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<DIV><SPAN class=492501318-14092007><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>Nancy:</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=492501318-14092007><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=492501318-14092007><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2>I'm
forward your e-mail to Robert Park, Associate Dean for Computing. It was
Robert's office that implemented the <A
href="mailto:artsannounce@artslist">artsannounce@artslist</A>
website.</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=492501318-14092007><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=492501318-14092007><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>Brenda</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
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<DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=left><FONT
face=Tahoma size=2>-----Original Message-----<BR><B>From:</B> NANCY BIRSS
[mailto:nbirss@watarts.uwaterloo.ca] <BR><B>Sent:</B> September 14, 2007 1:52
PM<BR><B>To:</B> Brenda Smith;
artsannounce@artsserv2.uwaterloo.ca<BR><B>Cc:</B>
dlang@uwaterloo.ca<BR><B>Subject:</B> Re: FW: Public lecture at WLU:
"Subverting Democracy: Stolen Elections in the American
Empire"<BR><BR></FONT></DIV>Hello Brenda, Alex and Anne,<BR><BR>I am getting
overwhelmed with emails about so many announcements, symposiums, conferences,
news releases etc not only from UW depts but from outside universities and
agencies. It is becoming quite time-consuming to even scan all these
messages. Is there not another way to reduce all these emails? I
don't have time to read all these or even pass them on and I'm sure many
others would agree. Is there a way to streamline the volume of all these
announcements and emails?<BR><BR>Thanks<BR>Nancy Birss<BR>History<BR><BR>At
11:53 AM 14/09/2007, Brenda Smith wrote:<BR>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=cite cite="" type="cite"><BR><FONT face=Tahoma
size=2>-----Original Message-----<BR><B>From:</B> Michael Truscello [<A
href="mailto:mj2trusc@artsmail.uwaterloo.ca" eudora="autourl">
mailto:mj2trusc@artsmail.uwaterloo.ca</A>] <BR><B>Sent:</B> September 14,
2007 11:15 AM<BR><B>To:</B> bsmith@watarts.uwaterloo.ca;
allipper@watarts.uwaterloo.ca;
aharris@watarts.uwaterloo.ca<BR><B>Subject:</B> Public lecture at WLU:
"Subverting Democracy: Stolen Elections in the American
Empire"<BR><BR></FONT>Hello Brenda Smith, Alexandra Lippert, and Anne
Harris,<BR> <BR><FONT size=2>I'm sorry if I have the wrong person or
people copied on this email; I am a UW alum, and I now teach at WLU, and I
have a public lecture to announce to UW Arts Faculty. Hopefully, some or all
of you are appropriate people for this message.<BR></FONT> <BR><FONT
size=2>Please find attached a flyer for a public lecture by Steven F.
Freeman of the University of Pennsylvania titled, "Subverting Democracy:
Stolen Elections in the American Empire."<BR></FONT> <BR><FONT
size=2>Below is a description of Dr. Freeman and contact information for me.
I hope you will kindly forward this message to the Faculty of Arts at UW.
Thank you.<BR></FONT> <BR><FONT size=2>Michael Truscello, Ph.D. (UW
2005)<BR></FONT> <BR> <BR>The Department of Communication Studies,
with the co-sponsorship of the <BR>Department of Political Science and the
Office of the Dean of Arts, is proud <BR>to host Dr. Steven F. Freeman on
Tuesday, September 18. Dr. Freeman will be <BR>presenting a talk, titled
"Subverting Democracy: Stolen Elections in the <BR>American Empire," from
4pm to 6pm in Arts Wing 1E1. Come hear the leading <BR>researcher into
US electoral fraud discuss the evidence that the 2004 <BR>presidential
election was stolen and the evidence of Canadian complicity in <BR>electoral
fraud in Iraq, Mexico and Haiti. Please forward the attached flyer <BR>to
anyone who may be interested.<BR><BR>Steven F. Freeman is Visiting Scholar
and Affiliated Faculty in the Center <BR>for Organizational Dynamics,
University of Pennsylvania. Since 1998, he has <BR>been Professor of
Management at INCAE (Central American Institute of <BR>Business
Administration), Alajuela, Costa Rica, an international MBA program
<BR>established by Harvard University. During 2002, he was Karel Steuer
Chaired <BR>Professor in Entrepreneurship at Universidad de San Andreas,
Buenos Aires, <BR>Argentina. He is co-author with Joel Bleifuss of Was The
2004 Presidential <BR>Election Stolen? Joel Bleifuss is the editor of In
These Times, where he has <BR>worked as an investigative reporter, columnist
and editor since 1986. <BR>Bleifuss has had more stories on Project
Censored's annual list of the "10 <BR>Most Censored Stories" than any other
journalist.<BR><BR>Freeman's research on the discrepancies between exit
polls and vote counts <BR>has already earned him some high-profile speaking
engagements, including:<BR><BR>"Are We a Democracy? Vote Counting in the
United States." American <BR>Association for the Advancement of Science, San
Francisco, Feb. 2007.<BR><BR>"The Failure to Report Evidence of Corrupted
Vote Counts in US Elections." <BR>Free Press National Media Reform
Conference, Memphis, January 2007.<BR><BR>"Black Disenfranchisement in
Contemporary US Elections." Congressional Black <BR>Caucus Annual
Legislative Conference, Washington DC, Sept. 2006.<BR><BR>"Polling Bias or
Corrupted Count?" American Statistical Association, <BR>Philadelphia, Oct.
2005.<BR><BR>Freeman was invited to the ASA conference in Philadelphia to
debate with <BR>Warren Mitofsky, who is probably the most highly regarded
practitioner of <BR>exit polling in the US (he did the 2004 US exit polls,
and has done exit <BR>polling for presidential elections in the US for more
than thirty years, as <BR>well as exit polls for national elections in
Russia, Mexico, and half a <BR>dozen other countries); by common consent
Freeman triumphed in that debate.<BR><BR>If you have any questions, please
contact:<BR><BR>Michael Truscello, Ph.D.<BR>Assistant
Professor<BR>Department of Communication Studies<BR>Wilfrid Laurier
University<BR>Waterloo, ON, Canada<BR>N2L 3C5<BR>(519) 884-1970 x 2501<BR><A
href="??">mtruscello@wlu.ca</A><BR><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>The
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