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Choir & Band Concert: European Preview

The McPherson College Choirs and Band will be touring Eastern Europe in January 2015. In preparation, the ensembles will present a European Tour Preview Concert at 4 p.m. on Nov. 23 in the college’s Brown Auditorium.

Dr. Josh Norris, assistant professor of music and director of choral activities, said the concert will feature music that the choir and band will perform during the European tour. Music includes works by the great European masters, as well as a variety of American genres such as Broadway, Gospel, Ragtime and Jazz.

“The music that the band and choir has been preparing for several months includes selections that will be really familiar to many classical music fans, such as Mozart, Schubert and Mendelssohn,” Dr. Norris said.

“However, we’re also really excited about including music that is uniquely American. Our audiences in Europe will not have had a chance to hear American genres as much as we do. We hear this music on the street, on the radio and at church. European audiences love to hear us perform the music we’re most familiar with.”

Stops on the tour will include Krakow, Poland; Prague, Czech Republic; Salzburg, Austria; and Munich, Germany.

All are invited and encouraged to attend this free event.

‘Behavior Mania’ at McPherson College Draws 100 High School Students to Explore Social Science

Don’t let the name fool you: Trevor Lies was telling the truth.

Lies, a junior at Cheney High School, was one of about 100 area students who attended the sixth annual “Behavior Mania” at McPherson College on Nov. 13 to learn about social sciences, such as psychology and sociology.

Lies wore a “Pink Freud” shirt – which featured a rose-colored version of the father of modern psychology – as he participated in “To Tell the Truth.”

In the interactive activity – one of six available during the day – four students would each make a statement about themselves, but one of them would lie. The other students then had to decide who they thought was lying.

Lies was, in fact, being honest when he said that he once lost 15 pounds from a bout of pneumonia.

Lies said the event was interesting and engaging, and that it increased his interest in the social sciences and learning more about human motivations.

“That needs to be known,” he said. “It’s good to know why we do the things we do so we can fix it if it’s wrong.”

High schools that attended Behavior Mania included Belle Plaine, Centre High (Lost Springs), Chase, Cheney, Southeast of Saline and Wichita East.

McPherson College Hosts Jazz Festival 
For 300 Area High School Musicians

More than 300 budding young jazz musicians gathered on the campus of McPherson College on Nov. 6 to better learn their craft.

Kyle Hopkins, band director and associate professor of music at McPherson College, said this was the first time MC has planned and hosted a jazz festival for middle school and high school students.

“This was a huge deal,” Hopkins said. “When looking at ways to bring students to campus, I remembered as a high school director that there were limited performance and festival opportunities for my jazz band in the fall. So we clearly hit the nail on the head with this event.”

The festival included 16 jazz band groups from 14 participating schools. In addition to performance, the students also had their work judged by three professionals and received feedback in workshop opportunities.

Participating high schools were: Salina Central, Salina South, Nickerson, Goddard, Smoky Valley, Newton, McPherson, Sterling, Chapman, Hesston and Abilene. Participating middle schools were Lakewood, Sterling and Chapman.

The judges for the event were Daryl Batchelor, former jazz director at Hutchinson Community College; Nick Schroeder, director of jazz studies at HCC who once played lead trumpet in the Glenn Miller Orchestra; and Rod Manges, a long-time jazz educator from the Manhattan, Kan., area.

Wheat Belt League Presents Choral Concert at McPherson College

The Wheat Belt League of Central Kansas High Schools will be presenting a choral concert at McPherson College on Tuesday, Nov. 11 at 7 p.m. in the college’s Brown Auditorium.

Dr. Josh Norris, assistant professor of music and director of choral activities, said the college will be hosting about 200 students for a day of rehearsal and then an evening of singing for the public. Norris will be the primary conductor for the ensemble and has selected a variety of music ranging from Handel to the music of a contemporary Kansas composer, Jake Narverud.

“I’m really excited to have the league singers here at the college,” Dr. Norris said. “I am looking forward to working with these young singers as they present a concert for their schools, parents, family and friends. I certainly hope that the McPherson community will attend the concert to congratulate our guests on what I am sure will be an awesome experience.”

Norris has plans to include guest instrumentalists from the area such as Bryan Hess on fiddle and Ty Kaufmann on bagpipes on a few of the numbers.

“I am hoping that we can use some of our local players to add to the students’ performances,” Norris said. “What a cool experience that will be.”

Diane Fast, adjunct faculty in music, will conduct the women’s choir and Dorothy Janzen, adjunct faculty in music, will accompany on piano.

All are invited and encouraged to attend this free event.

Flory Lecturer Sunday at McPherson College Features Alumna Vincette Goerl

The guest presenter at this year’s Flory Lecture in Public Policy is a McPherson College alumna who has had a profound influence during her career on the federal government itself.

Vincette Goerl, a 1971 graduate in history and politics, will present “Public Policy – Who Cares and Why Care” at 4 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2 at the McPherson Church of the Brethren, 200 N. Carrie. St. in McPherson. Goerl has a 41-year career in Federal financial and budget management positions.

Following graduation from McPherson College, Goerl chose to move to the East Coast, working as a clerk in the U.S. Navy. She soon moved on as a budget analyst in the then-new Environmental Protection Agency. That led to a series of financial management positions, culminating with her selection to serve on the financial management team for Vice-President Al Gore’s National Performance Review in 1993 – an initiative to make the federal government more efficient and cost less. It marked some of the first analysis on how to use technology to improve communication and information sharing in government.

“All those things that we take as a given today were brand new,” Goerl said.

From there, she went on to become the first chief financial officer at the U.S. Customs Services in 1994, and was in charge of an annual budget of $5 billion – quickly reforming the organization to earn its first clean financial audit. She also served as the first chief financial officer at the U.S. Forest Service, before retiring in 2001.

Today, Goerl is the president of Goerl Consulting, LLC, where she provides advice and counsel to Federal executives. She is a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and also serves as a chief financial officer of Strategic Advisors to Government Executives – or SAGE – a Partnership for Public Service program that provides advice and counsel to chief financial officers across the Federal Government.

She also devotes time to a variety of non-profit organizations where she has served in board and leadership positions. She has been a strong supporter of women’s issues – serving as Chair of the Virginia Business and Professional Women’s Foundation and as president of BPW-Virginia, where she supported issues including helping women re-entering the workforce, workplace equality and fair pay, and raising awareness of domestic violence against women.

“I felt a responsibility to be a mentor,” she said. “To be a leader in those kind of ways where I could be helpful.”

She’s also given back to McPherson College with commitments of both money and time – she is a current member on the college’s Board of Trustees, and has served on the board previously for more than a decade, including serving as chair.

The Raymond and Rowena Flory Lectureship in Public Policy was established at McPherson College by former Flory students Dean Coughenour and Howard Mehlinger in recognition of long-time McPherson residents Dr. Raymond Flory and Mrs. Rowena Frantz Flory.  Raymond, who passed away in November 2002, was affiliated with McPherson College for 50 years as an administrator and professor of history and politics.  Rowena continues to reside in McPherson.  The lectureship is designed to stimulate dialogue on a public policy issue relevant to the McPherson College community, the city of McPherson, and the surrounding area. Goerl was, herself, recruited to attend McPherson College by Dr. Flory.

For those unable to attend in person, the lecture will also be available live via the internet at http://new.livestream.com/McPherson-College. The lecture is free and the public is invited and encouraged to attend.

MC to Honor Former Sports Information Director

McPherson College Young Alumni Honored

McPherson College is honoring three of its outstanding young alumni Friday, Oct. 17, during an all-campus assembly.

Carolyn Masterson ’84, Carine Ullom ’84 and Barry McMillan ’94 will receive the honor, which recognizes accomplished MC alumni who have graduated within approximately the last 30 years. The recognition ceremony starts at 1 p.m. in Brown Auditorium.

Masterson graduated with a degree in business/economics, then went on to Wichita State to earn her MBA. Starting as an agency audit clerk for Farmers Alliance Insurance Company before graduating from MC in 1983, she moved up the ranks at Farmers, reaching controller and assistant treasurer for Farmers Alliance Companies in 2004. Today she serves as a member of The Cedars Board of Directors and as treasurer of the McPherson First Church of the Brethren.

Ullom graduated with degrees in computer science and German in 1984, then went on to earn a master’s in German from the University of Wyoming. She has held a number of roles related to computers, program oversight and technology. These included project coordinator for the Office of International Studies and software training specialist at the University of Kansas; director of the Language Resource Center for St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y; and most recently as the director for the office of Academic Technology at Ottawa University in Ottawa, Kan. She recently concluded a term serving as a member of the McPherson College Board of Trustees.

McMillan graduated MC with a bachelor’s in elementary education in 1994, and worked as an elementary school teacher from graduation until 2000. He worked as co-chair on a drive to create a large children’s playground in Lindsborg. In 2000, he moved to become a financial advisor for Ameriprise Financial Services, receiving recognition for overall excellence of financial planning services in 2002.