Friday, April 19 | 4:30 p.m.
Wriston Art Center
Artist Robin Jebavy will discuss her practice and the large scale paintings in her exhibition, Expanding Fields. https://robinjebavy.com/
Everyone is welcome! Reception with refreshments to follow.

Friday, April 19 | 4:30 p.m.
Wriston Art Center
Artist Robin Jebavy will discuss her practice and the large scale paintings in her exhibition, Expanding Fields. https://robinjebavy.com/
Everyone is welcome! Reception with refreshments to follow.
Come work at the Esch Hurvis Center for Spiritual and Religious Life! We have the following positions open for the Fall 2024 Term:
Apply on Handshake by Tuesday, May 7, 2024.
Lawrence University is committed to upholding the tenets of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging. We are proud to offer recognition of individuals in our campus community who embody these tenants. Campus community members are invited to nominate award recipients that ascribe to the follow criteria:
The I.D.E.A.S. Division is accepting nominations for a student, faculty, and staff member of our Lawrentian community. Please submit a nomination letter with supporting evidence of why this individual deserves this award. Nominations can be sent to ideas@lawrence.edu. Nominations are due by the close of business, Friday, April 19.
Kindness is a key component of community, particularly a community like Lawrence’s that values acceptance and belonging. Our 3rd annual 17 Days of Kindness community-wide campaign begins April 11!
17 Days of Kindness is a Lawrentian tradition that showcases the best of our community through a mix of events, gratitude, and a celebration of the intentional and random acts of kindness that make Lawrence so special. There will be events across campus that will span the 17 Days that will give faculty, staff, and students the opportunities to share gratitude with those who have impacted Lawrence students virtually and in person, and kindness to ourselves through self-care.
17 Days of Kindness has a kickoff planned for Thursday April 11 outside Warch Campus Center and ends on April 27 with our annual President’s Ball!
Come join us for this three-day “Forever a Lawrentian” event April 11-13.
Forever a Lawrentian is all about connecting students to our amazing and vast Lawrence University Alumni Association (LUAA); a community of scholars, change-makers, and supporters that all students will become part of when they graduate.
Our alumni want to meet current students and provide them with the support they need to be successful at and beyond Lawrence. At Forever a Lawrentian events in April students engaged with and received advice from the LUAA Board of Directors. These connections will give students an advantage in their career journeys both while at Lawrence and after graduation.
Read more on the Lawrence website
4:40-6:30 p.m. | Warch 325 – Pusey Room
4:40-6:30 p.m. | Memorial Hall – Diversity & Intercultural Center
7-8:30 p.m. | Warch 204 – Cinema
12-2 p.m. | Outside Warch
5-6:30 p.m. | Warch 324 – Somerset
8:30-9:30 p.m. | Memorial Hall – Viking Room
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. | Warch 324 – Somerset
1-2:15 p.m. | Warch 325 – Pusey
2:30-3:30 p.m. | Memorial Hall – Diversity and Intercultural Center
2:30-3:30 p.m. | Shattuck 156
Saturday, April 14 | 7-8 p.m.
Warch 226
Join the Office of SEAL and SOUP for an eventful night of intention bracelet making and U-Stuff It toy making.
Saturday, April 13 | 2-3:30 p.m.
Harper Hall
This event is free and open to the public!
Pianist Ksenia Nosikova, praised as “First rate” (Germany’s Fono Forum), “Full of dramatic intensity” (London’s International Piano), “Subtle and expressive” (France’s Journal L’Alsace) “Impressive musicianship, musically very poetic” (Boston Globe), and “Refined sensibility and exquisite pianism” (New York Concert Reviews), has performed extensively in Europe, Asia, Russia, USA, Canada, and South America. The scope of her concert engagements expands from prestigious professional concert venues, such as Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall and Merkin Hall in New York City, Shanghai City Hall in China, City Hall Theatre in Hong Kong, Chetham’s International Piano Series in England, and Dame Myra Hess Concert Series in Chicago, to major academic institutions world-wide, including over 180 American universities’ guest artist series. Her diverse and extensive repertoire list consists of masterworks and lesser-known pieces, as well as over 30 piano concertos.
She has recorded for Profil Medien, Albany Records, Centaur Records, and Capstone Records labels. Among her nine critically-acclaimed recordings are the complete Years of Pilgrimage by Franz Liszt, called an ‘outstanding achievement’ by Classics Today and “super disc” by London’s International Piano magazine. A graduate of Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory and University of Colorado, Dr. Ksenia Nosikova is a Professor of Piano and Co-Chair of Piano Department at the University of Iowa. Her students have won prizes at various national and international competitions and have been accepted to prominent music programs, including Curtis, Juilliard, Colburn, Eastman, and Peabody. She has presented over 300 master classes in the US and abroad, most recently at the Beijing Central, China, Shanghai, Wuhan, Xian, Sichuan, Tianjin, and Shenyang conservatories and Hong Kong Academy in China.
She is an artist faculty member of the Semper International Music Festival in Italy and Wiener MusikSeminar International Master Classes in Austria. Her 2019-2020 concert engagements have taken her to Brazil, China, Singapore, Thailand, and Prague. She is a member of the American Liszt Society’s Board of Directors and the Artistic Director of Piano Sundays at Old Capitol Concert Series (IA). Ksenia Nosikova is a Steinway Artist.
Wednesday, April 10 | 5:30-6:45 p.m.
Main 201
The journalism landscape is in the midst of unprecedented transformation. But what precisely constitutes journalism? How will it evolve in the coming years, and where can one discover the burgeoning opportunities within this dynamic field?
Join us for an intellectually stimulating event that delves into the multifaceted world of journalism and its profound influence on our democratic society. Esteemed panelists, all Lawrence alumni, will dissect the intricacies of reporting, storytelling, and media’s pivotal role in shaping public discourse.
Alumni Panel
Moderated by Ty Collins from the Career Center and English Professor David McGlynn.
Wednesday, April 10 | 8-9:30 p.m.
Harper Hall
Dr. Kenneth Johnson is a dedicated trombonist and educator newly relocated in Green Bay, Wisconsin. He is originally from Fredericksburg, VA, where he began playing trombone in elementary school under the guidance of his musician parents. He has been the Principal Trombonist in Sinfonia Gulf Coast in Destin, FL since 2017 and is a founding member of the Brass Institutes of America where he has served on the faculty since 2013. As a home studio recording musician he can be heard on the podcasts. The Musical and the Award Winning Bite Sized Broadway, and as well as through the American Composer’s Alliance. This past fall he also joined the staff at Notre Dame of DePere, where he teaches Instrumental and General Music.
This event is free and open to the public!
Both events are open to all campus community members.
Tuesday, April 9 | 9:30-10:30 a.m.
Shattuck 163
For the women and non-binary people who make the music in the musical theater industry
GEORGIA STITT is a composer/lyricist, music director, pianist, and music producer. Her original musicals include Snow Child (commissioned by Arena Stage and directed by Molly Smith); Samantha Spade, Ace Detective (commissioned by TADA Youth Theater and written with Lisa Diana Shapiro, National Youth Theatre 2014 Winner “Outstanding New Musical”); Big Red Sun (NAMT Festival winner in 2010, Harold Arlen Award in 2005, written with playwright John Jiler); The Danger Year (a musical revue); The Water (winner of the 2008 ANMT Search for New Voices in American Musical Theatre and written with Jeff Hylton and Tim Werenko); and Mosaic (commissioned for Inner Voices Off-Broadway in 2010 and written with Cheri Steinkellner). She is currently writing The Big Boom (with Hunter Foster) and an oratorio called The Circling Universe that has been developed at Princeton University.
Tuesday, April 9 | 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Harper Hall
A discussion on growing up in the segregated south in the 1990s with Georgia Stitt and Dr. Kenny Yarbrough.