David LowMay 24, 20113min
Hollywood’s highly successful writing and producing team Alex Kurtzman ’95 and Roberto Orci were recently featured in in an article by Dorothy Pomerantz in Forbes, “Hollywood‘s Secret Weapons.” The duo has worked on a number of films that together have earned $3 billion at the box office in six years, including Transformers I and II, The Proposal, and the 2009 blockbuster Star Trek, and they are able to transform genre pictures into something very special to audiences and studio heads. This summer they are behind big summer movie, Cowboys & Aliens, starring Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford as 19th-century cowboys…

David LowMay 24, 20112min
Anna Sobel ’01 is the owner Talking Hands Theater, an educational puppetry company she began in New York City and now runs in western Massachusetts. She was recently profiled about her work by Steve Pfarrer in the Amherst Bulletin. Sobel makes her own puppets of all sizes to entertain children, but she also uses them to educate kids about such social issues as environmentalism, healthy eating, and conflict resolution. Sobel first started working with puppets after seeing a performance at Wesleyan of the Bread and Puppet Theater, which uses puppets to convey political messages. As an undergraduate she worked with…

David LowMay 24, 20112min
Amy Baltzell ’87 is the author of Living in the Sweet Spot: Preparing for Performance in Sport and Life (Fitness Information Technology), an inspiring guide to getting ready for life’s big performances. The author integrates the best of the new field of positive psychology with the essentials of sport psychology. Every chapter contains practical, effective reflective exercises that will help readers rise to the challenge of performing at their best when it counts. The book is divided into three parts: The Building Blocks of a Champion Approach, Preparing for Performance and Competition, and The Day of Performance. Readers will learn…

Olivia DrakeMay 24, 20111min
Jan Naegele, professor of biology, professor of neuroscience and behavior, is the author of "Tangled Roots: Digging Deeper into Astrocyte or Interneuron Dysfunction in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy," published in Epilepsy Currents, Volume 11, Issue 1, 2011. The article is online here. She's also the author of "STEP Regulation of Seizure Thresholds in the Hippocampus," published in Epilepsia by Wiley Publishers, 2011. The article is online here.

Olivia DrakeMay 24, 20111min
Sumarsam, University Professor of Music, is the author of the essay, "Past and Present Issues of Islam within the Central Javanese Gamelan and Wayang," published in Divine Inspirations: Music and Islam in Indonesia by Oxford University Press, pages 45-79, in 2011. According to the abstract: "Sumarsam's contribution to the volume addresses Islam in the context and development of the Javanese gamelan and wayang kulit shadow play. The chapter uniquely combines the interpretation of primarily Javanese and European texts, the author's personal experience as teacher, performer, and practitioner of gamelan and wayang kulit, and a assessment of the public attitudes of…

Olivia DrakeMay 24, 20111min
Sumarsam MA '76, University Professor of Music, participated in an ethnomusicology panel during the State of Indonesian Studies Conference April 28 at Cornell University. Sumarsam spoke on "Javanese Music Historiography: The Lost Gamelan of Gresik." The interdisciplinary conference focused on Indonesia's anthropology, art history, history, language, government and ethnomusicology. Marc Perlman MA '78, Ph.D. '94, associate professor at Brown University; Martin Hatch '63, MA'69, associate professor at Cornell University; Kaja McGowan '82, associate professor at Cornell; and Christopher Miller MA '02, a Wesleyan ethnomusicology Ph.D. candidate, also participated in the conference. The conference was hosted by Cornell's Southeast Asian Program.…

Olivia DrakeMay 24, 20111min
Peter Staye, associate director of utilities for Physical Plant-Facilities, was featured in the May 16 edition of The Hartford Business Journal. In the article, titled "Energy Saving Projects Focus on Measurable Results," Staye explained how Wesleyan has invested more than $6.5 million into a variety of innovative, energy-saving measures. Wesleyan has reduced energy about 22 percent since 2005, but the focus is now shifting to a more challenging initiative - changing the culture of energy use on campus. "Not that long ago, energy was abundant and cheap. Now it's neither, but there is still the feeling that everyone should have…

Olivia DrakeMay 24, 20112min
Tasmiha Khan '12, founder of the student organization Brighter Dawns, is a recipient of the Dell Social Innovation Competition Semi-Finalist Fellowship. Brighter Dawns applied for the Dell Social Innovation Award in January. Their project is titled “Brighter Dawns: Clean Water for Humanity." "Tasmiha was selected from a very strong applicant pool to join 14 other innovative fellows that represent and work with communities around the world," says Betsy Loucks, director of the DSIC Semi-Finalist Fellowship. "The Semi-Finalist Fellowship is a cohort of students from around the world who have some of the most exciting and innovative ideas for social and environmental change."…