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    2004-2005 EPIIC Colloquium Members 
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     Cynthia
    Abulafia 
    Cynthia is a senior with a strong passion for travel and culture.
    Although she was born and raised in Los Angeles, she has spent many summers
    abroad, particularly in Spain, and has just returned from a year of study
    in Italy. Her father is Turkish by birth, with a broad understanding
        of language and travel, and she grew up speaking Spanish and understanding
        Ladino at home.  She is a major in English Literature, with a concentration
        in Art History and Comparative Religion.  Religion is a topic of
        particular interest to her, especially in the way that spiritual beliefs
        have shaped individuals, cultures, and nations.  Both she and her
        identical twin sister, Laura, have studied and followed yoga practices
        for many years.  They harbor a secret fantasy of moving to Singapore
        together in the future and opening up their own yoga studio.  She
        looks forward to her final year thinking about what the future holds.            | 
  
  
     Adina
    Allen 
    Although her family only recently moved to Ojai, CA after living
    for 20 years outside Chicago, Adina considers herself a California girl at
    heart. She spent this past summer doing stream ecology and marine mammal
    fieldwork at Big Creek Environmental Research Station in Big Sur, CA. Two
    summers ago she did research on the alpine living environments while backpacking
    through the back country of the High Sierras in California. Adina is a senior
    majoring in Environmental Studies and Anthropology. She recently combined
    these interests while studying abroad last year in the Turks and Caicos Islands
    in the British West Indies. In her program, Adina did underwater scuba research
    on juvenile coral populations and studied marine resource management and
    environmental economics issues of developing countries. Besides the semester
    she spent abroad in the islands, Adina has participated in education programs
    in El Salvador, The Bahamas, Cuba, and Israel. In addition to being a past
    president of Tufts' student environmental group E.C.O., a leader on Tufts
    Wilderness Orientation, and a former manager of Oxfam Café, Adina
    has done research for a number of agencies in the Boston area. This summer
    she worked on marine resource management issues at the Conservation Law Foundation,
    and the summer before she published articles for Cultural Survival on the
    environmental and human rights issues faced by indigenous tribes in South
    America. For fun, Adina loves to backpack, play with her housemates, run,
    read Tom Robbins books, write in her journal, and create art.       | 
  
  
     Karen
        Alroy 
    Karen is a senior who will be completing her studies in
        December of 2004. Born the youngest of three children in a Swiss-Israeli
        household, she has always been keen on learning with a global perspective.
        A double major in Biology and Environmental Studies, she has truly enjoyed
        her time spent completing her undergraduate degree. Very enthusiastic,
        Karen has particularly enjoyed conducting research, both in the laboratory
        and in the field. Her research includes work with Tufts Sackler School
        of Biomedical Research on superantigens and autoimmunity as well as research
        with Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine. This summer, she worked in
        Thailand investigating how the biodiversity of wild shrimp populations
        is affected by the environmental degradation of mangrove forests and
        the development of on-shore aquaculture. If you cannot find her in the
        field or at the lab, she may be out rowing on the Charles, hiking in
        New Hampshire's White Mountains, or throwing around the occasional Frisbee
        disk with friends. EPIIC fits nicely into Karen's long term plans to
        study the interface between communities and the environment.    
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     Jason Bauer  
      Jason is a junior majoring
        in Archaeology and Economics. He was born and raised in West Hartford,
        Connecticut where he has lived all of his life. He has spent the past
        two summers on an archaeological excavation in Murlo (Siena), Italy,
        most recently as a trench supervisor. In addition, Jason also worked
        on a Summer Scholars project this year, researching the archaeological
        evidence for trade and industry in Etruria during the Orientalizing period
        (7th century BC). At Tufts, Jason is actively involved in numerous organizations,
        including founder and dictator-for-life of TUPAC (Tufts University Presents
        the Archaeology Club) as well as a member of the Programming Board, Class
        Council, TCU Senate, TUSC, Entertainment Board, Concert Board and Lecture
        Series. Oil and water attracted Jason because of the overwhelming use
        of water in history as a transportation tool and means of communication.
        In addition, the diversion of water (especially for the creation of energy)
        has huge consequences for archaeology due to flooding and destruction
        of sites. He looks forward to EPIIC aiding in his understanding of the
        world, both past and present.
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     Casey
        Beck 
    Casey is a sophomore, majoring in Peace and Justice Studies and thinking
        about minoring in Mass Communications or Studio Art. Born in Boston,
        she grew up in southwest Florida and graduated from Naples High School.
        During high school, she felt isolated from current events and frustrated
        by the limiting perspective offered by her town. For this reason, she
        is extremely happy to be part of this year's colloquium and other globally-oriented
        organizations on campus. She is excited to be part of the newly founded
        organization, Pangea: Why Me?/SPARKS and looks forward to bridging EPIIC
        and Pangea this year. Casey is also interested in using photography as
        a means for social change and hopes to use Exposure as a starting point
        for a future in photography. 
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     Dan
      Becker 
    Daniel grew up as a Brazilian, despite being born and
        for the most part raised in Boston. Courtesy of his Brazilian parents,
        he managed to travel to Brazil for long periods of time, often lasting
        anywhere from three to eight months. It was in keeping one foot grounded
        in the States while keeping the other firmly rooted in Brazil that Daniel
        was able to compare and contrast the vast injustices that plague both
        nations. Encounters with some of Brazil's poorest citizens helped ignite
        Daniel's passion for 'social justice.' While in Boston, he has done what
        he can to bridge some of the gaps between Brazil and the United States.
        Working with organizations such as Jobs with Justice and B.I.C. (the
        Brazilian Immigrant Center) on projects supporting the first Immigrant
        Workers Freedom Ride and opposing the Free Trade Area of the Americas,
        Daniel has tried to address problems that plague Latinos still residing
        in Latin America as well as those forced to illegally immigrate. He hopes
        to continue his passion of addressing some of Brazil's problems while
        expanding his understanding of global issues involving not only immigration
        but also geopolitical issues through his studies with EPIIC and in his
      first year at college. 
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     Jessie
    Berlin 
    Jessie  is thrilled to be a part of EPIIC. A German-Korean-American,
      she deferred admission last year to live in Germany with the Congress-Bundestag
      Youth Exchange Program scholarship. As travel and foreign language are
      two of her greatest passions, she had a fantastic time immersing herself
      in Germany's language and culture and exploring more of the country. She
      thoroughly enjoyed poking around other parts of Europe as well. Jessie
      also went to Australia with the People to People Student Ambassador Program
      and now looks to travel outside the sphere of western society. She is currently
      learning Mandarin Chinese and plans to major in IR, focusing on human rights
      issues. A Seattle native, Jessie loves being on the ocean or in the mountains.
      Jessie enjoys British comedy, Jon Stewart, singing along to Sgt Pepper,
      Der Schuh des Manitu and many other things. Her joys include good music,
      good friends, good food, a good book and a good challenge. She looks forward
    to a phenomenal year with EPIIC. 
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     Jake
      Berliner 
    Jake Berliner is a sophomore who is majoring in political science. Raised
        just North of San Francisco in Marin County, California, he brings personal
        experience to EPIIC this year. Jake spent last summer in Washington,
        D.C. working for Senator Dianne Feinstein and for an energy lobbyist
        and is extremely interested in working energy and water policies into
        the mainstream of American political debate. Aside from politics, Jake's
        other main interest is baseball. He is an avid San Francisco Giants fan
        and has adopted the Red Sox as his second team. Jake also enjoys sailing
        and SCUBA diving, interests that he can hopefully mate with this year's
      EPIIC topic of Oil and Water. 
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     Kathyrn
      Brooks 
    Although she goes to school only 20 minutes from her hometown of Bedford,
        MA, Kathryn is a worldly Francophile at heart, recently returning from
        a year of study in Paris. An International Relations major, her academic
        interests are broad and include languages, women's studies, and international
        politics, particularly in the Middle East. It is this last topic that
        drew Kathryn to EPIIC this year, along with her desire to integrate environmental
        studies into her program. Kathryn has led two Wilderness Orientation
        excursions, tutored with the Tufts Literacy Corps, and been involved
        in numerous on-campus groups such as the Tufts Mountain Club, Tufts Dance
        Collective, and Environmental Consciousness Outreach. She holds American
        and Irish passports and enjoys figuring out which one will get her into
        the shortest customs line. Other passions include hiking, the Paris Metro
      system, long walks on the beach (seriously), and a good cup of tea. 
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     Catherine
        Caicedo 
        Catherine is a junior majoring in International Relations with
        a focus on international trade. She is from Ecuador and moved to New
        York at the age of fifteen, where she has been living ever since. Last
        year, she studied in the University College of London where she gained
        valuable knowledge of transition economies, especially Russia and Eastern
        Europe. Her academic interests include public and private corruption
        and the process of institution building in transition economies. Last
        summer, she had the great pleasure to be part of the Tufts Institute
        for Leadership and International Perspective (TILIP) group in Hong Kong,
        where she interned at the Education and Manpower Bureau. At Tufts, she
        is active in the Leonard Carmichael Society and in the Catholic Center.
        For her future academic endeavors, she would like to pursue a combined
        degree in law and international business. Upon graduation, she would
        like to work for a consulting firm to gain more experience in international
        business in a range of projects with a global focus. 
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     Lauren
        Clark 
    Lauren was born in Salt Lake City, Utah and moved to Washington D.C.
        where she attended Walt Whitman High School. In her free time she enjoys
        riding horses and competing in hunter/jumper shows. After graduating,
        she delayed starting college in order to expand her horizons. She spent
        the fall teaching English to middle school children in a rural village
        outside Kumasi, Ghana and then studied art history in Venice, Italy during
        the spring. She is currently a junior at Tufts University, majoring in
        International Relations and Economics with a focus in African development.
        She plans to study abroad next semester in Cameroon with the School for
        International Training. Considering 50 percent of Ghanaians do not have
        access to clean drinking water and the World Bank is building a multi-million
        dollar pipeline from oil fields in Chad through Cameroon, she is looking
        forward to taking advantage of EPIIC's topic this year. 
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     Katherine
    Conway 
    Katherine was born and raised in Boulder, Colorado.
      She was raised loving the outdoors, camping, backpacking, and mountain
      climbing. She is a sophomore here at Tufts and is majoring in Community
      Health and International Relations. At Tufts, she directs National Student
      Partnerships, which is a new volunteering organization that works with
      homeless and jobless clients in the Medford and Somerville communities.
      She is also participating in TIILES this semester, a service-learning class
      focused on Nicaragua. She spent her summer supervising for a program called
      Amigos de las Americas in Honduras, and through this she spent three months
      backpacking and checking on volunteers in the campo region of Intibuca.
      She supervised the volunteers in doing water sanitation work as well as
      other house hold improvement projects. When she grows up, she wants to
    participate in diplomatic work that focuses on international health issues.
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     Walter
        De Simoni 
    Walter is currently a freshman at Tufts University, possibly double
    majoring in International Relations and Economics and minoring in Mathematics.
    He was born and raised for most of his life in Brazil, most specifically
    in Minas Gerais. For 13 years he lived in Morro do Níquel. After that
    he lived in São Paulo for three and half years and in Venezuela for
    three more years. He graduated from Colegio Internacional de Caracas, in
    which he completed the International Baccalaureate program and learned English
    and Spanish. Throughout his life he has been involved in different activities,
    such as street hockey, photography and different Model United Nations conferences.
    He spent most of his summer 
    working for the Discovery Channel as a dubbing artist and translator for
    different shows. Walter looks forward to his new life at Tufts and believes
    that EPIIC will give him the chance to take full advantage of everything
    this University has to offer. 
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     Kelly
    Douglas 
    Kelly is a senior from Waccabuc, New York. She is majoring in international
        relations and just returned from an amazing year in Santiago, Chile.
        Kelly has been interested in IR and languages since the years she spent
        in Holland as a child and has always wanted to be a spy. Currently, Kelly
        is working on accumulating foreign languages because she firmly believes
        there is no reason for not being able to communicate with as many people
        as possible. In her spare time, she also enjoys watching movies, playing
    tennis, rowing, painting, and traveling.
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     Michael
      Doyle 
    Originally from Poughkeepsie, NY, Mike is a senior majoring
      in International Relations. During his sophomore year, he was a member
      of Tufts BRIDGES to Nicaragua program in its inaugural year. He and sixteen
      other Tufts students traveled to Siuna, Nicaragua, where they worked on
      both the construction of a maternity clinic and alongside campesinos in
      a sustainable agriculture project. He considers this trip to be a significant
      personal and academic incitement toward more global awareness, which led
      him to spend the fall semester of his junior year in Antananarivo, Madagascar.
        Through the SIT Culture and Society program, he studied the national
        response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic under President Ravalomanana. He was
        then able to compliment this experience with the Tufts in Paris program
        the following spring, where he worked at the French non-profit Sidaction
        on the project «Acces-Commun,» an effort promoting community-based
        access to antiretroviral therapy to both donors and political actors.
        In his spare time he enjoys travel, running and playing guitar. He looks
        forward to working with many of Tufts' finest this year in EPIIC and
      exploring the implications of oil and water issues in public health policy. 
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     Alexander
    Duncan 
    Alex is a senior majoring in International Relations with a concentration
        in Europe and the former Soviet Union. He is originally from Bethesda,
        MD. Alex just returned from his junior year abroad in Moscow and is now
        proficient in Russian and Russian drinking traditions. The past two summers
        he has interned in both the Senate and the House, where he researched
        renewable energy, foreign affairs, homeland security, and public diplomacy.
        He enjoys all sorts of foreign travel, learning about foreign cultures,
        the winter sport of curling, which he has played since he was 12, ultimate
        Frisbee, juggling, baseball, listening to Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin,
        and following major league baseball. In the future, he hopes to pursue
        a degree in International Law and potentially go into politics. He is
        very excited about this year and the opportunities to examine global
    affairs that EPIIC will provide.
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     Emily
    Estrada 
    Emily was born in 1983, the oldest child of a Catholic
      Mexican and a Jewish, die-hard Mets fan from New York. She, however, has
      lived almost her entire life in the white-bread suburbia of Connecticut.
      Emily is currently a senior, double-majoring in international relations
      and environmental studies, and her secret life ambitions include - in no
      particular order - running a marathon, singing karaoke, and founding an
      NGO. Emily has been playing the clarinet for 12 years, and also enjoys
      occasionally rockin' out on the piano. She has participated in such on-campus
      organizations as Water Watch and ECO. On the Tufts women's ultimate Frisbee
      team, she is a force to be reckoned with. Emily spent the previous semester
      in Spain, learning how to speak Spanish like the kings and cooking on a
      stove-top. During her summers, she has had such odd jobs as interning for
      Senator Joe Lieberman, conducting research for Connecticut's Department
      of Mental Health and Addiction Services, and working at a summer camp for
    inner-city children. 
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     Chelsea
    Feerer 
    Chelsea is proudly from Columbus, Ohio. She is a senior, majoring
    in architectural studies, which she hopes will lead her to a career in urban
        planning. Last summer in Maine, she pursued her dream of being a whitewater
        rafting guide. Chelsea spends her time rock climbing, swimming, and working
        at the Global Development & Environment Institute at Tufts (GDAE).
        In 2002, she was a member of the Tufts delegation to the U.N. World Summit
        on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg and has wanted to participate
    in EPIIC ever since.
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       Amanda
    Fencl 
      Amanda was born and raised in the suburbs of Chicago. She is a sophomore,
        majoring in Environmental Studies and International Relations. A musician
        since birth, she satisfies her musical craving as a double bassist in
        the Tufts Symphony Orchestra. An avid environmentalist, she works to
        raise awareness of environmental issues as an officer in Tufts' Environmental
        Consciousness Outreach (ECO) and as an intern at Tufts' Institute of
        the Environment. In the rare occasion of free time, she loves exploring
        photography, cooking, and knitting endless yards of scarves. As part
        of EPIIC this year, Amanda looks forward to discovering new ways to combine
        her creative and ecological energies and to challenging her existing
    notions of environmental problems.
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     Katharine
        Ferguson 
    Katharine is from Denver, Colorado and is now a senior at Tufts studying
        international relations and Russian. Her interest in global issues of
        all kinds arises from an early case of the travel bug, which has lead
        her on many adventures around the world and an uncanny determination
        to uncover common ground between all peoples. Specifically, she is interested
        in food security and agriculture as they pertain to sustainable development
        and public health. Often up with the sun, she is a member of the women's
        varsity swim team and enjoys triathlons, climbing mountains, and road
        races on those elusive free weekends. 
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     Nicolas
        Gortzounian 
    Originally from Armenia, Nicky was born in upstate
        New York and raised in France. Growing up, he frequently travelled between
        Western Europe, the US and Africa, giving him exposure to the world and
        sparking his curiosity. He always inquires about other people's backgrounds,
        and he believes that working with people of different up-bringings generates
        a more tolerant, nurturing environment. Over the years, Nicky has developed
        a passion for languages. His other interests include aerospace, molecular
        biology, and swing dancing. When asked what he is majoring in, he invariably
        responds: 'everything.' Such are the luxuries bestowed upon Freshmen. 
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     Rachael
        Hereford 
    Rachael is a senior majoring in Political Science and Spanish. She grew
        up in Newmarket, NH. She spent her junior year studying abroad in Havana,
        Cuba and in the Washington Semester program in DC, where she had an internship
        with Americans for Democratic Action. She is also involved with the Multi-Racial
        Organization of Students at Tufts (MOST), the Socialist Alternative,
        and the International Socialist Organization. After she graduates, she
        plans to enter the non-profit international development sector and concentrate
        on human rights. 
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     Unaza Khan 
    Unaza Khan was born in the
        warm and historical city of Lahore, Pakistan. At the age of thirteen,
        she moved to East Islip, New York. Her interests today are informed by
        the compilation of her experiences in Pakistan and the United States.
        She is currently a sophomore majoring in International Relations. At
        Tufts, she is involved in the University College, National Students Partnerships,
        Tufts Literacy Corp., Tufts Association of South Asians, and the Muslim
        Students Association. Her interests include painting, drawing, reading,
        and writing poetry. Unaza is very excited about taking part in EPIIC:
        to learn about the world, challenge herself, and pursue research in issues
        that interest her.       | 
  
  
     Gabriel
    Koehler-Derrick 
    Gabriel is a senior and native son of the Hoosier
    State raised o0n tales of Larry "Legend" and years of Bobby Knight
    antics. At the age of 16 he went abroad with the American Field Service to
    Naples, Italy which is entirely responsible for his love of travel, SSC Napoli
    (unfortunately), and languages. Since arriving at Tufts he has managed to
    take trips to Argentina, Senegal, and most recently he spent a year studying
    in Egypt. He is a proud member of la iglesia de la mano de Dios and prays
    for the recovery of Diego (D10s). His future plans include exploring Argentina
    with his compañera, Sabrina.
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     Adam
        Koeppel 
    Adam Koeppel hails from San Francisco. Spending junior
        year abroad in London stoked his previous interest in international issues.
        Adam is a Mechanical Engineering and Political Science double major and
        hopes to use his two fields of study to bring a new perspective to the
        EPIIC course. In addition to academics, Adam is currently teaching a
        class at the Ex College entitled 'How Things Work.' After graduation,
        Adam hopes to combine his two interests, engineering and politics, in
        order to benefit international development. 
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     Rachel
      Leven 
    Rachel Leven is a sophomore. She was born in New York
        City. At 13, she moved to Singapore and attended the Singapore American
        School. After ninth grade, she moved to Tokyo, Japan, and graduated from
        the American School in Japan. Among her pre-college activities are a
        five-week homestay in Tottori, Japan, where she attended a local high
        school; a teaching position at Tokyo's Jewish Community Center; and participation
        in Habitat for Humanity (Fiji). Along with EPIIC, she is also involved
        in the New Initiative for Middle East Peace, a student think tank and
        cultural advocacy initiative affiliated with the Institute for Global
        Leadership at Tufts. Last year she was proud to participate with the
        group in a fact finding mission to Israel and the West Bank. This year
        she is also involved with the Tufts Ultimate Frisbee team and is treasurer
      of the Japanese Culture Club. 
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     Dora
      Levinson 
    Dora Levinson is a sophomore currently planning to
        double major in Community Health and History. In addition to her academic
        studies, she has been actively involved in public health programs in
        India, among them an analysis of the nutritional and health well-being
        of young children in the state of Punjab, an evaluation of a UNICEF assisted
        maternal and child health project in Bihar, and a mobile health clinic
      for street children in Kolkata. 
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     Daniel
    Mandell 
    Daniel is a senior hailing from the Land of the Dimpled Chad:
    West Palm Beach, Florida. Living in famous places is nothing new for Daniel,
    as he has also lived in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania where, yes, George
        Washington crossed the Delaware River. In high school, his argumentative
        nature led him to a highly prosperous career in Lincoln-Douglas Debate,
        along with a reputation for activism with the faculty and administration.
        Since arriving at Tufts, he has restarted the Debate Society, been involved
        with various environmental and political groups, and learned the intricate
        art of projection from the Tufts Film Series Group. After being involved
        with the 02-03 EPIIC colloquium ('Sovereignty and Intervention'), Daniel
        spent his junior year in London interning with The Federal Trust for
        Education and Research, occasionally attending class at University College
        London, and studying British Parliamentary Debate with the UCL Debate
        Society. This year, with a declared political science major, Daniel hopes
        to use his time in EPIIC to find a place to go when Tufts finally tells
    him to go away. 
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     Aaron May 
    Aaron May is a senior at Tufts, majoring in political science. He is focused
        on issues of foreign and security policy, as well as the political and
        policy implications of new technologies. Aaron has worked for a number
        of private and governmental organizations in the Washington DC area,
        including Booz | Allen | Hamilton, Jane's Information Group, and the
        Executive Office of the President. He enjoys sailing, power boating,
        power napping and other power-related activities. Aaron likes writing,
        but finds his sense of humor too dark for political speechwriting and
        yet insufficiently amusing for the likes of The Daily Show  or The
        Onion . He also enjoys the looks of bafflement he occasionally induces
    in others. 
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     Elexia
      McGovern 
    Lexie McGovern is a senior at Tufts University, where she is majoring
        in International Relations and Latin American studies. Born in Lubbock,
        Texas into a multicultural family, her academic and personal interests
        are inspired by her diverse background. Latin America, particularly Mexico,
        has always been an extremely important part of her life as her mother
        is Mexican-American. Through her father's side, she was introduced to
        the Irish culture and is a dual citizen of Ireland and the US. Lexie
        is involved in a number of organizations which reflect her passions and
        interests. Among these organizations are: MOST (Multicultural Organization
        of Students at Tufts), the Tufts Symphony Orchestra, LCS, and Concilio
        Hispano. During her spring semester, she studied abroad in Oaxaca, Mexico
        where she further explored grassroots movements. She is unsure of her
        future plans after graduation, but she is sure it will somehow encompass
      her joint passions of Latin America and social justice. 
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     Lauren
      Miller 
    Lauren is currently a senior here at Tufts, majoring
        in International Relations and concentrating in European Studies. She
        transferred to Tufts for her sophomore year from American University's
        School of International Service in Washington, D.C. Although she lived
        most of her life on Cape Cod, in Dennis, MA, she attended Phillips Academy
        Andover for high school. During her senior year of high school, she had
        the opportunity to live in Burgos, Spain as an exchange student. It was
        during her time in Spain that Lauren really developed her passion for
        European culture and politics. She hopes to integrate this year's EPIIC's
        theme of Oil & Water with her interests in Europe, energy policy
        and security studies, not only into research for this year but for post-graduate
      research as well. 
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     Odmaa
      Otgonbileg 
    Odmaa was born in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia and moved
        to Erdenet when she was four. Her parents received their education in
        the former Soviet Union. Her mother is a doctor of pharmaceutical science
        and since 2001 has been a member of the Mongolian Parliament (Ikh Hural).
        Her father was a doctor of technical science, an honorary professor of
        Irkutsk mining institute, a general director of Erdenet Mining Corporation,
        the president of the Mongolian National Olympic Committee, and a member
        of the Mongolian Parliament. He was instrumental in bringing international
        attention to the almost unknown weather disaster called Zud, which is
        almost exclusive to Mongolian conditions. Odmaa studied in a Russian
        school in Erdenet from first to eighth grade, then spent one year at
        an American high school in Bethesda, MD, before completing her last three
        years of high school at Aiglon College in Switzerland. At Aiglon, she
        developed an interest in developmental and environmental issues, particularly
        concerning the allocation of natural resources. Initially undecided about
        her major at Tufts, Odmaa sampled a breadth of Tufts courses before settling
      on International Relations and Economics as her majors. 
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     Dalia
    Palchik 
    Dalia was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina but has lived
      most of her life in Fairfax, Virginia. She is currently a senior majoring
      in Anthropology and French and spent last year studying abroad in Paris.
      She spent the year pursuing her disciplines from a slightly different perspective
      and studying the immigrant communities in France and Europe. Coming from
      a culinary family, her passion is cooking for friends while listening to
      good music. She is interested in issues regarding migrant communities and
      literature studies, mostly francophone, written by its members. Her future
      plans range from joining the Peace Corps and becoming a visual anthropologist
      specializing in West Africa to opening a tea room for discussion and music
    somewhere by the sea.  | 
  
  
     Everett
      Peachey 
    Everett graduated from The College of Wooster (Wooster, OH) in 2001
        with a BA in International Relations. Upon graduation, he entered the
        U.S. Peace Corps, where he served as an university English teacher in
        both Russia and Kazakhstan. He enrolled at The Fletcher School when he
        returned to the U.S. in the fall of 2003, and he is currently in his
        second year here. Formally, his fields of study are Development Economics,
        Southwest Asia, and the United States. He has a particular interest in
        this year's EPIIC colloquium, especially as the issues of oil and water
        relate to Central Asia. He published an article in the Spring 2003 issue
        of the Journal of Public and International Affairs  entitled "The
        Aral Sea Basin Crisis and Sustainable Water Resource Management in Central
        Asia," and he is currently circulating an article for publication
        on the potential for conflict in transboundary water and oil relations
        between Kazakhstan and the People's Republic of China. He spent this
        past summer as a Political/Economic Intern at the U.S. Embassy in Almaty,
        Kazakhstan, and he was able to continue researching these issues on the
        side while there. He hopes to continue studying these areas as he looks
        toward his master's thesis in the near-term and potentially a dissertation
      in the long-run. 
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    Yissy Perez   | 
  
  
     Sajid Pothiawala 
    Sajid is a current Tufts senior who was born in Norwich, Connecticut,
        in May of 1984, to parents who immigrated from India a decade or so earlier.
        At a very young age, he found issues of social justice and globalization
        fascinating, two interests that do not exactly prevent a child from being
        beat up on the playground. At the age of 17, Sajid graduated from the
        Norwich Free Academy in Norwich, CT, where he spent three years on a
        student task force assembled by the administration that tackled issues
        of ethnic and socioeconomic diversity. At Tufts, Sajid has spent three
        years trying to figure out what he wants to do with the rest of his life,
        and along the way he has declared a major in Quantitative Economics and
        is actively pursuing a minor in Moral and Political Philosophy. His Tufts
        record is peppered with the numerous student groups he committed to and
        soon tired of, including but not limited to, the TCU Senate and numerous
        on-campus publications. He is also an avid tennis player and through
        his will and his will alone he has inexorably tied his fate to that of
    the Red Sox. 
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     Christopher
    Quirk 
    Christopher Quirk is a senior at Tufts University, majoring in English.
        His extensive travels and the lessons he has gleaned while on the road
        have inspired in him a desire to communicate his experiences to others.
        While literature and journalism have long been a conduit for conveying
        information and intellectual discourse, Chris hopes that his creativity
        and passion for prose and the arts will culminate in innovations of fiction
        that incorporate serious discussion of moral conundrums with accessible,
        enjoyable narrative. He suspects that EPIIC will both broaden his understanding
        of those moral quandaries and link him with others who share similar
    goals. 
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     Lisa
      Reitman 
    Lisa is a senior majoring in Internal Relations, concentrating
        on Nationalism, Culture and Identity. She is from Montreal and loves
        the city's sense of multiculturalism and sophistication. Fluent in French,
        she studied abroad in Paris during the fall semester of her junior year.
        She is an avid traveler, skier, and enjoys spending time with friends
        and family. She hopes to attend law school in the near future and intends
        to spend some part of her life in New York City and Paris. This fall,
        she is a co-leader of a Perspectives class for freshmen. She is also
        an active member of her sorority Alpha Phi. This summer, she interned
        for the Governor of Massachusetts in the Press Office. EPIIC appeals
      to her as it combines her international interests with political activism.
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     Diane  Rish 
    Diane Rish is a senior at Tufts University, pursuing a major in International
        Relations and a minor in Economics. Diane was born in Toronto, Canada
        to a Mexican mother and an American father and is a dual citizen of Canada
        and the United States. At a young age, she moved to the United States
        where she lived for a few years before moving to Europe. While living
        in Europe, Diane attended the American International School in Nice,
        France and later attended an international boarding school in Geneva,
        Switzerland. Diane's multicultural background, experience growing up
        overseas, and her travels around the world, have all led to her profound
        interest in international relations. She is particularly interested in
        US-Mexico relations and has had several work experiences along the US-Mexico
        border, which include working with the Mexican Consulate, the El Paso
        Chamber of Commerce, and Las Americas Refugee and Asylum Project. Although
        Diane is eager to return to the US-Mexico border to work in the field
        of economic development following her graduation in May, she is equally
        excited to have the opportunity to learn more about other regions of
        the world through her participation in this year's EPIIC program. 
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     Shanti
        Sattler 
    Shanti Sattler is a sophomore at Tufts University
          majoring in International Relations and Peace and Justice Studies.
          She was born and raised in Eureka, California. Her interests lie in
          international affairs, political science, social justice and the environment.
          She learned to love traveling and exploring other worlds at a young
          age and hopes to continue to do so throughout her life. While in high
          school, she studied in Quito, Ecuador. At Tufts, she is on the swim
          team and in the Tufts Mountain Club. She is also an active member and
          coordinator of several community service projects around campus. Fulfilling
          other loves of Spanish and Latin culture, she teaches English as a
          second language for El Salvadoran immigrants in the Somerville community.
          In her spare time, she likes to do anything and everything in the outdoors,
          especially mountain biking, backpacking and kayaking. She also likes
        to bake and do photography.
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     Laura
        Schenkein 
    Laura Schenkein, a New York native, is currently a senior
        at Tufts, majoring in international relations. She recently returned
        to Boston after spending her junior year studying in Spain and Chile,
        where she hiked, enjoyed the ocean, and conducted research on Chilean
        public opinion. Laura's academic interests include conflict resolution
        and security studies, and she hopes to work to prevent the widespread
        abuse of human rights. She interned at the National Security Archive,
        where she declassified government documents on human rights abuses in
        Peru and received the IR Research Scholars Grant to work on her senior
        thesis on cross-national variations in public opinion towards humanitarian
        intervention. She also interned at the Democratic National Convention
        and currently works as a Writing Fellow at Tufts. Laura spends as much
        time as she can outdoors, loves skiing, and occasionally plays ultimate
        frisbee. She is excited to be part of EPIIC and hopes the course challenges
        her to reexamine her perceptions of the world.    | 
  
  
     Kathrine
    Schmidt 
    Kat Schmidt is a sophomore from Princeton, NJ, majoring in English and
        International Relations, and she is thrilled to be part of EPIIC this
        year. She is a News Editor for the Tufts Daily , and in her
        spare time she enjoys being outside, reading an eclectic assortment of
        books and periodicals, cooking vegetables, taking silly digital pictures,
        writing, and dabbling in Capoeira, an Afro Brazilian Martial Art/Dance.
        This summer, she interned at Manhattan's Interfaith Center on Corporate
        Responsibility, a small nonprofit leading a coalition of religious investors
        in shareholder activism. She also worked for an environmental camp near
        home, leading backpacking and canoeing trips and teaching about organic
        farming and water quality. She would like to pursue a career in journalism
    or teaching. 
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      Margaret Senese 
        Margaret, a sophomore, is a recent transfer from the
        College of Engineering to the College of Liberal Arts. This illustrates
        her diverse and many interests, and she eagerly welcomes the chance to
        synthesize seemingly disparate issues in this year's colloquium. She
        is a very proud native of New Jersey. In her 19 years she has never left
        the United States and hopes to do so in the near future. Margaret talks
        with strangers in 24-hours diners, plays on the beach at night, and drives
    traffic circles with abandon. She has not yet declared a major.  | 
  
  
     Sinan
    Seyhun 
    Sinan is a first year graduate student in the Department
      of Urban and Environmental Planning and Policy, where he plans to concentrate
      on energy policy. He was born in Ankara and grew up in Istanbul, Turkey
      where he got his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering at Bogazici
      University. He has interned at several factories in Turkey that manufacture
      power plant components. In addition to his technical background, Sinan
      has always been interested in political and social issues. These interests
      have fueled his travels to conflicted regions like Northern Cyprus, Southeastern
      Turkey and Bosnia-Herzegovina, where he worked for a volunteer project
      called 'Builders for Peace' during the summer of 2003 to help the reconstruction
      efforts in the historical city of Mostar. Sinan is a soccer player and
      a mountain climber. He loves watching films, traveling, camping out, skiing
    and listening to reggae music.
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     Rana
        Shabb 
    Rana is currently a junior majoring in quantitative economics.
        She was born in Houston, Texas and lived there for the first seven years
        of her life while her parents were completing their studies. At the age
        of seven, she moved with her family back to Lebanon where she attended
        a French school. She earned her French scientific baccalaureate there.
        She enjoys playing badminton, scuba diving and absorbing the sun. She
        spent many summers doing voluntary work in a camp which hosted refugee
        children from around the Middle East (mostly from Iraq). Dealing so closely
        and personally with "hot political issues" in the region made
        her realize the need for mutual understating and regional development.
        Growing up in Lebanon, a country where western and oriental values constantly
        mix or clash, has offered her many things: her fluency in three languages
        Arabic, English and French, and an appetite for broadening her understanding
    of the relationship between the west and the Muslim world.        | 
  
  
     Nia Stoykova 
      Nia Stoykova is a native of Bulgaria, but
        currently she is a senior at Tufts, working on her education in International
        Relations (while playing with Environmental Studies and Economics). She
        spent her junior year reading (and eating, and breathing) Politics, Philosophy
        and Economics at Pembroke College, Oxford University. Aside from this,
        she likes to exercise volleyball and power (as a Resident Assistant)
        and is a bit of a computer geek (as her long "career" at the
        GIS center would testify). So far the trade winds have taken her to the
        US, England, France, Latvia, Czech Republic, Spain and Germany, but she
    does like to stay in one place too. 
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     Carol
      Strulovic 
    Carol left her hometown Caracas, Venezuela at age 16 to study French
        in Montreux, Switzerland for a year and travel around the world. She's
        currently a senior at Tufts majoring in Economics and Psychology. Last
        summer, Carol worked in the marketing department at a TV network company
        in Venezuela. She spent this summer in Hong Kong and Beijing with the
        TILIP program and had an internship at HSBC. This year Carol will be
        organizing the TILIP symposium, writing a thesis in the field of behavioral
        finance, and is very excited about participating in EPIIC and its anniversary
      theme, oil and water. 
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     Ariela
        Summit 
    Ariela Summit is a senior majoring in Environmental Studies and History.
        She is particularly interested in questions of environmental justice
        and global inequality as they relate to issues of food and water. Ariela
        is a native of Medford, but recently spent a year in Southern India working
        on an organic farm and studying yoga (one of her main passions). She
        was a member of the Tufts River Institute, and has interned with Eagle
        Eye, an environmental education group targeting underserved youth. Ariela
        plans to write her senior honors thesis this year on water rights in
        Sri Lanka in conjunction with EPIIC. She is fascinated by Sri Lanka because
        of the intersections between Hinduism, Buddhism, and Christianity, as
        well as the complex environmental and political situation. Ariela loves
        tropical fruit, and gardens, and the morning-time.
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     Oleg
      Svet 
    Oleg was born in 1986 in Ukraine, part of the Soviet Union.
        He came to Herzliya, Israel in 1990. Eight years later, he moved to Massachusetts
        and studied at Westborough High School. Following September 11th, he
        founded a political club, the Westborough Chapter of the Junior State
        of America, which one won the 2001 Chapter of the Year Award. He worked
        for liberals and Congressmen and Senators, Gubernatorial and Presidential
        campaigns, and the National Convention. He is currently a freshman and
        is hoping to double major in International Relations and International
        Law. He is a moderate who never chooses sides based on what one political
        party says. His hobby is reading non-fiction (historical commentary)
        and fiction (classical). He is passionate about international relations
      and conflict resolution.
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     Zofia
      Sztykowski 
    Zofia is a sophomore at Tufts with a major in Political
        Science and a minor in English. She was born in Gdansk, Poland but has
        lived the majority of her life in the United States and currently calls
        Rehoboth, MA home. At Tufts, she is a member of the Varsity Women's Crew
        team and of the editorial board of the Daily . She has also
        participated in the Tufts Democrats and hopes to study abroad in England
        next year.   This summer, she worked at a non-profit summer camp
        for children from inner-city Boston and considers this one of the most
        rewarding experiences she has had. She anticipates that EPIIC will soon
        be a part of this list as well. Like many young people, she intends to
        change the world, or at least a part of it, and believes that participation
      in EPIIC will open her eyes in ways that will help her to do so. 
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     Katie Todd 
    Katie is extremely excited
          to be doing EPIIC this year. She is a senior studying Geology and Engineering
          Science and has been involved with numerous activities here at Tufts,
          including Tufts Mountain CLub, the Women´s
            Varsity Rowing team, and Water Watch. She spends her free time hiking
            all over the East coast and playing frisbee, soccer and volleyball.
          In the spring and summer season of 2003, she completed a 2,172 miles
          trek through 14 states and the forests of the East coast on the Appalachian
            Trail. It took her five and a half months and changed her life. Katie
            likes to contemplate environmental issues and policies and thinks
    she will feel very at home in EPIIC.        | 
  
  
     Dan
    Toga  
    Dan is a senior majoring in International Relations, with a
    focus on Eastern Europe and European integration, and minoring in Italian.
    The travel bug first bit him during a yearlong experience in Germany during
    high school as a Rotary International Youth Exchange Student, where he lived
    with a German host family and attended school at the Richard-Wagner-Gymnasium
    in Bayreuth. Since then he has spent an extended period living and working
    in Australia, and has traveled independently throughout much of Europe and
    Southeast Asia. Dan also just returned from a semester at the Università Cattolica
    del Sacro Cuore in Milan, Italy where he focused on EU affairs. Consequently,
    he now speaks German and Italian with relative fluency and can order a beer
    in another dozen languages. Outside of the classroom, Dan is an active member
    of the Tufts E-men Ultimate Frisbee team and has participated in tournaments
    throughout the US and abroad. He is also interested in photography, especially
    travel photography as its gives him another excuse to travel. Seeing the
    99.99 percent of the world that he has not yet experienced remains a goal
    for Dan and probably will figure heavily into his choice of career. 
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     Julia
        Tong 
    Julia Tong is a sophomore majoring in International Relations. She is
          from Bala Cynwyd, PA and attended Lower Merion High School. She is fluent
          in Cantonese, speaks French, and is learning Mandarin. She is passionate
          about traveling, frisbee, Spanish music, craft projects, and exotic cuisine.
          Her most memorable trips include backpacking in Alaska, meeting her extended
          family in China, and most recently, six weeks in France. She is on the
      Tufts Ultimate Frisbee team and is an Asian American Peer Leader. 
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     Valerie
        Wood 
    Born and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, Valerie has known that
        her future would include some sort of medicine ever since she was a little
        girl. The eldest of three girls, she spent her childhood days going to
        the hospital with her father and to the stable with her mother. A true
        horse lover, Valerie spent a good deal of her college career deciding
        whether she should go into human or veterinary medicine. After deciding
        that she would rather spend her life caring for mankind, as long as she
        can ride horses on the side, Valerie has started to tackle the next BIG
        question: What kind of doctor do you want to be? Her interest in history
        (her major) and man's ever present battle with disease has pushed her
        in the direction of infectious diseases, where she hopes to focus on
        one of history's newest killers: HIV. While she finds the health related
        aspects surrounding water especially intriguing, she looks forward to
        this year's EPIIC topic of Oil and Water with much excitement. As a senior,
        Valerie is excited about what's to come - whatever it may be. Besides
    all that, she loves cats and dogs (equally!), horses, and Skyline Chili. 
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     Alex
        Wright 
        Alex is a freshman who was born and raised in San Diego, California,
        to a proud mother from Paris and father from New York. She has lived
        with her family in France for a few months every summer and has played
        the violin for 14 years. Her seventh grade science teacher, Mr. Otis,
        raised her interest in environmental and ecological issues, and she has
        been passionate about them ever since. She did internships at the Scripps
        Institute of Oceanography for two summers and organized a series young
        musician concerts to raise money for various environmental causes, mainly
        in the rainforests of Central and South America. One of these concerts
        raised money for the private endeavor of two ecologists in Costa Rica
        on the Osa Peninsula. Their goal is to find ways to profit from the rainforest
        without destroying it. In her senior year, Alex founded the Environmental
        Club at her school and organized a (hopefully annual) community service
        trip to the Osa Peninsula for a dozen students. Alex's interest in environmental
        issues has led her to be curious about all aspects of the oil and water
        industries. Her work at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography led her
        to realize that, in order to change government policy on ecological issues
        as well as others, one must be in the political world. That is one of
        many reasons that she has decided to major in Political Science. She
    is looking forward to learning all that EPIIC has to offer.        | 
  
  
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