A Pretty Good Start |
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An hour earlier, Russ Harbaugh ¡¯06 feared that the decision to move the screening of his film to the larger, 300-seat Salter Hall would prove an embarrassment. Would that many Wabash students, faculty, and staff members really show up on a spring evening to watch a student film?
When the lights came up following that premiere showing of Beside Myself: Wabash Men and Co-education, the English major and Little Giant quarterback stepped to the stage before an applauding standing-room-only audience clogging the aisles and eager to ask their questions.
"The turnout exceeded any expectations I had," Harbaugh said. "I¡¯ll remember this night for a long, long time."
Inspired by weekend trips to the University of Evansville to visit the twin brother who left Wabash after his freshman year, Harbaugh found parallels between the College¡¯s flirtations with co-education and his own personal struggles attending a college for men. A balanced and illuminating documentary, his film never was the call for co-education that some on campus had feared, but a deeply personal work encouraging an open and honest discussion of what it means to be a man at Wabash¡ªthe strengths and the struggles.
"I feel like I¡¯m doing something with this film that matters to a lot of people, and using my role as a football player to spark the discussion," said the Wabash senior, who spent the summer interning at the San Francisco Film Festival. "正规赌钱软件app¡¯re sitting on a laboratory for masculine studies here, so it¡¯s something we ought to talk about openly and honestly."
Invigorated by the supportive reception for what he called "the most involved, productive experience I¡¯ve ever had," Harbaugh was asked how the Wabash community might move that discussion forward. He smiled, "All of you showing up like this for the screening of a student film¡ªthat¡¯s a pretty good start!"
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