Archive - Apr 2009

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Northfield Arts Guild: 50 Years in the Making

NAG History Poster

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tomorrow, April 30, 2009, at 6:30 p.m. the documentary The Northfield Arts Guild: 50 Years in the Making will premier at Viking Theater which is located at St. Olaf College .

The film expresses both the positive influence that Northfield Arts Guild (NAG) has and continues to have on Northfield as well as NAG's historical significance. Through interviews from various members, from various time periods, the film dives into NAG's tremendous impact and NAG's rich history. "NAG has been a great communal outreach for Northfield and has given so much, and for us the mindset we had going into this project was to somehow give back to NAG, and through the interviews it's evident that the favor was returned" said Stephen Anderson and Rachel Woldum, St. Olaf Seniors who produced the film  this past semester.

The event is free and open to the public.  If you have any questions please call us at 507-645-9268 or email us.

See the article in today's Northfield News about the film.


Scott Richardson

Player Picture: 
Scott Richardson
Throws: 
Right
Bats: 
Right
Date of Birth: 
1950
Player Position: 
Behind
Nickname: 
Rabbit
Current Occupation: 
Community Releations
19th Century Occupation: 
Editor of the Northfield Telegraph-Examiner
Favorite President: 
Franklin Roosevelt
Vintage Rule You Find Most Problematic: 
Can’t overrun first base
Favorite Western: 
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

Northfield History on Film!

Cemetery Stories3 On April 29, "Cemetery Stories: A Rebel Missionary in South Africa" will premier in Olin 149 at Carleton College at 7:15 p.m.

This film was directed/produced by Cherif Keita a Professor of Francophone Literature at Carleton College.

Keita, takes us along his journey on the footsteps of two families, the Wilcoxes and the Dubes, one of white American missionaries, and the other, of Zulus from Inanda, whose friendship in the late 19th century, is an important yet little-known landmark in the struggle for Black liberation and Democracy in South Africa. Along the way, the Keita brings to both of those families some lost pieces of their history and makes them reconnect after ninety years. However, during his eight years of going back and forth between the US and South Africa, Kieta kept wondering why he, a West African Muslim and a professor of Francophone literature, had to be the one passionately piecing together the lost story of two Protestant missionaries in the distant land of South Africa. The answer only comes to him the day he discovers that he had been “chosen” for this surprising quest by two "unappeased" souls in Northfield, the town where he lives in the US.

I have seen the film and it is amazing.  The screening is FREE AND OPEN to the public!NAG History Poster

On the next night, April 30, the film "The Northfield Arts Guild: 50 Years in the Making" will premier in Viking Theater at St. Olaf College at 6:30 p.m.  This past semester two St. Olaf interns working for NHS developed a documentary that chronicles the 50 year history of the Northfield Arts Guild.  This event is FREE AND OPEN to the public as well!

If you have any questions on either event please call us at 507-645-9268 or email us.