From Augusta: A Brother and Sister Find Healing and Friendship in the Blues

It’s Blues & Swing Week at the Augusta Heritage Center of Davis & Elkins College in Elkins. The campus is a soundscape resonating with big jams of upbeat swing music interspersed with soulful Delta Blues. This week a brother and a sister have come to Augusta to further their talent and share a story.

 

“When I was five years old, entering kindergarten, I had orthopedic issues with my fingers, my fingers where very weak, so what the doctor did is recommend that I start playing guitar,” said seventeen-year-old Cole Layman from Williamsburg, Virginia. After performing the exercises prescribed by his doctor for two years Cole decided that the guitar was his instrument.

 

As Cole began to play guitar more his younger sister, Logan, wanted to spend more time with him so she decided to learn to play guitar, too. But she discovered guitar wasn’t her instrument.

“I hated using a pick,” Logan said, “so when I found out that the bass guitar doesn’t need to use a pick I started playing it and fell in love with it.”

 

Together they play as the duo, In Layman Terms, and are sometimes joined by their mother on drums. However, this week isn’t as much about performing. Cole and Logan are at the Augusta Heritage Center to learn both in the classroom and in jams. They each take four classes a day and jam into the evenings.

 

Cole finds his first class in swing guitar a rewarding challenge. “I’m learning some new chords that I don’t really use, at all, so it’s a little difficult, but I like difficult classes that challenge me,” he says. He’s also taking classes in finger picking and slide guitar. Logan really enjoys the jamming. She says, “I love the jams, watching all the other people come out of their comfort zone or inspire people to conquer their fears of going out in front of the audience and playing.”

 

 

 

 

Noted Authority of Independent Colleges to Speak at Davis & Elkins Graduation

Dr. Richard Ekman, President of the Council of Independent Colleges will serve as speaker for the 106th Commencement at Davis & Elkins College on…

Dr. Richard Ekman, President of the Council of Independent Colleges will serve as speaker for the 106th Commencement at Davis & Elkins College on Saturday.

“I’m going to try to remind the graduates just how distinctive their education has been.  You know only 14% of college students enroll in these smaller liberal arts colleges and yet, by all measures, the experience that students have at this kind of institution is superior to the education experience at other kinds of institutions.  If you look at graduation rates.  If you look at post graduate involvement in the community and on the job there’s a lot of be said for this form of education.”

Ekman is an authority on the future of private higher education.  Since 2000, he has served as president of CIC, an association of 750 nonprofit independent colleges and universities and higher education organizations.

President Resigns From Davis & Elkins College

Davis & Elkins College is officially looking for a new president. After a two-year stint, the current president of the four-year private institution has…

Davis & Elkins College is officially looking for a new president. After a two-year stint, the current president of the four-year private institution has resigned to accept another job as president of the Appalachian College Association – a non-profit consortium of 35 private four-year colleges and universities.

Dr. Michael Miholyo will complete his fourth year at Davis & Elkins as Provost, Chancellor, and his second year as president of the college in July. Then he’s off to Richmond, Kentucky, to head up the Appalachian College Association, of which Davis & Elkins is a part. On his way out he’s tipping his hat to the school and the improvements he’s seen while there, including increased student retention rates, improved ties with spiritual leaders within the Elkins community, and continued fiscal responsibility that is allowing the college to remain debt-free.

The Davis and Elkins Board of Trustees accepted the resignation over the weekend and has appointed former president G.T. “Buck” Smith to lead the college in the interim while a newly formed search committee moves forward in finding a new president. 

Lost Tradition Returns to Mountain State Forest Festival

The 78th Annual Mountain State Forest Festival is underway in Elkins this week. Amid this year’s festivities and fun, an old tradition is making a comeback.

From 1930 to 1966, the Forest Festival included a theatrical pageant. It generally featured a cast of local children and included elaborate costumes.

But that rich tradition faded out nearly fifty years ago. This year, Festival organizers are reviving it with the help of the theatre program at Davis & Elkins College.

The pageant tells the story of the birth of the State of West Virginia and also the story of the founding of the Forest Festival.

The show will feature D&E’s student string band and dance troupe – Appalachian Ensemble  – along with a cast of more than two dozen D&E students.

Forest Festival organizers say the pageant will be a great addition to the Coronation ceremony for Queen Silvia and her court and they’re excited to see it return.

The pageant will be presented at 1:00 this Friday, October 3, as a prelude to the Coronation ceremonies at D&E’s Outdoor Amphitheatre.

Exit mobile version