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Wells
Hosts Visit by Noted New York Times Reporter
Linda Greenhouse
has covered U.S. Supreme Court since 1978
Pulitzer
Prize-winning New York Times reporter Linda Greenhouse, who has
covered the Supreme Court of the United States for nearly three decades,
will present the 2006 Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Lecture on Thursday,
April 6, at Wells College. The lecture will take place at 4:45 p.m. in
the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. The event is free and the public
is invited to attend.
Greenhouse’s
lecture, entitled “Court, Country & Culture,” will look at the relationship
between the Supreme Court and the rest of the country. Decisions on gay
rights, affirmative action, federalism, and civil liberties will be discussed
in detail in order to understand how a “conservative” Court could produce
notably non-conservative decisions. Questions that will be considered include:
How do the justices, in their ivory tower, learn about the world and how
does that knowledge shape their opinions? What is their relationship to
the “constitutional culture” in which they function?
The
public is also welcome to hear her speak the following day (April 7) at
9:30 a.m. in 321 Macmillan Hall, where she will discuss “Civil Liberties
& National Security.” The events are part of a two-day residency sponsored
by the Wells College chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. During her
time on campus, Greenhouse will also make several classroom appearances
and meet informally with Wells faculty and students.
“What
could be more timely at this juncture in American political history, when
the makeup of the Supreme Court and its decisions are so critical, than
to have an astute observer of the court, Linda Greenhouse, sharing
her insights with us?” said Professor of History Beatrice Farnsworth, a
member of the Wells College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa who helped organize
Greenhouse’s campus visit.
Greenhouse
has covered the U.S. Supreme Court for the Times since 1978, except
for two years in the mid-1980s when she reported on Congress. In the last
year, Greenhouse has written about Supreme Court decisions regarding military
recruiting on college campuses; using racketeering laws against abortion
protestors; and the use of eminent domain to seize private property for
economic development projects.
She
won the Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting in 1998 for her “consistently
illuminating coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court.” In 2004, she received
the Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism from the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard, and the John Chancellor Award for Excellence
in Journalism from the Annenberg School for Communication at the University
of Pennsylvania.
Greenhouse
is also the author of Becoming Justice Blackmun: Harry Blackmun’s Supreme
Court Journey, published last year by Times Books. Blackmun is perhaps
most remembered for authoring the majority opinion in the 1973 landmark
Roe
v. Wade decision. Booklist praised Greenhouse’s book as
“an absorbing look at the personal and official concerns of a man who helped
to shape American law and society.”
Since
1980, she has also been a regular guest on “Washington Week,” the longest-running
public affairs show on PBS. She received a B.A. degree from Radcliffe College
and a Master of Studies in Law from Yale Law School.
Linda
Greenhouse’s visit is part of the Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Program.
Each year, the program makes available 12 or more distinguished scholars
who visit 100 colleges and universities with chapters of Phi Beta Kappa.
They spend two days on each campus, meeting informally with students and
faculty members, taking part in classroom discussions, and giving a public
lecture open to the entire academic community. Now entering its 50th year,
the Visiting Scholar Program has sent 518 scholars on some 4,500 two-day
visits. Founded in 1776, Phi Beta Kappa is the nation’s oldest academic
honor society, with chapters at 270 colleges and universities and over
600,000 members. The Wells College chapter was formed in 1932.
Greenhouse’s
residency is sponsored by the Wells Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa and the Office
of the Dean of the College. For more information, please contact Professor
of History Beatrice Farnsworth at 315/364-3239 or bfarnsworth@wells.edu,
or visit the college’s web site at www.wells.edu. For more information
on the Phi Beta Kappa Society, visit www.pbk.org.
March, 2006
Wells
College Welcomes Paul Simon’s Bass Player
Bakithi Kumalo brings
fusion of jazz, Latin, African beat to Aurora
The
Wells College Arts & Lecture Series Committee is pleased to host musician
Bakithi Kumalo on the Aurora campus for a special concert on Friday, April
14. Kumalo will perform at 7:30 p.m. in Phipps Auditorium, Macmillan Hall.
Prices are $6 for students, senior citizens and the Wells College community,
and $10 for the general public; free for Wells College students. Tickets
are available at the door the night of the performance or from the box
office the week preceding the show. Please call 315/364-3456 to reserve
seats.
South
African composer, vocalist, and bassist Bakithi Kumalo is renowned for
his indelible bass licks on Paul Simon’s 1986 “Graceland” album. Kumalo’s
musical style reflects world influences, including South African traditional
folk, jazz, salsa, and electronica.
“Bakithi
Kumalo is one of the finest bass players I’ve worked with in all my years
as a musician,” said Paul Simon in an interview with SC Entertainment.
“The first time I heard his fretless bass, it sounded more like the soulful
horn of Africa than a stringed instrument. Bakithi and his musicians complement
each other beautifully.”
Kumalo
grew up in the notorious Soweto township of Johannesburg, surrounded by
relatives who loved music and actively performed. By the time he was 7
years old, he had learned enough to fill in for his uncle’s bass player
when that gentleman had had too much to drink. Soon he was performing regularly,
and went on an 18-month tour in Zululand when he was ten.
Despite
financial hardship and the oppression of apartheid, Kumalo achieved a reputation
in South Africa as a fine musician. About the same time, a music producer
in Kumalo’s neighborhood was conferring with Paul Simon about musicians
for his upcoming album, and recommended Kumalo for the job.
As
Kumalo tells it, “[The producer] told me ‘Do you know Paul Simon? [He’s]
looking for a bass player, and I think you’re the guy for the music.’ I
thought ‘This is great! Paul Simon from America!’ ”
The
two collaborated in the studio, and the rest is history. “Paul liked my
playing and that made me so comfortable. He really loved the music and
we started working with some other musicians and Paul told me that we were
going to New York and finish the rest of the record. This had been my dream
– to go to New York!”
Often
referred to as “world music,” Kumalo’s compositions are evocative of his
South African heritage and the various genres he has encountered working
professionally in the United States. He has recorded and/or toured with
such artists as Gloria Estefan, Herbie Hancock, Chaka Khan, Jon Secada,
Harry Belafonte, and Cyndi Lauper.
He
has also produced two solo albums, “San' Bonan” (1998) and “In Front of
My Eyes” (2000).
The
Wells College Arts & Lecture Series features professional guest artists
and performers who are brought to campus to enrich the cultural and academic
components of Wells as a learning community. The acts are selected annually
by a committee comprised of Wells faculty, staff, administrators, and students.
For
more information about Bakithi Kumalo’s concert and the Wells Arts &
Lecture Series, please contact Siouxsie Grady, chair of the Arts &
Lecture Series Committee, at 315/364-3232
March, 2006
Poetry
Reading and Writing Workshop at Wells College
Christina Pugh will
read from her work; meet with students
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to welcome award-winning
poet and educator Christine Pugh back to the Aurora campus. Pugh will read
from her work at 7:00 pm on Wednesday, 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.
Christina
Pugh (B.A. Wesleyan University, Ph.D. Harvard, M.F.A Emerson College) is
the author of Rotary, a book of poems which received the Word Press
First Book Prize in 2003. The Wells College Press published a chapbook
of her poems, Gardening at Dusk, in 2002. She has received Poetry
magazine's Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship, the Grolier Poetry Prize, a Whiting
Fellowship for the Humanities, and three nominations for a Pushcart Prize.
Ms.
Pugh’s poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in The Atlantic
Monthly, Poetry, Ploughshares, and in the anthology Poetry 180.
She has taught literature and creative writing at Harvard University, Emerson
College, and CUNY-College of Staten Island, and is currently an assistant
professor of English at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Ms.
Pugh’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, the Virginia
Kent Cummins Writers-in-Residence Fund, and the Mildred Walker Fiction-Writer-in-Residence
Fund. 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 Christina Pugh and the Visiting Writers Series at
Wells College, please contact English professor Bruce Bennett at 315/364-3228.
March, 2006
Wells
Students Participate in Alternative Spring Break Trip to Georgia
Wells
College is sending 17 students on an alternative spring break trip to work
with Habitat for Humanity in Augusta, Georgia, from March 18 through 25.
Associate Dean of Students Kelly Moselle and Director of Campus Involvement
Melissa Hutson will lead the trip.
Since
its founding in 1976, Habit for Humanity has built and rehabilitated more
than 200,000 houses with families in need, becoming a true world leader
in addressing the issues of poverty housing. Wells students will work with
the future homeowner to complete the house’s framework.
The
trip is the result of a “Collegiate Challenge” that offered students the
opportunity to help people in need, improve their carpentry skills, and
put their faith into action by making a real difference in helping Habitat’s
mission of eliminating substandard housing.
Students
will also learn about the area by visiting sites such as the Lucy Craft
Laney Museum of Black History, the Woodrow Wilson home, the Augusta Museum
of History, and Artists’ Row.
For
more information about alternative spring break at Wells, please contact
Kelly Moselle at 315/364-3312
March, 2006
Wells
College Announces Next Art Exhibit
Paintings, silk-screened
prints on display through April 21
The
Wells College Art Department is pleased to announce the next art exhibition
of the 2005-2006 academic year. A selection of paintings and silk-screened
prints by Buffalo artist James Pappas will be on display in the String
Room Gallery from March 15 through April 21, 2006. The exhibit is free
and the public is cordially invited. An opening reception to be held on
Wednesday, March 15 from 7:00-9:00 pm offers an opportunity to meet the
artist; refreshments will be served.
James
Pappas is an associate professor in the African-American Studies Department
at the University at Buffalo, where he is a specialist in Applied Media
Aesthetics. He has an M.F.A. in painting from the University of Buffalo,
where he served as chair of the Black Studies department for 13 years.
He was also co-founder and director of the Langston Hughes Center for the
Visual and Performing Arts in Buffalo's Inner City. Pappas' work has been
featured in over 50 exhibitions and he has lectured widely in the field
of applied media aesthetics.
The
String Room Gallery is located in Main Building. Hours are Monday through
Friday from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm; Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings
from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm; and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00
p.m. For more information about the exhibit, please contact art professor
and String Room Gallery director William Roberts at 315/364-3237.
March, 2006
Wells
College Presents Reading and Booksigning
Former Wells faculty
member Bird Stasz returns for literary visit
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series welcomes back former faculty member
Bird Stasz for a book reading and signing. The reading will take place
at 7:30 pm on Monday, March 13 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall.
The free event will be followed by a reception and book signing with an
opportunity to meet the author; refreshments will be served.
Professor
Bird Stasz returns to Wells to read from her new book And That’s The
Way Of It: A Maine Village Life. The volume is a creative non-fiction
documentary that grew out of Stasz’s work as an ethnographer. Published
in November 2005, it is an oral history of Dorothy Carney Chase, a lifelong
resident of the village of Sheepscot, Maine.
When
Bird Stasz met 94-year-old Dorothy Carney Chase in the summer of 2001,
she embarked on a remarkable journey: one that took her back in time
in a very special place, the picturesque village of Sheepscot, at the confluence
of two rivers in mid-coast Maine. The journey begins in the 17th
century, when Sheepscot was one of the first settlements in Maine; takes
us into the 19th century, when Chase’s great-grandparents moved from Boston
to the thriving village; and through the 20th century, when Dorothy was
born and raised in an environment that offered the challenges of farm life,
a tolerance for the curious characters who made the village home, the security
for children to explore their own unique spirits, and encouragement to
grab life and live it to the fullest.
“Chase
talks about a world of rural Maine that no longer exists except in the
remembered and imagined cultural landscape of her stories,” writes Tom
Rankin of Duke University's Center for Documentary Studies. “Through this
book, the places exist again, in the minds of us, the readers and listeners.
That magical process -- from her memory, through her playful stories grounded
in history, and then on to us -- reconstructs what once seemed gone, invisible,
forgotten.”
Stasz
is currently teaching documentary courses as an associate professor of
education at Elon University in North Carolina. She taught at Wells College
for nine years, and earned a B.A. in anthropology/sociology from Middlebury
College, an M.Ed. from the University of Vermont, and an Ed.D. in Adult
Education from Syracuse University.
This
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, please contact English professor Bruce Bennett at 315/364-3228.
March, 2006
Wells
College Presents Free Play: “Mrs. Stanton & Susan”
Stage performance
in recognition of Women’s History Month
One-woman
play “Mrs. Stanton and Susan” will be performed at Wells College this Sunday,
March 12 at 7:00 pm in Barler Recital Hall as part of the school’s Women’s
History Month observances. The play is free and the public is cordially
invited to attend.
Miriam
Reed Productions brings “Mrs. Stanton and Susan” to the stage. Miriam Reed,
a highly trained actor from California, portrays both Elizabeth Cady Stanton
and Susan B. Anthony in a 90-minute play that depicts the beginnings of
the women’s suffrage movement and the committed women behind it.
Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony have long been criticized, even labeled
racists, because they were white, middle class women who believed that
women deserved the same rights and liberties as men. They chose to dedicate
their lives, their money, talents, and energies to a cause in which they
passionately believed.
The
difficulties faced by Elizabeth Cady Stanton as the mother of seven children
in isolated Seneca Falls, New York galvanized her to action in 1848. With
the blessing of fellow activist Lucretia Mott, Cady Stanton organized the
first Woman's Rights Convention, where she shocked most of those present
by demanding that women be given the right to vote.
Three
years later, she was introduced at an anti-slavery meeting to Susan B.
Anthony, who became her “friend and co-adjutant;” together they pursued
a lifetime of courageous work for women’s rights.
Reed
has a Ph.D. in English, German, and French 19th Century Dramatic
Literature,
a Master of Arts in 20th Century English and German Literature, and a Bachelor
of Arts in Language in the Performing Arts from UCLA. She has also studied
at the Yale University/British American Drama Academy Midsummer in Oxford
Program, England and with UCLA’s Graduate Abroad Program in Goettingen,
West Germany.
For
more information about “Mrs. Stanton and Susan,” please contact Melissa
Hutson, Director of Campus Involvement, at 315/364-3428.
March, 2006
Wells
College Assumes Management of Village Properties
Aurora Foundation’s
work in Aurora nearly complete
Wells
College President Lisa Marsh Ryerson announced today that effective June
1, 2006, management of the College’s commercial properties in the Village
of Aurora will be transferred from the Aurora Foundation to Aurora Inn,
Inc., a subsidiary of the College. The properties include the Aurora Inn,
E.B. Morgan House, Village Market, Pizzaurora, Fargo Bar & Grill, and
Posies. The current operating team will remain in place under the direction
of Sue Edinger. Ms Edinger has served as the General Manager for the past
three years.
Since
2001, the historic properties, which comprise most of the commercial district
of the small village, have been restored and managed by the Aurora Foundation.
The purpose of the Foundation was to restore the College’s commercial properties,
oversee the operation of businesses in them, and thereby enhance economic
development in the Village of Aurora. The College has retained its ownership
of the commercial properties and, as a gift to the College, Ms. Rowland,
a Wells alumna, provided all of the funding for restoration of the properties
and has absorbed any losses from the operations within them. Now that the
projects are nearing completion and businesses are fully operational, the
Foundation will turn over management to the College’s Aurora Inn, Inc.,
as planned.
One
project remains to be completed, namely the post office and parking lot.
Ms. Rowland will continue to fund that, assuming the necessary Village
approvals are received by March 31, 2006, a date agreed upon between the
College, the Village, and the Foundation. Katie Waller, Executive
Director of the Aurora Foundation, will oversee completion of the post
office and parking lot project.
Ms.
Rowland has established a fund of $2,000,000 for use by the College to
maintain the restored facilities and support their operations. “It has
been my pleasure to restore these beautiful historic properties, and to
put in place a first-rate management team to operate them,” said Rowland.
“These funds ensure that the facilities will be well-cared for in the future,
and that the fine reputation the Aurora Inn and its related properties
have earned will continue. I am proud of the work the Aurora Foundation
has done and feel confident that the College and the Village will prosper
as a result of our work.”
“Wells
College can never adequately thank Pleasant Rowland for her extraordinary
gifts of money, time, energy, expertise and vision that she has given to
us and to the Village,” said President Ryerson. “That she will continue
her philanthropy in Aurora with the completion of the post office and parking
lot project and the establishment of a fund for the ongoing maintenance
and operation is yet another example of the remarkable generosity and sincere
stewardship she has consistently exhibited in her work in Aurora.
Few colleges and fewer communities have ever received a gift of such magnitude.
Because of Pleasant Rowland, Wells College and the Village of Aurora will
continue to thrive for generations to come.”
March, 2006
Chamber
Music Concert Series Announced
Elizabethan Conversation,
Frogwork Consort to play at Aurora Inn
Dr.
Susan Sandman, professor emerita of music at Wells College and organizing
musician in two baroque-era ensembles, announces a series of chamber music
concerts. The first, “Purcell’s London,” is a program of songs for
the lute and viol presented by Elizabethan Conversation with special guest
tenor Gary Aubin. The concert will be held on Sunday, March 12 at 4:00
pm.
The
second in the series will present Christopher Simpson’s “The Months” performed
by The Frogwork Consort on Sunday, March 26 at 4:00 pm. Both performances
will take place in the Lakeside Room of the Aurora Inn, 391 Main Street,
Aurora. Tickets are $10, available at the door the day of the performance.
This is the third year this successful chamber music series has been presented
by Elizabethan Conversation and friends.
Elizabethan
Conversation and its sister ensemble, The Frogwork Consort, achieves musically
pleasing and exciting performances on period instruments by combining scholarship
in historical performance with individual judgment, and mixing in the magic
of the moment. Shared music of early times brings us to a meeting
of the minds surpassing that possible by words alone, and allows a communication
with the past unlike any other.
The
first program on March 12, “Purcell’s London,” features solo songs by Henry
Purcell, the most famous English composer of the 17th century, in settings
to lute and viol arranged by Dr. Sandman. Best known for his operas
and theatre music, Purcell’s music was widely performed at court and in
private homes. Also included are recorder and lute duets from The
Division Flute, one of many tutors for the recorder, a favorite choice
of wind instrument by highly skilled amateur musicians of Purcell’s time.
Additionally, solo lute music by Anthony Holborne and solo dances for viol
played lyra-way (“with chords”) by Tobias Hume will be performed.
The
instruments heard in “Purcell’s London” - lute, viol, and recorder - were
common court and household instruments in the 17th century baroque period.
Lutes, pear-shaped plucked instruments, typically had 7 to 10 pairs of
strings. Viols, also called viola da gamba (viola of the leg) because
of how they are held, usually had 6 or 7 strings. The recorder
is an end-blown flute often made of boxwood or other fruitwoods.
Instruments of earlier times were designed to produce subtle and varied
sonorities, and are heard best in intimate chamber spaces as experienced
in the Lakeside Room.
“The
Months,” the second concert on March 26, was written by Christopher Simpson
(image attached) specifically for a viol consort, the foremost string ensemble
before the 18th century string quartet. Each of the 12 movements is a fantasie
named after a month of the year, starting with January and ending with
December. The set takes just under an hour to perform, and contains lovely
melodies organized in polyphony and decorated with flourishes, giving us
a catalog of musical descriptions sure to surprise and amuse.
Started
in Aurora in 1982 as a renaissance lute duet by Dr. Susan Sandman and Derwood
Crocker, Elizabethan Conversation has a national reputation through recording
and performance. It now performs diverse programs, frequently with
guest artists.
The
Frogwork Consort grew out of the viol consort of Schola Cantorum of Syracuse.
Its members include Lee R. Johnston, organist and choir director of the
First English Lutheran Church in Syracuse and sheet music specialist for
Hickey’s Music (Ithaca); Alexander Rakov, a prize-winning performer trained
in St. Petersburg, and former collegium director at Syracuse University
and St. Lawrence College; and Dr. Susan Sandman. All the violas da gamba
played by the Frogwork Consort are strung with silk strings developed by
Alexander Rakov which are now gaining international recognition.
Susan
Sandman, early music performer and musicologist, earned her B.A. in music
summa
cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, from Vassar College, and a Ph.D. in musicology
from Stanford University. Her publications include a column on the
performance practice of early music for Continuo, and articles in
professional journals. In addition, she has won several National Endowment
for the Humanities (NEH) Fellowships and other grants for performance and
recordings. Now a professor emerita from Wells College, Dr. Sandman
devotes her time to music performance. She is the researcher and
organizer of the programs by Elizabethan Conversation and The Frogwork
Consort.
Derwood
Crocker’s interest in design, sculpture, and music led him to making musical
instruments. He has been a full-time craftsman and musician for almost
40 years. The Crocker Workshop in Aurora has produced hundreds of instruments,
some now found in private and public collections, most notably in the Museum
of Fine Arts in Boston. During this series, the audience will hear
a treble and bass viola da gamba built by the Crocker Workshop.
Guest
artist Gary Aubin, tenor, is a native of Lake Placid, NY and earned a M.S.
in voice from the College of St. Rose. He has studied opera under Renata
Cariso in New York and in Florence, Italy, and has performed in numerous
engagements in the U.S. and Canada. He sings for fun as a soloist
with area groups, and enjoys his work at Wells College, where for eight
years he has been general manager of Sodexho Dining Services.
CDs
by Elizabethan Conversation and The Frogwork Consort will be available
for sale at the concerts.
For
more information about the concert series, Elizabethan Conversation, and
The Frogwork Consort, please call Dr. Susan Sandman at 315/364-8406. To
reserve concert tickets, contact the Aurora Inn directly at 315/364-8888.
March, 2006
Wells
College Presents Fifth Annual Activism Symposium
“Food for Thought,
Fuel for Action” is this year’s theme
Wells
College continues its tradition of academic excellence and student leadership
with the presentation of the fifth annual Activism in the Academy Symposium
on Friday, March 10. Under the direction of Assistant Professor of Sociology
Laura McClusky, students have organized the campus-wide event, entitled
“Food for Thought, Fuel for Action.” The symposium is free for the Wells
community; a fee of $15 for all others, payable at the door, includes a
vegetarian lunch. Interested parties are strongly encouraged to pre-register
online at http://aurora.wells.edu/~symposium.
The
day will begin with a keynote address, “Fat, Famine & Froot Loops:
What’s Democracy Got to Do With It?” from author-activist Anna Blythe Lappé,
a Food and Society Policy Fellow with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. The
talk will take place at 9:00 a.m. in Phipps Audtorium, Macmillan Hall.
Along with her mother, noted activist Frances Moore Lappé, she is
the co-author of Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet (Tarcher,
2002), which chronicles social movements on five continents addressing
the root causes of hunger and poverty. The book is a follow-up to Frances
Lappé’s 1971 bestseller, Diet for a Small Planet, which “challenged
Western assumptions about hunger,” according to Publishers Weekly.
They are also the founders of the Small Planet Institute, based in Cambridge,
Mass.
The
day continues with more than 20 workshops, lectures, demonstrations, and
break-out sessions; individuals may attend one or all. Following Lappé’s
talk, participants may choose from two morning sessions (starting at 10:00
and 11:00 a.m.) and three afternoon sessions (at 1:30, 2:30, and 4:00 p.m.).
The sessions will address a wide variety of topics, including reproductive
rights, the National Security Agency’s domestic spying program, prisoners’
literacy, diabetes among the indigenous, and poverty in the upstate New
York area. In addition, two exhibits on display throughout the day will
focus on anti-war activist art and “the human cost of war.”
This
year’s lunchtime speaker, Gyude Moore, will give a talk at 12:00 noon.
Forced to flee his native Liberia at an early age, Moore completed high
school in while living as a refugee in the Ivory Coast. He is now a senior
political science major at Berea College in Kentucky and was one of 43
college students selected to participate in Oxfam America’s CHANGE Initiative,
a leadership training program.
Started
by the Collegiate Association (student government) in 2002, the purpose
of the student-centered symposium is to promote civic engagement, encourage
critical thinking, and find links between the academy and the world at
large. One objective of the day is to empower Wells and local community
members to use the college as a resource for advancing social justice and
community development through interdisciplinary study. As a liberal arts
institution, Wells College recognizes the value of service and activism
as part of the learning process.
For
more information about the Activism Symposium, please contact Assistant
Professor of Sociology Laura McClusky at 315/364-3252 or symposium@wells.edu,
or visit the symposium’s official web site at http://aurora.wells.edu/~symposium.
March, 2006
“No
Blood for Oil” Lecture at Wells College
Local activist, musician
Nancy Gilbertson speaks out about America’s dependency
Wells
College music instructor and local activist Nancy Gilbertson will speak
at Wells on Thursday, March 9. Gilbertson’s talk, “No Blood For Oil: America’s
Dependency and Alternative Energy Options,” will begin at 7:30 pm in the
Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. The lecture is free and the public is
invited to attend.
A professional
musician from Moravia, Nancy Gilbertson considers herself to be a “fledgling”
anti-war activist. In 2000, she joined the Green Party and worked on Ralph
Nader’s presidential campaign. The following year, she ran for Cayuga County
Legislature as a Green, backed by the Democrats. She has participated
in numerous anti-war demonstrations, as well as marches against the IMF
and World Bank, and the World Trade Organization. She “discovered”
bio diesel fuel (an alternative fuel made from waste vegetable oil) while
listening to NPR’s program “Unwelcome Guests” in 2002.
“I
was propelled into making bio diesel when, in my research, I discovered
that the U.S. military is the world's largest consumer of bio diesel,”
said Nancy. “I was incensed by the irony of our military using bio
diesel, which seemed virtually unknown to most of us at the time, to fight
wars to secure more fossil fuels.”
Nancy
and her husband Kim now drive a vehicle that is powered by a combination
of bio diesel, waste vegetable oil and a minimal use of petroleum diesel.
They also mix bio diesel in with their home heating oil.
Nancy
Gilbertson received her Masters in Music from Kent State University. She
has been a Lecturer in Music at Wells College since 1987, has been teaching
private piano lessons since 1973, and is now a frequent performer in the
Finger Lakes region.
Ms.
Gilbertson’s talk is sponsored by the Wells College Campus Anti-War Network.
For more information, please contact Communications Director Kelly Tehan
at 315/364-3260.
February, 2006
Wells
College Hires Director of Campus Involvement
Melissa Hutson will
manage student activities, many campus events
Wells
College’s Dean of Students Karen Green announces that Melissa Huston has
been hired as the College’s new Director of Campus Involvement. Melissa
began her duties on February 6.
Melissa
Hutson comes to Wells from Loyola University - Chicago, where she was resident
director. Previously, she was involved in college student personnel recruitment
at Western Illinois University. She earned her B.S. in Business Administration
– International Management from Shippensburg University, and her Masters
in Education – College Student Personnel from Western Illinois University.
“I
am pleased about the addition of Melissa Hutson to the Division of Student
Life,” says Dean Green. “She is an enthusiastic advocate of student development
and the expertise she brings to campus involvement will afford many opportunities
for students to grow their understanding of responsible leadership and
civic engagement. She has hit the ground running and has already
availed herself to student groups seeking advice and guidance.”
As
Director of Campus Involvement at Wells, Melissa will be responsible for
leadership within the Office of Campus Involvement to coordinate, supervise,
and evaluate a full range of activities and programming for the entire
campus community. She is also responsible for developing a comprehensive
co-curricular program that seeks to further the educational mission of
the College.
Melissa
is excited to be at Wells: “The Office of Campus Involvement has a large
role in shaping the social life of the College, and I hope that we can
offer programming and services that are valuable to all students and staff.
The small community environment here encourages frequent interaction, and
I hope that my office can contribute to the retention of students by offering
great ‘out of the classroom’ leadership experiences.”
For
more information about Melissa Hutson’s appointment at Wells College, please
contact Communications Director Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260.
February, 2006
Fifth
Annual Gospel Workshop and Concert at Wells College
The
fifth annual Wells College Gospel Workshop and Concert Weekend will be
held February 17 and 18, 2006. The workshop is a two-day event in which
the Wells College community and the local Aurora community come together
to learn about and engage in singing this uplifting genre of music. No
auditions are required and the event is free and open to the general public.
Everyone is warmly invited to lift their voices during this inspirational
weekend event.
The
Gospel Workshop Weekend is coordinated by Wells’ Gospel choir Appointed
and the Dean of Students Office. All rehearsals and the concert will be
held in Barler Recital Hall. The weekend schedule is as follows:
Friday,
February 17
Rehearsal
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Saturday,
February 18
Rehearsal
9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Warm-up
6:30 p.m.
Concert
7:30 p.m.
No
advance registration is necessary, but participants must attend all rehearsals.
Those interested in participating in the workshop should contact Jenn Bell
in the Dean of Students Office at 315/364-3311 by no later than Monday,
February 13.
“I’m
especially pleased that the gospel choir weekend at Wells takes place during
Black History Month, given gospel’s far-reaching influence on contemporary
music,” says Wells College President Lisa Marsh Ryerson. “I sing with the
choir during the weekend, and it is one of the most uplifting and rewarding
experiences of the academic year for me. We certainly encourage singers
from the community to join us, and I can guarantee that anyone who makes
the trip to Aurora for the weekend will have a wonderful time.”
Gospel
Weekend and Appointed are the brainchildren of Dean of Students
Karen Green, who will coordinate the weekend. L. Kirk Hatcher of Montgomery,
Alabama will be choir director, and Ed Menifee of Atlanta, Georgia serves
as music director.
For
more information about Gospel Weekend and the concert, please contact Jenn
Bell in the Dean of Students Office at 315/364-3311.
February, 2006
Two
Wells College Faculty Members Receive Tenure
French and Biology
teachers are tenured, promoted to associate professor
Wells
College’s Vice President for Academic Affairs Ellen Hall recently announced
that two faculty members were granted tenure, effective August 2007, by
the College’s Board of Trustees. In addition, both were promoted to the
rank of associate professor, which will take effect in August 2006.
Assistant
Professor of Biology Christina Wahl received her B.S. in biology and her
M.S., and Ph.D. in physiology from Cornell University. She has taught at
Wells for six years, leading students through Principles of Biology, Animal
Physiology, Developmental Biology, Cell Biology, and a course for non-science
majors on The Biology of Women. She is an active scholar, engaged in research
at both Wells and Cornell University. Her research interests lie in the
physiological mechanisms of development, including embryonic regenerative
processes and patterning of the retina, eye, and oculomotor system.
“Professor
Wahl is an animated and creative teacher who is also enthusiastic about
teaching across disciplines; she’s currently co-teaching a new course on
Sensation and Perception with Assistant Professor of Psychology Deborah
Gagnon. But many of us in the sciences feel that Dr. Wahl’s greatest gift
to our students is her passion for research and her commitment to making
the student research experience at Wells a meaningful one,” says Candace
Collmer, Chair of Biological and Chemical Sciences. “In working side-by-side
with students on independent research projects, she shares the joy and
excitement of actually doing science while also preparing them for diverse
opportunities beyond Wells. For many, these research experiences at Wells
will stay with them for a lifetime.”
Professor
Wahl also serves the broader Wells community as secretary of the faculty,
coordinator of the biology minor, and a member of the President's Committee
on Diversity.
Assistant
Professor of French Amy Staples’ areas of expertise are in French and francophone
literature, history, and culture; literature written by women; feminist
criticism; and issues in women's studies. She earned her B.A. in French
from the University of Vermont, an M.A. in French Literature from The Johns
Hopkins University, and a Ph.D. in Romance Studies from Cornell University
with a minor in Women’s Studies.
Dr.
Staples has taught a number of courses during her five years at the College,
including Introduction to French Literature I & II; Conversation on
French Civilization; Stylistics and Advanced Composition; The Splendid
Century; Reason and Sentiment in 18th Century France; Romanticism and Realism
in the 19th Century; and The Contemporary Literary Scene. She is valued
for her work in the community, most notably as Director of the Program
for the Arts in Paris, and as an active member of the Academic Program
and Policy Committee.
Chair
of the Department of Foreign Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Diane
Koester supported the decision to promote Dr. Staples: “Professor Staples
is both exacting and energetic in her teaching, expecting work from students
at a high and professional level while remaining good humored and available
to help them. She is an active scholar, especially in light of her
commitment to teaching and the Wells community. Her articles are
informative, spirited and enjoyable to read, in their complex feminist
analysis of important works of French literature. Wells College is privileged
to have Professor Staples’ breadth and good work.”
For
more information about these tenured faculty positions at Wells College,
please contact Communications Director Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260
February, 2006
Student
Art Show Opens
Artists from Fall
semester display their work
An
eclectic mix of student artwork will be on display in the College’s String
Room Gallery from February 8 through March 10, 2006. The exhibit is free
and the public is cordially invited to view the show.
On
display will be artwork produced by students enrolled in studio art classes
during the Fall 2005 semester – including courses in painting, ceramics,
and two- and three-dimensional design.
An
opening reception with refreshments on Wednesday, February 8,
7:00-9:00
p.m., offers an opportunity to meet the student artists and view and discuss
their work.
Art
professor William Roberts oversees the students’ work in the studios and
coordinates the installation of the show.
Gallery
hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.,
Wednesday
evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.,
and
Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
February, 2006
Wells
College Presents Faculty Flute and Piano Recital
Program includes
a tribute to New Orleans
The
Music Department at Wells College is pleased to offer an evening of flute
and piano music. On Saturday, February 11, music lecturers Nancy Gilbertson
and Laura Campbell will present a free concert at 8:00 p.m. in Barler Recital
Hall. The public is cordially invited to attend. A reception with the musicians
will follow the recital.
The
program includes Robert Muczynski’s Sonata for Flute and Piano; “Flying
Lessons” for solo flute by Robert Dick; Brian Dykstra’s “A Rag for New
Orleans, September 2005”; and César Franck’s Sonata in A major for
Flute and Piano. Three out of the four composers are still living: Dykstra
is the music department chair at the College of Wooster in Massachusetts;
Dick has been called the “Hendrix of the flute” because of his aggressive
playing style; and Muczynski, a professor emeritus at the University of
Arizona, has been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.
Nancy
Gilbertson has taught music at Wells College since 1987. She received her
bachelor's and master's degrees in piano performance from Kent State University
in Ohio. She has been a dedicated private piano teacher since 1973, and
an active soloist and accompanist in central New York since moving to Moravia
in 1986. Nancy released her first recording, Mediterranean Magic,
in 2000.
Laura
Campbell is instructor of chamber music at Wells College and instructor
of flute at Colgate University, where she is also the principal flutist
of the Colgate Symphony. She completed her B.M. in Music Performance and
Education from Southern Illinois University and her M.S. in Music Education
from the University of Illinois. Her recording of Margaret Fairlie-Kennedy's
“Windrider/Final Ascent” is available on the CD Evocations from Capstone
Records, Society of Composers, Inc. and she has recently released a CD
of flute and harp music with harpist Myra Kovary entitled Morning Light.
For
more information about the performance, please contact Nancy Gilbertson
at
315/364-3343.
February, 2006
Spring
Convocation
Wells
will open the spring 2006 semester with the traditional convocation ceremony
on Monday, January 30 at 4:45 p.m. in Phipps Auditorium. The entire campus
community is invited to help usher in the new semester during this special
occasion. The theme, “How can Wells shape your future beyond Aurora?” offers
an opportunity to focus on each individual student and address the unique
learning environment found at Wells.
Anne
Parker Taylor ’55, recipient of the Wells 2005 Alumnae Award, will give
the keynote address. Dr. Taylor is Distinguished Professor of Architecture
and Planning, and founder and director of the Institute for Environmental
Education at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. She has worked
for 40 years in the combined fields of education, design, architecture
and planning, and continues to be influential and innovative in the design
of architectural education and learning environments for children.
Collegiate
Cabinet, with the help of the Dean of Students and the President’s Offices,
organizes Spring Convocation each year by choosing a theme, selecting a
speaker, planning the order and content of the program, and coordinating
the many details that make a successful event..
January, 2006
A
New Post Office for Aurora
Agreement between
Wells College, the Aurora Foundation and the Village of Aurora paves the
way for a new post office, parking, and village park
As
the result of a cooperative new agreement among Wells College, the Aurora
Foundation and the Village of Aurora, village residents will be able to
look forward to a new lakefront park, an improved post office and more
parking and green space in the center of the village.
Wells
College, the Aurora Foundation and the Village of Aurora are pleased to
announce an agreement that will provide land for use as a new village park;
substantially improve parking and green space within the village; and,
contingent upon approval of the United States Postal Service, relocate
the Aurora post office to its historic location in the “Old Post Office”
building, also known as the Heary Building (pictured). In the spirit of
a true partnership, each party will contribute unique assets and assume
specific responsibilities for the ultimate benefit of the village and its
residents.
Following
a special Village of Aurora Board meeting on December 29, 2005, an agreement
is expected to be signed by Wells College President Lisa Marsh Ryerson,
Pleasant T. Rowland of the Aurora Foundation, and Village of Aurora Mayor
Tom Gunderson later this week. The three Aurora entities have jointly
endorsed a memorandum of understanding that expresses their shared intent
to proceed with the project cooperatively and expeditiously.
The
Aurora Foundation will renovate space in the Old Post Office building and
relocate the post office to it. The Foundation will also remove the current
building and create a new parking lot and green space in the center of
the village with improved access to the existing downtown village park.
The Foundation will underwrite all of the costs associated with the post
office/parking lot project. For the past several years, the Village has
been coordinating with the USPS regarding a potential move and is amenable
to the relocation of the post office as well as the demolition of the current
building. If all goes according to plan, that project will be completed
in 18 months.
In
addition to improved access to the small existing park in the center of
the village, residents will also gain land for a second new lakefront park
at the southern edge of Aurora. Wells College has agreed to make available
approximately 1,000 feet of the College's shoreline lands so that the Village
can develop a new park and waterfront area for recreational use. Building
the new park at the south end of the village will be the responsibility
of the Village; plans and a timeline for it have not yet been developed.
The
Village will retain ownership of the land on which the current post office
sits, as well as the current downtown village park just south of the Aurora
Inn. The College will retain ownership of its commercial properties
in the village, including the parking lot.
According
to College President Lisa Marsh Ryerson, “While the College, the Foundation
and the Village each contribute their unique assets and assume appropriate
responsibility, this agreement ultimately benefits the real stakeholders
– our community. A new lakefront park will benefit our families and
our children’s families for generations to come. I am especially
grateful to Pleasant Rowland for her continued and extraordinary philanthropy
in the renovation of the downtown area and for her deep sense of caring
for our community.”
Village
of Aurora Mayor Tom Gunderson agrees. “This is a real win-win for
the village and its residents. Thanks to the unprecedented generosity
of Pleasant Rowland, the village has been and will continue to be significantly
improved. We are grateful to Wells College for making lands available
for us to develop an extensive waterfront recreation area. This is
something our residents have needed and wanted for a long time.”
Pleasant
Rowland states, “I am very pleased that this agreement has been reached
between the Village, the College and the Foundation. With the relocation
of the post office project and an improved parking lot with good access
to the downtown village park, we will have completed our projects in the
heart of the Village of Aurora. In the focus groups held in 2001,
we learned that improvements to the post office, improved parking and access
to the village park were priorities for village residents, and I am glad
that we will now be able to address those important aspects of village
life. It is especially fitting that all of these projects will provide
greater access to one of Aurora’s most spectacular assets – Lake Cayuga.”
For
more information, please contact Kelly Tehan, Communications Director,
at 315/364-3260.
January, 2006
Earlier Articles
in Wells College News:
Wells
College News Archive
Last updated 06/27/2006 |