Two 9/11-related events in Worcester, MA

The following is the text of an e-mail I have just received. I haven't had time to reformat this text or learn details regarding those events but instead decided to just share it with you as is since the time is short. Hope you can make it.

Boris Epstein

Documentary Film about 9/11

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Other - Film/Video

Date & Time: Saturday, September 9, 2006
7:00 PM-9:30 PM
 
Suggested Audiences: Elders, Adult, College, High School
Location:
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Worcester State College: Ghosh Center for Science and Technology
Room 102
486 Chandler Street
Worcester, MA 01602-2597
Cost: FREE
Sponsored by: The 9/11 Truth Activists of Worcester
Description: The 9/11 Truth Activists group of Worcester will be showing the film "Loose Change" which is a documentary that presents an alternative explanation of events during the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
More Information: E-mail: kthompson@worcester .edu
Entered by: Kaine Thompson

Last Modified: August 24, 2006 at 11:23 AM

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On 9/11/06:

Press Release

ClarkArts Presents:

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED ON 9-11?

Monday, September 11, 2006, 7 p.m .

Razzo Hall, Traina Center for the Arts

Worcester, MA - ClarkArts /Theater presents WHAT REALLY HAPPENED ON 9-11?, a multi-media event, exploring the events of September 11, 2001. Theater Professor Raymond Munro and his students will consider the many questions that still surround the worst terrorist attack this nation has ever experienced through theatre, film and discussion.

Questions include:
What did our government know about this terrorist attack and when did they know it?
Were the Twin Towers and WTC 7 brought down by explosives?

Isn't the Pentagon surrounded by cameras? Why have we no photographs of the plane that hit the Pentagon?

When did Flight 93 crash? Was it shot down? Do cell phones work at 30,000 feet?
Is it possible that U.S. Officials were involved?

The evening's program will consist of the following:

1. A videotaped lecture by David Ray Griffin of the University of Wisconsin.
This lecture provides an introduction to the questions that persist from that day forward.

A leading proponent of process philosophy and theology, David Ray Griffin is professor of philosophy of religion and theology, emeritus, at Claremont School of Theology and Claremont Graduate University. His 27 books include "God, Power, and Evil" (1976), "Unsnarling the World-Knot: Consciousness, Freedom, and the Mind-Body Problem" (1998), "The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions about the Bush Administration and 9/11" (2004), "The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions" (2005), and "Deep Religious Pluralism" (edited) 2005. He has also published over 150 essays.

2. Student composed theatre works concerning questions surrounding 9/11, directed by Ray Munro.

Munro's recent productions include Waiting for Godot, Saint Joan, Holy Ghosts, Triptych: Three Works by Samuel Beckett, and Endgame. His independent films have been seen on American public television, and have toured museums throughout Great Britain. Ray was an original member of The Chicago Project and has performed for the New York Shakespeare Festival, the Open Space in London, and the Loeb Drama Center in Cambridge, MA. His international work includes appointments as visiting artist in the Drama Studies Program at University College Dublin, and guest artist at the University of Trier, Germany. He is professor of theatre in the Visual and Performing Arts Department at Clark University, Mass., and artistic director of Foxrock Performance Company.

3. A discussion with the participants and the audience moderated by Professor Albert A. Anderson Ph.D.
Dr. Anderson, Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Babson College, has held tenured positions in philosophy at Babson College, Clark University and Albion College. He has also held full-time faculty positions at Rhode Island School of Design and Bates College. At Babson College and at Rhode Island School of Design he served as Chair of the Liberal Arts Division, and at Clark University he was Chair of the Visual and Performing Arts department. He holds Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in philosophy from Boston University and a B.A. in English and Drama from Morningside College.

His scholarly work centers on ancient Greek philosophy, ethics, and aesthetics. He has published monographs, translations, and approximately 80 scholarly papers on a variety of philosophical subjects.

Dr Anderson is Senior Scholar and Partner of Agora Publicatrions. He will give the keynote address at the 7th World Conference of the International Society for Universal Dialogue on Hiroshima, Japan (June 1-5, 2007). It was while doing research for this address which will treat the issue of nationalism vs. world community that led him to the questions surrounding 9/11.