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Tara Gouldey
Major: Professional Writing
Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Semester: Fall 2015
Graduating: Fall 2015
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Statement of Purpose
There is something about writing that I just cannot sweat out. No matter what I put down,
whether it is assigned to me to write or I am inspired, it never leaves me. Like a birthmark, I look
to myself for the ideas to pour out from me. At the keyboard, my hands create the shapes of the
words I can visualize but not form in my mind. This portfolio showcases my best work of both
my internship and professional writing, during my college career at Kutztown University of
Pennsylvania. Through providing examples of my work, you are able to see the various styles
with which I choose to write. I am thankful that I was exposed to many types of writing, and
look forward to growing further in the future and developing the craft. You may notice that there
are both similarities and differences between my internship work and my professional writing,
and that is because my professional writing is more creative fiction or opinion pieces, while my
internship work is strictly creative magazine writing. Through my internship, I realized how
much I loved having the ability to blend the two styles. I was incredibly thankful for the
opportunity for the internship at Berks County Living Magazine because of how much it allowed
me to learn about both writing and myself at the same time.
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Table of Contents
Chapter Page
Statement of Purpose………………………………………………………………….2
Table of Contents……………………………………………………………………..3
Resume………………………………………………………………………………..4
Internship work……………………………………………………………………….6-17
Bowman’s Stove and Patio Berks Bits article for December 2015 Issue…….6-7
December 2015 “This Month” for December 2015 Issue……………………8-15
That’s What She Said Berks Bits article for December 2015 Issue………….16-17
Professional Writing work…………………………………………………………...18-33
Out of the shadows, into the dumpsters……………………………………...18-22
Waiting out in the cold……………………………………………………… 23-26
The Two Seasons……………………………………………………………..27-33
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Tara Gouldey
Objective: Career to gain experience in writing and editing as staff writer.
Education:
B.A Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Kutztown, PA
Major: English/Professional Writing December 2015
Reading Area Community College Reading, PA
Major: Liberal Arts 52 credits
Related Courses:
Magazine Writing, Advanced Magazine Writing, Travel Writing, Copy and Line Editing,
Creative Writing: Forms, Writing for the Workplace, Contemporary Issues, Journalism
Work Experience:
Berks County Living Magazine Reading, PA
Intern August 2015-Present
Writes web exclusives, and Berks Bits articles. Compiles
events to create This Month section in magazine. Fact checks
articles, and gathers information for listings and articles
from contacts. Posts on Pinterest and develops Facebook
captions.
Mixx Boutique West Reading, PA
Sales Associate March 2014 – May 2015
Aided in posting to social media and created a blog.
Helped owner by selling items, stocking clothing,
dressing mannequins, cleaning, and creating outfit
options for customers.
A.G. Artisan Designer Finishes West Reading, PA
Assistant Painter May 2012- 2015
Assisted owner by painting multiple surfaces and
helping to prepare worksites. Has experience in
painting apartments and resident homes.
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Babysitter West Reading, West Lawn, PA
2010-2013
Created a safe yet fun environment for children.
Spent quality time, played interesting activities, and
prepared snacks.
Skills/Qualifications:
 Creative, hardworking, friendly, optimistic, inspired
 Knowledge of Word, PowerPoint, InDesign
Honors/Awards:
 Reading Area Community College Dean’s list Summer 2011
 Published in Shoofly Literary Magazine Spring 2014
 Opinions Staff Writer at The Keystone Spring 2014
 DIY blog 2014 - Present
(http://thebestdiys.tumblr.com/).
Interests:
 Writing
 Reading Fiction
 Enjoying music
 Watching foreign films and television shows
 DIY projects
References: Available upon request.
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For this Bowman’s Stove and Patio article for the December 2015 issue of Berks County
Living Magazine, my objective was to interest our readers in hearths and fireplaces during the
winter. I had to describe what Bowman’s has to offer, but make it interesting so it enticed the
reader to read the entire Berks Bits article and possibly be tempted to contact the business. My
absolute favorite aspect of writing is the descriptions and creating mental imagery, so I loved
writing the beginning of this article. The target audience for the article was homeowners who
would possibly be making a winter purchase for their home. I thoroughly enjoyed speaking to the
contact through email. The exchange of information was really easy. In order to complete the
article, I imagined that I was a homeowner. What would I want to read that would make me want
to heat my home differently this year? This is how I approached writing the article. It helped me
to look from the reader’s perspective rather than my own. This was the first article I wrote for
Berks County Living during the semester, and I applied this tactic as I moved on in the semester
and wrote more articles.
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Tara Gouldey
Bowman’s Stove and Patio Berks Bits article
Nothing is better than listening to a fire crackle as the flames consume and crush the
wooden logs within under the pressure. You can experience this comforting sound within your
own home this winter thanks to the products at Bowman’s Stove & Patio, Ephrata. Dustin
Bowman states, “A new stove or fireplace adds warmth and beauty to your home and can save
you a lot of money on your heating bill.” They also add radiant heat that central heating systems
cannot supply. For more information, call 717-733-4973 or go to www.bowmansstove.com.
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For the December “This Month” for Berks County Living Magazine, my objective was to
scour the internet and find a fun variety of events in Berks County for the month. The events are
divided into sections based on what they are or what they include. This meant that I searched
many different types of websites to find events for each section. The audience that the “This
Month” is directed to is all the readers of Berks County Living Magazine. Since every reader has
a different general set of interests, it is important to cast a wide net with the “This Month”
listings in order to find something that every reader would be interested in. I enjoyed finding the
information for these listings every month because it really opened up my eyes to how many
great activities we have in our area, and once again I found myself writing my assignment as the
readers, instead of the writer. Also, it taught me how to get into a rigid format with my writing,
and as I learned the format and process to gathering the information, I became faster with my
work which is something I always need to improve on.
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December This Month
Compiled by Tara Gouldey
Art Exhibits & Galleries
Through Jan. 3
GERBERICH’S GADGETRY : ART THAT MOVES
North Museum of Nature and Science, Lancaster.
Experience Steve Gerberich’s sculptures involving objects like plastic parts, old furniture and
machine pieces that prove that household items can be used for more than just their purpose.
This exhibit catches everyone’s interest with its stunning visuals and connection to Math, Art
and Science. For info call 717.291.3941 or visit northmuseum.org.
Through Jan. 10
CURIOUS GEORGE TM: LET’S GET CURIOUS!
Reading Public Museum, Reading.
Monkey around with Curious George as your family helps him with obstacles! Children will be
able to experience locations they know from the show, including his apartment, the produce
stand, and a construction site, as well as participate in hands on projects that involve Math,
Science, Engineering and technology. For more info call 610.371.5850 or visit
readingpublicmuseum.org.
Through Jan. 17
FAT DOGS AND COUGHING HORSES.
Reading Public Museum, Reading.
Learn about the importance of a healthy lifestyle and good eating habits with friends Hot Dog
and Holly Horse! The duo discusses the similarities of asthma and diabetes in both animals and
humans and the exhibit is completed by the energetic Hot Dog’s Fitness Challenge! Get ready
for learning and fun for the entire family! For info call 610.371.5850 or visit
readingpublicmuseum.org.
Dec. 13
GOGGLEWORKS
11-4pm, GoggleWorks Center for the Arts, Reading.
Visit the GoggleWorks to learn about the inner workings of the artist community and enjoy live
music, walk-in workshops, demonstrations and make-and-take projects. For more info call
610.374.4600 or visit goggleworks.org.
Benefits
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Dec.14
BERKS WOMEN IN CRISIS’ CELEBRATION OF PEACE
6-9pm, Yashek Social Hall-Reform Congregation Oheb Sholom, Wyomissing.
Join Berks Women in Crisis in support as they present their Voices of Change awards to State
Senator Judith Schwank, Chief William Heim and the Reading Police Department. Tickets: $75.
For more info call 610.370.7604 or visit berkswomenincrisis.org.
Classical Music
Dec.13
READING SYMPHONY POPS ORCHESTRA - A POPS HOLIDAY WITH SPECIAL
GUEST ELLIOTT YAMIN
4-6pm, Miller Center for the Arts, Reading.
Get into the Holiday spirit with this annual concert featuring Elliott Yamin! After making third
place on American Idol in its fifth season, Yamin is partnered with the Pops to perform some
songs from his Holiday collections. Tickets: $40, are available at the Miller Center Box Office.
For more info call 610.607.6205 or visit racc.edu/MillerCenter.
Dec. 19
READING SYMPHONY YOUTH ORCHESTRAS - HOLIDAY EXTRAVAGANZA
3-5pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
The entire family will enjoy singing along, visiting the petting zoo, and seeing a jolly man in red
if the audience is lucky! Tickets: $15, are available through the VF Outlet Box Office, or
ticketmaster.com. For more info or to charge by phone call 800.745.3000.
Dec. 31
READING SYMPHONY POPS ORCHESTRA CONCERT- NEW YEARS EVE SIMON &
GARFUNKEL RETROSPECTIVE
7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
Have a soulful New Years Eve night out on the town with this concert featuring A.J. Swearingen
and Jonathan Beedle. After performing for over a decade, they will continue to ensnare their
audience with voices that mimic a classic duo. Tickets: $20-75, are available through the VF
Outlet Box Office, or ticketmaster.com. For more info or to charge by phone call 800.745.3000.
Holiday Events
Weekends in December & Dec. 21-23
SANTA TRAIN
Times vary, Colebrookdale Railroad, Boyertown.
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Santa trades in his sleigh for vintage vehicles, covered with thousands of breathtaking lights.
Passengers join carolers in the singing holiday favorites. Enjoy hot chocolate and cookies that
are available for sale. Children are encouraged to deliver their Christmas letter to Santa. Prices
vary. For more info visit colebrookdalerailroad.com.
Dec. 4-27
HOLIDAY LIGHTS AT GRING’S MILL
6-9pm, Wednesday through Sunday, Gring’s Mill Recreation Area, Wyomissing.
Enjoy Santa Claus as a nightly guest while walking through fantastic holiday light displays until
Dec. 23. Live music and a model train display will add to the wintery atmosphere. $5 for
parking. For more info call 610.374.8839 or visit countyofberks.com/parks.
Dec. 1
WEST READING’S HOLIDAY GLOW CELEBRATION
8-5pm every day, Penn Avenue, West Reading.
Kick off your holiday festivities with this celebration which includes the 85th annual Tree
Lighting on Dec. 4 and enjoy horse-drawn carriage rides all month along with Ladies and Men’s
special shopping nights, Mrs. Claus competition and the Run Santa Run 5K. For more info visit
lovewestreading.org.
Dec. 3
HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR
7:30-4pm, Reading Hospital, West Reading.
The Reading Hospital Annual Craft Fair is free and open to the public. All proceeds assist
programs funded by The Friends of Reading Hospital. For more info visit
readinghealth.org/holidayhappening.
Dec. 5
IRON PLANTATION CHRISTMAS
10-4pm, Hopewell Furnace, Elverson.
Visit to experience the beauty of Christmas past as volunteers sing songs from the 19th century
as the park celebrates “Christmas at the furnace”. Beware the Belsnickel! Free. For more info
call 610.582.8773.
CHRISTMAS ON THE FARM
10-4pm, PA German Cultural Heritage Center, Kutztown.
Come visit the Pennsylvania German Cultural Heritage Center at Kutztown University to enjoy a
“Pennsylvania Dutch Christmas on the Farm”. Get in the spirit by children’s activities, vendors,
wagon rides, music, folk life demonstrations, purchasing Christmas trees and much more! For
more info call 610.683.1589.
WINTER OPEN HOUSE
10-4pm, Rodale Institute, Kutztown.
Browse through organically-grown Christmas trees, and wreaths while enjoying holiday fun at
the Rodale Institute! Delight in local craft vendors, organic foods, and activities for children
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including complimentary pictures with Santa on his vintage sleigh! No admission fee. For more
info visit rodaleinstitute.org.
KUTZTOWN CHRISTMAS ON MAIN
12-6pm, Main Street, Downtown Kutztown.
Celebrate the holidays in Kutztown and revel in this year’s theme of “I’ll Be Home for
Christmas.” The shops will be joined by the man in red, street vendors, musicians, children’s art,
train rides, fire pits, annual tree lighting and more! Free. For more info call 484.646.9069 or visit
keepinitkutztown.com.
Dec 5 & 6
AMAHL AND THE NIGHT VISITORS
Dec. 5, 7:30 pm; Dec. 6, 2:30pm, Albright College Memorial Chapel, Reading.
Berks Opera Company presents a concert version of this classic holiday opera, with the help of
the Albright Angels and Mane Men. Tickets: $5 students, $10 for public. For more info visit
albright.edu/centerforthearts.
Dec. 6
A HOMESTEAD CHRISTMAS
12-4pm, Daniel Boone Homestead, Birdsboro.
Celebrate the holidays with the Homestead and learn the history of Christmas. The holiday
traditions of the English and Pennsylvania Germans is not something to miss! For more info visit
danielboonehomestead.org.
DO YOU WANT TO BUILD A SNOWMAN?
1-4pm, Nolde Forest Environmental Education Center, Reading.
The whole family will enjoy learning together about snowflakes, animals in winter, how to build
a snowman that feeds the birds, ice cutting history, and the difference between a white tailed deer
and reindeer at winter themed stations. Wear your favorite FROZEN shirt or costume for fun!
Free. There are activities indoors and outdoors. For more info call 610.796.3699 or visit
stateparks.com.
A PETER WHITE CHRISTMAS FEATURING MINDI ABAIR AND RICK BRAUN
3 pm & 7pm, Miller Center for the Arts, Reading.
Peter White’s Christmas show is a dose of holiday fun! Enjoy both their greatest hits and new
pieces. Peter White and friends start the holidays off right! Tickets: $42. For more info visit
racc.edu/millercenter.
Dec. 12
CANDLELIGHT OPEN HOUSE
1-6pm, Beidler House, Gibralter.
Come celebrate in the fashion of German colonials of early Berks County in this holiday open
house. This includes festive decorations, music, dancing, and seasonal treats to enjoy. Holiday
reception will follow until 6pm. For more info visit countyofberks.com/parks.
Dec. 13
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CHRISTMAS HOUSE TOUR & CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
Brunch: 10:30-1:30pm; Tour: 11-5pm, Centre Park Historic District, Reading.
Enjoy a champagne brunch at the Stirling Guest Hotel and tour several Centre Park Historic
District properties decorated for the holidays. Make sure to notice the architectural designs and
craftsmanship of the Victorian and early 20th century buildings. Park at FirstEnergy Stadium
and ride the free shuttle. Brunch only: $35; Tour only: $18; Combo: $48. For more info visit
centrepark.org.
Dec. 19
WINTER SOLSTICE WITH KING WINTER
5:30pm, Angora Fruit Farm Park, Reading.
Come spend the longest night of the year around a blazing bonfire, then stroll the candlelit path
to the main event at at cottage in the woods . Listen to a storyteller around the fire, and meet
King Winter. Ideal for families with kids ages 3-12. Make sure to bring a flashlight! To register
and for more info call 484.509.2667.
DEC. 27-31
HOLIDAY CAMP
Check-in: Dec. 27, 4-6pm; Check-out: Dec. 31, 4-6pm, South Mountain YMCA Camp,
Wernersville.
Come back to check out all the fun things to do in the winter for ages 6-15! Stay in heated cabins
and have delicious meals in Bynden Wood Lodge. Sledding, snow fort building, snow creatures,
along with experiments, exploration, and other goodies are planned for this retreat. Cost: $180.
For more info contact Amanda at 610.670.2267 or agriffith@smymca.org.
Concerts & Nightlife
Dec. 3
LEWIS BLACK
7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
Grammy Award-winning stand-up comedian, actor and author Lewis Black is coming to
Reading! Black performs over 200 nights a year to sell out audiences throughout Europe, New
Zealand, Canada and United States. Tickets: $49.75, 59.75. For more info visit santander-
arena.com.
STRAIGHT NO CHASER
7:30pm, Santander Arena, Reading.
Atlantic Records recording group Straight No Chaser has announced the release of their much-
anticipated new album in October as well as details of a major North American tour. Tickets:
$29.50-91. For more info visit santander-arena.com.
Dec. 5
JOHN PRINE
8pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
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Long considered a “songwriter’s songwriter,” JOHN PRINE is an exceptional talent. The list of
songwriters who have recorded his songs include Johnny Cash, Bonnie Raitt, the Everly
Brothers, John Denver, Kris Kristofferson, Carly Simon, Ben Harper, Joan Baez, and many
others. Prine holds two Grammys and has been honored by the Library of Congress and US Poet
Laureate. Tickets: $46.50-91.50. For more info visit santander-arena.com.
Dec. 10
JAZZ UNDER THE STARS
5:30pm, Neag Planetarium at Reading Public Museum, Reading.
The group Cartoon Christmas Trio will perform at Neag Planetarium’s monthly jazz
performance. VIVÁ Bistro & Tapas Lounge will offer refreshments for purchase. Tickets: $20.
For more info call 610.371.5850 or visit readingpublicmuseum.org.
Dec. 11
MANNHEIM STEAMROLLER
7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
The Mannheim Steamroller tour, now in its 30th year, has Grammy Award® winner Chip Davis
to direct and co-produce the performances with MagicSpace Entertainment. The shows will
feature the favorite Christmas music of Mannheim Steamroller along with state-of-the-art
multimedia effects. Tickets: $46.75-69.75. For more info visit santander-arena.com.
Dec. 12
SINATRA FOREVER
7pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
Rick Michel will be joined by a 14 piece orchestra to celebrate on Frank Sinatra’s 100th
birthday. This concert pays homage to possibly one of the greatest singers of all time. This is not
an impersonation show, but rather a tribute. Tickets: $25-45. For more info visit santander-
arena.com.
Sports
Dec. 18 & 19
READING ROYALS
7pm, Santander Arena, Reading.
Come Cheer on your home hockey team! For more info and tickets visit royalshockey.com.
Theatre & Dance
Dec. 4-13
9 TO 5
Genesius Theatre, Reading.
Based on the 20th Century Fox motion picture, three female co-workers concoct a plan to get
even with the man they despise to call their boss. Directed by Christopher Sperat. Tickets:
$17.50-28.50. For more info visit genesiusdifference.org.
Dec. 4
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PEPPA PIG’S BIG SPLASH
6pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
Don’t miss this family event starring Peppa Pig, character of Entertainment One’s (eOne) top-
rated TV series on Nick Jr. Peppa is hitting the road for her first-ever U.S. theatrical tour, Peppa
Pig’s Big Splash. Tickets: $29.50-46.50. For more info visit santander-arena.com.
Dec. 19 & 20
NUTCRACKER 2015 PRESENTED BY BERKS BALLET THEATRE
Dec. 19, 2 & 7pm, Dec. 20, 2pm, Scottish Rite Cathedral, West Reading.
Enjoy the holiday classic, The Nutcracker. Fun for all ages; watch Clara as she takes a magical
journey as she sleeps. For more info and pricing, call 610.373.7577 or visit
berksballettheatre.com.
What Else
Dec. 11
PARENTS' NIGHT OUT, KIDS AT CAMP
6-9pm, Bynden Wood Lodge, Wernersville.
Involve your children ages 6-12 in fun camp activities from 6-9pm! Enjoy some down time or a
night on the town as your children have a blast with classic camp crafts and games! This
program is $10 per child, per evening. Contact Amanda for information and registration at 610-
670-2267 or smymca.org
Dec.18
KIDS' NIGHT OUT: WINTER MAGIC
6:30-10pm, Reading Public Museum, Reading.
Let your children age 6-12 explore The Museum after dark! They’ll have a yummy pizza dinner,
and an evening snack. The evening starts with a planetarium show where they’ll learn about the
winter skies, and will follow with experimentation with ice paintings, snowflake art and more!
Registration required by Dec.11. Tickets for Members: $20 for the first child, 15 for each sibling;
Tickets for Non-Members: $30 for the first child, 25 for each sibling. All activities are included.
For more info visit readingpublicmuseum.org.
Dec. 31
NEW YEAR’S EVE LOCK-IN
Drop-off: 5-6pm on Dec. 31; Pick-up: 12pm on Jan. 1, South Mountain YMCA, Wernersville.
Have a night out as your children have the time of their lives! This includes Night Zip-Lining,
Games, Prizes, and of course a Ball Drop, SMYMCA style. Parents can enjoy a night out with
friends and partners while YMCA gives their children a memory they’ll never forget. Cost: $45.
For more info call Amanda at 610.670.2267 or visit smymca.org.
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The objective of this Berks Bits article for Berks County Living Magazine for the
December 2015 issue was to highlight a talk show on BCTV. I was excited to get this assignment
because the show itself is creative and unique all on its own. I knew that I would enjoy writing
about the show. I believe that the audience for this article would be anyone that is looking for
funny, cool entertainment but does not normally watch BCTV or is unaware of its existence.
Also, the majority of viewers would probably be women, but I could see men watching it as well.
This is why I was so focused on writing the article so that it would be exciting to many people
and pique their interest. Again, I really loved that I could be creative and bring in the article
visually, rather than just stating information. This was the second article that I wrote for the
magazine, and I liked interacting with the contact. I had a better time asking questions this time
because I learned from the last article.
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Tara Gouldey
That’s What She Said Berks Bits article
Have a case of the Mondays? Grab your favorite wine and snacks and settle in to watch
the vivacious That’s What She Said on BCTV! TWSS is a creative and fun talk show in its 5th
year that is known as Berks County’s call in version of The View! It is shown and streamed live
every 4th
Monday of each month from 9:00 pm. to 10 pm. on BCTV and www.bctv.org. The cast
which consists of Jane Street (a.k.a Kirk Lawrence-Howard), Martha Richardson, Sheila
Harrington, and Nicole Weaver discusses a variety of topics, and even take field trips! Martha
Richardson said, “We always have something with alcohol to drink because we aren’t on family
time!” Tune in to experience the “mixture of conversation, issues and silly things” that occur
each episode! For more information, go to www.thatswhatshesaidonline.com.
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This profile long article was written for my Magazine Writing class that I took at
Kutztown University of Pennsylvania for my Professional Writing major. Our objective as
students was to find someone that we found interesting, then interviews them, and expose the
things about themselves that they wouldn’t normally share. I made a few revisions after I first
wrote about Melissa, more so working to create more of a flow. I really enjoyed interviewing
Melissa, as she was a no bones, out in the open type of person who was in no way ashamed of
her hobby. What I did not think I would discover about her as a character is that she would
downplay things about herself that she wasn’t used to be admired for. I loved looking into her
body language while I was interviewing her, rather than what she was actually telling me. I
learned a lot from this assignment. This is one of the reasons that I started looking into magazine
writing as a vein to plunge into for my career. I found it so inspiring to be able to look into
someone’s life as if they were a character of my own, and mold how they are portrayed.
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Tara Gouldey
Profile Long Article
March 14, 2014
Out of the shadows, into the dumpsters
Amongst the dim lit living room, Melissa Visconti sits uncomfortably on the chocolate
brown suede couch. Dark wash jeans and a black velvet zip up hoodie cloak her form and secede
into the shadows. Blonde tresses frame her petite face and she tightly smiles as if waiting for
noises to explode from the basement in order to relieve the tension. Moments before, Melissa’s
family consisting of her boyfriend Nate, son Landon, and honorary step-son Dylan, scurried the
perimeter of the now still room before retreating downstairs to build catapults. The two cats,
Booger and Monkey look on with steel cut gazes of distrust and affection while Tootsie Roll, the
dog, whines from her cage. Melissa looks to the TV and mentions about turning off Sanford and
Son so its not a distraction. She clasps her hands together multiple times and fidgets until the
interview begins.
Despite having a cleaning position at a local, big – time management apartment complex,
Melissa has the same issues that many other mothers with young children do. A substantial
wooden coffee table is covered with Landon’s toy cars and pencil-shaped construction paper
cutouts earned from good behavior. The boy’s fragile trophies reflect Melissa’s true passion for
dumpster diving and flea markets. Out of something so simple can profit grow. Messing around
with found computer parts, thrown-away jewelry and good as new soap dishes is her thing.
She leans forward and smiles again. “It started with when I was a little girl. I lived with
my grandparents and they were fairly poor, you know. My grandfather would drive around in his
pickup truck and bring home scrap metal from any cars that were going to be junked,” she said.
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“Back then all cars were made out of steel, so it was like, you know, it was a lot of money.”
Melissa’s smile stretches as she laughs again, seemingly more comfortable than a few minutes
before. “I grew up seeing that, and my grandfather would come home with a trash bag full of
copper or aluminum or steel and I’d be amazed from the fact that, like, he could make money
from this. This was all free stuff he’d pull out from the trash and the cars.”
After growing up in that environment, Melissa gained a further interest in appreciating
the potential of used items after she started to live with her mother. “My mom started taking me
around the neighborhoods on the trash days, and we would bring home lawnmowers, air hockey
machines, or all kinds of neat, little goodies like Oriental rugs that were still good. I kind of got
fascinated by that.” She places her hands together again, a smile interweaving between her
words as she nods to herself in slow motion. The memory crosses over her eyes and her mouth
becomes a firm line as she retraces the steps which brought her to the person she is today.
Dumpster diving in her childhood led to her adoration of the activity. Not only could she
have fun, but she could also make a fantastic profit. “Taking the stuff out of the trash and
pawning it,” she states, “It’s not just a junk to jazz thing. It’s not just a trinket or a knickknack
that you have. You could just turn it into cash.” She loved that she could acquire something that
wasn’t broken that belonged to someone richer than she was. In the present, she is allowed to
dive at her work. . “Yeah, cleaning can suck sometimes.” she said, “You get tired and it can be
repetitive because your always cleaning an apartment but then you find those finds there because
the tenants are so rich. It keeps you going because you know there’s going to be something in the
trash downstairs.” Finding money, jewelry, and recently a fur coat would coax anyone into trying
this hobby.
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She gained a curiosity about used items from yard sales and flea markets and what she
could find there. “It started when I lived with my grandma. She would take me out yard sailing
every Saturday morning, even in the summer.” Another deep chuckle escaped her, showing her
love of this memory. “Being a kid, you wanted to sleep in. She’d come in my bedroom at five
thirty, six o’ clock. She’d say, “Okay, Honey, time to get up. Early bird catches the worm.” and
she’d drag me out of bed.” Both of her grandparents fully influenced her to be interested in
finding items cheaply and making a return. She didn’t enjoy it at the time, and would have rather
played with Barbies at home but recognizes now that she is emotionally tied to her hobby.
Melissa jokes that now that she’s older, she sees the reason why they brought along a little kid to
go through other people’s discarded items. “I learned the value of it over the years,” she said, “It
is actually cool. It follows the family history. It’s in my blood; I have to do it. I have to. I can’t
control myself.” Her voice is a mix of caramel and bass as she heartily laughs at her lack of self-
control.
Melissa leaves the couch and goes toward the radiator. Within the room, she seems small
enough to fit like a china doll on a shelf. Her rented home dates back to the 1920s, and like the
items she collects, it has an acute time limit within her grasp and evokes a sense of charm and
antiquity. She gestures to a dark, slightly rusted lantern that is now hanging from her fingertips
and silently gauges my reaction. “This thing. This is one of my favorite ultimate things. This is
actually off of a ship,” she said, “It still has all the glass intact. Some of its kind of messed up but
this is a good find. You can see the story behind it, because its got the dents, and the
imperfections. This piece has got history and someone just threw it out. It was just sitting there
out in the trash.”
22
Melissa Visconti sees the value in things where others cannot. In the dim light, she smiles
and it seems to brighten the whole room. Then, she pushes her nose up in the air with her finger,
mimicking a snooty look. “That’s why I get the free stuff because these people have their noses
stuck to the ceiling! They throw out working machinery, too. A paper shredder. There’s nothing
wrong with it. It’s not even jammed up and they throw it out.”
23
For this reported long article, the objective for the students in my Magazine Writing class
was to find something on campus that they wanted to discuss and have a hand in changing, but
had to find information and quotes to back it up. I remembered trying to go on a university free
mall trip, only to have the shuttle bus never show up after I had waited for over a half hour past
the time it should have been there. I knew that this angered me enough to want to write about it.
This article was more difficult to write for me, as I had to find others that had either had issues
with the mall shuttle like I had, or at least heard of it. After searching, I came across a woman
who was also angered, and a few others who had never tried going on the trip in the first place.
They agreed that they would be upset over this happening as well. When I revised, my professor
said to try to get more quotes so I searched for people who had the same feelings as the mall
shuttle and found others.
24
Tara Gouldey
Reported Long Article
April 13, 2014
Waiting out in the cold
At the McFarland Student Union Building at Kutztown University, dim twilight poured
across the sky in a gentle flush. Freezing temperatures caused the numb faces and raw hands of
many students to reflect the hue of the sky. In two uneven lines, huddled bodies convulsed
against each other as each gust of wind slammed torrentially down upon them. Some laughed
bitterly about how they could not feel their feet, while others retreated from the cold to sit inside
near a saving grace in the form of a heat lamp. One young woman offered a friend her gloves,
and gestured toward the diminishing line of students, which 40 minutes before had garnered a
sense of excitement. The bus for the advertised Wednesday Night Mall Trip was late.
The promoted Bieber bus trip for the Lehigh Valley Mall on Wednesday, March 5, 2014
was scheduled to depart from the McFarland Student Union building promptly at 6:00p.m. The
bus would then stop at various other locations on campus including Dixon and Golden Bear
Village South before transporting students to the mall. At 9:00p.m., the bus would retrieve the
students and transfer them safety back to campus. The school’s plan sounded appealing and easy
enough for students, except that not only was the bus late, but it also never showed up to the
MSU that night.
Mai Nguyen, a senior at KU, discussed the poor experience three weeks later. “It was
pretty cold. It was below freezing. I checked the temperature before I left my apartment. We
walked over there 10 to 15 minutes early just to make sure we’d have seats. We waited 40
25
minutes after 6 p.m. and the bus didn’t show up at all.” Uncomfortable with her voice being
recorded for the interview, Mai blankly started out at the various food vendors in South Dining
Hall and placed strands of jet black hair behind her ears. “There were a lot of people waiting
outside, too. I felt numb.”
Coincidentally, this was not the first time that the Bieber bus left students hanging after
the promise of the scheduled Wednesday night mall trip by KU. “It was last semester when we
went to the Berkshire Mall. I went there (MSU) with my roommate to catch the bus,” said
Nguyen, “When we got there, the bus wasn’t there. We waited 40 minutes. There was a lot of
people there, also. It was cold. I think it was also below freezing outside, and you shouldn’t be
outside when its - for that long.” Mai gave a determined look and shook her head, crossing her
arms against her. “I would say I wouldn’t want to (go on a Wednesday night trip again) because
I’ve had other bad experiences with the bus trips to the mall.”
The lack of transportation for the Wednesday night bus trips also leads some students to
make questionable decisions that they normally wouldn’t have to if the bus was there to pick
them up. “It was like hitchhiking. There were other people that were also waiting for the bus and
we lost faith in the bus coming. They said, “Okay, let’s just go in my own car if you guys want to
come.” So we ended up going to the mall with them and then they also gave us a ride back.”
Many students have not heard enough about the Wednesday night trips to even try
attending them. It would be a loss of a potentially fun experience if these issues didn’t occur with
the bus, but in turn it saves those same students from wasting precious time in their schedules
because they don’t attempt to to ride the bus which doesn’t show up. Lindsey S. Huh, a
sophomore at KU, stated, “I never heard of the Wednesday night busses. I never see posters
26
going around. If I would hear stuff like that, I would have gone on the trips but again, I just never
heard of it. Plus, I never see any stops or anything. I don’t see a schedule. Another thing is, if
they are going to not bother showing up, why even have them at all?” Lindsey moved her hands
in vast motions, emphasizing her point. Stefiny Thomas, sophomore, added in a silly voice, “I’ve
never heard of them either!” Brianna Bennett, a sophomore, interjected her thought between
Stefiny’s words with a half grin, “I knew they were there.”
Bennett then made a valid point against KU for not taking the responsibility for the lack
of the busses not being present when the trip is advertised on the University’s website. “They say
that these things are offered, like I’ve seen the advertisements on the screens in the SUB, but if
they’re not there, then that’s just-.” Thomas interrupts, saying, “Posters aren’t even there. You
know what I mean? Posters aren’t up, readily available for the people to look at.”
Kutztown University can turn the Wednesday night bus trips into a fun experience that
more students pay attention to by making sure that the vehicle transportation is available at the
scheduled time. Nguyen believes that KU can fix the problem. “They should communicate with
the bus company better so we know whether they are going to show up or not because it’s also a
waste of time to be waiting. We could be doing something else.”
27
For this Fiction piece I wrote for my Creative Writing class my first semester, I wanted to
relate back to pain that I have witnessed in my life through others, but prove that sometimes
there is light on the other side that is waiting for you. When I initially started writing this, I
channeled the dead of my Grandmother to cancer, and the lack of secure funds growing up. After
my first draft, I realized that I wasn’t being honest enough with myself. Pain is pain. It’s not
easy, and it’s not pretty. I was glazing over emotions I had felt in order to make what I thought
would be a “nicer” story. My second draft, I ripped it apart and tore out the sugar coated scenes. I
wanted the father to have had a troubled past with addiction. I wanted his son to have seen him
for who he really was, and not who he perceived him to be. It was my third draft that I was pretty
happy about, and decided to submit to Shoofly, the literary magazine at Kutztown University of
Pennsylvania. It was accepted, and I was thrilled.
28
Tara Gouldey
Spring 2014
The Two Seasons
Spring. In Spring, the trees jumped to life and shook from their brown, tough bark the
cold shoulders of Winter. The two seasons did not get along; they were in constant battle over
ideals of how the world should be. Winter wanted to silence nature, and create its own frozen
image on the earth’s landscape. Each year, Low temperatures, hail, sharp winds and snow would
shake the little house on the tree orchard and threatened to collapse it, entirely. Spring would
catch winter by surprise in April and knock the weather to the softened ground. The snow melted
into mossy slush, and the roots of the trees and stems of tulips flooded over winter and
suffocated the chill. Gone for another year, spring would rejoice in its victory and make plans for
winter’s next inevitable attack.
A small home was nestled on an orchard in Pennsylvania. It was protected by the
branches which blocked the sun from reaching down upon the shingles and through the
windowpanes. Shadows like tentacles puckered themselves against the paint and muddled the
blue siding into a muted gray. The home was blanketed in mid- April air. The sweet scent of
ruby tinted apples bloomed on the gentle gusts of wind and permeated through the crevices in the
cedar walls. Inside, a family held their breaths as they waited for the final answer. Daniel Hufftin
sat in the kitchen with his mother, Mary, and tightly wrung his work shirt in his hands. She
snaked her fingers through her gray locks and tugged gently as she paced in a loop from the
wooden table, to the stove, to her chair in the corner. Mary stared at the Nokia cell phone on the
table, and brushed her foot against the floorboards.
“Mom, don’t worry about this. It will all work out. Why don’t you start lunch while we
29
wait?” said Daniel. “Really, what I could use right now is your famous beef stew.” He smiled
a wide grin that he hoped would raise her spirit. Daniel fixed the loose ball cap on his head,
and adjusted it so it was straight.
“How can I not worry,” said Mary. “You are all I have left. With your father gone-oh,
and all that you do with the orchard! I can’t lose my baby. I just can’t.”
“I’m hardly a baby anymore,” said Daniel. “I’m 27. We’ll just have to wait for the
call. There’s not much sense in worrying about the outcome until then.”
Mary walked over to the wooden chair where Daniel sat, and placed her soft palms on his
face.
“You look so much like your father,” said Mary. “He would be proud.” Her eyes
waivered as she dropped her arms and turned away from him.
To Daniel, her hands felt like the buttery soft leather of his father’s bomber jacket and he
remembered from his childhood that the family ran together under the apple trees. His father
laughed with them, and would jump out from behind the thin trunks that barely concealed his
body. Daniel would grin at his mother and giggle in delight as his father caught Mary by the
waist. In mock terror, she would shriek to Daniel to run away. He picked up his speed and bolted
through the thick branches, out into the brilliant sunshine. That was his Spring.
“Daniel,” said Mary. “The phone! The phone is ringing! Who is it?”
Daniel shook himself out of the memory. He looked at the screen and saw the words,
Unknown Caller. He figured it would be a bill collector. The apple orchard wasn’t making the
profits it once had. When his dad died, everything went downhill. One check came in each
month instead of two, and Daniel had to move back home from Cincinnati to be with his mother.
Now when he felt he had everything settled in his life, a new problem erupted in his face.
“It’s not Dr. Reynolds,” said Daniel. “It’s just another bill collector.”
“Oh,” said Mary. “I should start lunch.”
30
Mary chewed on the fingernails of her left hand as she paced another loop around the
kitchen. She pulled them out of her mouth to admire her bare fingers, then wiped her eyes and
grabbed a package of beef from the fridge. A cool drift coasted over Daniel and raised goose
bumps on his neck. The drop in temperature slapped at his senses and made him think of
wintertime. Daniel recalled the day he found out his father died and he gripped his work shirt
even tighter against his fists. It didn’t take a call from Dr. Reynolds to know that his dad was
gone. His memory of that day was as sharp as his father’s tongue. It formed words that as a child
he couldn’t understand. Later, he realized the words were strings of angry sentences, spewed
venom laid across the cabin. It was December 22nd
, and Daniel was 15 years old. He raced
through the front door to the kitchen, and admired his mother near the delicious foods placed on
the table. Each meal was valuable to Daniel because it brought his family together. His
mother’s apple pie and custard wafted sensually towards him and increased his eagerness to take
a bite.
“Don’t you dare,” said Mary. “You need to wait for your father.”
“Can’t I just have one piece?” said Daniel. “Just one!”
“Go wake him up,” said Mary. “We’ll have supper, and afterwards you can have
some!”
Daniel shot a defeated glance towards Mary and walked out of the kitchen towards
his parents’ bedroom. He mumbled to himself the importance of one missing piece of
apple pie. His mother always made him wait for his father to eat. It was a constant fight in the
house. Daniel was just as much of a man as his father was. He was tall with strong arms
that could lift two barrels of apples at once. During the winter, Daniel would go out into the
snow and gather fire logs from the shed to burn. His father gave him the chore when he was 9,
and told him it would make him a better man. Laid next to the wood, his gloves smelled of
charcoal and cider. He always lifted them to his face and breathed in the warmth that lingered
31
before he returned to the house.
He shook his head at the memory as he ran his hand down the faded floral hallway. In
the dim light, the paper peeled off the walls in patches like the scales of a fish. He crushed the
shredded pieces within his fists as he entered the bedroom. His father was always awake
by dinner time; Daniel could not remember him ever missing a meal. Even after his parents
finished screaming and throwing the ceramic plates and porcelain mugs, his father always
emerged from their bedroom for supper with his lips pursed tightly against his face. Daniel
would squeeze his mother’s waist tightly and press his tear stained cheeks against her stomach.
He planned to be more of a man that his father ever though he could be.
Daniel opened the door and was instantly shocked by the lack of fragrance. It didn’t
smell like anything. His father wore the same pungent, heavy musk every day and it was absent
from the room. Daniel walked deeper into the dark, towards the bed.
“Mom,” said Daniel. “You need to come here.” A untold, sinking feeling crept up into his
stomach and over his chest. The window was open on the other side of the room. The bed was
dusted in snowflakes that escaped from the wind and a heavy blanket enclosed a large mass
hidden inside the dim lighting. His mother had not heard him. He touched the mass protruding
from the bed, and from his fingers an electric shiver traveled over his body. Daniel couldn’t bear
to remove the quilt.
“Mom! Mom!” said Daniel. “Come here!”
She didn’t reply. Daniel fled from the bedroom and felt worse with each moment. His
pace quickened as his stomach heaved. The realization dawned on him faster than he had
wanted. Daniel pushed the thought of his father out of his mind so he could function. When he
reached the kitchen, his mother sat at the table and started to hum a Christmas song.
“Mom!” said Daniel. “What happened to Dad?”
Mary watched her fingers shake beneath her stack of plates as they roughly clanged
32
against each other like echoing church bells.
“What do you mean?” said Mary. “Isn’t he up yet? My God, that man never misses
dinner. What’s taking him so long? Do you need me to get him up?”
Her smile faded.
“You, you haven’t seen him?” said Daniel. “At all?”
Mary paused, and her eyes pooled in their fresh sorrow.
“I just couldn’t touch him,” said Mary. “He came back late from work last night, and
slept until late this morning. I thought he was exhausted, so I let him alone. Later on, I called his
name while I was baking the pies. I thought he would come out like he always does, but he
didn’t. I, I cannot picture his face in that way. I can’t.” Mary’s mouth quivered and her
shoulders followed.
All of the suppressed emotions flooded from him as he ran barefoot from the kitchen into
the weather. He sprinted into the thick of the orchard, and let the snow pelt his face, arms and
feet. He didn’t fathom the sting of the ice or frigid air against his body. On his back, the apple
trees which were once so welcoming and warm seemed to point at him with their jagged,
malformed branches. Daniel felt the pain that his father should have felt. He dug his fingertips
into the winter and pulled at the frozen emerald blades beneath. After a few minutes, Daniel
knew he was numb because of his father and not the cold.
His father’s death changed the family forever. Daniel blocked out the memory of his
father in the winter because of the pain. He only ever imagined his childhood in the spring; He
happily smiled at Daniel’s mother as they chased each other through the orchard. His father’s
caramel eyes bright in the sunlight, and Daniel’s grin, spread across his face.
Daniel’s mother shouted, but he didn’t understand her. She flailed her arms in circular
motions and shook a chair from the table.
“The phone!” said Mary. “Who is calling? It better not be another damn bill collector.”
33
Daniel woke from his memories, and answered the call.
“Listen to me,” said Daniel. “If this is another person wanting money, we don’t have any!
Go find someone to pay what you overcharge everyone else for. If I knew who you were
I’d-.”
“Is this Mr. Hufftin?” said Dr. Reynolds. “I have some important test results for you that
I am sure I didn’t overcharge you for.”
“Dr. Reynolds! Sorry about that,” said Daniel. “I thought you were someone else.”
Mary looked intently at Daniel’s face.
“Yes. Okay,” said Daniel. “Yes, I understand. I will call you soon for a follow up.
Thanks again, Dr. Reynolds.”
“What do you understand?” said Mary. “Why didn’t you put it on speakerphone?”
Daniel peered at his mother’s face, and his smile slowly crept into his signature grin.
“Mom,” said Daniel. “I’m cancer free. I’m in remission, but for now its gone. The chemo
worked.”
Mary placed her hands against Daniel’s face and smiled as she took off his hat, and
patted his bald head.
“Did I ever tell you how much you look like your father?” said Mary. “He would be so
proud.”
Outside the house, the ground flourished with thick green grass. Vibrant tulips
surrounded the cabin’s foundation and a sweet wind full of floral perfume carried happier
memories through the branches of the apple orchard. Winter always returned, but in that
moment, spring prevailed.

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Events in Berks County this December

  • 1. 1 Tara Gouldey Major: Professional Writing Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Semester: Fall 2015 Graduating: Fall 2015
  • 2. 2 Statement of Purpose There is something about writing that I just cannot sweat out. No matter what I put down, whether it is assigned to me to write or I am inspired, it never leaves me. Like a birthmark, I look to myself for the ideas to pour out from me. At the keyboard, my hands create the shapes of the words I can visualize but not form in my mind. This portfolio showcases my best work of both my internship and professional writing, during my college career at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania. Through providing examples of my work, you are able to see the various styles with which I choose to write. I am thankful that I was exposed to many types of writing, and look forward to growing further in the future and developing the craft. You may notice that there are both similarities and differences between my internship work and my professional writing, and that is because my professional writing is more creative fiction or opinion pieces, while my internship work is strictly creative magazine writing. Through my internship, I realized how much I loved having the ability to blend the two styles. I was incredibly thankful for the opportunity for the internship at Berks County Living Magazine because of how much it allowed me to learn about both writing and myself at the same time.
  • 3. 3 Table of Contents Chapter Page Statement of Purpose………………………………………………………………….2 Table of Contents……………………………………………………………………..3 Resume………………………………………………………………………………..4 Internship work……………………………………………………………………….6-17 Bowman’s Stove and Patio Berks Bits article for December 2015 Issue…….6-7 December 2015 “This Month” for December 2015 Issue……………………8-15 That’s What She Said Berks Bits article for December 2015 Issue………….16-17 Professional Writing work…………………………………………………………...18-33 Out of the shadows, into the dumpsters……………………………………...18-22 Waiting out in the cold……………………………………………………… 23-26 The Two Seasons……………………………………………………………..27-33
  • 4. 4 Tara Gouldey Objective: Career to gain experience in writing and editing as staff writer. Education: B.A Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Kutztown, PA Major: English/Professional Writing December 2015 Reading Area Community College Reading, PA Major: Liberal Arts 52 credits Related Courses: Magazine Writing, Advanced Magazine Writing, Travel Writing, Copy and Line Editing, Creative Writing: Forms, Writing for the Workplace, Contemporary Issues, Journalism Work Experience: Berks County Living Magazine Reading, PA Intern August 2015-Present Writes web exclusives, and Berks Bits articles. Compiles events to create This Month section in magazine. Fact checks articles, and gathers information for listings and articles from contacts. Posts on Pinterest and develops Facebook captions. Mixx Boutique West Reading, PA Sales Associate March 2014 – May 2015 Aided in posting to social media and created a blog. Helped owner by selling items, stocking clothing, dressing mannequins, cleaning, and creating outfit options for customers. A.G. Artisan Designer Finishes West Reading, PA Assistant Painter May 2012- 2015 Assisted owner by painting multiple surfaces and helping to prepare worksites. Has experience in painting apartments and resident homes.
  • 5. 5 Babysitter West Reading, West Lawn, PA 2010-2013 Created a safe yet fun environment for children. Spent quality time, played interesting activities, and prepared snacks. Skills/Qualifications:  Creative, hardworking, friendly, optimistic, inspired  Knowledge of Word, PowerPoint, InDesign Honors/Awards:  Reading Area Community College Dean’s list Summer 2011  Published in Shoofly Literary Magazine Spring 2014  Opinions Staff Writer at The Keystone Spring 2014  DIY blog 2014 - Present (http://thebestdiys.tumblr.com/). Interests:  Writing  Reading Fiction  Enjoying music  Watching foreign films and television shows  DIY projects References: Available upon request.
  • 6. 6 For this Bowman’s Stove and Patio article for the December 2015 issue of Berks County Living Magazine, my objective was to interest our readers in hearths and fireplaces during the winter. I had to describe what Bowman’s has to offer, but make it interesting so it enticed the reader to read the entire Berks Bits article and possibly be tempted to contact the business. My absolute favorite aspect of writing is the descriptions and creating mental imagery, so I loved writing the beginning of this article. The target audience for the article was homeowners who would possibly be making a winter purchase for their home. I thoroughly enjoyed speaking to the contact through email. The exchange of information was really easy. In order to complete the article, I imagined that I was a homeowner. What would I want to read that would make me want to heat my home differently this year? This is how I approached writing the article. It helped me to look from the reader’s perspective rather than my own. This was the first article I wrote for Berks County Living during the semester, and I applied this tactic as I moved on in the semester and wrote more articles.
  • 7. 7 Tara Gouldey Bowman’s Stove and Patio Berks Bits article Nothing is better than listening to a fire crackle as the flames consume and crush the wooden logs within under the pressure. You can experience this comforting sound within your own home this winter thanks to the products at Bowman’s Stove & Patio, Ephrata. Dustin Bowman states, “A new stove or fireplace adds warmth and beauty to your home and can save you a lot of money on your heating bill.” They also add radiant heat that central heating systems cannot supply. For more information, call 717-733-4973 or go to www.bowmansstove.com.
  • 8. 8 For the December “This Month” for Berks County Living Magazine, my objective was to scour the internet and find a fun variety of events in Berks County for the month. The events are divided into sections based on what they are or what they include. This meant that I searched many different types of websites to find events for each section. The audience that the “This Month” is directed to is all the readers of Berks County Living Magazine. Since every reader has a different general set of interests, it is important to cast a wide net with the “This Month” listings in order to find something that every reader would be interested in. I enjoyed finding the information for these listings every month because it really opened up my eyes to how many great activities we have in our area, and once again I found myself writing my assignment as the readers, instead of the writer. Also, it taught me how to get into a rigid format with my writing, and as I learned the format and process to gathering the information, I became faster with my work which is something I always need to improve on.
  • 9. 9 December This Month Compiled by Tara Gouldey Art Exhibits & Galleries Through Jan. 3 GERBERICH’S GADGETRY : ART THAT MOVES North Museum of Nature and Science, Lancaster. Experience Steve Gerberich’s sculptures involving objects like plastic parts, old furniture and machine pieces that prove that household items can be used for more than just their purpose. This exhibit catches everyone’s interest with its stunning visuals and connection to Math, Art and Science. For info call 717.291.3941 or visit northmuseum.org. Through Jan. 10 CURIOUS GEORGE TM: LET’S GET CURIOUS! Reading Public Museum, Reading. Monkey around with Curious George as your family helps him with obstacles! Children will be able to experience locations they know from the show, including his apartment, the produce stand, and a construction site, as well as participate in hands on projects that involve Math, Science, Engineering and technology. For more info call 610.371.5850 or visit readingpublicmuseum.org. Through Jan. 17 FAT DOGS AND COUGHING HORSES. Reading Public Museum, Reading. Learn about the importance of a healthy lifestyle and good eating habits with friends Hot Dog and Holly Horse! The duo discusses the similarities of asthma and diabetes in both animals and humans and the exhibit is completed by the energetic Hot Dog’s Fitness Challenge! Get ready for learning and fun for the entire family! For info call 610.371.5850 or visit readingpublicmuseum.org. Dec. 13 GOGGLEWORKS 11-4pm, GoggleWorks Center for the Arts, Reading. Visit the GoggleWorks to learn about the inner workings of the artist community and enjoy live music, walk-in workshops, demonstrations and make-and-take projects. For more info call 610.374.4600 or visit goggleworks.org. Benefits
  • 10. 10 Dec.14 BERKS WOMEN IN CRISIS’ CELEBRATION OF PEACE 6-9pm, Yashek Social Hall-Reform Congregation Oheb Sholom, Wyomissing. Join Berks Women in Crisis in support as they present their Voices of Change awards to State Senator Judith Schwank, Chief William Heim and the Reading Police Department. Tickets: $75. For more info call 610.370.7604 or visit berkswomenincrisis.org. Classical Music Dec.13 READING SYMPHONY POPS ORCHESTRA - A POPS HOLIDAY WITH SPECIAL GUEST ELLIOTT YAMIN 4-6pm, Miller Center for the Arts, Reading. Get into the Holiday spirit with this annual concert featuring Elliott Yamin! After making third place on American Idol in its fifth season, Yamin is partnered with the Pops to perform some songs from his Holiday collections. Tickets: $40, are available at the Miller Center Box Office. For more info call 610.607.6205 or visit racc.edu/MillerCenter. Dec. 19 READING SYMPHONY YOUTH ORCHESTRAS - HOLIDAY EXTRAVAGANZA 3-5pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. The entire family will enjoy singing along, visiting the petting zoo, and seeing a jolly man in red if the audience is lucky! Tickets: $15, are available through the VF Outlet Box Office, or ticketmaster.com. For more info or to charge by phone call 800.745.3000. Dec. 31 READING SYMPHONY POPS ORCHESTRA CONCERT- NEW YEARS EVE SIMON & GARFUNKEL RETROSPECTIVE 7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. Have a soulful New Years Eve night out on the town with this concert featuring A.J. Swearingen and Jonathan Beedle. After performing for over a decade, they will continue to ensnare their audience with voices that mimic a classic duo. Tickets: $20-75, are available through the VF Outlet Box Office, or ticketmaster.com. For more info or to charge by phone call 800.745.3000. Holiday Events Weekends in December & Dec. 21-23 SANTA TRAIN Times vary, Colebrookdale Railroad, Boyertown.
  • 11. 11 Santa trades in his sleigh for vintage vehicles, covered with thousands of breathtaking lights. Passengers join carolers in the singing holiday favorites. Enjoy hot chocolate and cookies that are available for sale. Children are encouraged to deliver their Christmas letter to Santa. Prices vary. For more info visit colebrookdalerailroad.com. Dec. 4-27 HOLIDAY LIGHTS AT GRING’S MILL 6-9pm, Wednesday through Sunday, Gring’s Mill Recreation Area, Wyomissing. Enjoy Santa Claus as a nightly guest while walking through fantastic holiday light displays until Dec. 23. Live music and a model train display will add to the wintery atmosphere. $5 for parking. For more info call 610.374.8839 or visit countyofberks.com/parks. Dec. 1 WEST READING’S HOLIDAY GLOW CELEBRATION 8-5pm every day, Penn Avenue, West Reading. Kick off your holiday festivities with this celebration which includes the 85th annual Tree Lighting on Dec. 4 and enjoy horse-drawn carriage rides all month along with Ladies and Men’s special shopping nights, Mrs. Claus competition and the Run Santa Run 5K. For more info visit lovewestreading.org. Dec. 3 HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR 7:30-4pm, Reading Hospital, West Reading. The Reading Hospital Annual Craft Fair is free and open to the public. All proceeds assist programs funded by The Friends of Reading Hospital. For more info visit readinghealth.org/holidayhappening. Dec. 5 IRON PLANTATION CHRISTMAS 10-4pm, Hopewell Furnace, Elverson. Visit to experience the beauty of Christmas past as volunteers sing songs from the 19th century as the park celebrates “Christmas at the furnace”. Beware the Belsnickel! Free. For more info call 610.582.8773. CHRISTMAS ON THE FARM 10-4pm, PA German Cultural Heritage Center, Kutztown. Come visit the Pennsylvania German Cultural Heritage Center at Kutztown University to enjoy a “Pennsylvania Dutch Christmas on the Farm”. Get in the spirit by children’s activities, vendors, wagon rides, music, folk life demonstrations, purchasing Christmas trees and much more! For more info call 610.683.1589. WINTER OPEN HOUSE 10-4pm, Rodale Institute, Kutztown. Browse through organically-grown Christmas trees, and wreaths while enjoying holiday fun at the Rodale Institute! Delight in local craft vendors, organic foods, and activities for children
  • 12. 12 including complimentary pictures with Santa on his vintage sleigh! No admission fee. For more info visit rodaleinstitute.org. KUTZTOWN CHRISTMAS ON MAIN 12-6pm, Main Street, Downtown Kutztown. Celebrate the holidays in Kutztown and revel in this year’s theme of “I’ll Be Home for Christmas.” The shops will be joined by the man in red, street vendors, musicians, children’s art, train rides, fire pits, annual tree lighting and more! Free. For more info call 484.646.9069 or visit keepinitkutztown.com. Dec 5 & 6 AMAHL AND THE NIGHT VISITORS Dec. 5, 7:30 pm; Dec. 6, 2:30pm, Albright College Memorial Chapel, Reading. Berks Opera Company presents a concert version of this classic holiday opera, with the help of the Albright Angels and Mane Men. Tickets: $5 students, $10 for public. For more info visit albright.edu/centerforthearts. Dec. 6 A HOMESTEAD CHRISTMAS 12-4pm, Daniel Boone Homestead, Birdsboro. Celebrate the holidays with the Homestead and learn the history of Christmas. The holiday traditions of the English and Pennsylvania Germans is not something to miss! For more info visit danielboonehomestead.org. DO YOU WANT TO BUILD A SNOWMAN? 1-4pm, Nolde Forest Environmental Education Center, Reading. The whole family will enjoy learning together about snowflakes, animals in winter, how to build a snowman that feeds the birds, ice cutting history, and the difference between a white tailed deer and reindeer at winter themed stations. Wear your favorite FROZEN shirt or costume for fun! Free. There are activities indoors and outdoors. For more info call 610.796.3699 or visit stateparks.com. A PETER WHITE CHRISTMAS FEATURING MINDI ABAIR AND RICK BRAUN 3 pm & 7pm, Miller Center for the Arts, Reading. Peter White’s Christmas show is a dose of holiday fun! Enjoy both their greatest hits and new pieces. Peter White and friends start the holidays off right! Tickets: $42. For more info visit racc.edu/millercenter. Dec. 12 CANDLELIGHT OPEN HOUSE 1-6pm, Beidler House, Gibralter. Come celebrate in the fashion of German colonials of early Berks County in this holiday open house. This includes festive decorations, music, dancing, and seasonal treats to enjoy. Holiday reception will follow until 6pm. For more info visit countyofberks.com/parks. Dec. 13
  • 13. 13 CHRISTMAS HOUSE TOUR & CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH Brunch: 10:30-1:30pm; Tour: 11-5pm, Centre Park Historic District, Reading. Enjoy a champagne brunch at the Stirling Guest Hotel and tour several Centre Park Historic District properties decorated for the holidays. Make sure to notice the architectural designs and craftsmanship of the Victorian and early 20th century buildings. Park at FirstEnergy Stadium and ride the free shuttle. Brunch only: $35; Tour only: $18; Combo: $48. For more info visit centrepark.org. Dec. 19 WINTER SOLSTICE WITH KING WINTER 5:30pm, Angora Fruit Farm Park, Reading. Come spend the longest night of the year around a blazing bonfire, then stroll the candlelit path to the main event at at cottage in the woods . Listen to a storyteller around the fire, and meet King Winter. Ideal for families with kids ages 3-12. Make sure to bring a flashlight! To register and for more info call 484.509.2667. DEC. 27-31 HOLIDAY CAMP Check-in: Dec. 27, 4-6pm; Check-out: Dec. 31, 4-6pm, South Mountain YMCA Camp, Wernersville. Come back to check out all the fun things to do in the winter for ages 6-15! Stay in heated cabins and have delicious meals in Bynden Wood Lodge. Sledding, snow fort building, snow creatures, along with experiments, exploration, and other goodies are planned for this retreat. Cost: $180. For more info contact Amanda at 610.670.2267 or agriffith@smymca.org. Concerts & Nightlife Dec. 3 LEWIS BLACK 7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. Grammy Award-winning stand-up comedian, actor and author Lewis Black is coming to Reading! Black performs over 200 nights a year to sell out audiences throughout Europe, New Zealand, Canada and United States. Tickets: $49.75, 59.75. For more info visit santander- arena.com. STRAIGHT NO CHASER 7:30pm, Santander Arena, Reading. Atlantic Records recording group Straight No Chaser has announced the release of their much- anticipated new album in October as well as details of a major North American tour. Tickets: $29.50-91. For more info visit santander-arena.com. Dec. 5 JOHN PRINE 8pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading.
  • 14. 14 Long considered a “songwriter’s songwriter,” JOHN PRINE is an exceptional talent. The list of songwriters who have recorded his songs include Johnny Cash, Bonnie Raitt, the Everly Brothers, John Denver, Kris Kristofferson, Carly Simon, Ben Harper, Joan Baez, and many others. Prine holds two Grammys and has been honored by the Library of Congress and US Poet Laureate. Tickets: $46.50-91.50. For more info visit santander-arena.com. Dec. 10 JAZZ UNDER THE STARS 5:30pm, Neag Planetarium at Reading Public Museum, Reading. The group Cartoon Christmas Trio will perform at Neag Planetarium’s monthly jazz performance. VIVÁ Bistro & Tapas Lounge will offer refreshments for purchase. Tickets: $20. For more info call 610.371.5850 or visit readingpublicmuseum.org. Dec. 11 MANNHEIM STEAMROLLER 7:30pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. The Mannheim Steamroller tour, now in its 30th year, has Grammy Award® winner Chip Davis to direct and co-produce the performances with MagicSpace Entertainment. The shows will feature the favorite Christmas music of Mannheim Steamroller along with state-of-the-art multimedia effects. Tickets: $46.75-69.75. For more info visit santander-arena.com. Dec. 12 SINATRA FOREVER 7pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. Rick Michel will be joined by a 14 piece orchestra to celebrate on Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday. This concert pays homage to possibly one of the greatest singers of all time. This is not an impersonation show, but rather a tribute. Tickets: $25-45. For more info visit santander- arena.com. Sports Dec. 18 & 19 READING ROYALS 7pm, Santander Arena, Reading. Come Cheer on your home hockey team! For more info and tickets visit royalshockey.com. Theatre & Dance Dec. 4-13 9 TO 5 Genesius Theatre, Reading. Based on the 20th Century Fox motion picture, three female co-workers concoct a plan to get even with the man they despise to call their boss. Directed by Christopher Sperat. Tickets: $17.50-28.50. For more info visit genesiusdifference.org. Dec. 4
  • 15. 15 PEPPA PIG’S BIG SPLASH 6pm, Santander Performing Arts Center, Reading. Don’t miss this family event starring Peppa Pig, character of Entertainment One’s (eOne) top- rated TV series on Nick Jr. Peppa is hitting the road for her first-ever U.S. theatrical tour, Peppa Pig’s Big Splash. Tickets: $29.50-46.50. For more info visit santander-arena.com. Dec. 19 & 20 NUTCRACKER 2015 PRESENTED BY BERKS BALLET THEATRE Dec. 19, 2 & 7pm, Dec. 20, 2pm, Scottish Rite Cathedral, West Reading. Enjoy the holiday classic, The Nutcracker. Fun for all ages; watch Clara as she takes a magical journey as she sleeps. For more info and pricing, call 610.373.7577 or visit berksballettheatre.com. What Else Dec. 11 PARENTS' NIGHT OUT, KIDS AT CAMP 6-9pm, Bynden Wood Lodge, Wernersville. Involve your children ages 6-12 in fun camp activities from 6-9pm! Enjoy some down time or a night on the town as your children have a blast with classic camp crafts and games! This program is $10 per child, per evening. Contact Amanda for information and registration at 610- 670-2267 or smymca.org Dec.18 KIDS' NIGHT OUT: WINTER MAGIC 6:30-10pm, Reading Public Museum, Reading. Let your children age 6-12 explore The Museum after dark! They’ll have a yummy pizza dinner, and an evening snack. The evening starts with a planetarium show where they’ll learn about the winter skies, and will follow with experimentation with ice paintings, snowflake art and more! Registration required by Dec.11. Tickets for Members: $20 for the first child, 15 for each sibling; Tickets for Non-Members: $30 for the first child, 25 for each sibling. All activities are included. For more info visit readingpublicmuseum.org. Dec. 31 NEW YEAR’S EVE LOCK-IN Drop-off: 5-6pm on Dec. 31; Pick-up: 12pm on Jan. 1, South Mountain YMCA, Wernersville. Have a night out as your children have the time of their lives! This includes Night Zip-Lining, Games, Prizes, and of course a Ball Drop, SMYMCA style. Parents can enjoy a night out with friends and partners while YMCA gives their children a memory they’ll never forget. Cost: $45. For more info call Amanda at 610.670.2267 or visit smymca.org.
  • 16. 16 The objective of this Berks Bits article for Berks County Living Magazine for the December 2015 issue was to highlight a talk show on BCTV. I was excited to get this assignment because the show itself is creative and unique all on its own. I knew that I would enjoy writing about the show. I believe that the audience for this article would be anyone that is looking for funny, cool entertainment but does not normally watch BCTV or is unaware of its existence. Also, the majority of viewers would probably be women, but I could see men watching it as well. This is why I was so focused on writing the article so that it would be exciting to many people and pique their interest. Again, I really loved that I could be creative and bring in the article visually, rather than just stating information. This was the second article that I wrote for the magazine, and I liked interacting with the contact. I had a better time asking questions this time because I learned from the last article.
  • 17. 17 Tara Gouldey That’s What She Said Berks Bits article Have a case of the Mondays? Grab your favorite wine and snacks and settle in to watch the vivacious That’s What She Said on BCTV! TWSS is a creative and fun talk show in its 5th year that is known as Berks County’s call in version of The View! It is shown and streamed live every 4th Monday of each month from 9:00 pm. to 10 pm. on BCTV and www.bctv.org. The cast which consists of Jane Street (a.k.a Kirk Lawrence-Howard), Martha Richardson, Sheila Harrington, and Nicole Weaver discusses a variety of topics, and even take field trips! Martha Richardson said, “We always have something with alcohol to drink because we aren’t on family time!” Tune in to experience the “mixture of conversation, issues and silly things” that occur each episode! For more information, go to www.thatswhatshesaidonline.com.
  • 18. 18 This profile long article was written for my Magazine Writing class that I took at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania for my Professional Writing major. Our objective as students was to find someone that we found interesting, then interviews them, and expose the things about themselves that they wouldn’t normally share. I made a few revisions after I first wrote about Melissa, more so working to create more of a flow. I really enjoyed interviewing Melissa, as she was a no bones, out in the open type of person who was in no way ashamed of her hobby. What I did not think I would discover about her as a character is that she would downplay things about herself that she wasn’t used to be admired for. I loved looking into her body language while I was interviewing her, rather than what she was actually telling me. I learned a lot from this assignment. This is one of the reasons that I started looking into magazine writing as a vein to plunge into for my career. I found it so inspiring to be able to look into someone’s life as if they were a character of my own, and mold how they are portrayed.
  • 19. 19 Tara Gouldey Profile Long Article March 14, 2014 Out of the shadows, into the dumpsters Amongst the dim lit living room, Melissa Visconti sits uncomfortably on the chocolate brown suede couch. Dark wash jeans and a black velvet zip up hoodie cloak her form and secede into the shadows. Blonde tresses frame her petite face and she tightly smiles as if waiting for noises to explode from the basement in order to relieve the tension. Moments before, Melissa’s family consisting of her boyfriend Nate, son Landon, and honorary step-son Dylan, scurried the perimeter of the now still room before retreating downstairs to build catapults. The two cats, Booger and Monkey look on with steel cut gazes of distrust and affection while Tootsie Roll, the dog, whines from her cage. Melissa looks to the TV and mentions about turning off Sanford and Son so its not a distraction. She clasps her hands together multiple times and fidgets until the interview begins. Despite having a cleaning position at a local, big – time management apartment complex, Melissa has the same issues that many other mothers with young children do. A substantial wooden coffee table is covered with Landon’s toy cars and pencil-shaped construction paper cutouts earned from good behavior. The boy’s fragile trophies reflect Melissa’s true passion for dumpster diving and flea markets. Out of something so simple can profit grow. Messing around with found computer parts, thrown-away jewelry and good as new soap dishes is her thing. She leans forward and smiles again. “It started with when I was a little girl. I lived with my grandparents and they were fairly poor, you know. My grandfather would drive around in his pickup truck and bring home scrap metal from any cars that were going to be junked,” she said.
  • 20. 20 “Back then all cars were made out of steel, so it was like, you know, it was a lot of money.” Melissa’s smile stretches as she laughs again, seemingly more comfortable than a few minutes before. “I grew up seeing that, and my grandfather would come home with a trash bag full of copper or aluminum or steel and I’d be amazed from the fact that, like, he could make money from this. This was all free stuff he’d pull out from the trash and the cars.” After growing up in that environment, Melissa gained a further interest in appreciating the potential of used items after she started to live with her mother. “My mom started taking me around the neighborhoods on the trash days, and we would bring home lawnmowers, air hockey machines, or all kinds of neat, little goodies like Oriental rugs that were still good. I kind of got fascinated by that.” She places her hands together again, a smile interweaving between her words as she nods to herself in slow motion. The memory crosses over her eyes and her mouth becomes a firm line as she retraces the steps which brought her to the person she is today. Dumpster diving in her childhood led to her adoration of the activity. Not only could she have fun, but she could also make a fantastic profit. “Taking the stuff out of the trash and pawning it,” she states, “It’s not just a junk to jazz thing. It’s not just a trinket or a knickknack that you have. You could just turn it into cash.” She loved that she could acquire something that wasn’t broken that belonged to someone richer than she was. In the present, she is allowed to dive at her work. . “Yeah, cleaning can suck sometimes.” she said, “You get tired and it can be repetitive because your always cleaning an apartment but then you find those finds there because the tenants are so rich. It keeps you going because you know there’s going to be something in the trash downstairs.” Finding money, jewelry, and recently a fur coat would coax anyone into trying this hobby.
  • 21. 21 She gained a curiosity about used items from yard sales and flea markets and what she could find there. “It started when I lived with my grandma. She would take me out yard sailing every Saturday morning, even in the summer.” Another deep chuckle escaped her, showing her love of this memory. “Being a kid, you wanted to sleep in. She’d come in my bedroom at five thirty, six o’ clock. She’d say, “Okay, Honey, time to get up. Early bird catches the worm.” and she’d drag me out of bed.” Both of her grandparents fully influenced her to be interested in finding items cheaply and making a return. She didn’t enjoy it at the time, and would have rather played with Barbies at home but recognizes now that she is emotionally tied to her hobby. Melissa jokes that now that she’s older, she sees the reason why they brought along a little kid to go through other people’s discarded items. “I learned the value of it over the years,” she said, “It is actually cool. It follows the family history. It’s in my blood; I have to do it. I have to. I can’t control myself.” Her voice is a mix of caramel and bass as she heartily laughs at her lack of self- control. Melissa leaves the couch and goes toward the radiator. Within the room, she seems small enough to fit like a china doll on a shelf. Her rented home dates back to the 1920s, and like the items she collects, it has an acute time limit within her grasp and evokes a sense of charm and antiquity. She gestures to a dark, slightly rusted lantern that is now hanging from her fingertips and silently gauges my reaction. “This thing. This is one of my favorite ultimate things. This is actually off of a ship,” she said, “It still has all the glass intact. Some of its kind of messed up but this is a good find. You can see the story behind it, because its got the dents, and the imperfections. This piece has got history and someone just threw it out. It was just sitting there out in the trash.”
  • 22. 22 Melissa Visconti sees the value in things where others cannot. In the dim light, she smiles and it seems to brighten the whole room. Then, she pushes her nose up in the air with her finger, mimicking a snooty look. “That’s why I get the free stuff because these people have their noses stuck to the ceiling! They throw out working machinery, too. A paper shredder. There’s nothing wrong with it. It’s not even jammed up and they throw it out.”
  • 23. 23 For this reported long article, the objective for the students in my Magazine Writing class was to find something on campus that they wanted to discuss and have a hand in changing, but had to find information and quotes to back it up. I remembered trying to go on a university free mall trip, only to have the shuttle bus never show up after I had waited for over a half hour past the time it should have been there. I knew that this angered me enough to want to write about it. This article was more difficult to write for me, as I had to find others that had either had issues with the mall shuttle like I had, or at least heard of it. After searching, I came across a woman who was also angered, and a few others who had never tried going on the trip in the first place. They agreed that they would be upset over this happening as well. When I revised, my professor said to try to get more quotes so I searched for people who had the same feelings as the mall shuttle and found others.
  • 24. 24 Tara Gouldey Reported Long Article April 13, 2014 Waiting out in the cold At the McFarland Student Union Building at Kutztown University, dim twilight poured across the sky in a gentle flush. Freezing temperatures caused the numb faces and raw hands of many students to reflect the hue of the sky. In two uneven lines, huddled bodies convulsed against each other as each gust of wind slammed torrentially down upon them. Some laughed bitterly about how they could not feel their feet, while others retreated from the cold to sit inside near a saving grace in the form of a heat lamp. One young woman offered a friend her gloves, and gestured toward the diminishing line of students, which 40 minutes before had garnered a sense of excitement. The bus for the advertised Wednesday Night Mall Trip was late. The promoted Bieber bus trip for the Lehigh Valley Mall on Wednesday, March 5, 2014 was scheduled to depart from the McFarland Student Union building promptly at 6:00p.m. The bus would then stop at various other locations on campus including Dixon and Golden Bear Village South before transporting students to the mall. At 9:00p.m., the bus would retrieve the students and transfer them safety back to campus. The school’s plan sounded appealing and easy enough for students, except that not only was the bus late, but it also never showed up to the MSU that night. Mai Nguyen, a senior at KU, discussed the poor experience three weeks later. “It was pretty cold. It was below freezing. I checked the temperature before I left my apartment. We walked over there 10 to 15 minutes early just to make sure we’d have seats. We waited 40
  • 25. 25 minutes after 6 p.m. and the bus didn’t show up at all.” Uncomfortable with her voice being recorded for the interview, Mai blankly started out at the various food vendors in South Dining Hall and placed strands of jet black hair behind her ears. “There were a lot of people waiting outside, too. I felt numb.” Coincidentally, this was not the first time that the Bieber bus left students hanging after the promise of the scheduled Wednesday night mall trip by KU. “It was last semester when we went to the Berkshire Mall. I went there (MSU) with my roommate to catch the bus,” said Nguyen, “When we got there, the bus wasn’t there. We waited 40 minutes. There was a lot of people there, also. It was cold. I think it was also below freezing outside, and you shouldn’t be outside when its - for that long.” Mai gave a determined look and shook her head, crossing her arms against her. “I would say I wouldn’t want to (go on a Wednesday night trip again) because I’ve had other bad experiences with the bus trips to the mall.” The lack of transportation for the Wednesday night bus trips also leads some students to make questionable decisions that they normally wouldn’t have to if the bus was there to pick them up. “It was like hitchhiking. There were other people that were also waiting for the bus and we lost faith in the bus coming. They said, “Okay, let’s just go in my own car if you guys want to come.” So we ended up going to the mall with them and then they also gave us a ride back.” Many students have not heard enough about the Wednesday night trips to even try attending them. It would be a loss of a potentially fun experience if these issues didn’t occur with the bus, but in turn it saves those same students from wasting precious time in their schedules because they don’t attempt to to ride the bus which doesn’t show up. Lindsey S. Huh, a sophomore at KU, stated, “I never heard of the Wednesday night busses. I never see posters
  • 26. 26 going around. If I would hear stuff like that, I would have gone on the trips but again, I just never heard of it. Plus, I never see any stops or anything. I don’t see a schedule. Another thing is, if they are going to not bother showing up, why even have them at all?” Lindsey moved her hands in vast motions, emphasizing her point. Stefiny Thomas, sophomore, added in a silly voice, “I’ve never heard of them either!” Brianna Bennett, a sophomore, interjected her thought between Stefiny’s words with a half grin, “I knew they were there.” Bennett then made a valid point against KU for not taking the responsibility for the lack of the busses not being present when the trip is advertised on the University’s website. “They say that these things are offered, like I’ve seen the advertisements on the screens in the SUB, but if they’re not there, then that’s just-.” Thomas interrupts, saying, “Posters aren’t even there. You know what I mean? Posters aren’t up, readily available for the people to look at.” Kutztown University can turn the Wednesday night bus trips into a fun experience that more students pay attention to by making sure that the vehicle transportation is available at the scheduled time. Nguyen believes that KU can fix the problem. “They should communicate with the bus company better so we know whether they are going to show up or not because it’s also a waste of time to be waiting. We could be doing something else.”
  • 27. 27 For this Fiction piece I wrote for my Creative Writing class my first semester, I wanted to relate back to pain that I have witnessed in my life through others, but prove that sometimes there is light on the other side that is waiting for you. When I initially started writing this, I channeled the dead of my Grandmother to cancer, and the lack of secure funds growing up. After my first draft, I realized that I wasn’t being honest enough with myself. Pain is pain. It’s not easy, and it’s not pretty. I was glazing over emotions I had felt in order to make what I thought would be a “nicer” story. My second draft, I ripped it apart and tore out the sugar coated scenes. I wanted the father to have had a troubled past with addiction. I wanted his son to have seen him for who he really was, and not who he perceived him to be. It was my third draft that I was pretty happy about, and decided to submit to Shoofly, the literary magazine at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania. It was accepted, and I was thrilled.
  • 28. 28 Tara Gouldey Spring 2014 The Two Seasons Spring. In Spring, the trees jumped to life and shook from their brown, tough bark the cold shoulders of Winter. The two seasons did not get along; they were in constant battle over ideals of how the world should be. Winter wanted to silence nature, and create its own frozen image on the earth’s landscape. Each year, Low temperatures, hail, sharp winds and snow would shake the little house on the tree orchard and threatened to collapse it, entirely. Spring would catch winter by surprise in April and knock the weather to the softened ground. The snow melted into mossy slush, and the roots of the trees and stems of tulips flooded over winter and suffocated the chill. Gone for another year, spring would rejoice in its victory and make plans for winter’s next inevitable attack. A small home was nestled on an orchard in Pennsylvania. It was protected by the branches which blocked the sun from reaching down upon the shingles and through the windowpanes. Shadows like tentacles puckered themselves against the paint and muddled the blue siding into a muted gray. The home was blanketed in mid- April air. The sweet scent of ruby tinted apples bloomed on the gentle gusts of wind and permeated through the crevices in the cedar walls. Inside, a family held their breaths as they waited for the final answer. Daniel Hufftin sat in the kitchen with his mother, Mary, and tightly wrung his work shirt in his hands. She snaked her fingers through her gray locks and tugged gently as she paced in a loop from the wooden table, to the stove, to her chair in the corner. Mary stared at the Nokia cell phone on the table, and brushed her foot against the floorboards. “Mom, don’t worry about this. It will all work out. Why don’t you start lunch while we
  • 29. 29 wait?” said Daniel. “Really, what I could use right now is your famous beef stew.” He smiled a wide grin that he hoped would raise her spirit. Daniel fixed the loose ball cap on his head, and adjusted it so it was straight. “How can I not worry,” said Mary. “You are all I have left. With your father gone-oh, and all that you do with the orchard! I can’t lose my baby. I just can’t.” “I’m hardly a baby anymore,” said Daniel. “I’m 27. We’ll just have to wait for the call. There’s not much sense in worrying about the outcome until then.” Mary walked over to the wooden chair where Daniel sat, and placed her soft palms on his face. “You look so much like your father,” said Mary. “He would be proud.” Her eyes waivered as she dropped her arms and turned away from him. To Daniel, her hands felt like the buttery soft leather of his father’s bomber jacket and he remembered from his childhood that the family ran together under the apple trees. His father laughed with them, and would jump out from behind the thin trunks that barely concealed his body. Daniel would grin at his mother and giggle in delight as his father caught Mary by the waist. In mock terror, she would shriek to Daniel to run away. He picked up his speed and bolted through the thick branches, out into the brilliant sunshine. That was his Spring. “Daniel,” said Mary. “The phone! The phone is ringing! Who is it?” Daniel shook himself out of the memory. He looked at the screen and saw the words, Unknown Caller. He figured it would be a bill collector. The apple orchard wasn’t making the profits it once had. When his dad died, everything went downhill. One check came in each month instead of two, and Daniel had to move back home from Cincinnati to be with his mother. Now when he felt he had everything settled in his life, a new problem erupted in his face. “It’s not Dr. Reynolds,” said Daniel. “It’s just another bill collector.” “Oh,” said Mary. “I should start lunch.”
  • 30. 30 Mary chewed on the fingernails of her left hand as she paced another loop around the kitchen. She pulled them out of her mouth to admire her bare fingers, then wiped her eyes and grabbed a package of beef from the fridge. A cool drift coasted over Daniel and raised goose bumps on his neck. The drop in temperature slapped at his senses and made him think of wintertime. Daniel recalled the day he found out his father died and he gripped his work shirt even tighter against his fists. It didn’t take a call from Dr. Reynolds to know that his dad was gone. His memory of that day was as sharp as his father’s tongue. It formed words that as a child he couldn’t understand. Later, he realized the words were strings of angry sentences, spewed venom laid across the cabin. It was December 22nd , and Daniel was 15 years old. He raced through the front door to the kitchen, and admired his mother near the delicious foods placed on the table. Each meal was valuable to Daniel because it brought his family together. His mother’s apple pie and custard wafted sensually towards him and increased his eagerness to take a bite. “Don’t you dare,” said Mary. “You need to wait for your father.” “Can’t I just have one piece?” said Daniel. “Just one!” “Go wake him up,” said Mary. “We’ll have supper, and afterwards you can have some!” Daniel shot a defeated glance towards Mary and walked out of the kitchen towards his parents’ bedroom. He mumbled to himself the importance of one missing piece of apple pie. His mother always made him wait for his father to eat. It was a constant fight in the house. Daniel was just as much of a man as his father was. He was tall with strong arms that could lift two barrels of apples at once. During the winter, Daniel would go out into the snow and gather fire logs from the shed to burn. His father gave him the chore when he was 9, and told him it would make him a better man. Laid next to the wood, his gloves smelled of charcoal and cider. He always lifted them to his face and breathed in the warmth that lingered
  • 31. 31 before he returned to the house. He shook his head at the memory as he ran his hand down the faded floral hallway. In the dim light, the paper peeled off the walls in patches like the scales of a fish. He crushed the shredded pieces within his fists as he entered the bedroom. His father was always awake by dinner time; Daniel could not remember him ever missing a meal. Even after his parents finished screaming and throwing the ceramic plates and porcelain mugs, his father always emerged from their bedroom for supper with his lips pursed tightly against his face. Daniel would squeeze his mother’s waist tightly and press his tear stained cheeks against her stomach. He planned to be more of a man that his father ever though he could be. Daniel opened the door and was instantly shocked by the lack of fragrance. It didn’t smell like anything. His father wore the same pungent, heavy musk every day and it was absent from the room. Daniel walked deeper into the dark, towards the bed. “Mom,” said Daniel. “You need to come here.” A untold, sinking feeling crept up into his stomach and over his chest. The window was open on the other side of the room. The bed was dusted in snowflakes that escaped from the wind and a heavy blanket enclosed a large mass hidden inside the dim lighting. His mother had not heard him. He touched the mass protruding from the bed, and from his fingers an electric shiver traveled over his body. Daniel couldn’t bear to remove the quilt. “Mom! Mom!” said Daniel. “Come here!” She didn’t reply. Daniel fled from the bedroom and felt worse with each moment. His pace quickened as his stomach heaved. The realization dawned on him faster than he had wanted. Daniel pushed the thought of his father out of his mind so he could function. When he reached the kitchen, his mother sat at the table and started to hum a Christmas song. “Mom!” said Daniel. “What happened to Dad?” Mary watched her fingers shake beneath her stack of plates as they roughly clanged
  • 32. 32 against each other like echoing church bells. “What do you mean?” said Mary. “Isn’t he up yet? My God, that man never misses dinner. What’s taking him so long? Do you need me to get him up?” Her smile faded. “You, you haven’t seen him?” said Daniel. “At all?” Mary paused, and her eyes pooled in their fresh sorrow. “I just couldn’t touch him,” said Mary. “He came back late from work last night, and slept until late this morning. I thought he was exhausted, so I let him alone. Later on, I called his name while I was baking the pies. I thought he would come out like he always does, but he didn’t. I, I cannot picture his face in that way. I can’t.” Mary’s mouth quivered and her shoulders followed. All of the suppressed emotions flooded from him as he ran barefoot from the kitchen into the weather. He sprinted into the thick of the orchard, and let the snow pelt his face, arms and feet. He didn’t fathom the sting of the ice or frigid air against his body. On his back, the apple trees which were once so welcoming and warm seemed to point at him with their jagged, malformed branches. Daniel felt the pain that his father should have felt. He dug his fingertips into the winter and pulled at the frozen emerald blades beneath. After a few minutes, Daniel knew he was numb because of his father and not the cold. His father’s death changed the family forever. Daniel blocked out the memory of his father in the winter because of the pain. He only ever imagined his childhood in the spring; He happily smiled at Daniel’s mother as they chased each other through the orchard. His father’s caramel eyes bright in the sunlight, and Daniel’s grin, spread across his face. Daniel’s mother shouted, but he didn’t understand her. She flailed her arms in circular motions and shook a chair from the table. “The phone!” said Mary. “Who is calling? It better not be another damn bill collector.”
  • 33. 33 Daniel woke from his memories, and answered the call. “Listen to me,” said Daniel. “If this is another person wanting money, we don’t have any! Go find someone to pay what you overcharge everyone else for. If I knew who you were I’d-.” “Is this Mr. Hufftin?” said Dr. Reynolds. “I have some important test results for you that I am sure I didn’t overcharge you for.” “Dr. Reynolds! Sorry about that,” said Daniel. “I thought you were someone else.” Mary looked intently at Daniel’s face. “Yes. Okay,” said Daniel. “Yes, I understand. I will call you soon for a follow up. Thanks again, Dr. Reynolds.” “What do you understand?” said Mary. “Why didn’t you put it on speakerphone?” Daniel peered at his mother’s face, and his smile slowly crept into his signature grin. “Mom,” said Daniel. “I’m cancer free. I’m in remission, but for now its gone. The chemo worked.” Mary placed her hands against Daniel’s face and smiled as she took off his hat, and patted his bald head. “Did I ever tell you how much you look like your father?” said Mary. “He would be so proud.” Outside the house, the ground flourished with thick green grass. Vibrant tulips surrounded the cabin’s foundation and a sweet wind full of floral perfume carried happier memories through the branches of the apple orchard. Winter always returned, but in that moment, spring prevailed.