
German string ensemble and pianist to merge talents in HBPA performance
One of the most internationally sought-after string quartets, Minguet Quartet, will join with dynamic pianist Andreas Klein for the third concert in the Hesston-Bethel Performing Arts Series (HBPA) 2015-16 season at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Feb. 1, at Hesston Mennonite Church on the Hesston College campus.
Minguet Quartet, a German group comprised of two violins, a viola and violoncello, was founded in 1988 and has since played in many of the great concert halls of the world. The ensemble’s repertoire focuses on both Classical-Romantic and modern music, and has been hailed by the Washington Post for its “virtuosity and passion” and “flawless ensemble interplay.”
The quartet’s namesake is Pablo Minguet, an 18th century Spanish philosopher who, through his writings, strived to facilitate access to the fine arts for all sectors of the population.
Aside from their south central Kansas concert, the ensemble’s 2015-16 season also includes appearances at world-famous music festivals and concert tours in Great Britain, Finland and the United States.
Minguet Quartet regularly partners with other artists, including vocalists, pianist, fellow string musicians, actors and orchestra. Their HBPA performance will also feature guest pianist Andreas Klein.
Klein, who also hails from Germany, was lauded by the New York Times as “a fascinating artist with all the indispensable qualities: temperament, taste, touch, tone, the four T’s of pianism” and “a pianist who makes silences sound like music.”
Klein’s storied career as an orchestra soloist and recitalist has taken him to the world’s most prestigious venues. As a chamber musician, his collaborations include some of the world’s greatest ensembles.
Reserved seating and general admission tickets for Minguet Quartet are available online or by calling 620-327-8158. Ticket prices range from $17 to $20 with discounts available for students and senior citizens.
Remaining concerts in the 2015-16 HBPA lineup include the Grammy Award-winning men’s a cappella ensemble Chanticleer on Feb. 23; and London-based vocal ensemble The Swingles on April 3.
Hesston-Bethel Performing Arts is funded in part by the cities of Hesston and North Newton, Excel Industries and Hustler Turf Equipment (Hesston), the Hesston Community Foundation, the North Newton Community Foundation, Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts, and award from the National Endowment for the Arts and KMUW Wichita Public Radio.
Presidential Search Committee meets with campus community
The Hesston College Presidential Search Committee met on campus Jan. 15 and 16 to work through the process of determining the best candidate for the college’s next president. President Howard Keim, the college’s eighth president, announced his resignation in October, to be effective June 30, after 11 years of service.
The search committee facilitated listening sessions on Friday where students, faculty and staff were able to share their experiences as part of the community and their thoughts on the future of Hesston College.
“The committee is grateful for the significant and thoughtful responses that we received as part of the listening process,” said Carlos Romero, executive director of Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) and ex-officio member of the search committee. “The responses from the various groups will be carefully considered and help to inform the next steps.”
Involving students and hearing about their experience is an effective way for the committee to understand the campus climate and what is important to students both on campus and as they make their decision to start here.
“Students were involved in the past searches, and their voices helped make good decisions,” said Ken G Kabira (Naperville, Ill.), Presidential Search Committee chair and Hesston College Board of Directors member. “I believe current students can make a difference for future students by helping this committee.”
Faculty and staff discussed in small groups before sharing their ideas with the larger group. Looking to the future of Hesston College, some common themes that emerged for the next president were an understanding of Hesston College’s unique strengths as a two-year private college and a creative spirit to help the college thrive, passion for the college’s mission and values as well as those of the Anabaptist/Mennonite faith, experience in higher education and an ability to help navigate the current denominational and social climate with compassion and grace.
The committee also met with civic leaders as well as church and Mennonite Church USA conference leaders from the area and solicited views on Hesston College’s priorities as well as advice regarding the search.
The 12-person committee is made up of Hesston College Board of Directors members, MEA board members, Hesston College faculty and staff and church and educational leaders. Their next tasks include conversations with other identified groups, conduct an online survey of Hesston College stakeholders, assemble a profile of the ideal candidate and begin accepting nominations and applications for the role.

The Hesston College Presidential Search Committee: Addie Banks (Bronx, N.Y.), Marie Morris (Anderson, Ind.), Ramiro Hernandez (Washington, Iowa), Carlos Romero (Goshen, Ind.), Carlota Ponds (Hesston), Barth Hague (Newton, Kan.), Ken G Kabira (Naperville, Ill.), Kendra Burkey (North Newton, Kan.), Luke Roth-Mullet (Hesston), Tim Burkholder (Goshen, Ind.) and Lynette Bontrager (Archbold, Ohio). Not pictured: Tony Brown (Pittsburgh, Pa.) and Chuck Neufeld (North Newton, Kan.).
AVDS conference to feature Nobel Peace Prize nominee
Internationally known voice for peace and nonviolence Father John Dear, will be featured at Hesston College’s Anabaptist Vision and Discipleship series conference Feb. 13 to 15.
The conference will center on the theme “Overcoming Evil: Ordinary People Making a Difference,” Stories of peace from people locally and around the globe will focus on and encourage to follow Jesus on the path of overcoming evil with good. The 2015 Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship Conference, an organization of Mennonite Church USA for Mennonite and affiliated college peace organizations, will be held in conjunction with AVDS and sponsored by Hesston College’s Bible and Ministry Program.
Dear has spent more than three decades as a peace activist, popular lecturer and movement organizer, and has been arrested more than 75 times in acts of civil disobedience against war. In 2008, Archbishop Desmond Tutu nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize. He is the author of 30 books, including his autobiography “A Persistent Peace,” that have been translated into 10 languages.
In his nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize, Archbishop Tutu wrote of Dear: “John Dear is the embodiment of a peacemaker. He believes that peace is not something static, but rather to make peace is to be engaged, mind, body and spirit.”
Dear serves as a coordinator for CampaignNonviolence.org and as Outreach Coordinator for Pace e Bene, a group working with individuals, organizations and movements to strengthen efforts to abolish war, protect human rights, end poverty, challenge injustice, heal the planet and build a more just, peaceful and nonviolent world. He has also held many other service positions, including Red Cross chaplain coordinator following the events of Sept. 11, 2001, where he counseled thousands of relatives and rescue workers.
Dear has been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today and National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered.” For eight years he wrote a weekly blog for the National Catholic Reporter and is regularly featured on the radio show “Democracy Now!” and The Huffington Post. He is the subject of the DVD documentary The Narrow Path.
Dear has two masters degrees in theology from the Graduate Theological Union (Berkley, Calif.) and has taught theology at Fordham University (New York City).
See AVDS information and online registration.
Anabaptist Vision and Discipleship Series (AVDS) is an annual conference designed to address current topics in church and congregational leadership experience from an Anabaptist/Mennonite perspective. Audiences who should especially consider participating are youth and young adults as well as pastors and congregational leaders.
Leadership initiative receives funding
Hesston College’s new leadership program was recently awarded a $10,000 Leadership Transformation Grant from the Kansas Leadership Center (KLC) (Wichita) for 15 participants to attend KLC programs for leadership development in 2016.
Hesston’s program was one of 15 institutions selected at the $10,000 level. The funding will be used to allow students, faculty and staff from the college to participate in KLC training programs alongside representatives from the other institutions.
The leadership program at Hesston is currently being developed to be launched in fall 2016. It will help students develop their own leadership capacities as they lead and serve in the church, community and world.
Seminar to allow participants to engage in civil rights education
For the second year in a row, Hesston College is offering any interested participants the opportunity to learn the history and dynamics of the civil rights movement of the 1960s in a weeklong Civil Rights Seminar during the college’s spring break, March 4 to 13.
The seminar, led by Hesston College faculty member John Sharp as well as 1972 alumni Bruce and Joy Rogers (Goshen, Ind.) and former Hesston College faculty member Tony Brown, will engage with historical sites and activities in Alabama and Mississippi.
Participants will have the opportunity to walk from Brown Chapel across the Edmund Petus Bridge in Selma, Ala., where on Bloody Sunday, March 7, 1965, peaceful marchers were attacked. Most significant of all will be conversations with people on the ground – or “foot soldiers” as President Barack Obama called them – people deeply involved in the movement from Selma to Birmingham, Ala., to Merdian, Miss., whose stories are provocative and inspirational.
The seminar will include worshipping at the Sixteenth Baptist Church, Birmingham, Ala., visiting the Civil Rights Institute (Birmingham), the Rosa Parks Library/Interpretive Center (Montgomery, Ala.) and the National Civil Rights Museum (Memphis, Tenn.) where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was murdered in 1968.
Along with students and faculty, the general public is invited to participate. The cost of the seminar is $450 plus meals, which includes transportation, lodging, and museum entrance fees. The deadline for registering is January 15.
Contact John Sharp for more information at 620-327-8248 or john.sharp@hesston.edu.
Search committee announced for Hesston College president
Elkhart, Ind. – Hesston College and Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) will begin the search for the ninth Hesston College president with the first meeting of the search committee set for January 2016 on the college campus. The Hesston College Board of Directors and the MEA Board of Directors have jointly appointed a Presidential Search Committee that includes board members as well as alumni, professors, students, pastors and church and educational leaders. All are individuals, committed to the future of Hesston College and Mennonite education, who will come together from across the campus, the church and the country to begin the work of calling a uniquely qualified person to lead the 106-year-old institution.
“Selecting the president of an institution is one of the most important responsibilities of both the Hesston College and Mennonite Education Agency Board of Directors,” said MEA board chair Judy Miller. “The Hesston College search committee will be charged to create a presidential profile. The committee is expected to take time to listen to the multiple perspectives of Hesston College stakeholders and be informed by the strategic plan of the institution. They will be responsible for promoting the position in order to generate a list of possible candidates. Their work will culminate in recommendation of a candidate of choice to both the Hesston and MEA boards.”
Kelvin Friesen, chair of the Hesston College Board of Directors, said, “We have assembled a search committee that represents an abundance of professional, geographic, and ethnic diversity, with a common appreciation of and commitment to Mennonite higher education. Led by Hesston College board member Ken G Kabira, the search committee is eager to begin their work. We are thankful for their commitment and enthusiasm, and look forward to their recommendation of the person who will lead the Hesston College community where each student is educated and nurtured academically, socially and spiritually.”
The committee includes:
- Addie Banks, Bronx, New York, current MEA board member. Banks is founder and executive director of The Groundswell Group and pastor of King of Glory Tabernacle, a Mennonite Church USA congregation.
- Lynette Bontrager, Archbold, Ohio, current MEA board member. Bontrager has served on many boards and has a strong commitment to Mennonite education.
- Tony Brown, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, retired Hesston College artist-in-residence, faculty member and campus counselor. Brown is an internationally acclaimed baritone.
- Kendra Burkey, North Newton, Kansas, Hesston College professor of communication and an alumna of Hesston College.
- Barth Hague, Newton, Kansas, CEO of Mirror, Inc. Hague is city commissioner for Newton and an alumnus of Hesston College. He also serves as chair of the board for The Mennonite.
- Ramiro Hernandez, Washington, Iowa, current MEA board member. Hernandez is a church planter and Hispanic coordinator for Central Plains Mennonite Conference. He served on Howard Keim’s mid-term review.
- Ken G Kabira, Naperville, Illinois, chair of the search committee and current Hesston College board member. Kabira is associate executive director of Water Quality Association and an alumnus of Hesston College.
- Marie Morris, Anderson, Indiana, current Hesston College Board member. Morris is provost at Anderson University and an alumna of Hesston College.
- Luke Roth-Mullet, Hesston, Kansas, current Hesston College board member. Roth-Mullet is vice president of operations at Excel Industries and an alumnus of Hesston College.
- Chuck Neufeld, North Newton, Kansas, retired conference minister of the Illinois Mennonite Conference and pastor emeritus of Community Mennonite Church. Neufeld is also a folksinger, songwriter and storyteller.
- Carlota Ponds, Hesston, Kansas, staff for Hesston College Alumni/Church Relations.
- Carlos Romero, Goshen, Indiana, executive director of Mennonite Education Agency. Romero is an ex-officio member of the search committee.
The Presidential Search Committee is responsible to both the Hesston College board and the MEA board. Search Committee chair Ken G Kabira said “Hesston College is small but it gives a big experience to students. Thousands of students have been transformed by Hesston’s Christ-centered environment and quality education. God has provided the college with capable and faithful leaders for over 100 years. The committee will carefully discern God’s will for the college’s future, and I ask everyone to pray for Hesston College and our committee.”
Carlos Romero, executive director of MEA and ex-officio member of the search committee, said, “Hesston College plays an important role in the life and ministry of Mennonite Church USA. The institution has had a significant impact in the denomination and beyond. The commitment and experience that search committee members bring is a special blessing to Hesston College, Mennonite Church USA and the broader community.”
Sunflower Trio to celebrate local musician
The Sunflower Trio will give a concert to celebrate the life of Dr. J. Harold Moyer, a local musician, at 7 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 29, at Bethel College Mennonite Church, North Newton, Kan. The concert will also feature special guests Rosewood Winds and congregational singing of some of Dr. Moyer’s many hymn arrangements.
The Sunflower Trio recently released a CD called Reflections: The Music of J. Harold Moyer that commemorates the life of Dr. Moyer, a long-time music faculty member at Bethel College who passed away in 2012. The CD is available on the Sunflower Trio’s website and will be available for purchase at the concert.
“There was not a great deal of music composed for a group consisting of tenor, violin and voice, so Dr. Moyer was kind enough to write three sets of songs for us,” said Matthew Schloneger. “He composed enough material for or that fit our group that we were able to produce an entire CD of his work.”
The Sunflower Trio was founded in 2002 and is dedicated to performing music featuring voice, violin and piano/organ. Members include Hesston College music department faculty Matthew Schloneger, tenor; Rebecca Schloneger, violin; and Kenneth Rodgers, piano and organ. The trio excels in a variety of styles from Baroque to contemporary, folk and Broadway. The trio, which is also a family affair as Matthew and Rebecca are husband and wife and Rodgers is Matthew’s uncle, has performed extensively throughout the United States as a part of the Kansas Arts Commission and Mid-America Arts Alliance touring rosters. They released their first CD, All Good Gifts, in 2005, featuring arrangements of familiar classical and popular songs.
Rosewood Winds is a woodwind trio based in Newton. The trio has performed in a wide variety of venues with a large, varied repertoire. Their members are Amanda Friesen, flute; Kristin Kliewer, oboe; and Valerie Klaassen, clarinet.
Born in 1927 in Newton, J. Harold Moyer’s life reflected devotion to the work of the church and passion for music. The youngest of three brothers, he grew up as a Bethel College “campus kid” as his father worked in the business office, and after graduating from Newton High School, he attended Bethel, graduating in 1949.
During World War II, he served in Civilian Public Service during World War II at Camp Camino in California, and at Mennonite Central Committee headquarters in Akron, Pa.
After graduation from Bethel, he pursued graduate studies in music composition, receiving a master’s degree from George Peabody College (Nashville, Tenn.), and a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa (Iowa City).
After completing his graduate studies, Dr. Moyer taught at Freeman (S.D.) Junior College, during which time he was drafted for the Korean War and served in 1-W service, teaching music at Boys’ Industrial School in Topeka, Kan.
While working on his doctorate, he taught at Goshen (Ind.) College, then returned to teach at Bethel College in 1959 where he remained until 1992. He also taught one year at Conrad Grebel College (Waterloo, Ontario, Canada). He received professor emeritus status from Bethel and continued teaching until 2011. During his years at Bethel, he wrote numerous choral and instrumental compositions and arrangements, three operas and two musical dramas. In 2009, Moyer received the Bethel College Alumni Association’s Outstanding Alumnus Award.
From 1960-67, Moyer was involved in developing The Mennonite Hymnal, the first joint hymnal venture between the Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church. Moyer served as vice chair of the Joint Hymnal Committee, and the hymnal contains 13 hymns with an original Moyer tune or harmonization. He later contributed 10 hymns to Hymnal: A Worship Book (1992), currently used in many Anabaptist congregations in North America, as composer, arranger or tune harmonizer. He wrote a number of anthems for the Kansas Mennonite Men’s Chorus, which led to his relationship with the Mark Foster Music Co. (Champaign, Ill.), and publication of 14 of those anthems.
During the last decade of his life, Moyer composed a significant amount of chamber music, including the three sets of songs written for the Sunflower Trio. His late songs featured texts by some of his favorite poets, including Carl Sandburg, Lew Sarrett and Jean Janzen.
Celtic music and dance to ring in holiday season
Tradition-rich Celtic song and dance will help usher in the holiday season when Cherish the Ladies presents their Celtic Christmas program for Hesston-Bethel Performing Arts (HBPA) series at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 3, at Hesston Mennonite Church on the Hesston College campus.
Formed in 1985 in New York City, Cherish the Ladies is a Grammy-nominated, Irish-American group featuring extraordinary women in what is traditionally a male-dominated Irish music scene. In their 30 years of existence, the ensemble has toured the world, played the White House and the Olympics, recorded 16 albums and presented an Emmy Award-winning Public Television Special of their Irish Homecoming program that aired across the U.S. and Ireland.
The Ladies’ Celtic Christmas will feature six musicians and four dancers to create an evening that includes a spectacular blend of virtuoso instrumental talents, beautiful vocals, captivating arrangements and stunning step dancing.
The ethereal Celtic vocal harmonies will be accompanied by flute, whistles, guitar, accordion, piano and fiddle as well as accomplished step dancers, including the former principal lead dancer for Riverdance, two world champion step dancers and a Canadian step dance champion.
The New York Times calls Cherish the Ladies’ music “passionate, tender, and rambunctious,” and the Washington Post praises their “astonishing array of virtuosity.” The group has won recognition in the BBC’s Best Musical Group of the Year and won the Top North American Celtic Group by both the Irish Music Awards and NPR’s Thistle and Shamrock. They’ve also collaborated with musicians including The Boston Pops, The Clancy Brothers, The Chieftains, Vince Gill, Nanci Griffith, Pete Seeger, Don Henley, Arlo Guthrie and Maura O’Connell as well as being the featured soloist with more than 300 performances with symphony orchestras.
Reserved seating and general admission tickets for Cherish the Ladies are available through the HBPA website or by calling 620-327-8158. Ticket prices range from $23 to $27 with discounts available for students and senior citizens.
Remaining concerts in the 2015-16 HBPA lineup include the German instrumental ensemble Minguet Quartet with guest pianist Andreas Klein on Feb. 1, 2016; Grammy Award-winning men’s a cappella ensemble Chanticleer on Feb. 23; and London-based vocal ensemble The Swingles on April 3.
The HBPA Cherish the Ladies concert is funded in part by the cities of Hesston and North Newton, Excel Industries and Hustler Turf Equipment (Hesston), the Hesston Community Foundation, the North Newton Community Foundation, Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts, an award from the National Endowment for the Arts and KMUW Wichita Public Radio.
Hesston College was recently named a Top Higher Education Institution contributor to Kansas District 4 Economy by NAFSA: Association of International Educators based on the economic impact the college’s international student population has on the local economy.
A recent NAFSA report found that the 974,926 international students studying at U.S. college and universities added $30.5 billion to the U.S. economy, supporting more than 373,000 jobs during the 2014-15 year.
At the state level, 2,785 international students enrolled in Kansas colleges and universities in 2014-15 contributed $55.2 million and supported 548 jobs.
In Kansas Congressional District 4, NAFSA’s report found that the 44 international students from 13 countries that studied at Hesston College in 2014-15 contributed $1.8 million to the economy and supported 11 jobs, ranking Hesston fifth in the district.
Hesston College understands the financial impact that international students have on U.S., state-wide and local economies but also recognizes and appreciates the inestimable academic and cultural enrichment that these students bring to Hesston College’s campus and the city of Hesston.
Hesston has a rich international student history. In its 106 year history, the college has enrolled more than 1,300 international students from 84 countries. For the fall 2015 semester, 45 international students from 13 countries are enrolled at Hesston, or 11 percent of the total student population.