Monday, May 23, 2016

Develop Your Best SELF[ie]

Luminari’s newest camp, Speak & Tell!, is a unique and fun blend of performance art, audience engagement techniques, guest presentations, breathing exercises and confidence-boosting activities that will help teens shed their fear of speaking in public. This four-day summer camp is perfect for rising 8th to 12th graders who shy away from social events, but it's also for those students who are looking for an extra edge in developing their presentation skills.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines personality as “the set of emotional qualities that makes a person different from other people (qualities such as energy, friendliness, and humor).” Simply put, it is the behaviors one exhibits in social situations. Maybe not too surprisingly then, the origin of the word personality comes from the Latin word persona, which translates to “social mask.” An important part of public speaking is finding one’s own unique voice that plays to his or her strengths. Experienced speakers know this and use a variety of techniques to connect with their audiences while letting their authentic selves shine through.

To develop their own public speaking personas, campers will learn from and work with noted Pittsburgh-area TV, Sports and Theater professionals who will present Master Classes that prove public speaking can be fun.

Meet our camp thespian and Master Class instructor: TIM HARTMAN
Tim Hartman

Tim Hartman, is a native Pittsburgher, and has been professionally acting, singing, writing, cartooning and storytelling since 1982. Though known primarily for his work on the stage, including appearances on Broadway in “A Tale of Two Cities” and the Tony nominated “Finian’s Rainbow”, Tim’s favorite job is telling stories to children and family audiences for the Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh, where it is estimated he has performed for over 2 million children over a thirty year period. Other favorite roles include C.S. Lewis in the Pittsburgh premier of “Shadowlands”, Don Quixote in “The Man of La Mancha” and Daddy Warbucks in “Annie”. Film roles include “Silence of the Lambs”, “The Mothman Prophecies”, “The Piano Lesson”, “The Mysteries of Pittsburgh” and the film “The Fault in our Stars”. Tim is also an award-winning political cartoonist and his cartoons appear in 30 newspapers across Pennsylvania. Learn more about Tim at www.timhartman.com.

Meet our resident Sports Journalist and Master Class instructor: STAN SAVRAN
Stan Savran

Stan Savran joined FSN in 1992, and is one of the most respected sportscasters in Pittsburgh and serves as the primary host of Pirates and Penguins pregame shows. During football season, Savran hosts The Mike Tomlin Show and the Mike Tomlin Press Conference on FSN Pittsburgh. Honored in the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame, Savran celebrates over 35 years of experience in the Pittsburgh sports arena.






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We’re registering students now for Speak& Tell! Have fun winning over an audience, develop your personality, and conquer stage fright this summer. To learn more about Luminari and all of its teen summer camps, call (412) 877 – 1888 or visit www.luminari.org for more information.

Speak & Tell!

Who: Rising 8th – 12th graders
When: JULY 5 – 8, 2016 (9 am – 3 pm)
Where: Rodef Shalom, 4905 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh PA 15213
How much: $350.00
Sign Up: Click here to register today or visit the Luminari website to learn more

What's That Sound? The Sharpsichord


by Katie Smith

We at Luminari love music of all kinds: folk, symphony, hip hop, jazz, blues, country, marches, gospel, rock and roll—we enjoy all of it.

Because our mission is to broaden minds and promote innovation, we think it’s important—and fun—to open our minds to the possibilities of the world beyond our own doorstep.  And what better way to do that than to learn about the music of other lands.

In each issue of LUMOS!, we offer a regular series about the unique and unusual (and sometimes downright strange) instruments we’ve never heard. And since we can’t really understand an instrument until we’ve heard it being played, we’ll offer links to sites where you can hear and see a performance.

And so we offer our third in a series of unusual instruments: the Sharpsichord

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Sharpsichord photo credit from
http://www.clashmusic.com/feature/the-sharpsichord-created-by-henry-dagg
As a collector of music boxes, I was thrilled to learn that there is an instrument that is basically a giant, glorified music box. This instrument is called a Sharpsichord. It’s also known as a pin-barrel harp, and was invented by a sound sculptor named Henry Dagg.

The Sharpsichord is a 46-string, automatic, acoustic harp that, much like a music box, contains a rotating cylinder with many pins that can be programmed to pluck specific strings to produce a sound. The instrument features a keyboard for real-time playing; it includes two large horns for amplification and is entirely powered by a solar-charged battery.

The Sharpsichord recently was brought to light by Iceland musician Bjork. On her latest album, Biophilia, she partnered with Henry Dagg to feature the instrument in several of the songs. The two artists managed to transport the 2.5 ton music box to seven concert venues around Great Britain. Sadly, the logistics of maneuvering and maintaining the Sharpsichord for live performance became too difficult, and the instrument has been retired.

You can still hear it, though, on Bjorks album or in the following video.


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Author: Katie Smith is a journalism student at Robert Morris University

Friday, May 20, 2016

The True Adventures of a Volkswagen Beetle

CONGRATULATIONS to our May Share Your Story Winner: CHRISTY GUALTIERI!

THANK YOU to everyone who entered the Share Your Story: Writing Contest for May. We received many outstanding essays, short stories and memoirs and regret that there can be only one winner. However, our next contest begins June 1: so remember to Share Your Story for a chance to win!


The True Adventures of a Volkswagen Beetle
by Christy Gualtieri

It took me five tries to get my driver’s license.  It was mostly due to parallel parking - well, that and K-turns, those three-point turns you have to make to make a U-turn out of wherever you are.  It was pretty embarrassing, having to go through the test five times, but my brother took the cake for worst license test-taker in our family when he mixed up the gas and brake pedals and nearly hit a DMV worker who was walking into the building.

All of those tries aside, I have yet (thankfully) to be in any type of major car accident.  In the only one I’ve been in, I wasn’t driving, and it was just a minor fender bender.  I ended up with some really nasty whiplash and had to go to the Emergency Room.  The ER doctor was freaked out for a minute because I had these spots on my eyes, which is apparently a sign of a concussion, but it turns out my contact lenses were dirty.  I was sent home with a prescription for Motrin and an order to clean my contacts more carefully.

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My very first car was a used red Beetle, from the Jack Daniels Volkswagen dealership (yep, that was the name) in Northern New Jersey.  It had 60,000 miles on it, a cassette tape deck, and a pair of red fuzzy dice to hang from the rearview mirror.  (I never hung the dice from the rearview mirror.)  The hubcaps would fall off all the time, and I wished so hard for so long that it had come with a CD player instead, but I loved it very, very much all the same.

Affixed to the back of the car was a sticker-magnet that read “I Love Jesus” in big bubble letters.  I had forgotten it was there, and I’d always be surprised when people would stop me and say “Me too!,” seemingly apropos of nothing.  My license plate holder proudly boasted the name of the dealership I got it from, and I forgot about that too.  Until a woman knocked on my window.

I was sitting in the parking lot of my university, looking through some notes after a class.  A furious rapping on my window drew my attention to a middle-aged woman I had never seen before.  She was saying something I couldn’t quite make out, and once my heart stopped pounding from being startled out of my mind, I rolled down the window to figure out what it was she’d been trying to say.

“Do you love Jesus?” she demanded.

I looked up at her, confusingly trying to place where I might have met her before.  I had nothing.

 “Um...yes?”

“Well,” she continued, her voice crisp,  “You need to make a decision.  Either Jesus or alcohol.  You cannot serve two masters.”

I was now thoroughly confused.  “What?”

“Jack Daniels,” she insisted.  “It says so right on your license plate holder.”

Jack…?  “Ohhhhh!” I told her.  “Jack Daniels was the name of the dealership.  It’s not, like, a hobby.  Certainly not a master.”

Her face unfolded in relief.  “Oh! Well! That’s good to hear! Just wanted to make sure! We Christians need to hold each other accountable, and…”  Her voice trailed off as she ran out of things to say and I just stared at her, trying to smile, and after a moment, I rolled the window back up.

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When I was a graduate student, I once house-sat for one of my professors, who lived in Brooklyn.  I’d visit her brownstone every couple of days while she was on vacation to water her plants and bring in her mail, and sit in the quiet little room off the foyer and daydream about possibly owning a brownstone in Brooklyn one day.  There was so much to love about her neighborhood: living in New York City, the culture, the food, the people.  What there wasn’t to love about it was the parking.  In all of New York City there are about two parking lots for things, and they’re definitely not for brownstones.  Having to park on her street nearly gave me an anxiety-fueled stroke every time I went there.  For most of the visits I had managed to find decent enough parking, but on one of the last days, I was out of luck.  The only parking spot available required finesse, and seeing as how I wasn’t very comfortable with parallel parking to begin with (five tries!) , I would need help.  I reasoned that I would give it a try - I was driving a Beetle, after all, not a Ford F150 - but after three attempts, it wasn’t working out.  I was terrified of hitting the other cars, but God only knew where I’d have to park if I missed out on this spot.

As I sat in my car, fretting about what to do, a man walking down the street stopped and asked if I needed help.

“Yes, I do! Thanks!” I said, fully expecting him to stand at the back of my car and verbally guide me into the spot.  What I was not expecting was for him to open my car door and slide into the driver’s seat, shoving me into the passenger’s side.

This is carjacking.  Is this carjacking? What do I do? Am I going to be murdered right now? Is it a carjacking or kidnapping? Is carjacking like kidnapping a car?  My thoughts were frantic.  This was before the advent of everyone carrying a cell phone, so I would have no way to call for help. I tried to clear my head and think logically in this terribly frightening moment, but could only think of an old episode of the Oprah Winfrey Show I’d watched once, where a woman was kidnapped and thrown in her trunk.  She’d avoided certain death by kicking out one of the taillights and flagging down help with her foot.  But that was no help to me! What was I supposed to do from the passenger’s side?

I watched, dumbfounded, as the man buckled his (my!) seatbelt and promptly maneuvered my car into the impossibly tiny spot, hitting both the cars in front and behind us, chipping the paint on my bumper.

I could’ve done that! I angrily thought, and watched silently as the man cheerfully undid his seatbelt and slid out of the car.

“...Thanks,” I said weakly, watching him go, completely and utterly happy that the only thing he wanted to do was to park my car for me.

I’d like to say that was the last time that a stranger got into my car without asking, but the world can be a baffling place, and that is probably a story best told on another day. 

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My Beetle died a watery death when I stalled out in the middle of the street due to flooding during a particularly nasty storm.  It died slowly, and stinking of gross New Jersey river-water, but it died shiny and clean from the rain.  I have a Jetta now, and it too is gross and stinky, but that is because I drive my two kids in it every day and there’s only so much cleaning a person can do after one of those kids spilled milk (milk!) under the backseat floor mat.

But it works, and like my first car, I love it very much. 

It has a CD player in it, too.

AUTHOR'S BIO
Christy Gualtieri is a freelance writer specializing in pop culture, religion, and motherhood. She lives in Pittsburgh with her husband and children. She blogs at asinglehour.wordpress.com, and tweets @agapeflower117.









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SHARE YOUR STORY WRITING CONTEST
The winning writer receives a $50 gift card and reusable
tote bag sponsored by Pittsburgh Psychotherapy Associates
We are excited to team up with Pittsburgh Psychotherapy Associates to offer the Share Your Story Writing Contest to coincide with our bi-monthly publication – LUMOS! We challenge you to write and share stories that inspire, entertain, educate or inform.
Stories and topics for submissions can include (but are not limited to) current events, diplomacy, economics, politics, journalism, cooking, recipes with a great story to tell, creative writing, fiction, comics or environmental issues. This is your opportunity to let your writing skills shine. Share Your Story today!
Each period, a winner will be selected from all of the submissions eligible to receive a $50 Target gift card, sponsored by Pittsburgh Psych, and have his or her entry featured in LUMOS!
And to make sure you don’t miss future news, you can sign up for our newsletter by clicking here, or follow us on Facebook and Twitter for conversations, updates and inspiration.


How to Write an Exceptional Essay for College Applications


How to Write an Exceptional Essay for College Applications
by Gina Catanzarite

As the end of another school year approaches, kids’ thoughts turn to a summer of sleeping in and lazy days spent lounging by a pool . . . unless you’re finishing your Junior year of high school, in which case your stress level is rising like mercury on a sunny day because (insert ominous music here) IT’S TIME TO THINK ABOUT APPLYING TO COLLEGES!!!

Without a doubt, one of the most stressful parts of the college admissions application is completing the essay. (More ominous music. . .) Essays have become extremely popular as an educational tool in our country, and young people frequently need to write them for applications for college or for scholarships and other competitions.
What do you think college admissions officers want to learn about you from that essay? Proper grammar? Proof that you can write a thesis statement? How intelligent you are?

Nope!
Take a look at some of these actual essay questions from college applications:

“Describe yourself as fully and accurately as possible in 140 characters.”
“Anna Quindlen says that she ‘majored in unafraid’ at Barnard. Tell us about a time when you majored in unafraid.”
Don DeLillo, Libra, said, “This is what history consists of. It’s the sum total of all the things they aren’t telling us.” What is history, who are “they,” and what aren’t they telling us?
The essay questions are prompts to help you reveal your personal philosophies and personality. They are meant to showcase your critical and your creative thinking skills, as well as your ability to make abstract connections. They require a deeply personal tone with a theme that unfolds largely through personal observations, recollections, and reflections on the writer’s life and experience.

Unfortunately, that rarely happens when so many people “help” the college applicant polish an essay before submitting it.
These people who try to help are well-intentioned to be sure, but what happens is that the student writes a very academic-sounding term paper—thesis, body, conclusion. Parents read it, guidance counselors read it, English teachers read it—and everyone makes comments and edits until it gets distilled, even duller and more generic than it was to begin with!

According to the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC), their number one tip for writing effective college admissions essays is to be yourself. You can achieve that by following these guidelines, used in Luminari’s popular Teen Writer! camps:
TIPS TO WRITE BETTER COLLEGE ADMISSIONS ESSAYS:
·       Relate it to a deeply personal and significant experience and the life lesson you learned.

·       Explore the value of the life lesson you learned. How did/will it change your future?

·       Use precise details and descriptive writing to paint a vivid picture in the readers’ mind.

·       Include research or data to support your opinions.

·       Consider using the “YOU” voice to engage the reader more personally in the essay, e.g. Everyone probably has a clear memory that involved the school bully, and I do, too. VS. You probably have a clear memory about the bully from your high school. So do I.

Most importantly, let the answer grow out of what you want to say, not what you think someone else may want to read. When you write from your soul, the essay will be meaningful, personal, and a reflection of someone with the maturity and self-awareness who is ready to embark on the next phase of life... as a successful college student!

Looking for more tips to create more great writing? Check out Luminari’s 2016 Teen Writer! Fantastic Fiction camp running from June 27 – 30. Learn more about Teen Writer! camp activities and scholarships we offer for reduced tuition!
AND. . . read even more unusual college essay questions here:

Washington Post | Unusual College Essay Questions

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Gina Catanzarite, owner/operator of Arania Productions, and an award-winning television producer, author, media consultant and teacher who has worked both nationally and locally in her fields since 1987.

Gina is the instructor of Luminari’s Teen Writer! camps, being offered June 27 – 30, 2016, in Pittsburgh, PA.

Where Are They Now: Ambassador Alum Zach Kiehn



2013 I Want to be an Ambassador! camp
alumnus Zach Kiehn

by Beth Dolinar

Zachary Kiehn is that rare student who mapped out his career path while still in high school. A graduate of Fox Chapel High School, Zach decided early on that he would serve in the United States Navy.

But that is down the road a bit. Zach will first study nuclear engineering—his major at Penn State University. He’s enrolled in Naval ROTC there, with an eye toward following his father and his brothers into the military—dad in the Navy and brother in the Army.

When Zach considers his career choices, he acknowledges how his participation in the Luminari organization played a role.

In 2013, Zach attended the “I Want to be an Ambassador” camp. Although much has happened in his life in the three years since then, he has fond memories of the camp, and recalls how the activities helped to shape his worldview.

“The camp opened my eyes to the different ways people approach life,” he said. “It helped me to understand why people make the decisions they make.”

A highlight of the Ambassador camp is a trip to Washington, D.C., where students meet and interact with real-life diplomats. Zach’s camp visited the Royal Thai, South African and New Zealand embassies.

“It was really cool,” Zack said. “We talked with the interim ambassador for New Zealand. We learned how the work of diplomacy related to us.”

Zach carried what he learned during the camp back to his school, where he served on student government. The key to being an effective leader, he said, is to understand the perspectives of different people, and to find common ground.

Among his favorite camp activities was the Model United Nations, where the students considered the issues in a simulation of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

“We got an experience that most people don’t get,” he said.

In addition to the real-world diplomacy experience, Zach remembers the friends he made. He still keeps in touch with several other teens from the camp.

Did we mention that Zach is just 19? It’s easy to forget that this articulate and bright young man who approaches the world with such maturity and insight is still a teenager.

But, he is, at heart, a teenager.

“The camp was so much fun,” he said.  “And the food was awesome.”


I Want to be an Ambassador! camp 2016 begins June 14 -22. Learn more or register for one of our fun and unique summer camps for teens at www.luminari.org

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Luminari Coordinator, Beth Dolinar brings her talents and experience as a writer, Emmy-award producer, public speaker and deadline driven multi-tasker to our team. She writes a popular column for the Washington "Observer-Reporter." She is a contributing producer of documentary length programming for WQED-TV on a wide range of topics and currently teaches as an adjunct faculty member at Robert Morris University. Beth has a son and a daughter. She is an avid yoga devotee, cyclist and reader. Beth says she types like lightning but reads slowly -- because she likes a really good sentence.