Archive for the 'Community Activities' Category

Reflections on Second Semester

Now that my Freshman year is officially complete, I would like to take the chance to look back on everything that has happened during second semester. It gives you, the reader, a chance to catch up on what I’ve been doing and also give a concise version of everything that we have to offer here. For me, it simply gives me a chance to pause and take a collective look at what I’ve managed to accomplish in such a short period of time.

I’ll begin by taking a look at my classes since this should be the main focus of college. However, if you’ve been reading my blog, you may not have gotten that impression at times. I took Macroeconomics, Sculpture, Foundations of Leadership Studies, Calculus 2, and CORE. Even though the final grades aren’t in yet, I am confident that I did well. I really stepped up my work in CORE and I think I learned skills that will help me better manage my other classes in the future. Sculpture turned out to be a lot of fun for me. I’m not very artistic, but it was a nice break to have a class where you have complete control and make whatever you wanted. My workload was very manageable this semester. I buckled down in the library and made sure I was on top of my work. I still am somewhat unsure as to what my major and career will be (which is slowly starting to worry me) and no class has jumped out and enthralled me, but I’m continuing with the path of study that I think will be the best for me.

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The library on Friday afternoons, when I got most of my work done
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All of the books for my classes this semester
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The musical instruments I created out of skulls and wood in Sculpture

Though I am not sure of my path of study, I am exploring several opportunities that may make my decision easier. I am interested in math, so I will be staying on-campus over the summer to do ten weeks of math research. I will be studying the tortuosity and geometric configuration of blood vessels in the brain and how that results in strokes. It pays much better than working at SUBWAY back home and I’m hoping the experience will be rewarding. I’ve heard that the campus during the summer is a pretty fun place to be.

I will also be participating in a program called Campaigns 2008 in the fall. I applied and was accepted to live in Lakeview within the program. The sixteen of us in my program will take a class on elections in America as well as travel to D.C, talk to officials close to the campaigns, create media ads for the campaigns, as well as several other projects. We’ve picked our own curriculum and I’m really excited. I’ll be living in a single most likely and be in a suite with two of my good friends.

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I’ve been tracking the election closely and made sure to vote

I continued to be active in organizations during second semester. Some of my friends have said that I’m too involved. I wouldn’t necessarily disagree with them on that. I continued to serve as Class President for the men of the Class of 2011. My Cabinet and I planned events including a Super Bowl Party, March Madness Party, and Freshmen Cookout. They were all successes, especially the cookout which had over two hundred people attend.

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The Cabinet’s Super Bowl Party
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Some of my Cabinet members at our Freshmen Cookout

A new organization for me, this semester, was Collegiate Disaster Relief Team (CDRT). During Spring Break, thirty of us UR students went to New Orleans to help rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. We gutted a nursing home, painted a house, and even helped with a house for Extreme Makeover: Home Edition since they were in the area. It was a lot of work, but still a good time. However, since I went on the trip, it meant that I would not go home between Christmas Break and August. I have already applied to be on leadership for next year’s trip and we have already begun planning it.

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The nursing home BEFORE
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The nursing home: AFTER
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It was though the nursing home was frozen in time
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Me working for Extreme Makeover: Home Editionn1149750614_30996618_7384-1.jpg
Having fun with friends in the French Quarter

InterVarsity has also continued to be one of my activities. I did not attend small group and large group as often as first semester, but I was still a regular attendee. With InterVarsity, I participated alongside a few other men in a challenge called 3000-12 that required us to do 3,000 push-ups and memorize 12 Bible verses over the course of two weeks. I actually completed them all. I also helped with the Valentine’s Dinner where the men of InterVarsity hosted a dinner for the women. I was part of the kitchen crew and put in a lot of hours helping out, but it was still a fun time. Additionally, I served as the Team Captain for InterVarsity’s Relay for Life team. The event was rained-out, but the University did manage to raise $25,000 for cancer research. Since I am fairly active in InterVarsity, I applied to be on Leadership for next year and was accepted. So, I will attend a training retreat this summer for that.

 

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The kick-off to 3000-12
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Helping out with the IV Valentine’s Dinner
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InterVarsity’s Relay for Life Team
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We tried to make the most of the rain before Relay for Life was canceled

My local church has a group for UR students who attend there. I’ve become more involved with them as the year has gone on. I went over to one of my church leaders’ home for Easter dinner with other UR students. I’ve also tried to attend some of their weekly lunches when it doesn’t conflict with classes. Additionally, I helped them with Rebuilding Together, which helps to fix up needy homes in the Richmond area. I also attended an Interfaith Seder Dinner through my church group. Looking ahead, I will be representing this group next year on the Council for Christian Unity.

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Helping out with Rebuilding Together
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A beautiful cake at Easter Dinner
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The Interfaith Seder Dinner

Besides these organizations, I have worked a lot. In addition to this blog, I work in the Admissions Office. I’ve hosted students, helped with Admissions chats and panels, and, of course, given tours. I enjoy it and have spent a lot of time in the Admissions Office. According to my records, I have given 33 tours in the past two-and-a-half months.

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One of my tours was for some ladies from the Class of 1970

I suppose that you are probably wondering what I do when I’m not doing homework or active with my organizations. Well, I spend some of it supporting other organizations. I regularly attended a cappella concerts, improv comedy performances, and sports games. We had some great events that were fun to attend, especially our basketball team’s win over #16 Dayton.

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Our fans rushed the court after our victory over Dayton
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The Octaves, one of our a cappella group, performs

Besides these performances, I continued to attend a lot of the cultural events at the Modlin Center. I went to a performance of “The Battle for the Pentagon Papers”, “The Baltimore Waltz” (student-run play), Bobby McFerrin, “The Meeting” (University production), Natalie MacMaster (Celtic fiddler), Neil Berg’s “100 Years of Broadway”, and folk singer Arlo Guthrie (my favorite of the semester). They were all very enjoyable and entertaining, not to mention cheap.

We did have three special events occur this semester that I believe are worth mentioning. One was the launching of the first Spider into space. Leland Melvin is a UR graduate and was aboard Atlantis. We threw a fun party with “space food” to watch the launch. Also, President Ayers had his inauguration. It was a weekend of picnics, events, and festivities. We love President Ayers and are glad to see him here. One of the highlights from his inauguration was when he served as DJ for his own after party. Finally, the University of Richmond hosted a squash championship that brought fourteen of the top sixteen squash players in the world to campus. I watched many of the games and thoroughly enjoyed it. I’m hoping that they bring the tournament back next year as well.

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Space Food: Milky Ways, Moon Pies, Big Dippers, and Martian Punchp4114546-1.jpg
President Ayers’ Inauguration
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An Inaugural Picnic
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The Davenport Squash Tournament

Of course, I am a college student, so I hang out with my friends a lot and go to fun events. I have found a core group of guys who I hang out with a lot and are great friends. We made regular trips to Capital Ale House for Dollar Burger Night and also had meals at the Cellar (our on-campus restaurant) almost every week. Additionally, we had fun celebrating each other’s birthdays and getting together for game nights on the weekends or going to the Pier to watch “No Country For Old Men”, “Juno”, or whatever movie was playing that week. We also saw comedians perform on-campus, went to the James River, and attempted the new high ropes course on-campus together.

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Dollar Burger Night at Capital Ale House
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Eating out at The Cellar
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My friends threw a surprise birthday party for me
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Me playing Tarzan on the rope swing on the James River
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Having fun with Student Government on the ropes course

Lastly, I should mention the food here. I am still enjoying a wide variety at our dining center and am still amazed at the desserts that they offer. I’ve stepped up my exercise routine and now regularly go to our fitness center. In fact, I’m almost enjoying it (mainly because I watch my favorite TV shows when I’m there). The dining center has also done lots of specialty nights, such as Oriental Night (with sushi and seaweed salad) and Caribbean Night (with conch fritters and Cuban custard). They also had lots of things for finals week such as Midnight Munchies, a nacho bar, and grab-and-go items such as trail mix and popcorn.

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Caribbean Night at D-Hall

That’s been my semester. I know it’s been active but I’ve really enjoyed it. My friends and I have started doing lots more together and I’m curious and anxious to see what the summer and future hold for me. I’m hoping that I won’t be overloaded next year with Student Government, Lakeview, CDRT, InterVarsity, Council for Christian Unity, as well as work in the Admissions Office. Well, there’s only one way to find out and that is to keep reading my blog next year.

Final Shoutouts for Freshman Year: My good friends (Andrew, Jimmy, and Buddy), my family that keeps the care packages coming and answering all of my phone calls, and the Admissions Office for giving me this opportunity to blog about my crazy life.

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My parents awesome care package for Valentine’s Day

Easter Weekend

March 24, 2008

Happy Easter everyone! I’ve had a fairly fun and relaxing weekend. Like most weekends though, if I didn’t get my work done by Friday night, it didn’t get done until Sunday night. Still, I was able to do some fun things and take a breather from the stresses of life. Here’s a recap of what I did this weekend.

My friend, Andrew, decided to host a game and movie night, so I went shopping with him and picked up some snacks. Then, some other friends and myself got together and watched Cry Wolf, which is a recent movie that actually filmed most of the movie on-campus. It stars Jon Bon Jovi, which should have been the first sign to me that it wasn’t a very good movie. Still, it was fun to see all of our academic buildings and dorms in the movie. After the movie, we played Apples to Apples for almost two hours.

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Playing Apples to Apples with friends

On Saturday night, I decided to go to The Cellar for dinner with Andrew. The Cellar is our on-campus bar and grill. It has really good appetizers, pastas, paninis, etc… as well as beer and wine for those of age. They’ll often have live bands, karaoke nights, and showings of sports games there as well. I got a really good panini. Andrew and I talked about classes and scheduling for the fall, which I had spent a good portion of the day trying to figure out. Of course, I did watch lots of basketball as well since it is March Madness. My bracket has been busted many times, but Wisconsin (my team) is still going strong.

Sunday morning found me going to my church’s traditional church service since it was Easter. After the service, all five of us students from the University of Richmond who go to my church, as well as several friends we brought along, went to my church leader’s home for an Easter lunch. We had ham, peas, cheesy potatoes, chicken, and biscuits. Of course, we had to end it with a delicious cake. We played games and had a fun time getting a break from school and homework. However, we had to return home eventually. Later that night, I went to see “Juno” at the Pier. It was the movie of the week and was actually pretty good. I didn’t get as much homework done as I had wished, but I’m glad this weekend served to let me slow down and relax with good friends.

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Easter decorations
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Our delicious Easter cake
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Eating Easter lunch with friends
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Relaxing after a filling and delicious meal
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The group I spent Easter with

Quote of the Weekend: ‘Twas Easter-Sunday. The full-blossomed trees filled all the air with fragrance and with joy. ~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Spanish Student
Thought to Ponder: Why do we believe the Easter BUNNY is the one who brings Easter eggs?
Shout Outs: Emily for hosting Easter lunch
YouTube Clip of the Week
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Here’s the trailer for the movie filmed on-campus

What a Week

March 7, 2008

So, I’ve spent the past few hours trying to figure out how everything went down. Here’s what I’ve determined thus far:

Who: Ben
What: Took 3 Midterms
Where: University of Richmond
When: One 24-hour span
Why: He doesn’t want to fail his classes
How: THE BIG UNKNOWN

Life had been fairly quiet up until this week. However, everything began to converge the week before Spring Break and my life felt crazy and overwhelmed at times. Let’s take a look back and see what caused this crazy week.

Sunday night was spent relaxing while attending a Bobby McFerrin concert here on campus. He is most famous for “Don’t Worry. Be Happy”, but he didn’t even sing that song. He and his group called Voicestra had a very unique style where they didn’t sing in English, but just with different tones. It was a little weird for me, but a decent performance.

Bobby McFerrin and Voicestra perform

Then, it all began Monday. I found out early in the morning that I was accepted to Lakeview for next semester. I will be in the Campaigns 2008 program and I’m excited. Not only was I accepted, but my friends Andrew, Buddy, Jimmy, and Caleb also were accepted. The odds that we would all get into the program of twenty was quite small. However, we only had two days to accept the invitation and everyone was frantically trying to find out who else was accepted to get an idea for roommates, since the administration refused to release a roster to us. In the end, I’m in it and will figure out rooming arrangements after break.

There was also a meeting for the Collegiate Disaster Relief Team on Monday. We met for the second time and went over the basics for our Spring Break trip. I’m excited to be going to New Orleans, but am also ready for any break in general.

Along with CDRT, Relay for Life has begun to pick up. I’m the captain of the InterVarsity team and we’re a little slow in getting other InterVarsity students to join because it’s a busy time in everyone’s life. There are lots of teams, mainly sororities and fraternities, and, as a campus, we’ve already raised $11,000. If you want to check out my team’s progress and get an idea of what Relay for Life is like here at the University of Richmond, you can find that here.

Also with InterVarsity, I officially turned in my application to be on InterVarsity Leadership next year. It’ll be another activity for me to handle, but I think I can do it. Additionally, I went to Small Group, but was exhausted, so I didn’t contribute much. Everyone in the group was facing a long week and was just trying to crawl to Spring Break. Finally, 3000-12 officially wrapped up. In case you forgot, I did 3000 push ups and memorized 12 Bible verses over the course of two weeks. We got together Wednesday night and some of the guys finished their final 400 in half an hour. One guy was way behind and did 700 in 40 minutes. I had already finished, but still sat around talking and relaxing before heading to my room to do more work.

Right in the middle of the week, amongst hectic studying of finals, D-Hall had a Carribean night and had typical food from the region and brought in a live band. It was pretty fun and a nice break. D-Hall does a great job of providing specialty nights for the students.

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They brought in a Carribean-style band to play their drums and performp3044195-1.jpg
They had Cuban custard, conch fritters, and other Caribbeann-style foodsp3044194-1.jpg
A fruit station with canteloupe, honeydew, kiwis, and coconut next to the palms

Student Government went really late this week due to some important issues and funding requests. Everyone wanted to get out of there to go study, but we just had a lot to cover. I guess it could have been worse. The women’s meeting ran two and a half hours. I showed them the winning design for the class flag for the Richmond College Class of 2012, since I’m in charge of it as the Class Chair of 2011. I would show it to you here, but I’ll keep it a surprise. I think it’s pretty cool.

I have been working on a project that lets students know what Student Government is doing to address their main concerns and wanted to finish it this week. I’ve been in touch with a lot of the administration and just met with the director of Dining Services this week. It doesn’t look like I’ll finish the project by Spring Break, but I tried. That alone took up a fair amount of my time.

Through this all, I had midterms and classes to deal with. I tried to study as much as I could. I was given awesome study guides in all of them and basically knew the essay questions for each midterm, but I still studied a lot. I ended up getting to bed at 4 AM, 2 AM and 3 AM trying to get in some more studying. I voluntarily added the third midterm because it was currently scheduled for right when we got back from break and I wanted it out of the way and felt confident enough about it. All three ended up falling within a 24-hour time frame and I just wanted to get through them. Well, I did it and am still alive somehow. I feel good about them and just have to wait for the grades to be returned.

To celebrate after my last final, I went to the coffee shop, got a frozen lemonade and chocolate peanut butter dessert and did two hours of math homework. Fun, I know. I did realize that I have a ton of money left in my meal plan to spend at our coffee shop, smoothie place, and on-campus bar and grill, so I’ll need to start treating myself a bit more.

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My treat from 8:15 at Boatwright (our coffee shop)

I also celebrated by going to Natalie MacMaster at Modlin. She is a Celtic fiddler and did a good show. I enjoy Celtic music, so I was excited to put everything else out of mind and just relax for the first time this week. She had a cello player in her band that was incredible. Oh yeah, he had just turned fourteen years old. He made me feel like I, for my age, hadn’t accomplished much yet in my life.

A song by Natalie MacMaster and her band

Anyways, this week may not have sounded incredibly busy, but I was always moving. Besides that, the stress of everything catches up to you after a while, along with the sleep deprivation. So, I’m going to get some sleep and then wake up bright and early to embark on a long bus ride to New Orleans to begin our service trip to rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. The trip entails fifty hours on the bus, so I’ll have time to wrap up whatever work I have left at that time.

Quote of the Week: “We don’t like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out.” — Decca Recording Co. rejecting the Beatles, 1962.
Thought to Ponder: If bald people work in a restaurant, do they still have to wear hairnets?
Shout Outs: Grandma for continuing to check up on me
UR Spotlight: Mock Trial Our Mock Trial team is doing incredibly well this year. We are sending two teams to nationals, which is a big deal, and everyone who’s in it loves it. I have a good friend who swears “its the easiest/funnest one credit you’ll ever take”. The level of commitment varies, but most people really enjoy it and get pretty committed, some comparing it to the participation level of a high school varsity sport with 6-8 hours a week at busy times of the season. My friend told me that “you aren’t required to go to any tournaments, but you’ll most likely have so much fun that you’ll want to”. The team has participated in at least eight tournaments this year, at places such as Yale, Duke, George Washington, and Rhodes College. My friend who is on Mock Trial says it’s a great way to make friends since you do lots of road trips and flights as well as stay in hotels together (all paid for by the University). I can tell that he’s having a great time and if you’re interested, you can contact me and I will put you in touch with some contacts who know all about Mock Trial.
YouTube Video of the Week:


Give this one a while. I don’t know where the parents were on this one.