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1 North Central College Pe rforming Arts NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE With our season coming to an end, I always look forward to the next year in the arts. As North Central College continues with the sesquicentennial celebration being Naperville’s college, I am thrilled to offer you, the patrons of the arts, the best of the best. I suppose you can say this is the year of choice. We bring you the greatest artists at the most affordable prices we can, but to make this even easier on you, we are offering choices. Those choices include artist, venue, and day of the week. We announced our new season at the Legacy Series: Del McCoury Band, Preservation Hall Jazz Band concert on April 16. If you missed it, sorry, but you missed an amazing evening! Pfeiffer was rocking with some incredible music. For those who may not have been here, we have some of those choices I was talking about. For our performing arts series, we will open with the Beach Boys in Pfeiffer Hall and then the choices start. You can either select Manhattan Transfer in the Wentz Concert Hall or Celtic Woman Christmas in Pfeiffer. Next will be Bela Fleck and the Flecktones in the concert hall. See? Multiple venues for the one series. Our two final concerts for that series will be Canadian Brass in Wentz and the Charlie Daniels Band in Pfeiffer. But even with that, we have two performances of the Canadian Brass, so you can pick the time of day that is best for you. Staying with that one series, if you were to select one of the two different series options but were not able to attend a particular show, we will work with you to substitute a different artist of your choice, often at little or no additional expense. To borrow from a well-known series of commercials, but wait, there’s more! In addition to those five, or rather six, concerts for that series, you may want to select Yo-Yo Ma, Bernadette Peters, Herbie Hancock, Air Supply, or The Acting Company, just to name a few. The best of the best. That is what we are bringing to Naperville and DuPage County. And it is up to you to decide who you want to see and how much money you want to save seeing them! It is a very special time here at North Central. Don’t miss all that we have to offer to all patrons of the arts. We’re pulling out the stops this year, continuing with our extremely popular children’s programming and our newest addition, the Cabaret series in the Madden Theatre. Come join us and celebrate North Central being 150 years young. The sesquicentennial at North Central College. 150 Years, a Promising Start. Brian Lynch Fine Arts Director North Central College

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In addition to those five, or rather six, concerts for that series, you may want to select Yo-Yo Ma, Bernadette Peters, Herbie Hancock, Air Supply, or The Acting Company, just to name a few. The best of the best. That is what we are bringing to Naperville and DuPage County. And it is up to you to decide who you want to see and how much money you want to save seeing them! 1NorthCentralCollege

Citation preview

1North Central College

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

With our season coming to an end, I always look forward to the next year in the arts.

As North Central College continues with the sesquicentennial celebration being

Naperville’s college, I am thrilled to offer you, the patrons of the arts, the best of

the best. I suppose you can say this is the year of choice. We bring you the greatest

artists at the most affordable prices we can, but to make this even easier on you, we

are offering choices. Those choices include artist, venue, and day of the week.

We announced our new season at the Legacy Series: Del McCoury Band,

Preservation Hall Jazz Band concert on April 16. If you missed it, sorry, but you

missed an amazing evening! Pfeiffer was rocking with some incredible music. For

those who may not have been here, we have some of those choices I was talking

about. For our performing arts series, we will open with the Beach Boys in Pfeiffer

Hall and then the choices start. You can either select Manhattan Transfer in the

Wentz Concert Hall or Celtic Woman Christmas in Pfeiffer. Next will be Bela Fleck

and the Flecktones in the concert hall. See? Multiple venues for the one series. Our

two final concerts for that series will be Canadian Brass in Wentz and the Charlie

Daniels Band in Pfeiffer. But even with that, we have two performances of the

Canadian Brass, so you can pick the time of day that is best for you.

Staying with that one series, if you were to select one of the two different series

options but were not able to attend a particular show, we will work with you to

substitute a different artist of your choice, often at little or no additional expense.

To borrow from a well-known series of commercials, but wait, there’s more!

In addition to those five, or rather six, concerts for that series, you may want to

select Yo-Yo Ma, Bernadette Peters, Herbie Hancock, Air Supply, or The Acting

Company, just to name a few. The best of the best. That is what we are bringing to

Naperville and DuPage County. And it is up to you to decide who you want to see

and how much money you want to save seeing them!

It is a very special time here at North Central. Don’t miss all that we have to offer to all

patrons of the arts. We’re pulling out the stops this year, continuing with our extremely

popular children’s programming and our newest addition, the Cabaret series in the

Madden Theatre. Come join us and celebrate North Central being 150 years young.

The sesquicentennial at North Central College. 150 Years, a Promising Start.

Brian Lynch

Fine Arts Director North Central College

North Central College thanks its Fine and Performing Arts 2010-2011 season event sponsors. The following companies have made generous contributions in support of the fine and performing arts.

sponsors

These programs are also partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.

Sponsors Footlight Insert 2010-2011.indd 1 11/10/2010 10:16:29 AM

Tickets on saleJune 1

Don’t miss the announcement of our

Yo-Yo MaSaturday, October 1, 8 p.m.

The Beach BoysSaturday, October 15, 8 p.m.Sunday, October 16, 6 p.m.

Herbie HancockSaturday, October 29, 8 p.m.

Bernadette PetersThursday, November 10, 8 p.m.

Call the Box Office at 630-637-SHOW (7469) email us at [email protected] visit us online atnorthcentralcollege.edu/show

2011-2012coming in June.

Exciting performances are planned!Sign up today to receive email updates and learn about special offers for Friends of the Arts.

FINE & PERFORMING ARTS SEASON

These programs are partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.

The Beach Boys

Bernadette Peters

Herbie HancockPhoto Credit: Martin Schoeller

Yo-Yo- Ma

2011 UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

footlights ad 2011-2012.indd 1 4/6/2011 3:01:25 PM

4 North Central College

Contemporary Series Presents

Rachel Barton Pine with Earthen Grave

Friday, April 29, 20118:00 p.m.

Presented atPfeiffer Hall

310 E. Benton Avenue, Naperville, Illinoiswww.northcentralcollege.edu/show

2010 – 2011 Fine Arts Performances Sponsors

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

5North Central College

EARTHEN GR AVE

SCOTT DAVIDSON .................................................................................................................drumsMARK WEINER ......................................................................................................................... vocalsRACHEL BARTON PINE ...........................................................................................electric violinJASON MUXLOW .....................................................................................................................guitarTONY SPILLMAN .....................................................................................................................guitarRON HOLZNER ............................................................................................................................bass

EARTHEN GR AVE B IOGR APHY

Formed in 2008, Earthen Grave is a six-piece Chicago metal band that marries the sounds of metal past and future with a sweaty live show. Bassist Ron Holzner served a 15-year sentence with Chicago doom legends Trouble and Rachel Barton Pine brings frightening classical chops to her 6-string electric violin. Finding groups like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Saint Vitus, Trouble, Pentagram, Candlemass and Slayer to be common influences, the band wrote and played shows around Chicago for the first half of 2009, culminating in the release of the “Dismal Times” EP in June. Featuring three original songs that meld classic, crunchy doom and NWOBHM vibes with a solid dose of thrashy bludgeoning alongside covers of two choice doom classics by Pentagram and Witchfinder General, the EP was hailed by critics as “astounding,” and “pure, head-banging bliss” (MaximumMetal.com) and prompted Doommantia.com to write, “Can’t wait till the band gives us a full length with all originals... they have all the songwriting capabilities to make one of the best albums ever.”

In January 2011, Earthen Grave won Best New Entertainer at the Chicago Music Awards, the first time a metal band has ever received that honor in 30 years of the CMAs. In July 2010, Earthen Grave closed the Great Performers of Illinois festival at Pritzker Pavilion

in Chicago’s famed Millennium Park, where Rachel received the 2010 Great Performer of Illinois award. The band was featured on NBC’s Today Show and live in-studio on WGN’s nationally televised Midday News. Earthen Grave has shared the stage with such luminaries as Megadeth, Black Label Society, Mayhem, Macabre, Anvil, Machinehead, Pentagram, Novembers Doom, Raven, Skindred, and Nachtmystium and played at Indianapolis’ Templars of Doom III festival, Milwaukee’s Rave, Wisconsin’s Brat Stop and Vnuk’s, New York’s Piano’s and Europa Club, and Philadelphia’s Mill Creek Tavern, as well as at Chicago-area landmarks like House of Blues, The Metro, Double Door, Reggie’s Rock Club, Shark City, Chicago City Limits, Abbey Pub, and Pearl Room.

Earthen Grave is driven by the unique alchemy of its members: Mark Weiner on vocals, Rachel Barton Pine on a violin, Jason Muxlow and Tony Spillman on guitar, Ron Holzner on bass, and Scott Davidson on drums. The group boasts an undeniable collective metal and musical pedigree. Ron was a member of the seminal and seismic doom pioneers Trouble, who are widely regarded as one of the most important unsung American metal bands. Jason is a gifted guitarist and composer who has lived the music, both as a member of the critically-acclaimed band The Living Fields

6 North Central College

EARTHEN GR AVE B IOGR APHY (c o n t.)

and as the founder of Deadtide.com. Scott’s dedication has manifested as a drummer in numerous metal bands, booking shows and running radio station Rebel Radio. Tony has been in and around the metal scene for many years, and has worked with such bands as Trouble, Prong and Ministry. Mark has performed and recorded with several bands including Trifog. And while Rachel had never been in a metal band per se, her status as an internationally acclaimed classical violin soloist has taken her all over the world as both performer and music ambassador. While on tour for classical performances, Rachel often visits rock radio stations to perform metal songs and discuss the music’s intensity and compositional complexity.

Earthen Grave emerged late in 2008. As Jason recalls, “I had just finished writing The Living Fields’ new album and was on a Saint Vitus (the pioneering ‘80s doom metal band from Los Angeles) kick, and I just started writing these doom riffs. I was wondering who I could play this stuff with, so I reached out to Scott and asked him what he thought, and things just snowballed.” Enlisting Ron in their project, the trio soon had their first jam. Jason says, “The first rehearsal was tough, but after we sorted out some issues with downtuning, things really jelled.” The band put out an ad looking for a vocalist, and Mark responded the very next day. He recollects, “I saw Scott’s name in the ad, so I knew it was serious. I knew of Ron from Trouble. The minute we played for the first time, it felt right. I knew immediately that I wanted to be in this band.”

Then Scott - who had known Rachel for many years through the local metal scene - invited her to a rehearsal. Rachel brought along her new instrument, a custom built 6-string cousin of the electric violin. She says, “I’ve been listening to metal for most of my life. And for 15 years, I had been playing metal on acoustic violin. But the first time I jammed with Earthen Grave,

it was so much more intense than anything I had previously experienced – playing metal loud felt amazing.” Jason adds, “We knew from that rehearsal that we definitely wanted Rachel in the band. She brings a completely different dimension to the music. Violins have often been a part of metal, but usually playing parts underneath or above the band. This time, an electric violin will be woven into the DNA of the band as a core instrument.

Tony was the final piece. As he puts it, “I went to practice with them, and immediately I could tell they had something really interesting happening. Yes, the doom thing is there, but with a fresh twist, with different melodies and tempos. And what Rachel brings is just totally new.” He continues, “But what made the decision to join easy for me is the integrity of the people in the band, and the love with which they play.”

The band is dedicated to exploring new possibilities for the genre. Jason says, “It’s not about being the heaviest band or the slowest – it’s about having good songs and playing them live.” “Scott, Tony and I played doom metal before it was even called that,” Ron continues. “And for Jason, the music we pioneered was his influence. We’re bringing the strands of the music together - and with Rachel using the violin as a core component of a metal band, we’re taking the genre on a new journey.

Earthen Grave has become a band to be reckoned with for the purest of reasons. “We all have a deep passion for music and for metal,” Ron concludes. “That’s the basis of every note we play.” With their collective experience and talent, this band is dedicated to leaving their mark on the metal world.

www.earthengrave.com [email protected]

1-773-704-0539

7North Central College

REVIEWS FOR D ISM AL TIMES

HELLRIDEMUSIC.COM – “Earthen Grave’s Dismal Times rewards increasingly on repeated listen ... Rachel Barton Pine, an accomplished and respected classical violinist, makes her strings burn, soar and rip, lending the material here a very unique edge... You can just see the heads banging in your mind ... and over the thrash the violin skitters, stabs and saws... trust me, you are unlikely to have ever heard anything quite like it ... If the doom gods are with us, this band will stay around and continue to produce the kind of unique, powerful and thoughtful music contained on Dismal Times.”

MAXIMUMMETAL.COM– 4.5 out of 5 – “Pure, head-banging bliss! ... This group is onto something unique and fresh. What really sets the sextet apart is the inclusion of one Rachel Barton Pine on violin and the way her parts are written into the compositions... between her riffing with the guitars, she exhibits abundant fills, as well as leads, all in places where you’d expect to hear guitar leads. No mere atmospherics or chordal reinforcement here; even when the band reaches into high speed thrash territory - see “Death on the High Seas” - the effect achieved with the additional layer is astounding, let alone the prowess with which she plays.”

DOOMMANTIA.COM – “Fresh sounding Metal that crosses over many styles while retaining a sense of originality ... I can picture the hair flying ... Rachel Barton Pine’s musicianship shines throughout... The mixture of screeching violin and chugging guitars is very unique and it works ... Can’t wait till the band gives us a full length with all originals... they have all the songwriting capabilities to make one of the best albums ever.”

DECIBEL MAGAZINE – “This writer got a chance to see the band live, and my head almost came unscrewed. The phrase ‘tighter than a gnat’s ass’ comes to mind.”

MINDOVERMETAL.ORG – “The vocals are strong, sounding like Chris Cornell back when he had a set. And in fact, much of the music is gathered from the past one way or another, but in the best ways possible. This is clearly evident in their crown jewel, violinist Rachel Barton Pine, whose deft interplaying and extensive classical background add to the group’s unique character... EPs this promising portend crushing full lengths...”

CHICAGO READER – “Earthen Grave’s deeply grounded sound (‘bout six feet under, I’d say) fidgets like a seismograph needle between thrash, doom, stoner rock, classic metal, and psychedelia. Their lineup includes veterans of Trouble, the Living Fields, and Trifog, but what makes them more than your standard five headbangers in jeans is member six, violinist Rachel Barton Pine, a world-class classical player who debuted with the CSO at age ten). Pine is a very public metal fan of long standing, and when she lets her freak flag fly in Earthen Grave—she plays an electrified six-string monster called a Viper—it gives the band’s music a jarring and otherworldly edge.”

2010 GREAT PERFOR MER OF I LL INOIS

This past summer, Rachel received the 2010 Great Performer of Illinois award. The award was given at the annual Great Performers of Illinois festival, a three-day event held at the Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park in Chicago. Rachel closed the festival on Sunday by playing three sets: On baroque violin with her period-instrument chamber ensemble, Trio Settecento; on her 1742 “ex-Soldat” Guarneri del Gesu as soloist with the Illinois Symphony Orchestra; and on her custom built 6-string flying-V electric violin with Earthen Grave. After the sun set and storm clouds rolled in, Earthen Grave played a full 45-minute set of mostly original ma-terial and select covers, including the rainbow classic, Stargazer, accompanied by additional violinists Hannah Barton & Edgar Gabriel, and cellist Mike Block. Video of the performance can be seen on www.youtube.com/earthengrave.

North Central College thanks its Fine and Performing Arts 2010-2011 season event partners. The following establishments have made generous contributions in support of the fine and performing arts.

PARTNERS

BUSINESSES:HAWTHORNE CREDIT UNION1519 N. Naper Blvd., Naperville630-369-4070 • ehawthorne.org

NAPERVILLE DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP212 S. Webster St., Naperville630-305-7701 • naper.org

LIMOS WITHOUT LIMITS1911 Glacier Park Ave., Suite 601Naperville888-888-8108 • limoswithoutlimits.com

RESTAURANTS:BANGKOK VILLAGE22 E. Chicago Ave., Naperville 630-369-9756 • bangkokvillage.com

BLACKFINN16 W. Jefferson Ave., Naperville630-717-0400 • blackfinnchicago.com

CAFE BUONARO’S300 E. 5th Ave., Naperville630-717-0006 • cafebuonaros.com

CATCH 3535 S. Washington St., Naperville 630-717-3500 • catch35.com

HEAVEN ON SEVEN224 S. Main St., Naperville630-717-0777 • heavenonseven.com

KUMA’S216 S. Washington St., Naperville630-369-8500 • kumas.us

RAFFI’S ON 5TH200 E. Fifth Ave., Naperville630-961-8203 • raffison5th.com

TANGERINE CAFÉ47 E. Chicago Ave., Naperville630-717-7227 • tangerinenaperville.com

HOTELS:BEST WESTERN1617 Naperville Rd., Naperville630-505-0200 • bestwestern.com

COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT1155 E. Diehl Rd., Naperville630-505-0550 • marriott.com

FAIRFIELD INN & SUITES BY MARRIOTT1820 Abriter Court, Naperville630-577-1820 • marriott.com/chifn

HARRISON HOUSE26 N. Eagle St., Naperville630-420-1117 • harrisonhousebb.com

HILTON GARDEN INN28351 Dodge Dr., Warrenville630-393-3223 • napervillewarrenville.hgi.com

HOTEL ARISTA2139 City Gate Lane (Route 59 and I-88) Naperville 630-579-4100 • hotelarista.com

FAIRFIELD INN & SUITES1820 Abriter Court, Naperville630-577-1820 • marriott.com/chifn

RESIDENCE INN BY MARRIOT28500 Bella Vista Pkwy, Warrenville630-393-3444 • marriott.com

SPRING HILL SUITES4305 Weaver Pkwy, Warrenville630-393-0400 • springhillwarrenville.com

WYNDHAM LISLE3000 Warrenville Rd., Lisle630-505-1000 • wyndhamlislehotel.com

Partnership Insert_2010-2011.indd 1 4/6/2011 11:50:56 AM

10 North Central College

Presents

Rachel Barton Pine

Saturday, April 30, 20118:00 p.m.

Presented atWentz Concert Hall

171 E. Chicago Avenue, Naperville, Illinoiswww.northcentralcollege.edu/show

2010 – 2011 Fine Arts Performances Sponsors

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

11North Central College

R ACHEL BARTON PINE B IOGR APHY

“An exciting, boundary-defying performer - Pine displays a power and confidence that puts her in the top echelon.” - The Washington Post

In both life and art, violinist Rachel Barton Pine has an extraordinary gift for connecting with her audiences. She has received worldwide acclaim for her virtuosic technical mastery, lustrous tone and perceptive performances. Her passion for research allows her to bring emotionally charged, historically informed interpretations to her diverse repertoire, and her work as a philanthropist continues to inspire the next generation of artists and concertgoers.

Highlights of her 2010-2011 season include performances with Netherland’s Radio Kamer Filharmonie at the Concertgebouw, Bournemouth Symphony, Orquesta Sinfonica de Chile, Turkey’s Bilkent Symphony Orchestra, Mexico’s Orquesta Sinfonica de la UANL, Orquestra Sinfonica Brasileira, as well as appearances with the Stamford, Springfield, Lake Geneva, Asheville, Shreveport and Jacksonville Symphonies, the Illinois, Riverside and Brevard Philharmonics, and the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra. These concerts include concertos by Barber, Brahms, Bruch, Beethoven, Clement, Glazunov, Mozart, Szymanowski, Tchaikovsky and Vivaldi. Her period instrument chamber ensemble, Trio Settecento, will be featured at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C., and at the 2011 Boston Early Music Festival. Recital appearances include dates in Dayton, Ohio and North Central College in Naperville, Ill., for the Ladies Morning Musical Club in Montreal, and return engagements with the Montreal and Amelia Island Chamber Music Festivals.

In May, 2011, Pine will release Capricho Latino, a collection of unaccompanied virtuoso pieces from Spain and Latin America, on the Cedille label. Also in 2011, Warner Classics will release her performance

of the Glazunov Violin Concerto, recorded with the Russian National Orchestra conducted by José Serebrier.

Pine has appeared as soloist with many of the world’s most prestigious ensembles, including North America’s Chicago, St. Louis, Dallas, Vancouver, Syracuse, Montreal, Atlanta and Baltimore Symphonies; Buffalo and Rochester Philharmonics; and Philadelphia and Louisville Orchestras. Overseas, she has performed with the Vienna, Iceland, New Zealand and Budapest Symphonies; the Royal Scottish and Belgian National Orchestras; the Israel, Mozarteum and Scottish Chamber Orchestras, and the Royal Philharmonic. She has worked with such renowned conductors as Charles Dutoit, Zubin Mehta, Erich Leinsdorf, Neeme Järvi, Marin Alsop, José Serebrier and Placido Domingo and has collaborated with such leading artists as Daniel Barenboim, Christoph Eschenbach, William Warfield, Christopher O’Riley and Mark O’Connor. Her festival appearances have included Marlboro, Ravinia, El Paso, Vail and Salzburg. Last season she made her recital debuts in New York and Tokyo, and offered the world premiere of the last movement of Samuel Barber’s long-lost 1928 Violin Sonata at the Montreal Chamber Music Festival. She recently played for the President of Ghana and the President of Singapore as well as for the Justices at the U.S. Supreme Court. She frequently collaborates with living composers; Augusta Read Thomas has written a number of violin works for Pine and she was the second violinist to play John Corigliano’s entire Red Violin Concerto, working closely with him on the interpretation.

Pine has earned critical acclaim for her prolific discography of 16 recordings. For Beethoven & Clement Violin Concertos, released in 2008 on the Cedille label, Pine performed a centerpiece of the violin repertoire, the Beethoven Concerto, as well as the world premiere recording of

12 North Central College

R ACHEL BARTON PINE B IOGR APHY (c o n t.)

Clement’s D Major Violin Concerto, unearthed from 200 years of obscurity. The album was recorded with London’s Royal Philharmonic conducted by José Serebrier. Her American Virtuosa: Tribute to Maud Powell features rarely-heard Victorian-era gems arranged by America’s first internationally acclaimed violinist. Her 2005 album Scottish Fantasies for Violin and Orchestra features Pine with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, conductor Alexander Platt and famed Scottish fiddler Alasdair Fraser performing evocative works based on traditional Scottish melodies. Her Solo Baroque album highlights two of Bach’s masterpieces for unaccompanied violin and their predecessors. An album of Brahms and Joachim Concertos in collaboration with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and conductor Carlos Kalmar features performances of both Joachim’s and Pine’s own cadenzas for the Brahms Concerto and was nominated for a 2004 GRAMMY Award as “Best Engineered Album, Classical.” Previous acclaimed recordings on the Cedille label include Violin Concertos by Black Composers of the 18th and 19th Centuries, nominated for a National Public Radio (NPR) Heritage Award; the complete Handel Sonatas for Violin and Continuo; 20th-century duos on Double Play; and an album of virtuoso pieces entitled Instrument of the Devil. In 1994, Pine released her much-heralded debut recording Homage to Sarasate with pianist Samuel Sanders on the Dorian label.

Pine holds prizes from several of the world’s leading competitions, including a gold medal at the 1992 J.S. Bach International Violin Competition in Leipzig, Germany. She was the first American and, at age 17, the youngest person to ever win this honor. Other top awards came from the Queen Elizabeth (Brussels, 1993), Kreisler (Vienna, 1992), Szigeti (Budapest, 1992) and Montreal (1991) International Violin Competitions. She won prizes for her interpretation of the Paganini Caprices at both the Szigeti Competition and the 1993 Paganini

International Violin Competition in Genoa. She often performs the complete Paganini Caprices and the complete Bach Sonatas and Partitas (each cycle in a single evening).

Pine writes her own cadenzas to many of the works she performs including concertos by Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart and Paganini. Last fall, Carl Fischer published The Rachel Barton Pine Collection, a collection of original compositions, arrangements, cadenzas and editions penned or arranged by Pine, which earned her the distinction of being the only living artist and first woman to join great musicians like Fritz Kreisler and Jascha Heifetz in Carl Fischer’s Masters Collection series. Pine is also Music Advisor and Editor of Maud Powell Favorites, the only published compilation of Powell’s transcriptions, Powell’s cadenza for the Brahms Violin Concerto, and the music dedicated to, commissioned by, or closely associated with Powell.

Pine is also an avid performer of historically informed interpretations of baroque, renaissance and medieval music on baroque violin, viola d’amore, renaissance violin and rebec. She regularly performs with John Mark Rozendaal and David Schrader as the period instrument ensemble Trio Settecento, and often appears as a guest artist with such groups as the Newberry Consort. In September 2009, Cedille Records released Trio Settecento’s album, A German Bouquet, a selection of German Baroque era works with popular pieces by Bach and Buxtehude as well as rarely heard repertoire by artists including Johann Schop, Georg Muffat and Johann Georg Pisendel. Featuring Pine on baroque violin, Rozendaal on viola da gamba and ‘cello and Schrader on harpsichord and organ, A German Bouquet follows up the group’s highly successful An Italian Sojourn from 2007. The trio will continue to explore the character and complexion of Baroque music as it developed in various regions of Europe in future albums focusing on music from France and the British Isles.Pine is committed to encouraging

13North Central College

R ACHEL BARTON PINE B IOGR APHY (c o n t.)

the next generation to experience the transformative power of the arts and works to expand awareness of and appreciation for classical music. Since 1997, she has been an instructor at Mark O’Connor’s Fiddle Camp. She teaches chamber music, coaches youth orchestras, gives master classes, conducts workshops at universities, adjudicates music competitions, creates special programs for children and school groups, and offers spoken program notes or pre-concert conversations for audiences of all ages. In 2007, she received the prestigious Studs Terkel Humanities Service Awards for her work in music education.

A fan of rock and heavy metal since her pre-teens, Pine’s ability to see the connecting threads between classical and rock music makes her the perfect bridge between generations of music fans. Hailed as an artistic ambassador, she often visits rock radio stations and rock clubs to perform her own arrangements of rock and metal songs followed by classical pieces to illustrate how the two genres share a similar intensity and compositional complexity.

Pine serves on the faculty of Mark Wood’s Rock Orchestra Camp, and this season she will join the famed rock violinist in performance at the American String Teachers Association conference. She has also developed “Shredding with the Symphony,” an innovative orchestral initiative aimed at drawing new audience members to symphony concerts around the world. The program features Pine performing her own violin and orchestral arrangements of rock and metal classics by groups like AC/DC, Metallica, Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, Ozzy Osbourne and Nine Inch Nails, interspersed with powerful classical favorites by composers including Shostakovich, Sibelius, Paganini and Bruch. Another rock project on the horizon will have Pine collaborate with composers who will create classical pieces incorporating heavy metal influences. Last year, she acquired a custom-made extended range flying V electric violin and formed the six-piece doom/thrash metal band Earthen Grave.

The group frequently performs and recently released a critically-acclaimed five-song EP called Dismal Times.

Pine is President of the Rachel Elizabeth Barton Foundation, which assists young artists through various projects including the Instrument Loan Program, Grants for Education and Career, Global HeartStrings (supporting classical musicians in developing countries), and a curricular series developed in conjunction with the University of Michigan: The String Students’ Library of Music by Black Composers. She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Music Institute of Chicago, which recently named the “Rachel Barton Pine Violin Chair” in her honor.

She was a torchbearer in the 1996 Olympic torch relay and appeared as soloist for the opening ceremonies of the Paralympic Games in Atlanta. She performed her own arrangement of the national anthem at 1995 and 1996 Chicago Bulls playoff games, and at the 1996 Democratic National Convention. She has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning, appeared five times on NBC’s Today Show, and frequently has been a guest on nationally syndicated radio shows including Performance Today, Saint Paul Sunday and From the Top. Recent cover stories include Strad, Strings and International Musician.

A Chicago native, Pine began violin studies at age three and made her professional debut four years later at age seven with the Chicago String Ensemble. Her earliest appearances with the Chicago Symphony (at ages ten and fifteen) were broadcast on television. Her principal teachers were Roland and Almita Vamos and she has also studied with Ruben Gonzalez, Werner Scholz, Elmira Darvarova and several specialists in early music performance practice. Pine resides in Chicago with her husband. Her blog, podcast, and video channel may be accessed through her website www.rachelbartonpine.com. She performs on the Joseph Guarnerius del Gesu (Cremona 1742), known as the “ex-Soldat,” on generous loan from her patron.

15North Central College

PIANIST M AT THEW HAGLE B IOGR APHY

Pianist Matthew Hagle lives and works in the Chicago area, having performed at the Ravinia Festival’s Martin Theater, Symphony Center, the Chicago Cultural Center, and live from radio station WFMT, among other venues. He has performed in England, Australia, and Japan, as well as throughout the United States. His recent solo performances have explored the often neglected masterpieces of the 20th-century piano repertoire and connections between newer and older music, including piec-es of Copland, Carter, Ives, Schönberg, Messaien, Ligeti, and Takemitsu. Since 1999, he has been principal collabo-rator to violinist Rachel Barton Pine, joining her for performances around the United States including a recent recital at the U.S. Supreme Court, as well as appearances on National Public Radio’s Performance Today, St. Paul Sunday, and the Jerry Lewis Telethon. In 2005, he joined Ms. Pine for a series of performances of the complete works for violin and piano by Beethoven, live on WFMT. He also performs with mem-bers of the Chicago Symphony and as a piano duo with his wife, Mio.

Clavier Magazine has praised the “rare clarity and sweetness” of Mr. Hagle’s playing, which has been described by both Piano and Keyboard and the New Haven Register as “outstanding.” The Charleston Post and Courier commented on his “unusual sensitivity,” and the Springfield (MA) Union News applauded his “unaffected brilliance and profound

understanding,” “elegant phrases and majestic expostulations,” and “rhythmic dependability, guarded exuberance, and a glorious fourth and fifth-finger legato with which to sing gleaming upper-octave melodies.”

A dedicated teacher of piano, chamber music, music theory and composition, Mr. Hagle currently is on the faculty of the Music Institute of Chicago. His students in piano and composition have won prizes in local and national competitions. He also has taught at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, at Elmhurst College, and at the International Institute for Young Musicians at the Universities of Kansas and California at Santa Barbara. In addition to teaching composition, Mr. Hagle has composed pieces for solo flute and piano that have been performed in Germany and Japan. He was a laureate of the 1997 American Pianists Association Competition, and one of 36 pianists chosen to compete in the 2000 Sydney International Piano Competition.

Matthew Hagle is a graduate of the Peabody Conservatory (B.M.) and of Yale University (M.M., M.M.A., D.M.A), receiving faculty prizes in piano, ac-companying, and music theory. He has also received a Fulbright Grant to study piano privately in London. His teach-ers were Claude Frank, Robert Weirich, Donald Currier and Maria Curcio Diamond.

16 North Central College

R ACHEL BARTON PINE PROGR A M

Liszt ..................................................................................................................La lugubre GondolaLiszt .......................................................................................................................Die drei ZigeunerLiszt ....................................................................................................................................Elegy No. 1Liszt ....................................................................................................................................Elegy No. 2Liszt ..........................................................................................................Grand Duo Concertante

INTERMISSION

Janacek .....................................................................................................................................SonataRavel ........................................................................................................................................ Tzigane

PRESS QUOTES

“A greatly gifted young violinist…her sound was rich and commanding.” — The New York Times

“Barton has everything required -- a big burnished tone; the brilliance, agility and precision of a bel canto diva. Above all, she has the knack for reaching out to an audience and holding them at awed attention in a manner all her own.” — Chicago Tribune

“An exciting, boundary-defying performer - Pine displays a power and confidence that puts her in the top echelon of recitalists.” — Washington Post

“Rachel Barton Pine really may be the most charismatic, the most virtuosic, and the most compelling American violinist of her generation.” — All Music Guide

“Pine is an extraordinary violinist. She played [the concerto] with astonishing ease, bringing a burnished tone and pristine articulation and intonation to the most furious passages. Pine played expressively, freely and, in all cases, appropriately. Pine’s rhythmic and metric flex and dynamic and coloristic shadings contributed the emotional investment that late-Romantic music in general and this piece in particular demand.” — Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

“Barton is the real thing, a prodigious talent with obvious personality and a clear-eyed vision. Her technical skills can make the jaw drop. She has a full, singing sweet tone and plays with a confidence and elan that make an audience’s heart soar.” — Chicago Sun-Times

“For violinist Rachel Barton Pine, being sensational is normal - she’s arguably one of the greatest violinists performing today. Paganini couldn’t have played it better.” — The Gazette (Colorado Springs)

“One of the most impressive examples of violin playing I’ve ever witnessed.” — Iceland Morgunbladed

“Few can play as beautifully as Barton … the commanding ease at which she applied fingers and horsehair to the breathless roulades and passage work was enough to put the crowd in her thrall, as if they weren’t fans already.” — Chicago Tribune

18 North Central College

Presents

Anonymous 4

Friday, May 6, 20118:00 p.m.

Presented atWentz Concert Hall

171 E. Chicago Avenue, Naperville, Illinoiswww.northcentralcollege.edu/show

2010 – 2011 Fine Arts Performances Sponsors

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

19North Central College

ANONYMOUS 4 B IOGR APHIES

RUTH CUNNINGHAM MARSHA GENENSKY SUSAN HELLAUER JACQUELINE HORNER-KWIATEK

Renowned for their unearthly vocal blend and virtuosic ensemble singing, the four women of Anonymous 4 combine historical scholarship with contemporary performance intuition to create their magical sound. Celebrating their 25th anniversary during the 2011-12 season, the ensemble has performed on major concert series and at festivals throughout North America, Europe, and Asia. Enchanted both by their live performances and by their twenty-one recordings of medieval, contemporary, and American music, Anonymous 4’s listeners have bought nearly two million copies of the group’s albums on the harmonia mundi label.

Anonymous 4’s debut recording for harmonia mundi USA, An English Ladymass, was named 1992 Classical Disc of the Year by CD Review. Albums since have received numerous accolades including France’s prestigious Diapason d’Or, Classic CD’s Disc of the Year, Classic FM’s Early Music Recording of the Year, several Gramophone Editor’s Choice awards, Italy’s Antonio Vivaldi Award, and Le Monde de la Musique’s Choc award. The group’s 2004 release, American Angels (18th-20th century folk psalmody, hymnody, and gospel songs), spent 76 weeks on Billboard’s Top Classical Chart and received a perfect 10/10 from ClassicsToday.com. Their 2005 release, The Origin of Fire (sequel to their 1997 best-seller, 11,000 Virgins, music of Hildegard of Bingen) was named in Amazon.com’s Top 25 Classical CDs for 2005. For two consecutive years (2004 and 2005), Anonymous 4 was voted one of Billboard’s Top Classical Artists of the Year. Gloryland (the 2006 sequel to American Angels), featuring Darol Anger on fiddles and mandolins and Mike Marshall on mandolins and guitar, was a Gramophone Editor’s Choice for 2006. An anthology of the group’s favorite chants from 11th-14th century Europe, entitled Four Centuries of Chant, met great acclaim

upon its release in 2009. Fall 2010 marked the release of The Cherry Tree - their first new recording in four years, and their 18th original recording for harmonia mundi usa. With the miracle ballad The Cherry Tree Carol as inspiration, the album features an American version of the carol, a few of its medieval carol ancestors, and other medieval British carols and British-rooted American songs.

Anonymous 4 has long enjoyed collaborations with contemporary composers. “Anthology 25,” a concert program celebrating the group’s 25th anniversary season (2011-2012), features a new work by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Lang. Anonymous 4 appears regularly as the voice of Joan of Arc in Voices of Light, an oratorio with silent film, composed by Richard Einhorn, with performances under Marin Alsop (Vienna Symphony; Concordia Orchestra at Lincoln Center), and under Lucinda Carver (Hong Kong Philharmonic). In 2000-01, Anonymous 4 and the Chilingirian String Quartet premiered John Tavener’s newly commissioned work, The Bridegroom, included in their 2002 release, Darkness into Light. The ensemble commissioned Sir Peter Maxwell Davies to write A Carnival of Kings, premiered and recorded on their 2003 release,Wolcum Yule (which also included works by John Tavener, Geoffrey Burgon and Richard Rodney Bennett). Other new works for Anonymous 4 include Steve Reich’s Know What is Above You, and Richard Einhorn’s A Carnival of Miracles, both commissioned by WNYC Radio.

Anonymous 4 has appeared on a wide range of radio and television programs, including NPR’s All Things Considered, Performance Today and Weekend Edition, MPR’s St. Paul Sunday, WETA’s Millennium of Music, Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion, and ZDF’s Ersteklassich! (Germany). The ensemble has been featured on A&E’s Breakfast with the Arts, CBS Sunday Morning and Australian ABC’s Access All Areas, as well as on Discovery Health Channel and Fox News Channel.

20 North Central College

ANONYMOUS 4 PROGR A M

Secret VoicesMusic from the Convent of Las Huelgas, c. 1300

Sequence: Virgines egregieConductus: Ave maris stella

Kyrie: Rex virginum amator Gloria: Spiritus et almeSanctus & Benedictus

Conductus-Motet: O Maria virgo/O Maria maris/IN VERITATE

Conductus: Verbum bonum et suaveConductus: In virgulto gracie Lament: O monialis conscio

Benedicamus domino à 3 (rondellus)

Song: Si vocatus ad nupciasConductus: Mater patris et filia

Benedicamus domino a 2 Song: Omnium in te

- Intermission -

GlorylandSacred Music from the American Folk Tradition

I’m on my journey home (O who will come and go with me) revival songJewett (Amazing grace, how sweet the sound) revival song

Sweet Hour of Prayer gospel song

Wayfaring Stranger religious balladPleading Saviour (Gently, Lord, O gently lead us) folk hymn

Merrick (Saviour, visit thy plantation) revival song

Blooming Vale (O, were I like a feathered dove) fuging tune

Shall We Gather at the River gospel songParting Friends (Farewell, my friends) folk hymn

Angel Band gospel song

22 North Central College

ANONYMOUS 4 PROGR A M NOTES

Anonymous 4 - Sisters in Spirit

Secret Voices: Music from the Codex Las Huelgas (c. 1300)In the early 1180s, King Alfonso VIII of Castile founded a convent near Burgos in north-central Spain, Las Huelgas (“place of refuge”), for royal and noble women seeking the religious life. In 1188, it was incorporated as a house of the Cistercian order. Although Cistercians were supposed to live a simple life, these ladies gained a degree of ecclesiastical jurisdiction and independence that would seem shocking today. The abbess could say mass, hear confessions, and make other decisions and rulings such as a priest or bishop might do. Indeed, the cloistered, submissive life of a Cistercian was not reflected in daily life of the aristocratic ladies at Las Huelgas.

The Codex Las Huelgas, copied for the nuns of Las Huelgas in the first quarter of the 14th century, is an anthology of polyphony and monophonic Latin song that spans the entire 13th and early 14th centuries. There are 186 works in the collection: many are unique to this source, many others are only found in Iberian sources, and there are also several from the mainstream of the Parisian school of composition.

There is some controversy about who sang these songs. Some scholars believe that it must have been a hired choir of male chaplains who did the singing. Others believe as we do: that the nuns themselves sang them -- from simple plainchant and rhythmic monophonic song to the most complex and virtuosic polyphonic conductus and motets. Despite the Cistercian prohibition that would forbid these ladies from singing polyphony, it seems that it was an “open secret” that polypho-ny was both sung and enjoyed at Las Huelgas.

The Codex Las Huelgas includes sacred music in every genre of the 13th century. There are conductus, like Ave maris stella and Mater patris et filia, with un-predictable rhythms and lively hockets. The 4-voice conductus-motet O Maria virgo/O Maria maris stella/IN VERITATE is a hybrid genre, found in this Codex. The playful Benedicamus domino à 3 is written in rondellus fashion -- like a catch or round -- typical of 13th-century British polyphony. The monophonic song O monialis conscio is a heartfelt lament written on the death of a beloved member of the sisterhood. We sing two of the many elegant duos in the Codex: Verbum bonum et suave honors the “Ave” of Gabriel’s Annunciation to Mary, and In virgulto gracie speaks of virgins in gleaming white mantles, such as those worn by Cistercian monastics. Two songs on the subject of the wise and foolish virgins (Virgines egregie, and Si vocatus ad nupcias), praise the wise virgins, among whom the sisters would have certainly counted themselves.

The Codex contains many polyphonic works intended for the Mass. Most of these are troped -- that is, they are enlarged with prose or poetry in addi-tion to the normal liturgical texts, like the Kyrie: Rex virginum amator, and Gloria: Spiritus et alme.

The repertoire of the Codex Las Huelgas provides for us the proof that Anony-mous 4, far from singing “men’s music,” have been following in the footsteps of their much-older sisters, who had no difficulty (despite censure from their male monastic superiors and the pope) in finding and performing the most beautiful, virtuosic, avant-garde polyphonic music of their time.

23North Central College

ANONYMOUS 4 PROGR A M NOTES (c o n t.)

Gloryland: Anglo-American Spiritual SongsWe tend to think of American psalmody and hymnody as being uniquely Ameri-can. In fact, the earliest Anglo-American sacred music was imported from the British Isles, or was written in imitation of English music, and the notation in which much of it comes down to us has its roots in a sight-singing system first devised by the medieval monk, Guido of Arezzo, and used throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance in England.

But American spiritual songs have their own distinct life and character. They are filled with imagery of the journey, of birds and flying, of reaching and cross-ing over the Jordan River. Their narrators wish for wings, to fly to the next world; or they yearn to gather with loved ones at the river and to find green pastures beyond the banks of that shining shore. Most of these songs have themselves been traveling for a very long time, in a wonderful intertwining of oral and written traditions that has flourished for many generations.

The first American composers were very much influenced by English music and by English poetry, especially that of Isaac Watts. With its imitative entrances and long, ravishing phrases, the fuging tune Blooming Vale seems to inherit from Re-naissance polyphony. The tunes for the folk hymn Parting Friends and for Jewett, a mid-nineteenth century revival song identifiable by its rousing chorus, were either adapted from oral tradition or newly composed and arranged in spare three-part settings by tune book compilers from the Southern United States, who doubled as itinerant singing schoolmasters. The tunes they composed and arranged are known as shape-note tunes, and the tunebooks they published during the first half of the nineteenth century are referred to as shape-note tunebooks, be-cause they contain a musical notation using four different shapes for noteheads intended to help students to learn to read music quickly and easily (triangle for fa, circle for sol, rectangle for la, and diamond for mi. Fa, sol, la, mi, the four of Guido’s original six sight-singing syllables that were still being used to teach music read-ing skills in England and in the United States).

Although no new four-shape tunebooks appeared after the mid-1850’s, certain of the old four-shape tunebooks have never gone out of fashion. The shape-note singing tradition continues to flourish; and shape-note singer/composers fre-quently make new shape-note arrangements, like the haunting four-part setting of the religious ballad Wayfaring Stranger (1935).

Anonymous 4 records exclusively for harmonia mundi usawww.Anonymous4.com | www.facebook.com/anon4 | Twitter: @a4tweets

Anonymous 4 is managed exclusively by: Alliance Artist Management

98B Long Highway, Little Compton, RI 02837TEL (401) 592-0320 FAX (401) 592-0321

24 North Central College

Family SeriesPresents

The Theatreworks USA production of

“Click, Clack, Moo”

Saturday, May 7, 201110:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m.

Presented atPfeiffer Hall

310 E. Benton Avenue, Naperville, Illinoiswww.northcentralcollege.edu/show

2010 – 2011 Fine Arts Performances Sponsors

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

25North Central College

Theatreworks USA

Barbara Pasternack Artistic Director

Ken ArthurProducing Director

Presents

CLICK, CLACK, MOOBook by

Billy AronsonLyrics by

Kevin Del AguilaMusic by

Brad Alexander

Based on the book by Doreen Cronin

with illustrations by Betsy Lewin

Used with permission of Pippin Properties, Inc.

Music Direction byLisa DeSpain

Orchestrations byBrad Alexander

Stage ManagerBrendan J. O’Brien

Originally Directed byJohn Rando

Originally Choreographed byWendy Seyb

Directed and Choreographed byKeith Coughlin

Scenic Design byBeowulf Boritt

Costume Design byLora LaVon

26 North Central College

CAST (a l p h a b e t i c a l b y r o l e)

Darlene ......................................................................................................................... Sally EidmanDuck ..............................................................................................................................Chris IgnacioFarmer Brown ............................................................................................................Jake OttosenJenny ....................................................................................................................... Shayla SpradleyLoretta ...........................................................................................................Philip Jackson SmithMaddie ............................................................................................................... Rebecca Chicoine

The taking of pictures and/or making of visual or sound recording is expressly forbidden.Please check the houseboard for any program changes.

This program from Theatreworks USA is supported, in part, with public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts,

the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency,

and by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council

.The actors and stage manager employed in this production are members of

Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States.

MUSICAL NUMBERS

“The Farm of Farmer Brown” ...............................Farmer Brown, the Cows, the Chickens“Cold” .................................................................................................................................. The Cows“Get Down” ................................................................................................................................ Duck“Cows Type” ................................................................................................ Farmer Brown, Jenny“Mad Cows” .......................................................................................................... Maddie, Darlene“Loretta’s Anthem” .............................................................................Loretta, Maddie, Darlene“Boiled Chickens” .................................................................................The Chickens, the Cows“Your Way or the Highway” ................................................................... Jenny, Farmer Brown“Negotiation” .......................................................................... Jenny, Farmer Brown, the Cows“The Farm of Farmer Brown”(reprise) ...................................................................... Company

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featured shows and ticket giveaways in the Milwaukee, Chicago, and Madison areas.

27North Central College

WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST (a l p h a b e t i c a l b y r o l e)

SALLY EIDMAN (Darlene) is delighted to make her Theatreworks de-moo (debut)! Favorite Northwestern University credits include Lucille in Parade and Mrs. Noyes in Not Wanted on the Voyage. Love and thanks to God, my family, friends, and The Mine for their endless support.

CHRIS IGNACIO (Duck) is thrilled to begin the new year as a singing duck. His last appearance as a barnyard animal was in 2004, making this tour a rather nostalgic one. He humbly thanks all the wonderful people, and the fantastic accidents/coincidences that brought him to where he is now.

JAKE OTTOSEN (Farmer Brown) is a New York actor currently on his first national tour! A graduate of The Hartt School, some favorite roles include Mark in Rent (The Theater Co.), Bobby in Urinetown (Hartt), and various characters at the Sterling Renaissance Festival. He is a founding member of ByTheMummers, an interactive NY theater ensemble (www.bythemummers.com.)

SHAYLA SPRADLEY (Jenny) is “over the moon” to be touring with Click, Clack, Moo! She is a graduate of Webster Conservatory with a BFA in Musical Theatre. New York: Dancer/Singer for PHISH at Madison Square Garden, O Night Divine at York Theatre. National tour: Rockband Live! with MTV Games.

PHILIP JACKSON SMITH (Loretta) is excited to be a part of Click, Clack, Moo. The son of a children’s librarian, Phil was raised with a real love for children’s literature. Recent credits include: Barfee (Spelling Bee), Elliott (Band Geeks!), Cogsworth (Beauty and the Beast). Love to Marissa, Mom, and Dad.

REBECCA CHICOINE (Maddie) originally from the dairy state, is excited to get back to her roots with Click, Clack, Moo. Recent credits include Velma Gratch and the Way Cool Butterfly

(Vital Theatre), B.R.A.T.T. Camp (Music Theatre Company), Into the Woods (Porchlight Music Theatre). BA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

BILLY ARONSON (Book). Billy Aronson’s plays have been produced by Playwrights Horizons, Ensemble Studio Theatre and Woolly Mammoth Theatre; awarded a commission from the Magic Theatre and a NYFA grant; and published in Best American Short Plays. His new play, First Day of School, was produced by the SF Playhouse and by Philadelphia’s 1812 Productions. His writing for the musical theatre includes the original concept/ additional lyrics for the Broadway musical Rent and lyrics for No Dogs Allowed! TV writing credits include MTV’s “Beavis & Butthead,” Cartoon Network’s “Courage the Cowardly Dog,” Nickelodeon’s “Wonder Pets!” (head writer, first season), and PBS’s “Postcards From Buster” (Emmy nomination). He lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Lisa Vogel and their children, Jake and Anna. www.billyaronson

KEVIN DEL AGUILA (Lyrics) is the book writer of the hit musical Altar Boyz, which won the NY Outer Critics Circle Award, earned him a 2005 Drama Desk Award nomination and just completed its five-year Off-Broadway run at New World Stages. Kevin received the 2007 Heideman Award for his play The Greekest of Tragedies (Actors Theatre of Louisville), and his comedy 6 Story Building took top prize at the 2002 NY Fringe Festival. He has written for HBO, NBC and the Nickelodeon series “Wonder Pets!” Other musical collaborations with composer Brad Alexander include adaptations of the children’s books Lilly’s Big Day (part of Theatreworks USA’s musical revue If You Give a Pig a Pancake, directed by Kevin) and the upcoming I Have to Go. www.delaguila.info

28 North Central College

WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST (c o n t.)

BRAD ALEXANDER (Music) is honored to have written the music for Theatreworks USA’s Just So Stories, Lilly’s Big Day (from If You Give a Pig a Pancake), and the upcoming I Have to Go with Kevin Del Aguila. He and Adam Mathias won the 2008 Richard Rodgers Award and 2007 Jerry Bock Award for See Rock City & Other Destinations, which premiered at Barrington Stage Company and was recently workshopped with the Transport Group. Brad’s music has been featured on VH1, Lifetime, Showtime and Sony Records. He is a member of The BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop, National Academy of Popular Music, National Alliance for Musical Theatre, and The Dramatists Guild of America. www.bradalexander.com

KEITH COUGHLIN (Director/Choreographer) has worked as a singer, dancer, actor, choreographer and master class teacher across the country. Some of his choreography credits include: The Toxic Avenger Musical (2009 Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Off-Broadway Musical – New World Stages, NYC, Asst. Choreographer), Radio City Christmas Spectacular (Detroit Company, Asst. Director/Dance Captain), Thoroughly Modern Millie, South Pacific, Footloose, High School Musical (Choreographer). Graduate of the University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign.

BRENDAN J. O’BRIEN (Stage Manager) Theatreworks USA debut! Recent credits include Brownstone Breakdown (Ego Actus), Beauty and the Beast (Wagner College), and The Busy Little

Bee (Elephant Ensemble Theater). Also currently worked as the Technical Director for the Journey Church. BA from Wagner College. Proud Member AEA. Thanks to God for everything.

THEATREWORKS USA (Producer), founded in 1961, is America’s foremost professional theatre for young and family audiences. Its mission is to create imaginative and thought-provoking shows that are educational, entertaining and thought-provoking. Their 2010- 2011 touring repertoire includes Charlotte’s Web; A Christmas Carol; Click, Clack, Moo; Fancy Nancy & Other Story Books; Freedom Train; Junie B. Jones; The Lion, the Witch & the Wardrobe; The Mystery of King Tut; Seussical; and We the People. Theatreworks’ honors include a Drama Desk Award, Off - Broadway’s Lucille Lortel Award, the Jonathan Larson Performing Arts Foundation Award, the William M. Dawson Award for Programmatic Excellence given by the Association of Performing Arts Presenters and the Medal of Honor from the Actors’ Fund ofAmerica. www.TWUSA.org

ACTORS’ EQUITY ASSOCIATION, founded in 1913, represents more than 45,000 actors and stage managers in the U.S. Equity negotiates wages and working conditions, providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. Equity seeks to foster the art of live theatre as an essential component of our society. www.actorsequity.org

29North Central College

30 North Central College

Contemporary SeriesPresents

Ides of Marchfeaturing Jim Peterik

Saturday, May 21, 20118:00 p.m.

Presented atPfeiffer Hall

310 E. Benton Avenue, Naperville, Illinoiswww.northcentralcollege.edu/show

2010 – 2011 Fine Arts Performances Sponsors

PerformingArts

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE

31North Central College

IDES OF M ARCH B IOGR APHY

With its signature horn riff and one of the most famous opening lines in rock’n’roll, “I’m the friendly stranger in the black sedan, won’t you hop inside my car,” The Ides of March’s Vehicle has earned its place in rock history, but the story behind the Ides of March has a resonance that few bands can match.

The Ides are commonly referred to as “Chicago’s Band” and it’s easy to see why. Formed in 1965 in the Chicago suburb of Berwyn, all the members: Jim Peterik – lead vocal, lead guitar; Larry Millas – vocals, guitar, bass; Bob Bergland – bass, vocals, sax; Mike Borch – drums, vocals; Chuck Soumar – trumpet, percussion, vocals; and John Larson – trumpet, vocals, have been friends since grade school.

As freshmen and sophomore’s at Morton West High School studying Julius Caesar, the Ides of March was formed. The band developed a strong local following playing teen clubs, sock hops and after-school basketball games. Their determination led to a contract with London Parrot Records and their first single, You Wouldn’t Listen, made it to #42 on the Billboard charts and #7 on Chicago’s WLS survey in the spring of 1966.

The Ides of March toured America and Canada on weekends throughout the summer, while keeping up their high school education. In 1970 they got their big break. Warner Bros. Records signed them and released their million-seller, Vehicle. The song went to #1 in Cashbox and #2 in Billboard and became the fastest breaking single in Warner Bros. history.

The Ides, now in college, toured with bands such as Led Zeppelin, the Allman Brothers, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, The Grateful Dead and Poco. They appeared on many television shows including Dick Clark, Mama Cass, John Byner, Dennis Holey and many more. Vehicle,

which Jim Peterik wrote and sang, has since become a horn band classic, being performed on “The Tonight Show” by Tom Jones and Sammy Davis Jr. It was also the centerpiece of Sylvester Stallone’s motion picture smash, Lock Up.

In 1971, the Ides released L.A. Goodbye which stayed at #1 for five weeks on the Chicago charts. It is still a much-requested song on radio, currently on heavy rotation on The Drive, 97.1 in Chicago.

In 1973, after 15 singles and four albums, the Ides went on a 17-year sabbatical. Jim Peterik went on to platinum success as co-founder, songwriter and keyboardist with the group, Survivor, co-penning all of their hits including the motivational anthem from “Rocky III,” Eye Of The Tiger, as well as The Search Is Over, High On You, I Can’t Hold Back and Burning Heart from “Rocky IV.” He also co-wrote hits for 38 Special including Hold On Loosely, Caught Up In You, Fantasy Girl and Rockin’ Into The Night. He and Sammy Hagar wrote Heavy Metal for the animated classic of the same name. Many of these songs can be heard in a typical Ides set arranged in true Ides of March fashion.

In 1990, the original six members of the Ides of March, with the addition of longtime friend Scott May on keyboards and Dave Stahlberg on trombone, reunited for what was supposed to be a one-time concert for Berwyn’s Summerfaire. The event drew 25,000 fans and convinced the Ides to extend their tour indefinitely. Each year, their fan base continues to grow, not only drawing their loyal followers, but also their children and grandchildren. The Ide’s goodtime spirit never grows old!

The Ides of March is that rare commodity that still has all of its

32 North Central College

IDES OF M ARCH B IOGR APHY (c o n t.)

original members for the over 30 years since they started. It’s their special chemistry that makes every Ides show a memorable experience. Their trademark combination of horns and harmony and Peterik’s growling vocals always brings the audience to their feet.The Ides have never been a band to rest on their laurels. In 1998, Age Before Beauty was released. This EP features the title cut (with lyrics including “The fountain of youth is a state of mind, so move over cutie, it’s Age Before Beauty”). Also included is an instrumental adaptation of Vehicle called Friendly Stranger, currently an NBA favorite. In addition the Ides have recorded two much-played tributes to Chicago’s great baseball teams: Finally Next Year (Cubs) and Wild-Eyed

South-Side Boys (Sox) – a takeoff on Jim Peterik’s big hit with 38 Special, Wild-Eyed Southern Boys.

In addition to their greatest hits package, Ideology II.0, the Ides version of The Star Spangled Banner is included on the 911 Relief Project album called The Day America Cried, along with artists like Johnny Van Zant of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Don Barnes of 38 Special. As unusual as it seems, after 35 years of making music together, it appears that the best days of The Ides of March are still to come.

Paradise Artists, 108 East Matilija St. Ojai, California 93023

Tele: 805-646-8433 Fax: 805-646-3367

Stop by the snack bar at

right across the street from Pfeiffer Hall inside the Harold and Eva White

Activities Center.

THE CAGE

Hungry for a late night bite or

The Cage - open until midnight on Saturdays Harold and Eva White Activities Center l 325 E. Benton Ave.

dessert after the show?

The Cage.indd 1 3/24/2010 11:58:34 AM

North Central College Friends of the Arts members provide vital support to our Fine & Performing Arts program. They also enjoy an insider’s perspective on our outstanding productions, along with opportunities to mingle with artists, attend VIP events and join the college interest groups.

All Friends of the Arts have access to North Central College’s Concierge Services to purchase the best seats in the house for any production, complimentary ticket exchanges and personalized subscription seating. Friends of the Arts are also invited to exclusive events and receive special benefits. And dining is easy when you call a North Central College Dining Partner to make your reservation. Our perferred partners include some of the finest restaurants in Naperville.

Friends of the Arts membership begins with a contribution of $25. Each level of membership comes with an exclusive VIP benefits package.

To learn more about the Friends of the Arts program call Myrle-Marie Bongiovanni, Fine Arts Manager, or call Chad Pedigo, Box Office & Group Sales Manager, at 630-637-7469

FrIENDS OF ThE ArTSsupporting greAt perFormAnces

impresarioBravostanding ovationencoreperformanceovertureAudience

$10000 or more$5000-$9999$1000-$4999$500-$999$250-$499$100-$249$25-$99

Supporting Great Performances Footlight Insert 2010-2011.indd 1 11/10/2010 12:09:17 PM

35North Central College

IMPRESARIO ($10000 or more)Judy G. Stevenson

BRAVO ($5000 - $9999)

STANDING OVATION – ($1000 or more)Albert and Alpha BenedettiMichael and Carol BurkeJohn HafenrichterPaul and Sue LoscheiderBrian and Mary Jean LynchMr. John M. McCareins and Dr. Alicia G.

McCareinsNancy and Bill MitchellChad PedigoPrince Charitable TrustsRick and Pat SpencerJudy WehrliHal and Benna Wilde

ENCORE – ($500 - $999)Kathryne EsselburnHarold and Marcia Pendexter

PERFORMANCE – ($250 - $499)David HohJames and Tania McAndrewGary and Berneil MrozHubert and Martha PintoDonald SchaeferRonald and Dawn StruxnessRonald and Kay VanBuskirk

OVERTURE – ($100 - $249)Lauren BentelBoyd and Marilyn BriscoeWilliam C. Burke, IIIJames BurnerJames and Joanne ChiapelloJerry and Sandy DavisCraig and Carol DeanSam and Rebecca DempseyWilliam and Laurie DudleyRoger FritzSue and Nancy FritzJohn and Dora GlassDon and Pat HagmeyerToby HayerRoger and Sue HendricksonKathleen and Gerald HusarikCeleste JacklinDavid M. and Jennifer JohnsonJoel and Toni JohnsonTami Kidd-BrownSusan and John LeaverBarbara and Roger LiskaRussell and Ann MarineauTrista MattTom McRobertsLinda McShanePaula and John PalterMichelle PorcellinoCynthia Renne

Myra and Barry RiskedalDaniel W. and Margaret RyanJames and Maureen SaultJoanne and Russell SaultMichael Schroek and Mary PecoraPeter and Charlotte StrykerDr. and Mrs. John UnikKatherine P. Weber

AUDIENCE – (Up to $99)Joseph and Judith AugustJennifer B. BethmannJeanna M. BonamerKristina L. BonnHoward and Margaret BreedenLynne B. CaldwellDick and Dottie CarneyEmilie L. ClarkSharon ClarkJanet CoffeyMichael J. DempseyEd and Patti FeyMel and Carolyn FinzerElisabeth A. FisherBill and Beverly FrierPaula Lange-GarnerDr. Thomas O. and Marie GarnhartRon and Kandi GasperiniNorman and Judith GrobeElisabeth GrzywaRuth HeidornVictoria E. JozefEl Dora JuhaAbigail Kellermann and Sean DriscollGarth and Susan KennedyHazel and Clyde KleinJean KosiaraRichard and Cherie KraftJohn H. LoscheiderLarry and Helen LyonsShirley MontalboJennifer MatthewsPaul and Barbara MillerBonnie MizeRobert Murr Sr.Kathleen M. MusselmanMichael A. MusselmanStephen B. PeeblesJonna R. PetersonEvelyn Judie RamosDiana M. RedlienNelida RodriguezChristina M. RomanoPeter T. SiplaMichael E. SquireAbigail G. StarkAustin P. StevensonNancy TraceyJana K. TropperGenna M. WaldenMatthew F. WhalenZita WheelerJohn & Macie Zorn

2010 -2011 FR IENDS OF THE ARTS

We apologize if we have inadvertently made an error concerning your gift. Please contact the box office at 630-637-7469 so we can correct our records.

36 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS

GRAND BENEFACTORDr. Myron Wentz ‘63 and

Prudence ConleyBartley J. and Maricela ‘99

Madden

MAJOR BENEFACTORThe Kresge FoundationShige Masaki ’54 NagamuraConnie ‘50 and Gustav ‘48

SchoenherrJudy Meiley Stevenson

BENEFACTORBank of AmericaMimi ‘55 and Ian Rolland

MAJOR PATRONDon and Bernadine HacklRoger ’58 and Nadeane HrubyLoebl, Schlossman & Hackl,

ArchitectsLarry ’64 and Gail MeyerPark National BankDavid Andrew WentzSusan and Bob ’67 Wislow

PATRONAndrew Family FoundationComcastLeota Buss Ester ‘51First National Bank of

NapervilleHarris BankJohn and Rita HarvardJ.P.MorganNaperville JayceesMr. and Mrs. Donald R. Pletcher

’65Sara Lee FoundationMary Wegner ‘46 SchloerbJan and Peggy Schultz and

FamilyJacquelyn Lewis Wentz ‘63Hal and Benna WildeJames ’04 and Kathy Willett

OVATIONGary and Gloria BaumgartnerKevin and Carolyn BrahlerTrudy DickinsonFactory Card & Party OutletJ. Thomas GruenwaldBreck and Nancy ‘79 HansonFrank ‘98 and Carolyn HudetzJoseph and Patricia HudetzSamuel W. and Celia N. HuntDave and Dawn KelschRay and Paula KinneyJohn and Jeanine LehmanRon ’81 and Charmain

LueptowWayne ’54 and Marguerite ’53

LueptowMinuteman PressJames L. Moser Foundation

Mike and Maureen R. Naset

Northern TrustJeffrey ’76 and Teri OesterlePositively NapervilleSolar CommunicationsUSG CorporationBryan Paul Wentz

CONCERTOAnonymousJim ‘63 and Pat ‘63 BambuleJohn ‘60 and Norma BramsenDr. Gaylen R. Brubaker ‘72 and

Dr. Barbara Wildemuth ‘71Bulley & Andrews, LLCMr. Theodore E. DeschEsser Hayes Insurance GroupHitchcock Design GroupThe Hope GroupBarbara, James and Jeff

KnucklesBrian and Mary Jean LynchNancy, Charlie and Bill MitchellSelma ‘Sally’ B. MittelstadtHolly I. Myers ‘69Naperville Noon Lions ClubBill ‘74 and Cheryl NaumannEdward and Francine NavakasRichard ‘55 and Arlene ‘56

NorenbergNancy and Ron Nyberg FamilyHal and Marcia PendexterCarrie Johnsen Rough ‘74The Rubin FamilyManny and Pat Pulido SanchezJoyce, John ‘96 and Jennifer

SarffRobert ‘58 and Nancy Heyer ‘56

SchroederRick and Patricia SpencerAnita Wuertz Strauss ‘54Jean V. ThomasThe Louhon and Carolyn

Tucker FamilyThe Richard and Marguerite

Waters FamilyMarilyn Kubly Workman ‘54Dwight and Ruth Yackley

ARIAAdrian ‘02 and Jacqueline

Milbratz ‘03 AldrichAnderson’s BookshopsMr. and Mrs. Edward L.

Anderson ‘38AnonymousLeon ‘55 and Eleanor ‘56

ArnesonThe Bangkok Village

Kevin ’99 and Jennifer (Medows) ’01 Barrett

Mrs. M. I. BartelDennis Bauman ’54 and Jean

Ranson ’57 BaumanJan ‘75 and Larry BaumgartnerShane BeardEsther Benjamin ‘90 and Tim

Webb

Thomas F. Bennington, Jr. ‘84Steve and Rachel BergersonTodd Berry and Margaret LewisErin L. Bishop ‘93Janice Borla and Jack MouseWalter and Sally BorlaDavid Bowers ‘73Ruth Bauserman Brown ’52Nancy ‘79 and Jim ButerbaughDr. Richard F. Calhoun ‘52The Carriage ClubCasey’s FoodsChannell FamilyDoug and Margey ColbethJohn A. and Susan K. ColucciHoward L. Cosyns ‘49Wayne and Mary Lou

CowlishawBonnie Eisele-DeMerle and Les

DeMerleJerry ‘64 and Karen de St. PaerThe Dempsey FamilyMargaret (Walcott) Double

(1936-37) ‘39Mr. and Mrs. Tom W. Drake ‘58Cleve E. Carney Fund of

The DuPage Community Foundation

Bill ‘68 and Carol EdsonWilliam and Mary EllingsonJan Eisele Erickson and Bruce

EricksonMark ‘95, ‘07 and Nicole ‘97, ‘00

EverixHarris ‘51 and Ruth ‘52 FawellSteven and Wijid FayRev. Donald ‘50 and Norma ‘54

FennerGeorge and Joan Kerr ’58 FleckMardelle Schneller Fleming ‘46Miriam B. Fry ‘39Tom ‘89 and Laura ‘90 GarveyKevin and Susanne GenslerMr. and Mrs. Evan W. Getz ‘57James W. Godo ‘93 and

Deborah King ‘92 GodoKathryn M. GrambschDale ’50 and Virginia ’51

GrantmanNancy Meyer Grayheck ‘75Jayne Hart ‘64Wayne C. ‘49 and June

(Mittelstadt) ‘48 HessRichard ‘75 and Andrea HonerVicki Huffman Sladek ‘89Jan Brien Huffman ‘63Mary and Ralph F. Huth ‘51Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Johnson

‘57, ‘57Jerald and Charlotte JohnsonRay and Marilyn JonesPaul and Mary Ann JunkroskiJames and Catherine KadukDon and Anne KirchoffnerRichard P. Knoespel ‘63Dr. Kermit and Karen H.

Knudsen ‘55Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Koranda

37North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Ken, Susan ‘06 Katie ‘06 John ‘06 Koranda

Betty J. KozlowskiMyron M. ‘49 and Doris M. ‘52

KottkeEugene E. Krell ‘50Daniel and JoAnn KrischStan and Elizabeth LakenMr. and Mrs. Richard LamzDavid ‘59 and Barbara ‘59 LangMaxine and Tom Lelivelt ‘61James ‘53 and Susanne LenzBayard and Nancy LyonMr. and Mrs. Douglas MackieRichard and Deanna MandelMr. and Mrs. Kevin Martin ‘87Robert ‘50 and Vivian ‘49 MinerMonarch Landing, an Erickson

Retirement CommunityTrevor and Connie MorganCharles and Elizabeth Morin

(Chuck and Beth)Jean and Robert E. MorrisDr. and Mrs. Roger W. Murray

‘57Naperville MagazineNaperville Woman’s ClubNICORKaren Nordquist ‘66North Central College Board of

Trustee AssociatesEd and Lori Nita ’02 Novak

John L. ‘64 and Marcy NovakCathe (Clarida) Oberfoell ‘93

and Ron OberfoellDr. and Mrs. James P. OstrengaOswald’s PharmacyNancy A. Quigley and Michele

L. MichaelGary W. RadaFrances E. Nickel Raduege ’61

and William E. Raduege, MD ‘61

Russell ‘59 and Barbara Schroeder ‘57 Rehn

Mark and Holly RiordanCharlotte D. Roederer ‘65Roseland DraperiesJames and Kathy RunkMichelle N. Runk ‘06Nick and Teresa Ryan FamilySteven and Sheila SarovichJacob and Barbara SchillePaul ‘54 and Betsy (Belding) ‘56

SchmittBarbara SchoenherrDr. and Mrs. Donald T.

ShanowerJonathan B. Shanower ‘85Milton ‘50 and Carol ‘51

SiewertJamie and Neil SmithSuzanne Bessette-Smith ‘77

and David K. Smith ‘77

George ‘43 and Betty ‘48 St. Angelo

Mr. William J. Stang ‘02 and family

Harold ‘79 and Donna Stembridge

Rev. Dr. Paul and Elsie Marshall Stiffler ‘50, ‘50

SUN PublicationsBeverly Richard Svoboda ‘57Margaret and Leong T. Tan,

MD ‘54Joan Uebele ‘61Kenneth Thompson ‘63Marvin Edward Thompson

‘36 and Ruth Louise Powell Thompson

United Construction ProductsUS BankDr. and Mrs. Sam Vierra ‘98Ms. Kim WagnerSusan, Logan and Eric WallaceDr. and Mrs. Donald E. Weber

‘66Mr. and Mrs. William H. WentzDr. Herman B. White, Jr. and

Margaret A. WioraM. Dean Wilson ‘63 and Norma

WilsonRuss ’63 and Judy WilsonBrian, Ramona and Alaina WisArthur ’74 and Patricia Wolover

38 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Patricia C. Zeller ‘50Robert ‘73 and Paula ‘72 ZellerBeth ‘63 and Dick ‘61

ZimmermannCarol Westergard Zook ‘70

ENSEMBLEWilliam ‘50 and Mary ‘52 AbeAdvanced Data TechnologiesPaul ‘59 and Sandra AgnewLinda Eddy Allison ‘65Jason and Amy AltenbernJason AlterWilliam AngeliniAnonymousTerri B. Appelhans ‘91Grace Susan Bachmann ‘67Rev. Bob and Jeanni BakerDiane and Jon W. ‘69 BalkeMr. and Mrs. Burton

Bauernfeind ’38, ’38 Carol Marie Beach ‘99Tom and Penny BeerntsenAl ‘48 and Alpha BenedettiMr. and Mrs. J. Patrick BentonJohn Benway and Beverly

GreatMonna Becker ’59 BergdallBud and Lois Berger ’48, ’49 Elwood ‘54 and Barbara ‘57

BerkompasDr. K. Darrell Berlin ‘55Ms. Jamie Berndt ‘98 and Mr.

Eric WojcikiewiczRoger and Carol BeutlerRobert M. Bittle ‘88Dan and Kris BlouinDr. James A. Bloy ‘50Wilmer ‘53 and Allegra BloyBrand and Mary Ann BoboskyJeffrey L. Boggs ‘83Kristine E. Book ‘06Mr. Dennis L. Bosch ’73Rev. Paul ‘64 and Sue (Gates)

‘64 BosshardtAlonzo ‘93 and Kim ‘94

BoulreceDonald G. Krause and Susan R.

Bradshaw ‘85, ‘97Mary Louise Branigan ‘48Marvin J. Brickert ‘54M M Brill ‘97, ‘99Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brons ‘51Betty R. Brown ‘48Mr. and Mrs. Gregory BuckThe Bruce A. Burchfield FamilyDonald and Juanita BurneyDr. Donald and Mrs. Marjorie

(Wilhelm) ‘57 BuserDavid A. Bushnell ‘72Callie Byers ‘02 Celichowski Ruth Young ‘48 ByersWalt ‘71 and Nancy Tull ‘72

ByersWilliam and Mary ‘67 CaisleyMr. and Mrs. Paul Callighan ‘74Jo Ann Swank ‘63 and John C.

‘61 Canniff

Allan ‘57 and Nancy ‘57 CarlsonBoyce and Janice CarsellaMr. and Mrs. John J. CaseThe Caselli FamilyCatch 35C. Edward Cavert ‘57 and

Wilma Z. Cavert ‘55Cemcon, Ltd.Catherine Cerri ‘01Mary Ann Frahm Champion ‘64The Channell FamilyRuth Larson Chapek ‘57Miriam Chapman ‘73Susan Chia ’98George ChowCordelia ‘64 and Richard

ChristensenHarry ‘63 and Bonnie ClassenIan and Shelly ClugstonJerry Cole and Dorothy ColeCamille Conforti ‘66Continental Audi of NapervilleDavid Correll ‘57Daniel ‘51 and Carolyn ‘54

Corretore Jr.Kathleen Corrigan ‘05Patricia Crumpler-Green ‘81Lindsey Cummins ‘04Stacy R. Cunningham ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Loren DataGloria V. Davis ‘45 and V. Dennis

DavisNancy and John DeaconMr. and Mrs. Michael J. ‘00

DegerDuane K. Dennis ‘49Dr. Satyan L. Devadoss ’93Jesse R. and Annamary DeWittThe Diamond Gallery of

NapervilleMary Kay DoodyCaitlin Anne Drzewiecki ‘07DuPage Symphony OrchestraCarolyn Adams Duren ‘62Linda Marie Eason ‘96Richard M. EastmanEduardo ‘74 and Laurie

EcheverriaEllman’s Music Center, Inc.Ms. Kathryne S. EsselburnBeverly Z. Esser ‘51Elizabeth A. Fabel ‘91 and

FamilyDavid P. Farley ‘57Dr. Melvin ‘40 and Irene FarleySophie Faust ‘93Rolland Jackson Ferch ‘70Ed and Patti FeyMr. and Mrs. Joseph R. FiedlerRobert and Mary Ellen FieselerPeter ‘01 and JorjAnn FinkKatherine Diehl ’39 FinkbeinerFirst United BankJoyce Perry Fisher ‘62Dennis, Carolyn and Kirstin

FrantzenPaul ‘41 and Eileen ‘41 FreshleySuzanne Freshley ‘69

Shirley Frettinger ‘60June ‘46 and Gordon ‘49 FreyJon and Shirley FuglestadElaine M. Gasser ‘50Michael Gehl ‘88Mr. John H. GelstonMaureen Gennari ‘83Betsy Germanotta ‘51Jennifer Lauren Glasse ‘06Helen Branigan ’46 GlessnerGerald ‘58 and Marjorie ‘60

GoetheJennifer and Ken GoodSmithEdward ‘45 and Ida GrauMr. and Mrs. Patrick E. GrayMisty and Lewis GruberDavid ‘48 and Gloria HaebichMr. and Mrs. Don R. HagmeyerErika Hall ‘98Bill and Laurie HamenJoseph J. Haney ‘59Lisa Harms Hartzler ‘75 and

Joseph H. HartzlerC. Robert Hawley ‘68Hawthorne Credit UnionRobert Heap and Jane FawellNick and Barbara HeintzDr. John P. Henderson ‘60Uarda (Hafenrichter)

Henderson ‘33Roger and Sue HendricksonCharles and Miria (Lehnus) ‘61

HesterJoseph M. Hickok ‘05Carla Rae Hoeft ‘72Steven H. Hoeft ’73 Mr. and Mrs. Nick DempseyDavid and April ‘88, ‘99 HornerKathy Huffman ‘82The Hurd FamilyMary Kay and Steve HyettIllinois State Music AssociationCarol Lee ‘64 and Thomas E.

IversonThe Iverson FamilyYolanda ‘01, ‘07 and Yanez

JamnikJanet Matz ‘68 Jazayeri Walter ‘52 and JoAnn JelinekJimmy’s GrillDon ‘63 and Mary Ann JirakMarlene Bassett ‘55 Johns Mrs. Barbara B. Johnson and

familySteven E. ‘71 and Elizabeth S.

‘81 JohnsonJames B. Jones ‘88Herbert P. Jordan ‘52Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P.

JorgensonKathy ‘89 and Glen ‘89

KallhaugeAnn and John KeatingJack ’73 and Michele Tozer ’73

Kenaga John H. Kennaugh ‘50 and Jean

(Hitchcock) Kennaugh ‘50

39North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Kennedy, Jr. ‘95, ‘96

A. John King ‘42Mr. and Mrs. Harry KlimekDavid G. Knapp ‘67Mr. and Mrs. Alan KoehlerMichael Koleno ‘02The Russell C. Kolkay FamilyRobert C. KollerJane Dispensa Kopecky ‘84Kent D. Koshko ‘67Jack A. and Catherine M. KotenKraai Architects, LLCMarietta C. KrebaumMr. and Mrs. Dwayne KresenMarilyn Hoover Kuppler ‘52La Sorella di FrancescaJulie Lagodney ‘72Wes ‘63 and Jackie ‘65 LambBob ‘61 and Judy ‘64 LangeBarry and Jan ‘67 LauwersJohn ’83 and Robin (Jankers)

’83 LealDaphne Lee and Chung LeeRobert and Miriam Getz

Lehman ‘54, ‘53David ‘99 and Lydia ‘99 LesniakRev. Allen J. Lewis ‘42Mr. and Mrs. H. Kenwood Lewis

‘57, ‘55Jeffrey S. Lewis ‘88Jerry and Marguerite Beck ‘54

LewisGerard A. Lindgren ‘52 and Ann

LindgrenMrs. Alfred (Rita) LissonMat Littleton ‘01 and Krista

Engerman ‘02 LittletonCarl ‘85 and Dagmar LofgrenJoan Abbott Long ‘05Mr. and Mrs. Paul LoscheiderLuanne Luebke Dregne ‘60Pauline MacArthur ‘39Rodney ‘69 and Susan ‘68 MackMildred Maechtle ‘54Joseph P. Mallon ‘80Roberta K. ManningJim ‘82 and Susan MarseilleTashona Marshall ’02 Neville MartinJeordano MartinezJoan Davidson Mason ‘56Master’s Business InteriorsCurtis Mayfield ‘70Mary and Ray McMahonMr. and Mrs. Emery MeileyMeson Sabika Tapas Bar & GrillCarol Flugum Meyer ‘53Mark Meyer ‘81Chang Y. MiaoRobert ‘62 and Judith ‘64

MichaelDonald H. Mielke ‘51Mr. and Mrs. David J. MillerDavid L. Miller ‘75Ron ‘73 and Susan (Ubben)

‘75 MillerMr. and Mrs. Charles Minarik ‘62

Mark ‘61 and Joyce ‘64 MinorJohn and Luann MolitorGeorge ‘50 and Doris MooreMr. Michael Moser ’70Gary and Berneil MrozTimothy I. Murphy ‘62Jill MyattNaperville Art LeagueThe Naperville ChorusNaperville ExcavatingThe Naperville Men’s Glee ClubBill and Herbie Gamertsfelder

‘46 NaumannDaniel A. Nelson ‘94Bruce Nesmith ‘81Bruce NortellMichael J. North, MBA, Ph.D. ’92 Judy and Mark OganJames A. ‘64 and Patricia S. OrtMarion Allds Pace ‘57Arlene ‘68 and Nicholas PageGertrude Wahl Palm ‘47R. Devadoss Pandian and

Priscilla DevadossRobert and Claudia PattersonJohn Pcolinski Jr. ‘83Patrick and Leah PearsonCynthia L. Pearson ‘98Charlotte Grantman Peichl ‘51Pepper Construction GroupJ. David PepperMichael T. Pickett ‘05Bob ‘44 and Carol ‘45 PiperIolyn Mieklke Plagenz ‘60Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Pletcher

‘52Betty ’60 and Tim PlumKaren A. Pollock ‘93Lawrence A. Poltrock ‘63Burt and Kathie PrinsJeff J. QuanseyLinda S. Quantock ‘72Charlotte Steiner Queen ‘48Linda R. Rajca ‘73R. LeRoy ’50 and Muriel ‘50

RaysonJanet Reese ‘57Drs. Bruce ‘49 and Carlene

ReinhartSusan E. Repke-Rice ’52Stephen and Susan ‘80 ReppenMary and Bill ReynoldsMr. and Mrs. Clarence E. ‘48

RickleffWilliam ‘58 and Barbara ‘56

RobyMark Roe ‘97The Roesner FamilyLarry ‘60 and JoAnn ‘60

RoesslerRotary Club of Naperville/

DowntownTom and Melanie RottmannVirginia O. Rumsfeld ‘50Brian, Sun, Michael and Carson

RuppDan ‘74 and Kathy ‘74 Ryan

Kevin and Christine Ryan Family

David and Kathleen RydingJohn and Kim RygiewiczMarty and Sheila SauerJeff ‘92 and Sheila ‘92

SchaetzkeRobert ‘64 and Carole ‘65

SchappekJane W. Schelin ‘55Dr. David J. SchmitzLillian Schottenhamel ‘41Holly J. K. ‘02 and Jeffrey A. ‘99,

‘04 SchroetlinDr. Paul H. Schultz ‘71Robert ‘69 and Kaye Freshley

‘69 SchultzMarty (Beed) Schwab ‘53John E. Senn ‘60 and Sharon

Viner Senn ‘62Ann ‘64 and Maynard SherwinJune Henke Shiffler ‘41Kenneth C. ShifflerJack ShindlerDr. John C. Sippy ‘60Mary Smital ‘50Mary ‘78 and Loren ‘81 SmithWendy Hansen Smith ‘93 and

Edward SmithDave ‘48 and Genevieve ‘49

SpieglerDr. and Mrs. Howard Sprecher

‘58Jarvis ‘50 and Mary ‘50 SprengPaul ‘74 and Janice ‘72

SpringbornStandard Bank and Trust Co.G. Ward Stearns ‘56Truman Stehr ‘53Clark and Alice StonebrakerAndrea N. Suhre ‘97Dr. Paul W. Sutton ’58 and Rev.

Dr. Lana T. Sutton ’66 Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey K. Swallow

‘94Timothy T. Taylor D.D.S. ‘68Harold L. Temple ‘65Barbara I. Thompson ’51Mr. Elton R. Tietz ’51Timpano Chophouse and

Martini BarKyle D. Todd ‘95Erin M. Ufheil ‘05Mary-Claire UseldingMichael ‘88 and Elizabeth

UtterbackLawrence, Lynette ‘01 and

Deanna Van OyenMike ‘88 and Cathy Van PouckeTim ‘71 and Barb Shiffler ‘71

VanderwallStephen B. and Barbara L.

VeitchJane Begole Waidanz ‘90Clifton J. Ward Jr., MD and

Reneé L. Cruikshank-Ward ‘70

Bethany J. Walter ‘06

40 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Susan Sauer Walther ‘71 and Wayne Walther ‘71

Mary Lou Wehrli and Herbert W. Nadelhoffer

Scott ‘91 and Lynda Wehrli Family

John V. ‘57 and Ruth C. ‘58 Wendling

Richard and Christine WensitsMr. and Mrs. David G. WentzDennis K. Wentz, M.D. ‘57Sharyl B. Hammer Wernick ‘69Donald ‘52 and Marlys ‘53

WidderAudrey L. Wilder ‘06Robert J. Wilshe ‘04 and Wayne

R. WilliamsBradley W. Wilson ‘02 and

Rosemarie Conigliaro Wilson ‘01

Shirley A. WilsonMr. and Mrs. Martin J. WioraKeith ‘47 and Tally WitmerLee ‘85 and Elizabeth WoolleyYoung Naperville SingersPaul and Kim ‘92 Zaccone

CHORUSDr. William L. Abbott ’38Mr. John W. AbeMs. Susan M. Abele ’89Mr. and Mrs. Bill AbernethyMs. Lynda AbleMr. and Mrs. Jon E.

AbrahamovichMrs. Dotte Adams ’46Ms. Christina D. Adduci ’08Mr. and Mrs. Phillip T. Albano

’88, ’88Rev. Willard W. Albertus ’51Mr. Ronald AldrichMrs. Mary A. Allen ’43Rev. Stuart K. Allen ’68Mrs. Alice L. Alviani ’80Mr. Alan W. Anderson ’58Ms. Alice Marie Anderson ’95Mrs. Barbara J. Anderson ’80Mr. Gerry AndersonMs. Janice Anderson ’85Mr. Robert R. Anderson ’58Deb and Stuart AndersonMr. and Mrs. Kenny D. Andrews

’91, ’93Ms. Rebecca S. Andrjeski ’00Mr. Christopher L. AngelaMs. Kathryn J. Anseth ’06Mr. Andy AnuzisMs. Melissa R. Aquino ’91Mr. Fernando Araya ’71Argonne Choral GroupMr. Le Roi Armstead ’73Mr. Eugene Arnould ’69Ms. Gail Arrigo ’85Mr. and Mrs. Mike AshbyRev. and Mrs. Thomas E. Babler

’69, ’70Mr. Michael J. Baima ’95Ms. Anita M. Baker ’93

Mr. and Mrs. David BakerDr. Helen J. Baker ’48Mr. Ronn BaloeMs. Yvonne BambuleMr. and Mrs. Gary F. Barber

’76, ’77Mr. James W. Barber ’68Ms. Betty BarcheckiMrs. Patricia K. Barksdale ’65Mr. Richard L. Barndt ’93Dr. Bobby J. BarnesMr. and Mrs. James R. Barnes

’61, ’63Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E. BarnesMs. Pamela Baron-Hallyn ’89Mr. and Mrs. Randall BarringerMs. Ellen C. Bartel ’70Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bartel ’69, ’69Rev. and Mrs. Lowell C. Bartel

’57, ’57Ms. Jennifer L. Bartgen ’02Mrs. Nickole L. Barto ’95Mr. and Mrs. Bogdan BatinichMrs. Minerva M. Batt ’47Mr. and Mrs. J. E. BattyMs. Deanna L. Bazan ’90Mr. and Mrs. John BeatyMs. Jennifer L. Beck ’03Mr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Beck

’67, ’69Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Beebe

’43, ’45Mrs. Doris BeetzDebra and Ben Behrens ’97Ms. Judy Ann Belcher ’94Dr. Doris Benbrook ’81Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. BendeichMs. Bonnie J. Bendig ’93Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Bendis

’73, ’74Mr. Frederick W. Bennett ’59Dr. Linnea A. Berg ’72Rev. Daniel J. Berger ’69Ms. Sandra J. Bergeson ’68Mrs. Kay Bergstrom ’69Ms. Margaret J. BergstromMr. Ross P. Berkley ’05Mr. and Mrs. Mark N. BerosekMr. and Mrs. Wayne E. BessetteMr. and Mrs. Clinton J. Beuscher

’49Mr. Robert P. Biddle ’88Ms. Nancy Bifulco ’85Mr. James D. Bingle ’52Mr. Tyler J. Birkel ’04Mrs. Donna Bischoff ’35Ms. Jena BixbyMrs. Clara A. Black ’53Mr. Ralph R. Blessman ’51Ms. Sarah J. Blosser ’03Mr. Bob BluhmMr. and Mrs. Harlan BobbMr. and Mrs. John H. BodineMr. and Mrs. Paul Boecker ’61Dr. Marti S. BogartMr. Richard BoggsMr. Thomas M. Bolger

Mr. and Mrs. Loren M. Bollman ’77, ’80

Ms. Kristina L. Bonn ’03Mrs. Marla A. Bonus ’84Mr. Steven A. Borcich ’75Mr. Ronald G. Borck ’62Matthew Boresi ’97Mr. Michael Jerome Borzych

’94Ms. Rebecca S. BotosMrs. Janet Bouldin ’69Ms. Patricia M. Bovell ’90Ms. Ruth M. Bowden ’49Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bowers ’77, ’73Ms. Barbara BowlesMr. John N. Bowman ’74Mr. and Mrs. James T. BoydMrs. Joan M. Boyd ’57Mrs. Julie Boynton ’81Mr. John P. Bradford ’06Mr. William C. Bradish ’52Mr. Boychen W. Bradshaw ’92Mrs. Elizabeth M. Brand ’42Mr. Ernest Brandon, Jr. ’62Mr. Robert F. BrandonDr. Paul F. BrandtMr. and Mrs. E. Richard Branz

’57, ’56Mr. Karl A. BratlandMr. Kevin A. BratlandMr. Scott J. Braun ’96Ms. Heather M. Breed ’98Mr. James Breese ’98Mr. and Mrs. Bradley L. BrehmMs. Lucille BreitwieserMs. Andria M. Bremer ’00Ms. Jane A. Brennan ’04Mr. and Mrs. David L. Brewer

’64, ’64Mr. Kenneth R. Brickert ’70Mrs. Catherine R. Briggs ’93Mr. James R. Briggs ’51Mr. and Mrs. Ray F. Brinker

’61, ’62Ms. Judith BrinleyMr. John L. Brittan ’50Ms. Amanda M. BroaddusMr. Joseph J. Broton ’83Dr. Keith A. Brown ’77Mr. and Mrs. Larry Brown ’90Mr. Michael T. Brown, ’97Mr. Michael C. BrownMr. Scott D. Brown ’75Mr. Charles R. Brownell ’61Ms. Kimberly C. Broyles ’06Mrs. Sharron A. Brunk ’66Mrs. Shirley J. Bruns ’44John P. Buckley and Kelli

SkehanMs. Marilyn BucmanMr. and Mrs. Charles D. Bueche

’52, ’53Ms. Naomi M. Buerkle ’01Mr. John BullardMr. and Mrs. Ronald BuonauroMrs. Ruth M. Burbank ’50Mr. Leonard E. Burch ’50Ms. Myra E. Burgess

41North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Mrs. Nancy J. Burgess ’52Ms. Evie A. Burke ’00Rev. and Mrs. Phillip Burke, Jr.

’58, ’59Mr. Gregory B. Burks ’00Mr. Robert BurlinghamMrs. Catherine E. Burnett ’73Ms. Irene K. Burrell ’83Mrs. Mary B. BurrisMr. Vilas F. BursackMr. and Mrs. Thomas W. BurshMr. Jeff BurtonMr. Allan R. Busse ’66Ms. Kimberly J. ButlerMr. James D. Byrne, Jr. ’93Ms. Shannon M. Byrne ’97Ms. Melissa A. Caco ’90Café Buonaro’sMr. and Mrs. Joseph P. CalandraDr. Stephen Maynard CaliendoMr. and Mrs. Steven A. Caliendo

’77Mr. John L. Campbell ’65Dr. Kenneth D. CampbellMs. Mary CannizzaroMr. Jeffrey A. Cardwell ’83Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. CareyMr. and Mrs Richard CareyMrs. Janis L. Carlson ’56Dr. Colleen L. Carter ’86Mrs. Donna Caso ’65Mr. and Mrs. Thomas CavenaghMs. Amy Christine Cerny

Ramsey ’96Mr. Dann Chamberlin ’58Ms. Susan S. Chambers ’76Mr. Peter M. Chari ’04Ms. Heidi Renee Chase ’95Ms. Belinda L. Cheek ’83Chef by RequestMr. Hailei Cheng ’05Mr. Raj Cherian ’06Mrs. Renee J. Cherrie ’77Kirk A. Chestnut ’94Mr. and Mrs. Wendell ChestnutMs. Marie E. Chezem ’54Mr. and Mrs. Don ChivasMs. Jamie L. Chodoroff ’00Mrs. Elizabeth Christianson ’66Mrs. Lois J. Christman ’47Ms. Mary CiezczakMs. Ann M. Clark ’76Mrs. Ethel K. Clark ’47Mr. and Mrs. John ClarkMr. Charles B. ClarkeMs. Lisa D. Classon ’06Dr. Shirley F. Clement ’62Dr. Rebecca ClementeMrs. Laurene Clemmer ’68Dr. Thomas J. CliftonMr. Ian A. Clugston ’05Miss Ruth E. Cobb ’50Mr. and Mrs. Angelo CoglianeseMs. Jennifer A. Coglianese ’99Ms. Glessna CoissonMs. Lynn E. Colby ’78Ms. Prudence ColeMrs. Kathy Coleman

Mrs. Theresa L. Coleman ’81Ms. Donna ColettoDr. Thomas Colley ’63Mr. David C. Columbus ’92Mrs. Diane S. Compton ’87Mr. Ryan S. Conley ’02Ms. Charlene K. Conner ’70Mrs. Helga H. Connors ’48Dr. Timothy D. ConwayMs. Ashlee N. Cook ’03Mrs. Ellen Cook ’48Mr. and Mrs. Larry CoolbrothMs. Amy M. Cooper ’97Mrs. Jane F. Cordon ’70Dr. Louis CorsinoMr. and Mrs. Lawrence F. CorsoMs. Lacy A. Cortez ’99Rev. Carol CoryMrs. Marlys A. Costain ’90Mrs. Lynn S. Cottrell ’54Ms. Judy Countryman ’71Ms Ann M. Covert ’98Mr. Allan E. Crabb ’55Mr. and Mrs. Richard CraigRev. Solomon G. Cramer ’38Cmdr. Timothy W. Crawford ’82Ms. Emily E. Croft ’05Mr. Timothy J. Croft ’93Rev. and Mrs. Burton L. Crosby

’49, ’51Mrs. Chrisianne D. Cross ’77Ms. Sarah N. Crutchfield ’02Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery H. CurranMr. and Mrs. Michael Curran ’96Mrs. Betty Curtiss ’54Ms. Diane M. Cushman ’82Mr. and Mrs. David

CuthbertsonMr. and Mrs. George M. Cyr

’70, ’70Ms. Katalin Czako ’06Mrs. Hazel D. Daehler ’47Ms. Ashtin N. DallaviaMr. James J. DallaviaMs. Kimberly DallaviaMs. Lynette D. DallaviaMr. Timothy A. DallaviaMs. Donna J. Damato ’00Mr. Kenneth L. Damon, Jr. ’68Ms. Terran M. D’Andrea ’90Mr. Michael J. Danko ’90Mr. and Mrs. Gene Darfler

’56, ’52Ms. Peggy S. Davidson ’03Mrs. Gloria V. Davis ’45Mrs. Iola DavisMs. Megan Maura Davis ’96Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. DavisDr. and Mrs. Zev DavisMr. Tony DavisMr. William H. Davis, Jr. ’71Mr. Alan R. DeCamp ’04Mrs. Judith Decker ’58Mr. Jay Delmas ’96Mr. Barry A. Dempsey ’94Mr. Joseph G. Dennis ’98Mr. and Mrs. Robert Der ’73Mr. James A. DeRose ’74

Mr. Eric D. DeSimone ’02Ms. Diana D. DeSmit ’03Ms. Kathleen L. DettmanMrs. Norma E. Dettmann ’57Ms. Divya Eve Devadoss ’95Mr. Gilbert J. DeWilde ’41Mr. Patrick Dexheimer ’67Pastor R.Donald Dexheimer,

III ’65Mr. John A. DiCiurcioMr. Wesley E. Diener ’53Mrs. Jill A. Dieringer ’74Mr. and Mrs. Phillip M. DischMr. Patrick M. DockinsMr. and Mrs. James M. DolezalMr. and Mrs. Richard S.

DonnellyDr. and Mrs. Doward G.

Douwsma ’61, ’61Mr. Thomas H. Dover ’96Mr. Wayne K. Doverspike ’65Ms. Karen H. Dowling ’58Mr. and Mrs. Eugene DrendelMr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Driggett

’58, ’61Mr. Roy D. Dryden ’84Dr. Michael S. DuaneMs. Mari E. Duchaj ’97Dr. and Mrs. Wayne D. Duehn

’61Mr. Seth Aaron Dunham ’96Mr. and Mrs. Larry Dunlap-BergDr. Carol R. DunnMr. Robert J. Dunphey ’85DuPage County Fair

AssociationMrs. Carol A. Durava ’83Mr. J. Douglas Durham ’74Mr. and Mrs. Phil DuyMrs. Carol A. Dziedzic ’68Ms. Donna O. DziedzicMs. Julie A. EastmanMs. P. Clare EastmanMs. Sandy EberlyMr. and Mrs. James R. EcclestonMrs. Virginia R. Echo ’48Ms. Bonnie EddyMs. Phyllis Edelen ’71Dr. Edwin H. Eigenbrodt ’55Ms. Rosalie EilerMr. and Mrs. Glen A. EkeyMs. Judith A. El-Amin ’69Mr. and Mrs. James E. ElanderMs. Polly ElifsonMr. and Mrs. Donovan EmeryMr. and Mrs. Gerald Engelhardt

’70, ’72Mrs. Sharon L. Englund ’70Mr. John R. Engquist ’00Mr. J. Andrew Enright ’05Ms. Kelly M. Epperson ’86Mr. Gary Erb ’94Mr. John D. Erdman ’58Mr. Nicholas P. Erdmann ’00Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. ErnestDr. Gary ErnstMr. John R. Eskey ’57Mrs. Barbara Esterly ’59

42 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Mrs. Bee H. Evans ’67Rev. and Mrs. James Evans

’64, ’64Ms. Kathleen J. Evans ’92Ms. Ann L. Everhart ’87Mr. and Mrs. Robert EverhartMr. and Mrs. M. DeWitt EverixDr. Philip A. EwellRobert A. Faessel, D.D.S.Mr. and Mrs. Tom FalconeMr. and Mrs. James D.

Fanthorpe ’60Rev. and Mrs. Anthony J. Farina

’56, ’58Mr. Mark A. Farina ’01Mr. Paul T. Faris, Jr. ’69Mr. Patrick Farmer, Jr.Mr. Richard S. FarrarMr. Shawn M. Farson ’88Rev. and Mrs. Laurence E.

Feaver ’51, ’52Dr. and Mrs. Bruce A. FeayMr. and Mrs. John Fedorovich

’50Mr. M. William Feind, Jr. ’68Mrs. Charlotte R. Fenner ’51Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Ferington

’70, ’71Ms. Susan G. Fiedor ’01Mr. Gary FiedorowiczMs. Jennifer L. Fieldman ’95Mrs. Virginia R. Fietsch ’70Dr. Sheryl L. FinkleMs. Bonnie FischerDr. David H. FisherMs. Elisabeth A. Fisher ’04Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. FisherMr. and Mrs. William E. FitchMr. Adam R. Fitzenreider ’01Mr. Arthur E. Fitzner ’53Rev. George W. Fleming ’62Ms. Mary Jo FletcherDr. Duane F. Follman ’79 and Dr.

Holly Humphrey ’79Deborah and Jim FordMr. and Mrs. William

ForssanderMr. Steve FortMr. and Mrs. Bruce FosterMs. Debbie FrankMs. Krista FrankMr. and Mrs. Wallace FraserMs. Marsie L. Frawley ’75Dr. Andrea FrazierMr. W. S. Fredenhagen ’50Ms. Kelly J. FrederickMr. Paul V. FreedlundMs. Shirley M. FrenchDr. and Mrs. Dwight L. Freshley

’50, ’50Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Frey ’63Mr. James J. Frey ’76Mr. and Mrs. J.C. FricksMr. and Mrs. Bill FrierMr. and Mrs. John A. FryMr. and Mrs. David A. Fujiu

’74, ’75Dr. Judith A. Fulton ’77

Mr. William V. Funchion ’89Mr. Willard Gabel ’57Mr. and Mrs. Greg GadientMrs. Elizabeth P. Gallagher ’40Rev. and Mrs. Clyde F. Galow

’49, ’54Dr. Mary T. GalvanMr. and Mrs. Francis J. GalvinMr. and Mrs. Chris GannonMs. Linda Q. GaoMr. Robert H. Gardner ’90Mr. Keig E. Garvin ’37Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Gaspari

’77 ’79Mr. A. Edward Gay, III ’63Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A.

GaylordMr. Donald J. Gebbie ’65Dr. Gerald R. GemsMr. John Geyer ’68Mr. and Mrs. Marc Giacovelli ’88Mrs. Elizabeth B. Gibson ’43Mr. Warren C. Giere ’51Mrs. Bernina McGee Giese ’50Mr. Jerry B. Giesler ’58Mrs. Mary J. Ginke ’41Mr. John E. Glessner ’76Mr. and Mrs. John D. Glowicki

’76, ’78Ms. Jill Gnesda ’68Ms. Dianne GolatMs. Shirley GombertMrs. Mary L. Gomora ’91Mrs. Delores M. Goodfellow ’59Mr. Donald L. Goodin ’68Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Goodin

’68, ’68Mrs. Nancy H. Goodwin ’93Mrs. Mary L. Gorden ’80Mr. and Mrs. Scott D. GormanMrs. Theresa A. Gorman ’89Mrs. Helen Gorsuch ’77Ms. Joan C. GrassmanMr. David L. GrayMrs. Elizabeth A. Gregory ’45Mrs. Carolyn G. Grigereit ’61Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Groharing

’70, ’70Dr. Nancy A. Grote ’61Ms. Arlene A. Gryzlak ’77Mr. and Mrs. Thomas GuilfoyleMs. Donna Gullstrand ’61Rev. Paul A. Gutknecht ’66Mr. Michael A. Guzaldo ’05Ms. Gudrun HaasMr. Scott Haebich ’78Mr. Walter HagemannRev. Robert J. Hahn ’54Mrs. Ruth L. Hahn ’48Mr. Samuel J. HahnMr. Russell F. Haidle ’55Mrs. Shirley R. HainesMs. Vicki A. Haines ’76Mrs. Christi Hale ’83Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Hall ’57Sheila Hall ’93Mr. Wallace Hall, Jr. ’77Mr. Robert J. Hallwachs

Mr. and Mrs. H. Jeffrey HamarMr. Brian J. Hamilton ’93Mrs. Ruth L. HammMiss Mabel A. Hammersmith

’41Mrs. Estela A. Hammond ’98Mr. and Mrs. Gerald HamsmithMr. and Mrs. Joseph M.

Hamstra ’88Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Haney ’63Dr. Brian P. HanlonMr. Kenneth L. HannahMiss Alma E. HanneldMrs. Marilee Hanson ’62Mrs. Vivian Hargrove ’41Rev. and Mrs. Robert J. Harman

’59, ’59Ms. Sonia HarmonMs. Virginia L. Harmon ’84Mrs. Judith Harnisch ’67Dr. and Mrs. Jon J. HarperMrs. Marjean G. Harper ’50Mr. David C. Harr ’66James P. and Kristin Harrington

’87, ’87Ms. Karla HarrisMr. Bill HarrisonMrs. Sandra Harrison ’80Dr. David R. Hartman ’62Mr. and Mrs. Warren J. HartmanMrs. Iris L. Harvey ’48Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. HarveyMr. and Mrs. Larry Hatch ’70Mr. Steven M. Hauge ’71Mr. Paul E. Havelka ’78Mrs. Marcia Hawkins ’51Mr. and Mrs. Thomas HawkinsMr. Kevin M. Healey ’75Mr. Jim HealyMr. Douglas G. Hearn ’89Rev. Donna Bassett Heck ’58Mr. Marlowe A. Heckaman ’38Ms. Debra Hedemann ’87Rev. Dr. Donald H. Heinrich ’47Mrs. Sherryl Heinz ’62Ms. Amber N. Heinze ’98Ms. Rosemary Heiser ’42Ms. Sheila M. Heitke ’86Mr. Jeffrey C. HelbergMr. and Mrs. Kenneth C.

Helberg ’82Mr. Fred Helton ’49Mr. Craig W. Helwig ’87Mr. and Mrs. Dale HendersonMs. Kelly J. HendricksonMs. Anne K. Hengehold ’85Mr. John C. HennessyMrs. Marigail Henning ’42Mrs. Mary E. Henning ’46Ms. Nancy E. Henninger ’65Dr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Henricks

’69, ’71Mr. Robert HenryDr. and Mrs. Curtis Herink ’72Mrs. Carol A. Herman ’63Ms. Nancy K. HermannMrs. Victoria M. HerrmanMrs. Doris Heumann ’53

43North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Dr. Fawn D. Hewitt ’63Mr. Philip Hey ’52Rev. Edward L. Heyer ’53Mr. Andy HighlandMr. and Mrs. Leonard Higley

’58, ’62Mrs. Cheryl A. Hildebrandt ’67Mrs. Shirley A. Hill ’68Mr. Thayer J. Hill, Jr. ’64Mr. and Mrs. Jerry HilsenbeckMr. and Mrs. Rod HiltzDr. Richard C. Hinckley ’69Mr. Jeffrey M. Hinthorn ’99Mr. Nicholas J. Hird ’06Ms. Jane HirschMiss Helen S. Hitt ’51Ms. Mary E. Hitzeman ’62Miss Pei-Lee L. Ho ’56Mrs. Lucile Hodgins ’45Rev. and Mrs. Merlin J. Hoeft

’49, ’44Mr. Michael T. Hofbauer ’85Dr. and Mrs. John F. Hofert

’57, ’59Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Hoffman

’50, ’50Ms. Shirley Hofmann ’48Mr. John C. HolmbergMr. and Mrs. Fred L. Homa

’75, ’76Mr. Anthony HoppMr. B. T. Horek ’40Ms. Lori HornickMs. Kathryn I. Hornickel ’01Mr. Eric A. Horsch ’91Rev. Robert E. Horton ’52Mrs. Winnafred L. Horton ’39Mr. David J. HortsmanMr. Galen R. Hosler ’57Ms. Lola G. HotchkisRev. and Mrs. Don S. Howard

’45, ’46Mrs. Gail G. Howard ’63Ms. Jillian R. HowardMr. and Mrs. Paul P. HruskociMr. and Mrs. Thomas HubbardMr. Robert G. Hubbird ’03Mr. Michael J. HudsonMs. Cindy Hughes ’79Ms. Kimberly A. Hugo ’98Mrs. Joann H. Huheey ’48Sue and Marve HuizingaMs. Claudia N. Hummel ’68Mr. and Mrs. Richard L.

HummerThe Rev. Dr. Richard Hundrieser

’71Ms. Mariann A. Hunter ’90Mr. Taivo Hurt ’62Indian HarvestMr. Gary P. IrelandMr. and Mrs. Sheldon IsenbergRev. Paul W. Iwig ’55Mr. Edouard V. IzacDr. Renard I. JacksonMrs. Barbara Jaggers ’66Mrs. Mabel R. Jahnke ’63Ms. Christine M. Janes ’02

Ms. Janet A. Janko ’93Ms. Antonia M. JankowskiDr. Jeffrey A. JankowskiMr. Matthew William Jannusch

’97Mr. Peter S. Janzen ’50Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Jawor

’79, ’79Ms. Ana L. JensenMs. Geraldine JensenMs. Mary J. Jensik ’97Jilly’s of NapervilleMr. and Mrs. Chad JohnsonMrs. Constance M. Johnson ’82Mr. David C. Johnson ’67Mrs. Helen F. Johnson ’50Dr. Herman L. Johnson ’59Mr. and Mrs. David M. Johnson

’96, ’96Ms. Kim JohnsonMs. Merna L. Johnson ’71Mr. Randy JohnsonMs. Robin A. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. Rosie JohnsonMs. Sarah E. Johnson ’04Mrs. Shirley D. Johnson ’47Mr. Stephan G. Johnson ’61Mr. Stephen K. Johnson ’64Mrs. Barbara A. Johnston ’66Ms. Erin JohnstonMr. and Mrs. Charles D. JonahMrs. Faith A. Jones ’52Ms. Alma Jones and Mr. Greg

JonesDiana and Jim JonesMr. Peter Jonsson ’67Mr. and Mrs. A. Joseph JuddMrs. Barbara Judson ’62Mrs. Lorene G. Juhnke ’41Ms. Margaret M. JuhnkeMrs. Marian L. June ’69Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Justie ’80Mr. Torrey A. Kaatz, Jr. ’58Ms. Ellen F. Kadden ’71Mr. Joseph M. KainDr. John W. Kalas ’55Ms. Jodi L. Kalkis ’87Mr. and Mrs. Ivan P. KaneJames J. Kane ’74Mr. Ryan O. Kane ’01Mr. and Mrs. William M. KarthollMs. Jill M. Kastner ’02Mrs. Elizabeth Kaufman ’57Ms. Kathleen E. Kazmier ’06Mrs. Marietta E. KeatingMr. and Mrs. John A. KeenanDr. Nancy J. KeiserRev. James G. Kellermann ’73Dr. and Mrs. Karl KelleyMr. John KelschMs. Janet L. Kempf ’96Ms. Sharon Kennedy ’85Ms. Dorothy KennerMs. Alicia D. Kernica ’06Mrs. Carrie Duncan Kerr ’76Mrs. Sally B. Kerr ’71Mr. and Mrs. Obrad Kesic ’88,

’88

Mrs. Esther Kevern ’43Mr. and Mrs. Ronald H. KiesMrs. Elaine F. Kilday ’64Mrs. Alberta M. Kinate ’67Dr. Maureen KincaidScott Kindelspire ’95Mrs. Mary L. Kinner ’49Ms. Monie G. Kinney ’49Mr. Peter B. Kinsella ’81Mr. and Mrs. Dennis

KleehammerMr. David Klussendorf ’69Ms. Lynette M. Kmiecik ’88Ms. Doris M. Knapp ’62Ms. Linda B. Knapp ’93Miss Joan M. Knepp ’57Mrs. Tami KnissMr. and Mrs. Stanley L. KochDr. Lee R. Kochenderfer ’54Mr. Dan T. Kocher ’75Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. KoehlerMr. Marvin K. KoellingMs. Laura M. Koenes ’03Mr. Dale R. Koepnick ’82Ms. Joyce M. Koerfer ’86Mr. and Mrs. William C. KohleyMr. David R. Kokandy ’07Mr. Keith KolarMr. Bradley B. Kolavo ’05Ms. Carla L. Kolavo ’06Mr. Donald E. Koletsos, Jr. ’02Rev. and Mrs. Lynn K. Kollath

’59, ’61Mrs. Patricia C. Koller ’57Ms. Constance A. KomollMrs. Jane E. Kopp’71Ms. Francine A. Kopta ’78Mr. Kevin KoskiDr. David H. Koss ’56Mr. James A. Kosteva ’74Mr. and Mrs. Ken Kotiza ’67Mr. Nick KotwicaMs. Diana M. Kowalski ’01Rev. Harold E. Kraft ’48Mr. Richard M. Kraft ’92Mr. Ryan KrainzMr. Ellis E. Krapf ’52Mrs. Laura G. Krause ’88Mr. and Mrs. Gregory KraynekMr. Allen J. KreitzerMrs. Sandra A. Kreml ’82Ms. Elaine Krnich ’03Dr. Allison D. Krogstad ’92Mr. Timothy J. Kroupa ’06Ms. Marie C. Krueger ’82Ms. Cheryl A. Krug ’03Mr. and Mrs. Lyle F. KrumrieMr. and Mrs. James C.

KrumtingerDr. Matthew B. KrystalMrs. Jean Kuebler ’40Mr. Boguslaw Kukla ’02Ms. Christine KuklaMr. Michael K. Kulbeda ’02Ms. Crystal L. Kurtz ’01Ms. Susan L. la Monaco ’98Gregory Lacy ’89Mr. Donald A. Ladd ’53

44 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Mr. Bruce D. Ladtkow ’74Mr. John R. Lagodney ’72Mrs. Elane C. LaGroue ’75Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey H. Lamont

’74, ’74Mrs. Diane S. Land ’65Mrs. Charlotte Landmeier ’65Ms. Kelly A. Lang ’03Mr. Michael S. Lang ’93Mr. Rolland E. Lang ’69Mr. and Mrs. Waldo H. Lang

’50, ’50Mrs. Shirley M. Lange ’50Mr. Thomas S. Lange ’86Mr. Robert M. Langlois ’59Mrs. Patricia Laning-Meekma

’92Mr. Paul R. Lankenau ’83Mrs. Mary J. Larsen ’57Mr. and Mrs. Dallas K. LarsonMrs. Edith L. Larson ’69Ms. Wendy LarsonBob and Laura LarueMrs. Nancy E. Lasley ’69Mrs. Ellen Laubenthal ’65Stefanie Lazer ’94Mrs. Rhonda M. Leath ’74Mr. and Mrs. B. Pierre LebeauMr. and Mrs. John G. LeDonne

’80Ms. Melissa A. Lee ’93Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. LeedyMrs. Kerry L. Leet ’88Mrs. Nancy LeetMs. Jeanne LeFevreMr. Paul LehmanMs. Kara E. Lehnhardt ’02Mr. and Mrs. Brett A. Leifheit

’86, ’86Mr. and Mrs. Alan E. LeisRev. and Mrs. Carl R. Lemna

’52, ’55Mr. James A. LentzMr. Brian T. LesiewiczMs. Karen S. LevandowskiMr. John L. Lewis ’79Mr. S. Keith Lewis ’64Rev. Byron H. Light ’53Kay Lincicome ’58Ms. Carol W. Lindell ’57Mr. Eric R. Lindley ’99Ms. Elaine LindquistFranchon LindsayMs. Christine S. LinnellMr. Charles W. Linneman ’90Mr. Michael Linz ’49Ms. Mary Lou Lipscomb ’66Mr. and Mrs. Lyle E. Littlewood

’55, ’58Mr. Charles M. Litweiler ’66Mr. John B. Litweiler ’62Mrs. Annie W. LiuMr. Ted A. Longworth ’68Ms. Rebecca R. Lonneke-

Hodges ’91Mr. and Mrs. David E. Loop

’65, ’65Ms. Elaine Lopatka

Mr. Gregory W. Lorence ’06Mrs. Carol Lorenz ’83Ms. Susan Lynne Losczyk ’94Mrs. Lori B. Lossie ’88Dr. Thomas M. LoveMr. Donald J. Lovse ’63Mr. and Mrs. John LuckiMs. Mary Jane LudwigMr. Mason M. Luebbing ’01Mr. Merton D. Lueptow ’54Mrs. Ruth A. Lundgren ’53Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. LuzeMs. Colleen F. Lynch ’03Dr. and Mrs. Edward E. Lyon

’52, ’54Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence D. LyonsMasala Yangu IncorporatedMorton ArboretumNorman MacGregor ’53Ms. Emily M. MacGruder ’06Mrs. Bernice A. MacKenzie ’86Mrs. Jean L. MacMillan ’58Mr. Thomas E. Mader ’83Mr. John V. MadormoMs. Kathryn M. Maggio ’89Mr. Floyd MalloryMr. Charles H. Maney ’99Mrs. Norma Mann ’53Mr. James Mannion ’02Mr. Bruce N. Manola ’63Ms. Nancy Manypenny ’89Ms. Maureen MargalusMr. Victor MaroniMs. Kimberly A. Marran ’02Ms. Lois A. Marten ’52Dale and Betsy MartinMr. Douglas R. Martin ’63Mr. Eliseo E. MartinezMr. Leonard F. Martinez, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A.

Maschman ’68, ’68Mr. and Mrs. Terry Maschman

’69Mrs. Karen L. MasdenMr. Gerald D. Mast ’52Mr. and Mrs. Clarence F. Mather

’49Ms. Tracy L. Mathias ’02Dr. Curtis J. Mathison ’52Mrs. Jean Matzke ’52Mr. and Mrs. Ray Maynard ’70Ms. Elizabeth M. MazurMs. Natalie A. Mazurek ’04Miss Susan C. McArthur ’82Ms. Carol McCainMrs. Margery A. McCallister ’56Mrs. Laura L. McClellan ’62Mr. George McConaghyMrs. Sylvia D. McCracken ’74Mr. Patrick McCrite ’66Mr. Bryan P. McCusker ’98L.J. McDonald ’55Mrs. Jean McFarren ’67Mr. and Mrs. Brad McGuireMr. and Mrs. Gerald L. McIntoshMr. J. D. McJunkin ’41Ms. Bridget A. McKernan ’95Mr. and Mrs. Stan McKinney

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McKoski ’69, ’69

Mr. Eural C. McLaughlin ’65Ms. Meredith E. McLuckieMrs. Renee McLuckieMrs. Marilyn McNamara ’63Dr. and Mrs. Jack L. McPherson

’69, ’69Mr. Johnston E. McWilliam ’73Mr. William F. Mellien ’68Rev. and Mrs. Duane B. Mevis

’56Mr. Edward B. Meyer, Jr. ’78Mr. Gordon R. Meyer ’62Mr. and Mrs. Stuart K. MeyerMs. Nicole R. MichalczykMrs. Shirley Michel ’50JoAnn and Dave MikelsonMiss Emily M. Millberger ’41Ms. Ann MillerMrs. Brenda K. Miller ’73Ms. Elizabeth A. Miller ’04Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. MillerKy. Colonel Mary K. Miller ’37Mr. Paul A. Miller ’66Ms. Rosanne MillerMs. Kate Brawner Miller ’95Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Miller

’63, ’70Mr. Thomas J. Millin ’00Mrs. Dorothy MilnamowMs. Tia D. Milne ’03Mr. Mark MinardMs. Susan R. Mink ’81Ms. Lisa C. Mino ’99Mrs. Wilma MishlerMr. Benjamin J. Mitchell ’04Mr. Bradley J. Mlecko ’03Ms. Linda MockMr. Joseph E. Modaff ’61Ms. Alina A. Moldovan ’04Mrs. Kathleen Mollison ’60Mr. and Mrs. Bud M.

MontgomeryMs. Kathleen R. Montgomery

’99Mr. Fredric L. Moore ’60Mrs. Betty MooreheadMs. Carmen C. Moralez ’02Jan MorencyMr. and Mrs. Richard MorganMr. Joseph A. Morin ’39Mr. Brian C. Morrill ’02Ms. Rebecca Lynn Morrill ’97Mrs. Judith E. Morten ’75Ted and Paulette MoulosDr. Robert C. MoussetisMr. and Mrs Paul MroczkowskiMr. Robert J. Mroz ’97Ms. June Mueggenborg ’55Chris and Dave MuellerDr. and Mrs. Howard E. Mueller

’58, ’59Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan MuellerMr. Chad W. Muir ’03Ms. Mary L. Mullen ’62Rev. and Mrs. Robert A.

Mulligan ’39

45North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Ms. Kimberly A. Mulsoff ’04Mr. Carlo J. Mulvenna ’77Col. and Mrs. James R.

Mulvenna ’80, ’82Mr. Emmerson W. Munro, II ’74Mrs. Valerie Munson ’8oMrs. Alvira Murbach ’47Mr. David A. Murphy ’69Mrs. Karen M. MurphyMrs. Karen M. Murphy ’69Mrs. Angela R. Murray ’99Mr. Timothy M. Musa ’92Mr. Mark A. Myers ’01Mr. Brien J. NagleMrs. Peggy J. Nahrwold ’71Mr. Mahesh Narayanan ’97Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Naumann

’87Ms. Joanna Navarro ’03Mrs. Dorothy Neder ’52Mr. and Mrs. John D. NeesleyMs. Doris L. Nelson ’87Mrs. Padmalatha Nemani ’87Ms. Connie J. Nesler ’85Mrs. Diane C. Neumann ’70Dr. Robert E. Neumann ’55Mr. and Mrs. Robert W.

Neumann ’71, ’72Ms. Trang D. Nguyen ’88Mrs. Judith Nickelsen ’64Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Nielsen

’60, 60Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. NielsonMr. Al J. NoftzMr. Jeffrey M. Noga ’05Mr. and Mrs. James R. NolanMr. Matt P. Nolan ’85Mr. and Mrs. Karl W. Noltemeier

’51, ’52Ms. Amanda M. NousainMr. and Mr. Jerome F. NovakMrs. Mary NovelloMr. Thomas S. Novello ’96Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell L. Nowicki Rev. and Mrs. Andrew C. Noxon

’53Mr. Glenn E. Nystrom ’75Mr. Michael E. O’Brien ’05Mr. Richard E. Ochenkowski ’05Mr. and Mrs. Richard O’Connell

’73, ’75Ms. Karen E. OcwiejaMr. Timothy Patrick Ogan ’94Mr. Timothy P. O’Hara ’92Mrs. Winifred B. Olds ’47Mr. and Mrs. Clayton OlsenMrs. Bettylu Gretchen Olson

’51Mr. Rich OlsonMs. Karla K. Olvera ’94Mr. Richard J. Oman ’68Ms. Fallon N. Opperman ’05Miss Mary R. Oran ’63Dr. and Mrs. Lee Ortman ’71, ’71Mr. Frank C. Osterland ’42Ms. Leah Ostwald ’01Ms. Jaclyn A. Otto ’04

Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Otton ’51, ’51

Ms. Jennifer A. Palmer ’06Mr. Melville S. Palmer ’00Dr. Deborah L. PalmesMs. Paula PalterMs. Krittika Panananon ’06Mr. Allen F. Panek ’61Rev. Janet W. Parachin ’84Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. ParkerMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey ParypinskiMr. Bruce B. Patterson ’75Mr. Bruce D. Patterson ’75Ms. Betty PaulingDr. Pamela R. Payne-Edwards

’66Mr. Christopher M. Payton ’90Rev. Larry J. Peacock ’71Rev. and Mrs. Richard A.

Peacock ’69, ’69Mr. Mike PearlMr. Lance E. Pearson ’65Mr. and Mrs. Patrick C. PearsonMr. Timothy R. Peceniak ’04Ms. Rachel K. PeckMs. Verilyn R. Pelava ’70Mr. Chrisotpher J. Pelz ’03Ms. Christy L. Pemberton ’92Mr. Michael Pentz ’87Ms. Kathryn Jeanette Perez ’95Mr. Vincent M. Perillo ’02Mr. James J. Perisin ’60Ms. Melinda F. Perry ’06Mr. William E. Petersen ’65Dr. Nancy L. PetersonMr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Peterson

’59, ’60Ms. Susan Marie Peterson ’94Mr. Gregg Petri ’98Mr. Frank Pettaway ’96 and Ms.

Lisa Pettaway ’94Mr. Eric J. Pfeiffer ’06Mr. Michael PhelanMr. and Mrs. Donald PhillipsMs. Helen PhillipsMr. and Mrs. Michael H. PhillipsMr. Richard G. Phillips ’62Mr. Nicholas S. Piazza ’08Miss Marilyn A. Pickers ’77Ms. Meghan L. Pierson ’03Mr. and Mrs. Darrell PittardMs. Gerry PittroMr. Michael PolachekDr. and Mrs. Raymond P. Polivka

’51Mr. Richard E. PonxMs. Mary Ann Porlier ’06Mr. Patrick A. Pospisek ’02Mrs. Donna J. Posuch ’83Mrs. Vivian J. Potee ’87Ms. Susan M. Powell ’03Ms. Elizabeth A. PrebleMs. Suzanne E. Prelipp ’63Ms. Silvana Presta ’91Mr. David PriceMs. Nancy Prichard ’73Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Prince

Jim ’93 and Julie Aumann Probst ’94

Mr. Skip ProctorMr. Frank J. Prucha, III ’61Mr. and Mrs. David W. PughMr. Douglass A. Pye ’63Ms. Michelle R. Raduha ’06Raffi’s on 5thMs. Linda R. Rajca ’73Ms. Constance RamsayMs. Mary Jane Ramsey and

familyMs. Ann E. Randall ’87Mrs. Nancy L. Range ’74Mrs. Eleanor Ranney ’55Mrs. Julie RaridonJeff and Michelle RayRev. and Mrs. John F. Rebstock

’44, ’46Mrs. Rebecca A. Reckamp ’70Mrs. Betty Reed ’66Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Reents

’95, Dr. and Mrs. David R. RehnMrs. Adella ReidtMr. Russell O. Reinhard ’74Mr. David C. Renner ’00Mrs. Kay Rensink ’80Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Rhyne,

SrMr. and Mrs. Forrest D. Rice, Jr.Mr. Jack L. Rice ’59Ms. Sharon E. Rice ’03Mr. and Mrs. Larry M. RichMiss Gwendolyn Richardson

’89Mr. and Mrs. Wayne J. RichieJennifer L. Richrath ’95Mrs. Joann P. Richter ’65Mrs. Marjorie E. Riker ’48Ms. Mary Rinehart ’64Ms. Leah C. RippeMr. and Mrs. Jon A. RipskyMr. and Mrs. Barry R. Riskedal

’71, ’62Dr. Roger W. Ritzert ’58Mr. and Mrs. Fred RobertsMr. Byron K. Robertson ’89Mr. and Mrs. Joe RobertsonMr. Charles D. Robinson ’72Mr. Norman Robinson ’00A. Elizabeth Robinson-Chan ’93Ms. Karla K. Rockwell ’04Mr. Randy C. Roehrig ’79Mr. Frederick Roesti ’69Dr. LeRoy P. Roesti, Jr. ’65Mrs. Jan S. Rogoski ’68Mr. Charles A. Roloff, Jr. ’64Ms. Cindy T. Roman ’99Mrs. Beth D. Romine ’74Mr. John RonchettiMs. Christina I. Rosenmeier ’96Mr. and Mrs. Joseph RosenowMr. and Mrs. Michael Rosolie

’77, ’79Mr. William B. Ross ’67Mr. John B. Rottersman ’82Miss Barbara L. Rowland ’71

46 North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Ms. Ruth Royal ’61Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth RozekMrs. Jeanne C. Rudolph ’61Mr. William R. Rudolph ’44Ms. Colleen M. Ruff ’90Mr. and Mrs. Jim RussellMr. and Mrs. Daniel W. RyanRev. Eric E. Ryburn ’91Ms. Kathleen G. Salmen ’69Mr. and Mrs. Fred SalomonMrs. Jeannine M. Saltman ’61Ms. Shannon M. Sanders ’98Mr. Stephen J. Sanford ’79Mr. Vincent J. SapienzaMs. Kathryn M. Sarna ’04Ms. Mary Ellen Sarns ’03Ms. Rebecca S. Satterfield ’97Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. SaundersMr. Bruce Sautebin ’70Mr. Carl J. Schaefer ’67Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. SchaeferMr. Vernon H. Schaefer ’52Mr. Terrence J. SchaulMs. Lynn SchefflerMs. Carol L. Schelling ’67Ms. Irene SchendelMs. Katherine A. Schierenbeck

’90Ms. Tasha M. Schifo ’95Mrs. Arden G. Schilb ’73Mr. Wayne H. Schimpff ’63Ms. Lisa A. Schisel ’98Mr. Karl E. Schmidt ’94Mr. Steven SchmidtMr. and Mrs. William F. Schmiel

’67, ’69Mr. and Mrs. Karl SchnaseMr. and Mrs. J. Glenn SchneiderMrs. Marna J. Schneider ’50Ms. Wendy M. Schneider ’06Ms. Nancy A. Schobert ’55Ms. Deborah D. Schodrof ’97Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. SchoeneckMr. and Mrs. Warren

SchoenherrMrs. Jane Schoeny ’57Mrs. Joan Schreiber ’47Mr. and Mrs. Charles SchroederMs. Elizabeth R. Schroeder ’00Mrs. Phyllis H. SchroeterMs. Barbara E. SchubertMr. Thomas A. SchubertMr. and Mrs. Timothy W.

SchuenkeMrs. Janice B. Schultz ’72Ms. Cara M. Schuster ’97Ms. Ardella SchutzMs. Shannon V. Schwarzwalder

’01Mr. Jonathan R. SchweighardtMs. Betty Jane ScottMrs. Donna V. Scott ’57Ms. Nicki ScottMr. and Mrs. Richard C. ScottMr. Robert A. Sebastian ’53Ms. Kathi L. Seiden-Thomas ’95Mr. David A. Seiser ’74Lyn M. Seiser ’86

Mr. Jack D. Seith ’61Mrs. Carol J. Seiwell ’57Mrs. Ruth Ann Sellers ’55Stephen ’76 and Julia ’78

SellersMr. and Mrs. Charles SemkeSequoia General ContractingDr. Kristine ServaisMrs. Betty Service ’53Mrs. Lynne B. Severson ’65Mr. Richard A. Severson ’79Mr. and Mrs. Charles SextonMr. David J. Shafron ’03Ms. Bhavini R. Shah ’98Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G.

ShanowerMs. Mary Ann SharpMs. Deborah J. Shaw ’72Ms. Brenda J. Shay ’02Mrs. Arlene M. SheaMr. Bryant N. SheehyDr. and Mrs. Harry L. SheehyMr. Frank Shigut ’61Mr. Thomas Reuben Shoback

’95Mr. and Mrs. John S. Shoulberg

’82, ’82Mr. John D. ShultzMr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Shute

’91, ’92Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. SieversMr. and Mrs. Carl G. Silvernail

’54, ’54Rev. Wilbur L. Silvernail ’55Mrs. Esther M. Silvius ’46Mr. Robert N. Sima ’57Ms. Teresa L. Simchak ’90Mr. Anthony Simmons, Sr.Mr. Brad SimmonsMr. M. James Simonsen ’51Mrs. Dorothy L. Simpson ’41Ms. Margaret SimpsonNancy and Paul SingelynMs. Avery A. Sipla ’99Mr. Peter T. Sipla ’06Mr. Robert SiracusanoMr. Stephen Sivyer ’65Rev. R. Thomas Slack ’69Mr. and Mrs. F. Lee Slick ’63, ’63Mr. David H. Slinn ’90Mrs. Melissa L. Smallenberger

’97Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Smith

’59, ’57Mr. and Mrs. Cody C. SmithDr. Donnavieve N. SmithMrs. Dorothea L. Smith ’57Mr. Eric D. Smith ’06Dr. Garth D. Smith ’49Mr. and Mrs. John J. SmithMs. Mary K. Smith ’59Mrs. Sharon G. Smith ’93Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Smolinski

’74, ’73Mrs. Myla J. Snider ’54Ms. Holly Rose Snyder ’96Ms. Mary V. Soales ’56Mr. Michael J. Solch ’80

Ms. Dana J. Solomon ’03Mr. and Mrs. John J. Sook ’57Mrs. Linda M. Sorenson ’80Mr. Ralph Sorensen and familyMr. Alan J. Soukup ’47Mr. Charles J. Spalten ’50Ms. Whitney J. Spangola ’04Ms. Julie A. Sparks ’89Mr. Bradley W. Spencer ’04Mr. Tyke E. Spencer ’06Ms. Lorraine L. Spong-Scoville

’51Ms. Emily J. SquintoDr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Sroufe

’59, ’58Dr. Caroline St. ClairMs. Bonnie L. St. JohnMrs. Lynn M. St. John ’64Ms. Harriet Stachowiak ’02Ms. Lois C. Stack ’54Mr. and Mrs. Kevin E. Stahlman

’86, ’86Ms. Melanie L. Stancampiano

’02Rev. Nelson E. Stants ’50Mr. and Mrs. Steve StarzykMs. Amy E. Steenson ’01Mrs. Sandra L. Steer ’61Ms. Joyce Stegmeier ’53Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Stehr ’50Mr. Glenn E. Stehr ’50Mr. George Steimer ’99Mr. Charles Stella ’02Mr. Harry R. Stelling ’50Mrs. Mary J. Sterling ’66Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Stevens

’50, ’52Mr. and Mrs. Reuben T. Stibbe

’50Ms. Grace StillingMr. and Mrs Gregory StolzeMr. Russell M. Stratton ’87Rev. and Mrs. Donald F. Strauch

’71Mr. and Mrs. Herman StreddeMs. Gail M. Streeter ’62Ms. Kathleen Strickland ’00Ms. Patricia A. Stroud ’57Ms. Mary Ann Stuart ’97Mr. and Mrs. Larry J. Studer

’62, ’61Mr. Dan SturdenvantDr. Cathy SubberMr. and Mrs. Edwin O. SullivanMr. Michael P. Sullivan ’96Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. SuloMr. Chad A. Sutton ’93Ms. Stephanie C. Sutton ’02Mr. and Mrs. Richard O.

Swafford ’57, ’58Mrs. Heidi K. Sweet ’93Ms. Monica A. Szaflik ’05Ms. Alefiyah Tawawalla ’97Mr. Benny T. Taylor ’92Mr. Eugentri Taylor ’06Mr. Benjy TaylorMr. and Mrs. Edward A. Tehle

Jr. ’49, ’51

47North Central College

THE WENTZ CONCERT HALL & FINE ARTS CENTER CAMPAIGN DONORS (cont.)

Mr. Gordon G. Teichmann ’40Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Templeton

’59Mr. Gerald A. ThalmannMrs. Eunice U. Thanepohn ’49Ms. Tristan M. TheissingMr. Donald P. Thinnes ’56Mrs. Virginia C. Tholen ’66Miss Evelyn M. Thomas ’54Rev. and Mrs. James F. Thomas

’55, ’55Mr. and Mrs. Kelly B. Thomas

’91, ’92Mrs. Barbara J. Thompson ’51Mr. David Thompson ’99Mr. Donald R. Thompson ’41Rev. and Mrs. Frank E.

Thompson ’61, ’64Ms. Margaret M. Thompson ’81Mr. Robert E. Thompson ’38Mr. Roger A. Thompson ’90Mr. and Mrs. Tyrone A.

ThompsonMr. and Mrs. Richard G.

ThurstonMr. Frederic D. Tompkins ’40Rev. La Vern E. Tooley ’41Mr. Donald D. Topp ’61Mr. and Mrs. Clay TotzMr. and Mrs. Anthony ToyMr. Christopher A. ToyMr. and Mrs. Sheldon D. Trapp

’57, ’56Mr. Nicholas E. Trauth ’06Dr. Susan TraversoMr. and Mrs. George J.

TrepanierMr. Warren R. Tropf ’47Ray and Lynn TrygstadMrs. Gail F. Tuller ’80Mr. and Mrs. Leroy A. TumaMs. Melissa A. Turner ’95Mr. and Mrs. Frank

Tuttolomondo ’86Mr. and Mrs. Marvin

UmbanhourRev. and Mrs. Don K. Utzman

’54, ’55Ms. Bonnie ValiantMr. Douglas W. Van Dell ’79Dr. Madeleine Van HeckeMr. James E. VanHootegem ’90Mr. Milt VasichMs. Lynette M. Veitengruber ’04Jon Velishek ’94Ms. Crystal D. Verdun-White ’02Ms. Lorraine VerstraeteMr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Vicker

’76, ’77Mr. Howard R. Vieth ’38Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Vincent

’50, ’49Dr. Jonathan E. VisickMs. Alicia VodickaMrs. Berta J. Voorhees ’57Mr. Dale F. Voss ’51

Mrs. Shirley J. WahlMrs. Joylyn Wahla ’60Mrs. Jane E. Waidanz ’90Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wakefield

’60, ’60Walker’s Char HouseMrs. Amy L. Walsh ’89Miss Marilyn K. Walsh ’61Mr. Richard T. WalshMr. and Mrs. William J. WalshMr. Archie T. Walters ’85Ms. Judy C. WaltersMs. Mary Lynn Walters ’62Ms. Susan L. Ward, C.F.P. ’83Mr. and Mrs. William L. ’54

WardenMr. David WareMr. and Mrs. Gideon M. WarneMrs. Diane L. Warren ’91Mr. and Mrs. Rodney J. WarstlerMs. Shannon Webb ’94Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. WeberMr. and Mrs. Alfred D. WebsterMs. Michelle T. Weckmann ’93Mr. Robert A. Wegele, Jr. ’84Mrs. Bettye WehrliMr. G. Allan Weick ’53Mrs. Susan Weimer ’68Mr. Brad L. Weiss ’97Mr. Glenn A. Weiss ’94Mr. John W. Welch ’81Mr. Robert W. Welk ’60Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Wellman

’55, ’56Ms. Joan WeltyMiss Marcia Welzel ’68Ms. Julie WentzMrs. Lorraine Werner ’48Dr. Nancy J. Wesensten ’84Mrs. Jean R. Wesley ’54Ms. Carolyn R. West ’97Mrs. Kristin Miner West ’81Mr. Ryan K. West ’00Mrs. Judith K. Westin ’63Ms. Carol J. Weston ’62Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Westrom

’51, ’52Mr. Matthew F. Whalen ’05Dr. and Mrs. Andrew WhitakerMr. Russell G. Whitaker III ’00Mr. Donald WhitneyMr. Kenneth S. Whittenhall ’88John D. and Sheila Wier ’67, ’67Mr. and Mrs. Dave WiesbrookMs. Victoria S. WikeJanice and Ed WilesMr. William J. Wilger ’86Ms. Anita R. Wilkins ’42Mrs. Lois A. Will ’49Mr. Craig Williams ’98Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Williams

’68Mrs. Margaret Williams ’70Mrs. Patsy J. Williams ’62Ms. Gayle WilsmannWilliam F. and Maria Wilson

Mrs. Dorcas R. Windsor ’67Dr. Vicki A. Wine ’74Mr. and Mrs. Mark K. WinkelMr. Thomas A. Winter ’71Mrs. Margaret L. Winters ’60Mr. Timothy J. Wise ’97Mr. and Mrs. Dennis WisnoskyMrs. Marla C. Witbrod ’81Mrs. Vickie J. Witt ’01Ms. Heather Christine Wnek ’96Ms. Barbara Wolf ’68Ms. Margaret L. Wolf ’59Mr. Paul R. Wolf ’78Rev. and Mrs. Wilmert Wolf,

Jr. ’56Rev. Everett T. Wonder ’48Ms. Joan Sommers Wood ’57Mrs. Carmen Giese Woodring

’72Mr. and Mrs. Kevin WoodrowMs. Mercie D. Woolfolk ’95Dale and Lorrine Helm

Wordelmen ’56, ’56Rev. and Mrs. Robert C. Worner

’61Mrs. Karen Worst ’66Mrs. Helen L. Wright ’39Mrs. Ruth Wright ’39Mr. Stephen Wright ’03Mr. John P. Wrycza ’89Mr. Anthony J. Wycklendt ’94Ms. Imis WymanMr. and Mrs. Robert YahnkeMrs. Yu-Fen Yang ’86Ms. Rachel C. Yehl ’06Mr. Wallace C. Yenerich ’44Mr. Steven G. Yeomans ’77Mr. Frank O. Yezek ’52Mr. and Mrs. Norris G. YonkerMr. and Mrs. Ben K. Yoshinaga

’46Jean and Warren YoungMarilyn Yucaitis-Jarzembowski

’76Mr. and Mrs. Jan E. Zabinski ’74Mrs. Mae M. Zahl ’35Ms. Laura Zahn PohlMr. Burt M. Zak ’85Ms. Laurie A. Zastrow ’86Mr. and Mrs. William C. Zayas

’80Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zedrow ’51Mr. J. Charles Zeller ’69Ms. Kristine E. Zeller ’01Kimberly and Mike ZieglerMiss Opal E. Ziemer ’39Mr. Joshua D. Zilm ’99Dale and Rosemary

Zimmerman ’60, ’60Mrs. Donna M. Zinke ’61Mr. and Mrs. Martin M. ZivinMrs. Deborah A. Zorich ’83Ms. Erin D. Zorns ’00Ms. Paula J. Zoromski ’86Mr. and Mrs. Alexander E.

Zuback

Underwriting a North Central College performance allows you to directly support the artists whose work touches you the most. Fine arts event underwriting opportunities begin at $5,000 and come with many exciting benefits exclusive to underwriters. Individual underwriters receive:•VIP tickets to underwritten fine arts performance•Additional VIP tickets to preferred event at Wentz Concert Hall•Additional tickets to events at other North Central fine arts venues on campus (Meiley-Swallow Hall, Koten Chapel, Pfeiffer Hall, Madden Theater)•Access to special pre- or post-show private reception with artists •Recognition in a special salute ad in the Footlights program•Recognition on event invitation •Special offers to underwriter’s employees/family/friends•Opportunity to host employee/client/family event and reception •Name and/or logo recognition through various North Central College fine arts marketing programs (website, e-mail blasts, on-site recognition, newspaper advertising, etc.)•Listings in the Annual Report, on the College’s website and in event press releases

More exciting opportunities and VIP benefits are available at higher levels. For information on underwriting a North Central College fine arts performance please contact Barbara Knuckles, Managing Director of Development and Corporate Relations, at 630-637-5210 or John Holmberg, Assistant Director of Development & Capital Gifts, at 630-637-5218.

UNDeRWRIte A NORtH CeNtRAL COLLeGeFine Arts PerFormAnce

Herb Alpert and Lani Hall Wentz Concert Hall and Fine Arts Center

September 2009

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