•Dr. Ronald A. Hemmel, associate professor
of music theory and composition and artistic director of the
Music Computing Center at Westminster, attended the premiere
performance of his composition, "St. Cecilia's Song"
in May. This twenty-minute work for chorus and organ was performed
by the Westminster Community Chorus under the direction of Devin
Mariman and accompanied by Eric Plutz. Based on John Dryden's
"A Song for St. Cecilia’s Day, 1687," the composition
was commissioned by the chorus in celebration of their ten-year
anniversary. Dr. Hemmel also successfully completed the examinations
to become a Fellow of the American Guild of Organists, its highest-level
certification, and one held by fewer than one percent of guild
members world wide. He is the only member of the Westminster
faculty to achieve this status since George Markey in 1957.
The two-day test includes performance at the organ of prepared
repertoire, sight-reading, transposition, transcription, improvisation
and four-clef open score reading. The written portions include
composition, counterpoint, fugue, orchestration and notation
of both four-part choral and two-part contrapuntal dictation.
• Tatiana Leon, a junior biochemistry
major, was named Miss Ecuador Trenton for 2006. The Ecuadorian
Civic Association of Mercer County selected Leon for the title
on July 23 at Arbeiter Hall in the East Ward of Trenton. More
than 300 Ecuadorian Americans attended the pageant which featured
five candidates competing for the crown and status as queen.
The competition consisted of four categories, including talent,
gala wear, folklore dressing and a final question.