March 16, 2012 QuickNotes

MARCH 16, 2012

DIGGING DEEP

Carroll’s newest theatre production, The Mound Builders, by the great (and recently deceased) American playwright Lanford Wilson, has its final showings this weekend. With the backdrop of an archaeological dig exploring Native peoples’ mysterious burial mounds, the scientists and bystanders at the site expose both ancient ruins and the ruins of their inner lives. The cast includes veteran actor Steven Palmer, Carroll grads Robert Padmos (class of 2006), Kelly Clavin (class of 2011) and Nicole Boileau (class of 2010), and Carroll senior David Connolly.

“Interweaving past and present, the action of the play illuminates how humans create complications and conflict and underscores the irony of our collective blindness to the lessons of the past,” says the director Chuck Driscoll, head of the Carroll Theatre Department.

With adult subject matter, the play is not appropriate for young audiences. Performances in the Carroll Theatre are Friday and Saturday, March 23 and 24, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, March 25, at 3 p.m.  Ticket prices are $10 for general admission and $8 for students and seniors—but Carroll employees always get in free with one guest, and Carroll students are admitted free on Sunday.

HOORAY FOR HANK

Today, March 16, everyone is invited to a reception celebrating completion of the Henry (Hank) Burgess Professorship in English, in the Fortin Science Center Scola from 4 to 6 p.m. The professorship was inspired by Carroll legend Professor Hank Burgess (photo left), class of 1951, a beloved English Department faculty member for nearly 40 years and founding head coach of the Carroll Smoker boxing program for a quarter  of a century. Dr. Jerry Berberet, class of 1963, established this professorship fund and provided a significant matching gift, which inspired other alumni and friends of Carroll to generously support this important initiative.

GETTING A PAT DOWN

Tonight, March 16, Carroll’s student chapter of Engineers Without Borders-USA lets the St. Patrick’s Day spirit run wild during the annual gala fundraiser, the Shamrock Soiree, in the Great Northern Hotel Ballroom (in the Great Northern Town Center across from Carroll’s campus). From 6 to 11 p.m., get your Irish on by dancing to the music of three live bands (Triple Cross, Whiskey Root and the Shining Thistle Pipe Band), feasting on deluxe hors d'oeuvre, and partaking of the cash bar provided by the Silver Star. Bid on live and silent auction items and take home a treasure. Admission is $25 at the door. Students with ID get in for only $15.

All proceeds support EWB-USA Carroll Student Chapter’s work in Latin America building water treatment systems, earthquake structural support and other infrastructure to better the quality of life and health at an orphanage and the Diocese of Helena’s Guatemala mission. Event premier sponsors are Morrison-Maierle, Inc., and Morrison-Maierle Systems Corp. Other sponsors: CDM, DA Davidson & Co., Great West Engineering, Robert Peccia and Associates and The Seipp Family.

THE PATIENCE OF JOB

Next Wednesday, March 21, the 17th Annual Helena Area Career Fair is open to everyone in the Carroll PE Center from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. With free admission, this job extravaganza is the perfect opportunity for students of all ages to find out who’s hiring, submit a resume, and even interview for positions, from temporary to permanent. Wear professional attire and bring your resume and portfolios to show off.

PALESTINE HEARTBREAK

Next Wednesday, March 21, photographic journalist Will Boland presents a free, public lecture, "Palestine Heartbreak" in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre at 7 p.m.  A slideshow talk on his recent trip to the Middle East, “Palestine Heartbreak” reflects Boland’s rising concern with the effect of a nuclear Iran on the Middle East, with Israel threatening military action and the Palestinians’ fate in the balance. Boland notes that Iran has encouraged the Palestinians to take up armed resistance to protest their land dispossession.

“I have travelled through conflict zones from Colombia to Kashmir to Bosnia for 30 years, and I use photography as a means of telling stories,” says Boland. “After this, my second trip to the Middle East, I sensed a critical need to report on a tragedy seldom heard here: the plight of the Palestinians. As a staunch and unbending ally of Israel, the US rarely comes forward with a complete picture, and it is only right and just that the Palestinians be heard—if there is to be peace in that region they must be heard. So these are the stories from the other side of the Wall, and the brutal life visited upon the Palestinians daily as they seek to exist on their disappearing homeland.”

SWING THROUGH DIXIELAND

Nope, not another Southern GOP primary; it’s music to our ears: next Thursday’s, March 22, Carroll Jazz Combo free, public concert at 4 p.m., in the Campus Center. Our Jazz Combo performs standards in a variety of styles, including Dixieland, swing, Latin, and ballads.  The program includes the big-band era favorite A String of Pearls, Duke Ellington’s “exotic” Caravan, Lalo Schifrin’s 5/4 theme from the TV series Mission: Impossible, and Thelonious Monk’s quirky Straight No Chaser.  Two vocalists join the band on Cry Me A River, When Sunny Gets Blue, and other ballads. The Jazz Combo is directed by Carroll music professor, pianist and composer, Dr. Lynn Petersen.

LET’S SETTLE THIS GLOBAL WARMING THING ONCE AND FOR ALL

Also next Thursday, March 22, astronomer Dr. Kelly Cline (photo left) delivers his hottest lecture yet: “Global Warming and the Greenhouse Effect” at 7 p.m. in Simperman Hall Wiegand Amphitheatre.  Is the earth getting warmer?  When people burn gas and coal, releasing carbon dioxide into the air, does that really heat up our planet?  What’s the science behind this idea and what are we still trying to learn and understand? Can Mars and Venus tell us about the climate of the Earth? In this presentation, we will examine the fascinating scientific discoveries that have revolutionized our understanding of our planet’s climate and debunk some of the popular myths about our rising temps.

MAKING A SPLASH: BLUE GOLD

Now, to cool things down: next Thursday, March 22, also brings us the campus celebration of the United Nations’ World Water Day, with Compassion Tanzania joining us for a showing of the award-winning documentary film “Blue Gold: World Water Wars,” in O’Connell Hall room 107 at 7 p.m. This free, public event marks the annual March 22 World Water Day, with a mission of advocating for sustainable water resource management and access to both clean water and food for all people. Also at the screening, arts and crafts from Tanzania will be on sale—perfect Easter basket stuffers; mom will love the African jewelry on Mother’s Day. All proceeds go to support Compassion Tanzania's water projects in northern Tanzania, including well drilling for remote villages that do not have access to clean, safe water supplies. For more information, call 447-5472 or 439-2137.

SALISHLY SPEAKING

Get versed in an endangered tongue next Friday, March 23, when Native poet and author Jennifer Greene will read from her published work and give a lecture on Salishan language preservation in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre at 7 p.m. The event is free and open to everyone. Of Salish and Chippewa-Cree descent, Greene recently wrote the children’s book Huckleberries, Buttercups and Celebrations using Salish words. She also wrote two award-winning books of poetry, What I Keep and What Lasts, which have earned national and international acclaim. Most recently, Greene was awarded the 2010 MENADA Literary Prize at the Ditet e Naimit international poetry festival in Macedonia. This campus appearance was made possible by a grant from Humanities Montana.

STUDENT NEWS

Courses

Fall and summer class registration begins March 22, and it’s all online, including our course catalog. A searchable PDF of each schedule and accompanying documents can be accessed, downloaded and printed by going to http://www.carroll.edu/academics/. Academic calendars and class schedules are available there, and search/registration for class sections is available through MyCarroll. Financial information, including tuition, fees and payment options, can be accessed at http://www.carroll.edu/resources/business/index.cc

Awards

The annual Father Butko Awards in Freshman Writing are open to students enrolled in ENWR 101/ENWR 102 this academic year. Up to five scholarships, valued at $250 each, will be awarded to the students submitting winning essays. Entries must be submitted, along with a completed submission form, to the Academic Dean’s Office in O’Connell Hall by 4 p.m. on Friday, March 23. Winners will be notified by the Department of Languages and Literature and will be recognized at the Honors Convocation on Wednesday, April 18.

 Events

 Next Tuesday, March 20, Carroll’s Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) present a workshop, “Managing employees in the State of Montana,” with speakers Jim Nys and Staci Bloomberg from Personnel Plus in Helena. The event goes from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the lower level of the Campus Center. Free to all Carroll students, faculty and staff, the event is brought to us by SIFE in partnership with American Free Enterprise. Please preregister at www.personnel-plus.com.

In the News

Brenden Nichols, our Carroll freshman from Hayden, Idaho, who was in a serious vehicle accident near Lolo, Mont., this past fall, was discharged from St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Institute on March 9 and headed home. His 21-week journey to this homecoming has been a celebratory event, with Brenden making great strides in his speech, recreational, occupational and physical therapy. Thank you for remembering Brenden and his family in your thoughts and prayers on his CaringBridge webpage.

For the latest student news and activities, go to www.carroll.edu/students

ALUMNI NEWS

Events

Alumni Volunteers Wanted! Carroll’s third-annual “Speed Networking” is coming up on March 28. Speed Networking offers students an opportunity to practice their networking skills in a safe environment and learn effective techniques from professionals. In timed interactions with business pros, Carroll undergrads practice their “elevator speech” to sell themselves as prospective employees. At this appetizer-enhanced mixer, we need Carroll business and communication alumni interested in providing constructive feedback and mentorship to current Carroll students. Interested? Contact Carroll Internship Coordinator Nisan Burbridge at nburbridge@carroll.edu. This year’s Speed Networking is generously sponsored by Anderson ZurMuehlen & Co., Galusha, Higgins & Galusha and Junkermier, Clark, Campanella, Stevens (JCCS).    

On Saturday March 31, alums are welcome at our Phoenix Area Carroll Gathering, 1 to 3 p.m. at the home of Dr. Gordon (class of 1960) & Marilyn Peters. Contact Kathy Ramirez alumni@carroll.edu to RSVP. 

In the News

Carroll board of trustees member Al Olszewski (photo right), class of 1984, was recently named the running mate for Montana GOP gubernatorial candidate Jim Lynch. Olszewski is an orthopedic surgeon, former Air Force major, and serves as president of Flathead Orthopedics. Meanwhile, Democratic governor candidate Steve Bullock has chosen Brig. Gen. John Walsh (photo left), who attended Carroll in 1979-1986, as his running mate. Walsh resigned earlier this week as Montana’s adjutant general overseeing the Montana National Guard to join Bullock’s ticket. Since 1979, Walsh worked his way up from an enlisted man to a brigadier general. He commanded a 750-soldier infantry battalion in Iraq and was awarded the Bronze Star.

D.A. Davidson & Co. has promoted Chris Molvig (photo right), class of 1994, of its Individual Investor Group in Billings for the quality of his work and exceptional service to clients. His new title is associate vice president, senior financial consultant. He joined the firm in November 1996.

Jaymie Lewis, class of 2004, was recently in the news for her Irish dancing erudition as founder of Cassidy-Mallon Irish Dancers. They’ll be plenty busy this weekend, and you can read more about the group’s Celtic capering at: http://helenair.com/entertainment/yourtime/bouncy-and-fast-and-fun/article_dc5f7900-6d9f-11e1-adb7-0019bb2963f4.html

Tina Opar, MSW, class of 2004, is a primary therapist at Shodair Children’s Hospital and was recently selected as its Employee of the Year. She was selected for the honor by the Employee of the Month Committee and Shodair managers out of a pool of 2011 Employee of the Month winners. Opar began working at Shodair two years ago, first as a primary therapist working with the hospital’s youngest patients, then transitioning into caring for children and adolescents on the acute-care unit. After Carroll, she earned her master’s degree in social work from the University of Montana.

A June 23, 2012, wedding is being planned by Jessalyn Kim Bahnmiller, class of 2007, and Brett Thomas Ritland. After Carroll, Jess earned a doctor of physical therapy degree from Eastern Washington University in Spokane. She is a physical therapist employed by the Great Falls Clinic. (Couple in photo right)

Marc Mahoney, class of 2008, and Lindsey Zook, class of 2009, will be married on July 28, 2012, in Great Falls, Mont. They currently live in Seattle, where Marc is an account executive with the Seattle Mariners and Lindsey is a pharmacy technician at Target Pharmacy. (Couple in photo left)

Daniel Byrd, class of 2010, and Anna Stitt, class of 2011, have joined Anderson ZurMuehlen as staff consultants. With a master’s degree from the University of Montana, Byrd has accounting experience in tax preparation for individuals, partnerships and corporations. Byrd is also a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Stitt has a background in agriculture and specializes in the preparation of farm and ranch income tax returns. She is a member of the Montana Society of Certified Public Accountants.

Nicole Voeller, class of 2011, has been accepted to Roseman University of Health Sciences College of Dental Medicine's doctor of dental medicine program and also the University of Washington School of Dentistry's doctor of dental surgery program.

 In Memoriam

Joan Marie Mandeville (photo right), class of 1980, of Missoula, Mont., died of breast cancer on February 27, 2012. In 1981, she became a certified public accountant. She began her career in the telecommunications industry with the Montana Public Service Commission in 1982. In 1989, Joan moved to Great Falls to work for the Montana Telephone Association, becoming general manager in 1994. Joan came to Blackfoot Telecommunications in Missoula in 1997 and worked in various capacities. Most recently, she functioned as Blackfoot’s chief executive officer. She worked, even through her illness, until the end of December 2011. For more on her life, read: http://helenair.com/news/local/obituaries/joan-marie-mandeville/article_7594293c-6d9a-11e1-b309-001871e3ce6c.html

FACULTY AND STAFF NEWS

Associate Professor of English Loren Graham (photo left) has received word that CavanKerry Press of Fort Lee, NJ, has accepted his third book of poetry for publication under its "Notable Voices" listing. The book does not yet have its final title, but it follows a young boy growing up in rural poverty. Graham has read from the book during recent campus events, including the 2009 Carroll Literary Festival and Carroll's 2010 Alpha Seminar. His third opus is scheduled for release in 2014, and he reports that in the meantime he’ll be burnishing the book’s final revisions with well-known poet Baron Wormser as his editor.

Yvonne Kunz, administrative assistant for Carroll’s Department of Military Science/ROTC, delivered a baby boy, Griffin Xavier Kunz, on March 14, 2012. Grizzly Battalion now marches forward with an extra man in the ranks.

CAMPUS MINISTRY

Campus Ministry’s Catholicism Video Series during Lent will occur on Thursdays in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre (room 101/202) at 12:45 p.m.  Bring your lunch and enjoy the thought-provoking films and discussion. For more, check out: http://www.catholicismseries.com/

For all Campus Ministry news, Mass and sacraments schedules, homilies and much more, go to: http://www.carroll.edu/ministry/

ATHLETICS

Carroll College sophomores Rhianna Grossman (photo right) and Easton Padden posted runner-up finishes during the recent NAIA Indoor Track & Field National Championships, where 11 Carroll scholar-athletes earned All-American recognition. The Saints’ 4 x 800-meter relay placed third in the  Geneva, Ohio, championships, with all four runners on that team alone crowned All-Americans. Not bad for a two-year-old program. (Photo left, left to right: 800-meter relayers Will Roche [alternate], Taylor Peliska, Troy Solly, Austin Stuchell and Ben Vaughan) Keep track of the details at: http://helenair.com/sports/college/carroll-college/track/grossman-padden-lead-saints-at-naia-indoor-track/article_56ae79ac-65c8-11e1-95e3-001871e3ce6c.html

April 20 is the annual Saints Athletic Association Auction in the Carroll PE Center, raising money for scholar-athlete scholarships. Details TBA.

For all Athletics news and game schedules, visit www.carroll.edu/athletics

COMING EVENTS

Ongoing: Talmud art show, featuring over 40 prints combining the Biblical work of two of the most important Jewish artists of the 20th century: Marc Chagall and Ben-Zion. The images are commentaries on the scriptural text in the best of the Talmudic tradition. The exhibit is the first in the “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” series of events on campus this spring. See the exhibit in the Carroll Art Gallery, St. Charles Hall, through April 20. The gallery is open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, closed weekends and holidays. Free admission.

March 16: March Faculty Colloquium, with Professor Elvira Roncalli presenting “Actions Not Seen, Words Not Heard: Women in the Italian ‘Resistenza’” at 4 p.m. in the Campus Center’s Maronick Board Room.

March 26: Governor Martha Layne Collins speaks on the role of women in US leadership, with her free talk at 7 p.m. in the lower level of the Carroll Campus Center. In 1983, Collins made history with her election to a four-year term as governor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. She was the sixth female elected governor of a state and the third not to have followed her husband into office.  She is currently the senior former female governor in the nation and the first, and to date only, female elected governor of Kentucky. Her record included education reform, record-setting  job creation in Kentucky, and being interviewed by Walter Mondale as a potential candidate for first female vice president of the United States. After her term as governor, Collins served as the executive-in-residence at the University of Louisville’s School of Business, a fellow at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy Institute of Politics, director of the International Business and Management Center at the University of Kentucky’s Gatton College of Business and Economics, and president of St. Catharine College (Ky.) for six years. 

March 28: Two experts on the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), John Pavao and Todd Hoar, will discuss ADA requirements, the importance of community accessibility, and how to make Helena more accessible for people with disabilities, particularly for returning veterans. “Awareness and Accessibility: Veterans with Disabilities,” a free event, starts at 6 p.m. in Carroll College’s Simperman Hall Wiegand Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the Montana Independent Living Project, Carroll College Hunthausen Center for Peace and Justice, Carroll’s Sociology Department, and the Rocky Mountain ADA Center, the event will include numerous vendors and resources for the disability community, and appetizers will be served. Pavao is the Equal Employment Opportunity and ADA coordinator for Montana state government, with over 15 years of experience in implementing and managing equal opportunity and diversity-related programs. He holds a master’s in human resources management and retired from the Air Force in 2008 after more than 22 years of service. Hoar is the ADA coordinator for Butte-Silver Bow County government and executive director of the Silver Bow County Developmental Disabilities Council.  As ADA coordinator since 2008, he has partnered with Montana Independent Living Project and the Rocky Mountain ADA Center to assure training opportunities for individuals, businesses and government.

March 29: Andreas Widmer, author of The Pope and the CEO, will give a free public lecture, “Leadership Lessons: The Pope and the CEO,” focusing on entrepreneurship as a solution to world poverty in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre at 7 p.m. This event is part of Carroll’s ongoing Business Department Lecture Series. A former bodyguard to Pope John Paul II, Widmer is an entrepreneur who engages top businesspeople, investors and faith leaders around the world to foster enterprise solutions to poverty and promote virtuous business practices. He cofounded SEVEN Fund, a philanthropic organization run by entrepreneurs who invest in original research, books, films and websites to further enterprise solutions to poverty. Andreas and his business partner Michael Fairbanks initiated the Pioneers of Prosperity Awards, a first-of-its-kind industry program that finds and promotes the best entrepreneurs in emerging markets. Widmer is a research fellow in entrepreneurship at the Acton Institute and an advisor to the Zermatt Summit, an annual business leadership event that strives to humanize globalization. He also serves as an advisor to Transforming Business, a research and development project at the University of Cambridge. A seasoned businessman, he was an executive in residence at Highland Capital Partners, a venture capital firm, and served as CEO of OTF Group (formerly part of the Monitor Group) and helped lead Eprise Corporation, Dragon Systems and FTP Software. Working extensively in the US, Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America, he has brought more than 100 leading-edge technology products to market. Author of books and articles on faith-based entrepreneurship, he has been featured in various business and general interest media including the Financial Times and Bloomberg News.

March 31: Fundraiser for St. Baldrick's and Locks of Love at Carroll College. In the upper level of the Campus Center at noon. Those interested in donating cut hair to Locks of Love should check the Locks of Love website for details at http://www.locksoflove.org/donate.html. More info on St. Baldrick’s is at: http://www.stbaldricks.org/about-us/. Several campus celebs are participating, including the perennially long-locked Terri John of our Nursing Department—donate to support her sheer courage at: http://www.stbaldricks.org/participants/mypage/522053/2012  To participate, contact Logan McLean at lmclean@carroll.edu or 447-5196.

April 2: Carroll College hosts a free, public symposium, "Leadership Insights in Challenging Times," featuring interim Carroll President Dr. Paula McNutt and several other panelists from the Carroll and Helena communities at 7 p.m. in Carroll College’s Simperman Hall Wiegand Amphitheatre.

April 3: “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility,” a month of free events, continues with a 7:30 p.m. lecture in the Campus Center, “Running Races with God: How (and Why) Our Presidential Candidates Talk About Religion on the Campaign Trail,” by Dr. David Weiss, Ph.D., Professor of Media Studies, Montana State University.

April 10: Traditional Passover Seder, 6 p.m. in the Carroll Campus Center. Hosted by Dr. Barry Ferst, Carroll philosophy professor and department chair. Part of “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” month-long events.

April 11: National speaker Kevin Hines will offer insights on mental wellness at a 7 p.m. free, public talk, “Suicide Will Never, Nor Ever, Be the Solution,” in the Carroll College Campus Center lower level. Sponsored by Carroll College and NAMI-MT. Hines attempted suicide by jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge and since surviving the ordeal has dedicated his life to helping others struggling with mental illness. His story was featured in the film The Bridge.

April 12: Charlie’s Film Festival in the Carroll PE Center, 7:30 p.m.

April 12: “America, Islam, and the Holocaust,” the keynote address for “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” monthlong free events. The address by Professor Michael Sells of the University of Chicago Divinity School begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Campus Center.

April 13-14: Astronomy Weekend at Carroll. On Friday, April 13, the Neuman Astronomical Society and Helena Astronomical Society team up to present a free screening of The City Dark, a well-reviewed new movie on light pollution. The screening takes place in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre at 7 p.m. On Saturday, April 14, astronomy activities for the whole family, including solar observing, will occur in the Campus Center from noon to 4 p.m. On Saturday night, guest speaker Dr. Christina Dunn will present “Creating the Giant: Fabricating the Mirrors of the European Extremely Large Telescope,” at 7 p.m. in Simperman Hall’s Wiegand Amphitheatre.

April 13-14 and 20-21: The Commedia Puss in Boots by Lane Riosley, a Carroll children’s theatre production, at 7 p.m. in the Carroll Theatre, Old North, St. Charles Hall.

April 17: Pakistani music and performance, Caravanserai: A Place Where Cultures Meet at 7:30 p.m. in Trinity Hall lounge. Part of “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” monthlong free events, this performance is sponsored by the Myrna Loy Center for the Performing Arts and Arts Midwest, Regional Arts Organization.

April 18: Scholar Day and Honors Convocation

April 19-20: Manion Symposium, with a poster session Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m., paper presentations on Friday afternoon, followed by a physician panel discussion on admission to medical school. Details TBA.

April 19: Holocaust Remembrance Evening, ceremony and poster display, at 7:30 p.m. in the Carroll Campus Center upstairs lounge. Hosted by Carroll History Professor Gillian Glaes and Hunthausen Professor of Peace and Justice Christopher Fuller. A Shoah display of forty posters on loan from the Montana Association of Jewish Communities (MAJCO), plus a candle-lighting remembrance prayer will be the evening’s focus. A Carroll Honors Scholars and international student panel will discuss inter-cultural civility at the event. Part of “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” monthlong free events.

April 20-21: “We the People: Conversations on the Montana and U.S. Constitutions,” in the Carroll Campus Center. Part of “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” monthlong free events.

April 21-22: Softball Weekend

April 26: Carroll Jazz Combo Concert, 7:30 p.m. in the Carroll Theatre. Free and open to the public.

April 27: Dr. Kelly Cline lecture “The End of the Earth and Sun” at 7 p.m. in Simperman Hall Wiegand Amphitheatre. The Earth and Sun will not last forever: Earth will be destroyed, and recent astronomical calculations tell us exactly how and when. Several billion years from now, our Sun will run out of fuel and swell up to become a red giant star, so large that it will swallow up the Earth completely, and our world will die in the solar fires.  Join us for a startling preview of these “end times.”

April 27: Last Day of Classes

April 30: Dedication of the Carroll College Peace and Civility Wall, noon. Part of “Not One without the Other: Religious Harmony and Political Civility” monthlong free events.

April 29:  Carroll College Choirs Spring Concert, “A Time to Dance,” with special guest appe