Showing posts with label Week in Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week in Review. Show all posts

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Week in Review: Rain makes the Weekend a Wash, but the Middle was Surprisingly Satisfying

As expected during the week after midterms, events were back loaded and contingent on weather to succeed. 

The East Side Hall Councils planned to have an afternoon of a Muggle rendition of Quidditch. This low-budget version would substitute PVC pipes for brooms, soccer balls for the quaffle, the main scoring ball, eschew bludgers and beaters for the sake of safety, and utilize a member of the Cross Country team for the Snitch.  To improve scoring and ensure the matches last longer than five minutes, "catching" the snitch would result in 50 points instead of 250 points and the end of the match.

Unlike the wizarding world, inclement weather and a muddy playing surface will tend to prevent successful execution of Quidditch. Hopefully the weather will clear up and the East Side Quad Quidditch Season will begin this semester.

Sadly, I was also unable to attend the Luau or UP Idol, the Pilots After Dark event of the week. From what
I have been able to gather from atendees, the latter event featured special guest judges who knew residents and music well: Director of Residence Life Mike Walsh, playing the "Simon" role, Maureen Briare, Campus Ministry Music Director, played the "Paula Abdul" position, and Assistant Director Jon Merchant, relished his role as the "Randy Jackson" member, often utilizing "dawg" in his responses.

One event I was able to attend was Mr. Corrado, but stay tuned for that review.



I was able to stumble upon the International Club's Arts show and music night at Espresso UP.  Before my camera battery ran low, I was able to tape some of the performances.

Members of the International Club displayed their talents in one of five categories: painting, drawing, 3D art, photography, and mixed art, which I believe incorporates at least two different types of artwork.

Some categories, like photography and mixed art, only received one entry a piece, creating an easy win for those participants.

The musical portion of the evening featured a montage of around 23 songs mixing classical music and modern hits and the examination of whether French improves music (it does!)

Beatriz offered a change of pace with an anecdote from her time in South Africa.  When Beatriz went to say farewell to one of her friends who happened to be several months pregnant, she executed the traditional maneuver of hugging her friend.  When the embrace ended, Beatriz was dismayed to see her friend crying because hugging is considered unlucky.  However, this anecdote has a happy ending because the birth went off without any complications, which prompted Beatriz to consider the effect of superstitions on important life events.

It was definitely fun to stumble upon the International Club again because they have so many different cultures that can produce a greater variety toward their programming. I last encountered the International Club during Diversity Dialouge Week and it is always nice to see events overlapping. 

Stay tuned for a fun map and the Mr. Corrado/Mr. and Ms. Shipstad Tale of the Tape! 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Week in Review part 4: Interview with the Electric Acoustic Groove Experience

I should have included this within the JPFW post, but I actually forgot about it while writing the post.

Table offerings. Taken by Steven.
Saturday night of Junior Parents and Families Weekend, CPB presented a coffeehouse featuring Eric E, an acoustical guitar artist armed with some loop machines and recording devices that allowed him to layer his voice to assemble melodies.

He was able to mix in some original songs into his request style allowing the crowd to offer a year.  Eric would then play a hit song from that year. 
This tactic allowed the small crowd to hear among others, a string of 1998's "Thank You" by Natalie Merchant, 1968's "Sittin on the Dock of the Bay" by Otis Redding with audience participation on the whistling verse, and 1990's "Won't Back Down" by Tom Petty. 

To prove his musical diversity, he was able to play country (1986's Randy Davis's "Forever and Ever Amen") and jazz (1955's "Autumn Leaves" by Andy Williams.) 

Stay patient over the next few weeks for video from his performance.

After the concert, I was able to interview him before he left.

bs: Why the stage name "eric-e?"

eric-e: Well, my last name is Engerbreston and people kept mispronouncing it, so I decided to shorten it to save people the struggle.

bs: How wide is your repertoire?

eric-e.: I can play songs as old as "The Entertainer" to recent hits (he played Train's "Hey, Soul Sister" as the 2010 request.) I was actually surprised I did not get requests for years older than 1955, because I could have played some great jazz and blues standards.

bs: What is your view on music radio and the music industry as a whole?

eric-e: Radio has been damaged by the ipod and Itunes. When I was young, I could only afford 15 albums. I was able to listen to albums all the way through and get the true meaning of songs only after listening to them  several times.   Music is not album-oriented anymore.  Since people do not listen to albums as much anymore, some people are not able to understand songs that fit within the context of an album.

bs: Why did you refer to you final song, Kansas's "Carry on, my Wayward Son," as your favorite Top 40 song of all time?

eric-e: It is a great rock song and has a good message.  I enjoy playing songs that have a message to them.

bs:  You have a diverse amount of songs in your repertoire. Are there any songs that you have proud to have mastered?

eric-e: I had trouble mastering "Carry on, my Wayward Son" due to the complicated nature of the song and  I was originally not able to sing that high.  Over the years, I developed the ability to sing high enough and managed to learn the difficult parts.



Eric-e used to travel all over the country, but now stays around the Pacific Northwest partly due to the economy, as proved by his driving around in his family minivan that can hold all his equipment. 

Coffeehouses are open to everyone, so try to stop by their next one!

If you need music to accompany your wedding, party, or social gathering and your event will be taking place in the Northwestern states within a relatively short drive from Idaho, (Wash., Ore., Idaho, Mont., Wyo.), consider eric-e!

This coming week is midterms, so events should be light.  The next few posts might not be great, but we'll see how it goes. 

Hopefully you readers will be able to get enough sleep and not let your brain melt!

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Week in Review, Photo Edition: IRS+Anime= Tennis and Focus the Nation?

Wednesday presented an interesting pair of contrasting clubs: the Accounting Club (UPAA- University of Portland Accounting Association) and the Anime Club. The former was filled with students who desired extra credit and/or were actually intrigued in government work. The latter had around 10-12 people coming in and out, depending on time/opinion of show.  The blend of these two can be personified in tennis and Focus the Nation 2011.  Housed in the Louisiana-Pacific Center, tennis possesses the length and crowd size of Anime club meetings (around 3 hours, depending on length and around 10 people) but the seriousness of the UPAA meetings. Focus the Nation was a daylong event allowing students, teachers, community members and businesses to gather and discuss how to spread the new energy efficient ideas to the world. The sessions also featured the intensity of tennis and the capacity of the UPAA meeting.
Hopefully the following can illustrate the comparisons. If the link in the caption does not work here is the youtube link to "Every Anime Opening Ever Made"




See you next time, for some housekeeping from JPFW. Have a good week!

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Week in Review Part 3: JPFW Aptly Names its Core Demographic

After a week of discussing issues and topics that can strike chords with people, here's a recap of last weekend's big event: Junior Parents and Families Weekend.

Craig Karges, the "mentalist", was a hoot again this year, opting to select the 10 digits of a random Cincinnati phone number, give them, in order to 10 children and "children at heart", matching the same number a mother-daughter selected.  Karges also opted to perform his trademark "table levitation" and display his abilities of identifying the name and ID number of a UP student and each digit of a piece of paper currency, usually of unusual American value, like a $2 bill, even if someone tries to trick him by handing a 500 Forint note from Hungary.


After a brunch featuring breakfast quiche, introductory speeches for introductions, and Fr. Beauchamp delivering a general speech, Career Services, the Alumni Office and the Moreau Center were able to promote their services through the examples of several alumni and a current senior.  The varied post-grad experiences prove the sponsoring departments can find plenty of options that could work for the individual completely unsure of their future to the determined person who really wants a fellowship.

The end of the morning presented the "varsity sport of the mind," quiz bowl, pitting parents against students.
For those who have not played or seen a match, here are the basic guidelines.

Two teams of four compete to answer the most questions within 10 minutes.  The moderator, after saying "Welcome to College Bowl!" and getting the response "The Varsity Sport of the Mind!", will offer a tossup question.  The person that gets it right, earns their team 10 points.  If someone thinks they know it before the end of the question, they can buzz in early.  However,  an incorrect guess would subtract 5 points from their team's score.  If their team waits until the end of the question to offer a guess, no penalty exists for an incorrect answer.

The team that gets the tossup question correct gets about 30 seconds to answer a three-part question, having little to no relation to the previous topic like naming three different types of poetic lyrical forms after identifying which war the Lincoln Brigade fought (the Spanish Civil War.)

The moral of the exercise is the adults are more knowledgeable about the origins of Fictional Detectives and USC's transgressions, while the offspring were better at chemical compositions and identifying movies that Stephen Toblowsky, one of Hollywood's bit part royalty, has gotten paid to appear. (Groundhog Day as Ned Ryerson the Insurance Salesman and a part in the Garfield movie)  The parents showed their distance from general knowledge was closer than they were from their college days as they won close (75-65) and not so close matches (115-25).  The progeny did salvage some sense of pride with a 90-60 rout over the parents behind knowledge Mosul is a city in Iraq and Toblowsky films, despite a late threat by the parents.

The weekend works best for families that might not visit campus too often due to the distant nature of home from the university or to whom many stories of classmates are told.  Having had the family visit enough, the normal attractions of the university were no longer special, so I took the folks to the taqueria known as Tienda Santa Cruz #2, a restaurant hidden in the back of Panderia Santa Cruz Taqueria, a Mexican grocery store and bakery in St. John's. If one is not careful, they could drive right by the place along Lombard.  Park nearby and enjoy cheap Mexican cuisine that will fill you up for a limited amount of money.

Overall, the weekend featured plenty of time to have fun, point out the similarities between parent and child, and take your mind off tests and midterms.

To readers, what was your JPFW experience like? Is there anything you wanted to do, but just did not have the time to accomplish? If you are not yet a junior or your university did not offer the experience, what would you have liked to do with your family during college?

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Week in Review Part 2: Warning: A Look Behind the Machinery, Debating might be agreeable to your health, Venting about the Beacon, and JPFW Looming

As mentioned in the last post, this entry will discuss the ASUP Senate Speech Night and how it was covered.

Warning: this will be long.  Please stick with it; I provided some nice links to support my views!

Even though the 2 comments were favorable of my writing, I still feel like I was a little bit of a talking head, and not of the "Heaven" and "And She Was" variety. I was surprised I found the Senior Gift part of the ASUP Constitution, but I'm digressing.

Before I get to the content of the event itself, I need to provide how I got involved. The process started on a Friday, Feb. 4, when Secretary Burrelle shot me an e-mail. She mentioned KDUP has played a role in prior Speech Nights and wondered if we could handle this year's moderation because she had to go to a Drama Conference and thus could not be present.

Being the dedicated person I am, I spent the next few hours going through KDUP's archives to find anything about ASUP Senate.  I was only able to find the 2006 Speech Night, a cursory mention of Beergate, in which a candidate handed out flyers to attendees of a keg party, including the sibling of another candidate and a 2003 Beacon article from the then-president about ASUP Senate.  Since the latter were not much help, I listened to the question from 2006.  I quickly realized how similar the concerns of students were five years earlier, even down to the concern over printing allotment that was brought up at the following Senate meeting. 

I wrote down the questions, sent them to the KDUP news team because it is under their responsibility, and only Kirby, the News Director was comfortable participating because they did not feel like they could help and Kirby and I, since I have been attending ASUP Senate Meetings, should handle the event.  I also consulted others (the current president and vice president, other students I met, and faculty) and received some productive ideas that did not make the final list, like what has been your legacy within ASUP Senate, what would you do differently/similar to your predecessor, and how to increase participation within Senate meetings. Secretary Burrelle also provided a list of general questions last year's senate provided and the agenda.

Luckily, I also got help from Senator Vasconcellos, a member of the ASUP Awareness Committee.  He was willing to step in and co-moderate with Kirby. Thanks so much for rolling with the changes and great job!

However, I did not spend too much time outside the occasional day of work until the night before the event.  I overheard some candidates wondering how early to appear and got the opinion of Adviser Koffler. He mentioned the moderators needed to dress up to set the tone of the evening and how to handle personal attack questions: cutt of the question if it is an ad hominem attack, but if it is more biting than bitter, let it go, but remind the audience that the night was for the issues and how the candidates could handle the issues.  I spent the time after the meeting crafting e-mails to the candidates and Adviser Koffler. Luckily, Adviser Koffler managed to craft great introductions to questions, partly due to his decade plus of  Speech Night experiences.

That night, I spent the time before the event in CST 363, kavetching and fretting about the event going wrong, a personal characteristic I have to acknowledge. Thanks again to Caitlin and Roya for the switch to the bow tie, even if it bothered me through the entire event, existing just below my chin.

As mentioned in the twitter feed, ASUP's Facebook page and ASUP's Blog, there was plenty of agreeing, but this should have been expected from the similar platforms of the candidates.

Thanks again to Dr. Lovejoy and CST 363 for raising awareness of the Speech Night, allowing former CPB Director Tarra McCurdy follow it from New York.

Of course, the Beacon made their endorsements of candidates.  Sadly, the opinions seemed only formed from the impressions of Speech Night and views of the candidates, not the views of objectivity. I might have been more than a little concerned with keeping time, but I fail to remember hearing anything Presidential Candidate Imfeld say provide an impression he would "favor the administration's needs over the students' needs during the debate." Sure, he said he would go to the administration and provide student views and he endorsed 11-03, but the other president and vice president candidates did as well.   My point is no more obvious than their endorsement of Caitlin Chu for Treasurer.

They state:
Caitlin is a highly organized and genuine candidate who has forward thinking ideas and experience with the budget in the ASUP Finance Committee.
While Andy is enterprenurial and ambitious, he appeared unprofessional and apathetic during the ASUP debates.

How he appeared in the debates does not necessarily relate to how he would act with clubs.  By resorting to "lazy journalism", the Beacon, already a burr in my side over their preference on feature stories like a staff member getting some internet publicity from a blending of Snooki from Jersey Shore and the Mona Lisa
getting placed on page two and a piece on the results of a survey on the mental health of college freshman as their "top" story.  I know it tied in well with the Peer Health Educator's program earlier this month, but "top" stories have to be the ones that are the most important to readers, like the piece on 11-03 the week before, inconveniently published the morning after a compromise was reached.

Though they have dubbed the election "an election for the ages," the label would be more fitting for even last year's election in which non-senators tried but failed to topple those with Senate experience.  A race with similar platforms and unsatisfying responses even to a question of how they are different from their opponent makes this race similar to too many of the real political races, in which voters will select based off their personal feelings toward the candidates, something the night should have helped avoid.  

The audience did step up and ask some tough questions like how they plan to relate to the faculty and the aforementioned difference question.

Thanks again for all those who participated in the process and looking at my length means the Week in Review gets a special part 3, in which JPFW will finally get discussed.  Stay tuned for a report on the "Varsity Sport of the Mind", what the future can entail, sponsored by Career Services and the Alumni Department, what I gleamed from the Coffeehouse performance.

In case part 3 falls after the election, I will close with the sign-off of another famous TV journalist, Edward R. Murrow, " Good Night and Good Luck!"

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Week in Review Part 1: Warning: Debating and and JPFW on the Horizon

Wow! 

The only reason I was able to post today was due to rehabilitating from the first half of the week. Sadly no club visits yet, but this Week in Review will deal with some of the bigger events this week: ASUP Senate and Junior Parents and Family Weekend (JPFW). 

Monday featured the continued discussion of 11-03 a resolution to reallocate Capital Improvement Funds toward the fund-raising efforts of the new Recreational and Wellness Center.  Want to know more about CIF? ASUP Senate Vice President Katie Scally has done a nice job explaining the purpose and history of this fund on her blog Heard on the Bluff.

The executive board brought in speakers from the Rise campaign and the Office of Development to answer questions the senators and visitors had.  Not surprisingly, the representatives were for the idea of students giving their efforts money.  Even though they were prepped like witness for a trial, the representatives failed to convince enough senators to support the resolution, at least for that meeting. The representatives were also skilled at the art of not completely answering questions like whether the new Library or Recreational and Wellness Center was a higher priority for the campaign at the time of questioning or even if the donation could speed development. 

I understand the latter is a purely hypothetical question, but with the new Recreational and Wellness Center not even in the designing phase, it seems foolish to assume that enough people can get swayed by the legacy argument.  The main senators who believed that were Senior Senators, some of whom appear to think that people will acknowledge the plaque that could read "Construction supported by the contributions of students from 2011-2013," when few people read the plaques on the Victory Bell, Howard Hall or even recognize the island outside the library was funded by the 1994 Senior class. If they really wanted this to be their Senior Gift, here's the Senior Gift  page from the Rise campaign website.



Also here's how the Senior Gift is funded under the current ASUP Consitution :
ARTICLE VII: SENIOR GIFT
SECTION 1: FUNDING OF THE SENIOR GIFT
A. A portion of the student government fee shall be set aside each year for the purpose of
enabling the graduating class to give a gift to the University. This amount shall be a minimum of $500.00, which may be supplemented by the graduating class itself. All monies for the gift remaining unallocated at the end of the academic year shall be returned to the general account.
SECTION 2: SELECTION OF THE SENIOR GIFT
A. A committee composed of all interested Spring, Summer, and Fall graduates of the calendar year shall meet by the last week in January, for the purpose of designating a gift, if any. The organization of this committee shall be the responsibility of the ASUP President, and the Senior Class Senator(s). Campus publications and Alumni Office shall be requested to notify graduates of the nature of the gift.
If you look at Section 2: the committee is composed of the ASUP President and the Senior Class Senators, who are for the resolution. If 11-03 does not pass and enough seniors really want to donte to the fund-raising efforts, they should use the Senior Gift.

The discussion turned bitter as senators were rehashing the same talking points that had been developed for the last few weeks of "this has to be done now or it will never be happen", "the campaign will get the money regardless of our contribution", and "why not contribute anyway? The donation cannot hurt their efforts."
Also, senators representing the Freshmen class said their constituents did not want the idea, then Senator Ross, a freshman representing Shipstad, stated he had interviewed freshmen that were for the idea.

Now from reading all that you might think I am against 11-03.  I am only against the part in which it comes from the Capital Improvement Fund and the means by which it was presented.  The idea of giving to the new Recreation and Wellness Center is good, but skipping the Oversight Committee and having three members of the Executive Board be sponsors of the Resolution does seem a little hinky, at least to this blogger.

Thank God the discussion got tabled.  Sure, the debate will still not be a debate this Monday, but at least the bickering on that topic ended so they could bicker about the current CIF.

 
To alleviate some of the concern, the donation to the new Recreation and Wellness Center was not selected as one of the final six CIF ideas submitted to the Executive Board for their decision this last Wednesday at 2:30. 


The decision to keep the donation to the Rise campaign this semester on the final list was only supported by 8 senators, two of whom were Senators Bibbs and Collins, a President/Vice President ticket. I believe enough senators were concerned the Executive Board would not be objective in their selection of the Rise donation, hence it was one of the first items to be cut.

The surviving ideas are solar panels, a computer kiosk in the Commons, weight room equipment for Howard Hall, renovating the outside of St. Mary's Lounge (because the inside has been the recipient of previous CIF and the interior "possesses character"), CPB sound and Lighting, and Repairing the Victory Bell.  The last idea was attempted to be cut by the recommendation of  newer Senior Senators Steele and Saxton, but they and two others were the only ones in favor of cutting the repair.  Enough Senators believed ASUP (the Associated Students of the University of Portland) should fund its repair since a student allegedly broke it and its repair would help raise awareness of its purpose, ringing in victories for the athletic teams. 

The need to thoroughly discuss these ideas and caucus twice provided ample time and was a great inadvertent way to stall for time to not vote on 11-03. 

Since this is getting a little wordy, next post will feature day 2 of the intense week: the ASUP Executive Candidate Speech Night.

To borrow a sign off from Dan Rather that seems like appropriate summation and foreshadowing: "Until next time, Courage!"

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Inaugural Week in Review

This busy week offered several activities, many of which I sadly was unable to attend due to ASUP Senate proceedings and prior commitments.

I was unable to attend the African-American Read-in, the Anti-Valentine's Day Reading held by the English Society, a lecture about graphic novels, the Trashin' Fashion show, in which students submitted clothes made from recycled materials, the Campus Community Emergency Response Team session, a group preparing the campus for survival in case the community is shut off from resources via an emergency, the CPB movie Hereafter, or the Pilots After Dark event "Dance Your Heart Out."

I was fortunate to attend the Alaskan Immersion Plunge Concert/Bluffoon Improvisation performance and the ASUP candidate information meeting.

The concert, which raised at least $400 from $3 admission prices, featured student Sam Wegman and a group including April Vanderkamp, the event organizer.
Sam performed a cover of The Beatles' "Something", his own "Behind Closed Doors", "Never Perfect" and an untitled song that discussed the use of white lies to hide the truth of the subject's addiction.

Vanderkamp's group took a more humorous approach with their covers of Weezer's Sweater Song, the Band's "The Weight", "Maybe" and "I'm Sorry", the latter two being Vanderkamp originals about a couple's progression in a relationship culminating in living in a house built for four and a blunt but still respectful way of ending a relationship.

The Bluffoons performed some of their usual games like "Presidential Debate" in which two "candidates" have to say "A vote for me is a _____ for a ____", "I promise a _____ for every ____" and a closing quote, which was "And My Axe".  A team of three people mime the words that go in the blanks  and the first person to complete the phrases "wins" the election.  As easy as it might sound, ten minutes worth of using Michaelangelo's "The Creation of Man" from the Sistine Chapel fresco so the candidate could get "I-pod" managed to produce more laughs than I thought.

I managed to accomplish the highest goal for a spectator, getting a suggestion used, during the game "3 Rooms." This game features three different scenes happening, but the last line of one scene must be used in the next, word for word.  The scene featuring my suggestion "nice pants" had the trials of alleviating the pain of too tight pants. 

One of the interesting games was their starter, "My Movie", in which Bluffoon members pitched their ideas, provided a synopsis if prompted, then had their movie performed if the "studio executive" wanted to see it.  The participants provide some interesting ideas like "The Movie about the Thing", the tale of a multi-armed creature; "The Spoon Diet: a How-to Guide" where eveerything is eaten with a spoon, "The Legendary Benches of Azaroth", and "Orange You Glad?," the tragic claymation tale of two oranges that exist peacefully until one of them gets squashed.

The two hours flew by and was a solid investment of $3 and two hours on a Friday night.  The next Bluffoon show is Friday, February 25th, so take advantage of your Friday night by investing in laughter.

The candidate meeting for Executive Board positions was a harbinger of the week within ASUP Senate with one candidate concerned about personal attacks aimed at her.  Since I am acting as the coordinator and producer for the debate, I am concerned on how it will go, especially with the CST 363 class attending.

It should be fine, but the activity surrounding the newest resolution over allocating Capital Improvement Funds toward the construction of the new Recreation Center says it will not be easy. Activities includes facebook groups on both sides of the issue, strong opinions on how to discuss it during this Monday's meeting, a compromise meeting held after the Beacon deadline, a Beacon story that was unable to discuss the proposed compromise and a petition to move the decision to a student vote, for which I helped obtain signatures, all create a sense of tension and stress for the next week. The petition hinges partly on the resolution discussion being tabled, an uphill task.

If I can survive the next few days, the week should be smooth sailing until Junior Parent Weekend, which might present its own creative circumstances.

Take care, and have a safe and efficient week!