The University of Scranton will host its annual Jay Nathan, Ph.D., Visiting Scholar Lecture Series on Thursday, Oct. 26, at 5 p.m. in the PNC auditorium of the Loyola Science Center.
Ambassador Stig P. Piras, the deputy Chief of Mission at the Embassy of Denmark in the United States, will serve as the Weinberg Memorial Library’s distinguished guest speaker and Visiting Nathan Scholar. He will join Dr. Nathan and Frederikke M. Kristiansen, Cultural Diplomacy Advisor, for the panel discussion titled “Denmark: History. Culture. Economy.” The talk will be followed by a cultural performance and reception.
The event is free of charge and open to the public, and made possible through the generosity of Dr. Nathan, benefactor and former professor in Scranton’s Kania School of Management.
Ambassador Piras, before his current position as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the Embassy of Denmark in the United States, worked at the Embassy of Denmark in Washington, D.C. as First Secretary from 2005-2008. He was also Deputy Director for Asia and Latin America, Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, and Deputy Head of Mission, Counselor, at the Embassy of Denmark in Ankara, Republic of Turkey. Ambassador Piras was the Danish ambassador to the Republic of Iraq from 2020-2022. He earned a master’s degree in political science from the University of Copenhagen and a bachelor’s degree from Aarhus University.
As cultural diplomacy advisor, Kristiansen advises both U.S. and Danish artists and cultural organizations. She supports the cultural exchange between The United States and Denmark through various art forms, such as visual and performing arts, music, literature and film.
A recipient of the Fulbright Travel Scholar Grant to Romania, and the Fulbright Senior Scholar Awards to Thailand, Poland, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia, Dr. Nathan is a member of the Board of Directors of the Fulbright Association and a lifetime member of the Fulbright Alumni Association. He was past president of the Global Awareness Society International and is the author of recently published books on Kazakhstan and India. Dr. Nathan received a grant from the United Nations Development Program to teach graduate courses in management theory and logistics for the International Business School at Vilnius University in Lithuania.
A cultural music performance by Jacob Artved and Felix Moseholm will immediately follow the panel discussion. Artved and Moseholm share a special connection as a duo, as they began playing music together in Copenhagen and have closely followed each other’s musical journeys since they were 14.
A talented jazz guitarist, Artved was born into a musical family and began working as a professional musician as a teen. He has worked and recorded with internationally acclaimed jazz artists and has received numerous awards for his recordings and performances. He currently lives in New York City and is an active composer and arranger. He has made four recordings as a band leader.
Moseholm grew up playing the cello before his granduncle introduced him to the bass, for which his skillful playing has earned him numerous awards and acknowledgements. He earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree from Julliard. He resides in New York city and has worked as a sideman, bandleader, composer, arranger and teacher of music.
The Jay Nathan, Ph.D., Visiting Scholar Lecture Series invites international scholars from emerging democracies and countries in political and economic transition to visit the University to address issues that will enlighten and benefit students, faculty and the community at large. While visiting the campus, scholars deliver presentations on topics of interest to the academic community and meet informally with attendees, students and faculty.
Source : Scranton