around the block – winter is here!

Around the Block logo

Lace up the skates and glide across  the ice with members of the CC Tiger Hockey team! 

The public will have the chance to meet the some of our Tigers on ice during “Skate in the Park” at Acacia Park downtown on Friday, Dec. 15, 7-9 p.m. Team members will skate and take photos with fans and sign autographs. Posters will be available to be signed. Tickets are $10, which includes ice skate rental.

Environmental Activist English Major Shines During Summer Internship

ID: a young man standing with two older gentlement, all dressed for cooler weather and smiling at the camera

Photo submitted by Alex Weinman ’24
By Julia Fennell ’21

When Alex Weinman ’24 was applying for internships last spring, he had two simple conditions: he wanted to be in a place with great fly fishing and he wanted to do something to help protect the area’s environmental resources. Little did he know that lessons he learned from CC, like taking a stand for what he believes in, would be the driving force of his massively successful internship.

Weinman began his internship at Cottonwood Environmental Law Center in Bozeman, Montana during the summer of 2023. Cottonwood is a small non-profit that works in environmental protection and clean water litigation. When he arrived, the organization was facing criminal trespassing charges against its executive director, John Meyer.

“I knew before I took the job that his trial was approaching, but John was very confident all along that he would not be found guilty because the facts of the case were on his side, and because the charges against our grassroots coordinator for the same event had already been dropped,” Weinman says.

Weinman made videos explaining the case on Instagram and TikTok, with one Instagram video getting over 900 thousand views, giving the organization and the case vast exposure.

“I think the biggest thing that CC did for me was alleviate the fear of taking a loud stance for what I believe in,” Weinman says.  READ THE FULL STORY »

How does ADEI benefit the college?

Come join in a robust community conversation on ADEI with members of CC’s ADEI team. Our vision is a justice-centered CC community in which all members feel a sense of belonging and where we continuously uproot oppression wherever it exists, including within ourselves. Community conversation is a great tool to help us get there.

This event, part of the Work of the College Series, will be held in McHugh Commons Tuesday, Dec. 12 from 2-3 p.m. Register for the event.

Get to Know… Paul Adlerstein, Assistant Professor, 20th Century U.S. and World History

ID: caucasian man in mid thirties with dark curly hair, facial hair and classes, wearing a gray shirt, standing in front of a book shelf and smiling at the camera
What does your job entail?  
I teach a variety of courses on twentieth century U.S. history. My favorite is a course on community organizing where we use models and case studies from across the twentieth century, like the Flint Sit-Down Strike, or the work of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee to think about seemingly timeless dilemmas of actually making social change. I also advise students in the History Department on their senior essays and theses. I serve on college-wide committees and all the normal work of a CC professor. And I work on my own scholarship as well. I’m currently co-writing a book about progressives and the left in the United States and their relationships to global politics.
Where did you work before CC and what were you doing?
Before coming to CC, I spent four years as a lecturer in Harvard University’s History and Literature concentration. It’s a great little corner of Harvard where undergraduates get a major role in designing their own course of study.
Tell us a little about your background.
I was born in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. For undergraduate studies, I went to Brandeis University in Waltham, MA. There, I plunged into a lot of college activism, which continued after graduating when I moved to Washington, D.C. I worked at MoveOn.org and Public Citizen for about three years and then decided to get a PhD in History. That kept me in D.C. a while until I moved back to the Boston area to work at Harvard.
What do you like to do when not working?  
When I have energy – going out for hikes, having friends over, and cooking. When I have less energy – films and TV.
Wild card: When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
Maybe an astronaut? I’ve always and continue to love science fiction.

Lesley Irvine Discusses Mental Health Needs of CC Athletes

ID: Pikes Peak with snow on the cap and a building with the Children's Hospital logo
Vice President and Director of Athletics Lesley Irvine was interviewed on KOAA TV News 5 to talk about CC’s new partnership with Children’s Hospital Colorado to support the mental health needs of our student-athletes. She shared specifics of the peer coaching program, where clinical psychologists teach classes on campus, something CC hopes to take campus-wide in the near future. Read the transcript here.

You can also listen to Irvine on the True North Podcast, where she and Margaret Sabin, Special Advisor & Past President for The Children’s Hospital Colorado, discuss the unique partnership between CC and Children’s Hospital.

Winter Commencement 2023

Winter Commencement is set for Sunday, Dec. 17 at 1 p.m. We hope you’ll join us in celebrating the students who have completed their undergraduate studies prior to the May Commencement ceremony.

This year’s event will take place in-person in Shove Memorial Chapel, and the ceremony will include remarks from President L. Song Richardson and a Commencement address from Professor Steve Hayward. President Richardson will read the names of the graduates. 

Faculty members who would like to march in the ceremony must sign up no later than December 14 at 5 p.m.

Fine Arts Center Corner

Unframing Dalí

ID: a group of people examining a piece of art in a gallery
Swing by the Agents of Care gallery Friday, Dec. 15 from 1-4 p.m. to watch museum collections staff unframe several works by artist Salvador Dalí. Unframing art can often lead to exciting discoveries including sketches and incomplete drafts on the reverse of works, hidden inscriptions, and more. Museum staff will discuss why we store some works framed while unframing others, and how unframed art is protected and kept safe. This is a drop-in program that is free and open to the public.

Video of the Week

Trailer for Elf, playing at the FAC through Dec. 31
Video by Ray Bailey
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