Dan Williams, one of Lyndon States most beloved professors, will be leaving at the end of this semester. Dan will be leaving us to take a join in Washington DC to work as a copy editor for CCTV, a Chinese State Televisions American affiliate. His love for China has taken him from us, and though we shall miss him, we are glad that he will be doing something he loves.
Dan first came to our campus in 2006. He hailed our cold campus from Samford University in Alabama. If you have ever taken Dan’s Law and Regulation class you have heard him talk about his time at the private Catholic University. Before then he lived a rich life as a world wide journalist for organizations as prestigious as CNN, where he worked for over a decade.
He has worked in both Germany and his beloved China. In 2012-2013 he took a break to be a Fulbright Scholar, teaching journalism at Xian International Studies University. Though not much is known of his time there it is said that he illegally brought back plants and then planted them right here in Vermont.
Despite his criminal tendencies Dan is arguably the best professor at Lyndon State College. He has the highest rating on RateMyProffesors.com, which is in it’s own the highest honor a professor can have. Where some professors are pompous and strict, Dan is kind and considerate. He doesn’t care whether you learn things “his way”, just that you learn them. His door is always open if you need help or just want someone to talk to. He teaches several English and Journalism classes. If you are an EJA major you have most likely taken Journalistic Writing, Introduction to Multimedia Storytelling, and Law and Regulation. To him teaching journalism means opening up a new world to his students. “Journalism is a free ticket to the best show on Earth,” he says. “It’s a front-row seat on history.”
He also is a co adviser for the Society for Professional Journalism and Editor of NewsInk. At the same time Dan works as a member of the China Currents Educational Board.Whether he is remembered for his teaching, advising, or his friendship Dan Williams will certainly be missed by the students of Lyndon State College.
Above is a word cloud that we made by asking several of Dan's students the first word that came to mind when thinking of Dan.
For our final project we plan on interviewing students about one specific teacher at Lyndon State. We are going to get their opinion on the teacher and than have them write down one word that they would use to describe them. With that one word we are going to make a word cloud. With the interviews we are planning on doing a video project. Depending on the responses of the interviews will determine if we also use a podcast. We also plan on having a writing component to it as well. We have not decided what each team member will be doing for the project. We know that we will conduct the interviews together. When we figure out how the interviews go we will figure out who will complete each step of the project.
Logging has been a very big part of the history of Bethel, Maine.
The mountain village was originally settled in 1769 as the small Canadian
hamlet of Sudbury. In the late 1700's Doctor Timothy Andrew and his wife
moved from Boston to Maine and built what is now the Andrew's Farm, which still
stands today. They were one of ten original families to survive the last Native American attacks in the 1780’s, and sense then have survived everything from
scarlet fever that wiped out an entire generation of children, to snow storms
that killed all their animals. In the last hundred years the family has
expanded their business to include logging, both in the surrounding towns and
their own vast holdings.
Timothy Andrew spent the majority of his
life on the Andrew’s farm. He studied agriculture at the University of Maine Oreno and joined that
army soon after graduation. He was stationed in Chicago in the years leading up
to the Vietnam war were he met and married his wife Jo Ellen, a Texas native
and true southern bell. After they married they moved back to Maine to start
their family in the 1960s. Tim would go on to run the family farm just as his father
before him, and his son after that. Tim’s father Richard Andrew would spend winters
in the New England forest cutting wood to support his family, as Tim does now.
“Our family’s logging
history goes back four generations. My great great great grandfather was a
doctor, but his son was a farmer and a logger. He worked for the brown company
in the woods and my father was a scalar for the brown company out of Berlin.”
Richard worked cutting and hauling trees for
what about two dollars a day, including room and board. During the fall season,
they would go into the woods and wouldn't come back out until Christmas time. It
was important to the families that the men made it out in time to buy Christmas
presents for the children, sense this was the 1950’s and the women had little
to no way of supporting themselves.
“[One winter] there was a huge snow storm,
and the men couldn't get out of the woods. And all the women were upset because
there was no money to buy toys to put under the trees.”
So starts the family story that has been passed down for generations.
A story of how a group of Andrew women took Christmas into their own hands.
“They went to be
and had a dream,” tells Andrew “of making animals, by carving blocks of wood,
covering them with cotton, and pieces of cloth.”
Though
the family no longer makes handmade toys the story lives on. It is told every Christmas
to younger generations, as a lesson to always appreciate what you have and above
all to take pride in their rich family history.
Logging has been a very big part of the history of Bethel, Maine.
The mountain village was originally settled in 1769 as the small Canadian
hamlet of Sudbury. In the late 1700's Doctor Timothy Andrew and his wife
moved from Boston to Maine and built what is now the Andrew's Farm, which still
stands today. They were one of ten original families to survive the last Native American attacks in the 1780’s, and sense then have survived everything from
scarlet fever that wiped out an entire generation of children, to snow storms
that killed all their animals. In the last hundred years the family has
expanded their business to include logging, both in the surrounding towns and
their own vast holdings.
Timothy Andrew spent the majority of his
life on the Andrew’s farm. He studied agriculture at the University of Maine Oreno and joined that
army soon after graduation. He was stationed in Chicago in the years leading up
to the Vietnam war were he met and married his wife Jo Ellen, a Texas native
and true southern bell. After they married they moved back to Maine to start
their family in the 1960s. Tim would go on to run the family farm just as his father
before him, and his son after that. Tim’s father Richard Andrew would spend winters
in the New England forest cutting wood to support his family, as Tim does now.
“Our family’s logging
history goes back four generations. My great great great grandfather was a
doctor, but his son was a farmer and a logger. He worked for the brown company
in the woods and my father was a scalar for the brown company out of Berlin.”
Richard worked cutting and hauling trees for
what about two dollars a day, including room and board. During the fall season,
they would go into the woods and wouldn't come back out until Christmas time. It
was important to the families that the men made it out in time to buy Christmas
presents for the children, sense this was the 1950’s and the women had little
to no way of supporting themselves.
“[One winter] there was a huge snow storm,
and the men couldn't get out of the woods. And all the women were upset because
there was no money to buy toys to put under the trees.”
So starts the family story that has been passed down for generations.
A story of how a group of Andrew women took Christmas into their own hands.
“They went to be
and had a dream,” tells Andrew “of making animals, by carving blocks of wood,
covering them with cotton, and pieces of cloth.”
Though
the family no longer makes handmade toys the story lives on. It is told every Christmas
to younger generations, as a lesson to always appreciate what you have and above
all to take pride in their rich family history.
Katilyn and I are going to do our project on Black Friday shopping. I'm going to take the video, Katilyn will write the story about Black Friday shopping in America, and then both of us will edit.
The artist worked here at Lyndon State College at a professor for many years. And some say that he was the one that started the art program here.
Dorian is not just a drawer; he is also a painter, sculptor, garbagepicker and bargain finder. When he creates art he uses the things he finds to create the art around.
But, Dorian’s love is drawing people’s faces. He says even the ugliest person has something beautiful about them and that is what he makes known in his art.
Dorian loves looking at people’s eyes and ears, and says that has a lot to do with beauty.
Mr. McGowan has been an artist all of his life. He remembers being a little kid and climbing up in his grandmother’s oversized chair to draw with her.
We asked him if his grandmother was an artist as well, he said, “No, No she was not,” with a chuckle.
He said that once he got really good his grandmother said she was not going to draw with him anymore because he was too good. So he stopped being good at drawing because he wanted his grandmother to draw with him.
Dorian does not like photographs, even though some would argue that it was true art. He thinks that too many pictures are taken these days and they don’t capture the special things.
That’s why Dorian’s family photos are drawings he has done. They hang on his wall at his home.
The drawings include his late wife, children and grandchildren.
His grandchildren are some of the most important things in Dorian’s life. And like his grandmother did he also create art with his grandchildren.
In Dorian’s latest showing at the library in town he has the King and Queen Sliver Chins. These were named this way because in one of his bargain runs he would these silver pieces he thought would look great as chins.
Him and his grandson worked on these pieces together and even wrote a story to accompany them.
Dorian enjoys when his grandchild want to help him with his art because he believes they are all artists as well.
iRepirt looked really cool, but I will never know. iReport wouldn't let me create an account. I tried on my laptop at home first, and no matter what I did it wouldn't let me join. Then I tried here at school. iReport still wouldn't let me join. Does iReport hate me? It's possible. Either way I wish it had worked for me.