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Big Bash 2015 - Friday Colloquia & More

a group of people wearing lanyards

Tyler Regnier '16 (left) leads a campus tour Friday during the College's Big Bash reunion weekend. Bill Van Deest '65 and wife, Diane, are also pictured (rear).

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Bill Van Deest (left) talks with James Ashbaugh '75 (center), and Phil Wescott '65.

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Phil Wescott '65 (front left) shares a laugh with Tyler Regnier '16.

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Eric Farber '65 talks during his colloquia presentation, 'Distant Lands, Other Tongues,' on Friday in Hays Hall.

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Farber said, 'These days, there are more reasons than ever for Americans to live the expatriate life. Moving to a foreign country, there is a rush of knowledge and it starts with the language.'

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'We are more than satisfied with our life,' Farber said. 'As I reflect on the key choices in my life, what I've chosen most often is freedom.'

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'I lived abroad in France during my junior year at Wabash. It still may have been the best year of my life. (The experience) so enriches your life,' Farber said.

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Eric Farber '65 (left) talks with Bob MacCallum '65 following Farber's colloquia presentation.

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(from left) Alejandro Reyna '17, Griffin Levy '17, and Zack Carl '18 look through a yearbook from the early 1980s at the Lilly Library Friday.

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(from left) Class of 1985 members Greg Estell, Jim Davlin, Cory Olson, and Mike Raters during their colloquia presentation, 'Forever More as in Days of Yore. Class of '85,' They were joined by classmates Scott Himsel, Steve Hoffman, and Melissa Butler H'85.

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'The magic of this place is that you learn how to think,' said Himsel. 'I want our students to understand how quickly the world is changing. I want them to enjoy challenges early while they are here.'

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'I've been teaching at the College for 12 years and it's one of the most meaningful things I've ever done in my life,' said Himsel (left), pictured with Butler (center) and Hoffman. 'I get to talk about great subjects with students here. My God, it's fun. It's so much fun to work with them.'

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Nick Crnkovich '85 asks a question of the panel.

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Said Olson, 'It's a challenge today to defend the liberal arts. You'd have a hard time arguing that we didn't get the solid underpinings here for a lifetime of success, and that's not uncommon to see.'

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'We're very committed to the liberal arts and we're focused on outcomes,' said Davlin (right), pictured with Bill Glascock '54. 'When you think how fast things are changing, the liberal arts are a great training ground for long term success.'

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Pioneer Chapel basks in the glow of a beautiful spring evening.

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Joel Tragesser '95, Intellectual Property Attorney, presented his colloquium, 'Use and Protection of IP in Social Media and Apps.'

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Several current Wabash students who are participating in the Liberal Arts Bridge to Business (LABB) summer program attended Tragesser's talk on copyright and trademark.

a man standing in front of a projector screen

Intellectual Property Attorney Joel Tragesser '95 discussed trends in trademarks, copyrights, and rights of publicity.


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