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May 29, 2009
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May 1, 2009
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The Bates Daily
Monday, May 11, 2009
The Bates Daily is published on the web every weekday while class is in session. Paper versions of the weekday and weekend editions can be read in Commons.
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Feeling Stressed? Come TO MINDFULNESS MEETINGS - Every Monday, 12:10-12:40 *Please note the change to Mondays* 161 Wood St. Chaplaincy Common Room (#227) With Emily Wright-Timko. Mindfulness is a way of being aware of the present moment, developing gentleness toward ourselves and others, and releasing distracting thoughts of the past or future. Each meeting, we'll check in, and then Emily will offer a brief poem or reading followed by a guided mindfulness practice. This will be a great way to relax, re-focus and re-energize. Hope to see you there! If you have questions about Mindfulness Meetings please contact Mike Milliken: mmillike@bates.edu / x6936 or Emily: ewrightt@bates.edu / x6125. Also, let Emily know if you'd like to lead us in a mindfulness practice. Cosponsored by B Well and the Multifaith Chaplaincy
BBQ for SENIORS ONLY today, May 11 from 5-7pm outside the Benjamin Mays Center. Do not forget to bring cash/credit card to donate to Senior Gift! RSVP to Brianna Belanger at bbelange@bates.edu.
PEER WRITING is back for Short Term! Special Short Term hours: Monday through Thursday afternoons from 1 to 4 and Sunday through Thursday evenings from 7 to 9:30. Just stop by for helpful, low-key feedback and suggestions for your Short Term writing projects – no appointment necessary. We're on the main floor of Ladd.
GRAND OPENING OF ART COMMONS! Tonight, 8:00 pm , in Old Commons, Rowe Room. We’ll be painting the walls to decorate this new student art space, so come in clothes you don’t mind getting messy!
Remarkably attractive. Hilariously funny! Come laugh and be happy at the STRANGE BEDFELLOWS' first Short Term performance. April Fools! We were just kidding when we said we were done. The show starts at 9:00pm in the Skelton Lounge of Chase Hall. Be there! |
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SHORT TERM LECTURE SERIES: You are cordially invited to attend a series of guest speakers who will give special lectures in my short term course "Indigestible Memories of Food" (ACS: s10). Each talk will begin at 2:30 and will be held in Pettengill Hall Room 257. Tuesday May 12th: Manuel Dopilar, "My Portuguese and Chinese grandmothers' cookbooks: Intercultural memories of food"
CAMPUS-WIDE FORUM AND OPEN HOUSES for the Bates Facilities Master Plan Update - To hear information and share ideas related to the Facilities Master Plan Update please join us for the following events: a Campus-wide Forum will be held on Wednesday, May 13th from 3:00 to 5:00 PM in New Commons Rooms 221/222 and Open Houses will be held in New Commons Room 221 on Wednesday, May 13th from Noon to 1:30 PM and on Wednesday, May 20th from 3:00 to 5:00 PM. The Facilities Master Plan Update addresses current and future needs for the buildings, open spaces and facilities that compose the campus and establishes a framework for phased improvements. For more information look for posters and announcements around campus - we look forward to your participation.
Lecture by JAMIL DAKWAR, National Director, ACLU Human Rights Program on *Palestinian Human Rights in the Age of Obama: U.S., Israel, and the 'War on Terror'* - Wednesday, May 13, 4 pm, Benjamin Mays Center - Bates Students for Peace and Justice in Palestine welcomes Jamil Dakwar, director of the Human Rights Program of the American Civil Liberties Union. The ACLU Human Rights Program uses human rights strategies to complement existing ACLU advocacy on national security, immigrants' rights, women's rights and racial justice. In March 2005, the ACLU Human Rights Program and Human Rights First filed a landmark lawsuit charging former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other senior military leaders with direct responsibility for the torture and abuse of detainees. In May 2007, the ACLU Human Rights Program challenged the CIA on behalf of Khaled El-Masri, an entirely innocent victim of rendition who was released without ever being charged. The Human Rights Program is also currently involved in cases challenging inhumane practices in U.S. detention facilities and in organizing litigation to combat human trafficking.
ART LECTURE: Bates College Department of Art and Visual culture Presents: Bruce Brown, Independent Curator, Curator Emeritus at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art - Speaking on "Art Seen from Two Sides: Collector & Curator" - Wednesday, May 13, Olin Arts Center, Room 104, 7:00 p.m. Reception to Follow. The illustrious and celebrated Maine collector and curator, Bruce Brown is known throughout the state as the Freeport high school teacher whose teaching of Maine studies in the 1970s led to his becoming one the preeminent collectors of contemporary Maine artists and thus being named in 2007 one of America's significant art collectors. He is curator emeritus of the Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Rockport where he served from 1987 to 2006. Among his other contributions has been the organization of state-wide senior-thesis exhibitions. His visit is in conjunction with our course "Building a Studio Practice." Works from his own collection have been widely exhibited including major exhibitions at the Portland Museum of Art and Colby College.
COLLEGE LECTURES SERIES: Eric G. Wilson will speak on May 13 at 7pm in Chase Hall on the "The Power of Melancholy." His lecture will draw from his most recent book "Against Happiness: In Praise of Melancholy "(New York: Sarah Crichton/ Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2008) " "In "Against Happiness", the scholar Eric G. Wilson argues that melancholia is necessary to any thriving culture, that it is the muse of great literature, painting, music, and innovation and that it is the force underlying original insights. Francisco Goya, Emily Dickinson, Marcel Proust, and Abraham Lincoln were all confirmed melancholics. So enough Prozac-ing of our brains. Let’s embrace our depressive sides as the wellspring of creativity. What most people take for contentment, Wilson argues, is living death, and what the majority takes for depression is a vital force. It’s time to throw off the shackles of positivity and relish the blues that make us human." (http://www.wfu.edu/~wilsoneg/againsthappiness.html)
FREE ICE CREAM and FREE FILM SCREENING of the movie Free Swim, followed by Q & A with the founder of Swim to Empower sponsored by New World Coalition. Free Swim is a documentary film about the paradox of coastal people not knowing how to swim. Taking place on the island of Eleuthera in the Bahamas we follow a group of kids as they overcome their fears, gain confidence and reconnect with their environment by learning to swim in open waters. With fresh memories of a friend drowning and the conflicts of growing tourism, for these kids it’s not just about floating, but gaining new skills for their future. Highlighted in the film is Swim to Empower, a non-profit organization that aims to address the disturbing reality that 80% of Bahamians cannot swim. Brenna Hughes, the founder of Swim to Empower, will be presenting the film and will answer questions about VOLUNTEERING, non-profit organization establishment, as well as other topics you may want to discuss. Wednesday May 13th, 7:30 pm in PGill G52
The Student Activities Office is offering a great trip to go WHITEWATER RAFTING ON THE DEAD RIVER. The trip will be on Sunday, May 24th. The cost will be $75, and this will include rafting and all of the equipment, a roundtrip coach bus, snacks on the bus and a DVD of the rafting for each rafter to remember the trip. We are currently taking names and payments, so stop by the Student Activities Office in Chase Hall to reserve your spot. The trip is open to all students, staff and faculty, as well as affiliated friends and family members. The recommended age is at least 14, in case you are interested in bringing children or siblings along for the ride. For students that are interested in going but are concerned about the cost, assistance is available - please ask if you are interested. |
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COMMENCEMENT WORKERS NEEDED: Workers needed for Commencement exercises, Baccalaureate, Senior Semi-Formal, Midnight Madness and Commencement Weekend activities. Must sign up in the Student Activities Office. Housing and Commons privileges are given in return. Sign-ups are first-come, first served.
ATTENTION STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS: Please submit names of new officers to the CSA Office as soon as you have elections. The CSA office is in the process of putting a list of all student organizations and their leaders for next fall’s directory. The following organizations have not submitted a list of new officers:
BATES BUILDING HOUSES
CRICKET CLUB
GOSPEL CHOIR
IMMIGRANT RIGHTS ADVOCACY GROUP
KITE SURFING CLUB
MEN’S LACROSSE CLUB
LIBERTARIANS
MERIMANDERS
MOCK TRIAL TEAM
MUSHAHADA ASSOC. (MUSLIM STUDENT’S ASSOC)
PAINTBALL BALL
PUBLIC JOURNAL
SHOOTING ASSOC.
BATES STUDENT NEWSPAPER
TABLE TENNIS
ULTIMATE FRISBEE
UNITARIAN UNIVER.
VIDEO GAME CLUB
VOLLEBALL W
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Students!
Take a faculty member to lunch in Commons! Faculty! Take a student to lunch
in Commons! Free! Just give your name to the attendant
at door of Commons. Sponsored by the President's Office
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Students, student organizations, administrative or faculty offices who wish to submit a blurb to appear in the Bates Daily should fill out a request form in the Student Activities Office in Chase Hall by 4:00 p.m. the day before the date you want it to appear or 4:00 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday editions. Blurbs for one event may only run in three editions. The CSA Office reserves complete editorial control over all submissions to the Bates Daily.
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