Yale Researcher to Speak at MCLA

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass.—Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) will welcome Sam King, Researcher with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology, as part of its Green Living Seminar Series on Wednesday, April 15, at 5:30 p.m. in the Feigenbaum Center for Science and Innovation, Room 121.
 
King will present "The Call of the Ecozoic: Religions Enter Their Planetary Phase." 
 
According to a press release:
 
His talk explores how the world's religious traditions are entering a new phase of planetary responsibility and imagination amid ecological breakdown, drawing on the work of cultural historian Thomas Berry and his concept of the Ecozoic Era, a period of mutually enhancing human and Earth relations. The presentation examines the need for religions to integrate contemporary scientific understandings of Earth systems and evolutionary time, while recovering their ecological wisdom, and concludes with examples of engaged religious environmentalism across traditions, highlighting the work of the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology.
 
King serves as Project Manager for the Emmy Award-winning Journey of the Universe project and is Advisor to the Ecological Leadership and Ministry certificate program at Yale Divinity School. He has been a Teaching Fellow at the Yale School of the Environment and worked with leading scholars to develop six online courses on the ecological dimensions of the world's religions, available through Yale/Coursera. 
 
As an educator, King has taught courses on Journey of the Universe and the worldview of Thomas Berry, and has led retreats and workshops in schools, universities, religious communities, and retreat centers around the world.
 
All presentations take place Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. in MCLA's Feigenbaum Center for Science and Innovation, Room 121 and will be recorded as podcasts available at mcla.edu/greenliving. The event is free and open to the public.
MCLA's Green Living Seminar Series brings environmental experts, scholars, and practitioners to campus throughout the academic year to engage students and community members in conversations about sustainability, ecology, and our relationship with the natural world.
 
For more information, contact Elena Traister at elena.traister@mcla.edu or 413-662-5303.
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Vermont National Guard Members Depart From North Adams

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff

About 50 people waved flags to the see the Guardsmen off on their bus. The members were staying in North Adams because of a lack of hotel rooms in Bennington, Vt.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Residents came together Friday to see some Vermont National Guard members off.
 
The American Legion Riders organized a send off for a group of 75 or so Guard members who were staying at Hotel Downstreet.
 
"We are going to escort them to the Bennington Armory," Riders President Mike Lewis said. "They are going to gear up there, and then I am not sure where they are going. I don’t even know if they are all going to the same place."
 
Fifty or so people met in the Hotel Downstreet parking lot to show their appreciation. They waved flags and held signs. A bagpiper was also present.
 
The Riders contacted the Fire Department who helped organize the send off. North Adams Police cruisers and Northern Berkshire EMS were also on site to help see the bus off.
 
Lewis said there was not enough rooms in Bennington for the National Guard members. He added because of the trend to use vacant hotel rooms as low-income housing, the group had to look toward North Adams.
 
It's not clear where these Guard were off to, but about 500 members of 3-172 Infantry Battalion were expected to go to the Middle East with U.S. Central Command. According to Vermont Digger, this deployment was scheduled prior to the strikes on Iran. 
 
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