Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, March 5, 2025 7:00–8:00 PM
Description
Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Please contact Stephen Elfenbein (selfenbein@colgate.edu) with any questions.
More from Today's Events
- Mar 611:00 AMTaking Advantage of LinkedIn LearningToday's Events
Are you taking advantage of LinkedIn Learning? All Colgate faculty, staff, and students have access to LinkedIn Learning, an online library of thousands of courses and videos covering business, creative, and technical skills for learners at all levels. (LinkedIn Learning was formerly known as Lynda.com.) New content is added weekly! You can learn what you want when you want it from your laptop, tablet, or phone. This workshop will show you how to navigate LinkedIn Learning, search for topics, create a collection, and more. This session will take place as a Zoom meeting. Participants will receive the link to join the meeting via their confirmation email. - Mar 611:30 AMWagging for WellnessToday's Events | Shaw Wellness Institute, Lounge
Come take a break and play with our therapy dogs at Shaw Wellness! - Mar 612:00 PMHeretics Club: Disagreeing Well in the UniversityToday's Events | Colgate Memorial Chapel , Basement
Colgate’s Heretics Club lunch discussion series was created to elevate the conversation on campus about life’s “big questions.”Our spring 2025 theme: We Disagree! (But We Do It Well!)Discussions begin at noon in the Chapel Basement.Lunch is provided. All are welcome!FEB 6th: Building Trust Across Difference How do we engage across difference in productive ways? In a time of intense polarization, this can seem impossible, but it is more important than ever. Join us for a conversation with Simon Greer, social entrepreneur and founder of Bridging the Gap.FEB 20th: Disagreeing Well with Our Political “Frenemies” Do you have friends whose politics you disagree with? Join us for a student-hosted conversation about ideological bubbles, political frenemies, and the importance of cultivating relationships with people who see the world differently than you.MARCH 6th: Disagreeing Well in the University (feat. President Casey!) Colgate’s mission statement focuses on the importance of cultivating open inquiry, mutual understanding, and a broadened perspective. Join us for a conversation with our own Brian Casey, who will talk about the key role that “civil disagreement” plays in this mission.APRIL 3: What Does It Look Like to “Disagree” with Yourself? Have you ever experienced a dramatic change in your worldview? How did you make sense of it? Join us for a conversation with Sohrab Ahmari, editor of UnHerd and author of From Fire, By Water: My Journey to the Catholic Faith (2019) and Tyranny Inc.: How Private Power Crushed American Liberty—and What To Do About It (2023).APRIL 24th: Disagreeing Well Across Religious Difference Religious differences have created some of humankind’s most longstanding disagreements. Join us for a conversation with Colgate’s Chaplains, Rabbi Barry Baron and Imam Ahmet Celik, about disagreeing well across religious difference - Mar 612:00 PMParticipatory Unilateralism: Understanding Congress's Role in Presidential Unilateral PolicymakingToday's Events | Persson Hall, 27 Auditorium- Ground Floor
Mar. 6th- 12-1pm in 27 Persson AuditoriumAnnie Ben (POSC)Assistant Professor in Political ScienceTitle: Participatory Unilateralism: Understanding Congress's Role in Presidential Unilateral PolicymakingDescription: Executive orders signed by the president receive significant media attention, and give the impression that presidents can "go it alone" to move policy according to their own preferences. Political science scholarship on the topic of executive orders has traditionally shared a similar perspective, investigating the president's use of such directives as a function of his alignment with Congress, his popularity, or other macro-political variables. Recent scholarship, however, highlights that executive orders are not truly ‘unilateral’ at all, but rather require cooperation from bureaucratic agencies for implementation. I argue that this need for cooperation creates a previously under-appreciated opportunity for Congress to respond to presidential directives. Because executive orders are generally acts of delegation to agencies, Congressional committees can exercise oversight to shape agency implementation of them. I demonstrate this dynamic using two datasets: a sample of executive orders that have been coded using measures of executive-branch delegation and discretion, and a collection of Congressional hearings focusing on an executive order or its implementation. I find that Congress engages in more oversight activity when an order delegates more authority and a wider discretionary window to agencies. This relationship is generally not conditioned by partisan division, but rather persists during periods of both unified and divided government. This finding supports the theory that Congress is able to participate in unilateral policymaking by shaping agency implementation, recasting our understanding of the inter-branch politics of executive unilateralism. - Mar 64:15 PMJazz in the Library Series: MysteriesToday's Events | Case-Geyer Library, Flex Room (5th floor)
Phil Haynes (b. June 15, 1961, OR) is a 25 year veteran New York based artist now teaching at Pennsylvania’s Bucknell University. Haynes is featured on some 90 LP and CD releases by numerous American and European record labels. The international media have compared his drumming to masters Jack DeJohnette, Roy Haynes and Elvin Jones, and his compositions to Duke Ellington, Charles Ives, Charles Mingus and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. His recording credentials include many of the seminal musicians of this generation: saxophonists Anthony Braxton, Ellery Eskelin, and David Liebman; trumpeters Dave Douglas, Herb Robertson, and Paul Smoker; bassists Mark Dresser, Ken Filiano, and Drew Gress; keyboard artists David Kikoski, Denman Maroney, and Michelle Rosewoman; guitarists Ben Monder, Steve Salerno, and Jim Yanda; vocalists Theo Bleckman, Nicholas Horner, and Hank Roberts; violinist Mark Feldman, and the composers collective Joint Venture. Current Haynes touring ensembles include his: definitive saxophone trio, No Fast Food, featuring NEA jazz master David Liebman; romantic Americana string band, Free Country, featuring vocalist/cellist Hank Roberts; Double Bill, w/trumpeters Thomas Heberer & Herb Robertson with bassist Ken Filiano; plus the romantic piano trio, Day Dream, a cooperative with Yamaha artist Steve Rudolph and Drew Gress.Peyton Pleninger (b. April 7, 1996, PA) studied in High School with Anthony Tidd through the Kimmel Center Creative Music Program. During this time he also began studies with Steve Coleman. Upon his arrival in New York City in 2015, Pleninger formed the first iteration of his band Biotonic, performing throughout NYC at such venues as The 55 Bar, The Jazz Gallery, and Seeds Brooklyn, while releasing Heartbeat Music (2017), extro (2016), and alive (2019). Pleninger worked as a mentee of Milford Graves, from spring 2019 until Graves’ passing in early 2021, helping Graves prepare artwork and archival materials for his retrospective exhibit Milford Graves: A Mind Body Deal at the ICA Philadelphia, Heart Harmonics: Sound, Energy and Natural Healing Phenomena at the Fridman Gallery, and Milford Graves: Fundamental Frequency at Artist's Space. Plenninger also performed with Henry Threadgill’s "One" and "The Other One", as well as working with John Benitez’ Latin-Bop, Roy Ben Yosef's Moringa trio, Colin Hinton’s Glassbath, Michel Maurer’s Meridian, Quinn Bachand’s Brishen, among many. Highlight performances include the Toronto Jazz Festival, Montreal International Jazz Festival, and CBC Canada.Hilliard Greene (b. February 26, 1958, IA) originally studied at the Berklee College of Music and at the University of Northern Iowa, including privately with trumpeter Paul Smoker and bassist Ron Rohovit. As a young professional, Hill worked as musical director for singer Jimmy Scott for more than 20 years. With Cecil Taylor, he served as concertmaster for the ensemble Phtongos and played in the trio with pianist Don Pullen. He has also appeared on notable recordings by Charles Gayle, Billy Bang, Dave Douglas, Marc Edwards, William Hooker, Klaus Kugel, Jameel Moondoc, Perry Robinson, and Patrick Brennan. Under his own name, Hill recorded three albums with The Jazz Expressions. He also recorded with Steve Swell & Gebhard Ullmann’s quartet featuring Barry Altschul. In 2003, Hill released his solo album Alone. Besides a richly diverse international touring schedule, Hill currently works as a music instructor at the Bass Collective in New York City, where he presents master classes and gives private lessons in double bass and bass guitar. - Mar 64:15 PMReducing Poverty and Improving OpportunityToday's Events | Persson Hall, 27
How does U.S. public policy reduce poverty, and how can we better leverage policy to improve opportunity? [Despite what you may have read in Poverty, by America] Findings from the Dismal Science are optimistic about our collective ability to build a more inclusive economy. Join the Econ Dept for a lecture and discussion with Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, professor at Northwestern University and former Director of the Hamilton Project at Brookings