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of the Naropa Weekly

Naropa Weekly
April 23, 2009
Vol. 13, #14


April

Monday, April 20–Friday, April 24, 2009
Naropa Fest 2009
Sponsored by Student Life Programming

Please join us for Naropa’s 2nd annual celebration week (formerly known as Spirit Week). Daily themes include Celebrating Our  Creative, Green Spirit Day (Monday); Celebrating Our Inner Children Day (Tuesday); Celebrating Our Earth Day (Wednesday); Celebrating NAROPA: “That’s So Naropa” Day (Thursday); Celebrating Our Community Day (Friday).

Friday, April 24, 2009
Embodied Poetics Project: Projecting the Word into Time and Space

The fourth annual collaboration between The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics and the MFA Theater: Contemporary Performance Program
7:30 p.m.; Nalanda Studio Theater
$7 general admission; free to seniors, students and Naropa community w/ ID

New writing meets a kinesthetically and perceptually intensified arena of physical performance in a series of settings created by Naropa MFA Theater students and faculty.

Saturday, April 25, 2009
World Music and Dance Concert
7:30 p.m.; Performing Arts Center

The Naropa University Dance of Africa Class performs traditional dances from Ghana and the Ivory Coast. Directed by Maputo Mensah. With special guests Logo Ligi.
$5 general admission; $3 seniors, students and Naropa community w/ ID

Saturday, April 25 & Sunday, April 26, 2009
Desolate/delight Project: mythology of a species
Directed by Barbara Dilley & co-created with an ensemble from the MFA Theater: Contemporary Performance Program
7:30 p.m.; Nalanda Studio Theater
$7 general admission; free to seniors, students and Naropa community w/ ID

An evening of spontaneous performance arising from a culture that trains, experiments and dreams together. Surreal – poetic – embodied – and fractal in construction, we offer our deep play for the delight of the world.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Academic Support Program's Open Forum
12–1p.m., Lincoln Lecture Hall

Open to the Naropa undergraduate community. Need assistance with your final assignments or exams? Struggling with time management during this hectic end of the semester? Wondering how to prepare for your Warrior’s Exam? Want tips on the most efficient way to study? Drop in for individual help with any academic problem you have. Stay for five minutes or the full hour and grab some free lunch.

May

Friday, May 1, 2009
"Planetize the Movement: New Possibilities for Ecological Healing and Social Justice"
Free public lecture and poetry reading with Drew Dellinger
Sponsored by the Environmental Studies
7 p.m.; Nalanda Events Center

In this talk and poetry performance, Drew Dellinger will identify some core values common to ecology, social justice and cosmology, such as “personhood,” which acknowledges the sacredness of every individual being, and community, which emphasizes the primacy of relationship. He will also describe strategies for change common to ecology, social justice and cosmology, such as utilizing the power of story, the power of dream and the power of action.

Friday, May 1, 2009
BFA 2nd Year Final Performance

Directed by Onye Ozuzu
8 p.m., Performing Arts Center
$5 general admission; free for seniors, students and Naropa community w/ ID.

An improvisationally developed exploration into the workings of circularity in human community and its potential to hone both singular and group identity. Artistic director, Onye Ozuzu, will be working with the BFA students in movement techniques, improvisational composition and performance practices to create their version of a work focused on these ideas.

Saturday, May 2, 2009
BFA 2nd Year Final Performance

Directed by Onye Ozuzu
8 p.m., Performing Arts Center
$5 general admission; free for seniors, students and Naropa community w/ ID.

See description above.

Thursday, May 7, 2009
Transitions Celebration for President Tom Coburn and Leigh Berry
4–6 p.m.; Performing Arts Center and the Naropa Green

Faculty, staff and students are invited to a late afternoon transitions celebration for Thomas Coburn and Leigh Berry. Refirst-year studentsts provided. More information coming soon.

Friday, May 8, 2009
Writing & Poetics: BA Graduation Reading
Noon; Shambhala Hall

Join us in celebrating the accomplishments of the department’s BA Writing & Literature graduates.

Friday, May 8, 2009
Writing & Poetics: MFA Graduation Student Reading
8 p.m.; Performing Arts Center

Join us in celebrating the accomplishments of the department’s MFA Writing & Poetics graduates.

Saturday, May 9, 2009
Commencement
3 p.m.; Macky Auditorium, University of Colorado
Commencement Speaker: William Ury

Naropa University President Thomas B. Coburn will host a luncheon outside the Macky Auditorium, beginning at 1 p.m. This event is open to all graduating students and their guests. A reception with light refirst-year studentsts will follow the commencement ceremony.

Saturday, May 9, 2009
President Thomas B. Coburn and Leigh Berry Scholarship Dinner
6:30 p.m.; Spice of Life Event Center at Flatirons Golf Course - 5706 Arapahoe Ave.

Cocktails: 6:30 p.m.; Program Begins: 7:00 p.m.; Dinner: 7:30 p.m.
The cost is $50/plate. Seating is limited, so reservations are required. All proceeds to benefit the Coburn/Berry Scholarship. Reservations can be made at www.naropa.edu/coburnberryevent.
Parties interested in attending, but unable to do so on financial grounds can call 303-245-4751 to obtain reduced cost seats, which will be made available on a first-come, first-served basis.

June

June 15–July 12, 2009
Summer Writing Program
News, aka The Return of Camp Kerouac

The Summer Writing Program is coming up soon. We have an exciting program planned, and you're all invited to be a part of it. The program runs June 15–July 12, and courses are available for graduate and undergraduate credit, as well as noncredit. Each week is offered as a separate course, so if four weeks of non-stop writing, reading and performance is more summer fun than you can handle, join us for a week or two. We also have a fantastic reading series that runs for the whole month, and is open to the public. Come visit us in the Arapahoe House for more information.

Ongoing Events

Monday–Friday
Fresh Start Morning Sitting Group
Arapahoe Campus: 8:15–8:45 a.m.; Nalanda Campus: 8:15–9:00 a.m.

Many of you have requested more opportunities to practice together as a community on a regular basis, not just on Community Practice Day or in particular classes. These opportunities are core to the embodiment of contemplative education at Naropa. Paramita Campus is in the process of determining the availability of staff and faculty to umdze for group morning sitting. If you are interested, please contact Jackie Ashley at jackie@naropa.edu. Group sitting means there will be a time-keeper (umdze) that will begin and end the session; however, you are always welcome to come earlier and stay later.

Mondays, 12:00–1:20 p.m.
Community Yoga
Shambhala Hall

The students in the Yoga Teacher Training concentration will be offering free yoga classes for the Naropa community. Please bring a yoga mat (some are available for use in the closet). 

Mondays, 3–4 p.m.
LGBTQIA sitting group
Shrine Room, Lincoln Building

Come, get in touch with your buddha nature! Interested, but not a good time for you? Email sluther@naropa.edu to suggest alternative time, or to volunteer to be an umdze.

Mondays, 3– 6 p.m.
Japanese Tea, “Open hearth” Tea Ceremony
Led by Michael Ricci
Teahouse, 2130 Arapahoe Ave.

Mondays, 5:15–6:30 p.m.
Zen Group
Led by the Great Mountain Zen Group and Gerry Wick Sensei 
Arapahoe Campus Meditation Hall

Zazen sitting and instruction: 5:15–5:50 p.m.
Walking meditation: 5:50–6:00 p.m.
Zazen sitting and Chant of Four Vows: 6–6:30 p.m.

Tuesdays, 1:30–2:50
Community Yoga

Shambhala Hall

The students in the Yoga Teacher Training concentration will be offering free yoga classes for the Naropa community on the Arapahoe campus. Please bring a yoga mat (some are available for use in the closet). 

Tuesdays, 12–1:00 p.m.
Community Qigong Classes
Offered by Maureen O’Connor
Lincoln Lecture Hall (Once the weather is WARM, we will be directly south of the Café, past the parking lot, on the grassy area of the CU Campus)

Please join us for free practice sessions of Qigong (pronounced Chi Gong) and related energy work. Anyone is welcome to join at any time, no experience necessary. This is strictly for fun and exercise. Qigong is an ancient Chinese healing movement art related to acupuncture, acupressure, and the Taoist philosophy. It’s best to wear loose fitting clothing and flat-soled shoes or plan to go barefoot. (When inside you may want thick cotton or wool socks—outside you will need flat-soled shoes.) Please eat a small amount of food prior to coming to class—energy work on an empty stomach is not recommended. Free (donations appreciated, but not expected).

Tuesdays, January 20–April 28, 2009, 5:00–6:30 p.m.
Naropa Counseling Center Presents a Weekly Group Workshop
"Explore Psychological Balance through Yoga”

With Louis Carlino, RYT, third-year Somatic Counseling Psychology student
Dojo Room (Room 9180), Nalanda Campus

Forty-five minutes of Yoga followed by group sharing/discussion. For more information, email Louis at existentia@msn.com or call him at 303-815-0898.

Tuesdays, 7–9 p.m.
Insight Meditation- Vipassana, A Buddhist Meditation tradition of Southeast Asia
Led by David Chernikoff, a faculty member of Naropa University
Unitarian Universalist Church, 5001 Pennsylvania. For more information, please see www.insightcolorado.org.

Wednesdays, 9:00–10:20 a.m.
Community Yoga

Shambhala Hall

The students in the Yoga Teacher Training concentration will be offering free yoga classes for the Naropa community on the Arapahoe campus. Please bring a yoga mat (some are available for use in the closet). 

Wednesdays, 1:30-5:30 p.m.
Naropa Healing Group
On the Sycamore green if it is nice, Goldfarb or in the Student Lounge in inclement weather

The Healing Group and all interested, certified healers will gather to offer healings to the community. Light and local refirst-year studentsts will be offered. Modalities one might expect are reiki, spiritual healings, massage, zero-balancing, and whatever else our healing community brings to the table. Contact jurchek@students.naropa.edu for more information.

Wednesdays, 6–7:30 p.m.
Zen Peace-Makers Meditation Group, samatha-vipashyana, pranayama, metta and tonglen meditation practices
Led by Sensei Fleet Maull
Paramita Meditation Hall

Thursdays, 1–2 p.m.
Riding the Energy of Emotions
With Acharya Dale Asrael
Paramita Meditation Hall

Thursdays, 6–7:30 p.m.
Paramita Community Yoga Class
Virya classroom
Taught by Thiago Leao, one of Naropa's stellar yoga teacher training grads.
Suggested Donation: $3.

Saturdays, 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
Nyinthun, Sitting and Walking Meditation and Guided Bodywork Practice
and/or Dharma Talk

Led by the members of Dhyanasangha and the Dharma Ocean Foundation
Sitting and Walking Meditation Saturdays 10 a.m.–12 p.m.
Guided Bodywork Practice and/or Dharma Talk Saturdays 12 p.m.–1 p.m.
Arapahoe Campus Meditation Hall  

First Sunday of the Month, 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Group Sitting and Walking Meditation
Led by Phil Karl
Arapahoe Campus Meditation Hall

Every other Friday, 5–7 p.m.
Vimalakirti Cult, A full group reading of the Second Turning popular text
Arapahoe Meditation Hall

Resources

Drop-in Counseling Center
Tuesdays through Thursdays, 11:30 a.m.–2 p.m.
Snow Lion Building (entrance on the East side)

Need some support? Having a hard time adjusting? Wondering about community resources? Just want to talk? Drop by the Naropa Counseling Center. For more information or to set up an appointment, call 303-245-4697.

Career Services
Monday–Friday 9 a.m.–5 p.m. and by appointment

Career Services is a free service for Naropa students and alumni and can assist you in making meaningful and positive academic and career decisions. The process of career development and planning can be difficult, and they are here to help you:

  • Explore your interests, values, skills, and talents
  • Identify potential academic and career paths
  • Develop internship and job search strategies
  • Plan your graduate school or other educational application process
  • Learn how to write effective cover letters and resumes
  • Prepare for the interview process
  • Assist you if you have any other concerns, questions or need information about your career

If you would like to schedule an appointment, please call 303-245-4863 or email ssteward@naropa.edu.

Naropa Writing Center
Sycamore Hall across from the student lounge
Monday–Thursday 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; Friday: 10 a.m.–2 p.m.
303-245-4606; nwc@naropa.edu

The NWC is open for the spring semester. The NWC offers a respectful, collaborative environment for all writers. We can assist you with essays, scholarship applications, cover letters, creative work, theses and more. Come in at any stage of the writing process from brainstorming and organization to revising and documenting sources. Appointments are available on the hour and half-hour, for 25 or 50 minutes. Citation workshops will be offered this semester. Location, dates and times will be announced as soon as they are available.

Volunteer Opportunities

Volunteer work with Moving to End Sexual Assault

Rape Crisis Hotline
For more information, or a volunteer application, please check out our website, call 303/443-0400 x102 or email Julie Washnock at julie@movingtoendsexualassault.org. Training dates are listed below.

Men's Prevention Education Program
For more information, a training schedule and a volunteer application, please check out our website, call 303-443-0400 x103 and ask for Marti Hopper or email her at marti@movingtoendsexualassault.org.

Visit MESA for more information on required training dates, job descriptions and application forms.

Service-Learning Opportunities with Prison Dharma Network

Prison Dharma Network (PDN), an international interfaith network founded by Naropa adjunct faculty member Fleet Maull is always in need of service-learning participants for its various programs working with prisoners and youth at risk in the Boulder area. PDN is also in need of people to respond to prisoner's book and information requests, as well as teach yoga and meditation at the Boulder County Jail. We support thousands of prisoners in the practice of all forms of the contemplative path: meditation, yoga, centering prayer, chi kung, etc. Please contact Sarah Gurganus at pdn2@indra.com or visit Prison Dharma Network for more information.

Volunteer Work with Shambhala Prison Community

The Shambhala Prison Community works in about sixty prisons nationwide and is looking for dedicated practitioners of meditation to work with prisoners who are themselves practicing meditation and studying the Dharma. Current need also involves volunteers who can assist with shipping literature from our libraries to prisoners. If you are interested in this extraordinarily rewarding work, we would be delighted to discuss with you the possibilities of your becoming a volunteer.

To find out more about how you can help ease the suffering of the incarcerated, email the Shambhala Prison Community at prison@indra.com, or call 303-544-5923. Please identify your interest in volunteering in the subject line.

Student Discounts

Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA) Student Discount
An hour before any performance, students can purchase tickets at DCPA for only $10.

Eco Pass Xtra
Use your Eco Pass and receive discounts at restaurants, stores and more.

 

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