| In
This Issue
·
Catholic Studies scholarship applications available
·
Women's center announces scholarship for
women’s studies majors, minors
Important Information
·
Search for companies who applied for H-1b
visas
·
Start applying for OPT if
you are graduating this December
Upcoming Activities
· Oct
21 - Apple Orchard trip with mentors
· Oct 22 - Nov 7 - 28th annual Sacred Arts
Festival at UST
Interesting Articles
·
Career Development Fairs
·
Multicultural forum of workplace diversity
·
Life/Work
Center Newsletter
·
Save the date - MCPA sponsoring a Careers in Student Affairs event
·
Wellness Center offers meditation and a
cooking class at Trotter's
|
28th annual
Sacred Arts Festival at UST The
University of St. Thomas opens its 28th annual
Sacred Arts
Festival on Oct. 22. The festival, open to the public on the
university’s St. Paul campus, is a celebration of sacred art and an
exploration of faith. This year’s festival centers on the theme
“Illumination.”
All festival events are free unless indicated
otherwise.
This year’s festival events include:
- 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 22, in the Chapel of St. Thomas Aquinas:
A performance by the Rose Ensemble, the
acclaimed St. Paul vocal group that presents medieval,
Renaissance and baroque music. This concert celebrates the
release of a new Rose Ensemble CD, “ Rosa das Rosas: Cantigas de
Santa Maria and Other Spiritual Songs for the Virgin.” A limited
number of free tickets are available (two per UST ID) for St.
Thomas students, faculty and staff on a first-come, first-served
basis at the St. Thomas Box Office; general admission tickets
are $25 and $15 at the door or available in advance at
www.roseensemble.org.
- 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 25, in O’Shaughnessy Educational
Center auditorium:
Poet Mary Karr, whose 1998 memoir, The Liars’
Club, was a New York Times bestseller for more than a year,
will read from her work. Karr’s books of poetry include
Abacus (1987), The Devil’s Tour (1993), Viper
Rum (1998), and her new volume, Sinners Welcome
(2006). She is the Jesse Truesdell Peck Professor of English at
Syracuse University.
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Mary Karr
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Karr's Sacred Arts Festival talk at St. Thomas
also is sponsored by the university's Luann Dummer Center for
Women and English Department as well as the Creative Writing
Committee of the Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities.
Sigma Tau Delta, the English honor society at
St. Thomas, will host a book-signing and sale of Karr's works
following the reading.
Karr also will discuss her work in a
question-and-answer session at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 25, in
the O'Shaughnessy Room (also known as the "Leather Room") of
O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library Center. Students are especially
welcome.
For a good introduction to Karr's point of
view, Dr. Leslie Miller, professor of English at St. Thomas,
recommends Karr's essay, "Facing
Altars: Poetry and Prayer," from the November 2005 issue of
Poetry magazine.
- 5 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 2, in the Chapel of St. Thomas
Aquinas: Solemn vespers for All Souls’ Day, an
ecumenical service of liturgy and music, has its roots in a
centuries-old tradition of the Roman Catholic Church. The
vespers service, led by St. Thomas’ president Rev. Dennis Dease,
includes psalms, petitions and music by the university’s Women’s
Choir. All Souls’ vespers are an opportunity to remember the
dead and celebrate the communion of saints.
- 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 5, in St. Mary’s Chapel at the St. Paul
Seminary, 2260 Summit Ave.: The St. Thomas Chamber Singers and
soloists and the Early Music Orchestra of the College of St.
Scholastica, Duluth, perform one of the earliest known
oratorios, “Jeptha,” by Giacomo Carissimi
(1604-1674). The Early Music Orchestra will play on replicas of
early baroque instruments. A 3 p.m. lecture precedes the
performance at 4 p.m.
- 8:15 p.m. Monday, Nov. 6, in the Chapel of St. Thomas
Aquinas: Korean organist
Dong-ill Shin, winner of the Grand Prize this past summer at
the prestigious 20th Concours International d’Orgue “Grand Prix
de Chartres,” gives a recital.
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Award-winning organist
Dong-ill Shin
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Born in 1974, Shin won first prize in Korea’s
National Competition for Piano when he was 10 years old. At 11,
he debuted with the Pusan Philharmonic Orchestra, playing
Mozart’s Concerto in D minor, No. 20. He since has won dozens of
organ competitions and has performed all over the world. He is
the organist at First United Methodist Church in Hurst, Texas,
and teaches organ at Texas Wesleyan University. His St. Thomas
program will include works by Couperin, J.S. Bach, Escaish,
Franck and Liszt.
- 12:45-1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7, in the lobby gallery of
O’Shaughnessy Educational Center: A reception celebrates
the opening an exhibit of 22 giclée page facsimiles from The
Saint John’s Bible, which will be on display Nov.
1-Dec. 11 at St. Thomas. St. John’s Abbey, the Benedictine
monastery in Collegeville, Minn., and St. John’s University
commissioned renowned calligrapher Donald Jackson in 1998 to
create the first handwritten, illuminated Bible commissioned by
a Benedictine monastery in 500 years. When the project is
completed in 2007, The Saint John’s Bible will be
located in the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library at St. John’s
University.
- 11:45 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7, in O’Shaughnessy
Educational Center and other nearby locations: A daylong
Saint John’s Bible immersion includes
lectures, calligraphy demonstrations and “Visio Divina,” a
visual Bible study.
Lectures on Nov. 7 include Rev. Michael Patella, O.S.B., on “The
Saint John’s Bible in Scholarship and Art” at 11:45 a.m. in
O’Shaughnessy Educational Center auditorium, and Tim Ternes,
director of public programs and education at the Hill Museum and
Manuscript Library, whose talk is titled “From Inspiration to
Illumination,” at 7 p.m. in O’Shaughnessy Educational Center
auditorium).
Demonstration stations with prints, tools and videos and experts
on calligraphy will be open from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. in the
first-floor atrium of Murray-Herrick Campus Center.
Attendance is limited to the first 40 people who obtain free
tickets for the “Visio Divina” session, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library Center. Obtain tickets at the St.
Thomas Box Office, (651) 962-6137.
More information: For answers to
questions or for more information about this year’s Sacred Arts
Festival, call St. Thomas’ Campus Ministry Office, (651) 962-6560. |