This weekend marks the return of the annual Winterfest, but with significant changes. Last year, poor attendance at the weekend’s events was due in part to a lack of co-sponsorship at events that had been largely managed by the Campus Activities Board. This year the group branched out and is sharing responsibility with twenty-one other organizations, including the class councils, Grassroots, hall councils, and UR Cinema Group, to name a few.

This reorganization of Winterfest emphasizes two progressive steps – first, a real diversity of programs. Students have an enormous amount of events to choose from, including Pablo Francisco, “UR Idol” and Casino Night. Offering events that students want to go to is the first step in creating on-campus traditions that the UR community enjoys.

Second, and more importantly, it marks a major multilateral effort that allows groups with similar missions to communicate and create UR traditions together. UR prides itself on maintaining over 200 student organizations, but without coordination, they serve no use to the community they support. This year, the groups are working together. For example, Winterfest will this year forgo the annual Masquerade Ball, which flopped last year, replacing it with Fatman Scoop and a dance party in Douglass Dining Center. Fatman Scoop has been brought to the campus not by CAB alone, but with the additional funding of Sigma Beta Rho Fraternity, ADITI, the Black Students’ Union, Filipino American Students’ Association, the Korean American Students’ Association and UR Hip-Hop.

By combining and working together, as demonstrated through Winterfest, these organizations benefit extraordinarily. Hopefully, this trend will become a tradition of excellence.



Winterfest chills

As per tradition, “The State of the Campus Times” updates readers on our affairs — the Editor-in-Chief (EIC) and Publisher write this pseudo-column at the start and end of every semester to articulate the struggles and joys found through managing your local student-run newspaper. We also introduce ourselves and our projects, what we hope to achieve during our terms, and we provide progress updates regarding past management’s pursuits. Read More

Winterfest chills

The first realization of my own age hit me in the months before I started college. I was helping my dad clean the small office he’d occupied in Rush Rhees longer than I’d been alive. The walls of which boasted childhood drawings that my sister and I had crayoned. Even though I was looking at my distant past, I realized I would soon be starting a new page of my future. Read More

Winterfest chills

However, recent student protests are considerably less effective than they used to be. According to The American Prospect, there were far fewer young attendees to the most recent round of No Kings marches in proportion to the attendance of older generations. Read More