Category Archives: Students

New Student Health Groups Unite for Fundraiser

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Three new Illinois Wesleyan student organizations are joining forces to level the playing field for health care across the world.

The Illinois Wesleyan chapter of the national organization FACE AIDS, along with the University groups Global Medical Brigade and Titan EMS will be raising funds for their perspective groups through a raffle for a Wii game system and the popular Rock Band game starting March 1.

The organizations, which all began last year, have very different approaches to health care, but a first-year Illinois Wesleyan student believes they share the same ideal. “Our goal is better health care for everyone – to bring about global health equality,” said Michael Henry, the founder of the Illinois Wesleyan chapter of FACE AIDS, which raises awareness and funds to fight AIDS in Africa. “We can do that by helping to raise money for international organizations as well as our University organizations that focus on health care.”

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Students Receive, Give Back Fellowship for Community Work

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. — Illinois Wesleyan University students Sneh Rajbhandari and Danny Burke are the recipients of the Weir Fellowship that honors students who go beyond simply volunteering in the community.

The $1,250 fellowships come through Illinois Wesleyan’s Action Research Center (ARC), which links Illinois Wesleyan students with research projects with not-for-profit organizations. Students chosen as Weir Fellows must have previously worked closely with community partners, and proposed collaborative projects with them.

“Students have so many responsibilities with classes and work, that finding the time to volunteer and become involved in the community can be challenging,” said Jim Simeone, one of the founders of ARC. “This fellowship is intended to pay for the work they do assisting community partners.” Though the money is intended to support students financially as they work on projects for community partners, Illinois Wesleyan students are putting the funds back into the organizations they serve.

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Senior Honored by Chemical Society

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Senior chemistry major Matthew Spafford has been selected as a 2009 Illinois Heartland American Chemical Society (ACS) Collegiate Scholar.

Award recipients are chosen based on research accomplishments and grade point average. Spafford’s research focuses on developing environmentally friendly methods for organic synthesis, specifically, the use of bismuth compounds as catalysts. His research findings have been published in the international chemistry journals Tetrahedron Letters and The Australian Journal of Chemistry. He has also presented his findings in the organic division of The American Chemical Society.

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Students Receive CPA Society Scholarships

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Two Illinois Wesleyan accounting majors, Karl Albrecht and Sarah Micale, have been awarded Illinois Certified Public Accountant (CPA) Society scholarships and are interning with different accounting firms this spring.

According to accounting professor Gerald Olson, the scholarship was created for individuals planning to sit for the CPA exam their final year of college.

Junior Karl Albrecht applied for a book scholarship from the CPA Society and will receive $500 to cover his textbooks next semester. Albrecht is interning at Deloitte and Touche in Chicago working in the audit division. “Hopefully this internship will give me a better feel for the business world,” said Albrecht.

Junior Sarah Micale also received a scholarship. Micale is currently a tax intern at RSM McGladrey in Chicago in the net high worth service line doing tax returns.

Earlier this semester, Jeffrey Marinier was also awarded a CPA Society Scholarship.

Students Awarded Scholarships for Study Abroad

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Two Illinois Wesleyan University students, Brad Tieche and Frank Alonso, have received scholarships that will help offset their Spring 2009 semester study abroad expenses.

Tieche, a senior accounting major from St. Charles, Ill. who will study in Barcelona was awarded a $3,500 Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship. The Gilman International Scholarship Program offers grants for U.S. citizen undergraduate students to pursue academic studies abroad. Such international study is intended to better prepare U.S. students to assume significant roles in an increasingly global economy and interdependent world. Award amounts will vary depending on the length of study and student need.

Alonso, a junior psychology major from Elmhurst, Ill. who will study in Japan received a $5,000 Freeman Awards for Study in Asia Scholarship (Freeman-ASIA). Freeman-ASIA is designed to support American undergraduates with demonstrated financial need who are planning to study overseas in East or Southeast Asia. Freeman-ASIA Award recipients are expected to share their experiences with their home campuses to encourage study abroad in Asia by others, and to spread greater understanding of Asian peoples and cultures within their home communities.

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Students to Take Part in Obama Inauguration Parade

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Illinois Wesleyan University students Megan Francomb and Andrew Tobin will become part of history as they march in the 2009 Presidential Inaugural Parade on January 20, when President-elect Barack Obama will take the oath of office.

The two will be playing for the Colts Drum and Bugle Corps, an independent corps out of Dubuque, Iowa. The Armed Forces Inaugural Committee notified the Colts in December that their application to be part of the parade, one of a record number submitted, was accepted by the Presidential Inaugural Committee.

“I cannot wait to be there,” said Tobin, an Illinois Wesleyan junior who plays the baritone for the Colts. “This is something I will be telling my children and grandchildren about for years to come.”

Francomb, an Illinois Wesleyan first-year student who plays the cymbals for the Colts, says it will be a “surreal” experience. “This is the first time I could vote, and I will be playing in the Inaugural Parade for the man I voted for. Never did I think that could happen.” Both of Francomb’s sisters are also in the Colts, and will join her in the parade. “We all started playing together, and all of us going to Washington, D.C. together makes it all the more exciting,” she said.

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Junior Heading to Egypt for Coveted Archaeological Dig

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – While many students will be bundling up to ring in the New Year, Illinois Wesleyan University junior Aislinn Lowry’s plane will be touching down in Egypt, taking her to excavations of the ancient world.

Lowry, a Greek and Roman Studies major, has been accepted into Excavations at Amheida program through New York University. She is one of only 10 undergraduate students chosen from across the nation, and is the first Illinois Wesleyan student admitted into the program.

“To say this is an opportunity of a lifetime is an understatement. I’ll be learning from the most innovative minds in the field today,” said Lowry, a Jefferson City, Mo., native. She will arrive in Egypt on Dec. 31 and will return in late March 2009.

The Excavations at Amheida program combines classroom seminars, field trips and work on a functioning archaeological dig site. Nestled in the Dakhleh Oasis in western Egypt, the site draws professionals from around the world. “When we are working on the site, we will be there from sun-up to sun-down, and staying at the field house at night with some of the top archaeologists in the world,” said Lowry.

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Student Sees Push for Peace from Lincoln, Augustus

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – For Illinois Wesleyan University senior Kristin Zavislak, seeing the Ara Pacis – the Roman Emperor Augustus’ monument to peace in Rome – was more than breathtaking, it was oddly familiar.

“I started to notice how the Ara Pacis Augustae was strikingly similar to the Lincoln Memorial,” said Zavislak, a Greek and Roman Studies major from Lombard, Ill.

Her discoveries were recognized earlier this year when Zavislak was chosen as one of five undergraduate students from across the United States to present at the Classical Association of the Middle West and South in Asheville, N.C. Her topic, “An American Emperor and the Roman President: Images of Lincoln and Augustus,” garnered attention. “I heard people talking in the lobby about my presentation, and knew then it was going to draw a crowd,” said Zavislak.

The classical influence on American artists was especially strong in Lincoln’s time. Known as Neoclassicism, it was a period when artists discovered a rebirth of interest in ancient Greek and Roman architecture and art. Zavislak’s paper explored the similar look and feel of art depicting President Abraham Lincoln and the Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus.

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Students Offer Ideas on West Bloomington Revitalization

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Students from an Illinois Wesleyan University class are taking a look at how to make the west side of Bloomington stronger.

Illinois Wesleyan students enrolled in the University’s Action Research Center (ARC) class have spent the semester investigating the needs of youth in west side neighborhoods, as well as the resources that are currently provided by not-for-profit organizations. Students will present their findings at 3 p.m., on Friday, Dec. 5 at Beckman Auditorium of The Ames Library (1 Ames East, Bloomington). They will be joined by students from an Illinois State University class, who will present findings on issues facing seniors on the west side.

The event is free and the public is invited. Members of the Bloomington City Council have been invited, along with members of the West Side Revitalization Task Force, which studies ways to rebuild and attract homeowners and businesses to the city’s west side neighborhoods.

Students in the ARC class conducted surveys and interviews with youth and several organizations to ascertain challenges and opportunities for young people. “The goal is to help find some creative ways to get youth engaged in improving their community,” said ARC Director Deborah Halperin.

Illinois Wesleyan junior Rae Rein said she was thinking of the future when she joined the ARC class. “Everyone says youth is the future, but how can young people get to a promising future if they don’t have the resources they need in the present?” Rein asked. “If we want to see kids succeed, then we have to give them the opportunities to succeed.”

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Students Overseas Witness World’s Response to U.S. Election

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – Millions of Americans watched the results of the history-making election of Sen. Barack Obama as the first African-American to the Presidency of the United States on Nov. 4. Many of those Americans were overseas, including the 61 Illinois Wesleyan University students studying abroad, from England and France, to Argentina and Oman.

Obama was favored to win in many European polls, and Illinois Wesleyan students studying in Europe watched the excitement for the election build, and the jubilation of many people when the results were announced. At the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, Mark Kasperczyk attended an election party in one of the residence halls. “It was surprising how many people cared about the election here,” said Kasperczyk, a senior physics major. “The party was huge, with people overflowing into the sidewalks until around 3 a.m.” Kasperczyk estimated about 200 to 300 people stayed for most of the night.

Many students studying in Illinois Wesleyan’s London Program stayed up all night to watch the election coverage, even to hear Obama’s acceptance speech at 5 a.m. London time. “It was on the front page of every London newspaper that I saw the next day,” said Carolyn Leonard, a sophomore psychology major. “All of our British teachers were very excited that we stayed up to watch, and very understanding of how tired we all were.”

Sophomore Katie Bayles, an anthropology major, said the world was watching the election closely. “The tension that had been building from the extended coverage over the week came to a peak Tuesday night on the [British subway] Tube. I realized that everyone’s faces were pressed into the papers, reading about the upcoming election, what time the coverage started, even when California’s polls would close,” said Bayles, noting they understood the importance of the West Coast polls.

Nicholas Kogelman grew up in Hyde Park, Obama’s neighborhood, and said he felt a special tie to the election. “It was difficult not to be able to go downtown for his rally, but truly amazing to watch from an outside perspective,” said the senior business administration major. “It put the election in a global perspective and reinforced the magnitude of the ramifications of this election. After the election – and many of my fellow classmates share this opinion – that this was the proudest we have been as Americans in London.”

Watching from Spain, senior Ann Chang also found it difficult to be away from home during the election. “It was my first time voting, and not being able to witness people our age joining together to actually vote and show their American pride was rough,” said Chang, a mathematics and Hispanic Studies double major, who still called the chance to witness the election through the eyes of the Spanish “incredible.” The morning after the election, Chang said headlines were splashed across every newspaper she could see. “Talk of him is everywhere. And right now I can hear my Spanish neighbors saying how happy they are that he won.”

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