Class of 2018 School Alexandra Shipp Texas AM Corpus University
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Memory,Ritual and Place in Africa TWIN CITIES AFRICANIST SYMPOSIUM
Sacred Ground: Memory,Ritual and Place in Africa TWIN CITIES AFRICANIST SYMPOSIUM Carleton College February 21-22, 2003 Events Schedule Friday, February 21 Great Hall, 4 to 9 p.m. Welcoming Remarks Allen Isaacman, University of Minnesota Keynote Lecture “The Politics and Poetics of Sacred Sites” Sandra Greene, Professor of History, Cornell University 4 to 6 p.m. Reception with African Food, Live Music Musical performance by Jalibah Kuyateh and the Mandingo Griot Ensemble 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, February 22 Alumni Guest House Meeting Room Morning panel: 9 to 10:30 a.m. Theme: Sacred Ground: Memory, Ritual and Place in Africa Chair: Sandra Greene, Cornell University William Moseley, Department of Geography, Macalester College, “Leaving Hallowed Practices for Hollow Ground: Wealth, Poverty and Cotton Production in Southern Mali” Kathryn Linn Geurts, Department of Anthropology, Hamline University, “Migration Myths, Landscape, and Cultural Memory in Southeastern Ghana” Jamie Monson, Department of History, Carleton College, “From Protective Lions to Angry Spirits: Local Discourses of Land Degradation in Tanzania” Cynthia Becker, Department of Art History, University of St. Thomas, “Zaouia: Sacred Space, Sufism and Slavery in the Trans-Sahara Caravan Trade” Coffee Break Mid-Morning panel: 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Theme: Memory, Ritual and Performance in Africa Chair: Dianna Shandy, Macalester College Michele Wagner, Department of History, University of Minnesota, “Reburial in Rwanda: Ritual of Healing or Ritual of Revenge?” Tommie Jackson, Department of English, St. Cloud State University, “‘Fences’ in the drama by August Wilson and ‘Sizwe Bansi is Dead,’ by Athol Fugard” Helena Pohlandt-McCormick, Department of History, University of Minnesota, “Memory and Violence in Soweto” Pamela Feldman-Savelsberg, Department of Anthropology, Carleton College, “Remembering the Troubles: Collective Memory and Reproduction in Cameroon” Break 12:30 to 2 p.m. -
September 28, 1995
Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange The Kenyon Collegian College Archives 9-28-1995 Kenyon Collegian - September 28, 1995 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - September 28, 1995" (1995). The Kenyon Collegian. 484. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/484 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the College Archives at Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Kenyon Collegian by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Volume Cxxm, Number 3 E.lIJblished 1856 Tbunday, SepL 28, 1995 Sign theft signals. isolated homophobia By Gianna Maio isahisloryofbomopbobicaetivity ably fn-year SlUdenIS who aren't vandalism. According 10 Man Kenyonasaferenvironmenl They Managing Editor at KcnYOO.and say~ "Signs last ready to deal with these issues at Lavine '97. house manager of areplanning todisUibule mae safe ::-==-===---- .yearwao _dowa.Then: is a coDege," she says. Bauman is a CaplesclcnniuJly.gmfliIi waSwril- wne signs during Coming Out RCCCDt incidents of bislOry of vandalism here.. resident advisor in McBride resi- ee 00 Ibe eIev_ wall of Caples Week, and wid .... be distribut- homophobisCCll>COrllilliSafezane BoIh Bawnan and Kyk>eile dence.buthas_ooproblems eartier Ibis week rdaling 10 receer ing tbem in the dining halls in the signsoo campus baveapia SIim>d Ibe gcoI of Ibe signsas being a way with the signs on her hall. homophobic lellsions 011 campus. nosrfunoe. debaIe as to whether Kcayon Col- 10 cducaIc the community IDlIIO Andy Rkhmond '96. -
Kenyon Collegian Archives
Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange The Kenyon Collegian Archives 10-18-2018 Kenyon Collegian - October 18, 2018 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - October 18, 2018" (2018). The Kenyon Collegian. 2472. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/2472 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Kenyon Collegian by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ESTABLISHED 1856 October 18, 2018 Vol. CXLVI, No.8 Former SMAs create new group after losing confidentiality DEVON MUSGRAVE-JOHNSON SMA Program. In response, some of changes to the SMA program that SMAs would fall into the category support to peer education,” SPRA EDITOR-IN-CHIEF former SMAs have created a new included the discontinuation of the of mandated reporter, which means wrote in an email to the Collegian. support organization: Sexual Re- 24-hour hotline and the termination that the group could no longer have “While peer education is important, On Oct. 8, Talia Light Rake ’20 spect Peer Alliance.” of their ability to act as a confidential legal confidentiality and that the we recognize that there is a great need sent a statement through student Just a day before the letter was resource for students. Beginning this school could be held liable for infor- for peer support on this campus. We email titled “An Open Letter from released to the public, 16 of the 17 year, SMAs were required to file re- mation relayed to the SMAs. -
Below Is a Sampling of the Nearly 500 Colleges, Universities, and Service Academies to Which Our Students Have Been Accepted Over the Past Four Years
Below is a sampling of the nearly 500 colleges, universities, and service academies to which our students have been accepted over the past four years. Allegheny College Connecticut College King’s College London American University Cornell University Lafayette College American University of Paris Dartmouth College Lehigh University Amherst College Davidson College Loyola Marymount University Arizona State University Denison University Loyola University Maryland Auburn University DePaul University Macalester College Babson College Dickinson College Marist College Bard College Drew University Marquette University Barnard College Drexel University Maryland Institute College of Art Bates College Duke University McDaniel College Baylor University Eckerd College McGill University Bentley University Elon University Miami University, Oxford Binghamton University Emerson College Michigan State University Boston College Emory University Middlebury College Boston University Fairfield University Morehouse College Bowdoin College Florida State University Mount Holyoke College Brandeis University Fordham University Mount St. Mary’s University Brown University Franklin & Marshall College Muhlenberg College Bucknell University Furman University New School, The California Institute of Technology George Mason University New York University California Polytechnic State University George Washington University North Carolina State University Carleton College Georgetown University Northeastern University Carnegie Mellon University Georgia Institute of Technology -
As the Tenth President of Morris College
THE INVESTITURE OF DR. LEROY STAGGERS AS THE TENTH PRESIDENT OF MORRIS COLLEGE Friday, the Twelfth of April Two Thousand and Nineteen Neal-Jones Fine Arts Center Sumter, South Carolina The Investiture of DR. LEROY STAGGERS as the Tenth President of Morris College Friday, the Twelfth of April Two Thousand and Nineteen Eleven O’clock in the Morning Neal-Jones Fine Arts Center Sumter, South Carolina Dr. Leroy Staggers was named the tenth president of Morris College on July 1, 2018. He has been a part of the Morris College family for twenty- five years. Dr. Staggers joined the faculty of Morris College in 1993 as an Associate Professor of English and was later appointed Chairman of the Division of Religion and Humanities and Director of Faculty Development. For sixteen years, he served as Academic Dean and Professor of English. As Academic Dean, Dr. Staggers worked on all aspects of Morris College’s on-going reaffirmation of institutional accreditation, including the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC). In addition to his administrative responsibilities, Dr. Staggers remains committed to teaching. He frequently teaches English courses and enjoys working with students in the classroom, directly contributing to their intellectual growth and development. Prior to coming to Morris College, Dr. Staggers served as Vice President for Academic Affairs, Associate Professor of English, and Director of Faculty Development at Barber-Scotia College in Concord, North Carolina. His additional higher education experience includes Chairman of the Division of Humanities and Assistant Professor of English at Voorhees College in Denmark, South Carolina, and Instructor of English and Reading at Alabama State University in Montgomery, Alabama. -
2016 NCAC Preseason Men's Soccer Poll
Keri Alexander Luchowski Executive Director P.O. Box 16679 Cleveland, OH 44116 Phone (440) 871-8100 Fax (440) 871-4221 [email protected] www.northcoast.org ALLEGHENY COLLEGE ★ DENISON UNIVERSITY ★ DEPAUW UNIVERSITY ★ HIRAM COLLEGE ★ KENYON COLLEGE OBERLIN COLLEGE ★ OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY ★ WABASH COLLEGE ★ WITTENBERG UNIVERSITY ★ COLLEGE OF WOOSTER NCAC Men's Soccer Special For Immediate Release KENYON TOPS PRESEASON POLL AS NORTH COAST August 24, 2016 PREPARES FOR 33RD MEN'S SOCCER CAMPAIGN CLEVELAND -- Kenyon has been selected as the preseason favorite based on balloting from league coaches heading into the 33rd North Coast men’s soccer season. The Lords, who posted a 19-2-1 record and advanced to the NCAA Tournament quarterfinals in 2015, earned eight of the first-place votes cast by league coaches to finish atop the poll with 98 total points. Ohio Wesleyan, coming off its NCAA- record 38th Division III NCAA Tournament appearance, earned one first-place vote and finished second in the poll with 89 points, while DePauw rounded out the top-three in third with 78 points and the final first-place vote. Oberlin checked in at fourth with 66 points, while Denison cracked the top-five in fifth with 61 points after posting its second 11-win season in the last three years last fall. Wabash earned the sixth position with 50 points, followed by Allegheny (35), Hiram (29), Wooster (26) and Wittenberg (18). Kenyon enters the 2016 season under the direction of head coach Chris Brown for the 12th consecutive season. In 11 seasons at the helm, Brown has compiled the most wins in program history with a record of 130-58-26, which includes 122 victories over the past nine seasons and four NCAA appearances during that time. -
2005 Alumni Association Award Recipients
2005 Alumni Association Award Recipients 'C' CLUB HALL OF FAME The Carleton College Alumni ‘C’ Club inducted four new members into its Hall of Fame during Reunion weekend Bill Hendren ’50, a four-year letter winner in cross-country and indoor and outdoor track and field, holds the rare distinction of serving as a team captain in all three sports. He graduated as the Carleton record-holder in the indoor half- mile and mile runs and the outdoor mile run. He won the Minnesota state cross- country meet as a freshman and helped set new Carleton Relays records in the sprint and two-mile relays, and the mile. Hendren served as president of the ‘C’ Club his senior year, helping athletics become more visible on the Carleton campus. He continues to be a leader in the running world, having founded and coached a youth track club in Ventura, California. Lydia Neilsen ’95 was Carleton’s first female NCAA individual swimming champion, capturing the 1995 100-yard breaststroke title and becoming the first Division III female to break 1:05.00 in the event. She earned three All-America citations in the 100-yard breaststroke and was an All-America honorable mention in the 200-yard breaststroke. She captured the MIAC title in the 100- and 200-yard breaststroke in 1995 and helped the 200-yard medley relay team to victory as well. She was a four-time all-conference performer and set three school records. She earned an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship and was an Academic All-America selection as well as the first recipient of the Pat Lamb Award as Carleton’s top female student-athlete of the year. -
Teaching Faculty
Teaching Faculty Alok Amatya Assistant Professor of English. B.A., Reed College, M.A. & Ph.D., University of Miami Alexis Baldacci Assistant Professor of History. B.A., Illinois State University; Ph.D. University of Florida Wesley Beal Associate Professor of English. B.A., Hendrix College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Florida Martha Catherine Beck Professor of Philosophy. B.A., Hamline University; M.A., Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College John Becker Assistant Professor of Philosophy. B.A., California State Polytechnic University; Ph.D., Claremont School of Theology Alexander Beeser Assistant Professor of Biology. B.S., Concordia University; Ph.D., University of Tennessee James E. Berry II Visiting Artist in Residence. B.F.A., University of Montevallo; M.F.A., University of South Carolina Marcus Birkenkrahe Visiting Associate Professor of Data Science. M.S. & Ph.D., University of Hamburg Dustyn Bork Professor of Art. B.F.A., University of Michigan; M.F.A., Indiana University Karin Brown Assistant Professor of Education. B.S., Arkansas State University; M.S.T.S. University of Central Arkansas, Ed.D., Arkansas State University Angela Buchanan Associate Professor of Business. B.A., St. Gregory's University; M.B.A, University of Oklahoma; Ph.D., Capella University Paul Custodio Bube W. Lewis McColgan Professor of Religion. A.B., University of Notre Dame; Ph.D., University of Southern California David Carpenter Instructor of English. B.A., Arkansas State University; M.A., Arkansas State University Jeremy Chapman Associate Professor of Mathematics. B.S., College of the Ozarks; M.S., Missouri State University; Ph.D., University of Missouri Kimberly Crosby, ’92 Associate Professor of Education. -
Kenyon College
Kenyon College Years of Service Recognition Program Tuesday, June 15, 2021 Eleven O’clock in the Morning Table of Contents Five Years 1 Ten Years 19 Fifteen Years 28 Twenty Years 37 Twenty-Five Years 43 Thirty Years 46 Thirty-Five Years 48 Forty Years 51 Distinguished Service Awards 53 Five Years MacKenzie F. Avis Senior Assistant Director of Admissions A proud Michigan native, Mackie Avis made his way to Kenyon to ma- jor in history, study Latin and Czech, and spend a semester abroad in Prague. A true scholar-athlete, he was distinguished on the playing field as a member of the men’s lacrosse team, serving as the team’s captain and lead goal scorer. Mackie and his positive experience at the College inspired his younger brother to join him in Gambier. While staff members in the Enrollment Division are always happy to enroll students whose connection to Kenyon is strengthened by a legacy, we were particularly glad to have more members of the Avis family on campus. Over time, Mackie’s incred- ible devotion to family has inspired us, developing in all a particular care for his clan and for our own. As a son, sibling, cousin, and friend, Mackie is loyal, steady, and fun. Of course, all of these traits have served him well in his work on behalf of the College and the students he inspires every day. Reliable Mackie can be counted on to bring diplomacy and a deft touch to his work as an athletics liaison, completing many hundreds of pre-reads each year. -
BEARS in the NCAA/NAIA 2019 Michael Buck Delta State University
BEARS IN THE NCAA/NAIA 2019 Michael Buck Delta State University Lane Gordon Mississippi Valley State University Matthew Graves Blue Mountain College Daren Smith Southern University (Baton Rouge) 2018 T Tez Cole Alcorn State University Isaiah Davis Jackson State University Henry McDonald Blue Mountain College Cody Miller William Carey University Jarid Sturgeon Blue Mountain College Payton Yawn Mississippi College 2017 Kyle Coleman William Carey University Gerald Groue Louisiana College Tyler Pigott Northwestern State University 2016 Walt Aldridge Louisiana College Jacob Buchanan Louisiana College Kaleb Clarke University of South Alabama Duncan Cornfoot Louisiana College LD Coney Faulkner University Braden Smith William Carey University Dylan Spiers William Carey University Jarvis Warner Jackson State University Steven Williams Prairie View A&M University 2015 Brady Badon University of West Alabama Cliff Hurst Southeastern Louisiana University Bryce Laird Louisiana State University-Alexandria Sam Richard William Carey University Charlie Waddingham Louisiana College Jade Whitten Louisiana State University-Alexandria 2014 Collin Carroll Alcorn State University Logan Ferrell Mississippi College Ken Hodges William Carey University Payden Lynch Alcorn State University Shane McKinley University of South Alabama J. D. Stockstill William Carey University Jesse Travis Samford University 2013 Dylan Gregoire Loyola University New Orleans Kade Scivicque Louisiana State University 2012 Jared Fiorito Louisiana State University-Alexandria German Hays -
2014 Donnelly Monroe John Carroll University 2013 Burnick Andrew
Providence Day School Collegiate Athletes BASEBALL 2014 Donnelly Monroe John Carroll University 2013 Burnick Andrew University of Pennsylvania 2013 Stack Daniel UNC-Wilmington 2013 Hughes Kendall Longwood University 2013 Stack Daniel UNC-Wilmington 2012 Mansfield Tim High Point University 2012 Pope Andrew Davidson College 2012 Pope Andrew Davidson College 2010 Brown Read Lenoir-Rhyne College 2009 Hummel Steven Davidson College 2009 Rautenstrauch Christian Wagner College 2008 Cerbie James Davidson College 2006 Robbins Jonathan Lenoir-Rhyne College 2006 Wallace Drew Roanoke 2005 Zachodski Chris Roanoke 2003 Simpson Garner Hampden-Sydney College 2002 Ralston Thomas Hampden-Sydney College 1999 Heasley Kyle Wingate University 1998 Bondurant Steve University of South Carolina 1992 Heasley Derek UNC-Wilmington 1992 Moag Chris UNC-Wilmington 1992 Norwood Dewey UNC-Charlotte 1992 Smith Kemp Hampden-Sydney College 1989 Deatherage Dwayne UNC-Charlotte 1989 Efird Corey Pfeiffer University 1989 Sellers Mike NC-State University 1988 Smith Shawn Purdue University BASKETBALL 2014 Watkins Jordan Davidson College 2014 White Jatarie University of South Carolina 2013 Brayboy Ja'da UNC-Asheville 2013 Carrick Ashton Centre College 2012 Mitchell Tiffany University of South Carolina 2012 Parker Olivia Gardner Webb University 2011 Burnick Sarah Wingate University 2011 Hickson Kevin Wofford College 2011 Sullivan Connor Randolph Macon 2010 Awuruonye Nneka UNC-Greensoboro 2009 Conrad Ryan Wagner College 2009 Johnson Janee Seton Hall University 2008 Edwards Britny University of Virginia Current as of 1/16/2015 Providence Day School Collegiate Athletes BASKETBALL 2008 Edwards Whitny University of Virginia 2008 Nelson Quinn Mars Hill College 2007 Keitt Jessica Wingate University 2007 Toyo Wale Erskine College 2007 Woodson Epiphany University of Miami 2006 Goode Jeremy Mt. -
2014Football Guide
2014 FOOTBALL GUIDE WWW.GAC.EDU/ATHLETICS/FB ABOUT GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS COLLEGE For over 150 years, Gustavus Adolphus College has been educating tomorrow’s leaders to reason and act responsibly through its educational quality, accessible facilities, spiritual identity, and economic value. Quality is a word that finds its way into many colleges’ vocabularies. At Gustavus, quality is evident in its students, faculty, facilities, and programs, leading to recognition by a host of impartial critics. Forbes.com ranked Gustavus among the top 100 institutions in the country in its college report based upon several factors, including the average amount of student debt and the four-year graduation rate. The College is also included in other national guides and rankings, for example the Fiske Guide, U.S. News & World Report’s Best College Guide, and the Princeton Review, which in addition has ranked the Gustavus Dining Service among the best in the nation in each of the past two years. Gustavus students typically rank in the top third of their high school graduating class, and over 37 percent rank in the upper 10 percent of their class. Continuing their achievement at Gustavus, students find a challenging academic atmosphere where professors—98 percent of tenured faculty members have earned the highest degree in KING GUSTAV II ADOLF: THE their field—teach all classes (there are no graduate assistants) and serve as academic advisers. Collaborative learning is the norm, with exceptionally NAMESAKE OF GUSTAVUS motivated students invited to conduct research