BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Muste Documentary Film
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260512T055213Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_43836298744565
DTSTART:20230925T220000Z
DTEND:20230926T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The four-part documentary film series chronicling the life and 
 impact of peace activist A.J. Muste will be screened at Hope College acros
 s four Mondays between Sept. 25 and Nov. 6.\n\nCollectively titled “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace” and produced between 2017 and 2021\, the film
 s will be shown one per night on September 25\, October 16\, October 23 an
 d November 6 at 6 p.m. in Winants Auditorium of Graves Hall.  The screenin
 gs are being hosted by the college’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committ
 ee.\n\nThe public is invited.  Admission is free.\n\nA.J. (Abraham Johanne
 s) Muste (1885-1967)\, who was a 1905 Hope College graduate (and class val
 edictorian)\, was one of the most well-known and influential peace activis
 ts in the United States.  He spoke out against the nation’s involvement 
 in every war from World War I through the Vietnam War.  In his quest for p
 eace he generated controversy for being arrested for participating in prot
 ests in the U.S. and meeting with leaders like Ho Chi Minh\, yet he also d
 emonstrated in Moscow’s Red Square against nuclear testing.  Muste was a
 lso a prominent labor leader across much of his career\, with activity inc
 luding serving as general secretary of the Amalgamated Textile Workers of 
 America and educational director of Brookwood Labor College.  Serving as e
 xecutive director of The Fellowship of Reconciliation from 1940 to 1953\, 
 he became active in the civil rights movement.  He corresponded with Dr. M
 artin Luther King Jr. throughout the 1950s and 1960s\, and King in his boo
 k “Stride Toward Freedom” credited Muste with introducing him to pacif
 ism during a lecture that Muste delivered at Crozer Theological Seminary i
 n 1949 while King was a student.\n\nThe first film in the series\, “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace/Finding True North\,” follows Muste from his c
 hildhood through his early 50s\, and received a State History Award from t
 he Historical Society of Michigan in September 2019.\n\nThe second film\, 
 “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/The No. 1 U.S. Pacifist\,” follows Must
 e’s career as a Christian pacifist from the late 1930s though the mid-19
 50s.\n\nThe third film\, “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/Welcoming the Ne
 w Left\,” highlights Muste’s efforts at race reconciliation and demili
 tarization at an age when he might instead have retired.\n\nThe fourth fil
 m\, “Say not the struggle naught availeth…\,” begins with Muste’s 
 1963 visit to Birmingham\, Alabama\, when he met with Dr. Martin Luther Ki
 ng Jr. and other leaders of the civil rights movement\; shows him particip
 ating in mass protests in Washington\, D.C.\, and New York City in 1965\; 
 and follows him to South Vietnam and Saigon in 1966\, and to north Vietnam
  and his January 1967 meeting with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi.  Muste died just 
 a few weeks later\, on Feb. 11\, 1967\, at age 82.\n\n“A.J. Muste: Radic
 al for Peace” was produced and directed by Dr. David Schock\, an award-w
 inning independent filmmaker who is a former member of the college’s com
 munication and English faculty. Schock was invited to undertake the multi-
 film project by Dr. Kathleen Verduin\, a professor of English at Hope who 
 is a member and former chair of the A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committee.
 \n\nWith Schock serving additionally as videographer\, editor and research
 er\, and Verduin as associate producer and researcher\, between them they 
 covered thousands of miles\, including three trips to the West Coast\, thr
 ee to the East and two to the South.  Along the way they interviewed exper
 ts who have written extensively about Muste and those who knew him well an
 d worked with him. Highlights include interviews with scholars Jo Ann Ooim
 an Robinson and Leilah Claire Danielson\, activists David McReynolds\, Bra
 d Lyttle\, The Reverends Kristin Stoneking\, James Lawson\, and Andrew J. 
 Young\, SDS cofounder Dick Flacks\, Gene Keyes\, George Lakey\, Michele Gl
 oor\, Rosalie Riegle\, and Sheldon Weeks. Others include The Reverend Art 
 Van Eck\, Brenda Walker Beadenkopf\, Dorothy Vanderklipp\, Heidi Boghosian
 \, and grandson Peter Muste and granddaughter-in-law Shirley and grandson 
 Richard Baker.\n\nMuste is remembered at Hope in a variety of ways. The co
 llege’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture series\, which was established in 19
 85 to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of his birth\, seeks to explor
 e issues that would have been of interest to Muste\, including topics rela
 ted to labor\, civil rights and peace\, and this year was held on Monday\,
  Sept. 11.  Since 1988\, Muste has also been honored on campus with the A.
 J. Muste Alcove\, which is a study alcove in the Van Wylen Library.  A com
 missioned bust of Muste sculpted by Dr. Ryan Dodde\, a 1989 Hope graduate 
 who is a plastic surgeon\, was added to the alcove in November 2018.  A co
 nference focused on Muste and his work is being planned for the spring of 
 2024.\n\nAudience members who need assistance to enjoy any event at Hope f
 ully are encouraged to contact the college’s Events and Conferences Offi
 ce by emailing events@hope.edu or calling 616-395-7222 on weekdays between
  9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Updates related to events are posted when available in 
 the individual listings at hope.edu/calendar
GEO:42.787605;-86.103684
LOCATION:Graves Hall\, Winants Auditorium and Gallery
SUMMARY:Muste Documentary Film
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.hope.edu/event/muste_documentary_film
CATEGORIES:Academics
CATEGORIES:Arts and Humanities Divisions
CATEGORIES:English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260512T055213Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_43836302681514
DTSTART:20231016T220000Z
DTEND:20231017T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The four-part documentary film series chronicling the life and 
 impact of peace activist A.J. Muste will be screened at Hope College acros
 s four Mondays between Sept. 25 and Nov. 6.\n\nCollectively titled “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace” and produced between 2017 and 2021\, the film
 s will be shown one per night on September 25\, October 16\, October 23 an
 d November 6 at 6 p.m. in Winants Auditorium of Graves Hall.  The screenin
 gs are being hosted by the college’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committ
 ee.\n\nThe public is invited.  Admission is free.\n\nA.J. (Abraham Johanne
 s) Muste (1885-1967)\, who was a 1905 Hope College graduate (and class val
 edictorian)\, was one of the most well-known and influential peace activis
 ts in the United States.  He spoke out against the nation’s involvement 
 in every war from World War I through the Vietnam War.  In his quest for p
 eace he generated controversy for being arrested for participating in prot
 ests in the U.S. and meeting with leaders like Ho Chi Minh\, yet he also d
 emonstrated in Moscow’s Red Square against nuclear testing.  Muste was a
 lso a prominent labor leader across much of his career\, with activity inc
 luding serving as general secretary of the Amalgamated Textile Workers of 
 America and educational director of Brookwood Labor College.  Serving as e
 xecutive director of The Fellowship of Reconciliation from 1940 to 1953\, 
 he became active in the civil rights movement.  He corresponded with Dr. M
 artin Luther King Jr. throughout the 1950s and 1960s\, and King in his boo
 k “Stride Toward Freedom” credited Muste with introducing him to pacif
 ism during a lecture that Muste delivered at Crozer Theological Seminary i
 n 1949 while King was a student.\n\nThe first film in the series\, “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace/Finding True North\,” follows Muste from his c
 hildhood through his early 50s\, and received a State History Award from t
 he Historical Society of Michigan in September 2019.\n\nThe second film\, 
 “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/The No. 1 U.S. Pacifist\,” follows Must
 e’s career as a Christian pacifist from the late 1930s though the mid-19
 50s.\n\nThe third film\, “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/Welcoming the Ne
 w Left\,” highlights Muste’s efforts at race reconciliation and demili
 tarization at an age when he might instead have retired.\n\nThe fourth fil
 m\, “Say not the struggle naught availeth…\,” begins with Muste’s 
 1963 visit to Birmingham\, Alabama\, when he met with Dr. Martin Luther Ki
 ng Jr. and other leaders of the civil rights movement\; shows him particip
 ating in mass protests in Washington\, D.C.\, and New York City in 1965\; 
 and follows him to South Vietnam and Saigon in 1966\, and to north Vietnam
  and his January 1967 meeting with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi.  Muste died just 
 a few weeks later\, on Feb. 11\, 1967\, at age 82.\n\n“A.J. Muste: Radic
 al for Peace” was produced and directed by Dr. David Schock\, an award-w
 inning independent filmmaker who is a former member of the college’s com
 munication and English faculty. Schock was invited to undertake the multi-
 film project by Dr. Kathleen Verduin\, a professor of English at Hope who 
 is a member and former chair of the A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committee.
 \n\nWith Schock serving additionally as videographer\, editor and research
 er\, and Verduin as associate producer and researcher\, between them they 
 covered thousands of miles\, including three trips to the West Coast\, thr
 ee to the East and two to the South.  Along the way they interviewed exper
 ts who have written extensively about Muste and those who knew him well an
 d worked with him. Highlights include interviews with scholars Jo Ann Ooim
 an Robinson and Leilah Claire Danielson\, activists David McReynolds\, Bra
 d Lyttle\, The Reverends Kristin Stoneking\, James Lawson\, and Andrew J. 
 Young\, SDS cofounder Dick Flacks\, Gene Keyes\, George Lakey\, Michele Gl
 oor\, Rosalie Riegle\, and Sheldon Weeks. Others include The Reverend Art 
 Van Eck\, Brenda Walker Beadenkopf\, Dorothy Vanderklipp\, Heidi Boghosian
 \, and grandson Peter Muste and granddaughter-in-law Shirley and grandson 
 Richard Baker.\n\nMuste is remembered at Hope in a variety of ways. The co
 llege’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture series\, which was established in 19
 85 to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of his birth\, seeks to explor
 e issues that would have been of interest to Muste\, including topics rela
 ted to labor\, civil rights and peace\, and this year was held on Monday\,
  Sept. 11.  Since 1988\, Muste has also been honored on campus with the A.
 J. Muste Alcove\, which is a study alcove in the Van Wylen Library.  A com
 missioned bust of Muste sculpted by Dr. Ryan Dodde\, a 1989 Hope graduate 
 who is a plastic surgeon\, was added to the alcove in November 2018.  A co
 nference focused on Muste and his work is being planned for the spring of 
 2024.\n\nAudience members who need assistance to enjoy any event at Hope f
 ully are encouraged to contact the college’s Events and Conferences Offi
 ce by emailing events@hope.edu or calling 616-395-7222 on weekdays between
  9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Updates related to events are posted when available in 
 the individual listings at hope.edu/calendar
GEO:42.787605;-86.103684
LOCATION:Graves Hall\, Winants Auditorium and Gallery
SUMMARY:Muste Documentary Film
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.hope.edu/event/muste_documentary_film
CATEGORIES:Academics
CATEGORIES:Arts and Humanities Divisions
CATEGORIES:English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260512T055213Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_43836302688683
DTSTART:20231023T220000Z
DTEND:20231024T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The four-part documentary film series chronicling the life and 
 impact of peace activist A.J. Muste will be screened at Hope College acros
 s four Mondays between Sept. 25 and Nov. 6.\n\nCollectively titled “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace” and produced between 2017 and 2021\, the film
 s will be shown one per night on September 25\, October 16\, October 23 an
 d November 6 at 6 p.m. in Winants Auditorium of Graves Hall.  The screenin
 gs are being hosted by the college’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committ
 ee.\n\nThe public is invited.  Admission is free.\n\nA.J. (Abraham Johanne
 s) Muste (1885-1967)\, who was a 1905 Hope College graduate (and class val
 edictorian)\, was one of the most well-known and influential peace activis
 ts in the United States.  He spoke out against the nation’s involvement 
 in every war from World War I through the Vietnam War.  In his quest for p
 eace he generated controversy for being arrested for participating in prot
 ests in the U.S. and meeting with leaders like Ho Chi Minh\, yet he also d
 emonstrated in Moscow’s Red Square against nuclear testing.  Muste was a
 lso a prominent labor leader across much of his career\, with activity inc
 luding serving as general secretary of the Amalgamated Textile Workers of 
 America and educational director of Brookwood Labor College.  Serving as e
 xecutive director of The Fellowship of Reconciliation from 1940 to 1953\, 
 he became active in the civil rights movement.  He corresponded with Dr. M
 artin Luther King Jr. throughout the 1950s and 1960s\, and King in his boo
 k “Stride Toward Freedom” credited Muste with introducing him to pacif
 ism during a lecture that Muste delivered at Crozer Theological Seminary i
 n 1949 while King was a student.\n\nThe first film in the series\, “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace/Finding True North\,” follows Muste from his c
 hildhood through his early 50s\, and received a State History Award from t
 he Historical Society of Michigan in September 2019.\n\nThe second film\, 
 “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/The No. 1 U.S. Pacifist\,” follows Must
 e’s career as a Christian pacifist from the late 1930s though the mid-19
 50s.\n\nThe third film\, “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/Welcoming the Ne
 w Left\,” highlights Muste’s efforts at race reconciliation and demili
 tarization at an age when he might instead have retired.\n\nThe fourth fil
 m\, “Say not the struggle naught availeth…\,” begins with Muste’s 
 1963 visit to Birmingham\, Alabama\, when he met with Dr. Martin Luther Ki
 ng Jr. and other leaders of the civil rights movement\; shows him particip
 ating in mass protests in Washington\, D.C.\, and New York City in 1965\; 
 and follows him to South Vietnam and Saigon in 1966\, and to north Vietnam
  and his January 1967 meeting with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi.  Muste died just 
 a few weeks later\, on Feb. 11\, 1967\, at age 82.\n\n“A.J. Muste: Radic
 al for Peace” was produced and directed by Dr. David Schock\, an award-w
 inning independent filmmaker who is a former member of the college’s com
 munication and English faculty. Schock was invited to undertake the multi-
 film project by Dr. Kathleen Verduin\, a professor of English at Hope who 
 is a member and former chair of the A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committee.
 \n\nWith Schock serving additionally as videographer\, editor and research
 er\, and Verduin as associate producer and researcher\, between them they 
 covered thousands of miles\, including three trips to the West Coast\, thr
 ee to the East and two to the South.  Along the way they interviewed exper
 ts who have written extensively about Muste and those who knew him well an
 d worked with him. Highlights include interviews with scholars Jo Ann Ooim
 an Robinson and Leilah Claire Danielson\, activists David McReynolds\, Bra
 d Lyttle\, The Reverends Kristin Stoneking\, James Lawson\, and Andrew J. 
 Young\, SDS cofounder Dick Flacks\, Gene Keyes\, George Lakey\, Michele Gl
 oor\, Rosalie Riegle\, and Sheldon Weeks. Others include The Reverend Art 
 Van Eck\, Brenda Walker Beadenkopf\, Dorothy Vanderklipp\, Heidi Boghosian
 \, and grandson Peter Muste and granddaughter-in-law Shirley and grandson 
 Richard Baker.\n\nMuste is remembered at Hope in a variety of ways. The co
 llege’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture series\, which was established in 19
 85 to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of his birth\, seeks to explor
 e issues that would have been of interest to Muste\, including topics rela
 ted to labor\, civil rights and peace\, and this year was held on Monday\,
  Sept. 11.  Since 1988\, Muste has also been honored on campus with the A.
 J. Muste Alcove\, which is a study alcove in the Van Wylen Library.  A com
 missioned bust of Muste sculpted by Dr. Ryan Dodde\, a 1989 Hope graduate 
 who is a plastic surgeon\, was added to the alcove in November 2018.  A co
 nference focused on Muste and his work is being planned for the spring of 
 2024.\n\nAudience members who need assistance to enjoy any event at Hope f
 ully are encouraged to contact the college’s Events and Conferences Offi
 ce by emailing events@hope.edu or calling 616-395-7222 on weekdays between
  9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Updates related to events are posted when available in 
 the individual listings at hope.edu/calendar
GEO:42.787605;-86.103684
LOCATION:Graves Hall\, Winants Auditorium and Gallery
SUMMARY:Muste Documentary Film
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.hope.edu/event/muste_documentary_film
CATEGORIES:Academics
CATEGORIES:Arts and Humanities Divisions
CATEGORIES:English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260512T055213Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_43836302691756
DTSTART:20231106T230000Z
DTEND:20231107T020000Z
DESCRIPTION:The four-part documentary film series chronicling the life and 
 impact of peace activist A.J. Muste will be screened at Hope College acros
 s four Mondays between Sept. 25 and Nov. 6.\n\nCollectively titled “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace” and produced between 2017 and 2021\, the film
 s will be shown one per night on September 25\, October 16\, October 23 an
 d November 6 at 6 p.m. in Winants Auditorium of Graves Hall.  The screenin
 gs are being hosted by the college’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committ
 ee.\n\nThe public is invited.  Admission is free.\n\nA.J. (Abraham Johanne
 s) Muste (1885-1967)\, who was a 1905 Hope College graduate (and class val
 edictorian)\, was one of the most well-known and influential peace activis
 ts in the United States.  He spoke out against the nation’s involvement 
 in every war from World War I through the Vietnam War.  In his quest for p
 eace he generated controversy for being arrested for participating in prot
 ests in the U.S. and meeting with leaders like Ho Chi Minh\, yet he also d
 emonstrated in Moscow’s Red Square against nuclear testing.  Muste was a
 lso a prominent labor leader across much of his career\, with activity inc
 luding serving as general secretary of the Amalgamated Textile Workers of 
 America and educational director of Brookwood Labor College.  Serving as e
 xecutive director of The Fellowship of Reconciliation from 1940 to 1953\, 
 he became active in the civil rights movement.  He corresponded with Dr. M
 artin Luther King Jr. throughout the 1950s and 1960s\, and King in his boo
 k “Stride Toward Freedom” credited Muste with introducing him to pacif
 ism during a lecture that Muste delivered at Crozer Theological Seminary i
 n 1949 while King was a student.\n\nThe first film in the series\, “A.J.
  Muste: Radical for Peace/Finding True North\,” follows Muste from his c
 hildhood through his early 50s\, and received a State History Award from t
 he Historical Society of Michigan in September 2019.\n\nThe second film\, 
 “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/The No. 1 U.S. Pacifist\,” follows Must
 e’s career as a Christian pacifist from the late 1930s though the mid-19
 50s.\n\nThe third film\, “A.J. Muste: Radical for Peace/Welcoming the Ne
 w Left\,” highlights Muste’s efforts at race reconciliation and demili
 tarization at an age when he might instead have retired.\n\nThe fourth fil
 m\, “Say not the struggle naught availeth…\,” begins with Muste’s 
 1963 visit to Birmingham\, Alabama\, when he met with Dr. Martin Luther Ki
 ng Jr. and other leaders of the civil rights movement\; shows him particip
 ating in mass protests in Washington\, D.C.\, and New York City in 1965\; 
 and follows him to South Vietnam and Saigon in 1966\, and to north Vietnam
  and his January 1967 meeting with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi.  Muste died just 
 a few weeks later\, on Feb. 11\, 1967\, at age 82.\n\n“A.J. Muste: Radic
 al for Peace” was produced and directed by Dr. David Schock\, an award-w
 inning independent filmmaker who is a former member of the college’s com
 munication and English faculty. Schock was invited to undertake the multi-
 film project by Dr. Kathleen Verduin\, a professor of English at Hope who 
 is a member and former chair of the A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture Committee.
 \n\nWith Schock serving additionally as videographer\, editor and research
 er\, and Verduin as associate producer and researcher\, between them they 
 covered thousands of miles\, including three trips to the West Coast\, thr
 ee to the East and two to the South.  Along the way they interviewed exper
 ts who have written extensively about Muste and those who knew him well an
 d worked with him. Highlights include interviews with scholars Jo Ann Ooim
 an Robinson and Leilah Claire Danielson\, activists David McReynolds\, Bra
 d Lyttle\, The Reverends Kristin Stoneking\, James Lawson\, and Andrew J. 
 Young\, SDS cofounder Dick Flacks\, Gene Keyes\, George Lakey\, Michele Gl
 oor\, Rosalie Riegle\, and Sheldon Weeks. Others include The Reverend Art 
 Van Eck\, Brenda Walker Beadenkopf\, Dorothy Vanderklipp\, Heidi Boghosian
 \, and grandson Peter Muste and granddaughter-in-law Shirley and grandson 
 Richard Baker.\n\nMuste is remembered at Hope in a variety of ways. The co
 llege’s A.J. Muste Memorial Lecture series\, which was established in 19
 85 to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of his birth\, seeks to explor
 e issues that would have been of interest to Muste\, including topics rela
 ted to labor\, civil rights and peace\, and this year was held on Monday\,
  Sept. 11.  Since 1988\, Muste has also been honored on campus with the A.
 J. Muste Alcove\, which is a study alcove in the Van Wylen Library.  A com
 missioned bust of Muste sculpted by Dr. Ryan Dodde\, a 1989 Hope graduate 
 who is a plastic surgeon\, was added to the alcove in November 2018.  A co
 nference focused on Muste and his work is being planned for the spring of 
 2024.\n\nAudience members who need assistance to enjoy any event at Hope f
 ully are encouraged to contact the college’s Events and Conferences Offi
 ce by emailing events@hope.edu or calling 616-395-7222 on weekdays between
  9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Updates related to events are posted when available in 
 the individual listings at hope.edu/calendar
GEO:42.787605;-86.103684
LOCATION:Graves Hall\, Winants Auditorium and Gallery
SUMMARY:Muste Documentary Film
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.hope.edu/event/muste_documentary_film
CATEGORIES:Academics
CATEGORIES:Arts and Humanities Divisions
CATEGORIES:English
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
