Voice!

December 9, 2007

Reading Week & Finals

Filed under: Academics, Classes, Student Life, Usdan University Center, Work, Writing — hrizk @ 10:09 pm

Hey kiddos! As you’re all finishing your applications to Wesleyan and other colleges, we’ll be busy studying for finals! Yes, when classes are over tomorrow afternoon/evening, reading week officially commences! Six days of hanging out with friends, writing papers, studying for finals, and attending fun social events to de-stress and close out the semester! In previous years, reading week has certainly been a blast for me. I don’t think I’ve socialized with so many people in the library in an attempt to put off my work! On Tuesday night, we’re having the ever-so-popular, bi-yearly “breakfast at midnight” at Usdan, the new university center! So excited! Other highlights of the week include

- the “primal scream” Monday at midnight (to release all tension and frustration built on over the semester, Wes students will emerge from their dorms/libraries/rooms/etc. at the stroke of midnight, screaming at the top of their lungs outside for a full minute – it’s really interesting to be around so many people who are ready for finals!)

- music concerts

- dance performances

- comedy troupe shows

- and much, much more!

It’s that time of the year!!!

CHEERS!

H. Rizk ‘08
Senior Interviewer

December 5, 2007

Put on your yamulke…

Filed under: Religion, Student Life — eeinhorn @ 1:01 pm

Hannukah: Hannukkah: Chanukah: Channukkah: Hanukkah: Chanukkah: Hanukah: Chanuka: Hannuka: Channuka: Hanukka: Chanukka: Hannukka: Channukka

No matter how you spell it, Channukkah is an awesome time of the year. For the first time in years, all 8 days of Channukkah fall during the Wesleyan University Academic Year and the Jewish Community has thought of lots of fun ways to celebrate.

This year the Wesleyan Jewish Community will be hosting communal candle-lighting in different lounges and locations throughout campus. And yes, there will be chocolate gelt and dreidels. All are invited.

Dates and locations:

  • Tuesday, Dec. 4: Olin lobby
  • Wednesday, Dec. 5: Nics lounge
  • Thursday, Dec. 6: SciLi lobby
  • Friday, Dec. 7: Bayit
  • Saturday, Dec. 8: Usdan, ground floor
  • Sunday, Dec. 9: Butt C lounge
  • Monday, Dec. 10: Bayit
  • Tuesday, Dec. 11: WestCo lounge

And, there is a huge annual Channukkah Party in the Bayit ( Jewish Program House ). This is always a well attended event ( by celebrators and non-celebrators alike ) with campus bands, home made latkes, and gelt galore.

So, to all celebrating: Happy Channukkah.

To all: Have a wonderful Holiday Season and a Safe New Year!

Emily Einhorn ‘08
Senior Interviewer

November 7, 2007

When the Famous Grace the Wesleyan campus

Filed under: Academics, Center for the Arts, Student Life, Writing — eeinhorn @ 12:44 pm

While Wesleyan Professors are some of the best there are (Woodhouse/Sysco Professor of Economics Gary Yohe, for example, recently won the Nobel Prize for his work with Al Gore on Global Warming ), it is sometimes nice to bring a new perspective to campus. Fortunately, Wesleyan has AWESOME lectures with top notch academics, entertainers, creators, and authors that are some of the best in the world.

A small sampling of some of the best speakers to come to campus in the past four years:

Music and Art:

Dar Williams ‘89 – a folk singer-songwriter

Patti Smith – singer-songwriter, poet, musician, who was one of the women most influential in the birth of punk rock.

Sol LeWitt - minimalist and conceptual artist specializing in wall drawings with exhibitions in museums such as the Museum of Modern Art.

Amiri Baraka - author and poet, former Poet Laureate of New Jersey.

Books and Literature:

Art Spiegelman - comics artist, editor, and Pulitzer-Prize winner for his best selling graphic memoir, Maus.

Daniel Handler/Lemony Snicket ‘92 – author, screenwriter, and musician. Best known for his children’s series A Series of Unfortunate Events. He has played accordion with The Magnetic Fields.

Eric Schlosser - author best known for Fast Food Nation and Reefer Madness.

Journalism and Politics:

Ralph Nader - consumer advocate and presidential candidate.

Seymour Hersh – Pulitzer-Prize winning investigative journalist and author.

Amy Goodman – progressive broadcast journalist and host of the radio program “Democracy Now!”

Madeline Albright - former United States Secretary of State.

Film and Television:

Joss Whedon ‘87 – Academy-Award nominated writer and director famous for his show Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Alexander Payne – Academy- Award winning director and screenwriter best known for Election.

Michael Bay ‘86 – director and producer best known for The Rock, Transformers, Armageddon, and Pearl Harbor.

Paul Weitz ‘88 – director and screenwriter best known for American Pie, American Dreamz, and In Good Company.

Jonathan Demme – Academy- Award winning director, producer, and writer best known for Silence of the Lambs, Stop Making Sense, and Philadelphia.

Martin Scorsese – Academy-Award winning director, producer, and writer best known for Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Goodfellas, Gangs of New York, The Aviator, and The Departed.

and… finally… gracing our campus this coming Thursday …

Robin Williams – Academy-Award winning actor and comedian best known for Mork and Mindy, The Birdcage, Patch Adams, Jack, Aladdin, Mrs. Doubtfire, Good Will Hunting, and Dead Poet’s Society.

Enjoy!

Emily Einhorn ‘08 and Jeff Wong ‘08
Senior Interviewers

Internships at Wes

Filed under: Student Life, Work — pshill @ 1:28 am

Recently, I’ve been getting a lot of questions about internships on campus. While Wesleyan isn’t in midtown Manhattan, there are a lot of opportunities for work on campus and in the Middletown area. Students can gain experience in fields they’re interested in pursuing or build specific skill sets outside the classroom through student groups and organizations, as well as a huge number of on- and off-campus volunteer, work, and internship opportunities. These more practical experiences, often paid, can complement work in the classroom, extending the thinking, reasoning, writing, and research skills students gain in the classroom to real-world situations.

While there are far more options at Wesleyan than I can list here (or remember), I’ve gathered a few of them for your perusal. Some especially good places to look are the Financial Aid Office’s work study job postings and the Office of Community Service’s volunteer listings.

Some internship/work/experience building opportunities at Wes:

Peer Leadership/Organizing/Administrative:

Writing/Research:

Arts:

 Health/Science:

Activism/Environment:

Education/Tutoring:

Peter Hill ‘08
Senior Interviewer

October 24, 2007

College of Letters – The Educated Imagination

Filed under: Academics, Classes, Student Life, Writing — pshill @ 4:02 pm

The College of Letters (COL) is one of Wesleyan’s many exciting interdisciplinary programs, and one of the main reasons I, for one, chose to come study at Wes. Despite the grandiose name, the COL is organized like most other departments, with many classes open to non-majors, a great series of first-year courses, and an amazing faculty. The COL’s areas of focus are literature, philosophy, and history, with a strong emphasis on foreign language and creative thought. With its interdisciplinary approach, the COL offers a wide range of courses, including “Francophone Uses of America in Literature and Film,” “Dante and Medieval Culture,” and “Theories and Fiction of Androgyny” to name a few from this spring’s course catalog. The COL was also the home of Wesleyan’s most infamous course (no longer offered), “Pornography: Writing of Prostitutes.”
(more…)

October 10, 2007

Club Sports- Rugby!!

Filed under: Student Life — jcspector @ 12:18 pm

While Wesleyan has terrific sports all around, club sports are a particularly strong facet of athletic life on campus. Many of the club sports have no coach, giving the students the opportunity to really command their own teams. There is a wide range of both types of sports and intensity levels, so you can really find whatever kind of commitment level you’re looking for. For instance, there are multiple ultimate frisbee and club soccer teams that you can choose from depending on your experience level, whether you want to play co-ed, etc.

A great example of this is WesRugby (and I’m not just saying this because I’ve been playing for 4 years). We are a team-taught-team, so seasoned captains run practice and teach the new rookies the ins and outs of the game. Rugby is a particularly complex sport (no one, not even referees, seem to know all the rules) and one that most people haven’t ever played before college, so we’re all learning brand new skills together. To put it simply, rugby is kind of like a mix between soccer and football. The goal is to score a “try”– like a touchdown– by passing the ball to your teammates and running down the field. The way you stop the opposing team from making progress, however, is by tackling them to the ground…without any padding. It may sound like it hurts, but if you do it right it’s actually quite graceful. And plus, what better way to get out your aggression?

A really unique part of rugby is the socializing aspect. Unlike any other sport I’ve encountered, rugby teams traditionally have socials, where the home team hosts the visitors for a party after the game. No matter what’s happened on the field or who won, the teams come together afterwards to socialize and get to know each other as more than just opposing team members.

Last weekend, WesRugby played University of Rhode Island (URI) on our home field. URI is a much larger school and team than Wesleyan, so it wasn’t a huge surprise when they beat us, but we held our own quite well. Two weeks ago, though, we played Trinity College and won by a landslide. Because we have a small team this year, some of our starting players had only just started this season, and boy oh boy did they step it up: one of our tries was scored by someone who was playing her very first game!

Not only is rugby fun to play, it is also fun to watch. Come out to Long Lane field most Saturday mornings in October and April (we play fall and spring seasons), and you’re sure to catch a game in action. This is a sport, whether you’re participating or a spectator, that you don’t want to miss!

Jessie Spector ‘08
Senior Interviewer

September 26, 2007

The Wesleyan Film Series

Filed under: Center for the Arts, Student Life — eeinhorn @ 12:01 pm

Ever wonder what happens when film studies majors are allowed free range of film screenings for an entire University Campus? Sad you were born too late to see classics like Lawrence of Arabia and Casablanca on the big screen? Well, wonder and fret no more. At Wesleyan, we offer you the finest of film viewing experiences. Here, in our own newly built Goldsmith Family Cinema we have the WESLEYAN FILM SERIES!


Screening movies from Wednesday – Saturday night, the film series offers students an affordable and fun venue for seeing both contemporary and historic films. In your four years at Wesleyan you will never see the same movie twice, which means that over 350 movies will be screened during your time here. With the ability to show films in all different formats ( from digital to 70mm), watching a film at Wesleyan is a unique and different experience.

Going to the film series is not like going to your local cinema. Audience members often shout at the screen ( such as during Bob Saget’s rendition of the dirtiest joke in showbiz during “The Aristocrats”), dance along ( as was the case with the Talking Heads concert film “Stop Making Sense” and the Disney musical “Newsies”) , and laugh in one big wave ( constantly during films like “Knocked Up” and “40-Year Old Virgin). More politically oriented movies often spur passionate conversations that can both be heard in the lobby after the film and throughout the next week. The once a semester midnight screening is always a blast and one of the most popular features.

So, if you consider yourself a film buff or just enjoy a casual flick with friends every now and then, the film series will inevitably have something for everyone. And, if you don’t see it when you get here, you can always request it from the completely student run film series board.

Enjoy!

Emily Einhorn ‘08 and Jeff Wong ‘08
Senior Interviewers

September 25, 2007

Going for a Green Wes

Filed under: Green Wes, Student Life — iorlansky @ 9:56 am

EON

Hey all,

I wanted to update you all on the efforts of students, faculty and the university to go green. Last night we had our weekly EON meeting, and it was exciting to see the progress that has been made over the last several years. EON stands for the Environmental Organizers’ Network – it’s basically the place where students come together to talk about environmental stewardship on campus and in the community. We then break up into smaller ‘campaigns,’ where we will work with the community to get a specific goal accomplished.

I’ve been going to EON meetings since my RA (resident advisor) dragged me to a meeting my frosh year. I had never been interested in environmental activism before, but I kept coming to meetings because it was a group of incredibly passionate people, and they had a track record for getting things done. The group has become a big part of my experience at Wes – and I think it proves the point that if you come to Wes, you will undoubtedly get interested in something that you never could have predicted back in high school.

OK, back to the green. EON has worked closely with administrators to become more environmentally conscious. Walk into WESHOP (grocery store on campus) and you will without thinking buy organic, cage-free eggs – thanks to an EON campaign that occurred even before my time. Walk through the dorms and you will see nifty labels for cans/bottles and paper, thanks to pressure from students and support from administrators. We also have an up-and-growing composting program that has taken off thanks to the help of Bon Appetit, the new food service, which will compost all pre-production waste from Usdan.

Most exciting is that the university has started a Sustainability Committee, again with the help/prodding of students. Together with faculty and staff (and the people who hold the purse-strings), we meet to talk about new initiatives and how we can improve sustainability as a school. We have had a couple good meetings and we’re looking forward to the next one, where we will be discussing the possibility of President Roth signing a university commitment to combating climate change.

I’ll keep updating you all on the progress we’re making as a school. But look out on your next visit for recycling labels and compost bins, or ask a student what they think of the environmental awareness here. And, of course, you can do your own part in making your own lifestyles more sustainable.

Izaak Orlansky ‘08
Senior Interviewer

P.S. If you’re interested in following EON more closely, check out our blog at http://www.wesleyaneon.blogspot.com

September 19, 2007

More Tips for a College Visit

Filed under: Student Life, Tours Plus, Visiting — eeinhorn @ 10:32 am

When going on a college visit, talking to current students can give you as much information as the Office of Admissions. Searching through the campus on your own time can allow you explore different aspects of the campus and talk to current students. Don’t be shy!!! College students LOVE to talk about themselves and their school. So, ask away. They will probably be thrilled to reminisce about how they made their college decision.

THE BEST PLACES TO TALK TO STUDENTS AT WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY:

GREAT QUESTIONS TO ASK CURRENT STUDENTS:

  • What is your favorite part about college? What would you change?
  • What is the best class you took while here? Listen to how passionately they talk about their academic experience.
  • What surprised you about the school when you got here? When you got to college what parts of student life, academia, or social life became more important than you originally thought they would be?
  • What’s an average day like for you?


Enjoy your visit and just remember everyone was in your shoes once, too!

Emily Einhorn ‘08 and Jeff Wong ‘08
Senior Interviewers

Ronald K. Brown and First Year Matters

Filed under: Center for the Arts, Student Life — pshill @ 10:30 am

After Adam’s post about the arts scene at Wesleyan, I wanted to let you know quickly about an exciting event from this past weekend. For the past two years, Wesleyan has put together a “€œcommon reading”€ for first year students that allows them to come to campus with a shared work to discuss. At many other schools, this might be a novel or an essay, but at Wesleyan it’s a dance. After the great success of Bill T. Jones’€™s visit last year with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, the Center for the Arts (CFA) commissioned a new piece of choreography from Ronald K. Brown for his Evidence Dance Company. The dance was based on the photographs of Charles “Teenie” Harris, which evoke the spirit of mid-twentieth century black urban America. On September 7, Brown attended the opening reception of a show of Charles “Teenie” Harris’s work at the Zilkha Gallery in the CFA. The following Thursday, Brown gave a lecture on his new piece, “One Shot,” and its connections with Harris’s photographs. The lecture, part of Wesleyan’s First-Year Matters Program, was geared especially for first-year students, who attended in groups from their dorms. The lecture and the discussion that followed provided an opportunity to think about the connections between dance and photography, in addition to connecting the dance to students’ lives using photographs they had brought from home. The culminating event in this week-long residency was the premiere of Brown’s piece at the CFA Theater. The dance blended elements of African, modern, ballet and hip-hop styles, incorporating Harris’s photographs with the movement and various musical styles.

This is just one example of the kind of events that Wesleyan brings through the CFA every semester, and the kind of involvement those visiting artists have with the community. For more listings, check out the CFA’s events page.

Peter Hill ‘08
Senior Interviewer

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