Archive | April, 2011

Through the Looking-Glass

Ryan

Ryan

When I first started working for The Bulletin, I didn’t think the job would lead to much. I was entering my second semester of freshman year and suddenly realized, like most college students, that I was low on funds. I applied as a page designer, thinking I could draw on the skills I learned in high school yearbook to make some quick cash. But I was told the position was filled.

Do you have experience writing?

Yes.

You’re hired.

So began my journey down the rabbit’s hole at The Bulletin. By February, I had covered Barack Obama’s campaign stop in El Dorado. By April, I was writing a series about a violation of the Kansas Open Meetings Act and Kansas Open Records Act by the Faculty Senate. By May, I was hired as the managing editor for the next semester. Then by the next May, I was editor. That was two years ago.

Being a college journalist isn’t easy. You’re often told when you screw up and rarely told when you do well. There’s a constant pressure from deadlines and you’ll often find yourself writing an article instead of doing homework, or scheduling interviews instead of hanging out with friends. But it’s indescribable the feeling you get when you see your byline on page one, even if it’s just a college paper. That’s when you know you’ve got the journalism bug, that you’re willing to follow the rabbit down a hole.

But despite all of the stress, this job has been extremely rewarding. I’ve gotten to interview people on this campus that I wouldn’t normally talk to and share their stories. I’ve found a mentor in our adviser, Max McCoy, who is one of The Bulletin’s greatest assets. I’ve met countless friends who share a healthy dose of outrage with me. I’ve gotten to intern at the Student Press Law Center, a non-profit that advocates for student journalists’ rights, and at The Joplin Globe in Joplin, Mo. I’ve learned to become a better writer. And I’ve finally discovered what I’m supposed to do with my life.

I was lost when I came to ESU. I came here because I needed an affordable college education. I had family that had gone to school here. My long-term boyfriend was a student here. But when I joined the paper, I finally found a calling. I’m not going to say that journalism “saved” me, but rather it has pointed me in the right direction. And despite the job cuts, I’m going to give it my best shot to make it as a journalist.

Graduation looms. There’s that raw anticipation in my gut that comes from knowing I’ll soon be doing bigger and better things, but it’s juxtaposed by a sense of dread that nearly all graduates have right now in this economic climate – that maybe I won’t succeed. That maybe I’ve chosen the wrong path.

But that’s just the way it is – we just have to deal with the unknown, the possibility of failure, but also, the possibility of great success. We have to see the possibilities in ourselves as we peer through the looking-glass.

Kelsey Ryan/The Bulletin

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Staff Editorial: Free Press=Free Society

Cartoon by Ellen Weiss

Cartoon by Ellen Weiss

This newspaper you’re reading from is a beautiful thing. Isn’t it great to be able to hold something that has been edited, refined and compressed for your viewing? This object, which seems to be benign, is incredibly important.

Though this paper is produced without much real hardship or challenges, there are journalists all around the world who struggle everyday through repression and life-threatening conditions to provide the world with clear, objective journalism.

In acknowledgment of journalists throughout the world who have been put through hell in an attempt to exercise the right to free press, “World Press Freedom Day” will be held on May 3.

“Every year, May 3rd is a date which celebrates the fundamental principles of press freedom; to evaluate press freedom around the world, to defend the media from attacks on their independence and to pay tribute to journalists who have lost their lives in the exercise of their profession,” the website for World Press Freedom Day states.

These fundamental principles, including objectivity, diligence and commitment to a higher calling to inform the public are the tenants by which journalists live by in order to produce the news.

Though commitment to these principles is relatively easy to do at The Bulletin, there are journalists around the world who are tested on these principles day in and day out. Some of them give their lives to protect them. Last week, award-winning photojournalists Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros were killed in Libya while covering the Libyan civil war. According to Reports Without Borders, 18 journalists have been killed in 2011. World Press Freedom Day is a chance to acknowledge the work of journalists whose commitment to these principles has cost them their lives.

The U.S. is No. 20 on the Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index. This index is based on 43 questions given to journalists from over 170 countries that assess the number of threats journalists receive, the amount of freedom they have to criticize the government and the amount of censorship the government imposes on them.

Freedom of the press is something Americans take for granted. We expect that the newspapers we pick up contain relevant, factual and, most importantly, unbiased information. It’s normal for us. So normal that we forget how wonderful it is to be able to read a newspaper and assume that its content came from an unbiased source. It is an essential part of the democratic system for individual citizens to be able to become informed voters. As such, freedom of press provides a way for citizens in a democracy to know what aspects of government affect them. As the nations in the Middle East who have recently had revolutions move towards more democratic political systems, freedom of press will be a crucial part of rebuilding those nations.

May 3 is a good day to reflect on the fact that not every country around the world shares these ideas or allows journalists the freedom to report the news without fear of backlash. Around the world, “publications are censored, fined, suspended and closed down, while journalists, editors and publishers are harassed, attacked, detained and even murdered.” This day is a chance for the global community to acknowledge the importance of free press throughout the world.

Maybe, with a little knowledge and some activism, a world where everyone is given the right of free press will no longer be a dream for the future, but a fact in the present.

Megabus or mega bust? Discounter hits rough road

Tribune-Review/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review April 3, 2007 | Rob Amen The promise of an alternative discount bus service in Pittsburgh caught a flat before it even started Monday.

Megabus, a subsidiary of Coach USA, touts $1 bus fares to 14 Midwest cities, and yesterday began offering daily express bus service between Pittsburgh and Chicago, Cleveland and Toledo.

But its maiden voyage to Pittsburgh was memorable for all the wrong reasons — for starters, it was 2 1/2 hours late — and one that company officials want to forget. this web site megabus promotion code

“Ninety-nine percent of journeys run reliably,” Megabus President and General Manager Bryony Chamberlain said.

The 7:35 a.m. bus from Cleveland to Pittsburgh wasn’t one of them.

Scheduled to arrive in Pittsburgh at 9:50 a.m., the bus pulled into Downtown about 12:30 p.m. It was 45 minutes late leaving Cleveland and then delayed further when the bus driver and his co- worker had to assist another driver whose bus was vandalized overnight.

That wasn’t the half of it.

Unlike Greyhound, Megabus does not have bus stations. It designates locations where buses pick up and drop off customers. In Pittsburgh, that’s the corner of 10th Street and Penn Avenue, marked by a sign outside the Westin Convention Center Hotel.

In Cleveland, it’s outside The Ritz-Carlton, where there are no signs indicating a Megabus stop, leaving passengers literally out in the cold.

When the bus finally left Cleveland, it headed west. Pittsburgh is east. The only passenger noticed the road signs pointing to Toledo and told the bus driver, whose assistant blamed faulty hand- scribbled directions. About 30 miles later, the bus turned around and headed in the right direction.

Despite the bus being empty, a $1 ticket actually cost $15.50.

Megabus offers tickets for a buck, as long as riders book early enough, Chamberlain said. The company accepts reservations 45 days in advance. Ticket prices increase based on availability, she said, so the more people who book a seat, the higher the price.

So what happened yesterday?

Chamberlain said because the ticket was booked within a week of the trip, the price increased, even though no one else was on the bus.

On a 56-seat Megabus, most journeys carry only four or five $1 seats, she said. here megabus promotion code

“It’s a lot more than anyone else has,” she said.

As for the driver going the wrong way, Chamberlain blamed a driver unfamiliar with a new route.

“We provide them with turn-by-turn directions,” she said. “When there’s a lot of routes to learn, our guys are doing their best. When they do the route a week or so, it will become second nature.” Greyhound welcomes the competition, spokeswoman Anna Folmnsbee said. The company last month lowered fares from Pittsburgh and, unlike Megabus, offers discounts on tickets.

“Many times we find that sometimes another bus company can bring more riders to the industry as a whole,” Folmnsbee said. “That can benefit Greyhound, too.” U.S. Airways spokesman Morgan Durrant said the airline doesn’t consider Megabus a threat.

“We don’t compete with people who are going to book bus fares,” he said.

The company fared better in the afternoon. Megabus’ 1:30 p.m. bus departing from the Westin — the first trip from Pittsburgh that was promoted by a public relations firm — arrived 20 minutes early and left on time.

It had two customers.

“I thought I would try it out,” said David Blanchard, 26, of Shadyside, who is studying for a master’s of business administration degree at Carnegie Mellon University. “I haven’t had any great experience with Greyhound.” Blanchard bought a Mazda 6 on eBay yesterday and planned to drive the car home last night.

When told about Megabus’ troubles earlier in the day, Blanchard smiled.

“Any business starting up has these kinds of problems,” he said, reassuringly. “It will be a good trip.” Then he settled into his seat and, after the bus driver asked for directions out of town, the bus turned onto Liberty Avenue and disappeared.

Rob Amen

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Printing Services to close after 103 years

 In an effort to save money the ESU administration has announced it will officially close the university Printing Services this June. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

In an effort to save money the ESU administration has announced it will officially close the university Printing Services this June. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

In June, the university Printing Services, which has been in operation since 1908, will officially close its doors for the final time. In an effort to save money, the administration made the decision to dismantle the print shop last semester.

“It wasn’t ever going to be as big an operation as it had been when more stuff was printed,” said Ray Hauke, vice president of administration and fiscal affairs. “For that reason, it was best to phase it out.”

Bill Noblitt, director of marketing and media relations, said maintaining the print shop on campus had become expensive and that ESU was actually one of the last public universities in Kansas to maintain on-campus printing services.

Noblitt also said that most of the equipment in Printing Services is outdated and would cost “a lot of money” to upgrade since technology is constantly changing.

“At some point you have to make a decision,” said Gwen Larson, assistant director of marketing and media relations. “Do we invest in the technology so we can pull all the jobs back on campus or do we go ahead and say it’s time to get out of the printing business and give the best product that we can, but not from campus?”

Hauke said some projects were already being outsourced to other printing companies before the decision was made to eliminate Printing Service.

“I think it took long enough that anybody who had a thought on the matter had an opportunity to speak,” Hauke said when asked if decision to close the print shop was ever up for debate among different departments.

Larson said in comparison to the university’s print shop, newer presses in outside companies expand the possibilities in what can be done to create a publication. For instance, some presses can provide more color than Printing Services.

“The quality’s going to be better, and that reflects on the quality of the institution,” Noblitt said.

In June, Noblitt said Printing Services will essentially consolidate with the current copy center in Visser Hall to handle basic printing needs like posters and flyers.

“Some of the existing equipment will become surplus, be sold and then we’ll run a copy center,” Hauke said.

There are currently two full-time employees, one temporary full-time employee and two student employees working in the print shop. Noblitt said the full-time employees have been placed in different departments on campus.

The student positions have not yet been sorted out, but Noblitt said there may be an opportunity for the students to work at the copy center in Visser Hall.

“They are going to need a lot more students because they are going to be taking over copying for the entire university, so those students (working in Printing Services) can certainly apply and they do have experience,” Noblitt said.

The Bulletin asked Tony Hall, director of Printing Services, and a student employee for comment on Tuesday afternoon, but both declined.

Noblitt said the university already has a stationery contract with Chester Press, 2 S. Commercial St., to handle letterheads, envelopes and business cards.

“Like any transition, it could be painful,” Larson said. “We’re changing how people do things and we’re changing the timelines in which they do them… in short term, there’s probably going to be some stress.”

Unless the university gets “an influx of a lot of money,” Noblitt said Printing Services would probably never reopen.

Kenzie Templeton

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‘Dude looks like a lady’

“Ben Dover,” better known as Kristin Gilmore, health promotions graduate student, and “Lady Hollyweird,” or Jamarious Wicker, sophomore theater major, were named the 2011 Mr. and Ms. ESU at PRIDE’s alternative beauty pageant last Thursday.

“Ben Dover,” better known as Kristin Gilmore, health promotions graduate student, and “Lady Hollyweird,” or Jamarious Wicker, sophomore theater major, were named the 2011 Mr. and Ms. ESU at PRIDE’s alternative beauty pageant last Thursday.

“Ben Dover,” better known as Kristin Gilmore, health promotions graduate student, and “Lady Hollyweird,” or Jamarious Wicker, sophomore theater major, were named the 2011 Mr. and Ms. ESU at PRIDE’s alternative beauty pageant last Thursday.

“Winning was great, I had so much of fun, like I said in the show I’ve come a long way – this has really boosted my confidence,” Gilmore said. “I never would’ve seen myself doing this four years ago.”

Despite some costume malfunctions throughout the show, Wicker was still very excited to win and enjoyed the fact that his dance partner, Gilmore, also won the crown. He said this was his last year for doing the show because it was so much work, but he loved the experience.

Last year’s Ms. ESU, Austin Schopper, senior secondary English education major, hosted the show under the stage name “Valerie.”

“I (was) most excited to see the new talent this year – we didn’t have anyone that competed last year compete this year,” Schopper said.

The first event was the catwalk, followed by the talent portion, then an interview with the three judges, Giovanna Follo, assistant professor of sociology, Edward Emmer, assistant professor of social sciences, and Michelle Hernandez, the adviser for PRIDE.

Schopper’s stylist for the event was Shanon Fletcher, a stylist at Salon Del5ive, who did his hair, make up and even a waxing for the show. She said she enjoyed the challenge and all the hectic activity that happened backstage.

Schopper started the event with a dance number showing off some of the skills that won him last year’s crown such as a cartwheel in high heels. Then the rest of the participants joined in the dance number.

There were poetry readings and song and dance numbers. The questions posed by the judges offered the contestants an opportunity to show how well they could stay in character.

Emmer enjoyed the whole show and the opportunity to get a new perspective since he had just been an audience member for the previous year’s show.

Richard Stephenson,  junior chemistry major, while under the stage name “Mindy the Mennonite,” sang Marilyn Monroe’s “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend.”

“I’m just strutting my stuff, showing off what I have, letting it be judged in the harshest competition Emporia has to offer,” Stephenson said.

PRIDE President Josh Smith said the group plans to continue the show next year and keep drawing in the crowd.

Charlie Heptas

Cocktail tour drinks in the legends and lore of New Orleans.(Knight Ridder Newspapers) go to web site court of two sisters

Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service September 21, 2004 | Kingsbury, Amanda Byline: Amanda Kingsbury NEW ORLEANS _ Not long ago, some vegetarian teetotaler wrote about his trip here to discover if the city could support a vacation devoid of sin.

Nice idea, but really, such sober sanctimony doesn’t belong in a city of to-go cups, a city with a higher number of bars per capita than any other city in the country, a city where the collective blood-alcohol level on Bourbon Street on a Saturday night measures on the Richter scale.

Word has it that during Prohibition, federal agent Isadore Einstein was dispatched around the country to see how the laws were being upheld, and cities were ranked according to how fast he was able to score a drink. New Orleans was No. 1 _ Einstein got off the train and had a cocktail in hand within 37 seconds, according to Kerry McCaffety, author of “Obituary Cocktail: The Great Saloons of New Orleans” (Vissi d’Arte Books. $39.95).

No, the best way to tour New Orleans is not to skip over the bars but to hop them _ those legendary places where O. Henry, Tennessee Williams and Oscar Wilde took intoxicating inspiration and where generals and pirates hatched world history. Bars where you can find old-school bartenders who know how to make old-school cocktails and where you can hear stories like the one about a group of old college buddies who make an annual pilgrimage to the city, toting the ashes of their dead, beloved friend in a Crown Royal bottle.

It was in New Orleans that Southern Comfort was created, back in 1874. The first Sazerac was mixed here, too, along with the Ramos Gin Fizz, the Hurricane and the Hand Grenade.

They say the word “cocktail” itself was first uttered here, though that’s disputed. But New Orleans doesn’t always care about the truth _ sometimes it just wants a good story, passed around in those places where people drink in legends and lore, where exaggeration is always on the house.

___ BOTTOMS UP: A TIPPLER’S TOUR OF NEW ORLEANS _The Court of Two Sisters: Brandy Milk Punch 613 Royal St.

(504) 522-7261 or www.courtoftwosisters.com I’m not accustomed to drinking before a certain civilized hour (say, noon), yet here it is only 9:30 a.m., and there’s a Brandy Milk Punch sitting on my table that’s not going to drink itself. In New Orleans, such eye-openers precede the morning coffee, putting the brightness back into bleary eyes.

The cold, sweet, velvety Brandy Milk Punch is a traditional a.m. favorite, and the Court of Two Sisters makes one of the best in town, mixing brandy with milk, half-and-half, simple syrup and vanilla and dusting it with nutmeg.

The historic restaurant is world-famous for its jazz brunch buffet that seems to go on for miles. But the Court of Two Sisters’ real star is a 66-year-old bartender named Flo, who has invented or perfected many a cocktail in her 40 years of mixing drinks. Her Hurricane even beat out Pat O’Brien’s in an early 1990s bartending contest.

Flo likes to make the French 75 but says humbly, “I don’t have no specialty. My specialty is doing it the way they want it _ whatever drinks the people order.” _Tujague’s Restaurant: Grasshopper 823 Decatur St.

(504) 525-8676 It’s easy to justify a second eye-opener: one for each eye. Besides, it’s barely 11 a.m., and the woman next to me just lit a cigarette and ordered a double margarita to go. She appears to be making one of those cursed transactions with the venerable piper, and I think she’s still wearing her pajama bottoms.

The last time I ordered a Grasshopper, I was underage, attempting to get served in an off-the-highway dive bar in the Midwest (a bar whose specialty, I’m sure, was dessert drinks for novices). But, standing here at the bar _ the original stand-up bar in New Orleans _ it seems the right thing to order, given that the drink was invented by one of the former owners in the 1930s.

Paul the bartender makes it the old-fashioned way, with brandy, creme de menthe, creme de cacao and milk. Meanwhile, Eddie, a scruffy regular, is offering some historical perspective on the bar. Eddie says there used to be a trough in front of Tujague’s bar, so men could unzip and conveniently relieve themselves.

Paul says that’s dubious, though there’s no doubt that the restaurant has a colorful history. It opened in 1856, feeding the dock workers, seamen and market laborers who crowded the riverfront. Tujugue’s has since pleased many a famous palate _ from world leaders (Charles de Gaulle) to women who have romanced world leaders (Monica Lewinsky).

None of them get any special treatment from Paul. “The only thing that matters to me is if you’re an (expletive),” he says. “That’s the only criteria in how you get treated.” _Brennan’s Restaurant: Bananas Foster Martini 417 Royal St.

(504) 525-9711 Can I make the case for a third eye-opener? The menu at Brennan’s lists 14 liquid kick-starts _ among them, a Red Rooster and a Mr. Funk of New Orleans. Obviously, I don’t have three eyes _ but there’s always the possibility of seeing double, which would then technically give me four eyes, which would then qualify me for that third eye-opener, and hey, if I felt like it, a fourth, even.

But I drunkenly digress. Brennan’s may be renowned for its aristocratic breakfast tradition, but what diners really go bananas over is the dessert. In 1951, Chef Paul Blange of Brennan’s invented Bananas Foster _ back when New Orleans was the major port of entry for bananas shipped from Central and South America.

The dessert was named after Richard Foster, a friend of Owen Edward Brennan, the restaurant’s founder.

This summer, the restaurant concocted a drink just as scrumptious as the dessert: the Bananas Foster Martini, served in a martini glass rimmed with brown sugar and cinnamon. It tastes best sipped in the shade of a big old magnolia tree on the patio.

_Napoleon House: Pimm’s Cup 500 Chartres St.

(504) 524-9752 or www.napoleonhouse.com Three drinks and two slurred words later, it’s time to join the official Southern Comfort Cocktail Tour, led by Joe Gendusa, a New Orleans native with a sense of history and a sense of humor. Southern Comfort’s sponsorship is likely the only reason we’re being handed plastic cups full of a Southern Comfort concoction _ because the Napoleon House is famous for the Pimm’s Cup, made with Pimm’s (a gin mix developed in the 1840s), lemonade and 7UP. here court of two sisters

The charming, crumbling Napoleon House was intended to be a New World residence and refuge for Napoleon. Nicholas Girod, then the mayor of New Orleans, conspired with one of Jean Lafitte’s pirates to rescue the exiled emperor from St. Helena, where he was under guard by the British fleet.

Napoleon died three days before the ships that would rescue him were to leave New Orleans. But his presence still resides here, in portraits on the peeled-paint walls, in the oft-played Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 (Eroica), composed for the famed general, and in the form of out-of-towners at the bar who apparently suffer from an alcohol-induced Napoleon complex when it comes to conquering women.

_Ritz-Carlton’s Library Lounge: Mint Julep 921 Canal St.

(504) 524-1331 By this time, I think I’ve drunk as much as I did last New Year’s Eve. In my muddled mind, that calls for some resolutions.

I will never drink another appletini.

I will never again order a drink from a blithely authoritative bartender dressed in all black at a bar that looks like it was designed by someone on Ecstasy.

Sometimes, you just want a bar _ and a bartender _ with a soul. At the Library Lounge, Chris McMillian concocts drinks with the precision of a chemist and the lyricism of a poet. His bartending colleagues say he’s so good, he can make a drink to match your mood.

McMillian, a fourth-generation barkeep, considers himself a classicist. “There are only four seats at my bar, so I have the liberty to be able to take the time to create the cocktails, to handcraft them in the ways that made them classics in the first place,” he says.

In this dimly lit bar _ lightly perfumed with cigar smoke and peppered with jazz _ his favorite cocktail to make is the noble Mint Julep. More so than making the drink, he performs it _ taking five to 10 minutes to wed the ingredients and presenting it in a silver cup. Properly enjoyed, a Mint Julep should take an hour to finish, he says.

“If you sip it slowly, it melts together and takes on a quality it didn’t have at the beginning,” McMillian says. “And by the time you’re done, you’ll wish it had never ended.” _Fairmont New Orleans’ Sazerac Bar: Sazerac 123 Baronne St.

(504) 529-7111 or www.fairmont.com/neworleans I have stormed the Sazerac.

There’s a challenge on the table, too _ in 1949, when women were first allowed into the Sazerac Bar, a lady named Jenny Martin drank 13 Sazerac cocktails in one night. “She was out of this world!” a bartender told Dixie magazine. “The next day, she called up and said she’d lost her glasses.” Every Sept. 26, the bar celebrates equal-opportunity drinking with a “Stormin’ the Sazerac” party.

Tonight, it’s a party of one _ because I’m the only person here drinking the bar’s namesake drink, said to be “the” original cocktail, created by a New Orleans apothecary named Antoine Peychaud in the 1830s. He served his brandy-and-bitters concoction to ailing customers in a ceramic double-ended cup called a cocquetier (kah-kuh-tay) in French. But people kept mispronouncing it, and it devolved to “cock-tay” and then “cocktail,” or so the story (unlikely story, some say) goes.

The original Sazerac _ named after a popular bar that served it in the 1850s _ was made with bitters, cognac and absinthe. The modern version is made with bitters, rye whiskey and absinthe substitute. The sweet, spicy drink seems to warm up as you sip it, leaving you positively glowing _ or is that flushed?

Cheers to Jenny Martin for drinking 13 Sazeracs and losing only her glasses. I’ve had one, and I’ve already lost my room key.

_Hotel Monteleone’s Carousel Bar: The Goodie or Vieux Carre 214 Royal St.

(504) 523-3341 or www.hotelmonteleone.com Is my head spinning? Or is it the bar?

`Round and `round we go at the Hotel Monteleone’s Carousel Bar, a merry-go-round for merrymakers. The revolving 25-seat bar finishes a rotation every 15 minutes, though sauced patrons often accuse the bartenders of turning up the motor speed.

The Hotel Monteleone is famous for two drinks: the fruity Goodie and the dry, complex Vieux Carre. It’s also famous for its imbibers. Tennessee Williams drank Sazeracs and Brandy Alexanders here. Oscar Wilde drank anything here. Former Louisiana Gov. Earl Long courted famed stripper Blaze Starr at the Hotel Monteleone _ the notorious affair inspired the movie “Blaze,” starring Paul Newman and Lolita Davidovich.

Across the bar, one of the men from the earlier cocktail tour is courting a woman whom will most likely not meet his standards after sunrise.

I decide to call my sister, for no reason except to make the point that I’m in New Orleans and she’s not. Cell phones really should come with Breathalyzers that prohibit irresponsible dialing after a certain blood alcohol content is reached.

_Pirate’s Alley Cafe: Absinthe 622 Pirate’s Alley (504) 524-9332 “The first stage is like ordinary drinking, the second when you begin to see monstrous and cruel things, but if you can persevere, you will enter upon the third stage where you see things that you want to see, wonderful, curious things.”_ Oscar Wilde, describing the stages of absinthe intoxication Yes, that’s what I need: a 110-proof nightcap.

But no self-respecting reveler would miss a visit to Pirate’s Alley Cafe, a spooky little bar across from St. Anthony’s garden, where Creole gentlemen used to settle their differences with swords and where Lafitte sold his pirated loot and gave part of the profits back to the church.

The house specialty here, Gendusa warned earlier during the tour, would “separate the men from the boys.” Absinthe.

No, you can’t get the real stuff here _ the potent elixir, blamed for murders and madness, along with Van Gogh’s missing chunk of ear _ has been banned in the United States since 1912.

But you can still see the seductive ritual of absinthe performed at Pirate’s Alley Cafe. The bar substitutes Absente, a licoricelike liquor that contains Southern or “petit” wormwood _ a less-toxic, FDA-approved version of the wormwood said to cause delirium and contribute to permanent mental deterioration.

Bartenders rest a slotted spoon atop a tall glass and place a sugar cube in the spoon. Then they pour an ounce of Absente over the sugar and light the cube on fire from underneath. Cold water, poured over the cube, dissolves the sugar and completes the drink, which is stirred with the slotted spoon.

Halfway through the drink, I realize I’m making eye contact with a guy sitting at the bar who’s dressed like a pirate. “Who arrrrgh you?” I want to ask. And that’s when I realize it’s time to go home.

___ IF YOU GO:

Drink in the legends, lore _ and yes, libations _ of New Orleans’ famous bars and restaurants as part of the Southern Comfort Cocktail Tour. The 2 {-hour tour leaves at 4 p.m. daily from the Gray Line Lighthouse at Toulouse Street and the Mississippi River. Stops include Jax Brewery, O’Flaherty’s Irish Channel Pub, Galatoire’s, Arnaud’s, Cafe Lafitte in Exile, Tujague’s and others. Cost is $24 per person; you must be at least 21. Reservations: (800) 535-7786 or www.graylinetours.com.

___ Amanda Kingsbury: akingsbury@star-telegram.com ___ Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.

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TRAVEL NEWORLEANSDRINKS ARCHIVE PHOTOS on KRT Direct (from KRT Photo Service, 202-383-6099):

ARCHIVE ILLUSTRATION on KRT Direct (from KRT Illustration Bank, 202-383-6064):

Kingsbury, Amanda

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‘Father of international students’ to retire in June

James Harter, director of international education special projects, speaks with guests at a reception held for him in light of his up coming retirement in June Tuesday afternoon in the Memorial Union Colonial Ballroom. Megan Gartner/ The Bulletin

James Harter, director of international education special projects, speaks with guests at a reception held for him in light of his up coming retirement in June Tuesday afternoon in the Memorial Union Colonial Ballroom. Megan Gartner/ The Bulletin

After 40 years at Emporia State, James Harter, director of international education special projects, will retire in June. A reception for him was held from 2:30-4:30 p.m. on Tuesday in the Colonial Ballroom of Memorial Union. About 55 people attended.

“James has been a wonderful member of Emporia State,” said Gonzalo Bruce, assistant vice president of international education. “He has really put Emporia State in the world and has brought the world to Emporia State.”

Harter said that no matter how much he will enjoy his retirement, he will miss all the people he worked with over the years.

“Since he came here, we have developed so many partnerships. He knows people all over the world,” said Jason Strachota, psychology graduate student and graduate assistant for the study abroad program. “He has always helped me to do my job right.”

Quassim Almukhtar, senior information systems major, met Harter when he graduated from high school in 2006 and was looking for a school to attend at a conference with representatives of 500 colleges from the U.S.

“I felt good talking with (Harter),” Almukhtar said. “I felt that he was not marketing the school. I felt he was talking from his heart. So I told my friends I was applying to this school and I’m glad that I made this decision.”

Almukhtar said international students not only have to adjust to a new country, but they have to transition into a new life when they study abroad.

“He’s the one who was walking with me to run the transition from my old life to the new life very smoothly and safely,” Almukhtar said.

Harter also helped Almukhtar establish the Saudi Club and International Club.

“All the Saudi students here in Emporia think that he is our father – he’s a father of international students,” Almukhtar said.

For Harry Imbeau, director of international education, Harter has been his boss, his mentor, his friend and sometimes like a father to him as well.

“When working with him, he always lets us figure things out for ourselves,” Imbeau said. “He guides us in the right direction, even in work place, he is a father. He teaches. He doesn’t tell you what to do. He allows you to learn,” Imbeau said.

Imbeau said the one thing that stands out more than anything else is that Harter “has a big heart.”

“He cares about every single student that comes to ESU, especially international students,” Imbeau said. “Every single one of them, he wants them to be his friend.”

Huibing Lu

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‘80s-themed dance show takes stage

Noah Mefford, junior theater major, and Cara Lohkamp, sophomore theatre major practice their moves for the spring dance show Monday in Roosevelt. Erica Cassella/ The Bulletin

Noah Mefford, junior theater major, and Cara Lohkamp, sophomore theatre major practice their moves for the spring dance show Monday in Roosevelt. Erica Cassella/ The Bulletin

This year marks the first time a dance show has been part of the main theater season. “Dream Park in ‘80s City” is the title for first show of its kind in Emporia State’s history. The story revolves around 17 people working through a day in the city, told through dances choreographed to music from the ‘80s.

“I decided to do the ‘80s because there’s a lot of exciting hip-hop, break-dance and just a sense of the times, so I placed it in a park in a city…that allowed for people to have all kinds of dreams and themes,” said Lindy Bartruff, director of the show and adjunct professor of dance.

Bartruff said the buildup to the show had been slowly developing over a long period of time, beginning in the 1970s with ballroom dancing. Over the last seven years, Bartruff said the dance program has developed from dancing in the Friesen Studio for anyone who could come to putting on a full show in the Karl C. Bruder Theater.

“I thought it would be a nice experience, lots of fun, high energy (and I) get to hang out with my peers,” said Cara Lohkamp, sophomore theater major.

Lohkamp will perform in a scene with Noah Mefford, junior theater major. Mefford plays a man who has finally gotten a car and spots Lohkamp’s character in the park who is just trying to do her aerobics in peace. The two perform a pas de duex, or a duet dance to the tune of “Get Out of My Dreams and Into My Car.”

“Dream Park in ‘80s City” has an extensive cast comprised of 17 dancers and three other students who are working on the more technical aspects of the show such as lighting, costume and sound design. The show will also feature a small amount of special effects including fog during another duet which is choreographed to the song “Who Made the Moon?” by Little River Band.

Bartruff said that while the music will provide a great deal of atmosphere for the show, the characters themselves are also well defined.

“My character is a convenience store clerk,” said Emily Warren, senior theater major. “She’s sick of her job, sick of her life, her boyfriend just got laid off, and she just wants to leave the city and start a new life with him.”

Warren will perform to “Fast Car” by Tracy Chapman. She will also perform in other dance numbers both as the clerk and as other characters.

“Dream Park in ‘80s City” premieres on at 7:30 p.m. on May 6 in the Karl C. Bruder Theater. Admission is free.

Luke Bohannon

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Union renovations to improve building efficiency

The newly remodeled Webb Lecture Hall features wood floors, a new sound system and a new projection system. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

The newly remodeled Webb Lecture Hall features wood floors, a new sound system and a new projection system. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

While students work towards finals week, constant changes are taking place in the Memorial Union as renovations continue.

“For the union, it really is a complete makeover,” said Dave Hendricks, director of the Memorial Union. “We are finally more energy efficient and for the university as a whole, what we are trying to do is to create a front door, a welcome center for the campus.”

The west side of the union will be completed this week and its final inspection is tomorrow afternoon.

“The ID office, the scheduling office, catering office and IT office have been in four separate locations throughout the building for years,” Hendricks said. “When we move into the new space, all of the services offered will be in one location. It will be more efficient for the students and allow us some redundancy so that we can cross-train employees.”

Hendricks said the dining hall will be completed in early August. Work is currently being done on the heating, electric and water lines as well as the air conditioning system.

Although it was still under construction, the Greek Banquet was the first event held in the partially renovated Webb Lecture Hall.

“Because of (the contractors’) extra efforts, we were able to host the Greek Banquet, which was very important in a lot of reasons,” Hendricks said. “One is to complete the cycle from old to new. Also it’s a small token to say ‘thank you’ for the campus as a whole.”

Hendricks said to ensure that the event ran smoothly, the union staff had to make sure the fire alarm and life safety systems were working and blocked off all the construction zones.

“(Webb Hall) is definitely more modern,” said Brent McCoy, junior secondary education major. “It looks more lively. Hopefully it will be a place with a lot more events and better-utilized space.”

Hendricks said the renovation project should be finished between April and June next year.

“If I were a new prospective student, I’d be more willing to come to ESU seeing (the renovated union),” said Heather McCoy, sophomore history major. “Compared to the rest of the campus, it is the prettiest. It is like the diamond of the school now.”

Huibing Lu

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Runners and walkers to honor Blaufuss

Runners and walkers will raise money for the general scholarship fund tomorrow by participating in the Annual Blaufuss wich Scholarship Walk/Run.

Runners and walkers will raise money for the general scholarship fund tomorrow by participating in the Annual Blaufuss wich Scholarship Walk/Run.

Runners and walkers will raise money for the general scholarship fund tomorrow by participating in the Annual Blaufuss Scholarship Walk/Run.

The event is named for John Blaufuss, a former Emporia State controller who was killed in December 2005 after being struck by a vehicle while out jogging. Blaufuss was an employee at ESU for over 30 years, becoming the controller in 1973 after serving as the business manager for the College of Emporia.

“(He) was a big believer in Emporia State and he wanted to see students succeed, so when he was killed the university thought that it would be good to honor him by doing this event every year,” said Shanna Basset, development officer for the event.

Basset said the event has been in existence for six years and is split into two different courses. Participants can choose between a five kilometer run or a two mile walk. Both courses begin at the Sauder Alumni Center and run through the campus, eventually returning to the finish line at Sauder.

Participants can register for the event at the Sauder Alumni Center during business hours or at the event itself beginning at 4:30 p.m. The cost is $25. Anyone who has already registered can also pick up their race packet which contains a T-shirt and bib number at the Sauder Alumni Center during business hours.

“I have volunteered at the Blaufuss Run with the ESU Ambassadors for the last two years,” said Lacee Hanson, senior communication major and intern for Basset. “Previously my job has been to direct runners and walkers on the route and cheer them on.”

Other participants in this year’s run are also previous volunteers.

“I am doing the Blaufuss run this year because I wanted to help donate to the General Scholarship Fund, support the Blaufuss family and because it is part of Senior week,” said Drake Foster, senior secondary social science education major.

Foster helped direct runners and walkers, handed out water and helped with the reception that followed the event last year.

The event begins at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Sauder Alumni Center, followed by a reception at Sauder.

Luke Bohannon

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Laps 4 Landon fights Cystic Fibrosis, raises $2,500

Participants sign in for Laps for Landon Tuesday night at the HPER Building. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

Participants sign in for Laps for Landon Tuesday night at the HPER Building. Chris Franklin/ The Bulletin

Despite rainy weather, Laps 4 Landon, named for four-year-old Emporia resident Landon Dody, was held at Welch Stadium on Tuesday evening to raise funds for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

“Laps 4 Landon means people are being supportive of a cure, and to me it means hope and a longer life for my son,” said Landon’s mother, Blythe Eddy, associate director of the Center for Student Involvement.

The event was organized by health promotion majors and Jen Thomas, assistant professor of health and physical education. Thomas Eddy, professor of biology, is Landon’s grandfather and his aunt, Laura Eddy, is director of admissions.

Landon faces daily treatments for Cystic Fibrosis, which affects the lungs and digestive system. He has to wear a vest which shakes loose the mucus in his lungs and undergoes breathing treatments in which he inhales medicines through a nebulizer.

Landon spends his days at home with sitters to avoid getting sick in public daycare, but plans to attend kindergarten in a year.

“He is very, very energetic,” Blythe Eddy said. “I don’t think that cystic fibrosis slows him down for the most part really. He just acts like a regular four-year-old.”

Last year, the event drew more than 500 people and raised $4,000 for CFF, Thomas said. This year, before the event had even begun the fundraiser had already raised $500.

“I’m very thankful for Jen Thomas and all of the students who take their time to request prizes from sponsors, the city of Emporia and all the businesses and how they support this event is amazing,” Eddy said.

The event persevered through the rain and moved inside the HPER building into two gyms, one for the prizes and the other for walking and for the children in attendance to play with ESU athletes.

Students and members of the community bid on items in a silent auction for the cause. They walked around the gym and got the opportunity to see Landon running around, exemplifying the energetic four-year-old his mother described.

“The best part of (Laps 4 Landon) is getting to see Landon running around and having fun,” said Alison Germany, senior health promotion major.

Thomas said the event gave health promotion majors an opportunity to market an event and also a chance to support a worthy cause.

“Blythe and I have been friends since the sixth grade and when it turned out that Landon had Cystic Fibrosis it was just ‘well, we need to do something,’” Thomas said. “We want family and friends to be able to feel like they’re doing something for him.”

This year, the event raised $2,500 and had about 500 attendees. Thomas said they also received donations after the event from people that wanted to help but were unable to attend.

Charlie Heptas

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Webb recognized for positive impact on women at ESU

Associate Professor Amy Sage Webb speaks after receiving  the Ruth Schillinger Award Friday afternoon at the Sauder Alumni Center. Erica Cassella/ The Bulletin

Associate Professor Amy Sage Webb speaks after receiving the Ruth Schillinger Award Friday afternoon at the Sauder Alumni Center. Erica Cassella/ The Bulletin

Amy Sage Webb, professor of English and co-director of the creative writing program, received the Ruth Schillinger Award for her service to women last Friday at the Sauder Alumni Center, 1500 Highland St.

“I’m very impressed,” Webb said. “It’s a big honor and I am very touched by it. Some of the women who have won this award are amazing. I don’t think of myself as being in a same class as they are.”

About 60 faculty members and students attended the ceremony to support Webb. At the reception, Frances Busby, senior secondary English education major and staff assistant for the ethnic and gender studies program, gave a brief history of Ruth Schillinger and said the award is given to an individual who has made extraordinary contributions to the women of Emporia State over a sustained period.

“It’s important to support women,” Webb said. “Women are often caring for their family, their children and their adult parents and are very nurturing with their students and they are also trying to become professionals. So I think that we rely on each other as a community.”

Webb has been the co-director of the creative writing program since 1996. She said that creative writing programs are usually reserved for graduate students, but ESU’s is open to undergraduates.

As a result, undergraduate students in the program have to compete with graduate students, but Webb said ESU students have won two national competitions in the past.

Lindsey Bartlett, graduate teaching assistant in the English department, said if not for taking Webb’s creative writing course, she would not be the person she is today.

“She has taught me the most valuable lessons I have learned since I came to ESU, and they have nothing to do with academics,” Bartlett said.

Ariel Robello, director of multicultural affairs, said Webb has been a “guide” and she was impressed with Webb’s various leadership roles.

“She often seems superhuman in her ability to accomplish so much and do it so well,” Robello said.

At the reception, Webb praised Ruth Schillinger for her great contribution to women and said she had witnessed many changes over the years.

“Women need to be able to see other powerful, intelligent, kind women in their profession,” Webb said. “I think it’s a great advance to see women starting to do those roles and do them so well.”

Huibing Lu

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Job Outlook Promising

As spring commencement approaches, graduates can enter the job market with confidence. A recent report by the National Association of Colleges and Employers indicates that U.S. employers plan to hire over 19 percent more college graduates in 2011 than they did last year.

According to the document, “The picture painted by this report shows that overall college hiring continues to be encouraging for Class of 2011 graduates.”

But the unemployment rate for Kansas as of March was 6.8 percent compared to the national rate, 8.8 percent, according to statistics from the Bureau of Labor.

The career center on campus conducts an annual survey of students who graduated the previous year. June Coleman-Hull, director of Career Services, said the statistics for the past two years have not yet been processed, but according to the 2008-2009 results, 55 percent of graduates from the school of business were employed and the average salary was $36,000.

Additionally, 50 percent of graduates from the liberal arts and sciences college were employed an earned an average salary of $34,000. Graduates from the teacher’s college also earned $34,000 and 48 percent were employed.

Graduates from the school of library and information management are not included in this article due to insufficient data.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the employment rate for people aged 20-24 in 2010 was around 60 percent. The unemployment rate for people 25 or over with a bachelor’s degree or higher was 4.7 percent.

“A university has two obligations,” said June Coleman-Hull, director of Career Services. “One is to give students knowledge and training in their field and the second is to help them find employment after they graduate.”

Coleman-Hull said Career Services offers career counseling, opportunities for internships, resume and cover letter development and aids in job search or graduate school application along with preparing students for interviews and salary negotiations. Students and alumni can access the benefits free of charge.

Coleman-Hull said most career centers in the U.S. started sometime around the late 1970s to early 1980s and began as simply placement centers for graduating students.

“Now, fortunately, over the years it’s become a comprehensive full range of services,” Coleman-Hull said. “We figured out a lot of student were getting into student teaching and hated it.”

Coleman-Hull said the goal of ESU’s Career Services has “evolved” to start counseling students for career choices earlier on in their education.

Another advantage the university offers is the tight-knit community among faculty and students, Coleman-Hull said.

“That’s a huge advantage over what KU can provide or another huge university because you just can’t have great letters of reference or great connections with employers,” Coleman-Hull said.

Coleman-Hull said the job market has improved for graduates nationally, and that employers are slowly beginning to post jobs openings again.

“One-third of the Midwestern employers fall into the employer categories with the strongest overall hiring projections,” according to NACE report. “Results suggest that oil/gas extraction, chemical (pharmaceutical) manufacturers, computer/electronics manufacturers, and employers in the finance, insurance, and real estate group are among the best bets for Class of 2011 graduates.

“For the Class of 2012, Fall 2011 recruiting expectation suggests the job market for new college graduates will continue to be stable,” according to the NACE report.

Kenzie Templeton

Shooter Jennings

Telegraph – Herald (Dubuque) March 26, 2012 | megan gloss Shooter Jennings has enjoyed a prolific career since 2005, when he released his debut, “Put the’O'Back in Country,” which launched him onto Billboard’s country charts.

Seven years, three versatile releases, a record label and two kids later, the only child of the late country legend Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter is taking it back to his country roots with his latest release, “Family Man.” He joins Cody Canada and The Departed for the Magical Misdemeanor Tour at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 31, at the Mississippi Moon Bar, Diamond Jo Casino. web site cody canada and the departed

“We’ve really been done with this record for about a year,” Jennings said in a phone interview. “It was a little bit different this time around.” Unlike his previous releases, which were overseen by producer Dave Cobb, “Family Man” saw Jennings at the helm, collaborating with childhood friend and pianist Erik Deutsch. The duo formed The Triple Crown, a new country backing band, for the release.

“It came together in a weird and magical way,” Jennings said. “I feel like this record really shows where I’m at in my life. It’s a step I felt I really needed to take creatively. There was no answering to other people. Everything sounds and was done exactly how I wanted and is very true to my personal taste.

“I also knew that if this record was going to be successful, it was on my back,” he said. “It’s a step in a different direction. But it’s an exciting one. I’m happy about it.” According to his biography, music was Jennings’inevitable fate. His first years were spent in a crib on his parents’tour bus. He began playing piano by age 8 and had learned guitar and percussion by 14. By adulthood, Jennings uprooted from Nashville to Los Angelas, and from there, signed with Universal South Records. He went on to release his successful debut, “Electric Rodeo,” “The Wolf” and “Black Ribbons,” a dystopian concept rock opera featuring Stephen King as Will O’The Wisp. website cody canada and the departed

Jennings portrayed his father in the Johnny Cash biopic “Walk the Line” and is the host of “Shooter Jennings’Electric Rodeo,” a two- hour weekly music show on Sirius Satellite Radio’s Outlaw Country channel.

In 2009, Jennings became engaged to “Desperate Housewives” and “The Sopranos” star Drea de Matteo after proposing during a show in Utica, NY. The couple, who have put down new roots in New York, have two kids – Alabama Gypsy Rose, 4, and Waylon Albert “Blackjack,” 1.

These days, living the life of a family man and country rock star pose new and exciting challenges.

“It’s a huge part of my life,” Jennings said. “It’s not easy at all. Being away from them is pretty dang hard, but I couldn’t be happier. I try to take positive steps to making it work.” Jennings said his status as a tried and true family man also served to inspire his latest efforts, “Family Man” a second release that will be out this summer, while also producing other bands.

“I’ve really been allowed to have a lot, and my life as of late has definitely inspired me to write and keep busy,” Jennings said.

megan gloss

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