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Category: Press Releases

Lawrence University’s Neustadter Scores a Hit in International Film Composing Competition

APPLETON, WIS. — “And the Oscar goes to….”

Lawrence University student Garth Neustadter got a taste of the film industry awards scene — and perhaps a preview of things to come some day — during a recent three-day visit to Hollywood as one of five finalists in the 8th annual Young Film Composers Competition sponsored by the cable television network Turner Classic Movies.

A junior from Manitowoc, Neustadter was awarded first-prize honors (second place behind the grand prize winner) in the international film scoring competition when the results were announced July 25 at the Skirball Center in Hollywood in a gala ceremony featuring 250 guests, including many prominent composers and executives from the film music business.

The TCM film scoring competition is open to composers 18-35 years of age. This year’s competition drew more than 800 participants from throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France and Spain. Each finalist had to score a 90-second clip from the 1924 silent movie classic “Beau Brummel.”

At 21 years old, Neustadter was easily the youngest of the five finalists, all of whom were post-graduate composition majors. He was awarded a MacBook Pro 17″ laptop computer and Logic Pro software worth approximately $4,000 for his second-place finish. James Schafer from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., was named the competition’s grand-prize winner.

Acclaimed composer Hans Zimmer, whose credits include seven Academy and Golden Globe award nominations for his work on nearly 20 films, including “The Lion King,” “Gladiator,” “The Da Vinci Code” and two installments of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” series, served as judging chair for the competition.

“It was the experience of a lifetime to spend three days in Los Angeles, being treated like royalty, riding around in a limousine, surrounded by some of the biggest names in the film scoring business,” said Neustadter, a voice and violin performance major at Lawrence. “I had the opportunity to visit the archives at Warner Brothers Studios and was able to freely handle and examine all of the original hand-written music scores for classics such as ‘Gone with the Wind’ and ‘Casablanca.’ What a thrill.

“One of the trip highlights was meeting Hans Zimmer. He took time out of his busy schedule to show us around his personal studio and candidly talked with us one-on-one, answering all of our questions. Being from Germany, Zimmer told me he had to give the other competition judges a lesson in how to correctly pronounce my last name!”

Neustadter, who won a Downbeat magazine award in 2005 for best high school jazz composition, took his first crack at film composing for last year’s TCM competition after seeing a poster for the contest on campus. His entry earned him a spot in the top 20.

For the initial round of this year’s competition, Neustadter wrote and submitted a 60-second score in March for one of four available scenes from “Beau Brummel.” He was notified in late May he had been selected one of the five finalists. In early June, he received the 90-second film clip in the mail all the finalists had to score and was given three weeks to return a finished recording.

“After the initial shock of learning I was one of the finalists, I became very nervous and anxious waiting for the clip to arrive,” said Neustadter, who is currently in Boston taking classes at Berklee College of Music. “After receiving and watching the clip, I felt that the material was something that I could work with. It was suited toward my compositional tastes.

“It can be a bit intimidating starting out, though, because you know that you have three weeks to go from staring at a blank page to delivering a finished product. They give you a relatively short amount of time because they want to test your writing chops. Silent films present an additional challenge because, without any dialogue to support the story-line, you’re left with the task of communicating the plot entirely with music.”

The clip the five finalists had to work with turned out to be the final 90 seconds of “Beau Brummel,” in which the senile and ill title character is confined to a mental infirmary. As he reminisces over his long lost love, Margery, he envisions her presence and with his last breath toasts her and dies. As his loyal companion mourns his death, Brummel emerges from his deathbed as a young man, finally claiming the hand of his beloved Margery.

“The challenge of the clip was having to convey such a variety of contrasting emotions in such a short amount of time,” Neustadter explained. “I felt that I had effectively composed music that mirrored the emotional content of the characters on screen as they moved from delusion to despair, and finally from wonderment to ecstatic joy.

“Ninety seconds may seem like a relatively short amount of time for which to write music, but after deciding which musical cues will correspond to actions on screen, composing, orchestrating and recording, I had invested close to 100 hours in the project,” he added.

While some of the other composers relied on computer-generated music for their submissions, Neustadter had the luxury of using live musicians — including himself — to produce his film score. He solicited the talents of several Lawrence faculty members, classmates and other musical colleagues to produce a full orchestra sound.

Combining the acoustics and recording facilities of the Lawrence Memorial Chapel, Neustadter brought musicians in on an individual basis to record their parts. He replicated a full strings section solely himself by recording his own violin playing 40 separate times from different spots throughout the orchestra stage.

“I was fortunate to have so many talented musicians willing to help me record my score,” said Neustadter. “Very few composers have the chance to hear their compositions realized at such a high level by wonderful musicians like I did.

“It was truly exhilarating to have my clip played over a big screen for so many people the night of the ceremony,” he added. “All in all, the competition was an amazing experience and helped me to establish a lot of great connections.”

In addition to his moment in the spotlight as well as leaving Los Angeles with a job offer from a Nashville producer, Neustadter also experienced another side of celebrity. While staying at the swanky Loews Hotel in Santa Monica, he was unhappily awakened in the middle of the night one evening to police sirens and flashing emergency lights handling a commotion in the parking lot across the street from his room. It wasn’t until the next morning that he discovered he had been a sleepy witness to Lindsay Lohan’s latest encounter with law enforcement.

American Brass Quintet, Saxophonist Branford Marsalis Headline 2007-08 Lawrence Performing Arts Series

APPLETON, WIS. — The renowned American Brass Quintet and Grammy Award-winning saxophonist Branford Marsalis highlight Lawrence University’s 2007-08 “Performing Arts at Lawrence” season.

Hailed by Newsweek magazine as “the high priests of brass,” the American Brass Quintet visits the Lawrence Memorial Chapel April 19 for the fourth and final Artist Series concert. Since making its public debut in 1960, the ABQ, with more than 45 recordings, has produced the largest body of serious brass chamber music ever recorded by one ensemble.

Marsalis, a three-time Grammy winner and founder of the Marsalis Music label, brings his acclaimed musical palette to the stage of the Fox Cities Performing Arts Center in downtown Appleton Nov. 10 in a “jazz weekend” Jazz Series performance. Widely considered one of his generation’s greatest jazz musicians, Marsalis has released 20 CDs in his illustrious career, including 2006’s critically acclaimed “Braggtown.”

The Brentano String Quartet, which has performed in many of the world’s most prestigious venues, opens the Artist Series Oct. 20. Praised as an ensemble of “exceptional insight and communicative gifts” by London’s Daily Telegraph, the Brentano String Quartet received the United Kingdom’s Royal Philharmonic Award for most outstanding debut in 1997.

The nine-member, all-male vocal ensemble Cantus showcases its youthful vitality and polished nuance Feb. 23. Founded in 1995, the Minnesota-based ensemble has recorded eight CDs and performed more than 300 concerts throughout the United States and Europe. Shahzore Shah, a 2001 Lawrence graduate, is a tenor with the group.

Classical pianist Jon Kumura Parker, whose audiences have included Queen Elizabeth II, the U.S. Supreme Court and the prime minister of Japan, displays his keyboard virtuosity March 7. His extensive concert career includes guest soloist performances with nearly every major orchestra in the United States and Canada, including the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Houston Symphony. He also collaborates regularly with the Tokyo Quartet.

The two-men, two-women vocal quartet New York Voices, whose jazz-rooted vocals flash Brazilian, R & B, classical and pop influences, opens the Lawrence Jazz Series Nov. 9 with the first of two “jazz weekend” concerts.

Chris Potter’s Undergrounds unleash their funk grooves Feb. 8. A tenor saxophonist, Potter was long-time sideman to legendary bassist Dave Holland and was the 2000 recipient of Denmark’s Jazzpar Prize, becoming the youngest winner in the award’s 17-year history.

Drummer Matt Wilson, well known for his “joyful spirit,” along with his band Arts and Crafts, closes the Jazz Series May 23. Wilson was named the Jazz Journalists Association’s “Drummer of the Year” in 2003 and was voted the no. 1 “rising star drummer” three straight years (2003-05) in the annual Downbeat international critic’s poll.

Season subscriptions to either the artist, jazz, or a “favorite 4” series that allows subscribers to select any combination of four concerts from either series, are available through August 27 at $70-$62, with discounts available to senior citizens and students. Single-concert tickets will go on sale Oct. 1. With the exception of the Marsalis concert, all performances will be held in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel, 510 E. College Ave., Appleton.

Additional information on both concert series, including ticket prices, seating charts and ways to order is available at www.lawrence.edu/news/performingartsseries or by calling the Lawrence University Box Office, 920-832-6749.

Four Lawrence University Faculty Appointed to Endowed Professorships

APPLETON, WIS. — Lawrence University President Jill Beck has announced the appointment of four members of the faculty to endowed professorships.

Patrick Boleyn-Fitzgerald, associate professor of philosophy, was named to the Edward F. Mielke Professorship in Ethics in Medicine, Science and Society. Merton Finkler, professor of economics, was named to the John R. Kimberly Distinguished Professorship in the American Economic System. Peter Glick, professor of psychology, was named to the Henry Merritt Wriston Professorship in the Social Sciences. Claudena Skran, associate professor of government, was named to the Edwin N. and Ruth Z. West Professorship in Economics and Social Science.

Appointments to endowed professorships recognize academic distinction through teaching excellence and/or scholarly achievement.

Boleyn-Fitzgerald, a specialist in bioethics and political philosophy, joined the Lawrence philosophy department in 2001 after six years on the faculty at Louisiana State University. His research interests include the relationship between health care professionals and the philosophical virtues of gratitude, forgiveness and compassion.

A member of President Clinton’s Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments in 1994, he currently serves as a consultant to Appleton Medical Center and Affinity Health System on issues of confidentiality, competency and end-of-life treatment decisions. Since coming to Lawrence, he has coordinated the college’s annual Edward R. Mielke Lecture Series in Biomedical Ethics.

Boleyn-Fitzgerald earned his bachelor’s degree from Miami University and his Ph.D. from the University of Arizona.

The Mielke Professorship was established in 1982 in memory of Dr. Edward Mielke, a leading member of the Fox Valley medical community and founder of the Appleton Medical Center.

Finkler, a member of the faculty since 1979, is a specialist in health care economics. His recent research efforts have focused on the role of competition in medical-care markets.

A former Robert Wood Johnson Faculty Fellow in Health Care Finance, Finkler spent a year in the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program in California. Amid the national debate on health-care reform in the early 1990s, he co-chaired two Lawrence conferences on health policy guidelines for policy makers and made presentations before both the Wisconsin Assembly and Senate health committees.

Co-founder of the consulting firm Innovative Health Associates, Finkler has served on several state panels, including the Wisconsin Governor’s Task Force on Funding of Academic Medical Centers and the Turning Point project on the transformation of public health services.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics at the University of California-San Diego, a master’s degree at the London School of Economics and Political Science and his Ph.D. in economics at the University of Minnesota.

The Kimberly Professorship was established in 1977 by the Kimberly-Clark Corporation in honor of John Kimberly, the former chairman of the board of the company. John Kimberly also served as a Lawrence trustee from 1949-1971.

Glick, a scholar on gender stereotyping and prejudice, has taught at Lawrence since 1985. His research focuses on the subtle and the overt ways in which prejudices and stereotypes foster social inequality. He co-authored research that introduced the concept of “ambivalent sexism,” asserting that not just hostile, but subjectively benevolent views of women as pure, but fragile, reinforce gender inequality and reward women for conforming to conventional gender roles while also creating hostile attitudes toward women who fail to do so. His 2005 research paper, “Evaluations of sexy women in high and low status jobs” published in Psychology of Women Quarterly attracted national media attention.

He was the recipient of the 1995 Gordon W. Allport Prize for the best paper on intergroup relations and was elected a fellow of both the American Psychological Association and the American Psychological Society in 2004. The APA and the APS are the two largest and most prominent professional organizations in the field of psychology.

Glick earned a bachelor’s degree at Oberlin College and his Ph.D. in social psychology at the University of Minnesota.

The Wriston Professorship was established 1959 in honor of Lawrence’s eighth president (1925-37) by Lester and Gertrude Slocum. Mrs. Slocum served as a Lawrence trustee from 1933-61.

Skran, whose research interests focus on international relations, especially refugee issues, joined the Lawrence faculty in 1990. She is the author of the 1995 book “Refugees in Interwar Europe: The Emergence of a Regime” in which she analyzed the major players in the early days of the international refugee arena, including private volunteer agencies, the forerunners to today’s non-government organizations (NGOs).

In 2005, Skran was awarded a Fulbright Scholars grant to study the role of NGOs in refugee resettlement in post-civil war Sierra Leone, where she spent six months. She also has conducted field research in Central America, studying displaced people in El Salvador and refugee issues in Mexico and Belize.

A 1983 Rhodes Scholar, Skran earned a bachelor’s degree in social science from Michigan State University and her master’s and doctorate degrees in international relations at Oxford University.

The West Professorship was established in 1989. Edwin West, an attorney and business leader, served as a Lawrence trustee from 1941-57 and 1971-84.

Lawrence University Honors 10 Alumni for Achievement, Service at Reunion Celebration

APPLETON, WIS. — Career achievements, contributions to the betterment of society and volunteer service to Lawrence University will be publicly recognized as part of the college’s annual Reunion Weekend Celebration June 15-17.

More than 900 alumni and guests from 42 states and seven countries, including Australia, China and Indonesia, are expected to return to campus to participate in the weekend-long festivities. Two alumni will be recognized with distinguished achievement awards and eight will be honored with service awards Saturday, June 15 during the annual Reunion Convocation at 10:30 a.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel.

Virginia Danielson, Watertown, Mass., will receive the Lucia R. Briggs Distinguished Achievement Award. Named in honor of the second president of Milwaukee-Downer College, the Briggs award recognizes alumni of more than 15 years for outstanding contributions to, and achievements in, a career field.

A 1971 Lawrence graduate, Danielson has established herself as a world-class ethnomusicologist and library administrator. Regarded as a leading expert in sound-preservation technologies, Danielson is the curator of the Archive of World Music and the Richard F. French Librarian at Harvard University’s Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library, a position she has held since 1999.

After earning a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology at the University of Illinois, Danielson began her career as an archivist in the UI ethnomusicology archives and a cataloging assistant in the music library. She joined the library staff at Harvard in 1987 as a catalog assistant in the Widener Library and was appointed caretaker of the Isham Memorial Library, a special collection of rare books, microforms and manuscripts in 1994.

Pursuing her scholarly interests in music of the Middle East, Danielson spent three years in the mid-1980s living in the Egyptian city of Al-Minya. She later chronicled the life and influence of singer Umm Kulthum, regarded as the Arab world’s most celebrated musical performer of the 20th century, in the 1998 biography, “The Voice of Egypt: Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song, and Modern Egyptian Society,” which won the Alan Merriam Prize of the Society for Ethnomusicology.

Jennifer Baumgardner, a 1992 Lawrence graduate, will receive the Nathan M. Pusey Young Alumni Distinguished Achievement Award, which recognizes Lawrence alumni of 15 years or less for significant contributions to, and achievements in, a career field. The award honors the 10th and youngest president of Lawrence and an exemplary figure in higher education in the 20th century.

A resident of Brooklyn, N.Y., Baumgardner is one of the nation’s prominent voices in the “third wave of feminism.” Shortly after graduation, she began a five-year stint as the youngest editor at Ms. magazine and has since produced a remarkable body of work. She has co-authored two books, “Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism and the Future” in 2000 and “Grassroots: A Field Guide for Feminist Activism” in 2004. Her latest book, “Look Both Ways: Bisexual Politics,” published in February, explores the intersection of bisexuality and feminism.

In addition to her books, Baumgardner has written for many of the nation’s premiere women’s magazines, including Jane, Glamour, Marie Claire, and Elle and also edited a series of feminist classics, beginning with Germaine Greer’s “The Female Eunuch.” She has served on the board of the New York Abortion Access Fund, worked with Planned Parenthood and was the creator of the “I Had an Abortion” t-shirt, which was part of a larger campaign, that included a film of the same name that she produced, to encourage women to talk about their experiences.

The Commonwealth Club of California named Baumgardner one of six “Visionaries for the 21st Century,” noting she had “permanently changed the way people think about feminism.”

Five alumni each will receive the George B. Walter Service to Society Award. Named in honor of Walter, a 1936 graduate, beloved former faculty member and dean of men at Lawrence who believed strongly that every individual can and should make a positive difference in the world, the award recognizes alumni who best exemplify the ideals of a liberal education through socially useful service in their community, the nation or the world.

Since 1993, Duffie Adelson, has served as the executive director of the Merit School of Music in Chicago. Founded in 1979 in response to the elimination of music instruction in Chicago’s elementary schools, Merit brings music education to over 6,500 students of all ages and abilities each year. A music education major at Lawrence who earned her B.M. in 1973, Adelson spent 12 years as a music teacher in three states before joining the Merit School as a part-time instructor in 1982.

In 1986, Adelson stepped in to help the founding director, whose only staff member had just left, and was invited to stay on. Under her leadership, Merit has become a nationally recognized community arts school, known for its innovative partnerships with other organizations, its high-quality, comprehensive music curriculum and its commitment to serving economically disadvantaged students. Adelson has presided over a $19.6 million capital campaign to acquire and renovate the Joy Faith Knapp Music Center, which opened in 2005 and has more than doubled the school’s instructional and performance space.

Her work at Merit has earned Adelson numerous honors, among them the YWCA of Metropolitan Chicago Outstanding Achievement Award in the Arts, the Oprah Winfrey Angel Network “Use Your Life” Award, which was presented on national television and a Distinguished Alumna Award from Michigan’s Interlochen Center for the Arts. Today’s Chicago Woman magazine named Adelson one of its “100 Women Making a Difference.”

She serves on the board of advisors to “Midori and Friends,” a foundation that provides children in underserved New York City public schools with music-education programs, and is a trustee of the National Guild of Community Schools of the Arts.

Over the course of the past 50 years, 1957 Lawrence graduate Martin Deppe has played a role in some of the most important movements and moments of recent U.S. history. A United Methodist pastor who served six Chicago-area congregations from 1961 until his retirement in 1999, Deppe’s dedication and devotion to human and civil rights as well as worldwide peace and justice issues echo an early vision of his denomination: “to reform the nation, particularly the Church, and to spread scriptural holiness over the land.”

In 1967, he stood behind Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., at the signing of a covenant between the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Operation Breadbasket and the Jewel Tea Company. Having helped negotiate the agreement, Deppe was “midwife” to an event that led a major Chicago chain store move from 4 percent to 12 percent black employment in only three years.

As a member of Clergy and Laity Concerned about the Vietnam War, an organization co-founded by former Lawrence Scarff Professor Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Deppe was part of a delegation that traveled to Paris in 1971 to meet with the North Vietnamese representatives to the peace talks. As the head of the Alliance to End Repression, he led a successful effort that resulted in a federal district court ruling that eliminated the Chicago Police Department’s Subversive Activities Unit.

Active in the Reconciling Congregation Movement, a grass-roots effort for change on lesbian and gay issues in the United Methodist Church, Deppe also served on the strategy team for the election in 1980 of the first woman bishop in any denomination. He has extended his leadership and passion to dozens of organizations seeking social and economic justice, among them the AIDS Pastoral Care Network, the Chicago Leadership Network for the Common Good and the Justice Coalition of Greater Chicago.

Margarita (“Peg”) Thompson Oliver of Pharr, Texas, who earned a bachelor’s degree in drama from Lawrence in 1942, has been described as a “powerful whirlwind” for her work as director, lead teacher and guiding spirit of the Coalition of Literacy Services, Inc., a county-wide, non-governmental program she founded in Hidalgo County, Texas in 1984.

Operating in one of the nation’s poorest counties, where more than 100,000 adults over age 25 — roughly 30 percent of the population — were identified as needing some form of adult education, Oliver’s creation provides adult basic education, literacy and public information. The program is exceptionally noteworthy for its openness and self-paced curriculum: anyone can walk in and each student works at his or her own pace. For much of her 21-year tenure at CLS, Oliver single-handedly taught an estimated 1,000 people per year, often leading as many as ten classes a week.

A Texas transplant who spent nearly 40 years living in Appleton, Oliver was among the first volunteers to work with Hmong refugees on literacy issues when they began arriving in the Fox Valley in the mid-1970s. After relocating to the Rio Grande Valley in 1984, she quickly discovered a dire need for her education, motivation and time and shorting thereafter, the CLS was born. Since retiring in 2005, she has remained in touch with many of her former students, continuing to offer her support. She currently is working with the Bipartisan Education Compromise to help turn poor communities into educated communities.

Thomas Oreck may not be as familiar to the general public as his father, David, the founder and advertising “face” of the family-named company best known for its vacuum cleaners. But as president and chief executive officer of the New Orleans-based Oreck Corporation, the 1973 Lawrence graduate earned national praise for his compassionate response to his employees’ needs in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

When Katrina hit, Oreck’s manufacturing facility in Long Beach, Miss., was severely damaged and the homes of many of its 600 employees were destroyed. Tom Oreck immediately announced that the company would make sure the employees were safe and cared for. He also reassured them they still had jobs and a paycheck. The company provided its employees with housing in mobile units, food, water, generators, fuel and other supplies. Oreck also brought in medical trauma specialists and advisors to help employees with insurance and FEMA claims.

Despite the devastation wrought by Katrina on both of its locations, the Oreck Corporation was the first company to reopen a national headquarters in New Orleans and a plant on the Gulf Coast.

The company set up the Oreck Employees Relief Fund, seeding it with a $500,000 corporate contribution and launched a national donation drive through its Oreck Clean Home Centers across the country. In addition, it donated 1,000 vacuum cleaners to the Salvation Army for distribution to those affected by the storm. The company’s response earned the Oreck family a “Heroes of Katrina” designation by CNN’s “American Morning” program.

Tom Oreck, who became company president in 2000, serves on the board of the Isadore Newman School and the Make-A-Wish Foundation and is a volunteer pilot for Angel Flight. He is a vice-chair of the New Orleans Business Council, an organization made up of the CEOs of the largest local companies and joined with other residents to form Citizens for 1 Great New Orleans, a group active in recovery efforts.

Nancy Rigg is the human embodiment of the adage “out of tragedy came some good.” Through sheer determination and unwavering perseverance, she turned a tragic episode in her own life into a pioneering effort to save the lives of others.

In 1980, Rigg and her fiance, Earl Higgins, were walking near the flood-swollen Los Angeles River when they noticed a child in the turbulent waters. Higgins waded into the torrent to attempt a rescue but was swept downstream along with the child. While the child somehow survived, Higgins disappeared. His remains were recovered nine months later.

In the aftermath, Rigg discovered that 11 different agencies shared jurisdiction over a 30-mile stretch of the river. They could not communicate with each other, the river had never been mapped for rescue locations and none of the area’s first-responders were trained in rescue techniques specific to fast-flowing rivers.

A writer and filmmaker, Rigg unleashed her talents on bringing the issue of river safety to the attention of the public and civic authorities. She wrote op-ed pieces, produced an educational video, “No Way Out,” and even wrote an episode of the popular television show “Baywatch” about swiftwater-rescue techniques. After years of advocacy, her efforts were rewarded in 1992 with the creation of the Multi-Jurisdictional Joint-Agency River Rescue Task Force.

Today, as a direct result of Rigg’s efforts, flood zones in Los Angeles have been mapped, rescue operations are centrally coordinated and the death toll has been reduced from an average of 12-18 per torrential storm to an average of 1-2. Individuals who are swept away now have a fighting chance to be rescued and rescue personnel have the training, equipment, planning and communications capability to effectively coordinate rescue operations and also protect themselves.

Hailed as “the mother of swiftwater rescue,” the 1972 Lawrence graduate and current resident of Camarillo, Calif., has taken her fight far beyond her backyard. In 2000, the day before the 20th anniversary of her fiancé’s death, she testified in Washington, D.C., in front of the first-ever House of Representatives subcommittee hearing on flood-water rescue.

While changes at the federal level have been slow in coming, Rigg claims one small victory. After Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, all eight urban search and rescue teams with swiftwater rescue components from California were deployed by FEMA.

Rigg continues to write for professional fire and rescue journals and hosts an online newsgroup for rescue personnel as well as an online grief-support group.

Ryan Tarpley of Beverly Hills, Calif., will receive The Marshall B. Hulbert Young Alumni Service Award, which recognizes a Lawrence alumnus or alumna of 15 years or less, who has provided significant service to the college. This award honors Hulbert, a 1926 Lawrence graduate known as “Mr. Lawrence,” who served the university in many significant capacities for 54 years.

A 1993 graduate, Tarpley has been active in almost every facet of the Lawrence community, serving as a member of the steering committee for his 10th reunion, and the class gift committee for his 15th cluster reunion in 2007, an admissions volunteer, an Ambassador peer solicitor, a member of the Lawrence University Alumni Association (LUAA) Board of Directors and its executive committee, a member of the Los Angeles regional program committee and the host/coordinator for two Los Angeles alumni activities, including a “Meet Jill Beck” event.

Mary L. Carlson-Mason of Manchester, Mich., and Richard Weber, Cecil, will be presented the Gertrude B. Jupp Outstanding Service Award. The award honors Jupp, a 1918 graduate of Milwaukee-Downer College, who was named M-D Alumna of the Year in 1964 for her long volunteer service to the college. It recognizes Lawrence and Milwaukee-Downer alumni of more than 15 years who have provided outstanding service to the college.

Carlson-Mason, a 1972 Lawrence graduate, has served as steering committee chair and leader of the past two cluster reunions for the Classes of 1971-1973, inspiring the highest attendance at any 30th Reunion in 2002. She also served as chair of the LUAA Communications Committee from 2001-03, helping create and name the online alumni newsletter Lawrence E-News (LENs). She organized friends to attend President Jill Beck’s inauguration in 2005 and regularly hosts other informal gatherings of Lawrentians in her area.

Weber, a 1957 graduate, assumed a leadership role with his 40th and 50th reunion gift committees. In 1997, Lawrence’s Sesquicentennial year, Weber’s class set what was at that time a 40th Reunion alumni participation record of 69.3 percent. Since then he has been at the forefront of efforts to organize another substantial campaign for his class’s 50th reunion gift, facilitating innumerable meetings and conference calls, reaching out to classmates and engaging in behind-the-scenes work whenever needed.

Three Lawrence University Faculty Honored at Commencement for Excellence

APPLETON, WIS. — Lawrence University geologist Marcia Bjornerud, choral director Rick Bjella and music historian Julie McQuinn were honored Sunday, June 10 at the college’s 158th commencement for excellence in teaching and scholarship.

Bjornerud, professor of geology, was the second recipient of the college’s Excellence in Scholarship or Creative Activity Award, which was established in 2006. The award recognizes the importance of excellence in scholarly and creative work for advancing the mission of Lawrence, with preference given to a faculty member who has demonstrated sustained programs of excellent work for a number of years and whose work exemplifies the ideals of the teacher-scholar.

A structural geologist specializing in mountain building processes, Bjornerud was elected a Fellow of the Geological Society of American in 2003 and is the author of two books, the textbook “The Blue Planet: A Laboratory Manual in Earth System Science” and “Reading the Rocks: The Autobiography of the Earth,” which was published in 2005 to rave reviews.

“Reading the Rocks,” a history of the Earth and the toll human activity is exacting on the planet, draws upon Bjornerud’s field research conducted as a Fulbright Scholar on exposed rock complexes on the island of Holsnøy in western Norway. Since its initial release, the book has been reprinted in French, Dutch and Japanese, with a Chinese edition for Taiwan slated for publication later this year.

“You have impressed your colleagues with both the quality and quantity of your scholarly research,” President Jill Beck said in presenting Bjornerud her award. “Your interest in how ‘rocks behave,’ to use your words, has contributed important ideas to our understanding of tectonic plates and earthquakes.”

In April, Bjornerud was appointed the first holder of the new Walter Schober Professorship in Environmental Studies, established by a $2.5 million gift from Schober.

She joined the Lawrence faculty in 1995 after six years with the geology department at Miami University in Ohio. She has served as the chair of the Lawrence geology department since 1998 and helped establish the college’s environmental studies program as a major in 2000, serving as its director through 2006.

After earning a bachelor’s degree in geophysics at the University of Minnesota, Bjornerud earned master’s and doctorate degrees in geology at the University of Wisconsin.

Bjella, professor of music and director of the Lawrence concert choir and Viking chorale, received Lawrence’s Award for Excellence in Teaching, given annually for outstanding performance in the teaching process, including the quest to ensure students reach their full development as individuals, human beings and future leaders of society.

Since joining the faculty in 1984, Bjella has conducted in concert halls around the world, including Paris, Prague, London and Lucerne. He also has guest conducted more than 350 festivals and workshops in 25 states.

Beck cited Bjella’s “skill, dedication and sense of joy” in presenting him his award.

“As a teacher, you are described as passionate, inspiring, energetic, spirited and knowledgeable,” said Beck. “The work you demand from your students is accepted with the grace of those who know the final result will be worth every bit of expended energy. Those who have watched you work with choir groups have described your effect as magical.”

Bjella’s ensembles have been featured on Wisconsin Public Radio and in the Green Bay Packer video “Legend of Lambeau Field.” His concert choir was the first to record “Songs of Children” by Robert Convery, a cantata of nine poems written by children interned at Terezin, a Nazi concentration camp.

In 2006, Bjella received the Hanns Kretzschmar Award for Excellence in the Arts for his 20 years of service as artistic director of the community-based White Heron Chorale.

A member of the Washington High School Fine Arts Hall of Fame in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Bjella earned a bachelor’s degree from Cornell College and a master’s degree from the University of Iowa.

McQuinn, assistant professor of music, received the Lawrence’s Young Teacher Award in recognition of demonstrated excellence in the classroom and the promise of continued growth.

A musicologist, McQuinn joined the faculty of the Conservatory of Music in 2003, where she has taught courses on the history of music, music and gender, opera and “borrowed music” in the movies. She also has delivered several pre-concert lectures for the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

In presenting the award, Beck praised McQuinn’s “legendary” ability to engage students and create excitement for learning.

“When you teach, your enthusiasm makes the material leap off the pages of books and scores and into the hearts and minds of your students,” said Beck. “You have enriched the lives of many Lawrence students and given them the power to grow in their love for music of all kinds and all eras.”

Prior to coming to Lawrence, McQuinn taught at Northwestern University and Elmhurst College. She earned a bachelor of music degree in voice performance and a bachelor of arts degree in mathematics from Oberlin College. She also holds a master’s degree in voice performance from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana and earned her Ph.D. in musicology from Northwestern University.

State Supreme Court Justice, Retired Journalist/Research Director to Receive Honorary Degrees at Lawrence University’s 158th Commencement

APPLETON, WIS. — Two Lawrence University graduates will be recognized for their professional achievements and civic contributions by their alma mater with honorary degrees Sunday, June 10, at the college’s 158th commencement. Graduation exercises begin at 10:30 a.m. on the Main Hall green.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Louis Butler of Milwaukee will be awarded an honorary doctorate of humane letters and former journalist and research center director Margaret Carroll of Appleton will be awarded an honorary doctorate of education.

In addition, Lawrence will confer 316 bachelor of arts and/or music degrees to 305 seniors from 37 states and 18 foreign countries. That is the highest number of degrees awarded by Lawrence since 1976 (322).

A baccalaureate service featuring David Cook, professor of physics and Philetus E. Sawyer Professor of Science, will be held Saturday, June 9 at 11 a.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel. The baccalaureate service and commencement ceremony are free and open to the public.

Both honorary degree recipients, along with President Jill Beck, Lawrence Board of Trustees Chair William O. Hochkammer and student representative Micha Jackson, a senior from Brighton, Ontario, will address the graduates during commencement.

Since earning a bachelor’s degree in government from Lawrence in 1973, Butler has earned several notable “firsts” during a 30-year career dedicated to public service.

He is the first African-American in state history to serve on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. He also holds the distinction of being the first attorney from the Wisconsin State Public Defender’s Office to argue a case before the United States Supreme Court.

Gov. Jim Doyle appointed Butler to the Wisconsin Supreme Court in August, 2004 to fill the position vacated by Justice Diane Sykes, who left for the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. After 13 years with the State Public Defender’s Office, Butler began his judicial career as a Milwaukee Municipal Court judge in 1992. He was appointed a Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge in 2002.

His work as a jurist has been recognized with numerous awards, among them the 2006 Humanitarian of the Year by the American Federation of Teachers, Local 212, the 2005 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Foot Soldiers’ Award and the Outstanding Citizen’s Award from the Wisconsin Council of Deliberations, Prince Hall Masons.

A former adjunct professor at Marquette University Law School, Butler is a member of the faculty at the National Judicial College in Reno, Nev., which provides continuing education for judges around the nation. He also serves as a member of the bench at the Moot Court Competition at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles.

Outside the courtroom Butler has been actively engaged with a host of state and national organizations, serving as a member of the board of directors for the NAACP, Legal Action of Wisconsin and the Criminal Law Section of the State Bar. He also has worked with the Criminal Justice Reforms Task Force and the Urban Initiative Task Force on Public Education.

A native of Chicago, Butler earned his law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1977.

Carroll, a 1961 Lawrence graduate who, like Butler, earned a bachelor’s degree in government, enjoyed a 35-year career in journalism and research center administration.

In 1972, Carroll helped establish the Investor Responsibility Research Center (IRRC) in Washington, D.C., which provided impartial research and analysis of business and public policy issues that affect decision making by institutional investors and major corporations. Carroll spent 23 years with IRRC, including 20 as its executive director, before she retired in 1996. IRRC provided research and analysis as well as proxy voting services to more than 500 institutional investors, corporations, law firms, foundations, colleges and other organizations.

Shortly after she graduated from Lawrence, Carroll began her journalism career at the Congressional Quarterly, a Washington, D.C.-based weekly journal that covers Congress and the federal government, working her way up from researcher to associate editor. She had worked as an intern at CQ for two summers while a student at Lawrence.

Amid the civil unrest that was sweeping the country in the late 1960s, Carroll joined the staff at the National Urban Coalition in 1968 as director of publications, overseeing the production of substantive reports and a newsletter directed at local urban coalitions. The following year, she and several former colleagues from Congressional Quarterly joined forces to establish National Journal, a weekly publication that focuses primarily on key actions and personnel in federal departments and agencies. She served as the publication’s congressional editor and later associate editor.

Before helping found the IRRC, Carroll spent two years in the early 1970s as an independent editorial consultant with a diverse client portfolio. She edited and wrote much of a book on “Women in Policing” and edited a widely circulated guide to the 1972 elections. She also served as acting director of communications for the National Urban Coalition. After she retired from IRRC, she also edited a variety of publications.

A long-time member of the Lawrence Board of Trustees, Carroll served as a trustee for all but two years from 1974 to 2006, including two years (1993-95) as the chair of the board. She was elected trustee emerita of the college last fall. In addition, she served the college as a member of the Presidential Search Committee that found Jill Beck, president of the Founders Club, an admissions volunteer, a career consultant and a class agent. She now represents Lawrence on Appleton’s College Avenue Design Committee.

A native of New York City, Carroll has lived in Appleton since 2002.

Lawrence University Recognizes Green Lake, Germantown Teachers as “Outstanding Educators”

APPLETON, WIS. — Dana Neuenfeldt, an English teacher in the Green Lake School District, and Keith Musolff, a physical science teacher at Kennedy Middle School in Germantown will be recognized Sunday, June 10 with Lawrence University’s Outstanding Teaching in Wisconsin Award during the college’s 158th commencement. Both will receive a certificate, a citation and a monetary award.

Lawrence has honored Wisconsin teachers for education excellence annually since 1985. Recipients, nominated by Lawrence seniors, are selected on their abilities to communicate effectively, create a sense of excitement in the classroom, motivate their students to pursue academic excellence while showing a genuine concern for them in, as well as outside, the classroom.

A native of Ripon, Neuenfeldt has taught English courses in grades 8-12 in Green Lake since 1995. Her classes have encompassed the breadth of the department curriculum, including American, British, world and science fiction literature, poetry, creative writing and advanced composition. She spent the first seven years of her career working with the Green Lake forensics team, including five (1997-2002) as its head coach. She currently serves as a member of the National Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

“Mrs. Neuenfeldt expected the best work out of every student that walked through her door,” Lawrence senior Katie Smith, a 2003 Green Lake graduate, wrote in her nomination letter. “She genuinely cared for each and every one of us. She was always willing to bend her schedule to match yours, whether you needed to make up a test before or after school, or needed help writing a paper during her one free period during the day. She truly wanted everyone to succeed in whatever their chosen path and if she could help in some way, she did.”

Four times between 2002 and 2006, Neuenfeld was one of two Green Lake district teachers presented the Trailways Conference Significant Educator Award. Chosen by the school’s top two graduating seniors, the award honors two teachers who made a significant difference in the life of the students.

A 1990 graduate of Ripon High School, Neuenfeldt earned her bachelor’s degree in English from Ripon College and a master’s degree in professional development in education from UW-La Crosse.

Musolff, who retired at the end of the 2006-07 school year, had taught in the Germantown School District since 1972, including the last 20 years at Kennedy Middle School. During his career, Musolff taught third and fifth grades, reading and literature for grades 6-8, 6th-grade social studies as well as his current subject, physical science. From 1999-2003, he served as the coordinator of Kennedy Middle School’s Gifted and Talented program.

Actively engaged outside of the classroom, Musolff directed the school’s annual musical production all 20 years he taught there, served as coach of the Odyssey of the Mind: Destination Imagination program from 1990-2002, spent five years as the advisor to the Mathcounts team and directed Camp Invention, a national science and math camp for 2-6 graders for Germantown, Cedarburg and Grafton students from 2000-04.

He also served as the advisor to Germantown Builder’s Club, a middle school version of the Kiwanis service organization. During his five-year tenure with the club, he helped students in grades 6-8 organize community projects that raised more than $145,000 for the American Cancer Society.

In addition to being a student of Musolff’s, Lawrence senior Eric Armour spent a year working with him as a teacher’s aide in the Gifted and Talented Program, developing deep respect for Musolff’s work with high-risk children.

“It was not a one-size-fits-all method with Keith,” Armour wrote in nominating his former teacher for the award. “He took each student individually and determined the best course of instruction. Whether that meant an accelerated curriculum or more depth in a specific field depended entirely on the individual student. Keith was truly an example of how individualized learning can be effectively applied even as early as middle school.”

A member of the National, Wisconsin and Germantown Education Associations, Musolff earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from UW-Milwaukee and a master’s degree as a reading specialist from Cardinal Stritch University.

Lawrence University Salutes Professors Taylor, Doeringer for 68 Years of Teaching Service

APPLETON, WIS. — Armed with a freshly minted bachelor’s degree in classics after graduating with honors from Lawrence University in 1963, Dan Taylor had his career sights focused on a large university to pursue his research interests.

“I had no specific aspirations to return to Lawrence,” Taylor recalled.

But eleven years later, Taylor found himself back on the campus of his alma mater, teaching Latin and Greek in the same Main Hall classroom in which he himself had studied.

Taylor, Hiram A. Jones Professor of Classics, and Franklin Doeringer, Nathan M. Pusey Professor of East Asian Studies and professor of history, with 68 years of combined teaching service between them, will be recognized with professor emeritus status Sunday, June 10 as retiring faculty at Lawrence’s 158th commencement. They each will be awarded honorary master of arts degrees, ad eundem, as part of the graduation ceremonies that begin at 10:30 a.m. on the Main Hall green. Doeringer, who recently moved to Massachusetts, will be honored in absentia.

Taylor, who spent six years teaching at the University of Illinois before being recruited back to Lawrence, discovered bigger isn’t always better.

“That was not for me,” Taylor said of his time at UI. “When an opportunity arose to return to Lawrence, I jumped at it. I learned being at a small college is preferable to being at a large university because you’re so much more a part of the entire community. You really get to know your students. Plus, I still was able to do the kind of scholarship here that I wanted to at a large institution.”

Taylor’s scholarship specialty, classical linguistics, has helped him establish a reputation as the world’s leading scholar on Marcus Terentius Varro, ancient Rome’s foremost authority on Roman language science who came to be regarded as “the most learned of all the Romans.”

A linguist as well as a classicist, Taylor takes a scientific approach to the study of language. He has written two books on Varro, including “Varro De Lingua Latina X: A New Critical Text and English Translation with Prolegomena,” that culminated nearly 20 years of research on Varro’s once-lost seminal manuscript. He also edited the book “The History of Linguistics in the Classical Period,” which has become one of the most frequently cited texts in the field of classical linguistics, and co-wrote the pamphlet “Foreign Languages at the Middle Level.”

One of Lawrence’s most honored scholars, Taylor is the only faculty member in Lawrence history ever awarded two National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships, both of which sent him to Florence, Italy for a year. In 2002, he returned to Italy a third time on a Fulbright Fellowship as the first Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Linguistics at the University of Trieste.

He received Lawrence’s Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1998 and was the recipient of both the American Philological Association’s National Award for Excellence in Teaching the Classics (1983) and the Wisconsin Association of Foreign Language Teachers’ Distinguished Foreign Language Educator of the Year Award (1990).

In April, after serving as guest speaker at the annual “A Day with the Romans” event for 400 high school students at the University of Wisconsin, Taylor was surprised with a special plaque of commendation from Gov. Doyle by the Wisconsin Latin Teachers Association. Doyle’s commendation cited Taylor’s 33 years of “tireless dedication to the classics and linguistics” and for inspiring “countless students to pursue careers in the classics and many diverse professions with their classics background.”

“I’ve been fortunate enough to be honored for teaching at an institution that puts a premium on good teaching, but I also was able to produce a fair amount of reputable scholarship in my field,” said Taylor, who will leave Appleton for the ski slopes of Colorado later this summer. “I’ve thrived in this atmosphere. I’d like to think I’ve been good for Lawrence and Lawrence certainly has been good to me.”

A specialist in Chinese intellectual history and East Asian history, Doeringer arrived on the Lawrence campus from New York City in 1972 and found a much different Appleton than the one he recently left.

“There wasn’t a lot of interest in Asia at that time,” said Doeringer. “But the influx of the Vietnamese and Laotians in the early 1980s and later the Hmongs, many of whom became a permanent fixture in the community, helped change that.”

Doeringer himself helped pave the way for a heightened community awareness of Asian affairs. Always a historian at heart, his appetite for East Asia was whetted as a graduate student at Columbia University. He brought his hunger for all things Chinese with him when he joined the Lawrence faculty.

At a time when the history curriculum focused almost exclusively on U.S. and European perspectives, Doeringer began introducing courses on China and East Asia that helped create a new emphasis on world and comparative history that hadn’t previously existed.

“It was a big change at the time. It broadened the department and provided more of a global perspective,” said Doeringer, the author of two books, “The Peoples of East Asia” and the two-volume textbook “Discovering the Global Past.”

He also was instrumental in creating a new department that focused specifically on East Asia, serving as the first chair of the East Asian Languages and Cultures department when it was established in 1989. Working with colleagues in China, Doeringer arranged for professors from Heilongjiang University to spend a year at Lawrence teaching in the fledgling department.

“Heilongjiang University was carefully selected, in part because its winters were colder than Appleton’s,” Doeringer said with a chuckle.

Over the next dozen years, Doeringer helped raise close to $5 million for the department, which was renamed East Asian Studies in 2004, through six major grants awarded to Lawrence, including a $1.5 million grant in 2001 from the Freeman Foundation that provided scores of first-hand study and travel opportunities for students and faculty in China and Japan.

“Those grants helped pave the way and make the department a viable option,” said Doeringer.

China’s front door remained locked to most of the world during much of his early teaching career, but when it finally opened in the early 1980s Doeringer led a three-week long trip there for Lawrence alumni in 1983. Under the auspices of the Freeman Grant, he has since made at least a dozen more visits to China and Japan, leading both students and faculty colleagues on journeys of inquiry. Doeringer is hoping to make at least one more trip to the Far East. He is investigating a Fulbright opportunity in Hong Kong to serve as an advisor on general education to Chinese universities.

One of only seven faculty members in Lawrence history to be awarded both the college’s Young Teacher Award (1976) and its Award for Excellence in Teaching (1999), Doeringer admits to feeling a bit like Lawrence’s graduating seniors as he embarks on a new phase in his own life.

“I’m still trying to get the daily rhythm here,” said Doeringer, as he settles into the historically rich environs of Gloucester, Mass. “It’s going to take me a year to get my bearings and figure this all out.”

Lawrence University’s Feyertag Selected for Elite Summer Academy in Germany

APPLETON, WIS. — Aspiring student composer Paul Feyertag will have a unique opportunity to hone his craft this summer as a participant in the Akademie Schloss Solitude’s master class for young composers in Stuttgart, Germany.

The Lawrence University senior from New Berlin was one of 16 composers from around the world selected for the biannual program. Established in 2003, this year’s summer academy will be held August 3-19.

During his two-week residency, Feyertag will work individually with an academy faculty that features some of the most prominent composers of contemporary music, meet other visiting composers to discuss their work and participate in daily presentations in which each composer will introduce and discusses his or her work with the entire group.

Headlining the list of faculty with whom Feyertag will work is Chaya Czernowin, one of the most successful and influential composers of today’s new music scene. A permanent composition instructor at the summer program, Czernowin teaches composition at the University for Music and Performing Arts in Vienna.

Barely beating the program’s application deadline, Feyertag submitted three compositions he had written in the past year. The pieces ranged in length from 90 seconds to 15 minutes. Several weeks later he found out he was among the select few who had been extended an invititation to attend the academy. His participation in the program will be supported by a scholarship from President Jill Beck.

The internationally acclaimed Ensemble SurPlus will be in residence during the second half of the summer academy and will perform two public concerts of the participants’ compositions. Feyertag has already submitted a work entitled “Hammerspace (shh)” for Ensemble SurPlus to perform as part of the academy’s concert series. Written earlier this spring, the six-minute piece is based on a poem written by 2006 Lawrence graduate Melanie Farley.

“Ensemble SurPlus specializes in contemporary repertoire, so I tried to take advantage of their talents,” said Feyertag, a music theory-composition major, of the work he wrote for the group to perform.

Feyertag, who hopes to pursue a career as a professional composer after he graduates in 2008, wrote his first composition at the age of 14 — a jazz lead sheet — but says it wasn’t until his sophomore year at Lawrence that he truly got serious about composing as a craft. He’s looking forward to spending part of his summer working with the academy’s talented faculty and interacting with composers from around the world who are also at the beginning stages of their careers.

“To have a chance to go to another country and be immersed in something like this is going to be a wonderful opportunity,” said Feyertag.

Founded in 1990, the Akademie Schloss Solitude combines scientific and artistic exchange in a retreat-like setting. It places particular value on providing “quality” of time that is better than participants would otherwise experience in their daily lives. It offers fellowships in architecture, visual arts, performing arts, design, literature, music/sound and video/film/new media.

Hitting the Right Note: Lawrence University Percussionist Selected for Elite International Orchestra

APPLETON, WIS. — As graduation presents go, Mike Truesdell might be hard pressed to find a better one.

While on a study abroad program last fall in Amsterdam, Truesdell attended a concert performed by the world-renowned Ensemble Intercontemporain, regarded by many as the world’s premiere contemporary classical ensemble. He left the concert hall awe-struck.

“I remember saying to myself, ‘I want to do that,'” Truesdell recalled.

As fate would have it, this summer he will have an opportunity to do so.

The Lawrence University senior from Verona will return to Europe later this summer as a percussionist with the prestigious Lucerne Festival Academy, in Lucerne, Switzerland. Founded in 2004, the festival academy, an elite “training orchestra” for aspiring professional musicians under the age of 28, is an offshoot of the internationally acclaimed Lucerne Festival.

During its more than 60-year history, the Lucerne Festival has earned a reputation as one of the world’s exclusive musical venues, attracting guest conductors such as Arturo Toscanini, Herbert von Karajan and Paul Sacher as well as orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and the Vienna Philharmonic.

Musicians are selected from around the world by audition tape. And serving as coaches for this year’s festival academy are members of the same awe-inspiring Ensemble Intercontemporain.

“Elated” best describes Truesdell’s state of mind when he found out he had beaten the odds and was one of 140 musicians worldwide selected for the festival academy, which focuses on the study and performance of groundbreaking compositions from the 20th- and 21st-centuries. One of seven percussionists chosen, Truesdell will spend three, all-expenses-paid weeks in Lucerne, from August 18 to September 6, during which he will study under the tutelage of famed French composer and conductor Pierre Boulez.

Highlighting Truesdell’s stay will be three concert performances in Lucerne in early September followed by an eight-day concert tour that will take him to Essen, Germany and Tokyo, Japan. While in Lucerne, Truesdell will get a crash course in Swiss culture by living with a host family.

“This is such an amazing opportunity. I couldn’t even dream about doing something like this,” said Truesdell, whose specialty is the marimba. “This is going to be a great springboard for things to come musically for me. To work with the renowned conductors and coaches of this festival can only improve me as a musician and as a citizen of the world.”

Professor of Music Dane Richeson, director of percussion studies at Lawrence, isn’t surprised one of the most talented students he’s ever had earned a spot in one of the world’s pre-eminent concert festivals.

“Mike has a rare musical gift for understanding how to make the vast array of percussion instruments, with all the individual techniques they require, communicate true emotion to the listener,” said Richeson, who has taught percussion at Lawrence since 1984. “Sometimes this might only be a simple rhythm on a triangle. Yet, Mike is passionate and determined enough to make something so simple and one dimensional into a language that can sound multi-dimensional.

“Mike’s opportunity to study and perform in Lucerne is a wonderful and well-deserved reward for an exceptional musician,” Richeson added.

It was a friend of Truesdell’s from the Boston Conservatory who accompanied him to that Amsterdam concert and first told him about the Lucerne Festival Academy, encouraging him to audition for it. Inspired by what he had just witnessed on stage, he recorded the festival’s required repertoire last November and December in Amsterdam, crossed his fingers and sent it off.

“It was absolutely the most difficult piece of music I had ever seen in my life,” said Truesdell, who earned first-place honors at the 2006 Wisconsin Public Radio-sponsored Neale-Silva Young Artists competition.

A member of the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra (LSO) the past four years, Truesdell received his musical baptism on the violin at the age of four and took up piano in middle school. His percussion evolution continued with a stint with bells, from which he “graduated” to snare drum. He dabbled with marimba throughout high school and now considers keyboard percussion his primary instruments of choice. In addition to playing with the LSO, Truesdell also performs with Vale Todo, an Appleton-based salsa band steeped in traditional Cuban music.

With dreams of pursuing a career in contemporary music and eventually commissioning pieces himself, Truesdell is confident the Lucerne Festival Academy will provide him a “fantastic foot in the door of that world.”

“We only have solo repertoire for percussion from the past 50 years or so, while piano has repertoire from the 17th century,” said Truesdell, whose personal marimba back home takes up half of his bedroom. “I want to support new music as much as I possibly can.”

As he wraps up the final weeks of his life as an undergraduate and awaits his college graduation as a percussion performance major on June 10, Truesdell says he’s looking forward to discovering the impact this festival academy will have on his life.

“I had such an amazing experience my last time in Europe and came back such a different person, that I can only image the potential for change in store for me this time. Working with the caliber of musicians I will be exposed to, it’s anyone’s guess how great this will be.”

Middle and high school students near Truesdell’s hometown will be the immediate beneficiaries of his experiences in Lucerne. When he returns to Wisconsin this fall, Truesdell plans on teaching private music lessons for a year before pursuing graduate school studies.