flint residents. They connected with 
 activists in Detroit and across Michigan to 
 unite and stand together against the loss of 
 democracy and denial to clean, safe, affordable 
 water in this state.\n
 \n
 - Panelist SAN JUANA 
 OLIVARES is the president of the Genesee County 
 Hispanic/Latino Collaborative in Flint. 
 She is the oldest of six children and is dedicated 
 to making Flint, Michigan, a better place 
 for everyone that lives and works in and 
 around the county.\n
 \n
 San Juana was born on January 
 8, 1984, in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
 She moved to Flint, Michigan, on June 10, 
 1994, and has resided there ever since. She 
 attended Flint Central High School, but graduated 
 from Mount Morris Alternative High School 
 in 2003, becoming the first one in her family 
 to receive a high school diploma and graduated 
 a Salutatorian. San Juana was involved 
 with the American GI Forum Flint Chapter and 
 volunteered at Washington Elementary School, 
 American GI Forum, the Genesee County Hispanic 
 Latino Collaborative, and Durant Tuuri Mott, 
 where she taught dance to Kindergarten through 
 sixth graders.\n
 \n
 San Juana was a member 
 of ROTC 1999-2001 at Flint Central High School. 
 She was President of S.A.D.D., played JV soccer 
 and was team captain; she participated 
 in the Upward Bound Program through Mott Community 
 College.\n\n
 Price: free\n
 Sponsor: MSU Residential College in the Arts and Humanities\n
 Sponsor's Homepage: http://rcah.msu.edu\n
 Contact name: Katie Wittenauer\n
 Contact phone: (517) 884-6290\n
 Contact email: wittenau@msu.edu\n
 for more info visit the web at:\n 
 http://rcah.msu.edu/news-events/events/wednesday-night-live-flint-water-crisis-panel\n
LOCATION:Snyder-Phillips Hall, Terrace Level
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