Jazz musicians under Dustin Retzlaff perform at the HFA recital hall. Thanks to NDSU which provided our trumpet section! A totally enjoyable evening of music, "Americcan music" I might add. I loved the bass trombone sound! The concert was on Thursday. Thanks to Del Sarlette for taking photo. The stage floor has been repaired after an issue of "buckling."
Well it's Friday and surely any hopes we had of spring coming forth are rather dashed. We have so many kinds of weather in Minnesota. We think we have seen it all and then a day comes along with a distinct trait. Everything looks white on this Friday morning from the ground up through the sky above.
I might want to imagine music from the movie "Fargo." The movie springs to mind because of a reviewer who made note of a Minnesota trait. And that is, looking to the distance and barely making out where the horizon is. I believe the reviewer described the horizon as a faint blue line.
Meanwhile in Morris we're getting into a new semester of the U of M-Morris. And it's not exactly routine times. Another "splash" in the Star Tribune is a follow-up on the previous little "gem" that may have been revealing though not heartening for us. Mercy. So the sky is falling? We might have thought as much after the first article.
Erin Adler was the writer of both. I had a pleasant email exchange with her after the first one. I had to admit to her I was not a subscriber. She tried nudging me to become one. I explained that I had subscribed in the past. An issue now, I further elaborated, is that the paper's re-design has resulted in smaller type size. In my 70s now, my eyesight has unfortunately declined.
Hope Erin has my name filed away as someone who might help her with "background" sometime. Journalists salivate over getting "background." I should know. I corresponded also with a predecessor of Erin at the Strib and that would be Maura Lerner. Not sure what she's up to now. I fed Ms. Lerner the "tip" that the chosen new chancellor at our jewel in the crown, Rodney Hanley, had abruptly withdrawn within a couple weeks, as I recall. Was very irregular, obviously.
If Hanley withdrew because of a mere "whim," I might expect him to be "blackballed," to not be trusted by other institutions. This did not happen. I wrote about the guy. He was with Fisk University. I researched about how that college was promoted and lifted up in its earliest days by a singing group, the "Jubilee Singers." So then I drew the parallel with our UMM and how our little instituti0n got going with its "men's chorus" that traveled to World's Fairs. The chorus performed as part of Minnesota-themed days at those fairs.
UMM was joined by other music groups from across our state for those days. So the practical value was largely with making an impression on the other Minnesota musicians. Step one was just to assert that UMM was in existence and getting off the ground! It was mission accomplished. My father happened to be the director.
The original boosters of UMM were nervous about the institution's footing in its earliest days. Anxious. Could this place really "fly?" What about our "brand" of liberal arts education? Was it practicable or risky?
Today it appears fact that the liberal arts are struggling. Whither UMM? Good question. And the first Star Tribune article by Ms. Adler might have suggested that the sky is falling. Well, look at the word "nosedive" right in the headline! Subtle as a sledgehammer. To confirm our fears, we read in the article that UMM was changing horses in midstream. This was with our chancellor position - the top person.
In mid-school year the leadership reins were being transferred. We might have expected that if there were problems, they could have been smoothed over in a less panicky way. Instead we sensed panic in conjunction with the word "nosedive."
Turning the page
Within weeks we had a new head person in place and I got to meet him at TMC on campus (which I think has a new name). What a pleasant night at TMC! Students assembled around the room for "student government" which I have learned to expect is characterized by conflict. This has been a burr in my saddle through the years: conflict in UMM student government. If this was a "lab" for the students to experience government, it certainly was not an uplifting one.
Voila! The students at the meeting I was present for, were most pleasant with amicable spirit! A new day has dawned?
Not only that, I started attending UMM basketball games where I was impressed by the very firm message pre-game about how standards for fan behavior were going to be enforced. The day must have come when UMM leaders realized we could not countenance the coarse stuff anymore. I had witnessed a lot of that through the years. And a lot of it appeared to reflect the feeling among UMM students that they were superior to the kids at other schools. But today it's all very civilized, thank the Lord.
UMM has fallen into survival mode - we cannot risk getting kicked out of our conference. We're making a "last stand" in the UMAC. I now enjoy watching UMAC competition more than I thought I would. If we can maintain our current situation, all is right with the world. We need to hope the UMAC stays viable. And we can just "look the other way" with regard to the "oddball" or cultish traits of some opposing schools. Try to ignore it.
Martin Luther College is affiliated with the Wisconsin Synod of the Lutheran Church - that synod believes the Pope to be the antichrist!
A former athletic director explained to me that "as long as we just stick to sports, we'll get along fine."
I'll be attending a Catholic funeral in Morris on Saturday and so I have the opportunity to get a blessing from a Catholic priest! The Pope is courageously trying to hold the line versus Donald Trump. Is the Pope powerful enough to stand up to the Orange Man? We may stop laughing about Trump soon - it won't be funny anymore.
Always joyful music
I have enjoyed attending two UMM music events in the last few days. The photo of jazzers at the top here captures the excitement. Earlier in the week I attended the Mardi Gras singalong at the dance studio downtown. Thanks to the UMM choir program for this.
I wrote a blog post inspired by the Mardi Gras event for my companion blog site. I am an incurable "long-form journalist." A dinosaur maybe. Kids don't like reading dense text, so how can we expect them to read the Bible! Here is the link to the post which is on "Morris of Course." Thanks and God bless of course.
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| Tom Grosland |
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com














