Friday, May 4, 2012

A celebration of women and words


Diane Davis-Dixon, Centurion Staff
April 25, 2012
Filed under Arts and Entertainment
Christopher Wirth quietly stepped up to the stage with his Emily Dickinson “Wild Nights, Wild Nights” poem in hand. He walked to the podium, set the poem down, took a deep breath and a step back. Unpredictably, he bursted forth with his dramatization of the poem:
Wild nights! Wild nights!
Were I with thee,
Wild nights should be
Our luxury!
Futile the winds
To a heart in port,
Done with the compass,
Done with the chart.
Rowing in Eden!
Ah! the sea!
Might I but moor
To-night in thee!
He projected himself out into the crowd passionately reciting the already passionate poem.
Students, faculty, and staff alike were awestruck by the performance Wirth gave. The faculty was so amazed that they were still talking about it during their meeting afterwards.

Through hell and back: Never lose hope


Diane Dixon-Davies, Centurion Staff
April 11, 2012
Filed under Student LifeTop Stories
George, 40, of Levittown, sits on a red recliner in his apartment above a deli in Bristol Township. He’s smoking a Marlboro cigarette and gazing out the window. The place is modest, but neat. As is he, in his blonde, crew cut and simple but neat sweatpants and white T-shirt. Lines have formed around his worn blue eyes and he looks older.
It has taken 22 years for George to reach this point, to find this place, to find a home. He’s taken a road longer and harder than most, but, for now at least, he’s made it. He’s broken a lifelong addiction to drugs. He’s found himself.

Texting vs. talking


Diane Dixon-Davies, Centurion Staff
May 2, 2012
Filed under Student Life
Mom: Where are you?
Austin: Nick’s
Mom: home by 5.
Austin: k
Mom: Don’t be late
Austin: k
This is what a conversation between mother and son has come to.
If that is what one would call it. Nothing more than a few words typed out on a phone. Texting is the main source of communication not only between teenage friends, but it has become popular with parents and their children as well.

Tech troubles


Diane Davies-Dixon, Centurion Staff
May 2, 2012
Filed under Front pageTop Stories
In this week’s issue of The Centurion the staff explores technology and the negative effects it can have on our lives.
We have explored the pressure of having the newest gadgets; oversharing on Facebook; problems with distance learning; the possibility of getting fatter and dumber from being online all the time; dangers of texting and driving; relationships hurt by Facebook; privacy with social media; texting vs. talking; having no cell phone; 3D movies and the pricing of smart phones.
Facebook has reconnected friends from the past and families from across the country but it also creates drama. Whether you want to know a person’s personal problems or what they had to eat or not, it will be in your face within five minutes of logging onto your Facebook account.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Painting pictures with poems


Cleveland Wall read her poems and dramatically 
recited them to the audience.  Cleveland was one of
the runners-up from the recent Robert Fraser open
poetry competition.  


By: Diane Davies-Dixon
Centurion Staff

She painted pictures of beautiful ponds and skimming
rocks through the dramatization of her poems.  Cleveland
wall had her poems memorized as she dramatically recited them to the audience.
Cleveland was one of the
runner’s up from the Robert
Fraser open poetry competition.
“Cleveland was my favorite.
she was dramatic.” said
Eileen Flor, of Richboro, a
workshop student of Dr.
Christopher Bursk’s.  “her
poetry is inspiring and at
times it made me want to
write myself.”
Cleveland has been writing
poetry since she was eightyears old.  although, she has
never won a poetry competition, she did win a worst-sentence contest at a writer’s
conference in Fresno, Ca.
Her prize was a bottle of
Chardonnay. This competition is the closest she has
ever come to winning a poetry competition.  “I am
pretty tickled to be runner up
for this one, as there were so
many good poets vying for
the prize.” Wall said.
“I felt like I connected to her
poetry” said Kate Mccafferty, 23, of Bristol, fine arts
major.  “the way that she
uses her voice is artsy and
she adds humor.”
Christopher Bursk is a constant inspiration for Cleveland.  “as a poet and a
teacher and a mind (he will
hate that i said that, but it is
true).”  Wall said.  “The great
community of poets in Bucks
county is also inspiring.”
“I usually don’t know what
the poem is about until after
I’ve written it.” Wall said.
as far as her famous favorite
poets, she admires Rilke,
Poe, Sylvia Plath, Elizabeth
Bishop and so many others
there isn’t enough room to
list.
“Mostly my train of thought
will be rattling down the
tracks and somehow settle
into a poetry groove.” said
Wall.  That is how she gets
motivated to write.
Her poetry is mostly written
in freestyle and she casually
uses rhyme but she also likes
to play with visual poetry.
This is evident in the way she
had her poems memorized
and used hand gestures to
paint the picture of the story
she was telling in her poems.
She doesn’t try to send a
message through her poetry
because “When I try to do
that I tend to write very bad
poems.”  Wall said.  “for the
alchemy to work, the message has to put itself in the
bottle.”
“I have been to four or five
readings so far.  I liked
Cleveland’s performance.”
said Kyle Knoblauch, 22, of
Bristol.
the wordsmiths series on
march 30 was held in the Orangery where the runners up
Laura Holloway, Bernadette
McBride and Cleveland Wall
read their poetry along with
the winner of the 2012
Robert Fraser Poetry competition, Janet Poland and April
Lindner the Robert Fraser
distinguished visiting Poet
who was the judge of the
competition.
the orangery was filled window to window with students, faculty and staff.
some of them are aspiring
poets themselves.  Advice
from Janet Poland “living
alert and attentive, poems
will come to you.”  what she
means is to see things for
what they really are.  it will
bring out the poet in you.

Anxiety wrought by numbers


Diane Davies-Dixon, Centurion Staff
March 19, 2012
Filed under Student Life
Taran Stadanlick, 26, a nursing major, from Levittown, said, math stresses her out.
“If you get less than a 90 percent you have to be in a math final. If you score less than a 90 percent there you fail and have to repeat nursing. Talk about pressure. It is overwhelming and I sometimes draw blanks because of my nerves” Stadanlick said.
Does your head start spinning and heart start pounding as you look at the numbers in front of you in math class? Do you break out into a sweat and your mind goes blank? If so, you probably are suffering from math anxiety.
This can cripple a student’s dreams of graduating with the degree they had always thought they would attain. There are many students out there who just don’t “get it” when it comes to math. For some students the subject of math comes easily and they find it enjoyable while others agonize over the simple word algebra.

Ivy-league poets pack the Orangery

Diane Davies-Dixon, Centurion Staff
February 25, 2012
Filed under Campus News
The Orangery was packed from window to window as the crowd waited to hear the poetry of Ethel Rackin and James Richardson.  Over 100 people filled the Newtown campus room for one of the most attended events in this year’s Wordsmith’s series.
Ethel Rackin, an Assistant Professor of Language and Literature at Bucks, was the first poet to present her work in front of the audience during the event on Friday, Feb. 17. She earned a Masters in Fine Arts from Bard College and her PhD in English Literature from Princeton University.  She began writing in 7th grade and started writing poetry consistently at that time.  She found the inspiration to start writing when her best friend ran away from home as a child.
“I write when I try to make sense of things,” she said. “It’s a way to work through difficulties in life.”
Her book of poetry consists of notes, pictures and songs.  Rackin started out reading poems that had a theme of nature running throughout them, a major inspiration for her.