Around the Green

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around the green – faculty and staff

Appointed
Attended
Exhibited
Facilitated
Hosted
Participated
Performed
Presented
Published
Served

For position openings, please see www.bethelks.edu/careers

Appointed

Sheri Allshouse, KIPCOR administrative assistant and office manager.

Rebecca Barrett-Fox, visiting assistant professor of history. She has a B.A. in English and human studies from Juniata College, Huntington, Pa., and earned her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Kansas, both in American studies.

Gary Flory, KIPCOR director, was appointed to a three-year term on the Advisory Board of the Institute for Civic Discourse and Democracy at Kansas State University.

Sam Gaeddert, admissions counselor. He is a 2010 graduate of Bethel College with a major in art and minor in business administration.

Alonzo Jamison, head men’s basketball coach. He has been assistant men’s coach since 2008.

Mark Jantzen ’85, associate professor of history, was appointed co-book editor (along with Ines Murzaku, a professor at Seton Hall University) of the journal Religion in Eastern Europe.

Kathryn Layman, associate professor of chemistry and physics. She has a B.A. in chemistry with a mathematics minor from Occidental College, Los Angeles, and earned a Ph.D. in physical chemistry and surface science from the University of California at Irvine.

Hamilton Williams, associate professor of social work. He earned his M.S.W. (emphases on social justice and community development) and his Ph.D. in social work (emphases on international social work, policy and community practice) from the University of South Carolina.

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Attended

Mark Jantzen ’85, associate professor of history, attended the Kansas Association of Historians annual meeting April 1-2 at Johnson County Community College, where he moderated a panel on “Colonialism and Its Discontents.”

John McCabe-Juhnke ’78, professor of communication arts, attended a promotional event March 17 in New York City, “PERFORMING NEW LIVES: A Conversation with Artists Behind Bars on the Power and Potential of Prison Theatre,” along with other contributors to a book on prison theater. The book, Performing New Lives, edited by Jonathan Shailor, is a collection of 17 essays representing 14 programs across the country. Shailor, McCabe-Juhnke and seven other contributors to the volume – all of them facilitators of prison theater programs – shared stories of their work, engaged the audience in dialogue and signed copies of the book.

Barbara Schmidt ’65 , manager of KIPCOR’s Community Mediation Center, attended the Heartland Mediators’ Association conference April 7. She has served on HMA’s board of directors for five years, including four as treasurer.

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Exhibited

David Kreider ’82, technician at Kauffman Museum, traveled to Evanston, Ill., April 18-20 to pack and transport more than 30 works of art by American Impressionist Albert Krehbiel for an exhibit at the Carriage Factory Gallery, Newton. The exhibit, “Krehbiel Showcase,” will be on display through July 31. Krehbiel was the son of Bethel founder J.J. Krehbiel, who operated a carriage factory at the current gallery location.

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Facilitated

Kirsten Zerger ’73, KIPCOR director of education and training, and Gary Flory, KIPCOR director, designed and facilitated a day-long visioning retreat for Salina Mennonite Church April 16.

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Hosted

Sondra Bandy Koontz ’70, vice president for advancement, hosted the Wichita Public Library’s 25th anniversary celebration and showing of Academy Award-nominated short films (animation, live action and documentary) Feb. 26 at the Orpheum Theater in Wichita. Koontz opened the day’s celebration as she described the beginnings of the program, which she created for the library during her tenure as state film librarian and head of the art, music and film departments.

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Participated

Marla Krell ’97, director of career development and placement, collaborated with the ACCK career services directors to organize and participate in the annual Teacher Interview Day, held March 8 this year at Tabor College, Hillsboro. Approximately 80 teacher candidates interviewed with 46 school district administrators from across the state of Kansas.

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Performed

Karen Bauman Schlabaugh, professor of music, was the collaborating pianist with Richard and Suzanne Tirk in concerts at the University of Alabama- Birmingham Feb. 6 and at the University of Alabama Feb. 8. Schlabaugh also was the pianist for Scott Oakes, bassoonist, at his faculty artist recital at Wichita State University April 26.

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Presented

Gary Flory, KIPCOR director, and Ken Grotewiel, senior associate with KIPCOR’s Great Plains Consensus Council, presented two workshops for the 44th Annual Conference of the Kansas Rural Water Association at Century II in Wichita. The first workshop, March 29, was on “Resolving Disputes in a Neighborly Way,” and the second workshop, March 30, was on “Dealing with Difficult Customers.

Gary Histand, professor of chemistry, along with seniors Trent Baalman, Trey Ronnebaum and Carrie Schulz, presented chemical demonstrations to all 8th grade science classes at Chisholm Middle School April 13. Histand and Schulz hosted and worked with the Newton High School Chemistry II class April 26. The students performed analyses using NMR spectroscopy materials they made at the high school. In addition, they looked at ion concentration in popular sodas, finding that of the sodas tested, Pepsi had the highest phosphate ion concentration.

Nicholas Krehbiel, visiting assistant professor of history, gave a presentation Feb. 24 for the Friends of the Mennonite Library and Archives Lecture Series titled “The Mennonite General’s Alternative Service: Lewis B. Hershey and Conscientious Objection during World War II.” The presentation was a brief overview of his Ph.D. dissertation, completed at Kansas State University in 2009.

Rachel Pannabecker ’80, director of Kauffman Museum, gave an illustrated talk on “Fibers to Fabrics: Clothing Kansans 1854-1904” to the Moundridge Study Club Feb. 10. The presentation included audience sharing about antique clothing from their own collections. Pannabecker also spoke to the Harvey County Retired School Personnel on the educational mission and history of Kauffman Museum March 11.

Ami Regier ’85, professor of literary studies, presented “Functions of Multiperspective Narrative in Writing Haitian American Diasporic Community in Edwidge Danticat’s 2004 The Dew Breaker” at a research conference of MELUS (Multiethnic Literature of the United States) in Boca Raton, Fla., April 8. She also delivered the Bethel College Women’s Association’s annual Faculty Lecture June 3, “German Immigrant Stories as a Comparative Discourse in the Ojibwe Upper Midwest: How Louise Erdrich Radically Reshapes the Novel with Community Histories.”

Tracy Tuttle, assistant professor of physics, gave a workshop to the physics department and students at Fort Hays State University in practical astronomy and astronomical imaging/data acquisition Feb. 18, in which he taught how to acquire and understand digital data using a Charge Coupled Device (CCD) camera and Schmidt Cassegrain telescope. The group then went out at night and learned how to take and process astronomical images.

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Published

Mark Jantzen ’85, associate professor of history, published “Tenuous Bridges over the Iron Curtain: Mennonite Central Committee Work in Eastern Europe from 1966 to 1991” in the 2010 issue of Mission Focus. The same article was reprinted in the February 2011 issue of Religion in Eastern Europe.

Nicholas Krehbiel, visiting assistant professor of history, had the article “Relief Efforts Denied: The Civilian Public Service Training Corps and the Starnes Amendment, 1942-1943” published in War and Society, Vol. 30 No. 1: 48-60.

Francisca Méndez-Harclerode, assistant professor of biology, with Ceballos, G. P. Manzano, M. L. Haynie, D. H. Walker and R. D. Bradley, had an article published by Occasional Papers, Museum of Texas Tech University, entitled “Geographic Distribution, Genetic Diversity and Conservation Status of the Southern Flying Squirrel (Glaucomys volans) in Mexico,” 299: 1-15.

John Thiesen ’82, co-director of libraries, had a book review of Lexikon der Mennoniten in Paraguay published in the April 2011 Mennonite Quarterly Review.

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Served

William Eash, professor of music, and Karen Bauman Schlabaugh, professor of music, served as guest conductor and pianist for the Mennonite Schools Council Music Festival in Salem, Ore., April 7-10. They rehearsed with the mass choir of 180 high school students each day, leading up to the final performance April 10.

Dwight Krehbiel ’69, professor of psychology, served on a review panel for the National Science Foundation, Feb. 11-13 in National Harbor, Md.

Karen Bauman Schlabaugh, professor of music, served as an adjudicator at the KSHSAA State Piano Festival, Feb. 19 at Tabor College, Hillsboro.

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