Tag Archives: Lois Lehrman Grass

Where Art Meets Impact: CASA’s “A Taste of the Arts” Returns to Harrisburg

In a city where creativity and community often intersect, the Capital Area School for the Arts Charter School (CASA) continues to stand as a powerful example of what’s possible when education and the arts meet. This spring, that intersection takes center stage once again with the return of one of the region’s most anticipated cultural fundraisers—A Taste of the Arts—alongside the debut of a meaningful new tradition: the inaugural Lois Lehrman Grass Award.

For more than two decades, CASA has provided a unique, tuition-free public charter school experience for students across Central Pennsylvania. From visual art and theatre to music, dance and creative writing, CASA offers a rigorous academic curriculum infused with daily artistic training. The result is not just strong academic outcomes, but confident, expressive young people prepared to pursue creative careers—or simply carry a lifelong appreciation for the arts into whatever path they choose.

But sustaining a school like CASA requires more than curriculum. It takes a community.

That’s where A Taste of the Arts comes in.

Each year, the event brings together local restaurants, artists, educators, and supporters for an evening that celebrates both culinary and creative excellence. Guests can expect a vibrant atmosphere filled with live performances by CASA students, interactive artistic experiences, and a sampling of some of the best food and drink the region has to offer.

More importantly, the event serves as a critical fundraiser. Proceeds directly support CASA—helping to fund everything from classroom resources and performance opportunities to student support services that ensure every young artist has the tools they need to succeed.

This year’s event carries added significance with the introduction of the Lois Lehrman Grass Award, a new annual honor recognizing individuals who have made a lasting impact on CASA’s mission.

The award pays tribute to Lois Lehrman Grass, a founding force behind CASA and a tireless advocate for arts education in the region. As outlined in the award’s founding statement, she was “more than a founder and champion of CASA—she was its heartbeat,” helping guide the school from uncertain beginnings into a thriving and welcoming home for student-artists.

At a time when arts education often faces funding challenges and shifting priorities, Grass remained steadfast in her belief that creativity is not a luxury—it’s essential. She understood that students thrive when their voices are valued and their imagination is given room to grow. Her leadership and generosity helped transform CASA into a place where students are not only educated, but empowered.

Equally important was her belief in the people behind the mission. Grass recognized that institutions are sustained by those willing to show up—teachers, volunteers, board members, partners, and donors who invest their time and energy year after year. That philosophy is now embedded in the spirit of the award that bears her name.

The Lois Lehrman Grass Award will be presented annually to an individual who embodies those same values: dedication to arts-infused education, belief in young people, service to the community, and a willingness to lead with heart. It is not simply a recognition of achievement, but a celebration of impact—the kind that quietly, consistently shapes the future of an institution and the lives within it.

In many ways, the award reinforces a powerful idea: that legacy is not something left behind, but something carried forward. Each recipient becomes part of a living continuation of Grass’s vision, helping ensure that CASA remains a place where creative dreams are not just imagined, but realized.

For attendees of A Taste of the Arts, that message will be woven throughout the evening. Between performances and shared meals, there is a deeper story unfolding—one of resilience, collaboration, and the enduring importance of the arts in education.

It’s also a reminder of the role the broader Harrisburg community plays in that story.

Supporting CASA is not just about funding a school; it’s about investing in the cultural fabric of the region. Many CASA graduates go on to contribute to local arts organizations, creative industries, and community initiatives. Others carry the confidence and critical thinking skills they developed at CASA into entirely different fields. In every case, the impact ripples outward.

As CASA continues to grow and evolve, events like A Taste of the Arts—and initiatives like the Lois Lehrman Grass Award—serve as both celebration and call to action. They invite the community to reflect on what has been built, honor those who made it possible, and recommit to sustaining it for future generations.

Because at its core, CASA represents something bigger than a school. It represents a belief: that when young people are given the space to create, they also gain the power to imagine new possibilities—for themselves and for the world around them.

And in Harrisburg, that’s a vision worth tasting, celebrating, and carrying forward.

For more information about the Capital Area School for the Arts (CASA) visit   https://www.casa-arts.org/

For more information about The Taste of the Arts event visit https://www.crae-arts.org/a-taste-of-the-arts

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

(From left) Rep. Patty Kim (D-103), Why Not Prosper Founder Rev. Michelle Simmons, Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams, and other supporters cut the ribbon on a new women’s re-entry facility.

It’s finally feeling like fall in Harrisburg! Before you head out for a crisp stroll through the city or to dinner at one of Harrisburg’s many wonderful restaurants, catch up on this week’s news, below.

Dauphin County announced that three polling places will move for the upcoming election, our online story reported. The county also released information about important dates, mail-in ballots and registering to vote.

Friends of Midtown will hold “Bark for a Park,” a rally requesting a community dog park in the city, our online story reported. The organization is asking the city to take on the project and encouraging residents to sign a petition.

Gov. Tom Wolf  held a ceremonial bill signing for legislation that will widely expand the medical screening panel given to newborn babies. Learn what this bill means to one family, in our online story.

Harrisburg’s N. 2nd Street two-way conversion project is coming closer to completion, our reporting found. The roadway, from Forster to Muench streets is in the process of being paved, and the corridor will switch to two-ways in early October.

The Homeless Memorial Blanket Project, which began in Cumberland County, is now headed to our nation’s capital, and organizers hope to get blankets donated from each state, our online story reported. The project seeks to educate people on the issue of homelessness and give to those in need.

The HUE Invitational will gather on Saturday and Sunday to conclude the largest collegiate e-sports event, created and hosted by Harrisburg University, our online story reported. Teams will play this weekend in the finals for a chance to win $25,000 in scholarship prizes.

Lois Lehrman Grass, a Harrisburg native and long-time arts patron and philanthropist, died this week at age 90, our online story reported. She long supported a host of causes in Harrisburg through her leadership skills, fund-raising, volunteer activities and personal support.

The McCormick Riverfront Library will temporarily close from Sept. 30 to Oct. 19 to complete the last phase of renovations, our online story reported. The library has been working on a project to expand and renovate the property since it broke ground in 2021.

Parks, playgrounds and outdoor spaces in Harrisburg will receive upgrades, thanks to $2 million in local and state grants, our online story reported. The city received grants for Reservoir Park projects, the Paxtang Parkway Trail and an Italian Lake rain garden, among other projects.

PennDOT will begin a 4.8-mile resurfacing project on I-83 in Dauphin County on Sept. 26, our reporting found. The project extends from Cameron Street in Harrisburg, through Swatara Township, to Union Deposit Road in Lower Paxton Township.

Sara Bozich has lots of fall-themed events lined up for your weekend. Find them all, here.

Steven Williams, a Harrisburg author, recently released his new book, “Thyra,” a mythological tale, our magazine story reported. The book explores the theme of advocacy for the vulnerable, a passion for Williams.

Why Not Prosper, a Philly-based organization that assists formerly incarcerated women, cut the ribbon on a new Harrisburg location, our online story reported. The facility, in Allison Hill, will provide short-term housing for those re-entering society after prison.

 

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Lois Lehrman Grass, arts patron, community leader, has died at age 90

Lois Lehrman Grass

Lois Lehrman Grass, a Harrisburg native and long-time arts patron and philanthropist, died on Wednesday, just days shy of her 91st birthday.

A ubiquitous presence in Harrisburg over many decades, Lois Lehrman Grass long supported a host of causes in Harrisburg through her leadership skills, fund-raising, volunteer activities and personal support. She was especially focused on initiatives involving the Jewish community, the arts and healthcare.

On a personal note, in recent years, Lois became a dear and cherished friend of TheBurg, offering her friendship, advice, support and words of encouragement. We will miss her greatly. Our staff would like to extend our deepest sympathies to her family, her friends and her loved ones.

The following is Lois’ obituary:

Lois Lehrman Grass, whose lifelong dedication to community service gained her recognition as a Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania, died Sept. 21.

She was born in Harrisburg on Sept. 30, 1931, the daughter of Benjamin and Rose Herman Lehrman, in whose memory she named the Lehrman Chapel at Temple Ohev Sholom, the Rose Lehrman Arts Center at HACC, and the Rose Lehrman Wing at The Hebrew University School of Education in Jerusalem.

Lois was a visionary community leader, often at the forefront of initiatives that led to the creation of long-term community assets, including Jewish Family Service, Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts, and Capital Area School for the Arts Charter School (CASA). She was instrumental in the creation of the Aurora Club for people with developmental disabilities as well as the Hamilton Health Center. In her 30s she was Chairman of the Red Cross Chapter of Harrisburg and the first woman to chair the United Way campaign. She believed in “making things happen.”

While she understood profoundly the importance of philanthropy, she was, first and foremost, a dedicated and highly respected “hands on” volunteer. She devoted her insight, experience and resources to building community and nurturing organizations and talent wherever she saw promise and purpose.  She worked tirelessly–often “under the radar”–to foster and provide leadership to organizations and projects about which she felt deeply. Lois was passionate, in particular, about the arts and Judaism. She was a major supporter of the Harrisburg Jewish community and Jewish institutions in the United States and Israel, including the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC, where she was a founding donor.

Her love and support of the arts benefited many organizations. In the tradition of a true arts patron, she fostered the careers of promising young talents, often through commissions of their work. Concert grand pianos gifted by Lois grace the stages of Whitaker Center and the Rose Lehrman Arts Center. She was a founding member of the National Museum of Woman in the Arts and a member of the Museum’s National Advisory Board. In 1989, she was an inaugural recipient of the Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts in the Capital Region. Lois was known for her gracious hospitality. She loved good food, good drink and good company and she knew how to throw a fabulous party. She frequently hosted events at her home for the benefit of community organizations.

She is survived by her son Martin Grass and wife Jody; son Roger Grass and wife Marina; daughter Elizabeth Weese and husband Brian; son-in-law Jason Shapiro; 15 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren; brother Gilbert Lehrman; brother Lewis Lehrman and wife Louise.

She was pre-deceased by her daughter, Linda Grass Shapiro, her sister Barbara Weinberg and her longtime companion, Bowman Brown.

Services will be held on Sept. 23 at 2 p.m. at Temple Ohev Sholom, 2345 N. Front Street, Harrisburg. Burial will follow at Mount Moriah Cemetery, Strouse and Fritchey Streets. Rabbi Peter Kessler officiating.

To honor Lois’s memory, contributions may be made to any Jewish, arts or healthcare organization of your choice.

Lawrance Binda is co-publisher and editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Supporters, officials gather as Jewish Federation unveils flag, dedicates new Alexander Grass Campus

Roger Grass and Elizabeth Grass Weese hold up the flag that will fly over the Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life.

The new Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life offers space for community and people of all faiths, beliefs, and ideals to join forces for change, said speakers and supporters attending the flag-raising to dedicate the new home of the Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg.

The federation and affiliated organizations are moving to the former Dixon University Center at 2986 N. 2nd St., in Harrisburg’s Riverside neighborhood. The federation bought the site in April for $4.56 million from the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.

A gift from the Alexander Grass Foundation gave the federation the means to exit the overcrowded Jewish Community Center a few blocks north. The move “kind of brings everything full circle,” said Elizabeth Grass Weese, who agreed with her brother, Roger Grass, to make the gift.

“My brother, Roger, and I are honored to be here today to dedicate this beautiful space,” said Grass Weese, foundation president. “My father would have been proud to see the community coming together to support this amazing project, and I am thrilled to see how his legacy will live on through all the activities and programs brought to life on The Grass Campus.”

Growing up, Grass family life revolved around the JCC, said Roger Grass, who traveled from Israel for the occasion. In 1957, his father donated about $150 to the original JCC campaign in 1957 and pledged to do more if he ever had the means.

“We’ve been very lucky, very blessed,” Roger Grass said. “We learned from my mother (civic leader Lois Lehrman Grass), and my father, as they say in this new generation, you’ve got to pay it forward. You’ve got to give it back.”

On the six-acre campus, established around 1908 as the home of Harrisburg Academy, the administration building will now host meetings, federation staff and a 15,000-square-foot fitness center with river views.

Other federation uses now crammed into the previous JCC will have dedicated buildings, including the Brenner Family Early Learning Center and a senior wellness center. Duncan Hall, across 2nd Street from the main campus, will house a gymatorium, lap pool, and Silver Academy, Harrisburg’s Jewish day school. The federation-affiliated Jewish Family Services will occupy the former chancellor’s house.

“My mother was born and raised here,” Grass Weese said after the ceremony concluded with her and her brother holding up the campus flag. “My father loved it here. We’re so thrilled this is for all the community. That was important to us. For as long as Harrisburg is here, our hearts will always be here.”

Attendees view renderings of the planned Grass campus.

The Grass siblings’ decision to support the project is a tribute to their “incredibly generous” father, said Ron Muroff, rabbi of nearby Chisuk Emuna Congregation. The new space should allow joint programming between his synagogue and the JCC to grow, and the campus could be a platform for promoting Jewish values, he said.

“I would hope that we together, Jews and non-Jews alike, can really draw from the traditions, histories, values of Jewish history and Jewish life to promote justice, to promote joy, to promote support for the Jewish community and way beyond,” he said before the ceremony.

In the audience, Carol and Joel Ressler saw a sense of unity in the presence of rabbis representing multiple area congregations.

“This is what community is,” said Carol Ressler. “So many of us, between our family and our friends and our shul, we don’t have this endless opportunity to come together in the excitement of community, and this allows that.”

The campus “promises to be a blessing for the entire community,” said Dauphin County Commissioner Mike Pries, reading from a commissioners’ proclamation. The array of counseling, food, adoption, and other services “will be offered to all, regardless of religious affiliations,” he said.

“The Grass family has given and given and given to the community over several decades,” Pries said. “They have touched thousands and thousands of lives in the community.”

Carol and Joel Ressler, of West Hanover Township, wave Grass Campus flags at the event.

Matt Maisel, communications director for the City of Harrisburg, said that he grew up at the JCC. Presenting on behalf of Mayor Wanda Williams, who is out of town, he noted that the “diverse melting pot” convening around the JCC is all-inclusive. The federation’s move away from the Harrisburg-Susquehanna Township line and squarely into the city synchronizes with one of the most diverse cities in the United States, he said.

It’s bashert, Yiddish for destiny or “meant to be,” Maisel said.

“It’s so representative of the city of Harrisburg,” he told TheBurg after the ceremony. “Being a community center for the city, we’ll both be able to do great things together.”

The diversity, strength and shared values represented by the audience are “what holds us together as a community,” said state Sen. John DiSanto. “This is going to be an anchor, and it’s going to be growth for a solid community that’s doing good work not only here in Harrisburg but around the world.”

The campus will be “a great neighbor,” said state Rep. Patty Kim, noting the federation’s history of welcoming the community, from political forums to her children attending JCC day camps. She changed up a biblical saying, “Whoever is faithful in the little things will be faithful in the larger ones.”

“Whoever is faithful in the little buildings will be faithful in the big ones,” she said. “I know that as you open your doors to everyone in the community, you will continue that legacy.”

The campus is “everybody’s campus” and a community hub grounded in Jewish values that are also universal, said federation Board Chair Abby Smith.

“This is not about a bunch of organizations moving south along the river,” she said. “This is really about a moment to take what is one of the most beautiful properties I’ve ever seen and really make it shine, and to take this moment to dedicate this campus, standing on those who have come before us on their shoulders, but very much knowing that the best is yet to come.”

For more information about the Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg, visit their website. 

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Take a Bow: With a new charter, arts-focused CASA continues its run as one of Harrisburg’s premier schools.

Photo by Ben Miller.

Back in 2011, the CASA story did not seem headed for a happy ending.

Enrollment was down 40 percent, school districts were withdrawing funding, and the arts-oriented high school had lost its program director.

But in seven short years, the plot has turned dramatically in favor of the Capital Area School for the Arts. In April, CASA received a five-year charter renewal in a school district that typically does not embrace charter schools.

“This is a huge validation of the past four years—all the kids we’ve reached, all the work we’re doing,” said Tim Wendling, CASA’s principal and CEO.

Wendling arrived at CASA in 2013 after it had just received its first charter, following a dozen years as a struggling magnet school. It’s one of just three brick-and-mortar charter schools in the Harrisburg school district, which must approve charter applications.

Applying for a charter is a painstaking process. The charter renewal for CASA contained 3,500 pages of documents, including information about curriculum, test scores, school design, operations and management and future plans. Visits and questions from district officials were part of the process, as well.

Why was CASA’s charter renewal approved?

“We are meeting and exceeding the goals that were set down in the first charter,” said Wendling. “[We’re] a premier provider of arts education in the city.”

CASA’s performance numbers bear this out. The school’s graduation rate is 94 percent, and student proficiency scores are strong—87 percent in biology, 93 percent in literature and 78 percent in algebra.

Those scores don’t necessarily arrive with the students, who are accepted to CASA based solely on an audition. The school has no information on students’ academics, attendance or behavioral history until after they are accepted to the school.

Once enrolled, CASA students often begin to thrive academically because they like going to school, Wendling said.

“We have 200 very different kids,” he said. “This place is perfect for them. They all fit in.”

The school’s six disciplines include creative writing, dance, film and video, music, theater and visual arts, providing many places for students to excel both in academics and arts.

Lois Lehrman Grass, long a supporter of the arts in Harrisburg, has been a part CASA since its inception in 2001, seeing the school grow from leasing empty rooms to its current state-of-the-art facility in Strawberry Square.

“Everybody who has a wonderful talent should be in a safe environment to be able to do what they do,” Grass said.

She said the creation of the school was not a “one-man band” but involved many people working together. The same could be said of the charter renewal, she said.

“It was more than a little nerve-wracking,” said Grass, a fixture at the school who is greeted affectionately by staff and students as she walks down the bustling hallways.

So, what’s in store for CASA now that it’s met this milestone?

“No big changes,” Wendling said. “We want to take this great thing we started and keep making it better.”

CASA plans to stay in Strawberry Square, in keeping with the school’s mission to use the city as a classroom, Wendling said.

Having the school in the city is mutually beneficial. Students and parents who don’t live in or frequent the city can “come and see Harrisburg’s true self,” he said. And Harrisburg residents get to see high school students in a different, creative light— filming, painting by the river, taking pictures in the downtown, etc.

“[CASA] is an art school that has the city of Harrisburg as our landscape,” said David Skerpon, a board member.

Besides maintaining its arts focus, CASA plans to continue building on its strong academic foundation, focusing on math and science, Wendling said. The school also wants to continue to foster its “fantastic collaboration” with the local arts community.

“We hope to see that we are even more integrated with the art scene than we are today,” Skerpon said.

That integration includes internships with Gamut Theatre Group and Open Stage of Harrisburg, film viewings at Midtown Cinema and art exhibitions at the Art Association of Harrisburg and the Susquehanna Art Museum.

One new thing is the College and Career Readiness Program, designed to connect and direct students to the opportunities available after graduation. Students will select “pathways” of study that take into account their interests and strengths.

Even though CASA has just received a new charter, there’s little time to rest, Wendling said. In about a year, administrators will begin contemplating the next charter renewal process. CASA, after all, can’t afford to take a break, as there’s always another group of talented students waiting in the wings.

“When you look at the 200 kids and try to picture them somewhere else, you can’t,” Wendling said. “This is the perfect school for them.”

 

Capital Area School for the Arts will hold its CASA Celebration Soiree, celebrating its charter renewal and honoring founders Lois Lehrman Grass and Dr. Glenn Zehner, on Sept. 20 at Whitaker Center, 222 Market St., Harrisburg. For more information about the event and about CASA, visit www.casa-arts.org.

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