LU News

Author: LU News

V-Day Lawrence University Helps in the Fight Against Violence of Women and Girls

APPLETON, WIS. — V-Day Lawrence University is once again helping to stop violence against women and girls with its production of Eve Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues. Performances of The Vagina Monologues take place at 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Saturday, February 24 and at 8:00 p.m. Sunday, February 25 in Cloak Theatre. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students and may be purchased at the Lawrence University Box Office, located in the Music-Drama Center, or by phone at 920-832-6749.

Directing V-Day Lawrence University’s sixth production of The Vagina Monologues is David Hanzal ’08. New for the 2007 performance at Lawrence is local folk/pop group, Love, Claire, who will be playing throughout each performance.

The Vagina Monologues has been performed in cities all across the nation and at hundreds of college campuses. It has inspired a dynamic grassroots movement–V-Day–to stop violence against women and girls. In 2007, over 2,000 V-Day benefits will take place in over 950 communities and on college campuses around the world. Money raised during show at Lawrence will be donated to local, national, and international charities.

Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues has been translated into over 45 languages and is running in theatres all over the world, including sold-out runs at both Off-Broadway’s Westside Theater and on London’s West End. The Vagina Monologues is based on Ensler’s interviews with more than 200 women, which with humor and grace celebrates women’s sexuality and strength. For more information on V-Day and Ensler, visit www.vday.org.

Jazz Trumpeter Terence Blanchard Heats Up the Lawrence University Jazz Series

APPLETON, WIS. — The Lawrence University “Performing Arts at Lawrence” concert series continues on Saturday, February 24 with jazz trumpeter Terence Blanchard live in concert at 8:00 p.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel. Tickets are $22 and $20 for adults, $19 and $17 for senior citizens, and $17 and $15 for students. Tickets are available at the Lawrence University Box Office, or by phone at 920-832-6749. Tickets, if available, will also be sold at the box office beginning one hour before the show.

Born in 1962 in New Orleans, Blanchard started his trumpet career in elementary school while being coached at home by his opera-singing father. Blanchard came under the guidance of Ellis Marsalis during high school and after graduating, he attended Rutgers University. While at Rutgers Blanchard impressed one of his professors so much that he was brokered a touring gig with Lionel Hampton’s band. In 1983, Wynton Marsalis recommended Blanchard as his replacement in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers. Two years later, Blanchard and fellow Messenger Donald Harrison formed their own quintet. In 1990, Blanchard departed the quintet to pursue a solo career where the trumpeter/composer gained acclaim as a bandleader and scorer of movie and television soundtracks.

Blanchard won a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group in 2005 for McCoy Tyner’s Illuminations with Gary Bartz, Blanchard, Christian McBride, and Lewis Nash. He was nominated for several other Grammy Awards in 2002, 2001, 1996, and 1990. Blanchard has also been nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Original Score for The 25th Hour in 2003, and for an Emmy in 1995 for Best Original Score for a Documentary for “The Promised Land.” Blanchard won the Grand Prix du Disque, the French equivalent of the Grammy Award, for the album New York Second Line in 1984.

Blanchard’s discography includes his newest release, Flow, which was release on Blue Note in 2005, McCoy Tyner’s Illuminations, Bounce, Let’s Get Lost, Wandering Moon, Jazz in Film, The Heart Speaks, and many more. Blanchard’s soundtracks and scores including She Hate Me, People I Know, 25th Hour, and Original Sin, among many others.

The final Jazz Series concert of the 2006-07 “Performing Arts at Lawrence” concert series takes place on Friday, June 1 at 8:00 p.m. with Maria Schneider, composer and conductor, who will conduct her composition, performed by the Lawrence University Jazz Ensemble (LUJE). For more information on this and other upcoming “Performing Arts at Lawrence” concerts, visit www.lawrence.edu/news/performingartsseries.

Lawrence University Theatre Department Brings G.B. Shaw’s Last Comic Novel to the Stage

APPLETON, WIS. — George Bernard Shaw’s An Unsocial Socialist comes to life when the Lawrence University Theatre Department stages Smash by Jeffrey Hatcher. Performances of this witty, cunning, and intelligent play are at 8:00 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, February 15-17 and at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, February 18 in Cloak Theatre, located in the Music-Drama Center. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for senior citizens and students. Tickets are available at the Lawrence University Box Office or by phone at 920-832-6749. If available, tickets will also be sold at the box office beginning one hour before each show.

Inspired by Shaw’s novel, Smash, centers on the life of a very wealthy young man, Sidney Trefusis, who feels called to save England by bringing her to Socialism in 1910. He finds himself at an all-girls school, and his attempts to instill Socialism in various ways keeps blowing up in his face or “smashing.” While Socialism was very politically charged at the time, this production is more about how we try to cause change and form allegiances now, said director Kathy Privatt, associate professor of Theatre Arts at Lawrence University.

Leading the cast is Asher Perlman ’08 as Sidney Trefusis. Other cast members and their roles include Nora Taylor ’09 as Henrietta Jansenius, Kate Kirkland ’07 as Agatha Wylie, Octavia Driscoll ’08 as Miss Wilson, Brianne Mueller ’07 as Gertrude Lindsay, Cara Wantland ’09 as Jane Carpenter, Nikko Benson ’10 as Mr. Jansenius, Peter Welch ’09 as Sir Charles Brandon, Michael Beaderstadt ’07 as Chichester Erskine, and Tim Dunnell ’09 as Lumpkin. Two Lawrence alumni, Emily Rohm-Gilmore and Aaron Sherkow, are back as costume designer and lighting designer, respectively.

Lawrence University Pianist Shines in Young Artists Piano Competition

APPLETON, WIS. — Lawrence University senior Amanda Gessler was named first alternate at the East Central Division of the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) Young Artists Piano Competition held Saturday, January 27 at Central Michigan University.

Gessler of Harshaw, was this year’s Wisconsin state winner of the MTNA competition and therefore advanced to the recent East Central Division competition. As a first alternate, she will advance to the national finals if the winner is unable to participate.

Gessler is the sixth Lawrence pianist to win the Wisconsin state competition during the past eight years and she placed higher than any previous Wisconsin state representative in this event during the past 10 years. The East Central Division of the MTNA consists of graduate and undergraduate pianists who are state winners from Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Illinois. This year’s division winner was a graduate student from Indiana University.

The jury for this year’s competition included professors Louis Nagle from the University of Michigan and David Abbott from Albion College.

Lawrence University’s Cantala Performs Three Concerts During a Tour of Minneapolis/St. Paul

APPLETON, WIS. — Two Minnesota natives, freshman Sarah Lick of Hopkins and sophomore Leslie Sinak of Rochester return to their home state to perform as part of Lawrence University’s Cantala during a tour of the Minneapolis/St. Paul area. The tour is part of Lawrence University’s Focus On: Minneapolis/St. Paul 2007 events, which include a variety of activities throughout the year.

Cantala, Lawrence University’s women’s choir, is made up of 43 students along with a student accompanist. Founded in the fall of 2000, the choir performs a wide range of unique and challenging literature that includes traditional women’s literature, world folk literature, and contemporary works under the direction of Phillip Swan, assistant professor of music at Lawrence University.

Cantala performs three times while in Minnesota including a performance at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, February 8 at Stillwater High School, 5701 Stillwater Blvd. North, Stillwater. This performance includes the Cantala with Fanfare Brass, a student brass ensemble, in conjunction with Stillwater High School ensembles.

Selections for the performance includes selections from “Ceremony of Carols,” “Regnum Mundi” by Jacob Handl (Gallus), “Kadosh/Benedictius” by Lee R. Kesselman, “Sing a New Song to the Lord” by Paul Basler, “Tantum Ergo” by Corin Overland, and more. This concert features Lawrence students, Andrew Stoll and Ryan Olsen on trumpet, Anna Suechting, horn, Katie Daugherty, trombone, Beth Wiese, tuba, Melody Ng, piano, Nick Anderson, bass, and Kyle Traska, percussion.

On Saturday, February 10, Cantala, Fanfare Brass, and Kathrine Handford, Lawrence University organist perform a concert at 7:30 p.m. at Central Presbyterian Church, 500 Cedar St., St. Paul. The group also performs at the 10:30 a.m. worship service at Central Presbyterian Church on Sunday, February 11.

All concerts are free and open to the public. There are no tickets required.

In addition to the concerts, Cantala gives two private performances for students at Stillwater High School and holds music clinics at Edina High School and Armstrong High School while in Minnesota.

For more information on Focus On events, visit www.lawrence.edu/news/focus_on.

National Security Expert Explores Balance of Liberty and Security in Lawrence University Convocation

APPLETON, WIS. — During times of crisis throughout America’s history, in order to protect its citizens the government has had to weigh the benefits of national security against the potential harms to liberty, including the use of coercion in interrogation and extended detention. Since the global war on terror was launched following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, that “balancing debate” between security and freedom has taken on heightened importance.

Juliette Kayyem, an expert on national security strategy, will provide a historical and legal context to that debate and suggest ways to think about how American democracy might enhance both security and liberty in the years to come Tuesday, Feb. 6 in a Lawrence University convocation.

Kayyem presents “Preserving Liberty in an Age of Terror” at 11:10 p.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel. She also will conduct a question-and-answer session at 2 p.m. in Riverview Lounge of the Lawrence Memorial Union. Both events are free and open to the public.

The only Arab-American to hold a state-level homeland security position and one of the few women in the national security world, Kayyem was appointed Massachusetts’ Undersecretary of Homeland Security Jan. 10 by Gov. Deval Patrick. She assumed her duties Jan. 22 in the newly created position, where she will be responsible for coordinating all aspects of Massachusetts’ Statewide Homeland Security Strategy.

Prior to her state appointment, Kayyem had served as a resident scholar at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, where she taught courses on law, homeland security and national security.

A specialist in the intersection of democracy and counter-terrorism policies, Kayyem was the only woman to serve on the National Commission on Terrorism, a congressionally mandated review of how the government could better prepare for the growing terrorist threat. Chaired by L. Paul Bremer, the commission warned in 2000 that the terrorist threat was real and likely to succeed in America.

She is the co-author of the 2005 book, “Protecting Liberty in an Age of Terror,” which examines some of the most difficult legal and ethical challenges posed by the fight against terrorism. In the book, Kayyem stresses the need for clear rules to be drawn so that government conduct both protects the innocent from unreasonable government intrusion and prevents government agents from being made scapegoats after the fact if things go wrong.

Kayyem also served as co-editor of the book “First to Arrive: State and Local Response to Terrorism,” a 2003 collection of essays from first responders, political scientists and historians. The essays examine the operational needs of state and local governments in an age of terrorism and offer practical solutions to the challenges of local and state domestic preparedness.

A contributor to the pages of the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Christian Science Monitor and the Washington Post on issues of counterterrorism law and domestic preparedness, Kayyem has appeared as a national security expert for several major news organizations, including National Public Radio, CNN and MSNBC.

Before serving on the National Commission on Terrorism, Kayyem worked as a legal advisor to then Attorney General Janet Reno, assisting with a variety of national security and terrorism cases, including overseeing the government’s review of its classification procedures regarding secret evidence.

She began her legal career as a civil rights trial attorney, litigating cases on behalf of the U.S. Justice Department and also worked on death penalty appeals cases on behalf of Alabama death row inmates. Before going to law school, Kayyem worked as a journalist in South Africa.

A 1995 graduate of Harvard Law School, Kayyem was named a “Hero for our Times” in 2002 by the Boston Phoenix.

Lawrence University Trivia Contest Champions Retain Titles in 42nd Edition

APPLETON, WIS. — The Bank of Kaukauna: This One Goes to 11 ran its winning streak to seven straight, easily winning the off-campus title over the weekend in Lawrence University’s 42nd Great Midwest Trivia Contest. Bucky’s Banastitudinal Brevity extended its on-campus dominance, capturing its fifth consecutive title.

The Bank of Kaukauna, which has won nine of the last 11 contests, racked up 1,380 points, finishing comfortably ahead of runner-up The InDeciders (1,295 points) and third-place finishing Six Feet Under (1,190 points). For its winning effort, The Bank was awarded a cardboard box filled with breakable items, which, by tradition, were then broken at the awards ceremony on the steps of the Lawrence Memorial Chapel.

Bucky’s again dominated the on-campus competition, piling up 1,318 points, while Coalition of the Awexome for a Drug-free America was a distant second with 1,184 points and Brokeman O’Heitt, the Irish Mistress of the West Side finished third with 1,054. Bucky’s received a can of Red Bull stuffed with artificial flowers each signed by one of the trivia masters.

A total of 366 questions were asked during the 50-hour contest that ended at midnight Sunday. Twelve on-campus and 66 off-campus teams participated during the weekend.

No team was able to answer this year’s “Super Garruda,” the contest’s final question, which asked: “In The War of 1812 Museum’s Jean and Lillian Hofmeister building, six caricatures are framed on the wall of the children’s interactive learning room. What are their listed names?” The answer was Francis Scott Key, Mary Pickersgill, Major Armistead, Rebecca Young, Carolyn Pickersgill and Neighborhood Cat.

Lawrence University: Home of the Lafite-Rothschild of Trivia Contests

APPLETON, WIS. — Ungoogleable. That’s not a verb, it’s a goal.

Where some dream of fame and fortune, the student master minds behind Lawrence University’s annual Great Midwest Trivia Contest aspire to writing questions to which even the smarty pants Internet can’t provide answers.

That playful push-pull to the obscure and offbeat resumes Friday, Jan. 26 for the 42nd edition of the nation’s longest-running trivia contest, a 50-hour mental marathon dedicated to the most difficult — and least important — questions imaginable.

“The term ‘trivia contest’ is, unfortunately, a hopelessly inadequate label for the kind of madness that emanates from Lawrence University every January,” said James Hall, a senior from Omaha, Neb., who is entrusted with this year’s esteemed title of Grand Trivia Master. “To call this event a trivia contest is like calling the Super Bowl a football game, or calling Elvis Presley a singer, or calling a 1961 Lafite-Rothschild a wine. While technically correct, that description captures none of the mystique, excitement or significance of the weekend.”

Or perhaps more accurately, insignificance. Mix funky music with mountains of minutia, serious sleep deprivation and first-place prizes such as a bathroom scale covered in orange shag carpeting or a big o’ bag of human hair and it becomes obvious the Lawrence trivia contest is anything but a dull weekend.

Beginning at its usual inconsequential start time of 10:00.37 p.m. Friday evening, the first of some 325 weird and wacky questions will be webcast via www.lawrence.edu/sorg/trivia to dozens of on-campus and off-campus teams near and far. Last year 11 on-campus and 62 off-campus teams squared off and hunkered down for the contest. Teams have three minutes to phone in answers worth varying degrees of point values to the WLFM studio phone bank.

Following trivia tradition, Lawrence President Jill Beck will start the insanity by asking the contest’s first question, which, also by tradition, is always the final question of the previous year.

Since its debut in 1966, Lawrence’s Great Midwest Trivia Contest has seen 12 presidents (eight in the White House, four at Lawrence). It has weathered the evolution from reference books and almanacs to the Internet world of information-at-a-computer-mouse click. And it even withstood the loss of its broadcast license (it was sold) when the campus radio station, from where the contest originates, was converted from an over-the-air medium to an all Web-based broadcast format in late 2005.

Despite the sweeping changes, the contest has remained true to its credo for more than four decades

Lawrence University Receives $1 Million Gift to Promote “Servant-Leadership,” Alan Parks Named to Endowed Professorship

APPLETON, WIS. — Lawrence University has received a $1 million gift from the S & R Pieper Family Foundation in Mequon, Wis., to establish an endowed professorship that will foster and promote the concept of altruistic leadership at the college.

In conjunction with the gift, Lawrence President Jill Beck announced the appointment of Alan Parks, professor of mathematics, as the first holder of the Pieper Family Servant-Leader Professorship, effective July 1, 2007. Parks will have major responsibilities for enhancing Lawrence’s involvement in courses that feature community-based learning.

In appointing Parks to the Pieper Professorship, Beck stated that “Professor Parks will bring energy, thoughtfulness, and wisdom to the important goal of helping our students develop as citizen-leaders. His experience as a respected member of Lawrence’s faculty combined with his deep commitment to the ideals of community engagement makes him uniquely qualified for this position. He will help our students connect their learning in the classroom, laboratory, and studio with a commitment to use that learning effectively and responsibly in the contemporary world.”

The Pieper gift also will provide funding for an extensive assessment plan, including the collection of baseline data, longitudinal assessment and comparison with peer institutions on measures of character, attitudes and behavior related to servant-leadership, altruism, and community service. Parks will coordinate the assessment in conjunction with Bill Skinner, Lawrence’s director of research administration.

The principles behind servant-leadership were articulated by Robert K. Greenleaf (1904-90), a former AT&T executive, teacher, consultant, and essayist. Greenleaf endorsed a practical philosophy that encourages collaboration in decision making, promotes trust and ethical use of power and empowerment, and emphasizes a holistic approach to work and human relations.

In awarding the gift, Richard Pieper, founder and executive director of the foundation, cited Lawrence’s student honor code, a system overseen entirely by students to ensure academic integrity, as a great building block in not only educating honorable individuals, but also for molding citizens capable of honorable conduct in broader society.

The goal of the new Pieper Family Servant-Leader Professorship will be to support and expand existing courses as well as aid in the development of new courses with an integrated academic and community approach to learning.

Parks has taught mathematics and computer science at Lawrence since 1985. He has written text material for three upper-level courses. A member of the American Mathematical Society, Parks’ research interests in applied mathematics include dynamical systems, differential equations, and error correcting codes. He also is interested in the theory of computation and the analysis of computer algorithms.

Parks was recognized in 1987 with Lawrence’s Outstanding Young Teacher award. He earned bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Wisconsin Judge Leads Lawrence University Seminar on Confrontations in America’s Courts

APPLETON, WIS. — Wisconsin Reserve Judge Charles B. Schudson will spend part of Winter Term as a Scholar-in-Residence in Lawrence University’s government department, leading a three-part lecture/seminar series and a two-part discussion series for students who are considering attending law school.

Schudson will present three separate lectures under the title “Law and Society — Confrontations in America’s Courts.” The schedule for all three sessions is as follows: a reception at 5:30 p.m. in the Science Hall atrium, a lecture and question-and-answer session from 6:30-7:50 p.m. in Science Hall, Room 102 and a movie and post-film discussion led by Schudson in the Wriston Art Center auditorium beginning at 8 p.m.

The first seminar will be held Wednesday, Jan. 24 and will feature the 2001 movie “Bartleby the Scrivener,” a modern adaptation of Herman Melville’s short story of the same name. The discussion following the movie will focus on the topic “The Deviant and the Law: From Scriveners to Sex Predators — Criminals Confront Civil Liberties in America’s Courts.”

Part two of the series on Wednesday, Jan. 31 will feature the film “Absence of Malice,” the critically acclaimed legal drama about investigative reporting and libel. Schudson’s discussion topic afterward will be “The Journalist and the Law: From Lincoln Steffens to Judith Miller — the First Amendment Confronts National Security in America’s Courts.”

The seminar series concludes Wednesday, Feb. 7 with a showing of the 1980 Oscar-nominated short film “A Jury of Her Peers,” which explores issues of women’s victimization and justifiable homicide. Schudson’s follow-up discussion is entitled “The Vulnerable and the Law: From Suffragists to Assault Victims — Women and Children Confront the Good Ol’ Boys in America’s Courts.”

Also during his residency, Schudson will conduct two discussion/luncheon sessions for students interested in attending law school. The first, “So You’re Thinking about Law School: The Study and Practice of Law — the Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” will be held Thursday, Jan. 25 at 11 a.m. in Colman Hall. The second, “So You’re Still Thinking about Law School — Choosing and Applying,” will be conducted Thursday, Feb. 1 at 11 a.m. in the Barber Room.

A Wisconsin native born in Milwaukee, Schudson spent seven years as a state and federal prosecutor (1975-82) before joining the state judiciary. He served as a Wisconsin Circuit Court judge from 1982-92 and the following 12 years as a judge for the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. He currently is senior counsel for the Wisconsin law firm von Briesen & Roper, s.c., and teaches trial advocacy as an adjunct faculty member at the University of Wisconsin Law School. He also has taught two Lawrence University Bjorklunden seminars.

An advocate for the rights of children, women and the elderly, Schudson is the author of the book “On Trial: America’s Courts and Their Treatment of Sexually Abused Children.” His work on the bench has been recognized with numerous honors, including the U.S. Justice Department’s Award for Superior Performance for his precedent-setting prosecutions of nursing home patient abuses and Medicaid fraud, the Wisconsin Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse Certificate of Special Achievement, the 1998 National Human Rights Leadership Award and the 2000 Foundation for Improvement of Justice Award.

He has served as keynote speaker for conferences throughout the world and has provided expert testimony at congressional committee hearings on child sexual abuse, battered women and the impact of unemployment on children and families. He has been a featured guest on numerous radio and television shows, among them NPR’s “All Things Considered,” PBS’s “The McNeil-Lehrer Report” and “Oprah.”

Schudson earned a bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College, graduating Phi Beta Kappa and a law degree from the UW Law School, where he was on Law Review.