Events Schedule: October 2011, revised
Hello from Bates! Here’s a refreshed preview of public events at the college Oct. 7-31, 2011. This schedule includes events added since the first October edition, and corrections to the earlier edition.
Except as noted, these events are open to the public at no charge. (Where there is an admission fee, the cost for the general public appears first, followed by the cost for students and seniors.)
Print it! If you’re viewing this in the email version, please click here to go to the Events Schedule website. At the website, go to the bottom of the page and click “print” (as in “print this page”) for the printable format.
For updated events information throughout the month, see our Upcoming Events page. Questions or comments? Contact events editor Doug Hubley at calendar@bates.edu.
7 Fri
7:30 p.m.
Yondering: Artist Brad Kahlhamer and vocalist Kelsey Barrett of Effi Briest combine storytelling and music. The program also features a multimedia piece by Ursula Scherrer and Kato Hideki. Kahlhamer’s artwork appears in the Bates College Museum of Art exhibition Tale Spinning. A reception takes place in the museum during intermission. Free, but tickets required. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
Sat 8
9 a.m.
Men’s tennis: Wallach Invitational.
Wallach Tennis Center
10 a.m.
Happy Anniversary, Olin Arts Center! A family artsfest starts a yearlong celebration of the 25th anniversary of the arts center, home to music, art and visual culture at Bates. With family activities, student artists, barbecue (free for the first 100 arrivals) and music including the Asphalt Orchestra (see Oct. 6), which leads tours and offers a 2 p.m. performance. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Arts Center (where else?)
9 Sun
9 a.m.
Men’s tennis: Wallach Invitational (second day).
Wallach Tennis Center
11 a.m.
Holy Communion (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
5:30 p.m.
Protestant worship (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
7:30 p.m.
Buddhist meditation (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
10 Mon
7:30 p.m.
Dreams Deferred: The Sakia Gunn Film Project: Documentary filmmaker Charles Brack presents his film about a 2003 gay hate crime that led to the death of Sakia Gunn, a 15-year-old high school student in Newark, N.J. Sponsored by the rhetoric department. FMI 207-786-8294.
Pettengill G52 (Keck Classroom)
11 Tue
12:30 p.m.
Duo pianists Chiharu Naruse and Bridget Convey perform Hovhaness, McPhee and Brahms in a Noonday Concert. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
12 Wed
4 p.m.
Men’s soccer vs. Husson.
Russell Street Field
6:30 p.m.
Archive, Memory and South African Futures, a talk by Verne Harris, head of the Memory Programme at the Nelson Mandela Foundation. Sponsored by the Material Culture Working Group. FMI 207-786-8296.
Muskie Archives
6 p.m.
Life drawing (see Oct. 5).
Olin 259
13 Thu
4:30 p.m.
Irreducible Stories of Mental Illness by Nancy Koven, assistant professor of psychology and Kroepsch Award for Excellence in Teaching honoree. FMI 207-786-6066.
Pettengill G52
7:30 p.m.
Fiction reading. Language Arts Live presents Laura van den Berg, author of the short-story collection What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us. FMI 207–786-6256.
Muskie Archives
14 Fri
8 p.m.
Contradance: Music by Greg and Jessie Boardman, calling by Chrissy Fowler. All dances taught and called; beginners’ workshop, 7:30 p.m. $5.
Chase Lounge
15 Sat
11 a.m.
Men’s and women’s cross country: Maine State Championships.
Pineland Farms, New Gloucester
7:30 p.m.
Francine Reed, who sings with Lyle Lovett’s Large Band, is celebrated in her own right as a master of rhythm and blues. With Maine’s own Maplejuice Quartet. Tickets: $15/$10 advance, $20/$15 day of show, at www.batestickets.com. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
16 Sun
11 a.m.
Holy Communion (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
Noon
Field hockey vs. Tufts.
Campus Avenue Field
Women’s soccer vs. Tufts.
Russell Street Field
2 p.m.
Men’s soccer vs. Tufts.
Russell Street Field
5:30 p.m.
Protestant worship (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
7:30 p.m.
Buddhist meditation (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
17 Mon
7 p.m.
Ozzie Jones ’92 returns to Bates to discuss his career as writer, director and producer of stage and film. Jones is currently working on a documentary film, My Block is Crazy, that addresses teen violence in Philadelphia. FMI 207-786-6220.
Benjamin Mays Center
7:30 p.m.
A River Lost and Found: The Androscoggin River in Time and Place, presented by Bowdoin College faculty members Michael Kolster, photographer and associate professor of art, and Matthew Klingle, associate professor of history and environmental studies. A Civic Forum series event presented by the collaborators of the Andro Project, the Harward Center for Community Partnerships and the Environmental Studies department. FMI 207-786-6202.
Muskie Archives
19–23 Wed–Sun
Fall Recess: No classes, but administrative offices are open.
19 Wed
7 p.m.
Men’s soccer vs. Southern Maine.
Garcelon Field
20 Thu
7 p.m.
Nonfiction reading: Journalist Mary Jo McConahay reads from her new book Maya Roads: One Woman’s Journey Among the People of the Rainforest. FMI 207-786-6066.
Muskie Archives
22 Sat
9 a.m.
Medieval Miseries: Responses to Hard Times. Bates historian Michael Jones is among presenters at the annual New England Medieval Conference. Open to all, but registration required: $25. Visit www.community.bates.edu/NEMC2011. FMI 207-786-6400.
Pettengill G52
11 a.m.
L/A Community Day: Bates Athletics invites all Lewiston and Auburn schoolchildren to today’s home games against Middlebury as part of the NCAA’s “Take a Kid to the Game” initiative. Youth sports clinics, campus tours and other family activities are also offered, as well as Auburn/Lewiston Fly Football games before the Bates game and at halftime. FMI Kevin McHugh, director of physical education and athletics, at 207-786-6341 or kmchugh@bates.edu.
Athletics fields (see below)
Field hockey vs. Middlebury.
Campus Avenue Field
11 a.m.
Women’s soccer vs. Middlebury.
Russell Street Field
1 p.m.
Football vs. Middlebury.
Garcelon Field
2 p.m.
Men’s soccer vs. Middlebury.
Russell Street Field
23 Sun
11 a.m.
Holy Communion (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
5:30 p.m.
Protestant worship (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
7:30 p.m.
Buddhist meditation (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
24 Mon
Open to the World: Bates Celebrates Unbounded Learning. Five days of events celebrate Bates’ global reach through interdisciplinary academics, culminating with the Oct. 27 dedication of two renovated academic halls. Today: Bates observes United Nations Day. FMI 207-786-6336 or arichard@bates.edu.
6 p.m.
The Progress of the Fork: From Diabolical to Divine, a talk by Darra Goldstein, professor of Russian at Williams College and an expert on international cuisines. Sponsored by the Material Culture Working Group. FMI 207-786-8296.
Pettengill G52 (Keck Classroom)
7:30 p.m.
Social entrepreneurship: Discussing their work are Elizabeth Stefanski of Business Innovation Factory; Peter Murray, Center for Progressive Leadership; Bethany Robertson, I Do Foundation; and Jonathan Rosenthal, of Oke USA and Equal Exchange. A Civic Forum series event, sponsored by the Harward Center for Community Partnerships. FMI 207-786-6202.
Muskie Archives
25 Tue
Open to the World, second day (see Oct. 24)
12:30 p.m.
Bach concerti led by harpsichordist John Corrie in a Noonday Concert. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
4 p.m.
Translations 2011 Poetry Festival: This five-day event includes international poets presenting their work, Bates faculty and students offering English translations, and a conference on the art and practice of translation. This year’s festival showcases poets from Japan, Europe and the Americas. A welcome is followed by readings at 4:45 by Rhea Cote, of Brewer, Maine, and Bates faculty member Francisca Lopez, a native of Spain; and an evening reception at 6 p.m. FMI: gdumais@bates.edu or 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
26 Wed
3 p.m.
Women’s soccer vs. Colby.
Russell Street Field
4:15 p.m.
Translations 2011: Registration for a conference associated with the festival.
Chase Lounge
6 p.m.
Life drawing (see Oct. 5).
Olin 259
Open to the World: Programming during the third day of Open to the World: Bates Celebrates Unbounded Learning includes a screening of the food-industry documentary Food, Inc. and, at 7:30, remarks by Stonyfield Farm “CE-Yo” and President Gary Hirshberg P’13, who appears in the film. FMI 207-786-6336 or arichard@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
7 p.m.
Translations 2011: Poets Miguel Angel Zapata, of Peru, and Naomi Otsubo, a native of Japan living in Maine, read from their work, with Bates faculty and students offering English translations (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
27 Thu
8 a.m.
Translations 2011: A conference on the art and practice of translation opens (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Muskie Archives
4:15 p.m.
Open to the World: Bates’ celebration of its global reach through interdisciplinary academics culminates with today’s dedication of two renovated academic buildings, Roger Williams Hall and Hedge Hall. Paul Marks ’83, chairman and CEO of aerospace manufacturer Argosy International, offers dedication remarks (see next item). FMI 207-786-6336 or arichard@bates.edu.
Hedge and Roger Williams halls
5:15 p.m.
George Mitchell, former U.S. senator and special U.S. envoy for Mideast peace, gives a keynote address as part of Open to the World: Bates Celebrates Unbounded Learning. A reception in Pettengill Hall’s Perry Atrium follows. FMI 207-786-6336 or arichard@bates.edu.
Chapel (overflow viewing in Pettengill Hall, Perry Atrium)
7 p.m.
Translations 2011: A talk by conference presenter Enrique Yepes, Colombian critic and scholar of Latin American literatures, is followed by poetry readings by Polina Barskova, a native of Russia, and Bates faculty member Robert Farnsworth (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
28 Fri
4 p.m.
Open to the World: Global Possibilities: On the final day of Open to the World: Bates Celebrates Unbounded Learning, five young Bates alums discuss their experiences with initiatives that have both local and global consequences. FMI 207-786-6336 or arichard@bates.edu.
Pettengill G52 (Keck Classroom)
4:15 p.m.
Translations 2011: Rafael Carpintero, who has translated into Spanish works by bestselling Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, discusses the translation of poetry (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
6 p.m.
Volleyball vs. Trinity.
Alumni Gymnasium
7 p.m.
Translations 2011: Readings by Danny Plourde, a Francophone poet from Canada, and Carmen Elisabeth Puchianu, a poet from Romania who writes in German (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
29 Sat
The Cost of Value: A Symposium on College Costs with Robert B. Archibald and David H. Feldman, authors of Why Does College Cost So Much? Details TBA.
9 a.m.
Translations 2011: A conference on the art and practice of translation continues (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Muskie Archives
1:30 p.m.
Volleyball vs. Wesleyan.
Alumni Gymnasium
7 p.m.
Translations 2011: Readings by all participating poets and a reception in the Museum of Art conclude the festival (see Oct. 25). FMI 207-786-8293.
Chase Lounge
30 Sun
11 a.m.
Holy Communion (see Oct. 2)
Chapel
5:30 p.m.
Protestant worship (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
7:30 p.m.
Buddhist meditation (see Oct. 2).
Chapel
Bates College Museum of Art
Celebrating 25 years in 2011–12
Hours: 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Mon-Sat (until 7 p.m. Wednesdays)
Through Oct. 2
Andrew and Jamie Wyeth: Selections from the Private Collection of Victoria Browning Wyeth
Drawings, watercolors and illustrated letters from one of America’s most famous artist families, in a show assembled from the personal collection of Victoria Wyeth ’01.
Through Oct. 29
Manuel Alvarez Bravo: Fotografías de México
Bravo (1902-2002) is a leading figure in 20th-century photography and Mexican art, known for work deeply rooted in the culture, people and landscape of Mexico.
Through Dec. 17
Their imagery takes many forms, spinning mysterious and provocative tales that reflect their personal and cultural backgrounds.
Oct. 10–Dec. 17
25: Selections from the Permanent Collection
Reflecting the curatorial contributions of students in a museum internship course, 25 celebrates the museum’s quarter-century of existence with a select group of artworks from the collection.