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2011: Biggest Class Ever—and Other Milestones

alumnicenter
On Saturday, May 7, KSC will graduate the largest class in the College’s 102-year history. 1,093 students will receive 1,171 degrees during the Commencement ceremony that begins at 1 p.m. on Fiske Quad. If you’re  impressed that the College is maintaining record enrollment even during these challenging economic times, you should be.

Among this year’s graduates are two long-standing students: 94-year-old Selleck Scofield and the Honorable Philip “Dale” Pregent, Mayor of the City of Keene.

Lifelong learner Selleck Scofield will graduate magna cum laude with a BA. He began his education at KSC in 1995 by taking one course at a time and collaborating with faculty and Ann Rancourt, associate provost, to put together an individualized major in criminal justice studies.

Keene Mayor “Dale” Pregent will receive his BA in social science, a degree he began more than 50 years ago. He started at the College in the late 1950s, returned briefly in the 80s, and finally returned in summer 2010 to complete his coursework.

Model alumnus David Staples ’51 will be honored with the Granite State Award for his professional accomplishments and dedication to service. Long-time NH Commissioner of Agriculture member of the University System of New Hampshire Board of Trustees Stephen Taylor will receive an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters.

Get Your Commencement DVD

Keene Television (KTV), the KSC student organization, will make a video recording of the 2011 Commencement ceremony. KTV will have a table in the LP Young Student Center on May 7, where parents and students can order a copy of the DVD for $5. KTV estimates the DVDs will be completed and mailed to all customers by the end of June. If you have any questions feel free to contact KTV via e-mail at KTV.email@gmail.com.

Special Alumni Center Invite:

Grads—come and see your new home (and the world headquarters for Newsline!). Alumni, students, parents, and guests are welcome to visit the Alumni Center between 9 a.m.–12 p.m. on Saturday. Regular commencement parking restrictions will be enforced, so be caaeful wheah you paak the caa.

More information. …

Read it Online: Keene State Today

kst-winter2011cover

The latest issue of Keene State Today is available online. Share in a tribute to Phil Hyde Jr. ’52, one of Keene’s most gifted athletes, or step back to Revolutionary War-era New Hampshire with Professor Greg Knouff to visit a notorious Loyalist from Nelson. Are you a dance fan? Read about the dance students’, faculty’s, and alumni’s passion for the art. Get to know legendary folksinger Woody Guthrie through the efforts of his granddaughter, Anna Canoni ’00. Inspire yourself through modern-day abolitionist Janell Burley Hofmann’s (’99) story of saving young girls in India from a life of sexual slavery. Cheer the accomplishments of Drew Ledwith, a freshman swimmer who set six school records in his first four meets. And that’s just a sampling of the great stories in this issue!

Karrie Kalich Awarded KSC Faculty Distinction in Research Scholarship

Dr. Karrie Kalich
Dr. Karrie Kalich

Associate Professor of Health Science Karrie Kalich has been chosen to receive KSC’s 2011 Faculty Distinction in Research and Scholarship Award at the Teaching Excellence reception in the Mabel Brown Room on Wednesday, May 11th. She’s being honored for her outstanding scholarship and research in the area of child nutrition, which focuses on obesity-prevention from a community-based perspective. Dr. Kalich will share information about her research from the Early Sprouts program at the event, and again at the 2012 Academic Excellence Conference.

Architecture Students Design YMCA and Co Op in Walpole

the CommuniCorps ceremony in the Alumni Center (l–r): Steve Fortier ’86, Jamie Martin, Great River Co-op Board member Ben Daviss, Stacy Glover, Ramsey Mellish, and Jedd Pellerin ’01
At the CommuniCorps ceremony in the Alumni Center (l–r): Steve Fortier ’86, Jamie Martin, Great River Co-op Board member Ben Daviss, Stacy Glover, Ramsey Mellish, and Jedd Pellerin ’01

There’s nothing like practical, hands-on experience to bring educational ideas into the real world, and two KSC alums are offering six architecture students just such an opportunity. Steve Fortier ’86 is executive director of Meeting Waters YMCA and president of the Board of Directors of the Great River Co-op. Jedd Pellerin ’01, an architect and graduate of KSC’s architecture program, is on the Board of Directors of the Great River Co-op and one of the four developers of the complex on Route 12 in Walpole that will be the home to the Great River Co-op, Meeting Waters YMCA, an active older-adult living community, professional offices, and a restaurant. The pair invited students Michael Helmer, Kevin Enright, Ryan Ullrich, Stacy Glover, Ramsey Mellish, and Jamie Martin to design buildings for the Meeting Waters YMCA and the Great River Co-op in Walpole, New Hampshire.

Continue reading Architecture Students Design YMCA and Co Op in Walpole

Women’s Rugby Sets Guinness Record in Fundraiser

Exhausted, but proud, the KSC (in pink and black) and Williams (in blue and white) women's rugby teams had something to crow about on Sunday morning.
Exhausted, but proud, the KSC (in pink and black) and Williams (in blue and white) women's rugby teams had something to crow about on Sunday morning.

The women’s rugby teams of Keene State College and Williams College entered the Guinness Book of World Records over Easter weekend (April 23–24) by scrumming for 24 hours, five minutes, and 15 seconds. They also raised thousands of dollars for breast and colorectal cancer research.

Impressed? Drop them a line!

More information. …

AT Student Gwenn Lanouette Lands ESPN Internship

KSC junior Gwenn Lanouette heads to ESPN
KSC junior Gwenn Lanouette heads to ESPN

KSC junior Gwenn Lanouette will take a big step towards her career goal of working with the Boston Bruins when she logs some real-world experience as a non-certified athletic trainer for South Lake Hospital at ESPN Wide World of Sports in Florida this summer. As a member of the Athletic Training Education Program, Lanouette heard about the internship opportunity from Dr. Wanda Swiger.

“To be eligible for this internship you had to be entering at least your fourth undergrad year; you must have completed all evaluation courses, therapeutic modalities, and therapeutic exercise classes; and you must also have a minimum GPA of 3.0,” Lanouette explained. “While participating in this internship, I will get to work with athletes of all different age ranges, ethnicity, types of sport, and skill levels (ranging from amateurs to professionals).” Pretty impressive!

Celebration of Life for Claude Leavitt ’51

Come to Southeastern Regional Educational Services Center (SERESC), 29 Commerce Drive, Bedford, NH at 1 p.m., Tuesday, May 17th, to celebrate the life of Claude Leavitt ’51, a teacher, coach, athlete, official, and administrator who died last January. Join family, friends, and classmates in remembering Claude’s passions, and pay tribute to the legacy he has left his family, friends, and New Hampshire’s public education and athletic communities.

A Proud Owl Yet, McNair is also Maine’s Poet Laureate

Wesley McNair ’63 (Photo by Habib)
Wesley McNair ’63 (Photo by Habib)

On April 20th, 2011, Maine Gov. Paul LePage installed Wesley McNair ’63 as the state’s fourth poet laureate. Recently retired from the University of Maine at Farmington, where he co-founded and directed the Creative Writing Program, McNair plans to use his new status to bring poetry back into everyday life, as it was in days gone by.

McNair grew up in Claremont, NH, attended KSC, and taught high school and at Colby-Sawyer before moving to Maine in 1986. His latest book is Lovers of the Lost: New & Selected Poems, and he has received many awards for his creative work. His work has appeared on NPR’s Weekend Edition and The Writer’s Almanac, with Garrison Keillor; two editions of The Best American Poetry; and more than 50 anthologies. He has authored or edited 18 books, including poetry, nonfiction, and anthologies.

More information. …

Alumni: Send in Your Ballots

green-check-boxWhat do Blake Richards ’71, Gail Rowe ’79, Jonathan Leach ’85, Charles Owasu ’99, Ben Wheeler ’05, Valerie Nettleton ’05, and Christine Williams ’11 all have in common? They’re dedicated alums who have stepped up and volunteered to serve on the Alumni Association Board of Directors. And there’s also  Robert Baines ’68 and Steve Fortier ’86, who have offered to serve KSC on the USNH Board of Trustees. These are all great people who very much want to be a proactive part of the Alumni Association and KSC.

Continue reading Alumni: Send in Your Ballots

Amanda Benware ’09 Earns Math Teaching Award

Amanda Benware ’09 received the Fernand J. Prevost Mathematics Teaching Award from the New Hampshire Teachers of Mathematics (NHTM). The award is given annually to a beginning New Hampshire mathematics teacher with no more than three years’ experience but who has demonstrated an excellent commitment and ability to teach mathematics. The Prevost Teaching Award had been awarded for the past 17 years, and Amanda is the ninth Keene State alum to receive the award. Amanda teaches at Bedford High School. Beverly Ferrucci (mathematics) was her mentor here at KSC. Dr. Ferrucci has mentored all nine winners.

Seeking an Employment Opportunity? Check out JobWISE

Did you know that Academic and Career Advising (in the Elliot Center) maintains JobWISE, its own online job website? If you’re an alum or a student, check out its variety of job and internships listings. New opportunities across many fields are listed a weekly, including links to employers’ websites and application information.

Employers tell us they’ve found excellent candidates through posting to the site. KSC alumni are among the many employers who list positions on JobWISE.

If you are an employer with a job or internship opportunity you’d like to post, visit the employer page to submit your information. Listings expire after six weeks, but you can renew them as often as you like.

In Memoriam: Ranger Curran

Keene State College mourns the passing of Ranger Curran, Sr., 92, who inspired students in Keene State’s Management program from 1982 until his retirement in 1996. Students in his classes benefitted as much by his real-world experience as from his educational credentials.

Dr. Curran was a World War II fighter pilot, logging 340 combat hours and winning the Distinguished Flying Cross among other medals. In 2002, he was inducted into the Air National Guard Hall of Fame for his participation on the nation’s first jet precision acrobatic team, “The Minute Men.” Colonel Curran retired from the Air Force at age 45 and went on to earn a PhD in Management from the University of Georgia. An avid athlete, Dr. Curran was a Golden Gloves boxer, played football for Worcester Polytech, coached the US Air Force boxing team, and played squash and tennis well into his eighties.

Those wishing to commemorate Dr. Curran are invited to donate to Hospice at HCS, 312 Marlboro St., Keene, NH 03431.

The News(line) Heard Round the World

Newsline readers span the globe!
Newsline readers span the globe!

A new feature in the software that lets us send the monthly email notification that there’s new info in Newsline displays a world map that shows where those emails are being opened. As you might expect, most of our readers are concentrated in the Northeast, but we’ve also got readers scattered across the globe. The pins in the map mark where Newsline is being read. There are also pins in Tokyo, Beijing, and Auckland, NZ, but the map just couldn’t show that large a view. The word is out!

Are you a far-flung reader? Drop us a line, por favor!

Where’d I See That?

Where were you in 1960? (Percy Faith’s Theme from “A Summer Place” was the #1 song.) If you were on campus, you might have seen this block placed. Remember where it is? Of course, there’s that old saying, “If you remember the ’60s. …”

1960
If you think you’ve got the answer, please tape it to a roof rack for a 2008 VW Rabbit (official Newsline staff car) and send it to Newsline, 229 Main St., Keene, NH 03435, or use the “comments” link below.

KSC Needs Your Advocacy

You may have heard that the NH House of Representatives recently passed a budget that cuts 45% of the funds normally allocated to higher education. If cuts that deep are approved by the state Senate, the consequences for KSC, and every other school in the state university system, are grim. NH ranks 50th in support for public higher education as measured in per capita spending, and only 11% of KSC’s operating budget comes from state funds; however, the House’s proposal, HB 1, removes $6 million from the revenue the College depends on to do its work.

KSC has always maintained a very lean and frugal operation, doing the best with the limited resources we have, so a cut of $6 million is crippling. The options for making up the loss might require drastic measures. It could make it increasingly difficult to serve those students who need us most and who depend on public higher education for the training to become contributing members of society.

Keene State College works diligently to provide a fine education and excellent opportunity to every student who comes here, and we are proud of the positive impact we make and the students we produce. Our good work is felt far and wide. We hope that you share our commitment and ask that you write to your state Senator and ask him or her to preserve the investment in higher education that the state has traditionally made. Please write to your local newspaper and let your neighbors know how you feel, too. You can find your state Senator on this list.

The KSC Advocates site offers lots of information about the budget and tips for writing to your legislator and other avenues of advocating for our institution. Thank you for standing up for Keene State College, and the importance of public higher education in New Hampshire!

Class of ’86 Turns 25!

frisbee-galClass of ’86ers—this Reunion is a big one (your 25th), and there are big plans to celebrate. Mark your calendar now to get back to campus the first weekend in June (3–5) to recapture the fun you had back in the day. And this time, you won’t have to give a thought to that exam you haven’t studied for, or that paper you still have to write.

Be here for the welcome back dinner and social on Friday night. On Saturday, put on your flip flops and bring the whole family to Oya Hill from 2–4 p.m. for food and entertainment. But save room for more fun, because your class is holding a social at 4:30 in the Alumni Center.

Continue reading Class of ’86 Turns 25!