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Arts & Life

Downtown Arts Collaborative values artistic expression

By Michelle Reed

Contributing Writer

The newly renovated Campus Theatre and the recently opened Downtown Art Gallery are just two of the many factors contributing to Lewisburg’s fast-growing art scene. With the help of the Lewisburg Downtown Arts Collaborative, the borough might soon be an exciting destination for art lovers.

“In a broad sense, the Lewisburg Downtown Partnership [LDP] supports regional and community development that fosters the vitality of the downtown core of Lewisburg. As a consequence of its strategic planning process, the LDP identified four strategic collaborative partnerships that support this mission. One of these efforts is focused on economic development, bringing together leaders from the region to focus on strategies to support business development and economic growth. In the course of developing this initiative, the LDP identified a strong and vibrant visual and performing arts environment as one of the inherent strengths of Lewisburg. Clearly, a collaboration focused on the arts made sense. A strong and diverse arts scene is something that distinguishes this community. There is an opportunity for Lewisburg to become an ‘arts destination,’” said Linda Sterling, executive director of the Lewisburg Downtown Partnership.

The Arts Collaborative was established with the goal of encouraging and developing the arts in Lewisburg.

“The Arts Collaborative is intended to support the arts and make the arts more visible,” said Emily Conners ’14, Arts Collaborative liaison. “We are extremely lucky that there are so many great arts happenings in Lewisburg and we want to promote access to such great cultural events.”

Creating a network of artists who practice various types of media–studio art, poetry, music performance, film and more–is one of the objectives of the collaborative.

“The collaborative will allow arts organizations, both big and small, to be connected easily and efficiently, creating opportunities for collaboration to occur,” Conners said.

The Collaborative also aspires to form stronger bonds between the arts at the University and in the greater community.

“The Arts Collaborative intends on strengthening the link between the arts at Bucknell and the arts downtown by including artists and art supporters from all areas of Lewisburg,” Conners said. “Students will benefit from the Arts Collaborative because the more that the arts are promoted in Lewisburg and the more that different artists are connected, the more students will be exposed to many different forms of art than they are already exposed to, which could enhance their Bucknell experience with the arts.”

Rebecca Willoughby, a lecturer in the University’s English department, is excited about the growing relationship between the University and the Collaborative.

“It’s a benefit to all Bucknell students–whether they are in the arts or simply enjoy the arts–to build this bridge between what’s happening in the arts on campus and what’s happening in the surrounding community,” Willoughby said.

“We are thrilled to partner with Lewisburg in our mutual desire to promote the arts and to enhance the reputation of Lewisburg and Bucknell as premier regional arts locations,” said Carmen Gillespie, professor of English and University Arts Coordinator.

“Ultimately, we trust that this initial effort will foster additional relationships and partnerships that will encourage and promote the arts in this community. We hope and expect that groups and individuals who engage in this collaborative effort will find new ways to work together, enriching the community in the process,” Sterling said.

For information on upcoming arts events in downtown Lewisburg, check out the events calendar at www.lewisburgpa.com.


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Arts & Life From the Mind of Wiley Jack Humor

From the mind of Wiley Jack: WWE is Awesome

By Jack Wiles

Columnist

Sunday night, I realize there is an event on television that I would like to watch. Unfortunately, this event is only offered on pay-per-view. Luckily, my nerdy engineer side emerges from somewhere deep inside and I find a live stream of this event on the Internet. It’s WWE Wrestlemania 28. My life has not only been changed for the better, but for the best. Professional wrestling is the best thing to happen to America since we gained our independence.

There are many reasons to love the WWE. I would like to focus on the ones most applicable to University students.  One very important thing must be made very clear before I get into the details: the WWE is not real wrestling. The wrestlers are not actually having a physical competition; they are performing a show. This show requires a great deal of athleticism, strength and showmanship, but it is not a real wrestling match. I really wish I didn’t have to say that, but I feel like there are a lot of people out there that have never even heard of the WWE (or they’re just idiots). This is why I write about it. I’m sure they’ll pay me later.

The first thing to do to enjoy these spectacular events is pick a favorite wrestler. There are many superstars to choose from, all from different backgrounds and with different strengths and weaknesses. Like 7 foot, 441 pound behemoths? The Big Show is your boy. I go for the suave, yet flashy underdog Kofi Kingston. There is also an Indian wrestler named Jinder Mahal … or, you could go with the classic choices like The Rock or John Cena. There are millions that would join you on those options. Whoever you pick, you have to act like he or she (oh yes, there are divas who wrestle too) is the center of your world. You have to yell, cheer and really get into the big hits and the drama that happens backstage. Nobody beats your superstar.

The best thing about the WWE, however, would be going to a live event. Of course, University kids would stick out like sore thumbs, so you have to suit up in very hick-like clothing and WWE apparel. You also must bring a funny sign to hold up to get on TV. For example, I enjoyed seeing the sign “If Cena wins we riot!” You have to yell, react to all big hits, have aggressive banter with other fans and go all out. If you do this, drink lots of beer, and of course have a designated driver. I guarantee it would be a good time.

WWE Smack Down is coming to Wilkes-Barre, Pa. on May 22. This is two days after graduation, and y’all better believe I’ll be in attendance. If you want to join, we should gather a large group of University students to take it over. Tweet me about it, @improvize. 

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Arts & Life

Off the Beat and Path: The Head and the Heart

By Rob O’Donnell

Columnist

Attempting to describe the sound of The Head and the Heart’s self-titled debut album is complicated, so bear with me on this one. In fact, put this paper down and just buy the album. No matter what genre you usually identify with, it will make your night. 

Songs like “Down in the Valley” and “Winter Song” make me want to brand it as folk rock. They have beautiful acoustic guitar and violin as the driving instruments throughout, both of which call up the melancholy and nostalgic tone usually associated with folk or acoustic music. The lyrics on the entire album are incredibly intimate, and like good folk music they deal with honest topics like adventure, loss, heartbreak and whiskey. With all that said, the first time that I heard them was at the Newport Folk Festival, so I might be a little biased in my opinion. But as a testament to their skill, I heard them perform three songs and bought the album on the spot. So, as I said before, drop the paper and go listen.

For those people still reading, I’m going to change my mind and call it indie rock. I’m hesitant to do that, since the genre indie rock is the label that an album receives when it literally doesn’t fit into any other category. Which is why it is perfect in this case. Sorry. It is just way too upbeat and pop-sounding to be called folk music. I don’t mean pop-sounding in a bad way: in fact I actually mean it as a compliment. These are songs that I can actually play when I’m hanging out with my friends and not get grief for (because apparently Bob Dylan is not “party music”). Songs like “Lost in My Mind” and “Ghosts” can even be danced to, which is a sin for folk. You have to be a fairly confident dancer, but it can be done.

But overall, the album is fantastic. The songs all flow into each other and make the album really cohesive, not just a random assortment of songs in no particular order like a lot of artists. It’s a very eccentric sound, so the cohesiveness is crucial. They are one of the few bands that can turn listening to an album into a true experience. Taking a walk around town with The Head and the Heart on my iPod is one of my favorite things to do, and I suggest you do the same. Or if you’re too lazy, we’ll be playing the album this week on Those Damn Jackelopes from midnight to 2 a.m. on Thursday nights.

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Arts & Life Featured

Environmental Club improves campus footprint

Anna May

Arts & Life Layout Editor

There are many student groups on campus that are not widely publicized and deserve recognition for the many contributions they make to our campus community. One such organization is the Environmental Club.

This student-run organization has the goals of making our campus more sustainable, spreading environmental awareness and providing students with opportunities to become more involved with current environmental issues.

Unlike many other student organizations, the Environmental Club does not focus on raising money.

“The club focuses more on campus greening issues and environmental awareness on campus. We do, however, try to support other group’s fundraising efforts, such as the Bucknell Brigade,” president Rebecca Shopiro ’12 said.

The Environmental Club is responsible for many changes around campus. The organization is responsible for the placement of small devices called VendingMiser motion sensors on the soda machines around campus. This was the first project conducted under the new Bucknell Green Fund. The VendingMiser helps reduce the amount of energy used to cool the machines when they are not in use. Although it may not seem like a significant difference, the Environmental Club calculated that these gadgets save the University about $4,000 a year in electricity costs. This is one example of the many small steps that can be taken in order to make the campus more “green.”

At the moment, the Environmental Club is most concerned with planning events for Earth Day on April 22. Club members will give out free plants to students in order to help support the environment and create awareness for the holiday. They are also planning an event called “Swap Till You Drop.” Students are asked to bring in gently used clothing in exchange for a voucher. With this voucher students can participate in the event and pick up some clothes that other people brought. Clothes that are not taken by students will be donated to charity. This is a creative way of bringing students together while sharing the message that reusing can be enjoyable, as well as beneficial to the environment. 

There have been other changes around campus that can be attributed to the Environmental Club’s efforts.  A few years ago, the organization urged the Bison Café to switch from disposable plastic baskets to reusable ones. They have also helped with other events such as the fall environmental festival and a local pub night where the drinks are all served in glass mugs in order to reduce plastic waste.

In addition, they subsidized reusable water bottles sales on World Water Day in order to increase the number of reusable waters being used and decrease the number of plastic bottles being wasted. The club also held an Eat your Greens Event where environmental professors presented their research with students.

Although the Environmental Club may not always be in the public eye, there is no disputing that they are actively making changes at the University to improve the campus for us all.

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Arts & Life

Downtown Art Gallery to open

By Michelle Reed

Contributing Writer

 

University students and Lewisburg residents will soon have new opportunities to view and interact with contemporary art at the University’s Downtown Art Gallery.

Richard Rinehart, director of the Samek Art Gallery, sees the new gallery as an important part of the growing emphasis on the arts in Lewisburg.

“I think this new gallery could effect a dramatic positive change in the cultural landscape of Lewisburg,” Rinehart said. “We have the capability to bring the best art being produced in the world today to the heart of this community. There is a bit of a sea change taking place in this region currently with the newly renovated Campus Theatre, the Presidential Arts Initiative, edgy new galleries in Williamsport and a collage center opening in the future in Milton. Joining existing art and performance venues in the area, these new venues–including Bucknell’s new Downtown Art Gallery–can further Lewisburg as a cultural destination.”

The exhibitions at the Downtown Art Gallery will be separate from the program at the Samek Art Gallery on campus. Rinehart views the separation of the galleries as an opportunity to provide the campus and community with two different artistic experiences.

“By having distinct exhibitions, we double the opportunities for connecting with audiences,” Rinehart said. “Plus, the Samek is in the heart of academia, which suggests one kind of exhibition, whereas the Downtown Gallery is in the heart of the community, suggesting a different sort.”

The smaller size of the Downtown Art Gallery will allow for a much different presentation than one might encounter at the Samek Art Gallery.

“Size suggests the type of exhibition. The Samek is a relatively large gallery that suggests group shows and historic retrospectives, whereas the Downtown Gallery is much smaller, suggesting single-artist solo contemporary art shows where we can take advantage of living artists to visit town for residencies, lectures, and so on,” Rinehart said. “So, I see the two galleries complementing and balancing each other and providing a richer mix of cultural programming for the area.”

The Downtown Art Gallery will open its doors on March 31 with an opening celebration for the public on March 31 and April 1 from 12 – 5 p.m.

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Arts & Life

Li discusses the art of imagination and luck

By Courtney Bottazzi

Staff Writer

Imagination and luck becomes a winning combination when paired with a creative mind.

Fortunately for poet Yiyun Li, she has the creative imagination and luck on her side. On Tuesday, the University had the honor of hosting Li, author of “Gold Boy, Emerald Girl,” “The Vagrants” and “A Thousand Years of Good Prayers.” 

Li has earned many prestigious awards including the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, PEN/Hemingway Award and the Guardian First Book Award. She was also included in The New Yorker’s top 20 writers under 40. 

Li read excerpts from one of her short stories, “Kindness,” and held two question-and-answer sessions. Melanie Santos ’12, a psychology and creative writing major, introduced Li at the reading and praised the writer’s unique style.

“The language is simple, yet elegant. The power comes from the honesty of her characters,” Santos said.

After hearing Li speak about her characters, it’s hard not expect one of them to walk through the door–that is the extent of their resemblance to real life. Li explained that she always ends a story before she knows all of her characters’ secrets.

“With characters, write what you don’t know. Curiosity drives me to know. I don’t know these characters and I want to,” Li said.

It was clear that Li has a remarkable imagination. She was able to thoroughly construct her characters’ identities so that she can hear and hold conversations with her characters.

“Being a writer is like being an actor. You have to ask yourself, how would an old person drink?” Li said.

Similar to an actor’s preparation, Li dives into the roles of her characters. When asked about the beginning of her career, Li explained how she realized she did not to please the masses.

“You’re not looking for everyone to love your story. You’re looking for one right reader; one editor who can read the story right,” Li said.

Li grew up in Beijing and retold stories of how she has been confronted by people of Chinese heritage who disagree with the portrayal of her country. She stated that she would not write propaganda; the China on the pages was her China.

Additionally, Li perceives her stories to be accessible to many different people.

“The stories to me are more universal, they can belong to more than one culture,” Li said.

Li shared her advice for beginning writers with the audience.

“You have to be a reader before you are a writer,” Li said.

Additionally, she suggested, do not become swept away with the writings of authors who are currently labeled as “hot.”

“For every living writer you read, you have to read two dead authors. Always go back to the Russian writers,” Li said.

When praised for her success, Li gracefully laughed and told her audience that sometimes she believes she’s just lucky. It is clear Li’s remarkable skill as a writer is not simply chance and yet, she unintentionally echoes and fulfils Tennessee William’s famous quote, “Luck is believing that you’re lucky.”

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Arts & Life

“The Leftovers” redifines religious issues

By Carolyn Williams

Staff Writer

Tom Perrotta’s latest novel “The Leftovers” has been called his most ambitious work to date, beating out the popular successes “Election” and “Little Children,” both of which spawned successful film adaptations. “The Leftovers,” however, deals with a subject material quite unlike illicit high school love affairs or stories of infidelity and marital boredom.

The plot of the novel takes place primarily in suburban Mapleton (basically Hometown, USA). Our main players are the Garvey family, who have been left physically intact after the events of October 14, though their emotional health is less certain. Three years before the novel begins, the “Sudden Departure” took place, a mysterious disappearance of seemingly randomly selected individuals worldwide. Though this occurrence looks an awful lot like the prophesied Rapture of biblical fame, the event causes a panic among people of all denominations, because there seems to be no rhyme or reason to who made the cut and who got left behind. While some deny that this “Rapture” was the real deal, others take drastic measures to prepare themselves for their second chance at any cost.

Perrotta steers clear of religion for the most part, though, using the Rapture idea as inspiration only, instead dealing more with the individual reactions and coping mechanisms of those who were left behind to pick up the pieces of a bewildered world. Kevin, the Garvey family’s patriarch, takes on the position of Mapleton’s mayor in hopes of restoring some optimism to the still unsettled community. His wife Laurie goes the other way, though. Deciding she cannot return to “normal” life, she joins the radical faction the Guilty Remnant. There she takes a vow of silence, moves into a commune, dresses only in white and stalks her former friends and family members around Mapleton, a constant reminder of what everyone is so desperate to forget.

Their two children are similarly adrift. Once a conscientious, shy student, 17-year-old Jill has shaved her head for fun and taken to coming to school high and bumming around with the local “bad” kids, but touchingly prepares a Christmas gift for the mother who abandoned her, and worries about her dramatically slipping grades. Tom, who dropped out of college after the Sudden Departure to follow the cult leader Holy Wayne, has finally, after three years, come to realize with Wayne’s arrest that following a “savior” will not solve his problems, nor will it help him find his footing in this new world.

Perrotta hasn’t been called the “Steinbeck of the suburbs” for nothing, and, as always, his writing about this subset of upper-middleclass American life is dead on, losing none of its reality even in such an unusual situation as faces the citizens of Mapleton. Though perhaps not as gripping as the desperate, slightly twisted, “Little Children,” “The Leftovers” is still an excellent read, and a very solid sixth novel from Perrotta.

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Arts & Life From the Mind of Wiley Jack Humor

From the mind of Wiley Jack: How to Super Saturday

By Jack Wiles

Columnist

Last weekend was epic. It was House Party Weekend and I am happy to say that it was the best one I’ve been a part of in my four years at this institution of higher learning. This is because of Super Saturdays, and in this special case, Super Fridays. It took me four years, but finally I think I have discovered the secret to fully enjoying these days of backyard drinking: elevated surfaces.

There is no better way to show off your obviously annoyingly fratty attire and croakies than standing at a higher elevation than everyone. A table, a hay bale, an elevated porch or even your buddy’s shoulders, it doesn’t matter. You must be above everyone else or you are not having the best possible time. It also helps to point to everyone you see while singing along to the song currently playing in order to draw more attention to yourself. Next, a catch-phrase is essential. This phrase must be repeated over and over again and spoken at a very high volume. A few I heard this weekend were “let’s go,” “let’s get tropical,” “killin’ it,” “done,” “somebody’s got to do it” and my personal favorite, “tits out for the boys.” Beware, though, this phrase has a zero percent success rate and is almost guaranteed to affect women.

Another thing that helps the situation while on this elevated surface is adjusting your drinking vessel to something unusually large. It doesn’t matter if you are actually drinking this amount of alcohol or not, but it is important to look like you are. My standard choice is a bottle of champagne. What is excellent about this apparatus is that it’s also a workout in disguise. Lifting that bad boy from your waist to your mouth to the air in celebration of your last sip really tones the biceps. However, nobody wants muscle imbalance, so you have to switch hands quite often. The best option, though, is to have two of them. Scientists and researchers across the world have called this action “double fisting.” Not only does this make you look cooler than everyone, but it also motivates others to go harder, which will have the end result of some funny stories to tell your kids one day.

Lastly, while doing all of these things is extremely fun, awesome and the perfect way to go about a Saturday, don’t live in the house that hosts these types of parties. That is, unless you are actually an animal of the pig variety, because your home will become a pig sty. My house is called “The Shithole.” Try tellin’ that one to your kids.

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Arts & Life

WVBU collaborates with Double Take Project

Jen Lassen

Arts & Life Editor

WVBU, the University’s radio station is working with Christina Cody ’12 to add to her senior project entitled “The Double Take Project.”

Cody, a theatre major, began her Double Take project with the idea of “theatre for social change.” She arranges and conducts interviews with students from the department of theatre and dance; these students then discuss a new topic every week. All related to the University, topics range from students’ perspective of the University’s social scene to Bison pride.

With the help of WVBU Station Manager Alex Alam ’12, every Monday through Friday at 2 p.m. WVBU broadcasts a different interview from one of these students. 

“I saw this project and thought maybe I could help with it. I really wanted to get people’s actual words out, and that’s exactly what this project does,” Alam said.

All interviews are kept anonymous; no names are broadcasted on the air.

“I want to get people thinking about what happens on campus–-good and bad,” Alam said.

So far, both WVBU and Cody have received positive feedback for the project.

“I think Bucknell students would love to share their thoughts. We all have so much pride and love our school, so it’s great that people can share their experiences this way,” Julia Goldman ’15 said.

“Although there’s some confusion about what the project is, people seem to like it and think that it’s a really cool idea,” Alam said.

The most important thing is that students on campus are talking, not only about this project, but about the issues it addresses. Even though the topics are ones that walk the fine line of becoming social taboos, WVBU and Cody have made a concerted effort to make sure that what is being said is honest and real.

“I love this project because it takes a little bit of something from everyone. Every story affects me, too. [The project] definitely has changed my opinions about things, and I’ve gained new perspectives throughout the process … you can’t have one without the other,” Alam said.

And with campus climate a major topic of discussion, it’s good to recognize that everybody has something to say or a perspective to offer, and they deserve to be heard.

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Arts & Life

Porn lecture defines current culture

Katey Duffy

Writer

Sitting in a room full of mature college students and adults, I never thought I would feel so comfortable discussing the major impact of the pornography industry on our society today. So how was it that I was comfortable in this setting where we were discussing a topic that is usually taboo? It was because I was part of an audience in which students were eager to learn and Dr. Gail Dines knew how to blatantly bring up the problems with pornography by describing the motives behind the major pornography producers.

Dines is a professor from Wheelock College in Boston and a leader of the anti-porn movement as well as an active feminist. She is the proud author of the book “Pornland,” in which she shares her views about the negative effects of porn on young women and has also been interviewing and studying people in the porn business to understand their reasons for production.

I was most impressed with the way Dines handled the topic of porn. She discussed how our generation is an “image-based culture.” We have grown up in a society where we are constantly seeing images of what we are “supposed to look like.” But in reality, Dines highlights the truth: the men and women in these media images are part of an “abnormal group” of our culture. She stresses the reason men feel superior to women is because they have grown up seeing images in which women are vulnerable to men. This is the connection to the growing porn industry which is why the business is so huge in our world today, bringing in an estimated $12 billion in revenue every year. 

Although Dines commented on many different things throughout her talk, she claimed that her efforts to put a stop to this porn industry are like “pushing a boulder up a huge hill.” She understands that she cannot single-handedly manage to stop something so massive throughout our society today, but she demands that women stop allowing it to happen. For the sake of the next generation of young girls, we must demand more respect from men because the pornography industry is a “runaway train” in a sense. They have legally been able to portray women in this light and they are running out of ideas. We must stop it before it ruins the next generation. If you have any interest in joining this movement, Dines suggested visiting www.stoppornculture.org for more information.