Archive for Columbia University – Page 41

New Student Photo Series 2012 – Post #7

We took a brief Blog hiatus but we’re back with some more photo submissions.  We received a few in the past few weeks so we will post them in the next week or so before the class arrives for Orientation on August 27th.

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Today’s first set of photographs were submitted by Elisa Dumitrescu, an incoming MPA student.

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All photo’s submitted were taken in various locations in Kenya.

A tailor working on the roadside at one of the busiest junctions in Nairobi

A bicycle belonging to a security guard. Most people in Kenya either walk or cycle to work – or take a minibus (matatu) at some point in their commute

Photo was taken at one of the major used clothing markets in Nairobi – Mutumba/Toy Market. Clothes are often sold in large bundles for 50 shillings a piece (less than a dollar).

Some local children in Lamu, Kenya on Shela beach

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The second set of photos were submitted by Nancy Widjaja, an incoming MPA-DP student.

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My best friend Liyana visited me in Bangkok in 2011 and we decided to take a detour from the usual shopping & spa routine to drive about 2.5 hours out of the city to Wat Pha Luang Ta Bua, more famously known as the Tiger Temple, in Kanchaburi province. The Theravada Buddhist temple cares for about 100 tigers and tiger cubs (most roam freely or with a simple leash!). We had the awesome opportunity of playing with about ten cute tiger cubs and we even got to bottle-feed them. They were really cute, but don’t be fooled by their innocent looks…they do bite and scratch hard!

 

I was really excited when I was sent to Beirut, Lebanon, to attend an OECD conference in October 2010. I had heard that Beirut is a very pretty city, but all my expectations were surpassed! The people were also very nice and warm (and beautiful!). This picture is one of my favorite from my Beirut photo set. Here the gorgeous Mohammad Al-Amin mosque, an Ottoman-style mosque established by the late Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and inaugurated in 2008, sits side by side with Saint George Maronite Cathedral, established in late 19th century. You can also see ruins of ancient Roman structures in the foreground. For me, it offers a taste of how beautifully diverse and rich in heritage Lebanon is.

 

The other ‘perk’ of living in Bangkok is that you get to do the famous Muay Thai (Thai Kickboxing) with one of the real master kickboxers. I have to admit that I quit after 2 exercise sessions – way too strenuous for someone who has been living in a sedentary life for quite a while!

New Student Photo Series 2012 – Post #6

Photo submissions continue to roll in for our new student photo series.  If you are an incoming student and wish to share your photos on our blog, please review this entry for details on how to submit your photos.

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Today’s first set of photographs were submitted by Jesper Frant, incoming MPA-DP student

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Colorado National Monument, Grand Junction, Colorado

To commemorate Independence Day, my boss (U.S. Senator Mark Udall) and I rocked climbed up Otto’s Route to raise the American flag at the summit of Independence Monument, a 550-foot-tall rock spire in the Colorado National Monument. Not bad for a last day on the job.

 

Hiking in Tabernash, Colorado, with my brother and his twin daughters. They are nearly 3-years-old now. It has been cool watching their personalities develop…they couldn’t be more different.

 

Sitting on the shoulders of a giant. I spent two years working in and exploring Washington, D.C.

 

Me at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem during a Birthright Israel trip. I asked an Israeli man why women prayed separately from men and why the women’s section was 1/3 the size of the men’s. His response: “Americans are all about equality.”

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The second set of photographs were submitted by incoming student, Alana Ngoh, MIA

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With a journalist at the Travelport launch press conference in Manama – Manama, Bahrain

 

In front of the ancient Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the seven wonders of the world – Giza, Egypt

 

Watching the fishermen on an early morning stroll along the Corniche in Beirut – Beirut, Lebanon

 

On an impromptu tour with a friendly local in Kathmandu – Kathmandu, Nepal

New Student Photo Series 2012 – Post #5

Photo submissions continue to roll in for our new student photo series.  If you are an incoming student and wish to share your photos on our blog, please review this entry for details on how to submit your photos.

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Today’s photographs were submitted by Olivia Kemp, MPA Environmental Science and Policy ’13 student.

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I’m an Australian and spent the past 3 years  in Darfur, Sudan where I worked on food security.

These are Darfurian children, who have spent their whole lives in internally displaced persons (IPD) camps. These was taken in a camp during a large registration exercise where each person, regardless of age,  has their information and fingerprints electronically recorded by the UN for verification of IDP status.

 

Over 1 million people remain displaced and still depend on food aid in the region of Darfur.

   

New Student Photo Series 2012 – Post#4

Photo submissions continue to roll in for our new student photo series.  If you are an incoming student and wish to share your photos on our blog, please review this entry for details on how to submit your photos.

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The first set of photos today was submitted by Christina Hawatmeh, an incoming MIA student.

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Helen Thomas stands to honor the late Anthony Shadid (whose whole family was present) at the Gala for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee’s National Convention (considered to be one of the largest political and social gatherings of Arab Americans in the country).  June 21-24, 2012

 

The photo is of GSAPP students and myself meeting with the Mayor of Abween, West Bank during The Riwaq Summer Internship Program, which was held for the first time during the month of August 2011. The program, led by GSAPP Adjunct Assistant Professor, Craig Konyk, involved nine GSAPP students working on the documentation, rehabilitation, and development of the architectural heritage of Deir Ghassaneh (Bani Zeid) in the West Bank, located approximately 25 kilometers northwest of Ramallah.  I was privileged to visit and develop the internship program as CUMERC’s GSAPP Program Officer.  Photo was taken in Abween, West Bank

 

The picture is with Amr Moussa, who most recently ran for Egyptian President.  Trip Sponsorship to Cairo as a participant as a US Youth Ambassador for the First Arab Expatriates Conference entitled, “A Bridge for Communication,” hosted by Secretary General (Dec. 2010).  Photo was taken at the Arab League Headquarters, Cairo, Egypt

 

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The second set of photos was submitted by Anne Bergman, an incoming MIA student.

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This photo was taken from our hot air balloon as we drifted from our launch site in the U.A.E. over the deserts of Oman.

 

I took this photo on our final ascent to the summit of Kilimanjaro this past January.  As we rounded this bend we watched the sun rise over the massive glacier atop the mountain – phenomenal!

 

Each Sunday, U.N. Peacekeepers (primarily of Pakistani origin), would cross the border from Goma, D.R.C. to neighboring Rwanda.  On this particular Sunday, they challenged a group of European travelers to a beach volleyball match.

 

 

New Student Photo Series 2012 – Post #3

Photo submissions continue to roll in for our new student photo series.  If you are an incoming student and wish to share your photos on our blog, please review this entry for details on how to submit your photos.

 

Today’s photo submissions are from Barbara Wennerholm, an incoming MIA student.

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My sister and I in the Old Town of Stockholm, Sweden.

 

In front of the Royal Palace, Stockholm.

 

First trip to Washington, DC before living there for two years.

 

On a street in Havana, where I lived for six months.

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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