Wednesday, Nov. 15 | 1-3 p.m.
Mudd Library
Finals have you stressed? Come un-“rind” and enjoy a variety of delicious cheese samples to keep your spirits up for the final days of fall term.
Wednesday, Nov. 15 | 1-3 p.m.
Mudd Library
Finals have you stressed? Come un-“rind” and enjoy a variety of delicious cheese samples to keep your spirits up for the final days of fall term.
Friday, November 17 | 4:30-5:30 p.m.
Spirit Space & Goldgarden (weather permitting)
Spiritual and Religious Life invites you to take time to acknowledge a turning and the impact that this term has had on our community, our relationships, our knowledge, our dreams, and our souls. When we pause to see from multiple perspectives then it is possible to hold hard and joyful, growth and struggle, loneliness, and community in the same space.
We will close with a release of our regrets, gratitude, and prayers for the term. We hope you will plan to be part of a shared experience.
Thursday, November 16 | 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Riverview Gardens | 1101 S. Oneida St.
FREE
Through the Music for All initiative, we strive to expand the impact of music outside of the concert hall by using music to engage communities in new ways. We challenge Lawrentians to think outside the box, to create new and innovative performance opportunities for themselves, and to expand how they engage with their craft.
Through this initiative we lay the groundwork for students to create a rich, inclusive musical life after Lawrence that expands the possibilities of a career as a professionally trained musician.
Music for All is exactly what it sounds like: music, for everyone. Regardless of color, age, orientation, or ability.
This concert series features interactive musical performances by Lawrence students and faculty. The concerts are free and open to everyone. They last about an hour, and will take place locally.
Lawrence University will partner with St. Joseph Food Program on a food drive at the Appleton Christmas Parade, set for Nov. 21.
A Lawrence University trailer will roll down College Avenue in downtown Appleton as part of the “pre-parade,” immediately following the Santa Scamper Run-Walk. LU volunteers will carry donations of canned goods from parade attendees on the curb to the trailer as it moves down the street. All donations will go to St. Joseph Food Program. A QR Code for monetary donations to St. Joseph also will be available if attendees don’t bring cans but still want to contribute.
The food drive will begin at about 6:30 p.m. The parade is scheduled to start at 7 p.m.
“Lawrence University is proud to partner with St. Joseph to help stock their shelves as the holiday season approaches,” said Garrett Singer, special assistant to the president. “In addition to supporting our local community, it is an opportunity to model good citizenship for our students and campus community.”
For anyone wanting to volunteer, there are three opportunities (details about volunteering and registration can be found using these links):
The Appleton Christmas Parade is held annually on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. Drawing an estimated 80,000 spectators to downtown Appleton, the parade is among the largest holiday gatherings in the Midwest. The parade begins at the corner of State Street and College Avenue and travels east on College Avenue to Drew Street.
Thank you to all for attending the Open Enrollment Fair on November 1. The prize winners were drawn and are listed below. Prizes can be picked up from Human Resources in the 1025 Administrative building.
Name | Prize |
Gustavo Fares, Spanish | Oral-B Toothbrush |
Alex Baldschun, Advancement | Careplus Tumbler |
Mike LeMere, IT | Lawrence Yeti |
Mary Van De Loo, Community Music School | Lawrence Yeti |
Noemi Delgado, Accessibility Services | Transamerica Umbrella |
Angi Long, Registrar | Transamerica Umbrella |
Kyle Tauschek, Advancement | VOYA backpack |
Shannon Featherstone, Off-campus programs | EmpiRx backpack |
Brandie Jewett, Finance | Tumi Accessory Pouch |
Mark Musser, Facilities | Careplus lunch box |
Trudi van Beuningen-Hamilton, Library | Adidas yoga bag |
Ryan Gebler, Financial Aid | Movie Projector |
The deadline to submit any open enrollment changes, additions, or drops to Human Resources is Tuesday, November 14, 2023, at 4 p.m.
If you do not want to make changes to your current benefit elections, you do not need to submit open enrollment forms, with the exception of flexible spending. The flexible spending enrollment form must be completed if you want to participate in health care and/or dependent care flexible spending in the 2024 plan year/calendar year.
All Open Enrollment materials can be found on the Human Resources website. If you have any questions, please contact your Human Resources representative.
Tuesday, Nov. 7 | 3-5 p.m.
Wriston Lobby
Come hang out and learn about Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) with other Lawrence faculty and staff.
Heavy appetizers and one (1) complimentary drink token will be provided. Additional drinks can be purchased with a debit or credit card.
Questions? Contact helen.boyd@lawrence.edu
Employee Resource Groups are intended to create community, provide resources, increase social networks, and encouraging a sense of belonging at a workplace. They’re a good place to find a friend, someone to have a coffee or a beer with, to problem solve or bounce ideas off, and with whom you have some aspect of identity in common.
All of these groups operate differently and have different needs. Some meet regularly and do things together; others are more loosely connected community who gather only for certain events; still others rarely meet but maintain resources available to them when needed. It really depends on the group.
Our current groups:
The following groups currently have no leadership:
If you’re interested in joining or leading, please contact Helen Boyd Kramer, at boydh@lawrence.edu.
We’d also love to hear if there are any groups you’d like to create! These groups change depending on who is in them, so you’re welcome to create one if none of these serves you in ways that help you feel included and welcome.
The DEI office is happy to advise and assist in your creation, planning, and communication for your group.
Thursday, Nov. 9 | 7-9 p.m.
Diversity & Intercultural Center
Let’s Eat! Join us and help create family, community, and memories for students to take home with them at this year’s Queer Potluck.
Queer Potluck is a time for our LGBTQ+, faculty, staff, and the LU community/families to come together, pitch in, and to help us provide for our students before they leave for winter break.
Everyone is welcome. Everyone can bring a dish. We only ask that everyone come with love and dignity toward queer people in their hearts and words and actions and that LGBTQ+ students be given pride of place.
Tuesday, Nov. 7 | 8:15-10 p.m.
Harper Hall
This concert is free and open all.
A workshop led by the duo will precede their concert:
4-5 p.m. | Music-Drama Center 254
Kevin Henderson is a fiddler who draws on the rich fiddle music tradition of his native Shetland and his experience with leading bands including Boys of the Lough, Fiddlers Bid, Session A9 and Nordic Fiddlers Bloc to create an expressive and adventurously individual musical style.
Brought up in the Shetland schooling system, whose concentration on fiddle music and encouragement to participate still inspire him, Kevin benefited in his teens from the teaching of the legendary Willie Hunter. Lessons with Hunter could comprise chatting over coffee and biscuits and even extend to being taught survival skills, as well as learning both the essentials and the finer points of playing Shetland reels, and every Saturday Kevin came away motivated to emulate his mentor.
With school friends Chris Stout, Andrew Gifford and Maurice Henderson, Kevin formed Fiddlers Bid, a band that – almost thirty years, innumerable gigs and four enthusiastically received albums on – continues to represent the finest of Shetland fiddling allied with harmonic invention, creative subtlety and enthusiastic vigour.
Multi-instrumentalist, step dancer and host of the TradCafe podcast, Neil Pearlman is a vital and distinctive voice in contemporary traditional music. Described as “a tremendous pianist” on BBC Radio Scotland and “a force to be reckoned with” by WGBH’s Brian O’Donovan, Neil is best known for his groundbreaking approach to the piano in Celtic music. Motivated by a deep musical curiosity and a love of collaboration, his playing is continually evolving and spontaneous without losing its roots in the traditional piano styles of Atlantic Canada, New England and Scotland. He has appeared at major festivals across North America and Europe including the Newport Folk Festival, Celtic Connections in Glasgow, Celtic Colours in Cape Breton, the Orkney Folk Festival, and has recorded, performed or otherwise collaborated with such artists as Natalie MacMaster, Darol Anger, Seamus Egan, Alasdair Fraser and many more.
Growing up in a musical family, Neil was immersed in Scottish and Cape Breton music and dance from the start. He began dancing at the age of 3 and the piano followed soon after. Joining his parents and siblings on stage as the family band Highland Soles, Neil learned the art of performance early at festivals and concert halls across New England. At the age of 11, he appeared several times as a dancer in Natalie MacMaster’s high-powered show alongside his mother Laura Scott and a few years later released his first album with his father, fiddler Ed Pearlman. Already at that age he was exploring a passion for other styles of music, especially a lifelong love of jazz that has always played a role in his creative voice.
Today Neil’s musical projects run the gamut from deeply traditional to refreshingly contemporary. His podcast TradCafe is a series of conversations and collaborations with traditional musicians from around the world. In 2021 TradCafe launched a video series featuring one-off musical collaborations between Neil and artists such as Troy MacGillivray, Jenna Moynihan, Begona Riobo, Anxo Pintos, Yann Falquet and Alasdair White. His 2020 release Burden Lake with acclaimed Shetland fiddler Kevin Henderson received 5 stars from The Scotsman. He tours regularly with Kevin Henderson, Katie McNally, The Pine Tree Flyers, and as a solo pianist, while playing more irregularly with a wide variety of side projects featuring top Celtic, Americana and Jazz musicians.
Presented by the I.D.E.A.S. Division, Diversity and Intercultural Center (D&IC) and Lawrence University Native Alliance (LUNA)
Corn Husk Doll Making
Tuesday, Nov. 7 | 6:30-7:30 p.m.
Diversity & Intercultural Center
Join us in a captivating workshop where you can delve into the world of Oneida traditions. Discover the significance of the Oneida’s traditional white corn, still grown within their community today. Uncover the fascinating story behind why the corn husk doll has no face, and engage in a hands-on experience crafting your very own corn husk doll to take home as a memento of your enriching journey.
Register for the corn husk doll workshop. (Space is limited.)
Storytelling with Weeya Calif
Monday, Nov. 13 | 5-6:30 p.m.
Diversity & Intercultural Center
Come listen to traditional stories told by Weeya Calif, a member of the Echota Cherokee Tribe of Alabama. Weeya is a professional artist, art educator, and storyteller. She comes from a long line of oral storytellers and dresses in authentic 18th century clothing. Her stories have been passed down through many generations and teach important lessons, ways of life, and how things came to be. Indigenous food will be provided after the event.
Register for the Storytelling event.
Beaded Porcupine Quill Earrings
Wednesday, Nov. 15 | 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Memorial Hall 105
Join us in this fun and creative workshop where you will learn about Indigenous cultures and the use of porcupine quills in various applications. While learning about the culture, you will also create your own pair of beaded quill work earrings that you can wear yourself or gift to someone.
Register for the porcupine quill earrings workshop. (Space is limited.)