Sunday, October 2, 2011
Introductions: Round Two
I never really know how to start these. As you have probably deduced, these are more introductions for our new blog team!
KATIE SELINGER
Height: 5' 2"
Eye Color: Sea Green
Hair Color: Dark Brown
Class: Sophomore
Katie, a scorpio, can usually be found sitting in the Grantwood Gallery at the library, working on her 13 inch Apple MacBook Pro. She harnesses her inner love of all things feline during her day to day life. She likes the Frodo Baggins type, and if you are looking for some date ideas try going out to get strawberry ice cream. But be warned: She's a black belt!
RACHEL EPPERLY
Height: 5' 8"
Eye Color: Brown
Hair Color: Brown
Class: Freshman
Rachel is a Gemini, and there's no telling whether she is the evil twin or not! This monkey lover owns a swanky HP Pavilion and enjoys working on leather couches. If you were to look in her fridge you would find grape juice, hummus, pickles, and carrots that are probably bad. Don't let her mild shyness fool you: this girl's got spunk.
Look forward to posts from both of these girls as well as the start of our new segment, Quote of the Week, by Jane Lindemann!
-Kelci de Haas
Friday, September 30, 2011
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Do you know how autumn comes?
- Julia Pillard
Monday, September 26, 2011
Writing Center Staff At Blindspot
- Jane Lindemann
Sunday, September 25, 2011
It's the start of a new school year and a new blogging team here at the Writing Center. We are very excited to entertain you with witty wisdom and news about what's happening here, but we thought we should probably introduce ourselves first. However, we didn't want to overwhelm you with information - so we'll start slow.
Look forward to posts this week from three fabulous people: Jane, Julia, and Kelci!
JANE LINDEMANN
Height: 5' 7.5"
Eye Color: Green
Hair Color: Light Brown
Class: Freshman
Jane is a Leo looking for love. She logs onto her purple laptop between rehearsals for Twelfth Night, in which she plays Feste. While she can't pick a major, she is dedicated to her classes almost as much as she is dedicated to coffee. Her two pots a day will keep you on your toes to entertain her! However, if you are looking for date ideas, try taking her out to coffee, perhaps with a romantic giraffe ride afterwards.
JULIA PILLARD
Height: 5' 8.5"
Eye Color: Blue
Hair Color: Blonde
Class: Freshman
This Aries from Fort Collins has a fiery personality. Her Dell laptop (running Vista) allows her to complete homework for her music and writing classes. She loves long afternoons sitting in her cushioned wicker chair low to the ground, sipping minestrone soup. Her dream date would be something including owls, perhaps meeting them, petting them, drawing them, or just talking about them!
KELCI DE HAAS
Height: 5' 5"
Eye Color: Brown
Hair Color: Brown (with a blue and green streak!)
Class: Freshman
Kelci's Libra life is the furthest thing from balanced! She juggles playing sports, theater and writing classes, and hanging out with friends; perhaps watching a movie on her lime green Sony Viao. She loves both playing and watching football, as well as almost any kind of dessert. If you want to hang out with Kelci, avoid conflicts with any football games, but especially Green Bay Packers games!
Tune in next Sunday for another preview and more introductions!
- Kelci de Haas
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Friday, August 12, 2011
Asbestos in the Attic..or Basement
I hold my breath as I walk through the sauna of a stairwell. The asbestos abatement is in full swing in Peterson and somehow holding my breath will prevent the microfilaments from entering my lungs. Reaching the landing I gasp, inhaling all those particles I worked so hard to avoid.
The air conditioning has been shut off, while I imagine a giant vacuum hose outside is sucking the undoubtedly asbestos laden insulation from the interior of the cinder-block walls. Probably this is not how it works. And theoretically speaking, I think we aren’t supposed to be in the building, but nothing stops Dr. Bob from getting down to work in his 329 Peterson office. Not even hazardous silicate minerals.
Upon further investigation of the history and usage of asbestos I have discovered the following primarly on Wikipedia. Coming from the Greek word meaning unquenchable, asbestos in one of six silicate minerals. Used for its tensile strength, fire retardant ability and sound absorption the U.S. asbestos industry began in 1858. Until recently this tricky substance was used in automobiles, to wrap ship pipes, bulletproof vests, cigarette filters, plaster and artificial snow. Even now, it has not been made illegal in the United States, though it is listed amongst hazardous air pollutants.
Unfortunately for Peterson hall, when it was built in the 1960s, asbestos use was in full swing. By the time school begins, Peterson will be in ship shape—but a friendly piece of advice: don’t lick the walls.
- EmilyWednesday, July 20, 2011
The heat sets in.
It’s my first summer in Iowa, and I imagined a brisk summer like those spent in Seattle as a child-- pulling plums from a tree in the backyard and regretting the decision to wear shorts. Instead, we subsist in what has been dubbed ‘corn growing weather.’ The Iowa City Bank sign illuminates red digits. One, zero, seven. I didn’t think it possible outside the southwest. The humidity knocks you back, down, and rolls you around on the ground.
I run into Liz and Sydney in the writing center. I think we all escape to Peterson to find a little quiet in the nearly-empty basement. With the exception of a few glass research students, our little niche is cool and silent. The coffee supply has dwindled to only decaf, but it doesn’t seem to matter. We complain to one another about the systems migration. F-drives and I-drives don’t work. Or maybe they do. Everyone laments lost progress and class assignments. My honors composition portfolio is gone, but then again, maybe my prose isn’t as good as I recall. The summer is rattling its last few breaths; classes start in a week and a month - Emily
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Watching the books pile up and hankering for a cup of writing center coffee
Dr. Bob’s books for his latest nature-writing course cascade from his mailbox-- the one across from cherry auditorium. Unwrapping book after book, almost exclusively the Best American Science and Nature Writing 2005, I found myself hankering for a pot o’ Joe. Not just any, but the writing center’s own special brew, black. It’s the middle of summer and nothing will cut it. No coffee roasters around or mysterious burlap bags filled with green coffee beans arriving. I can’t help but miss walking into Peterson and being accosted by what smells like hot pencil shavings, knowing that there would be a fresh cup waiting for me downstairs.
- EmilySaturday, June 25, 2011
Grant Wood Slept Here...
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Is it still a writing center if no one is here to conference?
So far the writing center and my summer hideaway has been abustle with activity. Between working on the summer newsletter, next years calendar, and cleaning out old faithful (the refrigerator), there is rarely a dull moment. In fact last weeks adventures in the depths of the refrigerator yielded a treasure of miscellaneous foodstuffs. The top five things found the WC fridge:
5. An unopened Rockstar
4. A half-gallon tupperware of canned pears, labeled Tuna.
3. Baked beans and lots of 'em.
2. A pitcher of slightly green iced tea.
1. One full pound of creamed cheese set to expire next month. Not quite sure what I'll do with this fortune just yet...
Happy summer to all you folks and be sure to check out Beth's Baseball [May Term] Blog.
- Emily C.
Friday, May 6, 2011
Second Semester Blog Recap
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part XII

1929, the father is the last to pass on. And rest he shall among the family. The grounds are shaded by cedar and they face a land of opportunity and openness. A new foreign land is where the MalÑžs called home and most likely prospered. The size of the headstone and its detail must have cost much of what they had saved, but it is worth this cost to keep their name out there for a lonely and infrequent passerby to see.
Josef and Frantska now lie with their children by their sides. The MalÑžs are protected by the cedar trees and the dew soaked grass. The calm, warm winds clean them on this beautiful September morning. Their bodies are blanketed by the moist, deep Earth. They are minded by their God they chose to believe in and are guarded by the noble Saints Peter and Paul. Where they lie is separated only by a gravel road from the house of their God.
They rest in the pristine cemetery with a solid, lightly decorated and polished gray monument that stands above their heads where Josef, Frantska and their three children's names are now carved into time. Their native language of Czech adorns the lovely headstones. Frantska, a beloved daughter and mother, is memorialized with a sentence that only a few may translate and understand. I wonder what is said of her. I wonder who decided to leave words just for her. A massive agave has grown next to her headstone, making her blessed by the earth Herself.
However, happiness has not always befallen the MalÑžs. Two were lost far too young. Only days old and they were to be buried within the family plot. They now are among the parents and brother, Lancelot, they never knew. Miloslav and Josef Jr., twins, will always be remembered and loved, even after such a short life. Josef and Frantska had to watch Miloslav be taken after three days of life, and then they had to endure the pain again as Josef Jr. was also taken only a few days after his second half. A passerby, like myself, could not imagine what pain and heartache that would cause; how could two parents survive that? Yet again Josef had to watch as his young son, Lancelot, be taken away too, not long after Frantska, but quite some time after his brothers. Poor, poor Josef! My heart aches for the MalÑžs; how traumatic their life had to have been with so many young graces lost. And poor Josef had to live multiple years with only the headstones that must have cost much of his hard-earned money; these seemingly being the only tangible pieces of them left for him. How did he make it through? Did he throw himself into whatever work that made him most likely prosper in the eyes of business men? But he did not prosper in his life because his Lord took his family away far too soon.
Yet now death does not walk along these rows of heroes, patrons, fathers, mothers, sons, and daughters. New forms of life spring from the earth and prevail in the place of the loved ones who were lost, in the place of the tragedies that many, most likely, felt. Families watch over the quiet and lovely graves. Their family tombstones enlighten us all of those who once lived before us. Sadness does not fall here, but happiness for the lives of those who once brought joy shines through.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Photo of the Week: So Many Books

Monday, April 25, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part XI

by Ariana Uding
Carved A dot P dot
Son of Anton and Anna
Surname, no first name
Spots of mud and moss
In the tree’s shade you’ve rested
And will for all days
Close enough to smell
Bright enough to call the sun
Too far for a touch
Lonesome in your rest
Next to you lays mystery
Bones lay next to bones
Surname Pavelka
Aging over tombstone but
Letters left untouched
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Monday, April 18, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part X

How do people choose what goes on their tombstones? Do they sit down with a pen and paper one day and say, “I want an etching of something significant and a list of the relationships I’ve had and the family I’m no longer going to see.” How do people make that choice?
Julia A. Schaeffer. Julia has a rather lively display marking her resting place. Well, as lively as tombstones can get. A short, stout cross bearing her name standing on a pedestal, rosary beads etched into the stone. On the opposite side there are no beads, there is only a train. The surviving relatives: brothers, sisters, parents, one can only assume, have placed some of their own memorials around the grave. Roses, an angel with a faded painting of a garden adorning its robe: all objects with personal significance which mere visitors will never fully understand.
1964-2004. Julia was only 40 when she died. Did she have warning of it? Could she sit down and plan the designs, quotes, and etchings out? Or was it sudden? Was her family left to struggle with the phrases and pictures that would be seen by any and all visitors? Was her family charged with the task of deciding how she would be remembered?
How do people choose what goes on their tombstones? No matter how we choose, the etchings will become weathered and fade away. All we can tell is that someone is here. Name, age, likes, dislikes, none of that will register. We probably won’t even register that there were likes and dislikes or care about the name. All we’ll know is that the symbols someone chose to adorn their resting place with are gone. The choice of what they would be, ultimately, did not matter.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Monday, April 11, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part IX

47 Years
by John Thornburg
John Woods. You were okay
Saints keep the resting place
a green topography of slopes
and crosses leaned, the cold of graves
lie in rows like trees.
Maybe you were glad
when Emma rejoined you
47 years is a drive, John
I know she told you all about 1969
and Neil Armstrong, World War II
If it was 1900 and I was 20 years old
maybe I wouldn't have this feeling
like there are plastic flowers
on my grave.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Lively Weekend on Campus
How fitting, considering that it is Admitted Student Weekend, as well as the weekend of the Writing Center Fellowship competition. It can be hoped that all visiting students are served well by these events.
- Ben B '13
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Photo of the Week: Seashells
Monday, April 4, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part VIII

by Amber Caylor
I pull my sweater tight around me to prevent the cool morning from sneaking inside. The chill nips at my cheeks and nose, but it’s still early. The sun promises to warm the air around me. At the entrance to the cemetery, the tombstones are large and beautifully crafted, but I pass by them, trekking down the hill to the older part of the cemetery.
The older sections of cemeteries are always my favorite. They are full of lost stories of the people resting in the earth, joined by all those who knew and loved them. Sometimes even the engravings on the stones have been worn away, leaving those resting there nameless to this world.
I try my best to avoid walking on the graves. Many people don’t bother, but I was always taught that it was disrespectful to stand above where someone has permanently been laid to rest. The newer section is easy to get through, with tombstones in clear rows. Once I get to the older part of the cemetery, avoiding them becomes more difficult. They don’t line up to make paths, so I nearly trip weaving through them. Many of these older graves are from the early 1900s, with the names still easily read. I decide to plop down in a stretch of grass.
The cemetery is so peaceful and, strangely, alive. Golden flowers are in bloom, the grass vibrantly green, and I hear cows mooing in the distance. I usually picture cemeteries as dark, creepy, full of shadows and straight out of a horror film. This is not that place. This isn’t a place of death. It’s a place to celebrate life.
I look at the tombstones near me and see a small, flat one that simply says, “MOTHER.” The woman’s name, date of birth and date of death are a mystery. The weather hasn’t worn away the engravings; her loved ones simply chose to memorialize her as Mother, leaving off everything else.
Initially, this lack of name saddens me. Names are so connected with our identities that without them, we don’t know ourselves. This woman lies nameless in the ground, lacking an identity. Perhaps her tombstone is simple because the family didn’t have enough money for something more detailed.
Yet, I probably understand this woman better than if her name had been emblazoned on the stone. I know she was a mother. Every day she loved and cared for her children. I can imagine her tucking them into bed under a warm, heavy quilt and making them pancakes and bacon in the morning. Her family thought of her as such a wonderful mother that they chose to remember her for eternity as mother and nothing else. For her, mother is her identity, not her name.
Today, I attempt to capture a piece of someone’s story. It’s only a minuscule piece of a mother I never knew, but I remembered her. I thought of her. She was not forgotten.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Writing Center Suddenly Abloom with Poetry
The perfect cup of coffee eludes me.
There is no coffee at the pump,
nor is there any in the carafe,
and it is too early to even think of the word
decaf.
It takes me five minutes and twenty-three seconds
to make the coffee,
but I need to fill the sugar in the meantime.
There's no milk in the fridge,
so thick, syrupy cream must do.
Someone jacked my mug a week ago,
so one of the twenty-five cent
Goodwill mugs must service.
My sub-par cup of coffee,
cradled between anatomically incorrect sea turtles
and a whale with a lazy eye
will have to do.
Another fun Poem is just titled Poem, by Grant Stevens. It speaks to us from 9pm on Monday.
P is for the Pie I eat.
O is for the Orchid Forms
E is for the Energy I feel.
M is for the moment when
the orchid forms are done
and I eat pie
and am energized.
These and more can be found on the pillar just inside the Writing Center, and there are even more on Moodle that will probably find their way here in the future. This has been an interesting sort of project for consultants, and in my experience, we would enjoy similar projects in the future.
- Ben B. '13
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Photo of the Week: Hands of Truth
Monday, March 28, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part VII

for the others
I sat thinking.
The late August breeze
whisking by the engraved names
I felt the tingle of fall arriving
and the shivering contrast of silenced life
Maybe for Otillie,
death was a sickening fascination,
morbid thoughts interfering with
learning in school
playing with classmates
daily happiness.
Maturation into adulthood
withered the face into icy coloring
and eery bags hung beneath grey eyes.
The mind consumed with the Ultimatum.
Endlessly
thrashing in possessed sleep
searching for something;
when nothing could be found.
Only when the body lay
nearing its end
and the helpless eyes rolled into darkness
did the mind feel reluctant
to leave what had never really been seen.
So for Otillie,
for the others
I sat thinking.
Friday, March 25, 2011
Poem of the Week [3/21/11 - 3/25/11]
"Though methinks he was only
a dream
Perchance thine villain wilt ne'er strike
thee fair maiden."
Got a poem of your own? Put it up on the blue pipe above the front desk and it may appear as next week's Poem of the Week!
- Anna H., '13
Getting Those Publications Ready for Print
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Photo of the Week: Board Games
Monday, March 21, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part VI

Friday, March 18, 2011
Sunday Night Dinners
- Blogsters
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Poem of the Week [3/14/11 - 3/18/11]
- Anna H, '13
Photo of the Week: Coffee
Monday, March 14, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part V

Martha
by Heidi Heaton
August 17, 1907.
A life began that day.
Now three simple facts are left of her...her birth, her death, her name.
The sun’s fingers crawl over my skin, while the breeze tousles my hair,
I ponder at this sleek, cold stone and the significance it bares.
White flowers with tips dipped in pink sit delicately by this grave,
Fabric petals of permanence beside old bones of decay.
Does family often come to visit or are there any left?
What legacy did Martha leave to separate her from the rest?
A tombstone, average height, sits stoically in moist, shaven grass,
No distinctive qualities, just tangibly marking the past.
Visitors can only muse at the lives of those beneath the dirt.
But how, in truth, can a stone convey all of the human life’s worth?
The sun’s warmth has seeped into my skin; the soft breeze has left the air,
While peaceful quiet absorbs my thoughts of a life still unclear.
Country roads wind gracefully over hills rolling out towards the sun,
And though her body lies here, her journey has just only begun.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Photo of the Week: Baseball
Monday, March 7, 2011
Reminiscing the Past: Part IV

Friday, March 4, 2011
A dabble in Etymology
Knowing I should be keeping an eye out for interesting tidbits of information about writing generally and writing centers in particular, I decided to take a look at the etymology of write and center. (Etymologically, writing comes out of writings, specifically scriptures, which is less interesting than the etymological mash-up that write has.)
According to the OED (not to be confused with the other dictionary by that abbreviation)The word write comes into modern English from a variety of sources, the old English writan "to score, outline, draw the figure of," the old high German rizan "to write, scratch, tear," and the Sanskrit rikh featuring notably among them.
Center also has a bit of variety to its etymology. Similar old terms are the old French centre--still a common spelling for the term in Britain--the Latin centrum, and the Greek kentron. The latter actually refers to a bee stinger, producing an interesting chain of Etymologies that produce an important modern word.
The closest thing Etymologically to the phrase Writing Center, at least by this method, is the word eccentric. This is a beautiful irony.
- Ben B '13










