March 28, 2008

Salsa, Presidents, I-Day, and G-School

UNC's Festival on the Hill 2008 (March 27-30). DA students, faculty and parents have been preparing since September to participate in workshops and performances. Click here for the full schedule of events. Of special interest are the following dates and times where DA will participate:

Saturday, March 29 (4:30 - 6:30) Latin American Strings Concert
DA Chamber Ensemble, + Charanga Carolina

Sunday, March 30 (2:30 - 4:30) Roundtable: Teaching, Service, Research and Latina/o Studies
Participants: Bela Kussin + David Kern, Leslie Ogden, and Everett Wilson

Sunday, March 30 (5:30 - 9PM) Musica Latina in Carolina, Carrboro Arts Center
Free and open to the public. Program includes In the Pocket and the DA Salsa Club.

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Hail to the Chiefs!
Congratulations to our newly-elected Student Council President (Margaret Anderson) and Honor Council President (Salil Saxena). We'll have a special assembly on Monday (day 1) to hear speeches from our candidates for Student Council Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer.

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Friday (4/4) is International Day - We'll have 40-minute classes to accommodate three special events: DA Admissions Director Victoria Muradi will speak at Morning Meeting about her childhood in Afganistan. We'll enjoy an international lunch on the quad and an end-of-the-day musical performance by participants in the UNC Festival on the Hill (see above).

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Congratulations to the record number of DA students chosen for Governor's School 2008:

Ben Freedman (Choral Music)
Eva Stein (French)
Michael Roubey (Drama)
Elise Hartley (Dance)
Bryan Jadot (Natural Science)
Worth Newman (Spanish)
Nick Cariello (Spanish)

March 24, 2008

$EAC-ing community-minded entrepreneurs

As Mr. Cochran announced in today's Morning Meeting, the deadline for $EAC/DMHR grants has been extended to April 1 (no fooling!). $EAC and DMHR grant update Student Entrepreneurs Activating Community (SEAC) and David Markus Human Relations (DMHR) grants, funded by the DA Parents Association and an anonymous donor, give Upper School students the opportunity to design, propose, fund, and carry out projects that build community on campus or build bridges to communities outside the school. Find out more by clicking here.
Eight individuals/groups made proposals in the fall cycle, and six were funded. Please congratulate the following, and feel free to ask any member of the Student Life Committee for more information about the programs.

1. $850 for the SOCK Camp (Week-long summer camp for low income Durham kids.)
2. $70 for the CAVS Club (community service coordinators of drives, fundraisers, and projects).
3. $90 for the CAVS club (for DA students to collaborate with Hoop Dreams and take a group of 20 - 30 sick youngsters to a Duke women’s basketball game.
4. $100 for Science Olympiad (DA Upper Schoolers teach/entertain DA Lower Schoolers - pictured above).
5. $400 for Kate Taylor to send neck coolers made by DA students to U.S. Troops in Afghanistan
6. $250 for Amigos de Hope Valley and Lakewood, the revived version of the Spanish club that has resumed one-on-one tutoring of Latino children at the Upper School campus on Saturdays.

The committee has up to $2,250 for its spring granting cycle. If you could use a micro-grant to improve our community or connect it with others, see Mr. Cullen, Mr. Ulku-Steiner, or the $EAC/DMHR web page any time.

March 21, 2008

Spring sports; Marco, Dr. Joe, and DNS; Lust Interest; Bombadil and Failure

Spring has sprung - Our athletes are well into their tennis, baseball, softball, lacrosse, golf, soccer, and track seasons. They and their coaches would love to see you out supporting them during one of these sunny afternoons. Among the options this week:

Monday
Varsity boys tennis vs. Jordan at 4:30 pm
Tuesday
Varsity boys lacrosse vs. Riverside at 4:30 pm
JV boys tennis vs. Duke School at 4:30 pm
Varsity girls lacrosse vs. Athens Drive at 6:00 pm
Wednesday
Varsity boys lacrosse vs. Kilbourne H.S. (Ohio) at 4:30 pm
Thursday
Varsity boys and girls track meet at 4:00
Varsity boys lacrosse vs. Heathwood Hall (South Carolina) at 4:30 pm
JV baseball vs. Ravenscroft at 4:30
Friday
Varsity baseball vs. Charlotte Latin at 4:00 pm
Saturday
Varsity baseball vs. Charlotte Country Day School at 10:00 am

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Sophomore Marco Reyes and Dr. Joe Moyland (parent of 5 DA alums and grandparent of two DA students) were recently featured on WUNC's "The State of Things." To hear Marco and Dr. Moyland talk about Durham Nativity School, click here. To see a brief slide show about the school prepared by WUNC, click here.

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Jason Lind (DA '98) writes, "I decided to record this 'performance poem' in the def poetry jam style (just me talking to the camera.) It's a little longer than previous videos, about three minutes, but should still keep your interest. The rhymes and wisdom come fast and furious. It's called 'Lust Interest' and has already gotten about ten comments (more than all my other videos combined) in the first couple days it has been up. Please check it out here.

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DA alumnus Bryan Rahija is currently touring the country with his band Bombadil. To hear more of and about their music, click to http://www.bombadilmusic.com. To learn more about Bryan and the band, read this recent article from the Asheville-based Mountain Times.

Traveling the globe for musical inspiration Durham’s Bombadil at Canyons of the Blue Ridge Friday
By Jeff Eason

Some bands have an international sound. Others embrace the regional music of their hometowns. Bombadil is a North Carolina-based band that manages to do both. Sometimes it will delve into the Piedmont blues of its hometown of Durham, while at other instances it will go on an international exploration of the music of Europe or South America.

Bombadil includes Daniel Michalak, Bryan Rahija and Stuart Robinson. The band will release its first full-length album, A Buzz, a Buzz, on Ramseur Records this spring. 



The band has its embryonic beginnings when Michalak and Rahija met for the first time in Bolivia. Both were smitten with the ballads, waltzes and dance music indigenous to the region and began writing songs that incorporated the style and instruments of the area. 

Upon returning to the United States, the pair began to combine elements of Bolivian music with Piedmont blues and psychedelic rock. When Robinson brought his experience as a classically trained pianist to the table, Bombadil was born. 



The band spent much of 2007 on the road playing in clubs and on college campuses. The result is an ever-growing fanbase that connects with the band’s unique musical expression. During any given song, at any given show, the guys from Bombadil are likely to play odd combinations of instruments such as xylophone, saxophone, charango, glockenspiel, recorder or zampona, in addition to the standard live music tools of guitars, keyboards and drums.

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Food for Thought - "The difference between successful people and unsuccessful people is that successful people fail more." (Anonymous)

March 16, 2008

Princeton's Parker, International Day, Festival on the Hill, Mrs. Ward's PolarTREC, and Jon's Linguistics Group

Princeton's Preyer Clinches 4-3 Men's Tennis Win Over Stony Brook
Courtesy: Princeton Athletic Communications Release: 03/07/2008
Freshman Parker Preyer (DA '08, brother of sophomore Ellie) clinched the match for Princeton in his first dual-match appearance of the season to lead the No. 50 Princeton men's tennis team to a 4-3 victory over Stony Brook Friday afternoon at Jadwin Gym.

The Tigers (6-3) were challenged in singles after winning the doubles, but Preyer defeated Juan Carlos Cotto 6-1 and 6-4 at No. 6 to clinch the team match. The North Carolina native was one of three freshman playing singles for the Tigers on Friday.

Princeton next plays March 17 against San Diego State on a Spring Break trip to California.

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April 4's DA International Day 2008, though in its streamlined (no workshop) form, should be a treat nonetheless. Victoria Muradi will speak at Morning Meeting about her childhood in Afganistan. We'll enjoy an international lunch on the quad and an end-of-the-day musical performance by participants in the UNC Festival on the Hill (see below).

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UNC's Festival on the Hill 2008 (March 27-30). DA students, faculty and parents have been preparing since September to participate in workshops and performances. Click here for the full schedule of events. Of special interest are the following dates and times where DA will participate:

Saturday, March 29 (4:30 - 6:30) Latin American Strings Concert
DA Chamber Ensemble, + Charanga Carolina

Sunday, March 30 (2:30 - 4:30) Roundtable: Teaching, Service, Research and Latina/o Studies
Participants: Bela Kussin + CSI Members + DA Service-Learning class members

Sunday, March 30 (5:30 - 9PM) Musica Latina in Carolina, Carrboro Arts Center
In the Pocket + DA Salsa Club + other local performer
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Spring Sun and Sand? No thanks! Gerty Ward, MS science teacher (and mother of 9th graders Fred and Carl) spent her spring break in the Arctic Ocean, working on a project of PolarTREC (teachers and researchers, exploring and collaborating). Below is the description of their project. To read more (including pictures and Gerty's journal, click here.

Most of the time, prevailing winds cause a huge area of the Beaufort Sea to circulate in a clockwise (anticyclonic) direction; this circulation is know as the Beaufort Gyre. The Beaufort Gyre contains the major reservoir of fresh water stored in the Arctic Ocean, and learning more about how the Beaufort Gyre accumulates and releases fresh water as conditions change will improve understanding of ocean circulation in the Arctic Ocean.

The Beaufort Gyre team will be measuring ice thickness, ocean temperature, salinity, and bottom pressure by deploying and retrieving bottom-tethered moorings. Other moorings, known as ice-tethered profilers, are attached to the sea ice to observe and broadcast ocean properties in real time. The research team has worked in this area on annual cruises with scientists from Canada, the U.S., China, and Japan since 2003.

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Jon Piskor wrote to share a recap of the activities of his Linguistics Group.

Since I’ve been at DA, I’ve been proud to have the opportunity to work on a truckload of different projects. One item in this truckload is the Linguistics Group - another is the Magnificent Community. (I’m sure you will soon hear about the latter!)

The Linguistics Group was started back in November of 2006. I had finished working, with Mr. Teagarden, on the first of many languages I have created over the past few years. For this early meeting, I gathered together a cadre of inspired persons to critique my ideas (all this was part of my independent study). Out of this idea-driven dynamic came the idea to start a conference where others could present their ideas on, truly, anything that is even remotely connected to communication.

The first linguistics conference was held on February 2, 2007, and it was (thankfully) very well attended. A visitor/group member Dr. Mahableshwarkar (Dr. M) started us off with a speech connecting principles from his great love (Neurosciences) to learning and examining language. Mr. Nozick even gave an inspiring/inspired presentation involving his thoughts on Middle Eastern linguistics. Our focus in this conference was truly unfocused, and I know the quality and range of our discussions was greatly enhanced because of this.

Next came a meeting on May 24 of last year, when our beloved Dr. Ferrari gave a truly unique presentation on the “language of mathematics.” Mrs. M (wife of Dr. M) added to the schedule a presentation on the forms, patterns, and traditions of Indian classical music. This conference, as well, was so crammed with high-energy ideas that some had to flea the conference room with nasty head injuries.

This year, too, many colloquiums on a variety of topics have taken place. On November 6, 2007, I gave a speech on my new visual framework for communication that I had been developing over the summer. I presented an extensible meta-system that uses different kinds of visual tricks and two-dimensional gizmos to help individuals communicate effectively.

Also, December 13 saw Claire Burridge’s speech on language in the British Isles and some Germanic patterns influencing American English. (Mr. Ulku-Steiner was her advisor for the project.) This speech was also well attended and was followed by lots of great discussions and swigging of cider.

And that’s about it. If all goes according to plan (“All” has a way of doing strange things) then there will be one more conference before this school year is out. I am also trying to digitize some interviews with our group members from the past… to post on (possibly)
YouTube. To those who have helped with or presented at any of these meetings – a sincere thanks!

March 3, 2008

Scholarship opportunities for Leslie, Grace, and Ben

Senior Leslie Ogden has been awarded a Park Scholarship at N.C. State University. The award includes tuition and fees, board, lodging, books, a personal computer and academic and summer enrichment programs. The Park Scholarship seeks out young people with demonstrated high academic achievement and leadership, as well as those with unusual aptitudes, uncommon talents and special gifts of creativity or entrepreneurial acumen.

Leslie has co-captained the varsity field hockey and lacrosse teams, led service programs as co-president of the Cavs Club and co-founder of SPIN (Supporting People In Need), been active in her church and served on the Durham Youth Council. Senior Amadeo DeLuca-Westrate was a Park semi-finalist. Amadeo has received recognition for cross-country, track and swimming achievements; helps lead the Friday Night Film Club; earned his Eagle Scout designation; and was honored with a Magnificent Seven Award for “respecting the dignity of each individual.”

Junior Grace Wallack is a finalist for the Bronfman Youth Fellowship in Israel, and will fly to New York City in March for the interviews. Twenty-six Bronfman Fellows from the United States and Canada spend the summer before their high school senior year traveling through Israel, exploring their Jewish identity and engaging with thinkers, authors, artists, educators and political leaders (sometimes including the Prime Minister) in a fully-funded, five-week experience. Bronfman alumni include Rhodes, Marshall and Fulbright Scholars.

Grace is a nationally-recognized Durham Academy debater, former president of Durham Regional Temple Youth and one of nine mid-Atlantic regional board members for the North American Federation of Temple Youth.

Senior Ben Hattem
has been selected as a semi-finalist for the Robertson Scholars Program at UNC-Chapel Hill. The Robertson Scholars Program allows students — generally 18 at Duke and 18 at UNC each year — to take advantage of the faculty and other resources of two of the most highly regarded universities in the nation. Robertson Scholars learn to create social change and foster collaboration both locally on the two campuses and globally during summer enrichment experiences. The UNC-Chapel Hill scholarship includes full tuition, room and board, a monthly stipend, $4,000 for a domestic summer experience, $6,000 each for international and exploration summers and a laptop computer; the total value is over $75,000 for in-state UNC-Chapel Hill students.

Ben has been active in Upper School theater productions, won the DA English Speaking Union Shakespeare Monologue competition three consecutive years, attended Governor’s School in drama, co-edits the student newspaper and is helping pioneer new individual events for the DA debate program this year. Student U. executive director and Upper School faculty member Dan Kimberg was a Robertson Scholar at Duke.

Wildcat DA alum David McClay


Behind the Whiskers: Identity of Davidson's Mr. Cat mascot is revealed after 4 years
by SAM BOYKIN
The Charlotte Observer, February 28, 2008.

David McClay is about to say goodbye to a dear friend.

The Davidson College senior is graduating this summer, and as the 21-year-old makes his way into the world, he must leave some things behind.

While it will be hard to part ways with his friends, he said, there's one farewell that's sure to be particularly difficult. They've been extremely close for the past four years.

McClay often lugs him around campus in a big blue bag, and they've spent countless hours together cheering and running around. Yes, after an unprecedented four years and some 100 games, McClay is about hang up his Mr. Cat suit for good.

Mr. Cat is the Davidson College Wildcat mascot. He's an integral part of the cheerleading squad and appears at all home football and basketball games, as well as community events.

McClay has been donning the brown acrylic suit with the fake fur, whiskers and long tail since 2004. While Mr. Cat's true identity has been kept a secret, it was unveiled during Senior Night at the Davidson College-Appalachian State men's basketball game on Wednesday.

McClay's final performance as Mr. Cat will be March 1, when the women's basketball team takes on College of Charleston.

"It hasn't really hit me yet," McClay said a few weeks before his final performance. "But I know it's going to be really hard to leave it behind because what it's meant to me and how much fun I've had."

McClay's first adventure as a mascot wasn't as a wildcat, but a squirrel. He grew up in Durham, where his high school and the Parks and Recreation Department hosted the Special Olympics, and McClay, along with other students, often volunteered at the annual event.

McClay had vocal chord surgery during his junior year and couldn't speak, so he figured he'd sit out that year's games. "But then parks and recreation said they needed someone to be their mascot -- Mr. Squirrel," McClay said. "Squirrels don't speak, so I figured `why not,' and put on the suit, complete with a giant, 20-pound tail."

McClay, who had caught the acting bug after performing in a high school production of "Grease," said he loved the experience. He even volunteered to be Mr. Squirrel the following year.

So when McClay learned during his freshman year at Davidson College that the school was looking for a new Mr. Cat, he figured he'd give it a shot. As part of the audition, he performed during the first half of the homecoming football game. "That was it," said McClay. "From there on out, I've been Mr. Cat."

When McClay assumed the role of Mr. Cat, he was carrying on a Davidson College tradition that dates back more than 90 years.

According to the Davidson College archives, on Nov. 10, 1917, the Davidson football team traveled to Atlanta to play Auburn, which was described by the Atlanta newspaper as "the heaviest team in the South."

Against the odds, Davidson beat the heavily favored Auburn team, 21-7. The upset prompted one Atlanta reporter to write about how the small but ferocious "wildcats" from Davidson were able to overwhelm one of the most formidable teams in the South, according to the archives.

The name stuck, replacing some other less-intimidating nicknames like the Presbyterians and Preachers.

According to Jan Blodgett, Davidson College archivist and records management coordinator, the college used actual live wildcats as mascots until the early 1960s.

In 1962, a student named Kaki Williams donned a cat suit (and went by the name of Wildkitten). Since then, dozens of students have filled the role.

But according to Jeanette Scire, who's been the Wildcat cheerleading coach since 1990, McClay is unique in that he's one of the few, and perhaps the only, student who has played Mr. Cat for most of four years in a row, missing only the fall semester last year, when he studied abroad in London.

Moreover, in years past, it was common for several students to play Mr. Cat and rotate appearances, depending on their schedules. With the exception of the one semester last year, McClay has been the only Mr. Cat during the four years.

"Finding just the right person to be the Wildcat has always been a difficult process," said Scire.

"It's a huge time commitment, which is difficult with the academic rigors of Davidson College. We have had some very committed mascots in the past, but no one has had the ability to make Mr. Cat come alive like David. He's given Mr. Cat a personality of his own."

McClay, who is a lanky 6 feet 3 inches tall, is an English major and vice president of Davidson's co-ed a cappella group, Androgyny. Over the years he's performed in numerous Davidson College plays, including "Romeo and Juliet" and "Much Ado About Nothing."

He says his background in theater has helped him play the role of the mascot. "Mr. Cat has one expression," said McClay. "But there are times when he has to be mad, frowning, scared. He has to show all these different emotions. And it all comes down to body language, to nonverbal communication."

Being Mr. Cat also requires mental stamina, as McClay has to be creative, think quickly, improvise and interact with a wide variety of people -- from rabid fans to little kids.

"Some can be relentless, especially when you have a tail and whiskers that are begging to be pulled, which is a little trying. But I still love it. I'd say the biggest part of my Davidson College experience has been Mr. Cat."

Which makes the fact that McClay has to turn over the suit to someone else all the more difficult. He and Scire have been holding auditions for the past few months.

"It's really weird finding someone to replace yourself," said McClay. "It needs to be someone who is animated and spirited, and I don't think that'll be a tall order to find here at Davidson."

McClay, who is scheduled to graduate May 18, said his ultimate goal is to head to California and try his luck at acting. But he's not quite ready to leave the area.

In fact he's been mulling over another opportunity, and is hoping to go from a wildcat to a panther. He recently put his name in the hat to be the next Sir Purr, the Carolina Panthers' mascot.