2011-12 Issue - Johnson State College
Transcription
2011-12 Issue - Johnson State College
THE ANNUAL MAGAZINE OF JOHNSON S TAT E COLLEGE 2011/2012 ALSO I NSI DE: Celebrating the Wi l l ey Li br ar y & Le ar ni n g C enter "UILDING.AMEDIN$ONORS(ONORsPAGE 8 25 Ye ar s o f S E R VE /PTIMISMAND!CTIONAT*3#sPAGE 15 Ben t l ey Hal l Tr an sf orme d -AJOR2ENOVATION#OMPLETEDsPAGE 20 At the Water ’s Edge M I C H E LE B O O M H OWE R A N D F E L LO W J S C A LU M S G U I D E R E C OV E RY E F F O RTS A F T E R T R O P I CA L STO R M I R E N E S A V E T H E D AT E : J S C H o m e c o m i n g / R e u n i o n W e e k e n d — S e p t . 2 1 - 2 2 , 2 0 1 2 JOHNSONVIEWS2011/2012|COVERI F R O M T H E PRESIDENT President’s Message Unlike so many others, Johnson State College weathered Tropical Storm Irene relatively unscathed. While rivers spilled their banks and flooded roadways here, the Green Mountains served as our barricade, channeling the downpour to southern valleys while protecting Johnson and points north from the brunt of the storm. At JSC, in fact, the biggest headache we faced that second week of classes was the disruption of Internet communications caused by flooded power supplies at the Vermont State Colleges. It was a major inconvenience, but ultimately it was just that: an inconvenience. Some of our faculty and staff — and many JSC students with families as close by as Stowe and Waterbury — were not so lucky, of course, and in true JSC fashion, our community stepped up to help. Through a variety of fundraisers, benefit concerts, clothing drives, food collections, clean-up crews and more, Johnson State College has done much to help our neighbors move on after Irene. Given JSC’s history of service — noted by Judith Yarnall in her article about the program we now call SERVE — how fitting it is to learn that several key players in the state’s disaster-recovery efforts are JSC alums. We take pride in sharing their story in this issue, which serves to remind us that wherever you turn in Vermont, you’ll find Johnson State College grads leading the way. Notwithstanding Irene and the ongoing challenges of responsible fiscal stewardship we face, this has been a year of many positives. As you’ll see in this issue, we have a vastly new and improved Bentley Hall in support of JSC President Barbara E. Murphy our math and science programs. From the work of Dr. Liz Dolci and students on microorganisms at the former Vermont Asbestos Group mine, to ongoing research on asthma and exercise being conducted in our Exercise Physiology lab, the quality of our faculty-mentored undergraduate research continues to earn accolades. We recently received another highly competitive grant from the Vermont Genetics Network to continue our research in three key areas, and Dr. Gina Mireault’s work on infant humor will be featured in an upcoming episode of NOVA, the award-winning PBS science program. This also was the year we received our first million-dollar gift and named our Library & Learning Center in honor of generous donors Richard Willey and Rosalind Weiss, christened our new Chesamore Bell and Alumni Clock Tower on the campus quad, reveled in the national title earned by our fledgling Women’s Rugby Club, and transformed our Visual Arts Center into our latest campus showpiece. Reading through this issue of Johnson Views, I’m reminded that whatever one’s connection to JSC — as a student, a parent or a longtime friend or supporter — there is much to celebrate. Great things are happening at our small college, and great things lie ahead. n 337 COLLEGE HILL JOHNSON, V T 05656 VOLUME 21 | 2011/2012 PR E S I D E N T Barbara E. Murphy ACADEMIC DEAN Daniel Regan DEAN OF STUDENTS David Bergh DEAN OF ADMINISTR ATION Sharron Scott DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT Lauren Philie DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS Deborah Bouton CONTENTS Around the Rock 2 JSC Women’s Rugby Wins National TitlesNew Clock Tower on Campus Quad JSC Students Help With Post-Irene Cleanup ARAMARK Staff Honored for Community Commitment Archeology Students Unearth Fairfax Artifacts New Communications & Media MajorsThink College Program F E ATUR ES JSC Names the Willey Library & Learning Center 8 Donors Richard Willey ’71 and Rosalind Weiss build JSC's future with $1 million gift. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Sally Ballin, Deborah Bouton, Kelly Collar, Sally Laughlin, Jessica McCoy, Michael Osborne, Melissa Weinstein, Judith Yarnall CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGR APHERS Deborah Bouton, Glenn Callahan, Brian Coon, Daniel Hescock, Eric Kirk, Jason Johnson, Don Landwehrle, Michael Osborne, Alison Redlich, Patrick Rogers, Melissa Weinstein At the Water’s Edge 10 Michele Boomhower ’93 works with other JSC grads to help drive Vermont’s recovery efforts. 25 Years of SERVE 15 A reunion at Homecoming 2011 reunites JSC alums who proudly carry on JSC's tradition of service to the Lamoille County and the world. DESIGN Hathaway Point Design, St. Albans, VT PRINTING Queen City Printers Inc., Burlington, VT JOHNSON VIEWS is an annual publication for alumni, parents and friends of Johnson State College. SEND ARTICLES, SUGGESTIONS, ALUMNI NOTES & ADDRESS CHANGES TO : Office of Development & Alumni Relations Johnson State College 337 College Hill Johnson, VT 05656-9898 PHONE 802-635-1251 FA X 802-635-1278 EMAIL jscalum@jsc.edu www.jsc.edu COVER PHOTOS Route 100 in Wardsboro following Tropical Storm Irene, by Wardsboro Fire Warden Daniel Hescock; inset: Michele Boomhower in her office at the Chittenden Regional Planning Commission in Winooski, by Alison Redlich The Transformation of Bentley Hall 20 JSC's science and math building undergoes a major facelift. Sally Laughlin Bids Farewell 30 The longtime director of development and alumni relations retires. Looking Back on Homecoming 2011 50 DE PAR TME NTS Faculty/Staff Highlights 19 Athletics Update 23 2011 Hall of Fame Inductees 27 Philanthropy Report 28 2011 Alumni Association Awards 32 2011 President’s Awards 33 Donor Report 36 Alumni News 41 In Memoriam 47 Award Nomination Forms 52 JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 1 Happenings at Johnson State A Storybook Season... JSC Women's Rugby Team Scores together than any team he’s ever coached, men’s or women’s. Allen coached men’s rugby at JSC from 2000 to 2005 and returned this year to coach the women’s team. “You can’t start any lower and get any higher,” he said, noting that he showed up at the first practice to find three women “throwing a ball around.” He agreed to coach the team if they could get at least The 2011 JSC Women’s Rugby Club (back, from left): Club Advisor Patrick Rogers; Ashley Carrington (junior, Middlefield, MA); Tiana Cross (freshman, White River Jct., 10 others to VT); Satu Lord (junior, Essex, VT); Jessica Mott (senior, Swanton, VT); Jules Jacovini (senior, Morrisville, VT); Miranda Ingram (junior, Suffield, CT); Trina Guaraldi show up at (freshman, Springfield, VT); MVP winner Nora Wynter (junior, Tinmouth, VT); Miranda Giles (sophomore, Jaffrey, NH); Coach Don Allen; captain Aly Finn (junior, each practice. Montgomery, NY). FRONT, from left: Muzzy Wronski (sophomore, Barre, MA); Belinda LaFountain (freshman, Cornwall, VT); Paige Libby (freshman, Whitefield, NH); They did that Molly Banks (junior, Acton, MA); Amara MacKillop (sophomore, Charlotte, VT); Mikala Frenette (junior, Braintree, VT); Taylor Brown (freshman, Manchester, VT); and and more. Coral Bolio (sophomore, St. Albans, VT) As Allen The Women’s Rugby team at Johnson State College puts it, “They were a unique group of ladies who took secured the national Division IV championship Sunday, the game seriously and wanted to win, even to the point besting previously undefeated Albright College of of practicing at 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. at least two times a Pennsylvania 12-5. Center Nora Wynter, a junior at JSC week. They were the epitome of what a team should be.” from Tinmouth, VT, won Most Valuable Player honors. Allen singled out MVP winner Wynter for special The win is impressive on many levels, not the least of praise, saying she was an “excellent rugby runner” who which is that this was the team’s first year of competition latched on to the game from the start. “At first it was all and that only six of the members had previously ever about Nora — she was all we had in offense and attack played rugby. — but that didn’t last long,” he said. “The players Calling it “a storybook season,” Coach Don Allen quickly became the best team, and the best group of credited the players for working harder and playing better individuals, I’ve ever coached.” 2 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 A R O U N D THE ROCK National Title The victory received statewide media coverage and was featured on the National Public Radio program “Only a Game” (online at http://onlyagame.wbur.org), where it was titled “From Zeroes to Heroes.” JSC won a berth at the nationals after securing the New England Rugby Football Union (NERFU) title Nov. 12, winning two hard-fought games against Springfield College (26-10) and Saint Anselm College (17-12). Saint Anselm was the only school to have a win against JSC during the regular season. The Division IV Championship took place in Cherry Hill, N.J., on Sunday, Nov. 20. Heading into the nationals, team captain Alyson Finn, a junior The followin g is excerpted with permiss Mich ael Fa ion from a let ill ace to Presi ter sent by JSC dent Murphy won the na alum shor tly af ter tional title. the JSC Wom en’s Rugb y Cl Dear Presiden ub t Murphy: I have always valued the educ ation, the experi ences and the Johnson. I am relationships I for tunate to ha have from ve attended a school that wa the personal se s a good fit. I thr ttings of small ived in er class sizes and the serene mountains. Mo environment of st important, the the green teachers and pro Since graduati fessors had a ng in 2004 with profound impa ct on my life. a B.A . in busin ess, I have gone degrees and am on to achieve tw quickly progre ssing in the ac o master’s counting field. sources at Joh I can attribute nson State Co my success to llege. I am writing be cause I felt co mpelled to share my experience a resident of Ne from this past w Jersey, I had weekend. As the privilege of attending the Championship JSC Women's Ru game in Cherr y Hill. It was an gby National amazing feat to were outnumb witness! The Ba ered and going against an unde dgers feated team tha tournament. Th t had not let up e women of thi s team showed a point all determination, face of adversi resolve and res ty. They got up ilience in the when they were knocked down backs were ag and dug in deep ainst their own when their goal. It was incredibl e not only to se e this team tri umph on the fie it. They were a ld but to see ho complete class w they did act. They show ed respect for opponents and the game, thems their supporters elves, their . It was one of the finest displa ever witnessed ys of sportsman . It seems the coaching staff ship I have an d captains of thi success just as s team have infl the professors of Johnson have uenced this infl ue nced mine. Aside from gra duation, this wa s my proudest moment of being alumnus. I wa nt to thank the a Johnson State team for re- es College tablishing tha desire to be mo t honor and pri re involved as de and raising an out-of-stat my e alumnus. “Jo Champions” ha hnson State Co s such a nice rin llege National g to it. Michael Faillace Assistant Divisio from Montgomery, N.Y., felt confident of the win. “You’d think a small school like JSC wouldn’t have a chance against the bigger schools, especially since we’re just a club sport — but we do. We always go at it as hard as we can and with the attitude that we’re going to win,” she said. The current Women’s Rugby Club at JSC started three years ago. This was the team’s first year of competitive play. n Coming Next Issue! A look inside Johnson's beautiful new Visual Arts Center! A spectacular renovation and addition is inspiring amazing work. , Class of 2004 n Controller, Rep ublic Ser vices of NJ, New Bru nswick, NJ 08901 Go to www.youTube/JohnsonStateCollege for a video tour. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 3 A R O U N D THE ROCK Goodbye, Irene! JSC students pitch in to clean up storm damage JSC students have a well-deserved reputation for stepping up to the plate whenever a call for volunteers comes in, but last fall they turned out in droves to help with recovery efforts following Tropical Storm Irene. The Athletics Department organized student-athletes from all JSC varsity teams into work crews that helped out in Waitsfield (center photo, opposite page), while JSC’s SERVE-Fri volunteer program focused on clearing mud and debris from homes along the Winooski River in Waterbury just down the street from the headquarters of the Vermont State Colleges. JSC ARAMARK Staff Recognized for Community Service Tadd Stone (center) and James Consentino pose with Cindy Locke, executive director of the Lamoille Valley Chamber of Commerce, after receiving the organization’s Workplace Development Leader of the Year award. JSC Food Service Director Tadd Stone and Assistant Director James Consentino recently received the award for “Workplace Development Leader of the Year” from the Lamoille Valley Chamber of Commerce. The award was in recognition of a job-training program the two initiated at JSC in the summer of 2011 to train unemployed community members in basic food-service skills. Consentino came up with the idea for the project and worked with Stone to implement it. “We partnered with the College, ARAMARK (the company contracted to provide food services at JSC) picked up the cost for it, and we worked with the state to help us fund the program and identify the candidates,” said Stone. Consentino and Stone researched what skills would be most valuable for participants to learn, consulting restaurant owners and their own past experiences to develop a curriculum for the eight week course that ran from June to August. The course also included four day-long internships at local restaurants. Ultimately, 10 unemployed adults enrolled in the program, and ARAMARK hired the eight who completed the program to work at JSC this academic year. The idea for the program started last winter, when ARAMARK began providing the meals for the Johnson CommUNITY Meals program. That program offers a free lunch to residents on the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month at the United Church of Johnson. “We were committed to the program and wanted it to grow, so we came up with a food-training aspect to make the program more self-sufficient,” says Stone, director of ARAMARK at JSC. While at JSC, in addition to helping to prepare and serve the food at the College, program participants prepared and served the food at the biweekly community luncheons. The training program at JSC evolved from an understanding that a lot of people were out of work in Lamoille County and that his organization, ARAMARK, 4 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 was able to help, Stone said. “Basically, we saw the need to help some of our out-of-work neighbors get trained and back in the workforce,” he explained. “In addition, we struggle to find good candidates each fall to open up for the school year. We decided to offer this eight-week course to meet both of these goals.” JSC provided the kitchen and covered related expenses for the job-training program, while ARAMARK provided the training, the food and uniforms for each of the participants — as well as a set of professional kitchen tools and knives for each to keep. For participant David Coffey of Morrisville, one of the highlights of the training program — and now working at JSC — has been the opportunity to help with the Johnson Community Meals. “It feels great knowing that we were helping people in the community,” he said. Starting in June 2012, ARAMARK will no longer be the food-service provider for JSC and the other member institutions of the Vermont State Colleges, as the VSC recently signed a contract with Sodexo. While Stone and Consentino will be moving on, the commitment to community service that they inspired will carry on: Sodexo has agreed to take on the role of preparing and serving meals for the biweekly Johnson CommUNITY Meals program when classes resume in the fall. n New Clock and Bell Tower at JSC Johnson State College has a new addition: a 20-foot-high clock tower in the center of campus that houses the College’s historic Chesamore Bell, which was installed in the college’s first building (Chesamore Hall) in 1873. The tower will become the center of a donors’ plaza and be the focus of a campaign to “Increase Our Base,” aimed at doubling the number of donors and the total amount of gifts to the College. See page 28 for more about the campaign and how the tower came to be. JSC students uncover 2,000-year-old artifacts Students from Johnson State College have discovered an archaeological site in Fairfax along the Lamoille River that dates back at least 2,000 years. The six undergraduate students conducted site work at the River Berry Farm in Fairfax from mid-May to late June 2011 as part of a course called Unearth the Past: Field Archaeology on the Lamoille. The course, by taught by project leader and visiting Jessica anthropology instructor Corbett Torrence, McCoy had students document, evaluate and preserve the features of a specific archaeological site. “The Lamoille is one of the least studied of Vermont’s major rivers,” Torrence said. “Our goal was to put the Lamoille on the archaeological map.” Working with the Vermont Division of Historic Preservation, local farmers and land owners, Torrence and the students set out to identify new archaeological sites and to evaluate and confirm reported known sites. The River Berry Farm site was targeted for exploration last year by students taking the same course but working at Boyden Valley Farm in Cambridge. Torrence explained that the focus of the class has been the falls on the Lamoille River in Fairfax and in Johnson because they are high in natural resources and therefore are likely stopping points for early inhabitants. “We look for flat ground that is close to water but not swampy, surrounded by forest that would be full of fruit and animals that would be used by people to survive,” said student Chris Chabot of Johnson. The group discovered several fire pits as well as materials and stones used by Vermont inhabitants thousands of years ago. They created a grid and staked out test pits, then looked just beyond the “plow zone,” which is roughly 30 centimeters (one foot) below ground. They then examined the soil for changes in color that would be caused by fires that burned and oxidized the soil. One of the most valuable things to find at an archaeological site is a fire pit, Torrence said. “Fire pits are very important because plant and animal remains decay Top: Screening soil at the dig. Left: This soil cutout shows one of the fire pits used for cooking that JSC students unearthed at River Berry Farm in Fairfax, Vt. over time, but when they are carbonized in a fire they last a very long time,” he explained. “This shows us not only what the diet of these people was, but what time of the year they were eating it, depending on whether we discover the remains of seasonal fruit or a migratory animal.” Students spent the last week of class in the lab at JSC testing soil and creating reports on everything they discovered — and responding to inquiries from reporters throughout the state who were covering the group’s findings. The students’ reports will stay on file at the Vermont Division of Historic Preservation. n Jessica McCoy, ’11 is a JSC journalism graduate. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 5 A R O U N D THE ROCK ‘Think College’ Expands Options for Students with Intellectual Disabilities Above: Jon Fitzgerald works on an assignment with JSC student and Think College mentor Rachel Oakes. Right: JSC student Sally Hornick, a mentor with the Think College program, helps Brandon Zick review his class options. Young adults with intellectual disabilities such as Down Syndrome now have the opportunity to get a taste of college thanks to a new program run by JSC’s Education Department with the support of students majoring in education at JSC. Called “Think College,” the program launched in fall 2011 and provides an innovative and inclusive academic, social and vocational program for students who are 18 to 26 years old. Rather than working toward a degree, participants can earn a 13- to 25-credit “Certificate of Higher Education” over two years. Think College (TC) staff and master-level education majors at JSC work with students and their families to develop individualized plans of study centered around the student’s interests and strengths as well as beneficial skill areas, including socialization, independent-living skills, self-advocacy skills, and integrated work experiences. In addition, each TC student is assigned a mentor who provides classroom and related support as needed. Students enroll in one class a semester over two years. The first year focuses on academics as well as social, vocational and independent-living skills. The second year continues the focus 6 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 on coursework and independent-living skills and adds an internship tied to vocational goals. “This is a great opportunity not only for education majors at JSC to gain experience working with special populations, it opens the doors to students with intellectual disabilities who otherwise would not have the opportunity to experience college,” says JSC program coordinator Christopher Kennedy. “It’s a win-win all around.” The program is funded in part by a U.S. Department of Education grant awarded in partnership with the University of Vermont, which runs a similar program. The College welcomed three TC students this year and hopes to increase that number next year. n A R O U N D THE ROCK ‘Communications and Community Media’ JSC Revamps Journalism Major to Reflect Changing Media Landscape The news is ever-changing, and the business of covering it must change as well. This basic tenet was the driving force when Johnson State College expanded its journalism major into “Communications and Community Media.” The new program kicks off with the fall 2012 semester. Journalism students now can choose among three concentrations: print and web community journalism, photojournalism, and public relations. Whichever track they choose, they’ll gain the foundations of traditional journalism with the savvy of new media technology — a field that’s growing at an exponential rate each year, with interactive media ranging from podcasts and RSS feeds to social networks, apps and blogs. “We realized we needed to offer more in light of the rapidly changing nature of the news business and communications media in general,” says Tyrone Shaw, professor of writing and literature at JSC. “The new program reflects the new realities, including technological advances, and provides more opportunities for our graduates.” The community journalism concentration has been crafted around the particular demands of small-market newspapers and the significant role they play in their communities. According to Ethan Dezotelle, a 2002 JSC graduate and director of new media at the St. Albans Messenger, there’s a huge difference between community media and media in a broader sense. “The accountability that should and does come with being a journalist is much more immediate in community journalism,” he says. “There’s also an incredibly powerful sense that, as a community journalist, you’re acting as a public servant, with the public’s best interest at heart.” The demands on community journalism are even greater, he says, because newspapers need to find a way to bridge the generational technology gap. “The small, local daily or weekly can’t afford to lose the folks who still live in the print-only world,” he says. “At the same time, these papers can’t afford not to evolve as publications for readers who function primarily in the digital world. Students in JSC’s new Communications and Community Media major will be on the front lines of that balancing act,” he says. Those in the photojournalism concentration will blend the basics of composition, lighting and darkroom techniques with instruction in state-of-the-art digital photography and video production. Students in the public relations concentration will learn to shape and communicate organizational messages through a variety of media strategies and outlets. Every student in the major will have the same core of coursework combining news and feature writing with digital media and production. Developing the new major was a team effort among three academic departments at JSC: Writing & Literature, Business & Economics, and Fine Arts. Shaw says that after consulting with Vermont editors, publishers and journalists, “It became clear that we ought to broaden the scope of the journalism major.” He had a few conversations with the different department chairs, and the rest soon fell into place. “We saw the chance to introduce some excellent new courses that would benefit each department separately and the new program collectively,” he says. “All of us felt the same way: Given the obvious benefits to our students, why wouldn’t we want to do this?” A key component of the program is the practical experience students gain working on Basement Medicine, JSC’s biweekly student newspaper, which is produced in both print and web editions. Dezotelle, former editor in chief of The County Courier and a Vermont journalist for the past decade, has worked with other JSC graduates at newspapers around the state — including Melissa Betty (’08) Jessie Forand (’09), who work with him at the St. Albans Messenger — and can attest to the influence Basement Medicine had on their education. The common denominator, he says, is that they all started at JSC. n JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 7 WILLEY LIBRARY NAMING F E AT U R E Library & Learning Center Named in Honor of Donors Johnson Receives First J ohnson State College has received its first $1 million gift, in the form of an irrevocable bequest, which will be divided between two endowments at the college: the JSC Library Endowment and the Julia V. and Ervin L. Willey Scholarship Endowment. The gift is from longtime donors Richard E. (Dick) Willey, JSC class of 1971, and his wife, Rosalind S. Weiss, of Harrisburg, Pa. JSC’s Development Office has worked with these generous donors over the past 15 years. In 2000, when the College’s “Books for the Third Century” drive ended with a reception for donors, Dick told Director of Development Sally Laughlin that some day he hoped to name the building. Dick’s dream has now been accomplished: In recognition of this contribution, JSC named its library and learning center the Willey Library & Learning Center at a dedication ceremony Sept. 12, 2011. “This legacy gift from alumnus Dick Willey and Roz Weiss represents both great generosity and confidence in the future of Johnson State College,” said JSC President Barbara E. Murphy at the ceremony. “The entire JSC community — our students, faculty and staff along with the 8 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 neighboring community — will benefit from their gift to our library and learning center, and more students will realize their hopes of a degree from JSC thanks to the greater number of scholarships this gift will make possible.” She added that the gift “comes from an alumnus who knows what it means to step into college from a loving family of modest means, to be the first in his family to do so, and to begin the journey to a wider and fuller world through the riches of a college education.” In establishing the Julia V. and Ervin L. Willey Scholarship Endowment in honor of his parents 15 years ago, Dick noted that they were born into an early 1900s farming community in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. “Being from families of modest means, they were not privileged to have been able to finish high school, let alone to have the opportunity to pursue higher education,” he wrote. “As a result, they worked hard and sacrificed to make available to their children educational opportunities that had not been available to them. This endowment continues that spirit of hard work and sacrifice on behalf of future generations.” $1 Million Gift Clockwise from opposite page: The cover is pulled, revealing the lettering of the newly named Willey Library & Learning Center; Hayes Johnson, class of 2012, recipient of a Julia V. and Ervin L. Scholarship, meets his benefactors; Rosalind Weiss and Richard Willey stand in front of the building that now bears their name; the JSC Chorale sings at the dedication ceremony; Roz and Dick pose with JSC President Barbara Murphy and Vermont State Colleges Chancellor Tim Donovan at the dedication ceremony. Richard Willey earned his undergraduate degree in history, political science and economics from JSC and a master’s degree in public administration from Penn State University. He worked on budget policy in Pennsylvania in the office of the governor and for the general assembly before working for the law firm of Stevens & Lee, where he represented clients ranging from universities and electric companies to multinational corporations. He retired in 2007 as president and CEO of American Education Services and Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (AES/PHEAA). Other achievements include chairing the Tri-County Regional Planning Commission and the Susquehanna Valley chapter of the American Red Cross, and serving on the boards of the Whitaker Center for the Arts and Sciences (Harrisburg), the Pennsylvania Industrial Development Authority, the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority and the Capitol Region Economic Development Corporation. He received the “Distinguished Alumni Award” from JSC in 2000. At the time he wrote, “I owe everything that I have been able to do to the solid educational foundation that I received at Johnson State. The quality of the faculty and the intimacy of size gave me the confidence to know I could compete with people who come from the so-called ‘best schools’ in the country.” n JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 9 PHOTO: Daniel Hescock AT THE WATER’S JSC grad Michele Boomhower helps keep Vermont disaster recovery 10 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 F E AT U R E AT THE WATER’S EDGE S EDGE on track after Tropical Storm Irene photo: Alison Redlich ichele Boomhower, class of ’93, was heading back to Vermont after a transportation conference in Washington, D.C. It was August 26, 2011, and news about Tropical Storm Irene was hitting the airwaves. Predictions of high rainfall caught her attention. Recalling the flood of 1995 that swamped Lamoille County — six inches of rain in one day caused massive damage — she stayed glued to the Weather Channel after arriving home. Two days later, on August 28, Irene deluged Vermont, dumping 14 inches of rain in some areas. Michele sensed her world was about to change. As director of the Metropolitan Planning Organization (the transportation planning entity for Chittenden County) and assistant director of the Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission (CCRPC), Michele was called into action by the Vermont Agency of Transportation (VTrans). Realizing its resources were inadequate to address the extensive damage Irene had caused to the state highway network, VTrans called on Michele to coordinate Vermont’s 11 regional planning commissions (RPCs) so that towns could receive transportation-recovery resources ASAP. As a JSC alum, Michele was in a good position to know whom to call on for help. Two fellow alums, Cathy Voyer (’06) and Susan Bartlett (’77) also held critical positions that would come into play to help deal with the disaster. Michele and her staff set up a command center. Their job was to find out, fast, every location where damage had occurred and how bad it was, which communities were completely cut off and in need of immediate attention, and where to send heavy equipment and materials to repair roads, bridges and culverts. It was a huge logistical challenge. by Sally Ballin Background photo: A view of Route 100 in Wardsboro, 400 yards from Sheldon Hill; Above: Michele Boomhower outside her Winooski office JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 11 AT THE WATER’S EDGE F E AT U R E prevention/hazard-mitigation projects in Lamoille County, and for the next 10 years Michele – now the agency’s executive director — got a bird’s eye view of everything that comprehensive planning, prevention and recovery entail, including transportation and natural resources. In her current position, Michele manages the planning of Chittenden County’s transportation network — a position that necessarily includes elements of safety and disaster preparedness. “It’s all integrated,” she explains, noting that she and her staff are “the planners who figure out how to most effectively connect communities with the recovery resources they need.” photo: Alison Redlich Coping with Irene Above: Michele reviews maps of washed-out bridges and roads with co-workers David Roberts, senior trans- portation planning engineer, and Christine Forde, senior transportation planner, at their Winooski office. Below: Shortly after the storm subsided, temporary repairs made this section of Route 100 passable again, if only barely, on one side. photo: Daniel Hescock, Wardsboro Preparing for the Challenge Back when Michele was a senior at JSC, majoring in environmental science with a concentration in natural resource management, she landed an internship at the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) in the Water Supply Division. Following graduation, she took a part-time job with the Lamoille County Planning Commission (LCPC), helping with geographic-information-system (GIS) work. Two years later, she had moved into a full-time position there, as a GIS planner. Then Lamoille County flooded, and over the next several years she gained firsthand experience in emergency planning and disaster recovery. Michele had other experience to draw on as well. In 1998, LCPC received a federal grant to implement disaster12 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 By Labor Day weekend – just days after Irene wreaked havoc on Vermont — it was clear the need was bigger than anyone had imagined, and growing still. Teams from VTrans were gathering damage intel and making on-the-spot emergency repairs as they went along, but their resources were overwhelmed and things were moving slowly. That’s when Michele took on the role of coordinating all RPCs, assessing the needs, and getting resources to towns in crisis. At “command central” — her office at CCRPC in Winooski — Michele’s staff and workers from adjacent RPCs created town-by-town maps of road networks and streams pinpointing the problem areas identified by RPC staff and local road crews. They were aided by GIS personnel at the regional commissions who, working 12- to 14-hour days, put that data onto maps. RPC staff also were dispatched to the State Emergency Operations Center, which had relocated from flooded Waterbury to a Burlington field office that had been established earlier to deal with spring flooding along Lake Champlain. The first two months following Tropical Storm Irene were harrowing. “We were pushing staff so hard, working seven days a week and worrying constantly that we wouldn’t be able to get the job done before snow began to fly,” she says. Significantly — and in no small part thanks to Michele’s skilled orchestration — everyone worked in concert. Resources were deployed and progress was tracked. Maps were updated daily to identify where needs were greatest, where repairs were under way and where work had been completed. Data was gathered. It took two weeks simply to compile and enter all the damage information. The tally: 2,200 road segments, 285 bridges and at least 1,000 storm culverts were out of commission — either destroyed completely or in need of repair. JSC Alums to the Rescue To line up experienced contractors and heavy equipment, Michele called fellow JSC alum Cathy Voyer, executive vice president of the Associated General Contractors of Vermont. Cathy stepped up to the plate, connecting Vermont contractors with towns in urgent need and getting crews to trouble spots as efficiently as possible. Also at the ready: JSC alum and former state Senator Susan Bartlett, now special assistant to Governor Peter F E AT U R E Shumlin. As the person in charge of the state’s immediate response to Tropical Storm Irene, Susan worked closely with Michele and Cathy while serving as the governor’s liaison during those first critical weeks. By mid-October, the number of closed bridges and damaged roads had dropped dramatically. Michele’s office made sure that everyone living on a town road could get in and out, and that school buses and milk haulers were getting through. With the immediate crisis behind them, Michele and her staff continue to be “the eyes and ears of the people, getting concerns communicated from towns to the state and to FEMA” [Federal Emergency Management Agency], Michele says. Looking Back In those first weeks after Irene hit Vermont, Michele says her biggest challenge was the haunting feeling that she and others simply couldn’t work fast enough. Recalling AT THE WATER’S EDGE the 1995 flood in Elmore, her former hometown, she knew the urgency of the situation. Homes had been flooded, all three access roads had been washed out, and people had been isolated for days. “As a multigenerational Vermonter, I feel strongly connected to The tally: community life,” she says. “Knowing that so many people have been so 2,200 road segments, badly affected — my heart goes out to them. It’s taxing for town leaders 285 bridges and at least as well; they’re managing with volunteer labor and have myriad other 1,000 storm culverts things to attend to.” Michele says her post-Irene work were out of commission. reaffirmed the value of the personal relationships she formed through JSC, both as a student and an alum. “In crisis situations, if you have people you can turn to for help — people you have worked with over the years and networks you are JSC alum works to restore river and stream damage Jim Ryan, ’94, Helps Engineer Irene Recovery Jim Ryan, ’94, works for the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation’s River Management Program. Since Tropical Storm Irene, however, he’s become a “stream alteration engineer.” Jim was driving on I-89 from a site in Bethel to one in Norwich in November when a writer called to ask how things were going. “Insanity pretty much sums it up,” he replied at the time. Recruited to help with Irene recovery, Jim is all over the state, issuing permits and providing technical assistance to put roads, culverts and streambeds back together again. In the immediate aftermath of Irene, “River beds were dug out in the rush to rebuild roads needed for access in areas where people were isolated without services,” he explained. Now he’s proactively restoring river habitat that was also affected by the damaging storm and subsequent restoration efforts. “It’s damage control, but it’s also making things better for long-term recovery” for road and bridge rebuilding and other projects, he said. Normally Jim works on somewhat calmer watershed-restoration projects. Last fall he was brought in to assist one of the four engineers who cover the state — engineers who were overwhelmed managing dozens of sites a day after Irene hit, even with the help of four extras assigned to help by the Agency of Natural Resources. Jim says his work has brought him full circle from Johnson State College to Irene recovery. He graduated with a degree in environmental sciences and a concentration in natural resources. In his senior year, he interned with the River Management Program, headed by the very person he’s now working with on Irene recovery. His first job out of college was with the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. Later, he was part of the AmeriCorps program with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service in watershed assessment and restoration, then he worked for USDA in emergency watershed and flood restoration in the White River area. He’s reconnected with colleagues from all of those stints through his work repairing and rebuilding Vermont following Tropical Storm Irene. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 13 AT THE WATER’S EDGE Editor’s Note: Coincidentally, both Cathy Voyer and Susan Bartlett received JSC Presidential Alumni Awards in 2011. Recipients were chosen well before Tropical Storm Irene hit the state. See story on pages 33-34. F E AT U R E confident you can rely on to get things done — you create a framework and feel assured you can make it work as a team. I knew I could rely on Cathy and Susan and all of my Regional Planning Commission colleagues who had worked together over the years.” Susan Bartlett echoes that sentiment: “JSC graduates come from Vermont communities, we stay in Vermont communities, we get involved in Vermont communities. So when a crisis occurs, we step up to the plate,” she says. In addition to being a multigenerational Vermonter, Michele is a multigenerational JSC alum. Her dad is a graduate. Her parents met there. And her daughter Aleda, now working on her master’s degree in guidance counseling, attended the former JSC Child Development Center as a child. Because of this deep connection, Michele serves on the JSC Alumni Council, currently as president. Cultivating an alumni network is important to Michele, both personally and professionally, she says. It’s a network that, during Irene, certainly paid off in a big way for Vermont. n Sally Ballin is a freelance writer who lives in Burlington 14 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 and teaches writing and public speaking at the Community College of Vermont. F E AT U R E SERVE Realistic Optimists “Who wants to live without hope?” Ellen Hill, for 14 years the inspirational director of JSC’s service-learning program, left this question hanging in the air toward the end of our interview. Her words lend perspective to the situation recent college graduates face when they head out into an America where unemployment hovers around 9 percent, where 1 percent of the population owns nearly 45 percent of the financial wealth, where “wealth” itself is often casually equated with “worth.” Finding work in difficult times after graduation is challenging enough, let alone finding or making meaningful work that contributes toward positive change. But for years — 25 of them, to be exact — thousands by Judith Yarnall The SERVE reunion during Homecoming Weekend 2011 included — what else? — a local communityservice project. Here SERVE alums gathered for the festivities take a break after a treeplanting project at the new home of Laraway Youth & Family Services in Johnson (below). JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 15 F E AT U R E PHOTO: Glenn Callahan SERVE of JSC students have had SERVE began at JSC in 1987 with a grant to place the opportunity to engage in student volunteers in the local community. From the meaningful work well before beginning, it also sponsored blood drives at JSC, which by graduation. That’s because the now have contributed almost 6,000 units to the American summer of 2011 marked the Red Cross. Ellen, an undergraduate at JSC in the late 25th anniversary of the Center for 1970s, returned in 1990 to run the fledgling program, Service Learning — now simply recharging connections with local agencies and traveling called “SERVE” — at JSC. with a small group of students to Jamaica, where they Dozens of JSC alums who built a school in the village of Sligoville. She also worked volunteered with with Vincent Crockenberg, then “Aha!” moments SERVE during their JSC’s academic dean, to integrate time here gathered service learning into the general large and small during Homecoming curriculum, including sections of 2011 to reminisce required composition courses. and celebrate show up in the stories These initiatives — service trips Life is never dull for students involved in SERVE. the program’s and the melding of academic and Counter-clockwise, from above: Axel Handy, class of 25-year milestone. of SERVE alums. service learning — have borne good 2011, takes the plunge at the annual Polar Splash For some, their fruit. In 1991 JSC was invited to be in February at Lake Elmore to raise funds for a local SERVE experiences became a founding chapter of the national Break Away program, nonprofit; a crew of JSC students spends a sunny a touchstone guiding future whose mission is to develop and promote alternative break Friday sprucing up the playground at the Lamoille decisions. The radiance of their programs that inspire lifelong active citizenship. In 1995, Family Center; students Shani Stoddard and heartfelt smiles as they played Johnson was named the “Alternative Break Program of Khrystyne Bartoswicz show their volunteer pride at with kids at a D.C. homeless the Year” at a time when more than 350 colleges and JSC’s blood drive for the American Red Cross, which shelter or at a Vietnamese universities were affiliated with the national program. Today SERVE hosts each semester in the SHAPE Center; orphanage — both part of a SERVE runs at least four Break Away trips a year, both student and now-alum Angela Twerdok plays with children in Vietnam during her 2005 Break Away slide show celebrating SERVE’s domestic and international, which have involved more than trip to that country. 25th anniversary — would 100 trips and 1,000 participants to date. break through almost anyone’s But the true impact of SERVE is best described by pessimism. The slides also showed students engaged in words such as “connection” and “transformation,” not by plenty of hard labor too: stacking firewood for families just numbers. Both Ellen and SERVE’s current director, Krista above the poverty line in Lamoille County, shoveling mud Swahn, say the most satisfying thing about their work has left behind in Waterbury by Tropical Storm Irene, repairing been “watching students grow” and “seeing community the playground at a local family center. become a priority in their lives.” Krista speaks of a student 16 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 F E AT U R E SERVE Panel members on hand for the 2011 reunion of SERVE volunteers were (from left): Jasmine Yuris, class of 2012; Sara Chesbrough, class of 2003; Jessica Burrill, former student; Bill Smith, class of 1999; and Shelley Boomhower, former service-learning coordinator at JSC. Below, Kaila Fong, class of 2011, peers down the chute as she loads it with newly harvested carrots for the Vermont Foodbank; Catherine Loughney, class of 2001, helps build a school during a Break Away trip to Jamaica. whose capacity for empathy gradually caught up with his intellectual smarts; Ellen talks of students who start asking deeper questions about poverty after getting to truly know people who are homeless and having the opportunity to engage with them as equals. “Aha!” moments large and small show up in the stories of SERVE alums, many of whom shared their reflections as panel members during Homecoming 2011: For Toni Little, class of 2011, an “aha!” moment happened on a trip to post-Katrina New Orleans, where the organization hosting her JSC group had a four-minute shower rule that “would have been fine if I were a boy.” After a day of helping clean up hurricane damage with limited water, she understood the reason for the rule and no longer felt that “the Earth was mine for the taking.” For senior Jasmine Yuris, who grew up in New Jersey with no gardens nearby and a mother who joked about “having a black thumb,” it came during a JSC Break Away trip to Oregon, where she worked on an urban farm in Portland. Today she’s committed to sustainable agriculture and the local-food movement — all thanks to that experience. Now in her final year at JSC, she harvests a community garden behind the College Apartments; works at a Morrisville restaurant that uses local, organic produce; and dreams of one day “living and teaching on the same land and setting up an alternative school program.” For Courtney Gabaree, class of 2010, waking up to issues of local and global hunger meant waking up others too. She organized a Hunger Banquet at which half of the guests drew a “lower class” card upon entry. Like half of the world’s population, they ate minimally, dining on rice and dirty-colored water as they watched others, including a small “upper class” minority, enjoy multi-course meals. For Sara Chesbrough, class of 2003, the “aha!” moment came after she transferred to Johnson as a 20-year-old, selfproclaimed “naïve optimist” who “wanted to save the world and help everyone!” Through her work with SERVE, she found a way to put her passion for social justice to practical use as “one of a bunch of kids with backpacks” from JSC who traveled to Washington, D.C., to work at the CCNV (Community for Creative Non-Violence) homeless shelter. Students who may have felt themselves “poor” before that trip could not have imagined the details of poverty and misery they would encounter — the poor teeth and stained clothing of people too long on the streets.“ We basically learned a lifetime’s worth of human compassion and suffering in a short week,” Sara says. “The very people we had come to ‘help’ became our teachers.” 1977 JSC graduate Nat Kinney followed in Sara’s footsteps, travelling to work at CCNV in the spring of 1994 with another group of students. They assumed that they and their sleeping bags would have the CCNV basement to themselves, but a freak snowstorm and the need for overflow shelter found them sharing the space with mothers and children. The bond Nat formed with eight-year-old Darryll — and the bond they all gradually formed with Darryll’s JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 17 SERVE F E AT U R E homeless shelter in New England, before working in development for the UMass Medical School and its Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care and Society. l Sara Chesbrough, ’03 is a community activist in Burlington, where she works as a case manager for the Committee on Temporary Shelter (COTS). l Bill Smith, ’99 — a veteran of five SERVE trips during the ’90s, including two to “God’s Love We Deliver,” an agency in New York City that provides nourishing meals to people with HIV/ AIDS — lives and works in the city and still volunteers with the organization. Last summer, in fact, he raised money for it and three other agencies on a 3,500-mile bicycle trip across the U.S. SERVE Today Top: Professor Brad Moskowitz (right) and JSC student volunteers show their stuff after hauling trash and debris from the Lamoille River during a fall 2009 cleanup project. Bottom: Among those attending an October 2010 day of service splitting logs and chopping firewood for a local service organization were Wendy Davis, JSC staff member (center), and Ellen Hill (second from right), JSC director of experiential learning. Judith Yarnall is a former professor of writing and literature at JSC. For more information about SERVE and the SERVE Endowment, please visit www.jscserve. wordpress.com. mother that week — figures in many of their memories. A lanky kid riding on Nat’s shoulders, Darryll wanted to be “just like Nat” when he grew up. He never complained about his own hunger, but when asked what he would do if he were Jesus Christ, he had the answer: “I’d make sure there was enough food on this planet for everyone.” SERVE volunteers may never know the long-term effects of their efforts on others, but they know those effects within themselves — and for many students, those “aha!” moments have shaped the paths they’ve followed since graduation: l Jonny Thompson, ’09 — whose SERVE experiences ranged from pulling old tires out of the Lamoille River with a group that included Dean of Students David Bergh, to erecting mailboxes for flood survivors in New Orleans — recently finished a stint with the Peace Corps in Africa. l Megan Haggerty Panek, ’97, worked as volunteer coordinator at the Boston’s Pine Street Inn, the largest 18 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 And what of SERVE now? The brick walls of its new office in the Stearns Student Center display sign-up sheets for upcoming “SERVE FRI” opportunities — local service projects that take place each Friday morning when classes are in session. The brainchild of writing instructor and JSC alum Russ Weiss, ’10 (M.A. education), the SERVE FRI program started in fall 2009 and has become the cornerstone of the current SERVE program. Recent Friday activities included Waterbury flood cleanup, firewood stacking for low-income residents, gleaning at Salvation Farms, winterizing mobile homes, and service projects at the North Country Animal League, the Vermont Foodbank and the Lamoille Family Center. Krista Swahn, who makes the local connections and coordinates transportation for SERVE FRIs, also works with the national Break Away program, where she is a founding member of its five-year Nicaragua Compact. This agreement commits JSC and four other schools to sponsor trips to a single town in Nicaragua, where students work to sustain water and school improvements they’ve established there. Over the years, participants on SERVE-sponsored trips often raised their own money to cover travel expenses, but in tough times that’s tougher. Now there is a new SERVE Endowment Fund at JSC to supplement these efforts and ensure students will continue to have these opportunities. Bill Smith, one of the many JSC alums who credit SERVE for expanding their view of the world and instilling in them the importance of active citizenship, is the fund’s lead donor. “It only takes a little to make a big difference in the world,” Bill says, understatedly. That might sound impossibly rosy to someone who doesn’t know Bill and his history of service, or his skill at leveraging “little” to arrive at “big,” or the fact that he’s training for the 2012 NYC Marathon — for which he is using every mile he runs to raise funds for charities. n F A C U LT Y / S TA F F 2011 Freda Hebb Award recipient Ron Miller. Ron Miller was honored with the 2011 Freda Hebb Award, JSC’s highest staff honor. A longtime member of the Physical Plant team and JSC’s renowned floorcare expert, Ron maintains buildings flawlessly, and departments lucky enough to have him as their custodian are always delighted by the care he provides. In addition to his exceptional maintenance duties, for more than 20 years Ron has volunteered for athletic events, filming basketball games and driving the JSC van for team trips. The Freda Hebb Award is given yearly to an employee who has been at the College for at least 10 years and demonstrates the qualities of dedication and service exemplified by Freda Hebb, class of 1925, who worked at the College from 1934 to 1972. Karen Madden, director of Academic Support Services, received the Jack Anderson Award at the 2011 Vermont Educational Opportunity Programs (VEOP) conference. This award honors someone who is an active member of VEOP, a leader in the TRiO community and a positive champion for student success. Karen was praised for her unwavering support of TRiO programs and her recognition by Vermont’s Congressional delegation for coordinating a student petition drive against proposed cuts in federal support for Vermont’s most vulnerable students. Representing Sen. Bernie Sanders at the conference, Phil Fiermonte cited Karen as the driving force behind the petition and thanked her for her advocacy. After Karen’s acceptance speech, speaker Charlie Castelli commented, “Karen is a woman of few words, unless she is fighting for funding for TRiO students.” TRiO is a collection of federally funded Karen poses with Jack Anderson, programs designed to help low-income and Vermont’s first TRiO employee (now first-generation college students attend and retired) and namesake of the succeed in college. annual VEOP award Karen received. Also at the VEOP conference, Professor DeAnne Blueter of JSC’s Behavioral Sciences Department, was named the 2011 VEOP Educator of the Year. DeAnne teaches psychology for the summer Upward Bound program as well as at JSC during the regular academic year. HIGHLIGHTS Associate Professor Henrique Cezar (Business & Economics) has started a student Investment Club. The group meets to discuss finance-related topics and earned top honors in its first stock-market competition, competing against St. Michael’s College, Champlain College and the University of Vermont. The club’s future plans include financial consulting, with student members offering financialconsulting services to the JSC community. Journalism Professor Tyrone Shaw spent part of the spring 2012 semester racking up “Frequent Flier” miles. In a trip sponsored by the U.S. State Department, he traveled to Latvia in February to deliver two seminars — one on media ethics, the other on civic journalism — to working journalists, editors and publishers. And during April break he participated in a student trip to Cuba focusing on art and literature. Professor Bill Doyle continues his work documenting Vermont history and was featured as one of Vermont’s “Super Seniors” on WCAXTV, the CBS affiliate in Burlington. The segment, which aired in March, can be viewed online at www.wcax.com. comings & goings Several longtime staff and faculty members retired this year. We said a fond farewell to staffers Bonnie Griswold (Upward Bound) , Sally Laughlin (Development) , Sue Mann (Environmental & Health Sciences and Mathematics), Sally Reynolds (Athletics), Sally Searles (Information Technology) , Walt Reeves (Library) ; and professors Jerry Anderson and Gene Sapadin (Humanities), and Darlene Witte (Education). New to JSC are Assistant Professor Greg Petrics (Mathematics) and staff members Andrea Bordeau (Admissions) , Diana Gonsalves (Financial Aid) , Lauren Philie and Lisa Baranyay, ’94 (Development & Alumni Relations) , Mary Hogan (Fine & Performing Arts) , Emily Neilsen (First-Year Experience) and Jamie Ventura (Athletics) . JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 19 The Remarkable Renovation of Bentley Sparkling new labs and teaching spaces support the College’s research-focused science curriculum R enovations to our science facility, Bentley Hall, wrapped up just in time for fall 2011. The JSC community celebrated with an open house in October that included student presentations and hands-on activities — including temporary DNA tattoos and a “genes in a bottle” event — in addition to tours and displays. The transformation of Bentley Hall is remarkable, with sparkling new science labs, seminar rooms, faculty 20 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 offices and informal gathering and study spaces throughout. From a structural standpoint, the most impressive change is the removal of the massive central (concrete!) staircase and the creation of floors on the second and third levels where the stair openings used to be, as well as the relocation of stairways to both ends of the building, the construction of a new entrance at a new location, the creation of a glass-enclosed seminar room on the main floor, and a new corridor and study area on the main floor overlooking the campus quad. The skylight that previously looked down on the stairwell now illuminates a third-floor lounge. Hue-changing lights in the well of the skylight provide alternating displays of color inside and out after sunset. With JSC’s focus on facultymentored undergraduate research — a focus that’s grown exponentially in recent years — the laboratory and related upgrades are being put to good use. JSC research has attracted Hall Top: Doing the honors at the ribbon cutting were (from left) architect Alex Halpern of Freeman French Freeman, JSC President Barbara Murphy, biology senior Ryan Joy and Professor Liz Dolci. Bottom: An environmental-sciences student works in the Bentley Hall artificial streams lab. PHOTO: Jason Johnson a lot of attention this year, both within Vermont and nationally, and for good reason. Among the recent developments: The Vermont Genetics Network (VGN) has renewed grants funding three major research projects at JSC: humor development in infants (commonly referred to as “JSC’s laughing babies study” and featured in the 09/10 issue of Johnson Views); the characteristics of extremophiles in the former Vermont Asbestos Group mine in Lowell and Eden; and the effects of exercise on people with chronic asthma. They are led, respectively, by Professors Gina Mireault, Liz Dolci and Hans Haverkamp, and students provide significant research support for all three. VGN grants support research projects in biology and medical fields at baccalaureate colleges in Vermont and are highly competitive. With Environmental & Health Sciences Professor Robert Genter as JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 21 PHOTO: Jason Johnson PHOTO: Jason Johnson Clockwise, from top left: Students determine blood type from samples collected during open house festivi- PHOTO: Jason Johnson ties; one of the new stairwells in Bentley Hall; a new sky-lit lounge on the third floor fills space previously used for a stairway; the new chemistry lab. principal investigator, JSC is partnering with the University of Vermont (UVM) on water-quality research in the Lake Champlain Basin. The five-year research project is funded with a $20 million grant from the National Science Foundation to Vermont EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research). Sen. Patrick Leahy announced the award at UVM in October 2011. JSC is involved in another Vermont EPSCoR project, this one funded by a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant will be used to connect VSC institutions and the University of Vermont with highspeed fiber-optic cables and other information-sharing technologies in order to facilitate collaborative research. With Liz Dolci as lead, JSC is receiving a two-year award to support a “cyber specialist” who will 22 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 develop a bioinformatics course that will be offered across the VSC system and taught by faculty at UVM and other faculty in the Northeast. The new award also provides funding to connect a network of K-12 schools, libraries, museums, art galleries and hospitals in Vermont. The PBS science series NOVA will include Gina Mireault’s research on infant humor development in an upcoming episode on laughter. The segment is being filmed in Boston with NOVA host and New York Times writer David Pogue in summer 2012. JSC Names Ventura New Athletics Director Johnson State College has appointed Jamey Ventura as also led several successful community-outreach programs the college’s new director of athletics and recreation, with student-athletes while at Wells. replacing longtime director Barbara Lougee who retired At both Wells and GMC, Ventura in January 2011. increased the student-athlete Ventura brings more than seven years of combined retention to more than 80 percent experience as athletics director and women’s soccer coach for six straight years, and at at Wells College in Aurora, N.Y., and Green Mountain GMC he doubled the number of College in Poultney, Vt. Ventura facilitated impressive student-athletes at the college. growth and development of the athletic departments at As women’s soccer coach at both of those NCAA Division III institutions. GMC, he led the team to an 18-1 “We are very pleased to have Jamey join us,” said Dean record and claimed the Division of Students David Bergh. “I believe he has the skills and III independent championship. experience to help us build on the strong “It is foundation that has been established in extremely “It is truly an exciting JSC athletics and take the program to important to me time of transition within higher levels of success.” that studentJohnson State athletics, athletes at JSC “It is truly an exciting time of transition within Johnson State athletics, and to have have a positive and to have a person a person the caliber of Jamey Ventura to experience the caliber of come in and lead our staff only adds to while Jamey Ventura that feeling,” added Assistant Director of competing as to come in and lead Athletics Michael Osborne. “His experience a Badger,” and his professional skill set and demeanor Ventura said. our staff only adds are exactly what we were looking for during “I value their commitment level to be to that feeling.” our search, and we could not feel better successful in their sport, in the classroom Dean of Students David Bergh about the hire.” and in the community.” Ventura had been athletics director and Ventura holds an MBA with a specialty head women’s soccer coach at Wells College since 2007. in corporate finance and a bachelor’s degree in psychology Under his leadership the department has produced 50 with a concentration in education. He has pledged to work conference scholar-athletes who achieved a grade point hard at JSC to “maximize every budgeted dollar and raise average of 3.4 or higher while also seeing 12 of the 13 donations for the College, which will be key to alleviating varsity programs qualify for their conference playoffs. He budgetary constraints and allowing growth to occur.” n WHO COACHED THAT TEAM WHEN? We’re missing the names of several JSC coaches for years past and hope you can help us update our records. If you know who coached the following teams during the time periods listed, please let us know! Please send your updates to Michael Osborne by email (michael.osborne@ jsc.edu) or phone (800-635-2356), or use the envelope inserted into this issue and mail us. Thank you for your help! MEN WOMEN Baseball '70, '73-'91, '93 Basketball: '88; '90 Soccer: '90 MEN & WOMEN Basketball '77-'78 Cross Country '87-'93; '98-'99 Tennis: '98 to '99, '01 Lacrosse '03 Softball: '87-'89; '91; '93; '96 Skiing: '84-'91; '94 JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 23 Season Snapshots Bethany Preuss Ryan Demars MEN’S & WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY JSC’s men’s and women’s cross country teams are in their first season under new head coach Camille Campanile, who also has joined the Athletics Department as coordinator of student-athlete development. Kayden Keith The 2011-12 season was highlighted by a fourthplace finish for both teams. The men finished fourth at the 11-team Blazer Invitational hosted by Elms College. Senior Kayden Keith (Morrisville, Vt./ Peoples Academy) led the team with a 64th place finish at the 2011 North Atlantic Conference championships. The women’s team, meanwhile, secured a fourth-place finish at the 24 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 Green Mountain Invitational hosted by Green Mountain College. The team came in ninth at the 2011 North Atlantic Conference (NAC) championships and saw senior Bethany Preuss (Boonton Township, N.J./Mountain Lakes) run to a 34th place finish to lead the team. MEN’S SOCCER With JSC alum and second-year coach Ray Campanile at the helm, the men finished their 2011 season with a 4-11-1 overall record, 1-8 in the NAC. Senior forward Ryan Demars (Morrisville, Vt./Peoples Academy) led the team in scoring with 13 points on five goals and three assists while earning All-NAC Second Team honors. Again this year, the Badgers were honored with the NAC Team Sportsmanship Award. Women's soccer players (from top): Chelsea Hostetter, Ally Bataille and Jennifer Ferrari WOMEN’S SOCCER Also under the leadership of Ray Campanile, the 2011 Johnson State women’s soccer team completed its 2011 season with a solid 8-5-3 record, 3-4-2 in the NAC. The Badgers earned the #7 seed in the NAC playoffs and battled valiantly against #2 Colby-Sawyer. The teams played to 0-0 through regulation and overtime before the Chargers N E W S advanced 5-4 on penalty kicks. Johnson’s first-year forward Chelsea Hostetter (Morrisville, Vt./Peoples Academy) was named NAC Rookie of the Year and also earned All-NAC First Team honors while leading the Badgers in scoring with 37 points on 15 goals and seven assists. Joining Hostetter on the NAC First Team was sophomore goalkeeper Amber McCullock (Morrisville, Vt./Peoples Academy). McCullock led all of NCAA Division III in save percentage with .918. All-NAC Second Team honorees included senior defender Kathryn Johnson (Hyde Park, Vt./Lamoille), sophomore midfielder Jennifer Ferrari (Westfield, Mass./Westfield), and junior forward Ally Bataille (Waterbury, Vt./ Harwood). ATHLETICS was led by standout junior setter Kylie VanEtten (Montrose, Penn/Elk Lake) who led the Badgers with 173 assists, 166 digs and 45 service aces while also providing 27 kills. (17.6 ppg) and 3-point field goals (76). Robertson was named NAC Rookie of the Week four times during the year. MEN’S The 2011 JSC softball team finished the season 5-21 overall, 3-11 in the NAC, led by third-year head coach Robert Gervais. The team took a spring trip to Florida — a tremendous experience for the program — and played six games over three days. Junior Meagan Russ (Burlington, Vt./ Burlington) once again led the pitching staff, while rookie outfielder Amber McCullock (Morrisville, Vt./Peoples Academy), who also was the starting keeper for the soccer team and a member of the women’s basketball team, led the team in hitting. BASKETBALL In 2011-12, the men’s basketball squad finished 6-20 overall, 6-12 in the NAC, under seventh-year head coach Michael Osborne. The Badgers finished in a three-way tie for sixth in the regular-season NAC standings and played as the #7 seed in the NAC playoffs at #2 Colby-Sawyer. The Badgers competed well but dropped a 75-69 decision. Johnson was led by junior point guard Andy Bousono (Philadelphia, Pa./Nueva Esperanza), who led the team in scoring (12.1 ppg), assists (5.2 apg) and steals (2.3 spg). The Badgers were honored for a consecutive season with the NAC Team Sportsmanship Award, and they look to return their top six scorers in 2012-13. WOMEN’S SOFTBALL Meagan Russ Amber McCullock WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Ira Tillberg MEN’S GOLF In its third season of play, the team experienced the loss of Head Coach Lou Jarvis, who died in Sept. 30, 2011, after a year-long battle with esophageal cancer. (See tribute on page 52.) With the assistance of interim head coach Bill Boldwin, the Badgers persevered through the adversity and finished sixth at the NAC championships. Johnson served as the host institution in 2011 and saw senior Ira Tillberg (Randolph, Vt./Randolph) finish in 25th place to lead the team. The women’s team finished the 2011-12 season 4-21 overall, 2-16 in the NAC, under first-year head coach Greg Eckman. Senior guard Andrea Deuell (Milton, Vt./Milton) surpassed the 1,000 career-point mark in the final game of the season, ending her career ranked in the top 10 all-time at JSC in several categories. First-year guard Brittany Robertson (Burlington, Vt./Burlington) had a standout rookie year, leading the team in scoring Kylie VanEtten WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL In the team’s third season, led by head coach Mark Kaufman, the Badgers took another small step forward, posting the most wins in the program’s short history. JSC finished 4-15, 1-6 in the NAC. Honored for the third consecutive season with the NAC Team Sportsmanship Award, the team Andy Bousono JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 25 WOMEN’S 2 0 1 2 TENNIS JSC women’s tennis finished the 2011 season with a 0-13 overall record, 0-8 in the NAC led by third-year coach Michele Whitmore. The Badgers fell 9-0 in the North Eastern Athletic Conference Kate Murphy East Division semifinals to Castleton State but were honored to receive the NEAC East Team Sportsmanship Award for the third season in a row. JSC had junior Emily Miller (Tucson, Ariz./Ironwood Ridge) at #1 singles, while sophomore Kate Murphy (Westfield, Vt./North Country) was named to the NAC AllTournament Team. GOLF TOURNEY! Mark your calendars and plan to join in the fun! Maxwell Connolly MEN’S LACROSSE Under the leadership of second-year head coach Matt Heitman, the 2011 edition of JSC lacrosse experienced a 1-10 season, 1-65 in the NAC. Sophomore Maxwell Connolly (Rollinsford, N.H./St. Thomas Aquinas) was named to the NAC First Team in 2011 after earning Second Team honors as a rookie. In addition to Connolly, the Badgers leaned on the scoring of seniors Alex Petti (East Greenwich, R.I./East Greenwich) and Justin Connolly (Jeffersonville, Vt./ Lamoille). MEN’S TENNIS Ryan Joy James Dempsey 26 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 First-year head coach Laura Laramee saw her team go 6-6 overall, 5-3 in the NAC East Division, in 2011. The Badgers beat Lyndon State in the NAC East semifinals to make it to the Finals, where they fell 7-2 to Castleton State. Junior Ryan Joy (North Montpelier, Vt./U-32) once again earned NAC Singles First Team honors, as well as NAC Doubles First Team honors with freshman Chance Swafford (North Troy, Vt./ North Country). Junior Ben Algar (Old Lyme, Conn./Lyme-Old Lyme) and junior James Dempsey (Lincoln, Vt./Mount Abraham) teamed up to make the NAC Doubles First Team as well. 28TH ANNUAL Walter Minaert Memorial GOLF TOURNAMENT Friday June 1, 2012 Stowe Country Club Shotgun start at 9 a.m., with lunch to follow. SIGN UP ONLINE or call Athletics at 802.635.1486 for details. N E W S Hall of Fame ATHLETICS 2 011 I N D U C T E E S Johnson State College celebrated the newest members of the JSC Athletics Hall of Fame and celebrated longtime Hall of Fame supporters at a dinner during Homecoming/Reunion weekend on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011. Board members also adopted resolutions of appreciation for outgoing Hall of Fame chair David Rousselle and retiring JSC Director of Development & Alumni Relations Sally Laughlin. The new Hall of Fame members are: I N D I V I D UA L M E M B E R S Sean Fitzgerald ’91 While at JSC, Sean captained the men’s basketball team for three years. In February of his junior year, he scored his 1,000th point and ultimately finished JSC with 1,600 career points. During the 1989-90 season, Sean was second in the U.S. for rebounding. In his career-high game, he scored 54 points and 22 rebounds against Green Mountain College. He made the “All Tournament” team in 1990 and the “All Conference” team in 1990 and 1991. Sean also served as a resident assistant for two years and participated in various intramurals during his time at JSC. Sean earned a B.S. in health science from JSC then went on to earn a B.S. in biology from St. Michael’s College and a master in physical therapy from the University of Sean Fitzgerald Vermont. After a year at Fletcher Allen Sports & Orthopedic Rehab Center, he opened Momentum Physical Therapy, which now has locations in Burlington and Jericho. In addition to coaching youth soccer and basketball, Sean is a certified national strength and conditioning coach who has worked with athletes since 1995. Michael Osborne ’98 During his four years on the JSC basketball team, Michael helped lead the team to the Mayflower Championship game in his freshman and senior years, and in his sophomore year his team gained the regular-season Mayflower championship. He served as captain for two years and in his junior year was the team’s leading scorer. Michael finished his career as the school’s all-time leader in career 3-point field goals. He played in the 1998 All-Mayflower Conference and also made the 1998 Mayflower Conference All-Tournament Team. During college he also was a camp instructor for the Northern Vermont Hoop Camp (NVHC) and Small Fry Clinics, which he now directs. Enrollment in the NVHC has tripled during the six years of Michael’s leadership. After earning his B.S. in health sciences and physical education from JSC, Michael spent two years coaching high school basketball in Maine and Vermont. In 2004 he found his way back to the gym, joining Central Maine Community College (CMCC) in Auburn, Maine, as assistant to the director of athletics and assistant men’s basketball coach. The following year he returned to JSC to become assistant director of athletics, sports information director, and head men’s basketball Michael Osborne coach – roles he continues to carry out today. The men’s basketball team has won 50 games during Michael’s tenure. Among his many accomplishments at JSC, Michael served as men’s lacrosse team coach for two seasons, leading the team to a 15-11 record and the program’s first North Atlantic Conference playoff berth and win; helped add two new varsity sports to JSC; assisted in the renovation of the SHAPE Center; and led the implementation of an athletics-dedicated website, www.athletics.jsc.edu. The 1998-99 team, back in the day TEAM MEMBER The 1998-99 Women’s Basketball Team The 1998-99 JSC women’s basketball team finished its Mayflower Conference championship season with a 20-4 season record. Many members have standing records at the College, including Holly Patterson (all-time highest scoring game with 35 points at Atlantic Union College in November 1999), Tiffany Corey Esslinger (1st place for blocked shots, with 255), Sara MacDonough Civitello (3rd place for blocked shots, with 100), Meghan Brown (tied for 7th place with Holly Patterson), and Amanda Burby and Sarah Parker (9th and 10th place, respectively). Many of these players hold multiple records that have stood for more than 10 years. We are proud to recognize the team’s accomplishments by naming it to the JSC Athletics Hall of Fame. Bob Stevens Dave Rousselle Greg Martineau ’93 Greg was a member of the 1990 JSC Hall of Fame soccer team and played on the team all four years of his JSC career. He still holds the JSC career record for most assists (24). He scored a career-total of 48 points and was named to the National Soccer Coaches Association of America All-America Team in 1992, the NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) All-New England Team in 1990 and 1992, the NAIA District 5 First Team in 1992, and the All-Mayflower First Team in 1991 and 1992. Greg earned his degree in education from JSC and is currently a principal with the Hopkinton Public Schools in Massachusetts. H O N O R A RY I N D U C T E E Sally Reynolds Having recently retired from JSC, Sally is as dedicated an individual who has ever served the College. Her commitment, longevity and consistent support of the Athletics Department made her an obvious choice for the newest honorary Hall of Fame member. Sally came to JSC in 1971 and gave almost 40 years to this institution. Starting with the Upward Bound Program, she served as assistant to the president from 1981 to 1990 and then moved to the Athletics Department, where she worked as staff assistant until August 2011. A familiar and friendly face at the SHAPE Center, she was a great ambassador for JSC and the JSC Badgers. Sally Reynolds “She’s simply the best and JSC has been lucky indeed to have had Sally taking care of whatever she was asked to do over these past years,” said former JSC President Eric R. Gilbertson. “To say that I admire her is an understatement. I am grateful for the privilege of having worked with her and even more grateful to have become her personal friend.” Charlie Mason Above: JSC staff member Ron Miller (left), longtime Badger fan and videographer for the 98-99 women’s basketball team, joined several members of the team to celebrate their induction into the JSC Athletics Hall of Fame. On hand with Ron (from left) are former coach and JSC Athletics Director Barbara Lougee, Sarah Parker, Sara MacDonough Civitello, Meghan Nye Sweeny and Sarah Greene. Hall of Fame presenters, at right: Bob Stevens, ’69, board chair; Dave Rousselle, ’76, immediate past chair; Charlie Mason, former JSC coach; Dr. Peter Kramer, former JSC professor and coach; and Ken Burrill, board member and recently retired JSC professor. Dr. Peter Kramer Ken Burrill JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 27 We had a number of fundraising highlights this past year, including the receipt of our first million-dollar gift, recognized by naming the Willey Library and Learning Center; the installation of the Chesamore Bell & Alumni Clock Tower; the kickoff of our new “Increase Our Base” campaign; and the launching of a three-pronged Visual Arts Campaign. Chesamore Bell & Alumni Clock Tower The Chesamore Bell & Alumni Clock Tower was dedicated during Homecoming Weekend 2011. The 20-foot tower, installed on the campus green in front of the Stearns Student Center, houses the College’s historic Chesamore Bell and a three-sided, satellitelinked clock that is accurate to the minute. The tower is to become the center of a donors’ plaza that will serve as a highly visible acknowledgement of donations to the aptly titled “Increase Our Base” campaign. Following the Reunion Luncheon, attendees braved a cold rain to officially dedicate the new addition to campus. “This project ties the old with the new, using the common symbol of the historic Chesamore Bell, which hung in the College’s first building [Chesamore Hall] from 1873 until the 1970s, calling generations of students to class — and it marks the start of our campaign to increase donations to the College,” said Mark Heinrich, class of ’69, who led the fundraising drive for the tower. The “silent drive,” carried out in the spring and summer of 2011, led to donations from 20 alumni, longtime donors, and current and retired faculty and staff. Assisting Mark Heinrich with the drive was Michael Luck, class of ’70. Those making gifts of $5,000 (“Founders”) and $2,500 (“Benefactors”) are recognized on a plaque at the base of the tower. Over the next several years, the Development Office will use the donors plaza surrounding the bell as the focus for the “Increase Our Base” campaign. 28 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 G I V I N G The goal is to double both the number of donors and the amount of donations to JSC. Donations of at least $500 pledged over no more than five years can be earmarked for scholarships, the President’s Fund, the JSC Annual Fund or the Library Fund and will be recognized by a brick in the plaza recognizing the donor or his or her designee. The Visual Arts Campaign As renovation and construction work began on the Visual Arts Center in May 2011, JSC launched a campaign to increase support for the visual arts at the College. The campaign is aimed both at naming opportunities and at raising funds for scholarships for AT J S C PHILANTHROPY Scholarships from Endowments and Private Philanthropy At Honors Convocation in May 2011, JSC presented $125,875 in the form of 202 named scholarships and prizes to deserving students. This amount, raised from private philanthropy and endowment interest, can be expected to grow substantially in coming years as promised endowments are realized. Of the amount awarded this year, the largest scholarship endowment, the Carrie Hubbard Stewart Endowment, provided $20,000 to women working their way through college. Preceded by a tea and followed by dinner with the president, Honors Convocation is a favorite event of major donors, who have the opportunity to Union Bank President David Silverman meet the students their gifts are directly met student Kathryn Johnson, recipient benefiting — and of course all of them of a Union Bank scholarship, at JSC’s receive personal thank-you letters from 2011 Honors Convocation. scholarship recipients afterward. New Alumni & Development Leadership undergraduate and graduate students in the studio arts. Noted Canadian sculptor Won Lee, who earned his M.F.A. from Johnson in 2007, is serving as honorary campaign chair and has already named the Sculpture Studio. Other spaces already named include the Photography Studio, named by Brooks Buxton in honor of JSC Professor John Miller. With the new building now online and a number of special events and mailings being planned, we look forward to wrapping up a successful campaign at Homecoming 2012. The Willey Library & Learning Center We are thrilled to have named the Willey Library & Learning Center in recognition of a legacy gift from longtime donors Richard E. Willey, JSC class of 1971, and his wife, Rosalind S. Weiss. The $1 million gift, in the form of an irrevocable bequest, will be divided between the JSC Library Endowment and the Julia V. & Ervin L. Willey Scholarship Endowment. (See page 8 for the complete story.) At the July 2011 meeting of the JSC Alumni Council, members elected Michele Boomhower, class of ’93, president and Mark Huff, class of ’95, vice president. Professor Emeritus Alice Whiting, meanwhile, stepped down after five years as president, to universal thanks and acclaim. She will continue as a Council member. With the retirement of longtime director of development & alumni relations Sally Laughlin (see page 30), Lauren Philie has been named the new director at Johnson State. Lauren served as associate director under Sally for four months prior to Sally’s retirement and has already made connections with many donors and alumni. Before coming to JSC, Lauren was director of development for River Arts in Morrisville. “Lauren brings development experience and high enthusiasm to the position,” says Sally, adding, “I have greatly enjoyed working with the wonderful alums and supporters of JSC. It has been a privilege and an honor to be here.” For information on how you can help secure the future of Johnson State College and support future generations of JSC students, please contact: Lauren Philie, director of development and alumni relations 800-635-2356, ext. 1657 Lauren.Philie@jsc.edu. phone email Lauren Ph ilie JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 29 “People who work at JSC tend to stay a long time,” says Sally Laughlin. “They have a lot of loyalty, because there are so many wonderful things about the College.” Sally, longtime director of development and alumni relations at JSC, is a living testament to that statement. She arrived at Johnson in March 1994 and retired in January 2012, on her 70 th birthday, after 18 years. With the dedication of the Willey Library & Learning Center in September 2011 in honor of the College’s first $1 million gift (see page 8), Sally departed on an especially high note. Her tenure is framed by this impressive gift and a $1.5 million grant she secured her first year from the Freeman Foundation to support JSC’s fledgling Hospitality & Tourism Management program. Endowments, too, have grown significantly since Sally’s arrival. When she first came to Johnson, these funds — most for scholarships and the library; others for special academic projects — totaled $99,730. By the time she left, that figure had climbed to $2.3 million. “It’s lovely to have been here for enough years to look back and see how we’ve grown,” she reflects, modestly. “Making connections with people who are proud of their relationship to the College” is the key to building endowments and raising funds, Sally says, adding that the process is an ongoing one. She cites the tale of George Stewart of nearby Cambridge, whom Sally called weekly for years. These weekly conversations resulted in his pledge of $20,000 to create the Carrie Hubbard Stewart Scholarship Endowment in honor of his mother. The endowment supports working women making their way through JSC, Sally stands with Richard E. Willey, JSC class of 1971, at the dedication of the Willey Library & Learning Center, which was named in honor of a $1 million gift from him and his wife, Rosalind S. Weiss. 30 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 in honor of his late mother, who graduated from JSC in 1913. When Sally called to tell him about a grant the College had received to match new endowments, George quickly revised the amount: “‘Then I’m going to give $100,000!’ he exclaimed,” Sally recalls. Sally describes that $100,000 phone call: “‘I’ll send you a check!’ he bellowed. ‘Well, don’t send it by ordinary mail. Take it to the post office and send it certified,’ I said, to which he replied, ‘I don’t know when I can get to the post office because my car doesn’t have any brakes, and I can’t get under it to fix them myself until I feel better, and I’m not going to pay somebody else to do it!’” One way or another, of course, the check made it to Johnson — and the endowment has been awarding scholarships to deserving JSC students ever since. In addition to raising funds for the College and G I V I N G AT J S C PHILANTHROPY Sally's retirement party on January 5, 2012 drew many longtime friends from her years serving the JSC community. From left are Sally shepherding its alumni program, Sally has been instrumental in establishing the archives and maintaining an inventory of JSC’s named and memorial spaces. “I consider the archives a high point of Sally’s accomplishments at Johnson,” says Professor Emeritus Alice Whiting, Class of 1956, who recently stepped down as chair of the JSC Alumni Council. “Preserving our history made major strides under Sally’s leadership.” Before coming to JSC, Sally lived in Woodstock and served for 20 years as executive director of the Vermont Institute of Natural Science (VINS), which conducts environmental research and promotes environmental education in schools. This is her other passion. Sally is deservedly proud to be the co-editor with Douglas Kibbee of the 1985 Atlas of the Breeding Birds of Vermont, the result of a survey by numerous VINS volunteers spanning five years — the first of its kind to be her father, a ninth-generation Vermonter, from Castleton. She left Woodstock when she married husband Peter Krusch, who still runs “a lovely farm” in Cambridge, as she puts it. And last November, to her delight, she welcomed a new granddaughter, Adeline, into the world. That’s where Sally is directing her love and attention these days. Of course, that’s not the only place receiving her love and attention post-retirement. At a party in early January celebrating Sally’s many accomplishments at JSC, she was told to expect an invitation to serve on the Ellsworth Trust, which among other things sponsors an annual lecture at JSC and supports students in history, the humanities and political science. And her love and affection for JSC will live on in other ways, too: Sally has stipulated in her will that 10 percent of her estate go to the JSC Alumni Scholarship Endowment. n with Tom & Sue Carney and Ken & Susan Burrill; with Don and Susan Collins; and with JSC President Barbara Murphy and David Faile ’68. by Sally Ballin published in North America. And to this day, she has served as chair or vice chair for more than 30 years of the Vermont Endangered Species Committee. In March 2010, Sally received the first CVPSZetterstrom Environmental Award at a Statehouse ceremony in which she was honored as “a leading wildlife advocate and scientist whose work was instrumental in restoring three species of endangered birds in Vermont.” Given by Central Vermont Public Service utility, the award is named for Meeri Zetterstrom, the Milton woman who prodded CVPS to install osprey nesting platforms on its utility posts so the population could be revived. Sally is a Vermonter through and through: her mother, a seventh-generation Vermonter, hailed from Rockingham; Sally poses with Lauren Philie, who took over as JSC’s director of development and alumni relations upon Sally’s retirement. “I am thrilled to be at JSC,” Lauren says. “Having spent so many years working with small nonprofits, I am excited about all the possibilities a college campus brings.” She adds, “I was fortunate to spend four months with Sally before she left, which gave me the opportunity to absorb some of her 18 years’ worth of knowledge. I realize I have some big shoes to fill and will work hard to carry on her legacy.” JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 31 ALUMNI A S S O C I AT I O N Every year, the JSC Alumni Association names a person in each of three categories — alumni, faculty and staff — for special recognition and honor. In addition, the College president names the best and brightest — alumni who have made outstanding contributions in their personal and professional lives since graduating from JSC at least 10 years prior — for Presidential Alumni Awards. Recipients are honored every year during Homecoming/Reunion Weekend. Here are the 2011 honorees. Distinguished Alumni Award Given in recognition of the many contributions of JSC alumni to society through outstanding career and public service achievements. Richard Westman A lifelong resident of Cambridge, Rich Westman is a state senator representing Lamoille County. He spent his childhood and young adulthood working on his family’s farm and earned a degree in political science from JSC in 1982. Rich first ran for the state legislature at age 21 and was elected to the Vermont House in his second attempt, in 1982. He subsequently represented Cambridge, Waterville and Belvidere in the House for 27 years, holding a number of leadership positions along the way. In 1999, he accepted a position with the Vermont Student Assistance Corporation (VSAC), becoming director of the Vermont Higher Education Investment Plan. He helped launch the plan, which grew to nearly $100 million over 10 years, giving hundreds of Vermont parents and grandparents a way to save for their children’s and grandchildren’s college education. In 2009, he left his position at VSAC and stepped down from the legislature to become Vermont tax commissioner, a position to which he was appointed by Gov. Jim Douglas. This fall, he ran for the Senate and won his current position. In addition to his service in the Legislature, Rich has served on a number of boards, including those of Copley Hospital, Lamoille Home Health and Hospice, the University of Vermont, the Campaign to End Childhood Hunger, the Second Congregational UCC Church in Jeffersonville, and the Vermont Center for the Book. 32 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 Distinguished Staf f Award Given in recognition of outstanding commitment and dedication to the mission of Johnson State College Ellen Hill Now in her 20 th year at JSC, Ellen is JSC’s director of experiential learning, which focuses on civic engagement, experiential education and community partnerships. She directs the Nonprofit Management Certificate program, supports faculty who want to integrate service learning into their curricula, and supervises interns in psychology and nonprofit management. Prior to joining JSC, Ellen was a Peace Corps volunteer in rural Jamaica, where she was a small-business consultant, and a community development trainer in the Solomon Islands, South Pacific. During her time at JSC, she has worked with countless student leaders who are active in service, leadership and social justice. “I have the best job in higher education,” Ellen writes. “I have the honor of working with passionate, talented people who are catalysts for social change. Every year students amaze me with their achievements that make positive changes in our world.” In summer 2011, Ellen was named one of 100 “Active Citizens and Movement Builders” in the U.S. by Break Away: the Alternative Break Connection, a national organization based in Atlanta that develops community service programs for students on vacation breaks. P R E S I D E N T ' S These awards are presented to alumni who have made outstanding business and community Distinguished F aculty Award Given in recognition of outstanding faculty for teaching, service, scholarship and dedication to the students of Johnson State College Professor Elizabeth Dolci, Ph.D. Liz Dolci joined the JSC faculty in 1992 after spending 15 years as a research scientist in cell biology at Yale University and the University of Vermont. A resident of Georgia, VT, she holds a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. She spent her 2006-2007 academic year sabbatical as full-time director of the Vermont Science Initiative (VSI), a professional-development program for elementary and middle school teachers designed to improve the teaching of science. She is the recipient of a Math/Science Partnership grant from the Vermont Department of Education that supports both the implementation and expansion of this statewide initiative. When she is not teaching, she enjoys gardening, cooking with her spouse, hiking, kayaking, snowshoeing and traveling. “Being a research scientist for many years has greatly influenced my role as an educator,” says Liz. “I find the essential motivating forces for me as a teacher are students who are engaged in learning, eager to deepen their knowledge, and think critically about the world around them.” accomplishments in their careers and lives. Service to the College is one of many factors considered. Alumni under consideration for this award must have graduated a minimum of 10 years ago. Nominations are made by faculty, staff and alumni, with selection by the College president. Joel Krasnove Class of 1976 Joel is chief operating officer of Adirondack Studios, which creates environments for everything from museums to casinos to shopping malls, including sets for the Boston Opera and Broadway plays, in locations as far away as Singapore, the site of the company’s Adirondack Asia branch. After graduating from JSC in 1976, Joel followed a suggestion from his technical theater instructor at JSC and went to Manhattan, where he found work in on- and off-Broadway shows. In 1983, he and his wife moved to Glens Falls to work for Adirondack Studios for nine years. Although new career opportunities kept emerging — running Nickelodeon’s creative arts network in California or the non-digital side of Digital Domain, a premier visual-effects company, for example — he was lured back East by Viacom. In 2008, having had enough of corporations and cities, Joel came Joel Krasnove with President Murphy back to upstate New York, where the owners of Adirondack Productions convinced him to take over their company. Today, Joel and his wife, Nikki DeCenzo, live on 15 acres near Saratoga Springs. His youngest son, Jake, lives nearby; his oldest son, Nick, is in college in New Paltz; and his daughter, Catherine Hooper, founded a company called “Black Umbrella” that focuses on disaster preparedness and was recently featured in The New York Times. Cathleen M. Voyer Class of 2009 Cathy “brings a passion to anything she does. She gives her all in whatever setting she’s in, and has a power of luring you in and making you care” says Betsy Bishop, president of the Vermont Chamber of Commerce. Currently executive vice president of the Associated General Contractors of Vermont, a position she has held since October 2009, Cathy has served as a state legislator and a director of several programs within the Vermont Agency of Human Services (AHS). As an adult student in JSC’s External Degree Program, she received her B.S. in political science, business and public administration in May 2009 and represented her class as continued next page Cathleen Voyer JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 33 P R E S I D E N T ' S Cathleen M. Voyer continued one of the Commencement speakers that year. She was first elected to the Vermont House in 1994, representing the Lamoille 2-2 district. During her eight years in the legislature, she served on the House Judiciary Committee, spearheaded a bill that created a state DNA database and helped write the law that provided civil unions for same-sex couples. After narrowly losing a bid for the Senate in 2002, she was appointed director of the state’s Office of Economic Opportunity by Governor Jim Douglas. She also chaired the Vermont Interagency Council on Homelessness for six years and was director of housing, transportation and legislative affairs within AHS. Susan Bartlett Class of 1977 (M.A. Education) Susan is special assistant to Governor Peter Shumlin on projects that include substance abuse, early education, affordable housing and reforming the corrections system. She got her start in politics in 1992, when she ran for the Vermont Senate and was elected the first woman and the first Democrat to represent Lamoille County. As a Senator, Susan served on the Economic Development, Energy and Natural Resources, Judiciary, and Government Operations committees. During her 18-year tenure, she chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee for 10 years. Susan’s varied experience includes developing programs for a private school for teenagers in state custody, developing special education programs for Lamoille North Susan Bartlett Supervisory Union, and owning a business in Stowe called Wool and Feathers, through which she sold the wool and lambs that she raised on Bartlett Pair Farm. Susan lives in Hyde Park with her husband, Bill, two Labradoodles named Lulu and Elan, and two cats named Howard and Dean. 34 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 These awards are presented to graduates of the past decade who have enjoyed considerable early career success and are an inspiration to current students. Nominations come from faculty, staff and alumni, with final selection by the College president. Tuipate Mubiay Tuipate F. Mubiay Class of 2005 Tuipate Mubiay is coordinator of academic services at Community College of Vermont (CCV), where he advises and creates programs for students who are English language learners, and diversity coordinator at the Howard Center in Burlington, Vt. He was born and raised in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and while still in high school, he created the “Youth for the Better” project to help the elderly by building houses, bringing them water from streams, cooking and serving meals, and simply spending time with them. Tuipate immigrated to New York in 1994 and moved to Vermont four years later. By 2003, he had earned his associate’s degree in human services from CCV and enrolled in JSC’s External Degree Program. In 2005, he graduated with a B.A. in psychology, following that with a master’s in social work from the University of Vermont. He co-founded the Association of Africans Living in Vermont, which has grown into a community organization serving more than 3,000 people from many different countries, and now serves as the director of the board. He also sits on the board of directors for the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity. He is a former board member of the Visiting Nurse Association and served as board vice president of the Vermont chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. Thomas R. Stowell Class of 2011 Julie Nicole Julie Nicole Class of 2003 After teaching French at Arizona State University as a faculty associate, Julie came to JSC as a pre-medical student, graduating with a degree in biology in 2003. Before enrolling in medical school in 2005, Julie worked both as a laboratory technician at University of Vermont and a labor and delivery assistant at Fletcher Allen Health Care (FAHC). While studying at the UVM College of Medicine, she continued to work in Labor and Delivery as an operating room technician. In 2008, she completed a rotation in transgender medicine and surgery in Trinidad, Colorado. In 2009, Julie graduated with her M.D. degree and began her residency in obstetrics and gynecology at FAHC. As a member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, she educates providers on delivering health care to transgendered individuals. Julie plans to practice in Vermont after completing her residency in June 2013. She lives in Ferrisburg with her husband, Drew, a critical care nurse; and their two daughters, Lucienne and Elizabeth. M A R K Y O U R C A L E N D A R S Since 2007, Tom has held several positions at The George Washington University (GWU) in Washington, D.C. In 2010, he was selected as the founding director of Career Services in the Graduate School of Education & Human Development, where he launched a new office for the school’s student and alumni population. After receiving dual bachelor’s degrees in elementary education and psychology in 2001, Tom earned his M.A. in education curriculum and instruction in 2003. He began his career in public education, working in different capacities within the public school system. He then obtained his education specialist degree in career counseling and career programs administration from GWU. Tom serves on several university committees and chairs the Government Relations Committee of the National Career Development Association. He has been invited to speak at numerous education and career development conferences and has led many professional development workshops. Tom also has a private careerconsulting practice through which he provides assistance to individuals, businesses, professional associations and educational institutions. & P L A N HOMECOMING & Parents Weekend September 21-22, 2012 T O A T T E N D — Thomas R. Stowell F A L L 2 0 1 2 JOIN THE REUNION CLASSES OF 1 9 3 7 1 9 6 2 1 9 8 7 1 9 4 2 1 9 6 7 1 9 9 2 1 9 4 7 1 9 7 2 1 9 9 7 1 9 5 2 1 9 7 7 2 0 0 7 1 9 5 7 1 9 8 2 (75 years) (70 years) (65 years) (60 years) (55 years) (50 years) (45 years) (40 years) (35 years) (25 years) (20 years) (15 years) (5 years) (30 years) T h e s e a r e t h e c l a s s e s t h a t will b e o f f i c i a l l y a c k n o w l e d g e d , but EVERYONE’S INVITED! JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 35 F I S C A L Y E A R 2 0 11 : J U L Y 1 , 2 0 1 0 , T O J U N E 3 0 , 2 0 11 M E M O R I A L & H O N O R A RY G I F T S PRESIDENT’S CLUB Donations of $5,000 and above Professor Bill Doyle Ellsworth Trust Peter & Evelyn Fuss Mark & Star Heinrich ’69 & ’69 President Barbara E. Murphy David Oliveau Prescott W. Stearns Vermont Community Foundation Union Bank Richard Willey ’71 & Rosalind Weiss MANSFIELD CLUB Donations of $1,000 to $4,999 Dr. Irene Amilhat Allen ’57 & Elizabeth Amilhat Root ARAMARK Campus Services Ernest Broadwater Edward Cashman Dr. Sandy Chadwick ’67 Timothy Donovan John & Barbara Duffy David Faile ’68 Barbara Dillow Fiddler Fiduciary Trust Company Follett Higher Education Group Green Mountain Power Hackett Valine & MacDonald Ellen Hill ’95 John Lord Drs. Michael F. Luck ’70 & Barbara C. Wilson Alecia Manning Craig & Lauren Martone Oakland Foundation Marc Reibman Sally Reynolds Stella Bialecki Sargent Sharron Scott Dr. Carol M. Story ’69, MA ’74 Stowe Rotary Club SymQuest Vermont Humanities Council Donald R. Vickers ’70 Margo Warden ’97 Jane White ’71 Professor Alice G. Whiting ’56 PINNACLE CLUB Donations of $500 to $999 Katherine N. Blackett ’95 Donald & Susan Collins ’64 & ’70 Concept 2 Lisa Cummings Dr. Elizabeth Dolci Sandra Buck Howard ’75 David & Lindsey Huddle Professor David Hutchinson Sheila Whitcomb Jaquish ’68 Leif David Keelty ’89 Timothy & Sharon Kennison Linda & Peter Kramer Maloney & Fox, LLC Chandler & Madonna Parker Daniel Regan & Judith Mathison Patricia G. & Joseph F. Slate Bill Smith ’94 Peter & Jessica Thomson Bradford Townsend ’79 Margo Warden ’97 Geofrey T. Wolfe ’72 & Joan I. Wolfe STERLING CLUB Donations of $250 to $499 Anonymous Dr. Tania Bacchus John B. Black Norm & Linda Blair Teresa Bressette David & Jeanne-Marie Brookfield Butternut Mountain Farm James Canders ’70 Patricia Cano Benedicte Dodge Fidelity Foundation Reed & Dorothy Fisher Julie Fraenkel ’82 Judy Geer 36 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 Penny Howrigan Shelia Keiner Franklin & Marion Kellogg Jo Ann Lamore ’00, MA ’03 Sally Laughlin & Peter Krusch Dawn LeBaron ’76 Gertrude G. Lepine ’49 Denise MacMartin ’96 Karren Madden Denis &Jennifer Manelski Diane Manning & Family Elizabeth Powell F. Todd Renz ’85 Jean Reynolds John Rosenblum ’85 Judith Rosovsky Evan J. Smith Dr. Sharon B. Sousa ’74 Glenn & Marga Sproul Emma K. Thompson & George E. Desmarais Vasilios Zaharias Family SPRUCE CLUB Donations of $100 to $249 Dr. Leslie Abramson & Dr. Fred Rossman Bonnie Acker Jerry & Sharon Anderson Capt. Russell C. Arnold ’69 Barbara LaVerdiere Bachner ’00 William E. Baker ’85 Rebecca N. Ballard ’41 Robert & Marilyn Bellows Miss Janis Bender ’71 Berg, Carmolli & Kent Real Estate Corp. David Bergh Brian D. Bigelow ’90 Juanita Boardman Cynthia Borck ’98 Tanya A. Bou-Nacklie Deborah Bouton Stephen Bridgewater ’72 Jacqueline & Levi Brown I N H O N O R O F Professor Ken Burrill Ellen Hill ’95 Gladys Menkens President Barbara Murphy John J. Murphy Derek Murphy ’11 Bill Smith ’94 Emma K. Thompson I N M E M O RY O F Stephen E. Agosto Jay Blair ’95 Mark Canavan Professor Robert DiGiuilio Lillian B. Hoyt ’26 William J. Kelly Sarah Lizotte ’02 Mary Parizo Mary Alicia Shanks ’72 Christos Zaharias John H. Bullard ’71 Garrett Burch ’77 Anne Just Burling ’86 Mary C. & Steven G. Bushey ’72 & ’71 Michael J. Calevro ’68 Deborah Ceglowski ’74 Henrique Cezar Virginia Chenoweth ’77 Dr. & Mrs. Philip Chiaravalle Therese A. Cioffi ’87 Christopher & Kathleen Coghill ’93 & ’93 Jeffrey W. Cohen ’90 Darla J. Coleman ’86 Todd Comen Rodney Comolli ’69 Keith & Annie Conger ’91& ’91 Shirley Krygier Conley ’72 Nancy Couch Fran & Mary Lou Coyle Louise Cross ’67 Kathleen Daige ’75 Frederick Dart Peter Dart Ian & Felicity Davidson Rosanna de Guzman Edward Debor ’76 Marry B. Denny ’63 Esed & Melvida Djozic Carl Driscoll ’61 Richard Dumont ’91 Jacques N. Dupuis ’71 Judith McBride Duval ’62 Kirk B. Dwyer ’75 Jo Anne Edwards Tammy J. Ellis ’06 Dr. Edward Elmendorf Ryan Emmons ’00 Robert Esdon ’53 Charles & Patricia Eyler John Farmer Kirk & Ellen Farquharson ’65 & ’67 Allen Farrand ’54 Marianne Ferris Dr. Mary Field ’84 Carolyn Bullock Fisher ’61 Earl W. Fisher ’68 Fitch Hill Inn Kelly Ford & Michael Ford ’86 Ernest Forgione ’95 Susan Whitcomb Foster ’73 Marjorie Gale David M. Gallicchio ’67 Douglas Garno Robert Geyer-Sylvia ’87 Raymond R. Girouard ’73 Myra G. Gordon ’74 Leslie Black & Graham Hayes Govoni ’87 Robert Grace ’54 Phil Gray Connie Greathouse ’68 Bonita Griswold Nancy Gruber Patricia A. Guilfoyle Hugh Haggerty ’61 Patricia M. Haggerty Linda George Hall ’70 Handy Toyota/Handy Chevrolet Paulette Pavluchuk Harkins ’64 Yvonne Walter Harman ’75 Glenda Haskell ’74 Hans Haverkamp Jan Herder Robert & Dawn Herold ’56 & ’54 Robert G. Hess ’77 Linda S. Hill Melanie Hook ’03 Melissa Hunter-Boyce ’MA'92 Clifford Johnson Sarah Jane Johnson ’98 Dr. Leslie Kanat Jane Kitchel Roger Kowalsky & Patricia Cavanagh Paula A. Lamell Jane Lande Oliver Leek ’97 & Barbara Leek Mark A. Leipert ’96 Timothy Littlefield ’82 Tracy L. Lizotte ’87 Joye Lyon ’09 Cathy J. Mander-Adams ’88 Howard A. Manosh Linda E. Markin Jane Marshall James W. Martin ’71 Carol Mateo ’83 Mary Mathieu Richard J. McCarthy ’59 Robert & Cathy McDonough Norman McElvany Rebecca Smith McGregor ’02 Tim & Teresa McGuire James McWilliam ’67 Paula L. Mercier George E. Merrill ’70 Norman R. Messier ’61, MA ’84 Margaret McBride Miller ’42 Michele Miyamoto ’00 Kathy Hawkins Montague ’78 Barbara Mudgett-Russell ’56 North Country Tree Care Sandra JC Noyes Larry & Christine O’Brien Mary O'Brien ’87 Robert Onne ’69 Girard Paige ’65 Kurt E. Pearson’80 Dale E. Peters ’69 Bernard Piche ’91 Walter J. Pomroy, C.P.A. Fred Pond ’78 Laura Racioppi Tarquin Rayfield ’85 Don & Marti J. Raymond ’62 & ’68 Charles Rice ’83 James B. Robichau ’79 Olga Rosario-Galarza Michelle & Stu Ross-Robinson James Rowell ’54 RSVP/Volunteer Program for Lamoille Valley Barbara Russ & Dean Williams David W. Schraffenberger ’08 John P. Scully, III ’82 Robert E. Searles ’72, MA ’83 Tyrone Shaw Bernard C. Sheltra ’60 Neil Shepard Michael Sherman ’83 David Silverman ’85 Dr. & Mrs. Joel W. Silverstein Richard Smith Frederick Somers ’76 Senator Robert Starr Robert Stevens ’69 Toby Stewart David Stinson Catherine S. Stoddert ’99 Kent Strobel ’77 Please note that gifts received after June 30, 2011, are not reflected in this report. They will be listed in the next issue of Johnson Views. Sunset Motor Inn Wayne Swanger Joseph Tesetano ’58 Julie Theoret Dr. Karin Thornton Mary Tichey-Staack Sarah & Marc Tischler Arthur & Eileen Tonkinson Trapp Family Lodge Jon Treon ’75 Barbara Turnowicz ’64 Charles Usher ’65 Frances Weinbaum Lorraine Welch Rev. Gordon Weller ’70 Nancy Wentworth ’65 Wesley United Methodist Church David & Amie Whitcomb Michele Whitmore Joan Wilson Jermeny & Maria Wolf Karen Wong Charles Woodard Krystal Woodward BABCOCK CLUB Donations of $50 to $99 Donald Allen ’84 Gar Anderson ’67 Winthrop & Ruth Anderson Tomas Anderson ’64 Leila Arnett Thaddeus Asaro ’89 Carrie Ballou ’01 Siobhan Barber ’92 John Bates ’88 Marie Bean ’61 Michael Belforti ’00 Christopher Berdoulay ’99 Lorna Bliss ’59 Douglass Boardman ’89 & Jacqueline Gale ’92 Jay Bona ’00 Denis Boudreau ’82 Kevin Bracey ’92 Annie Bradley ’46 Eva & Alan Breckenridge Carol Buchdahl ’85 Kenneth Burch ’74 Betsey Burdett ’82 James Cardell ’58 Andrea Carey ’92 Erica & Monica Carter ’94 & ’94 Sean & Christine Cassidy ’94 & ’94 Raymond Cassin Stephen Cassin Sherry Chaisson ’64 Kendall Chamberlin ’06 Karen Christianson Janet Cole ’99 Nancy Collins ’92 Penny Conlon Joan Cook ’89 JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 37 Jonathan Cooper Diane Cote ’70 Edward Creighton & Debra Kurtz ’73 & ’75 Vernon Davis ’76 Nancy De Forge ’76 Michael & Alison Deleget Paula Dolan ’75 Pamela Dow ’96 Edward Dowling ’78 Sandra Duffy Richard Dundas Donna Durick Douglas Eastman Robert Egbert ’67 Ivan Eguigure ’99 Carol M. Fells Susan Flynn ’91 Forget Me Not Shop Joseph Forgione ’11 Wilma Fosgate ’51 Tony& Maureen Fusco Janet Gibbons ’75 David Gibson ’63 James Gilbert ’00 Andy & Robin Gingras Matthew Goddette ’01 John & Carol Godfrey Terry & Debra Goodrich ’73 & ’73 Arthur Gordon ’87 Steven Gordon Roy & Carol Gordon William Goudy ’88 Shirley Granger ’82 Adam & Anne Greshin David Grozinsky Anna Hardway Phillip Hardway Randy Hartshorn ’79 Sandi Hasler Robert Heim ’02 John Heydt ’83 Judith R Higgins ’00 Catherine Higley Jerry Himelstein Jeanne Hinrichs ’79 Melissa Hollander ’90 Douglas Howard ’90 Mark Huff & Julie Paris ’95 & ’95 Nancy G. Hutchins IBM Matching Grants Program Scott Johnson Robin Jones ’97 Lora Kaye Sarita & Nafis Khan Kenneth Kopsco ’66 Maury Kost Gail Kuhl ’86 Cindy Kullmann Stephen LaBree ’93 Allison LaFlamme ’06 Andrew Lafrenz ’00 Michael & Jill Lampron ’94 & ’95 Jessica Lane ’04 Phillip LaPorte ’80 Mark Larivee ’07 Perry LaRoque Elaine Larson Louise Leach ’56 Sarah Leduc ’01 Robert Lencke ’80 Blythe Leonard ’85 Marjorie Livingston ’69 Daniel Loskutoff Phillip & Belinda Lovely ’75 & ’75 Richard Lumbra ’61& Jean Lumbra Janet & Richard Lussier ’71 & ’68 James Madison Thomas Maguire ’71 Frank Martel ’75 & Evelyn Martel Charles Martin ’58 Karen Martin ’98 Michael Mashtare ’81 John McCartney ’88 Jane McGinley ’54 Millicent McGinnes ’92 Heidi McLaughlin ’00 Anne Menkens Craig & Sue Miner & ’75 Gina Mireault Thomas & Gail Moreau ’73 & ’74 Martha Morrissey Tim Mosenthal ’84 Carleen Musick ’97 Chris Muzzy Nancy Nottermann ’97 David O'Brien ’71 Christina Osgood-Smith ’92 Jonna Paolella-Kliphon ’93 Alan Paquette ’65 Ann Parker ’72 Carol Plante Bethany Plissey David Potter ’59 William Powell Alison Rabinoff ’89 Paul & Betty Racine Claude & Luthera Rainville ’61 & ’61 Jane Ralph Curt Randall ’93 Stephen Ratte ’59 Walter G. Reeve ’92 Lorraine Riebel Barbara Riley ’57 Donald Robinson ’81 Cori Rockwood ’00 Anissa Ross Seguin ’03 Barbara Rousesell Gary Russ Robert & Ann Russ Deneen Russell ’07 Sekou Saffold Debra & Robert Schack Carl Severance ’92 Karen Seward ’01 Don & Ellen Shepheard Robert Slade ’74 Cinda Smith ’76 Jean Snow ’80 Charles Sorenson Peggy Sprague ’81 Corinna Stanley ’85 Clyde Stats Steelcase Foundation Jennifer Stefanski & Greg Stefanski ’06 Jessica & Luke Stewart Diana Stone ’07 Jayne Stone ’77 Toni Stone & Steve Overton Christie Sumner James Swift Kenneth S. Thompson Scott Thompson ’98 Julie Tomsuden ’91 Jo Lynn Trusela-Ostler ’90 Jean Tucker ’51 Dr. Karen Uhlendorf Nina Velovich-Frankonis ’64 Judith Villa ’80 Richard Wade ’04 Russell Weis Cynthia West Clayton & Mary Faith Westervelt Catherine Whatley ’72 Patrick Wheatley ’75 Jacob White Lillian White ’74 Mark Winchester ’97 Mildred Wolf Lois Wolfe ’82 Norman Wolfe ’73 Dale Woods, Jr. ’76 Deborah Wright ’03 Amy Yankowski ’87 Dr. Judith Yarnall Norena Zanleoni ’73 SUPPORTERS Donations of up to $49 Derek Adams ’95 Loralie Adams ’11 Lori-Ann Adams ’01 38 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 Paul Adams ’98 Eleanor Ahlers ’65 Charlene Albee ’80 Wendy Allen ’01 Edward Andrus ’99 William April ’95 Dawn Archbold ’85 Bergthora Asmundsson Anne Atherton ’59 Elana Aubrey ’91 Emily Austin ’87 Kimberly Austin-Johnson ’91 Mary Jo Axelson David Baker ’71 Jeremy O. Baker ’03 Kathryn Baker ’96 Kathleen Ball ’91 Travis Barber ’92 Stephen Barnard ’77 Pietertje Barnett ’95 Karen Bartone ’91 Graham Bauerle Florence Beard ’39 Mary Lou Beaulieu ’03 Lou Ann Beninati ’77 Leroy Bennett ’64 Stacie Bilodeau ’98 Stephen Blair ’80 Marjorie Blake Rebecca & Rene Blanchard ’56 & ’56 Dorothy Bliss ’63 Colette Bonelli ’82 Linda Bongiolatti ’67 Alissa Booth ’91 Nancy Boyer ’60 Christina Bradley ’06 Stephen Brandon ’86 Ann Branon ’00 Kenneth Brighton Joyce Brill ’85 Richard Brochu ’73 Christiane Brown ’03 Lizabeth Buckley ’02 Carroll Burrington ’85 Colleen Bushway ’72 Robert Buyak Maria Calamia ’80 Connie Savard Carlson ’44 Thomas & Susan Carney ’71 & ’72 Mable Carr ’86 John Carroll ’79 Mary Carty ’93 Caroline Casavant ’84 Stephen Caswell ’78 Linda Chadburn Christopher Chamberlin ’97 Doreen Chambers ’85 Paul Ottis Chapman ’99 Julie Choquette ’01 John Ciccone Robert Clapper ’88 Jerry Clark ’71 Leigh Clark ’74 Mary Coburn ’68 John Coffin ’74 Conrad Coggeshall ’91 Ellyn Cole Paul Coleman ’73 Ron & Nina Coler Marie Cone ’97 Susan Conger ’86 Geoffrey & Martha Corey ’67 & ’68 Michael & Diane Corey Tammy Cox ’91 Cynthia Crandlemere Melanie Crosby ’03 Richard Cross ’71 Donald Culver ’62 Debra Currier ’96 Ruth Curtiss ’60 Beverly Cyr ’59 & Robert Cyr Timothy Daley ’03 Scott Dalrymple ’82 Jeanette Damato ’06 Lois D'Arcangelo ’74 Margaret Dary ’33 Patricia Dasaro ’00 George Davis ’67 Linda Davis ’80 Linda F. W. Davis Theresa Davison ’96 Roberta Decker ’60 Joan Dehm ’75 Victor & Edna Del Negro James & Linda Dempsey Barbara DeRoo ’83 Richard ’73 & Gwendolyn Devine ’73 Janis Dewey ’91 Everett Dickinson ’62 Avis Dodd ’39 Margaret Doheny ’78 Mary Dole ’86 Michael Dondes ’73 Carol Doner ’94 Lori Draper ’93 Karen & Michael Dreiblatt Cheryl Dudley ’74 James Duff ’76 Rachel Duffy ’08 Lois Eby & David Budbill EcoPhones Susan Emerson ’97 Barbara Endres ’91 Anna English Megan Eno ’71 John & Virginia Enola ’53 Essex Pediatrics Larry Fafard ’74 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Farnsworth Joyce Feck Tony Feck Dennis & Jonnie Filion ’74 & ’75 Martha Fiske ’70 Elaine Fitch ’51 Sean Fitzgerald ’91 Martha Flanagan ’74 Pat & Tony Florio Andrea Fournier ’70 Adrianna Fox ’93 Jennifer Franzen ’96 Peter Frenette ’82 Denise Fullerton ’90 Edmund & Wendy Furs Helen Gaffney ’85 Pauline Garceau ’45 Brett & Margaret Gardner Chuck Gargaly ’08 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Garno Jose & Lyn Garrido Rita Garrow ’95 Peter Gaskill ’88 Gay & Lesbian Fund of Vermont Ralph Geer ’75 Richard Gibson ’66 Paul Gladue Gena Glidden ’71 Mary Anne Gonsalves ’94 Glenn & Nancy Goodale Jeff Gordon Linda Greaves ’76 Bernadette Griffin ’80 Kathy Guidi Dorothy Haddock ’73 Debra Hale ’91 Andrew Hall Geraldine Hallock ’73 Alicia Hanrahan ’01 Patricia Hardy ’49 Molly Hatfield ’05 Kirsten Hayes ’78 & Patrick Hayes Donald Hazelton ’73 Margaret Henn ’83 Cynthia Hennard Mr. Henneruth Shaunee Higgins ’73 Gisele Hodgdon ’80 Rev. Thomas Hood ’84 Jeffrey Howard ’02 Warren Hull ’69 Jeanne Hutchins ’97 & Bruce Hutchins Betsey Ingleston ’92 Michelle Jackson ’98 Pietro & Elaine Jacovini Annette Jalbert Linda Johnson ’92 Alison & Laine Jones Nancy Jones ’92 Scott Josler ’04 Helen Joyal ’54 David Kahn ’88 Lois Keith ’52 Stephan Kellner Andrea Kelly Virginia Kelson Lisa Kent Janice Ketchum ’86 James Kiefer ’95 Anne Kilguss Janet Kilguss Steven Kilguss John King ’83 Mark Klein Marjorie Kramer Ruth Ann Krayesky Jenny Ladd Michael & Diane LaFarr Cory Laferriere ’02 Edward Lancaster, III ’88 Eva Lancaster ’53 Kathy Landry Amy Lanterman ’88 Leslie Larrow ’65 Phyllis Lasnier ’51 Elinor Jackson Lawrence ’52 Tracy Lea ’74 Katherine Leahy ’75 Alice Leeds Colleen Legris ’88 Francine Lemnah ’00 Marion Locke ’42 Stephan Lucchetta Rudolph Lurvey ’99 Judith Lusk ’79 Thomas Lyndes ’86 Betty MacDowell ’47 Laird & Nancy MacDowell ’74 & ’76 Ingeborg Mack Kimberly Madden ’99 Kevin Magee ’92 Beth Maginn ’78 Esther Maguire ’00 Jessica Maher ’92 Beverly Mahoney, Ph.D. ’87 Gregory Makuch Stephen Malo ’94 Susan & Roger Mann Virginia Mann ’57 Joyce Manning ’59 Steven Martel ’79 Christine Martin ’93 Deanna Martin ’81 Urban Martin ’74 Suzanne Masland ’00 Alison Matot ’05 Mark May ’74 Florence McCloud ’80 Donald P. McComb & Frank J. Joe Muriel McCuin ’68 Kristin McCusker Patricia McDermott ’83 Allyn McDonald ’74 Tricia McFadden ’94 Gail McGann ’08 Cathy McGarvey Sara McKouen ’06 Esther McLaughlin ’56 Richard McVicker ’00 Carolyn Mecklosky ’82 Cheryl Messier ’97 Kathleen Mobbs ’45 Danci Mock Kyle Mooney ’90 Michael Morgan ’87 Paula Morgan ’96 Suzanne Morlock ’06 Douglas G. Morris Phillis Mosher ’05 Brad Moskowitz Julie Mulroy-Evans ’05 Henry Murray ’78 Jean Pierre Nadeau ’96 Peter Neff ’79 Janet Nelson ’80 Diane Nicholls ’95 Roberta Noyes ’89 Karen Obert Linda Ohsberg Michael Osborne ’98 Rhonda Osgood Elizabeth Packer ’51 Scott Palmer ’88 Barbel Paradis ’08 Anita Parah ’06 Maryann Paris ’80 Louise Park ’82 Kendra Parkington ’04 Wendy Parrish ’75 Rebecca Pastor ’02 Michael & Stephanie Peabody ’05 & ’09 Renee Perdue ’76 Helen Perkins ’41 Jane Peters ’83 Mary Peters ’89 Amy Picotte ’92 Ann Plourde Donna Poulin ’04 Norman Poutre ’95 Cecily Powers ’53 Janet Quinn ’52 Frank & Barbara Racioppi Sebastian & Mary Ragno Margaret Ramsdell Christine Reighley ’71 Betty Renaudette ’62 James Reynolds William Reynolds ’82 Renee Riopel ’05 JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 39 Regina Ritscher-Winters Gary Robin ’68 Nancy Rock ’77 Wendy Rogers ’86 Carl Roof Patricia Rosati ’66 Dana Rosengard ’97 Alyson Rousselle Bonnie Rowe ’08 Carrie Roy ’06 Stuart Russo-Savage ’92 Donna Ryalls ’66 John Santorello ’88 Kimberly Sargeant ’01 Bryan Scanlon ’92 Susan Schermerhorn ’94 Ken & Jean Schiels Diane Schwach Joe Seguin ’00 Laura Sexton John & Beth Shea Michele Shea ’91 Eleanor Shepard ’44 Carolyn Shields ’94 John Simons ’84 Twila Skelly ’64 Carolyn Smith ’88 Jennifer Smith ’88 Mary Smith ’77 Timothy Smith ’71 Cynthia Smorgans ’72 Cynthia Snyder ’97 Ann Marie Spear Judith Stancliff ’00 Christopher Stone Matthew Stone ’91 Lisa Stoudt ’92 Dorcas Suitor ’66 Alf Svendsen Krista Swahn Miriam Swartz Carol Sweeney Gail Sweeney Paul Temmermand ’88 Jennifer Theoret ’93 Sheryl Thurber ’03 Elizabeth Tindall Susan Tinker ’06 Rodney & Sandra Titus ’62 & ’62 Donna Towne ’94 Mariana Towne ’46 Nancy Tracy ’83 Rachel Trefsger ’01 Kristina Trevits ’90 Robert Tyler ’78 Doris Underwood ’41 Peter Uricchio Carl Veilleux ’86 Gail Vreeland ’94 Gayle Waite ’61 Kimberly Ward ’89 Michelle Warner Dr. Eleanor Webber Roger Webster ’87 Peter Weeks ’00 James Wefers ’94 Melissa Weinstein Mary West ’79 David Wetmore ’98 Tony Whedon Beth-Ann Willey ’92 Thomas Williams ’69 Arlie Williamson ’45 Steven Winters ’86 Eduardo Wolle ’77 Mr. & Mrs. Spence Woodard Gregory Wright ’71 Mary Wylde Diane, Kelly, Violet & Ian Young Rodgers Victoria Zarozinski ’94 Patricia Zlotucha ’72 Lisa Zullig Give for the Future: Bequests & Endowments M any alumni and friends of Johnson State College have expressed their caring by making a charitable bequest or by creating an endowment. Simply put, a charitable bequest is a provision in a will or living trust specifying that all or a portion of your estate is to pass to a charitable organization such as Johnson State College. This provision can take effect immediately upon death or can be contingent on someone’s (spouse, children) surviving. An endowment is a gift of cash or stock of at least $10,000 that is invested to provide support for a cause of your choice and to ensure that the principal amount of your gift grows. Only the return on the investment (the interest) up to a defined percentage is spent, while the principal remains intact. The College and the students who benefit from the gifts of these special friends are extremely grateful for this support. Bequests and endowments live on, providing interest each year to support students, visiting lecturers, curricular innovation and excellence in teaching and learning at JSC. A lasting legacy FOUR WAYS TO MAKE A GIFT TO JOHNSON STATE COLLEGE: ! Include a gift of any size in your will. ! Name Johnson State College as a beneficiary of a retirement plan, trust or a life insurance policy. This can be done without needing to revise your will. ! Make a Charitable Gift Annuity, which provides you with lifetime income. These gifts can have significant tax benefits and pay attractive interest rates. ! Contribute an annual donation of cash or stock. For more information, contact the Office of Development & Alumni Relations 800-635-2356 OR 802-635-1251 Lauren.Philie@jsc.edu | www.jsc.edu/GiveToJSC 40 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 Winter storms brought Johnson students outside for some snow rugby. 40s HELEN C. HUARD ’41 taught for 33 years in the Vermont towns of Fletcher, Hyde Park and Waterville. In 1974 she began working for the U.S. Postal Service and became postmaster of the North Hyde Park office. After retiring in 1982, Helen traveled for several years before settling in Morrisville, where she now resides. was away, she would be asked to substitute. She tells us “teaching came naturally for me and I loved teaching at the Johnson Normal School.” She reports that JSC prepared her for her career by teaching her “not only subject matter, but about personalities so I could get along with many people.” ADENA AUGUSTA BELVILLE MARTIN ’41 lives at Sunrise Assisted Senior Living in for 20 years in Johnson and Richford and at Berkshire Academy and says she is still kicking at 91! Stamford, CT, near her daughter, Diane, and her family. The building looks like a large Victorian mansion, which reminds Adena of her home in Montpelier. She has met many new friends but still misses Vermont. Her favorite memory of the College is attending the church across the street from JSC and participating in church trips on weekends. She also remembers that when a teacher HELEN CONGER PERKINS ’41 taught DORIS LACE UNDERWOOD ’41 tells us that she still sees a number of Johnson graduates at retired teachers’ meetings and the Zeta chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma. Now her career is family, as she enjoys her five children, seven grandchildren, six great-grandchildren and one great-greatgrandchild. Visit www.peregrineproductions.com to see a video of JSC students talking about their experience making this video! JSC Professor Bill Doyle and his Vermont History & Government Class present LIFE IN ORANGE COUNTY Explore these and other videos in the series documenting Vermont life, history and traditions. Available from your local bookstore, the JSC Bookstore or www.peregrineproductions.com/shop BARBARA GORHAM MAYSILLES ’45 YVONNE SMITH ’54, retired from teaching and her husband, David, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary June 9, 2011. All their children and grandchildren surprised them by coming home to Walpole, NH, to celebrate the occasion. They delight in their long and happy marriage and their wonderful children and grandchildren. Their son, Duncan, recently wrote a book titled Ducktown: The Fight Over One of the South’s Greatest Environmental Disasters, about the disastrous result of copper mining in the Tennessee/Georgia area. in 1993. She has a granddaughter attending UVM, another attending Boston University, and a grandson who is a junior at Harwood Union High School. LUCY JIMMO ’48 reports that she retired MAUREEN RYAN COOPER ’61 has lived in fall 2010. in Las Vegas since 1967. She is a retired special-education teacher and a business owner. JEAN TUCKER ’51 became a great grandmother in June 2011. 60s CHRISTINE SMEAD CHRISTIAN ’61 says she loved her years at Johnson. She has lived in the U.S. and Europe, has had many careers, and is still happily working full time. 50s ESTHER McLAUGHLIN ’56 is enjoying retirement by knitting, remaining a part of the Vermont Visiting Nurses Association, being active in her community, traveling, and taking care of her dog. JACQUELINE MALONEY DOWD ’61 retired from teaching in 2002. She has two sons — one in California and another in Massachusetts — three grandsons and twin granddaughters. ELIZABETH “BETTY” NEWTON PACKER ’51 lives in New Paltz, NY and says she is enjoying retirement. Betty taught four years in Waterbury, a year in Connecticut, another year in Colorado and 31 years in Brentwood, Long Island. She says she enjoyed teaching and loved her students. She is a cancer survivor who enjoys quilting, knitting, painting, playing the organ, reading, traveling and camping. Betty went to Sarasota in May to a Lady Shriner Convention. Her daughter, Terri-Lynn, has been a special-education teacher for 20 years at Lindenhurst School on Long Island and has three children: Tyler (16), Jake (13) and Sienna (11). They all come to Vermont as often as possible. CAROLYN BULLOCK FISHER ’61 retired after teaching at the elementary level for 39 years. She is now pursuing a career in art and has joined an active group of artists in Kent, CT. She participates in art shows throughout the state. Examples of her work may be viewed at www.kentart.org. NAOMI GRAHAM ’61 has been involved for many years with a group called Guardianship Trust of Vermont, an advocacy group for the developmentally disabled that serves as an advisory board to Washington County Mental Health Services. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 41 PATRICIA HORSFORD ’61 is enjoying her retirement by keeping busy with travel, hiking, biking, kayaking and maintaining friendships around the world. She says that a wonderful joy and blessing in her life was her recent attendance at the graduation of her granddaughter, Marie Young, from JSC in May 2011. RICHARD LUMBRA ’61 lives with his wife, Jean, in Hyde Park and reports that they are both in good health. “I can never say enough about my years at Johnson State College,” he says. “It prepared me for a successful career in education. That degree made everything possible. Most importantly, I met my wife there!” RONALD MUIR ’61 and his wife, Mary, reside in Phoenix, AZ, and for three months in the summer they live in Vermont. He is active in real estate in the Phoenix/Scottsdale area and has 13 grandchildren. He writes that his favorite memories of the College are great friends, great laughs and great teachers. ANN GRIFFIN OSBORNE ’61 is enjoying her two grandchildren and says life is good! She is retired but still teaching as a substitute and still enjoys working with children, which she believes keeps her young. She says her favorite memories of the College are Water’s House, Chesamore Hall, friends and colleagues. CLAUDE & LUTHERA RAINVILLE ’61 are keeping busy. Claude retired after three careers and Luthera works for their son at Maple Landmark Woodcraft. LOUISE CHOINIERE REMILLARD ’61 tells us that her education at JSC prepared her for her career and instilled in her much knowledge. GAYLE SWEET WAITE ’61 and her husband, Bill, retired to Tennessee, where they volunteered for five years at Fairhaven Ministries, a non-denominational ministerial retreat center. In 2009, they purchased a home in Elizabethton, TN, where they stay involved with their church, community and neighborhood. MARIE BELISLE ’66 reports that she has four grandchildren who are all doing well and that she and her husband continue to enjoy gardening, the family and travel. MARILYN CLEVELAND ’66 and WILLIAM CLEVELAND ’68 are enjoying retirement and spending lots of time traveling. The proud grandparents of seven are looking forward to their 41st wedding anniversary and say they are thankful to JSC — they met outside the old music room on campus! JANE DEMERS ’66 continues to be actively involved with her community. She currently is knitting hats and mittens for the oncology unit at Fletcher Allen Health Care in Burlington. SHERRI “KITTY” SWINTON MUZZY ’69 retired in 2011 after teaching science for 41 years. She plans to spend time with her family and travel, and was planning to attend her youngest daughter’s wedding in the summer 2011. 70s RICHARD SHAE ’70 is chair of Ward 3 in Worcester, MA, and won “Worcester Male Democrat of the Year.” Although retired, he holds a part-time position at the teachers’ association, and is the district secretary of the Northeastern Barbershop Society. Richard’s eldest son, Peter, is an ambassador in Cairo, and his son Mark is a mortgage broker in Massachusetts. ELIZABETH BOLTON ’71 has been retired for more than four years but remains an active substitute teacher. GERALD DEITZ ’71 reports that he recently bought a 1966 Thunderbird. KAREN EHRLICH GANTT ’71 has lived in the South (in Georgia and North Carolina) since 1977 but has great memories of New England. She ended up in the design/display field and has a 24-year-old son and a 19-year-old daughter. GENA LYFORD GLIDDEN ’71 is married to Scott Glidden. She says her favorite memories of JSC are freshman year with D.F. and friends; skiing with M.E. and S.B.; student teaching in Johnson, Morrisville and Montpelier; chorus presentations; special teachers and their classes and encouragement; and outings and conversations with friends. Gena says that her student teaching with Bonnie Merritt, sharing of experiences with classmates, and feedback from Alice Whiting prepared her for her career by providing a foundation of knowledge and building her confidence. LORRAINE HALL ’71 is now retired, 81 years old, and living in Hardwick, VT. Her husband has passed away, but she enjoys the presence of her six greatgrandchildren in her life, as well as her nine granddaughters. SIDNEY MERRILL ’71 married SUSAN CAMPBELL MERRILL ’73 in 1972 after meeting at JSC. They have two daughters: Jennifer Lea, 32, and Kristen, 30. Sidney is a licensed captain with the U.S. Coast Guard and general manager for Blue Water Point Motel, Restaurant & Marina in Oak Island, NC. CHRISTINE LATIF HICKOK REIGHLEY ’71 has two granddaughters and three grandsons. She has been teaching “Reading Recovery” lessons for 19 years and Title I reading and writing intervention to students in grades 1 to 4 at the Sheldon (VT) Elementary School for 30 years. 42 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 CHERYL SIMEONE ’71 continues to work DAVID SOBOLESKI ’76 has two for the state of New York and says she is looking forward to retirement in the near future. daughters, ages 10 and 12, who perform in dance recitals. David enjoys keeping in touch with his JSC friends. He is in his seventh year of teaching ski school and is a fully certified PSIA instructor. He is also celebrating his 27th year at IBM. BOB CHAMBERLAIN ’74 was elected to the JSC Alumni Council in July 2011. Bob was dean of administration at JSC for many years. He and Pat live in Bristol and attended Homecoming 2011 at JSC. LAIRD MACDOWELL ’74 and NANCY BROWN MACDOWELL ’76 celebrated their 35th wedding anniversary Oct. 16, 2011. Nancy continues to be involved with Lamoille County Players. She also continues her interest in music and is recording a new CD with Vermont musicians she had as guests on her radio program, “Sunday Morning Sampler,” on WLVB. Volunteering at the College radio station led to 30 years in broadcasting as an on-air personality. RICHARD AUSTIN ’76 has started a new business called Open Sky, which manufactures outdoor luxury showers. MARY CRONIN CONSTANCE ’76 is the executive director at Camp Allen, a camp for children and adults with disabilities, which recently launched a capital campaign to rebuild. Mary’s daughter is a lawyer in Boston, and her son will be graduating from UVM. MARTHA DUBUQUE ’76 was named “Vermont Distinguished Principal of the Year” for 2010 by the National Association of Elementary School Principals. At the time she was principal of the Walden School in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. In summer 2011, she accepted a new appointment as co-principal of St. Johnsbury School, where she is the school’s instructional leader. DAVID YACOVONE ’76 has been appointed commissioner of the Vermont Department for Children and Families by Governor Peter Shumlin. LEO LEONARD ’78 was one of three U.S. coaches invited to Turkey in January 2011 to coach the U.S. Alpine Ski Team for the World University Games, where his team received five gold and two silver medals! Leo has coached ski racing at Vermont Academy, Williams College, Colorado Mountain College and Stratton Mountain School. WILLIAM VECCHITTO ’79 and his wife PAMELA VECCHITTO ’81 are enjoying their first grandchild, born March 4, 2010. 80s AVID RINGUETTE ’80 has transitioned from associate professor to full professor at the University of Hawaii. The television show “Lost” filmed a scene in his house during the summer of 2010. MARK WOODWARD ’80 represents the towns of Eden and Johnson in the Vermont House of Representatives. He served in the legislature previously, from 1996 to 2003. Mark also runs Woodward Rentals and a small farm in Johnson. J. DAVID BENEDIX ’81 is a specialeducation teacher at Masconomet Regional Middle School in Boxford, MA, where he also is faculty advisor to the Student Council and faculty leader of the Environmental Club. Historical Society releases JOHNSON pictorial history The Historical Society of the town of Johnson recently published a pictorial history of the town co-authored by JSC alums Alice Whiting, ’56, and R. Dean West, ’64, with the assistance of longtime Johnson residents Linda Jones and Lois Frey. The book features 234 photographs taken during the late 19th century, each with a caption helping to tell the story of Johnson as it evolved from an agricultural town to a diverse community with business, industry, education, the arts and agriculture driving its economic engine. Poring through numerous old photos and postcards, the authors included some of the older buildings of Johnson Teachers College, JSC’s predecessor. Many alumni will remember Chesamore Hall, Sterling Hall, Hill House and even Martinetti Hall in its earliest stages. The book is one of the “Images of America” series by Arcadia Publishing Co. It is available at the Johnson Town Clerk’s Office or by contacting Alice Whiting at whitingag@ myfairpoint.net. Copies are $21.99 plus postage. All proceeds benefit the Johnson Historical Society. ELIZABETH BURGESS ’81 tells us that her daughter, Amelia, graduated from Champlain College with a degree in professional writing. JOHN KING ’83, president and CEO of Vermont Public Television, was inducted into the Vermont Association of Broadcasters’ Hall of Fame Nov. 19, 2011. King joined VPT in 1987 and became president and CEO in 1998. CHERYL MILLER ’85 is living in Colorado, where she is a licensed chiropractor and is awaiting her chiropractic license from the state of New Mexico. Continuing her participation in sailing, Cheryl and her team took first place in the Dylan Open Regatta. She also is involved in the Iron Horse Race in Colorado and invites others to participate! Cheryl was planning a fall 2012 wedding to Rene Hunter, a pilot for Continental Airlines. GARY CROSBY ’86 resides in Burlington. Although officially retired, he says he may still work on government software projects from time to time. He enjoys photography, music, sports and working on his car. THOMAS LYNDES ’86 lives in Durham, NC, and works as a technical writer. He is enjoying single life. DIANA WHITTINGTON ’86 is married and living in Alexandria, VA, where she works for the Migratory Bird Program of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and recently assisted with the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act. She was lead author of an environmental assessment under the National Environmental Policy Act. “I’m working to develop the tools and guidance we need to implement a new national program, including co-authoring an interim Golden Eagle technical guidance document,” she writes. “In short, I do eagles and other raptors. It’s an incredibly gratifying job.” ROBERT LONG ’87 resigned his position as director of conferences and catering at the Chatham Bars Inn in Chatham, MA, to become a carpenter and run his own homemanagement company. This switch has allowed him to focus on being a single father to his two sons, he says. Robert also entered the 2011 race for the Chatham Board of Selectmen. WILLIAM “BILLY” ADAMS ’88 was recently elected to the Stowe (VT) Selectboard. 90s SANDRA HAWKES ’90 is an art educator and chair of the art department of Patterson Mill Middle/High School in Maryland, where she lives with her 12-year-old daughter. She also bartends occasionally and does calligraphy for weddings. DANIEL AMYOT ’91 is the chief ranger at Mat-Su/Copper Basin Park in Alaska. He has been married for four years and moved into a newly built house in November 2008. JSC Art Grad Sees the 'Big Picture' TARA GOREAU ‘11 is working in Burlington as assistant to Vermont artist Dug Nap. Tara had her artwork featured in the “Welcome Gallery” in the Winooski (VT) “Pop-Up Gallery District” in June and July 2011. More recently, Tara gained attention for a huge mural created for Pete’s Greens, a well-known organic farm in Craftsbury, VT (see photo above) When the three-story, 140-foot-long storage barn at Pete’s Greens went up in flames, gone were tons of storage crops, vegetable-washing and processing equipment, and two tractors — an estimated loss of more than $500,000. Tara was among the many people who rallied to help owner Pete Johnson bring the farm back to life. After the barn was rebuilt, the B.F.A. grad offered to paint one of her larger-than-life murals inside. In exchange for gas, materials and a share in the CSA (community-supported agriculture) farm, Tara spent several days over two weeks during the summer of 2011 painting a colorful 60’ x 20’ scene depicting life on the farm. “It was a great experience,” says Tara, “and I had no shortage of vegetables to dole out to friends.” She also created a mural for High Mowing Seeds in Wolcott, VT, and she was a featured exhibitor in the café at Barnes & Noble Booksellers in South Burlington in February 2012. More of Tara’s work can be seen at www.arteatergallery.com. ELANA AUBREY ’91 is a licensed LAURA ELDRED ’91 is teaching grades JEFF THOMAS ’92 lives with his family in independent clinical social worker in Western Massachusetts, where she works as the program director of a therapeutic afterschool program serving children and families in Franklin County. In her spare time she makes photographic collages, which can be viewed at www.earthkaleiodoscopes.com. 5-12 for Keene Valley Schools in New York. She is also building a new house. Pomfret, VT, and is the athletic director at Woodstock Union High School. His plans for the athletic department include giving an athletic award and increasing participation with his “We Are Woodstock” initiative. DANIEL DECKER ’91 married Tracy Young on Jan. 23, 2010, and the couple lives in Claremont, NH. Daniel teaches social studies and serves as Key Club advisor at Stevens High School in Claremont. Tracy is assistant activities director at Historic Homes of Runnemede in Windsor. JENNIFER HARRISON ’91 has a 14-yearold daughter and a 12-year-old son. KATHERINE MACKO ’91 is a physician’s assistant at the Orthopedic Clinic at Alice Peck Day Memorial Hospital in Lebanon, NH. FELICIA DARLING ’91 has been accepted in to the Ph.D. program in mathematics education at Stanford University. DEREK LIBBY ’92 and EMILE WILLETT ’92 have acquired the company Beagle Outdoor Wear of Johnson. DAVID TUCKER ’92 has been appointed executive director of the Vermont E911 Board, which oversees the state’s emergency communications system. He previously served as commissioner of the Department of Information and Innovation. HALACIA BARNEY ’93 has been promoted to office manager at Mansfield Orthopedics in Morrisville, VT. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 43 MICHELLE ROBBINS ’96 opened a new KARL ASMUNDSSON ’99 has worked for massage office in Williston in September 2011. the same firm for 10 years and welcomed a second baby boy, Oscar, in November. Oscar joins Karl›s first son, Haukur, who is 5. NICOLE MYERS ROKSVOLD ’96 is married with two children and works as a special educator in the Bronx. BOBBY SEARLES ’96 is married and has four children. CHERYL ECKLUND ’97 teaches middle- CHRISTOPHER JANUSZ ’93 reports that he has retired from his general contracting work. BRYAN PERRY ’93 is a partner/owner of Northeast Printing Network in Cheshire, CT. He is a leader in community work, local education, Little League and other civic groups, as well as chair of the Republican Town Committee in East Haddam, CT. for eight years. They say they have been “thoroughly enjoying the peacefulness and nature that abounds, but the peacefulness may be temporarily interrupted as they prepare for the addition of their second child,” who was due to arrive in October 2011, around the time their son, Keith, turns 8. Andy is an environmental professional at France Environmental Inc. in Richmond. LEONA BELL HOLCOMB ’96 was practice specializing in children with severe emotional disturbances. She has a 9-yearold daughter, Maylee. employed at The Meadows School-Brattleboro Retreat for seven years as an assistant teacher and an outpatient administrative assistant. Her grandson has lived with her since 2000. GEORGETTE STEFFENS ALTIMARI ’95 AIRLIE DIFAZIO ’96 has a 9½-year-old was expecting her first child in April 2011. daughter named Isabella and a 5½-year-old daughter named Olivia. ELIZA DeSAUTELS ’94 has a private SCOTT BURT ’95 was featured in Business People Vermont for outstanding work with his company, Topcoat Finishes, which provides custom wall and floor finishes for builders and designers. He has also been writing a regular column for American Painting Contractor since 2008 and blogs at www. topcoatreview.com. MONIQUE PUTVAIN DUNN ’96 writes DEBORAH GOODWIN ’95 and BRIAN GOODWIN ’95 have three children, who Cirillo Oct. 9, 2010, at the Vergennes (VT) Opera House. will be 15 months, 4 years and 7 years old in March 2012. CHRISTI LAFONTAINE O’CONNOR ’95 is the director of community outreach and summer programs at the Ethel Walker School, an independent secondary school for girls in Simsbury, CT. Her third child with husband Ned was due to arrive in September 2011, joining siblings Ted, age 3, and Annie, age 2. that she is the proud mother of an 8-year-old daughter and a 5-year-old son. She and her husband of more than 15 years, Tom Dunn, live in Wolcott. She is employed at Lamoille Valley Veterinary Services in Hyde Park. ISRAEL EVARTS ’96 married Jennifer ROBERTA GAGNE ’96 recently completed her 20th year working as a member of the sexual-assault team with the Vermont Network Against Sexual and Domestic Violence. HEATHER GODIN ’96 welcomed a new baby boy in December 2010. MELISSA HABERMAN ’96 received a $10,000 grant from the Vermont Department of Education for the art department at St. Albans City School, where she is an art teacher. 44 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 home mom. MAYA O’ DONNELL ’97 stays at home 00s ROBYN LONGTIN DALEY ’00 is self-employed at E.C. Brown›s Nursery in Thetford Center, VT. ANDREW BAIRD ’96 and wife MARTI HILTS BAIRD ’98 have lived in Virginia DEBORAH KIMBALL ’99 is now a stay-atSOONER ROUTHIER ’99 went on to KEITH WATERMAN ’97 and wife EMILY WATERMAN ’97 have two little girls. Keith planner and is working on a website for her business. maker and has two granddaughters. school science at North Country Union Junior High School in Derby, VT. Her son Jasper is now 3 years old. caring for her three girls, who would be ages 17 months, 6 years and 8 years old in March 2012. MARY CARTY ’93 is working as a wedding LAURIE-HELISE HEIJN ‹99 is a home- MICHAEL RAPOPORT ’98 and wife JULIE RAPOPORT ’09 welcomed twin baby girls in December 2010. Emerson College after her time at JSC and is now the lighting director for Bon Jovi. was promoted to clinical director at Lamoille Community Connections in May 2011. PATRICIA GELO ’00 writes that she has started her own business, Pat Gelo Consulting Inc. ELIZABETH HABICH ’00 was planning a September 2011 wedding to Justin Guilbeau of Brattleboro. MOSES MURPHY ’00 is assistant director of admissions at the University of Vermont. He was planning a July 2011 wedding to Sarah Shackett. The JSC Alumni Website is YOUR Online Connection! If you haven’t yet checked out the JSC website, log on and see what you’ve been missing. Here’s how: Go to www.alumni.jsc.edu (or www.jsc.edu and click on the “Alumni” link, just under the logo). You’ll land on the Alumni Community home page, with a brief welcome message and a list of upcoming alumni events. To access the links at left so you can submit news, find and connect with former classmates, upload photos and more, you’ll need to register to set up an account: s #LICKON“First Time Login” to the right of the login button. s %NTERYOURLASTNAMEASINSTRUCTED s 3ELECTTHEBUTTONNEXTTOYOURNAME s %NTERYOUR)$NUMBERWHICHISPRINTEDABOVE your name on the mailing label of this issue of Johnson Views. s 9OUCANNOWCREATEYOURUSERNAMEAND password and start reconnecting with former classmates. If you already have a Facebook account: Once you set up an alumni account, you can authorize the JSC alumni community to access your Facebook page – and you can log in to your alumni account using your Facebook username and password when you return. This can be done by clicking on the Facebook link beneath the login button on the alumni website. (If you encounter a screen asking, “Do you want to view only the website content that was delivered securely?” select “no.”) MICHELLE GRUNER PRESSEY ’00 is GIBRIL SERGHINI ’01 visited JSC in SARAH GREENE ’03 has finished her ANN PAYEA ’03 writes, “On July 17, 2009, a full-time mom. In October 2010 she gave birth to a son, who joins a big sister. They are all enjoying year-round summer in Hawaii. February 2012, marking his first return to the East Coast since graduating from JSC! A native of Morocco, Gibril transferred to JSC after two years at St. Michael’s College. After earning his degree (in health sciences/ athletic training), Gibril headed to California, where he enrolled in Los Angeles Chiropractic College and went on to practice as a chiropractor for four years. (“The education I received at JSC really prepared me well for my chiropractic studies,” he says.) After that, he fulfilled a lifelong dream, opening and running a Moroccan restaurant — the Karma Café in Costa Mesa — for five years. Now, having sold the restaurant, he’s back to his career as a chiropractor but this time he’ll be working in France. He spent a few days in the Johnson area visiting friends and stopping at JSC before heading off to Paris, where he will work at the American Hospital of Paris. Ph.D. and accepted a position teaching anatomy and neuroanatomy at the University of Vermont. Joseph John Baiungo IV came into the world, welcomed by his big sister, Clara.” BROOK MARCOTTE ’03 is working as a earned her master’s degree in social work from Springfield College. “It is amazing how my volunteer experiences have stuck with me as the solid foundation to my life’s work,” STEWART RANDALL ’00 is working parttime as a biologist working in water-testing. RYAN WALL ’00 has joined AccounTax and Twin State Business Services in West Lebanon, NH. PRISCILLA WHITE ’00 is the child victim treatment director and co-director of the Vermont Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Sexual Abuse, a program of the Department for Children and Families. She lives in Montpelier with her 13-year-old son, she has two grown daughters who live in the area. COURTNIE COCHRAN ’01 recently had her third child, a boy. ELIZABETH DAVIDSON ’01 is the owner of Clear Connection Chiropractic in Middlebury, VT. She received her doctor of chiropractic degree from Sherman College of Chiropractic in 2006. CARRIE COLE GARROW ’01 is in her third year as an instructional assistant at Richford (VT) Junior/Senior High School. She plans to complete requirements for a secondary teaching endorsement in mathematics. Her two children are in elementary school, and her husband works at Blue Seal Feeds in Richford. GALEN GINNETTI ’01 was married in 2008. SARAH LEDUC ’01 is building a house in South Burlington. KIM MCRAE ’01 received her master’s degree in public administration at the University of Vermont after graduating from Johnson’s External Degree Program. Upon receiving her master’s degree in 2006 she was accepted as a Ph.D. candidate at the Rubenstein School of Environmental and Natural Resources at UVM. She is currently in her last year of the Ph.D. program, and her area of expertise is toxic hazardous waste remediation and ecological restoration. She also is a Gund Graduate Fellow at the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics. TODD SCHATZMAN ’01 is the owner of Trinity Motor Works, which offers restoration and maintenance services for Indian motorcycles and British and European automobiles in both Waterville, VT, and Charleston, SC, where Todd maintains homes. He also keeps busy as owner of a biodiesel fuel-anddistribution facility in Charleston and as a real estate developer in Vermont and South Carolina. Visit his website at www.TrinityMotorWorks.com. BARBARA VANDENBURGH ’01 was featured in a Springfield Reporter article about her work as family and mental health services manager for Windsor County (VT) Head Start. She has been married for 25 years and has two children. MARCIE WALSH-O’CONNOR ’01 was expecting a baby in March 2011. HELEN WESTON ’01 has been accepted to the North Bennet Street School in Boston for a two-year training program in piano technology. HEIDI CHAMBERLAIN ’02 showed her mixed-media art exhibit, “Only Animals,” in the Island Arts Gallery in South Hero, VT, throughout April 2011. She teaches art part time at Berkshire Elementary School. RICHARD “BUDDY” DOTY ’03 completed his education degree from the University of Nebraska in 2009 and is a candidate for his doctorate in education at Northeastern University, class of 2013. Buddy is the director of student conduct at Johnson & Wales University. He welcomed his first daughter in July 2010 and was expecting a second daughter in October 2011. Gibril Serghini ’01 hams it up with Penny Howrigan, JSC associate dean of enrollment services, during his visit to campus. registered nurse at the Hardwick (VT) Area Health Center. She had a son on Jan. 16, 2011. LAURALEE SAMPERE-GAGNON ’03 has Altieri Receives National Chef Educator Honors DINA ALTIERI, '07 won the American Culinary Federation (ACF) 2011 “Chef Educator of the Year” award and a $5,000 prize at the 2011 ACF national convention in Dallas. She currently works as a chef-instructor at the Kendall College School of Culinary Arts in Chicago. The award recognizes an active culinary educator whose knowledge, skills and expertise have enhanced the image of the professional chef and who, by example, has provided leadership, guidance and direction to students seeking a career in the culinary profession. Food-service educators across the nation were first nominated by colleagues for the award. Among all candidates, each of the four ACF regions selected a finalist. At the national competition in Dallas, the four finalists each had 75 minutes to present a lecture and demonstration. “Dina is a natural teacher and a natural leader; she knows how to engage students, set high expectations, and help students stretch to achieve them,” said Dr. Karen Gersten, president of Kendall College, upon learning of the honor. Dina has worked in the food-service industry for more than 20 years. She graduated as salutatorian from the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y., in 1991, then earned her bachelor’s degree in liberal arts from JSC. She has cooked from coast to coast for multiple restaurants, catering operations and special events, including the James Beard House and the Academy Awards. Prior to joining the faculty of Kendall College in 2008, Dina served as associate dean and chef-instructor at the New England Culinary Institute in Montpelier, Vt. Certified as both an executive chef (CEC) and culinary educator (CCE) by the ACF, she has coached three student teams to win the ACF Baron H. Galand Culinary Knowledge Bowl in 2007 and 2010, and most recently the Kendall team that won the 2011 National Knowledge Bowl for the second consecutive year. In 2010, she received Kendall College’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 45 she writes. “I have Ellen Hill and many others [at JSC] to thank for that.” JESSE SCHLOFF ’03 was planning a July 2011 marriage to Kimberly Leslie. Jesse teaches English and works as a part-time professional photographer. REBECCA CARR ’04, MA ’09 represented the TRiO programs at the 31st annual National Policy Seminar in Washington, DC. EMILY FRAPPIER ’04 recently published a book titled Reclaiming Jenna, the story of a girl who suffers a personal tragedy that causes her to withdraw. She says that the book follows the rebuilding of her life. She is working on other books as well as writing and directing plays for children at the Enosburg (VT) after-school program. JACQUI BRENNAN ’06 received her M.A. in sociology from Humboldt State University in 2010, with concentrations in sociological practice, teaching sociology, participatory action research, inequality and homelessness. She is working as a research associate through HSU doing process mediation, facilitation and consultation. She also is a street outreach worker with Redwood Community Action Agency/Youth Service Bureau’s RAVEN project, a drop-in and outreach center that serves homeless and at-risk youth of Humboldt County, and is an organic farmer at Earthly Edibles CSA and Organic Matters Ranch. REBECCA BROWN ’06 married Kyle Em- BRADLEY LOWELL-RAYMOND ’04 erson Aug. 14, 2010. She is a kindergarten teacher at Twinfield (VT) Union School. The couple resides in Cabot. married Maggie Elyse Byers Sept. 18, 2010. JONATHAN CHIARAVALLE ’06 has moved JULE MEUNIER ’04 is teaching grades 5 to Portland, OR, and says he loves the city. and 6 in Derby, VT, and pursuing a master’s degree in mathematics through UVM’s Vermont Mathematics Initiative program. GRETCHEN DESAUTELS ’06 had a baby HEIDI PICKERING ’04 earned a master’s degree in art and liberal studies at Skidmore College. JANELLE LUSSIER ’05 was planning to more than 800 hours building a disc golf course at Westfield YMCA’s Camp Shepard in Westfield, MA which serves over 200 children a day during the summer. June 25, 2011. They live in Waterville, VT. welcomed their first baby, son Ozias Ambrose Peabody, Sept. 14, 2010. IAN SMITH ’06 has been working on his COLIN SORENSON ’05 founded his JAMES THOMPSON ’07 and JARED THOMAS ’06 were honored in 2008 by human resources department at Copley Hospital in Morrisville, VT. She also is president of the Vermont Healthcare Human Resources Association. JILLYAN JAMES ’07 was planning a EMILY LUNEAU ’07 married Jesse Hanley photography for Counterpoint and working with another artist who is starting a magazine about Vermont artists. CHRISTINA BRADLEY ’06 works in the Joe Fiorini on New Year’s Eve 2010. Her daughter, Mikayla, was maid of honor; she was given in marriage by her two sons, Frederick and Christopher; and the groom’s two sons, Jordan and Joseph, were the best men. The couple lives in Fairfield, Vermont. ANDREW GARDNER ’06 volunteered MICHAEL PEABODY ’05 and STEPHANIE THOMPSON PEABODY ’09 were married in October 2006. They Stephen Splonskowski May 14, 2011. CHRISTINE GRISGRABER ’07 married boy, Levi, in August 2009. JEAN NEW ’06 reports she is doing JILL BARNUM ’06 was planning to wed have a baby daughter, Petra Ivy Steele (right). Kara is still working for Vermont Cares. June 2011 wedding to Jeffrey Viens in Waterbury Center. Jillyan is a librarian at PKC Corporation and at St. Michael’s College, where she is working toward a master’s degree in library and information sciences. wed Matthew Germaine in August 2011. renewable-energy business, Local Energy LLC, in Stowe, VT, in February 2010. Among other services, the firm installs solar panels for homes and businesses. KARA CASEY ’07 & RIGEL STEELE ’06 Ph.D. in Edinburgh, Scotland. Vermont Governor Jim Douglas for the their information-technology firm — Acute Technology in Morrisville — at a ceremony celebrating the impact of the entrepreneurial spirit in Vermont. DEBRA SUTTON WATERS ’06 and her husband, Bryan, biked more than 4,500 miles from Vermont to Mexico and back, then left Vermont again for the West Coast. You can read about their amazing journey at www.thrubike.net. CHAD TANNER ’07 is the owner of Aloha on July 2, 2011. The couple lives in Rochester. JESSIE FORAND ’09 joined the St. Albans Messenger as a staff writer in May 2011. STEPHANIE HUMPHREY ’09 and her family moved to South Carolina in July 2009. Stephanie became engaged in April 2011 and is planning a September 2012 wedding. Her son turns 5 this year. COLLEEN HUNTLEY ’09 was planning an August 2011 wedding to Corey Cole. KEVIN MICHAEL PAQUET ’09 is engaged to Cara Louise Tucker; they plan to marry in May 2012. MARCY EDELSTEIN ’10 directed the Lamoille County Players in Moon Over Buffalo, a comedy by Ken Ludwig, in May 2011. KATHRYN JOBIN ’10 married Jonathan Smith of Turners Falls, MA, May 13, 2011, at Lake Morey Resort in Fairlee, VT. JEFFREY NOWLAN M.A. ’10 is engaged to Jessica Donnelly. The couple resides in Shelburne. Winds — Ancient Ways Healing Massage in Hardwick, VT. Chad graduated from the Hawaiian Islands School of Massage, with 1,400 hours of medical massage training and worked at Waimea Hospital in Hawaii before returning to Vermont to open his business. Chad incorporates a variety of techniques into his practice, including traditional Hawaiian hot stone, pregnancy and infant/child massage, and Thai, Swedish and other therapy styles. MELISSA PIZZO ’10 was slated to begin DANIELLE LAFAILLE ’08 was planning to in Bradford, VT, with youth recovering from substance abuse. She is applying to graduate school. pursue certification in Rolfing, a therapeutic, connective-tissue therapy, in Colorado. AMANDA THOMAS ’08 and SCOTT GRANER ’09 announced their engagement. AISHA CAMERON ’09 works part-time at Otter Creek Associates in Brattleboro, VT, and has begun a part-time private psychotherapy practice. Like Grandmother, Like Grandson... PAULINE GARCEAU, ’45 and grandson NASH GARCEAU, ’15 (a current student at JSC) displayed their pride at a 2011 holiday family gathering in Connecticut. Originally from St. Albans, Pauline taught school after earning her degree from what was then Johnson Normal School. After her husband returned from the service, the couple moved to Woodbridge, Conn., and started a family. They eventually had seven children, who became Pauline’s full-time occupation! She now has 11 grandchildren, including Nash, and two great-grandchildren with another on the way. Nash is on track to graduate from JSC in 2015. Thanks to Pauline’s daughter Joanne for sending this “all in the family” photo! 46 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 STACI CUTTING ’09 married Bryant Harvey graduate school at Antioch University in fall 2011. JACQUELINE POUTRE ’10 received her M.B.A. from Clarkson University in May 2011 and planned to join her fiancé in Colorado. CHARLOTTE ROOZEKRANS ’10 is the manager of the Winooski (VT) Farmer’s Market. KYLA SUAREZ ’10 works at Valley Vista SARA ANN FARNSWORTH ’11 has a new name as of her Oct. 30, 2010, marriage. She is now Sara Arman. BENJAMIN CHAUCER ’11, former Student Government Association president at JSC, was one of four leaders from Vermont who traveled to Washington, DC, in summer 2011 to urge Congress to raise the federal debt ceiling. One of 120 student leaders present from around the country representing 2 million college students (including 15,000 from Vermont), Ben was among the leaders who signed a letter to President Obama and members of the Senate. DOMINIQUE COUTURE ’11 is executive administrative assistant at Par-Springer Miller and says she is very excited about her position, which she assumed within weeks of graduating from JSC. 20s LORA H. (MARCKRES) ATHERTON ’27 died Sept. 26, 2011, at age 103. She was born in Craftsbury, VT, where she once taught. She also taught in Wolcott and Greensboro for 30 years. CYNTHIA (RAINE) DUVAL ’26 died Feb. 2, 2011, at age 102. She leaves a daughter, Judith, and her husband, Stanley; a son, Lawrence, and his wife, Jo; and several grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband, Lawrence; a daughter, Janet; and a son, Douglas. ARDELLE (CORSE) SPAULDING ’39 died Aug. 22, 2011. Born in Fletcher, she graduated from Cambridge High School in 1937 and from Johnson Normal School 1939, then began her teaching career. She earned her bachelor’s degree in education from the University of Vermont in 1973 and taught at BFA-Fairfax until 1983. ALICE M. (MINOTT) SWEET ’33 died at County Medical Care Facility in Mount Pleasant, MI. Frances received her teaching certificate from Johnson Normal School, the first incarnation of Johnson State College. her home in Waterbury Center, VT, Nov. 15, 2011, just short of her 100th birthday. Alice enjoyed a long and rewarding teaching career, beginning in several one-room schools. She continued through the years with the exception of taking some time away to raise her three children (Gayle, Tom, and Carol). In 1975, she retired after teaching in Waterbury elementary schools. She was married to Lynwood “Jack” Sweet of Johnson, who predeceased her in August 1989. ANNA LOIS (BEERS) LAMOS ’38 died 40s 30s FRANCES MAY (WARREN) BEAUPRE ’39 passed away at the Isabella April 28, 2011. Anna graduated from Bristol High School and continued her education at the Johnson Normal School. In addition to raising her family, Anna taught school in Fletcher, Moretown and Duxbury. She earned a B.A. in education and retired as a teaching principal from Duxbury Elementary School following 35 years of service. She is survived by two daughters, Virginia Martin and her husband, and Darleen Ross and her husband; her daughter-in-law; eight grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. Anna was predeceased by a son, David Lamos, and three sisters and a brother. AVIS C. (WANZER) DODD ’39 died Oct. 12, 2011 at the age of 91, in East Fairfield, VT. She attended Johnson Normal School and went on to teach in one-room schoolhouses, including Gould Hill School in Fairfield and Chester A. Arthur School in North Fairfield. EDITH PATTEE ’36 died June 12, 2011. She attended to Johnson Normal School and the University of Vermont; taught in Georgia and Irasburg schools, and worked as a clerk in the accounting department of the Central Vermont Railway. She is survived by her eight nieces and nephews, their spouses and their children. AMY (COX) BROMLEY ’40 died Nov. 27, 2010. After graduating from Brigham Academy, Johnson Normal School and the University of Vermont, she went on to teach for 43 years. She started in a one-room schoolhouse with eight grades, then taught high-school math and science. Her last teaching job was in Westfield, MA. She is survived by her two daughters, Sue Juliano and Lynn Bromley; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her sisters, brothers and infant daughter, Carol Lee. DOROTHY L. (GAUVIN) DESROSIERS ’40 died April 27, 2011. Dorothy’s higher education began at Johnson Normal School, and she received her first teaching contract in Barre in 1940. She received a B.A. in humanities and social sciences from Southeastern Massachusetts University in 1973 and worked as an elementary school teacher in the New Bedford public school system from 1964 until her retirement in 1988. The last 15 of those years were spent at the Elizabeth Carter Brooks School as a Title I tutor, and she continued to tutor neighborhood children after retirement. Dorothy was a member of many charitable organizations. She is survived by her daughter, Theresa Yates; her son, Raymond Desrosiers; and five grandchildren. She also leaves her “honorary daughter” Maureen Morss, and numerous nieces, nephews and friends, many of whom knew her as “Aunt Dot.” She was predeceased by her first husband, Arthur Trudo, who died during World War II in Germany; her husband Roland Desrosiers; her constant companion, Tony Boudreau; and two brothers and a sister. EVELYN M. (DASHNER) DIKE ’41 died Feb. 6, 2009, at 87. Evelyn began teaching at a one-room school in South Washington, VT, and later taught in Bristol and Middlebury. In addition to teaching for 41 years full time and 10 years part time, she was a member of the Mount Abraham School Board for 28 years and served as a library trustee in Bristol and Bristol Historical Society. She married Kenneth Dike in June 1945. She is survived by her five children, 11 grandchildren, three step-grandchildren, a great-grandchild, six step-greatgrandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. PERLEY GRISWOLD ’41 died April 24, 2011, at 94. He taught for many years and after retiring ran a bicycle shop in Norwall, MA, which is now operated by his son. He had six children, and his daughter Nancy lived with him in his later years. RUTH E. (PORTER) MacLEAN ’41 died May 4, 2011. She taught briefly in Hyde Park before moving to Hingham, MA, where she continued teaching and met her husband, Frank who predeceased her in 1990. She was an active member of her church choir for more than 60 years. She is survived by her sons, Douglas and Bruce and their spouses; her daughters, Barbara Fisher and Nancy Fitzgerald; and three granddaughters. GRACE (LUNNA) MINER ’40 died May 15, 2011, at 91. She graduated from Newport Center High School where she was a standout basketball player. She received her teaching certificate from Johnson Normal School and taught for more than 30 years. While teaching second grade at Lamoille Central Academy, she was also the basketball coach. Grace ended her teaching career as the first kindergarten teacher at Hyde Park Elementary School. She leaves a daughter, Katherine Thompson, and her husband; a son, John Miner and his wife; and a brother, two sisters, numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband, John; a daughter, Peggy Lynch; and five brothers and a sister. jsc faculty & staff members MARJORIE JOY BOYCE BRADLEY, former JSC staff member, died Jan. 27, 2011. MARY BRENNEMAN, former anthropology professor at JSC, where she also served as president of Faculty Senate, died May 4, 2011. Survivors include her husband, Ted; four daughters, Edith Leslie Wheelock, Tracy Gandin, Laurie Covington and Valerie Whitaker; two sons, Robin Whitaker Wright and Gavin David Wright; and three sisters, Sarah Se, Phyllis Robinson and Carol Arnold. Also surviving are 12 grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, several nieces and nephews, and her beloved friend Clare. DON M. GAMBLE died Sept. 2, 2011, at his home in Moretown, VT. He grew up in Iowa, earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Syracuse University, and served in the U.S. Air Force. Among Don’s post-Air Force professions, he felt most deeply about his time as a professor at JSC, helping to shape the futures of young people and humbly offering his wisdom and wit. Don was also involved with the American Legion Post 59 in Waterbury. He enjoyed traveling and had visited most of the United States as well as Europe, Scandinavia, and Africa. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 47 jsc 2011 students The JSC community was saddened by the tragic deaths of three promising students during the fall 2011 semester: REBECCA BAPP, age 21, died Nov. 12, 2011, as the result of a blood clot in her heart. A resident of Brownington, VT, she worked at the Community College of Vermont in Newport. She was a junior in JSC’s External Degree Program. TIMOTHY M. DREW ’12 died Sept. 28, 2011, from a drowning accident at Waterbury Dam, at the age of 39. Tim was born in Berlin and graduated in 1990 from Montpelier High School. He attended the Community College of Vermont before transferring to JSC in 2010. He studied psychology and sociology and was interested in substance abuse and treatment. PATRICK M. KEEFE ’12 died Dec. 3, 201l, from injuries received in a car accident, at age 22. He had recently completed his B.A. in business and was planning to attend JSC’s December graduation reception with his family just two weeks later. Patrick moved to Vermont with his family from his birthplace of Tucker, GA, in 2001 and graduated from BFA-St. Albans in 2007. Patrick is survived by his wife, Lindsay (Ploof) Keefe, who remains a student at JSC; parents Kevin and Peggy Keefe; sister Kelly and her husband, Jeff Taylor; sister Kerry Thurman and Steven Sager; sister-in-law Meagan Ploof; and many nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. HAZEN GORDAN NILES ’49 died Nov. 18, 2011. He earned his B.A. in education from Johnson State College and went on to earn a master’s degree in education from Sul Ross State University in Alpine, TX. He taught in both Vermont and Texas and met his wife of 33 years, Alice Schultz, in El Paso. PAULINE (SIMPSON) PALERMO ’45 died at Berlin (VT) Health and Rehab Center Oct. 1, 2011. She and her five siblings were all born in Danville and graduated from Cabot High School. Pauline graduated from Johnson Normal School with a B.S. degree and completed some graduate work at Lyndon State College. She worked at WWII-related factories in Connecticut from 1942-1944, then taught in a one-room schoolhouse in Plainfield for a year before moving to Marlboro, MA, and teaching there. Pauline rounded out her teaching career at Danville (VT) Elementary School, teaching first and third grades. She and her husband had two daughters. INA (CLARK) WOODWARD ’40 died April 8, 2011. After graduating from Johnson, she taught school in a one-room schoolhouse in Jonesville and later at Burlington High School. She was known for her musical talent, playing piano with Joe Leveque’s Big Band and the Green Mountain Banjos. She is survived by her daughter, Diana Green and her husband; her sons Larry, Derrel and Lonnie and their spouses; and several grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband Winfred; brother Norman Clark; and sisters Gladys Clark and Quita Kenyon. 50s FRANKLIN S. ADAMS ’56 died June 13, 2010. Franklin received his teaching degree from JSC and taught at several schools in Vermont, including Randolph Junior High, Rochester Junior High, and Hartford High School in White River Junction. He also taught at Penn State College, the University of MichiganDearborn, Wayne State Community College and Goddard College. Franklin was an environmental activist, a photographer and a model-train enthusiast. He is survived by wife, four children, 12 grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. RENE L. BLANCHARD ’56 died Nov. 29, 2011. Rene grew up with a passion for playing sports, especially basketball. Over his high school and college career playing basketball, he scored 1,000 points. Rene went to school at Johnson State College for education and received his master’s degree for history and government from St. Michael’s College. His many accomplishments including teaching government, U.S. history, economics and physical education for 28 years in Winooski; coaching soccer, baseball and girls’ and boys’ basketball for 18 years; winning three consecutive state championships for the Winooski Boys Basketball team; being inducted into the JSC Athletics Hall of Fame in 1982 and the Vermont Basketball Coaches Association in 2009; and being named Basketball Coach of the Year in 1970. After retirement, Rene was an Essex Junction trustee and a member of 48 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 the Vermont House of Representatives from 1995 to 2000. as do his three children and their families, including eight grandchildren. KENNETH R. CHADWICK ’55 died May NANCY (GALLUP) PEPIN ’69 died May 24, 2011 at 77. He received his B.A. in education from JSC and his master’s in education from the University of Vermont. Ken began his long teaching career in Marshfield, VT, where he also served as the head coach for the varsity basketball team that won a state title under his leadership. He held teaching positions in South Royalton and Norwich before joining the staff of Waterbury High School. During his tenure as a teaching principal in Waterbury, he was instrumental in starting the school’s first kindergarten program. Ken is survived by his wife of 58 years, Janet Chadwick; their children, Lawrence “Larry” Chadwick, Linda Chadwick and her husband, and James, Brian, Jeffrey and Ronald Chadwick and their wives; 11 grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren; two sisters and two brothers. He was predeceased by two brothers. 17, 2011, at the Vermont Respite House in Williston. She graduated high school from Peoples Academy. She is survived by her husband, Thomas Pepin; stepson, Chad, and his wife; two brothers; three granddaughters; and several nieces and nephews. STEPHEN D. GOOD ’56 died July 2, 2011 in Florida. After earning his B.A. in education at JSC, he went on to receive his M.A. in administration at St. Michael’s College. He spent 37 years in the education field, retiring in 1994 from the Huntington (NY) Elementary School, which had sought him out to open the school in 1969. Stephen also served on the Shelburne (VT) Selectboard from 1999-2005 and the Mater Christi School Board from 1995-1997. He is survived by his wife, Gloria; daughter Stephanie Webler and her husband; son Gregory Good; three brothers, Glenn, Douglas, and James; two sisters, Kathleen Pancoast and Malinda Good; and numerous grandchildren, nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. He was predeceased by his son, Robert. 60s ELAINE A. (SQUIRE) DUNBAR ’60 died Sept. 3, 2011, at 72. Born in Randolph, VT, she received her teaching degree from JSC, then taught in Craftsbury and Walden. In her spare time she helped her husband and family with the farm. She enjoyed reading (especially westerns) and gardening. STEPHEN FOSTER ’65 passed away June 12, 2011. Stephen taught school until 1981, when he joined his father-in-law’s drafting business. He retired in 2010. He is survived by his wife of 42 years, Cindy; his daughter, Kelly Foster; two sisters, Joan Welch and Mary Lou Kreis and their spouses; and many nieces, nephews and other family members. HENRY MARSHIA, JR ’60 died Dec. 29, 2010, in St. Albans, VT. Henry served with the U.S. Army during the Korean War and then was a teacher for 33 years. His wife of 54 years, MARIE MARSHIA ’60, survives him, 70s DIANE CARTER ’76 died July 9, 2011 at 57. She received an M.A. degree from Goddard College. She worked at Vermont Sports Today and the C.H. Dana Co., and most recently she was a freelance writer. KATHLEEN (GRANT) HUBBARD ’71 died Sept. 5, 2011, in Killington. She graduated from Woodstock Union High School and, after graduating from JSC, attended Finger Lakes School of Massage. She had her own massage- thera py practice, called Bodynamics, and managed Waterwheel Trading Company in Killington. In her spare time, she enjoyed hiking, singing, gardening, photography and her spiritual practice of Sahaj Marg. LOU JARVIS ’78 was lost to the JSC community on Sept. 30, 2011, after a year-long battle with esophageal cancer. As men’s golf coach at JSC, Lou led the golf program since its revival in the fall of 2009. A resident of South Burlington and a native of Essex, he served his country in both the Army National Guard and then in the Navy during the Vietnam War. Upon returning home, Jarvis enrolled at JSC. He began his golf teaching career at Mt. Snow Golf School, went on to the Stratton Golf School, and then served as head professional at various courses. He loved to teach the game of golf and created golf camps to introduce youth to the game. He was proud of his life membership in the PGA, having first joined in 1990. A “Celebration of Life” for Lou was held at Catamount Country Club Oct. 8. Donations in his honor can be made to: ASPCA, 424 East 92nd St., New York, NY 10128 (www.aspca.org) or the Chittenden County Humane Society, 142 Kindness Ct., South Burlington, VT 05403 (www. chittendenhumane.org). See tribute at right. JAMES WALTER LAROE ’72 died Oct. 16, 2011. He was born in Montpelier and graduated from Central Catholic High School in St. Albans. He married Sharon Ann Lavigne and was happily married for 39 years. James worked at the Fonda Container Company and IBM until he retired. 80s RAYMOND BETIT ’83 died Jan. 19, 2011. A veteran of WW II, he was stationed in Japan and served six months of active duty in Germany. After his discharge, he became a licensed embalmer and funeral director. He worked for and owned several businesses in the Bennington area and also served as town Lister, village auditor and justice of the peace at various times. Ray was active in the Sacred Heart St. Francis de Sales Church and was a member of the Knights of Columbus Council 307, the Fourth Degree Assembly, the American Legion Post 13, and the VFW Post 1332. He was predeceased by his wife, Kathleen, in 2005, and is survived by four daughters and sons-in-law, nine grandchildren, and many other loved ones. DONNAL DEAN MALONEY Jr. ’80, of Newport, VT, died Sept. 17, 2011, in Lebanon NH. He attended Columbia University in New York and received his master’s degree at JSC. He taught at Vermont middle schools, high schools and colleges around the Newport and Orleans area. In his spare time Donnal enjoyed skiing, mountain climbing, traveling, cycling and playing the piano player. FRANCES (KILLEEN) PATRY, M.A. ’80 died Feb. 28, 2011. Frances was devoted throughout her life to education and the arts. Her husband of 66 years, Joseph, survives her, as do her nine children and their families, 35 grandchildren, and 46 greatgrandchildren. JAMES PROPER ’82 died Feb. 1, 2011. His parents and younger brother survive him. 90s MICHAEL GUILD ’97 died July 22, 2011, at 62. Michael served in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, stationed in Germany. Michael and his wife, Nancy, lived in Calais and later moved to Williamstown, where he spent the rest of his life. STEVEN PHILLIP HOWARD ’98, of Burlington, VT, died Oct. 4, 2011. He loved being near the water, especially Lake Champlain. He enjoyed boating, flying and the 12 years he spent in Key West, FL. Steven founded various entrepreneurial ventures and was a pioneering buyer’s broker, assisting buyers with real-estate transactions. SHANE R. LEACH, who last attended JSC in 1990, died April 25, 2011. He graduated from Colchester High School and went on to study business at Johnson. He is survived by his wife, Christy Berg Leach; daughter Samantha Elizabeth; brother Craig; and parents Russell and Kathy Leach. SUSAN (KAMUS) McCANNA’93 died April 15, 2011. She taught kindergarten for 18 years in Dummerston, VT, and touched many lives during that time. She is survived by her husband of 39 years, Jeffrey; their son, Benjamin; her grandson, Otis; her mother, Marjorie Kamus; her brother Robert; and numerous nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her father, Frank. RUTH (MORSE) TAYLOR ’92 died Sept. 15, 2011 in Burlington. Ruth graduated from Bristol High School and the UVM School of Dental Hygiene in 1959, and later received her bachelor’s degree from JSC. “Toothy Ruthie” not only worked as a dentist, she also worked for the Vermont Health Department and the Water Supply Division of the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation. She loved creating family traditions, volunteering at the Shelburne Museum and playing Scrabble. the Vermont Student Assistance Corp. for more than 20 years. 00s CATHERINE (SCHWARZ) ROSSI ’06, of JEAN (BROSSEAU) BURNOR ’03 died July 25, 2011 at 58. Jean earned her bachelor’s degree through JSC’s External Degree Program over 25 years. A lifelong resident of Franklin County, Jean worked with Stowe, VT, died July 17, 2011 at 63. Catherine received an “Outstanding Caregiver Award” in 2007 for providing outstanding care for a child with special needs. Louis Jarvis: A 7-iron Approach to Life By Bill Boldwin The Vermont golfing community lost an avid golfer, teacher, coach and all-around nice guy Sept. 30 when Louis H. Jarvis died at age 62 after a yearlong battle with esophageal cancer. Many of Lou’s friends, colleagues and students were stunned to learn of his death, since Lou had been seen on the golf course only weeks earlier with the same enthusiasm and focus that made him a Class A Professional in the PGA. An alum of Johnson State College, class of 1978, Lou returned there in 2009 to become the head men’s golf coach, a role he truly loved. He taught his players to think about the game — to think less about how far the ball was traveling and more about how they were finishing their swing; to spend less time aiming a putt and more time reading the line. “The desired results will come as long as you stay true to your swing,” he would tell them. “It’s all about muscle memory — it’s about putting in the time, committing to the game and enjoying the people you play with,” Lou would say. He began his instructional career at Mount Snow Golf School in West Dover, Vt., and continued on to Stratton Golf School. In the ensuing years he worked with hundreds of novice, intermediate and advanced golfers, improving their skills and appreciation for the game. Every first lesson with Lou consisted of him asking the student to take out a club to hit a few balls. Almost without fail, students of all abilities would select the driver. Lou would then tell them that if their goal was to be able to hit the longest drive, then they probably shouldn’t waste their time with lessons from him. He didn’t care how far someone could hit the ball. After all, he would point out, the most you’ll use your driver in a round of golf is 14 or 15 times. Considering the average golfer hits the ball close to 100 times, Lou was more interested in teaching success on the other 85 shots. “OK,” he would say. “Let’s put those drivers away and take out a 7-iron.” It was then the lesson would begin. Lou considered himself an ambassador of the game. He always presented himself in a professional manner and insisted those he golfed with do the same out of respect for others on the course and the game itself. Win, lose or draw, Coach Jarvis would leave the Johnson State athletics building after each visit with the same remark. He would look you straight in the eye and say, “Go Badgers!” Every time. Lou’s last year was a tough one. With the support of wife and best friend, Joan, and his dog Scout at his side, Lou was able to keep active until the very end. He never complained, never asked for help. He lived his life the way he played the game, with intensity, integrity and focus. It’s a legacy he leaves with Johnson State and the Badgers golf team. Just days before his passing, and with Lou very weak, yet still fighting the cancer with the tenacity of his school’s mascot, he provided two final words: “Go Badgers!” he said. You can bet that we will, coach. Bill Boldwin succeeded Jarvis as JSC men’s golf coach. Michael Osborne, assistant athletic director and sports information director at JSC, also contributed to this article. This article originally appeared in the Winter 2012 issue of NCAA Champion. JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 49 50 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 2 0 11 R E U N I O N W E E K E N D HOMECOMING … a good time was had by all! JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 51 N O M I N AT I O N AWA R D ALUMNI 2012/13 ALUMNI AWARD NOMINATION FORM Use this form or submit your nomination online at www.jsc.edu/AlumniNominate I am nominating this person for (please select ONE): Distinguished Alumni Award | Recognizing outstanding career and public service achievements Distinguished Faculty Award | Recognizing outstanding teaching, service, scholarship and dedication to JSC students Distinguished Staff Award | Recognizing outstanding commitment and dedication to the mission of JSC Nominee’s Name: ___________________________________________________________ JSC Graduation Year: ______________ Nominee’s Street Address: ____________________________________________________________________________________ City: __________________________________________________________ State: ___________ ZIP: ____________________ Email:____________________________________________ Phone: ___________________________________________________ NOMINATED BY: Your Name: ________________________________________________________________ JSC Graduation Year: ______________ 2012/13 Address: _______________________________________________City/State: ___________________________ ZIP: ___________ Email:____________________________________________ Phone: ___________________________________________________ Supporting Information, Awards, Comments (please attach additional sheet, if necessary): _______________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ N O M I N AT I O N Return this form to: Johnson State College Office of Alumni Relations, 337 College Hill, Johnson, VT 05656 2012/13 HALL OF FAME NOMINATION FORM Use this form or submit your nomination online at www.jsc.edu/HallOfFame I am nominating this person for (please select ONE): Student-Athlete Team Honorary Other: ______________________________________________ Nominee’s Name: __________________________________________________________________JSC Class of: ______________ OF FA M E Nominee’s Street Address: ____________________________________________________________________________________ City: __________________________________________________________ State: ___________ ZIP: ____________________ Email:____________________________________________ Phone: ___________________________________________________ NOMINATED BY: 2012/13 HALL Your Name: ________________________________________________________________ JSC Graduation Year: ______________ Address: _______________________________________________City/State: ___________________________ ZIP: ___________ Email:____________________________________________ Phone: ___________________________________________________ Supporting Information, Awards, Comments (please attach additional sheet, if necessary): _______________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Return this form to: Johnson State College Hall of Fame, Athletics Department, 337 College Hill, Johnson, VT 05656 52 | JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 JSC Alumni Questionnaire TELL US YOUR NEWS! GIVE US YOUR THOUGHTS! STAY CONNECTED! Name: _______________________________________________________________ New address? Yes No Mailing Address: ____________________________________________________________________________ City: ___________________________________________________State: ____________ ZIP: ____________ Phone: _____________________________________ Email: ________________________________________ Year of Graduation (or dates attended JSC): _______________ Major/Degree Earned: ______________________________ What is your current career/occupation? ____________________________________________________________ JSC ALUMNI COUNCIL! As a member of the Alumni Council, you’ll help plan alumni events and guide the work of the JSC Alumni Office. Send us your news! News regarding weddings, births, promotions, hobbies and more — about yourself or other JSC alums you know of — is of interest to our readers. We will post it on the alumni Web site and print it in the next issue of Johnson Views. ________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________ Members meet 3 times a year (via conference call, Skype, etc. if you’re far away). One of these meetings takes place during Check here if you would like to receive information about accessing the JSC alumni website. (Be sure to provide your email address above.) Would you like to nominate someone for a JSC Alumni Award? Let us know who you believe deserves this honor. Homecoming in the fall. Distinguished Faculty Award ________________________________________________________ Serving on the Distinguished Staff Award: _________________________________________________________ Alumni Council is a fun and rewarding experience and a great way to support past, present and future JSC students. Alums from 2000 and later are especially welcome. LEARN MORE! Lauren Philie 802-635-1657 or email lauren.philie @ jsc.edu Distinguished Alumni Award: _____________________________________________________________ Would you like to volunteer on the Alumni Council or the Athletics Hall of Fame? Check your interests here, and we’ll send you information. Organize alumni gatherings in your area. Be a class agent and help organize your next reunion. Be a career mentor to JSC students and recent grads. Check here if you would like information about serving on the JSC Alumni Council. Clip and return this form to: JSC Alumni Office s337 College Hill sJohnson, VT 05656 Or email your information to: jscalum@jsc.edu. FOR THE LATEST ALUMNI NEWS AND UPDATES, VISIT THE JSC ALUMNI AT Let us hear from you! www.alumni.jsc.edu JOHNSON VIEWS 2011/2012 | 53 NonProfit ORG U.S. Postage PAID Burlington, VT Permit No. 399 337 College Hill Johnson, VT 05656-9898 June 1 s&RIDAY Walter Minaert Memorial Golf Tournament 28th Annual Join us at the Stowe Country Club for this annual event. Shotgun start at 9 a.m., with lunch to follow. Sign up online or contact the JSC Athletics Department at 802-635-1486 for details June 28, 2012s4HURSDAY JSC Night at Centennial Field FALL 2012 Homecoming/Parents Weekend September 21–22, 2012 Plan to join us for fun-filled early autumn weekend on the JSC campus! We’ll have some new events just for alumni, and because we’re combining it with Parents Weekend for current students, the campus will be jumping! Mark your calendar, and be on the lookout for complete details this summer. Join us at Centennial Field in Burlington for JSC Night at the Vermont Lake Monsters. Enjoy a pre-game BBQ at 6 p.m., followed by a minor league game with Vermont’s own Lake Monsters, Champ (and Boris Badger!) and fellow JSC alums. This is a great time to bring the whole family, invite former classmates and just have fun!