Kalamazoo Senior Ashleigh Holden Earns a STAR

 

Ashleigh Holden with a horse
K senior Ashleigh Holden (Photo by Matt Gade, MLive / Kalamazoo Gazette)

When K senior Ashleigh Holden isn′t studying chemistry or guiding prospective students around the campus for the K Admissions Office, she′s often at the Cheff Therapeutic Riding Center in Augusta, east of Kalamazoo. During the last year alone, Ashleigh has amassed more than 475 hours helping to deliver hippotherapy, a physical, occupational, and speech-language therapy that utilizes horses to provide aid to clients with a variety of special needs. For her efforts, Ashleigh has earned the 2013 College Volunteer STAR (Sharing Time and Resources) Award, a partnership between Volunteer Kalamazoo and MLive/Kalamazoo Gazette to honor outstanding volunteers in Southwest Michigan. Congrats, Ashleigh. You truly are one of K′s stars.

Sustainability Goes Fourth at Kalamazoo College

Kalamazoo College will host the fourth annual Sustainability SIP Symposium on Monday, April 29, 6-9 p.m., in 103 Dewing Hall on the K campus (1200 Academy St.), co-sponsored by the College’s Guilds and Environmental Studies Program. Free and open to the public, the event will feature student presentations of sustainability-related Senior Individualized Projects (SIPs) ranging in topic from English to Economics. Audience members will have time for questions following each presentation, and an opportunity to meet student researchers at the interactive poster session and reception beginning at 8 p.m. in Dewing Hall Commons. Refreshments will be provided by the People’s Food Co-Op.

Student presentations include:

Mysha Clarke: Energy Recovery in Landfills: A Jamaican Case Study

Monika Egerer: Ecosystem Services on the Mariana Islands: Implications of bird loss for a wild chili pepper species

Rebecca Rogstad: Zane, the Curious Little Zooxanthellate

Shoshana Schultz: Inverting the Atlas: Mapping Geographically Based Food Security in Kalamazoo

“The annual symposium recognizes the scholarship and research that many K seniors devote to their SIPs (a graduation requirement) and showcases the breadth and depth of sustainability-related work taking place at the College,” said Joan Hawxhurst, Director, Center for Career and Professional Development.

This year’s Symposium is the first since the reorganization and expansion of the Guilds to include seven career path clusters: Arts & Media, Business, Education, Health, Law, Nonprofit & Public Service, and Science & Technology. Sustainability infuses the conversations and collaborations in all seven Guilds, and the Sustainability SIP Symposium showcases how this value cuts across disciplines and departments and informs the work of all professionals.

K Reflects on Boston Bombings

Students at Stetson Chapel after Boston bombings
Photo by Mark Bugnaski, Kalamazoo Gazette/MLive

K students and staff members gathered in Stetson Chapel at noon Wednesday for prayers, silence, music, poetry, and shared thoughts in order to remember all those affected by Monday′s bombing in Boston.

Dean’s List Winter 2013

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 Winter 2013 academic term. …

Winter 2013

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T V W Y Z
A
Ayaka Abe
Keaton Adams
Mojtaba Akhavan-Tafti
Dana Allswede
Rasseil Alzouhayli
Brittany Amor
Abby Anderson
Katelyn Anderson
Giancarlo Anemone
Evan Angelos
Esprit AutenreithB

Gordon Backer
Madison Baxter
Abraham Bayha
Renee Beaudoin
Rebecca Beery
Tyler Benmark
Kathryn Bergh
Martin Bergstrom
Hilary Bick
Mara Birndorf
Reid Blanchett
Brita Bliss
Hannah Bogard
Nicholas Bolig
Amanda Bolles
Sean Bolourchi
Alice Bowe
Miss Grace Bowe
McKenna Bramble
Caitlin Braun
Travis Braun
Erica Breakey
Taylor Brown
Anh Bui
Aaron Bunker
Camille Burke
Megan Burns
Philip Bystrom

C

Francisco Cabrera
William Cagney
Xiaotang Cai Jr.
Christopher Cain
Willina Cain
Kathryn Callaghan
Sonia Camarena
Ellie Cannon
Elizabeth Caputo
Olivia Cares
Edward Carey
Elaine Carlin
Raymond Carpenter
Cody Carr
Alejandra Castillo
Brandon Casto
Colin Cepuran
Savanna Chambers
Natalie Cherne
Christine Chien
Kyoung Shin Cho
Philip Cho
Idah Chungu
Isabelle Ciaramitaro
Katherine Clark
Mysha Clarke
Gabrielle Clay
Taylor Clements
Annaliese Collier
Bridgett Colling
Anne Colonius
Natalie Coogan
Kacey Cook
Riley Cook
Holly Cooperrider
Philip Cromack
Brock Crystal
Rebecca Cummins-Lanter
Brian Cunningham-Rhoads

D

Susmitha Daggubati
Hannah Daly
Rachel Dandar
Callie Daniels-Howell
Charles Davis IV
Janelle Davis
Megan Davis
Parker de Waal
Francesca DeAnda
David DeSimone
Calee Dieleman
Miranda Doepker
Erica Dominic
Kelsey Donk
Samuel Doyle
Rachel Dranoff
Lauren Drew

E

Erin Eagan
Maya Edery
Taryn Edsall
Ian Edwards
Monika Egerer
Adam Eisenstein
Kristen Ellefson
Elinor Epperson
Michelle Escobar
Kelly Eubank
Samuel Evans-Golden

F

Abram Farley
Beth Farwell
Faiza Fayyaz
William Ferrara
Nathaniel Feuerstein
Caitlin Finan
Marie Fiori
Ian Flanagan
Joshua Foley
Samantha Foran
Mark Fortelka
James Frye
Rina Fujiwara

G

Aileen Gallagher
Bridget Gallagher
Keith Garber
Lauren Gaunt
Jared Georgakopoulos
Mark Ghafari
Cierra Gillard
Ian Good
Evan Gorgas
Kaitlin Gotcher
Alexandra Gothard
Anna Gough
Mary Goyings
David Graham
Joseph Granzotto
Hannah Gray
Kaitlyn Greiner
Jared Grimmer
Alexandra Groffsky
Hanna Groniger
Xueyun Gu
Andrea Gutierrez
Emily Guzman

H
Zari Haggenmiller
Lynza Halberstadt
Marie Hallinen
Allison Hammerly
Elizabeth Hanley
Stephen Hanselman
Nora Harris
Emilie Harris-Makinen
Hadley Harrison
Shannon Haupt
Sara Haverkamp
Stephanie Heard
Mariah Hennen
Jordan Henning
Michelle Hernandez
Michael Hicks
Robert Hilliard
Frances Hoepfner
Ashleigh Holden
Jacob Holloway
Jenna Holmes
Jeffery Holton
Daniel Holtzman
Rachel Horness
Pornkamol Huang
Benjamin Hulbert
Julia Hulbert
Jenna Hunt
Katherine Hunter
Chaz HyattI

Sierra Imanse
Andrew Iraola
Craig Isser

J

Thomas Jackson
Jaehoon Jang
Morgan Jennings
Lara Job
Tibin John
Andrea Johnson
Samantha Jolly
Hannah Jones

K

Margaret Kane
Sukhvir Kaur
Jessica Kehoe
Grace Kelley
Spencer Kennedy
Michelle Keohane
Kelsey Kerbawy
Faiz Khaja
Daniel Kilburn
Siga Kisielius
Emily Kotz
Ruiqi Kou
Sarah Krafft
Matthew Kuntzman

L

Rory Landis
Bonnie Lathrop
Tessa Lathrop
Justin Leatherwood
Bo Gyoung Lee
Rachel Leider
Elizabeth Lenning
Jacob Lenning
Rebecca Lennington
Rachel LePage
Madeline LeVasseur
Jacob Lindquist
Emily Lindsay
Samuel Linstrom
Conrad Liu
Vageesha Liyana Gunawardana
Trenton Loos
Jordan Loredo
Paul Lovaas
Christopher Lueck
Riley Lundquist

M

Lucy MacArthur Jr.
Corinne MacInnes
Madeleine MacWilliams
Lucy Mailing
Megan Malish
Laura Manardo
Grace Mandry
Grace Manger
Sarah Manski
Scott Manski
Natalie Martell
Guy Martin
Megan Martinez
Jack Massion
Belinda McCauley
Mallory McClure
Indigo McCollum
Alaina McConnell
Quinn McCormick
Adam McDowell
Jessica McInchak
Molly Meddock
Jordan Meiller
Arik Mendelevitz
Bradley Merritt
Caroline Michniak
Emily Mickus
Matthew Mills
Alexander Minch
Sashae Mitchell
Gabrielle Montesanti
Jacob Montz
Tessa Moore
Aliera Morasch
Alexandra Morris
Chloe Mpinga
Tendai Mudyiwa
Philip Mulder

N

Brendan Nagler
Alissa Neff
Taylor Netherton
Maureen Newman
Hang Nguyen
Alexandra Norman
Jason Nosrati
Alexander Numbers
Kelsey Nuttall

O

Moses Odhiambo
Franco Ojimba
Stephen Oliphant

P
Crestina Pacheco
Jane Packer
Fayang Pan
Yunpeng Pang
Jisung Park
Emma Patrash
Jamie Patton
Michael Paule-Carres
Bronte Payne
Regina Pell
Elizabeth Penix
David Personke
Laura Persons
Adam Peters
Alicia Pettys
Thanh Thanh Phan
Pavan Policherla
Alejandra Portillo Taylor
Beau Prey
Jung Eun PyeonQ

R

Jacob Ragen
Christopher Ralstrom
Katherine Rapin
Bianca Rasho
Anna Rayas
Margaux Reckard
Robert Relief
Lindsey Reppuhn
Natalie Reszka
Maria Rich
Alexander Rigney
Sophie Roberts
Rebecca Rogstad
Megan Rosenberg
Marissa Rossman
Michelle Rothenbach Stacey
Connor Rzeznik

S

Kira Sandiford
Andrea Satchwell
David Scasny
Kaitlyn Schneider
Alicia Schooley
Colleen Schuldeis
Cameron Schwartz
Lauren Seroka
Nicholas Shabino
Hannah Shaughnessy-Mogill
Dylan Shearer
Cameron Shegos
Adrian Shier
Geon-Ah Shin
Alexsandra Siems
Sajan Silwal
Samantha Simmons
Jyotika Singh
Alexandra Smith
Colin Smith
Hayley Smith
Julia Smucker
Renjie Song
Lauren Sprowl
Allison Starr
Ernest Stech
Alexandra Stephens
Nikki Stern
Katherine Stevenson
Shelby Stuart
Casey Sullivan
Sarah Sullivan
Muyang Sun
Shang Sun
Kyle Sunden
Mira Swearer

T

Tyler Tabenske
Emerson Talanda-Fisher
Kinza Tareen
Lilian Taylor
Yvonne Thoits
Brett Thomas
Allison Thompson
Mary Tobin
Nadia Torres
Alexander Townsend
Minhkhang Truong
Ken Tsuchiya
Elizabeth Tyburski

U

V

Trevor Vader
Matthew Vanderhoef
Rachael Vettese
Julia Villarreal
Elizabeth Vincensi
Samantha Voss
Austin Voydanoff

W

Chelsea Wallace
Sarah Wallace
Emily Walsh
William Warpinski
Cameron Wasko
Loren Weber
Jared Weeks
Natalie Weingartz
Clayton Weissenborn
Yuanyuan Wen
Alexander Werder
Scott Wharam
Connor Wheaton
Kieran Williams
Lori-Ann Williams
Luke Winship
Samantha Wolfe
Abby Wood
Nicholas Wood
Erika Worley
Emily Wright
Preston Wyckoff
Joseph Wyzgoski

Y

Sina Yakhshi Tafti
Skylar Young

Z

Jose Zacarias Jr.
Cheryl Zhang
Duncan Zigterman

Home is where the art is

Annie Belle installs her Senior Individualized Project
Annie Belle ’13 installs her Senior Individualized Project

Senior Annie Belle’s art SIP can’t be displayed on a wall or a pedestal.

“Basically I’m knitting a house,” Belle said.

The house will be up through Friday, April 19 in the Light Fine Arts Building gallery space, with a reception on Thursday, April 18 from 4 to 5 p.m.

Belle, who learned to knit when she was 16 and was taught by her mother, designed all of the patterns for the cottage-style house and the knitted furniture that will go inside it.

“When you look at things, they all basically are geometric shapes, so I’m just knitting a bunch of rectangles or squares,” she said. “I’ve gone through multiple design ideas. I think I’ve unraveled everything that I’m working on at least once.”

Belle uses wool roving, a thick material that she described as somewhere between wool straight off a sheep’s back and finer spun yarn. It knits faster than thin yarn, she said.

Plastic piping gives structural support to furniture pieces.

Belle looked at floor plans for microhouses — very small and often portable homes — when creating her own designs.

“They’re kind of what I think of when I think of a house,” she said. “Nothing terribly sophisticated — someplace to sit, someplace to eat.”

Belle says she cannot remember how exactly she came up with the idea for the project. She reflected for a moment before saying that the concept of home has influenced her time at Kalamazoo College.

“Looking back, I feel I’ve been concerned with domestic spaces, gender roles, and private versus public sphere.” she said.

Belle financed the yarn with funding from the K Art Department, but the project scale was large enough that the money did not cover the full cost of materials. She recently launched an online fundraising campaign that has raised more than $1,600.

“I don’t feel like I’ve really done that much with my art on campus, and if I’m going to go out, I want to go out big,” she said.

After displaying the piece in Kalamazoo, Belle plans to submit it to Art Prize, a large juried art competition in Grand Rapids, Mich. She said the project may ultimately end up as stuffing for a mattress after she dismantles it.

“There’s only so much room in the world for a knitted house,” she said. (Story and photo by Maggie Kane ’13)

Washington March Culminates in Campus Event

Kalamazoo College students joined the National March for Immigration Reform
Kalamazoo College students joined the National March for Immigration Reform.

Kalamazoo College sophomore Mariah Hennen, a member of MiRA, an advocacy program of the Mary Jane Underwood Stryker Institute for Service-Learning, organized 13 Kalamazoo College students to attend the National March for Immigration Reform on April 10. Those 13 students will be part of a special campus event called “What is Immigration Reform?” That event features a keynote address by Susan Reed. Reed has practiced immigration and immigrant rights law since 2003. She has also served as a staff attorney at Farmworker Legal Services of Michigan and as a regional attorney for Justice for Our Neighbors, the immigration legal services program of the United Methodist Committee on Relief. Her particular interests include the intersection of family and immigration law, the rights of unaccompanied immigrant children, immigrant eligibility for public benefits and programs, and civil rights matters. Reed is Secretary of the Steering Committee for the Michigan Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights and co-chairs the Advocacy Committee of the Michigan Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association. She has served as an adviser to several State Bar of Michigan committees and initiatives. Her research and commentary has been published in Clearinghouse Review among other publications. “What is Immigration Reform?” will occur Wednesday, April 17, at 4 PM in Dewing Hall Room 103.

K Team Presents at Food Justice Meeting

A Kalamazoo College (and Kalamazoo-area) food justice partnership coordinated by the Mary Jane Underwood Stryker Center for Civic Engagement (formerly the Institute for Service-Learning) came together as a plenary session team and presented at Michigan State University’s First Annual Workshop on Food Justice & Peace. Team members included Alison Geist, director of the Center for Civic Engagement; Associate Professor of English Amelia Katanski; K students Shoshana Schultz ’13 and Charlotte Steele ’14; Ben Brown of the People’s Food Co-op; and Guillermo Martinez of the Van Buren Intermediate School District. Martinez also works with the College’s Hispanic Health and Disease class (Spanish 205). Steele is a former Civic Engagement Scholar of the organization Farms to K. Most of the MSU conference presenters discussed theoretical aspects of food justice and peace. The K team discussed how theory has translated into action in the Kalamazoo area. According to Schultz, the K team demonstrated the “ecology of food justice work in Kalamazoo,” how the parts work together in a manner that integrates theory and practice. Said Schultz: “People were blown away and very impressed by the collaboration that takes place in Kalamazoo.

Kalamazoo College Announces Finalists for $25,000 Global Prize for Collaborative Social Justice Leadership

Kalamazoo College is pleased to announce the finalists for its inaugural $25,000 Global Prize for Collaborative Social Justice Leadership.

Fifteen finalist projects are collaboratively led by scholars and activists from eight U.S. cities (Columbus, Ohio; Detroit; Los Angeles; New York; Oakland, Cal.; Olympia, Wash.; South Bend, Ind.; and Urbana, Ill.; and ten nations including Germany, Honduras, Hungary, India, Malawi, Palestine, Rwanda, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. One of these projects will earn the $25,000 Global Prize.

Three finalists—two from Kalamazoo and one from Marshall—are eligible for a $5,000 Regional Prize for a project that originates in Southwest Michigan.

All finalists will present their work May 9-11 in Dalton Theatre on the K campus to jurors and attendees who will discuss and deliberate over the course of a three-day “Prize Weekend.” Global and Regional Prize winners will be announced by Kalamazoo College President Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, on Saturday, May 11 at 7:15 in Dalton.

“The Kalamazoo College Global Prize creates an opportunity for our students, faculty, and the local community to interact with scholars and activists who are at the leading edge of collaborative social justice leadership practices around the country and around the world,” Wilson-Oyelaran said.

“The Global Prize also matches up with K’s mission to prepare its graduates to better understand, live successfully within, and provide enlightened leadership to a richly diverse and increasingly complex world,” she said.

Visit https://reason.kzoo.edu/csjl/clprize/finalists  to see a brief description of each finalist and link to its video entry. Facebook users may also view each video and “Like” their favorites ).

Each Global Prize applicant submitted a video (8-10 minutes) describing a social justice project, its innovative approach, and its collaborative leadership structure. A total of 188 entries were received from 23 countries and 25 U.S. states (including 14 from Southwest Michigan) by the March 8 deadline.

“The Global Prize undertaking truly presents an excellent opportunity for K students and the entire community to see social justice theory in action and to reflect on what we see as promising practices in the pursuit of a more just world,” said Lisa Brock, academic director of Kalamazoo College’s Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership, which is administering the Global Prize competition.

According to Brock, a wide variety of social justice issues are addressed among the finalists, including: education access and equity, environmental sustainability, food sovereignty, health inequities, human rights violations against prisoners and LGBTQI people, immigration, international development, racism, workers’ rights, and more.

“Several finalists involve projects and partners that cross state and international borders,” Brock said. “One project from India, for example, includes partners in Columbus, Ohio and South Bend, Indiana. And the project from South Africa includes collaborators in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.”

More than 50 people, including K students, faculty, and staff members, as well as social justice advocates in Kalamazoo and elsewhere, juried the semifinal round of the competition and selected the 18 finalists. Jurors included: author, political activist, and University of California-Santa Cruz scholar Angela Y. Davis; former Executive Director of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission Cary Alan Johnson; and shea howell, Detroit-based author, educator, columnist, and board member of the James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to Nurture Community Leadership.

The Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership was launched in 2009 with support from the Arcus Foundation (www.arcusfoundation.org), including a $23 million endowment grant in January 2012. Supporting Kalamazoo College’s mission to prepare its graduates to better understand, live successfully within, and provide enlightened leadership to a richly diverse and increasingly complex world, the ACSJL will develop new leaders and sustain existing leaders in the field of human rights and social justice.

Kalamazoo College (www.kzoo.edu), founded in Kalamazoo, Mich., in 1833, is a nationally recognized liberal arts college and the creator of the K-Plan that emphasizes rigorous scholarship, experiential learning, leadership development, and international and intercultural engagement. Kalamazoo College does more in four years so students can do more in a lifetime.

Tuesday April 9 at Kalamazoo College

Baseball v. Holy Cross College (double header)
2 PM, Homer Stryker Field

Men’s Tennis v. Hope College
4 PM, Stowe Stadium

Territories of the Breast
6 PM, Connable Recital Hall, Light Fine Arts
Film screening with filmmaker Sonia Baez-Hernandez
Visiting Fellow, Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership
The film traces Sonia Baez-Hernandez’s experiences after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2001. She interviews four other Latina and African American breast cancer survivors. The film interweaves their journeys and discloses the complexities of medical access and choices, and the process and meaning of becoming women. Honest, heartfelt, hopeful.
Ms Baez-Hernandez will be present and take questions from the audience.

How Did Civil Rights Happen In Kalamazoo?
7 PM, Olmsted Room, Mandelle Hall
Oral history interviews and discussion with Phyllis Seabolt, Cal Street, Charles Warfield and James Washington, Sr. Sponsored by students in the Kalamazoo College Senior Seminar “Building the Archive: James Baldwin and His Legacy” in partnership with Southwest Michigan Black Heritage Society.

La Fiesta Desi Soul 2013

What better way to fend off winter blues than to celebrate the ethnic diversity of Kalamazoo College’s student body? In February a number of ethnic student organizations joined the Office of Student Involvement to host and organize  the 4th annual La Fiesta Desi Soul (LFDS) event. Student organizations–including the Black Student Organization (BSO), the Caribbean society, Kalama-Africa, K-Desi, the Asian Pacific Islander Student Association (APISA), the Latino Student Organization (LSO), and the Young Persian Society–have helped turn this into the biggest Zoo After Dark event.

The event’s origins trace back to Fall of 2008, according to the Assistant Director of Student Involvement Kate Elizabeth-Leishman Yancho. It was sponsored at that time by  BSO, LSO, and K-Desi. “Compared to the first time when the event took place in the Welles Dining Hall with a relatively smaller crowd, the event has become one of the most highly attended events on campus”, says Yancho. Furthermore, LFDS won the award for the 2011 Outstanding Campus Collaboration by the National Association of Campus Activities (NACA).

Participating student organizations put up visuals, serve different dishes (catered by Sodexo) and sponsor interactive games for everybody. Sashae Mitchell ‘14, the president of the Caribbean Society, said the purpose of this event is to “share aspects of the culture of the ethnic student groups through music, food, dance, and fun activities.”  Mitchell added that she would like to see “more students attend the event so that it outgrows Hicks!” When asked about the future goals for LFDS, Brittany King-Pleas ‘13, president of BSO, said she hopes  “the educational component continues to expand and the members of the committee work together to create a bit of cohesion amongst themselves.”