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News from LEH
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March 2008 LEH Newsletter
LEH Honor Wall
 
A mahogany plaque now hangs in the lobby of the LEH's new Louisiana Humanities Education Center at Turners Hall to recognize major donors whose generosity made the Center a reality. "There is no way we can thank these major donors enough for the confidence they demonstrated in supporting this project, but we want to recognize them in some way," said LEH Chair Dr. Alice Pecoraro. "To the first donors who stepped up and got things rolling, to those who came forward immediately after Katrina and actually accelerated the project when the city and state needed it most, and finally to those who helped close out the Kresge Challenge Grant, we give them our thanks." While the Kresge Challenge Grant has been fulfilled and the Education Center is now in use, important aspects of the campaign remain. "There are still a few blank tiles on the donor wall," said Dr. Pecoraro. "We welcome the opportunity to talk with all who are interested in making the Capital Campaign a complete success."
Besthoffs donate three John Scott sculptures to LEH
 
Noted New Orleans philanthropists and art collectors Sydney and Walda Besthoff have donated three bronze kinetic sculptures to the LEH's John Scott Collection. The painted art works were created by the late John Scott, a renowned New Orleans artist and recipient of the 1984-1985 MacArthur Genius Award. "This donation adds important elements to the collection and I cannot thank Sydney and Walda enough," said LEH President and Executive Director Dr. Michael Sartisky. "The Besthoffs understand what we are trying to accomplish through the collection and wanted these three pieces to be viewed by the public as part of the largest permanent collection of Scott's work in the world."
"New Harmonies" Smithsonian Museum on Main Street tours Louisiana
 
In conjunction with the April 14, 2008, to Jan. 15, 2009, tour of the Smithsonian Institution Museum on Main Street and LEH exhibition "New Harmonies: Celebrating American Roots Music," the following pre-exhibition activities are planned:

  • March 6, 6 p.m., Jeanerette Bicentennial Park and Museum, Jeanerette: Dr. Robert Allen Alexander, associate professor of English at Nicholls State University, leads a book discussion on "You are My Sunshine: The Jimmie Davis Story." For more information, contact 337-276-4408.
  • March 15, 3 p.m., Lincoln Parish Library, Ruston: Conly's Irish Band presents an informance on Irish-American roots music. For more information, contact 318-251-5030.

"New Harmonies" tour schedule:
Abita Springs - April 14-May 24, Abita Opry Inc.
Ruston - June 2-July 12, Lincoln Parish Library.
Jeanerette - July 21-Aug. 30, Jeanerette Bicentennial Park and Museum.
Kaplan - Sept. 4-Oct. 15, Le Musee de la Ville de Kaplan.
Ferriday - Oct. 23-Dec. 5, Delta Music Museum.
Oil City - Dec. 11-Jan. 15, 2009, Louisiana State Oil and Gas Museum.

Upcoming Louisiana Cultural Vistas
 
The spring 2008 edition of Louisiana Cultural Vistas, due for circulation in mid-March, features a cover story, "A Brush with the Intimate," about New Orleans artist Jean Seidenberg, "a painter of people" says the artist in his own words. Seidenberg's works are currently on view at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, and a book featuring his paintings and sculptures, funded in part by the LEH, is scheduled for release later this year.

Other content from the forthcoming magazine will include:

  • The Burning of Alexandria, Louisiana, in 1864 at the hands of retreating Union troops.
  • An interview with Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa, a native of Bogalusa, La.
  • Photographs by Donn Young of Hurricane Katrina's damage to New Orleans as part of an exhibit titled "40 Days and 40 Nights" that will premiere in Baton Rouge at the Louisiana State Archives in August 2008.
  • Native-American basketry from the Whitecloud Collection, featuring works from the Chitimacha, Coushatta and Houma tribes.
  • A history of development in suburban New Orleans East, an area that was largely inundated by floodwaters from the August 2005 levee failures.
  • Portraits of Louisiana artists by photographer Jerry Siegel.

PRIME TIME - UNO teacher institute planned for New Orleans
 
From July 7 to July 31, approximately 25 New Orleans kindergarten through 8th grade teachers will have the opportunity to participate in the "Prime Time for PRIME TIME in New Orleans Schools" Institute for Advanced Study that will provide instruction in the PRIME TIME FAMILY READING TIME® methodology. A partnership between LEH and the University of New Orleans, the Institute will be co-directed by Dr. Nancy Dixon, who teaches at the University of New Orleans and has been a PRIME TIME scholar for several years, and Dr. Olivia Pass, the associate director of PRIME TIME who has served as a PRIME TIME scholar for 7 years as well as a program coordinator for PRIME TIME. The Institute will be held at the Louisiana Humanities Center at Turners Hall in New Orleans. Guest instructors include Jack Heflin, Endowed Professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Monroe and a PRIME TIME scholar, and Cindy Treme, a PRIME TIME storyteller from Lake Charles.

In this Institute, teachers will employ PRIME TIME methodologies and books to enhance their ability to teach reading and critical thinking skills in grades K-8. They will also learn techniques for character education. "Teachers will learn to foster discussion, focus on real-life issues, and explore humanities issues by means of award-winning children's and young adults' books," said Nancy Dixon.

Participating teachers will receive a $750 stipend and are eligible to receive 3 hours of graduate credit from the University of New Orleans, as well as 45 CLUs. Furthermore, UNO has waived tuition. For more information, contact Miranda Restovic at 504-620-2486 or restovic@leh.org.

Volunteers of America-LOUISIANA PROMISE of Shreveport presented bilingual PT program
 
On Feb. 18, LEH PRIME TIME team members from Shreveport's Volunteers of America's LOUISIANA PROMISE initiative welcomed 17 parents and 31 children to the third session of this PRIME TIME program. Many who attended were bilingual but some spoke only Spanish or English. After a big welcome, the families gathered to hear scholar Janine Demerath and storyteller Carol Hill de Santos present the book A Spoon for Every Bite in English and Spanish.

Families responded enthusiastically in Spanish and English to questions centering on the greed, trickery and motives of the characters. The second story of the evening, Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters, covered the same topics but then led to the participants comparing their system of government to countries with kings and queens. The program resembled a family reunion in many aspects. Site coordinator Deanna Martinez stated: "After the third session, participants are building relationships with one another. Some are from Bossier and some from Shreveport but now they are getting to know one another."

This program, which ends March 10, was funded by a generous grant from the Zemurray Foundation who continues to support the expansion and development of bilingual (Spanish/English) family literacy programming in Louisiana. Another bilingual program is in progress on Tuesdays through March 25 at Esperanza Charter School in New Orleans. Ouachita Valley Library in West Monroe has scheduled a bilingual program for March 17 through April 21.

National Endowment for the Humanities grant funds spring PRIME TIME sites
 
Libraries in Florida, Michigan, New Jersey, New York and Oklahoma were selected to participate in the 2008 phase of the PRIME TIME FAMILY READING TIME bilingual national expansion, funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Florida sites that have scheduled programs during the spring session include Clearwater Main Library (February 26-April 1), and Clewiston Library (April 21-May 27). Two New Jersey sites will be held at the Paterson Free Public Library (March 3-April 14) and the Kearny Public Library (April 24-June 5). Norman Public Library (Oklahoma) will offer PRIME TIME April 8 - May 13, while Queens Borough Public Library in New York has scheduled their sessions May 22-June 26 at Woodside Community Library. The first Michigan PRIME TIME will be located at Hoyt Public Library in Saginaw April 1-May 6.

Thirty-six states and the Virgin Islands have implemented PRIME TIME since the pilot program was developed in East Baton Rouge Parish in 1991 with a LEH grant.

Public Library Quarterly® publishes PRIME TIME article
 
Digging Deep - The Humanities Approach to Family Literacy by Cathy Reta and Dianne Brady appeared in the most recent edition of Public Library Quarterly published by the Haworth Information Press. Reta served as the California State Project Director for PRIME TIME in 2004-06 and Brady is the senior consultant to the program after serving as Director of PRIME TIME for more than ten years. The article includes a section titled "The PRIME TIME Difference" where the authors explain: "From a distance the PRIME TIME model looks like any other family literacy program, but it would be a mistake to assume it is the same. Rather than teaching reading skills, the primary goal of PRIME TIME is to foster a love of reading, talking about books, and a lifelong enjoyment of libraries and their resources, which in turn results in improved critical thinking, gains in vocabulary and greater self-confidence."
RELIC: Readings in Literature and Culture
 
The New Orleans Mid-City library branch, 330 North Carrollton Ave., will host its first RELIC program, beginning 6 p.m. March 27. The reading program "Louisiana Characters: Biographies of the Bayou State" will feature a team of scholars from Loyola and Tulane universities. Current RELIC programs are experiencing large public attendance in Lafayette, Ruston, Marksville, Colfax, Monroe and Haynesville. If you have missed out on any of these events or wish to be contacted for any upcoming programs in your community, be sure to contact the host library and request that your name and information be added to the library's outreach list. These and other programs available in the winter and spring can be found in the schedule.

Upcoming RELIC reading programs around the state:

LEH "Humanist of the Year" and other awards
 
Just a reminder! The LEH will hold its annual awards banquet at 12:30 p.m. March 29th at Houmas House Plantation and Gardens in Darrow, La., on the River Road just south of Baton Rouge. During the ceremony, the LEH will present its Humanist of the Year award to New Orleans musician and teacher Ellis Marsalis.

In addition, Dr. Norman Francis, long-time president of Xavier University in New Orleans, will receive the Award for Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities. The Chair's Award for Institutional Support will go to the Community Foundation of Shreveport-Bossier for its contributions and partnership in LEH's PRIME TIME programs in the Shreveport-Bossier area. Jennifer John Block's film "Reconstructing Creole" will receive the LEH's Humanities Documentary Film of the Year Award.

Official recognition of the new state Poet Laureate, Dr. Darrell Bourque, of Lafayette, will be commemorated at the event.

Individual Achievement in the Humanities awards will go to Dr. Delma McLeod-Porter, a professor and coordinator of developmental writing at McNeese State University in Lake Charles; Dr. J. Paul Leslie, a history professor at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux; and Jack Heflin, professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Dr. John R. May, an English professor at LSU in Baton Rouge, will receive the Public Humanities Programming Award, and the Humanities Book of the Year Award will go to Bliss Broyard's One Drop: My Father's Hidden Life-A Story of Race and Family Secrets, a remarkable account of a young woman's journey to discover her racial identity in the wake of discovering her father's African-American ancestry. Teacher of the Year awards will be presented to Catherine Green, a social studies (history) teacher at Caddo Middle Magnet School in Shreveport, and to Emmitt Glynn III, who teaches political theory, government and history of religion in America at The Episcopal School in Baton Rouge.

For ticket information, contact Brian Boyles at boyles@leh.org or 504-620-2622

LEH Events for March
 
Houma - March 5-6: Fletcher Technical Community College: "Writing Women Back Into History," a series of public lectures, performances and activities focusing on Louisiana women's contributions to culture, academia, labor and politics to mark Women's History Month. For more information, call 985-857-3655 ext. 276.

Lafayette - March 26-30: 3rd Cinema on the Bayou Film Festival. Festival focuses on the sometimes celebratory, sometimes stereotypical depictions of Cajun and Creole culture in film. For festival schedule details, visit www.cinemaonthebayou.com. For more information, contact 337-235-7845.

New Orleans - March 6: Scholar and novelist Dr. Maryse Conde will give a lecture titled "Mapping the New Frontier: New Identities and Fraternities in the Time of Globalization." Event is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Louis J. Roussel Performance Hall at Loyola University, following a performance of Conde's play "Comme Deux Freres / Like Two Brothers," which begins at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call 504-865-2479

New Orleans - March 26-30: The Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival 22nd Annual Event. For five days this spring, The Tennessee Williams Festival will light up the French Quarter with culture, food and fun, bringing back some favorite voices and exciting new ones as well. Featured authors and artists include Hal Crowther, Dan Menaker, Tift Merritt and Lee Smith. For festival schedule details, visit www.tennesseewilliams.net For additional information, call 504-581-1144.

Shreveport - March 14: Louisiana State University in Shreveport hosts eminent political biographer Dr. Jean Edward Smith of Marshall University, who will present a public lecture on writing presidential biographies, with particular emphasis on his 2007 work, FDR. Event scheduled for 9 a.m. in the University Center Theater. For more information, contact 318-797-5138.

LEH organizes American history institutes in Shreveport and Lake Charles
 
The LEH - funded by two $1 million grants from the U.S. Department of Education's Teaching American History program - has organized institutes in American history this June for public school teachers in Caddo and Calcasieu parishes. Three summer institutes will be held in Caddo Parish in partnership with LSUS and four institutes in Calcasieu Parish in partnership with McNeese State University. The LEH also is serving as the fiscal agent for the Algiers Charter School Association's Teaching American History summer institutes for New Orleans public school teachers.
LEH grant deadlines
 
Documentary Film and Radio grant deadline, April 25. Contact Walker Lasiter at 504-620-2631 or lasiter@leh.org

The Public Humanities grant deadline is May 1. Contact Walker Lasiter at 504-620-2631 or lasiter@leh.org

Go to Grants webpage...

NEH and Smithsonian celebrate Jazz
 
April 2008 marks the 7th Annual Celebration of Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)! The Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History has led this nationwide effort to draw public attention to jazz as a living and historical treasure and will kick off this year's celebration, as it has in the past, with a special program at the end of March. This year's program will be a Town Hall meeting hosted by Ramsey Lewis, host of the Legends of Jazz radio and PBS television series, to discuss jazz's global impact and the role of jazz advocates in preserving jazz's heritage and performance.

NEH has participated in JAM by featuring jazz-related funded projects and resources on the NEH website (www.neh.gov) and lesson plans on EDSITEment (http://edsitement.neh.gov/view_lesson_plan.asp?id=379

For more information on Jazz Appreciation Month and to access some of the lesson plans and other online material, please check the JAM website http://www.smithsonianjazz.org/jam/jam_start.asp.

 

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