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Faculty

Category: Faculty

Fox Valley Newcomer Project

Tuesday, Jan. 30 | 6-8 p.m.
Briggs 420

Help us uplift the ideas of Newcomers in the Fox Cities!

Join Hilary Haskell ’12 to learn about the variety of Newcomer communities across the Fox Cities. Jump into the Newcomer Community Project as we look at our first set of data from Newcomers and organizations across the community.

Dinner will be provided.

This event is open to students interested in working with immigrant and refugee populations. They will get a chance to learn about the community-based research project, engage with the data, and eat in fellowship with others that evening. 

We are asking for people to register by Jan. 19, but all are welcome to attend the evening of!

The mission of this program is to create a thriving community by connecting and supporting refugee and immigrant populations with the necessary resources and relationships.

We believe that true support and connection can only be achieved when we work together. By identifying the strengths, understanding the unmet needs, and recognizing the underutilized assets within our refugee and immigrant communities, we can pave the way for a brighter future.

Performing Arts Series: Escher String Quartet

Friday, Feb. 2 | 7:30-9 p.m.
Memorial Chapel

The Escher String Quartet is acclaimed for their insightful music and beautiful tones. They have been recognized as a former BBC New Generation Artist and have received the Avery Fisher Career Grant. They have performed at prestigious venues like the BBC Proms at Cadogan Hall, and Wigmore Hall. In New York, they are season artists for the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Currently, the quartet is extensively touring the U.S., including notable venues such as Alice Tully Hall, Bohemian National Hall, the Library of Congress, and the Harris Theater. They are also performing in international locations such as Wigmore Hall, St. John in the Virgin Islands, and San Miguel De Allende in Mexico.

Guest-faculty recital: Kyungwha Chu, piano, and Colin Carr, cello

Saturday, Feb. 3 | 6:30-7:30 p.m.
Memorial Chapel

Colin Carr appears throughout the world as a soloist, chamber musician, recording artist, and teacher. He has played with major orchestras worldwide, including the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, The Philharmonia, Royal Philharmonic, BBC Symphony, the orchestras of Chicago, Los Angeles, Washington, Philadelphia, Montréal and all the major orchestras of Australia and New Zealand. Conductors with whom he has worked include Rattle, Gergiev, Dutoit, Elder, Skrowasczewski and Marriner. He has been a regular guest at the BBC Proms and has twice toured Australia.

Award winning pianist Kyungwha Chu performs as a soloist and chamber musician throughout the United States, Canada, Asia and Europe. Her performances have included appearances at New York’s 92nd street Y, Kennedy Center Washington D.C., Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall New York.

She has appeared as a soloist with the Seoul Symphony Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Cleveland Institute of Music orchestra, and Royal Conservatory of Music Orchestra. Her awards include top prizes in the Korean Broadcasting System competition, Cleveland Institute of Music concerto competition and Royal Conservatory of Music concerto competition. She has participated in the professional training workshop at Carnegie where she worked with Yo-Yo Ma and Pamela Frank. In 2010 she was one of seven students of Leon Fleisher to perform all 32 Beethoven piano Sonatas in a single-day marathon concert. During the summer of 2014 she participated in the Pearlman Music Program, working with Itzhak Pearlman and Donald Weilerstein.

Great Midwest Trivia Contest

Trivia LIX will begin at 10:00:37 p.m. Central Time on Friday, Jan. 26 and end around midnight on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2023.

The contest will be streamed live on Twitch.

Participants can also join the official Trivia 59 Discord Server.

Additional resources can be found on Linktree.

Registration

Official registration will take place at 8 p.m. on the first night of the contest (Jan. 26). Latecomers can register throughout the contest but will be at a points disadvantage.

To register, a team representative will call the appropriate phone line. A Trivia Master will answer and take the team’s name and a team representative’s contact information (name, phone number, and email). The teams will be assigned a team number–on-campus team numbers will start at 1, and off-campus numbers will start at 101.

Teams should use the registration period to find out if they have a significant delay in their signal. The official time for Trivia is time.gov.

Phone numbers

  • Head Master Phone Line: (920) 419-TRIV a.k.a. (920) 419-8748
  • Complaint Phone Line: (920) 419-6727
  • On-Campus Phone Line: (920) 832-7140
  • Off-Campus Phone Line: (920) 832-7148

Order LIX Trivia merch!

Guest recital: Duo Montagnard

Saturday, Jan. 27 | 8-9:30 p.m.
Harper Hall

Duo Montagnard was formed in 2002 and has performed over 350 concerts in 50 states, eight Canadian provinces, and twenty countries on six continents. Festival performances include the Chautauqua Institution, Scandinavian Saxophone Festival, Hartwick College Summer Music Festival, North-West University New Music Week (South Africa), UNC-Wilmington New Music for Guitar and Saxophone Festival, Radford University International Guitar Festival, and the Alexandria Guitar Festival. The duo has commissioned, premiered and recorded more than forty works for guitar and saxophone.


Joseph Murphy has been the saxophone professor at Mansfield University of Pennsylvania since 1987, where he has also served as Department Chair and Director of Bands. He received the Bachelor of Music degree from Bowling Green State University (OH), and the Master of Music and Doctoral of Musical Arts degrees from Northwestern University. Dr. Murphy was the music director of Tiffin (OH) Calvert High School from 1983-85. In 1985-86 he received a Fulbright Award for a year of study in Bordeaux, France, where he received a Premier Prix. In June 1996, Dr. Murphy performed a solo recital at Lincoln Center. He has performed in Europe, Taiwan and Japan. He is a clinician for the Selmer Corporation and has been recorded on the Erol (France), Opus One, and Mark Record labels. Dr. Murphy’s memberships include Music Educators National Conference, Music Teachers National Association, North American Saxophone Alliance, National Association of College Wind & Percussion Instructors, College Band Directors National Association, Phi Mu Alpha and Kappa Kappa Psi. Murphy has been involved in commissioning and premiering more than twenty new works for the saxophone, including pieces by Libby Larsen, Michael Colgrass, John Harbison, Bernard Rands, and Gunther Schuller.

Matthew Slotkin is an acclaimed performer, teacher, and scholar, and has appeared in leading venues on six continents. A commitment to contemporary music has resulted in premieres of numerous works by composers including Linda Buckley, John Anthony Lennon, Scott Lindroth, John Orfe, and many others. Recent performances include tours of South Africa, Poland, Germany, Argentina, Uruguay, New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom, Portugal, and Greece, as well as concerts at the Piccolo Spoleto Festival, the Walled City Music Festival, the Monadnock Music Festival, the Chautauqua Institution, the Guitar Foundation of America, and the World Saxophone Congresses in Scotland, Thailand and Slovenia. He has performed on numerous classical guitar society concert series including New Zealand (GANZ), Montreal, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Iowa, Northeastern Pennsylvania, and the Great Lakes. He has given performances with many prominent chamber ensembles including Cantata Profana, Metropolis Ensemble, Mallarmé Chamber Players, Duo Montagnard and Dez Cordas. Recordings on the Summit, Centaur, and Liscio labels have been praised as “wonderful…a very enjoyable disc” (Soundboard), and “a magnificent achievement…the concept of this program is brilliant” (American Record Guide). Soundboard magazine called him an “exceptional” player, and a recent concert review from the Classical Voice of North Carolina praised his “fine sensitivity and facile technique.” Slotkin is an Associate Professor of Music at Bloomsburg University in Bloomsburg, PA, where he has directed the guitar program since 2004. He has given masterclasses at numerous institutions and festivals including the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Northwestern University, Victorian College of the Arts (Australia), ESMAE (Portugal), National University of La Plata (Argentina), the Alexandria Guitar Festival, and many others. He received the Doctor of Musical Arts, Master of Music, and Bachelor of Music degrees from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied guitar with Nicholas Goluses.

Visual Brand 101 – Color

The Communications SharePoint site is your one-stop-shop for resources and best practices related to brand and visuals!

Download official logos, submit project request forms, learn about official fonts and colors, and so much more.


Pro Tip of the Week

Color Palette

Lawrence colors are as unique and distinctive as the logo. Consistent use of Lawrence’s official colors is required in all communications. No variation is acceptable for use with the Lawrence logo except black and white.

The colors pictured above illustrate the hierarchy of the Lawrence University color palette. Navy and Blue are the primary colors, followed by gold and terra cotta. Orange and green are to be used sparingly and as accent colors only.

LU NAVY 
C100 M88 Y42 K52 
R0 G12 B52 
HEX #000C35 
PMS 282
BLUE 
C100 M90 Y0 K0 
R33 G64 B154 
HEX #213F99 
PMS 072
GOLD 
C11 M39 Y100 K0 
R227 G159 B0 
HEX #E39F00 
PMS 130
TERRA COTTA 
C32 M80 Y81 K32 
R131 G60 B46
HEX #833C2E 
PMS 1815
ORANGE 
C4 M70 Y94 K0
R233 G110 B46
HEX #E96E2E 
PMS P 37-8
GREEN 
C94 M56 Y67 K63
R20 G52 B50 
HEX #143432 
PMS 627

Since colors often shift depending on the medium or reproduction method, specific designations have been identified: 

  • CMYK and PMS (print)
  • RGB and HEX (digital needs such as web, ppt presentations, and video)
CMYK refers to the four ink plates used in some color printing: cyan, magenta, yellow, and key (black). CMYK is used for projects designed to be physically printed, not viewed on a screen. RGB is a color model referring to red, green, and blue. RGB is best for websites and digital communications.
PMS refers to the Pantone Color System. It is a standardized color matching system, which allows you to specify colors that cannot be mixed in traditional CMYK. These references are best for branding where perfect color matches are critical.HEX refers to a hexadecimal way to represent a color in RGB by combining three values: red, green, and blue.
  • The main difference between CMYK and PMS is the level of accuracy when it comes to the final color. Pantone will deliver the exact color every time, whereas CMYK can result in slight color variances.
  • There is no informational difference between RGB and HEX colors. They are simply different ways of communicating the same thing.

Read more on the Communications SharePoint site!

New Study Abroad Program Approved

Off-Campus Programs is excited to announce the approval of our latest study abroad program: IES Nagoya, Japan.

The IES Nagoya, Japan program offers a direct enrollment opportunity through Nanzan University’s Center for Japanese Studies, where students will choose between a Modern Japanese track or an Intensive Japanese track. Aside from language study, both tracks also offer students English-taught area studies courses, elective arts classes, and Japanese-taught seminar courses. Advanced-level Japanese language courses are available.

Look for this program application opening soon. If you have questions on this program, please Make an Appointment with an Off-Campus Programs advisor.