All posts by Joanne

St. Cecilia to bring jazz organ master Joey DeFrancesco and his ‘People’ to town Feb. 7

Joey DeFrancesco having fun in concert. (JoeyDefracesco.com)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

In publicity material for Van Morrison’s 2018 all-jazzed up release “You’re Driving Me Crazy” his partner in musical crime is listed at “Hammond hero” Joey DeFrancesco. Maybe the nickname is a little bit of Morrison’s infamous Irish humor and maybe it is simply stating the obvious.

Either way, DeFrancesco and his Hammond heroics will be on full display when St. Cecilia Music Center bring multi-talented, multi-Grammy nominated jazz man and his quartet “The People” to Grand Rapids on Thursday, Feb. 7.

Tickets are still available.

DeFrancesco is a four-time Grammy Award nominee, with more than 30 recordings as a leader under his belt. He has received countless jazz awards including being inducted into the inaugural Hammond B3 Organ Hall of Fame in 2014, as well as being named the top organ player in the Critics Polls in DownBeat Magazine 11 times over the past 15 years and the Readers Polls every year since 2005.

That certainly qualifies as being a “Hammond hero.”
 

Accompanying DeFrancesco at St. Cecilia will be his group — known as “The People”, and including drummer Michael Ode, guitarist Dan Wilson and saxophonist Troy Roberts. And Joey may well also break out his trumpet and singing voice during the show.
  
 
“Joey DeFrancesco and “The People” … is bound to have guests swinging in their seats,” Cathy Holbrook, SCMC executive director, said in supplied material. “Their amazing jazz, blues, soul sound will really speak to the hearts of true jazz lovers and it’s something different then we have featured in the past with Joey on the Hammond B3 Organ.”

DeFrancesco’s latest Grammy nomination was with “The People”, in 2017 for “Project Freedom”, an album that features DeFrancesco on the Hammond B-3 organ, along with contributions on keyboards, trumpet and as a vocalist. “Project Freedom” includes originals by DeFrancesco and covers of Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come” and John Lennon’s “Imagine”.

DeFrancesco is no stranger to a little genre bouncing, and in 2018 he teamed up with Van Morrison on Morrison’s hard-driving soul-jazz sounding 2018 album titled “You’re Driving Me Crazy”. The album included Morrison, JDeFrancesco, Wilson, Roberts and Ode.


Joey DeFrancesco, in brief

Joey DeFrancesco (Jay Gilbert)

DeFrancesco was raised in Philadelphia where his musical roots in jazz, blues and other musical art forms were born, according to his website bio. The son of “Papa” John DeFrancesco, an organist himself, the younger DeFrancesco remembers playing as early as four-years-old. Soon after, his father began bringing him to gigs in Philadelphia, sitting in with legendary players like Hank Mobley and Philly Joe Jones.


Some argue that DeFrancesco’s emergence in the 1980s marked the onset of a musical renaissance as organ jazz had all but gone out of vogue from the mid-’70s to the mid-’80s “until DeFrancesco reignited the flame with his vintage Hammond organ and Leslie speaker cabinet.”


DeFrancesco has recorded and toured with his own groups as well as musical whose who names such as Ray Charles, Diana Krall, Nancy Wilson, George Benson, James Moody, John Scofield, Bobby Hutcherson, Jimmy Cobb, John McLaughlin, Larry Coryell and David Sanborn.

He currently also hosts a weekly program on SiriusXM Radio’s Real Jazz channel, fittingly called “Organized.”

 
Tickets for Joey DeFrancesco and “The People” are $35 and $40 and can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at scmc-online.org .
 

A pre-concert reception for $15 begins at 6:30 pm, including wine and hors d’oeuvres, is available by reservation in advance by calling the center. A post-concert party with dessert, coffee and wine is open to all ticket-holders to meet the artists, obtain autographs and CD purchases.

The final St. Cecilia Jazz Series Concert will be on March 7 and will feature rising jazz star singer Veronica Swift and the Benny Green Trio.

For more information on Joey DeFrancesco visit his website; for a video of DeFrancesco and his quartet “The People”, visit here.

Snapshots: Wyoming and Kentwood news you need to know

By WKTV Staff
Ken@wktv.org

Quote of the Day

“No matter at all, I replied; for the point is not who said the words, but whether they are true or not.”

Plato, The Dialogues of Plato, Vol 1
The Lee High School’s current mascot is a caricature of Confederate soldier. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

To change or not to change the Rebel

When the Godfrey-Lee Board of Education announced it was going to host forums to discuss whether to change or keep its Rebel mascot, the goal, according to school officials, was to have an open and honest discussion among students, parents, staff and the community. For the complete story, visit here.

Young people can get too much screen time, no matter what they say. (Pexels)

Study finds kids at risk for myopia

Nearsightedness, also called myopia, is on the rise worldwide. And kids, who spend long hours playing on smartphones and tablets, might be at greater risk for vision problems, a new study suggests. For the complete story, visit here.

An Allegiant Airlines plane at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport (Supplied/Ford International Airport)

And the beat goes on at Ford airport

The Right Place, Inc., in collaboration with the Gerald R. Ford International Airport and the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, announced that Allegiant Air, LLC will be opening a new base at GRR in Grand Rapids. This expansion will result in the creation of at least 66 new jobs and a capital investment of $42.8 million. For the complete story, visit here.



Fun fact:

2 hours, 19 minutes

Average screen time of an American child under 8 years old in 2017. (Source)

Local high school sports schedule includes WKTV featured girls basketball games

WKTV offers on-demand viewing of the Wyoming and Kentwood high school sports, community events, and government meetings. (WKTV)

Mike Moll, WKTV Volunteer Sports Director
sports@wktv.org

WKTV Featured Game high school sport coverage this week will include two girls basketball games, a solo game from Wyoming High Tuesday, and part of a boys-girls basketball doubleheader Friday from Godwin Heights.

The Jan. 15 game will feature Grand Rapids Christian at Wyoming. The Jan. 18 game will featured NorthPointe Christian at Godwin Heights.

Show the local schools your support by going in person, but then watch WKTV for the events that are showcased each week. Check out the broadcast schedule at wktvjournal.org for replay dates and times.

The rest of the current tentative January featured game schedule is:

Tuesday, Jan. 22 — Boys/Girls basketball: Potter’s House at Tri-Unity Christian
Friday, Jan. 25 — Boys/Girls basketball: Middleville T-K at Wyoming
Thursday, Jan. 31 — Boys swimming/diving: Rockford at East Kentwood

In addition our featured games — where our sports crew and remote coverage truck will be on hand — we also have a weekly list of all local sporting contests for local fans to get out and enjoy in person.

 
Featured games are broadcast the night of the contest and then at least once later in the week.

WKTV broadcasts on Wyoming and Kentwood cable channels. On Comcast cable, Channel 25 is the Community Channel, where sports events and other community events are shown; Channel 26 is the Government Channel, where local government meetings and events are shown. On AT&T cable throughout the Grand Rapids area, viewers go to Channel 99, and then are given the choice to watch Wyoming (or Kentwood) Community (Channel 25) or Government (Channel 26) channels.

For complete schedules of programs on WKTV channels, see our Weekly On-air Schedule.

All Featured Games, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV, are available on-demand within a week of play at wktvondemand.com.

 
For a complete schedule of all local high school sports action each week, any changes to the WKTV feature sports schedule, and feature stories on local sports, visit wktvjournal.org/sports/ .

 
Following is this week’s schedule:

Monday, Jan. 14
Boys/Girls Bowling

South Christian @ Wayland
Kelloggsville @ Belding
Wyoming @ Byron Center
Hopkins @ Wyoming Lee
East Kentwood @ Grand Haven
Girls Gymnastics
Potter’s House @ Lowell

Tuesday, Jan. 15
Boys Basketball

Godwin Heights @ Wyoming Lee
Hopkins @ Kelloggsville
Wyoming @ Christian
Wellsprings Prep @ Tri-Unity Christian
Hudsonville @ East Kentwood
Holland Calvary @ Potter’s House
Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Aviation
Creative Tech @ West Michigan Lutheran
Muskegon Catholic Central @ Grand River Prep
Girls Basketball
Kelloggsville @ Hopkins
Christian @ Wyoming – WKTV Featured Event
Fruitport Calvary @ Tri-Unity Christian
East Kentwood @ Hudsonville
Holland Calvary @ Potter’s House
Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Aviation
Creative Tech @ West Michigan Lutheran
Holland Black River @ Grand River Prep
Boys/Girls Bowling
Wyoming @ Unity Christian
Calvin Christian @ Potter’s House

Wednesday, Jan. 16
Boys/Girls Bowling

Wyoming Lee @ Godwin Heights
Middleville T-K @ South Christian
Kelloggsville @ Hopkins
Wayland @ Wyoming
Caledonia @ East Kentwood
Boys Wrestling
Godwin Heights @ Hopkins
Wyoming Lee @ Hopkins
Allendale @ Kelloggsville
Christian @ Wyoming
Caledonia @ East Kentwood
Girls Cheer
Godwin Heights @ NorthPointe Christian
Kelloggsville @ NorthPointe Christian
Wyoming Lee @ NorthPointe Christian
Wyoming @ Zeeland East
East Kentwood @ West Ottawa

Thursday, Jan. 17
Boys Swimming

South Christian @ Muskegon Mona Shores
East Kentwood@ Grandville
Boys/Girls Bowling
Potter’s House @ Hopkins

Friday, Jan. 18
Boys/Girls Bowling

Ottawa Hills @ Godwin Heights
Girls Cheer
Godwin Heights @ West Catholic
Boys Basketball
NorthPointe Christian @ Godwin Heights – WKTV Featured Event
South Christian @ Middleville T-K
Kelloggsville @ Belding
Wyoming @ Benton Harbor
Hopkins @ Wyoming Lee
Tri-Unity Christian @ Zion Christian
Rockford @ East Kentwood
Holland Black River @ Potter’s House
West Michigan Lutheran @ Libertas Christian
Girls Basketball
NorthPointe Christian @ Godwin Heights – WKTV Featured Event
South Christian @ Middleville T-K
Kelloggsville @ Belding
Benton Harbor @ Wyoming
Tri-Unity Christian @ Zion Christian
Rockford @ East Kentwood
Holland Black River @ Potter’s House
West Michigan Lutheran @ Libertas Christian
Boys Wrestling
Wyoming Lee @ Pinconning
Boys Hockey
East Grand Rapids @ East Kentwood

Saturday, Jan. 19
Boys Wrestling

Godwin Heights @ Hopkins
Kelloggsville @ Christian
Wyoming @ Jenison
East Kentwood @ Holt
Boys Basketball
Catholic Central @ South Christian
Girls Cheer
Kelloggsville @ Muskegon Reeths-Puffer
East Kentwood @ Rochester
Girls Dance
East Kentwood @ Wayland
Boys Hockey
FH Central @ East Kentwood

Monday, Jan. 21
Boys/Girls Bowling

Godwin Heights @ Calvin Christian
South Christian @ Christian
Kelloggsville @ Wellsprings Prep
Wyoming @ FH Eastern
Grandville @ East Kentwood
Girls Gymnastics
Potter’s House @ Rockford

Schuler Books hosts national pilot program on civil discourse

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


Since the 2016 elections, we have seen conservatives and liberals pretty much sparring with each other at what seems like a moments notice. But over the past year, a quiet movement has taken place with those of opposing views sitting down and just listening to each other. It is a movement that Schuler Books & Music is joining starting tonight with its program the “Open Discussion Project.”

Starting at 7 p.m at the bookstore, 2660 28th St. SE, and led by moderators, each meeting will be centered on a book of the group’s choosing. Attendees are encouraged to invite a neighbor, colleague, or friend – especially if they hold different political views. Attendees should be committed to having civil discourse where all opinions are treated with respect.

“I think people are tired of being angry and not being able to have a conversation,” said Schuler Books Marketing Coordinator Alana Haley. “You see where the political situation has ended up and I believe people just want to sit-down and have an open discussion.”

The concept is not new. In fact many have been following the “Hands Across the Hills project that brought a group of liberal voters from Massachusetts to meet with conservatives in Kentucky just to talk.

Schuler Books & Music is one of six book stores participating in the pilot program Open Discussion Project. (WKTV)

“At last year’s American Booksellers Association (ABA) conference, there was a bookstore, Quail Ridge Books (in Raleigh, North Carolina), that mentioned it was hosting a civil discourse program where it was trying to bring people together to discuss the issues that divide them,” Haley said.

From there, the discussion lead to launching the program nationally. Before doing that, it was decided that six independent bookstores would participate in a pilot program to help determine the best way to launch the national program, Haley said. Quail Ridge Books as well as Schuler were selected along with a bookstore in Washington, DC, Naperville, Ill., Concord, NH, and Pasadena, CA.

There are a few guidelines and a booklist provided by ABA. Each bookstore determines how it will operate its program. For example, the one in Washington DC, sent out invitations to a variety of panelists to talk about the books with the goal of getting a mix of conservatives and liberals, Haley said.

Schuler Books opened its program to the general public with response being fairly positive.

“We weren’t really sure what the response would be and so far it has been very positive,” Haley said. “We put it on social media and it took off with most people tagging it and sharing ti with others. There really has been no negative.”

For the first meeting, the book “Think Again: How to Reason and Argue” by Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, was selected. There will be sheet available with a list of points from the book that will be discussed so anyone can participate.

The next programs, which are the third Tuesdays of the month (Feb. 19, Mar. 19, April 16, May 21, and June 18) will be focused on a book. The goal is to have those who attend tonight’s meeting to decide which books they would like to include, Haley said.

“It is an opportunity to meet with people who think very differently from you and to understand where they are coming from and why they feel the way they feel,” Haley said. “And hopefully they will do the same.”

In June, the pilot program will be reviewed with a national rollout set for later in 2019. The Open Discussion Project is sponsored by the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) in partnership with the American Booksellers Association (ABA) and the National Institute for Civil Discourse (NICD).

Country superstar Alan Jackson coming to Van Andel Arena Feb. 23

By Mike Klompstra, SMG


Country Music Hall of Famer Alan Jackson will bring a night of hits to Michigan with a concert at SMG-managed Van Andel Arena on Saturday, Feb. 23, 2019, at 7:30pm.


Tickets and information are available at Ticketmaster.com, by phone at 800-745-3000, at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place box offices or by visiting alanjackson.com/tour, where you can find information about Alan, his tour schedule, music and more. 


Alan Jackson’s concerts find the country icon performing hits that have gained him legions of longtime fans, songs that continue to draw new crowds as a younger generation discovers his music. Jackson’s repertoire stands the test of time; it has impacted a field of artists who cite Jackson as an influence. It’s these same songs – many written by Alan – that earned him his place alongside country music’s greatest names and cemented his place in its history with membership in the Country Music Hall of Fame.


Recently inducted to the Songwriters Hall of Fame, Jackson’s membership among music’s all-time greats is part of a long line of career-defining accolades that include three CMA Entertainer of the Year honors, more than 25 years of membership in the Grand Ole Opry, a 2016 Billboard ranking as one of the Top 10 Country Artists of All-Time, induction to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Heritage Award as the most-performed country songwriter-artist of ASCAP’s first 100 years.


The man from rural Newnan, GA has sold nearly 60-million albums worldwide, ranks as one of the 10 best-selling male vocalists of all-time in all genres. He has released more than 60 singles – registering 50 Top Ten hits and 35 #1s (including 26 Billboard chart-toppers). He has earned more than 150 music industry awards – including 18 Academy of Country Music Awards, 16 Country Music Association Awards, a pair of Grammys and ASCAP’s Founders and Golden Note Awards. Jackson is one of the most successful and respected singer-songwriters in music. 


He is in the elite company of Paul McCartney and John Lennon among songwriters who’ve written more than 20 songs that they’ve recorded and taken to the top of the charts. Jackson is one of the best-selling artists since the inception of SoundScan, ranking alongside the likes of Eminem and Metallica. He’s also the man behind one of Nashville’s most-popular new tourist stops, AJ’s Good Time Bar, a four-story honky-tonk in the heart of downtown (along a stretch of Broadway known as the “Honky Tonk Highway”) featuring daily live music and a rooftop view of Music City.

GR theater community mourns death of longtime actor

Rob Thomasma as General MacKenzie in Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None.”

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org

A tremendous amount of outpouring of love could be seen on Facebook as members of the Grand Rapids theater community remembered friend and colleague Rob Thomasma.

Thomasma died over the weekend. His contributions to the theater were well known ranging from make up to performing on stage. He started in the theater as a child with his first production being “The Wizard of Oz.” Since then, he has appeared on stage or behind the scenes at Civic Theatre Jewish Theatre, Heritage Theatre, Circle Theatre, Opera Grand Rapids, Actors’ Theatre, and Grand Valley State University.

His last role was as General MacKenzie in the current Grand Rapids Civic Theatre production of Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None,” which opened on Friday. Many people noted they saw him at Friday’s opening.

“Rob loved theater and his 50-year career has made a lasting impression in our West Michigan community theatre and opera,” said Nancy Brozek, the director of development and community relations for the Grand Rapids Civic Theatre. “He was a talented actor and an extraordinary hair and make up artist.”

Brozek said Thomasma had enjoyed his role as General MacKenzie with many commenting on social media that he said he was happy to return to the stage.

Jack Gillisse will reprise his role as General MacKenzie for the rest of the show’s run, which is through Jan. 27. Gillisse was in the Shadblow Theatre’s summer production of “And Then There Were None,” with Wyoming resident Cathy Van Lopik. 

“We dedicate our production in celebration of Rob’s full and artistic life,” Brozek said. “He is greatly missed.”

For more information about the show, visit grct.org.

City of Kentwood’s Daddy-Daughter Dance set for Saturday, Jan. 26

From a previous year, the City of Kentwood Daddy-Daughter Dance includes fun had by all and memories made. (WKTV)

City of Kentwood


Fathers can dance the night away with their daughters at the City of Kentwood’s annual Daddy-Daughter Dance, which is set for Saturday, Jan. 26 at the Kent District Library — Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch.

With an “Under the Sea” theme, this year’s event will run from 6 to 8 p.m. The evening will include dinner, dessert, crafts, a photo area with props and, of course, dancing.

“We love offering this dance for Kentwood dads and daughters to have a special night out together,” said Val Romeo, Kentwood Parks and Recreation director. “Our Daddy-Daughter Dance sets the stage for a fun evening, making memories that will last a lifetime.”

Tickets cost $20 per pair, $5 per extra person. Pre-registration is required. Those interested in purchasing tickets can go online at kentwood.us/daddydaughter or call 616-656-5270.

The Right Place helps carrier with $42 million expansion at Ford Airport

One of the Allegiant airbuses. The airlines plans to house two such planes at Grand Rapids. (Supplied)

WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


Today The Right Place, Inc., in collaboration with the Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR) and the Michigan Economic Development Corporation (MEDC), announced that Allegiant Air, LLC will be opening a new base at GRR in Grand Rapids. This expansion will result in the creation of at least 66 new jobs and a capital investment of $42.8 million.

Founded in 1998, Allegiant is known as one of America’s premier, ultra-low-cost carriers. The airline offers nonstop service to more than 120 popular destinations across the United States, primarily from small and medium-sized communities. Allegiant currently flies to seven nonstop destinations from GRR, including five in Florida, one in Arizona and one in Nevada. However, with its new base in GRR, the airline will house two Airbus-series aircraft in the city, bringing the resources and flexibility to serve additional routes in the future.

An Allegiant Airbus (Supplied)

To support Allegiant’s two aircraft, the airline will establish a crew and maintenance base that will add at least 66 additional jobs to the airport with a majority of them coming from technical career fields to include pilots, flight attendants and aircraft maintenance personnel. A majority of the new positions are expected to pay more than double the Michigan average wage. These jobs – in addition to existing ground support team members – will continue to fuel the carrier’s already incredible growth at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport.

Also as part of today’s presentation, Allegiant announced it would service two new cities, Nashville, Tennessee and Savannah, Georgia. Plans to begin its base of operations at the Gerald R. Ford Airport start June 4.

“Grand Rapids has been a great city for Allegiant, with solid demand and steady growth over the years,” said Keith Hansen, vice president of government affairs, Allegiant. “It’s a perfect location for a permanent base, where having locally-based aircraft and crews will open a world of opportunity to expand options for both new service and operational hours. This will make travel even more convenient and affordable for both residents and visitors to the area, and further establish Allegiant as a hometown airline for Grand Rapids.”

“Today’s announcement would not have been possible without the support of key state and local agencies and partners,” said Hansen. “We’d like to thank both the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and The Right Place, as well as our long-term partners at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport.”

The MEDC is supporting the expansion with the approval of a $200,000 Michigan Business Development Program performance-based grant.

Birgit Klos, president and CEO of The Right Place (Supplied)

“Allegiant’s decision to open a base at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport is a big win for the region, and will have a ripple effect through our economy beyond the initial jobs and investment,” said Birgit Klohs, President and CEO, The Right Place, Inc. and Board Member of the GRR Airport Authority Board. “It speaks to the strength of our growing airport, which is critical for companies doing business in West Michigan and beyond.”

“Echoing our community partners, the team here at GRR is excited that Allegiant has made the decision to establish a base at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport,” said Brian Picardat, Interim President & CEO, Gerald R. Ford International Airport. “This will bring additional jobs to West Michigan and more travel options for passengers. Thank you to the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and The Right Place for their assistance in bringing this base to Grand Rapids.”

Allegiant began operating at Gerald R. Ford International Airport in 2009 and with today’s announcement now offers nine non-stop routes – to Las Vegas; Phoenix/Mesa, Arizona; to five cities in Florida: Tampa/St. Pete, Punta Gorda/Fort Myers, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando/Sanford and Sarasota/Bradenton; and seasonal service to Nashville and Savannah beginning in June.  Allegiant currently carries more than 300,000 annual passengers through Grand Rapids.

Grand Rapids will become the airline’s 16th aircraft base, which will allow Allegiant to expand its service to and from the city, offer more new non-stop routes in the future, and further connect Grand Rapids businesses, residents and visitors to destinations around the world.

School News Network: New welding lab for high school students ‘big deal’

Kent Career Tech Center welding instructor Jim Swenson has a new virtual welding lab to help high school students learn the art of welding

By James Harger
School News Network


Kent ISD board president Andrea Haidle is not about to take up welding. But she was eager to see the new virtual welding laboratory that was recently installed by the Kent Career Tech Center.

“This is a big deal,” said Haidle, who donned a welding mask and tried the equipment, which uses simulated welding tools and video game technology to teach the art of fusing metal.

“Welding is an important skill,” she said. “More manufacturers seem to want to have people with this skill. This fills a niche we didn’t have.”

Welding is back in demand as the U.S. manufacturing sector is being restored, according to industry experts, who estimate more than 400,000 welding jobs will need to be filled by 2025.

While welding is often self-taught and is offered at the community college level, the Tech Center has not offered welding courses in recent years for its high school students. The new lab will be used for a full two-year program scheduled to begin in the fall of 2019.

Jim Swenson, a veteran welder and teacher who was hired from Newaygo County’s Career-Tech Center, says Kent County’s manufacturing base is ripe for the program. His welding students in Newaygo County were finding jobs in Kent County, he said.

“We’re sitting in one of the biggest markets in the U.S.,” Swenson said. “Eighty-five percent of all consumer goods are affected by welding.” This means welders are highly desired in the workforce, often making six-figure incomes with only a high school degree, he said.

On the virtual equipment, students also learn safety basics without running the risk of injury, Swenson said. “Safety is our No. 1 factor,” he said. While welding relies on technical skills and knowledge, it is also an art, he said.

Kent Career Tech Center welding instructor Jim Swenson explains how the virtual welding equipment helps students learn the art of welding

Saves time, money

The $463,000 virtual welding lab was installed in recent months with the help of a $300,000 state grant.  The equipment purchased is compatible with the equipment being used at Grand Rapids Community College.

Before welding classes begin next fall, the Tech Center will have to purchase real welding equipment on which the students can hone their skills, Swenson said. “There’s no job out there for virtual welding,” he quipped.

Nonetheless, the virtual welding lab will save time and money because it simulates the process, which consumes a lot of electricity and creates a lot of waste as students learn the fine art of holding an electrified stick of metal that gets hot enough to melt and join two other pieces of metal.

The virtual tools use only standard household currents rather than high voltage current. They don’t create hot sparks, smoke and fumes associated with welding. They mimic welding on pieces of plastic that never wear out or need to be scrapped. The equipment also can mimic the various types of welding techniques used to bond different materials.

Students using the virtual tools use a simulated welding mask as they wield the welding gun and practice on a piece of plastic. The computerized program grades them on five techniques that need to be mastered for high quality welding.


On the shelf: ‘The World’s Strongest Librarian…’ by Joshua Hanagarne

By Tallulah Stievers

Oh, I loved The World’s Strongest Librarian: A Memoir of Tourette’s, Faith, Strength, and the Power of Family — it’s so touching and funny, even as the author describes what could have been a total disaster of a life. Working in a library, I was naturally attracted to a memoir with “librarian” in the title, but I didn’t expect it to be such a cliff-hanger. It has all the necessary elements: a mystery, a challenge, eccentric characters, a boy who manages to overcome extreme trials and adventures to grow up and become a good man.

Josh Hanagarne has the literary talent to take the stuff of life and turn it into a wild ride with the Mormons, women, strength training, (and libraries). Complicated at every step by a severe expression of Tourette Syndrome, which manifested very early in his life.

More screen time ups kids’ odds for nearsightedness

Less screen time, more outdoor time. For eye health, it’s good to break away from the screen. (Courtesy Spectrum Health Beat)

By Steven Reinberg, HealthDay

 

Kids with summer birthdays, especially those who spend long hours playing on smartphones and tablets, might be at greater risk for vision problems, a new study suggests.

 

Nearsightedness, also called myopia, is on the rise worldwide. It’s what eye doctors call a refractive error, meaning the eyes can’t focus light properly. The result: Close objects look clear; distant ones, fuzzy.

 

It’s most often caused by continuously focusing on close objects while the eyes are still developing—as in reading, for example. But the growing use of electronic devices seems to be making the problem worse, researchers report.

 

“As ever, everything should be done in moderation,” said lead researcher Dr. Christopher Hammond, chairman of ophthalmology at King’s College London in England. He urged parents to limit kids’ use of electronic devices.

 

That appears to be especially important for kids born in the summer, the study suggests. That’s because they start formal schooling at a younger age than kids born in winter so they are exposed to more reading sooner. And that increases myopia risk, the researchers said.

 

The researchers added that, while their study doesn’t prove smartphones, tablets and computer games cause nearsightedness, those devices may lead kids to spend less time outdoors. And less time outdoors also appears to increase myopia risk.

 

“We know that time outdoors is protective, and so kids should spend probably up to two hours a day outside,” Hammond said.

 

Myopia can be corrected with glasses, laser surgery or contact lenses. Later in life, however, sufferers are more likely to develop sight-robbing conditions such as cataracts or glaucoma, the researchers said.

 

Experts predict that by 2050, nearly 5 billion people worldwide will have myopia. That compares to about 2 billion in 2010.

 

Genes have been linked to a person’s risk for the condition, but even if it has a genetic component, that doesn’t account for the dramatic increase, Hammond said.

 

For the study, his team collected data on nearly 2,000 twins born in the United Kingdom between 1994 and 1996.

 

The researchers reviewed results of eye tests, as well as social, economic, educational and behavioral data on the twins between the ages of 2 and 16. They also had questionnaires completed by parents and teachers.

 

On average, children started wearing glasses for myopia at age 11. About 5 percent had amblyopia (“lazy eye”), and about 4.5 percent had a squint. Overall, 26 percent of the twins were nearsighted, the study found.

 

Kids who had college-educated mothers, those who were born in summer months and those who spent more time using electronic devices had a higher likelihood of nearsightedness, the study found.

 

The findings were published online in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.

 

Dr. Tien Wong, medical director of the Singapore National Eye Center, is co-author of an editorial that accompanied the study.

 

“Evidence supports a link between device screen time and myopia, which includes time on phones and tablets,” he said.

 

This is concerning in view of how many young kids have access to these devices, Wong said. Evidence shows 2-year-olds spend up to two hours a day using digital devices.

 

“Managing your child’s device screen time and increasing their outdoor play can help reduce the risk of developing myopia,” Wong said. “We must better monitor our children’s device activities, even during their preschool years.”

 

Surprisingly, the researchers said children born as a result of fertility treatment had a 25 percent to 30 percent lower risk for myopia. They said that may be because many are born premature and have developmental delays, which could account for shorter eye length and less myopia.

 

Reprinted with permission from Spectrum HealthBeat.

Keeping Up With Your Resolutions? 5 Tips for Active Senior Living

Courtesy Vista Springs Assisted Living

 

By Vista Springs Assisted Living

 

Very few people will be surprised that in a study of popular New Year’s resolutions in the United States, getting more exercise topped the list, along with eating healthier and spending less money. For aging adults, getting active can be a difficult goal, but it’s an important one. If you’re pursuing active senior living in 2019, but are feeling discouraged, we’ve got a few tips on how to get back on track.

1. Have Fun With It

Exercising isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but getting active doesn’t have to be a chore. The key is to pick an exercise or activity that is fun and interesting for you. Ideally, you should think of something that will get you excited to get going; for example, if you love the feeling of slipping into a pool, try swimming every day, or if you’ve always enjoyed being out in nature, go for a walk or short bike ride whenever you can. Alternatively, explore some fun exercises that are new to you, like dance fitness, spinning classes, or yoga.

If you can’t find anything that speaks to you, incorporate hobbies and activities that you love into simple exercises. Try listening to audiobooks, music, or podcasts while you run or lift weights, or help out friends and neighbors with dog-walking.

2. Start Slow

One of the big reasons that people fail to keep their New Year’s resolutions is that they set goals, then get discouraged when they don’t see immediate results. Whether your goal is to lose weight, run a 5K, or simply pursue active senior living, it can’t happen overnight. Ease into daily exercise by starting with five or ten minutes of activity, and gradually increasing to 15, then 20, then 30 minutes every day. Starting slow will also help you stick to it — jumping in at 30 minutes a day gets exhausting when your body isn’t use to that much exercise, leading to procrastination, frustration, and avoidance.

3. Keep Your Doctor Involved

It’s not empty advice — you really should talk to your doctor before you begin a new exercise routine. Not only can they evaluate your heart, lung, muscle, and bone health so you have a good baseline to start from, but they can also recommend activities that will be the most beneficial for your body, age, and goals.

4. Make It Part of Your Daily Routine

Making a lifestyle change is never easy, which is why you should try to incorporate exercise and activity into your daily routine from the moment you set your goal. Set aside time before breakfast, or right before you shower at night. Maybe you want to do strength exercises while your favorite show is on TV. Whatever time makes sense for you, just be sure to hold yourself to a schedule until exercising becomes routine.

5. Get Others Involved

Getting active is so much more fun when you do it with friends. Get together with others who have resolved to achieve active senior living in 2018 and come up with a few things you can do together, like weekly jogging or a community fitness class. Even having one fitness buddy can help you stay motivated and enthusiastic about your goals. Share your progress, get feedback, and make exercising part of your social life.

 

Keeping your resolution to get active in 2019 may seem hard now, but by starting slow and having fun, you’ll be amazed at how much you’ll be able to achieve.

 

Reprinted with permission from Vista Springs Assisted Living.

‘Reflect Revise Reshape’ faculty art exhibit at GVSU Jan. 14-March 29

Works by faculty members Dellas Henke, Anthony Thompson, Hoon Lee and Brett Colley
(Images supplied)

By Grand Valley State University Art Gallery


Within an artist’s drive to create is the instinct to repeated look back on past artwork, methods and practice. Through this reflective and repetitive process, new technologies and ideas are married with the artist’s experiences. The results, driven by an exploration of the past and reshaped by the application of renewed energy in the present, are often works of surprising depth and balance.


Included in this exhibition are four artists who serve as faculty members in the GVSU Department of Visual & Media Arts — Dellas Henke, Anthony Thompson, Hoon Lee and Brett Colley. Each artist recently completed a sabbatical leave, which functioned as a dedicated opportunity to focus on creative exploration in their field of study. This intentional period of research and production allowed for reflection, revival and reshaping of their work.

Opening Reception

  • Thursday, Jan. 17 5-7pm
  • Grand Valley State University Art Gallery
  • Thomas J. and Marcia J. Haas Center for Performing Arts, 1121 Performing Arts Center, Allendale Campus

 

The Who announce May 7 concert at Van Andel Arena

By Mike Klompstra
Van Andel Arena


For WHO fans everywhere, the announcement of a brand new tour means only one thing:  the world’s most untamable rock band is about to deliver the goods once again. Never ones for nostalgia, singer Roger Daltrey and guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend will be unleashing the combustible force that is The Who, with symphonic accompaniment this summer and fall in 2019.  Produced by Live Nation, The Who’s North American MOVING ON! TOURwill bring their indelible brand of powerhouse rock to 29 cities beginning in May. The kickoff date is Tuesday, May 7 at 7:30 PM at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, MI with the band wrapping up the first leg of the tour June 1 in Toronto, ON. A much-anticipated series of fall dates will launch on September 6 in St. Paul, MN and conclude on October 23 in Edmonton, AB.

Tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, Jan. 18 at 10:00 AM. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. SeeTicketmaster.com for all pricing and availability.

The Who will also be releasing their first album of new songs in thirteen years later this year. On stage, the line-up will be rounded out by familiar Who players featuring guitarist/backup singer Simon Townshend, keyboardist Loren Gold, bassist Jon Button and drummer Zak Starkey, and complemented by some of the best orchestras in the U.S. and Canada.

The Who’s fan club presale starts Wednesday, January 16 at 10:00 AM local time and runs through Thursday, January 17 at 10:00 PM local time. The venue presale will run Thursday, January 17, from 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM. Every pair of tickets purchased online includes a redeemable code for a CD copy of The Who’s forthcoming album when it’s released. This offer is available to US and Canada customers only and not valid for tickets purchased via resale. In addition, $1 from each ticket sold for the MOVING ON! TOUR will benefit Teen Cancer America.

The tour is their first return to the states since their 2017 Las Vegas residency.  That same year they did a limited run of shows following 2016’s rescheduled leg of their acclaimed 50th anniversary celebration.  The band also drew praise for their extended 2012-2013 North American run, a 36 city Quadrophenia tour with the band performing their 1973 rock opera in its entirety.

Commenting on what WHO fans can expect on the 2019 MOVING ON! tour, Pete Townshend stated: “The Who are touring again in 2019.  Roger christened this tour Moving On! I love it. It is what both of us want to do. Move on, with new music, classic Who music, all performed in new and exciting ways. Taking risks, nothing to lose. Looking forward to seeing you all.  Are you ready?”

Commented Roger Daltrey: “Be aware Who fans! Just because it’s The Who with an orchestra, in no way will it compromise the way Pete and I deliver our music. This will be full throttle Who with horns and bells on.”

The Who are one of the top three greatest rock legacies in music history.  Their music provoked explosive change and spanned what many critics declare is rock’s most elastic creative spectrum, with Pete Townshend’s songwriting moving between raw, prosaic, conceptual, and expressively literate.  Their visionary sense of stagecraft headed by Roger Daltrey’s soaring vocal prowess is topped off by the band’s blistering rhythm section.  With both Roger and Pete delivering their own memoirs in recent years (Pete’s Who I Am was released to much acclaim in 2012, and Roger’s autobiography, Thanks A Lot Mr. Kibblewhite; My Story, was embraced by critics in 2018) it’s fitting that the two remaining WHO members have shared their incredible legacy in literary fashion, for few bands have had a more lasting impact on the rock era and the reverberating pop culture than The Who.

Emerging in the mid-1960s as a new and incendiary force in rock n’ roll, their brash style and poignant storytelling garnered them one of music’s most passionate followings, with the legendary foursome blazing a searing new template for rock, punk, and everything after.  Inducted into the Rock n’ Roll Hall Of Fame in 1990, the band has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, placing 27 top-forty singles in the United States and United Kingdom and earning 17 Top Ten albums, including the 1969 groundbreaking rock opera Tommy, 1971’s pummeling Live At Leeds, 1973’s Quadrophenia and 1978’s Who Are You.  The Who debuted in 1964 with a trio of anthems “I Can’t Explain,” “The Kids Are Alright” and “My Generation.” Since then they have delivered to the world hits such as “Baba O’Riley,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” “Pinball Wizard,” Who Are You,” and,” You Better You Bet.”

In 2008, they became the first rock band ever to be awarded the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors. The Who has performed all over the world including global music events for the Super Bowl XLIV Halftime Show in 2010 and closing the London 2012 Summer Olympics. The Who continued their charity work by playing a concert in January 2011 to raise money for trials of a new cancer treatment called PDT. In December 2012 they performed at the Hurricane Sandy Benefit in New York. In January 2014 they played a set on the U.S. television special to support the charity Stand Up To Cancer. In November 2012 Daltrey, with Townshend at his side, launched Teen Cancer America. The charity is now established in the USA, with offices in Los Angeles and devoted Teen Cancer units being opened in hospitals all over the U.S. TCA’s work has impacted over 5,000 young people and their families nationwide during the last six years.

GVSU announces MLK commemoration week events

By Michele Coffill
Grand Valley State University


Two speakers, an expert on the influence of race in urban education and an alumna who speaks to the hearts of difference makers, will give presentations that highlight Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration Week at Grand Valley State University.

With the theme, #BreaktheSilence, Grand Valley’s events will run Jan. 21-26.
 

David Sovell

David Stovall, professor of African American studies and criminology, law and justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago, will give an address on January 21 in the Fieldhouse Arena beginning at 1:30 p.m. Stovall studies the influence of race in urban education, community development, and housing. His work investigates the significance of race in the quality of schools located in communities that are changing both racially and economically.

Stovall will also speak at Fountain Street Church in Grand Rapids at 6 p.m. on January 21, highlighting the 33rd annual King community program. The event is sponsored by GVSU, Grand Rapids Community College and Davenport University. It is free and open to the public, doors will open at 5:30 p.m.

Shannon Cohen

Grand Valley alumna Shannon Cohen, ’99 and ’11, will give a presentation on campus on Jan. 23 in the Kirkhof Center, Pere Marquette Room, at 4:30 p.m. Cohen is the founder and principal of Shannon Cohen, Inc., a boutique firm specializing in providing emotional health strategies to leaders and difference makers. She is a W.K. Kellogg Foundation Community Leadership Network Fellow, and is the co-founder of Sisters Who Lead, a talent and wellness affinity group for women of color.

Highlights are below and more information is online at gvsu.edu/mlk. Most events are on Jan. 21, which marks the seventh year classes have been canceled on the national King holiday, allowing more students, faculty and staff members to participate.

Monday, Jan. 21

• 9:30-11:30 a.m.: Upcycling, Kirkhof Center, Pere Marquette Room

• 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Workshop: Back to Reality: Finding Our Freedom through Storytelling, Kirkhof Center, room 2215/2216

• 11:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m.: Free Campus Lunch, Kirkhof Center, Grand River Room

• 1 p.m.: Silent March to Fieldhouse, assemble at Zumberge Hall

• 1:30 p.m.: Keynote Presentation by Dr. David Stovall, Fieldhouse

• 2:30-3:30 p.m.: Panel Discussion, #BreaktheSilence, Kirkhof Center, rooms 2215/2216

Wednesday, Jan. 23

• 4:30 p.m.: Keynote Presentation by Shannon Cohen, Kirkhof Center, Pere Marquette Room

• 6 p.m.: Democracy 101 Series: “This is What Democracy Looks Like! #Breaking the Silence and the Living Legacy of MLK,” Mary Idema Pew Library, multipurpose room; sponsored by the Community Service Learning Center.

Annette Gordon-Reed and Peter S. Onuf present on Thursday, Jan. 24.

Thursday, Jan. 24

• 7 p.m.: Annette Gordon-Reed and Peter S. Onuf: Jefferson, Slavery, and the Moral Imagination, Eberhard Center, room 215

Presented by the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies: Thomas Jefferson, the most revered philosopher of the early Republic’s Enlightenment ideals, was deeply involved in the nation’s original sin of slavery. Historians Annette Gordon-Reed and Peter S. Onuf will explore how to find common ground at the troubled crossroads of race and American memory. Visit hauensteincenter.org to RSVP.

Saturday, Jan. 26

• 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.: MLK Jr. Day of Service and Solidarity: Coordinated by the Community Service Learning Center, students will meet at the Cook-DeWitt Center and hear a keynote presentation then participate in service projects with area partners.

Kentwood to host second annual Valentine’s Dash 5K on Feb. 9

Some of the runners at a previous Kentwood Valentine’s Dash 5K. (WKTV)

By City of Kentwood

The City of Kentwood is hosting its second annual Valentine’s Dash 5K at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 9, an event that will feature candy stations, awards and after-party including music, snacks, a photo booth, and the award ceremony.

The 5K run/walk will start and end at the Kent District Library – Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch, located at 4950 Breton Rd. SE. The route of the run will include a combination of trails and roads, mile markers and Valentine’s Day candy stations.

“The route for this race is great for first-time and experienced racers alike,” said Val Romeo, Kentwood Parks and Recreation director. “Whether you plan to run with your sweetie, family, friends or new acquaintances, our Valentine’s Dash is a great way to celebrate the holiday and your love of running.”

Valentine’s Day-themed costumes are encouraged. Fellow participants will vote to determine who is the “best dressed” and awards will also be presented to the fastest runners. While the 5K is intended to be a fun run, it will be chip-timed.

Following the race will be an after-party in the library’s community room, which will include music, Valentine’s themed snacks, a photo booth, an award ceremony and more.

Online registration is available and costs $30 until Feb. 8, after which the price will increase. Runners who sign up as a couple will save $5 each.

Check-in, on-site registration and packet pick-up will all take place at the library at 9:30 a.m. Participant packets include a long sleeve shirt and other goodies.

Proceeds from the race will support Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry, which provides food and hygiene products to community members in need, no questions asked. Individuals are encouraged to bring $5 or a non-perishable item to donate to be entered to win a special door prize.

For more information visit kentwood.us .

Public Museum extends exhibit on local legend

Ralph W. Hauenstein

By Christie Bender
Grand Rapids Public Musum


The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) just announced today that by popular demand, the exhibition, Ralph W. Hauenstein: A Life of Leadership is being extended. Visitors can now experience the life and legacy of Ralph W. Hauenstein through April 14, 2019.

COL Hauenstein was a leader in the West Michigan community, remembered for his role as a journalist, his military and intelligence service, his dedication to the Catholic faith, his entrepreneurship, and his philanthropy in Grand Rapids. Hauenstein left a lasting legacy in the United States and around the world. 

The exhibition highlights Ralph’s extraordinary life, his contributions to our nation and community, and his legacy of leadership. Interactives allow visitors to test out writing a headline for the newspaper on an antique typewriter and try their hand at cracking a secret code. Photography from around the world bring visitors face-to-face with Ralph’s impact globally.

“We’re thrilled to offer this exhibition for a few more months to the community,” said Kate Kocienski, VP of Marketing and PR for the Grand Rapids Public Museum. “Visitors as well as school groups have enjoyed the exhibition’s focus on COL Hauenstein’s impact and his inspiration to future leaders.”

Ralph W. Hauenstein: A Life of Leadership is included with general admission to the Museum, and is be located on the Museum’s third floor.

This exhibition is made possible through the generous support of: The Hauenstein Family and The Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University. Images and objects on loan courtesy of Brian Hauenstein unless otherwise stated. The images in this exhibition were first digitized for public display by the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University. Thank you also to the National Cryptologic Museum, NSA, Washington D.C.

Ralph W. Hauenstein

Born in Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1912, Ralph’s family moved to Grand Rapids when he was 12 years old, where he graduated from Central High School in 1931. He was a public servant from his early years starting as a boy scout. Ralph was curious, inquisitive, and an exceptional storyteller, which led him to his first job as a police reporter for the Grand Rapids Press and later as a city editor with the Grand Rapids Herald.  

Ralph joined the U.S. Army in 1935, serving first with the Civilian Conservation Corps. In 1941 he began working as an intelligence officer in Iceland and rose to the rank of colonel. During World War II, he was promoted to Chief of Intelligence for the European Theater of Operations under General Dwight D. Eisenhower. An important part of his experience was the liberation of the German concentration camp at Dachau. His WWII experiences opened his eyes to the need for ethical, effective world leaders.

Ralph saw first-hand that many countries face food shortages. After the war he returned to Grand Rapids and became an entrepreneur in international trade and food equipment manufacturing, designing equipment to make Goldfish Crackers. His success in business allowed for substantial philanthropic contributions in Grand Rapids. He gave generously to many local causes and established the Grace Hauenstein Library at Aquinas College, Mercy Health Hauenstein Neuroscience Center and the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University.

On Tap: Perrin, Cedar Springs Brewing support local causes; KDaLe’s events

Runners will need to be dressed for winter weather for the Frostbite 5K. (Wikimedia Commons)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

 
Are you a runner? A drinker of fine craft brews? A supporter of the Kids’ Food Basket? Any combination there of? Perrin Brewing has a event for you.

On Saturday, Jan. 26, Perrin will team up with the Kids’ Food Basket for the Perrin Ice Jam Winter Festival from 3-8 p.m. The third annual event will feature live music from Sydney Burnham, The Turnips, Legal Immigrants, and Go-Rounds, specialty Perrin beers, and the Frostbite 5K Run/Walk. Admission to the party is $10 donation or a bag of food items from Kids’ Food Basket wish list. All proceeds during the event will be donated to Kids’ Food Basket of West Michigan.

“The Kids’ Food Basket provides kids in the community with the nourishment they need to reach their full potential,” according to supplied information. “Every donation provides a child with a nutritious evening meal so they can be their best in school and life.”

Perrin Brewing has already begun to collect food donations in the front foyer from the wish list, which includes dried fruit, toasted oat cereal, cheese crackers, fruit cups or pouches, pretzel twists and snack size zipper bags.

The 5K Run/Walk is $30 for adults and $15 for Kids 12 and under. Packet pick-up will be the January 22– 25 in the Perrin Pub. The race-day check-in is from Noon to 2 p.m. and the race begins at 2 p.m.

To register for the run online visit Frostbite 5K Run . For more information on the event, including updated with beer releases, registration 5k run details, band line-up and more, visit the Perrin Ice Jam Facebook page . Perrin Brewing is located at 510 Comstock Park Dr. NE, Comstock Park.

Cedar Springs Brewing hosts soup drive for North Kent Connect

Cedar Springs Brewing Company has teamed up with Ryanne Donahue State Farm and North Kent Connect to help local families in need by hosting a “Soup for Soup Food Drive” today, Jan. 14, through Jan. 19, with a special event planned on Jan. 19.

The Soup for Soup Food Drive will specifically collect nonperishable non-glass containers of soup, pasta and pasta sauces. But it will also be accepting any non-perishable food donation not in glass jars.

For every donation made, Cedar Springs Brewing will provide a free cup of soup.

Donation Locations include Cedar Springs Brewing Company, at 95 N. Main St., in Cedar Springs; or at Ryanne Donahue StateFarm, at 6585 Belding Rd NE St. E, in Rockford (during normal business hours). The soup drive will end on Jan. 19 at the CSBrew Up To Snow Good Party, where everyone “will celebrate all of the food raised and enjoy a beverage or two on the patio!” we are told.

For more information on Cedar Springs Brewing call 616-696-BEER — got to love that number! — or visit csbrew.com . For more information on the Soup for Soup Food Drive, visit the event’s Facebook page here.

KDaLe plans home brewing competition, brewery tours

The Kent District Library’s adult KDaLe program has several programs and events in the near future including a home brewing competition and a tour at local craft brewer Railtown Brewing.

“If you think your home brew has what it takes to be crowned champion, here’s your chance … see how your beer stacks up,” or so states information on the KDaLe website, promoting the program’s now annual “Book Inspired Brewing” competition, wherein KDL staff and local brewers both amateur and professional will taste test.

“It’s a rough job, but someone has to do it!”, they go on to say.

The winners get to brew with a professional brewer and see their beer on tap at KDL’s Super Party Wonder Day next summer. But registration deadline is Jan. 20, and beer submissions must be delivered to Gravel Bottom (418 Ada Drive, Ada), Railtown Brewing (3555 68th St SE, Caledonia), or Pike 51(3768 Chicago Dr, Hudsonville) by Feb. 28.

The KDaLe Tour will also make stops Jan. 15 at DeHop’s Brewing Company and Café, an “Amsterdam style” brew pub at 363 Cummings Ave. NW, in Walker. Also on tap will be a tour Jan. 22 at Railtown Brewing Company, at 3595 68th St SE, Dutton, to get a tour of their new building and brew house.

For more information on KDaLe events, see kdl.org/events .

Employment Expertise: Your 2019 job search New Year’s resolutions

By West Michigan Works!


The New Year is a great time to reset goals and create healthy habits. Have you made any resolutions yet? Here’s a list of popular goals and how they can help your job search:

  1. Exercise more — Exercise releases endorphins which make you feel happier. Exercise will improve your sleep, reduce stress and help you stay healthy. Schedule time to exercise into your job search schedule. 
  2. Save more, spend less — All of West Michigan Works! job search services are free; don’t ever pay for a resume review or interview prep.
  3. Read more — Pick a work or hobby related topic you’re interested in. Find books at the library or credible online resources. If you choose a work topic, reference your learning in interviews.
  4. Learn something new — Keep your brain sharp and your day productive. Consider something fun like woodworking or painting, or something that relates to your job. Our Career Coaches can connect you to job training. Scholarships might be available too.
  5. Get organized — Make sure your resume is up-to-date. Start a job search spreadsheet (if you haven’t already) that tracks where you’ve applied and the status of the application. This will help you follow up on applications and write timely interview thank you notes.
  6. Get more sleep — Sleep improves your immune system, decreases your chance of depression and improves concentration and productivity. Job searching is hard work, so reward your body each night with at least 7 hours of sleep. You’ll wake up rested and ready to give 100% to your job search.
  7. Spend time with family — Networking is a very important part of your job search, so start with your friends and family. Then begin reaching out to your extended personal and professional networks.

Employment Expertise is provided by West Michigan Works! Learn more about how they can help: visit westmiworks.org or your local Service Center.

Caregiving family meetings

Photo supplied

By Holly Tiret, Michigan State University Extension


With the aging of baby boomers, chances are there will also be an increase in the number of informal caregivers. Michigan State University Extension recognizes that caring for an aging parent may seem like a natural progression of life; however, many are ill prepared to deal with the social, emotional, physical and financial decisions that will arise. If you’re caring for a loved one, a family caregiver meeting can help you navigate the many decisions that need to be made.


If you are making these decisions on your own (for example, if you are an only child), then your scope of consulting would mostly fall between you and your parent. It may be helpful to include a social worker, your care receiver’s medical care providers and perhaps their religious advisor. The final decisions, however, are up to you and your parent.


If you have siblings, your decision-making circle is much larger and has the potential to be highly emotional. It may include a variety of opinions and be loaded with family relationship baggage. Siblings can be a major source of support and a major source of stress. Not everyone thinks alike or has the same amount of time or talent to devote to caregiving. For these reasons, you may want to consider having a family caregiver meeting. A family caregiver meeting can help you work on specific problems, give people a chance to share thoughts, make a list the needs of your loved one and opens discussion about who can best fill those needs and how.


Whom you invite depends on your own family dynamics. You may want to consider being more inclusive rather than being exclusive. You may assume someone is not interested or involved enough; however, that person may end up being someone who really has the time and would love to pitch in. More hands tend to make less work. If possible, be sure to include your loved one, as they are the expert on their thoughts, wishes and needs. If relationships with your siblings are typically contentious, you may want to invite a social worker or religious leader to help mediate.


A caregiver family meeting should not be much different from staff meetings at work to address tough issues or lawyers meeting to discuss a plea bargain. Both situations have the potential to be emotionally charged. However, the difference is in the planning. Imagine a lawyer going into a plea bargain meeting unprepared, with no notes, no facts, and just relying on raw emotion. You could be almost sure their client would not be getting the best representation that they need or deserve. A lawyer or a boss goes into a meeting at a set date, time, place with certain people invited. There is an agenda, rules of communication to follow, there is productive discussion, notes are taken, decisions are made, and subsequent meetings may be scheduled. Caregiver family meetings can be run the same way.


Whether you have no siblings or many, a planned and organized caregiver family meeting can help you all make the best decisions possible for your loved one. For more information about caregiving, you may wish to consider signing up for a Powerful Tools for Caregiver class. During six lessons, groups of caregivers explore and share tools for focusing on self-care in order to be able to provide the best care possible to a loved one. To find a class near you visit www.msue.msu.edu and search for Powerful Tools for Caregivers. You can also call your local Michigan State University Extension Office to inquire about starting a class in your area.


This article was published by Michigan State University Extension. For more information, visit http://www.msue.msu.edu. To have a digest of information delivered straight to your email inbox, visit http://www.msue.msu.edu/newsletters. To contact an expert in your area, visit http://expert.msue.msu.edu, or call 888-MSUE4MI (888-678-3464).

Reining in the pain

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By Marie Havenga, Spectrum Health Beat

Photos (except where noted) by Chris Clark, Spectrum Health Beat

 

With the wind in her face and the reins in her hands, Shanna Ruffner guides Jag, her quarter horse, through corkscrew-like barrel racing drills at a farm near her Otsego, Michigan, home.

 

Ruffner, 39, has been steering horses through barrels since age 2.

 

She’s always felt freedom and exhilaration aboard a horse’s back. Until last year.

 

After many repetitive motions at work, she felt pain.

 

The pain in her hands started like a slow walk, waking her up at night about this time last year. By November, the sensation had galloped into her daily life, affecting just about everything she attempted to do.

Taking a toll

Ruffner has worked for years for General Motors in the Lansing Delta plant, assembling Traverse and Enclave vehicles.

 

“I do a lot with the main wiring harness for the motor, plugging in different things and bolting things to it,” Ruffner said. “I also torque down the strut, tie bar and hub on the front end and attach radiators to the undercarriage before it gets married to the body.”

 

It’s important work, but repetitive work. And it eventually took a toll on her.

 

“I started experiencing numbness in my fingers about a year ago,” she said. “It finally got to the point in November that I could no longer sleep because it was waking me up. My hands would completely go numb in the middle of the night. They would go numb and they would burn. It was just unbearable.”

 

It became increasingly more difficult to work, and also risky to ride.

 

“It made it difficult to ride a strong, powerful horse because my hands would go numb while I was riding,” Ruffner said. “I ride a very powerful gelding. It’s a good thing we have a good bond because if it were any other horse, I don’t think I’d be able to ride.”

 

Still, the pain sometimes outweighed the fun. It was a crushing blow for Ruffner, who followed in her dad’s hoofprints so many years ago.

 

Her dad, George, who died in 1996, rode competitively and taught his daughter all he knew about barrel racing.

 

Photo by Chris Clark, Spectrum Health Beat

As a child, Ruffner competed in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and Texas.

 

But in the last year, she felt like her condition was holding her over the barrels.

 

“It made it hard to pull and made it hard to hang on,” she said. “It just didn’t feel quite right. I didn’t have as much control as I would have liked to have.”

 

A horse wasn’t the only thing that became difficult to steer. She experienced trouble driving a car.

 

Ruffner’s commute from Otsego to Lansing spans an hour and 15 minutes. About 10 minutes into her drive, her hands would go numb. And eventually, they’d be numb before she even turned on the ignition.

 

She enjoyed taking her sons, Trenton, 18, and Brady, 15, to the movie theater for family outings. But the numbness closed the curtain on those outings, too.

 

“I got to the point I didn’t want to go to the movie theater because I knew my hands would bother me by the time I got there,” she said.

‘It was simple’

Last spring, with pain and numbness continuing to canter, Ruffner saw a specialist in Lansing for a nerve test.

 

“They basically hooked up different electrodes to see how the nerves react,” she said. “The nerve testing came back that I needed surgery on both my hands.”

 

In June, she consulted with Peter Jebson, MD, a Spectrum Health Medical Group orthopedic hand and upper extremity surgeon.

 

Within 10 days of first seeing Dr. Jebson, on June 27, she underwent carpal tunnel release surgery in his office.

 

“It was simple,” Ruffner said. “I felt a little pressure when they were cutting (the ligament), but as far as anything else goes, the worst part of it was the shot of the local (anesthetic) to numb my hand. It was a piece of cake.”

 

Ruffner needed only Tylenol to keep the pain at bay.

 

“It’s felt really good,” she said.

 

Photo by Chris Clark, Spectrum Health Beat

Dr. Jebson said he’s pleased with Ruffner’s progress.

 

“With carpal tunnel, you have pain, particularly at night,” he said. “You can have bothersome numbness and tingling and also functional loss. She had the entire constellation of symptoms. But she’s already experiencing 100 percent pain relief and 90 percent of the tingling has improved. She is doing very well and the incision looks good.”

 

Dr. Jebson said carpal tunnel release surgery has come a long way in recent years. It used to be performed in an operating room in a hospital or outpatient surgery facility, under general anesthesia, which is significantly more expensive. The new technique, developed in Canada, saves patients money, pain and healing time.

 

“It also used to be a larger incision,” he said. “The patient used to be casted or splinted after surgery. We’ve progressed to where we now do minimally invasive incisions.”

 

Dr. Jebson and his Spectrum Health Medical Group team of hand specialists—Drs. Kevin Chan, Randy Lovell and Levi Hinkelman—perform about 750 in-office hand surgeries each year, including carpal tunnel release, trigger finger, trigger thumb, De Quervain’s tendonitis release, simple tendon laceration repairs and ganglion cyst excisions.

 

Dr. Jebson estimates performing procedures in the office suite saves patients and health care insurers $2,000, “which is significant with the increasing shift of financial responsibility to patients with higher co-pays and deductibles,” he said.

 

“Not only does it save patients a significant amount of out-of-pocket expense because they’re not using anesthesia and they’re not at a surgical center, patients don’t have to go for any preoperative testing, which saves them a lot of time,” Dr. Jebson said. “And this doesn’t require IV antibiotics.”

 

Office-based surgery is also environmentally friendly, producing only one bag of waste for a day’s worth of surgeries versus one bag for every procedure.

 

“It’s a significant savings to society in general,” he said. “It’s a multiple win and provides true value for patients. It’s the future—it will be the standard of care in three to five years across the country. We’ve been doing it for four years now and happen to be a nationally recognized program.”

 

Ruffner is pleased—especially that she’ll be able to return to work soon.

 

“I’m a self-admitted workaholic,” she said. “Being home all the time is difficult for me.”

 

Photo by Chris Clark, Spectrum Health Beat

It may be a bit before she bounces back to barrel racing—her saddle weighs 19 pounds and she has a 5-pound weight restriction.

 

But she has plans beyond lifting saddles. She aims to have surgery on her left hand, too.

 

“By the time this journey is all said and done, I will have had surgery on both hands,” Ruffner said. “I want to get it done and over with and be pain-free and resume a normal life.”

 

She hopes to be running barrels again by mid-September, with both hands healed and weight restrictions lifted.

 

“It’s a rush,” she said of barrel racing. “I love the adrenaline. You get to go out and run as fast as you can around three barrels without hitting them on a 1,000-pound animal that has a mind of their own. They have a personality and temperament all their own. You learn the true meaning of teamwork. It’s one thing to be a team with another human. It’s entirely different to be a team with an animal.”

 

But Ruffner said she truly appreciates the teamwork with Dr. Jebson and other Spectrum Health staff, in getting her back to where she wants to be.

 

“Anybody that is fearful of having carpal tunnel release surgery done should know, the way Dr. Jebson does it, they shouldn’t be fearful,” Ruffner said. “Have the surgery and take care of it as opposed to waiting until your hands are completely numb all the time. This experience has been so easy.”

 

Reprinted with permission from Spectrum Health Beat.

School News Network: Big plant, little plant

Fifth-graders Yarieli Johnson, Airyanna Garcia, and Naomi Camarena-Jimenez watch a demonstration about wastewater treatment

By Bridie Bereza
School News Network


Flush and wash and be on your way? It might seem as simple as that, but fifth-graders from  Southeast Kelloggsville Elementary recently learned a thing or two about the messy business of making clean water, and they now know there’s much more than meets the eye.

Lynnea Roon, science teacher at Southeast Kelloggsville Elementary, uncaps ‘wastewater’ to demonstrate how water is cleaned

It started with a trip to the City of Wyoming’s Clean Water Plant where students toured the facility and asked questions, such as, “Is there PFAS in the water?” They followed the same path 15 million gallons of water take each day to get clean – plugging their noses at times and watching in amazement as microbes cleaned bubbling swaths of water.

Back in the classroom, they saw the big picture of what happens – flush to finish – thanks to a hands-on model of a town with a clean water plant. The model, used by science intervention teacher Lynnea Roon, drives home lessons the students learned at the clean water plant.

Students crowded around and watched intently as Roon demonstrated the path of wastewater through the miniature town.

Students from Southeast Kelloggsville Elementary watch as microorganisms clean the water at the City of Wyoming Clean Water Plant

Where water goes and flows

The model has all the components students need to understand water treatment: houses, drains, underground pipes, rivers, and more. Using water and “wastewater” –really just chocolate-tinged water — Roon showed students how what they saw at the clean water plant fits in with how they use water at home.

“It shows the whole process really nicely,” said Roon. “I love doing hands-on learning where they can actually see things. I love how it has the little roads and houses and how you can really see the dirty water moving through in places they normally can’t see.”

As a science intervention teacher, Roon isn’t assigned to a single class. Rather, she makes the rounds and meet with many classes once a week, augmenting lessons in the science curriculum. When she gets a chance to use a special piece of equipment or prop to teach a lesson, it’s well-received.

To many students, said Roon, waste “goes down the drain and disappears.” The model shows water’s pathway through the system and back into the water cycle again. “It’s a pretty amazing lesson.”

For more stories on what is happening in our local schools, visit the School News Network website.

‘Seeing Through Dutch Eyes, an Exhibition of Dutch Landscapes 1952-2018’ opens Jan. 11

Courtesy Holland Area Arts Council

By Jeremy Witt, West Michigan Tourist Association


The Holland Area Arts Council (150 E. 8th St., Holland, MI 49423) presents Seeing Through Dutch Eyes, an exhibition featuring the work of Dutch-American artist Chris Stoffel Overvoorde beginning Friday, Jan. 11 with an opening reception at 6pm.


Seeing Through Dutch Eyes, recognizes a natural pattern. Overvoorde was born in the Netherlands (Capelle aan de IJssel) to two Dutch parents. It is therefore essential to recognize, that the artist, can only see through the eyes he has been given at birth. But, it is not just the mechanics of seeing, that is important, it is also the cultural and spiritual vision that will modify his perception of the world.


Overvoorde left the Netherlands at age of 22 and is now 84, which means he has lived 62 years in the US and yet he is still a Dutchman in the way he looks at this world. The exhibition is divided into several components: ‘Early Years/The Shipyard’, ‘Learning Period/Drawing’, ‘Transitions/Acrylic and Oil Paintings’, and ‘Self Portraits’.


The artist grew up with the sounds of the shipyard. His grandpa den Braber and his uncles Dirk, Jan, and Chris were ship-carpenters. From age 14, he worked in a large shipyard as a metalworker and later as a diesel mechanic. Shipbuilding was an integral part of his growing up. Many of his early works are drawings.


Today, drawing is an essential part of his creative process for it is the basis for his paintings. He almost always starts by making a drawing first and then works from the drawing. Drawing is a way of learning, of seeing, of discovering, and a way of defining.


Watercolor has become a playful exploration in capturing the rain loaded clouds of the Dutch skies when he returned for a study period and studied the Dutch 19th Century landscape painters in the late ’70s.


Later, the switch to acrylic and oil followed as he began to explore the Midwest landscape and sky in the 1980s, searching for the spiritual in nature. That search continues in the 90 in the southwest corner of Alberta, Canada on the edge of the mountains and the open spaces of the prairie. Space and light have become his companions.


The last works in the flow of the exhibit are explorations of these Dutch eyes that look at this world with the mind and soul of a Dutchman and smiles in between.


The exhibit will open with a reception on Friday, Jan. 11 from 6-8pm complete with light snacks and refreshments. The exhibit will be on display through Feb. 25. The opening reception and the exhibition are free and open to the public.

Snapshots: Wyoming, Kentwood weekend news you ought to know

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org

Quote of the Day

“If you place your head in a lion’s mouth, then you cannot complain one day if he happens to bite it off.” 
- Agatha Christie

Mayhem and Murder

Did Emily Brent do it in the library with the candlestick?

Join Cathy Van Lopik, aka Emily Brent, and the rest of the Grand Rapids Civic cast for a little murder mysteries by one of the best, Agatha Christie. Civic Theatre presents “And Then There Were None Jan. 11 – 27 at its theater, 30 N. Division Ave. Tickets are $18 – $29 with student tickets $26.

Some Local All Stars

East Kentwood High School lead the way for the AP All-State listings for the state of Michigan.

This past football season lead to four local high school players earning the title of first team AP All-State in the state of Michigan. East Kentwood, somewhat unsurprisingly, lead the way with three of those All-Staters coming from their team after a tremendous season from the Division 1-2 Falcons finishing the season 9-2. A student also came from South Christian High School and Wyoming’s Tri-Unity Christian had two seniors for 8-man football.

Something Funny’s Goin’ On

Getting their funny on: Brian Borbot (center) with comedians Stu McCallister (left) and. Matt Harper (right).

Brian Borbot, part of the Sunday Night Funnies, talks with area comedians about the art of being funny. The podcasts are part of a new feature at the WKTV Journal. To check them out, click here. Sunday Night Funnies is at 8:30 p.m. every Sunday at Woody’s Press Box, 5656 Clyde Park Ave. SW.



Fun fact:

https://youtu.be/-i2WHcFgIz8

Oymyakon, Russia

That is consider the coldest inhabited place in the world. In Oymyakon, the winter temperatures are known to average -58 F (-50C). Water freezes at 32 F. About 500 people live in the area. And while many Michiganders treasure having remote start to warm their cars, those in Oymyakon have to run their cars 24/7 to make sure the batteries do not die. The community earned the title in 1933, when a temperature of -90 F was recorded. The city beat its own record in 2013, when a -98 F temperature was recorded. Now that’s cold.

Recently appointed Kent County Sheriff on WKTV Journal In Focus


By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

On the latest episode of WKTV Journal In Focus, visiting our studio is Kent County Sheriff Michelle LaJoye-Young. Sheriff LaJoye-Young has a long history in law enforcement, specifically with the Kent County Sheriff’s Office where she most recently served as Undersheriff.

Sheriff LaJoye-Young talks about her years working within the Sheriffs Office, the broad scope of the duties and responsibilities of the office she leads, and what she thinks about being the first female to be the county’s top law enforcement official.

She was appointed to fill the unexpired term of Sheriff Larry Stelma, who retired in November and whose term goes through December 2020, at which time there will be an election for the badge.

“WKTV Journal In Focus” airs on cable television in the Wyoming and Kentwood areas on Comcast WKTV Channel 26 and on AT&T Channel 99 Government channel (see our Weekly On-air Schedule for dates and times). In Focus is also available on-demand within a week of play at wktvondemand.com. All individual interviews included in episodes of WKTV Journal In Focus are also available on YouTube at WKTVvideos.

Use caution with home health tests

Before you buy a home health test kit, look for the words “FDA-approved” on the package. (Courtesy Spectrum Health Beat)

By Len Canter, HealthDay

 

Home pregnancy tests are commonplace, but that doesn’t mean that every type of self-test for health issues is reliable.

 

And even if results are accurate, you shouldn’t forgo getting advice from your health care provider, especially if the condition is life-changing and requires very targeted treatment.

 

Some kits that let you test at home are fast and inexpensive. They can uncover problems before symptoms start, allowing for early treatment and lowering the risk of later complications. Others help you monitor your health.

 

Home glucose test—some of the most common—show how well you’re controlling diabetes, but even these everyday tests require input from your doctor. So take precautions when using a home test, and remember that they don’t replace regular health-care visits.

 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration considers home tests medical devices and, in light of this rapidly growing category, is working to set standards for the tests and establish rules on how to regulate them.

 

Many home tests are reliable, including those for hepatitis C and HIV.

 

But some are more problematic, like DNA tests—genetic testing for your own disease risk and for genes associated with disorders that could be passed on to a child.

 

Before you buy a store kit, look for the words “FDA-approved” on the package. Be sure to read any disclaimers to understand a test’s limitations and heed the advice to get health counseling for positive results.

 

And no matter what type of test you do, always discuss results with your doctor, even if you get a normal finding. Most results should be evaluated along with your medical history and a physical.

 

Also, many DNA home kits do not test for every possible genetic mutation, so you can get false negatives as well as false positives. Take your findings to your doctor and discuss whether more comprehensive testing will help you get more accurate answers.

 

Reprinted with permission from Spectrum HealthBeat.

‘Aftermath: War is Only Half the Story’ photography exhibit coming to Krasl Art Center

By Matthew Bizoe, Krasl Art Center


Beginning Friday, Feb. 8 at Krasl Art Center, 707 Lake Blvd., Saint Joseph, MI 49085, viewers will see incredibly moving stories of the people left behind after cameras have moved on from a war zone in the photography exhibit, Aftermath: War is Only Half the Story. Drawing on photographs from over 50 photographers, these personal and often poetic post-war views unveil not only another side to the devastating effects of war, but also tell the stories of people coming together to rebuild and heal.


The exhibition is a 10-year retrospective of the work of the groundbreaking documentary photography program, The Aftermath Project. Founded to help change the way the media covers conflict — and to educate the public about the true cost of war and the real price of peace — The Aftermath Project has discovered some of the most groundbreaking photojournalists in the world — as well as internationally acclaimed photographers Stanley Greene, Nina Berman, Davide Monteleone, Justyna Mielnikiewicz, and Jim Goldberg, among many others – working on post-conflict themes.


Aftermath: War Is Only Half the Story is originated by The Aftermath Project, Los Angeles, and toured by Curatorial Assistance Traveling Exhibitions, Pasadena, California.


About The Aftermath Project
The Aftermath Project is an outcome of photographer and writer Sara Terry’s five-year-long project, Aftermath: Bosnia’s Long Road to Peace, about the aftermath of the 1992–95 war in Bosnia and Hercegovina. She completed her work in 2005, convinced that a broader public understanding and discussion of aftermath issues was crucial in a world where the media regularly covers war, but rarely covers the stories that follow the aftermath of violence and destruction. Sara founded The Aftermath Project as a way to help photographers tell these crucial stories


The Aftermath Project is a non-profit organization committed to telling the other half of the story of conflict — the story of what it takes for individuals to learn to live again, to rebuild destroyed lives and homes, to restore civil societies, to address the lingering wounds of war while struggling to create new avenues for peace. The Aftermath Project holds a yearly grant competition open to working photographers worldwide covering the aftermath of conflict. In addition, through partnerships with universities, photography institutions and non-profit organizations, the Project seeks to help broaden the public’s understanding of the true cost of war — and the real price of peace — through international traveling exhibitions and educational outreach in communities and schools.


Gallery Opening Party
Friday, Feb. 8
6-8 pm
FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC


Join us as we welcome Aftermath: War Is Only Half the Story to Krasl Art Center. Allow inspiration to take over with KAC’s Education Department leading an exhibit-themed workshop. Small bites from Bistro on the Boulevard and a cash bar available.


Panel discussion hosted by Aftermath curator, Sara Terry

Saturday, Feb. 9
10am-12pm
FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC


Join Aftermath: War is Only Half the Story curator, Sara Terry, who will lead an engaging panel discussion with regional community members on the themes covered in this exhibition. Sara Terry is an award-winning documentary photographer and filmmaker best known for her work covering post-conflict stories. She founded The Aftermath Project in 2003.


Coffee with the Curator
Wednesday, Feb. 13
12 noon


FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Gain insights to the art on view and the connection to the art world at large in this gallery tour with KAC Deputy Director and Curator, Tami Miller.

Open, honest discussion is what Godfrey-Lee has had over mascot

The Lee High School’s current mascot is a caricature of Confederate soldier. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


When the Godfrey-Lee Board of Education announced it was going to host forums to discuss whether to change or keep its Rebel mascot, the goal, according to school officials, was to have an open and honest discussion among students, parents, staff and the community.

According to Board President Eric Mockerman, it is exactly what has happened. 

“We are really happy with how the first forum went and happy with the discussion that was generated,” Mockerman said, adding that forum, which was in December, included a mixture of students, residents, and staff with all sharing their thoughts and feelings. “We were hoping for a good, constructive conversation, and that is what has taken place.”

The district is still in the gathering phase as to what the overall consensus of the community’s feelings are toward the rebel mascot, which currently is depicted as a cartoonish figure of a Confederate general. 

The next community forum is set for Jan. 17 at 7 p.m. at the high school medial center. Mockerman said the board is tentatively set to review and discuss its findings at its Feb. 11 board meeting. 

“There has been a variety of reactions from some saying we want to buy a Confederate flag to everything has to be changed, the mascot, the name of the high school,” Mockerman said. 

Controversy has swirled around the Lee mascot for years because of its association with the Confederate south. Recently, the district went through an extensive strategic planning process, according to Superintendent Kevin Polston. Through the process, the district determined its values as Community, Human Centered, Equity, Excellent, and Relationships or CHEER for short. 

The Godfrey-Lee District’s new logo represents the major streets within the district, north and south, Hall Street to Burton streets, and east to west, Clyde Park and Burlingame avenues. Also represented is Godfrey, Engel and Lee Street (which is the diagonal line and the street the high school is located on).) (Supplied)

Polston said the district has three short-term districtwide goals, culture, collaboration and aligning the K-12 curriculum.

“We rebranded the district with a new logo to represented the new values,” Polston said. “After the strategic plan was approved, it was a logical progression to examine the name and the mascot.”

Video supplied by Godfrey-Lee Public Schools

So where did the Lee Rebel name come from? Former Godfrey-Lee superintendent and area historian David Britten provided a 10-minute video on the naming of the school and the mascot. Some highlights from the video:

• Lee Street was an accessory road that ran along the side of the railroad tracks. It was named State Street, but in 1913 was changed to Wall Street and then in the following year, renamed to Lee Street. As to why the name was chosen, Britten said in the video, it is uncertain, but he did note that streets were often renamed to eliminate duplication and/or confusion. 

• In 1923, the Lee High School, originally called Lee Street Middle School, opened. It was named after Lee Street.

• In 1936, a newspaper article, the rebel name is first mentioned and the 1936 yearbook had a theme, the Civil War, tying the school’s name to General Robert E. Lee.

The 1943 spartan-helmeted warrior. (From supplied video)

• In 1943, the first school mascot, a spartan-helmeted warrior, appeared.

• In 1958, a student penned an article that while acknowledging the school was not named after the Confederate general, that a new connection be formed with the school’s fight song be the tune of “Whistling Dixie” and Confederate flags waving from students’s cars.

• In 1959, the student council announced it would incorporate the rebel name with “all the trimmings” and in 1960, the student council purchased a Confederate flag with an official dedication being showcased in the 1961 school yearbook. 

• By 1966, the Confederate flag replaced the Spartan warrior as the school’s symbol.

• By the the 1980s, the school had the Rebel mascot. 

• By the 1990s, the Rebel character had been modified to a cartoonish character with much of the other Confederate symbolisms, such as the flags, gone. 

• Since 2010, the students and staff have adopted a modern rebel code of Respect, Effort, Be original, Be prepared, Integrity, and Elevate your life, more connected to their futures than some distant past, Britten said in the video. 

“This code is visible in the building and has been celebrated in assembles, helping to instill pride in what each and every student is and can become regardless of the obstacles he or she faces each day,” Britten said. 

St. Cecilia music school offers three concerts on Saturday, Jan. 12

St. Cecilia Music Center’s School of Music youth jazz program performance with Robin Connell conducting, from 2017. (Supplied/St. Cecilia Music Center)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

St. Cecilia Music Center’s School of Music offers a variety of music education for West Michigan youth of all ages and adults, and this month there will be a series of concerts featuring the students starting this week.

On Saturday, Jan. 12, the school will hold its winter mid-season concerts for the three youth orchestras in School of Music. All performances are held in Royce Auditorium at St. Cecilia Music Center.

The Sinfonia and Concert Orchestra concert will be at 5 p.m., with the Philharmonic concert at 7:30 p.m. Tickets for each concert are $12 per person (age 10-and-under are free).

The Philharmonic is an advanced orchestra, complete with strings, woodwinds, brass and percussion, playing challenging works from classical, musical and film scores. The Concert Orchestra is a preparatory string ensemble for intermediate students with moderate ensemble experience. Sinfonia is an advanced entry-level string orchestra introducing beginners to the elements of teamwork and ensemble performance.

Later in the month there will be concerts featuring the the Concert Band and Jazz ensembles on Friday, Jan. 18, at 7 p.m. Tickets are also $12 per person (and 10-and-under free).

According to supplied information, as part of the School of Music “students receive high-quality music training and performance opportunities from the region’s top instrumental educators. Young musicians begin to cultivate a lifelong appreciation for music in a nurturing and supportive environment. Ensembles are comprised of talented musicians from across the region, allowing them to learn not only from their teachers, but from one another. They are introduced to diverse musical literature, including pieces from the classical canon and more contemporary modern works.”

For more information about the School of Music offerings visit SCMC-online.org . Tickets to the concerts are available through this link and through the Box Office at 616-459-2224. St. Cecilia Music Center is located at 24 Ransom NE, Grand Rapids.

On the shelf: ‘The Devil Wears Prada’ by Lauren Weisberger

By Karolee Gillman, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

In the the world of high fashion, Miranda Priestly is queen. Miranda is the editor of Runway magazine. She expects perfection from everyone, including her newly hired assistant, Andrea Sachs. Andrea wants to be a writer for The New Yorker, but has left her resume at every publishing house. Runway offers Andrea a job “that a million girls would die for”.

 

The job is actually salaried servitude. Miranda has one demand, often near impossible, after another for Andrea to complete during the day. Andrea pushes friends and family aside as she tries to keep up with those demands. During a trip of a lifetime to Paris Fashion Week, Andrea realizes what is really important in her life, and abruptly quits her job.

 

The way Andrea quits makes news in the society pages, making her a minor celebrity. Afraid that she has been blacklisted in the publishing industry, Andrea moves back home with her parents, and begins writing short-story fiction. One of these stories is picked up by a national teen magazine, and her career really begins.

 

 

Strategies to help young children learn life skills and gain self-confidence

Courtesy MSU Extension

By Tracy Trautner, Michigan State University Extension

 

“I love you too much to deny you the privileges of making mistakes.” – Kathy Lee Gifford, The Gift That I Can Give.

 

If your goal as a parent is to protect your child from getting hurt or avoid confrontation, then you are parenting from a fear-based perspective. This can create anxiety for a child attempting to explore their world and learn from their mistakes. It is difficult to let “stuff happen”, as a parent’s natural instinct is to protect their children. We don’t want our children to feel distressed so we protect them. However, is parental protection worth missing out on some of the valuable life lessons a child can learn when they are given the opportunity to explore and make mistakes on their own?

 

When children are able to process their emotions related to good or bad decisions, parents may not need to say or do anything else. Instead of jumping in and protecting children, learn to trust natural consequences to do much of the teaching for you. Dealing with frustration is a building block for coping skills in life.

 

When you constantly remind your child what to do, such as pack their backpack or put their dishes in the sink, you are teaching your child they are not capable of being responsible without you telling them what to do. This parenting technique will not teach your child to respect themselves or develop necessary confidence skills to be successful later in life. When we allow our children to attempt something new and fail at a young age, the consequences are far different than when they make a similar mistake later.

 

For example, allowing them to negotiate on their own for a turn on the swing or deciding to do something against the rules of the school just because they want to be liked by their friends are both scenarios that will teach valuable lessons for the future. The worse possible outcome is they are sad because they did not get a turn on the swing or sent to the school office for a few hours of detention. Next time—and there will definitely be a next time—they will be a better negotiator or able to stand up to their friends and say “no” when they are making bad decisions. These lessons would not have been learned if a parent or caregiver was hovering and guiding their child’s every move.

 

Fast forward when they are 18 years old and have not developed a strong sense of self because they have been protected their whole life. They may get into a bad situation where the outcome is much more severe and possibly has life-altering consequences.

 

While it is hard thing to witness, when we allow a child to fail frequently early in life, they will build strong resiliency skills that will allow them to deal appropriately with letdowns and sticky situations in the future. According to pediatrician Dr. Jennifer Cunningham, young children are more resilient than we think and cannot grasp the gravity of situations like adults can and don’t dwell on things to the same extent.

 

When a child makes a mistake, help them reflect the situation as well as the part they played in the scenario. Focus on the moment they made a decision to participate or make a bad choice and discuss alternative options that would have had a better outcome. We want our kids to feel equipped and competent. It can be a great feeling for parents when they feel they have raised young adults who are responsible, trustworthy and resilient.

 

Michigan State University Extension suggests helping the child process their decision by asking what happened, how it happened and why it happened. In the future, they will think about this process, make better decisions and take responsibility for their actions. It will encourage them to think things through next time. With some thoughtful, compassionate guidance, we can turn unhappy events into a valuable learning experience that will help the child make better decisions in the future.

 

To learn about the positive impact children and families experience due to MSU Extension programs, read our 2017 impact report: “Preparing young children for success” and “Preparing the future generation for success.” Additional impact reports, highlighting even more ways Michigan 4-H and MSU Extension positively impacted individuals and communities in 2017, can be downloaded from the Michigan 4-H website.

 

 

 

Rexie the T-Rex makes a stop at the Grand Rapids Public Museum

Rexie the T-Rex visits the Grand Rapids Public Museum Jan. 19 and 20.

By Christie Bender
Grand Rapids Public Museum


The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced that they are welcoming a special guest to the Museum, Rexie the T-Rex on Saturday, January 19 and Sunday, January 20! Visitors will get up close with a life-size dinosaur through this entertaining show for kids and families.

Be prepared to step back in time when you meet Rexie, an anatomically perfect, realistic puppet standing over 8’ tall and 12’ long! Everyone loves to make friends and take their picture with Rexie. Families who see the gentle and life-size baby T-Rex experience a thrilling prehistoric encounter from a world long since extinct. Join Rexie the T-Rex, for an unforgettable family experience of legendary proportions!

“We are excited to welcome Rexie the T-Rex to the Museum this month,” said Kate Kocienski, VP of Marketing and PR for the GRPM. “With the popularity of the Expedition: Dinosaur exhibit, this is a perfect fit to continue our dinosaur takeover throughout the Museum.”

Rexie will be meeting visitors on the first floor galleria of the GRPM on January, 19 and 20 at 11:00 a.m., 12:30 p.m., 2:00 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Encounters and photo opportunities with Rexie are free to Museum members and free with general admission to the Museum.

Rexie the T-Rex is brought to the GRPM by Great Shows for Kids.

Expedition: Dinosaur, a special traveling exhibition now open at the GRPM, explores the fascinating world of dinosaurs and the hunt for their fossils! From life-sized and lifelike animatronic dinosaurs – some controlled by visitors – to mechanical and electronic learning stations, visitors become paleontologists. The exhibit taps into our fascination with these incredible creatures and includes a number of hands- on interactives that explain dinosaur movement, digestion, and evolution, and show the life and methods of dinosaur hunters from the 1800s to today. Tickets to the Expedition: Dinosaur exhibition are $4 with the purchase of a general admission ticket, with discounts for Museum members. For more information and tickets, visit grpm.org/Dinos.

Expedition: Dinosaur was developed by Stage Nine Exhibitions. The exhibit at Grand Rapids Public Museum is sponsored locally by Meijer, David & Carol Van Andel Family Foundation, David & Amy Leonard, Keller Ford, Chris & Kim Branoff, FASTSIGNS, Old National Bank, Straight Line Fences and Holiday Inn Grand Rapids Downtown. Media sponsorship by Wood TV8, Wood News Radio and WGVU Public Media.

Due to demand, Kenny Chesney adds second Grand Rapids show

By Mike Klompstra
Van Andel Arena


The first Grand Rapids show Kenny Chesney announced for April 6 at SMG-managed Van Andel Arena on his Songs for the Saints 2019 Tour sold out quickly. So quickly that a second show for Sunday, April 7, has been added.

Tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, January 18 at 10:00 AM. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. See Ticketmaster.com for all pricing and availability.

After playing 19 major stadium concerts, breaking 11 records and playing to over 1.3 million members of No Shoes Nation, Kenny Chesney decided to scale things back, head to where the fans are and create a more intimate concert experience. Though known for his high impact shows, Songs for the Saints 2019 Tour is going to bring all the energy, all the intensity and all the songs to select markets.

“I wanted to bring the music to the people, knowing how many members of No Shoes Nation travel to see our stadium shows,” the man the Los Angeles Times hailed “The People’s Superstar” said of his 2019 tour. “To me, making the rooms a little smaller, coming to where the fans live, we’re changing the dynamic – and I think it’s going to be pretty cool. It’s a lot of people’s hometowns, and that’s always awesome energy.”

Joining the songwriter/superstar on Songs for the Saints 2019 Tour is good friend and hard country icon David Lee Murphy. Murphy’s feel good faith in the universe “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright” became his second and Chesney’s 29th No. 1 – and scored the pair the 2018 CMA Award for Musical Event of the Year.

With “Better Boat,” Chesney’s duet with Mindy Smith from the deeply personal Songs for the Saints climbing the charts, the 8-time Entertainer of the Year is turning his attention back to the fans, the music and the road. Profiled in The New York Times in early November for his intersective approach to music through sports, the man from East Tennessee believes in the power of music to heal people wherever they are.

“One thing people who’ve been coming to see us know is that every night, I tell people, ‘Whatever your problems are, I want you to leave them out there… and for one night, I want you to forget about it, and have the time of your life,’” he explains. “It’s not that we don’t have serious songs, or heartbreak songs, but I want people to feel what they need to feel, sing as loud as they can and have the kind of night everybody needs to feel the best part of being alive.”

Earlier this year, The New York Times further recognized that power, offering, “Everything country learned from arena rock is in the mix…the music gives him heroic, wide-open spaces,” while the Cleveland Plain Dealer offered, “Chesney makes you feel better, better about yourself, better about life,” and Variety noted, “Country Music’s only true long-term stadium act.”

“To me, songs are personal. That is until you play them for others. Now when I hear the audience singing along on “Noise,” or “Get Along,” or “American Kids,” it’s their song every bit as much as it’s mine. They throw so much light and heart on everything, even a sad one like “Anything But Mine,” the songs shine. So for us, getting out there and hearing these songs again just reminds us how powerful they are. And getting to take them to some places we’ve missed, playing some rooms where we can really see all the faces? That’s really awesome, too.”

Spanish guitarist, GR Ballet join GR Symphony in DeVos Hall, Jan. 18-19

Pablo Sáinz Villegas performs with the Grand Rapids Symphony Jan. 18 and 19.

By Jeffrey Kaczmarczyk
Grand Rapids Symphony


It’s wintertime West Michigan, but things are about to heat up downtown in DeVos Performance Hall. The Grand Rapids Symphony presents the rich and fiery flavor of Latinx music and dance in Rhythm of the Dance.

From Argentina to Spain, Rhythm of the Dance showcases music from both sides of the Atlantic and gives a taste of the classic favorites as well as a contemporary imaginings of Latin-American music. The program will include such classic works as Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez, the most popular work of all time for guitar and orchestra, with guitarist Pablo Sáinz Villegas.

Dancers from Grand Rapids Ballet will join the orchestra for the vibrant rhythms and irresistible melodies of Two Tangos by Astor Piazzolla.

The concert in the Richard and Helen DeVos Classical series, led by Music Director Marcelo Lehninger, will take place at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Jan. 18-19 in DeVos Performance Hall. Concert sponsor is Warner Norcross + Judd. Villegas’ performance is sponsored by the Edith I. Blodgett Guest Artist Fund.

The Grand Rapids Symphony’s Brazilian-born Music Director will lead the orchestra in Spanish composer Manuel de Falla’s Suite No. 1 from The Three-Cornered Hat and in Argentinean composer Alberto Ginastera’s Four Dances fromEstancia.

The Symphony will also perform Three Latin American Dancesa contemporary work written by Gabriela Lena Frank, a Grammy Award-winning American composer of Peruvian descent.

Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez, which includes one of the most hauntingly beautiful English horn solos in the symphonic repertoire, is sure to be a highlight of the program.

Having lost his sight at the age of 3, Rodrigo was a virtuoso pianist and gifted composer. Though he was not a guitar player himself, several of his works for guitar and orchestra raised the profile of the instrument within the world of classical music.

Spanish guitarist Pablo Sáinz Villegas, winner of the Andres Segovia Award and Gold Medalist in the first Christopher Parkening International Guitar Competition, will join the Symphony to perform the concerto that made Rodrigo famous. 

Born and raised in La Rioja, Spain, a region full of wineries and bodegas in northern Spain, Villegas is praised as a charismatic performer with singing tone and consummate technique that conjures the passion, playfulness and drama of his homeland’s musical heritage.

‘I never heard the guitar sound the way that you play it.’ is a comment guitarist Villegas often hears.

Villegas told Billboard Magazine in 2016, “When I play a concert, people always say, ‘I never heard the guitar sound the way that you play it.’ And that is exactly what I am looking for. We’re talking about an emotional connection through the music using the guitar. For me, the guitar is the most wonderful and expressive instrument.”

An evening of Latin music would not be complete without a tango or two by “The Great Astor.”

On his ninth birthday, Piazzolla received his first bandoneon, an instrument related to the accordion, from his father, who bought it from a pawn shop for less than $20. Piazzolla soon became a prodigy on the instrument, learning the music of Bach, Mozart and Schumann and, of course, the tango.

Intending to become a composer of classical music, Piazzolla for 10 years wrote symphonies, piano concertos and chamber music. After winning a composers’ competition, he was given the opportunity to study with the famed pedagogue Nadia Boulanger, mentor to such composers as Aaron Copland and Philip Glass.

In a 1988 interview with the Washington Post, Piazzolla recalled presenting his work to Nadia Boulanger, “…all of a sudden she says, ‘Why don’t you play a piece of the music you write in tango? I’m very much interested.’ I played eight bars and she just took my two hands and put them against her chest and said, ‘This is Astor Piazzolla, this is the music you have to go on writing, not that. Throw that into the garbage.’”

“And that’s what I did,” he continued. “I threw 10 years out of my life into the garbage. Now I write classical music, or symphonies, but always with a tango taste in it, trying the most to be Astor Piazzolla always.” 

  • Inside the Music, a free, pre-concert, multi-media presentation sponsored by BDO USA, will be held before each performance at 7 p.m. in the DeVos Place Recital Hall.
  • The complete Rhythm of the Dance program will be rebroadcast on Sunday, April 14, 2019, at 1 p.m. on Blue Lake Public Radio 88.9 FM or 90.3 FM.


Tickets


Tickets for the Richard and Helen DeVos Classical series start at $18 and are available at the Grand Rapids Symphony box office, weekdays 9 am – 5 pm at 300 Ottawa Ave. NW, Suite 100, (located across the street from Calder Plaza). Call (616) 454-9451 x 4 to order by phone. (Phone orders will be charged a $2 per ticket service fee, with a $12 maximum).

Tickets are available at the DeVos Place ticket office, weekdays 10 am – 6 pm or on the day of the concert beginning two hours before the performance. Tickets also may be purchased online at GRSymphony.org.

Fiona Dickinson performs in first 2019 Concerts Under the Stars

Fiona Dickinson

By Christie Bender
Grand Rapids Public Museum


Sit back and experience the wonder of the cosmos with the wonder of music! Kick off the New Year with Concerts Under the Stars at the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) featuring the sounds of dark folk music with Fiona Dickinson on Thursday, Jan. 17.

This site-specific performance will combine shoegaze and dream-pop with ethereal interludes to create two seamless sets that flow into familiar song structures and out into meditative drones. Musicians Dan Fisher, Shane Tripp, and Ben Wiessenborn will assist on the project as a backing band. Accompanying Fiona with live visuals on the planetarium dome will be Meghan Moe Beitiks.

“Fiona Dickinson is a great start to the 2019 Concerts Under the Stars series,” said Kate Kocienski, VP of Marketing and PR for the GRPM. “Although each concert is a different genre, so you would need to see all of them for the full experience.”

Concerts Under the Stars will begin at 7:30 p.m., with Museum doors opening at 6:30 p.m. New this year, performers will play two sets, with a short intermission in between. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

Tickets are $12 for GRPM members and $15 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for members and $18 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616-929-1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

The 2019 Concerts Under the Stars series will continue on Feb. 7 with psych rock from Frankie and Myrrh, Feb. 28 with ambient R&B from Bronze Wolf, and will conclude on Mar. 21 with the electronic sounds of Pink Sky.

Fiona Dickinson is a British songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and music educator currently residing in Grand Rapids. Along with her work arranging strings for the ambient noise project, Saltbreaker, Fiona has a lengthy list of collaborations on stage and in the studio. She also has a background in composition for independent film and live score for site-specific performance with dance, video, and analog projection.

Meghan Moe Beitiks, has designed lights for the California Academy of Sciences, the Asian Art Museum, SF Sketchfest, and Atom-R. She is an artist working with associations and disassociations of culture/nature/structure, analyzing perceptions of ecology through the lenses of site, history, and emotions in order to produce work that interrogates relationships with the non-human. She was a Fulbright Student Fellow in Scenic Design to Latvia and a recipient of the Edes Foundation Prize for Emerging Artists. She received her BA in Theater Arts from the University of California at Santa Cruz and her MFA in Performance Art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at Grand Valley State University, and has designed media for previous Concerts Under the Stars in 2018.