Saint Mary's Newsroom
Campus ConnectionAn update from the president to alumni and parents
Spiritual offering
In today’s spiritual offering, St. Francis de Sales, who was subject to serious crisis several times in his life, encourages us to trust in God knowing He will always give us what we need.
“Do not fear what may happen tomorrow. The same loving Father who cares for you today will care for you tomorrow and every day. Either he will shield you from suffering, or He will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace then and put aside all anxious thoughts and imaginings.” – St. Francis de Sales, Bishop and Doctor of the Catholic Church
‘Faith at Home’ through Augustine Institute
The Augustine Institute created a program that offers videos for children and adults, audio talks, and other resources. This resource is free for 40 days during this time of uncertainty. Register at formed.org/faithathome.
A Hidden Life: Making the Most of Solitude
Every Wednesday, starting March 25, at 8 p.m., join other students online as we break through the barriers of uncertainty together and discover the beauty of life at a distance. Bring your concerns and questions while Campus Ministry guides reflections rooted in the wisdom of scripture and the saints.
RSVP to Brian Kusek at bkusek@smumn.edu to receive Zoom link.
A Scriptural Accompaniment of Jesus Through His Passion, Death, and Resurrection
Every Friday, starting March 27, at 1 p.m., join other students online as we spend time with Jesus and take a deeper look into His Passion, Death, and Resurrection and what it all means for us.
RSVP to Sister Mary Elizabeth Ann, RSM, Ed.D., at mmccullo@smumn.edu to receive Zoom link.
Join us daily, starting March 23, at 3 p.m. for the rosary to help bring an end to COVID-19. Live on Saint Mary’s University Campus Ministry Facebook page, which also includes daily inspiration, information, and Minute to Win It games!
Saint Mary’s University responds to COVID-19
WINONA/MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — With the progressing threat of COVID-19, Saint Mary’s University is taking steps to keep its students and the community safe, including moving classes online, canceling all athletic events, and suspending upcoming public events.
For the latest news, visit smumn.edu/COVID19.
Athletics
The Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) announced Friday, March 13, that it will cancel the remainder of the spring sports season. In a statement released to all of the 13 member schools, MIAC executive director Dan McKane stated:
“The Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Presidents’ Council has voted to cancel the 2020 conference regular season and postseason championships for spring-sports through the remainder of the academic year, effective immediately. The decision was based on the ongoing impact of the coronavirus, following the lead of the NCAA cancelling spring-sport championships and many other conferences cancelling their spring seasons.”
The MIAC is working with the NCAA regarding eligibility for all student-athletes affected by the nationwide health pandemic. In accordance with the MIAC’s announcement, Saint Mary’s is canceling all spring sports competitions, including all nonconference contests. Read more at saintmaryssports.com.
Events
In accordance with Saint Mary’s decision to minimize the spread of COVID-19, the following public events are suspended:
- All on-campus admission events and visits, including information sessions, campus tours, and class visits.
- Taylor Richmond Benefit Dance and Dinner on Saturday, March 14.
- Concert Band performance on Sunday, March 15.
- Founders’ Day on Tuesday, March 17.
- Theatre and Dance SPLaSH! Wednesday through Sunday, March 18-22.
- WE Forum Panel: Investing in Your Business on Thursday, March 19.
- Scholarship Recognition Day on March 21.
- Spring Preview Day on March 27.
- Page Series SPEAK residency Monday through Saturday, March 23-28.
- Driftless Dance Festival Friday through Sunday, March 27-29.
The university will examine which events can be rescheduled for later this spring. Some events are still under consideration. All events after Monday, April 13, are still planned as scheduled. Saint Mary’s will reassess the situation as April 13 approaches and provide updates as more information is available. Ticket holders will be contacted.
Campuses
Winona Campus — Beginning immediately, all athletic facilities and the Performance Center will be closed until April 13. In conjunction, all outside events scheduled in these facilities will be canceled until they re-open. University employees are available to answer questions by phone or online 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Twin Cities Campus and Apple Valley Center — Employees are available to answer questions by phone or online 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Students are encouraged to contact Student Central at 612-238-4566.
Rochester Campus — The Rochester Campus is open 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and by appointment.

Page Series brings groundbreaking kathak and tap dancers to Winona in SPEAK
Leela Dance Collective, Michelle Dorrance, and Dormeshia to perform and offer a week of programs throughout the community
Winona, Minn. — The Page Series at Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota brings the Leela Dance Collective and world-renowned tap dancers Dormeshia and Michelle Dorrance to Winona Monday through Saturday, March 23-28, for a week of residency activities and a performance of their original dance and music production SPEAK.
Bridging tradition and innovation and history and progress, Indian kathak and American tap dance, continents and ages apart, share parallel stories of struggle and perseverance. In SPEAK, kathak dancers Rachna Nivas and Rina Mehta (torch bearers of the late master Pandit Chitresh Das’ famed lineage), as well as jazz tap dancers Michelle Dorrance (a MacArthur Award winner) and Dormeshia (of the Tony Award-winning Bring In Da Noise, Bring In Da Funk) bring to the forefront the voices of a new generation of powerful female artists.
SPEAK breaks creative barriers, celebrates two contrasting forms of expression through cross-cultural performances, and highlights the vacuum of female artists in two male-dominated dance genres. The production serves as an example for intercultural collaboration and global citizenship, a dialogue of rhythm, poetry, storytelling, music, and dance hailed as “… an evening of rhythmic magic” (Los Angeles Dance Chronicle).
Providing a live musical score by Allison Miller and Jayanta Banerjee are a trio of classical Indian musicians, led by sitarist Jayanta Banerjee, and a trio of American jazz musicians featuring pianist Caili O’Doherty. They are joined by Dan Kurfirst on piano, Keala Kaumeheiwa on bass, Debasish Sarkar on vocals, and Satyaprakash Mishra on tabla.
Kathak comes from the word “katha” which means story. The kathakas were storytellers that travelled from village to village in ancient India telling the stories of the great Hindu gods and goddesses. While the depiction of Hindu iconography remains visible in modern day kathak, the tradition of telling epic tales through kathak has been left behind by most contemporary practitioners of the art form in favor of more contemporary, abstract, or accessible explorations.
Tap is an indigenous American dance genre that evolved over a period of some 300 years. Initially developing out of West African musical and step-dance traditions — along with influences from other rhythmic forms such as Irish step dance — tap emerged in the southern United States in the 1700s.
The inspiration for SPEAK comes from the late kathak master Pandit Chitresh Das’ work with tap dancer Jason Samuels through their collaboration, “India Jazz Suites.” After Das’ death in 2015, the Leela Dance Collective was formed to continue his legacy.
Residency Activities
Beginning Monday, March 23, members of the SPEAK cast will be in Winona to offer workshops, artist talks, and events designed to share the history and background of their work. All are invited to participate in free events throughout the week, including:
- Introduction to Kathak workshops:
- Monday, March 23, 7:30 p.m. at the Valéncia Arts Center
- Tuesday, March 24, 10:45 a.m. at the Winona Friendship Center (call 507-454-5212 to register)
- A Page in History: Kathak and Tap Dance
- Tuesday, March 24, 12:05 p.m. at the Winona County History Center
- Tap and Kathak Master Class for Intermediate/Advanced dancers
- Tuesday, March 24, 4 p.m. at the Valéncia Arts Center (register at pagetheatre.org)
- Artist Talk: How I learned music without learning to read a measure of it
- Wednesday, March 25, noon in the Figliulo Recital Hall (Saint Mary’s Performance Center)
- Meet the Artists Event and Tap Jam
- Wednesday, March 25, 5 p.m. at Island City Brewing Company
- The Music of SPEAKLecture-Demonstration
- Thursday, March 26, 4 p.m. at the Page Theatre
- Documentary Screening: Upaj: Improvise
- Thursday, March 26, 7 p.m. at Winona State University (Science and Laboratory Center, Room 120)
Company members will also participate in the Driftless Dance Festival on Saturday, March 28:
- Rhythm and Movement for Families
- 10:15 a.m. at the Winona Family YMCA
- Artist Panel and Lunch with the Artists
- 11:45 a.m. at Acoustic Café
- Introduction to Kathak Workshop
- 2 p.m. at Valéncia Arts Center
- Tap Master Classes at Valéncia Arts Center (fee-based events, registration required)
- 10-11 a.m. • Michelle Dorrance • Open to dancers ages 10 and older
- 1:15-2:45 p.m. • Michelle Dorrance • Open to dancers ages 13 and older
- 3-4:30 p.m. • Dormeshia • Open to dancers ages 10 and older
In addition, the artists will work with groups from Home and Community Options and Riverway Learning Community during their week in Winona. Area school groups are also invited to attend a school matinee performance of SPEAK on Friday, March 27, at 12:30 p.m. at Saint Mary’s.
Full activity descriptions and registration information is available at pagetheatre.org.
SPEAK will be performed Friday, March 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Page Theatre. Tickets to SPEAK are $30 for adults, $27 for students and seniors, and $24 for youth, and may be purchased online at pagetheatre.org or by calling the Performance Center box office at 507-457-1715 (noon to 6 p.m., weekdays). Performance tickets are also available at a reduced rate when ordered as part of a Driftless Dance Festival pass.
To view the SPEAK trailer: https://bit.ly/34knqpZ
Additional SPEAK videos: https://bit.ly/30nzjKq and https://bit.ly/2QYLeuY
About the Artists
Rachna Nivas is a charismatic performer, mentor, and powerful leader amongst today’s generation of Indian classical artists, bringing a contemporary voice to kathak. Deemed “revelatory” by the San Francisco Chronicle, she has an extensive performance career to great acclaim across the U.S. and India. She is a senior disciple of the late legendary master, Pandit Chitresh Das, and the former director of the Chhandam School of Kathak, one of the largest classical Indian dance institutions in the world. www.rachnanivas.com
Rina Mehta, founder and artistic director of The Leela Institute, is one of the most powerful Kathak artists of her generation. She is a senior disciple of the late Pandit Chitresh Das and has performed to great acclaim across the United States and India, both as a soloist and principal dancer with the Chitresh Das Dance Company. She received a Fulbright Award for Dance, and is a pioneer and strong leader amongst her generation, taking Kathak forward and carving a place for the ancient art form in modern times. www.rinamehtakathak.com
Dormeshia Sumbry-Edwards has been a part of almost every major tap movie or show that has appeared in the history of tap dance since the 80s, including the Tony-winning Bring in Da Noise, Bring in Da Funk. Accolades include an Astaire Award for Best Performance, the Bessie Award, and the Hoofer Award. She is founder of Harlem Tap Studio and performs extensively at shows and festivals around the world. Dormeshia was also Michael Jackson’s private tap instructor for 11 years. She is revered as one of the most dynamic performers in the industry today. www.divinerhythmproductions.com/DormeshiaSumbryEdwards.html
Michelle Dorrance is a New York City–based artist who has appeared in STOMP, Derick Grant’s Imagine Tap!, Jason Samuels Smith’s Charlie’s Angels/Chasing the Bird, Ayodele Casel’s Diary of a Tap Dancer, and Mable Lee’s Dancing Ladies. Company work includes: Savion Glover’s Ti Dii, Manhattan Tap, Barbara Duffy and Co., JazzTap Ensemble, and Rumba Tap. Solo work ranges from The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to commissions for the Martha Graham Dance Company and American Ballet Theatre. A 2018 Doris Duke Artist, 2017 Ford Foundation Art of Change Fellow, and 2015 MacArthur Fellow, Dorrance has received honors and support from United States Artists, the Joyce Theater, New York City Center, the Alpert Awards, Jacob’s Pillow, Princess Grace Foundation, The Field, American Tap Dance Foundation, and the Bessie Awards. www.dorrancedance.com
The Leela Dance Collective was founded in 2016 by Rina Mehta, Rachna Nivas and Seibi Lee, senior disciples of legendary kathak master Pandit Chitresh Das, along with leading kathak performers Sarah Morelli and Shefali Jain. It is the only one of its kind Indian-American dance company that brings together leading kathak artists from around the world representing a multitude of voices to articulate a clairvoyant vision for kathak. The collective is distinguished by an artistic practice that centers around collaboration and collective creativity and a body of work that is at once grounded in tradition and boldly innovative. In its two-year history, the collective has already begun to make an indelible mark on the field of kathak and world dance with its rigorous technique, dynamic choreography, fashion-forward costuming, and sophisticated musical scores.
The collective has garnered critical acclaim across the United States and internationally for its groundbreaking productions from SPEAK, a collaboration that brings together leading female artists in kathak and tap, to Son of the Wind, a traditional dance ballad based on India’s epic, the Ramayana. With home season performances in San Francisco and Los Angeles along with national and international touring, the collective performs for more than 10,000 people annually. Past highlights include appearances at The Broad Stage, the Green Music Center and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. The collective’s productions and performances have been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, the Zellerbach Family Fund, the Esper Petersen Foundation and New Music USA. theleelainstitute.org.
About the Page Series
Now in its 33rd season, the Page Series connects professional performing artists from around the globe with thousands of Winonans each year. With events at the Joseph Page Theatre on the Winona Campus of Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota, as well as at locations across the Winona community, the Page Series offers dance, music, and theatre performances, workshops, classes, and more that inspire, uplift, educate, and invite community members to discover the relevance of the arts in their daily lives. www.pagetheatre.org
This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.
Driftless Dance Festival activities are supported, in part, by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Page Series community programs are made possible in part by a grant from the Xcel Energy Foundation.
Robertson, Geospatial Services director, presents at Wetland Science Conference
Andy Robertson, Geospatial Services (GSS) director, presented at the Wisconsin Wetlands Association’s 2020 Wetland Science Conference in Elkhart Lake, Wis., on Feb. 19.
Robertson presented the results of a geospatial model developed by GSS that predicts the spatial extent of federally protected wetlands and waterways under different interpretations of the WOTUS (Waters of the United States) rule.
The purpose of the model was to help elected officials, policy makers, and the public understand what waters are currently federally protected, as well as the extent and impact of changes proposed for the rule by the current presidential administration.
Robertson’s presentation was part of a session co-hosted by the Wisconsin DNR, The Nature Conservancy, and GSS to discuss WOTUS-related implications.
The two-day conference draws around 350 wetland or water scientists and professionals from across the upper Midwest each year.
Meet Dr. Shih, Psy.D. in Counseling Psychology core assistant professor
Jerome (Jerry) Shih, Ph.D., joined Saint Mary’s University as a core assistant professor of Psy.D. in Counseling Psychology on Jan. 6.
Prior to joining Saint Mary’s, he was assistant director of University of Minnesota Student Counseling Services for more than 10 years. In addition to college counseling, he has worked as a counseling psychologist in community mental health and corporate settings. He previously taught for many years as a course-contracted faculty in Saint Mary’s master’s in Counseling and Psychological Services program, as well as in the Counseling and Student Personnel Psychology program at the University of Minnesota.
A member of the American Psychological Association (APA) since 1993, Dr. Shih was also a member of the Association for the Coordination of Counseling Center Clinical Services from 2008 to 2019. His areas of expertise include counseling psychology and suicide prevention, but he is also interested in counseling process and outcomes, counseling ethics, multicultural counseling, counseling international students, and more.
“I love my work as a counseling psychologist because it enables me to develop deep and meaningful relationships with other people and help them make progress toward their personal goals,” said Dr. Shih. “Counseling is about helping people make changes to thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. It’s an honor and privilege to work with clients on making those changes. It’s also an honor and privilege to teach and supervise students who aspire to become counseling psychologists.”
Dr. Shih received his Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the University of Minnesota and his M.A. in Counseling Psychology from the University of St. Thomas. He also holds an Information Systems Analysis and Design Certificate from the University of Minnesota and a B.A. in East Asian Studies from the University of Pennsylvania.
“I have always appreciated the deep commitment to social justice at Saint Mary’s, as well as the Lasallian core values and traditions,” Dr. Shih said. “I have also enjoyed fulfilling relationships with Saint Mary’s students, faculty, and staff. I was thrilled to come on board recently as core faculty in the Psy.D. program.”
Dr. Shih is originally from New York City, but has lived in Minnesota longer than the East Coast. His parents emigrated from China in the late 1940s, and he is the first person in his family to be born in the United States. In his spare time, Dr. Shih is a mosaic artist and a baritone singer with the Minnesota Valley Men’s Chorale.
Join us in welcoming Dr. Shih!
MFT alumna gives tips on how to handle ‘ambiguous loss’ in recent TEDx Talk
For close to five months, she had practiced. The recommendation from the TEDx event organizers was to go over one’s presentation at least 100 times before the actual event.
Natalie Bowker M’06 went over it somewhere in the ballpark of 300 times before stepping on the stage at TEDxMcMinnville — an independently organized event affiliated with the well-known TED Talk series — Jan. 25 on the campus of Linfield College in McMinnville, Ore.

Natalie Bowker has served in various capacities as a licensed marriage and family therapist for 10 years. Earlier this month, she began working in a counseling role at Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, Ore., after serving in a similar role at Linfield College for two years.
“You try to keep it fresh, but you also have it completely memorized,” Bowker said. “You never know, though, how the audience is going to respond to your presentation because you practice maybe in front of 15 people max.”
Luckily, though, the audience responded well to her talk, “Embracing Ambiguity,” in which she tried to persuade those present to “embrace the unknown through a variety of grief and loss experiences,” in her own words.
The center of her talk focused on the idea of “ambiguous loss,” a term coined by Pauline Boss, whom she discovered while working on her thesis paper in the M.A. in Marriage and Family Therapy program on the Twin Cities Campus of Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota. She has served as an adjunct professor at Saint Mary’s since 2012 by co-teaching a course called Introduction to Grief and Loss Issues in Family Therapy.
Although it is traditional to mourn a death by way of a funeral, people experience less finite losses throughout the course of their lives that they often never fully mourn. They sometimes repress the emotions that come with less defined losses, which can include dementia, cancer, stroke, traumatic brain injury, divorce, and mental illnesses. Often, if these losses are not properly dealt with through therapeutic outlets, these losses can physically manifest themselves into a variety of ailments, Bowker said.
In her talk, Bowker provided a few tips for those dealing with their own ambiguous losses. They included:
- Name your losses as they happen (voice them and stop minimizing them).
- Have a productive “pity party” with a trusted love one.
- Find a trained therapist or support group if you do not want to talk to a loved one.
Toward the end of her presentation, she shared with the audience one of her own ambiguous losses of being diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, an inflammatory bowel disease, when she was 20 years old.
“It felt like a grenade went off in my life,” Bowker said.
She then explained her own personal journey to healing, by dealing with this particular loss as best she could.
“I wouldn’t have been able to do that talk five or 10 years ago,” Bowker said. “But my disease is in remission, and, knock on wood, all is well. It doesn’t interfere with my life the way it used to consume me early 20s. Learning to manage my ambiguous loss has taught me how to have empathy for those living with similar losses.”
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Ignite 300 grant in action: Mental Health First Aid training
“Humble, Silent, and Fortitudinous Hospitality” is an Ignite 300 mini grant with the primary goal of providing Mental Health First Aid training (MHFA) for educational professionals from the Diocese of Winona-Rochester (DOW-R) and Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota.
The Ignite 300 mini grants were first offered by the Office of the President of Saint Mary’s University to honor the 300th anniversary of the death of the founder of the Brothers of Christian Schools, Saint John Baptist de La Salle. This particular grant was awarded to Karen Hemker, director of Access Services in the Student Success Center; and Joseph Tadie, Ph.D., associate professor, Philosophy Department. The two had vibrant cooperation from Marsha Stenzel, superintendent of Catholic Schools, DOW-R; and Rev. Monsignor Thomas Melvin, vicar general, DOW-R.
Thirty educational professionals with roles including guidance counselor, principal, lead teacher, dean, professor, and superintendent gathered at Saint Mary’s Rochester Campus recently to learn from Connie Mettille, Mental Health First Aid trainer and professor of exercise science and rehabilitation at Winona State University.
The course, provided by the National Council on Behavioral Health, teaches educational professionals how to help those who may be experiencing mental health or substance use challenges. The eight-hour training certifies participants in Mental Health First Aid and equips educators to identify, understand, and respond to signs of addictions and mental illnesses.
Students on the Saint Mary’s Winona Campus are also participating in a national movement to promote mental health awareness called the Green Bandana Project.

Saint Mary’s Concert Band to perform March 15
WINONA, Minn. — Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Concert Band will present a concert of “Band Classics” 3 p.m. Sunday, March 15, in Page Theatre.
Each year, the Saint Mary’s Concert Band presents an early spring concert during national Music in Our Schools Month. This year’s theme, Music Changes Lives, encourages reflection on how music impacts lives in support of life-long music education from preschool through adulthood.
The concert opens with Gustav Holst’s Suite in Eb for Military Band, one of the very few works for concert band that has been transcribed for orchestra and a piece considered the cornerstone of band literature.
The concert continues with a work by Percy Grainger, a composer well-known to band members and audiences around the world. Grainger was an innovative composer for his time using irregular rhythms, unusual harmonies, and instrumentation techniques. His Children’s March includes the piano as a member of the percussion section and prominently features the low reed instruments and saxophone tone colors.
Also included is Frank Erickson’s original work, Air for Band, and Frank Ticheli’s Cajun Folk Songs, one of the most frequently performed pieces of modern band repertoire. Ticheli’s piece is based on two folk songs which depict tragic stories, although the second one was set in a lively dance form full of energy and rhythmic complexity.
The final work in the program is John Philip Sousa’s Minnesota March, composed toward the end of his career in 1927. His name is almost synonymous with the modern march form; he wrote more than 150 marches between 1873 and 1931.
Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for youth, students, and seniors. They can be purchased at the door, online at pagetheatre.org, or by calling the box office at 507-457-1715 (noon to 6 p.m., weekdays).
The Saint Mary’s Music Department offers music degrees in Music, Music Industry, and Music Education with various tracks. A variety of instrumental and vocal ensembles and classes are also available to all students. The Saint Mary’s Concert Band is a college-community partnership ensemble which provides performance opportunities to Saint Mary’s students and area musicians. For additional information, contact Janet Heukeshoven, Concert Band director, at jheukesh@smumn.edu.
Saint Mary’s to highlight student talent in short play showcase March 18-22
WINONA, Minn. — Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota’s Department of Theatre and Dance will present “SPLaSH!: 2020 Vision,” a short play showcase, Wednesday through Sunday, March 18-22, at the Performance Center Studio Theatre.
“SPLaSH!” is Saint Mary’s biennial short play showcase that puts our students and their work front and center. The performance will feature a kaleidoscope of professionally written and student developed one-act plays from their playwriting class that are produced, directed, designed, and acted by Saint Mary’s students.
Show dates and times:
- Wednesday, March 18, at 7:30 p.m.
- Thursday, March 19, at 7:30 p.m.
- Friday, March 20, at 7:30 p.m.
- Saturday, March 21, at 7:30 p.m.
- Sunday, March 22, at 3 p.m.
Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for youth, students, and seniors. They can be purchased online at pagetheatre.org or by calling the box office at 507-457-1715 (noon to 6 p.m., weekdays).