Posts Tagged ‘ Conference ’

1
22
Apr

FACES On Common Ground Conference

This past week at Stanford University, I participated in the Forum for American/Chinese Exchange at Stanford (FACES)‘s On Common Ground Conference. The conference brings together 40 delegates, 20 from the U.S. and 20 from China, to discuss the past, present, and future of US-China relations.

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(Panelist skyping in to a panel from DC)

Throughout the week, we heard from Hoover Institute fellows, Stanford professors, the Beijing bureau chief of The Washington Post, an official from the Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a former director of the World Bank, and a former Secretary of State under President Reagan, just to name a few. My greatest take-away from all of this is the surprising amount of humanity that is involved in international relations and foreign affairs. In Government classes, we learn about the realpolitk nationalism that plague the relations between China and the US. Our professors tell us that the Sino-US relation is shadowed by distrust stemming from sovereignty, human rights, security, and trade issues. FACES literally put a face to this entire discussion. Former Secretary of State George Schultz chuckled as he recounted how much fun he found former PRC President Jiang Zemin to be, and how much he appreciated Deng Xiaoping’s blunt, and straight-forward personality. Sure, Schultz spoke at lengths about the future of US and China in a bipolar system of world power, but what was most memorable to me was the thought, heart, and toil that these statesmen put into fostering the relationships of two countries.

Punctuating the provocative discussions of tri-party policy development in regards to Taiwan, panels about regional stability in South Asia, and seminar talks about gender roles in China and the U.S., the delegates…

Traipsed the Stanford campus making funky short films and learned the meaning of “chillin”.

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Roamed around San Fran like perfect tourists.

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Concocted elaborated three-course meals with a limited number of ingredients for the execs to “enjoy”.

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Engaged in crisis simulations playing national leaders.

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Shopped for Stanford gear

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(Stanford’s mascot is a tree)

And learned how to share a small bed with a bedmate in the guest house at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

In between panels and parties, we found ourselves becoming fast friends. The delegates are Fullbright scholars, JD/MBA candidates, PHD students, entrepreneurs, government interns, non-profit founders, aspiring i-bankers/artists/diplomats/consultants/professors, multi-lingual exchange students, and much, much more. They hail from all corners of the world. Some switch between English and Chinese with a confident easeĀ  that I admire. Some have been to more places than I will probably go my whole life. And how can we forget the executives at Stanford who organized this? Kudos guys!

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Part II of the conference will convene in Hangzhou in November this year. See you in a flash!

1
26
Nov

Smidgens and Tidbits

Right now, my entire suite is empty and there are probably no more than five people left in my hall. My most distinct memory of my first American Thansgiving will be how @%$#ing hungry I am, since all the dining halls closed. Although to be fair, I did choose to stay in Ithaca to catchup on work and I did procrastinate on stocking up until after the convenience stores all closed, which leaves me with dining-hall-nabbed fruits and vending machine chocolate bars for sustenance.

Life has been hectic to say the least. Here’s a brief recap.

Work/Stay/Play in Syracuse. This is three-day “conference” that brought together 36 students from Cornell, URochester, and Syracuse U to solve, in a creative and collaborative manner, a huge issue the region faces: how to retain students in Upstate New York after graduation. Cornell paid for the transportation, food, and hotel for all her representatives so I was immensely grateful. Here’s the Daily Sun article!

Kingston getaway with my suite & Royal Military College Christmas Ball. My entire suite drove up to Kingston this past weekend to visit friends. Coincidentally, the Christmas Ball, supposedly one of the top parties in Canada, took place on the same weekend so my good friend Wendy came in from Toronto for the “festivities”, in the tame sense of the word. If I were to tag this tidbit, it would read: wall-scaling, Queen’s, poutine, pancakes, military boys men, endless dancing, black squirrels, Felix Felicis, and generosity and genuineness of so many people we met.

Student Assembly Finance Commission (SAFC) interview. Imagine my surprise when I walk into a boardroom in the basement of Day Hall to find 15-20 people inside – all ready to interview me, together, for an extra-curricular activity. With my love of interviews and public speaking, suffice to say, I decided to bath in the (doubtful) limelight of the occasion and ramble on about my previous experience doing financial services for the Commerce Undergraduate Society (THANK YOU TRAVIS). I’m happy to report that I’m a newly minted Commissioner on SAFC! Very excited to start allocating that $1.2 million (alright, less mathematically challenging than the CUS’s excel budgets but it’ll be fun).

Pants Off! for Charity event at the University of British Columbia. The organizers of this – one of whom is my good friend Lucas – will probably kill me for posting this so late, but here it is! The event was a tremendous success and raised over $400 in the span of a few hours. Here’s photographic evidence of the event

Pants Off! for Charity at UBC

Lucas is the one on the left (you didn’t think I was going to let you off the hook by being “one of the three pantless boys” now did you?).

CORNELL, let’s see some creativity.

P.S. – My mom, an avid reader of this blog and self-proclaimed my biggest fan, will be so proud that it only took four entries before photos of half-dressed boys appeared on Ivy Years.

6
9
Nov

Harvard Intercollegiate Business Convention

My much-anticipated, whirlwind trip to Boston for Harvard Undergraduate Women in Business’s Intercollegiate Business Convention (HUWIB – IBC) took place this past weekend. Organized by the lovely ladies at Cornell’s branch of 85Broads, the twelve of us made our way from Ithaca to Boston in three cars after 6 hours on the road, during which Miley Cyrus’ “Party in the USA” came on way too many times (yet we still belted it out every time).

Boston road trip

By the time we got to our hotel it was already nightfall. We drove to Cambridge and was shown around Harvard Square and Harvard Yard by our unofficial host. Sorry Ithaca, but Cambridge is what a legit college town should look like – festive shops, classy restaurants, preppy boys dressed in swoon-worthy black topcoats and Burberry scarves traveling in groups, actual civilization etc. Ithaca just has hippies. Everything’s definitely a lot closer on what we saw of the Harvard campus, which has its advantages. I do love Cornell’s gorgeous hilly landscape though.

Harvard in Cambridge

Harvard at Night

(85Broads girls walking in Harvard at night)

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