Wednesday, July 28, 2010
the Garbage Question
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
"Green to Gold" Daniel Etsy
Friday, July 23, 2010
On behalf of the Office of Admissions, it is my pleasure to inform you that your application to Naropa University’s Bachelor of Arts program has been accepted by the admissions committee for entrance in Fall, 2010. The decision was based on the strength of your application and the contributions we feel you can make to the Naropa community. This acceptance is contingent upon the receipt of an appropriate, original, second letter of recommendation.
http://www.naropa.edu/tuitionfees/ugrad_scholarships.cfm
Monday, July 19, 2010
Landscape Architecture
A First Professional Bachelor Degree Program for graduate students is available for students who wish to pursue a course of study that culminates a comprehensive design project as opposed to a graduate research/design project. This program combines learning the basic skills and knowledge of Landscape Architecture in the early years with significant attention paid to an individually focused, studio-based design project that the students organize and execute in their third year.
http://landarch.uoregon.edu/index.cfm?mode=programs&page=grad&sub=gradbla
The First Professional Master's Degree Program combines learning the basic skills and knowledge of Landscape Architecture with graduate research work during the third year. Students are required to take five elective classes in their 'Area of Concentration' and in support of the Master's project or thesis. This program begins in the third week of June each year.
Based upon their undergraduate courses, work experience, and background in design-related disciplines, these students may have competency in some areas, gained either through previous course work or professional experience. In these cases, adjustments are made to the typical program of study for each individual, done in consultation with a faculty advisor.
http://landarch.uoregon.edu/index.cfm?mode=programs&page=grad&sub=firstpro
STUDY ABROAD
Examples of programs offered outside of the UO have included the DIS program in Copenhagen, study in Norway and Sweden offered through UC Davis, and a summer experience in Costa Rica offered by SUNY Buffalo. Students will also often elect to travel, either on their own, or as part of a scholarship-funded exploration that meets their own interests or that meets an area of concentration interest that they have.
The Landscape Architecture department also has partnered with Lincoln University in New Zealand to establish an exchange program for students. This program enables students at the UO to travel to Christchurch for two terms and study landscape architecture in the program at Lincoln. Students interested in work on the Pacific Rim, or in the landscape of that region of the world, have found this experience to be an amazing opportuniity to experience life overseas while pursuing their degree.
Saturday, July 17, 2010
When Ideas have sex
Thursday, July 15, 2010
3. Altering my outlook of culture and society
In 150 words or fewer, describe how one of the items listed in the "Involvement and Participation" section has affected you. How have you changed by being involved with this particular club, organization, or activity? Or how has this experience altered you outlook on politics, cultures, economics or education?
What is Contact Improvisation

Contact Improvisation is an evolving system of movement initiated in 1972 by American choreographer Steve Paxton. The improvised dance form is based on the communication between two moving bodies that are in physical contact and their combined relationship to the physical laws that govern their motion—gravity, momentum, inertia. The body, in order to open to these sensations, learns to release excess muscular tension and abandon a certain quality of willfulness to experience the natural flow of movement. Practice includes rolling, falling, being upside down, following a physical point of contact, supporting and giving weight to a partner.
Contact improvisations are spontaneous physical dialogues that range from stillness to highly energetic exchanges. Alertness is developed in order to work in an energetic state of physical disorientation, trusting in one's basic survival instincts. It is a free play with balance, self-correcting the wrong moves and reinforcing the right ones, bringing forth a physical/emotional truth about a shared moment of movement that leaves the participants informed, centered, and enlivened.
—early definition by Steve Paxton and others, 1970s, from CQ Vol. 5:1, Fall 1979
Contact Improvisation is an open-ended exploration of the kinaesthetic possibilities of bodies moving through contact. Sometimes wild and athletic, sometimes quiet and meditative, it is a form open to all bodies and enquiring minds.
—from Ray Chung workshop announcement, London, 2009
Contact Improvisation (CI) is a framework for an improvised duet dance. Since it is essentially a dance of investigation of weight, touch, and communication, it adheres to no single definition or pedagogical certification program. All practitioners ultimately participate in the defining, disseminating, and development of the form through their own practice and discovery.
2. personal transformational experience
Naropa University is a place where transformation happens. Our students examine who they are, their roles in the world and how they want to meet the world and change it for the better. In a minimum of one page, tell us about a transformational experience you have had and how it enhanced your ability to see another person's view, alter your own view, or engage with the issue or you community in a new way.
In the fall of 2008 I packed a couple of panniers full of warm clothes, camping gear, and bike tools and flew to Portland, Oregon to set off on a month long bike ride to Los Angeles. Never in my life did I consider that traveling by a bike and camping for days on end was possible, moreover doable. I met my 3 friends with whom I planned this adventure in Portland and after a few days of preparations we were off.
A small footnote, I began riding my bike in Los Angeles 4 years prior to the trip and although I was a bike enthusiast, the farthest bike rides I did where 10-15 miles one way to meet some friends across town; I was used to riding for an hour max and then moving onto a different activity. I was comfortable and familiar riding in the city but by no feat was I a rode racer, pounding away miles to attain a goal. I have always been an athlete, but within recent years I have fallen into the comforts of personal choice and being able to withdrawal myself from physical challenges when they where too much.
So you can only imagine how I felt when I began to realize the first day that we where going to ride for hours on end. This was the begging of coming to terms, breaking away and expanding my mental barriers and perceived physical limitations. Not only did I have to adapt to the changed weight of my bike, whereas it was 25 pounds in the city to more than doubled on this trip; I also had to come to terms with physical pain of relentless time spent in the saddle, freezing in the nights, and nowhere to hide- emotionally or literally.
This was my initiation. I was learning to release the notion of instant gratification and endure- for success down the line. I learned to communicate my sorrows more deeply, my joys more openly. Every mountain climbed and descended, crazy autumnal elements overcome, I learned. I observed. I shared. I overcame. And with that, it began to dawn on me not only in theory but through experience, of how resourceful, resilient and patient human nature can be. I gave myself a month of contemplating, listening within, exercise and direct exposure to the natural elements. How many people in the world have that kind of time and opportunity?
My personal experiences also motivated and inspired others to do the route, as well as shed light on the very possibility to "everyone" else. It is almost like I became a certified spokesperson for bicycle touring. But more importantly the trip gave me the confidence to be a part of the bike co-op community. Shortly after my return, I began to volunteer at Bikerowave , a "do it yourself" bike shop, which has been a big figure in the west-side bike community in Los Angeles. I continued to learn about my bike, but I also began to learn about vintage French bottom brackets as well as building wheels and teaching people to do their own tune-ups. I was growing in my knowledge of bike repair, moving from simply fixing a flat to fully re-hauling a bicycle. Even more importantly though, it was all done through a community setting. We held monthly board meetings and voted on issues; raised money through fundraisers and parties; created a "women only" night for females who wanted to fix their bikes in a quiet and sensitive environment; moved to a bigger and more accessible location, and thus grew our member base. All the participation stemmed from the trip. It was my way in to the bike community.
Since then, I have toured the east coast of Australia. Learned and explored the sub-culture of bicycle polo. Connected with people around the world, who I might have never have met, if it wasn't for this medium. Not only is cycling a great way to exercise, it is an important means of alternative transportation, and ultimately an enriching journey inside and through the world.
1. how you are prepared to participate
Two Streams/ Many Ways

cont...
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Two Streams/ Many Ways
