Bazelon Center Intern Helps Protect the Disabled

Bazelon Center intern Thomas Lichtenberg at Capital in Washington
As a strategic communications intern, Thomas Lichtenberg ’23 backed
the Bazelon Center’s efforts by planning and drafting many of its social
media posts and strategies.

A Kalamazoo College student experienced an internship with an organization that protects the disabled this term.

Thomas Lichtenberg ’23—a political science and philosophy major and math minor—worked in Washington, D.C., for the Judge David A. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, which helps attorneys and others who work to protect the legal rights of people who experience mental disabilities. In some cases, the center will also represent individuals in court who face discrimination or a denial of needed services.

Lichtenberg earned the opportunity through the Washington Center, a group that unites college students with a variety of nonprofit organizations in the nation’s capital. As a strategic communications intern, he backed the Bazelon Center’s efforts by planning and drafting many of its social media posts and strategies. His drafts, which would get approved by a policy or legal director, touted events such as a virtual awards ceremony highlighting the center’s 49th year. That event featured figures such as singer John Legend and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. He also attended a virtual briefing on infrastructure with U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, and separately met some well-known people, even if only virtually in some cases.

“I attended a congressional briefing,” he said. “I walked to the Supreme Court once and Representative Ilhan Omar was speaking about court reform there. I also met a lot of newscasters. We have a pretty strong relationship with PBS and I got to meet Judy Woodruff and a couple other PBS reporters at an afterparty for our award ceremony.”

Another event he covered through social media was a live YouTube discussion concerning the use of student resource officers in schools and how some officers have mistreated students of color and students who have disabilities. In a social campaign, however, the Bazelon Center more directly targeted publicity regarding an active case, CVS Pharmacy Inc. v. Doe, in cooperation with other disability and civil-rights groups.

“At the end of my time, we actually won that Supreme Court case and social media was essential to it,” Lichtenberg said. “It involved CVS and a group of people with HIV who argued that they were receiving different treatment based on their condition. CVS was trying to say that if it’s unintentional discrimination, then Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 doesn’t apply.”

Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 is a civil-rights law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability.

“A ruling like that would’ve been catastrophic for disability rights,” Lichtenberg said. “Essentially, if that were in place, the person who didn’t have full use of their legs, for example, wouldn’t have a legal recourse if someone built a building that could only be accessed by stairs. “Our social media campaign pressured CVS into withdrawing the case and commit to find a solution which respects the rights of people with disabilities, which is pretty unheard of for such a big company.”

Lichtenberg is returning to K’s campus for winter, where he served last spring as a teacher’s assistant for a logic and reasoning philosophy class that includes an independent study requirement. For that, he wanted to figure out how someone might codify a version of Star Trek’s Prime Directive, a guiding principle that prohibits Starfleet members from interfering with the natural development of alien civilizations while protecting unprepared civilizations from receiving advanced technology, knowledge and values before they’re ready for it. For now, however, he will reflect on an overwhelmingly positive experience in Washington, D.C.

“I find it amazing that there are only about seven people who work for the Bazelon Center,” Lichtenberg said. “It’s incredible that they’re able to manage the cases they do. It was a real honor to work for them and I’m excited to apply what I’ve learned to my classes in a new context.”

Shared Hope International Intern Helps Fight Against Sex Trafficking

Shared Hope International Intern David Kent in front of the White House
David Kent ‘22 interned this term in Washington, D.C., at Shared Hope International, a
nonprofit organization that seeks to prevent sex trafficking while comforting and bringing
justice to victimized women and children.

A Kalamazoo College student is reflecting on an eye-opening internship opportunity that explored a global problem while providing experience that will benefit him in his life after K.

David Kent ‘22, a business and political science double major from Beverly Hills, Michigan, worked in Washington, D.C., at Shared Hope International this term. The nonprofit organization seeks to prevent sex trafficking while comforting and bringing justice to victimized women and children. 

“I thought it would be a great opportunity to learn more about an important issue,” Kent said. “I learned that the practice of sex trafficking is rooted in human civilization. It’s been around as long as people have lived together in societies. It went hand in hand with the institution of slavery. But even now, as slavery is mostly illegal, it persists. I think there is a preconception that it only happens in back alleys and at night. But the reality is there are large operations that work in plain sight and they can sell to people who are well known and very influential. I learned that it can be anybody.” 

Part of Kent’s opportunity was funded by the John Dingell Memorial Scholarship, which provides funds for students from Michigan colleges and universities while they participate in an internship. The internship itself was offered through Shared Hope International’s connection with the Washington Center, a group that unites college students with a variety of nonprofit organizations and other companies in the nation’s capital. 

Kent worked at Shared Hope International as a policy and communications intern, meaning he was responsible for assisting the organization’s legal team with whatever it needed. Its biggest project involved issuing grades and report cards to each state based on its sex-trafficking laws. Kent served as a media relations contact as he connected with news professionals from around the country. 

“It wasn’t necessarily a surprise, but I learned that Michigan is one of the worst states for trafficking with I-94 coming in from Detroit and going on through Chicago, and the state’s connections to Ohio, which is also one of the worst states because of its own highway system,” Kent said. “Michigan certainly has a lot to do in terms of getting laws on the books and enforcing them to better address the situation.” 

In addition to the state report card project, Kent performed individual research on large-scale sex-trafficking operations before presenting to the organization’s staff on it. He also helped the organization prepare for a national conference conducted in Washington, D.C., that brought together activists, nonprofit organizations, policymakers, senators and survivors, while running a breakout session and funneling questions from virtual attendees to presenters. 

Looking back, Kent said he has some ideas for how the world can fight sex trafficking. 

“It starts with individual action,” he said. “Shared Hope International was founded by a former Congresswoman. It started with one person and that’s how we can advocate for such an organization—through one person at a time. These organizations always need volunteers, whether it’s donors contributing supplies or money, or volunteers for activities or shelters. You have to start there and work your way to bigger solutions.” 

Kalamazoo College Unveils Fall 2021 Dean’s List

Upper Quad Picture for Fall 2021 Dean's List Story
Congrats to the Kalamazoo College students who qualified for the fall 2021 Dean’s List.

Congratulations to the following Kalamazoo College students, who achieved a grade point average of 3.5 or better for a full-time course load of at least three units, without failing or withdrawing from any course, during the fall 2021 academic term. Students who elect to take a letter-graded course on a credit/no credit basis (CR/NC) are not eligible for Dean’s List consideration during that term. Nor are students who receive an F, NC or W grade for that particular term. Students with incomplete (I) or in-progress (IP) grades will be considered for Dean’s List upon receipt of the final grades. Dean’s List recognition is posted on students’ transcripts. Kudos to the entire group.

Fall 2021

A

Shannon Abbott
Morgan Acord
Kayla Acosta
Aliyah Adams
Kelley Akerley
Shahriar Akhavan Tafti
Hashim Akhtar
Abigail Allen
Adnan Alousi
Paige Anderson
Mia Andrews
Ava Apolo
Jeremy Ardshahi
Alexandra Armin
Joshua Atwell

B

Aidan Baas
Litzy Bahena
Guenevere Baierle
Annalise Bailey
Bryan Baires
Lindsey Baker
Chloe Baker
Elizabeth Ballinger
Madison Barch
Ethan Barnes
Evelyn Bartley
Jenna Beach
Danielle Bennett
Carolyn Bennett
Jane Bentley
Meghan Best
Jonah Beurkens
Maryam Rafiah Beverly
Anna Binkley
Ella Black
Katherine Black
Nora Blanchard
Rose Bogard
Zachary Borden
Daphne Bos
Mairin Boshoven
Mabel Bowdle
Holly Bowling
Breven Brill
Jacquelyn Brines
Chason Brodsky
Eamon Bronson
Irie Browne
Anna Buck
Anna Budnick
Marilu Bueno
Jaden Buist
Drake Butcher

C

Natalie Call
Grace Cancro
Chloe Carlson
Eleanor Carr
Colin Carroll
Ashley Casagrande
Isabella Caza
Alexandra Chafetz
Jessica Chaidez
Iris Chalk
Lily Chambers
Josetta Checkett
Lance Choe
An-Ting Chu
Noah Chukwuma
Maile Church
Madeleine Coffman
Quinn Collins
Zachary Connor
Rowan Cook
Kyle Cooper
Indigo Corvidae
Violet Crampton
Lucy Cripe
Isabella Cross
Lauren Crossman
Lilian Crowder Smith
Emma Curcuru

D

Nicholas Dailey
Beatrix Damashek
Jessica Dant
Talia Dave
Claire Davis
Emma Davis-Rodak
Claire de Vries
Zachary Dean
Tali Deaner
Sophie Decker
Julia Degazio
Lille Dekker
Julia Del Olmo Parrado
Ethan DeNeen
Catherine Dennis
Sarah Densham
Olivia Depauli
Laura DeVilbiss
Christopher DeVito
Katerina Deyoung
Liam Diaz
Olivia DiGiulio
Savannah Dobreff
Brooke Dolhay
Rorie Dougherty
Ryan Drew
Dylan Drier
Katia Duoibes
Hannah Durant

E

Eli Edlefson
Jairo Eguia
Nathanael Ehmann
Alden Ehrhardt
Sara Elfring
Kelsi Elliott
Adaora Emenyonu
Sara English
Dean Ersher
Justin Essing
Chad Ewing

F

Faith Faber
Daniel Fahle
Sabina Fall
Brady Farr
Madalyn Farrey
Andreas Fathalla
Ava Fischer
Morgan Fischer
Peter Fitzgerald
Julia Fitzgerald
Jameson Fitzsimmons
Payton Fleming
Sofia Fleming
Jordan Flink
Parker Foster
Melanie Fouque
Daniel Foura
Caroline Francis
Janna Franco
Emma Frederiksen
Allison French
Hana Frisch
Nathaniel Fuller
Tristan Fuller

G

Ethan Galler
Nikhil Gandikota
Ana Garcia
Aliza Garcia
Brynna Garden
Farah Ghazal
Griffin Gheen
Katie Gierlach
Jessica Gracik
Noah Green
Donovan Greene
Lillian Grelak
Westin Grinwis
Elizabeth Grooten
Zoe Gurney
Abigail Gutierrez

H

Sydney Hagaman
Emma Hahn
Emily Haigh
Vien Hang
Ryan Hanifan
Alison Hankins
Garrett Hanson
Eleanor Harris
Lucy Hart
Meaghan Hartman
Tanner Hawkins
Beatrice Hawkins
Noah Hecht
Megan Herbst
Maya Hester
Ella Heystek
Sierra Hieshetter
Jacob Hoffman
Thomas Hole
Julia Holt
Cole Horman
Jaelyn Horn
Joseph Horsfield
Molly Horton
Hazel Houghton
Gavin Houtkooper
Sharon Huang
Micah Hudgins-Lopez
Samuel Hughes
Trevor Hunsanger
Ian Hurley
Madelaine Hurley
Megan Hybels

I

Ngozi Idika
Carolyn Ingram
Daniel Isacksen

J

Colton Jacobs
Ashani Jewell
Deepa Jha
Hao Jiang
Jonathan Jiang
Casey Johnson
Aaron Johnson
Amelia Johnson
Logan Johnston
Ellie Jones
Maxwell Joos

K

Amalia Kaerezi
Kiana Kanegawa
Leo Kaplan
Judah Karesh
Thomas Kartes
Maria Kasperek
Lucas Kastran
Lillian Kehoe
Ava Keller
Will Keller
Ella Kelly
Roze Kerr
Mphumelelo Khaba
Mahum Khan
Hunter Kiesling
Jackson Kiino-Terburg
Vivian Kim
Joshua Kim
Si Yun Kimball
Lily Kindle
Kaylee Kipfmueller
Alexander Kish
Joergen Klakulak
Molly Kohl
Melody Kondoff
Cole Koryto
Daniel Koselka
Reese Koski
Katya Koublitsky
Christian Kraft
Brandon Kramer
Rachel Kramer
Kieya Kubert-Davis
Celia Kuch
Koshiro Kuroda

L

Margaret LaFramboise
Caroline Lamb
Kathryn Larick
Blaze Lauer
Annmarie Lawrence
Madeleine Lawson
Grace Leahey
Angel Ledesma
Isaac Lee
Margaret Lekan
Alejandra Lemus
Sydney Lenzini
Milan Levy
Connor Lignell
Sydney Lis
Mengzhuo Liu
Luis Lizardo-Rodriguez
Ava Loncharte
Christian Lopez
Madeline Lovins
Teresa Lucas
Chloe Lucci
Nicholas Lucking
Elizabeth Luhrs
Jacob Lynett

M

Selina Ma
MacKenzy Maddock
Natalie Maki
Andrew Mallon
Arjun Manyam
Lesly Mares-Castro
Isabel Martin
Daniel Martinez
Molly Martinez
Stephanie Martinez
Harshpreet Matharu
Lillian Mattern
Nicholas Matuszak
Claire McCall
Lauren McColley
Liam McElroy
Grace McGlynn
Dylan McGorisk
Molly McGrath
Lucas McGraw
Leo McGreevy
Ashlynne McKee
Amy McNutt
Sophia Merchant
Eva Metro-Roland
Gabriel Meyers
Luke Middlebrook
Jade Milton
Ameera Mirza
Camille Misra
Caleb Mitchell-Ward
Anna Modlinski
Lina Moghrabi
Brooklyn Mohr
Jana Molby
Aleksandr Molchagin
Rachel Molho
Raven Montagna
Mackenzie Moore
Ryan Morgan
Isabel Morillo
Wyatt Mortensen
Samantha Moss
Ezekiel Mulder
Anna Murphy
Madison Murphy
Ryan Muschler
Rishaan Muthanna
Sydney Myszenski

N

Alex Nam
Blagoja Naskovski
Maya Nathwani
Matthew Nelson
Elizabeth Nestle
Nguyen Nguyen
Char Nieberding
Stefan Nielsen
Alexandra Noel
Joanna Nonato
Malin Nordmoe
Rohan Nuthalapati

O

Larkin O’Gorman
Ileana Oeschger
Jeremiah Ohren-Hoeft
Akinyi Okero
Emma Olson
Gabe Orosan-Weine
Eliana Orozco
Gunzi Otj

P

Ella Palacios
Jenna Paterob
Paul Pavliscak
Houston Peach
Isabella Pellegrom
Natalia Pena Ochoa
Kaitlin Peot
Anthony Peraza
Nionni Permelia
Margaret Perry
Alexander Perry
Alexis Petty
Mary Phillips
Sydney Pickell
Benjamin Pickrel
Noah Piercy
Megan Ploucha
Elaine Pollard
Evan Pollens-Voigt
Grayson Pratt
Noah Prentice
Melissa Preston
Lucas Priemer
Doug Propson
Elena Pulliam
Mason Purdy
Noah Pyle

Q

Emma Quail
Alex Quesada
Jorence Quiambao

R

Elizabeth Rachiele
Tieran Rafferty
Elle Ragan
Julia Rambo
Leah Ramirez
Roman Ramos
Samantha Ramser
Ali Randel
Abby Rawlings
Clarice Ray
Sara Reathaford
Laura Reinaux Silva Oliveira
Kelli Rexroad
Keegan Reynolds
Maxwell Rhames
Gabrielle Riaz
Mya Richter
Kayla Ridenour
Sheldon Riley
Ashley Rill
Emory Roberts
Xochitl Robertson
Michael Robertson
Kaitlyn Robinson
Skyler Rogers
Madison Roland
Joshua Roman
Luke Rop
Panayiotis Rotsios
Elizabeth Rottenberk
Jacob Roubein
Sofia Rowland
Charlotte Ruiter
Angel Ruiz
Luisa Ruiz

S

Richard Sakurai-Kearns
Sydney Salgado
Sofia Santos
Leslie Santos
Isabel Schantz
McKenna Schilling
Leo Schinker
Allison Schmidt
Vivian Schmidt
D.J. Schneider
Eden Schnurstein
Madeline Schroeder
Audrey Schulz
Hannah Schurman
Michael Schwartz
Darby Scott
Isabella Shapiro
Eli Shavit
William Shaw
Morgan Shearer
Steven Shelton
Austin Shepherd
Elijah Shiel
Riley Shoemaker
Elizabeth Silber
Xavier Silva
Samantha Silverman
Zachary Simmons
Colby Skinner
Meganne Skoug
Ping Smith
Grace Snyder
Ariana Soderberg
Allison Sokacz
Erin Somsel
Armaan Sood-Mankar
Kaden Sotomayor
Jonah Spates
Maxwell Spitler
Adam Stapleton
David Stechow
Eleanor Stevenson
Meredith Steward
Abby Stewart
Alex Stolberg
Maeve Sullivan
Hannah Summerfield
Michael Sweeney
Ella Szczublewski

T

Madison Talarico
Nicole Taylor
Claire Taylor
Emily Tenniswood
Abhi Thakur
Levi Thomas
Sophia Timm-Blow
Rojina Timsina
Jack Tomer
Luke Torres
Danielle Treyger
Nghia Trinh
Uyen Trinh
Maria Tripodis
MiaFlora Tucci
May Tun
Dean Turpin

U

Tristan Uphoff
Chilotam Urama
Lilibeth Uribe
Ifeoma Uwaje

V

Emma Van Houten
Samantha Vande Pol
Hannah Vander Lugt
Brianne Vanderbilt
Anna Varitek
Ella VarnHagen
Anna Veselenak
Lucille Voss
Jessalyn Vrieland
Dat Vu

W

Kaytin Waddell
Megan Walczak
Ivy Walker
Audrey Walker
Alex Wallace
Lucinda Wallis
Rosesandy Walters
Madison Walther
Elizabeth Wang
McKenna Wasmer
Alaina Wayne
Jadon Weber
Riley Weber
Margaret Wedge
Elias Wennen
Emerson Wesselhoff
Andrew Widger
Lee Wilkinson
Megan Williams
Tariq Williams
Ava Williams
Carson Williams
Hannah Willit
Jordyn Wilson
Joshua Wilson
Madelyn Wojcik
Olivia Wolfe
Laurel Wolfe
Alexa Wonacott

X

Y

Tony Yazbeck
Hillary Yousif

Z

Maddie Zang
Zoe Zawacki
Nathaniel Zona
Margaret Zorn

Student Zeal for Study Abroad Affirms K’s Excellence

Study abroad student attending a festival in Germany
Kalamazoo College had 249 students at international sites like this one in
Germany in 2019-20, putting it 32nd overall among baccalaureate colleges
in the Open Doors Report, which ranks higher-education institutions
for study abroad participation.

An annual report released in November from the Institute of International Education (IIE) places Kalamazoo College among the top higher-education institutions in the country for study abroad opportunities based on student participation.

According to the Open Doors Report—which analyzes more than 1,800 institutions including doctoral universities, master’s colleges and universities, baccalaureate colleges, associate’s colleges and special-focus institutions—K had 249 students at international sites in 2019-20, putting it 32nd overall among baccalaureate colleges. K was the only Michigan institution to make the top-40 list in the category despite the College’s 2020 pause in study abroad with the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Students often cite study abroad opportunities as one of the big reasons why they attend K,” Center for International Programs (CIP) Executive Director Margaret Wiedenhoeft said. “A distinction like this reflects that. We’re proud we give our students a chance to broaden their view of the world in an advantageous and transformative experience.”

IIE shares the Open Doors Report yearly through the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. The organization, founded in 1919, is a private, not-for-profit leader in the global exchange of people and ideas as it creates programs of study and training for students, educators and professionals from all sectors in collaboration with governments, foundations and other sponsors. Those programs include the Fulbright Program and Gilman Scholarships administered for the Department of State.

Combined efforts from K’s faculty and the CIP, along with the availability of international partners, have allowed study abroad to restart this fall at K with about 50 seniors in addition to the regular batch of juniors. In a normal academic year, K students can choose from 56 study abroad programs of varying lengths and emphases in 29 countries on six continents over three, six or nine months. The ventures allow students to challenge their assumptions about themselves and other cultures in a rigorous experiential education environment.

“The pandemic, despite its challenges, has only amplified K’s commitment to global experiences,” Wiedenhoeft said. “Students have remained determined to go abroad, and faculty and staff have shown a lot of flexibility and dedication to making that happen. When new students arrive at K and visit the CIP, they should know we can do our best to help them work toward their goals of studying abroad.”

Honors Day Salutes Student Achievement

More than 300 students were recognized Friday during the annual Honors Day Convocation for excellence in academics and leadership. Students were recognized in six divisions: Fine Arts, Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures, Humanities, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social Sciences, and Physical Education. Recipients of prestigious scholarships were recognized, as were members of national honor societies and students who received special Kalamazoo College awards. Student athletes and teams who won Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association awards also were honored. The students receiving Honors Day awards or recognition are listed below.

FINE ARTS DIVISION

Brian Gougeon Prize in Art
Julia Holt
Ana Garcia
Ileana Oeschger
Julia Degazio     

The Margaret Upton Prize in Music
Lindsey Baker                                                                          

Cooper Award
Matthew Swarthout

Theatre Arts First-Year Student Award
Sam Ewald                        

MODERN AND CLASSICAL LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES

LeGrand Copley Prize in French
Ella J. Kelly
Claire McCall     

Hardy Fuchs Award
Teresa Lucas
Julia Bienstock  

Margo Light Award
Kelley Akerley
Abby Barnum                                       

Department of Spanish Language and Literatures Prize
Madison Walther
Maria Kasperek

Clara H. Buckley Prize for Excellence in Latin
Emma Van Houten
Aliza Garcia

Provost’s Prize in Classics
Isabella Luke
Elle Ragan

Classics Departmental Prize in Greek
Garrett Hanson

HUMANITIES DIVISION

O. M. Allen Prize in English
Claire McCall

John B. Wickstrom Prize in History
Jacob Roubein
Meghan Best

Department of Philosophy Prize
Drake Butcher
Louise Colin-Sloman
Nikolas Krupka

L.J. and Eva (“Gibbie”) Hemmes Memorial Prize in Philosophy
Anna Budnick
Jessalyn Vrieland
Caleb Mitchel-Ward

NATURAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS DIVISION

Department of Chemistry Prize
Ifeoma P. Uwaje
Nikhil M. Gandikota
Steven A. Shelton

First-Year Chemistry Award
Ann Marie Johnston
Jordyn A. Wilson
Jessica S. Dant  

Lemuel F. Smith Award
Faith A. Flinkingshelt      

Computer Science Prize
Sara Elfring
Shahriar Akhavan Tafti
Jackson Kiino-Terburg                                                                                              

First-Year Mathematics Award
Xavier Silva
Indigo Corvidae

Thomas O. Walton Prize in Mathematics
Mallory Dolorfino           

Cooper Prize in Physics
Jonah Beurkens
Matthew Nelson

NSF S-STEM PRIME Scholars Program

Leslie Bowen
Alexander Perry
Christine Burton
Emily Rojas
Isabella Cross
Angel Ruiz
Grace Leahey
Lilibeth Uribe
Elijah Mobley
Sancera Williams             

SOCIAL SCIENCES DIVISION

Departmental Prize in Anthropology and Sociology
Marquisha James
Alexandra P. Noel
Jane Bentley

C. Wallace Lawrence Prize in Economics
Zoe Gurney        
Carolina Guzman
Samantha Moss

William G. Howard Memorial Prize
Mihail Naskovski
Emily Tenniswood
Tristan Fuller
Jenna Paterob   

C. Wallace Lawrence Prize in Business
Aleksandr Molchagin

Irene and S. Kyle Morris Prize
Andreas Fathalla
Blagoja Naskovski                                                                                                                    

Department of Psychology First-Year Student Prize
Leah Ramirez
Sophia Haas
Anna Budnick
Ryan Drew

PHYSICAL EDUCATION DIVISION

Division of Physical Education Prize

Jacob ZellerKelsey Diekman

Maggie Wardle Prize
Savera Rajendra-Nicolucci                         

COLLEGE AWARDS

Gordon Beaumont Memorial Award
Mackenzy Maddock
Mihail Naskovski

Henry and Inez Brown Prize
Ella Palacios
Abby Stewart                                                 

Virginia Hinkelman Memorial Award
Reyna Rodriguez

HEYL SCHOLARS
Class of 2025

Ava Apolo
Anna Buck
Elizabeth Grooten
Alexander Kish
Cole Koryto
Margaret Lekan
Emerson Wesselhoff
Laurel Wolfe

POSSE SCHOLARS
Class of 2025

Clarke Austin
Sekai Beard
Micah Dailey-White
Jalen Iereneo
Kiana Kanegawa
Gionna Magdaleno
Allan Martinez
Deanna Miranda
Leslie Santos

NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLARS
Class of 2025
George Weber

VOYNOVICH SCHOLARS

Addissyn House (Religion)
Elisabeth Kuras (Science)

DAVIS UNITED WORLD COLLEGE SCHOLARS

Ashhad Abdullah
Benjamin Buyck
Silvia Gaete Lagos
Amalia Kaerezi
Mphumelelo Khaba
Akinyi Okero

ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA

Alpha Lambda Delta is a national honor society that recognizes excellence in academic achievement during the first college year. To be eligible for membership, students must earn a cumulative GPA of at least 3.5 and be in the top 20% of their class during the first year. The Kalamazoo College chapter was installed on March 5, 1942. 

Kelley L Akerley
Shahriar Akhavan Tafti
Sam Ewald
Andreas Nile Fathalla
Sophia E. Haas
Julia Holt
Sharon Renai Huang
Madelaine Hurley
Carolyn Kate Ingram
Ann Marie Johnston
Jackson Kiino-Terburg
Molly Kohl
Margaret LaFramboise
Mengzhuo (Leo) Liu
Anna Murphy
Blagoja Naskovski
Elizabeth Nestle
Megan Ploucha
Steven Anthony Shelton
Xavier William Silva
Allison Sokacz
Erin Somsel
Ella Szczublewski
Danielle Treyger
Ifeoma Uwaje
Megan Grace Walczak
Madison Elisabeth Walther
Hannah Willit
Claire de Vries

ENLIGHTENED LEADERSHIP AWARDS

Performing Arts:  Music

Mabel Bowdle
Grace Park
Laura DeVilbiss
Addison Peter
Sierra Hieshetter
Elena Pulliam
Joseph Horsfield
Maxwell Rhames
Amelia Johnson
Kaytin Waddell
Liam McElroy
McKenna Wasmer
Leo McGreevy
George Weber
Aiden Morgan
Alexa Wonacott

MIAA AWARDS

These teams earned the 2020-2021 MIAA Team GPA Award for achieving a 3.3000 or better grade point average for the entire academic year:

Men’s Baseball
Women’s Golf
Men’s Swimming and Diving
Women’s Lacrosse
Men’s Soccer
Women’s Soccer
Football
Volleyball
Men’s Golf
Women’s Cross Country
Men’s Lacrosse
Women’s Tennis
Women’s Swimming and Diving

MIAA ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL

Student Athletes 2020-2021

Max Ambs
Julia Bachmann
Annalise Bailey
Spencer Baldwin
Madison Barch
Travis Barclay
Hunter Bates
Lillian Baumann
Blake Bean
Ella Black
Rose Bogard
Nikola Bogoevich
Lukas Bolton
Luke Bormann
Alex Bowden
Holly Bowling
Austin Bresnahan
Jack Brockhaus
Jamison Brown
Pierce Burke
Jacob Chantres
Ben Chosid
Walker Chung
Isabelle Clark
Madeleine Coffman
Nicholas Cohee
Zachary Colburn
Thomas Cook
Noah Coplan
Chase Coselman
Joe Coyne
Emma Curcuru
Nicholas Dailey
Gwendolyn Davis
Emmelyn DeConinck
Sarah Densham
Olivia DePauli
Kelsey Diekman
Ryan Drew
Alexander Dubin
Matthew Dubin
Austin Duff
Alex Dupree
Hannah Durant
Gina Dvorin
Bradley Ekonen
Sara English
Jake Fales
Jazmyne Fannings
Colton Farley
Taylor Ferguson
Peter Fitzgerald
Payton Fleming
Matthew Ford
Rachael Gallap
Aliza Garcia
Brynna Garden
Brendan Gausselin
Farah Ghazal
Katie Gierlach
Aidan Gillig
Madison Goodman
Max Gordon
Matthew Gu
Garrett Guglielmetti
Emily Haigh
Rebekah Halley
Ryan Hanifan
Lucy Hart
Hannah Heeren
McKenna Hepler
Sam Hoag
Matthew Howrey
Joy Hunziker
Madelaine Hurley
Nicholas Jackson
Taylor Jackson
John Jesko
Casey Johnson
Jackson Jones
Amani Karim
Lucas Kastran
Ben Keith
Will Keller
Ella Kelly
Blake Kelsey
Hunter Kiesling
Meghan Killmaster
Dahwi Kim
Kaylee Kipfmueller
Allison Klinger
Ella Knight
Matthew Kralick
Brandon Kramer
Benjamin Krebs
Juanita Ledesma
Jack Loveland
Samantha Luzadre
Rachel Madar
MacKenzy Maddock
Keelin McManus
Nathan Micallef
Camille Misra
Ryan Morgan
Anna Murphy
Alexis Nesbitt
Dustin Noble
Jacob Nugent
Alina Offerman
Larkin O’Gorman
Abigail O’Keefe
Jake Osen
Ella Palacios
Helen Pelak
Calder Pellerin
Erin Perkins
Scott Peters
Alexis Petty
Parker Pickell
Sydney Pickell
Megan Ploucha
Harrison Poeszat
Doug Propson
Savera Rajendra-Nicolucci
Jordan Reichenbach
Mya Richter
Ashley Rill
Molly Roberts
Katherine Rock
Lily Rogowski
Alec Rosenbaum
Elizabeth Rottenberk
Jacob Roubein
Tyler Sakalys-Moore
Marco Savone
Justin Schodowski
Hannah Schurman
Darby Scott
Mae Scott
Steven Shelton
Cassidy Short
Jack Smith
Erin Somsel
Emma Stickley
Alexander Stockwell
Alex Stolberg
Kate Stover
Hayden Strobel
Brandon Sysol
Nina Szalkiewicz
Ella Szczublewski
Leah Tardiff
Cade Thune
Frances Trimble
Zachary Ufkes
Damian Valdes
Gabriel Vidinas
Caleb Waldmiller
Maija Weaver
Tanner White
Andrew Widger
Megan Williams
Madalyn Winarski
Madelyn Wojcik
Hannah Wolfe
Olivia Wolfe
Brandon Wright
Tony Yazbeck
Jacob Zeller
Maggie Zorn

Student-Written ‘Unzipped’ Spotlights Self-Discovery

Production Poster Says Unzipped by Rebecca Chan
Unzipped,” complete with monologues and Rebecca Chan’s own
music, explores the perception of East Asians in the U.S.
and her experiences as a queer Chinese American.

Our life stories make great stage plays and Rebecca Chan ’22 has a chance to share her story with us all. Her self-written coming-of-age story, Unzipped, is a part of the Festival Playhouse of Kalamazoo College’s Senior Performance Series.

The production, complete with monologues and Chan’s own music, explores the perception of East Asians in the United States and her experiences as a queer Chinese American. Unzipped takes aim at a common racial slur used against Asian Americans and refers to Chan’s life of unpacking and discovering her identity.

“I’d say in the past few years there has been a lot more representation of Asian Americans, and like myself, mixed Asian Americans,” Chan said. “But I find a lot of media has characters who maybe have one white parent and one Asian parent like myself, and the racial experience of that existence is brushed over. A lot of my life has been me questioning my racial identity, trying to understand it and what it means, so I wanted to write a show very specifically about that experience.”

Chan, a theatre major, has participated in Festival Playhouse productions and events since her first year on campus. In 2019, she was selected for the week-long Kennedy Center American College Theatre National Festival in Washington, D.C., where she was one of four students from around the country to participate in its Institute for Theatre Journalism Advocacy (ITJA) events; another one of her self-written plays, Record, was featured at Theatre Kalamazoo’s 10th annual New PlayFest in February 2020; and she earned the Theatre Arts First-Year Student Award at Honors Convocation in 2019.

Unzipped, however, represents her senior integrated project. She had a chance to write the play as an independent study during the spring term of her junior year while taking an advanced playwriting class taught by then-Visiting Assistant Professor of Theatre Arts “C” Heaps. Since, Chan has been calculating the details of the acting process.

“It’s been tricky because I want to be emotionally invested in the show, but I don’t want to carry so much of the emotions that it weighs me down,” Chan said. “It’s a very careful balance of being in the moment of the show and knowing I’m telling the story how I need to tell it.”

The production’s storytelling process includes projected pictures of Chan’s own childhood and picks up with her in high school.

“I talk about different high school relationships and how I understood myself, and as I get into college, how those experiences changed my perception of who I am,” she said. “There are two big plot points: my relationship with my family, like with my grandmother and my dad and how those evolved over the course of my life, and my relationships in college. There’s a lot of weaving and intersecting of how my perception of my family influences how I interact with my friends, and then how things I realized for my friends influenced how I think about my family.”

Chan wrote the music for Unzipped over two years and has added new songs to fill in the gaps.

“I started writing the music before I even knew I wanted to make the show,” Chan said. “I was always interested in it, but in high school, I felt very nervous about it. I didn’t think I had a good enough voice to sing on my own or had enough knowledge of music to produce something people would want to listen to. But starting my sophomore year, I got back in touch with the piano and started picking up the ukulele. I would just write little songs as I was going through life. It was a coping mechanism that helped me process what I was going through in the big events of my life. Over the summer, I spent a lot of time recording demos of the songs so I could share them with whoever would be playing in my band. Luckily, I was able to find five musicians who were available for the show. Four of which are current students and one a recent alumna.”

Milan Levy ’23 is the director and Angela Mammel ’22 designed the set and projections for their senior integrated projects. Attendees should be aware the play contains racial violence and language. Tickets for the in-person performance of Unzipped, at 129 Thompson St. in the Nelda K. Balch Theatre, and the virtual show are available online. In-person presentations start at 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday. The virtual broadcast is at 7:30 p.m. Friday.

“The biggest thing I’ve learned is to be unapologetic in who I am,” Chan said. “I think I spent a lot of time trying to make my focus educating other people or changing the world around me. While those are important things to strive for and do, I think the core of my existence should be living for myself and not living to change others who might not be willing to change.”

K Student’s Dedication Leads to Behind-the-Scenes Work at the Olympics

Uyen Trinh Next to the Olympics Rings
Uyen Trinh ’21 stands next to the Olympic Rings in Tokyo.

It takes dedication, perseverance and determination for the world’s best athletes to reach the Olympics, just as it did for Uyen Trinh ’21 to be a part of the behind-the-scenes efforts at the Summer Games in Tokyo. She was there to gain global career experience while working as an accountant in the Finance Department of Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS). 

OBS was established through the International Olympic Committee in 2001 to produce live television, radio and digital coverage of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Organizations such as the New York Times and NBC set up, along with OBS, at Tokyo Big Sight, an international exhibition center composed of the International Broadcast Center and the Main Press Center as the Games began. 

Uyen Trinh at the Olympics
Uyen Trinh ’21 poses in front of Tokyo Big Sight, the international
exhibition center where she worked to support the Olympics behind the scenes.

Trinh, an international student from Vietnam majoring in business and psychology with a minor in Japanese at K, played important roles processing paperwork, receipts, documents and bills for the Olympic Games while stationed in the International Broadcasting Center. A typical six-day workweek involved a one-hour commute on the subway, a trip through security and working from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day with the Olympics, lasting about a month. 

Trinh gained the opportunity while studying abroad through K at Waseda University in Tokyo in 2019. At that time, a friend from the university’s Tae Kwon Do club told her about training for a position at the Olympics.  

“After Tae Kwon Do practice that night, I looked up OBS right away because it sounded like a fascinating opportunity,” Trinh said. “I found out the application deadline was a day or two later, so I filled out and submitted the application right away in one sitting.”

Uyen Trinh at the Finance Department for the Olympics
Uyen Trinh ’21 poses for a photo outside the Olympic Broadcasting Services
Finance Department where she worked during the Games.

Trinh then proceeded to interview for the accounting position.

“In the interviews, I told them I wanted to work for the Olympics because watching the Games has always given me unforgettable feelings,” she said. “And the Japanese people had been treating me really well. I thought Tokyo 2020 was a great opportunity to present Japan to the world. It was a chance for me to return the favor of their kindness and help deliver a positive image of Japan.” 

Her interest in accounting made the impression she left with her interviewers even more favorable. 

“I said that I wanted to do accounting because I’d been keeping track of my personal expenses and it really excited me to see numbers matching up,” Trinh said. “A week later I got a certificate saying I was qualified to work for the Olympics.” 

However, in March 2020, COVID-19 began spreading, forcing Trinh to leave Japan and putting the Games in doubt.

“I still kept a close eye on the Olympics and was disheartened when they decided to postpone the Games. I questioned my chances of coming back,” Trinh said. “September 2020 was the first time I heard back from them. They asked, ‘Are you still interested in working for the Olympics?’ I thought, ‘What do you mean? This is everything I have been waiting for.’ All the logistics afterward in preparation for my departure to Japan were completed via email and the OBS portal website. I received their welcome package in February 2021 with an accreditation card, which served as my visa to enter Japan. There were a lot of requirements regarding COVID that made the week before the flight especially stressful.” 

Upon her return to Japan, COVID-19 regulations required her to quarantine at a hotel for the first 14 days. She was restricted to commuting only between the hotel, OBS and a convenience store next to the hotel. After those weeks, a former host family from her time on study abroad welcomed her to stay with them.  

“I learned to treasure every relationship I had with people. You never know what kind of opportunity anyone could bring to you and what your relationship could grow to be. Most of my colleagues were from countries other than Japan like Spain, Bangladesh and Greece. It’s just wonderful to think that working for the Olympics has enabled people from all over the world to meet and get to know each other regardless of the pandemic. Returning to Japan this time also made me realize how many meaningful relationships I have made during only six months of study abroad. This whole adventure was terrific and I’m so glad I was able to make it. Different from the abrupt departure last time because of COVID, I left Japan this time in peace and with more confidence in myself. This valuable experience will set the stage for my career in finance after K.”