Michelle Trigila Marion ’98, 2011 Connecticut Assistant Principal of the Year (photo by Life Touch)
KSC alumna Michelle Trigila Marion ’98 has been chosen as the 2011 Connecticut Assistant Principal of the Year. The Connecticut Association of Schools chose Marion, who is assistant principal at East Hartford High School, to represent the state and travel to an awards banquet in March to Washington, D.C., along with her counterparts from other states. The honorees will also be offered professional development programs and networking opportunities at the banquet.
Even if you’ve never noticed it, it’s pretty easy to guess where this item is. But what nation does it represent? Ten points for location, 90 points for identification!
This, and other images as we add them, are on display in our Where’d I See That? gallery. If you can shed any light on this month’s mystery photo, please put your answer inside the bell of a Vintage King 2B SilverSonic Trombone and mail it to Newsline, Alumni Center, Keene State College, Keene, NH, 03435-1502, or use the “Comments” link below.
Ernest Borgnine as Bill Sweet in The Whistle at Eaton Falls
Ernest Borgnine has been a screen and TV star longer than most of us have been watching movies. The 94-year-old actor’s great contribution to his craft was recognized at this year’s Screen Actors’ Guild Awards on Sunday, January 30, when he was given the Life Achievement Award. And the film retrospective that SAG did on Borgnine’s life would not have been complete without a clip from NH film producer Louis de Rochemont’s 1951 movie, The Whistle at Eaton Falls, in which Borgnine made his first major film appearance.
And guess where that film clip came from? Due to their friendship with Professor Emeritus of Film Studies Larry Benaquist, the de Rochemont family donated the maverick filmmaker’s entire collection to the Keene State College Film Archives, where the only known print of The Whistle at Eaton Falls now resides.
Responding to a request from the SAG for a clip from the film just a few days before the awards ceremony, Dr. Benaquist scrambled to make that happen. He sent the 16mm print to Gary Anderson at the NH Film Archive in Deerfield. Anderson transferred the black and white clip of Borgnine via telecine and shipped it to LA as a digital file. And that was the excerpt that appeared in the retrospective of Borgnine’s career.
Louis de Rochemont’s films often dealt with social issues, and The Whistle at Eaton Falls focuses on an explosive wildcat strike in a small NH town when automation threatens to cut the workforce in the local plastics factory in half. Borgnine plays Bill Street, a union member and coworker of union leader Brad Adams, played by Lloyd Bridges. Adams is appointed president of the company just as the new automation machinery arrives, sparking labor unrest and straining longstanding relationships.
Julie Arie, who managed the rights clearance for the SAG event, thanked Dr. Benaquist for his help and made it clear that, were it not for archives such as Keene State’s, her work would be impossible. Preserving such films as this one “is very important for future generations, for people in the Internet Age who are always looking for historically significant footage to back up facts. It’s a wonderful gift and a wonderful way for Keene State to be connected to Hollywood and the industry,” said Roger C. Memos ’79, a Hollywood freelancer who researches rights and clearances for music, photos, and clips from TV and film for documentaries, talk shows, and film-tribute awards. Memos is currently directing a feature documentary on his friend, blacklisted actress/social-activist Marsha Hunt.
If you’d like to see The Whistle at Eaton Falls and other gems from our collection, stay tuned: The KSC Film Department has big plans for the great treasures it holds in its archives. To be continued. …
Come and witness history at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, 23 February, in Centennial Hall in the Alumni Center. Gerhard L. Weinberg, the William Rand Kenen, Jr., Professor Emeritus of History at the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill, will speak on “Pope Pius XII in World War II,” the First Annual Lecture of the Zeta Chi Rho Holocaust and Genocide Studies Honor Society.
Since escaping Germany as a young boy with his family just before World War II and joining the US Army at age 18, Dr. Weinberg has become a life-long student of Nazi Germany, the Second World War, and the Holocaust. He is the author of 10 books, including The Foreign Policy of Hitler’s Germany: Diplomatic Revolution in Europe, 1933-1936; The Foreign Policy of Hitler’s Germany: Starting World War II, 1937-1939; World in the Balance: Behind the Scenes of World War II; A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II; Germany, Hitler, and World War II; and Visions of Victory: The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders.
At age 83, Dr. Weinberg continues to be a man of great passion about his work, traveling, writing, and lecturing. According to Professor Paul Vincent, who has known the scholar for years, “Dr. Weinberg is a powerhouse historian, who gave the opening keynote at our 2001 symposium on the Second World War at Keene … and was our Kristallnacht Remembrance speaker immediately after the symposium. No one has so impacted my understanding of Nazi Germany as has Dr. Weinberg, and I am hardly alone.”
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Zeta Chi Rho (ZXP)—a name derived from the Hebrew term “Zakhor,” meaning “to remember”—is the undergraduate honors society in Holocaust and Genocide Studies. Its principal goal is to recognize superior academic work in the field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies. Dr. Weinberg’s lecture, the first of an annual series, is sponsored by Keene State College’s Alpha Chapter of Zeta Chi Rho to help promote both academic excellence and a better understanding of the Holocaust.
Remember how Appian Way looked after a powdery snowfall? There’s nothing quite like it. Many Alumni have said they loved to see the Quad under a blanket of fresh snow. So come back and make the first footprints for Keene State College’s Winterfest. The fun starts this Friday, February 4, and goes until Sunday, February 6. (That should give you your fill of winter, eh?)
Get out of the house and bundle up for warmth and relive the feeling of being a student as you ride a tube down a slippery slope or compete in a friendly winter contest with fellow classmates, students, and faculty. Bask in KSC spirit and join fellow sports fans at Spaulding Gym or the local ice rink for some hot action, renewed friendships, and entertainment. Catch the music, thrills, and fun as snowboarders try their tricks on the rail jam, or pitch in and create a snow sculpture right here on campus. Unleash your creativity! Don’t miss this opportunity to build magical memories.
We’ll have lots of snow waiting here for you—and lots of fun and old friends. Bring your own dose of KSC spirit! Visit the Winterfest 2011 web page for more information and to register for the events.
In keeping with its values to “provide educational opportunities for all qualified students and continue our heritage of service to New Hampshire and the New England region,” Keene State College works hard to remain affordable and accessible. However, the current economic climate has many parents and students worried about paying for college. With that in mind, the Office of Financial Aid at KSC has scheduled its first ever FAFSA Nights event!
FAFSA Nights is a volunteer-driven effort to provide FREE assistance to any college-bound students and their families seeking help to complete the FAFSA. Representatives from KSC’s Office of Financial Aid will lead the event and give freely of their professional experience.
We welcome any high school seniors and/or their families who may need help filling out a FAFSA for the first time. The FAFSA Nights will be held February 3, 10, and 15 from 4 to 7 p.m. in Rhodes Hall on the KSC campus. If you’re a returning student (or know one) who needs help with a new year FAFSA, please contact the Office of Financial Aid directly.
On the job: KSC's ice melter. (Photo by Lynn Roman)
If you’ve been climbing over the snow piles on campus, or venting your frustration when you find half the spaces in the parking lot taken up with mounds of plowed snow, you’ll appreciate this contraption. It’s the new KSC ice-melting machine. It’s been a couple of years in the making, but it’s finally perfected and on the job of removing much of the campus’ excess snow.
It sprang from a demonstration at the City of Keene that Bud Windsor, assistant director, Physical Plant, attended. He saw a machine that allowed cities to melt much of the snow that was plowed into huge piles that then either had to be trucked away or left perhaps for months hogging valuable real estate. Bud realized that the College could sure use such a machine, but the cost was prohibitive: nearly a quarter of a million dollars!
So he brought a brochure back to campus, and the guys at the plumbing and heat plant departments started building one. Forget the $250K — they had an axle and a dump truck bed, and bought and scrounged a few more parts and built the machine for somewhere around $30K. That’s quite a savings, and another great example of KSC’s Yankee frugality and do-it-yourself ethic.
According to Bill Rymes, supervisor-Plumbing/Heating Physical Plant, the melter can easily liquefy 25 2.5-yard bucket loads of packed snow per day, reducing much of the expensive trucking that had to be done in the past. Now, the snow is turned into pretty clean water that goes down the storm drain, instead of adding to the burden at the City’s snow dump. Better schedule your sugar-on-snow party while there’s still some left!
Keene State College’s Carroll House Gallery will open on Thursday, January 27, to offer students, artists, and the Keene community regular samplings from the world of contemporary art. The opening exhibit will feature the work of Jarod Charzewski in a site-specific installation called Earthflow, which will use discarded clothing collected from Keene and the surrounding area to create an expansive, three-dimensional landscape that pays homage to the Monadnock region. By collecting clothing from the local communities, the artist intends to engage area residents and instill a sense of global responsibility. Following the project, these materials/garments will be donated to a local thrift store.
Currently an assistant professor in sculpture at the College of Charleston (SC), Charzewski will work with KSC students for four days, installing the exhibit before the gallery opens. The artist will talk about his work at noon on Wednesday, January 26, in the Thorne-Sagendorph Conference Room, and there will be an opening reception at the Carroll House Gallery from 4–6 p.m. on Thursday, January 27.
All spiffed up, inside and out, Carroll House is ready to welcome the most discriminating visitors.
Carroll House, located next to the Alumni Center on Main Street, was recently converted from student housing to handsome gallery space to exhibit the work of KSC students and invited artists, functioning as a teaching gallery, where the Keene community can view contemporary art. It will create opportunities for Keene State art students to display their work, create art installations, and perform other gallery-management tasks.
All Carroll House Gallery events are free, open to the public. The Gallery is open from Wednesday through Saturday from 12–5 p.m. For more information, contact the KSC Art Department at 603-358-2040.
KSC faculty and students at the ASSE Engineers Regional Operations Committee Meeting. Back row, l to r: KSC Professor Wayne Hartz; Josh Besnoff, Rho Kappa Sigma President; Aaron Eames, Vice President Student Chapter ASSE, Dr. Robert McCay, ASSE ROC Chairman; KSC Professor Larry McDonald; Katherine Burke, Vice President RKS; Jacqueline Ayers. Front row, l to r: KSC Professor David May; Travis Brenner; Stephanie Rocha; Mike Araujo; Alex Devittori.
Members of the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) spent a weekend in November at the Alumni Center for their Regional Operations Committee Meeting. Members came from throughout the Northeast, and the group included KSC Safety Studies alums Amanda Vogel ’07, from the Central Mass. Safety Council, and Kristin Hoffman ’88, principal specialist at Pfizer; KSC professors Wayne Hartz, Larry McDonald, and David May; and six student presenters:
Jacqueline Ayers talked about her SeaWorld internship.
Josh Besnoff, Rho Kappa Sigma (National Safety Honor Society) President, used video clips to discuss his construction internship and attendance at a national safety conference.
Katherine Burke, RSK Vice President, discussed her personal experience of texting while driving and how that experience plus course work is motivating action at KSC.
Stephanie Rocha transferred to KSC and told a marvelous story of her journey to Safety Studies.
Mike Araujo discussed his internship with Skanska construction in Boston.
Brendon McCarthy, President of the ASSE Student Chapter, served as MC and tour guide and discussed the students’ focus on the hazards of texting while driving. Check out their YouTube video.
McCarthy and Prof. Hartz led a tour of the campus on Sunday morning, visiting Butterfield, reviewing KSC’s program and planned building renovation.
Prof. Hartz noted that Richard Pollock, CSP, Sr. Vice President of the ASSE, and Dr. Robert McClay, ASSE Regional Vice President Region VII, attended both days of the meeting and were enthusiastic in their praise of the student presentations. He also said that Tom Nolan, ASSE Regional Coordinator and Past President, ASSE Granite State Chapter (which sponsors the student chapter) and weekend organizer, mentioned that “this was the best regional meeting they have ever had. Period. To a person, each attendee commented that the best part of the weekend were the students and their presentations.” Go KSC!
Parents: Don’t Text While (Your Kids are) Driving!
Safety Studies Professor Wayne Hartz pointed out that studies indicate that parents initiate over 50% of their children’s text traffic. A driver who’s also texting takes his or her eyes off the road an average of three seconds per text. At 65 mph, that means that the car travels 100 yards while the driver isn’t watching the road ahead. So, parents, think before you text: Am I encouraging my kid to read this text while he or she is driving?
Each year, members of the Alumni Association choose the recipients of the Alunni awards, including the Alumni Achievement Award, the Sprague Drennan Award, the Outstanding Service Award, and the Alumni Inspiration Award. At Reunion each June, the Association gathers to celebrate the outstanding contributions award recipients have made in their career field and in service to the Alumni program and the College.
If you know of an alum who deserves one of these awards, please let us know; we’re currently accepting nominations for this year’s recipients. Visit the Alumni Awards page for a list of past honorees, to review the criteria, and to download the nomination form. The deadline is February 1st.
Looking for a healthy dose of cool fun and warm friendships? Come on back to campus on February 4–6 for Winterfest — where memories are made. You’ll find snowy thrills, entertainment for the whole family, KSC spirit, and an opportunity to get together with old friends — and make new ones! The weekend will offer snow tubing, outdoor competitions, a rail jam (can you shred it?), KSC athletics, and much more.
Need more info? Contact the Alumni Office: 603-358-2369, 800-572-1909, or alumni@keene.edu.
If you’re planning to give a year-end gift to your alma mater, the new tax laws may affect you. The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 “provides a two-year retroactive extension of the IRA Charitable Rollover. Specifically, the new law reinstates the Rollover for 2010 and allows any eligible gifts made by January 31, 2011 to be treated as a 2010 donation and be used to satisfy the taxpayer’s minimum distribution requirement for 2010. The new expiration date for the Charitable Rollover is December 31, 2011.”
Award-winning poet and KSC English prof, William Doreski (photo courtesy of The Negativity Institute).
Poet and KSC English Professor William Doreski recently won the Aesthetica Creative Works Competition 2010 poetry award. Aesthetica is a British-based art and culture publication that explores both emerging and established contemporary arts and design. The annual competition received 4,000 entries, and one winner was chosen from each of three categories: Artwork & Photography, Fiction, and Poetry. Each winner received an award of £500 and an additional prize from Aesthetica’s competition partners. Winners and finalists have their work published in the Aesthetica Creative Works Annual.
Read more, including a link to “Your Sea Bass,” and more of Prof. Doreski’s poems.
OK, here’s an easy one. Where on campus have you seen this tasteful sign?
This, and other images as we add them, are on display in our Where’d I See That? gallery. If you can shed any light on this month’s mystery photo, please tape your answer to a mint-condition, 1909 S VDB penny and mail it to Newsline, Alumni Center, Keene State College, Keene, NH, 03435-1502, or use the “Comments” link below.
Last October, Irene Herold, Dean of Library at KSC, was one of two NH delegates who joined 116 other women from around the country at Vision 2020: An American Conversation about Women and Leadership. The delegates to this national initiative gathered at Drexel University in Philadelphia to advance women’s equality by 2020. They spent three days in discussion and debate, generating hundreds of ideas on how to support women’s leadership. Each woman signed the “Declaration of Equality” and pledged to create action projects designed to give more women a voice in government, media, education, and business in their home states.