A Cultural & Educational Events Publication of Salisbury University PANORAMA FALL 2019

ONGS T FRENCH S HE GREATES T

How Land Is the Universe Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo Indigenous philosopher and and Fall Festival educator Nimachia Howe Pay tribute to decoys addresses the consequences from the past while of settlement • p. 19 encouraging the carving of new ones • p. 13

Horn for the Holidays Visiting Artist Talk Featuring Gregory Miller, Korean-American artist one of the most Mina Cheon discusses accomplished horn players “polipop,” or political of his generation • p. 25 pop art • p. 18 welcome

A Message from the President This spring, I was honored to be inaugurated as the ninth president of Salisbury University. At the ceremony, I officially outlined my priorities for the University, which include furthering mutually positive community relationships and building on SU’s culture of diversity and inclusion. The over 100 events highlighted in this edition of Panorama are integral to supporting those priorities. As always, I welcome our campus and surrounding community to take advantage of the myriad cultural and education offerings SU provides. Through them, we come together to enjoy stellar art and artistry and embrace the diverse points of views they represent. As we honor the vast cultures that make up our campus and community, it is only fitting that the Cultural Affairs Office Professional Performing Arts Series focuses on “Latin American Culture” in its programming through music, dance, discussion and film. In addition, we spend our fall celebrating Native American and Hispanic heritage during their month-long festivals. We also turn a critical eye to our past with the 1619- 2019: 400 Years of Resilience Series, which explores the 40 decades since slaves of African descent arrived on the shores of what would become America. Issues of racism and stereotypes discussed in the 400 Years Series play out in the comedic 1619-2019: theatre production Meet Vera Stark, which is 400 Years of one of the performances and concerts you Resilience Series p. 7 will find on the SU stages this fall. While we aim to entertain, we also aim to educate, and our roster of faculty lectures – from both our own scholars and those from other campuses – is sure to illuminate issues and ideas new to you (and me). I hope you’ll flip through these pages and find several events that you’ll add to your calendar. Whether you choose to check out the Ward Museum of Wildfowl Art or SU Art Galleries, or celebrate the 20th anniversary of PACE (the Institute for Public Affairs and Civic Engagement), or visit us for Alumni Homecoming and Family Weekend, SU welcomes you! Find what matters to you in Panorama, and I look forward to seeing you in the audience.

Charles A. Wight President, Salisbury University

1 Explore Our Beautiful Campus: Of course we want you to attend our amazing academic and cultural events, but we also FALL SEMESTER invite you to visit our campus and just explore! SU is quickly CULTURAL SERIES amassing a collection of accolades for its beautiful grounds. Most recently, travel website Expedia naming SU among the Latin America generally refers to territories in the Americas where the Spanish and Portuguese languages prevail: Mexico, “Most Beautiful College Campuses.” Central and South America, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Puerto Rico. It encompasses an area from the Almost Everything Is Free: northern border of Mexico to the southern tip of South America, including the Caribbean. Supporting our primary mission to Latin American culture is the formal or informal expression encourage life-long learning, we World Drum Experience of the people of Latin America, including popular culture such are proud that most of our p. 20 as music, folk art and dance. The richness of this culture is the offerings are free and open to the product of many influences: pre-Columbian cultures, Spanish and Portuguese public. For events where a large culture, and audience is anticipated, attendees African and may be asked to pick up a free ticket European immigration. in advance to ensure their seat, look for the There is also an A symbol. For those events that do require an admission, look important Latin for the $ symbol and ticket information is provided or turn to American cultural pages 29-30 for details.

Jane Bunnett and Maqueque • p. 6 presence in the United States. All the Details: Looking for locations, contact phone We begin with screenings that discover the musical fusions numbers, websites or admission costs? You’ll find it all in one that helped shape popular music in the United States in Latin Music USA. Additional screenings include a year in the life of a place. Turn to pages 27-30 and find this information organized champion ensemble in Mariachi High and the tale of a young by event sponsor. musician embarking on an extraordinary journey to the magical land of his ancestors in Disney/Pixar’s Coco. We delve into the award-winning drama Roma and journey with artist Cultural Series Contact: If you see this symbol at the end Vik Muniz to his native Brazil in Wasteland. of the event description J, that means the event is sponsored “Travel abroad” to Latin America via our Cultural Immersion bus trip, including the Embassy of Paraguay, the by the Cultural Affairs Office and you can get more OAS, Inter-American Development Bank and the Cultural information on these events by calling 410-543-6271. Institute of the Mexican Embassy to the U.S. Acclaimed jazz musician Jane Bunnett and Maqueque showcase the rhythms of Cuba, Argentinian Sofia Viola performs “Tropical Wave” music and the Natalia Arroyo Ensemble performs the music of Mexico. Pro-Am dance champion Joey Corsica teaches Latin dance workshops and the Peacherine Ragtime Society Orchestra accompanies the swash-buckling Native Voices • p. 22 adventures of The Mark of Zorro. We welcome Choir KZ Megaron and the internationally renowned Paris! The Show, a vibrant tribute to the greatest Events Can Change: As always, everything is subject to French songs of the post-war change. Visit the SU website for the press releases that include years. We round out our offerings presenting Native details about the event and the latest time, date and location. Voices, a musical exploration of Visit www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends and indigenous artistic expressions, Families” at the top and you’ll find links to “Cultural Events” both centuries-old and and the “Cultural Affairs Office.” contemporary, in North America.

On the Cover: Paris! The Show • p. 15

2 august

ONGOING THROUGH SEPTEMBER 15 Delmarva: People, Place, Skilled Service: The Volunteer Art Show 17 SATURDAY and Time Ward Museum, Welcome Gallery Pop Up Art Guerrieri Academic Commons, WARD MUSEUM EXHIBIT: Many of the volunteers at the Ward Ward Museum, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Niemann Gallery Museum are accomplished artists themselves. Enjoy this WARD MUSEUM EVENT: Join Open During GAC Hours collection of works made using a variety of media and a different artist every third Free and Open to the Public techniques by our dedicated volunteers. $ Saturday for this FREE family art NABB CENTER EXHIBIT: This program that is fun for all ages. self-guided exhibit highlights Families can pop in to make and THROUGH SEPTEMBER 29 various aspects of Delmarva take a fun art creation. An history, including Native Chesapeake Visual Icons exhibit of the artist’s work is Americans and early settlers, Ward Museum, LaMay Gallery also showcased during the agriculture and water, military WARD MUSEUM EXHIBIT: The area activity. All children should be contributions, and an early surrounding the Chesapeake Bay accompanied by an adult. 19th century home. has a distinct visual appeal that is Funded by the Susan K. Black centered on the iconic images of Foundation. the Bay, its people and the incredibly diverse bounty of both the water and land. From the arch of the Bay Bridge rising over the Chesapeake to the Ward Brothers in their workshop, this exhibit features historical pictures that have shaped the wider understanding of the Chesapeake. Paired with the historical images, contemporary photographers display works that feature the Chesapeake through both cultural MONDAY and environmental perspectives, 26 offering a powerful sense of where THROUGH DECEMBER 17 we have been and where we are. $ Out of the Box: The Archives at the Nabb Research Center Guerrieri Academic Commons, Thompson Gallery THROUGH 16 FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 8 Mon. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Drop-In Kids’ Gallery Craft and Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Material Play Game Nights & Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Fulton Hall, University Archives in the 21st Century: Gallery Downtown Gallery K3-3rd Grade: 6-6:30 p.m.; The Challenge of Preserving SU ART GALLERIES 4th Grade and Up: 6:30 p.m. the Past: Thu., Sept. 19, EXHIBIT: Material Play is SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: 6 p.m., Guerrieri Academic a group exhibition of Commons, Assembly Hall SU Art Galleries | Downtown is works that explore the excited to welcome kids of all NABB CENTER EXHIBIT: tangible possibilities of ages and their parents to The Nabb Research Center objects and their make- enjoy a craft table and has several archives that up. Artists Gulsah educator-led gallery games document the history of the Mursaloglu, Woomin during 3rd Friday events in Delmarva region (Local Kim, Nathan Randall August and October. Games History Archives) and Green and Jordann and tours take place by grade Salisbury University Wine introduce wonder levels. (University Archives), as well and complexity to as individuals and groups processes of designing, around the world (Special making and using. From Collections). The collections recognizable organic featured in this exhibit and inorganic objects showcase papers that might used in everyday life to not typically be included in non-functional forms of other exhibits. Rather than once-functional materials, the works inevitably bring to mind an let them rest in the back, we overarching and temporal relationship between human and have decided to give them nature. life by bringing them out of the box. 3 • For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 september

26 MONDAY 4 WEDNESDAY THROUGH DECEMBER 17 Creative Writing Festival From Coastal Maryland to the World: A Celebration in Images Featuring John A. Nieves of Salisbury University Students Studying Around the World Perdue Hall 156, 8 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, 1st Floor Lobby WRITERS ON THE SHORE: Open During GAC Hours; Reception: Thu., Sept. 12, 3:30 p.m., Nieves has Guerrieri Academic Commons, 1st Floor Lobby poems SU LIBRARIES EXHIBIT: Every published in semester, SU students study at journals universities throughout the world. including North This exhibit features images of American student experiences and highlights Review, Poetry the many partnerships that SU has Northwest, developed with institutions of Southern Review, 32 Poems and higher learning across the globe. Crazyhorse. He won the Co-sponsored by Center for International Indiana Review Poetry Contest Education and his first book, Curio, won the Elixir Press Annual Poetry 5 THURSDAY Award Judge’s Prize. His work also recently was featured in Art Department Visiting Artist the acclaimed anthology The Talk Series: Jon Lundak Eloquent Poem. He is an Conway Hall 156, 5:30 p.m. associate professor of English ARTIST TALK: Lundak’s work at SU and an editor of The explores a connection to Shore Poetry. The featured spaces, places and objects student reader is poet Lisa that are transitory. He has Compo. Nine other SU examined the miniaturization creative writing students also of architectural space and the briefly read from their work at implications of the viewers this event. memory on these sculptural spaces. He is currently exploring the traveling of 5 THURSDAY objects as well as the Lighthouse Literary Guild: methods, vessels, perception MONDAY 26 Meet and Greet and phenomena of travel. THROUGH FEBRUARY 8, 2020 University House, 7-8 p.m. Lundak is assistant professor Horizontes (Horizons): Verónica Peña and Hector Canonge CELL EVENT: Learn about our and head of the sculpture Conway Hall, Electronic Gallery fall writing classes and meet department at Towson Site-Specific Performance: Sat., Sept. 28, Assateague Island our instructors. University. (contact SU Art Galleries for details); Workshop: Mon., Sept. 30, Noon-3 p.m., Conway Hall 317 (open to the public); Talk/Reception: Tues., Oct. 1, 12:45 p.m., Conway Hall 129 5 THURSDAY SU ART GALLERIES EXHIBIT: Peña (Spain/U.S.) and Children, Numbers and Philosophy: Canonge (Argentina/U.S.) are interdisciplinary artists How Philosophy Can Help in Talking with Children About Math focused in performance art. Horizontes explores the human Conway Hall 252, 5-6:30 p.m. connection to water and comprises an exhibition, site- FULTON PUBLIC HUMANITIES LECTURE: Nadia Stoyanova specific performance, talk and workshop. Horizontes Kennedy, assistant professor of mathematics at CUNY, presents references the history of Assateague Island and explores this lecture for a general audience of parents, teachers, the ever-changing relations among cultures and peoples. grandparents and educators interested in integrating philosophical thinking 29 THURSDAY about mathematics in Summer Student Research Showcase dialogue with children Guerrieri Academic Commons, Assembly Hall, 3:30-5 p.m. in the classroom and OURCA EVENT: Learn about student research and creative at home. Kennedy has activities conducted over the summer. Student researchers from published extensively across the campus present posters and discuss their scholarship in philosophy of mathematics education and philosophical at this interactive event. Those interested in research and inquiry in the mathematics classroom. creative activities are strongly encouraged to attend. Co-sponsored by the Philosophy Department

4 september

SEPTEMBER 9 MONDAY THROUGH DECEMBER 10 13 & 14 PRESTO & PRESTO Plus Lessons Latin Dance Workshops Location & Times with Featuring Pan-Am Champion Registration Latin Dancer Joey Corsica CELL CLASS: PRESTO Holloway Hall Auditorium features individual vocal, Stage, Look for Times as the instrumental and theater Date Approaches lessons for all ages. PRESTO WORKSHOP: Champion Plus features group piano and dancer Corsica teaches six group guitar lessons for workshops of various Latin adults. $ dance styles, including salsa, For classes, costs and registration: merengue and more. He has www.salisbury.edu/presto owned and operated several dance academies, including NYC Salsa in New York and 305 Salsa in Miami. Corsica has offered his programs of dance in some of the premiere Latin venues and cultural and performing arts centers in the 6 FRIDAY THROUGH OCTOBER 26 U.S., including Lincoln Center On Water and the Kennedy Center. His Downtown Gallery programs introduce Latin Opening Reception: 3rd Friday, Sept. 20, 5-7:30 p.m. dance in an easy-to- Film Screening: 3rd Friday, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m., understand, open, friendly Curated by Ryan Conrath (English, film studies) atmosphere with a mix of Workshop: Fri., Sept. 20, Noon-4 p.m., Conway Hall 352 history, dance and dialog and Anastasia Samoylova Talk/Book Signing: Thu., Oct. 17, 5:30 p.m. leave all participants with a SU ART GALLERIES EXHIBIT: This exhibition brings sense of inclusion and together photographic explorations of water and its role in accomplishment. J our interactions with and perception of the world. Through No previous experience, tickets or registration required. their respective disciplines within the photographic 13 FRIDAY medium, artists Liz Donadio, Matthew Moore, Jay Gould and Anastasia Samoylova pose significant environmental Feature Friday: and socio-cultural questions and put forth the ubiquity of Lee Knier and Friends the molecule as one that is at once romanticized, stylized, The Brick Room, 116 N. threatened and feared. Division Street, 6-7 p.m. CELL FACULTY & STAFF PERFORMANCE: Must be 21+. 8 SUNDAY Cold War 13 FRIDAY Fulton Hall 111, 2:30 p.m. FRIDAYS THROUGH SALISBURY FILM SOCIETY: With a brilliantly stark NOVEMBER 15 No class October 11 & 18 visual aesthetic to match its lean narrative, Cold War is a passionate love story between a man SU at the Beach: Writing Your and a woman who meet in the ruins of post-war Memoir with Emily Rich Poland. Of vastly different backgrounds and temperaments, The Greyhound Bookstore; they are fatefully mismatched and yet condemned to each 9 Main Street, Berlin, MD; other. Set against the 1950s background of the Cold War, it’s 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. the tale of a couple separated by politics, character flaws and CELL CLASS: Delmarva unfortunate twists of fate. This impossible love story set in Review’s Rich teaches this impossible times was nominated for three Oscars and won five eight-week class on European Film Awards. $ developing the craft of In the fall, look for details on Rated R. Directed by Pawel Pawlikowski. Poland/UK/France, 2018. 89 minutes. memoir writing. $ legendary Cuban guitarist and composer Pedro Luis Ferrer’s performance in the Great Hall of Holloway Hall.

5 HISPANIC HERITAGE HISTORY MONTH September 15-October 15 Honoring the generations of Hispanic and Latino Americans who have positively influenced and enriched our nation and society in the United States and to celebrating the group’s heritage and culture.

SEPTEMBER SEPT. 23 16 MONDAYS Bridges THROUGH OCTOBER 7 Trace the rise of Latin jazz, the LATIN MUSIC USA SCREENINGS explosion of the mambo and (See bottom right for additional the cha-cha-cha as they swept screening) across the U.S., infiltrating Holloway Hall, rhythm and blues and rock ‘n’ Great Hall, roll through the 1960s. 7 p.m. FILM: Discover SEPT. 30 the fascinating The Chicano Wave musical fusions Mexican Americans in that propelled California, Texas and throughout the Southwest SEPTEMBER Latin music to 25 WEDNESDAY the top of the U.S. charts with created their own distinct Latin Music USA, the series musical voices during the Jane Bunnett and Maqueque that invites audiences into a second half of the 20th Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. vibrant musical conversation century. Their music played CONCERT: An internationally acclaimed musician, Bunnett is that has helped shape the an important role in the known for her creative integrity, improvisational daring and history of popular music in struggle for Chicano civil courageous artistry. Her exploration of Afro-Cuban melodies the United States. J rights and ultimately expresses the universality of music, and her ability to embrace propelled them from the and showcase the rhythms and culture of Cuba has been SEPT. 16 barrio to the national stage. ground breaking. With Maqueque, Bunnett has created The Salsa Revolution something new and phenomenal in the world of jazz. What Explore how Puerto Ricans OCT. 7 started out five years ago as a project to record and mentor and other Latinos in New York Divas and Superstars young brilliant Cuban female musicians has become one of the reinvented Cuban and Puerto Discover the Latin pop top groups on the North American jazz scene. Bunnett is a five- Rican rhythms by adding explosion of the turn of the time Juno Award winner and has been nominated for three elements from soul and jazz 21st century and the success Grammy Awards, received The Order of Canada, the Queen’s to create salsa – which of artists like Jennifer Lopez, Diamond Jubilee Medal and, most recently, The Premier’s became a defining rhythm for Ricky Martin, Gloria Estefan Award for Excellence. J Latinos in the world. and Shakira in the English- This engagement is sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Office and funded through language market. the Mid-Atlantic Tour program of the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation with support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Maryland State Arts Council.

OCTOBER OCTOBER 9 WEDNESDAY 14 MONDAY Sofía Viola Mariachi High Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, CONCERT: Enjoy Viola’s U.S. 7 p.m. debut at “Café Argentina” in FILM: In a part of America SU’s Holloway Hall. She takes that rarely makes headlines, the stage embracing her guitar there is a small town with a or her charangón and performs group of teenagers who will SEPTEMBER her songs, which drift from captivate your ears and warm 25 WEDNESDAY tango to vibrations of the your heart. Watch a year in Hispanic Heritage Dinner Andes, from milonga to happy cumbia, from rock to vallenato, the life of the champion Featuring Mariachi Aguila DC and from chamamé to blues, in a show that is pure blood mariachi ensemble at Zapata traction and interpretative power. She composes songs in which High School in South Texas. Commons, Bistro, As they compete and perform 4:30-7:30 p.m. she professes her unconditional love for Latin American folklore in all its dimensions; and in her solo show she tells micro stories with musical virtuosity, these INTERNATIONAL DINNER that speak of love, ecology, junk food, and universal themes teens and the music they SERIES: Mariachi Aguila DC is from her perspective. A native Argentinian, her style was make will inspire, surprise, and an ensemble of young formed in the suburban tango, but she also draws from rock bring you to your feet. J energetic musicians who pride music and the Argentinian “Tropical Wave” style. Viola’s themselves in offering the provocative and sometimes acidic humor leads the audience on audience authentic mariachi See calendar for additional a journey to discover the roots of Argentina through the music. This dinner is in events of interest as part of characters and landscapes that inhabit her songs. conjunction with the the Cultural Affairs Office This engagement is made possible through Southern Exposure: Performing Arts performance of Jane Bunnett of Latin America, a program of Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation in partnership with Professional Performing Arts and Maqueque. J $ the National Endowment for the Arts. J Series: Latin American Culture.

Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” • 6 september

17 TUESDAY Constitution Day 19 THURSDAY Red Square, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Art Department Visiting Artist PACE EVENT: On Constitution Talk Series: Roberley Bell Day, learn about the Conway Hall 156, 5:30 p.m. foundational document and ART DEPARTMENT ARTIST cast your ballot yea or nay to TALK: Bell’s work is inspired ratify the Constitution today. by nature and rooted in the Meet individuals running for art historical tradition of office and learn more about organic abstraction. Her the political process. practice draws on the world around her, in particular the observation of nature within 18 WEDNESDAY the built environment. Allegheny Trio Concert Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. 19 THURSDAY SU MUSIC CONCERT: Allegheny Trio members Ernest Discover SU: Barretta, piano; Sachiho Murasugi, violin; and Jeffrey Schoyen, cello – with guest Angela Marchese, soprano – Nanticoke River Center present “South of the Equator” with Madagascan Songs by 4-5:30 p.m. Ravel and Four Seasons of Buenos Aires by Piazzolla. A CELL CAMPUS TOUR: Student Showcase by talented SU music students also will Visit our environmental house be featured. in Mardela Springs. Pre-registration required.

1619-2019: 400 YEARS OF RESILIENCE REFLECTING ON THE INCEPTION AND EFFECTS OF SLAVERY IN AMERICA

SEPTEMBER OCTOBER 17 TUESDAY 17 TUESDAY A Celebration of Local Heroes The Institutionalization of Slavery and Its Legacy in the U.S. Harriet Tubman and Frederick Guerrieri Student Union, Wicomico Room, 7 p.m. Douglass: Remarks, Praise and ENLIGHTENED PERSPECTIVES SERIES: Featuring Mary Elliot, Reflection curator at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Reception to follow. Conway Hall Exterior, Harriet Tubman Sculpture, 6 p.m. Sponsored by Multicultural Student Services. Reception: Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. KICK-OFF EVENT: See SU website for details as the date approaches. Reception to follow. SEPTEMBER 26 THURSDAY Myne Owne Ground: Race and Freedom on Virginia’s Eastern Shore Guerrieri Academic Commons, Assembly Hall, 7 p.m. OCTOBER BOOK & PANEL 24-25 THURSDAY-FRIDAY DISCUSSION: History Singers Showcase – From Ship to Shore: professors Joseph Venosa and Clara Small discuss Stephen Celebrating 400 Years of Human Resilience Through Music Innes’ book with the Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7:30 p.m. community. SU MUSIC CONCERT: John Wesley Wright and SU’s award-winning vocalists present a concert featuring work songs, spirituals, operatic arias, Broadway renditions and other musical genres influenced by and/or borne out of the institution of slavery. Reception to follow.

7 • For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 20 FRIDAY THROUGH FEBRUARY 16 Art of the Industry: Oyster Cans of the Mid-Atlantic Ward Museum, Welcome Gallery WARD MUSEUM EXHIBIT: 19 THURSDAY Bold, bright colors, fanciful Archives in the 21st Century: The images, clever brand names Challenge of Preserving the Past and strong graphic design Guerrieri Academic Commons, dominate the look of Assembly Hall, 6 p.m. historical oyster cans. This NABB CENTER EVENT: Anne exhibit features a variety of Turkos, University of Maryland these unconventional art archivist emerita, and Cynthia pieces from around the region and country. $ Byrd, executive director of the Opening reception is during the Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo, October 12. Julia A. Purnell Museum in Snow Hill, discuss their experiences working with archival collections. 20 FRIDAY 21 SATURDAY Photography Workshop with Learn to Draw Herons 20 FRIDAY Matthew Moore and Liz Donadio with Ellen Lawler SU at the Beach Faculty Series Conway Hall 352, Noon-4 p.m. Ward Museum Ocean Pines Chamber of SU ART GALLERIES WARD MUSEUM CLASS: For Commerce; 11031 Cathell WORKSHOP: Explore the class information, hours and Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. analog to digital workflow cost please visit CELL LECTURE: Stephen using advanced scanning, www.wardmuseum.org. $ Decatur: America’s First editing and printing Commando Warrior, an techniques in order to American Navy Hero with Tim produce fine-art digital prints. Robinson. Walk-ins welcome. $ Open to current and former film photography students and lens-based artists with NOVEMBER DECEMBER experience in film 7 THURSDAY 4 WEDNESDAY photography. Contact [email protected] by A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Slave Narratives: The Stories Sept. 5 to reserve a spot. Thing: The Incarceration of We Know and Those We Should African American Women from Conway Hall Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland 153, 7 p.m. 20 FRIDAY Commons, LECTURE: On Water Reception and Worcester Room, Featuring John Film Screening 7 p.m. Ernest, Downtown Gallery; Reception: 21 SATURDAY POETRY University of 5-7:30 p.m., Film Screening: Teen Poetry Workshop and READING & Delaware Judge 7:30 p.m. Poetry Reading with Grace Hugh M. Morris Q&A: DaMaris SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Cavalieri, Poet Laureate of Hill, author of Professor of English. Film is curated by Ryan T\Vi-z -b l\ Reception to follow. Conrath (English, film studies). Maryland Downtown Gallery \Teks-ch rs\(Visible Textures)ə ə , See Sept. 6 for exhibit details. reads from and discusses her Workshop: 1:30-3:30 p.m.; ə Public Reading: 7 p.m. work. Reception to follow. 21 SATURDAY SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Pop Up Art: Featuring Crocheted Cavalieri visits Salisbury and NOVEMBER Gloves with Sheri Hill offers a poetry workshop for TUESDAY 12 Ward Museum, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. local teens followed by a Netflix Documentary 13th WARD MUSEUM EVENT: Join public poetry reading of Perdue Hall 156, 7 p.m. a different artist every third selected poems by Grace FILM & PANEL DISCUSSION: 13th, by director Saturday for this FREE family Cavalieri and Nancy Mitchell, Ava DuVernay, explores the “intersection of race, art program that is fun for all the newly appointed Poet justice and mass incarceration in the United ages. Families can pop in to Laureate of the City of States” and is titled after the 13th Amendment to the U.S. make and take a fun art Salisbury, MD. Constitution, which abolished slavery. Jennifer Jewell and creation. An exhibit of the Rebecca Anthony, Social Work, lead a panel discussion on the artist’s work will also be film with formerly incarcerated individuals and individuals showcased during the activity. involved in the criminal justice system. Reception to follow. All children should be accompanied by an adult. See Sept. 26 for a bus trip to the National Museum of African Funded by the Susan K. Black American History and Culture. Foundation.

8 september

23 MONDAY THROUGH DECEMBER 7 All My Children Sleep in the Sea Fulton Hall, University Gallery Artist Talk and Reception: Thur., Oct. 24, 5:30 p.m., Fulton Hall 111, Reception to follow in University Gallery SU ART GALLERIES EXHIBIT: This solo exhibition by D.C. artist Rachel Schmidt uses time-based media and installation to explore ex-urbanization and its impact on aquatic ecosystems. This transformative experience delves into future landscapes and the roll that myth plays in our understanding of the environment.

26 THURSDAY SU on the Road: National African American History and Culture Museum Leave SU: 7 a.m.; Return: 7 p.m. CELL TRIP: Join our motor coach trip to Washington, D.C., for a morning entry into the museum and time on your own in the afternoon. (See p. 7 for events in the 1619-2019: 400 Years of Resilience Series.) $

23 MONDAY 25 WEDNESDAY 26 THURSDAY National Museum of African Hispanic Heritage Dinner Art Department Visiting Artist Talk Series: Robin and Julia Rogers American History and Culture Featuring Mariachi Aguila DC Conway Hall 156, 5:30 p.m. Blackwell Hall, 2-3 p.m. Commons, Bistro, ART DEPARTMENT ARTIST TALK: From Cloud Gap Glass in CELL PRE-TRIP LECTURE: Learn 4:30-7:30 p.m. Western Montana to their trailer-mounted portable glass tips on how to get the most out INTERNATIONAL DINNER shop collaborative duo Robin and Julia Rogers have of your visit to the museum and SERIES: See page 6 for developed a working method in which every step of the the National Mall.(See the bus details. $ J process from conception to installation is completed by trip on Sept. 26.) both artists. Through the synergy of this collaboration the 25 WEDNESDAY whole is much greater than the sum of the parts. 23 MONDAY Jane Bunnett and Maqueque Latin Music USA: Bridges Holloway Hall Auditorium, Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. 7 p.m. CONCERT: See page 6 for FILM: See page 6 for details. J details. J 26 THURSDAY 24 TUESDAY Myne Owne Ground: Race and Voicing and the Bow in Bach’s Freedom on Virginia’s Eastern Suites for Unaccompanied Cello Shore Conway Hall 152, 3:30 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, FULTON FACULTY Assembly Hall, 7 p.m. COLLOQUIA: Presented by BOOK & PANEL Jeffrey Schoyen, professor of DISCUSSION: See page 7 for music, theatre and dance. details.

9 • Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” 27 FRIDAY Slovenian Chamber Choir KZ Megaron Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 PM CONCERT: This choral group was founded in October 2003 on the initiative of Damijan Močnik, composer and conductor, and represents the peak of the choir pyramid in St. Stanislav’s Institution in Sentvid, Ljubljana, Republic of Slovenia. The choir is characterized by a distinguishing, rich sound and inspiring interpretations of music from different stylistic periods. It has several awards from numerous prestigious national as well as international choral competitions. Chamber Choir Megaron has evolved into a superior choir, performing regularly in Slovenia as well as in Austria, Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands, Slovakia, Poland and Canada, thus earning its stellar reputation at home as well as abroad. J Sponsored by the Embassy of the Republic of Slovenia, World Artists Experiences, Inc. and the SU Cultural Affairs Office.

27 FRIDAY 28 SATURDAY 30 MONDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series Horizontes (Horizons): Verónica Latin Music USA: Ocean Pines Chamber of Peña and Hector Canonge The Chicano Wave Commerce; 11031 Cathell Site-Specific Performance Holloway Hall, Great Hall, Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. 7 p.m. Assateague Island (contact CELL LECTURE: LGBTQ Safe SU Art Galleries for details) FILM: See page 6 for Spaces: The Importance in SU ART GALLERIES details. J Your Community with Diane PERFORMANCE: See Aug. 26 Illig. Walk-ins welcome. $ for details.

28 SATURDAY Learn to Draw Shorebirds with Ellen Lawler Ward Museum WARD MUSEUM CLASS: For class information, hours and cost please visit www.wardmuseum.org. $ 30 MONDAY 30 MONDAY REFLEJOS: Hector Canonge and 28 SATURDAY Rosh Hashanah Dinner Veronica Pena Workshop Tambor Fantasma Commons, Bistro, Fulton Hall 217, 6-9 p.m. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7:30 p.m. 4:30-7:30 p.m. SU ART GALLERIES SU MUSIC CONCERT: Buenos Aires-based percussion ensemble INTERNATIONAL DINNER WORKSHOP: Open to the performs new work by U.K. artist Mark Fell. Under the direction SERIES: Please note: Salisbury public. See Aug. 26 for of Bruno Lo Bianco, the ensemble specializes in contemporary University does not have a details. chamber music. kosher kitchen. $ J

10 2 WEDNESDAY Matthew Vollmer Reading Commons, Worcester Room, 8 p.m. october WRITERS ON THE SHORE: Vollmer is the author of two story collections – Future Missionaries of America and Gateway to Paradise – as well as two collections of essays 1 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY – inscriptions for headstones and Permanent Exhibit. He was 2 the editor of A Book of Uncommon Prayer, which collects Horizontes (Horizons): WEDNESDAYS THROUGH invocations from over 60 acclaimed and emerging authors, Verónica Peña and Hector NOVEMBER 6 and was co-editor of Fakes: An Anthology of Pseudo- Canonge Artist Talk Lighthouse Literary Guild: Intro. Interviews, Faux-Lectures, Quasi-Letters, “Found” Texts, and Conway Hall 129 to Songwriting with Lauren Glick Other Fraudulent Artifacts. His work has appeared in venues SU ART GALLERIES University House, 7-8:30 p.m. such as Paris Review, Glimmer Train, Ploughshares, Tin House, TALK/RECEPTION: See CELL CLASS: Six-week Virginia Quarterly Review, The Pushcart Prize and Best Aug. 26 for details. songwriting course with a American Essays. A winner of a fellowship from the National focus on lyric writing. $ Endowment of the Arts, he teaches creative writing and literature in the English Department at Virginia Tech, where 2 WEDNESDAY he is an associate professor. WEDNESDAYS THROUGH NOVEMBER 6 Lighthouse Literary Guild: 3 THURSDAY 3 THURSDAY Odyssey to Self THURSDAYS THROUGH THURSDAYS THROUGH with Nancy Mitchell NOVEMBER 7 NOVEMBER 7 University House, SU at the Beach: Lighthouse Literary Guild: 10-11:30 a.m. Writing Your Memoir CELL CLASS: Using Joseph Beginning Writing Poetry Campbell’s The Hero’s Journey with Nancy Mitchell with Pat Valdata as a guide, this writing The Greyhound Bookstore; Blackwell Hall, 6-8 p.m. workshop explores how our 9 Main Street, Berlin, MD; CELL CLASS: Six-week own lives have been heroic 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. memoir writing class using journeys. $ CELL CLASS: Six-week poetry storytelling techniques of plot, writing class with a Pushcart character, setting and Prize-winning poet. $ dialogue. $

4 FRIDAY THROUGH JANUARY 20 War Over the Waves: Oyster Wars of the Chesapeake Ward Museum, LaMay Gallery WARD MUSEUM EXHIBIT: After the Civil War, oyster harvesting exploded in the Chesapeake Bay, with watermen attempting to meet the demand of restaurants in major East Coast cities such as New York and Philadelphia. Many men from Virginia to New England set their eyes on the Chesapeake and tried to claim a piece of it as their own. But as states put restrictions on harvesting, access to oysters became scarce. And in the end, these tenacious mollusks created fortunes for some, and were the downfall of others. The exhibit features art and artifacts from – and provides historical perspective on – the time of “the oyster wars” – when watermen, oyster pirates and authorities clashed in an attempt to control the oyster industry and access to the Bay. $ 2 WEDNESDAY Opening reception during the Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo, October 12. The Maryland Rural Legacy Program Devilbiss Hall 123, 7 p.m. ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES COLLOQUIUM SERIES: Harold Scrimgeour has been involved with the Maryland timber industry for several years. Maryland’s Rural Legacy Program provides funding to preserve large, contiguous tracts of land and to enhance natural resource, agricultural, forestry and environmental protection while supporting a sustainable land base for natural resource-based industries. Scrimgeour gives a survey of the history of the Maryland Rural legacy Program in the context of Green Infrastructure and sheds light on current issues of easements.

11 4 FRIDAY 7 MONDAY 9 WEDNESDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series Latin Music USA: Sofía Viola Ocean Pines Chamber of Divas and Superstars Holloway Hall, Great Hall, Commerce; 11031 Cathell Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. 7 p.m. CONCERT: See page 6 for CELL LECTURE: With Derya FILM: See page 6 for details. J details. J Kulavuz-Onal. Walk-ins welcome. $ 9 WEDNESDAY Seeing Sound Series #8: Love And Other Emotions (L.A.O.E.) Conway Hall 317, 7 p.m. SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: 10 THURSDAY L.A.O.E. is an experimental, The Resilience of the DelMarVa new age concept-project run Peninsula and Its People by Ariel Piazza. The project Guerrieri Academic Commons, has developed over the last Assembly Hall, 6 p.m. five years, featuring vocals on NABB CENTER LECTURE: top of ambient and electronic Building resiliency to climate tones. L.A.O.E. performs change may be a modern songs from their newest 9 WEDNESDAY reaction to a recent crisis, but album Orenda, a vivid and the people of the DelMarVa personal story about spiritual WEDNESDAYS THROUGH Peninsula have been adapting awakening and understanding NOVEMBER 13 to their environment for “the matrix.” Through Lighthouse Literary Guild: centuries. Those experimental sound and Writing with Art as a Prompt environmental modification instrumentation, L.A.O.E. with Martha Graham techniques are etched in the 5 SATURDAY paints an imaginary picture of Location TBA, 7-8:30 p.m. landscape for us to discover. Sea Gull Century Earth as a school of energy. CELL CLASS: Six-weeks Lecture by Michael Scott, SU SPECIAL EVENT: The presenting an art object and geography professor and nationally acclaimed discussion at each class to Henson School of Science and bicycling event, beginning inspire writing. $ Technology dean. and ending on SU’s campus, tours the Eastern Shore and offers two routes: Assateague Century (100 miles) and 10-13* Princess Anne Metric Tour Euripides’ Medea (65 miles). $ Fulton Hall, Black Box Learn more and register: Theatre, 7:30 p.m. seagullcentury.org & *2 p.m. SU THEATRE: In Ben Power’s raw, starkly eloquent update to Euripides’ great ancient 6 SUNDAY tragedy, Medea is a Three Identical Strangers woman discarded: a foreigner brought to a Fulton Hall 111, 2:30 p.m. misogynistic, bigoted SALISBURY FILM SOCIETY: Three strangers are society and left to live in reunited by astonishing coincidence after being filth. Cornered like a born identical triplets. Their jaw-dropping, feel- caged animal, she exacts a good story instantly becomes a global sensation horrific revenge and destroys everything she holds dear. complete with fame and celebrity; however, the The play challenges us to consider “How can there ever be fairy-tale reunion sets in motion events that unearth an any ending but this?” $ unimaginable secret with radical repercussions for us all. This For mature audiences. documentary features as many twists as a great psychological thriller “in which the more pieces of the puzzle are filled in, the more disgusted and infuriated we become.” (David Edelstein, New York) $ Rated PG-13. Directed by Tim Wardle. UK, 2018. 96 minutes.

For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 • 12 october

11 FRIDAY 12 SATURDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series Teen Earth Art Workshop Ocean Pines Chamber of Downtown Gallery, Commerce; 11031 Cathell 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. (Hurricane Date: Oct. 13) CELL LECTURE: Forensic Ages 13-18. $40 per Science: How Does it Really participant. Work? with Jocelyn Bunting. SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Walk-ins welcome. $ Explore Eastern Shore waterways with teaching artist 12 SATURDAY Christy Cox. Participants are Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo and Fall Festival guided through a process of Ward Museum, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. creating site-specific WARD MUSEUM EVENT: The crisp, clear fall air and earthworks out of natural and beautiful grounds of the museum once again set the stage found materials. Lunch for a day of excitement, anticipation and socialization included. $ among decoy collectors and carvers from across the country. Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo pays tribute to decoys 14 MONDAY from the past while encouraging the carving of new ones. Mariachi High Film Families are invited to join in the festivities with pumpkin carving, crafts and a quack-or-treat throughout the museum. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. Costumes encouraged. 11 FRIDAY FILM: See page 6 for Admission to the event and museum is free! Feature Friday: Danielle details. J Cumming and Friends The Brick Room; 116 N. Division Street; 6-7 p.m. CELL FACULTY & STAFF PERFORMANCE: Must be 21+.

11 FRIDAY Fall Migration Gala Ward Museum, 6-9 p.m. WARD MUSEUM EVENT: Celebrate and support the Ward Foundation at this unique fundraiser, featuring 12 SATURDAY cocktails, canapés … and Revolutionary! camo! Wear your Eastern Featuring Soovin Kim, Violin Shore finest black-tie-and- Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. camo, and be ready to bid on unique pieces of art while SALISBURY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: When he was 20 enjoying an evening at the years old, Kim received first prize at the Paganini museum. $ International Violin Competition. He enjoys a broad musical career, regularly performing Bach sonatas and For event details and ticket prices as the date approaches please visit Paganini caprices for solo violin, sonatas for violin and www.wardmuseum.org. piano ranging from Beethoven to Ives, Mozart and Haydn concertos and symphonies as a conductor, and new world- premiere works almost every season. Among his many commercial recordings are his acclaimed disc of Paganini’s 24 Caprices and a two-disc set of Bach’s complete solo violin works, released in 2019. He is the founder and co- artistic director of the Lake Champlain Chamber Music Festival (LCCMF) in Burlington, VT. He was bestowed an honorary doctorate by the University of Vermont for the LCCMF’s great contributions to its community. In 2020, he and his wife, pianist Gloria Chien, will become co-artistic directors of Chamber Music Northwest in Portland, OR. Kim devotes much of his time to his passion for teaching at the New England Conservatory in Boston. $

13 • Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” 17 THURSDAY 18 FRIDAY FloodZone: Anastasia Samoylova SU at the Beach Faculty Series Talk and Book Signing Ocean Pines Chamber of Downtown Gallery, 5:30 p.m. Commerce; 11031 Cathell SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. FloodZone is Samoylova’s CELL LECTURE: Human photographic account of life Behavior and Financial on the climatic knife-edge of Decisions: Why We Do What the southern United States. We Do (and why we don’t do Sea levels are rising and what we should) with Charles 18-19 hurricanes threaten, but this is Booster. Walk-ins welcome. $ not a visualization of disaster Alumni Homecoming and Family Weekend or catastrophe. These 18 FRIDAY beautifully subtle and often SPECIAL EVENT: Alumni unsettling images capture the Drop-In Kids’ Gallery Craft and families are invited to mood of waiting, of knowing and Game Nights SU for a weekend of fun. 16 WEDNESDAY the climate is changing, of Downtown Gallery For details visit: living with it. K3-3rd Grade: 6-6:30 p.m.; www.salisbury.edu/homecoming Informed and Engaged Lecture 4th Grade and Up: 6:30 p.m. Series: Why Engaged Citizenship SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Matters 17 THURSDAY SU Art Galleries | Downtown is Holloway Hall, Great Hall, The Institutionalization excited to welcome kids of all 18-20 7 p.m. of Slavery and Its Legacy ages and their parents to Carve and Paint an Antique Owl PACE LECTURE: Paul Loeb’s in the U.S. enjoy a craft table and with Rich Smoker books, including The Guerrieri Student Union, educator-led gallery games Ward Museum Impossible Will Take a Little Wicomico Room, 7 p.m. during 3rd Friday events in WARD MUSEUM CLASS: For While and Soul of a Citizen, ENLIGHTENED August and October. Games class information, hours and have 350,000 copies in print. PERSPECTIVES SERIES: See and tours take place by grade cost please visit His nonpartisan Campus page 7 for details. levels. www.wardmuseum.org. $ Election Engagement Project engages schools nationwide. Loeb discusses about how 19 SATURDAY ordinary citizens can make 17 THURSDAY PACE Open House their voices heard and actions Maryland State Department of Education Camden House, 9-11 a.m. count in a time when we’re Director of Curriculum Bruce A. Lesh PACE EVENT: The Institute for told neither matter. He Public Affairs and Civic Perdue Hall 156, 7 p.m. provides inspiration and Engagement has a new home! FULTON ALUMNI LECTURE SERIES: SU support for moving beyond Join PACE faculty, students alumnus Lesh discusses how his time as a relentless self-interest and and staff for breakfast and a student at Salisbury University prepared him for a career in making a difference even in a tour of our new community- education. A high school teacher for over two decades, Lesh seemingly broken political friendly space. Learn about also is the author of the book “Why Won’t You Just Tell Us the system. Learn how people get our programs and how PACE Answer?” Teaching Historical Thinking in Grades 7-12. involved in larger community can support your interests. issues and what stops them Sponsored by the Fulton School of Liberal Arts and the Seidel School of from getting involved, how Education. they burn out in exhaustion or 19 SATURDAY maintain their commitment for Pop Up Art the long haul, and how 18 FRIDAY Ward Museum, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. involvement can give them a Taste of the Chesapeake WARD MUSEUM EVENT: Join sense of connection and Dinner Featuring a different artist every third purpose rare in purely Saturday for this FREE family personal life. Red Letter Day art program that is fun for all Commons, Bistro, ages. Families can pop in to 4:30-7:30 p.m. 17 THURSDAY make and take a fun art INTERNATIONAL creation. An exhibit of the Discover SU: Brown and DINNER SERIES: Local artist’s work will also be Church Carillon musicians Suzanna showcased during the activity. Fulton Hall Lobby, Mallow on guitar and vocals, Andrea “AJ” Jones on sax, All children should be 4:30-5:30 p.m. Colleen Clark on electric guitar, and Becca Doughty on drums accompanied by an adult. CELL CAMPUS TOUR move effortlessly between genres of alt rock to funky country, Funded by the Susan K. Black to folk influenced – all with lots of harmony and heart. $ J Foundation.

14 october

19 SATURDAY 19 SATURDAY 21 MONDAY 21 MONDAY PACE Turns 20 Homecoming Alumni and Faculty Philadelphia History An Evening in Paris Dinner Blackwell Hall, 2-3 p.m. Commons, Bistro, Guerrieri Academic Concert 4:30-7:30 p.m. Commons, Assembly Hall, Holloway Hall, Great Hall, CELL PRE-TRIP LECTURE: 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Explore the history of City INTERNATIONAL DINNER PACE EVENT: Help the SU MUSIC CONCERT Hall, the museum district, SERIES: This dinner is Institute for Public Affairs Society Hill, South Street and in conjunction with and Civic Engagement other interesting sights in the the performance of celebrate 20 years of Philly area. (See the bus trip Paris! The Show. $ J informed and engaged on Oct. 24.) events and the ShoreCorps/ AmeriCorps program celebrate 25 years of getting things done on the 21 MONDAY Eastern Shore. Catch up University Fictions: Violence, Lawsuits and Obsessions in Recent Argentine with friends, relive good Academic Novels memories and learn more Conway Hall 156, 4:30 p.m. about new PACE programs. FULTON PUBLIC HUMANITIES PROGRAM LECTURE: Marcos Campillo- The gala event features a Fenoll, associate professor and associate director of Latin American and special exhibit from the Latino/a studies at West Chester University of Pennsylvania, discusses Nabb Center archives. $ fictional representations of academia in recent Argentine literature. RSVP required. $50 per person, includes dinner and one drink ticket. While focusing mostly on 21st-century Argentine novels, he also discusses the ever-growing new literary genre of academic fictions in Spanish America, where the U.S. college setting plays a central role for Argentine academics/writers to fictionalize. The talk offers an insight about the role of contemporary literature in shaping problematized views of the university in general.

Gil Marsalla & Directo Productions present 21 MONDAY Paris! The Show Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. This is a ticketed event. 2 free tickets per person available at the Guerrieri Student Union Information Desk SU Students, Faculty, Staff & Alumni: Mon., Sept. 16 Community: Mon., Sept. 30 ONGS T FRENCH S CONCERT: This spectacular evening is a HE GREATES vibrant tribute to the greatest French songs T of the post-war years and exports the charm and the flavor of “Paris” for the whole world to enjoy. Thrilling casting and exceptional scenic design transport us from Montmartre to the stages of the great Parisian cabarets of the time, presenting a repertoire of the greatest songs of Edith Piaf, Maurice Chevalier, Lucienne Boyer, Charles Trenet, Josephine Baker, Yves Montand, Charles Aznavour, Jacques Brel and more. In this show, the young girl named Françoise who dreams of becoming a famous artist in Paris, arrives in Montmartre. On her journey, she’ll cross paths with Edith Piaf and will become her friend, her confidante and her soul mate. Françoise will find love in the person of Charles Aznavour, a young singer living in Pigalle. A romance will blossom between them in a city where love conquers all! J

15 22 TUESDAY Creating Community 25 FRIDAY Connections: Could Solutions to Frankenstein Journalism Be the Answer to All Marathon Reading of Our Problems? Guerrieri Student Union, Fireside Conway Hall 152, 3:30 p.m. Lounge, 9:30 a.m.- FULTON FACULTY 10:30 p.m. COLLOQUIA: Presented by ENGLISH DEPARTMENT 26 SATURDAY Jennifer Brannock Cox, EVENT: The 200th anniversary associate professor of of the publication of Mary You’ve Come a Long Way Baby?: communication arts. Shelley’s novel Frankenstein was History, Art, Cinema and Change celebrated in 2018. In 2019, Since the Radical 1920s members of the campus and Conway Hall 179, community are invited to drop 10 a.m.-3 p.m. in and celebrate this fabulous ADVENTURES IN IDEAS: work of fiction. HUMANITIES SEMINAR: Faculty members from history, art and cinema studies examine changing roles and representations of women since the 25 FRIDAY suffrage movement. Professors Kara French (History), Latin American Cultural Liz Kauffman (Art/SU Art Galleries) and Elsie Walker Immersion Day: Embassies (English/film studies) identify moments of progression, and Arts of Latin America: regression and transformation. $ Washington, D.C. First in a three-part series; see Nov. 16 and look for details in spring for Feb. 29 “Fake News, Facebook, Bots and Memes: Politics and the Use of THURSDAY Sign up begins Mon., Sept. 30, at 24 Social Media in the 21st Century” SU on the Road: Guerrieri Student Union Information Desk Philadelphia on Your Own • SU Students: $65 • SU Faculty, Staff & Alumni: $80 Leave SU: 7:30 a.m.; Return: 7 p.m. • Community: $100 Cost of tickets must be paid in full at CELL TRIP: Join us for a motor 28 MONDAY the time of sign-up. Crys Matthews coach trip to enjoy the No refunds for cancellations unless the museums, history, architecture seat is filled. Seats may not be Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 PM and urban vibe in the City of transferred. Price includes CONCERT: A southeastern North Brotherly Love. $ transportation, all entry fees and dinner. Carolina native who now calls Herndon, BUS TRIP: “Travel abroad” to VA, home, Matthews blends Americana, Latin America via the folk, jazz, blues, bluegrass and funk into 24-25 Organization of American a bold, complex performance Singers Showcase States, the Cultural Center of steeped in traditional melodies From Ship to Shore: Celebrating the Inter-American and punctuated by honest, 400 Years of Human Resilience Development Bank, the original lyrics. A prolific Through Music Cultural Institute of the lyricist and composer, Holloway Hall, Great Hall, Mexican Embassy to the Matthews has found 7:30 p.m. United States and a visit to inspiration in her SU MUSIC CONCERT: See the Embassy of Paraguay. A surroundings, from driving details on page 7. “Latin Dinner” completes the through the Blue Ridge immersion experience. For Mountains to the more information call: compelling and heart- 25 FRIDAY 410-543-6271. $ J breaking love story of SU at the Beach Faculty Series Participants must complete a form Richard and Mildred Loving. Ocean Pines Chamber of with address and phone number(s) as Thoughtful, realistic and Commerce; 11031 Cathell required by the Embassy. emotional, Matthews’ songs Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. speak to the voice of our CELL LECTURE: Perchance to generation and remind us why Dream: Connecting Art, music indeed soothes the soul. J Mathematics, Music and This engagement is sponsored by the Cultural Shakespeare with Randall Affairs Office and funded through the Mid-Atlantic Tour program of the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation Cone. Walk-ins welcome. $ with support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Maryland State Arts Council.

For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 • 16 november

1 FRIDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series 1 FRIDAY Ocean Pines Chamber of Harpist Melissa Tardiff Dvorak and Commerce; 11031 Cathell Flutist Julianna Nickel Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. CELL LECTURE: Franklin and PETER & JUDY JACKSON CHAMBER Eleanor Roosevelt: America’s MUSIC SERIES: The lush, vibrant music of Ultimate Power Couple with romantic and classic periods, with a touch Dean Kotlowski. Walk-ins of modern storytelling, is the flute and harp welcome. $ combination for this concert. An active soloist and chamber music musician, Salisbury native Tardiff-Dvorak performed at the 45th presidential inauguration, the world premiere of the film Gods and Generals and in private concert for the ambassador of Spain. Nickel teaches at the George Mason University School of Music and performs throughout the Washington, D.C., area. She has played with the National Symphony Orchestra and Washington National Opera. J SATURDAY 2 Sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Office. “Day of the Dead” Disney/Pixar Coco Screening Holloway Hall Auditorium, 2 SATURDAY 7 p.m. 2-3* Civic Reflection Training FILM/SPECIAL Musical Theatre Ensemble: EVENT: In Commons, Worcester Room, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. A Grand Night for Singing - Disney/Pixar’s Rodgers and Hammerstein vibrant tale of PACE EVENT: Learn how to family, fun and engage in deeper, more Revue adventure, an productive conversations. The Holloway Hall, Great Hall, aspiring young Center for Civic Reflection 2 & 8 p.m., *2 p.m. only musician named offers a public training in SU MUSIC CONCERT: This Miguel embarks on an concepts and strategies of revue features over 30 extraordinary journey to the civic reflection. A humanities- songs from the iconic team magical land of his ancestors, based conversation model, of Rodgers and the stunning and colorful Land civic reflection helps groups Hammerstein. Enjoy classic of the Dead. After meeting and organizations explore tunes, lesser known ones the charming trickster Héctor, compelling issues and as well as familiar songs the two new friends embark pressing themes through reimagined in order to on an extraordinary journey to constructive dialogue. $ appreciate the timely, and timeless, value of traditional unlock the real story behind RSVP required. $30, breakfast and American musical theatre. $ lunch included. Miguel's family history. J

3 SUNDAY 2 SATURDAY Madeline’s Madeline Undercurrents 02 Fulton Hall 111, 2:30 p.m. Downtown Gallery, 6-10 p.m. SALISBURY FILM SOCIETY: Madeline has SU ART GALLERIES EXHIBIT & become an integral part of a prestigious physical EVENT: One-night fall festival theater troupe. When the workshop’s ambitious celebrating underground and director pushes the teenager to weave her rich underrepresented art and culture on interior world and troubled history with her mother into their the Eastern Shore. From visual art to collective art, the lines between performance and reality begin music to performance art to poetry, to blur. The resulting battle between imagination and this event takes a multidisciplinary appropriation rips out of the rehearsal space and through all approach, featuring a pop-up three women's lives. Proving that experimental cinema is alive exhibition, live performances and readings that highlight a and well, the film is “one of the boldest and most invigorating diverse community of regional contemporary artists pushing American films of the 21st century.” (David Ehrlich, Indiewire) $ boundaries of concept, form and medium. Unrated. Directed by Josephine Decker. USA, 2018. 93 minutes.

17 4 MONDAY Urban Dreams, Rural Commonwealth: The Rise of Plantation Society in the Chesapeake Fulton Hall 111, 7 p.m. NABB CENTER EVENT: Thomas 7 THURSDAY Jefferson famously Art Department Visiting Artist claimed that 18th- Talk Series: Mina Cheon century Virginia had Fulton Hall 111, 5:30 p.m. “no towns of any ART DEPARTMENT ARTIST consequence,” but TALK: Known for her that was not for want of trying. Ambitious plans “polipop,” or political pop art, to establish cities and towns were debated Maryland Institute College of almost constantly in both Virginia and Maryland Art professor and Korean- through the 17th century. This debate, American artist Mina Cheon is surrounding places such as Yorktown and Snow a media artist, writer and Hill, played a long-overlooked role in shaping the economy 6 WEDNESDAY educator who works between and society of the Chesapeake. Paul Musselwhite, associate the United States and South professor of history at Dartmouth College, shares the Cary Holladay Reading Korea. research at the heart of his recent book. Commons, Worcester Room, Co-sponsored with the History Department 8 p.m. WRITERS ON THE SHORE: Holladay’s awards include an O. Henry Prize and a 4 MONDAY 6 WEDNESDAY fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Life and Times of Frida Kahlo Maryland Biodiversity Project Brides in the Sky: Stories and a Screening Devilbiss Hall 123, 5:30 p.m. Novella is her eighth volume Holloway Hall, Great Hall, ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES of fiction. Her stories and 7 p.m. COLLOQUIUM SERIES: Jim essays have appeared in FILM: Explore Brighton discusses the Alaska Quarterly Review, the 20th-century Maryland Biodiversity Project Blackbird, Cincinnati Review, icon who (MBP), a project he co- The Georgia Review, The 7 THURSDAY became an founded with Bill Hubick in Hudson Review and many A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous international June 2012. Brighton other journals. She teaches Thing: The Incarceration of discusses how MBP is sensation in the creative writing at the African American Women from worlds of cataloging all the living things University of Memphis. Her Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland modern art and of Maryland as part of their work often reflects the history radical politics. Rita Moreno – effort to promote education Commons, Worcester Room, and folklore of her native 7 p.m. the Oscar, Emmy, Tony and and conservation through Virginia. Holladay taught in POETRY READING & Q&A: Grammy award-winning building a vibrant nature the SU English Department in See page 8 for details. actress – narrates the film. J study community. the late 1980s.

8 FRIDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series Ocean Pines Chamber of 5 TUESDAY Commerce; 11031 Cathell Natalia Arroyo Ensemble Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, CELL LECTURE: The Wisdome 7 p.m. of Comedy with Jerome CONCERT: The ensemble Miller. Walk-ins welcome. $ performs traditional and contemporary music of northern and central México worldwide, 8 FRIDAY consolidating their sound in a Feature Friday: Augustine fresh and innovative way. The “The Pan Man” DiGiovanna ensemble, in quartet format, is The Brick Room; 116 N. composed of guitar, violin, Division Stre et; 6-7 p.m. mexican jarana, doble bass, CELL FACULTY & STAFF peruvian-flamenco cajón, PERFORMANCE: Must be Latin percussion and voice. J 21+. Sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Office, World Artists Experiences, Inc. and the Mexican Ministry of Culture.

Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” • 18 november

9 SATURDAY 8-10* New York City “On Your Own” Bus Trip SU Fall Student Dance Sign up at Guerrieri Student Union Information Desk Showcase • SU Students, Faculty, Staff & Alumni: $50 (sign up begins Tue., Oct. 1) Holloway Hall Auditorium, • Community: $65 (sign up begins Mon., Oct. 14) 7:30 p.m. & & *2 p.m. Cost of tickets must be paid in full at the time of sign-up. SU DANCE COMPANY: No refunds for cancellations unless the seat is filled. Seats may not be transferred. Enjoy selected works by BUS TRIP: Enjoy New York City on your own! For more members of the SU Dance information call: 410-543-6271. $ J Company and other student choreographers. The concert highlights a variety of styles and themes, featuring a mixture of solo works and group choreographies. $

9 SATURDAY Sip and Craft Night: Holidays! Downtown Gallery, 4-7 p.m. SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Get a head start on the holidays! Enjoy a one-night pre- holiday celebration featuring ornament, wreath-making and NATIVE AMERICAN cocktail-making workshops led by local artists, as well as HERITAGE MONTH snacks and a cash bar for those over 21. Learn festive tips and tricks, prepare unique 11 MONDAY handmade holiday gifts, and How Land Is the Universe: enjoy crafts and lively The Wisdom of Rocks in Buddhist Grave Markers and Rainbow, Paia, Maui, Hawaii conversation for all ages. $ Ansel Adams Indigenous Plains Ecology Guerrieri Academic Commons, Assembly Hall, 7 p.m. 9 SATURDAY LECTURE & ROUNDTABLE: Into the Vault: Guided Tour Indigenous philosopher and educator Nimachia Howe addresses the consequences of settlement not only on of Photographs in the SU particular living kinds, such as the buffalo, but also on the land Permanent Collection itself. The question raised is how we might move forward in a Guerrieri Academic Commons, renewed relationship to land that is respectful of the full extent University Archives and of its gifts and powers. Special Collections, 10 a.m. Sponsored by the Fulton Public Humanities Program, Honors College and SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: In Philosophy Department. this one-hour tour of works from Salisbury University’s permanent collection of 15 FRIDAY photographs, SU Art Galleries The Past, Present and Future of the staff introduce original prints by legendary photographers Nanticoke Indian Tribe including Ansel Adams, Shelby Perdue Hall 156, 7 p.m. Lee Adams, Paul Strand, LECTURE: Chief Natosha Norwood Carmine, Henry Callahan, Elliot Porter the first woman to lead Delaware’s and Edward Weston, and Nanticoke Indian Tribe, discusses several of discuss the historical and the challenges faced and future plans artistic significance of the initiated by the tribe. images. Sponsored by the Fulton Public Humanities Program, the History Department and the Nabb Center.

19 • For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 11 MONDAY Roma Screening Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. FILM: Alfonso Cuarón’s 2018 drama, set in 1970 and 1971, Roma, is a semi- autobiographical take on Cuarón's upbringing in the Colonia Roma neighborhood of Mexico City, starring Yalitza Aparicio and Marina de Tavira and following the life of a live-in housekeeper of a middle-class family. Winner of the Venice International Film Festival Golden Lion, the film received 10 Academy Award nominations. It became the first Mexican entry to win Best Foreign Language Film and won for Best Cinematography and Best Director, becoming the first foreign language film to win in the last category, as well as marking the first time a director won Best Cinematography for their own film. It also won the Golden Globe for Best Director and Best Foreign Language Film, the Critics’ Choice Awards for Best Picture and Best Director. J Recommended for mature audiences. Faculty panel discussion follows the screening.

PAYING TRIBUTE TO THE RICH ANCESTRY AND TRADITIONS 12 TUESDAY OF NATIVE AMERICANS NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Blackwell Hall, 2-3 p.m. 21 THURSDAY CELL PRE-TRIP LECTURE: Explore its mission, challenges Eloquence Embodied: Nonverbal Communication Among French and and the new role of America’s Indigenous Peoples in the Americas space program. (See the bus Holloway Hall, Social Room, trip on Nov. 14.) 5:30 p.m. LECTURE & BOOK SIGNING: Céline Carayon, associate 11 MONDAY 12 TUESDAY professor of history, presents and Robocon Is Zen Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins’s signs her new book Eloquence Conway Hall 153, 6:30 p.m. Cultural (Re)Appropriations Embodied: Nonverbal HISTORY DEPARTMENT Conway Hall 152, 3:30 p.m. Communication Among French and LECTURE: A pioneer of FULTON FACULTY Indigenous Peoples in the Americas. Taking a fresh look at the Japanese robotics, Mori COLLOQUIA: Presented by first two centuries of French colonialism in the Americas, Masahiro (1927-) also founded April Logan, associate Eloquence Embodied answers the long-standing question of the Buddhism-inspired Mukta professor of English. how and how well indigenous Americans and European Institute, established the colonists communicated with each other. Challenging the Robocon competition and notion of colonial America as a site of misunderstandings and published numerous books in 12 TUESDAY insurmountable cultural clashes, Carayon shows that natives which he called for integration Netflix Documentary 13th and newcomers used nonverbal means to communicate of Zen philosophy and Perdue Hall 156, 7 p.m. successfully before the rise of linguistic fluency and, crucially, practice into engineering FILM & PANEL DISCUSSION: well afterward. education. Yulia Frumer of See page 8 for details. Sponsored by the History Department and Fulton School Faculty Colloquium Johns Hopkins University Series. explores the interplay between Mori’s robotics work, engineering methods, SU’s Cultural Affairs Office presents Native Voices on Nov. 20 – Buddhism, and the role of see calendar for details. psychology and cognitive science in Japanese humanoid robotics.

20 november

15 FRIDAY SU at the Beach Faculty Series Ocean Pines Chamber of Commerce; 11031 Cathell Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. CELL LECTURE: Is Big Brother Watching? Public/Private Partnerships for Data and Surveillance with John Murphy. Walk-ins welcome. $

15 FRIDAY Peacherine Ragtime Society Orchestra Accompanying the Swashbuckling Adventures of Douglas Fairbanks (1920) in The Mark of Zorro Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. FILM/PERFORMANCE: The Mark of Zorro, a Photo Credit: Todd Dudek 1920 silent adventure romance film, is a genre-defining swashbuckler adventure. It is the first movie version of Zorro. It tells the story of how corrupt Governor 13 WEDNESDAY Alvarado crushes the poor people of Spanish California World Drum Experience under his iron heel, wealthy fop Don Diego Vega sheds his Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. silks, dons a mask and cape and becomes the legendary SU MUSIC CONCERT: The World Drum Experience Zorro, defender of the people. The Peacherine Ragtime features Latin and African rhythms including steel drums Society Orchestra is “the premier American ragtime and Kpanlogo from Ghana. The performance includes ensemble” as hailed by The Washington Post and is rapidly songs from UB40, Poncho Sanchez, Steppenwolf, Allman becoming the leading professional ragtime orchestra in the Brothers and others. They feature many genres, including United States. Formed by young virtuoso Andrew Greene R&B, Latin, Fusion, Afro Beat and more. Special guests for at the University of Maryland in 2010, the Peacherine the evening is AMP! featuring African dance. Ragtime Society Orchestra recreates the syncopated stylings of a bygone era – ragtime, theatre and dance music, along with underscoring classic silent films using the original orchestral scores. J 14 THURSDAY An Evening of Percussion Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT: Under the direction of Eric Shuster, the SU Percussion Ensemble explores music for percussion across contemporary and historical perspectives.

14 THURSDAY SU on the Road: Goddard Space Center Leave SU: 7 a.m.; Return: 6 p.m. CELL TRIP: Motor coach ride to tour NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and the Earth Science Operations Control Center. Must register by October 31 for NASA processing. $

21 18 MONDAY 20 WEDNESDAY Wasteland Screening Thanksgiving Dinner Holloway Hall, Great Hall, Commons, Bistro, 4:30-7:30 p.m. 7 p.m. INTERNATIONAL DINNER SERIES: This dinner features traditional FILM: Filmed Thanksgiving fare as well as Native American offerings. $ J over nearly three years, the film follows renowned artist 20 WEDNESDAY Vik Muniz as he Native Voices: Katajjaq to Hip-Hop 16 SATURDAY journeys from With Featured Artists: Supaman & his home base Nukariik: Kathy Kettler & Kendra The World We’ll Make: in Brooklyn to his native Brazil Environmental Utopias in and the world's largest Tagoona and Featured Local Cultural Literature, Film and Visual Art garbage dump, Jardim Specialist Shodekeh Conway Hall 179, Gramacho, located on the Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. PERFORMANCE: From practitioners ADVENTURES IN IDEAS: There he photographs an of the rarely heard Inuit women’s HUMANITIES SEMINAR: What eclectic band of “catadores” – vocal tradition of katajjaq (throat- does the future have in store self-designated pickers of singing) and to a fancy dancer/hip for Earth – for us? This recyclable materials. Muniz’s hop artist/beatboxer from the Crow seminar tackles that question initial objective was to “paint” Nation, this program explores by looking at how creative the catadores with garbage. indigenous artistic expressions, both writers and visual artists However, his collaboration centuries-old and contemporary, in depict environmental futures, with these inspiring characters North America. J while also interrogating how as they recreate photographic This engagement is sponsored by the Cultural we ourselves anticipate the images of themselves out of Affairs Office and made possible through the future in a world of climate Folk and Traditional Arts Touring Network garbage reveals both the program of Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation in change. Join Ryan Conrath dignity and despair of the collaboration with the National Council for the (English/film studies) and catadores as they begin to re- Traditional Arts with support from the National Shane Hall (Environmental imagine their lives. J Endowment for the Arts. Studies) for a series of Faculty panel discussion follows the See additional Native American Heritage creative activities (games, screening. Month events on page 19. writing/sketching) and critical exercises (examining visual art and works of short film and fiction) to collectively imagine environmental futures in the present. $ Second in a three-part series; look for details in spring for Feb. 29 “Fake News, Facebook, Bots and Memes: Politics and the Use of Social Media in the 21st Century”

16 SATURDAY Pop Up Art Ward Museum, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. WARD MUSEUM EVENT: Join a different artist every third Saturday for this FREE family 19 TUESDAY art program that is fun for all THROUGH DECEMBER 7 ages. Families can pop in to 61st Bi-Annual Senior Exhibition: make and take a fun art Fine Arts and Graphic Design creation. An exhibit of the Downtown Gallery artist’s work will also be Visiting Graphic Designer: showcased during the activity. Thu., Dec. 5 All children should be Reception: Fri., Dec. 6 accompanied by an adult. SU ART GALLERIES EXHIBIT Funded by the Susan K. Black Foundation.

Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” • 22 november

20 WEDNESDAY 21 THURSDAY Reinvigorating Environmental Laridae Student Academic 21-24* Justice: Marshalling Student Journal Launch Party By the Way, Meet Vera Stark Activism for Change Guerrieri Academic Commons, Fulton Hall, Devilbiss Hall 123, 5:30 p.m. Assembly Hall, 3:30-5 p.m. Black Box Theatre, 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m. ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES OURCA EVENT: Celebrate the COLLOQUIUM SERIES: In release of SU’s first student SU THEATRE: While spite of activism, research and academic journal, Laridae, working as a maid for an policy efforts, environmental Latin for gull, that features aging starlet, an African- injustice persists. Oscar published work from students American actress attempts Eduardo de Paz discusses the across campus. First 200 to break into 1930s lessons learned from the attendees receive a copy of Hollywood. Seventy years stalled and failed efforts of the journal. Selected authors later, her ground-breaking the EJ movement in read excerpts of their writing film and controversial career Pittsburgh, PA, a nearly and showcase their visual arts. are re-discovered by 60-year environmental Light refreshments served. academics seeking the conflict, as well as how spotlight. Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lynn student environmental Nottage examines race, fame and identity in her 2011 21 THURSDAY send-up of screwball comedies and scholarly ambitions. $ organizations play a role in Eloquence Embodied: Nonverbal environmental conflicts. Communication Among French and Indigenous Peoples in the 22 FRIDAY 20 WEDNESDAY Americas SU at the Beach Faculty Series Don Bogen Reading Holloway Hall, Social Room, Ocean Pines Chamber of Commons, Worcester Room, 5:30 p.m. Commerce; 11031 Cathell 8 p.m. FULTON FACULTY Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. WRITERS ON THE SHORE: COLLOQUIA: Book launch for CELL LECTURE: The Future of Bogen is the Céline Carayon, associate American Foreign Policy with author of five professor of history. See Eric Rittinger. Walk-ins books of details on page 20. welcome. $ poetry, most recently Immediate Song. His other two books are a critical study of Theodore Roethke and a translation of selected poems by the contemporary Spanish 23 SATURDAY poet Julio Martínez Mesanza. Salisbury and University He has collaborated with composers from the U.S. and Chorales other countries. Prizes for his Holloway Hall Auditorium, work include The Writer / 7:30 p.m. Emily Dickinson Award of the SU MUSIC CONCERT: A Poetry Society of America and preview of American grants from the National musical selections for their Endowment for the Arts and upcoming tour of Italy in the Camargo Foundation. He March 2020. Directed by has held Fulbright positions in 21 THURSDAY William M. Folger. $ Spain and at the Seamus Discover SU: Heaney Centre for Poetry in The New Blackwell: Belfast. Nathaniel Ropes Beyond the Library Professor Emeritus at the 24 SUNDAY Blackwell Hall, University of Cincinnati, he 4:30-5:30 p.m. Chamber (Madrigal) Choir serves as editor-at-large of CELL CAMPUS TOUR Concert The Cincinnati Review. Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 4 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT

23 • For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 december

1 SUNDAY Zama Fulton Hall 111, 2:30 p.m. SALISBURY FILM SOCIETY: In this adaptation of Antonio Di Benedetto’s 1956 novel Zama, an officer of the Spanish Crown born in South America waits for a letter from the king granting him a transfer from the town in which he is stagnating. He is forced to accept submissively every task entrusted to him by successive governors who come and go as he stays behind. This blackly funny and ultimately haunting examination of colonial history from one of contemporary cinema’s most celebrated filmmakers, Lucrecia Martel, was voted the best film of 2018 in Film Comment’s poll of international critics. $ Rated R. Directed by Lucrecia Martel. Argentina/Brazil/France, 2017. 115 minutes.

5 THURSDAY SU on the Road: ICE Holiday Show Gaylord Resorts at National Harbor Leave SU: 7 a.m.; Return: 7 p.m. CELL TRIP: Join our motor coach trip to an indoor winter wonderland of hand-carved ice sculptures and a full crystal-clear ice nativity. $

5 THURSDAY 6 FRIDAY Jazz Ensemble SU at the Beach Faculty Series 2 MONDAY 3 TUESDAY Holloway Hall Auditorium, Ocean Pines Chamber of Freedom, Self and Agency 7:30 p.m. Commerce; 11031 Cathell Holiday Traditions SU MUSIC CONCERT Road, Berlin, MD; 3:30-5 p.m. Blackwell Hall, 2-3 p.m. in Indian Philosophy CELL LECTURE: Curing CELL PRE-TRIP LECTURE: Conway Hall 152, 3:30 p.m. Cancer: Why Haven’t We Discover the magic of this FULTON FACULTY Done It Yet? with Anthony year’s National Harbor ICE COLLOQUIA: Presented by Rojas. Walk-ins welcome. $ Extravaganza, ice sculpting Joerg Tuske, professor of and holiday traditions around philosophy. the world. (See the bus trip on 6 FRIDAY Dec. 5.) 3 TUESDAY Piano/Strings Concert Salisbury Pops Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 2 p.m. 3 TUESDAY Holloway Hall Auditorium, SU MUSIC CONCERT Giving Tuesday Trivia 7:30 p.m. Downtown Gallery, 7-9 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT SU ART GALLERIES EVENT: Spend a fun-filled evening 4 WEDNESDAY playing art-themed trivia for amazing prizes. Cash bar and Slave Narratives: The Stories a modest trivia registration We Know and Those We Should fee help support SU Art Conway Hall 153, 7 p.m. Galleries programs. Let’s LECTURE: See page 8 for celebrate art together on details. Giving Tuesday! $

24 december

6 FRIDAY Silver Bells Holiday Quarter 7 SATURDAY Auction Horn for the Holidays Ward Museum; Preview: Featuring Gregory Miller, Horn 5 p.m.; Auction: 6 p.m. Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. WARD MUSEUM EVENT: SALISBURY SYMPHONY Bring quarters or get them ORCHESTRA: Equally at home as a from us to bid on great items soloist, teacher, chamber musician from local businesses. General and symphonic horn player, Miller is admission gets you into one of the most accomplished horn auction and one paddle to players of his generation. In 1997, bid. he was appointed hornist with the $10 in advance; $15 at the door; internationally acclaimed Empire VIP ticket – $35 – includes admission to the auction, one paddle and access Brass. Over the course of his career, to the VIP room for refreshments from Miller has performed in 25 foreign local businesses. countries spanning five continents For more information or tickets visit in addition to all 48 states within the continental U.S. He www.wardmuseum.org or call has performed in nearly every major concert hall in the 410-742-4988 ext. 120. world, including the Mozarteum, Carnegie Hall, Suntory Hall, Tokyo Opera City, the Barbican, to name but a few. His recordings with Empire Brass, which include Class Brass: Firedance and The Glory of Gabrieli, can be heard exclusively on the Telarc Label. In 2002, Miller released the first of two solo CDs on the MSR Label titled From Bach to Bernstein and in 2006 released his Solos for the Horn Player. His orchestral experience includes principal positions with the New World Symphony and the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra. He has also performed with the Detroit, Pittsburgh, Jacksonville, National and Baltimore symphony orchestras. $

10 TUESDAY PRESTO Recitals Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 5 p.m. & 7 p.m. 8 SUNDAY CELL CONCERT Adam Beres Senior Recital For more info.: Holloway Hall, Great Hall, www.salisbury.edu/presto 6 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT 12 THURSDAY Discover SU: University Dining Services Guerrieri Student Union, 4:30-5:30 p.m. CELL CAMPUS TOUR

12 THURSDAY 9 MONDAY Youth Symphony Orchestra Multi-Holiday Dinner Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. Commons, Bistro, 4:30-7:30 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT INTERNATIONAL DINNER SERIES: This celebration of Hanukkah, Christmas and Kwanzaa features music by Red Letter Day and alternative klezmer band Alexandria Kleztet, who have been combining traditional Eastern European/Jewish music with diverse influences for more than a decade. Please note: Salisbury University does not have a kosher kitchen. $ J

25 • Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu and click on “Donors, Friends & Families” 13 FRIDAY Feature Friday: Martha Pfeiffer and Friends Holiday Revue 21 SATURDAY The Brick Room; 116 N. Winter Wonderland Division Street; 6-7 p.m. Holiday Crafts and Visit CELL FACULTY & STAFF from Santa Claus PERFORMANCE: Must be Ward Museum, 21+. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. WARD MUSEUM 13 FRIDAY EVENT: This FREE 8-bit Bach: Exploring holiday social event pairs with Pop Up Art Connections Between Video for the creative in you. Game and Classical Music: The lobby and grounds Hunter Lupro Senior Lecture are decked out for the and Recital holidays, offering a Holloway Hall, Great Hall, perfect setting for a 7 p.m. community gathering SU MUSIC CONCERT in honor of the season. Don’t miss out on the chance to have your 15 SUNDAY picture taken with SU Children's Choir Santa and make Holloway Hall Auditorium, delightful winter crafts. 4 p.m. SU MUSIC CONCERT january

16 THURSDAY Third Annual Posters on the Bay at the Maryland General Assembly Lowe House Office Building Rooms 170 & 180; 6 Bladen St., Annapolis; 11 a.m.-1 p.m. OURCA EVENT: Select undergraduate and graduate student researchers and creative artists are invited to showcase their work as posters to present to our Maryland elected representatives and their staff. Students, to be selected for the showcase contact [email protected] by December 15. Transportation provided for SU members; RSVP to [email protected] by January 14 to be included.

26 All events are listed here by their sponsoring program/department. Find out the date of the event in which you are interested and look to the calendar for contacts & categories more information. Contact information is provided in case you have questions. 1619-2019: 400 Years of Resilience Series • 410-543-8106 LIGHTHOUSE LITERARY GUILD Sept. 17...... A Celebration of Local Heroes Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass: Remarks, Praise Sept. 5...... Meet and Greet and Reflection Kick-Off Event Oct. 2-Nov. 6...... Odyssey to Self with Nancy Mitchell (Wednesdays) Sept. 26 ...... Myne Owne Ground: Race and Freedom on Virginia’s Eastern Shore Book and Panel Oct. 2-Nov. 6...... Intro to Songwriting with Lauren Glick (Wednesdays) Discussion Oct. 3-Nov. 7...... Writing Your Memoir with Pat Valdata (Thursdays) Oct. 17 ...... The Institutionalization of Slavery and Its Legacy in the U.S. Lecture Oct. 9-Nov. 13...... Writing with Art as a Prompt with Martha Graham (Wednesdays) Oct. 24-25 ...... Singers Showcase Concert - From Ship to Shore: Celebrating 400 Years of Human DISCOVER SU TOURS Resilience Through Music Sept. 19...... Nanticoke River Center Nov. 7...... A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing: The Incarceration of African American Women Oct. 17 ...... Brown and Church Carillon from Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland Poetry Reading and Q&A Nov. 21...... The New Blackwell Hall Nov. 12...... Netflix Documentary 13th Film and Panel Discussion Dec. 12...... University Dining Services Dec. 4...... Slave Narratives: The Stories We Know and Those We Should Lecture FEATURE FRIDAYS CONCERTS Alumni Homecoming & Family Weekend • 410-543-6042 Sept. 13...... Lee Knier and Friends Oct. 11 ...... Danielle Cumming and Friends Oct. 18-19 Nov. 8...... Augustine “The Pan Man” DiGiovanna Adventures In Ideas: Humanities Seminar • 410-543-6450 Dec. 13...... Martha Pfeiffer and Friends Holiday Revue PRESTO MUSIC Oct. 26 ...... You’ve Come a Long Way Baby?: History, Art, Cinema and Change Since the Radical 1920s Sept. 9-Dec 10...... PRESTO and PRESTO Plus lesson (call for details) Nov. 16...... The World We’ll Make: Environmental Utopias in Literature, Film and Visual Art Dec. 10...... PRESTO Recitals SU Art Galleries • 410-548-2547 EXHIBITS Cultural Affairs Office • 410-543-6271 Sept. 27 ...... Slovenian Chamber Choir KZ Megaron Concert Through Sept. 8...... Material Play Oct. 21 ...... Paris! The Show Performance Aug. 26-Feb. 8...... Horizontes (Horizons): Verónica Peña and Hector Canonge (Performance: Sept. 28; Workshop: Sept. 30; Talk/Reception: Oct. 1) Oct. 28 ...... Crys Matthews Concert Sept. 6-Oct. 26 ...... On Water (Reception/Film/Workshop: Sept. 20; Talk/Book Signing: Oct. 17) Nov. 20 ...... Native Voices: Katajjaq to Hip-Hop Performance Sept. 23-Dec. 7...... All My Children Sleep in the Sea (Talk/Reception: Oct. 24) LATIN AMERICAN CULTURE PROFESSIONAL PERFORMING ARTS SERIES Nov. 2...... Undercurrents 02 Please see Hispanic Heritage Month Festival below for additional events Nov.19-Dec. 7...... 61st Bi-Annual Senior Exhibition: Fine Arts and Graphic Design Nov 5 ...... Natalia Arroyo Ensemble Concert ART DEPARTMENT VISITING ARTIST TALK SERIES Nov 15 ...... Peacherine Ragtime Society Orchestra Accompanying the Swashbuckling Adventures of Douglas Fairbanks (1920) in The Mark of Zorro Sept. 5...... Jon Lundak Film Screenings Sept. 19...... Roberley Bell Nov. 2...... “Day of the Dead” Disney/Pixar Coco Screening Sept. 26...... Robin & Julia Rogers Nov. 4...... The Life and Times of Frida Kahlo Nov. 7...... Mina Cheon Nov. 11...... Roma EVENTS Nov. 18...... Wasteland Oct. 9 ...... Seeing Sound Series #8: Love And Other Emotions (L.A.O.E.) HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH FESTIVAL Oct. 17 ...... FloodZone: Anastasia Samoylova Talk and Book Signing Sept. 13 & 14...... Latin Dance Workshops Featuring Pan-Am Champion Latin Dancer Joey Corsica Nov. 9...... Into the Vault: Guided Tour of Photographs in the SU Permanent Collection Sept. 25 ...... Hispanic Heritage Dinner Featuring Mariachi Aguila DC Nov. 9...... Sip and Craft Night: Holidays! Sept. 25 ...... Jane Bunnett & Maqueque Concert Dec. 3...... Giving Tuesday Trivia Oct.9 ...... Sofía Viola Concert YOUTH PROGRAMS Oct. 14 ...... Mariachi High Film Sept. 21...... Teen Poetry Workshop and Poetry Reading with Grace Cavalieri, Poet Laureate of Maryland Latin Music USA Screenings Aug. 16...... Drop-In Kids’ Gallery Craft and Game Night Sept. 16 ...... The Salsa Revolution Oct. 12 ...... Teen Earth Art Workshop Sept. 23 ...... Bridges Oct. 18 ...... Drop-In Kids’ Gallery Craft and Game Night Sept. 30 ...... The Chicano Wave Oct. 7 ...... Divas and Superstars Center for Extended & Lifelong Learning • 410-543-6090 PETER & JUDY JACKSON CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES SU ON THE ROAD Nov. 1...... Harpist Melissa Tardiff Dvorak and Flutist Julianna Nickel Pre-Trip Lectures BUS TRIPS Sept. 23...... National Museum of African American History and Culture Oct. 25 ...... Latin American Cultural Immersion Day: Embassies and Arts of Latin America: Washington, D.C. Oct. 21 ...... Philadelphia History Nov. 9...... New York City “On Your Own” Nov. 12...... NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center INTERNATIONAL DINNER SERIES Dec. 2...... Holiday Traditions Sept. 25 ...... Hispanic Heritage Dinner Featuring Mariachi Aguila DC Trips Sept. 30 ...... Rosh Hashanah Dinner Sept. 26...... National Museum of African American History and Culture Oct. 18 ...... Taste of the Chesapeake Dinner Featuring Red Letter Day Oct. 24 ...... Philadelphia On Your Own Oct. 21 ...... An Evening in Paris Dinner Nov. 14...... Goddard Space Center Nov. 20 ...... Thanksgiving Dinner Dec. 5...... ICE Holiday Show Dec. 9 ...... Multi-Holiday Dinner SU @ THE BEACH Sept. 13-Nov. 15.....Writing Your Memoir with Emily Rich (Fridays, except Oct. 11 & 18) Sept. 20-Dec 6...... Faculty Lecture Series (Fridays – see calendar for dates and subjects) English Department Events • 410-543-6445 Oct. 25 ...... Frankenstein Marathon Reading Oct. 3-Nov. 7...... Beginning Writing Poetry with Nancy Mitchell (Thursdays)

27 • For costs $, locations and contact information: pages 29-30 Environmental Studies Colloquium Series • 410-543-8105 Native American Heritage Month • 410-548-3836 Oct. 2 ...... The Maryland Rural Legacy Program Nov. 11...... How Land Is the Universe: The Wisdom of Rocks in Indigenous Plains Ecology Lecture Nov. 6 ...... Maryland Biodiversity Project & Roundtable Nov. 20...... Reinvigorating Environmental Justice: Marshalling Student Activism for Change Nov. 15...... The Past, Present and Future of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe Lecture Nov. 21...... Eloquence Embodied: Nonverbal Communication Among French and Indigenous Fulton Alumni Lecture • 410-543-6450 Peoples in the Americas Lecture & Book Signing Oct. 17 ...... Maryland State Department of Education Director of Curriculum Bruce A. Lesh Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Activity (OURCA) Fulton Faculty Colloquia • 410-543-6450 410-546-1674 Sept. 24 ...... Voicing and the Bow in Bach’s Suites for Unaccompanied Cello Aug. 29 ...... Summer Student Research Showcase Oct. 22 ...... Creating Community Connections: Could Solutions to Journalism Be the Answer to All Nov. 21 ...... Laridae Student Academic Journal Launch Party of Our Problems? Jan. 16...... Third Annual Posters on the Bay at the Maryland General Assembly Nov. 12...... Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins’s Cultural (Re)Appropriations Nov. 21...... Eloquence Embodied: Nonverbal Communication Among French and Indigenous Peoples in the Americas (Book Launch) PACE (Institute for Public Affairs and Civic Engagement) Dec. 3...... Freedom, Self and Agency in Indian Philosophy 410-677-5045 Sept. 17 ...... Constitution Day Fulton Public Humanities Series • 410-677-5070 Oct. 16...... Informed and Engaged Lecture Series: Why Engaged Citizenship Matters Sept. 5...... Children, Numbers and Philosophy: How Philosophy Can Help in Talking with Children Oct. 19...... PACE Open House About Math Oct. 19...... PACE Turns 20 Celebration Oct. 21 ...... University Fictions: Violence, Lawsuits and Obsessions in Recent Argentine Academic Novels Nov. 2 ...... Civic Reflection Training Nov. 11...... How Land Is the Universe: The Wisdom of Rocks in Indigenous Plains Ecology Lecture & Roundtable Salisbury Film Society • 410-543-2787 Nov. 15...... The Past, Present and Future of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe Lecture Sept. 8...... Cold War Oct. 6 ...... Three Identical Strangers History Department Events • 410-543-6245 Nov. 3...... Madeline’s Madeline Nov. 11...... Robocon Is Zen Dec. 1...... Zama Nov. 4...... Urban Dreams, Rural Commonwealth: The Rise of Plantation Society in the Chesapeake Salisbury Symphony Orchestra • 410-543-8366 Music, Theatre & Dance Department • 410-548-5588 Oct. 12...... Revolutionary! Featuring Soovin Kim, Violin MUSIC PROGRAM Dec. 7...... Horn for the Holidays Featuring Gregory Miller, Horn Sept. 18...... Allegheny Trio Concert Sept. 28...... Tambor Fantasma Sea Gull Century • 410-548-2772 Oct. 19 ...... Homecoming Alumni and Faculty Concert Oct. 5 Oct. 24-25...... Singers Showcase - From Ship to Shore: Celebrating 400 Years of Human Resilience Through Music Ward Museum • 410-742-4988 Nov. 2-3...... Musical Theatre Ensemble: A Grand Night for Singing - Rodgers and Hammerstein EXHIBITS Revue Through Sept. 15 .....Skilled Service: The Volunteer Art Show Nov. 13...... World Drum Experience Through Sept. 29 .....Chesapeake Visual Icons Nov. 14...... An Evening of Percussion Sept. 20-Feb. 16...... Art of the Industry: Oyster Cans of the Mid-Atlantic Nov. 23...... Salisbury and University Chorales Oct. 4-Jan. 20...... War Over the Waves: Oyster Wars of the Chesapeake Nov. 24 ...... Chamber (Madrigal) Choir Concert EVENTS Dec. 3...... Salisbury Pops Oct. 11 ...... Fall Migration Gala Dec. 5 ...... Jazz Ensemble Oct. 12 ...... Chesapeake Wildfowl Expo and Fall Festival Dec. 6...... Piano/Strings Concert Dec. 6...... Silver Bells Holiday Quarter Auction Dec. 8...... Adam Beres Senior Recital FAMILY FUN Dec. 10...... PRESTO Recitals Aug. 17 ...... Pop Up Art Dec. 12 ...... Youth Symphony Orchestra Sept. 21 ...... Pop Up Art: Featuring Crocheted Gloves with Sheri Hill Dec. 13...... 8-bit Bach: Exploring Connections Between Video Game and Classical Music - Hunter Lupro Senior Lecture and Recital Oct. 19 ...... Pop Up Art Dec. 15 ...... SU Children's Choir Nov. 16...... Pop Up Art BOBBI BIRON THEATRE Dec. 21...... Winter Wonderland Holiday Crafts and Visit from Santa Claus Oct. 10-13...... Euripides’ Medea CLASSES Nov. 21-24...... By the Way, Meet Vera Stark Sept. 21 ...... Learn to Draw Herons with Ellen Lawler SU DANCE COMPANY Sept. 28 ...... Learn to Draw Shorebirds with Ellen Lawler Nov. 8-10...... SU Fall Student Dance Showcase Oct. 18-20 ...... Carve and Paint an Antique Owl with Rich Smoker

Nabb Center • 410-543-6312 Writers On The Shore • 410-543-6250 EXHIBITS Sept. 4...... Creative Writing Festival Featuring John A. Nieves Ongoing...... Delmarva: People, Place & Time Oct. 2 ...... Matthew Vollmer Aug. 26-Dec. 17 ...... Out of the Box: The Archives at the Nabb Research Center Nov. 6...... Cary Holladay Aug. 26-Dec. 17 ...... From Coastal Maryland to the World (Reception: Sept. 12) Nov. 20 ...... Don Bogen Reading EVENTS Sept. 19...... Archives in the 21st Century: The Challenge of Preserving the Past Oct. 10 ...... The Resilience of the DelMarVa Peninsula and Its People Nov. 4...... Urban Dreams, Rural Commonwealth: The Rise of Plantation Society in the Chesapeake

28 general info, hours & costs

To make your visit Cultural Affairs Office SU Art Galleries Music, Theatre & Dance Department For organization or event n University Gallery Ticketed Events to SU enjoyable, information call: 410-543-6271 Located in Fulton Hall, THEATRE ADMISSION or 410-548-5697 just off the main lobby in here are a few n $15 adults www.salisbury.edu/ Room 109 n $10 seniors 62+, SU faculty & helpful hints: culturalaffairs 410-548-2547 SU staff (ID required) Facebook: Cultural Affairs n SU Art Galleries | Downtown n Follow SU on social media n $5 non-SU students at Salisbury University 212 West Main Street for all the latest: n $3 SU students w/ Gull Card Twitter: @SU_CulAffairs Gallery Building n Free children under 12 Like us on Facebook [email protected] 410-548-2401 n $9 groups of 10+ Facebook.com/SalisburyU [email protected] n Electronic Gallery Conway Hall 128 CHORALES/DANCE/ Follow us on Twitter MUSICAL THEATRE @SalisburyU n Cultural Laureate Program For SU Art Galleries hours, SU students are invited to visit: or call ENSEMBLE ADMISSION n INFORMATION: If you need participate in the Cultural www.salisbury.edu/ n $10 adults more information, want to Laureate Program by attending universitygalleries n $7 seniors 62+, SU faculty & confirm a date or have at least five different select SU staff (ID required) questions: cultural events per semester. Center for Extended & n $5 non-SU students n $3 SU students w/ Gull Card q Call the cultural events For information visit: Lifelong Learning hotline at 410-677-4685. www.salisbury.edu/ n Free children under 12 q Visit: www.salisbury.edu/ culturalaffairs/clp [email protected] n $6 groups of 10+ www.salisbury.edu/cell newsevents [email protected] SPECIAL NEEDS PATRONS SU on the Road n ARTS MINUTE: You can n Please call the Box Office in receive the SU Arts Minute n International Dinner Series • National Museum of African advance to request special weekly email. Just send an Commons, Bistro, American History and Culture: seating email requesting to joein th 4:30-7:30 p.m. $60 TO PURCHASE TICKETS mailing list to: Most meals have • Philadelphia On Your Own: n Cash, Visa, MasterCard and publicrelations@ entertainment from 5-7 p.m. $60 Cost (plus tax): $15; checks payable to Salisbury salisbury.edu • Goddard Space Center: $60 children (6 & under) $8.75 University accepted n CULTURAL AFFAIRS EMAIL: • ICE Holiday Show: $95 n Online 24/7 You can receive the This n Bus Trips SU @ the Beach www.salisbury.edu/ Week at SU Cultural Affairs performingarts weekly email. Just send an • Latin American Cultural • Writing Your Memoir with Immersion Day: See Oct. 25 Emily Rich: $96 Ticket operations fee applied email requesting to join the n By Phone: 410-543-6228 for details • Faculty Lecture Series mailing list to: n At the Box Office • New York City “On Your (Fridays): $75 for 11-week [email protected] Fulton Hall 100 Own”: See Nov. 9 for details series or $8 each lecture Monday-Friday, • Beginning Writing Poetry with 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Adventure in Ideas: Nancy Mitchell: $72 Would you like to PLEASE ARRIVE ON TIME! support events Humanities Seminar Series Lighthouse Literary Guild Cost (including continental n For Black Box Theatre • Odyssey to Self with Nancy performances, guests who like these, or other breakfast and lunch) $30 Mitchell: $72 Sponsored by the Fulton School already have tickets are priorities including • Intro. to Songwriting with of Liberal Arts and the Whaley encouraged to arrive 30 scholarships? Lauren Glick: $72 Family Foundation. minutes prior to the Become a part of The For more information contact • Writing Your Memoir with Pat scheduled curtain time. Campaign for Salisbury the Fulton School Dean’s Valdata: $96 All late seating is at the University as we fund the Office, Donna Carey: • Writing with Art as a Prompt discretion of theatre resources needed for the 410-543-6450 or with Martha Graham: $72 management. extraordinary people – [email protected] students, faculty, staff and Nabb Research Center others – who are woven into Institute for Retired Persons the fabric of our campus. 410-742-8310 for Delmarva History & Culture Together, We Are SU. www.salisbury.edu/irp Guerrieri Academic Commons, Fourth Floor Mon.: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tues.-Fri.: 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat.: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 410-543-6312

campaign.salisbury.edu

29 The buildings highlighted in red are the facilities that most frequently host cultural and educational events. Please note adjacent parking lots for ease in access. Visitors must display a visitor parking pass, which may be obtained free of charge from the Parking Services Office at 410-543-6338 or online at: www.salisbury.edu/parking/visitors.html Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Activity (OURCA) Guerrieri Academic Commons Room 233 CAMPUS MAP O [email protected] AND PARKING 410-546-1674 www.salisbury.edu/ourca

Salisbury Film Society 410-543-2787 Tickets: n $8 Salisbury Wicomico Arts Council (SWAC) members Guerrieri n $9 non-members Academic n $20 4-film season pass Commons n Students free w/ ID

Salisbury Symphony Orchestra ADMISSION*: Academic Advising Center n $25 adults Guerrieri n $20 seniors 60+ Student Union n $10 SU faculty/staff n $5 all students Visit www.Salisbury Bookstore SymphonyOrchestra.org and Gull Card Click on the “Purchase Office Tickets” button. 410-543-8366

Ward Museum of Wildfowl Art

909 S. Schumaker Drive REV: JULY 2019 Salisbury, MD; 410-742-4988 Contact the museum for class Institute for Public Affairs World Artists Experiences, Inc. information, registration and and Civic Engagement (PACE) SU Ambassador Series costs. PACE is a non-partisan institute SU is affiliated with World Artists Experiences, Inc., HOURS committed to undergraduate a non-profit organization that is committed to World Artists Experiences, Inc. n Mon.-Sat.: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. learning that sparks interest in developing the vital role of the arts in building n Sun.: Noon-5 p.m. public affairs and civic bridges of international understanding. By providing educational engagement, and acts as a experiences with world artists in schools, colleges and communities, ADMISSION resource center for local WAE seeks to foster an appreciation for the rich diversity and cultural n SU Faculty, Staff & Students: government, nonprofits and commodities of the world’s citizens. Learn more at Free (w/SU ID) public groups. www.WorldArtists.org. For more information about being part of SU’s n Adults: $7 For more information and to Ambassador Program, please call 410-543-6271. J n Seniors (60 & over): $5 RSVP, call 410-677-5045. n Students (K-12): $3 www.salisbury.edu/pace Delmarva Public Radio n College (w/college ID): $3 n Adults (w/AAA card): $6 With exciting new programs and a bold new format, Delmarva Public Radio has rededicated n Family Rate (parents & itself to providing the best news, music, arts and children 18 & under): $17 culture from Delmarva – and around the world. Institute for delmarvapublicradio.net Public Affairs and Civic Engagement WSCL 89.5 Fine Arts & Culture The Women’s Circle at Salisbury University WSDL 90.7 Rhythm & News of Salisbury University For organization and event information: 410-677-0292 [email protected] www.facebook.com/ suwomenscircle SU is an Equal Opportunity/AA/Title IX university and provides reasonable accommodation given sufficient notice to the University office or staff sponsoring the event or program. For more information regarding SU’s policies and procedures, please visit www.salisbury.edu/equity.

Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu • 30 Office of Public Relations 1101 Camden Avenue Salisbury, MD 21801

ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED

Events are subject to change; for updates and corrections, visit: www.salisbury.edu

SOFÍA VIOLA OCTOBER 9 WEDNESDAY Sofía Viola Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 7 p.m. See p. 6 for details. J