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30 movies featured at Newark Film Festival, Sept. 4-11

D.C.-area Blue Hens gather Sept. 24 at the Old Ebbitt Grill

Baltimore-area Hens invited to meet Ravens QB Joe Flacco

New Graduate Student Convocation set Wednesday

Center for Disabilities Studies' Artfest set Sept. 6

New Student Convocation to kick off fall semester Tuesday

Latino students networking program meets Tuesday

Fall Student Activities Night set Monday

SNL alumni Kevin Nealon, Jim Breuer to perform at Parents Weekend Sept. 26

Soledad O'Brien to keynote Latino Heritage event Sept. 18

UD Library Associates exhibition now on view

Childhood cancer symposium registrations due Sept. 5

UD choral ensembles announce auditions

Child care provider training courses slated

Late bloomers focus of Sept. 6 UDBG plant sale

Chicago Blue Hens invited to Aug. 30 Donna Summer concert

All fans invited to Aug. 30 UD vs. Maryland tailgate, game

'U.S. Space Vehicles' exhibit on display at library

Families of all students will reunite on campus Sept. 26-28

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'Killing Fields' survivor Dith Pran to lecture at UD April 9

New York Times photojournalist Dith Pran, whose wartime experience in Cambodia was portrayed in the award-winning movie “The Killing Fields,” will present a lecture titled “Cambodia’s Killing Field: Memoirs of a Survivor” at 7 p.m., on Tuesday, April 9, in the theatre of the University of Delaware’s Trabant University Center, located on the corner of East Main Street and South College Avenue, Newark.

Pran was born in the picturesque region of Angkor Wath, and worked in the tourist business until the war in Vietnam spilled over into Cambodia. He then found work as a war correspondent.

In 1975, Pran and then New York Times correspondent Sydney Schanberg were trapped in Phnom Penh after the fall of the Cambodian capital to the communist Khmer Rouge. They were arrested by the Khmer Rouge and, along with two other journalists, held for execution. Pran saved their lives by convincing Khmer Rouge officials that the three Westerners were neutral French journalists. The four found refuge in the French embassy until foreigners were asked to turn in their passports and Cambodians were ordered to leave.

Pran was exiled to the forced labor camps or “killing fields” in the Cambodian countryside, where he endured four years of starvation and torture before escaping to Thailand in October 1979. Many of Pran’s family members did not escape the cruelty of the Khmer Rouge, however, and more than 50 of his relatives perished in the Cambodian holocaust.

Since his escape, Pran has worked to alert the world to the ongoing troubles in his home country. A recipient of the 1998 Ellis Island Medal of Honor, Pran has testified several times before the Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the Senate and House of Representatives regarding the Cambodian situation.

He holds four honorary doctorate degrees and has been a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations. He is also the founder and president of the The Dith Pran Holocaust Awareness Project, Inc.

Says Pran, “I speak for those who did not survive and for those who still suffer…. Like one of my heroes, Elie Wiesel, who alerts the world to the horrors of the Jewish holocaust, I try to awaken the world to the holocaust of Cambodia, for all tragedies have universal implication. Part of my life is saving life. I don’t consider myself a politician or a hero. I’m a messenger.”

This free, public lecture is sponsored by the Office of Multicultural Programs. For more information, call (302) 831-2991.

March 26, 2002