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If you would like to join Global Cincinnati as a cultural local resource, please email Michelle Harpenau Glandorf, President & CEO.
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Biography
Dr. Hebert has degrees in History from St. Anselm College (New Hampshire), Duquesne University (Pennsylvania), and the University of Maryland, College Park (Ph.D.) He has been at Thomas More College for 39 years and, for 14 of those, served as Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College. Since his return to the classroom in 2001, in addition to his teaching responsibilities, he served as Chairperson of the History, International Studies and Political Science Department from 2001-2008 and Director of the James Graham Brown Honors Program from 2001-2011. In 2011-2012 he assumed duties as Director of the College’s Gemini (Dual Credit) Program and Director of Faculty Development. His teaching specialty is in Modern European History and his expertise is primarily in the British Isles where he has been a Director or faculty member for many programs in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Australia.
An ongoing special project is a team-taught course on History and Literature of Irish Nationalism 1798-1926 that has been offered in Ireland since 1991 and currently as well on alternate campuses with Dr. Gary Walton of Northern Kentucky University’s Literature Department since 2001. He has also been a Board member, Director and faculty member for the Cooperative Center for Study Abroad (CCSA) since 1987 with at least twenty trips abroad and thirteen to Ireland alone. Dr. Hebert is consistently asked to conduct the orientations for faculty and students who participate in CCSA’s Early Ireland (late May) and Late Ireland (late July) programs and typically directs or teaches in the Late Ireland program every year. His particular expertise is the History of Irish Nationalism 1798-1926 and the travel aspects of Ireland involving the Republic.
Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion
Contact: Bobby Covitz
Work 3101 Clifton Ave Cincinnati OH 45220 work
Work Phone: 513-221-1875work
Work Email: cincinnati@huc.eduINTERNET
Website: www.huc.edu
Notes
HUC-JIR is a religious and scholarly learning community dedicated to: developing Jewish professional and lay leaders to transmit and apply to contemporary life the sustaining values, responsibilities and texts of our tradition; applying the open and pluralistic spirit of the Reform movement to the study of the great issues of Jewish life and thought; and advancing the critical study of Jewish culture and related disciplines in accordance with the highest standards of modern academic scholarship.
Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion
School 3101 Clifton Avenue Cincinnati OH 45220 postal
Work Phone: (513) 221-1875work
Work Fax: (513) 221-0321workfax
Biography
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion is the intellectual, academic, spiritual, and professional leadership development center of Reform Judaism.
Notes
Our goal is to promote the creation as well as the continued growth of Hispanic/Latino business in the Cincinnati TriState area. By becoming a member of HCCUSA you will open doors for your business, for partnerships and involvement in the community.
Hispanic Ministry of Diocese of Covington
Work PO Box 15550 Covington KY 41015 workWork 1125 Madison Ave Covington KY 41011 work
Work Phone: 859-392-1500work
Personal Email: info@covdio.orgINTERNET
Website: http://www.covingtondiocese.org
Notes
On July 29, 1853, His Holiness Pope Pius IX formally erected the Diocese of Covington in Kentucky. At that time the diocese comprised the eastern part of Kentucky. The then president of Xavier College, Cincinnati, Father George A. Carrell, S.J. was named the first Bishop of the newly created diocese. Today, 150 years later, the Diocese of Covington is comprised of the 14 northern-most counties in Kentucky. Our tenth bishop, Bishop Roger J. Foys, D.D., was ordained and installed in the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption July 15, 2002.
Notes
Holy Trinity-St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church is the oldest parish on record in Ohio. Many of the original families of this parish are said to have arrived between 1880 and 1900 during the initial wave of Greek immigration to the United States. Adhering to her ancient traditions and practices, we follow the doctrine and teachings of our holy Orthodox Church. We are part of the Apostolic succession, therefore maintaining the unbroken communion with the Holy Church established by our Lord and God, Jesus Christ on the Cross in year 33 AD. Each year in June St. Nicholas hosts their Panegyri, or Greek Festival featuring Greek food, cultural performances, and entertainment.
Biography
Honorary Consuls are official representatives of a foreign country, who on a voluntary basis represent that country in cities that are distant from a full-time diplomatic mission of that foreign government. Honorary Consuls assist and protect the citizens of that country and facilitate trade and friendship between their city and the foreign government they represent.
Biography
Honorary Consuls are official representatives of a foreign country, who on a voluntary basis represent that country in cities that are distant from a full-time diplomatic mission of that foreign government. Honorary Consuls assist and protect the citizens of that country and facilitate trade and friendship between their city and the foreign government they represent.
Notes
The mission of the School is to provide a venue in learning Chinese language and arts, to promote the awareness of the Chinese culture and heritage, as well as to facilitate the mutual understanding between Chinese and other ethnic groups in the local community through educational and cultural activities and events.
Notes
The Hunger Project (THP) is a global, non-profit, strategic organization committed to the sustainable end of world hunger. In Africa, South Asia and Latin America, THP seeks to end hunger and poverty by empowering people to lead lives of self-reliance, meet their own basic needs and build better futures for their children. Our local group is working both locally and internationally to end hunger. Our goals include getting educational information on hunger into the Cincinnati schools, both public and private and raising $100,000 per year for five years to pay for an epicenter in Africa.