Pots Return to Wabash
Transcription
Pots Return to Wabash
Pots Return to Wabash September 14 . 2006 • volume 99 • issue 3 ROYCE GREGERSON NEWS EDITOR After more than 30 years, the green and red pot has returned to prominence on the Wabash campus this month. Originally intended as a means for alumni to purchase a bit of memorabilia from the past, the pot has exploded into a phenomenon of renewed tradition. However, the pot now being worn by much of the freshman class were not originally intended as a method to bring back tradition. “The renewed interest in pots began with Cal Black [‘66] getting them for his 40th class reunion this year. They were a big hit. Other alums wanted them,” Mike Bachner ’70 said. Bachner is the manager of the Wabash Bookstore, which currently sells the pots. “Ross Dillard [’07] came to the store in August asking us to order pots for fall. He had worked with the manufacturer to make replicas of the original style. They had come to a price and minimum order quantity. We knew alums would buy them for reunions and ordered extras.” Before going to the bookstore or seeking a manufacturer, Dillard went to the Ramsey Archival Center to research the pot. Archivist Beth Swift was able to share a few examples of the pot. The current pot is made of a green felt-like material with a red bill and red button on top. The quick re-institution of the Freshman Adapt to College Life ELIJAH SANDERS | WABASH ‘10 Wally Wabash prepares to snatch a Delta Tau Delta pledge’s pot at a preseason Wabash scrimmage. NELSON BARRE EDITOR IN CHIEF There’s joy in being a high school senior. You’re on top. You run the school and everything is going well. You’re going off to college after the long process of deciding a college choice. Then you get there and everything changes. Freshmen coming to Wabash soon learn their high school days are gone. Whether or not they are up to the challenge is another question. The fact is: some are and some are not ready for the life and academic challenges. “We are trying to address any issues the freshmen might have,” Wabash counselor Scott Cavins ’84 said. “We want to know how to help them. What do they need? Where do they come from?” Cavins has only been the Wabash counselor for a little over a year. The College recognizes that coming into a new environment can be difficult. The counseling service is available to aid all Wabash students. “College can be pretty overwhelming,” Cavins said. “Adjusting to class, fraternity or dorm life, making new friends, et cetera. Here we can provide student services for anything from anxiety to depression or other stress related issues.” All appointments are confidential and the counseling center takes the utmost care in keeping things private. Any questions can be directed to Scott Cavins ([email protected]). What if the freshmen think do not think they need any kind of help? Well, they may be right. “No freshman has left through the first three weeks of class,” Dean of Students See, POT, Page 2 “College can be pretty overwhelming. Adjusting to class, fraternity or dorm life, making new friends, et cetera.” Dr. Scott Cavins See, ADAPT, Page 2 PAGE 2 • News September 14, 2006 BACHELOR 301 w. wabash Ave. crawfordsville, IN 47933 EDITOR IN CHIEF Allen Chatt . [email protected] MANAGING EDITOR Timothy Flowers . [email protected] NEWS EDITOR Nelson Barre . [email protected] OPINIONS EDITOR Travis Ross . [email protected] SPORTS EDITOR Steve Crockett . [email protected] STUFF EDITOR Adam Hawkins . [email protected] PHOTO EDITOR Jeff Sostak . [email protected] ONLINE EDITOR Travis Ross . [email protected] LAYOUT Allen Chatt, Adam Hawkins COPY EDITOR Aaron Parrish, Ashley Stephens BOP ADVISORS Howard Hewitt, Jim Amidon & Steve Charles The purpose of The Bachelor is to serve the school audience, including but not limited to administrators, faculty and staff, parents, alumni, community members and most importantly, the students. Because this is a school paper, the content and character within will cater to the student body’s interests, ideas and issues. Further, this publication will serve as a medium and forum for student opinions and ideas. Although an individual newspaper, the Board of Publications publishes The Bachelor. The Bachelor and BOP receive funding from the Wabash College Student Senate, which derives its funds from the Wabash College student body. Letters (e-mails) to the editor are welcomed and encouraged. They will only be published if they include name, phone, or e-mail, and are not longer than 350 words. The Bachelor reserves the right to edit letters for content, typographical errors, and length. All letters received become property of this publication for the purposes of reprinting and/or redistribution. Profanity may appear in the publication, but only in cases of direct quote or if profanity is necessary to the content of the story. Please do not confuse profanity with obscenity. No article or picture of an obscene nature will appear in this publication. The Bachelor is printed every Thursday at the Journal Review in Crawfordsville. It is delivered freely to all students, faculty, and staff at Wabash College. To receive a year’s subscription, send a $30 check (mail) or $10 (e-mail) to The Bachelor. All advertising published in The Bachelor is subject to the applicable rate card. The Bachelor reserves the right to deny requests for publication of advertisements. Student organizations of Wabash College may purchase advertisements at half the listed rate. The Bachelor is a member of the Hoosier State and Indiana Collegiate Press Associations (HSPA and ICPA). The Bachelor Pot From Page 1 pot to fraternity pledge classes evoked strong responses from many freshmen. “I love the idea of the pots, and the idea of bringing back an old tradition,” Kevin Long ’10 said. “I feel it just enriches our history.” John Dewart ’10, a Sigma Chi pledge, echoed Long’s sentiment. “I’m glad the Brothers [of Sigma Chi] brought back the pots because it helps to restore traditions lost to time,” he said. Due to their fraternity’s no hazing policy, the Lambda Chi Alpha associates themselves almost unanimously voted to wear the pot. “We feel that such unique traditions at Wabash deserve to not only be preserved but flourish with each new student,” Mark Schultz ’10 said. “[They are] just one more way we like to promote a sense of pride and tradition here.” Not everyone is happy that more people are wearing the freshman pot. Two pledges of Phi Delta Theta, the one fraternity to continue requiring its pledges to wear the pot since the tradition lapsed, spoke out. “I’m proud to wear my pot because unlike all the other freshmen on campus, I’m upholding a tradition,” Joshua Coyle ’10 said. “The pot is something that should be worn with pride and kept like a precious gift. I walk around cam- Adapt From Page 1 Tom Bambrey said. “As far as we can tell, it’s all good. The general dimension of the class seems very positive. The time we begin to see how the class is developing is around Homecoming.” The College offers a variety of services not only to freshmen but all students including the academic services, counseling services, the career center and faculty advisors. All of these can be used to help a student acclimate himself to Wabash’s campus and environment. “Most of what we do early pus and see people spinning them on their fingers.” Joshua Lopez ’10 also critiqued other freshmen’s misuse of the pot. “They disrespect them by leaving them around and losing them. If you wish to continue the tradition, respect it at least,” he said. In addition to the Phi Delts, the renewed tradition has a unique impact on the independent freshmen, who have no pledgeship program to force the pot on them. “I won’t consider getting a pot,” Barry Ooi ’10 said. Ooi cited the class scrap and the intense rivalry between the freshmen and sophomores. “Nothing like that will ever happen anymore, not in this day.” The re-formed Senior Council, itself a renewed tradition, weighed in on the pot issue. The Council decided to declare the pot the “symbol of the freshman class.” Members of the Council also discussed making the pot mandatory for participation in Homecoming events, but eventually tabled the issue. Wabash’s archives have plenty of the history of the pot. It was first mentioned in the minutes of the Student Council (the early predecessor of the Senior Council) in its May 9, 1918 minutes. The Council created a committee to investigate possible designs for a potential uniform cap for freshmen. The Council’s May 21, 1918 minutes note that the committee “recommended [a] green cap with red button and red-bordered bill.” Then, the Council adopted the “green cap with scarlet button and scarlet visor” as the permanent freshman cap. In the same meeting, the Council resolved that all students would remove their hats as a salute to the flag when entering campus. The January 6, 1919 minutes show that the Council agreed to place an order with W.C. Murphy and Co. for the hats. The Council fixed the price of the cap at one dollar. The Student Council established the Vigilance Committee on October 4, 1920, which was responsible for enforcing the various rules placed on freshmen. The Council later expanded the membership of this committee to include all seniors. The pot seems to have enjoyed a healthy life until the turmoil of the late sixties and early seventies. In the fall of 1968 the Freshman Orientation Program, previously known as Freshman Indoctrination, became officially voluntary by pronouncement of the Student Senate. Admitting failure, the Senior Council had already dissolved itself in March of ’68. The previous fall (1967), a group of well-organized independent freshmen had succeeded in undermining the Council’s program. Five students refused to participate in Freshman Sing (now Chapel Sing), effectively proving that the program only worked because freshmen voluntarily participated in it. The Bachelor con- curred and ran an editorial claiming that the Council’s Freshman Orientation program was, for all intents and purposes, optional. In January of 1968, the editor of The Bachelor wrote an editorial bemoaning the passage of Wabash traditions. He placed much of the blame on the President of the College, Ron Clark, for failing to back the Council. Punishments (such as green tights) remained part of the code for the Fall of 1968, even though the Orientation became officially optional for the first time and the Student Senate eliminated the W haircut on September 13 of the same year. The Orientation program for the fall of 1970, when the Student Senate re-wrote the former Senior Council’s orientation plan, finally made all the provisions optional. The statement on the pot read: “Freshmen will be encouraged to secure and wear pots.” Unlike Freshman Sing, the transition to a pot-less freshman class was gradual. Alumni who attended school at the time note they just faded away, a contrast to the pot’s sudden re-appearance on campus. “We have sold out of our original order of 150 and have reordered,” Bachner said about the bookstore’s efforts to keep the pot in stock. “A reunion group has already ordered for this fall. I don’t know if this is a passing notion for freshman or if the tradition has been renewed after nearly 40 years.” on is at orientation,” Bambrey said. “We introduce them to the Gentleman’s Rule, help them learn their responsibilities and prepare them for the rigors of class.” Does all of this actually work? Several freshmen writers for the Bachelor wrote on their early experience. The Wabash webpage has three freshman student blogs chronicling the life of Daniel King, Jon Short, and Jacob Lee. The Bachelor freshmen staff offer their take on the first few weeks: The stories continue from this page to page 3 and page 10: Gary James About a month ago, I arrived in a brave new world. Though it offered no new races of people, no new species of life, and no new languages, this new world was abundant with the new faces of people I had never before seen. With these new people, I have encountered new living arrangements, new daily routines, and new freedoms. I now find myself as a pledge at the Kappa Sigma fraternity. I am also involved with several clubs and activities. Finding time to study, hang out with friends, rest, and complete my house responsibilities is like getting the last drop of Kool-Aid from the pitcher. In one day, I have woken up at 7:30 pm, taken three classes by 11:30 am, worked an ESH job for two hours, attended Chemistry lab, and taken care of fraternity responsibilities by 1:00 am. While most of my days aren’t like that, having one that is makes the weekend that much sweeter. By Friday, it’s time for a release. Speaking of releases, I have found college parties to be more benign than advertised on movies like “Never Been Kissed” or “She’s All That.” All in all, College life rocks! Victor Nava I don’t think there is one freshman on campus who can truly say that he was prepared to deal with the academic standards that Wabash expects of its students. In just the few weeks that I’ve been here, I’ve come to realize that Wabash doesn’t just always fight, See, FRESH, Page 3 news The Bachelor Fresh • PAGE 3 September 14, 2006 From Page 2 Wabash always studies as well. Ok, perhaps I may be overdramatisizing the situation, but we all have to agree that Wabash isn’t exactly the type of college where you simply show up to class, take a test at the end of the semester, and get your credit for the course. Classes at Wabash have proven to be a big transition from those in high school. I used to think we did everything bigger in Texas. I guess we forgot to make the workload bigger. Even though I only have an average of ten hours of class per week, I find myself spending massive amounts of time studying just to stay on top of all the work. Even the four hour “study tables” I attend daily don’t seem to begin to cover half of what I need to do. Academics at Wabash seem to have many dimensions and levels of depth to them. The trick is not to get overwhelmed. I’m not going to be one of those students that say, “high school didn’t pre- pare me for college.” Instead I’ll say: High school prepared me the best that it could. Elijah Sanders Living in a fraternity is a totally different lifestyle then being an Independent. I have to wake up before my first class to do my house job, which usually consists of sweeping, mopping, cleaning toilets, showers, tables tops etc. and cleaning up after all the actives’ mess. Some of the jobs aren’t so bad, like cleaning with the vacuum, while others are a flat out hassle. Then I go to class, try to catch a nap, go swim, eat dinner, go to a four-hour study table, and then I can go to bed if I have finished all my work. 67 guys on campus that I can talk to about anything. My life is not so bad, every time somebody cuts us down my pledge brothers always build each other back up. I am very happy with my choice to be in a fraternity and live my life as a frat boy. Without it I would not know what to do with my time besides sit around and think about home. It keeps me busy and in line and I know that I will always have a blast. Although, to most people, this wouldn’t seem like fun there are a lot of benefits. The active brothers will look at my papers before I take them to the writing center, which doesn’t make me look as stupid. I knew that no matter what when I came to Wabash College I was going to meet new people. Also I know that there are at least See, MORE, Page 10 Study Pack $8.99 Small One Topping Pizza, Half Order Of Buffet Sticks With Pizza Sauce And A 20oz. Drink Litle Giant Combo $12.99 14” New Yorker 1 Topping Pizza, Full Order Of Buffet Breadsticks With Pizza Sauce And 2 Liter. (765) 362-3390 • 1501 South Grant Ave. Crawfordsville Roger and Nancy Beach 5157 S. Davis Bridge Rd. Crawfordsville, In 47933 (765) 866-0281 Fax (765) 866-0291 Order & Pre Pay For Your Flowers With A Wabash Student ID & Receive 4 $ 95 With Left Chest Logo $ 95 With Left Chest Logo 7 Crewneck Sweatshirt With Left Chest Logo 9 $ 95 Red Adjustable Cap PRE- PA I 10% UNT Red T-Shirt D CO White T-Shirt D ENT IS We do Wabash Apparel and Custom Orders!! D STU ON LOCAL FLOWERS With white sandwich bill 11 $ 95 115 E. Main Street Crawfordsville • 362-3496 PAGE 4 • opinion The Bachelor September 14, 2006 The Bachelor’s opinion The voice of Wabash since 1908 EDITOR IN CHIEF STUFF EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR NEWS EDITOR OPINION EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR Nelson Barre Allen Chatt Adam Hawkins The Bachelor: Vector for the “Grand Conversation” Royce Gregerson The Bachelor has played a major part in most of the major controversies that have beset Wabash. People representing a diverse range of viewpoints have contributed articles, and they have prompted much discussion. In the past year, the campus discourse that resulted from opinion articles in the Bachelor took on forms ranging from response articles to informal discussions on the Mall. For example, last year’s debate between fraternity members and independents over the relative merits of both lifestyles started in the Bachelor and expanded into face-to-face discussion. While there was some flamboyant rhetoric, many excellent points were raised and debated. Such a discussion would never have happened without the all-campus forum of the opinion page of the Bachelor. The Bachelor is the only allcampus forum that requires the author to think. The “send” button on the e-mail program is a far more forgiving editor than the various section editors who read each article that comes through their e-mail boxes. The Bachelor does it best to minimize silly, destructive rhetoric. While the Wabash community is not massive, it is still just largeenough to make widespread conversation difficult. The Bachelor is the only venue on campus that has both a broad impact and enough review to ensure sound, reasonable discussion. Face-to-face discussion is certainly the best method for resolving conflicts between individuals. The Opinion section of the Bachelor is not a place for Patrick Smith Aaron Parrish individuals to resolve their differences or make their disagreements public. However, the Bachelor has a role in campus discourse and resolving disputes. From time to time, there are problems and disagreements between individuals or groups that need to go public. Sometimes, there are problems on our campus of which everyone needs to be aware. That is when an editorial in the Bachelor is appropriate. Please do send in your interesting debates and or topics, which might require the attention of the campus. Not that we are asking for heated debate in the pages of the Bachelor; we are asking for thoughtful opinion. Offer up opinions and let your voice be heard. It is after all the student voice of Wabash. Interesting debate abounds on campus, as is evidenced by the topics of the previous Chapel talks. The goal of such an endeavor should always been an increase in information, the root of all discourse. Sharing an opinion can frequently be done in a manner that constitutes an increase in information. There must be a spark to ignite discussion. Someone must be the first to share his or her opinion. That is the role of this Opinion section, sharing thought-out opinions with the goal of increasing information and discourse. So, in friendly discourse faceto-face, please also put forth your opinions into thoughtful writing. The Opinion section lives and dies off the voice of the Wabash community. Like it or not, you are the Wabash community. You are the Opinion Section. Think, Before You Speak PATRICK SMITH OPINION EDITOR “Caught in that sensual music all neglect / Monuments of unageing intellect.” Thus did William Butler Yeats indict the Byzantine young. However, I prefer to think of Yeats’ comment as a warning for Wabash. In the last several weeks, the members of the community have had their aural fill of talk of conversation. New forums are springing up, among both faculty and students, to facilitate discussion, face-to-face. It is, at the very least, a start. I suppose, by now, dear reader, you’ve gathered that I am not altogether positive about this revolution. My reservations about the new order come from my firm belief that the problems of Wabash aren’t ones of communication, but ones of thought. For, if they are matters of communication, they are mere misunderstandings. That is, to my mind, far too charitable in many cases. Too often, slogans are shouted merely to make the rhetorical point. Vain dramas played out, if for no other reason than to shock the audience. The warden from Cool Hand Luke could intone, by way of rationalization, in that delicious southern drawl, “What we have here is a failure to communicate.” But he’d be wrong. Luke wasn’t failing to communicate his point, and neither was the warden. I am inclined to say that the same situation applies here. In this melee, no one group is blameless. It is a profound and profoundly human failure to fall victim to rhetoric at the No. Often as not, the things that give offense were intended to offend. expense of content. That does not, however, excuse it or offer a general absolution. Rather, the potential – no, the likelihood – of it should keep all participants in the conversation on guard. No. Often as not, the things that give offense were intended to offend. It is at this point where we reach the limits of conversation and tread, not so lightly, where angels fear: the land of the demagogue. This is my issue with the new way of Wabash. Perhaps that’s not entirely fair. Rather, I am afraid that new emphasis on conversation will provide, especially to See, THINK, Page 5 Think those with ulterior, but obvious-enough often as not, motives, an excuse to spout irrational, offensive screed. That would be a betrayal of the ideals of Wabash and the noble calling of rational discourse. If we are to have a conversation, then we must first think long and hard about what we wish to say. The goal should not be to stick it to the other side. That sort of silly partisanship is destructive. When sloganeering becomes the order of the day, ideas suffer. Sometimes, the wounds are terminal. Real conversation, i.e., conversation worthy of the name, revolves around reason and reasoned discourse. There is no place for point-scoring or flamboyant drama. Those things ensure that the conversational gangrene progresses to outright sepsis. And anyone with a reasonable understanding of how the body works knows how that will end. Not well. Sound and reasonable ideas, especially at a college, are far too precious to kill. If we intend on running headlong into conversation, then we should prepare ourselves for it. This new order requires firing certain things in the crucible of intent. Of our own volition, we must give up rhetoric, silly posturing, and vain show. These things are all intended to give offense, and they are therefore antithetical to conversation. Perhaps you think that I am arguing that everyone should think good and non-controversial thoughts. I am, but not in the way you think I am. Think about it again and it might become clearer. I hope it does, when all is said and done. That isn’t my point. I know that there will be controversy, just as I know that the sun will rise tomorrow. My point is this: think before you speak, and you’ll see an exponential decline in nastiness. That is the unpleasant offal from a conversation that is more of a Dillard Brings The Pot Back To Campus opinion The Bachelor • PAGE 5 September 14, 2006 If we intend on running headlong into conversation, then we should prepare ourselves for it. shouting match or absurd, stylized debate-team Kabuki; that is to say, it is the waste produced from a conversation that isn’t really much of one at all. When we accept such talk as real conversation, we make the error of Siegfried. In Wagner’s Götterdämmerung, the hero makes the grave mistake of casting his lot (albeit under the influence) with the Gibichungs, who “befriend” him. Unbeknownst to him, Hagen is the son of Alberich, the Nibelung dwarf, and ultimate villain of the whole Der Ring des Nibelungen. Needless to say, it ends badly for Siegfried – he gets stabbed in the back. If we allow bad conversation to beguile us, I warrant that we’ll find ourselves with a similarly new orifice in our collective back. To heed the call of President White and Dean Phillips, we must ensure that we are trading in real ideas and working in the framework of real conversation. To do anything else is a disservice to Wabash and to ourselves. Back to Yeats, who is alarmingly underappreciated in modern American society (thanks, W, “no child” indeed). Let us not ignore the single greatest monument of Western culture, one forged by Plato and refined by countless minds since, the reasoned discourse. Let us not get caught up in the “sensual music” of conversation, lest we slip into dissonance and atonality. Let’s follow the wonderful lead given to us by President White and Dean Phillips. To my way of thought, the first step on that path is thinking before we speak. It’s not hard. Occasionally, I discover something wonderful about someone, something that makes me re-consider my entire perception of a person. That happened Tuesday when I went to the Ramsey Archives to research the freshman pot for my article in this issue of The Bachelor. I expected finding the information I needed to be quite tricky, but it turns out that someone had done all the work for me. That person was Ross Dillard. I knew that Ross had been working on the pot issue, but I just understood it as a little pet project of his, just as I understood his role in bringing back the Senior Council. However, those actions make little sense outside of the larger role Dillard has played lately in reviving the history of Wabash. All the information I sought about the pot was easily available in a file Dillard put together on the history of the student body, dating to about the turn of the century. It is truly a work of love. He must have sifted through every issue of The Bachelor, The Wabash, and every other publication that has ever focused on life at Wabash. The file contains relevant points from the minutes of the three governing bodies that have controlled student government at Wabash, articles of the afore-mentioned publications, and much, much more. But what really is incredible is not so much the work itself, but rather Dillard’s efforts. The passion that Dillard has for the history and traditions of this school is inspirational. I may not agree with Ross on everything (an instance when he claimed my beloved Catholic Church has always been and always will be a means of suppressing the masses comes to mind) but ROYCE GREGERSON NEWS EDITOR this week I’ve come to respect him a lot more. I doubt everyone will share my opinion after seeing the budget cuts to their clubs, but Student Senate Treasurer is a job that is bound to make no one happy. So, in the spirit of investigating the lessons of the past to which Ross has inspired me, I’d like to see what the pot lesson has to teach us. I chatted a little with Beth Swift, Wabash’s archivist, while doing my research about how the actions of people on campus demonstrate what the campus was feeling at the time (this is why The Bachelor is a great historical indicator in so many different ways). Our desire (and I say “our” because the campus has effectively decided to support it) to bring back the pot must stem from something. Mostly, it’s nostalgia. However, it’s nostalgia for something we never experienced. Why, then, do we long for what we perceive as nobler, greater traditions of the past? I think it’s partly because modern society has failed to provide us with meaningful and sustaining traditions. That too was the reason many of us came to Wabash, whether we knew it at the time or not. We come from a culture that lacks ritual (a reason so many of us take comfort in our fraternities). For the upper-middle class from which so much of Wabash comes, we’ve also never gone through a right of passage, a In some respects, the pot is a symbol of something that’s gone, something that’s not coming back. time of extended hardship. So we sought that at Wabash, but we didn’t always find what we were looking for. For many of us, freshman year wasn’t the great humbling experience we thought it was going to be. We were not dazed with awe at the glory of Wabash. In that regard, the pot is about more than re-creating the freshmen as an inferior class. It’s about re-establishing the Wabash Myth (please note that myth means legend, not falsehood). We’ve struggled to define what the Wabash Myth is, but we’re always reshaping it, recreating it. We’re trying to create for freshmen-to-come the kind of freshman experience we thought we’d have, that we wish we’d had. Today, we have Ross to thank for moving us in that direction. In some respects, the pot is a symbol of something that’s gone, something that’s not coming back. That’s partially a good thing. Extreme, school-sponsored hazing manifested in physical assault and public humiliation should not re-enter the Wabash experience. But there are many ways to reach the result we want, a greater freshman experience, and a greater Wabash Myth. We’re building it, piece by piece. PAGE 6 BROCKS EYE VIEW THIS WEEK: CHICAGO ROAD TRIP September 14, 2006 BROCK JOHNSON: Each week throughout the semester, Johnson ‘07 will record what he sees around Wabash and elsewhere. Contact him at [email protected] The Bachelor Escaping the boundaries of Montgomery County is essential to surviving four years at Wabash. Luckily, great opportunities are just a short road trip away. Chicago, possibly the most appealing of nearby destinations, is a vibrant big city that somehow maintains its Midwestern charm. Millennium Park, finished in July of 2004, is an extraordinary venue for any weekend trip. Chances are you will stumble upon a concert, wine tasting, or street performance during any random road trip. Best of all, it can be done on an average student’s budget. For example, the Lyric Opera of Chicago gave a free sampler of their season under the stars, including pieces from Mozart, Rachmaninoff, Strauss, Puccini, and Verdi. Not only was the music world class, but the scenery was also wonderful. The Frank Gehry-designed Jay Pritzker Pavilion served as the perfect backdrop. Whether a Bulls fan or museum buff, Chicago has something for everyone. Steak ‘n Shake may make Crawfordsville a bit more appealing, but take a chance and discover your own adventure in the Windy City. -- Brock ‘07 Above: Cloud Gate, a 110-ton steel sculpture, serves as a funhouse for children and adults alike. Below: The Downtown Chicago skyline. news The Bachelor • PAGE 7 CHICAGO ROAD TRIP September 14, 2006 BROCK’S EYE VIEW THIS WEEK: BROCK JOHNSON: Each week throughout the semester, Johnson ‘07 will record what he sees around Wabash and elsewhere. Contact him at [email protected] Top Left: Crown Fountain by Juame Plensa lights up Millennium Park and allows spectators to walk on water -at least it appears so in their photos. Bottom Left: Musicians filled Millenium Park with classical music for many spectators. Right: Under the Skyline, Lyric Opera of Chicago performed at the Pritzker Pavilion. Why Wii Will Win: Nintendo’s Latest Revolution PAGE 8 • stuff The Bachelor September 14, 2006 AUSTIN CROWDER GAMING COLUMNIST The new console generation is just around the corner. This is a magic time for gamers; the faithful pick their ponies, the game companies parade out new games with slick graphics and amazing new features, the good games well dries up, and we’re all left waiting with baited breath for the next big round. Microsoft and Sony are plugging along at their market strategies: bringing the bigger, badder console to market, speeding up the processor, and increase the graphical detail. It’s worked up to now, so why stop? But Nintendo, the grizzly veteran of the console world, stopped. At first, the move sounded like a disaster waiting to happen. Without any semblance of a public strategy Nintendo stated its new console would not be as powerful as the offerings by Sony or Microsoft. They then said that they’ll be pushing toward a new demographic, an idea that usually leads to a company’s destruction. But Nintendo’s marketing genius has turned a dangerous marketing move into the biggest video game buzz in years. Calling the Nintendo strategy tightlipped would be an understatement. Instead of laying everything on the table at once, Nintendo decided to reveal details a little bit at a time. The result has been a media frenzy that fed itself; the public consumed, analyzed, and debated over every little tidbit of information. We didn’t wait for Wii information. We clawed for it like animals. At the first Electronic Entertainment Expo in which Wii appeared, only the graphics were shown. The next year, after the other companies began to finalize their console plans, Nintendo dropped their bombshell and mentioned that their controller would rely on motion and a simplistic button layout. Still Nintendo only allowed a select few reporters to try limited demos of the controller. Because of the lack of information, speculation electrified the internet, full of editorials and possibilities. “I tried the controller,” a blogger would say, and suddenly that person was the most popular one around. At the next E3, lines waiting to try the playable Wii demos stretched on to four-hour waits that snaked their way through multiple convention halls. The Playstation 3s both topped out at thirty minutes. Nintendo even manipulated the media in getting more than its fair share of attention. Shortly before the Playstation 3’s debut, Nintendo announced that the prototype name of their new console – at the time, the Nintendo Revolution – would be changed to the Nintendo Wii. The controversy exploded as gamers raged at the decision – how could such a smart company replace a trendy name like Revolution with a silly nonsense word? And, in the Nintendo hype, the wind in the Playstation 3’s sails was calmed. The Wii will win because it has a winning combination of affordability, smart marketing, and, most importantly, a sense of mystique. We have no clue how well the Wii will work. After years of pressing buttons, the concept of a remote that reacts to space, rotation, and speed of movement is a bit of a shock. We want to know: where to buy it, when to buy it, how to play it, why it will change the way we play games. Whenever the Wii hits the market, gamers will be happy to shell out the money to have these long-standing questions answered. United 93 Soars Some New Music that is Good with Emotion stuff The Bachelor • PAGE 9 September 14, 2006 ROB FENOGLIO FILM CRITIC Everyone in America knows the story about the ill-fated passengers on United Airlines Flight 93. On September 11, 2001 that flight would change not only the passengers’ lives, but all the lives in this country. United 93 is now out on DVD and is a triumph. The film is shot in real time (as in the television show “24”) and it shows us those horrific 111 minutes that changed the nation, and the world, forever. The director, Paul Greengrass, knew exactly how to approach this hot-button portrayal. Before he even started writing the movie, he interviewed the family members of all the passengers and received detailed descriptions of conversations on cell phones before the last moments. He wanted this film to be as real and un-Hollywood as possible. This is why this film works so well. The way the film is shot is also extremely personal. It feels as if you are there with the passengers, which is even more chilling. Naturally, this type of film will be engulfed in controversy and outrage. Is five years too soon for a movie like this? No. Not if it is told in such a respectful manner, which this film accomplishes. The actors in the movie are all unknowns, which creates a sense of ultimate realism. Nowadays, the influx of A-List actors to portray heroic people is rampant. Greengrass truly wanted this film to look and feel as real as it possibly could. The acting is superbly moving, the characters grow on you immediately due to the fact that we know what is going to ultimately happen to them, and the real footage of the first two planes crashing into the Twin Towers is so grotesque that it opens old wounds. This is vital for the film because United 93 also focuses on the government’s reaction to the hijackings and the air traffic controllers who had to hear some of the commotion on the flights and how they reacted. Greengrass thought it was absolutely necessary that he use many of the traffic controllers and military officials involved with United Flight 93 to help recreate the emotions and tension correctly. This is fundamental to aiding the movie in its quest for realism. United 93 is exceptionally graphic and should not be taken lightly. The death of one passenger is particularly horrifying and the tone of the movie stays consistently dark and dismal. The ending of the movie is so daring and appropriate. As the plane goes down with two passengers in the cockpit thwarting the terrorists plan to crash into the White House, the movie ends as the plane ultimately crashes into the ground. This film is not for the faint of heart. If you are not ready to see it, then do not. If you feel that you need to see this movie (which I strongly recommend to all of you), then be prepared to either cry or feel utterly horrified afterwards. This movie will stir you emotionally. As a final side note: Universal Pictures, the studio that made the film, donated 10% of the film’s opening weekend gross to a 9/11 fund for the victims. At least Universal went about this film in an extremely tasteful fashion. Included in the special features on the United 93: Limited Edition, are a commentary by the director, a chilling documentary on all of the family members of the victims of United Flight 93, and a memorial page that contains information on every individual passenger. Final Grade: A In this week’s brief missive regarding worthy contemporary music, your humble critic wishes to adulate on two solo efforts from singer/songwriters who made their name in a different context. Additionally, he intends to use as many GRE words as possible, with the possible exception of “putrefaction,” because we are talking about music that is good. Róisín Murphy Ruby Blue Róisín Murphy represents one half of British electronic/pop duo Moloko – she was (memorably) the one wearing the disco-ball dress in the video for “Sing It Back.” Now that Moloko has broken up, Murphy proves she doesn’t really need any help to turn out a great album – except for her producers, but nobody really counts them. Murphy has a remarkable and unique voice: sultry with a touch of twang and a subtle lisp. If she wanted, she could make an album of 21st century bubblegum pop interesting. The tunes, however, play just as strong a role in making Ruby Blue a great album as the vocals. There’s an odd 1920s lounge-y feeling throughout, but Murphy and producer Matthew Herbert spice it up with unconventional instruments and sound effects, assiduously placed so as to not overwhelm the dance-pop core, but complement it. Songs range from the straight piano ballad “Closing of the Doors,” that sounds like a lost Carpenters record, to the nigh-indescribable “Ramalama (Bang Bang),” that shuffles as much as it bounces on some sort of steel drum. Regardless, it will burrow into your cortex for days. While some of the songs can blend into each other, most are memorable. Ruby Blue is a great first album with a unique sound that promises a lot for the future from Róisín Murphy – I’m hoping she’ll head in the more experimental direction “Ramalama” suggests … but then I’d also love to hear another great pop song like “Sow into You”. Conflict! Neko Case Fox Confessor Brings the Flood Neko Case was first known (i.e., became the object of countless indie-rock crushes) as part of Canadian super-ish group the New Pornographers, but what you may not know is that she is also an altcountry star! (such as that is). Case’s Fox Confessor is her fifth album and it’s much more straightforward than Ruby Blue, probably because Case knows exactly what she is doing. Her alternative-country sound is faithful to its roots, but she mixes it up with some unconventional structures and recondite but evocative lyrics. The melodies are memorable, particularly the occasional singalong chorus (viz. “Hold On, Hold On”). It’s modern to be sure, but it’s almost as if Case is simply covering lost American roots songs. In fact, there is only one song credited to “traditional”. While Ruby Blue used unconventional instruments, Case’s album inserts them in unexpected place, such as the barroom piano in the gospel-toned “John Saw That Number.” Oh, hey, I forgot to mention that Case has possibly the most gorgeous voice in contemporary music. It’s smooth and smoky, much like Róisín Murphy’s. But while you might expect to see Murphy in a cocktail dress draped across a grand piano, Case is like the unassuming waitress who makes all the cowboys put their guns down and start crying into their whiskeys. Fox Confessor is a polished alt-country gem that will certainly appeal to rock fans with a hankerin’ for their roots, but I could see it drawing some good ol’ boys as well. Ajob Ajob I close my panegyric with the new album featuring Wabash’s very own Taz Ahmed. Ajob, from Bangladesh, play a fusion of traditional Bangla music with Western rock influences. I can’t speak for someone from that side of world, but I can give my impressions as a Rock Critic. Ajob take typical rock instrumentation, plus Taz on tabla, then wrap that around central Asian songs and scales. Add in some healthy prog influences and an array of effects pedals and you have a CD that sounds as strangely familiar as it does exotic. It’s also a mere $1.85 in mp3 format, so there is no excuse for not picking up these songs! Bachelor Freshmen Experience Wabash PAGE 10 • news The Bachelor September 14, 2006 Andrew Parrish I am assimilating nicely into college life. My days have consisted of late-night runs to Wal-Mart, staying up until dawn doing homework and writing papers, and hanging out with friends in the dorm. Wabash is slowly feeling like home. Having an older brother on campus helped in the transition period. Just being on campus all the time before coming here aided the transition. I walk around campus and see familiar faces, people I met through my older brother and it is like I have been here for a while. Wabash is the perfect fit. It is a place where I can get to know a lot of people on campus, and there is always something going on. I also love the fact that I can be involved on campus. In high school I was involved in numerous activities, many of which I can continue here. Since I come from a small town, these qualities are an important part of Wabash becoming my home. I love the freedom of living the college life. WABASH COLLEGE PUBLIC AFFAIRS Patrick McAlister You know, I probably slept in the last Freshman Elijah Sanders shoots a photo at the Franklin game on Saturday. three weeks. There really isn’t any way to be sure, though. All I can remember is working thousands of miles away from home is provide an ideal liberal arts education, on the production of The Elephant Man at always very difficult. When I arrived at which prepare its students to face the intim10:30 p.m. and listening to a lecture on Wabash a month ago, I was astonished to idating world dauntlessly. Chuck Summers Plato’s Republic at 8:00 a.m. The events that face a new culture, new food, new people, As I sit here, writing this column, I find lie between these two points were a con- new experiences and many other “new” things. myself having difficulty coming up with fused jumble of homework, line memorizaI first knew about Wabash while I was how to describe student life as a freshman. tion, and possibly sleep. Although, I really surfing websites of U.S. News and Princeton My mind is far too busy with vivid and glowon’t ever be too sure. Review during my high school years. Apart rious dreams of soft pillows, humming fans, What I am sure about is that my few from generous financial aid, the academic and that once-common treasure - sleep. weeks of college have left me more exhaustreputation, and level of academic challenge For a freshman adjusting to the student ed than at any other point in my life. This beats out waiting in line for Star Wars: were the important factors that I considered life at Wabash, sleep can be hard to come by. Episode VI, watching it, and driving to my before making my final decision to enroll at Increased workloads in classes, clubs, high school for class four hours later. It even Wabash. And when I attended Physics class sports, and even jobs have freshmen all over beats out standing in line for almost two on the first day of class, the first class of my the campus dreary-eyed and in definite need hours to receive my very own copy of Harry undergraduate experience, Long syllabi with of a caffeine fix. If only I didn’t hate coffee. Personally, my first few weeks have been Potter and The Half-Blood Prince. Yes, I loads of assignments to do in the next sixteen weeks are the only things I received in an incredibly difficult adjustment. My have reached new heights of exhaustion. my first classes of each course. schedule has been booked with obligations Never has my time been so “maximized” (or Although I am taking only four courses to school, a job, The Bachelor, and, of stolen, whichever you prefer). I move from one daily duty (hehe….duty) to another this semester, I am feeling challenged by the course, my pledgeship to the greatest fraterwithout so much time as to stop and smell rigorous curriculum that require lots of read- nity on this, or any campus, Delta Tau Delta. In the small time between activities, I the putrid stench of my week(s) old laundry. ing, writing, and participating both inside and outside of the classroom from the very have often found myself still missing old And the worst part is I don’t even have it As a first week of the semester. friends and teachers and remembering what that bad.- I am independent, and therefore Physics/Math double major, I know I have it was like to sleep in room without 22 other do not have to go through the trials of to get ready to face tougher times in coming dudes, or to go to class and see a bunch of, pledgeship. I can’t even imagine what it’s what were they called? Ah, yes, girls. It’s like for those guys. And … aww shucks. My four years. Coming from a high school that had tough getting used to a whole new world and “time management skills” that everyone around 50 students in each class, I am defi- the responsibilities as a student, employee, I’ve ever met at Wabash say I need to learn nitely influenced by the small size of writer, and pledge, especially while working here tell me that I can’t neglect my homein fact, I had not attended a class on just a few hours’ sleep. Wabash; work anymore. I also probably need to get that has less than 15 students. Pledging the Delt house has easily been some of that sleep I’ve been missing… For an international student, like me, one of the most constantly demanding things Rabin Paudel from a very different educational setting, it is I’ve been a part of, and official pledgeship It has already been a month full of new experiences to me. Coming to a new place very difficult to adjust in an entirely different hasn’t even kicked up yet. The house jobs, academic setup. I have found that Wabash study tables, night kitchen, chapel sing prac- tice, interviews, and assignments have a way of really wearing you down. Like many, I have wondered why I chose this path, and feel like I had more freedoms in high school, but all I have to do is look at the actives to remind myself why this is so right. They are really brothers, people from incredibly diverse backgrounds, who all have a definite bond and loyalty to the house that is remarkable. Us “pukes” are still working on it. In the meantime, we’ll just have to learn the sometimes difficult lessons of respect, responsibility, accountability, and, of course, how to clean the hell out of an aging house. But growing with these brothers over the next four years is something that keeps me excited, keeps me going, no matter how tired. All in all, I’m just getting a taste of some of the qualities, values, and traditions that make this place so loved. And I’m all about it. Now, I’ll see if I can sneak in a quick nap. Kyle Frederick Should I live in a dorm or fraternity? Am I going to be spending the next four years of my college career pledged to a fraternity where I have obligations and people who depend on me or should I just go the independent route and make my own rules and create my own schedule? My response was the dorms. I came to Wabash intent on living in the dorms and I thought there was nothing that could change my mind. I lived in Martindale and had friends at Kappa Sigma so I would visit them quite frequently and that’s when I began to see the genuine bond that the brothers seemed to have that’s when I became enticed. The more time that I spend there the more I began to appreciate it until I finally decided to accept my bid a week or two into the school year. Moving away from home and adapting to college life has been a challenging transition. I was spoiled there and never had to do too many chores or even a load of laundry for that matter. Now I am doing laundry, the dishes, taking out the garbage and whatever else is asked of me. You quickly learn that staying up until 3 or 4 in the morning isn’t really the best idea when you have a 9 a.m. class the next morning. After the first week or so you begin to figure out where you can start taking quick naps in between classes to recuperate from the two hours of sleep from the night before. I can see that I have a long road ahead of me and I am more that willing to accept the challenges that I am presented with. College life is a difficult adjustment but I am sure that it will be an enriching experience in the end. Red Pack Soccer Takes First was Mentally Win in Philadelphia Unprepared Sports The Bachelor • PAGE 11 September 14, 2006 CHUCK SUMMERS ASHLEY R. STEPHEN WABASH ‘07 The body was ready but the mind was weak. That was the theme for the Wabash cross country team this past Saturday. After running the first couple of miles with the leaders, the Wabash runners began to move back through the field. “We got out well, we tested ourselves early but we just didn’t test ourselves late,” Acting Head Coach Roger Busch said. Senior Dennis Frazee and sophomore Sam ComptonCraig led the Little Giants, finishing eighth and twentieth, respectively. The Red Pack finished the meet with a team score of 134 points, which earned them sixth place. “We were probably the most physically fit team there on Saturday,” Busch said. “But we need to work on being mentally prepared.” Junior Matt Maher echoed Busch’s words. “We ran hard but we didn’t run smart,” he said. With the help of a one-two individual finish, DePauw won the meet with 38 points, while NCAC rival Ohio Wesleyan was second with 72 points. Albion finished third with 92, Oberlin was fourth with 94, and Denison was fifth with 100. Kenyon, Earlham, and Kalamazoo rounded out the field finishing seventh, eighth, and ninth, respectively. The GLCA Invitational was the first meet for the Red Pack under Acting Head Coach Roger Busch. Busch is currently serving as the acting head coach of the Wabash cross country program while Coach Rob Johnson is taking a leave of absence for medical reasons. “We were probably the most physically fit team there on Saturday, but we need to work on being mentally prepared.” Coach Roger Busch Senior Dustin Beck finished 32nd, junior Geoff Lambert finished 36th, and freshman Micah Milliman finished 40th to round out the scoring for the Little Giants. “Micah Milliman had a good first 8k,” Busch said. Coach Busch was also pleased with the performances Milliman’s fellow freshmen, Graham Johnson and Cole Jeffries. Johnson and Jeffries, who were the eighth and ninth men for the team, ran to 69th and 76th place finishes, respectively. “Dennis Frazee did a good job battling back late in the race,” Busch said. He then admitted that was the only positive comment he could give about the performances of the team’s returning members. The Red Pack looks to improve its season when it competes on Friday in the Indiana Intercollegiate Cross Country Championships. The meet, hosted by Indiana State, will be held on the LaVern Gibson Championship Course at the Wabash Valley Family Sports Center. The open race begins at 3:30pm, while the men’s race begins at 5:15pm. “I’m looking for steady improvement at Intercollegiates,” Busch said. “It’s a fast, cross country-only designed course in Terre Haute.” WABASH ‘10 Last Saturday was certainly a special day for Wabash head soccer coach Roberto Giannini. On this, the day of he and his wife’s 16th wedding anniversary, his team came through with about as good a present as he could ever ask for. Led by junior Gary Simkus’ hat trick, the Little Giants defeated host Haverford 4-1 to give Giannini his first ever win as a collegiate head soccer coach. “It’s about time!” said a laughing Giannini after practice on Tuesday. “It was a great present they gave me.” The obvious star of the game was Simkus, whose hat trick against Haverford was the first of his career. “I was very pleased with (the performance),” Simkus said, who attributed his careerday to great teamwork and assists. “The guys were giving me good chances. They were setting me up perfectly. All I had to do was finish.” Finishing is something this team has struggled with over the first few games. “If we capitalized on Alma and Rose Hulman, we would be 3-2,” Giannini said. The Little Giants found the cure to this problem against Haverford. With the first goal from freshman Luis Quiroga to open the second half and the additional three from Simkus, the team had more goals than in their first three games combined. “We were all on the same page,” said Simkus. “We had good pressure on the ball in that second half.” Giannini added, “Tactically, we were very mature. We were lucky (Haverford) didn’t score goals in the first half. We were a little flat. But we came out strong in the second half.” The win was the first of two games the Little Giants played over the weekend in the Haverford Invitational Tournament in Philadelphia. The team lost the second game to Cabrini, 1-4, and took second overall in the tournament. Despite the loss, Giannini believes his team played well in the second game. “In the second game, overall, we played better than the first. But we just had 60 minutes of foolishness,” said Giannini. “We hit the post twice, and then, all of a sudden, we blacked out and allowed four goals in 60 minutes. The whole team fell into a black whole.” Simkus sees this weekend as more important than the 1-1 record the recorded there. “It was a great bonding experience, being on a long road trip like that with all the guys,” Simkus said. The team spent about 26 hours on a bus traveling to Philadelphia and back. The team finally has a number in the wins column and looks to build off the successes in the tournament. “They’re getting better and better and better. They’re really believing in what we do,” Giannini said, who is still looking to eliminate mistakes. “It comes down to not committing suicide,” he said. “We are too generous.” Simkus also recognizes the need to be constantly improving in order to be competitive this year. “There’s always something to be working on,” said Simkus, “That’s why we go to practice every day.” 7D\ORU/DQHVDQG&UDVK0F&ODLQV /RFDWHGEHKLQG.URJHUVLQWKH&UDZIRUGVYLOOH6TXDUH /HVVWKDQPLOHIURPFDPSXV 0RQGD\ 'ROODU1LJKWV WR %HHU &ORVH%RZOLQJ )UHH3RRO )ULGD\ 4XDUWHUPDQLD 30$0 %RZOLQJ 0DNH\RXU %HHU UHVHUYDWLRQV 3LWFKHUV &RYHU :HGQHVGD\ %HHU %RZOLQJ WR&ORVH 6DWXUGD\ &RVPLF%ODFNOLJKW%RZOLQJ KRXUVRI8QOLPLWHG %RZOLQJ &RYHU 6WDUWVDW30 Wabash Tries to Restart Streak against Millikin PAGE 12 • Sports The Bachelor September 14, 2006 After a disappointing start to the season at Franklin, the football team looks ahead to the Big Blue to regain winning form. CHAD FINLEY WABASH ‘08 The Little Giant football team looks to rebound after a frustrating loss in Franklin last weekend. The team lost their first regular season game, a 45-38 overtime loss that saw an emotional 4th quarter comeback. Senior Jeff Walker led the Little Giants with 175 yards receiving and 3 touchdowns. Billy King got his first start at running back and gained 92 yards. These efforts were not enough to overcome the dominance of Franklin in special teams. The kickoff team gave up 175 return yards, which gave Franklin great field position for most of the second half. The Little Giants will have to rebound at home against a very tough Millikin team from Decatur, Illinois, this weekend. It will be the Wabash’s first home game of the season. Millikin enters the game at 1-1. They are a member of the CCIW, a very good conference. They defeated Illinois College in their season opener and lost to Ohio Northern in their second game. Ohio Northern, a member of the OAC, defeated defendingnational champion Mount Union during the regular season last year. Millikin will provide the Little Giants a difficult non-conference game. They are an offensively balanced team. They enter the contest averaging 112 yards rushing and 142 yards passing per game. Defense will be key for Wabash. The Little Giants have to stop Wallick, a preseason All-American, and Albin, a senior quarterback. Wallick is Millikin’s all-time leading rusher, and is averaging over 4 yards a carry for Millikin this season. Albin is completing just over 50% of his passes this season. Millikin also had 3 other players earn Pre-season All-American accolades. Senior defensive lineman, Chris Williams, senior defensive back, Robaer Williams, and punter Aaron McLean round out the list of Pre-season All-Americans. Wabash will enter the game averaging 186 yards rushing and 313 yards passing. The teams theme for the week is “win this play.” The Little Giants are going to try to focus on each individual play and just win that play. The home opener is shaping up to be an exciting game. The Sphinx club will begin a cookout at 11:30. Go support your Little Giants. Kickoff is at 1:00 pm in Hollett Little Giant Stadium. Order our Wabash special! 1 large 1 topping and a 2liter For Only 9.95 +tx Ask about our Party Discounts!! 765-361-6840 Call Today!! ELIJAH SANDERS | WABASH ‘10 The Sphinx Club urges on the Wabash comeback at Franklin. Ya gotta go to Johnny’s
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