| 
			
			 The program is free and is held Wednesdays at 3 p.m. 
			at First Presbyterian Church, 301 Pekin St., in Lincoln. It is 
			supported in part by First Presbyterian Church and a grant awarded 
			to the College last year from the Illinois Prairie Community 
			Foundation to offer reduced tuition for after-school programs. The 
			workshops will run through May 1. 
 The workshops are being held in conjunction with the coming 
			Contemporary Jazz Studies presentation of “Langston in Illinois,” 
			which will be May 2-3 on the main stage of the Johnston Center for 
			Performing Arts at Lincoln College. It is taught by Lincoln College 
			Contemporary Jazz Students under the direction of Dr. Denise La 
			Grassa, lead faculty for Contemporary Jazz at Lincoln College.
 
			
			 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
             
				 
				 
The production pays tribute to poet, musical lyricist and 
activist Langston Hughes, who attended Central School in Lincoln in 1915-16. 
Hughes was inspired and mentored by his eight grade teacher Ethel Welch. 
			 
Hughes wrote his first poem for the school’s eighth grade 
commencement program in 1916. Hughes would go on to become one of the earliest 
innovators of jazz poetry and performance and is best known as a leader of the 
Harlem Renaissance of 1920s New York. 
 Students or parents of students interested in taking part in the after-school 
program should contact Pastor Adam Quine at 217-732-6141 for details.
 
				 
			[Mark GordonPublic Relations and Media Manager
 Lincoln College]
 |