Music student Trevor Eaden takes 1st in two vocal competitions!

trevor eadanCongratulations to Shoreline music student Trevor Eaden, who took first place in two regional singing competitions this spring. In March, he won the Classical Voice/College I category (students with 1-3 years of college-level study) at the annual adjudications of the Puget Sound Chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing, held at Seattle Pacific University. In April, Trevor was awarded first place in the College/Adult Classical Voice Category at the Performing Arts Festival of the Eastside held in Bellevue. Trevor studies voice with Shoreline Community College music instructor Dr. Fred Lokken, and has participated in the choirs, opera workshop, and two music department Honors Recitals during his first year at the college. Way to go, Trevor!

Join us for an evening with Octavia’s Brood at Shoreline Community College, Wed., May 18

Octaivas Brood_May 18
Join us on Wed., May 18 at 6:30 p.m. in the Main Campus Theater for an evening focused on Octavia’s Brood, this year’s campus Community Read book. Octavia’s Brood is an anthology of 
science fiction stories from social justice movements co-edited by Walidah Imarisha and adrienne maree brown. Join the editors and contributing writer, Gabriel Teodros, in a conversation around radical science fiction and organizing. All students, staff, and community members are welcome to engage in this FREE event. 

Updated Schedule for Multicultural Week 2016: May 16-20

Multicultural Week 2016: We Are Our Stories
May 16-20th, 2016
Stories for Healing, Resiliency, Strength and Cultural Empowerment!

Monday, May 16
Deep Roots Community Garden Annual Plant Sale !
9:30am – 2pm – Outside of the PUB
Stop by and buy some great plants and discover stories of their origins!

Náakw Dancers
A Part of the First Nations Symposium Series!
11:30am- 12:30pm – Pub Lobby
Náakw (Medicine) is a Tlingit dance group that meets weekly to celebrate ancestry, community empowerment and proper protocols for song and dance presentation. They have a strong focus on Tlingit language perpetuation through new song composition, introductions, as well as casual and formal use of the language. The group was formed in November of 2014 in Seattle, WA and includes members several tribes. Náakw looks forward to sharing their medicine with you. Gunałchéesh (Thank you)

Beauty in the Struggle, Presented by ALAS
POSTPONED

Tuesday, May 17
Deep Roots Community Garden Annual Plant Sale Continues!
9:30am – 2pm Outside of the PUB
Stop by and buy some great plants and discover stories of their origins!

The Maiden of Deception Pass: Guardian of Her Samish People
A Part of the First Nations Symposium Series!
10:30am – 11:30 am – PUB 9208
Movie and discussion with writer and Longhouse media’s Tracy Rector!

Long ago a maiden named Ko-kwahl-alwoot risked her life to save the Samish people from starvation. She did so by agreeing to marry a man of the sea, who threatened to take the plentiful sea life away from the area if she did not. Her reluctant father demanded that Ko-kwahl-alwoot return annually. But, after about four years of visits, it became increasingly difficult for her to return to the village. And so, today, Ko-kwahl-alwoot lives eternally underwater. The documentary tells her story and how tribal history inspires generations of Samish people.

We Are Our Stories: A Theater of the Oppressed Workshop
11:30am -1:30pm – PUB 9208
In this workshop, Dr. Elena Esquibel and Dr. Ernest Johnson will facilitate student exploration of inequality through Boalian Theater of the Oppressed performance techniques. Tackling issues of sexism, racism, classism, ableism, transphobia, and homophobia in the classroom, students will learn proactive  performance strategies to respond to oppression. Presented by ALAS

Students of Color Conference Report Back
1:30pm – 2:30pm – PUB 9202
Shoreline Community College Students just returned from the statewide conference. Hear about their experiences and get ready to attend next year !

Wednesday, May 18

Chenoa Egawa
A Part of the First Nations Symposium Series!
10:30am -11:30am – PUB 9208
Chenoa Egawa is a well-known Salish singer and storyteller, as well as author of children’s books.  Come hear Chenoa and her partner share their stories! Chenoa Egawa is from the Lummi and S’Klallam Coast Salish peoples of Washington State.

Which Way Home – Film & Discussion
11:30am – 1:30pm – PUB 9208
As the United States continues to build a wall between itself and Mexico, Which Way Home shows the personal side of immigration through the eyes of children who face harrowing dangers with enormous courage and resourcefulness as they endeavor to make it to the United States. Presented by ALAS

Stories of Transitions and Successes
12pm -1pm – PUB 9201
We will be providing a comfortable space to share with three professionals in varying fields as they share their stories of how they have overcome language barriers, various other challenges associated with the immigration experience, and how they have come to conquer their goals. Sponsored by the HEROES Club.

Decolonizing Our Bodies
1:30pm – 2:30pm – PUB 9202
An interactive workshop for all students, faculty, and staff with a focus on re-connecting our cognitive, emotional, and physical selves. Presented by the Women’s Center.

Margin to Center: Octavia’s Brood at Shoreline Community College
6:30 pm – Campus Theater
Octavia’s Brood is an anthology of original science fiction from social justice movements, written by organizers and activists. Each of the stories reimagines the world we live in, putting forth compelling futures with new questions, new visions to explore. Co-editors Walidah Ishimara and adrienne maree brown, along with contributing writer Gabriel Teodros will engage in a community conversation around radical science fiction and organizing.

Thursday, May 19

Margin to Center: Octavia’s Brood at SCC Sci-Fi Writing Workshops
10:30-11:30am & 1:30pm-2:30pm –  PUB 9208
Collective Sci-Fi Writing Workshop: Walidah Imarisha, adrienne maree brown, and Gabriel Teodros will lead participants through a collective story-telling/writing workshop where you create collective and individual stories based on current political issues.

Sci-Fi & Direct Action Training: Participants will use familiar stories of other worlds (such as Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Oz, Harry Potter, etc.) to design direct action campaigns that parallels the world we are fighting for in the here and now. By the end of the session, regimes will be toppled, evil forces vanquished and solid skills in direct action organizing developed.

Roger Fernandes
A Part of the First Nations Symposium Series!
11:30am – 12:30pm – PUB 9202
Roger Fernandes is a member of the Lower Elwha Band of the S’Klallam Indians from the Port Angeles, Washington, area. Roger has been storytelling for about seven or eight years. The stories he started with were simple legends. Over the years, he has moved into telling myths, creation stories, flood stories, and hero stories. In sharing these types of stories Native people can teach non-Natives about the aspects of their culture that go beyond food, shelter, and clothing. These stories actually define the culture of the tellers.

Friday, May 20

Makah Dancers
A Part of the First Nations Symposium Series!
10:30am – 12:00pm – PUB 9208
Neah Bay High School’s Makah Language Club presents a language, culture and dance presentation of approximately 15 dances and will have explanations presented bilingually in Makah and English.  Shoreline Community College’s, Jaylin Garcia, the reigning Makah Day Queen will join us.

Campus events for May 13-15: The Mystery of Edwin Drood opens and more!

These are the events happening around campus for Fri., May 13 through Sun., May 15.

Fri., May 13

City University information session, online
Fri., May 13: 12 p.m.
Interested in pursuing your City University bachelor’s degree online? Join Michael Pauley in an info session and learn more.

To RSVP for this event, please e-mail jlee@shoreline.edu.  You will receive a confirmation e-mail with a website link to enter the online session.

Intramural Yoga, Athletics bldg., room 3025
Fri., May 13: 12:35-1:25 p.m.
Intramural yoga free to students, faculty, and staff of Shoreline Community College.

The Mystery of Edwin Drood – Musical Theatre, Main Campus Theater 1600 bldg.
Fri., May 13: 7:30 p.m.
edwin drood
Shoreline Community College presents this interactive whodunit mystery musical in Steampunk style.

The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a hilarious, interactive whodunit mystery musical that allows the audience to enter the action and become the ultimate detectives. The show is based on Charles Dickens’ unfinished novel of the same name. In small town of Chesterham, England, the young and charming Edwin Drood has been mysteriously murdered. But by whom? His leering romantic rival, John Jasper? The infamous purveyor of opium and vice, Princess Puffer? The mysterious Landless twins, newly arrived from Ceylon? Or someone else even more dastardly and villainous? Dickens passed away before he was able to reveal the culprit. Rupert Holmes’ award-winning musical solves this predicament by asking the audience to choose which character is the killer by putting it to a vote. Staged in metatheatrical manner by the Shoreline Community College Musical theater department, we have crafted a cast full of colorful characters while reflecting the modern world we live in today—Steampunk elements and gender bent roles. This charming and inventive musical is sure to intrigue and entertain any musical or mystery lover.

All actors play two parts. Each plays an actor of the Music Hall Royale and also the character he or she plays in their production of The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Adapted from:  The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Charles Dickens
Playwright and Lyricist: Rupert Holmes
Directed by Gregory Award winning director and Sound Theatre Company Artistic Director: Teresa Thuman
Producer and Music Director: Dr. Charles Enlow
Choreography by Lee Ann Hittenberger

Performance Schedule:
Fri- Sat, May 13-14, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 15, 2016 at 3:00pm
Fri-Sat, May 20-21, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 22, 2016 at 3:00pm

FREE PARKING
Beer, wine & refreshments available.
SCC Campus Theatre, Building 1600
Ticket Information:
General Admission: $18
Seniors/Staff/Non-SCC Students: $12
SCC Students / Youth 15 & under: $10

Tickets available at the door or through: Brown Paper Tickets:http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2538574
800.838.3006

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Charles Enlow, Producer & Music Director
206.546.4524
cenlow@shoreline.edu

Sat., May 14

Softball vs. Bellevue, away at Bellevue
Sat., May 14: 3:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Wish our Phins well as they take to the road to take on Bellevue. #GoPhins!

Jim Elenteny and Don Hutton at Fix Coffeehouse, Fix Coffeehouse
Sat., May 14: 6:30-8:30 p.m.
elenteny
Music Tech faculty member Jim Elenteny and music student Don Hutton return to Fix Coffeehouse in Greenlake for the third time. Stop by for acoustic guitars and singer/songwriter music…free!

Fix Coffeehouse
6900 E Greenlake Way N
Seattle, WA 98115

The Mystery of Edwin Drood – Musical Theatre, Main Campus Theater 1600 bldg.
Sat., May 14: 7:30 p.m.
edwin drood
Shoreline Community College presents this interactive whodunit mystery musical in Steampunk style.

The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a hilarious, interactive whodunit mystery musical that allows the audience to enter the action and become the ultimate detectives. The show is based on Charles Dickens’ unfinished novel of the same name. In small town of Chesterham, England, the young and charming Edwin Drood has been mysteriouslymurdered. But by whom? His leering romantic rival, John Jasper? The infamous purveyor of opium and vice, Princess Puffer? The mysterious Landless twins, newly arrived from Ceylon? Or someone else even more dastardly and villainous? Dickens passed away before he was able to reveal the culprit. Rupert Holmes’ award-winning musical solves this predicament by asking the audience to choose which character is the killer by putting it to a vote. Staged in metatheatrical manner by the Shoreline Community College Musical theater department, we have crafted a cast full of colorful characters while reflecting the modern world we live in today—Steampunk elements and gender bent roles. This charming and inventive musical is sure to intrigue and entertain any musical or mystery lover.

All actors play two parts. Each plays an actor of the Music Hall Royale and also the character he or she plays in their production of The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Adapted from:  The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Charles Dickens
Playwright and Lyricist: Rupert Holmes
Directed by Gregory Award winning director and Sound Theatre Company Artistic Director: Teresa Thuman
Producer and Music Director: Dr. Charles Enlow
Choreography by Lee Ann Hittenberger

Performance Schedule:
Fri- Sat, May 13-14, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 15, 2016 at 3:00pm
Fri-Sat, May 20-21, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 22, 2016 at 3:00pm

FREE PARKING
Beer, wine & refreshments available.
SCC Campus Theatre, Building 1600
Ticket Information:
General Admission: $18
Seniors/Staff/Non-SCC Students: $12
SCC Students / Youth 15 & under: $10

Tickets available at the door or through: Brown Paper Tickets:http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2538574
800.838.3006

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Charles Enlow, Producer & Music Director
206.546.4524
cenlow@shoreline.edu

Sun., May 15

Softball vs. Skagit Valley, home at Shoreline
Sun., May 15: 12-4 p.m.
Head on out to Meridian Park to cheer our Phins on to victory in a double header at home against Skagit Valley. All home games are played at Meridian Park, located at 16765 Wallingford Ave N. in Shoreline. #GoPhins!

The Mystery of Edwin Drood – Musical Theatre, Main Campus Theater 1600 bldg.
Sun., May 15: 3 p.m.
edwin drood
Shoreline Community College presents this interactive whodunit mystery musical in Steampunk style.

The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a hilarious, interactive whodunit mystery musical that allows the audience to enter the action and become the ultimate detectives. The show is based on Charles Dickens’ unfinished novel of the same name. In small town of Chesterham, England, the young and charming Edwin Drood has been mysteriouslymurdered. But by whom? His leering romantic rival, John Jasper? The infamous purveyor of opium and vice, Princess Puffer? The mysterious Landless twins, newly arrived from Ceylon? Or someone else even more dastardly and villainous? Dickens passed away before he was able to reveal the culprit. Rupert Holmes’ award-winning musical solves this predicament by asking the audience to choose which character is the killer by putting it to a vote. Staged in metatheatrical manner by the Shoreline Community College Musical theater department, we have crafted a cast full of colorful characters while reflecting the modern world we live in today—Steampunk elements and gender bent roles. This charming and inventive musical is sure to intrigue and entertain any musical or mystery lover.

All actors play two parts. Each plays an actor of the Music Hall Royale and also the character he or she plays in their production of The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Adapted from:  The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Charles Dickens
Playwright and Lyricist: Rupert Holmes
Directed by Gregory Award winning director and Sound Theatre Company Artistic Director: Teresa Thuman
Producer and Music Director: Dr. Charles Enlow
Choreography by Lee Ann Hittenberger

Performance Schedule:
Fri- Sat, May 13-14, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 15, 2016 at 3:00pm
Fri-Sat, May 20-21, 2016 at 7:30pm
Sun, May 22, 2016 at 3:00pm

FREE PARKING
Beer, wine & refreshments available.
SCC Campus Theatre, Building 1600
Ticket Information:
General Admission: $18
Seniors/Staff/Non-SCC Students: $12
SCC Students / Youth 15 & under: $10

Tickets available at the door or through: Brown Paper Tickets:http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2538574
800.838.3006

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Charles Enlow, Producer & Music Director
206.546.4524
cenlow@shoreline.edu

Shoreline STEM Festival & Science Fair on campus this Sat., May 14

ssf_logo_small
You won’t want to miss the Shoreline STEM Festival and Science Fair featuring a K-12 student science fair, hands-on STEM fun, robotics demonstrations, and more!

Schedule of Events:
10:00 am Welcome in the PUB/Cafeteria
10:00 am – 1:30 pm Visit science exhibits and science fair projects, solar cars and robotics demo in the gym!

Science Fair Projects
10:00 am – 11:00 am Session 1 Judging
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Session 2 Judging
12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Session 3 Judging
1:30 pm – 2:00 pm Awards Ceremony

Questions? Please email shorelineSTEMfestival@gmail.com