Tears and a standing ovation from a crowd of 60 people marked the end of Brianna Robinsonâs senior recital on Jan. 20 in Jemison Auditorium.
Robinson, a soprano, performed works from Bach, Mozart and Britten, to name a few. She sang in English, French, Italian, German and Latin.
Much of the music was chosen by Robinson, but it âdoesnât usually happen that way,â she said.
âWhen I learn music I do a lot of listening, so itâs very important to me to have role modelsâfemale singers whose voices sound like mine or who I love to listen to,â Robinson said.
Her favorite female vocalist is Anna Netrebko, a Russian opera singer. Robinson said she also likes Jessye Norman and Cecilia Bartoli.
She said she memorized her music by spending time over winter break âjust walking around the house spouting them.â
One of the biggest challenges she faced in her singing career occurred during her sophomore year of college and had nothing to do with memorization.
âI found out that I had blisters on my [vocal] cords that caused a lot of air in my sound,â Robinson said.
She remembers auditioning for a few different parts, not getting them, and finding out afterward it was because her voice had a breathiness that was not liked.
âThe blisters are not all the way gone,â Robinson said. âI have to understand and work on how to actually close my cords. Itâs still a struggle.â
Robinson said being able to share her music is what keeps her singing.
âIâve always felt more like myself when Iâm on a stage,â Robinson said. âNot because Iâm in the spotlight because I donât necessarily think thatâs what it is. I think itâs being able to share my voice because Iâve put so much hard work into it.â
Sophomore Teona Council said she attended the event to support Robinson.
âShe has a really beautiful voice, and sheâs a senior so I wanted to hear her before she leaves,â Council said.
âImpressiveâ was how freshman Patrick Puracchio described Robinsonâs ability to hit certain high notes.
Robinson plans to graduate this May with a bachelor of music in performance degree and is thinking about attending Northwestern University to pursue music.
Students, faculty and staff are invited to the fourth annual Presidentâs Ball on Dec. 6th, which will feature a brand new theme but the same holiday spirit as holiday’s past.
The event is hosted by Presidentâs Club and will run from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m in the lobby of the Schimmel-Conrades Science Center.
According to the OWU website, the event was developed in the 1980s with the establishment of Presidentâs Club, but then was not held for a number of years until the club reformed in 2009 and the members reinstated Presidentâs Ball.
Senior Jennifer Lloyd, Presidentâs Ball co-director, said the event used to be held in the Slocum reading room with the wooden tables removed.
Lloyd, along with her co-director junior Katie Nunner, chose the 20s theme.
âWe just sort of wanted something that would appeal to both professors and students, and just be fun,â Lloyd said. âWe liked the glamour of the 20s.â
She said the jazz band will play for part of the event, which will go well with the theme, and be followed by disc jockeys Bhuneshwar and Krishna Arjune, both juniors.
âChartwells is doing some really cool food for us,â Lloyd said. âOur food person, Tucker (Fontanella), studied abroad in Italy and so he has a bunch of Italian dishes heâs using.â
The senior class council will once again be hosting a cocktail hour from 7:30 to 9 p.m. All OWU faculty, staff and seniors who have paid their dues are invited to attend, said Lloyd.
Sophomore Taylor Golden is the liaison between the clubâs marketing committee and the Presidentâs Ball committee, and said a lot of behind-the-scenes work goes into the event. This includes ensuring contracts are properly filled out and no health or fire codes are violated.
Senior Liz Simmons said Presidentâs Club members do the set-up and tear down for the event, make the decorations and take shifts with coat check. Students are asked to only bring coats to coat check.
âAs hosts and hostesses of the event, we want to ensure that everyone in attendance is having a great time,â Simmons said.
President Rock Jones said the theme of this yearâs Presidentâs Ball will provide another âunique twistâ on the event.
âPresident’s Ball is an important and long-standing tradition at Ohio Wesleyan that provides a special opportunity for students, faculty, and staff to come together toward the end of the semester to celebrate the coming holiday season and to enjoy the special OWU spirit that brings us together,â Jones said. âEvery year, Melissa and I look forward to sharing the spirit of the season with students at President’s Ball.â
Tickets are $5 with cash and $6 with credit or debit, and can be purchased in Ham-Wil until Friday.
âThe closer we get to Christmas, we are seeing more and more need,â said Lori Falk, executive director of the Common Ground Free Store, located on Central Avenue.
The store provides a variety of items and warm meals free of charge to Delaware residents in need.
Since January, the store has helped 5,000 different families and served between 15,000 and 18,000 meals, all provided by volunteers.
Falk said the hardest step for people in need is getting in the door.
âWe never know why they come,â Falk said. âEveryone has their own story.â
Falk, who has over thirty years of non-profit management experience, said 15 percent of their patrons cannot read or write and 10 percent to 18 percent are homeless. The store is a non-profit with a budget of $115,000 a year. It is primarily funded by individual donors and has partnerships with 33 churches.
Deb Whitney, who describes herself as âa garden-variety volunteer,â said blankets, towels, sheets, housewares and childrenâs clothes are in particularly high demand.
âThose things blow out of here fast,â she said. âWe never have enough of that stuff.â
Donations must be in good enough condition that you would give the items to a friend or neighbor, and the store does not accept furniture. Whitney said people sometimes return childrenâs clothing they got at the store that their children have outgrown.
âThey want to be sure we have the opportunity to give them to other patrons,â she said.
Freshman Ellen Sizer began volunteering at Common Ground Free Store this semester after visiting with her UC 160 class. She said she âfell in loveâ with the place.
While volunteering, she keeps track of the items patrons take and interacts with them, which is why she visits as often as she can, she said.
âI love the whole communal factor of this place,â Sizer said. âI like connecting to the people and interacting with them. It is truly a special place in that way.â
For information about how to get involved, either donating or volunteering, those interested can visit the Delaware Common Ground Free Store website, commongroundfreestore.org, or like the Common Ground Free Storeâs page on Facebook.
Starting this year, the treasurer for the Wesleyan Council of Student Affairs (WCSA) will be appointed by current WCSA members, instead of elected by the student body.
Sophomore treasurer Sam Schurer said the change was made because an election was âa little bit too risky.â
âWe wanted to avoid anyone being elected that wasn’t necessarily qualified, and so this is just kind of another level of security,â Schurer said.
Junior Emma Drongowski, newly elected vice president, said the treasurer needs to have special knowledge of the software WCSA uses and know general accounting. In the past, treasurers have not always had the necessary expertise and âthe position suffered for it.â
The decision to make treasurer an appointed position was made about a month ago during a full body meeting, though the idea was âtossed aroundâ for awhile, said senior President Lauren Holler, who was the treasurer two years ago.
She said having to run in an election can be intimidating for students, and in past years sometimes only one person ran for treasurer.
âSeeing that thereâs not a lot of candidate turnout for that position, generally we thought it would be better to make it an application so that maybe more people would be encouraged to apply,â Holler said.
Typically, WCSA members hold their positions from January to December. Schurer said he was appointed at the end of last semester because the previous treasurer, Connor Latz, is not on campus this semester.
Holler said having to replace Latz halfway through his term did not really impact WCSAâs decision to appoint treasurers from now on and said she believes Schurer has done a great job as treasurer.
She said having a treasurer who has experience with making budgets is important because WCSA has three different budgets to make: one for clubs and organizations, one for special initiatives, and one for WCSAâs operational expenses.
âWe would really like to just get cleaner, more precise budgets,â Holler said. âWe feel that if thereâs someone who was appointed who has different qualifications or better knowledge of excel, or things like that, they might be able to do that.â
Schurer said it is becoming even more important that WCSA funds be handled properly.
âThe number of students we have is going down, so the amount of money we have to work with is going down,â Schurer said. âMeanwhile, the number of active clubs on campus is going up, and so, especially with that tightening, we wanted to make sure everything is being done responsibly.â
Schurer said WCSA had been considering developing an internship for someone who would âhandle everything on more of an accounting endâ but they decided to not do that this year, so the WCSA treasurer remains an unpaid position.
The application for WCSA treasurer can be found at wsca.owu.edu and should be submitted to wcsaexec@owu.edu. The deadline is Nov. 21.
Title IX compliance continues to be an ongoing process and a source of heated debate at many universities, and Ohio Wesleyan is no exception.
The Title IX statute of the Educational Amendments of 1972 states:Â âNo person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.â
Because even private universities like Ohio Wesleyan take advantage of federal grant money, Title IX requires essentially every institution in the United States to provide equal opportunities to both men and women.
Athletics
In September, Val Cushman visited campus to conduct an audit of Ohio Wesleyanâs Title IX compliance regarding our athletic programs. Cushman is the former athletic director at Randolph Macon Womanâs College and former senior assistant to the president at Washington & Lee University.
The OWU Presidentâs Office hosted a Title IX presentation on Oct. 27 at noon in Benes Room B in which Cushman shared her findings and recommendations.
Cushman said the focus of her Title IX audits is intercollegiate athletics, but the statute involves many other issues, such as the practice of prohibiting men from admittance into nursing programs, which is now illegal.
She said the law was challenged all throughout the 1970s and 1980s and the right away to interpret it is still being decided. The Department of Education Office of Civil Rights is responsible for enforcing and interpreting the law, but it is also interpreted through case law.
Title IX has three prongs: quantity of opportunities, proportionality and quality of athletic experience. Each prong is determined in a specific way.
Cushman said she has her own way of telling if an athletics program is meeting Title IX requirements.
âAn athletics program can be considered gender equitable when the participants in both the menâs and womenâs sports programs would accept as fair and equitable the overall program of the other gender,â Cushman said.
According to the chart on Cushmanâs slideshow, the amount of female athletes in the U.S. doubled between 1970 and 1980, and has continued to grow since then. The amount of male athletes has also continued to grow, and there are still more male athletes than female athletes.
Skylar Drake â14, who works for the Presidentâs office and helped create the event, said the fact that the male athlete population has also increased under Title IX stood out to her.
âEquity doesnât mean taking away menâs opportunities,â Drake said. âEveryone deserves to have access to the same resources.â
Cushman said football began at OWU in 1890, and many other male sports were added in the decades to follow. However, the first varsity competition for women wasnât established until 1982, nearly a century later.
She also said that the roster sizes for most menâs sports at OWU exceed the suggested size set by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). For womenâs sports, however, the roster sizes are nearly all smaller than the suggested size. For example, the OWU football team is composed of 122 athletes. The NCAA suggests 58.
âWhile you (OWU athletics department) made improvements for women, you grew your menâs roster even more,â Cushman said.
She said OWUâs facilities and equipment, among other facets of the athletics department, are equitable, but 70% of athletic recruiting expenditures go to menâs teams, with only 30% going to womenâs teams.
Cushman said another issue is that OWU currently has no policy regarding how to respond to requests for new sports.
Cushmanâs recommendations include adding a female senior administrator to the athletics department, setting team roster sizes and coming up with a long-term plan to establish more womenâs teams.
âI have never recommended a menâs sport be cut,â Cushman said. âAt division III institutions with established programs, I would be hard pressed to say a male athlete having a good experience should lose that opportunity.â
She also said she believes OWUâs athletic program is something to be proud of. âYour next claim to fame just might be gender equity.â
Sexual Violence
About twenty-five students came out to see OWU administrators discuss Title IXâs effect on sexual violence policies on Oct. 29 at noon in Benes Room C.
The event was hosted by the Womenâs Resource Center and the panel included Richelle Schrock, womenâs and gender studies professor; Kimberlie Goldsberry, Dean of Students; Michael Esler, coordinator of student conduct; Levi Harrel, residential life coordinator; and Douglas Bennet, Director of Counseling Services.
Senior Lo Rump, intern at the Womenâs Resource Center, said the event came about because she and other interns had been hearing a lot about Title IX in the news and how it might change sexual violence policies, but they didnât know much else about it. They thought many other students might be the same way.
âWe wanted to bring together some administrators and people on campus to further explain what these changes were and how they pertain to OWU,â Rump said.
Panelists were each given the chance to share with the audience their thoughts and experiences regarding OWUâs sexual violence policies and Title IXâs effect on them.
Goldsberry said new laws and regulations are passed often, and so sexual violence policies are continually evolving.
âOftentimes legislators are not familiar with the student experience on the college campus,â Goldsberry said. âThey donât always have that full knowledge, but I trust theyâre doing the best they can with the info they have.â
She said a bystander intervention training program was started in October to teach faculty, staff and students how to properly intervene in crisis situations, including those regarding sexual violence. She said there will be four training sessions in November focusing on prevention.
In the past ten years, there has been âan explosionâ of Title IX activity, Esler said. It began as an anti-discrimination edict, but has changed over time.
He also said the government assumes colleges are trying to conceal sexual violence on their campuses, but that is not always true. OWU has a higher rate of reporting sexual violence than many other universities, he said.
Harrel told the audience about the process that occurs when sexual misconduct is reported and said Title IX hasnât had much of an effect on that. He said he becomes âvery personally investedâ in cases of sexual assault and that residential life staff are always there to help.
For more information about sexual violence at OWU, see Public Safetyâs 2014 Clery Campus Safety Report on public safetyâs website.
âPoetry and the problem of politics seem to have an affinity,â said poet and essayist Adam Kirsch, who spoke to about ninety students and staff about the intersection of poetry and politics on Tuesday, Nov. 3 in the Benes Room.
However, there are important differences. âPoetry can be absolute, while politics is the art of compromise,â Kirsch said to an audience of about 90 in the Hamilton-Williams Campus Center Benes rooms on Tuesday.
The timeline of Kirsch’s lecture spanned from Plato to Percy Shelley to the Nazis. In Platoâs time, he said, poetry was highly regulated by the government because it was believed to have the same influence violent video games are believed to have nowadays.
But people do not think of poetry this way anymore, Kirsch said. âLiterature is no longer a cutting edge entertainment technology.”
He said the Nazis performed book burnings because they believed books shaped the minds of citizens, so only âthe right booksâ can be allowed into the country.
âLiterature becomes freer as it becomes less dangerous, and it becomes less dangerous when it becomes less powerful,â Kirsch said.
Junior Hannah Simpson said she particularly enjoyed Kirschâs references to well-known literary works and how his presentation was structured.
âI like how he explained various trends in poetry, basically starting in ancient Greece all the way to modernism,â she said.
Junior Joe Pileski said what most stood out to him was Kirschâs comments about poetryâs role in the world and about the Romantics claiming Milton was âof the devil.â
âThe most energetic parts of a poem â what makes a great poem the greatest â is not the moral center of the poem necessarily,â Pileski said. âI think the Romantics kind of missed the point a little bit.â
Kirschâs latest book, “Rocket and Lightship: Essays on Literature and Ideas,” comes out Nov. 17.
The new mural in the amphitheater beside the Hamilton-Williams Campus Center uses symbolism and a painting technique called pointillism to celebrate âthe diversity of people and cultures on this campus,â said senior Kerrigan Boyd, moderator of Citizens of the World House.
The mural was painted the weekend of Oct. 24 and was a collaborative effort between the Student Led Art Movement and Citizens of the World House, who brought in artist and muralist Jacque Fragua to help with the project.
Fragua is a Native American artist who works for Honor The Treaties, which is an organization that uses art and advocacy to amplify the voices of indigenous communities, according to their website.
Boyd said Fragua visited campus last semester to speak about his use of art as a tool for activism. She and her housemates were inspired by his speech, so Boyd reached out to the president of SLAM, senior (not sure about this…)Â Catie Beach.
âCatie actually said she had been wanting to do a mural too, so it was just kind of a series of perfect events that aligned very well,â Boyd said.
Boyd and Beach won Octoberâs You Are OWU award for their work on the mural.
WCSA provided the funds for the project, and Boyd said they were âreally supportive and generous.â
Boyd said there were a lot of administrative levels the project had to be approved on, but the process would have been much more challenging at a bigger school.
âCraig Ullom (Vice President of Student Affairs) and Sally Leber (Director of Service Learning) really championed the project and took it to the proper levels to where it needed to be,â Boyd said.
She said the amphitheater was chosen as the muralâs location because it was unutilized and the subject of the mural was based off Fraguaâs work, which is focused on social justice.
âWe know thatâs broad, but itâs also a theme I think really unites us on campus, so we wanted the mural to be an expression of that,â Boyd said.
Both artistic and non-artistic students were invited to contribute to the mural and Boyd said she was âblown awayâ by how many people participated.
âI went to class on Friday until 1 and I came back and there was already so much on the wall,â Boyd said. âI think it really speaks to the inclusivity of the theme.”
The mural was painted in the style of pointillism, which Boyd said doesnât require extensive knowledge of painting, but makes for beautiful art.
Freshman Ellen Sizer, a member of SLAM, said pointillism is a painting technique that uses small dots of colors in a pattern to create an overall image and is an offshoot of impressionism.
âI think it was genius because people who arenât as artistically gifted can still contribute and the mural can look rad,â Sizer said.
Sizer compared the effect of pointillism to a city landscape, saying the view from far away is very different from the view up close.
âI was afraid that Iâd screw it (the mural) up, but I did contribute a little bit,â Sizer said. âIt was fun to just watch the process more than anything.â
Boyd said she is happy with how the mural turned out and wants to thank everyone who contributed.
One of her favorite aspects of the mural is its symbolism.
âHe (Fragua) based it loosely on indigenous bead work,â Boyd said. âThe metaphor for each bead is that each piece stands alone but comes together to make something beautiful and united as a whole.â
Using posters, pictures, and quotes, several students displayed what they learned at the national LeaderShape conference on Tuesday and Thursday in the Hamilton-Williams Campus Center.
Starting the summer of 2012, Ohio Wesleyan has sent several student delegates each year to the intensive, week-long LeaderShape conference to explore how to âlead with integrityâ and discover who they want to be.
Sophomore Rachel Morley applied to be part of LeaderShape after hearing about it through the OWU Daily.
âTo me, LeaderShape means a complete lack of sleep and amazing people, and going way outside of my comfort zone to figure out what I want in life and how Iâm going to get it,â Morley said.
Junior Meghan Finke said each delegate who attended the conference this year created a poster describing his or her experience and what was learned.       Â
âEach of us came up with a vision of how we’d like to see the world involving an issue we’re passionate about,â Finke said. âFor instance, my vision is âI’d like to see a world where people with mental illness thrive with community support, understanding, and respect while living without stigma.ââ
Finke said it was âpowerfulâ to meet so many passionate, involved college students from across the country and she now feels more confident in her leadership abilities.
âThe most important thing that I learned from LeaderShape is how all the different personality types of leaders lead, as well as how I go about leading,â said sophomore Leslie Alton. âThis is important because I now know how to better work with others to achieve a goal with limited problems and best outcomes.â
There is also a LeaderShape fellow position, currently held by junior Hannah Henderson, that involves coordinating the application, selection, and registration processes for LeaderShape at OWU.
âUpperclassmen leaders on campus are asked to recommend younger students they think would be a good fit for the conference,â Henderson said. âThe application is then sent out to those students, but also advertised in several ways to the whole student body. It is an online application that becomes available in February.â
A new art exhibit in Beeghly Library titled âWaterscapes: Transforming the Landscapeâ showcases several photographs of nature captured by Columbus-based photographer Rick Buchanan.
           According to Buchananâs artist statement, he is drawn to photographing water because it is always moving and changing the landscape. The photographs in the display were taken over the course of the past nine years in the United States, Canada and Taiwan.
âThey represent water in its many forms and illustrate how water changes, influences and beautifies the landscapes of our world,â Buchanan wrote.
Buchanan is a commercial and portrait photographer with a studio in downtown Columbus who âenjoys working alone in natureâ and travels regularly to capture âthe natural world and the not-so-natural world.â
The students in Mr. Justin Kronewetterâs gallery management class were tasked with choosing, framing and hanging the photographs, and had the opportunity to talk with the artist beforehand.
âMeeting Mr. Buchanan was a pleasure,â freshman Cameron Stemler said. âWe discussed many of his photographs and were able to get a chance to learn where these photographs were captured.â
Sophomore Leia Miza is also in Kronewetterâs class and said Buchanan gave them a stack of his photographs so they could chose which ones would be displayed.
âHe suggested a few himself and agreed with our decisions for the exhibition,â Miza said. âItâs very important to meet the artist beforehand and see his point of view of his work.â
Library Director Cathi Cardwell said she appreciates the relationship OWUâs libraries have with the Ross Art Museum and all the exhibits it curates for Gallery 2001.
â The exhibits add visual interest to Beeghly and draw the OWU community and Delaware community members into our space,â Cardwell said. âWaterscapes is a wonderful example of the way the exhibits tie into events or campus initiatives, like the Sagan National Colloquium. I always look forward to what’s coming next–it’s always different.â
The exhibit began on October 13 and will run until December 18. The photographs are located on the wall beside the front desk on the first floor of Beeghly Library.
Buchanan will also be giving a public artist talk in the Bayley Room in Beeghly Library on October 24 at 7:30 p.m.