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Elizabethtown College News   

    11/18/2008permalink Former Harsco CEO welcomed as Sara Lodge Executive-in-Residence
    11/18/2008permalink College Receives $1,000,000 Gift to Provide Student Scholarships
    11/17/2008permalink College to Hold Annual Christmas Candlelight Service
    11/17/2008permalink Kafka Scholar Releases New Translation of “Amerika: The Missing Person"
    11/17/2008permalink Reading by Award-winning Writers at Elizabethtown College
    11/17/2008permalink Elizabethtown College Presents American Family Christmas Concert
    11/17/2008permalink Rock the E-Vote – A Party to Bring the Parties Together
    11/17/2008permalink A Cappella for Aid
    11/17/2008permalink Elizabethtown College Presents Tony Award-Winner “Urinetown: The Musical”
    11/7/2008permalink Elephant Toothpaste Garners Award for Elizabethtown’s Chem Club
    11/6/2008permalink Emotion presents fall showcase "Bright Lights and Dark Nights" Dec. 5, 6
    11/6/2008permalink College presents solo recitals on Nov. 10
    11/6/2008permalink Student chamber recital to be held Nov. 24
    11/6/2008permalink Lecture celebrating New Deal Post Office Murals to be held Nov. 13
    11/6/2008permalink Free showing of "Baran" to be held as part of Peace Fellow Residency
    11/6/2008permalink Guest recital featuring Soprano Teresa Bomberger to be held Dec. 1
    11/3/2008permalink Educate for Service Awards presented


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11/18/2008
Former Harsco CEO welcomed as Sara Lodge Executive-in-Residence

Elizabethtown College has named retired Harsco Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Derek Hathaway as Sara Lodge Executive-in-Residence in its Department of Business. During this appointment that begins January 2009, Hathaway will bring four decades of international business experience to Elizabethtown’s classrooms. Additionally, Hathaway’s long-time involvement with community organizations on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean will offer students a living case study of the powerful impact of the College’s “Educate for Service” motto.

A native of the United Kingdom, Derek Hathaway founded Dartmouth Investments Limited in 1966 and built a group of engineering businesses into a public corporation, which was acquired by Harsco Corporation in 1979. Over the next decade, Hathaway was promoted through a series of increasingly more responsible positions before being named Harsco’s chairman, president and chief executive officer in April 1994. The company prospered under his leadership, with sales exceeding $4 billion by the time he retired in April 2008.

Hathaway has served on numerous boards of public corporations, charitable institutions and government advisory councils in both the United Kingdom and the United States. In 1998, he was awarded the prestigious Ellis Island Medal of Honor, which is presented annually to individuals of foreign heritage for extraordinary service to the United States and international community. Additionally in 2008, Her Majesty The Queen of England presented him with the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, one of the highest civil service honors bestowed on a native of the British Empire. Locally, Hathaway also has been awarded honorary degrees from Elizabethtown College, The Dickinson School of Law, and Messiah College in recognition of his outstanding career and commitment to serving the community.

As Sara Lodge Executive-in-Residence, Hathaway will advance Elizabethtown’s mission by joining theory and practice for students, and will underline the importance of the College’s commitment to “Educate for Service.” He will share his expertise and experience in a variety of ways, including classroom instruction, formal presentations, internal publications, and informal meetings. In addition, Hathaway will provide career guidance to our students, will advise the Department of Business and Elizabethtown College on matters of curriculum and program development, and will promote links between the College and business community. The Sara Lodge Executive-in-Residence Program was created in 1991 through the generous contribution of siblings, Dr. William H. Lodge and Sara Lodge ’41, both of whom attended Elizabethtown College.




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11/18/2008
College Receives $1,000,000 Gift to Provide Student Scholarships

The Donald B. and Dorothy L. Stabler Foundation recently awarded Elizabethtown College a $1,000,000 grant to create the Stabler Scholarship Fund, significantly increasing the College’s commitment to student scholarship aid.

Beginning in the 2009-2010 academic year, Stabler Scholarships will be awarded to Elizabethtown College students who exhibit “…the character, motivation and achievements of candidates who give indication of their eagerness for a college education, do not expect a free education and recognize the virtues of working for what they receive.”

“This is an extraordinary gift,” said Elizabethtown College president Theodore Long. “Thanks to the Stabler Foundation, the Stabler Scholarship will help highly motivated students benefit from the education that Elizabethtown College offers - for generations to come.”

According to Long, Stabler Scholarship recipients will be encouraged to repay the scholarships in the years after they graduate in order to make even more scholarships available to future Elizabethtown College students. Characterized as a “debt of conscience” by the Stabler Foundation, this is consistent with Mr. and Mrs. Stabler’s view of philanthropy.

Forming the Harrisburg-based foundation in 1966, Mr. and Mrs. Stabler believed in the importance of education and were aware of the fact that many young men and women might not be able to have the benefits of higher education without financial assistance. In his will, Mr. Stabler stated, “Each alumnus of a private college or university owes a considerable debt to his or her Alma Mater… (and) should be encouraged to form the habit of making annual financial contributions to the college in accordance with his or her means.”

“At Elizabethtown College, our motto is ‘Educate for Service’,” Long said. “This will remind Stabler Scholarship recipients that they can and should serve future generations of students here. No one knows better what an impact scholarship aid can have than students who have benefitted from scholarships themselves.”




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11/17/2008
College to Hold Annual Christmas Candlelight Service

On Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m., Elizabethtown College will welcome members of the community to its annual Christmas Candlelight Service, which will be held in Leffler Chapel and Performance Center. An uplifting, celebratory start to the holiday season, this service is free of charge and open to the public. The event is not ticketed, and seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Auditorium doors will open approximately 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start of the service. For more information, please contact Karen Hodges at 717-361-1260.

The Christmas Candlelight Service – which is coordinated by the College’s Office of Religious Life – is a longtime community favorite. This year’s service will include performances and seasonal sentiments from the College’s students, faculty and staff. To herald the Christmas holiday season, gifted performing groups – including the Women’s Chorus, Gospel Choir, Camerata and the Arioso Flute Choir – will play and sing holiday favorites. In addition, several speakers will offer heartwarming thoughts focusing on their favorite lessons and carols. All are invited to enjoy seasonal treats at a reception in the lobby following the service.




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11/17/2008
Kafka Scholar Releases New Translation of “Amerika: The Missing Person"

Elizabethtown College Professor Mark Harman – who garnered critical acclaim for his edition of modern classic Franz Kafka’s masterpiece “Das Schloss” (“The Castle”) – has crafted an elegant new translation of the author’s first novel, “Der Verschollene” (“The Missing Person”). Published by Random House’s Schocken Books, “Amerika: The Missing Person” is now available online and will be released at book stores across the nation on Nov. 18.

Three year’s after Kafka’s early death from tuberculosis in 1924, Kurt Wolff Verlag published, under the title “Amerika,” a version of “The Missing Person” that was edited by the author’s friend and literary executor, Max Brod. Over the past 30 years, an international team of Kafka scholars has worked on restoring all of Kafka’s writings by consulting the original manuscripts and notes, correcting transcription errors, and removing Brod’s editorial interventions. Harman’s translation is based on the restored text of the resulting German-language critical edition.

With the same expert balance of precision and nuance that marked his award-winning translation of “The Castle,” Harman now restores Kafka’s dry humor and linguistic precision in his translation of “Der Verschollene.” “The Missing Person” tells the story of young Karl Rossmann, who is banished by his parents to America following an incident involving a housemaid. With unquenchable optimism and in the company of two comic-sinister companions, Rossmann throws himself into misadventure after misadventure, eventually heading toward Oklahoma, where a career in the theater beckons. Though we can never know how Kafka planned to end the novel, Harman’s translation allows us to appreciate, as closely as possible, what Kafka originally committed to the page.

Mark Harman – a native of Dublin, Ireland – is currently chair of the Department of Modern Languages and professor of German and English at Elizabethtown College. Harman did his doctoral work at Yale University and also has taught at Dartmouth College, Oberlin College, Franklin & Marshall College, and the University of Pennsylvania.

Harman’s translation of Kafka’s novel “The Castle” for the same publisher was nominated for the PEN/Book-of-the-Month Club prize, selected as a best book of the year by the Los Angeles Times, and won the first Lois Roth Award of the Modern Language Association of America. The paperback edition of the translation is currently in its fifth printing. Harman’s other translations include “Robert Walser Rediscovered” (University Press of New England), which he edited and co-translated, and Hermann Hesse’s selected letters, “Soul of the Age” (Farrar, Straus), as well as shorter works by contemporary German writers ranging from Günter Grass to Martin Walser.

His most recent publications include essays on Kafka’s “The Castle” in “A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka,” Swiss writer Robert Walser in Sewanee Review, the Gaelic tradition (also in Sewanee Review), Kafka and Berlin in New England Review, and Bertolt Brecht’s “Galileo” in Sinn und Form (Berlin). Other articles and reviews about German-language authors, Irish literature and literary translation have appeared in journals such as Partisan Review, Boston Review and New Literary History, as well as newspapers such as The Philadelphia Inquirer, Los Angeles Times, The Irish Times (Dublin), and The Washington Post.

Among his recent literary and scholarly awards were residencies at MacDowell Colony (New Hampshire), Ledig House (New York), Djerassi Foundation (California), European Translators’ Collegium (Germany) and Tyrone Guthrie Centre (Ireland); a Berlin Prize Fellowship at the American Academy, Berlin; and a grant for translation from the Office of Federal Chancellor of Austria.

Upcoming regional talks and readings by Harman include: Gettysburg College on Nov. 18 (sponsored by "The Gettysburg Review"); Princeton University on Nov. 24; Franklin & Marshall College on Dec. 2; Austrian Cultural Forum at the Austrian Embassy in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 21, 2009; and the University of Pennsylvania on Jan. 28, 2009.

South African novelist and Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee described Harman’s translation of “The Castle” in The New York Review of Books as follows: "Semantically accurate to an admirable degree, faithful to Kafka’s nuances, responsive to the tempo of his sentences and to the larger music of his paragraph construction. For the general reader or for the student, it will be the translation of preference for some time to come."




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11/17/2008
Reading by Award-winning Writers at Elizabethtown College

Elizabethtown College will present An Evening of Poetry and Prose on Tuesday, November 18 at 7 p.m. in Gibble Auditorium by two talented professors. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 361-1236.

Lenore Hart is an award-winning author of poetry, children’s literature, and young adult fiction. Her novel Becky was a main selection of the Literary Guild, and the Doubleday and Book of the Month book clubs. Previous novels include Ordinary Springs and Waterwoman, a Barnes & Noble Discover Award winner, and a BookSpan and Literary Guild selection. Her short fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and reviews have appeared internationally. Nevermore, a novel due out in 2010, is based on the marriage of Virginia Clemm and Edgar Allan Poe.

Jesse Waters is an award-winning poet, essayist, and writer of fiction. Winner in the 2001 River Styx International Poetry contest judged by Billy Collins, Jesse Waters has also been a finalist in both the Davoren Hanna International Poetry Competition and the Glimmertrain 2003 Poetry Contest. Jesse's fiction, poetry and essay work has appeared nationally and internationally in magazines such as 88: A Contemporary Review of Poetry, Adirondack Review, Cortland Review, Cimarron Review, Sycamore Review, Magma, Plainsongs and many others.




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11/17/2008
Elizabethtown College Presents American Family Christmas Concert

Revel in the spirit of the season as Elizabethtown College’s Department of Fine and Performing Arts present its annual American Family Christmas Concert on Sunday, Dec. 7 at 3 p.m. in Leffler Chapel and Performance Center. This event – featuring performances by the Women’s Chorus; the Concert Choir; the College-Community Chorus; the student-directed ensemble, Camerata; and the Jazz Band – is open to the public and free of charge. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

During the concert, the Women’s Chorus will perform works by Benjamin Britten and Daniel Nelson. The group is directed by adjunct faculty member Carrie Fritz.

The Concert Choir and College-Community Chorus – both directed by Associate Professor of Music Matthew Fritz – also will perform. With Dr. Fritz on sabbatical, these groups will be conducted by Emery DeWitt, director of music at the Lancaster Church of the Brethren. The Concert Choir will perform a collection of significant choral works for the season, such as pieces by Manz, Bruckner, Fissinger, Rutter, Flummerfelt and Mechem. The College-Community Chorus – which includes both Elizabethtown College students and local community members – will perform an international collection of carols from Spain, France, England, Trinidad and the Appalachian region of the United States.

In addition, the Jazz Band will present holiday favorites, such as “Winter Wonderland,” “Jingle Bells” and “White Christmas.” The group – comprised of College students of many majors who perform on campus and in the community – is led by Grant Moore II, director of the College’s Preparatory Division.




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11/17/2008
Rock the E-Vote – A Party to Bring the Parties Together

After months of dueling it out in debates and advertisements, the Democratic and Republican parties tonight must come together under a new U.S. president. Filling this rift may be a difficult task, but groups across the country are taking on the responsibility.

Here at Elizabethtown, the College Democrats and College Republicans will come together and host an event to erase party lines and to celebrate every citizen’s right to vote. This event – Rock the E-Vote – will take place Tuesday, November 4 from 5 until 10 p.m. in the Event Space in Brossman Commons. All students, faculty and staff are welcome to join together to watch the election returns, while enjoying performances by Melica, For the Greater Good, Vocalign, Mad Cow and Blue Faze Step Team. Light snacks and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.

Seeing this event as the first step toward focusing on the future, both student political organizations are looking to ease political tensions with tonight's gathering. “We are hosting this event together because we see the importance of moving forward as a united country,” explains junior Katy Kauffman, who is vice president of College Democrats. “We have to begin working together to make our nation stronger.”

Both groups believe that, in order to accomplish this, citizens must do their part and become politically active. “We are all Americans and all want what we think is best for this beautiful country we call home,” states Kauffman. “This event celebrates people taking the most important step in making this country a better place – responsibly exercising our right to vote.”

For more information, please contact Katy Kauffman at kauffmank@etown.edu.

All are invited to:
Rock the E-Vote
Tuesday, November 4
5 until 10 p.m.
Event Space, Brossman Commons
Enjoy Watching the Election Returns
Free Food, Free Entertainment and Free from Partisanship!




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11/17/2008
A Cappella for Aid

Elizabethtown College’s all-female a cappella group, Melica, will hold a benefit concert November 9, 2008 entitled Girls Night Out. The purpose of the show is to raise money for victims (most of whom are women) of domestic abuse. The event is one way in which the group carries out the college’s motto of “Educate For Service.”

Instead of making a profit from ticket sales, all money collected at the event will go to Domestic Services of Lancaster County (DVSLC), an agency that directly aids victims of domestic violence and their children. Girls Night Out, which will begin at 7:00pm, will consist of a cappella songs, solo performers, speakers and a local band. Each act is volunteering their talents to the event; no group is receiving money to perform. The women in Melica sponsor the concert annually in order to educate the Elizabethtown College Community about the dangers of abuse.

Admission to Girls Night Out is $3 for college students and $5 for the general public. Tickets will be sold at the doors starting at 6:30pm on the night of the event. Melica will also be collecting cash and check donations for DVSLC. Girls Night Out is open to everyone and will be held in the Event Space of the Brossman Commons, located in the center of the Elizabethtown College Campus.

Domestic Violence Services of Lancaster County is a part of the Community Action Program of Lancaster County, a non-profit human services and community development corporation. Visit http://www.caplanc.org/ for more information.


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11/17/2008
Elizabethtown College Presents Tony Award-Winner “Urinetown: The Musical”

Elizabethtown College’s Fine and Performing Arts Department will present the irreverent Tony award-winner, “Urinetown: the Musical,” for its fall 2008 production. The musical – which opens Nov. 6 – will be presented in the Tempest Theatre in Baugher Student Center.

“Urinetown” director Michael Swanson – who is associate professor of theatre and coordinator of theatre and dance at the College – says the musical “tells an earnest tale of love, greed and revolution that pokes fun at politics and musical theatre.” Written by Greg Kotis and Mark Hollmann, “Urinetown” is set in a town where the residents have to pay to use the facilities. In a future in which water has so dried up that the tired and poor must dole out their hard-earned cash for their most private functions, hero Bobby Strong rises from the huddled masses to rally a rebellion against the money-hungry Urine Good Company. The production’s songs – drawing from “West Side Story,” “Chicago” and “Les Misérables,” among others – pay witty homage to the American musical theatre tradition. Outrageously funny and painfully honest, “Urinetown” provides a fresh perspective about one of America’s greatest art forms.

Performances of “Urinetown” are slated for Nov. 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, and 15 at 8 p.m. Beginning Monday, Nov. 3, tickets for the production can be purchased for $5 through Elizabethtown College’s Theatre Box Office by calling 717-361-1170 or sending a request via e-mail to boxoffice@etown.edu.

The cast for “Urinetown” includes Officer Lockstock, played by Ezra Schatz of Elliotsburg, Pa.; Caldwell B. Cladwell, played by Sam Gillam of Glen Burnie, Md.; Penelope Pennywise, played by Kristina Psitos of Wallingford, Pa.; Mrs. McQueen, played by Alyssa Miller of Boyertown, Pa.; Senator Fipp, played by DJ Littell of Landisville, Pa.; Officer Barrel, played by Katlyn Howes of Taneytown, Md.; Hope Cladwell, played by Pauline Jarvie of Mendon, N.Y.; Bobby Strong, played by Travis Lucas of Wallingford, Pa.; Little Sally, played by Tammy Bateman of Woodlyn, Pa.; and Hot Blades Harry, played by Nathan Shughart of Barnesville, Pa.

Also included in the cast are Old Man Strong, played by Peter Northrop of Hatfield, Pa.; Josephine Strong, played by Suzanne Harris of Furlong, Pa.; Tiny Tom, played by Michael Fleming of Ewing, N.J.; Soupy Sue, played by Lauren Fairweather of Hillsborough, N.J.; Little Becky Two-Shoes, played by Melissa Fitts of Montgomery, N.Y.; Bobby the Stockfish, played by Spencer O’Dowd of Methuen, Mass; Cladwell’s Secretary, played by Jen Schoonmaker of Chambersburg, Pa.; Mrs. Millennium, played by Linda Bateman of Folcroft, Pa.; Silly Girl Jill, played by Abbie Ricker of Carlisle, Pa.; and Dr. Billeaux, played by Elizabeth Karcha of Wilmington, Del.

The chorus for “Urinetown” includes Laura Abernethy of Washington, D.C.; Becky Altland of York, Pa.; Chelsea Cornwell of East Greenville, Pa.; Jaclyn Light of Leesport, Pa.; Amanda Marfisi of Bethlehem, Pa.; and Gabe Robison of Selinsgrove, Pa.

Tom Hackman, assistant professor of theatre at Elizabethtown, oversees scenic design for “Urinetown” and Barry Fritz, the College’s technical operations director, is in charge of lighting design. Costumes are designed by Shannon Bowman. The music director for the production is Rob Spence, Elizabethtown’s assistant professor of music and director of instrumental studies, and the vocal director is Magda Silva. “Urinetown” is being choreographed by Jillian Roberts of Barnesville, Pa. Beth Lewis of Lititz, Pa., is the stage manager for the production.


Left: In” Urinetown: The Musical,” Hope (Pauline Jarvie) pulls Bobby’s (Travis Lucas) ear to her heart, so he can hear what it has to say.







Below: : In “Urinetown: The Musical”, Bobby Strong (Travis Lucas, shown left) and protective corporate father Cladwell (Sam Gillam, shown right) come to blows over the future of Hope (Pauline Jarvie). 





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11/7/2008
Elephant Toothpaste Garners Award for Elizabethtown’s Chem Club

One E-town student group earned a national title from the American Chemical Society this year, and an elephant helped them do it.

The diverse resume of the Elizabethtown College Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society (ACS)—commonly referred to as the Chem Club—garnered them an Honorable Mention in an annual awards program sponsored by the national organization. During the 2007-2008 academic year, students participated in Dr. Al Hazari's chemistry magic show, which was a part of the Middle Atlantic Association of Liberal Arts Chemistry Teachers meeting held on campus in November 2007, and they hosted the 72nd Intercollegiate Student Chemists' Conference. Five students also presented original research at last year’s ACS National Meeting in New Orleans.

Additionally, members of the student organization guided elementary-age children through the making of elephant toothpaste at the Activities Fun Fair at Elizabethtown Middle School during Into the Streets. Last year, the outing had Chem Club members telling small groups of first through fifth graders that Elizabethtown College had a pet elephant. “Bruno” was napping, and the kids had to hurry to make his toothpaste. This was an opportunity for the college students to teach the children about catalysts—chemicals used to speed up reactions. The young ones received the added bonus of making chemicals react!

E-town’s Chem Club found enormous success with the experiment, so they submitted it to the Chem Demo Exchange, a program where Student Affiliate groups present their favorite chemistry demonstration that uses household materials. The activity was selected by the ACS Kids & Chemistry Division as an outstanding demo.

Chapter President Alaina DeToma (shown in the center to right, wearing the orange Into the Streets T-shirt) says she knows that the Honorable Mention and the club’s success are due to busy members and hard work. “I think it speaks well for the Elizabethtown Chemistry Department and the College for supporting the chapter,” she says. “Hopefully, the success of last year's efforts will inspire the club members to make this year even better!”

The Chapter will be recognized in the November/December 2008 Issue of “in Chemistry,” a magazine for Student Affiliates of ACS, and at the Undergraduate Awards Ceremony of the National ACS Meeting in Salt Lake City in spring 2009.

by Audra Farren ’09




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11/6/2008
Emotion presents fall showcase "Bright Lights and Dark Nights" Dec. 5, 6

Elizabethtown College Presents “Bright Lights and Dark Nights” Dance Showcase

ELIZABETHTOWN, Pa. – The Elizabethtown College Department of Fine and Performing Arts will present a fall showcase by the College’s dance club, Emotion, on Friday, Dec. 5 and Saturday, Dec. 6 at 8 p.m. in Leffler Chapel and Performance Center. The event is open to the public. Tickets – which may be purchased at the door the evening of the concert – cost $3 for students and $4 for the general public. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

The fall showcase – which is themed and titled “Bright Lights and Dark Nights” – will feature dances choreographed and performed by Elizabethtown College students. The event will include a wide variety of performances, from a segment showcasing the toe-tapping Broadway jazz style to powerful pieces focused around peace, love and conflict.


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11/6/2008
College presents solo recitals on Nov. 10

Elizabethtown College Presents Solo Recital

ELIZABETHTOWN, Pa. – Elizabethtown College’s Fine and Performing Arts Department will present a solo recital featuring several of the College’s talented student musicians and vocalists on Monday, Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in Zug Recital Hall. The event is open to the public and free of charge. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

Performing will be:

  • seniors Micah Albrycht of Plymouth Meeting, Pa.; Lore Herzer of Center Valley, Pa.; Jessica Lutz of Doylestown, Pa.; Emily Sanders of Chambersburg, Pa.; and Alice Yu of Athens, Ga.;
  • juniors Brad Eargle of Mifflintown, Pa., and Michael Tschop of Dingmans Ferry, Pa.; and
  • sophomore Leeann Hackett of Northbridge, Md.
The students will perform works by Bach, Bartók, Debussy, Handel, Mercadante and C.P.E. Bach, among others.


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11/6/2008
Student chamber recital to be held Nov. 24

The Elizabethtown College Department of Fine and Performing Arts will present a student chamber recital on Monday, Nov. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in Zug Recital Hall. The event is open to the public and free of charge. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

The program will feature small ensembles of students, under the direction of department faculty, performing works by Mozart, Mendelssohn and Krommer, along with contemporary composers Eugenie Rocherolle, Catherine McMichael, Pierre Lantier and Marty Paich. The concert will feature a variety of musical timbres and combinations, including:

  • a saxophone quartet, featuring junior Brad Eargle of Mifflintown, Pa.; first-year student Tanna Leigh Gibble of Lebanon, Pa.; senior Nick Diaduk of Lexington Park, Md., and first-year student John Puzzo of Avon, Conn.;
  • a mixed wind quartet, featuring sophomore Sarah Johnson, flute, of Sinking Spring, Pa.; first-year student Tanna Leigh Gibble, clarinet, of Lebanon, Pa.; senior Amanda Marfisi, French horn, of Bethlehem, Pa.; and College adjunct faculty member Faith Shiffer, bass clarinet;
  • a clarinet ensemble, featuring sophomore Sarah Biedka of Lower Burrell, Pa., junior Jacqueline Elder of Centereach, N.Y., and junior Katelynn Olsavick of Hollidaysburg, Pa.;
  • a flute quartet, featuring first-year student Stephanie Crawford of Warminster, Pa.; first-year student Amber Farah of Palmyra, Pa., senior Lore Herzer of Center Valley, Pa., and sophomore Caitlynn Hill of Haddon Heights, N.J.;
  • a piano ensemble, featuring first-year student Alison Sailer of Lititz, Pa., first-year student Kelsey Hayes of Hummelstown, Pa., first-year student Elizabeth Shea of Amherst, N.Y., first-year student Rachel Hensberger of Perry Hall, Md., sophomore Rebecca Weida of Perkasie, Pa., and junior Bingye Mu of Doylestown, Pa.
  • and vocal ensembles from “Elijah” and “The Magic Flute,” featuring junior Danielle Hopkins of Franklin, Mass.; sophomore Dominique DiMeglio of Skillman, N.J.; senior Emily Sanders of Chambersburg, Pa.; and first-year student David Hiddemen of Duncannon, Pa.



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11/6/2008
Lecture celebrating New Deal Post Office Murals to be held Nov. 13

The Fine Arts Division of Elizabethtown College’s Department of Fine and Performing Arts will present a lecture by historian David Lembeck on Thursday, Nov. 13 at 3:30 p.m. in Brinser Lecture Room (room 114) of Steinman Center. The event is open to the public and free of charge. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

In 1933, the administration of then newly-elected U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt launched an ambitious program to place murals and sculptures in post offices across the country, including the post office in Elizabethtown, Pa. To mark the 75th anniversary of the New Deal, historian David Lembeck will present an illustrated lecture, titled “New Deal Post Office Murals in Pennsylvania.” A Pennsylvania Humanities Council Commonwealth Speaker, Lembeck is co-curator of the exhibition “A Common Canvas: Pennsylvania’s New Deal Post Office Murals,” which opens Nov. 23 at the Pennsylvania State Museum in Harrisburg, Pa.


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11/6/2008
Free showing of "Baran" to be held as part of Peace Fellow Residency

Elizabethtown College’s High Library will present the film, “Baran,” on Tuesday, Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in Gibble Auditorium of Esbenshade Hall. Following the showing, the College’s 2008 Alumni Peace Fellow, Dr. Caroline Hartzell, will lead an audience discussion of the relevance and implications of the film’s messages. This event is part of an annual Peace Fellow residency, which is made possible through the generous sponsorship of the Elizabethtown College Alumni Peace Fellowship. It is free of charge and open to the public. More information is available by calling 717-361-1222.

From Academy Award-winning Iranian director Majid Majidi, “Baran” (2001) is a heart-warming story that highlights the plight of Afghanistan refugees before the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001. More than 1.4 million of that country’s people fled to Iran during the Russian invasion of their homeland. This film tells the story of one young Iranian boy and an Afghan girl caught in the turmoil of that time.

Dr. Caroline Hartzell is professor of political science and director of the Globalization Studies program at Gettysburg College. She teaches courses in international relations and specializes in international political economy with an emphasis on issues of development, conflict and globalization. Dr. Hartzell's research focuses on civil war settlements and the effects institutions, both domestic and international, have on social conflict.

The Elizabethtown College Alumni Peace Fellowship is a community of Elizabethtown alumni responsive to the enduring relevance of the College’s peace identity. Believing this aspect of the College’s legacy to be of profound significance in the contemporary world, the Fellowship seeks to affirm and promote the values of peace, non-violence, human dignity and social justice in the global community, as stated in Elizabethtown’s Mission Statement.


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11/6/2008
Guest recital featuring Soprano Teresa Bomberger to be held Dec. 1

The Elizabethtown College Department of Fine and Performing Arts will present soprano Teresa Bomberger in a guest recital on Monday, Dec. 1 at 7:30 p.m. in Zug Recital Hall. The event is open to the public and free of charge. More information is available by calling 717-361-1212.

Bomberger is a winner of the Montpelier Recital Competition and the Lotte Lehman Art Song Competition. She has performed leading roles with the Hawaii Opera Theatre, the Maryland Lyric Opera, the Cornell Savoyards, the Durham Savoyards and the Maryland Shakespeare Festival.

The first half of her Elizabethtown performance will feature songs and arias by Handel, Mozart, Samuel Barber, and Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel. The second half will be devoted to Advent and Christmas music, including excerpts from Bach’s cantata, “Nun komm der heiden Heiland,” and favorite carols by Peter Cornelius, Max Reger, Joseph Rheinberger and John Jacob Niles.




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11/3/2008
Educate for Service Awards presented

Elizabethtown College presented three alumni with Educate for Service awards. The highest honor given to Elizabethtown alumni, these awards are presented annually at the President’s Dinner to those who have made exceptional contributions to the community, professional field or the College.

A Service through Professional Achievement award went to David G. Behrs, Ph.D., of Terre Haute, Ind., a 1981 graduate of Elizabethtown. Behrs is the 15th president of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College in Indiana, the nation’s oldest Catholic liberal arts college for women. He was appointed the first lay president of the 1,700-student institution following an extensive national search.

After graduating from Elizabethtown with a bachelor’s degree in history and social science, Behrs earned a master’s degree in counseling and student personnel from Shippensburg University and his doctorate in counseling and student development from American University.

Spending the past 25 years of his career in higher education, Behrs came to Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College after serving as both the associate provost for university initiatives and vice president for student affairs and enrollment management at Dominican University of California. His career has included positions at Lynchburg College, Marymount University, George Mason School of Law and The Pennsylvania State University.

A Service to Humanity award was presented to Katharine A. Moser of New York City, a 2003 graduate of Elizabethtown and the youngest person to ever receive an Educate for Service award. The following is an excerpt from a March 18, 2007, story in the New York Times written by Amy Harmon: “The test, the counselor said, had come back positive. Katharine Moser inhaled sharply. She thought she was as ready as anyone could be to face her genetic destiny. She had attended a genetic counseling session and visited a psychiatrist, as required by the clinic. She had undergone the recommended neurological exam. And yet, she realized in that moment, she had never expected to hear those words.

“Ms. Moser was 23. It had taken her months to convince the clinic at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University medical Center in Manhattan that she wanted, at such a young age, to find out whether she carried the gene for Huntington’s disease. Huntington’s, the incurable brain disorder that possessed her grandfather’s body and ravaged his mind for three decades, typically strikes in middle age. Ms. Moser is part of a vanguard of people at risk for Huntington’s who are choosing to learn early what their future holds.”

Moser graduated from Elizabethtown with a bachelor’s degree in occupational therapy. She works at the Terence Cardinal Cooke Health Care Center in Manhattan, where her grandfather spent 10 years in treatment before dying in 2002 from Huntington’s.

Moser has found strength through advocacy. She educates about the disease, even appearing on network television and writing a children’s book about Huntington’s, and organizes fundraising events for the Huntington’s Disease Society of America. Whenever she gets a break at work, Moser returns to the Huntington’s unit to customize wheelchairs with padding to fit each patient’s unique physical tics and fabricate special silverware to prolong his or her ability to feed himself/herself.

A Service to the College award was presented to Jay R. Buffenmyer, Ph.D., of Palmyra, Pa. A member of the Class of 1959, Buffenmyer graduated from Elizabethtown – after a two-year pause for a calling in the Brethren Volunteer Service – with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. After graduation, Buffenmyer went into the Peace Corps until 1965, serving in Tunisia and India. Upon returning to the United States, he went on to earn a master’s degree in public and international affairs and a doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh.

Buffenmyer began his teaching career in 1971 with the Organization of American States, where he was assigned to the Institute of Management and Productivity in Barbados, followed by two years as chairman of the Department of Economics and Business Administration at Lebanon Valley College. He returned to Elizabethtown in 1976, where he served twice as chairman of the Department of Business. Although Buffenmyer retired as a full professor in 2003, most of the campus community believes that he is still working full-time at the College because of his continuing presence and involvement in campus life. As a professor emeritus for the past five years, Buffenmyer has taught almost 10 different courses, coordinates student internships, and advises between 30 and 40 students each semester.

Buffenmyer has many notable achievements to his name, from consulting with private-sector businesses and educational organizations to an extensive list of research and publications, including work funded by the World Bank and the Ford Foundation. But his greatest success – and a source of personal pride, as well as a lasting legacy to the College – was his creation of the International Business Program at Elizabethtown in 1983. The program became a major in 1992, which is a credit to Buffenmyer who has worked in seven countries and visited more than 60 others.





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