Reversing a two-year decline in applications, the “number of foreign students who applied to graduate programs in American universities during the current academic year increased by 11 percent” from last year.
Category: issues
Getting ‘Em Where They Live (Literally)
The Twin Cities have always been a haven for the arts, particularly music, theatre, and literature. But as the Minneapolis/St. Paul metro area increasingly gives in to urban sprawl, suburbanites have been less willing to come all the way into the urban core for their plays, violin lessons, and writing seminars. As a result, arts organizations in the cities are following the lead of groups in larger cities across the country, and expanding their services to the ‘burbs.
D.C. Area Arts Center Asks Pols To Jump-Start Funding
“A committee raising private money for a planned $56 million performing arts center in [Virginia’s] Prince William County yesterday urged county and city officials to begin construction ahead of its fundraising schedule because of increasing building costs. The 1,100-seat center near Manassas is a partnership between George Mason University, the city of Manassas, Prince William County and private donors. The committee has set a goal of raising $7.5 million in private funds before construction begins.”
The Well-Adjusted Goth
A new study reports that Goths are pretty healthy people. “Most youth subcultures encourage people to drop out of school and do illegal things. Most goths are well educated, however. They hardly ever drop out and are often the best pupils. The subculture encourages interest in classical education, especially the arts. I’d say goths are more likely to make careers in web design, computer programming … even journalism.”
Arts Council Wales Top Job Unfilled
Artists in Wales are concerned that the government does not seem to be looking for a new director of Arts Council Wales. “As yet, no successor has been appointed to Mr Davies – and the post has not been advertised, even though Mr Davies steps down at the end of March.”
A Florida Community Goes For Something Different In A Cultural Plan
The city of Delray Beach Florida commissioned a new cultural plan, and the authors of it tout it as something new: “What’s interesting about it is that it is focused on taking the city’s inherent cultural assets and using them as building blocks in a way that addresses the always-on, experience-oriented, don’t-make-me-sit-in-a-seat-and-watch-you-perform nature of culture today. There are no cookie-cutter solutions in this report. No build a new performing arts center just like the one down the street to compete.”
Missouri Has Sunk To The Bottom In Arts Funding
“Its current budget of $485,000 places it in the bottom six of 56 states, territories and protectorates. The others are Montana ($406,356), the Virgin Islands ($309,568), Guam ($266,577), Northern Marianas ($260,000) and American Samoa ($44,000).”
Schwarzenegger Proposes Big Arts Ed Increase
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 2006-2007 budget for California proposes $100 million to enhance and expand arts education throughout California’s K-8 schools. The plan is to apportion these funds to local school districts using a formula based on their enrollment levels…
Art Of Conversation
“Conversation is one of those acts that require subtle forms of social imagination: an ability to listen and interpret and imagine, an attentiveness to someone whose perspective is always essentially different, a responsiveness that both makes oneself known and allows the other to feel known — or else does none of this, but just keeps up appearances. It may be, then, one of the most fundamental political and social acts, indispensable to negotiating allegiances, establishing common ground, clearing tangled paths. Conversation may reflect not just the state of our selves, but the state of society.”
Who Owns The Public?
“The practice of street photography has a long tradition in the United States, with documentary and artistic strains, in big cities and small towns. Photographers usually must obtain permission to photograph on private property — including restaurants and hotel lobbies — but the freedom to photograph in public has long been taken for granted. Remarkably, this was the first case to directly challenge that right. Had it succeeded, “Subway Passenger, New York City,” 1941, along with a vast number of other famous images taken on the sly, might no longer be able to be published or sold.”
