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Arts & Life

Emmy Award winners surprise viewers

Anna Jones

Arts & Life Editor

Celebrities dazzled the American public once again at the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards on Sept. 22. The show was hosted by a dapper Neil Patrick Harris and provided a night filled with upsets and excitement for avid television watchers.

AMC’s “Breaking Bad” took home the award for Best Drama Series, defeating “Downton Abbey” from PBS, Showtime’s “Homeland,” Netflix’s “House of Cards,” “Game of Thrones,” and “Mad Men.” Not surprisingly, ABC’s popular show “Modern Family” claimed Best Comedy Series again, while HBO’s “Behind the Candelabra” snagged Best Miniseries or Movie.

As for actors, Claire Danes won Best Lead Actress in the drama category for her role in “Homeland,” beating out Kerry Washington from ABC’s “Scandal,” Elisabeth Moss from “Mad Men” on AMC, Robin Wright, Connie Britton, Michelle Dockery, and Vera Farmiga. Jeff Daniels from “The Newsroom” joined Danes as Best Lead Actor in a Drama Series.

On the comedy side, “Big Bang Theory’s” Jim Parsons defeated Jason Bateman from “Arrested Development,” Alec Baldwin from “30 Rock,” Louis C.K., Don Cheadle, and Matt LeBlanc. Julia Louis-Dreyfus from HBO’s “Veep” took home the female award in the same category. She stood out from a list of crowd favorites, such as Lena Dunham, Tina Fey, and Amy Poehler. “Behind the Candelabra” continued its streak with Michael Douglas winning Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Movie. Laura Linney from “The Big C: Hereafter” won Best Lead Actress for the same category, over the favored Elisabeth Moss from “Top of the Lake.” Unfortunately, Linney was not present to accept her award, since neither she nor anyone else expected her to take home the Emmy.

The Emmy’s also focused on the people behind the camera. “House of Cards” won Best Directing for a Drama Series, “Modern Family” was victorious for Best Directing for a Comedy Series, and “Behind the Candelabra” succeeded in Best Directing for a Miniseries or Movie.

During the show, Jane Lynch from Fox’s “Glee,” gave a tribute to the late Cory Monteith, her fellow “Glee” co-star. Jean Stapleton from “All in the Family,” Jonathan Winters, Gary David Goldberg, and “The Sopranos’” James Gandolfini were among the other celebrities honored in the annual tribute to deceased celebrities.

The show lasted three hours and made for countless magazine articles chronicling the winners and their outfits, and it was certainly an interesting year to view the Emmy’s.

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Arts & Life

ACE hosts throwback event

Anna Jones

Arts & Life Editor

The 90s is a decade that we know and love, and on Sept. 21, ACE put on an event to celebrate one of our favorite decades. Held in the student space in the Elaine Langone Center, guests decorated their own fanny packs with puffy paint, made their own chapstick, and watched 90s television shows. They also made friendship bracelets and played Pokémon. In addition to the crafts, students competed in a dance competition for Furbies and Tamagotchis. Students also ate 90s-themed candy, food, and drinks, which rounded out the throwback night. ACE’s next event is Christy’s A Cappella Concert, happening this weekend at Rooke Chapel. Be sure to buy your tickets and check out the University’s talented performers. 

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Arts & Life

Behind the Screens

By Anna Jones, Arts & Life Editor

You’ve all seen their names in your inbox, but do you really know what they do or who they are?  Check out these Q&As to learn more about the people who email you all the time!

Polly Doyle

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: Academic Assistant in the Mathematics Department.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: 11 years

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: [I’m] not sure how I feel and why so many people receive emails from me, but my department is quite large therefore [there is a] high number of emails. If I’m famous for representing the Mathematics Department, that is very cool. On the other hand, I apologize if there are too many emails from pdoyle and you are tired of seeing my address across your screen.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: Gardening, cooking, hiking, working out (Laurel rocks!), raising my kids (one more heading to college), Sunday Giant’s games with my husband, getting out of town now and then with my family, summer down at the shore, enjoying dinner with friends, concerts, and watching some really great TV/Netflix.

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: Lewisburg is truly one of the prettiest places to live. It’s a gorgeous, thriving town on the water, [with] wonderful art and culture. [It’s] a very caring and close community, but more important, it is the University and the students that brings the energy and life to this bucolic area. You can just feel it.

Melissa Weber

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: Associate Registrar.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: It will be 16 years in November.

Q: How did you get into your field of work?

A: I moved here from Pittsburgh, Pa. when my husband started a new job in a neighboring town. My background is in developmental psychology and I worked in childcare before coming here. My first job was as a temporary employee filling in while the previous assistant registrar was on maternity leave. I remember in the interview telling them the separation issues for infants and parents aren’t much different for 18-year-olds.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I don’t know about being famous, but I get a similar reaction from faculty too, where people only know me from my email. I’ve joked with some that ‘maweber’ is actually monitored by a bunch of people and it’s not really one person. I guess this is blowing my cover.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: I am a big sports fan. I‘m a season ticket holder to my alma mater’s (University of Pittsburgh) football team. I spend a lot of time in the fall traveling home for games. I love tailgating with friends and family. Being from Pittsburgh, Pa. I’m also a fan of the Steelers, Pirates, and Penguins. In addition to sports, I enjoy traveling. I’ve been told I’m an excellent vacation planner. I really enjoy researching potential vacation spots.

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: I enjoy the pace of our town, but also the fact that Bucknell helps bring so many great events to the area. I think we have the best of both worlds, a small town feel, with some big city amenities.

Judy Mickanis

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: Executive Director, Events Management.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: Working and communicating with the Bucknell community. There are so many great people on campus to interact with.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: Almost 29 years.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I’m not comfortable with the ‘famous’ part, but the campus alerts is a good, workable system to alert the Bucknell community of not only traffic and road challenges, but serious weather-related incidents as well. I’ve had nice e-mail conversations with students in clarifying a particular alert to help them. And I’ve met students because of the alerts connection that I may not have necessarily met.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: Being the best grandmother there is to five grandkids!

Emily Dietrich

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: I am the Program Director of the Externship Program at the Career Development Center. The Externship Program matches sophomores to one to two day job shadowing experiences over Winter Break.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: I enjoy the variety my job offers. Not only do I manage a program, I interact with students through career counseling appointments, and recruit alumni, parents and employers to host students.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: I began my career at Bucknell’s Career Development Center in 2002.

Q: How did you get into your field of work?

A: After working in a corporate human resources department in the consumer products/manufacturing industry, I recognized that I needed a position that spoke more to my values. My position at the Career Development Center allows me to use the skills and experience I learned from recruiting, interviewing and training employees, and to assist students as they explore their own interests and prepare for their first career opportunity.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I don’t know about famous, but I certainly recognize that we all receive a lot of emails.  As the Career Development Center’s point person for the sophomore class, I send out weekly emails to the Class of 2016 to help keep them informed about all the programs and services the CDC has to offer. The Class of 2016 also receives additional emails from me about the Externship Program.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: When I’m not in the office, I am enjoying time with my family. I love to discover new recipes, travel as time allows, and stay connected with friends near and far.

Denise Lewis

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: I am the Academic Assistant for the Department of English.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: There is never a dull moment, and there’s always something new to get involved in. It also helps to be surrounded by so many fun, and caring individuals. This department is the best!

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: I have worked at Bucknell for 12 years.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I really don’t think I am ‘famous.’ And who knows how many of those emails are actually read?

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: I work in my flower gardens, cook, bake, check out flea markets/antique shops, spend time with my family and friends, and take care of my foster Shar Pei, Passion. I also volunteer for a dog rescue transport group, the Rescue Road Warriors.

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: I have met a lot of great people here at Bucknell, many people whom I hope to remain friends with for years to come.

Jen Hnatuck

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: I am the Game Operations Assistant & Marketing Coordinator in the Athletics Department, so basically I am at most of the home athletic events to make sure everything goes well operationally and I also do my best to promote the sporting events.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: My favorite part of my job is seeing an event successfully come together. We have different promotions at athletic events and when everything falls into place and we get a great turnout, it’s very rewarding.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: This is my third year at Bucknell.

Q: How did you get into your field of work?

A: In college I decided I wanted to work in sports marketing at the collegiate level. I took the classes for it and completed internships during college. This was my first job out of school.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I’m sure I’m not ‘famous’ to most students. Annoyed would probably more accurately describe how they feel when they see another email from me in their inbox. I just hope that some of the students actually read my emails.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: I enjoy traveling and hope to explore that more. This past summer I went overseas for the first time to Italy and loved it. I now have a major travel bug!

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: I really like the close-knit, community feeling you get being here in Lewisburg. I am from a smaller town and went to a small liberal arts college, so I am used to the ‘everybody knows you’ vibe. It’s a comforting feeling.

Linda Godfrey

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: Religious Life Assistant in the Office of Chaplains. Specifically, I work in the Berelson Center for Campus Jewish Life.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: Getting to know some of the students, especially making challah with students, and meeting our wonderful guest speakers.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: 10 years

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: This isn’t what I expected fame to be. Honestly, I am happy to know that someone has seen my emails.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: Read, write poetry, walk, hike, and cook.

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: I think this is a really beautiful area and the pace of life suits me. Overall, people at Bucknell are kind and caring and truly dedicated to doing a great job.

Beth Bouchard

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: Director of New Student Orientation and Student Leadership Programs.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: The night before the new class arrives in August. There is so much preparation and planning that goes into the beginning of each school year and by the night before Arrival Day, the Orientation Assistants (OAs) and Orientation Leaders (OLs) are extremely excited to see the new students arrive. My weekly late-night OL meetings are also dear to my heart … This is where we review the past year and generate new ideas for the upcoming year. And, if you’ve never spent 10 p.m. to midnight with 14 students highly invested in Orientation, you’re missing something delightful.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: Just over three years.

Q: How did you get into your field of work?

A: A lot of Orientation professionals choose this field either because they had an amazing first-year experience or a miserable one. I was the latter … I returned to graduate school with the sole purpose of gaining a position in first-year programming because I believe that the transition into your first year of college is both extremely challenging and a crucial foundation for your college experience.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I’m not sure. I guess that depends on people’s reaction when they see my name in their inbox yet again.

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: The Rail Trail and Ricketts Glen are two of my favorite outdoor destinations. I also read quite a bit, play volleyball, and enjoy FaceTiming with my sister and nephew who live on the West Coast.

Rob Guissanie

Q: What is your job at the University?

A: My official job title is Senior Technology Support Specialist. I work with Tech Support in Library and IT. I spend most of my time answering questions, resolving issues, and communicating information to the campus. I do send a fair amount of emails.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job?

A: My favorite part of the job is getting to know people from all over campus. Technology touches every part of Bucknell, so there’s a lot of variety in the work that we do.

Q: How long have you worked at the University?

A: I have worked at Bucknell for 13 years this November.

Q: How does it feel to know that you’re famous on campus thanks to all of your emails?

A: I think ‘famous’ might be overstating things a bit. I will say I feel grateful that people acknowledge the emails I send. Anymore, it can be challenging to effectively communicate and rise above the level of ‘spam.’

Q: What do you like to do when you’re not working?

A: When I’m not working I spend a great deal of time as a volunteer coach for the cross-country and track teams here at Bucknell. While I occasionally run with the men’s team, I most often train with the women’s team. (I’m the guy with gray hair running with people half my age.) Beyond that, I’m actively involved with my church and my family’s activities.

Q: In your opinion, what is the best part about being in Lewisburg and the college community?

A: In my opinion, the best part about being in Lewisburg and the Bucknell community is the personal growth I’ve experienced during my time here. It’s a great place to raise a family. I tell my sons (Kyle, 16 and Derek, 13) that no matter where they end up living, Lewisburg is a place they will always be proud to call home.

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Arts & Life

“LEO” wows audience with gravity-defying show

Jen Lassen

Senior Writer

Director Daniel Briere’s LEO, The Anti-Gravity Show came to the Weis Center for Performing Arts’ main stage on Sept. 24.

Performed by William Bonnet of Avignon, France, the show captured the art of optical illusion through the interplay between video projection and live performance.

The show began with LEO, an ordinary man holding a suitcase, who soon discovers that he no longer has control over his gravity.

On one side of the main stage, Bonnet performed movements, such as handstands and other arm and leg movements, on a “mini-stage” that included a floor and three walls. On this mini-stage, Bonnet moved while mostly lying down.

On the other side of the main stage, a video projection screen displayed Bonnet’s movements. These movements looked right-side-up to the audience. In reality, the audience knew that Bonnet was lying down while moving and performing, yet his movements projected on the video screen appeared as if he were standing up and truly defying gravity.

When LEO discovered that he could defy gravity, he got creative. To portray a sense of LEO’s new, confusing, and exciting reality, Bonnet drew images with chalk on the walls of the mini-stage, including a pet cat, a chair, a table, and a window.

Different lighting effects, music, and moving animated images allowed LEO’s story to progress. Using a time-lapse effect, Bonnet’s movements appeared suspended on the projection screen for a portion of the show.

As LEO became increasingly aware of his situation, his emotions changed drastically. Bonnet’s facial expressions ranged from confusion, to terror, to insecurity, to wariness, and then to joy and pleasure.

Once LEO realized that he felt confined in the “room,” he used the suitcase to escape from his situation. Bonnet escaped through a hole on the side of one wall on the mini-stage, which was disguised by the suitcase. On the video projection screen, Bonnet appeared to drop vertically through a hole in the floor. In his live performance on the mini-stage, Bonnet appeared to crawl horizontally through this same hole.

LEO, The Anti-Gravity Show won the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award, a theater prize given annually at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Other awards include the Three Weeks Editors Award, the Scotsman Fringe First Award, and most recently the John Chataway Award for Innovation at the 2013 Adelaide Fringe Festival.

Briere has been directing, performing in, and creating new plays since 2003. He has been featured on television and film, and has directed over 20 plays including “Bashir Lazhar” and La Fin.

Tobias Wegner, the original performer for LEO, The Anti-Gravity Show, also came up with the concept for the show. Wegner won the European competition “Jeunes Talents Cirque Europe” with the project AIUAIO.

Also involved with LEO, The Anti-Gravity Show are Gregg Parks, creative producer; Flavia Hevia, set and lighting designer; Heiko Kalmbach, video designer; Ingo Panke, animation; and Heather MacCrimmon, costume designer.

LEO, The Anti-Gravity Show tours in countries all over the world, including cities such as Berlin, Melbourne, Moscow, London, and Hong Kong.

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Arts & Life

Allen strikes gold with “Blue Jasmine”

Carolyn Williams

Senior Writer

Woody Allen’s latest film, “Blue Jasmine,” is arguably his best since “Match Point” in 2005. Channeling Tennessee Williams, Allen has written Blanche DuBois for the 21st century. Paired with Cate Blanchett’s Oscar-worthy interpretation, and an all-star supporting cast, “Blue Jasmine” definitely belongs in Allen’s pantheon of successes.

New York socialite Jasmine French has recently fallen on hard times. Her husband, Hal (Alec Baldwin), a slick-talking business mogul and frequent philanderer, has turned out to also be a crook of the Bernie Madoff variety. With all of his assets seized by the FBI, Jasmine is left with little more than the designer clothes on her back and her pretensions to recommend her. Found talking to herself on the streets of New York, she has no choice but to move to San Francisco with Ginger (Sally Hawkins), the estranged, working-class sister she has always done her best to ignore. Intent on regaining her former life, Jasmine (whose real name, we learn, is Jeanette), begins the search for a suitable beau to rescue her from Ginger’s plebeian existence.

As the story progresses chronologically, it also reveals snatches of Jasmine’s former life with Hal. In glittering environs and amongst beautiful people, Jasmine was at home—a far cry from the shattered neurotic eking out a living as a dentist’s receptionist. Self-obsessed, lying, desperate, and dangerously deluded, Jasmine succeeds in catching the attention of the fashionable Dwight (Peter Sarsgaard) with the help of some well-placed lies and considers herself home free.

She has left a serious trail of destruction in her wake. Insidiously undermining Ginger’s genuine relationship with the “grease monkey” Chili (Bobby Cannavale), Jasmine has repeated a pattern of meddling in her sister’s relationships, as she is reminded by Ginger’s ex-husband Augie (Andrew Dice Clay, as a Kowalski type) at a particularly inopportune moment. Jasmine is also asked repeatedly, as the film progresses, how much she really knows about her husband’s business dealings. How could she not have guessed that his fortune was less than realistic? As Jasmine becomes more and more frantic in her answers, her carefully arranged next chapter is suddenly called into question, threatening to push her over the edge.

Blanchett’s performance has been roundly praised, and with good reason. Her portrayal of the suddenly anchor-less Jasmine is terrific. She simultaneously demands her audience’s sympathy while still managing to disgust at every turn. Her relationship with the well-meaning but slightly clueless Ginger is, at turns, comical and heartbreaking. Their fundamental disconnect works as an extension of Allen’s thesis, condemning Jasmine’s world of privileged deceit while highlighting the happiness possible in the less glamorous domain of Ginger and Chili. At the end of the day, Jasmine really does have to answer one question: how much longer can she continue to depend on the kindness of people she has always treated as strangers?

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Arts & Life

University orchestra kicks off season with music from around the globe

Alex Golden ’17

Contributing Writer

The Bucknell University Orchestra took its audience on a journey through history, exploring the cultures of many composers and the rivers that inspired them. On Sept. 21, the Orchestra kicked off its performance season with a Pops Concert in the Weis Center for the Performing Arts. Conducted by Associate Professor of Music Christopher Para, the Orchestra performed four pieces based on the theme, “Songs of the Great Rivers.” Para provided background information about each of the composers and their societies before each selection. He also expressed that it is impossible not to be drawn into the soaring melodies skillfully played by the musicians in the Orchestra. It was evident that the members of the Orchestra were incredibly skilled, as all of the pieces performed required nimble playing and total concentration.

The Orchestra’s selections took us from the banks of the Danube, with the majestic “Waves of the Danube Waltz,” to the Nile, with “Egyptian March,” to the Vltava, with a piece by the same name, and even included an orchestral arrangement of a medley from the musical “Show Boat.” The most poignant moment of the evening came when the Orchestra deviated from the program to perform a moving tribute to Associate Professor of Music Catherine Payn, founder of the Bucknell Opera Company, who passed away on Sept. 19.

The orchestra next performs at its fall concert, which will take place on Nov. 16.

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Arts & Life

Student talent showcased at late-night concert

Alex Golden

Contributing Writer

Seventh Street Café was hopping on Sept. 20, as Michael Strauss ’14 took the stage to perform as part of the café’s Late Night Music series. Accompanied only by his guitar, Strauss performed an impressive array of music, covering diverse artists such as Father John Misty, Iron and Wine, and Bruce Springsteen. Strauss, a theatre major with minors in English and music, is clearly a masterful musician with the warm, raspy quality of his lower register perfectly complementing the clear and pure high notes he hit effortlessly throughout the night.

Strauss is heavily involved in the Department of Theatre and Dance, and is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and the University’s only male a cappella group, the Bison Chips. And sure enough, many of his fellow Bison Chips members were in the audience on Sept. 20 supporting their friend, and in some cases, joining him, most notably to rap Usher’s “Love in This Club.” Overall, the atmosphere was one of camaraderie and humor, as Strauss’ audience simultaneously cheered on and heckled its friend.

In a post-show interview, Strauss explained that he was inspired to start performing in elementary school after receiving both an Elvis and a Beatles CD as gifts. He began singing and playing for his family, and performing in small plays at his summer camp. He most enjoys playing folk music, especially the songs from Paul Simon’s chart-topping album, “Graceland.” When asked which artist, living or dead, he would most like to perform with, Strauss said “Louis Armstrong. No one plays the trumpet like Louis. No one plays jazz like Louis. It would be a huge honor to perform with him.”

Anyone who came to Seventh Street on Friday would certainly agree. We will definitely be hearing more from Strauss in the future; in the meantime, be sure to visit the café tonight to see Lara Murray ’16, this week’s Late Night Music Series’ artist.

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Arts & Life

Rees’ Pieces: iBM

Ben Rees

Columnist

With the recent releases of the iPhone 5s and 5c selling over nine million units within the first week, something horrifying has become clear to me. As a species, consistent connectivity has penetrated every aspect of human life. For some purposes this is fantastic. People can communicate in emergencies and perform amazing tasks at tremendous speeds.  (At this point, I feel obligated to warn you that extremely posh and elegant humor lies ahead, as you may or may not have inferred from the title of this piece.) But, as cultural beacons Trey Parker and Matt Stone articulated, “toilet-time is the last bastion of American freedom,” and there is a reason King Louis the XIV built a golden commode—he valued his time there.

I am never one to stoop below the level of appropriate and highbrow, but I cannot let this cultural phenomenon go unnoticed. How many people bring their phones into the bathroom and everywhere else? The answer is most. I have made my feelings clear about the bathroom as a haven for people everywhere. As you can see from a prior article on restroom graffiti, “[The bathroom] is a place for unabashed indulgence in the most basic syntax; yet, it is also a haven for raw emotion. The restroom is exactly that–a place for rest and intellectual cathartic release” (Rees, 2012). Take the word of someone that cites himself in his own school newspaper column, this space matters, and phones, tablets, and laptops are draining it dry of its feeling and emotion.

Notice the absence of graffiti on bathroom stall walls. New restrooms in Academic West have yet to be graced with artistic expression! If this were the 90s, there would be at least 15 phone numbers for a “good time” and eight or nine people deemed “stoopid” spread across the walls.

Bathroom technology also leads to health issues. Toasted skin syndrome is a real ailment. That is not funny. Toasted skin syndrome (Erythema ab igne for short) may be caused by leaving one’s laptop on their bare thighs for too long. That should be the funniest line in this column. This pandemic stems from the long-term placement of one’s laptop upon their thighs. I understand that chaffing can be problematic and that toasted skin syndrome from other causes is real, but a diagnosable condition arising from lengthy toilet sessions on AIM says a great deal about our society.

I’m not advocating that people unplug. In fact, I suggest that you plug in more. Whenever you need to attend the powder room, plug your phone in so it can charge and catch a break somewhere else in the house. Chances are that with all your incessant tweeting and emailing your phone needs a break from all of your crap anyways.

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Arts & Life

Cooking Corner: Almond Trail Mix

Cooper Josephs

Contributing Writer

Almonds are high in protein and fiber, but some find them difficult to eat by themselves due to their chalky texture. This recipe masks the chalky flavor of the almonds with the sweetness of Life cereal and craisins. You don’t have to worry about the coconut shreds falling to the bottom of your bag because they stick to the craisins! This is a healthy, crunchy, delicious on-the-go snack that can be stored and consumed throughout the day.

Ingredients:

  • 2 Tbsp unsweetened, shredded coconut

  • ¼ cup Life cereal

  • ⅛ cup craisins

  • ¼ cup almonds

Servings: 4

Directions:

1.  Combine all ingredients, mix it all together, and enjoy!

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Arts & Life

Family Weekend offers events for all

Anna Jones

Arts & Life Editor

With Family Weekend right around the corner, students may be looking for something to do or somewhere to go with their parents. Beginning on Friday, Sep. 27, the University will provide many opportunities for families to get a glimpse into campus life.

The weekend kicks off with campus tours at 11 a.m., 1 p.m., and 3 p.m. The tours are open to all and are a good opportunity for younger siblings to take a look around campus.

Later in the day, there are several events for active families. The Family Weekend Golf Tournament starts at 1 p.m. at the Golf Club; pre-registration is required and there is a fee to play. Next, at 1:30 p.m., the University is hosting a family bike ride.

For families more interested in the academic aspect of the University, Associate Professor of Biology DeeAnn Reeder and Associate Professor of Dance Kelly Knox will discuss their research around the globe. The event will be hosted from 3-4 p.m. in Trout Auditorium in the Vaughn Literature Building and pre-registration is required. Immediately following these talks, families have an opportunity to meet the dean of students and other faculty at a reception in the Terrace Room.

In the early evening, the University’s outdoor clubs are hosting a bike ride as well as a canoe and kayak excursion. Both are a great chance to see some of the school’s clubs in action.

As for artistic entertainment, the Weis Center is hosting singer-songwriter Josh Ritter from 7:30-9 p.m. Ritter has been regarded as one of the most exciting new artists, so be sure to purchase tickets from the Weis Center box office.

At 8 p.m., theater students will be performing “All the Great Books (abridged)” in Tustin Studio Theatre. This play is a 60-minute version of over 100 great novels and will feature the class of 2017’s theater students. The show is directed by Logan Kauffeld ’15 (I’m pretty sure that this is the right person–the Family Weekend flyer thing says Logan Connors but he’s a professor of French soooo I’m assuming it’s not him), and promises to be a refreshing take on an old topic. The play will also show at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturday, Sep. 28.

Finally, from 9-11 p.m., Rooke Chapel will host Christy’s A Capella Concert, a Family Weekend tradition. The show will feature student a cappella groups, such as the Bison Chips, the Silhouettes, and Beyond Unison. The a cappella groups will perform again on Saturday night from 9-11 p.m. Christy’s A Capella concert almost always sells out, so be sure to grab your tickets early.

On Saturday, the Family Weekend fun continues with a breakfast reception in the Terrace Room from 8-10 a.m. After this reception, the day is filled with international education information sessions, Career Development Center introductions, high school student information sessions, and outdoor pursuits.

At 10:30 a.m., University President John Bravman will host a question and answer session in the Weis Center. After the Q&A, Bravman will join families for a reception in the Weis Center lobby. All students and family members are encouraged to go and get to know the University’s president.

From 1-2 p.m. in the Gallery Theatre, Housing Services will have an information session regarding changes in the housing policies. This session is extremely important to sophomores and their parents because the changes will affect their housing options in the upcoming years.

After, families can experience Lewisburg in a new way through the Poetry Path Tour, featuring Yoga with Cheri Orndorf. Visitors will read and hear poetry throughout their walk around downtown Lewisburg.

Next, be sure to join families from all over campus at the Family Weekend Tailgate, starting at 3:30 pm. Dining Services will provide upscale tailgate food and faculty will be in attendance to discuss their research projects. After the tailgate, the football team will take on Sacred Heart at 6 p.m. in Christy Mathewson Memorial Stadium.

To finish off the day, the University will host a WE DO Family Party in a tent on the football practice field. There will be desserts, beverages, music, and dancing from 8-11 p.m.

On Sunday morning, in conclusion to Family Weekend, Colleges Against Cancer will host a 5K walk/run. The race starts at 9 a.m. and registration costs $20; all the proceeds go to the American Cancer Society.

Lastly, the Terrace Room will host a jazz brunch from 9 a.m.-noon. Adults pay $18 and children under 12 only pay $10.

Family Weekend is an annual tradition and there are all sorts of events for everyone, so make sure to take advantage of all the opportunities.