The Foundation announces the inaugural recipient of the 1964 Society Faculty Professional Development Scholarship

The Foundation Board of Directors is pleased to announce the inaugural recipient of the 1964 Society Faculty Professional Development Scholarship is Jensina Oliver. There were many good applications and the Board expressed their appreciation for the Associate Faculty’s interest in this opportunity. Jensina will receive $1,100 this year to attend the Music Teachers National Association Conference and bring back to our college best practices and valuable information to assist with the newest technology and how to incorporate it into classroom and individual instruction.

The Scholarship review committee was comprised of three Foundation Board members, two of which are faculty. The Foundation Board decided to open the first year applications to Associate Faculty at the recommendation of the Federation leadership.

The 1964 Society Scholarship Fund honors the year our college was founded. It was designated to Faculty Professional Development because that was the original intention of the fund when the Foundation started a campaign in 2010.

The fund was then inactive for several years. The current Foundation Board made the determination to revitalize the fund and invest it as a Board Designated Fund with the Foundation’s investment firm. $25,000 was invested and $3,300 retained to provide Faculty Professional Development scholarships for three years while the invested funds accrue enough earnings per year to provide an annual scholarship. This will provide a scholarship for Faculty Professional Development in perpetuity unless a future Board of Directors changes the intention of the fund, which is unlikely.

The Foundation Board of Directors, again, welcomes any donations to this fund at any time and would like to see it continue to grow.

Please join the Foundation Board and staff in offering many CONGRATULATIONS to Jensina Oliver for this award!

Warm Regards,
Mary Brueggeman, VP Advancement
Executive Director, Foundation

Message from President Roberts: Pearl Harbor Day

Dear Colleague,

The flags on Shoreline’s campus are lowered to half-staff today in honor of National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day. I encourage all of us to take a moment to remember with gratitude, all those in World War II who served our country so valiantly.

Respectfully,

Cheryl Roberts, Ed.D.

President

Final weekend to catch Brighton Beach Memoirs

Brighton Beach Memoirs: Campus Theater, 1600 Bldg.
Fri., Dec. 8 & Sat., Dec. 9: 7:30-9:30pm
Sun., Dec. 10: 3-5pm
Tickets at brownpapertickets.com.
bbm_crop
There’s liver for dinner, holes in his shoes, and a war on the horizon, but 15-year-old Eugene Jerome would rather think about baseball…and girls. Surrounded by his overworked mother and father, his “worldly” older brother, his aunt, and two cousins, Eugene has plenty of material for his future career as a writer. This coming-of-age story is an affectionate, entertaining lesson in overcoming hard times with warmth and humor.

Brighton Beach Memoirs is the first installment in Neil Simon’s semi-autobiographical Eugene Jerome trilogy (which includes the plays Biloxi Blues and Broadway Bound) and is one of America’s most cherished plays. The New York Daily News called the original New York production “…in many respects Neil Simon’s funniest, richest, and consequently the most affecting of his plays”, and elevated Simon into the pantheon of great American playwrights.

Main day of BREATHE events Thurs., Dec. 7

Join us for a full day of Fall quarter BREATHE events Thurs., Dec. 7. BREATHE is a week full of daily events and activities focusing on decreasing stress before finals week, with the main day of activities happening on Thursday in the Counseling Center.

BREATHE – Main Activities: Counseling Center, FOSS 5245
Thurs., Dec. 7: 9am-4pm
Our main BREATHE event will be held in the Counseling Center on Thursday, December 7 from 9:00 am – 4:00 pm. Join us for free snacks, jewelry making, coloring, make a stress sock, board games, and pick up handouts on study skills and stress reduction.

BREATHE – Popcorn and games: Advising & Success Coaching Center, FOSS 5229
Thurs., Dec. 7: 10am-2pm
The Advising and Success Coaching Center will provide popcorn, coloring, and puzzles! Stop by to enjoy popcorn and relax with an activity.

BREATHE – Be Safe; BeDazzle!: PUB 9202
Thurs., Dec. 7: 1-3pm
International Education is hosting an afternoon of crafting and BeDazzling! It’s important to be safe when walking around after the sun goes down. Join International Education for an afternoon of crafting and BeDazzling to make your items more visible in the dark. Bring your own accessory, bag, or piece of clothing to decorate or use one of ours!

BREATHE – Meet Logan: Counseling Center, FOSS 5245
Thurs., Dec. 7: 1:30-2:30pm
Meet Logan, a trained therapy dog, and his owner, Dr. Roberts, Shoreline’s President.

Fall Choir Concert “Sing to Me” Thurs., Dec. 7

Chamber Chorale & Shoreline Singers featuring Jeff Kashiwa in “Sing To Me”
Thurs., December 7
Doors open at 7pm
Venue: First Lutheran Church of Richmond Beach, 18354 8th Avenue NW, Shoreline, WA  98177
No admittance fee, but donations are graciously accepted.
Sing To Me poster.jpg
The Fall session concert of Shoreline Community College’s two choral ensembles, Chamber Chorale and Shoreline Singers, will feature saxophonist, and Shoreline music faculty member, Jeff Kashiwa.

The program stemmed from a single piece, Ola Gjielo’s, Evening Prayer, a beautiful flurry of chords, melody, and beauty all tied together with tenor sax. When I first presented the idea to Jeff, he wholeheartedly agreed and proceeded to blow us all away with his world-renowned musicianship. This inspired a program that featured him on more than just the one tune. Jeff moves seamlessly between Soprano Sax, Tenor, and Clarinet.

We also welcome Northwest composer John Muehleisen, who has composed for all types of ensembles and setups and is most recently honored with premiers across the nation for his work on Pietá, a 90-minute oratorio about compassion and mercy, and But Who Will Return Us Our Children? – A Kipling Passion, a moving compilation of letters, prose, and poetry that explores the costs of war from the view of families left behind.

Additionally, both choirs will join that of Edmonds Community College and Edmonds-Woodway High School for four movements of Vivaldi’s Gloria.

~Evan Norberg, Director of Choirs