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Poetry
Reading and Writing Workshop at Wells College
John Hoppenthaler
will read from his work; meet with students
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to welcome poet John Hoppenthaler
to the Aurora campus. Hoppenthaler will read from his work at 7:30 pm on
Monday, April 5 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. All are invited
to hear this inspiring author. The free reading will be followed by a reception
with an opportunity to meet the speaker; refreshments will be served.
Mr.
Hoppenthaler's poems have appeared in numerous literary magazines, including
Ploughshares,
The Southern Review, New Letters, 5 AM, Tar River Poetry, The Bloomsbury
Review, and Chelsea. He is the author of a book of poetry, Lives
of Water, and serves as poetry editor of the journal
Kestrel.
He has recently taught creative writing at Manhattanville College, the
West Virginia Writers' Workshop, and at the Chautauqua Institution in western
New York.
Of
Lives
of Water, poet David St. John wrote: “There is such measured composure
and quiet wisdom to the poems of John Hoppenthaler’s powerful debut collection...
that their resonance and beauty stay with us long after their reading.”
While
on campus, Mr. Hoppenthaler will also participate in classes and conduct
a poetry-writing workshop.
Mr.
Hoppenthaler’s reading and the Wells College Visiting Writer Series are
made possible in part by a grant from the New York State Council on the
Arts. Poets and writers are invited to campus throughout the academic
year to meet with students, present writing workshops, and read from their
respective works.
For
more information about John Hoppenthaler and the Visiting Writers Series
at Wells College, please contact English professor Bruce Bennett at 315/364-3228.
.
March, 2004
Former
Rhodes Scholar Speaks on Indian Nature Conservation Policies
Dr. Mahesh Rangarajan
discusses India’s choices
The
public is cordially invited to attend a public lecture by Dr. Mahesh Rangarajan.
He will speak on nature conservation policies in India on Tuesday, April
6 at 12:30 pm in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. The lecture is free
and open to the public.
India,
the world's largest democracy, is a country with over one billion people.
They share living space with the last lions in Asia, the largest concentrations
of the tiger and the Asian elephant, and a host of other endangered landscapes,
species and ecosystems. Conservation entails difficult choices and conflicts
between human livelihood and habitat protection, and between economic growth
and animal protection. A colonial past and the promise of a new future
weigh heavily on present day choices. A host of new movements and initiatives
raise hopes that there will be ways to harmonize India’s economic surge
with nature conservation. The outcomes of these efforts will have implications
well beyond India's borders.
Mahesh
Rangarajan is a well-known historian of ecological change and a frequent
television commentator on Indian politics. He is currently a consulting
political analyst for “The Telegraph” and a visiting assistant professor
at Cornell University. He has been a Fellow of the Nehru Memorial Museum
and Library, and was a Rhodes Scholar between 1986 and 1989. Dr. Rangarajan
has published several books on the history and politics of wildlife conservation,
with a focus on India. He speaks regularly on a variety of topics including
environmental history, environmental activism, and historical as well as
contemporary aspects of the relationship between ecology and politics.
Dr.
Rangarajan’s lecture is sponsored by the Environmental Studies and International
Studies majors. For more information, please contact professor Niamh O’Leary
at 315/364-3279.
.
March, 2004
Nancy
Willard to Give Public Reading and Workshop
Visiting Writer will
read from her work
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to welcome poet, fiction
writer, essayist, and children’s author Nancy Willard to the Aurora campus.
Willard will give a public reading of her fiction at 7:30 pm on Wednesday,
March 31 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. Ms. Willard is this year’s
Mildred Walker Visiting Fiction Writer. All are invited to hear this inspiring
author. The free reading will be followed by a reception with an opportunity
to meet the speaker.
Nancy
Willard is the author of two novels, “Sister Water” and “Things Invisible
to See,” as well as many poetry collections, essays, and children's books.
She received a Newberry Medal for “A Visit to William Blake's Inn.” “Things
Invisible To See” has been called “a miraculous novel of
enduring
power by one of our finest talents.” Writing about “Sister Water,” one
critic referred to “Willard's gift for seamlessly mixing the magical and
the mundane.” Another critic wrote: “Her prose is at once fluid and beautiful…
creates an atmosphere that is simultaneously haunting and comforting.”
Nancy
Willard has for many years been a Writer in Residence at Vassar College.
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is supported by the New York State
Council on the Arts, the Virginia Kent Cummins Writers-in-Residence Fund,
and the Mildred Walker Fiction-Writer-in-Residence Fund. Several writers
are invited to campus each academic year.
For
more information about Nancy Willard and the Visiting Writers Series at
Wells College, please contact English professor Bruce Bennett at 315/364-3228.
March, 2004
Recycling
for Earth Day
In
observance of Earth Day and Arbor Day, the Campus Greens welcome all students
to step up their efforts to recycle and be more environmentally friendly.
-
What:
Week-long recycling effort
-
When:
Week of April 22-29, 2004
-
How: Members
of the Campus Greens will pick up recycled materials from the dorms daily.
Recyclables will be weighed and a winner announced on Arbor Day (Friday,
April 30). Prizes will be awarded in the dining hall during lunch hour.
-
Why: To
increase awareness about recycling and move the Wells community to action
The goal
of the Campus Greens is to increase environmental awareness on campus.
The group is not politically affiliated.
For
more information, please contact Jennie Cole ’06..
March, 2004
Wells
College Republicans Bring Congressman Jim Walsh to Aurora
25th District rep
will speak on the 2004 presidential election
The
Wells College Republicans are most pleased to welcome Congressman Jim Walsh
to campus on Monday, March 15. Congressman Walsh will be speaking in the
Main Chapel at 7:00 pm on “National Issues in the 2004 Election.” Mr. Walsh
will give a brief overview, then will open the floor for a question-and-answer
session. The entire program should last about one hour, and is free and
open to the public.
Jim
Walsh of the 25th Congressional District represents New York State in the
House of Representatives as a member of the Committee on Appropriations.
He is one of 13 chairmen of the Appropriations Subcommittee, a group sometimes
referred to in Washington as "the college of cardinals" because of their
influence on national spending policies. In the 108th Congress, Mr. Walsh
is chairman of the Subcommittee on the Departments of Veterans Affairs
and Housing and Urban Development. His district includes Onondaga County,
northern Cayuga County, Wayne County, and the northeastern portion of Monroe
County.
Mr.
Walsh’s visit to the Wells College campus is sponsored by the College Republicans.
The mission of the Wells College Republicans is to make known and promote
the principles of the Republican Party among members of the Wells campus
and community, and to develop political skills and leadership abilities
among its members as preparation for future service by them to the Party,
community, and country.
To
learn more about Congressman Walsh’s lecture, please call director of communications
Gwen Webber-McLeod at 315/364-3260. More information on Congressman Walsh
may also be found at http://www.house.gov/walsh/index.htm.
.
March, 2004
Wells
College Amnesty International Features Speaker
Francis Bok of the
American Anti-Slavery Group talks about his own captivity
Amnesty
International at Wells College welcomes Francis Bok to the Aurora campus
on Tuesday, March 16, 2004. While at Wells, Mr. Bok will give a public
lecture on “21st Century Slavery: Living Proof” beginning at 7:00 pm in
the Chapel, Main Building. The talk is free and open to the public; donations
to the American Anti-Slavery Group will be gratefully accepted. A reception
with the speaker and a book signing will follow the presentation.
Francis
Bok is a 24-year-old native of Southern Sudan. At the age of seven, he
was captured and enslaved during an Arab militia raid on the village of
Nymlal in 1986. During his captivity, Francis saw adults and children brutalized
and killed. After escape and arrest, the United Nations in 1999 resettled
him in North Dakota. He now lives in Massachusetts and is an associate
at the American Anti-Slavery Group of Boston.
Mr.
Bok is the author of Escape From Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years
in Captivity and My Journey to Freedom in America. The Books for a
Better Life Awards this week named Escape from Slavery as 2003’s
most inspiring and empowering book by a new author. The New York City Chapter
of the Multiple Sclerosis Society hosts the Books for a Better Life Awards
annually. Escape from Slavery was chosen from a pool of five nominees
competing for the 2003 Suze Orman First Book Award. This book will be available
for sale and signing after the lecture.
In
addition to his book, Mr. Bok has spoken alongside Coretta Scott King,
testified before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, met with Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright and President Bush, and headed a panel on slavery
at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government ARCO Forum. While in central
New York, he will also speak at Cornell’s Warren Hall on Monday, March
15 at 5:00 pm.
Mr.
Bok’s visit to the Wells College campus is sponsored by Amnesty International;
the Wells College library; the Dean of Students; the Office of Intercultural
Programs; Collegiate; the divisions of Humanities
and Social Sciences; and the departments of History, Religious Studies,
International Studies, Foreign Languages and Literatures, and Spanish.
To
learn more about Francis Bok and his lecture, please call Amnesty International
advisor Laura McClusky at 315/364-3252. Additional information about Mr.
Bok and Escape from Slavery may also be found at www.iabolish.com/escape.
.
March, 2004
Earlier Articles
in Wells College News:
|
Dec., 2002 |
Jan.,1999 |
Sept.,1997 |
| April.,
2004 |
Nov., 2002 |
Fall,1998 |
July - Aug.,
1997 |
| March,
2004 |
Oct., 2002 |
Aug.,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| Jan.-Feb.,
2004 |
Sept., 2002 |
June -July,
1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| Nov., 2003 |
Aug., 2002 |
May,1998 |
Feb.,1997 |
| Oct., 2003 |
Sept.,2001.-May.,2002 |
April,1998 |
Nov. - Dec.,1996 |
| Sept., 2003 |
Sept.,2000.-May.,2001 |
March,1998 |
Oct.r,1996 |
| Summer, 2003 |
Sept. 1999-Aug.,2000 |
Feb.,1998 |
Sept.,1996 |
| May, 2003 |
August,1999 |
Jan.,1998 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
| April, 2003 |
May,1999 |
Dec.,1997 |
May,1996 |
| March, 2003 |
April,1999 |
Nov.,1997 |
April,1996 |
| Jan.-Feb.,
2003 |
Feb. - March,
1999 |
Oct.,1997 |
Feb - March, 1996 |
Last updated 06/03/2004 |