’s Guide to Cultural & Educational Events PANORAMA FALL 2021

Artist Talk: Wingchow Capturing the Times Explore her work, which uses This exhibit details the distinct amorphous forms photojournalism of influenced by nature • p. 4 Mel Toadvine and the news that shaped Delmarva from 1961-1996 • p. 12

Rethinking Indigenous History Coming Out Julia King's presentation uses This video project collects artifacts unearthed through the “coming out” stories of archaeological investigation LGBTQ+ people living in the to describe an Indigenous Salisbury area and the allies history of • p. 13 who support them • p. 7 welcome

A Message from the President I’m so excited to finally say this: Welcome back to Salisbury University! It has been a year and a half since we have had the pleasure of inviting you to campus, and we are delighted to share with you this issue of Panorama with most of our cultural and educational events open to the public and on campus. The one constant we have all grown accustomed to over this past year and a half is change. This is especially true in the realm of public gatherings. We have provided on our website our latest policies for campus visitors (online screenings and face masks currently are required) and have scheduled facilities we think will work, but requirements can change, so I encourage you to continue to visit our campus Events webpage – www.salisbury.edu/events. There you will find the latest in terms of visitor policies and event information. As you flip through the pages ofPanorama, you will see your old favorites are still there – exhibits at the SU Art Galleries, Nabb Center and Ward Museum; performances from our Music, Theatre and Dance Department; and great lectures sponsored by several campus groups – as well as some Present Absence Exhibit • p. 3 sensational, new offerings like the EnviroKids Literacy Festival and the Read OUT Series of group literature readings. We have kept our recent layout of grouping events together by their sponsoring entity, but because we have so much planned for the fall, we have also included a quick calendar in the back so you can see what is happening at SU on any given day. The Bobbi Biron Theatre is presenting the American classic Our Town this fall, bringing their unique take on this beloved piece. Our Democracy Across the Disciplines weekly lecture series explores “Voices to Votes” through the diverse points of views of our faculty across the disciplines. The much-loved Riall Lecture Series returns, welcoming nationally recognized educators to campus to discuss issues that are important to our classrooms. We are finally able to host outside performers on campus and are excited to present The Baltimore Consort, a group whose music ranges from classical to folk. The SU Art Galleries presents local underground band Dirt Woman! and Feature Friday returns to The Brick Room downtown, with performances from SU faculty and staff. Don’t forget to stop into our Ward Museum; their Delmarvalous Festival returns to celebrate the best of our region. I hope you are as happy as I am to be in our audiences again. Our faculty and students have shown remarkable resiliency during this pandemic, and I am exceptionally proud of how they have adapted and continue to adapt to provide quality information and entertainment to our community, safely and with great enthusiasm. Be well and I look forward to seeing you in person this fall!

Charles A. Wight President, Salisbury University 1 What You Need to Know Ways to Stay Connected Visitors Are Welcome & with SU Everything Can Change The Baltimore Consort Salisbury University is excited to welcome Celebrate Our p. 4 you back to campus! As we are preparing Diversity Panorama in late spring/early summer, Recognizing the policies regarding public gatherings are inclusive nature of rapidly changing. What is provided below are exposing campus our current guidelines for campus visitors, and community but please know these guidelines can change. members to diverse And because guidelines are quickly evolving, events and ideas, SU’s some of our events may evolve and change Cultural Affairs Office as well. Before you come to campus for an has moved under the event, be sure to visit the SU Events page for umbrella of the Office of the latest information on visitor policies and Diversity and Inclusion (ODI). to double check the event’s date, time and The Cultural Affairs Office resumes its location: www.salisbury.edu/events offerings this fall with a performance by The Baltimore Consort. As travel and

SU Dance Company Student Showcase • p. 10 gathering restrictions are lifted, look for more of this group’s celebrated offerings.

Explore SU Know a student who is interested in attending SU? Currently, our Admissions team is able to offer limited daily tours to individual, registered families. Learn more at www.salisbury.edu/visit. The Admissions team is on hand from 8 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday to answer any questions you may have: [email protected] or 410-543-6161. Visitor Screening Events sponsored by SU and its affiliates may Get Social With Us permit indoor visitors at most locations as Check out a video tour on our YouTube long as they adhere to the rooms’ COVID-19 channel: www.youtube.com/salisbury capacities and SU’s policies regarding university. View our playlists to learn more COVID-19 screening, face mask requirements about SU, including spotlights on each of and physical distancing. our academic programs and other areas of All visitors must complete an online campus life. You can even take a virtual stroll COVID-19 screening on the day of their through the Arboretum: www.salisbury.edu/ visit, prior to coming to campus. As a safety arboretum. Be sure to follow SU on Facebook, precaution, individuals may be asked to show Twitter and Instagram. proof of screening clearance. Access may be denied for non-compliance. In-person Go Gulls! screening also may be required at some You can get the latest news and events. connect with other Gull enthusiasts. Fans can follow the SU Sea Gulls on Face Mask Policy Facebook, Twitter and Instagram Based on vaccination levels and low positivity @suseagulls. rates on campus, SU’s face mask requirement is evolving. To read the latest policy visit: www.salisbury.edu/news/ SU-Masking-Policy.pdf

For the latest campus COVID-19 information, online screening and policies visit: www.salisbury.edu/coronavirus

On the Cover: Amy Shook, bass, of Ear Alliance performing at the Jazz Festival • p. 11

2 Adventures in Ideas: Alumni Homecoming & Humanities Seminars Family Weekend

Sponsored by the Fulton School of Liberal Arts and the Whaley Family For Information: www.salisbury.edu/homecoming Foundation, this three-part series features outstanding Fulton School faculty exploring important social, cultural or moral topics. Attend any or Welcome Home Sea Gulls! all events in this series. • $30 each or $75 for 3 via University Tickets October 22-24 • Continental breakfast and boxed lunch are included After over a year apart, it is For Information & To Register: www.salisbury.edu/academic-offices/ time for our Sea Gulls to fly liberal-arts/for-community/seminars.aspx home. Mark your calendars now and plan to return to Salisbury for a weekend Public Memory & Monuments: The Civil War in the Present of fun! Highlights of the Saturday, October 16 weekend include reunions; Conway Hall 179, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Athletics Hall of Fame; Part 1 of 3 Flock Party with music, How do we remember our common past? Who should decide? bounce houses, food, beer What is overlooked? The recent furor over Confederate and wine; scavenger hunt; monuments has revived such questions with renewed urgency. athletic events; and more! Donald Whaley (History - emeritus), Creston Long (History/ Nabb Research Center) and Jim Burton (Communication) interrogate the social history of Civil War monuments, their current status on the Eastern Shore and related legal Art Department & challenges, and the changing reputation of The Birth of a Nation (1915), which President Woodrow Wilson described as “like writing history with lightning.” SU Art Galleries For Hours & Admission Details Visit: www.suartgalleries.org Speaking of the Common Present Absence Exhibition Good/Hablando del Bien Through October 2 Común: Three Perspectives SU Art Galleries | University Gallery, Fulton Hall on Community Humanities The Art Department in conjunction with the Fulton School Saturday, March 12 of Liberal Arts, the Janet Dudley-Eshbach Center for International Education and the University of Málaga Spain Conway Hall 179, present this exhibit curated by Blanca Montalvo. The show Understanding Death, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. While We Keep Living includes videos, photographs and installations created by Part 3 of 3 students from the Department of Art and Architecture at Saturday, February 19 When we want someone the University of Málaga Spain. Salisbury University and the Conway Hall 179, to speak to our common University of Málaga have been partners for two decades; 10 a.m.-3 p.m. good, who should we ask? over the past 20 years, the universities have exchanged Part 2 of 3 ¿Qué idioma usar y a quién hundreds of students. Since the COVID-19 pandemic incluímos cuando usamos el began, we’ve all had to face “nosotros”? Our pandemic death in new ways. How year has underscored the can philosophy, psychology reality of ethical isolation: and cinema studies help us? from provisions of health, Yujia Song (Philosophy and happiness and belonging. Health Humanities), Meredith It has also opened new Patterson (Psychology) and opportunities for listening, Elsie Walker (English/Film understanding and repair. Studies) use an eye-opening Corinne Pubill (Modern and uplifting range of Languages and Intercultural examples for exploring one Studies), Michèle Schlehofer of the greatest challenges (Psychology) and Timothy we all have to face – from Stock (Philosophy) describe the philosophy of grief as an voices shared via the Lower experience made possible by Shore Vulnerable Population our experiences of love and Task Force and REACH attachment; to psychological ethics initiatives. Our shared studies of grieving, end-of-life humanity is at the center of a decision making and care- conversation about language, giving; to the wildly different justice, public responsibility stories of dying and renewal and reevaluating who is in Life of Pi (2012) and included and who is isolated Nomadland (2020). from the public good.

3 • To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events Clarke Honors College

FLOW For Information: www.salisbury.edu/honors August 30-November 6 Journalist & Adventurer Andrea Pitzer SU Art Galleries | Thursday, November 4 Downtown Commons, Worcester Room, 7 p.m. FLOW is an exhibition In a life that resembles Indiana Jones, that celebrates art Pitzer’s research has taken her to some evolving from a sentient of the farthest outposts on the planet. In experience rather than conversation with Clarke Honors College conscious thought. It presents artworks on the transcendence Dean Andrew Martino, Pitzer discusses of the mind and the mind’s ability to explore surreal and her research process and the art of abstract ideas, therefore connecting the perception of life with globetrotting in looking for forgotten or what exists around and beyond us. FLOW features painting, neglected histories. Pitzer is the author of sculpture and immersive installation. During the run of this The Secret History of Vladimir Nabokov, One Long Night: show, enjoy yoga in the gallery, an artist talk and a live EDM A Global History of Concentration Camps and, most recently, concert – see the October 23 event details below. Icebound: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World. Exhibiting Artist Talk: Wingchow Thursday, October 21 • 5:30 p.m. Wingchow is a Richmond-based painter and muralist whose work Cultural Affairs Office can easily be recognized through the use of distinct amorphous forms. Thematically, her works are Office of Diversity & Inclusion influenced by nature, mystery, magic, playtime, spiritual leanings and For Information: 410-677-5407 day-to-day life. They aim to inspire www.salisbury.edu/administration/diversity-and-inclusion/cultural-affairs the viewer’s imagination through an exciting exploration of color and The Baltimore Consort form, to beautify the spaces and Friday, November 5 communities they reside in. Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. The Baltimore Consort is a musical ensemble that performs Live Concert with Dirt Woman & LITZ a wide variety of early music, Renaissance music and music Saturday, October 23 • 7 p.m. from later periods. They began in 1980 as a group specializing Dirt Woman is back! This popular, in music of the Elizabethan period, but soon expanded their local, underground band is back repertoire to include Scottish music, broadside ballads, and at the Galleries with new music Italian, French and other European music of the 16th and for this exciting show. Following 17th centuries. Their music bridges the genres of classical Dirt Woman’s powerful opening and folk music. act, LITZ performs as headliner with mind-bending electronic music. SU alumnus Austin Litz, aka cryptoWAVEradio, is the heart and soul of the band LITZ and a multi- instrumentalist, singer, producer and pioneer of music NFTs, who pushes the boundaries of music, technology and the future of sound.

65th Biannual Senior Exhibition SU Art Galleries | Downtown November 22-December 10 Reception & Awards Ceremony: Friday, December 3 5-7 p.m. SU’s semester ends with the highly anticipated senior show. This exhibition is where our art majors share their artwork and designs as they complete their degrees and get ready to head out into the real world. This show is very diverse in terms of styles, media and content, and it definitely has something for everyone.

4 EnviroKids Environmental Studies Feature Friday Colloquium Series

For Information & To Register: For Information: 410-548-3848 www.salisbury.edu/libraries/crc/ The Old Home Is Not There: envirokids.aspx Study Internship Experiences Reflections on Harriet Wednesday, September 8 Tubman’s Eastern Shore EnviroKids Literacy Festival Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. Wednesday, October 13 October 7-9 Students share their Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. Virtual Event Via Seidel environmental internship A Guide to ’s School’s REMO Platform experiences from the past Eastern Shore: The Old Home What happens when year. Hear their stories and Is Not There (published student activists, quality learn about possible winter in July by History Press) is children’s literature and term, summer term and about the Dorchester County educators committed to the semester-long opportunities landscapes and environments environment intersect? SU’s for learning and travel. known by Harriet Tubman very own EnviroKids Literacy and shared by Dorchester Festival! The festival includes residents, and how those landscapes and environments a virtual reception and award Chris & Grayson English ceremony for esteemed Green have changed – in some Earth Book Award-winning cases disappeared – since her time. Co-authors Phillip 2nd Friday of the Month authors; a virtual celebration (*unless otherwise noted) of their works with teachers Hesser (formerly History) and and school children; as well as Charlie Ewers (Environmental The Brick Room, a professional development Studies) discuss the process 116 N. Division Street workshop for educators, of putting the book together 6-7 p.m. • Must be 21+ librarian, and citizen scientists. from interviews, photography For Information: 410-543-6450 Thanks to the assistance and archival sources, including This monthly music series of the Educators for Social Harriet Tubman’s own words. features performances from Co-sponsored by the Environmental SU community members. Justice student club, the Saving San Domingo: Studies Department and the Nabb EnviroKids Literacy Festival A Little-Known Piece of Center. n Chris English inspires multiple audiences to Eastern Shore History (Music, Theatre & Dance) foster environmental justice, *Friday, September 3 literacy and stewardship in our Screening & Panel Discussion classrooms and communities. Wednesday, September 22 n Red Letter Day Hosted by the Nature Generation, Seidel October 8 Guerrieri Academic Featuring Suzanna Mallow School of Education, SU Libraries and the Commons, Assembly Hall, Educators for Social Justice. (Event Technical Services), 6 p.m. Colleen Clark (Music, This film by Tom Horton, Theatre & Dance), and Dave Harp and Sandy alumnae Andrea Jones and Cannon-Brown tells the Becca Doughty. story of San Domingo, MD, n Matt Michaud founded in 1820, possibly (Music, Theatre & Dance) one of the oldest surviving How Can I Help: November 12 Black communities in the Writing About Science & United States. The name and Nature for Young Readers n David Raizen historic records suggest that (Information Technology) its founding fathers were Wednesday, November 10 & Jerry Atkins mariners who came from Haiti Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. December 10 soon after the rebellion there Writing about science and that freed all slaves in 1804. the environment for young The film helps document people has unique challenges, the work of Newell Quinton like putting events in and his family, who strive historical context, explaining to preserve the traditions complex concepts and being and oral histories of the honest about the threats community. Following the to ecosystems. Author and film, join a panel discussion Salisbury University alumna with the filmmakers and Elizabeth Pagel-Hogan members of the Quinton discusses how to combine family. information with inspiration. Co-sponsored by the Environmental Studies Department and the Nabb Center.

5 French Week Fulton Faculty Colloquium

National French Week is an 1st Tuesday of the Month Communication annual celebration of French Conway Hall 152 & Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. with Ourselves & language and francophone For Information: 410-543-6450 cultures created by the Zoom Registration: https://salisbury.universitytickets.com/?cid=184 Our Communities American Association of Featuring the research and creative work of faculty members November 2 Teachers of French (AATF). from across the Fulton School of Liberal Arts, the colloquia n Corinne Pubill (Modern This year's theme at SU is celebrate both the work of individual faculty and the Languages & Intercultural “France-Amérique.” disciplinary diversity of the school. Studies) - Engaging the Sponsored by the SU French Program Latinx Community During with the support of the Modern the COVID-19 Pandemic Languages and Intercultural Studies University System of Maryland Board of Regents Department, Fulton School Dean n Emily Story (History) - Maarten Pereboom, and the Fulton Award Winners Public Humanities Program. Latin American September 7 Communities, n Céline Carayon (History) - Forsaken not Forgotten: Nature and Health Creating the Other: Memory and Colonial Failures in the Early Atlantic World The French in American Pubill offers a reflection on n Kristen Walton (History) - “For the Wealthe of the Realme the work of the Lower Shore Literature, Americans in and the Libertye of the Same”: Politics, Religion, and the Vulnerable Populations French Literature Scottish Reformation Task Force as well as the involvement of SU students Thursday, November 4 Carayon traces how the memory of disasters was mobilized in in its community service. Conway Hall 152, 6:30 p.m. official printed accounts, personal and official correspondence, Story explores conceptions of Through the analysis of and in pictures (maps and engravings) to construct a positive nature and efforts to exploit representations of the French narrative of imperial growth, resulting in revisionist histories and tame the environment in in American literature and of of Indigenous trauma and displacement. Walton explores the Brazilian history. Americans in French literature, intersection of politics and religions during the volatile first William Cloonan, Professor decade of the Scottish Reformation. Emeritus from Florida State From Jest to Jazz: University, discusses the Use of Comedy & Chords complex process and various Sexual Identities & Social Development December 7 factors that come to play in October 5 the creation of the image of n Timothy Stock (Philosophy) n Kara French (History and the “Other.” - Finite Jest: Kierkegaard Gender and Sexuality Studies) - and the Limits of Comedy Against Sex: Identities of Sexual A Celebration of the Restraint in Early America n Jerry Tabor (Music, Theatre Franco-American Relationship & Dance) - Using Deep- n Lance Garmon (Psychology) - Structural Harmonic Monday, November 8 Gaming During a Pandemic: Reinterpretation to Conway Hall 153, 6:30 p.m. Did Young Adults Generate Flexible Non- This film, in French with #PlayApartTogether, and Functional Jazz Chord English subtitles, is presented Do They Think It Helped? Successions by Arnaud Perret (Modern French considers three groups of Stock’s presentation serves Languages and Intercultural 19th-century Americans whose as an overview of the Studies). sexual abstinence provoked interpretation advanced in almost as much concern as the Laughter’s Martyr, a book idea of sexual excess and sheds manuscript on Kierkegaard’s light on the creation of sexual theory of the comic and identities in the present, including the growing visibility its religious significance. of the asexuality movement. Garmon explores whether Tabor demonstrates how the already high level of gaming activity by young performers have choices adults provided them with perceived benefits during in chord successions and the pandemic in areas such as coping, socialization and even formal design by distraction from reality. using fixed progressions as background schemes that can be reinterpreted and then recomposed. This technique is used by the Jerry Tabor Ear Alliance at the SU Jazz Festival (see page 11).

To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events • 6 Fulton Public Humanities Program

For Information: www.salisbury.edu/academic-offices/liberal-arts/ for-community/public-humanities-program.aspx Rethinking Indigenous History through Archaeology, or Colonization from a Piscataway Point-of-View Ask a Philosopher Author Talk Thursday, November 4 Fulton Hall 111, 7 p.m. Thursday, October 14 In this Native American History Month lecture, anthropologist Conway Hall 152, 5 p.m. Julia A. King from St. Mary’s College of Maryland uses artifacts Ian Olasov, author of Ask a and other landscape features unearthed through archaeological Philosopher: Answers to Your Most investigation of the Piscataway chiefdom on the lower Important and Most Unexpected western shore of Maryland to describe an Indigenous history Questions, discusses his book of colonial Maryland in the face of both territorial and bodily involving the questions we all displacement. (See page 13 for more details.) wrestle with, as well as answers a Co-sponsored with the History Department. few questions you many never have thought to consider. Frères ennemis (Creating the Other): Ask a Philosopher Booth The French in American Literature, Friday, October 15 Americans in French Literature Downtown Salisbury Plaza, Thursday, November 4 5-8 p.m. Conway Hall 152, 6:30 p.m Ian Olasov, author of Ask a Through the analysis of representations Philosopher: Answers to Your Most of the French in American literature Important and Most Unexpected and of Americans in French literature, Questions, joins SU philosophy William Cloonan of Florida State students at Salisbury’s 3rd Friday University discusses the complex event where participants are process and various factors that come to encouraged to stop by and pose play in the creation of the image of the questions for discussion. “Other.” Part of National French Week, see page 6 for details. Co-sponsored with the Modern Languages and Intercultural Studies Department.

Salisbury Environmental Justice Leadership Summit: Community Outreach Initiatives Look for details on these upcoming initiatives that A 30-Year Reflection support the needs of SU and the surrounding community. Sunday, October 24 n Civic Reflection Student Fellows Designed and made by Guerrieri Academic SU art major Joshua Killen This new, student-run series based on civic reflections Commons, Assembly Hall, to improve communication around issues of diversity Noon-4 p.m. and inclusion on and off campus will be held twice each Coming Out: Stories of Celebrate the 30th month. Civic reflection dialogues will help members of Support on the Shore anniversary of the first the campus community explore, share, listen and learn National People of Color from one another about topics such as intersecting Throughout October Environmental Leadership social identities, privilege, oppression and social justice Online: www.salisburypflag.com Summit, which changed and the ways these topics affect each of our lives. Coinciding with LGBTQ+ the course of the modern Co-sponsored with PACE (Institute for Public Affairs and Civic Engagement). History Month and National environmental and social n SU Cures COVID-19 Coming Out Day (October justice movements. Keynote This ongoing project makes COVID-19 vaccine 11), this virtual video project speakers as well as SU information more accessible to speakers of English, collects the “coming out” student speakers increase Spanish, Korean and Haitian-Creole in the Salisbury stories of lesbian, gay, awareness of environmental area. Partnering with the Wicomico Health Department, bisexual, transgender justice issues and discuss volunteers distribute leaflets designed by students and queer or questioning solutions for inequity and go door-to-door to reach communities with lower (LGBTQ+) people living in the present in and around our vaccine rates. Salisbury area and the allies community. n Blessing Boxes who support them. Videos and Co-sponsored with the Environmental accompanying descriptions Studies Department, Environmental This event calls attention to the problems of poverty will be available on the Student Association and Political and hunger in the Salisbury area. Boxes built by SU Science Department. student Laura Amrhein will solicit public donations of Salisbury PFLAG website food, toiletries, school supplies and other necessities (www.salisburypflag.com) and that will be given to those needing them. A video its social media accounts. project documents the process of creating the boxes (For additional events, see and making them available to the public. page 9.)

7 • To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events Fulton School of Liberal Arts Guerrieri Student Union Art Space

For Information: 410-543-6450 Art Showcase Guerrieri Student Union, Second Floor Lounge Balla Kouyaté Ensemble Each month, the Guerrieri Student Union Art Space showcases Thursday, September 9 the work of talented Salisbury University art students. In Red Square, 7 p.m. addition, the Art Space website features the current artist and (Rain: Guerrieri Academic their exhibition, as well as the exhibition schedule and a gallery Commons, Assembly Hall) of all the artists, their artwork and their price lists: The ensemble performs to www.salisbury.edu/guc/artspace • 410-543-6274 help kick-off the National n D’Shon McCarthy: Pinkification(Painting) Folk Festival’s return to September 3-30 Salisbury September 10-12. Balla Kouyaté, n Philipa Roberts: Shallow Sorrows (Photography) world-renowned balafon October 1-28 player, is part of a family n Kayleigh Sweitzer: Dreaming Alone (Painting) lineage of 800 years October 29-December 3 that is upholding West African traditions. Kouyaté learned to play the balafon as a child and was soon playing alongside his mother, motivating agricultural laborers during harvest season. As a young adult, he emigrated to the U.S. in 2000 to pursue music as a profession, settling in Massachusetts. Kouyaté is featured on more than 25 albums, including the work of Yo-Yo Ma.

U.S. Marine Band Concert Friday, October 1 Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Established by an act of Congress in 1798 and dubbed “The President’s Own” by Thomas Jefferson, the U.S. Marine Band D’Shon McCarthy is the nation’s oldest professional music organization.

Fall for Fulton Fulton Alumni Lecture Series Friday, October 22 Scholar-Activist Yaba Blay Fulton Hall Fountain, Wednesday, October 27 1-4 p.m. Guerrieri Academic (Rain: Fulton Hall Lobby) Commons, Assembly Hall, Celebrate the Fulton School 7 p.m. of Liberal Arts, which plays SU alumna Blay discusses a vital role in the academic the trajectory of her career experience of nearly every and her time as a student Salisbury University student at Salisbury University. as home to the visual Blay is a scholar-activist, and performing arts, the public speaker and cultural Philipa Roberts humanities, and the social consultant whose scholarship, sciences. Event includes work and practice centers giveaways, artwork sale, on the lived experiences of demonstrations, live music Black women and girls, with and more. a particular focus on identity/ body politics and beauty practices. Blay is the author of the award-winning One Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race, the inspiration behind CNN’s documentary Who is Black in America?, for which she served as consulting producer. Kayleigh Sweitzer

8 Institute of Retired Persons Modern Languages & Intercultural Studies Department

The Institute of Retired Persons (IRP) offers continuing For Information: 410-543-6341 education, including a speaker series, for area residents ages 50 and above. For more information and class schedules (to be Escrituras migrantes y cuerpos híbridos en Estados Unidos posted in the fall) visit: www.salisbury.edu/irp (Migrant Writings & Hybrid Bodies in the U.S.) Thursday, September 30 Conway Hall 152, 6 p.m. In Spanish LGBTQ+ History Month Peruvian-American writer Oswaldo Estrada discusses today’s new literary boom in the United States, For Information: 410-677-5009 his own experiences as an immigrant and writing in Spanish as an act of The Word Is Out Screening Candlelight Vigil resistance. His talk includes a reading & Panel Monday, October 11 of some of his short stories. Estrada Sunday, October 10 Blackwell Hall Steps, 7-9 p.m. is professor of Latin American Fulton Hall 111, 5 p.m. (Rain: Blackwell Hall, Center for Literature at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has On National Coming Out Equity, Justice & Inclusion) authored and edited over a dozen books of literary and cultural Day, this documentary This candlelight vigil criticism. As a writer of fiction, he has received the International features more than two dozen commemorates the life Latino and Latin American Book Fair Prize from men and women of various of Matthew Shepard and (2021) and also the International Latino Book Awards for two of backgrounds, ages, and races advocates for the end of his collections (2020). talking to the camera about violence toward the LGBTQ+ community, especially trans being gay. A panel and Q&A German Club Oktoberfest Languages Across the follow. persons (of color) and a litany of victims. Wednesday, October 6 Disciplines Fulton Hall Lawn, Thursday, October 7 11 a.m.-2.p.m Conway Hall 152, 6:30 p.m. Oktoberfest is back! Do you know that learning Celebrate German–American another language can help you Day at the 48th annual no matter what you study? Oktoberfest, SU’s longest This inaugural event of the running cultural event. Enjoy new Language Across the German food, music, games, Disciplines series features SU's a Biergarten and more. Learn Fulton School of Liberal Arts about German and German– Dean Maarten Pereboom and American heritage and Perdue School of Business interact with other cultural Associate Dean Ani Mathers organizations and student discussing how language clubs. learning has impacted their professional and personal lives. The Joys of Teaching Spanish Read OUT Series Tuesday, October 12 Guerrieri Academic Commons, Room 117 Conway Hall 153, 4:30 p.m. 5-9 p.m. Have you ever wondered This new series features marathon readings of important what it is like to teach works. Spanish? SU alumnae Amanda n The Laramie Project Raniolo (2016) and Karen Tuesday, October 12 Jiménez (2020) talk about This 2000 play by Moisés Kaufman and members of their experiences as Spanish the Tectonic Theater Project is about the reaction to teachers on the Eastern the 1998 murder of gay University of Wyoming student Shore, the certification Matthew Shepard in Laramie, WY. process and what it is like to work as a mentor/intern n Carmilla pair. In addition, they share Tuesday, October 26 examples of the fun things This Halloween edition features Sheridan Le Fanu’s these two Spanish teachers novella. do with their students. Food for the Flock benefit event. n Read OUT 3: Title TBA Tuesday, November 9 Music, Theatre & Dance Department

For ticket information and pricing visit: www.salisbury.edu/performingarts Bobbi Biron Theatre Program Presents Our Town October 21-24* Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, 7:30 p.m. & 2 p.m.* Described by Edward Albee as “the greatest American play ever written,” Thornton Wilder’s Our Town presents the small town of Grover’s Corners in three acts: “Daily Life,” “Love and Marriage” and “Death and Eternity.” Narrated by a stage manager and performed with minimal props and sets, the play depicts the simple daily lives of the Webb and Gibbs families as their children fall in love, marry and eventually – in one of the most famous scenes in American theatre – die. Yet, with its eternal themes and deceptively simple form, Our Town – as critic Howard Sherman has said – contains “healing Allegheny Trio powers … to a world confronting multiple crises.” Wednesday, September 29 Bobbi Biron Theatre Program Asbury United Methodist SAVE THE DATE! Church, 1401 Camden Ave., Spring Musical 7 p.m. March 31-April 3 Mamma Mia!

Black Box Fall Festival Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre n Music Theatre Workshop November 11-14* 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m. n SU Dance Company Student Showcase November 19-21* 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m.

n The Vagina Monologues December 3-4* Jackson Chamber Music Series: Ayres of Albion with Ayreheart 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m. Monday, October 11 n Directing Scenes Showcase Asbury United Methodist Church, 1401 Camden Ave., 7 p.m. Wednesday, December 8 Ayreheart was founded by Grammy-nominated lutenist Ronn 7:30 p.m. McFarlane, and he is joined by Willard Morris on colascione (a kind n Devised Performance of bass lute) and Mattias Rucht on percussion. Their program, “Ayres Tuesday, December 14 of Albion” with guest soprano Sarah Pillow, features two seemingly 7:30 p.m. different genres in one exciting program. Combining music from Renaissance England, Scotland and Wales with folk music from the same period, Ayreheart not only shows the surprising parallels in the music from this era, but makes it accessible in a modern context. The Peter and Judy Jackson Chamber Music Series provides opportunities for live chamber music concerts to be heard and enjoyed on the Eastern Shore. Guest Soprano Sarah Pillow

To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events • 10 Music, Theatre & Dance Department continued

Allyson Morris Senior Recital Friday, October 22 Jazz Festival Wednesday, December 8 Thursday, December 9 December 7-9 n Ear Alliance Performance Asbury United Methodist Enjoy concerts, workshops All events in Holloway Hall Church, 1401 Camden Ave., and lectures on jazz. Holloway Hall Auditorium 7 p.m. Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. n Jazz Workshop Tuesday, December 7 Featuring the music of Jerry Tabor and performances by 12:30 p.m. Sara Miller Senior Recital n Mark Turner as a Model Jeff Antoniuk, tenor sax; n Jazz Masterclasses for Internalizing Saturday, November 18 Matt Michaud, guitar; Brian Upper-Structure Triads 2 p.m. Asbury United Methodist Dean, piano; Amy Shook, n SU Jazz Ensemble Church, 1401 Camden Ave., Fulton Hall 130, 11 a.m. bass; and Frank Russo, This lecture is presented drums. 7:30 p.m. 7 p.m. by SU music faculty member Matt Michaud. Jeff Antoniuk Percussion Ensemble n From Jest to Jazz: Use Thursday, November 18 of Comedy & Chords Holloway Hall Auditorium, Conway Hall 152 & 7:30 p.m. Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. SU music faculty Jerry Piano & Strings Recital Tabor discusses his recent Friday, November 19 jazz compositions to be Jerry Tabor Brian Dean premiered on December 8. Asbury United Methodist Part of the Fulton Faculty Matt Michaud Frank Russo Church, 1401 Camden Ave., Colloquium series – see 2 p.m. page 6 for details. n Jazz Guitar & World Drum Experience Improvisation Friday, November 19 Fulton Hall 130, 5:30 p.m. Holloway Hall Auditorium, Featuring SU’s Matt 7:30 p.m. Michaud and Jerry Tabor. Amy Shook Photo: Culling Innovations Photography Salisbury Symphony Orchestra For Concert Details As They Are Finalized Visit: www.SalisburySymphonyOrchestra.org Fall Overtures Saturday, October 16 Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Chamber Choir Holiday Concert with Jennifer Hope Wills Saturday, November 20 Saturday, December 11 Location TBA, 7:30 p.m. Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. University Chorale & Salisbury Chorale Saturday, December 4 Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Salisbury Pops Tuesday, December 7 Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.

11 • To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events J. Millard Tawes, Governor of Maryland 1959-1967, & John F. Kennedy, Nabb Research Center for Delmarva History President of U.S. 1961-1963 & Culture

For Information: www.salisbury.edu/libraries/nabb [email protected] Saving San Domingo: A Little-Known Piece of Voices & Votes: Democracy in America Eastern Shore History Capturing the Times: Screening & Panel Discussion The Photojournalism of August 14-September 25 Mel Toadvine Guerrieri Academic Commons, 1st Floor Lobby Wednesday, September 22 SU is honored to be one of five Guerrieri Academic October 11-December 10 communities selected by Maryland Commons, Assembly Hall, Guerrieri Academic Humanities to host this Smithsonian 6 p.m. Commons, 1st Floor Lobby traveling exhibition. Voices This event is co-sponsored by the Toadvine’s long and storied and Votes is based on a major Environmental Studies Department and career at Salisbury’s The Daily exhibition currently on display at the Nabb Center. See page 5 for details. Times spanned four decades. the Smithsonian’s National Museum As a photojournalist and of American History. It features The Old Home Is Not There: later as editor, he captured historical and contemporary photos; Reflections on Harriet the news and events that educational and archival video; Tubman’s Eastern Shore shaped Delmarva from the engaging multimedia interactives; 1960s through the 1990s. This Wednesday, October 13 and historical objects like campaign souvenirs, voter exhibit features a collection memorabilia and protest material. Our democracy demands Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. of his award-winning This event is co-sponsored by the action, reaction, vision and revision as we continue to question Environmental Studies Department and photographs, including how to form “a more perfect union.” How do you participate the Nabb Center. See page 5 for details. images documenting as a citizen? From the revolution and suffrage, to civil rights Presidents Jimmy Carter, and casting ballots, everyone in every community is part of this Richard Nixon and John F. ever-evolving story – the story of democracy in America. Kennedy when they each visited the region.

Podcast Series & Exhibit To see new offerings throughout the year or to explore any of our past online exhibits, visit: https://libapps.salisbury.edu/nabb-online/ n The ‘Nam Files https://libapps.salisbury.edu/nabb-online/exhibits/show/namfiles This three-part podcast series was created by Nabb Research Center’s Digital Humanities Intern Rihana Stevenson and is dedicated to sharing the stories of Vietnam veterans from the Eastern Shore. The three men featured in these episodes are Donald Whaley, Harry Basehart and Newell Quinton. This podcast uses resources from the Nabb Research Center to explore the complexities of these men’s experiences during the Vietnam War and how their lives were impacted by the war. n A Labor of Love: Baking Traditions Across the Eastern Shore of Maryland Online: https://libapps.salisbury.edu/nabb-online/exhibits/show/baking In Person: Guerrieri Academic Commons, 4th Floor Lobby This online and in-person exhibit curated by Samantha Steltzer as the culmination of her Museum Studies internship at the Nabb Research Center was inspired by a biscuit brake found in the Nabb Center’s collections and an interest in Voices & Votes: Democracy on Delmarva highlighting the techniques that women used to sustain August 14-December 10 traditional Maryland baked goods. The focus of the exhibit Guerrieri Academic Commons, 4th Floor, is two of the most prominent G. Ray Thompson Gallery Eastern Shore-related foods: In conjunction with the Smithsonian Voices and Votes beaten biscuits and Smith Island exhibition, the Nabb Center’s gallery features artifacts, cake. Included in the exhibit are documents and stories from its collection that promote archival items and artifacts from discussion and inspire visitors to think about the democratic the Nabb Research Center’s process, activism and civic engagement within our collections and local newspaper local community. The companion exhibit features voter articles that detail the history, registration ledgers, campaign memorabilia, and items from techniques, recipes and people’s local political and civic groups. In addition, several area personal stories behind these museums and historical organizations are contributing items traditional Eastern Shore foods. for the exhibition that highlight democracy on Delmarva. 12 Native American PACE - Institute for Public Heritage Month Affairs & Civic Engagement

For Information: [email protected] Democracy Across the Disciplines: Voices to Votes Rethinking Indigenous History Through Archaeology, IDIS 205 Lecture Series or Colonization from a Piscataway Point-of-View Mondays, August 30-December 6 Thursday, November 4 Fulton Hall 111, 7-8:30 p.m. Open to the SU community for-credit and drop-in; Fulton Hall 111, 7 p.m. Open to the public for-credit and drop-in The Piscataway chiefdom controlled Learn More & Sign Up: https://bit.ly/idis205fall2021 much of the lower Western Shore of This one-credit class engages the topic of “Voices to Votes” Maryland when Englishmen invaded from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Each week, faculty this landscape in the early 17th century. members from a different department discuss issues relevant The colonizers left behind valuable, but to voting rights. The course is open to students from any major nonetheless limited, records of these and all sessions are also open to the public. encounters. Fortunately, an even more valuable archive can be found buried in the ground. This presentation by First Amendment & the Media Panel Discussion Julia King, professor of anthropology at St. Mary’s College, uses artifacts and Monday, September 20 other landscape features unearthed through archaeological Fulton Hall 111 & Via Zoom, investigation to describe an Indigenous 7-8:30 p.m. history of colonial Maryland in the Sign Up: bit.ly/firstamendmentsu face of both territorial and bodily Coinciding with SU’s displacement. King is one of the Constitution Day programming, premier scholars in historical PACE and the Communication archaeology and the history Department host a panel of the Chesapeake. She discussion spotlighting the recently received a substantial affordances of the First archaeology grant from the Amendment in the realm of National Park Services to fund public higher education. In a complete archeological collaboration with a section overview and assessment of COMM 100: Fundamentals of Piscataway Park in Prince of Communication, this student-facilitated event provides a George’s County, MD. platform for leading First Amendment experts in the region, Sponsored by the Fulton Public Humanities including journalists, political scientists and attorneys, to Program and the History Department. showcase to students how First Amendment principles enrich 21st century learning environments in indispensable ways.

OURCA - Office of Candidate School Wednesday-Thursday, Undergraduate Research & October 20-21 Commons, Worcester Creative Activity Room, 5:30-8:15 p.m. Free SU Members; $50 Community Members Summer Student Research Showcase Civic Reflection Training Thursday, September 2 Sign Up: bit.ly/candidateschool Saturday, September 25 Guerrieri Academic Commons, Assembly Hall, 3:30-5 p.m. This top-to-bottom campaign Learn about student research and creative activities conducted Via Zoom, Noon-4 p.m. training workshop is for $35: Lunch Included students and community over the summer. Student researchers from all academic Sign Up: bit.ly/crtrainingfall disciplines present posters and discuss their scholarship at this leaders considering a run for Learn how to engage in interactive event. Those interested in research and creative public office. This training deeper, more productive activities are strongly encouraged to attend. takes a local approach to conversations. The Center these topics, featuring for Civic Reflection offers a politicians and elected officials public training in concepts from the Salisbury and and strategies of civic Wicomico County region. reflection. A humanities- based conversation model, civic reflection helps groups and organizations explore compelling issues and pressing themes through constructive dialogue. 13 Riall Lecture Ward Museum of Wildfowl Art Series

Paul S. Sarbanes Tribute Suzanne Rupp DeMallie The Ward Museum is open to the public Wednesday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, November 6 Wednesday, October 13 For Museum Admission Details & Costs: Guerrieri Academic Guerrieri Academic www.wardmuseum.org Commons, Assembly Hall, Commons, Assembly Hall, 5:30-9 p.m. 6 p.m. EXHIBITS $50 per Guest or $1,000 for a The E. Pauline Riall Lecture Table of 8 Series returns this fall with Las Aves: Birds in the Art of & Learn More & Sign Up: nationally recognized author bit.ly/sarbanestribute Inspired by Mexico and child advocate Rupp Through September 19 This dinner DeMallie. In her book, Can and speaker You Hear Me La May Gallery event Now?, Rupp From colorful amate paintings celebrates DeMallie to intricate huipil fabric designs, the life exposes the fanciful alebrije sculpture and of late unsettling modern printmaking, birds grace Salisbury reality of our many of the vibrant art forms native public school produced by the peoples of and five- classrooms Mexico and Mexican-Americans term U.S. with a first- living in the United States. Senator from Maryland hand account This exhibit highlights some of Paul S. Sarbanes. Proceeds of the policies and practices the many traditional art forms benefit the Paul S. Sarbanes that leave so many children featuring birds, which are carried Lecture Series at Salisbury behind. She taught for seven on by the artists and makers of Mexico. It also features birds University and the Paul S. years in the Baltimore County in contemporary works created by artists living in the U.S. with Sarbanes Endowment Fund Public Schools. Research heritage connected to Mexico. at the University of Maryland into her own son’s learning Eastern Shore. difficulties led her to author the Classroom Auditory Oliver “Tuts” Lawson Learning Issues Resolution, Retrospective adopted by the National September 24-January 23, Peer-2-Peer PTA. Rupp DeMallie was 2022 awarded the 2007 National Peer-2-Peer is a LaMay Gallery PTA Life Achievement Award, Lawson is a local living legend, community outreach the highest honor from the program for professional a son of Crisfield, MD, who nation’s largest advocacy learned from Lem and Steve women. They meet organization. the first Friday of the Ward and went on to become month (via Zoom and in a world-renowned artist and person) to discuss issues decoy maker. From some of and leave with tools to his earliest working decoys, take into participants’ Sea Gull carved and painted alongside professional and personal the Ward brothers to highly life. For the fall schedule Century decorative wildfowl sculpture, and more information: this exhibit highlights the For registration: seagullcentury.org www.salisbury.edu/ history and work of Lawson. discover-su/community- Visionary Volunteers: outreach/peer2peer.aspx • Saturday, October 9 The Volunteer Art Show [email protected] SU's annual bicycle ride is Through October 3 set to return in person in Welcome Gallery 2021, providing cyclists with Every other year, the Ward the option of two routes: Museum dedicates gallery the traditional 100-mile space to exhibit artwork century ride to Assateague from the Ward Foundation’s Island and the shorter 63- multi-talented volunteers. mile southern ride including This year’s exhibit features Princess Anne and Pocomoke carvings, paintings, City, MD. Cyclists still have photography, stained glass the opportunity to register and even model ships – all for a virtual ride in their own made by the museum’s gifted neighborhoods or other volunteers. destinations.

14 Ward Museum of Wildfowl Art Writers on the Shore continued

EVENTS Fall Migration Food Festival For Information: 410-543-6445 Delmarvalous Festival Saturday, November 6 Creative Writing Festival 2-8 p.m. Wednesday, September 15 Saturday, August 14 Tickets At: wardmuseum.org 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Perdue Hall, Bennett Family Auditorium, 8 p.m. In lieu of our annual Fall Students from the Creative Writing Program read a wide Celebrate Delmarva culture, Migration Gala, the Ward including traditional arts, variety of their work to celebrate the beginning of the new Museum is offering a unique, school year. regional foods and local Eastern Shore-themed festival history. Now home to the fundraiser with food and drink long-standing Chesapeake the scarab tastings, live music, cultural Salisbury University Literary Magazine Challenge Decoy Contest, this demonstrations, a silent 2021 festival of all things Delmarva auction and more! Ticketed features familiar facets of life blocks for specific times will on Delmarva and highlights be offered. some new traditions as well.

EDUCATION

Wing Watch Wednesdays 9-10 a.m. Interested in learning about John Wenke the birds that call the Eastern Wednesday, October 6 Shore home? Join Ward Museum Perdue Hall, Bennett Family staff and local birders as Auditorium, 8 p.m. they conduct a free bird walk Wenke is professor of English at SU, around Schumaker Pond every where he teaches American literature week. This is a fun and easy and literary writing. He has twice won opportunity to step outside and the University’s Distinguished Faculty learn tips about birding, as well Award. His recent work, The Critical as facts about our feathered List, is a collection of 12 published neighbors. All sightings are short stories. His other books include J. D. Salinger and reported to eBird, an online Melville’s Muse. He also has published numerous scholarly community science database. essays, creative non-fiction essays, chapters and reviews. His short fiction and creative non-fiction have appeared in many magazines, including North Dakota Quarterly, Chariton Review, Art Class: Acrylic Beach Art Class: Carve Two The Gettysburg Review, Cimarron Review and South Carolina Scene Painting with Songbirds in Two Days Review. Jenell Willey with Rich Smoker Saturday, September 4 Saturday-Sunday, Kimberly Grey 1-3 p.m. October 9-10 Cost: $35 Museum Members; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday, October 20 $40 Non-Members Cost: $100/day Museum Members; Perdue Hall, Bennett Family Register At: wardmuseum.org $125/day Non-Members Auditorium, 8 p.m. Participants in this adult art Register At: wardmuseum.org Grey is the author of three books: A class receive instruction on Master carver Smoker Mother Is an Intellectual Thing: Hybrid painting a beach scene in teaches participants in this Essays, forthcoming from Persea Books, acrylic. The painting is an two-day adult art class how Systems for the Future of Feeling (2020) 11x14 canvas and all materials to carve – from start to finish and The Opposite of Light (2016), which are supplied. – two songbirds. The two was the winner of the Lexi Rudnitsky First birds chosen for this class Book Prize. Her work has appeared widely in journals, including are the Indigo Bunting and New England Review, Kenyon Review, Tin House and A Public the Blackburnian Warbler. All Space. She is the recipient of a Wallace Stegner Fellowship materials are supplied. and teaching lectureship from Stanford University, a Civitella Ranieri Fellowship, and Taft and Dissertation Fellowships from the University of Cincinnati, where she earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature and creative writing. She currently teaches at Webster University and lives in St. Louis. Calendar of Events

September 3-30 Thursday, September 30 Saturday-Sunday, October 9-10 AUGUST Exhibit: D’Shon McCarthy: Lecture: Escrituras migrantes y cuerpos Class: Carve Two Songbirds in Two Wednesdays Year-Round Pinkification (Painting) híbridos en Estados Unidos (Migrant Days with Rich Smoker Class: Wing Watch Guerrieri Student Union, Writings & Hybrid Bodies in the U.S.) Ward Museum, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Ward Museum, 9-10 a.m. Second Floor Lounge Conway Hall 152, 6 p.m. Sunday, October 10 Through September 19 Saturday, September 4 Film & Panel: The Word Is Out Exhibit: Las Aves: Birds in the Art of & Class: Acrylic Beach Scene Painting OCTOBER Fulton Hall 111, 5 p.m. Inspired by Mexico with Jenell Willey Ward Museum, LaMay Gallery Ward Museum, 1-3 p.m. Throughout October Monday, October 11 Exhibit: Coming Out: Jackson Chamber Music Series: Through October 2 Tuesday, September 7 Stories of Support on the Shore Ayres of Albion with Ayreheart Exhibit: Present Absence Fulton Faculty Colloquium: University Online: www.salisburypflag.com Asbury United Methodist Church, 1401 SU Art Galleries | University Gallery, System of Maryland Board of Regents Camden Ave., 7 p.m. Fulton Hall Friday, October 1 Award Winners Special Event: Candlelight Vigil Conway Hall 152 & Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. Concert: U.S. Marine Band Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Blackwell Hall Steps, 7-9 p.m. Through October 3 (Rain: Blackwell Hall, Center for Equity, Exhibit: Visionary Volunteers: Wednesday, September 8 Justice & Inclusion) The Volunteer Art Show Lecture: Study Internship Experiences October 1-28 Ward Museum, Welcome Gallery Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. Exhibit: Philipa Roberts: Shallow Sorrows (Photography) October 11-December 10 Exhibit: Capturing the Times: Saturday, August 14 Thursday, September 9 Guerrieri Student Union, Second Floor Lounge The Photojournalism of Mel Toadvine Special Event: Delmarvalous Festival Concert: Balla Kouyaté Ensemble Guerrieri Academic Commons, Ward Museum, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Red Square, 7 p.m. 1st Floor Lobby (Rain: Guerrieri Academic Commons, Tuesday, October 5 Fulton Faculty Colloquium: Sexual August 14-September 25 Assembly Hall) Tuesday, October 12 Exhibit: Voices & Votes: Identities & Social Development Conway Hall 152 & Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. Lecture: The Joys of Teaching Spanish Democracy in America Wednesday, September 15 Conway Hall 153, 4:30 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, Writers on the Shore: 1st Floor Lobby Creative Writing Festival Wednesday, October 6 Read OUT Series: The Laramie Project Perdue Hall, Bennett Family Auditorium, Special Event: German Club Guerrieri Academic Commons, Room 117, August 14-December 10 8 p.m. Oktoberfest 5-9 p.m. Exhibit: Voices & Votes: Fulton Hall Lawn, 11 a.m.-2.p.m Wednesday, October 13 Democracy on Delmarva Monday, September 20 Writers on the Shore: John Wenke Guerrieri Academic Commons, 4th Floor, Panel Discussion: First Amendment & Lecture: The Old Home Is Not There: Perdue Hall, Bennett Family Auditorium, Reflections on Harriet Tubman’s G. Ray Thompson Gallery the Media 8 p.m. Fulton Hall 111 & Via Zoom, 7-8:30 p.m. Eastern Shore Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. August 30-November 6 Thursday, October 7 Exhibit: FLOW Wednesday, September 22 Lecture: Languages Across the Riall Lecture Series: SU Art Galleries | Downtown Film & Panel Discussion: Saving Disciplines Suzanne Rupp DeMallie San Domingo: A Little-Known Piece Conway Hall 152, 6:30 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, Mondays, August 30-December 6 of Eastern Shore History Assembly Hall, 6 p.m. Class: Democracy Across the Guerrieri Academic Commons, October 7-9 Disciplines: Voices to Votes Assembly Hall, 6 p.m. Special Event: EnviroKids Literacy Thursday, October 14 Fulton Hall 111, 7-8:30 p.m. Festival Lecture: Ask a Philosopher Author Talk September 24-January 23, 2022 Virtual Event Via Seidel School’s Conway Hall 152, 5 p.m. Exhibit: Oliver “Tuts” Lawson REMO Platform SEPTEMBER Retrospective Friday, October 15 Ward Museum, La May Gallery Friday, October 8 Special Event: Ask a Philosopher Booth Thursday, September 2 Downtown Salisbury Plaza, 5-8 p.m. Special Event: Summer Student Feature Friday Concert: Red Letter Day Saturday, September 25 The Brick Room, 116 N. Division Street, Research Showcase Saturday, October 16 Guerrieri Academic Commons, Class: Civic Reflection Training 6-7 p.m. Assembly Hall, 3:30-5 p.m. Via Zoom, Noon-4 p.m. Adventures in Ideas: Public Memory Saturday, October 9 and Monuments: The Civil War in Friday, September 3 Wednesday, September 29 Special Event: Sea Gull Century the Present Conway Hall 179, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Feature Friday Concert: Chris English Concert: Allegheny Trio seagullcentury.org The Brick Room, 116 N. Division Street, Asbury United Methodist Church, 6-7 p.m. 1401 Camden Ave., 7 p.m.

To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events • 16 Calendar of Events

Saturday, October 16 Wednesday, October 27 Wednesday, November 10 December 3-4* Salisbury Symphony Orchestra: Fulton Alumni Lecture Series: Lecture: How Can I Help: Writing About Theatre: The Vagina Monologues Fall Overtures Scholar-Activist Yaba Blay Science & Nature for Young Readers Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, Conway Hall 153, 6 p.m. 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m. Assembly Hall, 7 p.m. Wednesday, October 20 November 11-14* Saturday, December 4 Writers on the Shore: Kimberly Grey October 29-December 3 Special Event: Music Theatre Workshop Concert: University Chorale & Perdue Hall, Bennett Family Auditorium, Exhibit: Kayleigh Sweitzer: Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Salisbury Chorale 8 p.m. Dreaming Alone (Painting) & *2 p.m. Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Guerrieri Student Union, Wednesday-Thursday, Second Floor Lounge Friday, November 12 Tuesday, December 7 October 20-21 Feature Friday Concert: Matt Michaud Fulton Faculty Colloquium: From Jest Class: Candidate School (Music, Theatre & Dance) to Jazz: Use of Comedy & Chords Commons, Worcester Room, NOVEMBER The Brick Room, 116 N. Division Street, Conway Hall 152 & Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. 5:30-8:15 p.m. 6-7 p.m. Tuesday, November 2 Lecture: Mark Turner as a Model for Fulton Faculty Colloquium: Internalizing Upper-Structure Triads Thursday, October 21 Thursday, November 18 Fulton Hall 130, 11 a.m. Artist Talk: Wingchow Communication with Ourselves & Concert: Sara Miller Senior Recital SU Art Galleries | Downtown, 5:30 p.m. Our Communities Asbury United Methodist Church, Concert: Jazz Guitar & Improvisation Conway Hall 152 & Via Zoom, 3:30-5 p.m. 1401 Camden Ave., 7 p.m. Fulton Hall 130, 5 p.m. October 21-24* Concert: Salisbury Pops Thursday, November 4 Concert: Percussion Ensemble Bobbi Biron Theatre Program: Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Our Town Lecture: Creating the Other: The French in American Literature, Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, Friday, November 19 Wednesday, December 8 7:30 p.m. & 2 p.m.* Americans in French Literature Theatre: Directing Scenes Showcase Conway Hall 152, 6:30 p.m. Concert: Piano & Strings Recital Asbury United Methodist Church, Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Friday, October 22 Lecture: Journalist & Adventurer 1401 Camden Ave., 2 p.m. Concert: Ear Alliance Performance Special Event: Fall for Fulton Andrea Pitzer Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Fulton Hall Fountain, 1-4 p.m. Commons, Worcester Room, 7 p.m. Concert: World Drum Experience (Rain: Fulton Hall Lobby) Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Lecture: Rethinking Indigenous History Thursday, December 9 Concert: Allyson Morris Senior Recital through Archaeology, or Colonization November 19-21* Class: Jazz Workshop Asbury United Methodist Church, from a Piscataway Point-of-View Dance: SU Dance Company Holloway Hall Auditorium, 12:30 p.m. 1401 Camden Ave., 7 p.m. Fulton Hall 111, 7 p.m. Student Showcase Class: Jazz Masterclasses Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, Holloway Hall Auditorium, 2 p.m. October 22-24 Friday, November 5 7:30 p.m. & *2 p.m. Special Event: Alumni Homecoming & Concert: The Baltimore Consort Concert: SU Jazz Ensemble Family Weekend Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, November 20 Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. www.salisbury.edu/homecoming Concert: Chamber Choir Saturday, November 6 Location TBA, 7:30 p.m. Friday, December 10 Saturday, October 23 Special Event: Fall Migration Feature Friday Concert: David Raizen Concert: Dirt Woman & LITZ Food Festival November 22-December 10 (Information Technology) & SU Art Galleries | Downtown, 7 p.m. Ward Museum, 2-8 p.m. Exhibit: 65th Biannual Jerry Atkins Senior Exhibition The Brick Room, 116 N. Division Street, Sunday, October 24 Special Event: Paul S. Sarbanes Tribute 6-7 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, SU Art Galleries | Downtown Special Event: Salisbury Environmental Assembly Hall, 5:30-9 p.m. Reception & Awards Ceremony: Justice Leadership Summit: Friday, December 3 • 5-7 p.m. Saturday, December 11 Salisbury Symphony Orchestra: A 30-Year Reflection Monday, November 8 Guerrieri Academic Commons, Holiday Concert with Jennifer Hope Wills Assembly Hall, Noon-4 p.m. Film: A Celebration of the Holloway Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Franco-American Relationship DECEMBER Conway Hall 153, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, October 26 Friday, December 3 Tuesday, December 14 Read OUT Series: Carmilla Exhibit Reception & Awards Ceremony: Special Event: Devised Performance Guerrieri Academic Commons, Room 117, Tuesday, November 9 65th Biannual Senior Exhibition Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, 7:30 p.m. 5-9 p.m. Read OUT Series: Title TBA SU Art Galleries | Downtown, 5-7 p.m. Guerrieri Academic Commons, Room 117, 5-9 p.m. Special Event: Devised Performance Fulton Hall, Black Box Theatre, 7 p.m.

17 • To find out details on campus events, including final dates, times and registration information, look for the latest listings at:www.salisbury.edu/events The Flatts University The Orchard Gathering

East Campus Complex Horticulture • Delmarva Public Media Grounds • Football/ Offices and Weight Room SALISBURY UNIVERSITY • Lower Shore Child Care Resource Center • Maroon & Gold Club 1101 Camden Avenue • Public Access Channel 14 • Small Business Development Center Salisbury, Maryland 21801-6860 • University Police www.salisbury.edu Grounds Facility EMERGENCY: Dial 911 from any campus phone or pick up the BLUE LIGHT Public Emergency Response Ward Museum Facility Phones located all around campus. Campusof Wildfowl Art Map and Parking (2 miles on right) Bateman Parking Lot K VISITOR PARKING: www.salisbury.edu/parking/visitors.html When attending events on campus, Soccer note parking lots adjecent to your Facility venue for ease in access. • Downtown Galleries • ESRGC Visitors must display a visitor parking • Rommel Center for Entrepreneurship pass, which may be obtained free (Located in Downtown Gallery Building) of charge from the Parking Services Office at 410-543-6338 or online at: www.salisbury.edu/parking/ 3D visitors.html Arts

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Court Plaza Academic Advising Center Guerrieri Student Asbury Lot Union Student Cashiers Office Art Center Financial Aid Parking Services REV: MAR/2021 Nationally Competitive Fellowships Office Bookstore Dudley-Eshbach Center for and International Education Gull Card Office Philosophy House

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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 visitwww.salisbury.edu/equity .

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LIVE CONCERT Dirt Woman & LITZ Saturday, October 23 See page 4 for details Pictured: LITZ performs as headliner with mind-bending electronic music. Photo: Adam Berta Photography