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Winter
Institute
In
partnership with the Aurora Inn, Wells
offers the first Winter Institute, a series of three, week-long learning
adventures that combine thought-provoking classroom discussion and exciting
regional excursions led by Wells faculty with delicious meals and luxurious
accommodations provided by the Aurora Inn. Modeled after the educational
travel adventures offered by ElderHostel, Winter
Institute features three weeks of relaxed study in a peaceful lakeside
setting: Full details are available HERE.
Wells
College Becomes Smoke-Free
New policy considers
health and wellness of constituents
In its continual effort to
promote the health and well-being of its community, Wells College becomes
a non-smoking campus today.
“Our discussion and research
led us to the conclusion that Wells College will be a healthier, more comfortable
living and working environment as a smoke-free campus,” said Wells President
Lisa Marsh Ryerson. “In doing so, we join many other colleges, universities,
hospitals and workplaces in recognizing the public health and safety benefits
of a smoke-free environment.”
Associate Dean of Students
for Residence Life Joel McCarthy attended the Central New York College
Tobacco Policy Summit at LeMoyne College in Syracuse earlier this spring.
Representatives from about 30 New York colleges and universities were present
to discuss campus tobacco and smoking polices, and to learn more about
national trends.
“Many schools currently do
not allow smoking in their residence halls or academic buildings, and more
and more campuses have begun implementing smoke-free and even tobacco-free
polices,” said McCarthy. “Cazenovia College, SUNY Upstate Medical University,
and Onondaga Community College have all recently implemented smoke-free
policies on their campuses, and Wells will become non-smoking this summer.
I attended the Tobacco Summit to explore ways to make this transition a
successful one for students, staff, and faculty alike.”
Wells College has a long-standing
commitment to health and wellness. The College offers “healthy lifestyles”
living options in its residence halls, boasts a state-of-the-art fitness
center, created the Coalition for a Sustainable Wells this year, and will
introduce a Sustainability Learning Community model in the 2008-09 academic
year; eight students selected to participate in the Learning Community
will focus on civic engagement, social responsibility, and the environment.
“Our new smoking policy reflects
the College’s commitment to wellness and its mission to ‘think critically,
reason wisely and act humanely’,” explains McCarthy. “Numerous programs
and resources will be available for students, faculty, and staff who wish
to quit smoking, and off-campus smoking areas will be identified for individuals
who choose to smoke.”
For more information about
Wells’ new non-smoking policy, please contact Director of Publications
& Media Relations Kelly Tehan by calling 315.364.3260 or emailing ktehan@wells.edu.
Map of smoke-free area (PDF)
July, 2008
Wells
Welcomes Cayuga Lake Watershed Network to Aurora
Wells partners with
regional agency; CLWN makes new home on campus
In
keeping with its commitment to the liberal arts and in recognition of the
need for leaders in scientific and environmental studies initiatives, Wells
College and the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network are collaborating in new
ways. Wells President Lisa Marsh Ryerson recently announced that the Watershed
Network will move its offices into Zabriskie Hall this summer. The three-story
building
on the College’s campus will provide the Network and its staff with office
space and a central location with ready access to Cayuga Lake.
“This is an exciting time
in the history of our relationship with the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network,”
said President Ryerson. “Wells has been actively involved with the Network
for a number of years, and we are delighted that they will bring their
headquarters to Aurora. I look forward to welcoming my Network friends
and colleagues to the Wells campus, and am excited about continuing our
collaboration as we seek ways to protect one of our most valuable regional
assets – Cayuga Lake.”
The Cayuga Lake Watershed
Network (CLWN) was founded in 1998 in Ithaca, and is currently operating
from Interlaken. CLWN seeks to protect and improve the ecological health,
economic vitality, and overall beauty of the watershed through education,
communication, and leadership. The Cayuga Lake watershed covers more than
850 miles and is spread over seven counties: Cayuga, Seneca, Tompkins,
Cortland, Ontario, Schuyler, and Tioga.
As CLWN enters its second
decade of water resource stewardship in the Finger Lakes, it was determined
that a change of location was necessary for the community-based, not-for-profit
organization.
“I am delighted to have this
opportunity to expand our services and move to the Aurora and Wells community,”
said CLWN treasurer and founding director Bill Shaw. “We look forward to
enhanced collaboration with the broader community and are deeply grateful
for Wells’ generosity and support of our programs.”
Wells’ collaboration with
CLWN began several years ago. Professors of Biology and Environmental Studies
Thomas Vawter and Niamh O’Leary are both engaged with CLWN and its partner
group, the Cayuga Lake Watershed Intermunicipal Organization, which bring
together representatives from the counties that comprise the Cayuga Lake
watershed.
One of the most popular programs
offered by these agencies is the The Cayuga Lake Floating Classroom Project.
The M/V Haendal, a 43-foot steel boat also known as “the floating classroom,”
provides direct access to Cayuga Lake for middle school, high school, and
college students to learn about the lake and directly interact with the
natural world in intellectually and experientially rewarding ways. The
Haendel stops frequently at the Wells College dock to take students out
on the water for ecological studies and water monitoring, coupled with
shoreline activities focusing on stream ecology, watershed concepts, storm-water
runoff, global climate change, and other topics.
The CLWN is expected to move
into Zabriskie Hall at Wells College on August 1. New contact information
for the organization will be released at that time.
For more information about
Cayuga Lake Watershed Network’s move to Wells College, please contact Kelly
Tehan, director of publications and media relations, at 315.364.3260. Additional
information about Wells College may be found at www.wells.edu; go to www.cayugalake.org
to learn more about the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network.
May, 2008
Wells
College Announces 2008 Alumnae Award Recipients
Two Wells women honored
for their dedication to Wells, service to community
Carrie Bolton, president
of the Wells College Alumnae Association, has announced the College’s two
2008 Alumnae Award recipients. Karen Smith Rosenbaum, Class of 1960,
of Arlington, Va., and Joanne Lowell Johnson, Wells Class of 1970,
of Newbury, Mass., will be honored on Saturday, May 31 during Wells’
annual Reunion Weekend.
This is the 40th anniversary
of the Wells College Alumnae Award. The award honors Wells women of high
achievement in professions and careers, in volunteer and community work,
in service to their alma mater, or in some combination of these endeavors.
Karen
Rosenbaum has been selected for her distinctive contributions in the
field of education and technology; she has been actively involved with
education for over forty years. After receiving an M.A.T. from Oberlin
College, she taught secondary school English in Ohio and Massachusetts,
and received a Ph.D. in education from The Johns Hopkins University in
1973. Four years later, she was appointed chair of the Arlington Schools
Task Group on Responsible Student Conduct and Attendance, whose recommendations
are still in force in the Arlington (Va.) schools. She worked for the Vice
President’s Task Force on Youth Employment during the Carter Administration
as project director for Making Youth Programs Work, a 1980 publication
which showed how to coordinate the efforts of schools, labor unions, and
businesses on behalf of out-of-school, out-of-work youth. It is distributed
to 16,000 school districts across the U.S.
In 1982, Karen founded Technology
Instruction Corporation (TIC) and set up a day camp in Washington, D.C.
for 7- to 16-year-old campers. When “computer camps” were all the rage,
Karen’s vision was to offer a place where learning technology was balanced
by active athletics. TIC summer camp uses classrooms and sports facilities
on college and school campuses to offer a unique “spontaneous curriculum”
developed for and by each individual camper. TIC has a 1:4 ratio of counselors
to kids, and its motto is “Kids learn by having fun!” After two weeks at
TIC, every camper takes home a project they have designed themselves—a
computer game they programmed, a brilliant video, a dazzling website.
TIC celebrated its 25th anniversary
last year and has two locations, Bethesda, Md. and McLean, Va., serving
the greater metropolitan Washington, D.C. area. Creating and leading this
unique program requires strong business skills and a deep understanding
of education. Due in large part to Karen’s vision, enthusiasm, and ability,
the camp was awarded accreditation by the American Camp Association (ACA)
in its first season. She later served two terms as president of the ACA
Virginias Section.
Karen majored in English
at Wells, and was also active in music and the performing arts. These interests
continue. She is an avid photographer and was for 20 years a member of
the Master Chorale of Washington, which performs at the Kennedy Center
several times a year. She is married to Dr. David Mark Rosenbaum. They
have two adult children and three grandchildren.
Joanne
Johnson was selected in recognition of nearly four decades of remarkable
service to her alma mater and her community.
A career banker and a leader
of the Alumnae Association, Joanne has contributed her time and expertise
to reinforcing the position of Wells College during a pivotal period in
the College’s history. She has also shared her wisdom and leadership with
other organizations she loves, in particular, the Girl Scouts of Spar and
Spindle Council and the Newburyport Choral Society.
In 1970, when Joanne graduated
from Wells Phi Beta Kappa and cum laude with distinction in economics,
she was elected Wells’ first-ever collegiate trustee. In this position,
she served a two-year term on the College’s board of trustees. Joanne has
served Wells in positions of leadership and support ever since, both as
a member of the Alumnae Association board and as a full member of the College
board for three terms. She was elected an honorary trustee in 2004.
Joanne began her career as
a research assistant at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and in late
1971, was hired as Essexbank’s first woman management trainee. In 1983,
she was named senior vice president of marketing and administration. Over
the next two decades, she was promoted to positions of increasing responsibility—with
the Bank of New England, Fleet, and the Bank of America—from which she
retired as a change management executive in personnel technology. She received
a degree in credit and loan administration from the American Institute
of Banking in Boston, and a master’s degree in retail bank management from
the University of Virginia. She was one of 50 outstanding professional
women in the Boston area selected for the Vanguard Award.
She is a lifelong resident
of Boston’s North Shore and has been active in the Wells Club of Boston.
Involved in the Girl Scouts since her youth, Joanne has served on the board
of directors of the Girl Scouts of Spar and Spindle Council (northeastern
Massachusetts) for over 20 years, including terms as vice president and
president. As a member of the council realignment committee, she recently
helped complete the merger of the three Girl Scout Councils in her area.
She is currently chair of the board of that new entity, the Girl Scouts
of Eastern Massachusetts.
Joanne and her husband, Ralph,
are longtime members and generous supporters of the Newburyport Choral
Society, and have served in nearly every leadership position in that group.
The Wells College Alumnae
Award was established in 1968 as part of the Wells Centennial Celebration,
and is presented by the President of the College at a convocation ceremony
held during Reunion Weekend each spring.
For additional information
about Joanne Johnson, Karen Rosenbaum, and the annual Alumnae Award at
Wells College, please contact Director of Publications & Media Relations
Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260.
May, 2008
Concert
Choir Performance at Wells College
“Music for a Royal
Occasion” presented Sunday, May 11
The
Wells College Music Department proudly presents “Music for a Royal Occasion,”
performed by the Wells Concert Choir. The concert will be held in the Sommer
Center at 4:00 pm on Sunday, May 11. Admission is free and the public is
cordially invited to attend.
This regal program features
the Coronation Mass in C Major, K.317, composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
for full chorus, soloists and orchestra. In addition to the joint performance
of the Mozart mass, the College’s women’s and men’s ensembles will sing
works from their respective repertoires. The concert will be conducted
by Wells Professor of Music Crawford R. Thoburn.
Soloists in the Mozart Mass
will be soprano Mary Gooding ’10, alto Jillian Kline ’09, tenor Justin
Zehr ’11, and bass Marshall Anderson ’09, all of whom are from Professor
Thoburn’s vocal studio. The orchestra will consist of Wells students and
professional players from the Ithaca area, led by concertmaster Meyer Stolov.
The Coronation Mass is the
most popular of the sixteen works by Mozart that set the ancient words
of the Latin mass to music. Written in 1779, it may have been composed
to accompany a celebratory springtime crowning of a venerated image of
the Virgin Mary in a pilgrimage church near Salzburg, Austria. Later, the
work was performed at the coronation of two Austrian sovereigns, Leopold
II and Francis I.
“The music is very festive
and energetic, but it’s also infused with some of the composer’s richest,
most lyric melodies,” said Professor Thoburn. “It wonderfully encapsulates,
in a fairly short and highly accessible work, the genius that is Mozart.”
This is the first academic
year, following the College’s move to coeducation in 2005, that the full
Wells Concert Choir is performing as a mixed-voice ensemble. Previously,
for several decades under Professor Thoburn’s direction, the Concert Choir
annually performed major choral works with men’s ensembles from other colleges
and universities. “The enthusiasm the students have shown in expanding
the choral program here at Wells is very exciting,” said Thoburn.
For more information about
the concert and music offerings at Wells, please contact Professor Thoburn
at 315/364-3347.
May, 2008
Wells
College Presents Senior Art Exhibit
Three graduates display
paintings, sculpture as part of thesis project
The
Wells College Art Department is pleased to present the spring senior thesis
exhibit featuring paintings and sculpture by graduates June Lesney, Annie
Ryerson, and Nicole Blum. The show opens on Monday, May 12 in the String
Room Gallery, Main Building, and will run through May 25. The public is
cordially invited to view the free exhibit. An opening reception on May
12 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. offers an opportunity to meet the student artists
and discuss their work; light refreshments will be served.
June Lesney of St.
Paul, Minn. is a visual arts major with a concentration in studio arts.
Her focus on three dimensional, found object sculptures came about fairly
recently, beginning with independent study and developing during an internship
at the New York Student Art League. Her thesis explores the aesthetic and
practical problems of the accumulation of consumer by-product. The challenge
lies in consuming the rest of that by-product into her work. This idea
originates less in the environmental movement than in the depiction of
the Native American practice of using “every part of the buffalo.” As June
explains it, “Essentially, I am taking the refuse of my own consumerism
and turning it into something meaningful.”
This summer following graduation,
June will begin an internship with the Rogue Buddha Gallery in Minneapolis.
Aurora native Annie Ryerson
also holds a concentration in studio art and a minor in French. Her
love of the arts in addition to the French language led her to spend a
year in Paris studying under several accomplished artists and art historians.
It was through her painting professor, Betsy Castleman Damez, Wells class
of 1964, that Annie became a copyist in the Louvre Museum. That experience
transformed her general love of art to a deep passion for painting.
Annie has completed an internship
at the Sherry French Gallery in Manhattan, taken courses at the Student
Art League, and studied abroad at the University College of Cork, Ireland.
After graduation, she plans to take a year off to work and exhibit her
paintings before attending the Art Institute of Chicago. She hopes to one
day be a professor of art.
The bright colors in Nicole
Blum’s paintings flow smoothly in work that is non-representational
and free flowing, yet calls to mind organic forms. Nicole, who comes from
Rochester, likes to leave her work open to interpretation by those who
are experiencing it.
Senior theses are the culminating
requirement of study at Wells College. Art seniors are expected to plan
and implement the entire exhibit, including the creation of the artwork
to be shown, hanging the pieces and preparing the gallery, coordinating
the reception, and promoting the show. Art professor and gallery director
William Roberts, along with Associate Professor Ted Lossowski, guides the
students’ work in the studios and oversees the installation of the show.
The String Room Gallery is
located in Main Building. Hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday evenings from 7:00 p.m.
to 9:00 p.m.; and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. For more
information about the exhibit, please contact Professor Roberts at 315/364-3237.
May, 2008
Jim
Crow Memorabilia Exhibit Comes to Wells
Travelling show features
representative anti-Black and racist items
A
traveling exhibition of Ferris State University’s Jim Crow Museum of Racist
Memorabilia will visit Wells College from April 23 – 28, 2008. The exhibit,
entitled “Hateful Things,” will be on display on the second floor of Long
Library between the hours of 8:00 am – 6:00 pm, and is free and open to
the public.
“Hateful Things,” a sampling
from the museum’s 4,000 pieces, represents nearly 150 years of anti-Black
racist objects and images. The exhibit was created by David Pilgrim, the
university’s chief diversity officer and museum curator, and Carrie Weis-Taylor,
coordinator of FSU’s Rankin Center Art Gallery. The museum is located in
Ferris’ College of Arts and Sciences in Big Rapids, Mich. It addresses
the relationship between Jim Crow segregation and everyday objects that
belittle African-Americans. Examples vary from Jim Crow memorabilia to
caricatured images of Blacks on postcards, games, ashtrays and drinking
glasses.
Dr. Pilgrim views the collection
of images and artifacts not as a traditional museum, but as a learning
and teaching laboratory. He seeks to use the images of intolerance to teach
tolerance. As a youth, Pilgrim purchased and disposed of racially insulting
items wherever he found them. The sheer volume of merchandise forced him,
eventually, to change his tactic. “I found them at flea markets and garage
sales as a kid,” said Pilgrim. “Items would offend me, and I'd buy them
to destroy them. I got older and recognized the historical significance
of these items. I stopped destroying them and started collecting them.”
“Hateful Things” is brought
to the Wells campus through the sponsorship of the following student clubs
and organizations: Amnesty International, Appointed gospel choir, Collegiate
Cabinet, POWER, the Programming Board, the Publications Board, Student
Diversity Committee, and the Wells International Students Association.
For more information about
the “Hateful Things” exhibit at Wells College, please email coordinator
Emma Henry at ehenry@wells.edu. Additional
information about the Jim Crow Museum at Ferris State University may be
found at www.ferris.edu/htmls/news/jimcrow/menu.htm.
April, 2008
Wells
College Celebrates Earth Day
University of Buffalo
professor gives public lecture on Native American role in environmental
policy
Dr.
Donald Grinde, professor and chair of American Studies at the University
of Buffalo, will give a lecture at Wells College in celebration of Earth
Day. The free talk, “Native American Eco-centricity in the Environmental
Movement,” will take place on Wednesday, April 23 at 4:45 pm in Stratton
Hall 209. All are invited to attend.
Donald Grinde's research
and teaching center on Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) history, U.S. Indian policy
since 1871, Native American thought, and environmental history and policy.
He is the author of several books, including The Encyclopedia of Native
American Biography: Six Hundred Life Stories of Important People; Apocalypse
of Chiokoyhikiu, Chief of the Iroquois; and The Iroquois and the
Founding of the American Nation, among other texts. A Japanese
translation of his book Exemplar of Liberty (co-authored with Bruce Johansen)
was published in Japan in 2006.
Dr. Grinde received his B.A.
in history from Georgia Southern University, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from
the University of Delaware. His talk at Wells College is co-sponsored by
the Campus Greens, the Environmental Studies major and the First Nations
and Indigenous Studies minor.
For more information about
Dr. Grinde’s Earth Day lecture, please contact Assistant Professor Jaclyn
Schnurr at 315/364-3274.
April, 2008
New
Art Exhibit Opens at Wells College
Featuring lithographs,
paintings by late Ithaca artist Arnold Singer
A
memorial exhibition of paintings and lithographs by the late Arnold Singer
of Cornell University will be on display in Wells College’s String Room
Gallery, Main Building, from April 9 – May 8, 2008. An opening reception
with refreshments will be held on Wednesday, April 9 from 7:00-9:00 pm;
the public is invited to attend.
A master of the art of lithography,
Arnold Singer, professor emeritus of art in Cornell's Department of Art,
devoted his life to printmaking, painting, and drawing. His subject was
often the human figure, and his imagery was marked by strong, simplified
forms, graceful contours and large areas of solid color.
Before coming to Ithaca in
1966, he lived and worked in New York City, printing at the Art Students
League and teaching lithography at the Pratt Graphic Arts Center, where
he was a master printer. He printed works of art by such well-known artists
as Rufino Tamayo, Stuart Davis, Larry Rivers, Ellsworth Kelly, Adolf Gottlieb,
and Barnett Newman.
A 1957 woodcut collage by
Singer appeared on the cover of Fortune magazine, and another Singer print
was selected for the 1966 UNICEF calendar. He went on to teach lithography,
painting and drawing in Cornell's College of Architecture, Art and Planning
for 22 years, becoming emeritus in 1988.
Singer died in January 2005
at the age of 84.
The String Room Gallery is
located in Main Building. Hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Saturday
and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. For more information about the show
and art classes at Wells, please contact William Roberts at 315-364-3237.
April, 2008
Wells
College Announces 2008 Commencement Speaker
College Trustee,
Executive Director of “By The People” to address graduates on May 24
Wells
College President Lisa Marsh Ryerson has announced that Wells trustee Gail
Leftwich Kitch, executive director of MacNeil/Lehrer’s By The People,
will be Wells’ 2008 commencement speaker. This year’s ceremony will
take place at the Aurora Inn on Saturday, May 24.
Gail Kitch is the executive
director of By The People, an initiative of MacNeil/Lehrer Productions
which uses public television to encourage and support informed non-contentious
citizen dialogue around policy issues. Prior to joining MLP, Ms. Kitch
served as president of the Federation of State Humanities Councils following
service as director of Cambridge Forum (Mass.), and principal of Strategic
Business Consultants, an international business consulting organization.
Ms. Kitch established SBC after serving as associate director of the Program
on South Africa at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.
“As a member of Wells’ Board
of Trustees, the College community has had the pleasure of talking with
Gail over the past decade and know her to be a passionate and articulate
advocate of liberal arts education and of Wells,” said President Ryerson.
“We are deeply honored to welcome Gail Kitch as our 2008 commencement speaker.”
Ms. Kitch earned her B.A.
cum laude from Bryn Mawr College and law degree from the University of
Chicago. A lawyer by training, she practiced for a number of years
with large firms in Washington, D.C. and Boston, where she was a board
member and chair of the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities, and
a Radcliffe College Public Policy Fellow from 1997-1999.
Among her many leadership
roles, Ms. Kitch sits on the executive committee of the Women’s Foreign
Policy Group; is a board member of the American Bar Association Museum
of Law in Chicago; serves on the National Advisory Group to The State of
the USA, Inc.; and is a member of the Advisory Commission to the Standing
Committee on the Law Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. She joined
the Wells College Board of Trustees in 1999, and now serves on the executive
committee as secretary of the board; she is also chair of the enrollment
committee and a member of the student affairs and academic affairs committees.
Wells College expects to
confer degrees on more than 90 students this spring. Commencement ceremonies
will take place at 10:00 am at the Aurora Inn, Main Street, on Saturday,
May 24.
For more information about
Ms. Kitch’s commencement address and general commencement activities at
Wells College, please call Director of Publications & Media Relations
Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260.
April, 2008
Spring
Faculty Dance Concert at Wells College
“Dances Then and
Now, Again” is collaborative choreographic work
The
Wells College Performing Arts Department is pleased to present its annual
faculty and guest artist dance concert, “Dances Then and Now, Again,” with
performances on Friday, April 11 and Saturday, April 12 at 7:30 pm in Phipps
Auditorium, Macmillan Hall. “Dances Then and Now, Again” features
choreography by Wells Professor of Dance Jeanne Goddard of Ithaca and guest
artist Elizabeth Wilmot Bishop. Prices are $3.00 for students; $5.00 for
seniors and the Wells community; and $7.00 for the general public. Tickets
are available at the door or by calling the box office at 315-364-3456.
The third in a series of
retrospective concerts developed by the Wells College dance faculty in
recent years, “Dances Then and Now, Again” juxtaposes new choreography
and seasoned repertory pieces by Goddard and Wilmot Bishop in a wide array
of styles. Such concerts showcase the long-term and current accomplishments
of faculty choreographers while expanding the stylistic range and technical
skill of student performers. Musical selections range from Boccherini to
Donovan, and from commissioned score to the spoken word.
The April program features
a number of exciting large ensemble pieces, including Goddard’s driving
1982 creation, “The Closer We Get,” with a commissioned score by Paul Briggs,
and her premier of “Whispers,” an exploration of secrecy and things unseen,
accompanied by baroque strings. Wilmot Bishop’s lyrical neoclassical piece,
“The Sea is Calling,” contrasts with her high energy jazz-tango fusion
“Fire Dance” as well as “The Box,” set to John Denver’s sobering anti-war
text.
Goddard offers three more
intimate dances to round out the concert. “One Who Was Working,” a suite
of three solos set to piano transcriptions of DeFalla guitar pieces, draws
inspiration from the paintings of Pablo Picasso and the writings of Gertrude
Stein. Finally, Goddard sounds a lighter note with the premier of “Your
Lovin’ Mind,” a playful duet nostalgically pairing youth and age, and “Maud,”
a solo caricature portrait of the 19th century handkerchief-wafting, fainting
female. “Maud” was originally choreographed in 1988 for Goddard’s first
dance concert at Wells College.
Lighting design for “Dances
Then and Now, Again” is by Wells technical director Joe DeForest, with
costume designs by Roberta Kolpakas.
Student members of the Wells
College Dance Ensemble are: Ryan Addario ’10, Brittany Bouchard ’11, Megan
Chamberlain ’08, Michelle Chase ’11, Sara Chiochetti ’11, Mary Gooding
’10, Janin Hendry ’08, Eden Kostick ’10, Catherine Marshall ’11, Iivy Murphy
’09, Tiffany Orellana ’09, Julia Swisher ’09, and Michaela Wilson ’11.
For more information about
“Dances Then and Now, Again,” please contact Professor Goddard at 315/364-3213.
April, 2008
Joseph
Heller’s "Catch-22" Comes to Wells College
Aquila Theatre Company
to present dynamic, timely play about war
The
Wells College Arts & Lecture Series is pleased to welcome the award-winning
Aquila Theatre Company to campus on Friday, April 18 for a stage production
of Joseph Heller’s important play, “Catch-22.” The performance will
begin at 7:30 p.m. in Phipps Auditorium, Macmillan Hall. Prices are $6
for students, senior citizens and the Wells College community; $10 for
the general public; free for Wells students with ID. Tickets are now on
sale; call the box office (315/364-3456) to reserve seats. Any tickets
remaining will also be available at the door the night of the performance.
The Aquila Theatre Company’s
dynamic and humorous new production of Joseph Heller’s own stage adaptation
of his classic novel “Catch-22” will explore the important and timely questions
surrounding the nature of war and its impact on American society.
Joseph Heller himself was
a bomber pilot during World War II; he created his novel and his play in
response to his own experience. “Catch-22” is set on an island off the
coast of Italy, where World War II bombardier Yossarian is caught in a
world of bureaucratic absurdity and irrational madness. Determined to keep
the squadron active and on the front line, Yossarian’s superiors abuse
their authority by increasing the number of required flying missions, making
it impossible for anyone to complete these missions and be discharged from
duty. Yossarian’s efforts to plead insanity fail, as his superiors realize
that active avoidance displays a healthy mental state. Yossarian avoids
the missions by creating ridiculous excuses, but in doing so prolongs his
duty as the missions continue to accrue. A maze of inter-related “Catch-22’s”
develops as the play unfolds.
“Catch-22” is a great American
classic, and the term itself has become embedded in our everyday vocabulary.
This will be the first-ever professional production of “Catch-22” to tour
nationally.
This tour engagement of Aquila
Theatre Company is funded through Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation’s Mid Atlantic
Tours program in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts Regional
Touring Program.
Each year, the Wells College
Arts & Lecture Series brings professional artists to campus to perform,
to speak on relevant issues, and to represent the disciplines of theatre,
music, and dance. Groups and individuals are selected annually by a committee
composed of Wells faculty, staff and students.
For more information about
Aquila Theatre Company’s performance of “Catch-22” and the Wells Arts &
Lecture Series, please contact Rebecca Cooper, coordinator of the Arts
& Lecture Series Committee, at 315/364-3330 or visit the College’s
Web site: www.wells.edu. Additional information on Aquila may be found
at www.baylinartists.com/aquila.htm.
April, 2008
Wells
College Prepares for Basketball with New Portable Floor
View
slideshow on the installation of the new portable basketball floor (Auburn
Citizen).
As Wells College prepares
to launch its inaugural basketball season this fall, it has invested in
a portable gym floor for use by the entire campus community, especially
the newly formed men’s and women’s basketball teams. The new floor is expected
to arrive on campus in mid-April.
“This gym floor shows the
commitment that our administration is making to support our athletic programs,”
said Head Men’s Basketball Coach Joe Wojtylko. “The new floor will allow
us to make maximum use of our facilities and will enhance our play at the
NCAA Division III level. We are very excited about it.”
Wells has contracted with
Praters Incorporated of Chattanooga, Tenn. Prater has recently constructed
gym floors for the University of Florida, the NBA 2008 All-Star game, the
2004 Olympic Games, and the Atlanta Hawks, as well as numerous other college
and professional teams.
Once on campus, the floor
will be installed in the Farenthold facility attached to the Schwartz Athletic
Center, which will serve as the home venue for the Wells basketball teams
starting next season.
“Bringing in a portable floor
for our students is a wonderful investment in the future of athletics at
Wells,” said Director of Athletics Jamey Ventura. “Not only will our student
athletes be able to practice and compete on our own campus, the floor will
be available to all Wells students and the entire community to participate
in extra-curricular activities.”
Along with the floor, there
are plans in place to add over the summer a new scoreboard, bleachers,
and scorers table to the Schwartz Athletic Center. These improvements will
complete the renovations necessary to launch Wells’ inaugural basketball
season in fall 2008.
For more information about
the new portable gym floor and athletics at Wells College, please call
Director of Athletics Jamey Venture at 315/364-3409.
March, 2008
Art
Exhibit Opens at Wells College
Etchings, engravings
by Giovanni Piranesi on display
The
Wells College Art Department is pleased to announce its March exhibition.
A selection of engravings and etchings from the Wells College art collection
will be on display in the String Room Gallery, Main Building, from March
12 through April 4. The exhibit is free and the public is cordially invited
to view the show. There will be no opening reception, but a talk on Piranesi
is being planned for later in the month; check www.wells.edu soon for more
information.
This special exhibition,
pulled from Wells’ own collection, will feature 22 framed engravings and
etchings by Italian neoclassical engraver Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778).
Piranesi is famous for his etchings of Rome and of fictitious and imaginary
“prisons” (Carceri d'Invenzione).
Piranesi’s work is on permanent
display in some of the world’s finest art museums, including the Louvre,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the National
Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Hermitage, the National Museum
of Warsaw, and many more. The portfolio of prints in Wells’ possession
came to campus in the mid-20th century and was once used in classroom art
instruction.
Wells alumna Pleasant Thiele
Rowland, class of 1962, salvaged the prints when they were discovered tucked
away on campus in 1995. Recognizing their decorative and historical value,
she underwrote the cost of having the prints archivally matted and framed.
The String Room Gallery is
located in Main Building. Hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Saturday
and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. For more information about the show,
please contact gallery director William Roberts at 315/364-3237. Additional
information about Piranesi may be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Battista_Piranesi.
March, 2008
Wells
College Presents Seventh Annual Activism Symposium
“The Anatomy of Change”
is the theme of this year’s student-run event
Wells
College continues its tradition of academic excellence and student leadership
with the seventh annual Activism Symposium on Friday, March 28. Under the
direction of Associate Professor of Sociology Laura McClusky, students
have organized the campus-wide event, entitled “The Anatomy of Change,”
which captures the global theme of “the body.” The symposium is free for
all; a deli lunch with vegetarian options will be available during the
luncheon talk. Interested parties are requested to pre-register online
at http://athena.wells.edu:6080/special/symposium/.
The day will begin with a
keynote address by Andrea Ritchie, a New York City activist representing
INCITE! (www.incite-national.org). INCITE! is a national organization of
feminists of color that is mobilizing to end all forms of violence against
people of color, especially women. Ritchie’s lecture is “Insight into Women
of Color and the Prison Industrial Complex: INCITE! on State Violence Against
Bodies on the Margins,” and will take place at 9:00 a.m. in the Art Exhibit
Room, Macmillan Hall.
The day continues with more
than 20 workshops, lectures, demonstrations, and break-out sessions; individuals
may attend one or all. Following Ritchie’s talk, participants may choose
from two morning sessions (starting at 10:30 and 11:30 a.m.) and two afternoon
sessions (at 2:30 and 3:30, with a brief wrap-up at 4:30 p.m.). The sessions
are offered by Wells students, faculty and staff, and outside presenters,
and address a wide range of activist-related topics. Some sessions this
year will focus on international reproduction rights, sex trafficking,
energy and renewable power, sexual assault, homelessness in Swaziland,
’zines, how to be an activist in 10 minutes, transgendered rights, and
the School of the Americas.
Members of the Beehive Collective
(www.beehivecollective.org) of Maine will give this year’s lunchtime talk.
The artist/activist group creates collaborative, anti-copyright images
that can be used as tools to educate the public about complex geopolitical
issues. They are especially interested in Latin American – U.S. relations
with a particular focus on trade relations. The presentation, which takes
place at 12:30 p.m. in Cleveland Hall auditorium, is entitled “Dismantling
Monoculture: Tales of Ants and Economics in the Americas.”
Started by the Collegiate
Association (student government) in 2002, the purpose of the student-centered
symposium is to promote a bridge between activists and scholars, and to
celebrate the connections that already exist. 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 experiential learning
process.
This year’s Activism Symposium
theme “the body” was specifically chosen as part of Wells’ year-long celebration
of the sciences. The College dedicated its new 45,000 square foot science
building, Ann Wilder Stratton ’46 Hall, last fall.
For more information about
the Activism Symposium, please call Professor McClusky at 315/364-3252
or email symposium@wells.edu and
visit the symposium’s official Web site at aurora.wells.edu/~symposium.
March, 2008
Lecture
on Darwin and Evolution Held at Wells
Dr. Kenneth Miller
of Brown University is preeminent biologist
The
Wells College Dean’s Council has invited Dr. Kenneth R. Miller to deliver
this year’s Beckman Lecture. During his two-day residency, Miller, a renowned
spokesperson on the importance of teaching evolution in the public schools,
will speak on “God, Darwin, and Design: Thoughts About America’s Continuing
Problem with Evolution” on Friday, February 29. The lecture will begin
at 4:45 pm in Stratton Hall 209, and is free and open to the public.
Kenneth R. Miller, a professor
of biology at Brown University, is a preeminent evolutionary scientist
and the co-author of the most widely used high school biology textbook
in America. He is also the author of the acclaimed Finding Darwin’s
God: A Scientist’s Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution,
now in its second printing.
He was the lead witness in
the 2005 Dover trial in Pennsylvania (sometimes called “Scopes II”), a
case that challenged the legitimacy of public schools teaching “intelligent
design” as an alternative to evolution to explain the origin of life.
During his two-day residency
on the Wells campus, Dr. Miller will meet with faculty and students, and
present the weekly science colloquium talk. That presentation, “Time to
Abandon Darwin? Meeting the Challenge from Intelligent Design,” will take
place in Stratton Hall 209 on Friday, February 29 at 12:30 pm and is free
and open to all.
The Dean’s Council selected
Dr. Miller to be part of the College’s year-long celebration of the sciences.
Wells opened its new 45,000 square foot science building, Ann Wilder Stratton
’46 Hall, last August.
“I could not be more excited
that Kenneth Miller is coming to Wells in this year of celebrating the
connections between science and all the liberal arts,” said Professor of
Biology Candace Collmer, chair of the sciences division and member of the
Dean’s Council. “Not only is Ken Miller an excellent biologist, he has
become known as a respected and reasoned speaker who addresses issues surrounding
the teaching of ‘intelligent design.’ He himself is a religious person,
and in Finding Darwin’s God, he contends that ‘properly understood,
evolution adds depth and meaning not only to a strictly scientific view
of the world, but also to a spiritual one.’ I urge anyone interested in
these topics to come to his talk(s) to hear a fair, articulate, accessible,
and thought-provoking presentation.”
Dr. Miller received his Ph.D.
in biology from the University of Colorado, and has taught at Brown University
since 1980; he has also taught at Harvard University. Dr. Miller holds
membership in a range of professional associations such as the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, Special Instrumentation Study
Section of the National Institutes of Health, and Sigma Xi. He is an editor
of three scientific journals—The Journal of Cell Biology, The Journal
of Cell Science, and Advances in Cell Biology—and was the scientific
advisor to the WGBH/NOVA television series on evolution (1999-2001).
The Beckman Lecture Fund
was established in 1952 by three Wells alumnae. The Beckman sisters
endowed the fund “with sincere appreciation of the enduring character of
a Wells education.” They desired that Beckman lecturers “be distinguished
for creative work and the ability to teach. The lecturer should be an original
thinker, an artist in his or her field who can communicate easily and with
enthusiasm.”
For more information about
the Beckman Lecture and Dr. Miller’s residency at Wells, please contact
Kelly Tehan, Director of Publications & Media Relations, at 315-364-3416;
to learn more about Wells, visit the College’s Web site at www.wells.edu.
Additional information about Dr. Miller may be found at www.millerandlevine.com/km/.
February, 2008
Wells
College Receives President’s Honor Roll Award for Service
School Honored for
Distinguished Community Service
The
Corporation for National and Community Service has named Wells College
to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll for exemplary
service learning programs.
Launched in 2006, the Community
Service Honor Roll is the highest federal recognition a school can achieve
for its commitment to service learning and civic engagement. Honorees for
the award were chosen based on a series of selection factors including
scope and innovativeness of service projects, percentage of student participation
in service activities, incentives for service, and the extent to which
the school offers academic service-learning courses.
Wells was among the 12% of
colleges and universities honored in this way. In total, 528 schools were
recognized. A full list is available at www.nationalservice.gov/honorroll.
“I am delighted that Wells
College has been nationally recognized for our commitment to community
service,” said Wells President Lisa Marsh Ryerson. “Wells has long been
a leader in instilling the principles of community service in students
as we provide opportunities for their active involvement, both domestically
and abroad.”
The Corporation for National
and Community Service (CNCS) is a federal agency that improves lives, strengthens
communities, and fosters civic engagement through service and volunteering.
CNCS administers Senior Corps, AmeriCorps, and Learn and Serve America,
a program that supports service learning in schools, institutions of higher
education, and community-based organizations.
“College students are tackling
the toughest problems in America, demonstrating their compassion, commitment,
and creativity by serving as mentors, tutors, health workers, and even
engineers,” said David Eisner, chief executive office of CNCS. “They represent
a renewed spirit of civic engagement fostered by outstanding leadership
on caring campuses.”
In congratulating the winners,
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings said, “Americans rely on
our higher education system to prepare students for citizenship and the
workforce. We look to institutions like these to provide leadership in
partnering with local schools to shape the civic, democratic and economic
future of our country.”
The Honor Roll is jointly
sponsored by the Corporation for National and Community Service, through
its Learn and Serve America program, and the Department of Education, the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, USA Freedom Corps, and the
President’s Council on Service and Civic Participation.
For more information about
Wells’ recognition by the Corporation for National and Community Service,
please contact Kelly Tehan, director of publications and media relations,
at 315/364-3260; to learn more about Wells, visit the College’s Web site:
www.wells.edu. Additional information on CNCS may be found at www.nationalservice.gov.
February, 2008
Wells
College Hosts Reading
Poet Karen Anderson
to read from her new book Punish Honey
The Wells College Visiting
Writer Series is pleased to announce that poet Karen Anderson will read
from her work on Thursday, March 6 at 7:30 pm in the Art Exhibit Room,
Macmillan Hall. The event is free and will be followed by a reception with
an opportunity to meet the writer; light refreshments will be served.
Karen Anderson graduated
from the University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop and is completing her Ph.D.
in English at Cornell University. Her work has been published in Verse,
The Indiana Review, The Colorado Review, The New Republic, and other
journals. Her first book, Punish Honey, is forthcoming from Carolina
Wren Press. Ms. Anderson currently teaches at Cornell and Wells College.
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 about
this and other readings at Wells, please contact Professor Cynthia Garrett
at 315/364-3250.
February, 2008
Acclaimed
Paul Taylor Dance Company Comes to
Wells
College
Internationally renowned
troupe offers exceptional modern dance
The
Wells College Arts & Lecture Series is pleased to welcome the award-winning
Paul Taylor Dance Company of Manhattan to campus on Saturday, February
16. The internationally recognized dance troupe will perform in Phipps
Auditorium, Macmillan Hall, at 7:30 p.m. The show is expected to sell out.
Prices are $6 for students, senior citizens and the Wells College community;
$10 for the general public; free for Wells students with ID. Tickets are
now on sale; call the box office (315/364-3456) to reserve seats. Any tickets
remaining will also be available at the door the night of the performance.
Now in its 53rd year, the
Paul Taylor Dance Company is one of the world’s most exquisite modern dance
ensembles. Founder Paul Taylor first presented his choreography in Manhattan
in May 1954. That modest performance marked the beginning of a half-century
of unrivaled creativity. In the decades since, Mr. Taylor has become
a cultural icon and one of history's most celebrated artists.
His two dance companies (Taylor
2 was created in 1993) have traveled the globe many times over, bringing
his ever-changing repertoire to theaters and venues of every size and description
in cultural capitals, on college campuses and in rural communities. His
choreography, once considered experimental, avant-garde and even “painful”
to sit through, has become the gold standard of modern dance.
Taylor 2 has been in the
Finger Lakes region this January, offering master classes at Wells College,
Cornell University, Ithaca College and a number of area schools and dance
venues. Over the next two weeks they are presenting ten classes at Wells
featuring ballet and modern dance technique, Taylor repertory, and a lighting
design class, all of which are open to the entire community.
“We are so fortunate to have
these talented young artists in residence in our area, particularly as
we kick off the new semester,” said Wells Professor of Dance Jeanne Goddard.
“Their energy, enthusiasm, discipline, and passion are an inspiration for
both students and faculty. The extended exposure to the Taylor repertory
and style are of great value to our educational program, and provide a
shared experience with other area institutions and the wider community.
Furthermore, their teaching will pave the way for a full performance by
the Paul Taylor Dance Company, the flagship company and one of the most
beloved dance troupes in the United States today.”
The Paul Taylor Dance Company
will perform three dances at Wells on February 16 – “Cloven Kingdom,” “Equinox,”
and “Promethean Fire.”
Paul Taylor and his company
are the subject of the Oscar-nominated film Dancemaker, hailed by Time
magazine as being “perhaps the best dance documentary ever.”
MetLife Foundation is the
official tour sponsor of the Paul Taylor Dance Company. Additional support
is provided by the National Foundation for the Arts, the New York State
Council on the Arts, and the board of directors and donors of the Paul
Taylor Dance Foundation, Inc.
Each year, the Wells College
Arts & Lecture Series brings professional artists to campus to perform,
to speak on relevant issues, and to represent the disciplines of theatre,
music, and dance. Groups and individuals are selected annually by a committee
composed of Wells faculty, staff and students.
For more information about
Paul Taylor Dance Company’s performance and the Wells Arts & Lecture
Series, please contact Rebecca Cooper, coordinator of the Arts & Lecture
Series Committee, at 315/364-3330. More information on Paul Taylor Dance
Company may be found at www.ptdc.org.
January, 2008
Seventh
Annual Gospel Workshop Weekend At Wells College
Community members
invited to join in uplifting workshop, concert
The
seventh annual Wells College Gospel Workshop and Concert Weekend will be
held February 15 and 16, 2008. The workshop is a two-day event in which
Wells College’s gospel choir Appointed and singers from the surrounding
communities come together to learn about and engage in singing this inspiring
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 the Department of Students Life and Appointed, led this
year by Emma Henry ’08 of Springfield, Mass. Professional gospel virtuosos
L. Kirk Hatcher of Miami, Fla. and Ed “Chief” Menifee, Jr. of Atlanta,
Ga. have been invited once again to serve as choir director and music director,
respectively. Gospel choirs from Chatham University and Hamilton and Muhlenberg
Colleges have been invited to attend as well.
All rehearsals and the concert
will be held in Barler Recital Hall on the Wells campus. The weekend schedule
is as follows:
Friday, February 15
Rehearsal/workshop 7:00-9:00
p.m |
Saturday, February 16
Rehearsal/workshop 9:00
a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Warm-up 4:00 p.m.
Concert 5:00 p.m. |
Advance registration is recommended;
participants must attend both rehearsals. Those needing more information
or who are interested in participating in the workshop may contact Rebecca
Cooper at 315/364-3330 by February 8 if they’d like their name included
in the program.
January, 2008
Annual
Student Art Show Opens at Wells College
Work by more than
50 students to be featured
An
eclectic mix of art will be on display in Wells College’s String Room Gallery
from February 6 – March 7, 2008. Artwork produced by students enrolled
in studio art classes during the Fall 2007 semester will be shown. The
annual student art exhibition is free and the public is cordially invited
to view the show. An opening reception with refreshments on Wednesday,
February 6 from 7:00-9:00 pm offers an opportunity to meet the student
artists and view and discuss their work.
More than 50 students are
exhibiting their work this winter. Media represented include painting,
ceramics, photography, drawing, two- and three-dimensional design, and
more.
Professor of Art William
Roberts and Associate Professor Theodore Lossowski guided and instructed
the students during the fall semester. They oversaw the students’ work
in the studios and coordinated the installation of the show.
The String Room Gallery is
located in Main Building. Hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Saturday
and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. For more information about the show
and art classes at Wells, please contact William Roberts at 315/364-3237.
January, 2008
Wells
College Introduces Women’s and Men’s Basketball
New teams expected
to attract additional student-athletes
Wells
College announces plans to add women’s and men’s basketball teams beginning
in the 2008-09 academic year. The men’s basketball program, led by head
coach Joe Wojtylko, will begin competing at the intercollegiate level in
October 2008. The women’s program will be offered at the club level during
the first year, and will elevate to the intercollegiate level in the 2009-2010
season.
“I am pleased by this latest
addition to our athletics program,” says Director of Athletics for Recruitment
and Retention Jamey Ventura. “Adding basketball to our athletics program
provides more opportunities for our student-athletes and introduces an
exciting spectator sport for our entire community to enjoy during the cold
winter months.”
Wells College is a National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III member and joined the
North Eastern Athletic Conference (NEAC) in Fall 2007. The College currently
offers intercollegiate teams for women in field hockey, lacrosse, soccer,
softball, swimming, and tennis. In fall 2005, as Wells transitioned to
coeducation, the College introduced men’s soccer and swimming, and a cross
country team for both men and women. Men’s lacrosse will debut at the intercollegiate
level this spring.
“This is a great time for
athletics at Wells College,” said Ventura. “We have a dedicated coaching
staff that is working hard to recruit the best student-athletes to Wells.
At the Division III level, student-athletes are choosing a college that
can provide them with an excellent education; when we add in the opportunity
to continue playing varsity athletics, we enhance their overall college
experience. The bond these student-athletes will form at Wells College
with their teammates, coaches, professors, and peers create a tremendous
learning experience and memories that will last a lifetime.”
The College continues to
develop plans for additional sport sponsorship that are inclusive of both
men and women, and meet the needs of college students today.
To advance its athletics
programs, Wells offers a variety of indoor and outdoor athletic facilities.
The Schwartz Athletic Center houses a swimming pool, gymnasium, and two
tennis courts; a state-of-the-art fitness center opened in fall 2006. Outdoor
facilities include four newly rebuilt tennis courts, softball field, boathouse,
a 9-hole golf course, and game fields for field hockey, soccer, and lacrosse.
New cross country running trails have been designed and will be developed
this year.
Student-athletes interested
in playing basketball for Wells should contact Coach Joe Wojtylko at 315.364.3479
or email jwojtylko@wells.edu.
January, 2008
Wells
College Launches New Study Abroad Program
Gender Studies and
Development now offered in Mumbai, India
In
keeping with its promise to connect students to the world around them,
Wells College has developed a new study abroad program in Mumbai, India.
Designed to help students appreciate the differing impacts development
can have on women’s and men’s lives, the new Gender Studies and Development
Program welcomes its first students this spring.
“This is an excellent example
of a study abroad program which combines classroom learning with cultural
immersion,” said John Wells, director of off campus study. “Students combine
courses which are specifically designed for them with a service learning
experience at a social service organization in Mumbai.”
According to Mr. Wells, Wells
College’s partner institution in India, the Tata Institute of Social Science
(TISS), is the ideal host for the new program. “Alongside faculty who conduct
research on issues related to women’s health, the environment, and child
poverty, students in the Gender Studies and Development Program will be
able to combine classroom learning with their own experience volunteering
in Mumbai,” he says.
Program participants will
live on-campus with five hundred TISS students from across India, providing
an invaluable experience for informal learning about one another’s cultures
and countries.
Six Americans are participating
in the inaugural semester, said Mr. Wells. “I’m pleased that this initial
group represents students from Wells College, St. Mary’s College (Indiana),
Notre Dame University, and the University of Mary Washington. The group
is solid, and we expect interest in the program to grow.”
Two of the Wells students
going to India, Nicole Fambo ’09, a public affairs major from Schenectady,
NY, and women’s studies major Krystal Cleary ’09 of Eastlake, Ohio, have
received the prestigious Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship to
participate in the new Mumbai program. The Gilman Scholarship is sponsored
by the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
and is administered by the Institute of International Education. Its mission
is to diversify the kinds of students who study abroad and the countries
and regions where they go.
For more information about
Wells’ study abroad programs, please contact Director of Publications &
Media Relations Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260 or by email at ktehan@wells.edu.
January, 2008
Dance
in January
 |
January 7 – 23,
2008
Wells College Dance
Studio
Schwartz Athletic
Center
$12 per class; $55
per week / 5 classes |
All classes are taught
by Emma Batman, who holds a degree from Goucher College with a concentration
in dance and advanced coursework in ballet and modern technique and composition.
Emma has worked with such guest artists as Nilas Martins, Michael Vernon,
Heather McArdle, and Roger Jeffrey.
Creative Movement(ages
4-7)
MWF 3:15 – 4:00 pm
Modern & Ballet
(ages 8-12)
MWF 4:00 – 5:00 pm
Adult Stretch & Tone
T, Th 4:30 – 5:30 pm
$10 per class
Modern, intermediate/advanced
MWF 5:30 – 7:00 pm
Ballet, intermediate/advances
T, Th 5:30 – 7:00 pm
The last week of classes
will be offered in conjunction with a two-week residency by Taylor 2 of
the internationally acclaimed Paul Taylor Dance Company. Go to www.ptdc.org
to learn more about Taylor 2. The Paul Taylor Dance Company will also perform
at Wells College on Saturday, February 16; click on www.wells.edu
and then call the box office (315-364-3456) to reserve tickets.
To register or for more information,
please contact Emma Batman at 315-406-8557 or email ebatman@goucher.edu.
Sponsored by Peachtown Elementary
School
January, 2008
Wells
College Board Elects New Trustees
Local businessman
Daniel Fessenden among them
The
Wells College Board of Trustees recently elected a new board member and
three honorary trustees. Among them is local business leader Daniel J.
Fessenden.
Dan Fessenden of Union Springs
will serve as a College trustee for a three-year term. He is the executive
director of the Fred L. Emerson Foundation in Auburn. From 2004 to 2006,
Fessenden was the founding executive director of the Cornell Agriculture
and Food Technology Park in Geneva, N.Y., a nonprofit local development
corporation engaged in cutting-edge research in food, agricultural and
bio-based technologies. Before that he managed government and community
relations for the Carrier Corporation in Syracuse, and in 1993, was elected
to the New York State Assembly. He went on to serve four terms representing
the 126th District.
Fessenden received his undergraduate
degree from Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, where he
majored in applied economics and business management; he was honored in
1995 with that school’s Young Alumni Achievement Award. He also pursued
graduate studies at the State University of New York’s College of Environmental
Science & Forestry in Syracuse. He has served on the staff of the New
York state legislature and as a lobbyist with the New York Farm Bureau.
“It is indeed an exciting
time for Wells College,” said Fessenden. “As a resident of the Aurora area,
I want to help strengthen the role and relevance of the College to our
region’s economy. I also look forward to helping Wells build upon its strong
tradition of preparing the next generation of leaders to impact our global
economy.”
The College has also named
three honorary trustees: Dr. William Clark of Corte Madera, Calif., and
Wyoming residents Susan Wray Sullivan, Wells class of 1951, and her husband
Pike Sullivan Jr.
For more information about
these appointments, please contact Director of Publications & Media
Relations Kelly Tehan at 315/364-3260 or by email at ktehan@wells.edu.
December, 2007
Wintersession
Dates
Wells College has
adjusted hours for winter break 2007 – 2008:
Last
day of classes: Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Final
exams end: Thursday, December 13, 2007
College
closed for winter break:
4:30 pm, Friday,
December 21, 2007 – 8:30 am, Wednesday, January 2, 2008
College
reopens: Wednesday, January 2, 2008
Monday
– Friday 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Spring
classes begin: Monday, January 28, 2008
If you have an emergency
or need assistance while the College is closed December 22 – January 1,
please contact the Office of Campus Security at 315.364.3229.
Happy
Holidays!
December, 2007
Rockin’
A Cappella Group Gives Concert at Wells
Grammy-nominated
ensemble The Bobs fills room with high energy
The
Wells College Arts & Lecture Series Committee is pleased to welcome
a cappella group The Bobs to campus on Friday evening, November 30. Billed
as “an unforgettable evening of classics that rock and classic rock,” the
performance will be held in Phipps Auditorium, Macmillan Hall, at 7:30
p.m. Prices are $6 for students, senior citizens and the Wells College
community, and $10 for the general public; free for Wells students with
ID. Tickets are available at the door the night of the performance or from
the box office the week preceding the show; call 315/364-3456 to reserve
seats.
Grammy-nominated vocal pioneers
The Bobs are a four-voice a cappella group that’s been performing for 25
years. Known for their incredible live show, witty, tuneful original material,
and outrageous covers of classic songs, their repertoire runs the gamut
from The Doors, Duke Ellington and Cream to flamenco and the Talking Heads.
In 2001, the band’s concert
special, “The Bobs Sing! ( And Other Love Songs),” was filmed for PBS and
later released on DVD. That DVD won the Chicago International Film Festival’s
film and video competition in the “Interactive Entertainment” category.
Their recording of The Beatles’ Helter Skelter received a Grammy
nomination in 1984 for Best Vocal Arrangement, and two of The Bobs’ CDs
have been added to the permanent collection of the media archives in the
Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of American History.
Warming
up for The Bobs will be Wells’ own Henry’s VIIIs and Whirligigs student
singing groups.
Each year, the Wells College
Arts & Lecture Series brings professional acts and individuals to campus
to speak on relevant issues and represent the arts: drama, music, and dance.
The acts are selected annually by a committee composed of Wells faculty,
staff and students.
For more information about
The Bobs’ concert and the Wells Arts & Lecture Series, please contact
Rebecca Cooper, coordinator of the Arts & Lecture Series Committee,
at 315/364-3330 or visit the College’s Web site: www.wells.edu. More information
on The Bobs may be found at www.bobs.com.
November, 2007
48th
Annual Holiday Choir Concert at Wells College
Festive tradition
replete with evergreens and candlelight
All
are welcome to enjoy a long-standing holiday tradition at Wells College.
On Sunday, December 2, the Wells Concert Choir will present the 48th annual
holiday performance at 7:30 pm in Barler Recital Hall on the Aurora campus.
Professor of Music Crawford R. Thoburn will conduct the program, which
features seasonal music for the men’s, women’s, and combined choral ensembles.
The public is warmly invited to enjoy this special treat. Donations of
canned and boxed foods for a local food pantry will be gratefully accepted
as the price of admission.
Pine trees and candlelight
will create a festive atmosphere for this holiday favorite. This year’s
program is a choral sampler, with works ranging from Renaissance motets
to American folk-songs, and from the works of Baroque masters to African-American
spirituals. Holiday favorites will include Lo, How a Rose, Carol of
the Bells, O Come, O Come Emmanuel, and Silent Night. The students
will also sing several published choral compositions written by Professor
Thoburn, including There is No Rose of Such Virtue, ’Neath Starlit Skies,
and
Venite Adoremus. Wells College Lecturer in Music Russell Posegate will
serve as piano accompanist for the program.
“It’s a campus tradition
— the candlelight, evergreens, carols and holiday music — but this year
something new is added,” said Professor Thoburn. “This is the first year
in the College’s history that the holiday concert will include a mixed-voice
Concert Choir, with tenors and basses added to the sopranos and altos.”
In the last two years, some
of Professor Thoburn’s students formed a small mixed-voice chamber music
group called Sine Nomine that helped make the vocal transition to coeducation.
The group has already established a reputation for excellence.
Under Professor Thoburn’s
direction, Wells College choral ensembles have appeared by invitation at
national professional conventions, toured throughout the northeastern United
States and western Europe, and been heard on national network radio and
PBS.
For more informatio about
the concert and music offerings at Wells College, please contact Professor
Thoburn at 315/364-3347.
November, 2007
Wells
College Hosts Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar
Cornell University
professor Daniel Huttenlocher to give lecture, visit classes, conduct two-day
residency
Cornell
University's Neafsey Professor of Computing, Information Science and Business
Daniel Huttenlocher will be on the Wells College campus November 15 and
16 for a two-day residency as the 2007-08 Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar.
As part of his campus visit, Dr. Huttenlocher will give a public lecture
on Thursday, November 15 entitled "Computer Vision: From Autonomous Vehicles
to Video Surveillance to Image Search." The lecture will take place at
4:45 p.m. in Stratton Hall 209. The public is invited to attend the
free talk.
Professor Huttenlocher holds
a joint appointment in the computer science department and the Johnson
Graduate School of Management at Cornell. His research interests
are in computer vision, online social networks, electronic collaboration
tools, computational geometry, and financial trading systems.
"Professor Huttenlocher is
a particularly appropriate choice for Wells this year," said Assistant
Professor of Psychology Deborah Gagnon, president of the Wells chapter
of Phi Beta Kappa. "As a practitioner of computer and information science,
he is a natural fit with the events coinciding with the opening of our
new science building, the search for a tenure-track computer science faculty
member, and the recent addition of a new associate vice president for library
and information sciences."
The recipient of a National
Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award in 1990, Dr. Huttenlocher
was named the New York State Professor of the Year by CASE in 1993, and
honored as a Weiss Fellow by Cornell in 1996 for excellence in teaching.
He holds 24 U.S. patents and has published more than sixty technical papers.
In addition to academic positions, he has been chief technology officer
of Intelligent Markets, a provider of advanced trading systems on Wall
Street, and has spent more than ten years at Xerox PARC, where he directed
work that led to the ISO JBIG2 image-compression standard.
During his Wells residency,
Professor Huttenlocher will make several classroom appearances and meet
informally with faculty and students. He will also present the weekly science
colloquium lecture on Friday, November 16 in Stratton 209. Beginning at
12:30 pm, Huttenlocher will discuss "Computational Social Science: Large
Scale Studies of Wikis, Blogs, and Social Networking Sites."
Huttenlocher earned his B.S.
from the University of Michigan in 1980. He went on to receive both his
master's and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His
visit to the Wells campus coincides with the College's year-long celebration
of the sciences, heralding the opening of Wells' new science building,
Ann Wilder Stratton '46 Hall.
Daniel Huttenlocher'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 52nd year, the Visiting
Scholar Program has sent nearly 550 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.
Dr. Huttenlocher'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 Gagnon
at 315/364-3307 and visit the College's Web site at www.wells.edu. For
more information on the Phi Beta Kappa Society, go to www.pbk.org.
November, 2007
Fall
Choir Concert
Students and faculty
conductor present Schubert's "Mass in G Minor"
Wells
College Professor of Music Crawford R. Thoburn is pleased to announce this
fall’s choir concert. On Sunday, November 18, the program will include
Schubert’s “Mass in G Major” for the combined Concert Choir with vocal
soloists and string orchestra. The performance will take place at 3:00
p.m. in the Sommer Center. The public is invited to attend the free
concert.
Franz
Schubert’s beloved “Mass in G Major” (D.167) will be the featured work
presented by the Wells College Concert Choir and soloists, accompanied
by a chamber orchestra. Professor Thoburn will conduct the performance,
in which the College’s women’s and men’s choral ensembles will also sing
works from their respective repertoires.
“The
‘Mass in G Major’ is Schubert’s best-known choral-orchestral composition
and an astonishingly fine work for the eighteen year old composer who produced
it in just five days!” said Professor Thoburn. “The choral parts present
a lyrical, expressive setting of the traditional liturgical text in a style
somewhat reminiscent of Mozart and early Beethoven. The vocal solo writing
is woven into the choral movements, with the exception of the ‘Benedictus,’
which is set as a theme and variations for solo trio.”
The
vocal soloists in this performance will be soprano Mary Gooding ’10 of
Penfield, N.Y., tenor Justin Zehr ’11 from Syracuse, and basses Marshall
Anderson ’09 of State College, Pa. and Travis Niles ’09 of Nineveh, N.Y.,
all of whom are Wells students from the vocal studio of Professor Thoburn.
In
addition to the Schubert mass, the Concert Choir will sing arrangements
of African-American spirituals and shorter works by William Byrd and Johann
Sebastian Bach. The women’s ensemble will perform works by Orlando
di Lasso, Ellen Keating, and Henry Purcell, and the men’s ensemble will
present pieces by William Byrd, Thomas Ravenscroft, and Marshall Bartholomew.
The women’s ensemble will be accompanied by pianist Russell Posegate, lecturer
in piano at Wells.
November, 2007
Special
Literary Event
Tribute in honor
of late Welsh poet, author Leslie Norris features readings, screenings
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to announce that on Wednesday,
November 14, there will be a special literary event celebrating the life
and work of the late beloved Welsh poet and short story writer Leslie Norris.
Beginning at 7:00 pm in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall, the tribute
will include readings from Mr. Norris’s poems and stories, and will feature
his recently released children’s book, published posthumously. The free
event is open to the public; light refreshments will be served.
Mr. Norris, who passed away
last year, had a close relationship with Wells. He read on the Aurora campus
several times, and Wells College Press’ first full-length book publication
was his poetry collection Holy Places (1998). Subsequently, the
Press reprinted his classic collection of poems for children, Norris’s
Ark, as well as pamphlets and broadsides of his work. His readings
are legendary; he was one of the all-time favorite writers to visit Wells.
This reading will feature
Norris’ latest book, Albert, Lucille, and the Two Williams, sequel
to the 2003 Christmas story, Albert and the Angels. One of the readers
will be editor, poet, and fiction-writer Peter Makuck, who co-edited An
Open World: Essays on Leslie Norris (1994).
Mr. Norris ranks among the
finest contemporary writers in English. A Fellow of the Royal Society of
Literature and of the Welsh Academy, and recipient of numerous awards for
poetry and fiction, he was named Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing
at Brigham Young University in 1983. He authored more than twenty books
of poetry and fiction; his Collected Stories and Collected Poems
appeared in 1996.
Crossing Borders,
a DVD of Mr. Norris reading and talking about his life and work, will be
shown repetitively in the Art Exhibit Room beginning at 4:30 pm on November
14 and continuing until the start of the event. Copies of his books will
be available for purchase at the reading.
For more information about
this and other readings at Wells, please contact Professor Bruce Bennett
at 315.364.3228 and visit the College’s Web site: www.wells.edu.
November, 2007
Wells
Tennis Team Wins Tournament Berth
Women’s tennis captures
first-ever NCAA championship bid
The
Wells College Express women’s tennis team traveled to Clarks Summit, Pa.
last weekend to compete in the North Eastern Athletic Conference (NEAC)
team and individual championships. In so doing, the Express earned the
NEAC’s automatic qualification to the National Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) tennis tournament, the first in the College’s athletic history.
The Express entered the NEAC
tournament as the #4 seed last and upset #1 seed Keuka College in the semifinals
of the team championship on Friday. In the championship round, the Express
took on #2 seed Penn State-Berks, who defeated #3 seed Keystone College
in the other semifinal round. Due to their provisional member status of
the NCAA, Penn State-Berks did not receive the qualifying bid. The first
round of the 27th annual Division III women’s tennis championships will
be held May 2-4, 2008.
The tennis team continued
their success on Saturday as eight of the nine flights qualified for the
individual championships. The team met their goal by placing in the
top three in every position, and two flights came away with NEAC championship
wins.
“This whole season has been
a full team effort as each individual player has contributed equally to
our team’s success,” said Express first year head coach Andrew Gross. “The
team reached its three season goals: finish with a 9-5 regular season
record, reach the NEAC championship final match, and have all our players
place in the top three at individual championships. The team is intrinsically
and extrinsically motivated and knows how to come through in the big matches
– I couldn’t be more pleased.”
The women finished the regular
season 10-6 overall and 4-2 in conference play. The team will participate
in practices and matches during the spring tennis season to prepare for
the May tournament.
Founded in 1868, Wells College
is a Division III member of NCAA and joined the North Eastern Athletic
Conference this fall. Wells offers the following intercollegiate teams
— Women: field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis and
cross country. Men: cross country, swimming, soccer, and lacrosse. Men’s
basketball is being introduced this year at the club level and will elevate
to varsity in 2008-09; women’s basketball will be sponsored at the varsity
level in 2009-10.
For more information about
the tennis team’s berth in the NCAA tournament or athletics at Wells, please
contact Kelly Tehan, director of publications and media relations, at 315.364.3260
and visit the College’s Web site: www.wells.edu/athletics.
October, 2007
Beloved
Poet, Children’s Writer Reads at Wells College
X.J. Kennedy to recite
from two new books of poetry
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to announce that renowned
anthologist, poet, and children’s writer X.J. Kennedy is returning to the
Aurora campus for a reading. The event will take place at 7:30 pm on Thursday,
November 8 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. The free reading will
be followed by a reception with an opportunity to meet the writer; light
refreshments will be served.
For more than half a century,
readers and listeners have taken special pleasure in the poetry of X.J.
Kennedy. While at Wells, Kennedy will read from two of his latest books
of poetry: Peeping Tom’s Cabin and In a Prominent Bar in Secaucus.
The latter is an anthology of his best work — memorable songs, startling
lyrics, in-depth character studies, and poems that tell poignant stories.
A master of verbal music, Kennedy has long been praised for his wit and
humor; as this collection reveals, many of his poems also reach surprising
depths and heights.
Kennedy is also the author
of several other volumes and collections, including the prize-winning Nude
Descending a Staircase, Cross Ties, and The Lords of Misrule.
Kennedy has long occupied a unique place in American poetry; In a Prominent
Bar in Secaucus offers the first comprehensive collection to span his
entire career.
“X. J. Kennedy is an eminent
anthologist, author of children's books, essayist, and poet, who also happens
to be one of the most entertaining readers of poetry around,” said Bruce
Bennett, Wells professor of English and director of the Visiting Writer
Series. “Wells is lucky to have him back to celebrate the publication of
two new major books of his poetry.”
X. J. Kennedy has written
poetry, children’s verse, and fiction as well as textbooks on writing and
literature. Before becoming a full-time writer, he taught at the University
of Michigan, the University of North Carolina–Greensboro, Tufts University,
Wellesley College, the University of California–Irvine, and Leeds University.
He now lives in Lexington, Mass. with his wife and sometime coauthor, Dorothy
M. Kennedy.
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 about
X.J. Kennedy’s reading at Wells, please contact Professor Bruce Bennett
at 315.364.3228
October, 2007
Wells
Students Participate in Wide-Reaching Study
Results of “The Aurora
Truck Study” report to be shared tonight with legislators, public officials
Wells
College continues to apply classroom learning to “real world” situations.
In response to a request by Aurora trustees to quantify the magnitude of
truck traffic in the village, 23 Wells students participated in a study
that has made its way to the upper reaches of state government.
Under the direction of Wells’
Assistant Professor of Psychology Deborah Gagnon and at the request of
Aurora village trustee George Farenthold, nearly two dozen students in
May 2006 conducted a count of multi-axle trucks traveling through the village
of Aurora on State Route 90. |