香港六合彩开奖直播

Tag: alumni

#NPUBlueandGoldDay

The Office of Advancement announces North Park鈥檚 second annual Giving Day on May 3.

The Office of Advancement announces North Park鈥檚 second annual Giving Day on May 3.

On #NPUBlueandGoldDay we invite the entire North Park community to Wear It. Give It. Share It. all in support of student scholarships and the University we love!

Here is how you can be a part of #NPUBlueandGoldDay:

WEAR IT! Show your North Park pride by wearing blue and gold.
GIVE IT! Make a gift to the North Park Fund in support of our students.
SHARE IT! Post on social media using #NPUBlueandGoldDay.

We look forward to celebrating #NPUBlueandGoldDay with you on May 3 and please encourage your North Park friends and family to join us on this special day.

Follow Us:


Posted on Categories Announcement, StoriesTags

鈥淗ope Has a Home Here鈥 at 香港六合彩开奖直播

Hate has no home here. Hope has a home here.

香港六合彩开奖直播 held a candlelight vigil on the steps of Old Main on February 20, 2017.

President Parkyn welcomed students, faculty, staff, and the public to a candlelight vigil on February 20, 2017, called 鈥淗ope Has a Home Here.鈥 聽Held in response to the travel ban issued several weeks previously by President Trump, the vigil tapped into the movement 鈥淗ate Has No Home Here,鈥 created by a North Park alumnus.

Candles were lit starting from the center candle, and the light moved through the crowd, each person giving light to the next. A series of litanies were performed by students and faculty, led by Professor Boaz Johnson and Student Body President Steve Smrt, with an audience response of 鈥淗ate has no home here鈥 and 鈥淗ope has a home here.鈥

鈥淲e remember,鈥 said Faith and Justice leader Jorie Dybcio, 鈥渙ur own immigrant origins, and the origin of 香港六合彩开奖直播 as a Christian institution that, from the beginning of its existence, has sought to empower and give voice to all.鈥

鈥淗ope has a home here!鈥 the audience responded.

Dr. Helen Hudgens performed a rendition of 鈥淭his Little Light of Mine鈥 substituting some of the lyrics to reflect the current events, such as the DREAMers act, and calling out prominent political figures, letting them know that her light will continue to shine. This was followed by a multi-lingual reading鈥攊ncluding in English, Spanish, German, Korean, Afrikaans鈥攐f Micah 6:8: 鈥淗e has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God鈥 (NIV).

Although the night was windy, and multiple candles were blown out, there was always someone nearby to share their light. It characterized the attitude of those who attended: they were there to help re-light the candle that had been snuffed out in others鈥 lives.

鈥淭he Hope Candlelight Vigil was an attempt for us to follow the teaching and example of Christ, to love our neighbor鈥攖he widow, the orphan, the stranger, the Samaritan. . . . My hope and prayer is that we鈥檒l continue to be a community which keeps doing this. In doing so, we will be more like Jesus, and truly a Christian community,鈥 said Dr. Boaz Johnson.

Posted on Categories News, StoriesTags , ,

I Chose North Park: “I enjoyed the relationships most,” Michelle Dodson C’03

Michelle Dodson C鈥03, biblical and theological studies alumna, shares why she chose North Park.

Michelle Dodson C’03, biblical and theological studies alumna, shares why she chose North Park.

Michelle鈥檚 experience as a biblical and theological studies major helped prepare her professionally for the work she does in ministry today. Serving in campus ministry and engaging with college diversity 鈥渉elped me develop a theology of racial reconciliation. It also gave me opportunities to learn how to communicate that theology.鈥 Michelle serves as associate pastor of New Community Covenant Church in Bronzeville, a neighborhood on Chicago鈥檚 South Side. She describes New Community as 鈥渁n intentionally multiracial congregation that actively pursues racial reconciliation and social justice.鈥 She鈥檚 currently working toward a PhD in sociology with a focus on multiracial congregations.

As a high school student, Michelle chose to come to 香港六合彩开奖直播 because she was looking for a Christian liberal arts university that was small enough for her to get to know people. 鈥淚 was attending a Covenant church in California at the time,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd my pastor suggested I apply to North Park.鈥

As it turned out, North Park was a great fit for Michelle. 鈥淭he relationships that I built at 香港六合彩开奖直播 are what I enjoyed the most,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have had the privilege of doing life and ministry with many of those people to this day.鈥

What鈥檚 more, she says, Michelle鈥檚 experience inside and outside of the classroom as a biblical and theological studies major helped prepare her professionally for the work she does in ministry today. 鈥淣orth Park was a great training ground for what I do,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was as a student there that I got my first experiences leading in the areas of racial righteousness.鈥 Serving in campus ministry and engaging with college diversity 鈥渉elped me develop a theology of racial reconciliation. It also gave me opportunities to learn how to communicate that theology.鈥

Michelle serves as associate pastor of New Community Covenant Church in Bronzeville, a neighborhood on Chicago鈥檚 South Side. She describes New Community as 鈥渁n intentionally multiracial congregation that actively pursues racial reconciliation and social justice.鈥 She鈥檚 currently working toward a PhD in sociology with a focus on multiracial congregations.

Posted on Categories Profile, StoriesTags , , ,

I Chose North Park: “personal and in the big city,” Tim Ahlberg C’13

Tim Ahlberg C鈥13, a business and economics alumnus, shares why he chose North Park.

Tim Ahlberg C’13, a business and economics alumnus, shares why he chose North Park.

Tim chose to attend North Park because he wanted to be in a big city, but at a college that felt personal. 鈥淚 wanted to have relationships with my professors and mentors, and to live in a close-knit community where I could get to know other students from all different backgrounds,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd coming from a Covenant Church family, I knew I wanted to attend a Christian school, to be surrounded by others that shared my faith and would help me build and sustain my own faith throughout my formative college years.鈥

Maybe most important, Tim wanted a college environment that placed focus not just on finding a career, but living a life of significance and service. When he came to North Park, he got that environment鈥攏ot only in the classroom, but in experiences around the campus and city. 鈥淭here鈥檚 really nothing else like the community there that I鈥檝e experienced before or after North Park. Students and faculty really all-in for your success, both personal and professional.鈥

He loved taking part in Chapel and College life services; was voted president of the student body; served with homeless ministries; and was captain of the men鈥檚 soccer team his senior year, being named an Academic All-American. 鈥淣orth Park is such a personal university that, no matter your area of study, your background, or your future pursuits, the entire campus feels like one community that exists because of and for each other,鈥 Tim says. 鈥淚 met amazing people who were so different than I was, and we learned so much from each others鈥 experiences and life stories.鈥

A business and economics major with a concentration in accounting and a minor in Spanish, Tim got to know his faculty members in North Park鈥檚 small class sizes. They encouraged him to study abroad in Guanajuato, Mexico, where he became fluent in Spanish. In his senior year, Tim received a Fulbright Binational Business Exchange Grant, which allowed him to complete a business internship and take MBA classes in in Mexico City. 鈥淣one of this would have been possible without the support of the faculty and staff of North Park,鈥 he says.

鈥淏y the time I started my full-time job in the United States, I was not only prepared with specific business acumen and skills gained through curriculum, but armed with a global perspective and bilingual capabilities that really set me apart in today鈥檚 competitive workforce,鈥 Tim says.

As an assurance associate at PricewaterhouseCoopers, he focuses on accounting solutions and business operations improvements. 鈥淭his includes traveling to business all over the country, and to Mexico, where I have been able to use my fluency in Spanish. I feel like North Park has prepared me beyond my peers for entering the global workforce.鈥

Posted on Categories Profile, StoriesTags , ,

New Diversity Team Focuses on Intercultural Campus Initiatives

Alumna Jacqueline Strapp began as director of diversity this fall

jackie-strapp-copyCHICAGO (October 24, 2016) 鈥 In an effort to better serve its intercultural campus community, 香港六合彩开奖直播 launched its strategic new Diversity Team this academic year. Consisting of University Dean , Assistant Vice President for Student Engagement Dr. Barrington Price, Director of Diversity Jacqueline Strapp, and Director of the International Office Dr. Sumie Song, the team will focus on student success and recruitment, as well as retention of diverse students and faculty.

Strapp, who joined the staff this fall, is a 2008 North Park graduate. Her return to campus follows the appointment of Acosta as University dean and the creation of Price鈥檚 new role over the summer.

Acosta works with deans across campus to create strategies for faculty development and diversification, while Price, formerly the director of student success, provides leadership for students to effectively navigate college transition and establish clear pathways to graduation. Song will now also guide global campus conversations within the context of the diversity team.

Strapp calls the University鈥檚 approach to diversity programming 鈥渃utting-edge.鈥 Here, she shares her thoughts on what compelled her to return to North Park, how the Office of Diversity is expanding its initiatives, and how their work addresses everyone on campus.

North Park: What made you want to return to North Park as a staff member?

Jacqueline Strapp: Having the chance to come back to North Park and really make some changes that I wish were being done for me when I was a student was an amazing opportunity. So I jumped at the chance to do that. I worked for some great institutions before I came here, but nothing can compare to being back where you started everything. I have a vested interest in North Park.

NP: What are some of the new initiatives that the Office of Diversity will be pursuing?

JS: We鈥檙e going to have a real focus on student success. It鈥檚 something that鈥檚 worked very well for the , helping students get integrated into college life and providing them with success counselors. So we鈥檙e going to emulate a lot of those practices. My background is in student success, making sure we鈥檙e increasing retention rates, specifically with students who are of minority status. So that鈥檚 really going to be helpful for us.

We also want to talk about topics that maybe have been avoided in the past on campus. What I鈥檓 hearing from students in conversations and from the administration is that we鈥檙e in a climate where we can鈥檛 ignore things anymore, we can鈥檛 talk around it.

NP: What are some of the sponsored talks you鈥檙e hosting?

JS: We鈥檙e going to hit things head-on, and we鈥檙e going to do things like talk about Black Lives Matter; immigration; 鈥淩ace and Politics,鈥 an event we just held, focused on some of the racial tensions that have been expanding in our country, and what that means for students.

This relates to student success because it鈥檚 very difficult for students to be successful with a lot of these things playing in the backdrops of their mind. You can鈥檛 separate a successful student from their experience鈥攊t goes together. So we鈥檙e addressing these issues and giving students places to talk about them safely.

We鈥檙e going to make sure we have a wide spectrum of views, and give students a chance to voice things that they鈥檙e thinking about. The process of letting people hear from others that are different from them, and becoming informed on things that maybe they weren鈥檛 before, is going to be huge. So this is going to play out on our campus in a lot of different areas.

 

acosta

NP: How does the work of the Diversity Team differ from how we鈥檝e approached these issues in the past?

JS: The Division of Student Engagement has been really intentional in making sure we鈥檙e giving focus to each one of the areas represented on the team, whereas before, it鈥檚 largely fallen only to the Office of Diversity. So now with me specifically focusing on students, Barrington expanding his programs, Dr. Acosta focusing on faculty and staff, and Sumie focusing on the greater global picture, I feel like we have a dream team. I鈥檓 excited about the role we鈥檙e going to play on campus, making sure that we鈥檙e keeping leadership informed about things that are happening, how what鈥檚 going on in the world is impacting our students, and the changes that they want to make.

We鈥檙e going to start off by making sure our approach is data-driven. We鈥檙e going to conduct focus groups, including a climate survey for diversity across the entire campus, and we鈥檙e going to use the results from these focus groups and surveys to influence what we鈥檙e going to tackle first.

NP: How does Dr. Price鈥檚 work in student success within Student Engagement interact with yours within the Office of Diversity?

JS: Barrington has done great work with the COMPASS program, and working with and those cohort models. So our future-thinking is that we鈥檙e going to implement some cohorts and expand on what has already been done in COMPASS. They鈥檝e done a great job of mentoring students鈥攎inority students, specifically鈥攁nd encouraging their retention at 香港六合彩开奖直播. I looked at the data and said, 鈥淲hoa. We鈥檙e going to have to emulate this elsewhere.鈥

The Office of Diversity is under Student Engagement, and we鈥檙e going to be more intentional about making sure that our efforts are the same. We鈥檙e going to expand programming, and some of them will be working directly with me.

The Diversity Team is about focusing our positions, and zooming in on these specific things. That鈥檚 the difference that I love about this job. When I first heard about it, I thought, 鈥淲ow, that鈥檚 very intentional.鈥 It鈥檚 cutting-edge for an institution to even take the time to change the structure and think strategically in this way.

NP: What are some of the ways that work will be expanded?

JS: We鈥檙e not just focusing on creating groups and places of community for individuals of minority backgrounds, but we鈥檙e also focusing on educating students that are outside of the minority status on issues and sensitivities that they need to have in order for them to be successful as whatever they plan to do in the world. They have to learn how to work with people of diverse backgrounds.

So that鈥檚 something else that鈥檚 going to be very intentionally targeted. Our events will not just be for minority students, although we do still have those. We鈥檙e going to be intentional about addressing the entire campus.


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags , ,

Alumni Spotlight: Shanna Horner O鈥橦ea

Chef returns to North Park for 125th Anniversary Alumni Panel

shanna-horner-ohea-storyCHICAGO (October 3, 2016) 聽鈥 As a 香港六合彩开奖直播 undergraduate student, Shanna Horner O鈥橦ea had no idea that her major in and minor in would eventually lead her to competing in TV cooking shows. But while her career has taken an unexpected path, she鈥檚 always been driven by a pursuit of creative work.

鈥淢y connection with food is very related to art,鈥 O鈥橦ea, a 1994 North Park graduate, said. 鈥淚nstead of using a paintbrush, I鈥檓 using food as my palate.鈥

Today, O鈥橦ea and her husband, Brian, co-own the Kennebunk Inn and Academe restaurant in Kennebunk, Maine. Academe gained national notoriety when O鈥橦ea鈥檚 lobster potpie dish was featured on the Food Network series The Best Thing I Ever Ate and her lobster white pizza made O magazine鈥檚 O List. Since then, she has competed on the shows Chopped, Rewrapped, and Beat Bobby Flay.

When she recently returned to campus for the University鈥檚 , she spoke at an session about her experiences as a chef while performing a live cooking demonstration, then distributed toasted s鈥檓ores to the audience. 鈥淓ducation is in my bones,鈥 said O鈥橦ea, daughter of former North Park president Dr. David Horner. 鈥淢y desire to continue to learn is something I absolutely got at 香港六合彩开奖直播.鈥

We spoke with O鈥橦ea about how staying true to herself led to a career she loved, the ways in which her small seaside town is like North Park, and 鈥渢he dance鈥 of a kitchen running smoothly.

North Park: How did your time at 香港六合彩开奖直播 prepare you for what you do now?

Shanna Horner 翱鈥橦别补: North Park provided great structure and accountability for me. It鈥檚 the first time in your life when you鈥檙e really making personal decisions that have consequences. I think that structure reflects my job now because聽I feel accountable for employees, our reputation, inspiring staff to give it their all.

I also felt a great deal of community in a large city at 香港六合彩开奖直播, which is something rather special about the campus and the people that encompass it. I made lifelong friends at 香港六合彩开奖直播, and I think this feeling of a small community in an interesting area led me to Kennebunk. My job as an innkeeper and chef introduces me to Maine locals, international and domestic tourists, and interns. I love the cultural diversity that this small seaside town can provide, which mirrors my feelings while attending North Park.

NP: Was there a specific moment or experience at 香港六合彩开奖直播 that helped kick off the trajectory of your career?

翱鈥橦别补: I truly did not understand my direct connection to becoming a chef while at 香港六合彩开奖直播, but I did have an “aha” moment of the importance of pursuing a career in something you love. As a freshman, I started with an art focus because I always loved to create. But I got a little self-conscious with the first classes and wondered if I was good enough to pursue this path. I also fell under some peer pressure of “what kind of job are you going to get after college as an art major?”

I then decided to pursue business and marketing for that post-college job. Although I enjoyed the marketing classes鈥攁nd the free candy and inspirational videos the instructor had us watch鈥攅conomics was certainly not my thing. I eventually went back to the arts with encouragement from my mother about truly enjoying my time in college and doing what made me happy. She was right with the advice that keeping true to yourself would lead to a career that I loved.

I also thoroughly enjoyed the dining scene in Chicago. I certainly think going out to eat in such a live culinary city help guide me to becoming a chef.

NP: You mentioned that your connection to food is related to your passion for art. Could you tell us more about that relationship?

翱鈥橦别补: Art is about creating and evoking feelings on many levels; this is also true of dining. As a chef, I am constantly creating dishes and recipes by paying attention to colors, textures, temperatures, plating, beverage pairings, and of course, selling it to the customer. Food can make you happy, provide memories, give you comfort鈥攊t makes you feel, just like art.

There is also a sense聽of magic in the kitchen when we are working the line. They call it “the dance.” This happens when a team has worked together for a while, and the timing of courses and expediting is on point. It feels amazing when it happens. It is what keeps me cooking; that adrenaline push when you do a great night of service is wonderful. And finally, some dining experiences can be like going to the theater鈥攁nd can cost even more. But I love it, on every culinary level.

NP: Do you have a favorite North Park memory?

翱鈥橦别补: One of my favorite memories was our art . I volunteered聽to be responsible for the food, which, given my passion for hospitality and culinary arts now, seems rather appropriate. I remember being just as excited about showcasing my art projects as I was about the menu-planning and execution of the show. Another example of the arts and the culinary intersecting.


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags , ,

Vikings Celebrate North Park’s 125th Anniversary

Alumni honored as part of Homecoming weekend

CHICAGO (September 27, 2016) 鈥 Generations of North Park alumni returned to campus over the weekend to celebrate the University鈥檚 and to share in festivities.

There were several聽, including an alumni art exhibit, the River Run 5K, and Homecoming Fest. Alumni were also聽聽from both soccer teams, including a men鈥檚 2-1 victory over conference rivals Carroll University, and a 2-2 tie against Carroll by the women鈥檚 team.

.

At Homecoming Brunch, all past recipients were invited to celebrate the accomplishments of this year鈥檚 designees. Four alumni were honored for their contributions to the North Park community and for leading lives of significance and service, exemplifying the University鈥檚 mission:

  • Theodore Ernst A鈥51 C鈥54, U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame inductee, Distinguished Academy Alumnus
  • Dr. Janice Phillips C鈥76, director of government and regulatory affairs for CGFNS International, Distinguished University Alumna
  • Mary Helwig C鈥06, one of just over 115 women to finish the Iditarod Sled Dog Race, Distinguished Young Alumna
  • Joanna (Ericson) Kanakis C鈥06, vice president and account executive at Societe Generale Americas Securities LLC, Distinguished Young Alumna

125th Anniversary Celebration

125thOn Friday of Homecoming weekend, alumni, families, students, faculty, and staff came together to honor North Park鈥檚 125-year legacy and to celebrate its future with events throughout the day.

A history and heritage exhibit, Cultivating Great Intellects & Great Hearts: 香港六合彩开奖直播鈥檚 Quasquicentennial, traced the evolution of the University through text by North Park historians and photographs from the . The exhibit, displayed in the Johnson Center, also included University artifacts and publications from the Archives.

Three concurrent featured North Park graduates sharing about their accomplishments in the fields of entrepreneurship, health professions, and the arts鈥攊n which chef Shanna Horner O鈥橦ea performed a live cooking demonstration and distributed toasted s鈥檓ores to the audience. 鈥淓ducation is in my bones,鈥 said O鈥橦ea, daughter of former president Dr. David Horner. 鈥淢y desire to continue to learn is something I absolutely got at 香港六合彩开奖直播.鈥

Following the Alumni Panels, two were held, featuring three concurrent classes taught by current and former faculty members on their areas of expertise. 鈥淲hen we say we want to be the leading city-centered Christian university, it鈥檚 because the world desperately needs that,鈥 said Provost , describing North Park鈥檚 engagement with the city of Chicago, in the 鈥淯rban Sociology and Context鈥 session.

The day concluded with an evening concert and program featuring performances by the Alumni Choir, under the direction of Associate Professor of Music , Professor Emeritus Gregory Athnos, and former professor Dr. Rollo Dillworth, respectively. also led the University Choir in a performance of his commissioned piece in honor of the 125th anniversary.

In addition to the musical performances, the David Nyvall Medallion for Distinguished Service to 香港六合彩开奖直播 was presented to former board chair and two-time interim University president Bruce Bickner and former board chair Stanley Helwig. Former North Park presidents William Hausmann (1980鈥1986) and Horner (1987鈥2004) also shared remarks about their time serving the University.

鈥淲e are living in a global world, and it surrounds our campus,鈥 said Hausmann. 鈥淚 like to think that we started to build bridges to this world back in the 1980s. Our decision (in 1980) to stay in Chicago was the most important in North Park鈥檚 history, next to its founding.鈥


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags ,

Alumni Spotlight: Joshua Musil Church

Film producer returns to North Park for 125th Anniversary Panel

josh-churchCHICAGO (September 22, 2016) 聽鈥 When North Park alumnus Joshua Musil Church returns to campus this week for the University鈥檚 , he鈥檒l be doing so as a graduate with a particularly unique career trajectory.

鈥淚 never thought that helping run the service at 香港六合彩开奖直播 would lead to working with Pee-wee Herman,鈥 Church says, 鈥渂ut that’s聽exactly what happened.鈥

After graduating in 2000, Church moved to Los Angeles and found a job working for writer-director Judd Apatow on the TV series Undeclared. From there, he joined Mosaic Media Group, where he worked as a producer on several of Will Ferrell鈥檚 films, including Step Brothers and Talladega Nights. He is now head of development and production for Apatow Productions, where he has served as executive producer onPee-wee鈥檚 Big Holiday and co-producer on Trainwreck, among other movies.

Ahead of North Park鈥檚 125th Anniversary 鈥攚here Church will speak on his career in the arts鈥攚e caught up with him about working in comedy, how his experience at 香港六合彩开奖直播 led to his job, and why serving on the Chapel team is like being a Hollywood producer.

North Park: How did your time at 香港六合彩开奖直播 prepare you for what you do now?

Joshua Church: One of the main roles of a producer is to work behind聽the scenes to pull together complicated TV series or movies. North Park afforded me the opportunity to become very involved in many different areas of campus life, from serving on聽the Chapel team to being vice president. Looking back, it’s clear to me聽that those were my first producing jobs.

NP: Was there a specific moment or experience at 香港六合彩开奖直播 that helped kick off the trajectory of your career?

Church: I don’t think that there was a specific moment聽where聽it all “clicked in” and I knew聽what I wanted to do, career-wise. It was probably a combination of a bunch of moments. I always had fun聽performing in comedy sketches, and my advisor, , worked with me to ensure that I聽could spend a semester at the Los Angeles Film Studies Center, which was an important step in me deciding to move to L.A. after college.

NP: Did you know that you wanted to work in comedy, and in production specifically?聽

Church: Like many people, I grew up loving comedy. I’d watch episodes of Johnny Carson, David Letterman, Saturday Night Live. To be honest, at the聽time, growing up in Maine, I聽never really thought聽about the fact that there were jobs in comedy. It聽seemed so far away. But as I learned more about the film industry in college, I realized that there was a world out there of聽people helping make comedy. I decided, probably sophomore year,聽that I wanted to eventually move to L.A. and try to get a job in the comedy film or TV industry.

NP: Do you have a favorite North Park memory?

Church: I have so many great memories of being at 香港六合彩开奖直播. My best friends and I lived in an on-campus house called the Arena, and I probably聽laughed聽more in聽that house than on any movie set I’ve been on, and those friendships have continued to this day.

When I was student body vice president, the student body president and I were invited to a meeting with then-President Dr. David Horner at his home. We were really nervous鈥攚e were used to meeting with other students at night while drinking coffee in . But this seemed like a big step, a meeting with an adult before 10:00 a.m.

To prepare, we had to set our alarms to make sure we were up by 9:30, which was a big change from our normal schedule. We borrowed an iron for our shirts, and practiced saying things that we imagined adults said, like, “The markets are fluctuating, how’s your portfolio doing?” or “I’m not sold on NAFTA, I worry it will do more harm than good.鈥

Confident we had mastered the art of faking adulthood, we showed up at his house, only to find Dr. Horner standing in his聽bathrobe while he studied up for his fantasy baseball draft, which was in an hour. Dr. Horner was not interested in discussing NAFTA at all. But at least our shirts were ironed.


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags

Alumnus Wins International Guitar Competition

An Tran C鈥14 earned first prize at the 2016 Hamilton International Guitar Festival and Competition

an-tranCHICAGO (August 3, 2016) 鈥 Class of 2014 香港六合彩开奖直播 graduate An Tran聽 at the 2016 Hamilton International Guitar Competition last month in Ontario, Canada, earning a cash prize, a custom handmade guitar, and an appearance at the 2017 Hamilton Guitar Festival.

Tran received first prize in the Vietnam National Guitar Competition at the age of 12; Vietnam鈥檚 Best Overseas Student Award in 2010; a certificate of merit granted by Vietnam鈥檚 vice president in 2010; first prize in the 2013 Society of American Musicians Guitar Competition; and first prize in the 2013 香港六合彩开奖直播 Performance Awards. In 2013, he was by the Lincoln Academy of Illinois.

After earning a with classical guitar as his major instrument, Tran was accepted into the Yale School of Music, where he earned a master of music this spring. 鈥淵ale has an amazing guitar graduate program, one of the best in the world,鈥 he . 鈥淭here were 200 applicants from all over the world, and they chose two. I am very lucky and honored to be one of them.鈥

A native of Hanoi, Vietnam, Tran was invited to perform Rodrigo鈥檚 Concierto de Aranjuez with the Hanoi Philharmonic Orchestra last year. As a senior at 香港六合彩开奖直播, he toured Vietnam on behalf of the Red Cross Society, performing charity concerts.

While at Yale, Tran served as a teaching artist for the Music in Schools Initiative. He will return to the Chicago area this fall to pursue a doctor of musical arts at Northwestern University. 鈥淚 want to become a professor to teach music and guitar, and also continue to provide music for people,鈥 as a North Park student in 2013. 鈥淚 want to share with others what I am learning from my teachers right now.鈥


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags

Renowned Composer and Alumnus Returns to Campus

Marvin Curtis C鈥72 has been commissioned to craft a piece for North Park鈥檚 125th anniversary celebration

Marvin Curtis

CHICAGO (May 10, 2016) 鈥 香港六合彩开奖直播 alumnus Dr. Marvin V. Curtis is no stranger to writing original songs for major events. The renowned composer has received numerous commissions for musical works from churches and schools, performed at the White House and at presidential cabinet members鈥 memorial services, and crafted the piece 鈥淐ity on a Hill鈥 for President Bill Clinton鈥檚 inauguration. But Curtis, the first African American composer commissioned to write a choral work for a presidential inauguration, is currently working on a piece that鈥檚 a little closer to home.

Curtis has been commissioned to compose a work that will be performed by students at on September 23, 2016. 鈥溌爄s honored that Dr. Curtis has accepted our invitation to compose a musical piece for the event,鈥 said聽, dean of the School of Music. 鈥淭he piece will be written for choir and a chamber instrumental ensemble, using a text that will be meaningful for the occasion. We very much anticipate the performance of his music, and we are confident that it will be a highlight of a very memorable celebration.鈥

We spoke with Curtis, dean of the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts at Indiana University South Bend,聽about his time at 香港六合彩开奖直播, performing for presidents, and what to expect from his 125th anniversary piece.

North Park: How did you first come to North Park?

Marvin Curtis: An admissions counselor at 香港六合彩开奖直播 in the 鈥60s came to my high school a couple times, Harlem High School, on the South Side. I wanted to go away to school. I came to North Park鈥檚 campus, and I remember walking around thinking, Okay, it鈥檚 still Chicago; I could live on the campus because they have housing. So I auditioned and was accepted, got a scholarship, and I came that fall.

NP: What are some of your favorite memories from your time as a student?

Curtis: It was a very different experience coming from inner-city Chicago to North Park. But I became part of the student body government, got involved in a bunch of different activities, and was a dorm counselor my third and fourth years. For three or four years, I was in charge of the Homecoming Committee, so we did a parade, we had fireworks鈥擨 had a lot of ideas. I was really engaged. At the same time, I was in the choir. I wrote my first compositions then, and the choir sang them on tour up and down the West Coast. One was called 鈥淲orship the Lord,鈥 which was one of the first pieces I had published in the 鈥70s. It was very different being in the choir and singing the pieces that I wrote. But the music faculty recognized my talent, so they programmed them! It was amazing to be a college junior and have your music sung by the North Park College Choir every night on tour, and then Orchestra Hall, and then later on, get those pieces published.

NP: What was the campus like at that time?

Curtis: It was a very interesting time. It was the late 鈥60s, so there was a shift happening in politics. But I got to meet a lot of people, and being an African American student on campus, there were only 35 of us, and I was the only one in music. But it created an interesting dynamic. And I got involved with in the summertime, and Professor F. Burton Nelson, who I鈥檇 met along the way, got me involved. Burton kept me centered. I remember, my first year, we latched onto each other. So whenever things got crazy, I would go see Burton and explain stuff to him and we would agree on certain things. I was really involved with what was going on. But I had a good time meeting people and growing up. The music program really allowed me to grow and shape my thoughts about music education. They taught us to think outside the box.

 

125 Years

NP: How did North Park influence the trajectory of your career?

Curtis: I graduated in 1972, and thanks to Burton Nelson, I ended up in the Seminary. I was working at Grace Covenant Church up the street, and Burton enticed me to study Christian education. So I was one of the first students that did the joint program with the Presbyterian School of Christian Education. I did my first year at 香港六合彩开奖直播, then moved to Richmond, Va., and did my second year down there. So thanks to Burton, I got a master鈥檚 in Christian education. North Park was a big part of my life. I actually spent summers here working in the Student Union. And after my first year, I said, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I want to go back home.”

After getting my master鈥檚, I moved to New York to teach, and also took a couple of church jobs. I ended up at Riverside Church, with my own choir. Then I left New York and moved to California. Eventually, I was invited to come to the University of the Pacific in California for a fellowship, so I came out there in 鈥86 and graduated four years later with my doctorate. In the meantime, I鈥檓 still writing music. I had done commissions for several schools and churches. I ended up getting my doctorate and moving, then, back to Richmond.

NP: And that’s when you were commissioned for the presidential inauguration?

Curtis: Through a friendship I had, I got the opportunity to write for the president. He called me up one day and said, 鈥淲e want you to write a piece for us. We鈥檝e been asked to sing at the inauguration, if Bill Clinton wins.鈥 He knew Clinton. And he knew me as a composer, and asked if I could write this piece. I thought, You have to be kidding. This was in September 1992. So I called him back and said, 鈥淎re you serious?鈥 He said, 鈥淵eah!鈥 So I began working on 鈥淐ity on a Hill.鈥 And I ended up at the inauguration with the president, sitting on top of the Capitol, shaking his hand afterwards, and hearing my piece performed live with the United States Marine Band on top of it.

NP: What was that like?

Curtis: I鈥檝e described it several ways. People asked how I felt, and I would say, 鈥淎ll the people in my life that told me I wasn鈥檛 going to do anything are watching me on television.鈥 It was very humbling, too, because I was sitting there listening and watching the ceremony, and it didn鈥檛 dawn on me that this was being broadcast around the world. So people around the world heard this piece that I wrote. Totally blew me out of the water.

NP: How do you find inspiration to write a piece for something that big?

Curtis: I thought, I want to leave the president a message with this song. So the message came out of Colossians, and then I had a text. Within two days I had written this whole thing. And I鈥檓 writing it and faxing it to my publisher and he鈥檚 writing back with some notes and corrections. And then we just waited until the election came. In December, I went to Little Rock, Ark., to hear it for the first time, and they sang it, and I was blown away. So there I was, January 20, 1993. I sat there and watched this take place, and it鈥檚 still amazing to me. My music is now in the Clinton Library, it鈥檚 in the Smithsonian, and it鈥檚 still being performed.

NP: What made you want to come back and do something for North Park?

Curtis: I鈥檓 very honored that my alma mater would ask me to do something like this. I know it鈥檚 about the celebration of the school, and as an alumnus of North Park, I know something about the school. I know about the capabilities of the school. So I thought, Let鈥檚 do something joyful.

NP: Were there things about 香港六合彩开奖直播, based on your experiences here, that you wanted to make sure you included in a piece about it?

Curtis: The text I used for one section of the piece is from Luke 13:29: 鈥淭he people will come from east and west, from north and south, and will eat in the kingdom of God.鈥 I started with that verse first as a potential text because that was my experience being at 香港六合彩开奖直播: people came from all over. That was something about 香港六合彩开奖直播 that I really liked: it was not just people from Chicago. People came to this one school for a common purpose. It was interesting for me, being a kid from Chicago, to begin meeting people from all over the country. I was able to make friends from all over because of North Park. I also traveled across the country with the Concert Choir. For me, it was a way of connecting the dots.

NP: What else will the song convey, textually or musically?

Curtis: I got an idea of the kind of text I want to use from the book of Micah. There are four verses on display at the center of campus, including Micah 6:8: 鈥淲hat does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.鈥 That鈥檚 one of my favorite passages. I鈥檓 trying to craft this to reflect the ideals that I learned at 香港六合彩开奖直播. The section that I wrote for the Luke passage is more of an introspective part. But the piece will open triumphantly and will close the same way. Most of my music has a big opening and a big closing, and I think that鈥檚 the way this has to be鈥攖his is a celebration. But it鈥檚 still formulating itself. Getting that soft part written took a while, but I got it the way I wanted it.

NP: How does the process of composing this piece compare to your process for something like a presidential inauguration?

Curtis: I鈥檓 a text-painter. The text, for me, is driving the writing of the music. For example, this part about 鈥渢he people will come from east and west.鈥 I could鈥檝e used it as a bombastic thing, but I decided to use it as a quiet section. When I wrote 鈥淐ity on a Hill,鈥 I started with John Winthrop鈥檚 speech, the actual 鈥渃ity upon a hill鈥 part, first, and then worked everything else around it. With 鈥淐ity on a Hill,鈥 it was a quiet text, and I built everything else around it, and I鈥檓 doing the same thing with this. That piece was specific in its nature. I always use the phrase, 鈥淚 was trying to figure out what to say to the president in music.鈥 In this case, I鈥檓 trying to say, 鈥淗ow do I celebrate my school in music?鈥 So that鈥檚 the approach I鈥檓 taking. There are loud moments; there are quiet moments. I鈥檓 trying to do that in the sense of making it so that it fits a celebration of an institution and what it’s done over 125 years.

 


Follow 香港六合彩开奖直播 on Learn more .

Posted on Categories StoriesTags ,