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Arts & Life Campus Events Movies Review

Professors Goodale and Andersson help audience understand the life of Elizabeth I

Laura Crowley
Senior Writer

Associate Professor of History James Goodale and Professor of Art History Christiane Andersson presented the Hollywood portrayals of Queen Elizabeth I in Tudor England on Nov. 13 at the Campus Theatre. Goodale discussed the beginning of Elizabeth’s life in “The Other Boleyn Girl” and “Elizabeth” (1998), while Andersson presented the later half of Elizabeth’s life in the mini-series version of “Elizabeth” (2005).

Throughout the event, they showed clips from the period films and analyzed their historical veracity. They also analyzed the accuracy of the plot itself and the ways in which Hollywood used lighting and music to often make the films more dramatic than Elizabeth’s life may have actually been. Goodale pointed out that the lighting used in “Elizabeth” (1998) is especially dark in the beginning of her life to contrast the brightness and purity of when she officially became “The Virgin Queen.”

Both professors helped audience members gain a more holistic and accurate view of Queen Elizabeth’s life story than the movies and series provided by themselves. They particularly noted her use of humor to get her way with Parliament when it continuously urged her to get married. As the head of her country, Elizabeth’s duties led her to be a “rational, coldblooded and deliberate woman and Protestant,” Goodale said. Queen Elizabeth I felt she wouldn’t be able to lead England as well if she were married, and cut her hair like a man to deliberately strip herself of her femininity.

The professors felt the films were fairly accurate. In the mini-series, “Elizabeth” (2005), Andersson pointed out that the producers even reconstructed White Hall from the original blueprint for the film.

They also stressed how, in Tudor England, love was a political entity rather than a romantic one. It seems that gender was also more of a “performative act,” Goodale said. Both Elizabeth and one of her suitors Henry III of France were both known to possess and project qualities of both genders for a number of motives.

The event was part of the Film/Media Series and was open to the community. There is an event every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Campus Theatre.

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Arts & Life Columns

Trend Report: Black Friday

Black Friday

Kate Jansen

Writer

In one week’s time, we will be stuffing ourselves with Thanksgiving leftovers and deliberating whether or not we are fit enough to join Black Friday’s shopping extravaganza.

For the past few years after Thanksgiving, my mom and I have ventured to New York City to join the anxious mobs of other mother-daughter pairs in search of the best bargain. For those who have not participated in Black Friday, allow me to put things into perspective. Black Friday is a survival of the fittest game of sorts. Women of all ages fight for the cheapest overall haul of garments. My mom and I have witnessed this on several occasions while shopping at Bloomingdale’s. Small mountains of last season’s sweaters litter the department store floor. Mothers go through piles in the dressing room, willing to snag the cheapest cardigan, even if it means they will lose an earring in the process.

I have found that the best way to cure any Turkey Day hangover is to beat the mad rush and shop online. Personally, I think that major department stores like Bloomingdale’s and Saks Fifth Avenue offer better deals online than they do in stores. Other popular retail stores offer major blowout sales the Friday, Saturday and Monday after Thanksgiving. I’d pay close attention to sales that are exclusive to Cyber Monday; these could be the best deals of the season. And so, next weekend, channel your inner shopaholic and grab your laptop.

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Campus Events News

Ghost hunter spooks campus

Christina Oddo
Arts & Life Editor

On Nov. 6, Rich Robbins, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, spoke of the supernatural, the evidence supporting and dismissing the existence of ghosts and the presence of other related phenomena. He also spoke of ghost hunting. His annual talk, “Ghosts and Hauntings: Decide for Yourself” had been rescheduled due to Hurricane Sandy.

Robbins attended the University of Nevada, Reno, and holds a master’s degree in experimental psychology, as well as a doctorate degree in social psychology. Robbins has had more than 80 professional presentations at academic conferences, and has been published on several occasions.

Robbins is also a certified parapsychologist, has participated in many ghost hunts and has been interviewed by the media regarding his work with supernatural phenomena. 

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Arts & Life

Taking A Stroll Through Lewisburg

Molly Ford
Writer

Nov. 2 and 3 marked the 14th annual Stroll Through the Arts Weekend. Thanks to the Lewisburg Arts Council, visual and performing arts were on display in Downtown Lewisburg. Nov. 2’s festivities included displays from artists from all over the central Susquehanna Valley region. A Silent Art Auction, featuring judged pieces from the Spring Arts Festival, was a highlight of the night. While visual art lined the streets on Nov. 2, music was the focus on Nov. 3. From 7 p.m. to midnight, bands played in four local venues. All venues in this Dance to the Music Event were free and open to the public. Events such as this promote local artists and musicians and bring a vibrant big city feel to our town.

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Arts & Life Columns Cooking Corner

Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

Katie Mancino | The Bucknellian

Katie Mancino
Writer

Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

Makes 24 cookies

54 calories, 1g fat, 8 carbs, 1g protein

I was making a recipe for mint chocolate chip cookies when I realized how easy it would be to make the recipe vegan–I just had to swap out the egg. These were the result and they are some of my favorite cookies of any kind, let alone vegan recipes! I like using mini chocolate chips so that the chocolate gets more spread out throughout the batter, Enjoy Life Brand Mini Chips is a great vegan brand for these. If you’re not vegan but want to try this recipe, just use regular chocolate chips, it won’t change the nutrition.

Ingredients

  • 2 Tbsp creamy peanut butter
  • 3/4 cup Truvia Baking Blend
  • 1/4 cup Silk Light Soymilk
  • 1.25 cups all purpose flour
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1/4 cup vegan chocolate chips

Directions

  1. Heat oven to 350 F.
  2. Beat peanut butter, soymilk, vanilla and Truvia together.
  3. Mix in remaining dry ingredients and chocolate chips.
  4. Spray pan with a nonstick spray, divide batter into 24 cookies (use two trays;  each cookie is about two heaping tablespoons of batter)
  5. Bake for 9-10 minutes.
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Arts & Life

Showcase Feature

Christina Oddo
Arts & Life Editor

The Bucknell Theatre and Dance Department is proud to present the annual Fall Dance Showcase 2012. A vast range of dance styles will be performed on Harvey M. Powers Theatre stage tonight at 8 p.m. and tomorrow at 2 p.m.

Auditions for the Fall Dance Showcase took place in August, and choreographers have been since busy with creating work for the show. The concert will feature contemporary jazz, modern and ballet, choreographed by students, faculty, alumni and guest artists. The choreographers cannot wait to share their work with the audience.

“We began tech rehearsals on Sunday of this week, working with lighting and sound designers and stage managers to bring the work to life on stage,” Dustyn Martincich, assistant professor of theatre and dance said. “After two dress rehearsals and a preview performance, we are ready to open the show tonight. It’s a long process with a fabulous outcome for our audiences, who get to see the joy and artistry.”

Student choreographers submitted proposals for pieces over the summer. Each student choreographer has taken the Dance Composition class, and through their new works in this fall’s showcase, they are furthering the development of their choreographic skills. Choreographers shared their process through a Facebook group over the course of several months, enabling the students to help and take advice from other choreographers, as well as from the student directors, Leigh Arnold ’13 and Sam Gosnell ’13.

“Every semester is a little different because we have new and growing choreographers with various interests,” Martincich said. “Some pursue musicality, some style, some narrative themes, some simply the love of line, dynamic change and clear technique. That’s what makes the showcase so appealing to so many audiences. It truly has something for everyone.”

The performances will also consist of student group work, including Irish dance, the Bisonettes, tap and dance classes. Also, students from the local Lewisburg Conservatory of Dance are performing a piece choreographed by a University student.

“Some pieces are really intense and hard hitting, while others are upbeat and exciting,” Arnold said. “You can be sure that whatever comes on stage next will be piece to remember.”

There is a pre-show installation piece, too, which was choreographed by Martincich and Joe Meiser, assistant professor of art and art history.

“It’s a real treat for audience members who get their tickets and get to the theatre early,” Martincich said.

In the pre-show installation piece, the dancers and choreographers worked together to create movement phrases based on images, species descriptions of radiolaria or microorganisms, as well as Italo Calvino’s “Aquatic Uncle” and sculptures from the Sculpture I class. These movements were then set in different locations in the Theatre.

“Every night, the audience will see something a little different depending on when they get to the Theatre and where they sit,” Martincich said.

Showcase Directors Arnold and Gosnell look forward to the weekend. Both have worked relentlessly to make this show a success. They have been involved in past showcases as dancers and choreographers. This fall, the directors feel privileged to have had to opportunity to student direct.

“My favorite part of directing was that I was able to work closely with Sam [Gosnell] and the faculty as well still work along side my fellow dancers,” Arnold said. “The passion that we all share for dance is contagious and it is a wonderful environment to work in.”

“Although the process sometimes got overwhelming, as any major production can, everyone involved in the show truly loves to dance and believes in this art form,” Gosnell said. “That definitely made the final turnout worth so much more.”

Directing has proven to be different from Gosnell’s and Arnold’s past experiences in the dance showcases.

“I get to see the choreographers’ visions come to life from the very start,” Arnold said.

The showcase will include many new dancers, as well as dancers who have appeared in past showcases.

“We take pride in how each showcase is new and exciting, and this year is no exception,” Arnold said. “We have many people who have performed or worked with us before participating, but we also have many new people choreographing, dancing and working back stage.”

“This has been one of the most fun things I have done at Bucknell,” said Angel Hernandez ’13.

Hernandez, a dancer in the show, points out the lack of balance in regards to who participates in the showcases.

“It’s sad that not that many guys are involved, especially when there are so many beautiful girls,” Hernandez said.

“Perhaps, my favorite thing about this year is the creativity that the choreographers have brought to the stage that has allowed for many dancers to be cast into roles that they have never had to take on,” Arnold said. “So the excitement of seeing people take on new roles and dance styles makes for some great surprises and a wonderful performance.”

Visit the Campus Box Office and buy tickets now ($10 regular and $5 for students, senior citizens and children) before the shows are sold-out.

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Arts & Life Books Columns Review

“The Last Policeman:” the first of three new apocalypse novels

Carolyn Williams
Writer

Ben H. Winter’s latest novel “The Last Policeman” plays with the popular genre of crime fiction and humanity’s inevitable curiosity about the end of the world. In this version, a young detective is faced with mounting apathy as he tries to solve crimes in the months before Earth’s unavoidable collision with a six-kilometer-wide asteroid called Maia.

Henry Palace, age 27, has always wanted to be a detective. He has finally achieved this goal, but now the world around him is falling apart. Last year, scientists announced the discovery of an asteroid that might hit Earth, and a few months ago, they confirmed that Earth has a 100 percent chance of impact, and everyone is going to die. Ever since then, people have started to get a little bit crazy.

Henry works in his hometown of Concord, N.H., which used to be a pretty quiet place. In fact, when Henry’s mother was killed less than 20 years ago, the odds of dying of unnatural causes in Concord were zero. This is no longer the case. Though Henry tells us the Midwest favors shotguns to the head as a means of suicide, Concord is decidedly a “hanger town.” It’s Detective Palace’s job to clean up the messes.

Although most everyone has stopped caring about maintaining law and order, Henry is determined to do the job he as always wanted to, in whatever time he has left. He latches on to the suspicious suicide of Peter Zell in a McDonald’s bathroom, and though everyone assures him this is a cut and dry suicide, Henry remains unconvinced. As he digs deeper into Zell’s background and his quiet existence, he feels more and more affinity for the lonely actuary, becoming increasingly hell-bent on solving this case. Between the case, his hippie sister, her deadbeat husband and his growing attraction to a woman from Peter Zell’s office, Henry certainly does not have time to “go Bucket List” like everyone else.

In the wake of last year’s “Melancholia” and “Seeking a Friend for the End of the World” in movie theaters, one has to wonder: why the sudden spike in popular interest for apocalypse entertainment? Detective Palace is one of those characters who is so fixed in his thirst for justice that it becomes difficult to separate him from the idea of “justice” in the abstract. Usually in this kind of quick-paced, dry-humored police story, we get a tale of previous injustices inflicted or a dead wife to avenge. Instead, we have the level-headed Henry Palace, our guide through a world disturbingly similar to our own, but doomed. So maybe he’s no Dirty Harry, but that’s a story we’ve all heard before anyway. What’s lost in excitement is made up for in believability. Winters has stated that “The Last Policeman” is the first in a planned trilogy, so if nothing else, we haven’t seen the last of Henry Palace.

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Arts & Life Campus Events Review

Sonya Renee Taylor, international artist and activist, joins students and faculty at Uptown

Anna Jones
Writer

On Nov. 2, Uptown held one of its well-known Poetry Slams to show off the work of talented University students, faculty and guest artists.

“A Poetry Slam is a competition between anyone who wants to share a poem they wrote or read … poems are about anything that is on the poet’s mind,” Emilie Ratajczak ’15, assistant manager of Uptown, said.

“The poems are judged on a ten point scale by audience members and a winner is determined,” Steph Wyld ’14, manager of Uptown said.

The Stadler Center for Poetry has hosted six Poetry Slams, led by Jamaal May, a Stadler Fellow, at Uptown in the past year and a half. Each has been well attended. There are several different sections during a poetry slam.

“Each Slam breaks the night up into an Open Mic, Featured Poet and a One-Round Slam that artists sign up for at the beginning of the night with audience judges,” Wyld said.

The Poetry Slams at Uptown are campus-wide events, but students from other schools, such as Susquehanna University, are also invited.

At this particular slam, Sonya Renee Taylor, the founder and current CEO of The Body Is Not An Apology, a movement focused on self-acceptance and body empowerment, was the featured guest. Taylor is herself a poet, so she performed her powerful work along with University and Susquehanna University students.

“My favorite part of the Poetry Slam is being surrounded by such passionate poets,” Ratajczak said.

She also encourages University students to head out to a slam if they get a chance.

“These events are an extremely fun way to break from the usual night scene at Bucknell,” Ratajczak said. “In addition, you get to meet so many great new people at these events at Uptown.”

“My favorite part is seeing performers put their whole heart and soul into a piece and connect to the audience through those common experiences by sharing something so personal,” Wyld said. “Past performers have surprised me with talent I couldn’t have imagined they possess and it’s great to hear them express their work.”

Wyld also recommends that students check out the Poetry Slams.

“They are something that you can’t experience every day. They really are special and will open your eyes to a whole other world of self-expression,” Wyld said. “There is a very welcoming and supportive crowd, so it is a great place for anyone to share their poetry without fear of criticism and for audience members to enjoy a fantastic performance.”

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Arts & Life Columns Humor Rees' Pieces

Rees’ Pieces: 7 Things You Should Never Say on Television

Ben Rees
Writer

In 1972, George Carlin went on television and performed his comedic monologue entitled “The Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television.” He rattled off a string of obscenities prohibited from cable, and criticized America’s methods of censorship. Forty years later, I, without attempting to equate myself to someone as truly marvelous as Carlin, think we have gone too far. Our civilization is consistently inundated with visual smut, which has inspired a list I have dubbed: “The Seven Things You Should Never Say on Television, But Unfortunately, Due to Lax Regulations and Our Bizarre Interest in Disgusting People, We Are Able to.”

First: “Introducing your host, Ryan Seacrest!” Anything that has his name on it is an intellectual travesty. He was sexy for a few seasons of “American Idol,” but every show that involves a singing contest of sorts is simply embarrassing. All competitive talent programs revolve around false hopes, false eyelashes and falsely emotional obese contestants.

Second: “Spike TV.” Partially excluding “1000 Ways To Die,” this channel is a sad, testosterone-fueled quest for ratings. They don’t show “MXC” anymore, and G4 has “Ninja Warrior;” Spike TV has essentially zero programming that anyone with a functioning brain stem would ever want to watch. Never have I ever heard someone utter: “Dude, let’s see what’s on Spike.”

Third: “You are/are not the father.” We have all sat through an episode or two of “Maury,” and I truly believe each and every one of us pities humanity during it. The universal excuse is: “It makes me feel great about myself,” but this is simply a socially constructed facade. This show goes past being an ego boost; rather, it stymies any sort of hope that people are inherently good.

Fourth: “It will leave you breathless.” Plain and simple–it will not. In fact, the show will probably aggravate you to the point of holding your breath until you have lost consciousness.

Fifth: “On a brand new episode of ‘The Simpsons.’” I do apologize, because it makes me as sad as everyone else, but Fox needs to stop. This show hit the skids a long time ago, and every week I cringe a little more because something I once loved has fallen apart.

Sixth: “World’s,” “Most” or “Extreme.” Whether it’s “World’s Worst Tenants,” “Extreme Cheapskates” or “Extreme Makeover,” any term that implies a hyperbolic comparison of something grandiose is doomed to eternal mediocrity. If someone truly were the worst tenant in the world, then they would be homeless–not collecting alligators in their bathtub. Most of these shows can be consolidated into one overarching character flaw: un-dateable. If the program were entitled, “World’s Most Single,” then we as viewers would probably assume they are extremely cheap, awful tenants and addicted to eating toilet paper. This show could air for an hour per week, thereby saving humanity from the currently inescapable barrage of reality TV.

Seventh: “HWHHHATTTTT?” or whatever that ghastly noise Jon Stewart makes when he attempts to act surprised about something. I think he’s funny the same way I enjoy “Cops.” It’s hysterical the first time someone messes himself in the back of the police cruiser, but after a while, the same old shit gets pretty stale.

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Arts & Life Campus Events

Kind Campaign promotes apologizing and awareness of bullying among girls

Ally Boni | The Bucknellian
President and Cofounder Lauren Parsekian and Vice President and Cofounder Molly Thompson speak to University students and faculty, as well as local members of the community, about girl bullying.

Laura Crowley
Senior Writer

On Nov. 5, the Kind Campaign came to campus to talk to female students and other members of the larger community about abuse within the “girl world.” President and Co-founder Lauren Parsekian and Vice President and Co-founder Molly Thompson of the non-profit organization presented their cause, showed their documentary “Finding Nice” and facilitated conversation and activities after the film.

The documentary tells the story of how the Pepperdine University graduates set off on a tour around the country to interview both sexes about female bullying. They have now made three nation-wide tours in which they have visited schools to show their documentary and facilitate conversation between girls and women of different ages. The pair was inspired to spread awareness of the topic after they were both victims of bullying in middle and high school.

Ally Boni | The Bucknellian
Audience members had the opportunity to fill out Kind Cards with apologies, personal statements, and honest letters to other peers, family members, or friends.

The movement hopes to spread the sentiment that victims of bullying do not stand alone.  Their website, kindcampaign.com, spreads this sentiment and provides a forum where girls can anonymously share their struggles and seek support. The movement also spreads this message through several Kind Clubs across the nation, as well as a magazine and an online blog.

The most striking part of the night was seeing the “raw emotion of the girls who shared their stories” throughout the documentary, Mikaela Stein ’13 said. Cameron Berry ’13 was similarly surprised to see “the impact of mean girl-on-girl behavior on later stages of life.”

“You’d think that kind of behavior only exists in younger girls who haven’t fully matured, but now it’s obvious it exists in every stage of life, which is disheartening,” Berry said.

Both Stein and Berry believe meanness amongst girls is a problem on our campus. Lexie Leone ’14 and Sarah Remshifski ’14 shared the same sentiments, and said they will take action in their own sorority by “trying to make it more of a sisterhood with less cattiness.”

Thompson and Parsekian were both members of sororities at Pepperdine and felt their experience as Greek members was a positive one.

The campaign acknowledges that while we have all been victims to bullying, we have also been part of the cause. In honor of this, the event concluded by having audience members fill out the three cards in which they told the truth about an instance of bullying they were a part of, apologized for the incident and pledged not to bully or be a bystander to bullying.