Category Archives: 3-bottom

A Teacher’s impact is lifelong!

Promote MichiganBy: Dianna Higgs-Stampfler – Promote Michigan

 

Many of you may not be aware that I was a teacher in a previous life – well, an educator, I guess, since I never actually received my certification to “officially” teach. I’m not sure if it is allowed today, but in the 1990s, if you had a degree in certain fields, you could still “teach” in that area. For example, a mechanic could “teach” auto shop, a chef could “teach” culinary arts, a sculptor could “teach” art. As a professional journalist—in both print and broadcast—I was given the opportunity to develop and advise a student-run newspaper program at Otsego Middle School.

 

I’ve been a writer since childhood. I still have my third-grade journal from Gilkey Elementary School, a selection of poems written for my grandparents, and reports from my middle school years.

 

My interest in journalism came my sophomore year at Plainwell High School. Kenny Zelnis was our teacher and advisor of the Trojan Torch. I remember leaving the very first class that year knowing what my career would be. The child of a long-time radio broadcaster, it seemed like a perfect fit. My natural curiosity, relentless communication skills and passion for writing were fueled by this specific teacher and his obvious inspiration for news.

 

For the next two-and-a-half years, journalism class became my #1 priority (until my senior year, when yearbook also came into play). I thrived on the research—before the internet, when we had to use the card catalog, microfilm machine and the telephone to conduct interviews and pull pieces together for articles. I looked forward to class, to telling stories, to attending conferences and entering stories in competitions through the Michigan Interscholastic Press Association (MIPA) at Michigan State University.

 

By my senior year, I was named News Editor of the Torch and business manager of the Trojan yearbook, where I also managed a new special “features” section. I was also working at a local weekly newspaper, typesetting copy, taking photos, covering news and writing my own column. If that weren’t enough, I also began working in broadcast news at Quixie, a local radio station co-owned by my dad, who now owns and operates WAKV. At that year’s MIPA conference, I was honored as one of the top four student journalists in the state of Michigan.

 

College took me to Western Michigan University where I majored in English (with emphasis in Community Journalism) and Communications (with an emphasis in Radio Broadcasting). Here, I also finally met Cheryl Kaechele, who owned newspapers in our community from 1982 until 2015. She was teaching a couple journalism classes at Western, and I had known of her my entire life.

 

You see, Cheryl and her husband, Walt, graduated from Plainwell High School with my dad. Not only was she a long-time family friend, but she was active with the Michigan Press Association. Even then, I knew the value of building a solid network! I would even coordinate my academic and work schedule just to get into her classes, knowing there were key things to be learned from her.

 

While finishing my degrees, I continued working at local newspapers (including ones owned by Cheryl) and the radio station, and also served as copy editor of the campus paper, Western Herald. My multi-tasking skills were being perfected in those days.

 

I realize how fortunate I was that my skills and passion lined up back in high school. I’ve known since I was 15 what I wanted to do with my life. Although it has changed slightly in focus over the years, the bottom line is I am still a professional communicator in a variety of platforms. I have Mr. Zelnis to thank for that first introduction into the world of journalism. Had I never been in his class, where would I have landed in life? The power of a dedicated teacher is so profound. I used to joke with him that someday I’d have his job. I didn’t exactly get there, but I did get close.

 

After college, I landed a part-time job as the PR person for Otsego Public Schools (the neighboring, rival school district). A couple of years in, at the request of former Superintendent John Kingsnorth, I developed a non-credit, elective middle school journalism program. Students were taught every aspect of the field, from ethics and writing styles, to the business of running a newspaper (including advertising, layout and design and distribution).

 

Spartan AwardThe Bulldog Express was born in March 1993 and went on, during its four-year life, to earn several MIPA awards for individual and group projects. MIPA really hadn’t focused much on middle school programs in the past, but with my involvement all that changed. A board position was even created for the Middle School Chair, which I served as for a couple of years.

 

In April 1996, the paper and its dedicated staff even won a coveted Spartan Award and was recognized as the #1 Middle School Student Newspaper in the state of Michigan. My students worked hard—they wrote grants to pay for equipment and desktop publishing software, they attended conferences, they gave up free time after school to work on stories, they spent their lunch hours selling papers and so much more.

 

That all changed during the winter of 1997.

 

Days before our next issue was to head to the printer, an incident on a school field trip created a last-minute editorial change to the front page. An eighth-grade girl was caught shoplifting, the police were called and the following day, teachers informed students that as a result of this incident, future trips were in jeopardy. Students weren’t happy and our news editor wanted to cover the story.

 

With the approval of the editor-in-chief and myself, content changes were made and the reporter set out in search of the facts. A police report was received, interviews were conducted, the story was written (and since the accused was under age, her name was never reported). The article was completed, the layout was revised and we were ready to go to print.

 

Hold the presses!

 

Hearing about the pending article, the new superintendent stepped in and made an executive decision. Publishing such an article could be seen as negative for the district, and therefore the paper was forbidden to run it. In our four years of operation, this was the first case of censorship that we were faced with. We had a reputation for covering “controversial” topics in the past, so this caught us off guard as it seemed so trivial.

 

After an office meeting with the superintendent and principal, I informed the editorial team of this new development. I provided my editor-in-chief with a list of case studies and resources provided to me by MIPA and the Student Press Law Center. We talked about the options, the laws and the consequences. Then, I sent him home to discuss it with parents and to think about his course of action, saying that I would support whatever decision he made.

 

I then contacted my journalism colleagues—including Mr. Zelnis at PHS—to get advice on how to handle the situation. I knew what needed to be done, but it helped to have their support and guidance as I moved through this uncharted territory.

 

A couple of days later, after talking with industry leaders and officials in Lansing and Washington DC, the editor-in-chief decided that the censorship could not be allowed to happen. He decided, with me and his parents by his side, to fight for his constitutional right to free press. Calls were made to the local newspaper, who were provided the article which ran that week under the headline: “You Couldn’t Read it in The Bulldog Express, But You Can Read it Here.”

 

The war had begun!

 

The exact sequence of events is a bit hazy at this point, nearly 20 years later, but the basics are still with me. The editor-in-chief retained a pro-bono lawyer out of Grand Rapids who filed a lawsuit against the superintendent, principal and board of education for violation of his First Amendment rights.

 

Local media listened.

 

Not only did the story hit the weekly newspapers (owned at the time by my former professor Cheryl Kaechele) but the Kalamazoo Gazette picked it up. The story went regional, with local radio and TV stations following it. WJR in Detroit and WGN in Chicago did radio interviews with the editor-in-chief. A story on the Associated Press wire lead to articles in Boston Globe, Dayton Daily News, Chicago Tribune, Patriot Ledger, Rocky Mountain News, Detroit News, Grand Rapids Press and Los Angeles Times. The Chicago Reader ran a story as well.

 

Printing of The Bulldog Express continued, but it had definitely changed. Now, in addition to the first case of censorship, the paper was subject to “prior review” on a multitude of levels. The editorial calendar had to pre-approved, the stories had to be pre-approved after they were typed into the computer, the final layout had to be reviewed and the principal or superintendent was responsible for delivering it to the printer (to prevent us from swapping out stories at the last minute). The job of producing the paper became much more laborious and time-consuming.

 

Yet, subscriptions and advertising increased dramatically. If I recall correctly, we had fewer than 10 ads in that issue where the story was originally pulled. By the next month’s issue, we were over 20—including a one-half page ad from the local VFW which said something to the effect of “Thank you for supporting our constitutional rights.” The ad ran, because I don’t think the administration wanted to take on the local veterans on this one.

 

As the school year ended, things continued to decline. After months of being reprimanded for supporting my editorial team, I was pulled as advisor from the paper. Not being a certified teacher (and not part of the union), I had no real recourse. When the new school year started that fall, my hours (and my paycheck) were cut in half, which forced me to look elsewhere for a job. I left in November of 1997, and the paper—under new leadership—eventually folded. The lawsuit continued throughout the school year, but was eventually settled out of court. The editor-in-chief was heralded for his efforts by many journalist organizations and he was even recognized by the Freedom Forum in Washington DC.

 

Yes, we lost the battle, but I think we still won the bigger war. Granted, the paper and the journalism program didn’t survive, but the students and I learned some valuable lessons that still play a role in our lives today. Defending your constitutional right is a big deal. Imagine doing that at the age of 13 or 14? Being a leader for students, making them think and challenge authority when appropriate are life lessons they’ll never forget. I learned those lessons in the classroom with Mr. Zelnis (although not to the extreme that my students did at OMS), but it all started with that one inspiring teacher.

 

About 10 years ago, when my daughter was a freshman at Plainwell High School, we stopped in to see Mr. Zelnis during fall open house. I wanted to introduce her to the teacher who helped shape my life—the teacher who inspired me, motivated me and encouraged me. The teacher who became a colleague and a friend.

 

With a fondness for writing herself, my daughter found herself interested in journalism and that year she became one of only two freshmen admitted into the Journalism I class that Zelnis was teaching. I remember her coming home from school a week or so into the class and I could tell she got it — she understood the impact that a great teacher can really have. Zelnis retired before she graduated, but I’m so thankful she was able to spend a brief period of time learning from him just as I did years before.

 

I’ve always been vocal about my role models—about those who have had such an impact on my life that even today their inspiration runs deep and is at the core of who I am as a person, a writer, a business person and a leader.

 

This article was republished with permission from Dianna at Promote Michigan. We do our best to help with the promotion of the great State of Michigan!

Poetry Slam Competition makes its way to Kentwood Library

poetry slam
Spoken word poetry slam competition to be held at Richard L. Root Kentwood Branch Library

By: Barri Tiggle

 

Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch library is hosting its first live and uncensored spoken word poetry slam competition on Tuesday, May 17 from 7-8 pm.

 

There were up to 300 entries from Kent county residents between the grades of 6 through 12. The event is free and open to all general public. The event was created based on the original 13th Annual Teen Poetry Contest held at the KDL branch.

 

“We decided to add a spoken word component in an effort to breathe a little life into the event, and hopefully attract a segment of kids who otherwise have no outlet for their creativity,” said Greg Lewis KDL Teen Paraprofessional.

 

Poets are supposed to submit their work online in hopes of being selected. “We amped it up to get more teens involved,” said Carlita Gonzalez, KDL Program and Outreach Specialist.

 

There are two different categories for the competition, which are written and spoken word. Any submissions are automatically added into the competition.

 

“GF Korreck will be judging the written portion only,” said Kelsey May, a member of The Diatribe Staff. The Diatribe is an organization used to empower individuals through written and spoken word. Their values consist of helping others cope with challenges and struggles, while finding their own voice and story through the use of poetry. The Diatribe will be participating in the KDL poetry slam event as the master of ceremonies, also known as emcees.

 

Each winner will be given a prize. The prizes given away are centered on a book and music theme and will be provided by Schuler Books. 20 winners will be chosen, ten from the written portion and ten from the spoken word, and given a $50 gift card. All winning entries will be showcased on the KDL website’s Teen page. As of right now the event is not set as an annual event.

 

“As long as there is interest, we hope to offer this event, we are definitely planning on next year,” said Lewis.

 

The entire event is in correlation to as well as funded by KDL READS. For more information on the KDL poetry slam event or upcoming events with The Diatribe please visit kdl.org or thediatribe.org.

Late-night dreams: Unknown Mortal Orchestra to play The Pyramid Scheme

Unknown Mortal Orchestra comes to Grand Rapids May 18.
Unknown Mortal Orchestra comes to Grand Rapids May 18.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra has been making the rounds of the late night shows – with stops on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, and in February on Last Call with Carson Daly – and rightly so: the band’s psycho-pop sounds are the stuff of dreams.

 

UMO, led by singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Ruban Nielson, will make a stop in Grand Rapids at The Pyramid Scheme on Wednesday, May 18. The sold-out show starts at 8 p.m., with Whitney opening, so you can bet UMO’s synthesizer and Nielson’s vocals will be echoing in the heads of the audience late that night too.

 

The band is touring in support of its third full-length release – after 2013’s “II” and 2011’s self-titled debut release, on which the band explored everything from techno-pop to lo-fi funk to otherworldly folk. More focused this time out, 2015’s “Multi-Love,” the new album and the lead single on it, is a dive into the deep end of what one reviewer called “psycho-pop”. I’ll not argue.

 

UMO currently calls Portland, Oregon home and is comprised of Nielson – who hails from New Zeeland – bassist Jake Portrait, keyboardist Quincy McCrary, and drummer Riley Geare.

 

The songs on the new release you’ve most likely heard, if you caught them late night or you’re into blog radio or SiriusXMU, are “Multi-Love,” “Can’t Keep Checking My Phone,” and “Necessary Evil,” and each deliver modern, if-slightly-strange, love stories.

 

On “Multi-Love,” Nielson is nearly whispering as he sings: “Multi-Love, checked into my heart and trashed it like a hotel room. Who is your God? Where is she? She wants to bury me in Austin under Uchiko. She don’t want to be a man or a woman.” That’s modern love alright.”

 

But it is UMO’s layered, techno-pop instrumentations that really make the stuff of dreams.

 

“Building old synthesizers and bringing them back to life, creating sounds that aren’t quite like anyone else’s. I think that’s much more subversive,” Nielson says on the band’s website about the music.

 

As someone who reluctantly fell in love with the music and strange storytelling of Death Cab for Cutie, Unknown Mortal Orchestra fits right in with the desired soundtrack of my routine dreams and occasional nightmares.

 

— Kady

 

The Lowdown:

 

Unknown Mortal Orchestra & Whitney

 

When: Wednesday, May 18, 8 pm.

 

Where: The Pyramid Scheme, 68 Commerce SW, Grand Rapids

 

Tickets: The show is now sold out. Age 18-plus

 

More info here.

 

 

 

In Kyoto: Temples and Geishas

By Lynn Strough

Travelynn Tales

 

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This is the sixth installment chronicling the adventures of Lynn Strough, a local artist and writer who’s been traveling the world since November 2014. Lynn’s travels have (so far) taken her to Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Cambodia, Japan, Slovenia, Croatia, Ireland, England, France, Italy… and I’m sure we’re forgetting a few destinations. To learn more about her journey, go here.

 

Kyoto is a city of contrasts – modern buildings and very old temples, the latest fashions and traditional kimonos. It’s the kind of place I envision when I think of Japan.

 

My first morning in Kyoto, I navigated the train system to get to Fushimi Inari, the temple of 10,000 gates (which should also be called the temple of a million steps). It sits at the base of a mountain with thousands of giant red gates all in a long row snaking upward, which you walk through, following the path past many smaller temples or shrines.

 

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It leads up to a view at the top looking out over Kyoto. It’s about four kilometers and takes about two hours to walk up, and is totally worth the effort, not just for the view, but for the experience of all of the different things to see along the way.

 

The entrance was jam-packed with people, and the usual money-making things like fortune telling in various forms – the sticks in a tube, the place to hang bad fortunes out to dry, and tons and tons of food booths selling mostly things I didn’t recognize.

 

 

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Many foxes are found in Inari shrines, and Inari is the god of rice. You can purchase a small fox-shaped board and put your own fox face or message on it to leave behind.

 

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From there, I wandered to the Gion area, which is the “old Kyoto” where women dressed in Geisha garb hang out. Some are “real” geishas and many more “pretend” geishas – there are actually kimono rental shops!

 

On my way there I accidentally stumbled upon a park, so I headed through instead of taking the direct map route, and discovered Kennin ji, a Zen temple & garden – what a happy accident! I’d been trying to find what I thought was a Zen temple on the map this morning, with no luck, and here I found one when I wasn’t looking!

 

It was beautiful, with a rock garden raked in circles and swirling lines, lovely rooms with tatami mats and square green cushions, and amazing paintings. Girls dressed like geishas posed for photographers, and a couple of them took a selfie with me.

 

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Also while not looking, I ran into a dance show venue where tickets were about to go on sale, and someone was handing out sheets for a discount, another happy accident. The show included a bit of traditional music, flower arranging, tea ceremony, comedy play, Kyoto dance, and puppet theater. It was a bit touristy but still worth seeing.

 

16Gion at night is a sight to behold. In Kyoto, you can also visit Nijo Castle and visit the Golden Pavillion, Kinkakuji.

 

You can visit amazing ceramics shops and a gallery where 102 different artists works are displayed, all tea ceremony related, contemporary as well as traditional, and shop in places that just sell Japanese fans…

 

You can attend a Japanese tea ceremony, where they will show you all of the intricacies involved. It’s quite fascinating, full of way too many details for me to remember. But then it’s also sort of meditative. Even the tea scoop has a name. This one translated to something like “cherry blossoms that float like snow in spring.”

 

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Later, dinner with a new Swiss friend, Ruth, at a local’s joint, sitting at the bar eating dumplings and beer. A great way to end the day.

 

Even without your own kimono and tea bowl, you can have a lovely time in the beautiful Japanese city of Kyoto!

 

About Lynn Strough

Lynn is a 50-something year old woman whose incarnations in this life have included graphic designer, children’s book author and illustrator, public speaker, teacher, fine art painter, wine educator in the Napa Valley, and world traveler. Through current circumstances, she has found herself single, without a job or a home, and poised for a great adventure.

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“You could consider me homeless and unemployed, but I prefer nomad and self-employed, as I pack up my skills and head off with my small backpack and even smaller savings to circumnavigate the globe (or at least go until the money runs out). Get ready to tag along for the ride…starting now!”

 

 

 

All images copyright Lynn Strough and Travelynn Tales

Reprinted with permission

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Big trucks and hotdogs: It’s National Public Works Week

Kentwood Public Works Department oversees the city's recycling center.
Kentwood Public Works Department oversees the city’s recycling center.

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org

 

It’s the kid in all of us that watches those big machines that build and plow our roads in wonderment and a little bit of awe. Next week, thanks to two local Public Works Departments, we will all get the chance to let our inner child out.

 

In celebration of National Public Works Week, May 15 – 21, both the Kentwood and Wyoming Public Works Departments will be hosting open houses, giving area residents a chance to discover all that these departments do for the city and its residents.

 

“Road, water, sewer, recycling, household hazardous waste,” said Kentwood Public Works Director John Gordy as he listed off just some of the items area Public Works Departments take care of on a daily basis.

 

In 1960 the American Public Works Association established National Public Works Week to create a better understand of the various responsibilities of a Public Works facility in maintaining the infrastructure of its community. This includes such areas as ground maintenance, sewer and water, potholes and road maintenance, and snowplowing to list a few of the many services provided by these departments.

 

Having hosted a Public Works Week Open House for the past 22 years, the event has become one of the City of Wyoming’s most anticipated activities for families..

 

The City of Wyoming will have various equipment out at its Public Works Open House set for May 16.
The City of Wyoming will have various equipment pieces out at its Public Works Open House set for May 16.

“It has become a tradition,” said Wyoming’s Public Works Assistant Director Aaron Vis. “We have been doing it so long that people have just come to expect that we will be hosting it.”

 

Because there are several entrances into the event, its hard for staff to take attendance, Vis said, adding they estimate attendance by the number of hotdogs served.

 

Last year, the Wyoming Public Works Department went through about 1,800 hotdogs with staff estimating about 1,500 people attended the event. Vis said he expects about the same for this year’s open house which is set for Monday, May 16, from 5 – 8 p.m. at the Wyoming Public Works building, 2660 Burlingame Ave. SW. Various Public Works Department equipment will be on hand for people to explore along with a police cruiser and fire truck. Staff will be on hand to talk to visitors about equipment and projects as well as serving free beverages, chips, and, of course, hotdogs.

 

Kentwood’s Public Works Department will host its first Public Works Week Family Event with the Kent County Road Commission Wednesday, May 18 from 4 – 7 p.m. at the Kentwood Public Works building, 5068 Breton Rd. SE. Road plow trucks and construction equipment will be on hand for visitors to explore along with 20 different displays on various Public Works topics. Gorney said there also will be live demonstrations on maintenance and repair of water and sewer systems and discussions on how and why different improvements are made on roads. Kent County Public Works officials will be there to discuss household hazardous waste and how to properly dispose of such items. There also will be giveaways for children, free snacks, and yes, hotdogs.

 

According to APWA’s website, National Public Works Week has been growing with more and more municipalities participating. Besides Wyoming and Kentwood observing the week, the City of Grandville will have a display at its library as part of Michgian Week BBQ, the City of Grand Rapids will mark the entire week with a display of Grand Rapids Public Works equipment on Market Street, and the City of East Grand Rapids will host a “Touch a Truck” event starting at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 18.

 

 

WKTV celebrates Heritage Hill Home Tour with a rebroadcast of popular film series

Exterior shot of the Meyer May House from the home's porch.
Exterior shot of the Meyer May House from the home’s porch.

The annual Heritage Hill Tour of Homes is set to kick off in a couple of weeks and to whet your appetite WKTV will rebroadcast the award-winning “Grand Homes of Heritage Hill.”

 

“Grand Homes of Heritage Hill” will air Wednesday, May 18, at noon featuring the 2007 Telly Award winning episode “The Voigt House.” Friday, May 20, at 11:30 a.m., all three episodes will air, “The Voigt House,” “The Meyer May House,” and “Connors House.” Hegewald also received a Festival of the Arts film award in the documentary category in 2007 for his work on the series.

 

“The homes of Heritage Hill have fascinated me all of my life – from their varied architectural styles to their unabashed grandeur,” said Thomas Hegewald in an 2014 WKTV article about the series. Hegewald is the producer, videographer, and writer behind the series. “On every occasion that I have driven through this area, I have gawked at the homes and picked my favorites. I had been volunteering at WKTV for a few months when Tom Norton, the station manager, suggested that I produce a series on these homes. It seemed like an ideal match.”

 

"The Grand Homes of Heritage Hill" episode feature The Voigt House won a Telly Award.
“The Grand Homes of Heritage Hill” episode feature The Voigt House won a Telly Award.

In 2009, the Grand Rapids Public Museum discontinued the public hours for the Voigt House, making Hegewald’s video the about the only way to peek inside the 19th century home. Built in 1895-96 for the prominent merchant and businessman Carl Voigt, the Voigt family lived in the house continually for nearly 76 years until Voigt’s youngest son, Ralph, died in 1971. In 1974, the Kent County Council for Historic Preservation purchased the home and donated the structure to the City of Grand Rapids. One of the most noted features of the facility is that since it was a one-owner house, the first floor was redecorated in 1907 and never update again with the original silk wall coverings and carpeting remaining.

 

Hegewald said he selected the Voigt House and the Meyer May House because they both showcased how the original owners had once lived. “The Voigt house featured not only the original furnishings, but the décor as well,” he said. “The only restoration came in replacing an item, and only when completely necessary. Since there had been an addition to the Meyer May House, followed years later by it being broken up into apartments, a complete restoration had to take place to bring it back to its original state.”

 

Even the details of the Meyer May House were well planned.
Even the details of the Meyer May House were well planned.

The Meyer May House originally was built for a Grand Rapids clothier and purchased and restored in 1987 by Steelcase. The home was opened to the public in 1987 and provides the opportunity to se a Prairie house exactly as Frank Lloyd Wright intended. Along with being part of this year’s Heritage Hill Home Tour, the Meyer May House is open to the public Sundays from 1 – 4 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursday from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m.

 

The third home in the series is the Connors House, which is privately owned. While the home was owned by one family, it needed to be brought up to code for electrical and plumbing. “With extensive renovations underway, much thought was also put into the décor of the home to reflect its past, but with a contemporary feel as well,” Hegewald said.

 

“In the end, I came away with an appreciation for this area in our city – from the original owners who built the homes to those who fought to save them from destruction during the days of urban renewal,” he said. “I also applaud the efforts of the homeowners today who strive to keep up with the amount of work it must take to keep these homes in good repair.”

 

A greater appreciation of these historic homes and the district they are in is one of the reasons Heritage Hill started its annual Tour of Homes 47 years ago. This year’s tour, which is Saturday, May 21, from 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. and Sunday, May 22, from noon – 6 p.m., features six restored private houses, three historic buildings and two recent additions that demonstrate how new construction can fit into the fabric of a historic district. The tour includes the 1886 Queen Anne-style home built for the Davis family of Stow & Davis Furniture Co.; a 1916 Georgian Manor, a 1906 American foursquare and a 1912 Tudor Revival.

 

Advance tickets for the tour are $15 and available at the Heritage Hill Association Office, 126 College SE or at www.heritagehillweb.org. Tickets the weekend of the tour are $20. All proceeds go to the Heritage Hill Association and the organization’s historic preservation efforts. A free shuttle bus for the tour is provided between featured properties. For more information on the tour, call 616-459-8950.

New additions at the Wyoming Dog Park raise the ‘Woof’

Wyoming Dog ParkBy: Mike DeWitt

Mike.DeWitt@wktv.org

 

As the sun breaks through the clouds and warms the ground beneath, spring is ushered in and invites everyone to get outside. Winter has finally put itself in the rearview mirror and Wyoming residents can now take the opportunity to bring their loved ones outside on the new equipment at Marquette Park.

 

As the adults look on, the playful noises coming from the new equipment isn’t the laughter of kids, but rather the happy barks and tail wagging of Wyoming’s four-legged friends at the Wyoming Dog Park.

 

This spring, the Wyoming Parks and Recreation Department installed a large “canine castle” and a smaller “top dog bridge” to the city’s dog park. Both play structures were made from low-maintenance durable recycled plastic and will continue to recycle joy for canine visitors for years to come.

 

Dog ParkThe dog park opened in 2009 and was founded by a citizen group with a vision for a dedicated pet area in the city. The group petitioned the Wyoming Parks and Recreation Commission for a space and an enclosed 2.2-acre park was created just north of Kimble Field in Wyoming’s Marquette Park. The enclosed area features areas for all dogs, both large and small.

 

“The dog park creates a community,” said Valarie Mester, the recreation programmer at Wyoming Parks and Recreation. “It’s a social event for people, as well as their dogs, and the dog park members become very close. It also brings people, even non-residents, to the north side of town.”

 

The dog park currently has 179 active members for 2016. That number is expected to reach over 300 by the end of the summer as new members sign up and old membership are renewed.

 

In total, the new equipment cost $5,178 and the dogs really enjoy going underneath the pieces for the shade it provides. In fact, the castle is designed for the dogs to go underneath it. Funding for the project came from the Wyoming Parks and Recreation millage as well as through the annual Wyoming Dog Park membership fees.

 

“The Wyoming Dog Park is the result of a successful collaboration between the Citizens for Dog Park Committee and the City of Wyoming Parks and Recreation Department,” said Rebecca Rynbrandt, the city’s director of community services. “We are excited to incorporate this new equipment to the park, which will enhance the experience for our canine members.”

 

Dog ParkThe Wyoming Dog Park is open daily from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. The park is controlled by a key fob access requiring a membership for entry into the dog park. The membership process is to ensure all pets are vaccinated and licensed to create a safe environment for everyone.

 

“Our key fob entry system is an advantage to our park and makes us unique,” said Mester. “The extra security and safety measures are very helpful. They make sure everyone stays healthy, and the members of the dog park really appreciate that feature.”

 

An annual membership costs $12 for a Wyoming resident and $24 for a non-resident. Memberships can be purchased at the Parks and Recreation office at 1155 28th St. SW. Proof of required medical records and a current dog license are necessary for membership.

 

For further information regarding the dog park, or any of Wyoming’s parks, call the Wyoming Parks and Recreation Department at 616-530-3164.

 

So, this spring and summer, make sure to get outside and enjoy the weather! Oh, and bring your furry friends too.

Kentwood celebrates paying off Justice Center

By: Mike DeWitt

 

The cake was cut and commemorative bottles were opened as the City of Kentwood celebrated paying off a 15-year, $10 million bond on the City’s Justice Center this past Friday. The celebration was led by Mayor Stephen Kepley and quickly handed off to the two men who put the plans together 15 years ago, Judge William Kelly and former Chief of Police Richard Mattice.

 

Justice Center GroundbreakingBefore the Justice Center was built, the Police Department and the District Court were housed in the Kentwood City Center. It was a cramped working environment that limited the productivity of both staffs.

 

“We were really cramped,” said Judge William Kelly. “One of our clerks in the court had to be put in the back of the courtroom, and that was also our city commission chambers.”

 

“Before [the Justice Center] was built, the police department used the City Center but also had two trailers that housed our detective bureau and our community services bureau,” said former Police Chief Richard Mattice. “Our locker rooms were across the street in the fire station.”

 

It was apparent that the court and the police department needed a new home, but how? Kentwood had never taken out a bond for a building before. For a city as fiscally conservative as Kentwood, it was a big step to take.

 

“The mayor promised the voters that if they approved the millage to hire more police officers, then the city would build a new facility without going to the public for another millage,” said Kelly.

 

Justice Center GroundbreakingSo, with that on the table, the millage was passed to hire more police officers and the city got to work on building a new facility. Planning started in August of 2000 with a groundbreaking ceremony quickly to follow on March 22, 2001.

 

Coming in at 60,000 square-feet, approximately 20,000 on the court side and 40,000 on the police side, the Justice Center added much-needed room for city employees to do their jobs.

 

“When we moved in here, we came from 5,200 square-feet to 41,000 square-feet,” said Mattice. “We had facilities to adequately meet the public which we didn’t have before.”

 

Kentwood Justice CenterIn the end, the Kentwood Justice Center was completed on time and on budget. 15 years later the building was paid off on time and is one of the reasons for the city’s AA+ bond rating – a rating very unusual for a city the size of Kentwood.

 

Another example of the City of Kentwood doing what is best for the community.

Explore the Earth in Grand Rapids Public Museum’s newest exhibition

In "Earth Explorers" participants can explore the ocean floor. (Christopher Gannon/Gannon Visuals)
In “Earth Explorers” participants can explore the ocean floor. (Christopher Gannon/Gannon Visuals)

Journey around the world at the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) in the new exhibit “Earth Explorers” opening May 21. Organized around Earth’s eco-zones, “Earth Explorers” brings the unparalleled adventures of “National Geographic” to life.

 

“Earth Explorers” allows visitors to let their imaginations run wild as they become explorers and embark on an adventure to discover new species, study animal behavior and learn about the important roles technology, innovation and ingenuity play in making and documenting these discoveries.

 

Explore an arctic cabin and test your ability to live in an ice-covered world. Descend into the deep ocean in a 3-D submersible and explore how life forms at varying depths, even coming face-to-face with a great white shark. Identify incredible insects from the Amazon while learning the benefits of biodiversity. Ascend into the thin air of the Himalayas. Soar in a hot air balloon over the Savanna while learning about the life of elephants and other mammals.

 

“’Earth Explorers’ gives our community a chance to visit places most are never able to go,” said Kate Moore, VP of Marketing and Public Relations. “This exhibit is highly interactive, allowing visitors to engage in the various eco-zones, making it a fun learning experience for all ages.”

 

Visitors will learn about the daring men and women who venture into dangerous and remote parts of the world to discover new places, help protect our planet’s biodiversity and unearth new scientific discoveries.

 

Participants will come face-to-face with a Great White Shark in "Earth Explorers" exhibit at the Grand Rapids Publc Museum. (Christopher Gannon/Gannon Visuals)  --  shot by Christopher Gannon on 9/25/13 in Des Moines, IA Shot for GES
Participants will come face-to-face with a Great White Shark in the “Earth Explorers” exhibit at the Grand Rapids Publc Museum. (Christopher Gannon/Gannon Visuals)

Admission to “Earth Explorers” will be included with general admission to the GRPM and is free to Museum members. For more information, visit grpm.org/EarthExplorers.

 

CHILL: The Polar Regions
Experience life on ice in Earth’s extreme Polar Regions. Covered with icicles, battered by winds and harsh weather, an Arctic cabin invites hands-on discovery about surviving and thriving in the Polar Regions. Assemble the right mix of protein and carbohydrates in “What’s for Dinner?” Watch a polar bear pace outside a window and flip through the Explorer’s Notebook to learn first-hand survival strategies from photographer Paul Nicklen. Compare your own “thermogram” heat loss signature to a polar bear’s and test out how well different gloves protect your hands from the chill of an ice plate.

 

DIVE: The Oceans
Can you handle life under pressure? Find out in the Oceans eco-zone, where you’ll descend into the deep in a 3-D submersible. Mysteries of life under pressure and at great depths are revealed through stunning National Geographic videos. Learn the science behind submersibles and how life forms at varying depths. Get up close and personal with AIR JAWS, an 11-foot long sculpted great white shark—one of the ocean’s oldest and most misunderstood predators.

 

TREK: The Rain Forests
Hang out in a prep tent for fun, self-guided discovery about life in the tropical rain forests – the wet, wild and wonderful ecosystem that provides much of the air we breathe, safeguards Earth’s incredible biodiversity and may well hold the key to new life-saving remedies. Try your hand at identifying incredible insects from the Amazon and get “grossed out” with realistic creepy-crawlies while discovering the benefits of biodiversity.

 

CLIMB: Mountains and Caves
Descend closer to the Earth’s core and ascend to its highest peaks. Meet Carsten Peter, an explorer who takes on Earth’s most challenging caves to share photographs with the rest of the world. Then, ascend into the thin air of the Himalayas, but be careful, you might be caught by a camera trap, the same technology used by explorer Steve Winter to capture photos of the elusive snow leopard.

 

SOAR: The Savanna

Take a hot air balloon ride to witness “Life On the Move.” Through seamless video production, surround sound and other atmospheric effects, you’ll soon have the sensation of flying over a savanna where wild herds still roam. Next, put your animal tracking and migration mapping skills to the test, and meet explorers who document the incredible life cycles and stories of elephants and other endangered mammals of the savanna.

 

“Earth Explorers” is produced by Global Experience Specialists (GES) in partnership with “National Geographic.”

Wyoming student surprises herself with a win from countywide poetry contest

San Juan Diego Academy Seventh Grader Nurit Gonzalez with her winning poetry piece "April."
San Juan Diego Academy Seventh Grader Nurit Gonzalez with her winning poetry piece “April.”

Every student is bound to get that school assignment where you write a story or poem and then have to submit it to a local writing competition.

 

At least that was the assignment for Nurit Gonzalez, a seventh grader at Wyoming’s San Juan Diego Academy, and her classmates. The 23-member class was just wrapping up its poetry unit when their teacher, Molly Pelak, announced the students would each need to select one poem from their collection to enter the Dyer Ives Kent County Poetry Competition.

 

“I had never done something like the before,” Pelak said, admitting she had never heard of Dyer Ives until her principal had forwarded her information about the annual competition. “I have a classroom with many of whom write pretty well and I thought this was a great way to end the unit.”

 

Gonzalez looked over her poems that covered various topics from rain to her favorite sport, soccer. She decided to select “April” because she liked the way it had come together and “because it is the month my birthday is in.”

 

She submitted it and from there, really did not give the poetry competition much thought. “I really didn’t think it was going to go anywhere,” she said.

 

This year the Dyer Ives Kent County Poetry Contest had a huge increase with nearly 400 entries, due in part to area teachers sending in student work, according to coordinator Christine Stephens Krieger. “More first-time poets are entering and winning the competition alongside more experienced local poets, so we end up with a mix of voices to represent Kent County,” Krieger said. “Poetry is alive and well in Kent County, thanks in part to efforts like this competition and teachers who prompt students to write a poem and send it in.”

 

Nurit Gonzalez's poem "April."
Nurit Gonzalez’s poem “April.”

The Dyer Ives Kent County Poetry Contest is a free poetry competition started by the Dyer Ives Foundation in 1968 to encourage excellence in writing and to provide recognition for local work of high quality. The contest is open to Kent County residents of all ages. There are three divisions: kindergarten – eighth grade; high school – undergraduate; and graduate – adult.

 

The standards are high for the competition as every year there is a panel of judges alone with a national judge. This year’s national judge was Maria Mazziotti Gillan, who has published 20 books, been on NPR and CBS, is the founder/executive director of the Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College, editor of Paterson Literary Review, director of the Binghamton Center for Writers and professor of English at Binghamton University-SUNY.

 

Gillan said because there were so many good poems, it was “difficult to choose” the winners. With that spirit, the Dyer Ives Foundation decided to add an Honorable Mention category to celebrate more Kent County poets in this year’s publication of “Voices,” which features all the winners of the 2016 competition. Gonzalez’s poem “April” was one of five to receive an honorable mention in the kindergarten – eighth grade division. Along with being published, she will read it June 4 at 1 p.m. at the Ryerson Auditorium at the Grand Rapids Main Library, 111 Library St. NE. The reading is part of the Festival of the Arts, a celebration of the local arts that takes place June 3 – 5 in downtown Grand Rapids.

 

“Our teacher announced that one of us had made it in and then she was like, ‘Drumroll please,’” Gonzalez, the daughter of Maria Martinez and Josè Gonzalez, said of the day she found out about her winning piece. And how did it make her feel? “I can actually do something,” she said.

 

Besides playing soccer for a travel team, writing is another passion for Gonzalez. “I do enjoy writing a lot,” she said. “I mostly write fiction as I like to make up stories as I go.”

 

Poetry was a new challenge and one that Gonzalez said she enjoyed, however; her goal is to write a book, something that the Dyer Ives has given her the confidence to get started. “I love writing that makes people think,” she said. “So the reader can ask questions and think.”

 

In five years, she is hoping to have that book written as she heads off to college maybe for sports medicine since she loves soccer so much, Gonzalez said.

 

She also has some advice for those students facing that assignment to enter a piece of writing into a contest.

 

“Try to do the best on what they are writing and stop thinking those negative thoughts that yours isn’t good enough,” Gonzalez said. “There is always that one chance that you can.”

The Hunt for Michigan’s Mighty Morels…and other Wild Edibles

MorelsBy: Dianna Higgs-Stampfler

 

When you live in Pure Michigan, the spring season means the return of golf, fishing, biking and hunting—not necessarily for animals, but for wild edibles such as morels, asparagus, fiddleheads, leeks (also known as ramps) and more. Early- to mid-May is the typical timeframe for these spring edibles, although Mother Nature makes the final determination.

 

As winter succumbs to spring and the snow melts away, an amazing growth begins to take place on forest floors across Michigan. The moist ground is warmed by the sunshine and sprouts begin to push up through the dirt and dead leaves, alongside fallen Elm, Ash, Poplar, Aspen and Maple trees.

 

There are three common varieties of morels found throughout Michigan. Black morels usually appear in late April and make a three-week appearance, before the white and yellow morels come in for their run in May (of course, all are weather dependent).

 

Camouflaged by the fallen leaves from the previous autumn, morels are not easy to spot. It takes a trained eye to catch them peeking out from beneath the groundcover. However, after you spot one…it becomes easier to find the others (much like searching for Petoskey Stones along the Lake Michigan shoreline – your eyes are just drawn to them).

 

There is a system – or rules one would say – to the actual act of harvesting and cleaning morels.

  • Never just “pull” or “pluck” a morel from the ground as it destroys the mycelium which affects the crop in future years. Pinch the stem just above the ground or even use a small knife or scissors to cut it.
  • Use a mesh bag – similar to what onions are sold in – to carry your morels. This allows the spores to redeposit on the ground (something that won’t happen if you use a paper or plastic bag).
  • Carry a mushroom guidebook for identification purposes, unless you’re a seasoned hunter. There are countless imposters out there, many of which are poisonous. If in doubt, throw it out.
  • Take time when cleaning morels. Their hollow centers often collect dirt and the occasional insect so its recommend to slice them in half the long way and soak them in salt water to remove the grit and critters.

 

Morels make a great addition to hollandaise sauce atop Eggs Benedict or folded into an omelet. Stems, or the less-than-perfect morels, can be cooked into a delicious creamy bisque. Of course, dipping morels in an egg-wash and flour and frying them into a salty, crispy treat is also a favorite recipe. Consider an aioli dipping sauce – made with eggs, Dijon mustard, olive oil, white vinegar and lemon – to compliment them.

 

RampsOften where there are morels, there are other wild edibles – such as wild leeks – or ramps as they’re often referred to. A member of the lily family (just like the asparagus), ramps carpet the forest floor with their sweet garlic-onion scent between April and June.

 

The plant itself is green, with two or three elongated smooth leaves – almost feather-like in appearance – with a burgundy tone to the stem. Earlier in the season, the bulbs of the ramps are more slender and as they grow and mature, they become more bulbous.

 

There are a few differences in foraging for ramps, including:

 

Hunting for ramps on state and federal grounds is legally off limits and there are fines and penalties enforced on those who do.

 

When digging ramps, be sure to go all the way down to the root and harvest the entire plant. It’s often easier to use a small shovel or scoop shovel to guarantee a clean harvest.

 

Use a plastic bag to transport ramps, as they can fall through the mesh bags used to gather morels.

 

All parts of the ramp can be used in recipes. The tender fresh spring leaves can be used in salads, quiche and omelets. Ramps make a great base for pesto, combined with olive oil, kosher salt, pine nuts and parmesan cheese. Blend ramps with vinegar for dressings, marinades and sauces. Ramps can be eaten raw, grilled, roasted or sautéed, but remember they have a strong flavor – much more intense than scallions – and should be used more sparingly.

 

FiddleheadsFiddlehead greens are the premium – and lesser known – wild forage vegetable of spring. Their appearance coincides with that of wild morels and ramps. The fiddlehead resembles the curled ornamentation of a stringed instrument (such as a fiddle) and thus the name.

 

They should be harvested early in the season, before the frond has opened because once they open and start to grow, they become inedible. Look for a tight, dark green coil and snip it off, with scissors, just an inch or two down the stem beyond the coil.

 

Boasting a deliciously intense flavor, fiddleheads are reminiscent of asparagus, with an added nutty-bite. The flavor of fiddleheads goes well with cheeses, tomato sauce and oriental cuisine. They’re excellent with Hollandaise sauce or marinated in oil and vinegar. Cooked to crunchy tenderness, like fried morels, they are a flavorful and versatile treat. Sautéed with garlic and bacon (everything’s better with a little pork fat) they develop a more complex flavor and make a decadent side-dish.

 

AsparagusAsparagus is another widely-popular spring edible. In addition to sprouting wild, it’s also grown on farms across West Michigan – particularly along the shoreline where the sandy soil provides ideal growing conditions.

 

In fact, Michigan is the #3 producing asparagus state in the country – producing up to 25 million pounds annually on approximately 11,000 acres. Only 25% of the harvest is sold fresh at retail outlets and roadside markets; most is sold to processors to be frozen or canned. Oceana County itself is known as the “Asparagus Capital of the World.” This region is even featured in the award-winning PBS documentary called “Asparagus: Stalking the American Life.”

 

Other wild spring edibles worth researching include the long spiky leaves of Stinging Nettles – comparable to spinach or wheat grass, great for soups, purees or even pasta and dandelions – a bitter weed that can be cooked like greens, used in raw salads, added to oil and vinegar for dressings or turned into beverages such as tea or even wine.

 

If you have trouble finding wild edibles yourself, check out the Michigan-based Earthy Delights. As America’s premier supplier of specialty foods, they’re the leaders in offering wild-harvested and hand-crafted foods from small harvesters and growers. Their website also includes a wealth of recipes which inspire beginner foodies to gourmet chefs.

 

Once the harvest is complete (or after you’ve received your shipment from Earthy.com), it’s time to head to the kitchen to whip up an impressive gourmet menu fit for a five-diamond restaurant.

 

For specific recipes, look to local chefs for inspiration.

 

  • In his award-winning cookbook “Fork in the Road,” PBS-broadcasting Chef Eric Villegas features a Stinging Nettle Soup (pg. 26), Wild Ramp Quiche with Raw Milk Cheddar and Roasted Garlic (p. 28) and Strozzapreti Pasta with Morel Mushrooms and Asparagus (p. 49).
  • In Matt Sutherland’s cookbook “Savor Michigan,” you’ll find a half dozen morel recipes including two from The Rowe Inn in Ellsworth: Morel Mushroom, Wild Rice Bisque (pg. 199) and Morel & Leek Pierogi (pg. 202).
  • In the “Cook’s House: the art and soul of local, sustainable cuisine,” Chefs Jennifer Blakeslee and Eric Patterson feature a Stinging Nettle Soup with Horseradish Dumplings (pg. 124) and Tatsoi and Sorrel Salad with Pickled Ramps, Boiled Eggs & Tarragon (pg. 134).

 

Michigan’s Spring Edible Festivals & Events

 

May 11-15
National Morel Mushroom Festival – Boyne City

 

May 20-22
Empire Asparagus Festival

 

June 10-12
National Asparagus Festival – Oceana County

 

This article was republished with permission from Dianna at Promote Michigan. We do our best to help with the promotion of the great State of Michigan!

On the Shelf: French Milk by Lucy Knisley

cvr9781416575344_9781416575344_hrFrench Milk

By Lucy Knisley

In the throes of becoming an adult, Lucy has an idea: she and her mother shall move to Paris. For a month. For both of their birthdays. Through some planning and words lost in translation, the mother-daughter trio start their adventure.
Lucy gives the reader a look into what it would be like for an American to uproot their life for a month and travel to a foreign country. Visiting museums and visiting the Eiffel Tower are obvious places they visited, but buying gourmet cheeses and delicacies only found in Europe are also highlights. Filled with intricate drawings and photographs, Knisley creates a unique story that will make the reader want to move to a foreign country themselves.
– Karen Herringa, Grand Rapids Main Library
On the Shelf book reviews are provided by the Grand Rapids Public Library. For a list of locations, programs and other good reads, visit grpl.org.

Tulip Time celebrates its 87th year May 7-14 in Holland, Mich

tulip time

 

Holland, Michigan’s Tulip Time 2016 is May 7-14
By Pure Michigan

 

The beautiful beach town of Holland has been celebrating its Dutch heritage and culture since 1929 and the festivities continue this year. May 7-14, 2016 the Tulip Time Festival will feature parades, traditional Dutch Dance performances, concerts, theatre, Dutch attractions, Dutch food and more. More than 500,000 people from 40 countries travel to the Holland Tulip Time Festival each year.

tulip time dutch dance

 

During your visit at the Tulip Time Festival, you’ll see more than four million tulips decorating city parks, public attractions and city streets. Drive the six miles of Tulip Lanes through Holland’s historic neighborhoods. For more of nature’s beauty, explore Windmill Island Gardens, home to manicured gardens with more than 115,000 tulips, a 250 year-old working Dutch windmill and an antique Dutch carousel. For a more adventurous day, take your family to the Midway Carnival, or have a blast at the Nelis’ Dutch Village Family Theme Park, where the history of the Dutch culture comes to life. Continue the Dutch experience at Dutch Marktplaats, a marketplace where you can delight in the tastes, sights, sounds and crafts of 19th century Holland.

tulip time map

 

The Tulip Time Festival features three spectacular parades. See the traditional Volksparade, led by thousands of locals in traditional Dutch costumes. Participants gather at the beginning of the parade for the official Street Scrubbing, which includes an appearance by Michigan Governor Rick Snyder. The Johnson Controls Kinderparade, or “children’s parade,” is the largest parade of children in the state. The parade series finishes with GMB Muziekparade “music parade,” one of the most spectacular parades in the state, featuring 4,000 participants including floats, dancers, and bands along Michigan’s longest parade route.

 

For a relaxed way to experience the tulips, book a Tulip City Tour. The tours are offered daily; purchase your same-day tour tickets at the booth at Centennial Park The hop-on, hop-off tour allows easy access through beautiful Tulip Lanes, Holland’s Historic District, city parks and downtown, and includes admission to Windmill Island Gardens and the Holland Museum, Cappon House and Settler’s House.

Top20-all-R

 

While visiting Holland, make sure to take in beautiful Lake Michigan. Visit Holland State Park to view Big Red Lighthouse or Tunnel Park beach to watch a sunset. For a little more adventure, climb the 230 steps to the top of Mt. Pisgah, a 157 foot sand dune. Here, enjoy a panoramic view of Lake Michigan and Lake Macatawa.

 

Downtown Holland is a great destinations for unique, first-class shopping and dining. For Holland travel information and suggestions, click here. To purchase tickets and to peruse the entertainment opportunities, go here.

 

Images courtesy of Pure Michigan and Tulip Time

Kentwood has the urge to purge, too

City of KentwoodBy: Mike DeWitt

mike.dewitt@wktv.org

 

As certain mammals hibernate through the winter, us humans treat winter as a time to become a pack rat. Whether it’s your house, car, or garage, no one likes tidying things up in the cold. However, once the weather turns and the sun peaks out over the horizon, suddenly cleaning becomes a lot more manageable. The warmth, coupled with the excessive amount of junk accumulated throughout the winter, gives people a reason to take pride in their surroundings and start spring fresh.

 

Spring cleaning doesn’t always have to be greeted with sighs a groans!

 

On Saturday, May 7, from 8:00am – 2:00pm, the City of Kentwood will host their annual Pride Day for the citizens of Kentwood to take pride in their community. The community wide cleanup will be held at the Kentwood Recycling Center (5068 Breton Avenue) and is limited to Kentwood residents with proof by picture identification.

 

“The cleanups originally started with dumpsters in neighborhoods, but it was more difficult to dispose of everything,” said John Gorney, Kentwood’s Director of Public Works. “Having the community cleanup at a central location makes everything run smoother for everybody.”

 

Gorney has been an advocate for community cleanup days since he started working with the City of Kentwood 9 years ago. He was quick to point out that the city has been offering cleanups well before he arrived.

 

“I’ve been here for nine years, but our community cleanups have been going on for much longer. It’s a great way for the city and the community to work together to properly dispose of big, and potentially dangerous, items that are accumulated throughout the year,” said Gorney.

 

While most items will be accepted, latex paint, medical waste, pharmaceuticals, ammunition, fireworks, tires, and yard waste will not be accepted. The Kent County Department of Public Works will be available to accept household hazardous waste items.

 

Joining in on the cleanup will be the Salvation Army and Comprenew. The Salvation Army will be on hand to accept gently used items for donations. Comprenew will also be present to receive electronic waste (mobile phones, computers, fax machines, and other items will be accepted at no charge. CRT screens will not be accepted, but they can be dropped off directly at any Comprenew commercial location for a small fee.

 

Those planning to attend Kentwood’s Pride Day are asked to enter the drive off Breton Avenue. Volunteers will be checking for valid residence identification and approved items for disposal.

 

If you have any further questions, or are seeking more information, please call the City switchboard during business hours at 698-9610.

Kentwood Pride Day

Wyoming business marks 100th anniversary by celebrating opening of plant

Reith-Riley officials and employees along with City of Wyoming officials and business owners gather for a ribbon cutting ceremony at Rieth-Riley.
Rieth-Riley officials and employees along with City of Wyoming officials and business owners gather for a ribbon cutting ceremony at Rieth-Riley.

How do you celebrate your 100th anniversary? How about with a ribbon cutting, cupcakes and a tour of your recently opened facility?

 

That is what Rieth-Riley Construction, Inc. did today, May 5, exactly 100 years ago to the day when Indiana civil engineer and surveyor Albert Rieth started the asphalt and concrete paving company.

 

“We have found the City of Wyoming to be amazing,” said Chad Loney, Rieth-Riley’s regional vice president for Michigan. “The city has been very generous and is very pro-business. They have bent over backwards to help us accomplish this goal.”

 

Formerly based in Ada, the company bought five Aggregate Industries locations in 2009 including the one at 2100 Chicago Dr. SW. When the economy slowed, Rieth-Riley shut the facility down but a couple of years ago, decided to move its regional operations out of Ada to the Wyoming location.

 

“We are happy to have them come back to Wyoming,” said Wyoming Mayor Jack Poll, adding that Reith-Riley is a great fit to the industrial area located along Wyoming’s Chicago Drive corridor.

 

“We have about 13 acres here,” said Rieth-Riley Area Director Kirk Breukink. Breukink said the company has actually been on the Wyoming site since November 2014, redesigning the location to make it more efficient including tearing down an existing building and constructing a new facility. Those who attended the open house and ribbon cutting on Thursday were able to tour the site along with viewing  a 10-minute video on the history of the company.

 

Rieth-Riley Area Manager Kirk Breukink accepts a plaque from
Rieth-Riley Area Manager Kirk Breukink accepts a plaque from

Started in 1916 by Rieth, the company’s focus is road construction and through its history has remained true to that providing highway construction, asphalt and concrete paving, site preparation and excavation, bridge construction, underground utilities and drainage construction, asphalt and concrete recycling, curb and sidewalk construction, mining and aggregate processing, and sand, gravel and other aggregates for construction projects.

 

Rieth’s first project was a county road in Elkhardt County, Indiana, his home state and where he founded the company. The project was $25,000 and later became known as Country Road 32. In 1918, George A. Riley became Rieth’s partner, hence the company’s name Rieth-Riley.

 

In the 1920s, the company expanded into Michigan with its first contract to lay paving on the Michigan State Trunk Line No. 11 near Sawyer in Berrien County. From there, the company grew with today there being 14 plants in the state. The Wyoming location serves as the regional office for the state and oversees operations at the Wyoming and Zeeland facilities. Breukink said the company has worked on about every major highway in the state of Michigan including 1-96, US-131, US-31 through Holland, M-6, and the M-231 bypass around Grand Haven, which helped the company earn a Michigan Asphalt Pavement Award and a National Asphalt Pavement Award.

 

One of the most noteworthy aspects of Rieth-Riley is that it is 100-percent employee owned. With the deaths of the owners, Rieth’s sons Blair, Lee, and William, it triggered the company to move toward the establishment of the Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) in 1986. Fifty percent of the company was sold to the employees at that time. In 1992, the employees bought the other 50 percent making it a fully employee-owned company.

 

“It was quite cutting edge to do that,” Loney said, adding Rieth-Riley was one of the first companies become employee owned. It also was a risk but one that appears to have done well for the business. Talking to employees, it is easy to find people who have been with the company 17, 23, 30 and more years.

 

Breukink said the company is in full swing for the construction season and is already working on various road construction contracts.

 

Approximately 80 people attended the ribbon cutting ceremony and celebration at the site. It was a mixture of employees, city officials, and local business owners.

 

 

What’s in Your Bucket?

Kindness Bucket 2
Counselor Lisa VanKampen is helping students develop a common language around bucket filling at school

By: Erin Albanese — School News Network

 

Every student at West Kelloggsville Elementary School has an invisible bucket. Johana Cruz explained the importance of keeping everyone’s full.

 

“If you’re a bucket dipper, you’re not going to have any friends,” explained the second-grader.

 

Students at the second- and third-grade school are thinking a lot about “bucket filling” and “bucket dipping” as they interact with one another.

 

“The bucket has one purpose: It holds your good thoughts and good feelings about yourself,” said counselor Lisa VanKampen. “When our bucket is full, we feel great. When it’s empty, we feel awful. Yet most children, and many adults, don’t realize the importance of having a full bucket throughout the day.”

 

When students fill buckets with kind words and actions, almost magically their own fills up too, she explained. But, alas, say an unkind word or act in a hurtful way, and buckets sink low. VanKampen’s “Have You Filled Your Bucket Today?” program, based on Bucket Fillers 101, is all about spreading kindness to benefit everybody.

 

Kindness Bucket
Compliments are free and anyone can give them

She says it’s creating a common language at school, a way for students to express their feelings and teachers to state expectations using the bucket as a symbol. Smile at someone: Buckets fill. Scowl? Buckets empty. Students learn everybody has a bucket, regardless of age.

 

“Bucket filling is inviting someone to play when they are all alone,” Johana said.

 

“It’s being nice!” said second-grader Scarlett Shepard.

 

“It’s giving high fives and fist bumps,” added second-grader Angel Gomez.

 

Filling Buckets

 

VanKampen has conducted two lessons in each classroom on bucket filling and bucket dipping. The idea is based on the book, “How Full is Your Bucket?” by Tom Rath, which tells of a boy who begins to see how every interaction in a day either fills or empties his bucket. The children’s book is a spin-off of an adult version written by Rath and Donald Clifton. Both books emphasize that it hardly takes any time and it’s all free. “Everyone, no matter if you are 1 or 101, can fill buckets,” VanKampen said.

 

Kindness Bucket 3VanKampen passed out cards with behaviors written on them for students to categorize under “Bucket Fillers are people who…” and “Bucket Dippers are people who…” Each class received its own bucket with blue slips of paper that read, “I’m filling your bucket.” Students write positive feelings, comments or compliment to someone in their class. Teachers read out of the classroom bucket to reinforce the lesson.

 

“I wroted one to my BFF Eaden,” Scarlett said. “I wroted that you’re the bestest friend anyone can ask for.”

 

VanKampen also has an interactive bulletin board about bucket dipping outside her office. She hangs bucket-filling “tear-offs” around the school for kids to have for themselves or give to others.

 

Third-grade teacher Bethany Kamps took the program a step further and hung buckets for each child on her classroom wall.

 

“I wanted to add it into the classroom because I feel like the whole culture and environment of the class really affects how they learn,” Kamps said. “When kids are treating each other positively and getting along, it makes it easier to get learning done.”

 

VanKampen and East Kelloggsville counselor Hillary DeRidder are hosting a parent night in May to introduce, educate and model the bucket story with the hope that it will be extended to students’ homes.

 

Be sure to check out School News Network for more stories about our great students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan!

Living Like the Locals in Thailand

By Lynn Strough

Travelynn Tales

 

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This is the fifth installment chronicling the adventures of Lynn Strough, a local artist and writer who’s been traveling the world since November 2014. Lynn’s travels have (so far) taken her to Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Cambodia, Japan, Slovenia, Croatia, Ireland, England, France, Italy… and I’m sure we’re forgetting a few destinations. To learn more about her journey, go here.

 

 

Udonthani, like most of Thailand, is a blend of old and new, low tech and high tech, and

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local market and super market.

 

What’s it like to live like a local in Thailand? I was lucky enough to find out, thanks to a connection made by another Travel Angel, my friend Lee in California, who introduced me via email to what turned out to be two more Travel Angels, Paul and Joi. They live in Udonthani, which is a fairly big city in the northeast of Thailand, however they live in the outskirts, so in effect, more like a village, with quick access to the city center.

 

They welcomed me with open arms, and I settled into village life for a week, which included meeting Joi’s mother, who lives with them, as well as many of the other nearby relatives and neighbors.

 

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The days started with Joi rising about 5:30 am to cook rice for alms for the monks. At about 6:20 am the three of us would join other neighbors out on the street to give out rice, fruit, and packets of coffee to the monks who pass by and chant us a blessing.

 

After our breakfast of scrambled eggs, corn on the cob, and cool, sweet mint-green guava juice, we head to the market, where I see a plethora of interesting fruits, vegetables, fish, and piles of my nemesis, mushrooms, as well as things I’m not sure how to categorize. Longans (I call them the little round eyeball fruit), tamarind, sweet juicy mangos, dragon fruit, they’re all here for pennies.

 

 

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The market  is even busier in the evenings. Lots of people stop by to pick up their dinner, assorted pre-made meals in little clear plastic baggies, curries and tofu balls floating in brown liquid – their version of fast food. Joi knew just how to pick the sweetest, juiciest fruit, and later, made mango with coconut sticky rice for dessert, pure ambrosia! And there are always lottery tickets for sale if you want to try your luck.

 

When Paul mentioned he gets his eye drops in Thailand for a fraction of what they cost in the U.S., I told him I pay $40 a pill for my migraine prescription and he immediately insisted that they take me to see their doctor at the local hospital to find out if I could buy some there. It’s about $10-15 to see the doctor to write the prescription, and yes, they have my rx for $5 a tablet! They even gave me my own medical card, even though I’m just a visitor (I said Ms, but they added an R).

 

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Paul ordered 100, enough to last me a year. It was a big bite out of my travel budget, but is such a relief to not have to worry about where I can refill. The doctor asked, “Do you really want that many? They are very expensive, $5 each!” He has no idea. (As a side note, I also found them affordably in Australia, although a much smaller quantity. Same medication, same brand, made in the U.S., but eight times more expensive for us in the States – there’s something wrong here…)

 

We made a day trip to nearby Nong Khai, a town on the 2700 mile-long Mekong River, just across from Laos, where they treated me to a feast. Joi went to school in Nong Khai for years, living with the monks, so we visited his old school. By the way, the Mekong is the world’s 12th longest river, running through China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

 

I even got to go to the local barbershop with the guys, where they can get a 45-minute shave and a haircut for $1.85. The barber likes them as they tip about 100%. Some things are universal – Joi plays Candy Crush and other games while he waits his turn.

 

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On my last day, we took an early morning walk past the rice paddies, which were dried up and brown now, but will be lush and green soon with the rainy season. We saw stray dogs and water buffalo, and the round peach sun rising, along with its twin floating on the water.

 

Paul and Joi were delightful hosts, kind and generous, fun and funny, and they showed me a side of Thailand I wouldn’t have seen as a tourist. Many thanks, Kob Khun Ka!

 

About Lynn Strough

Lynn is a 50-something year old woman whose incarnations in this life have included graphic designer, children’s book author and illustrator, public speaker, teacher, fine art painter, wine educator in the Napa Valley, and world traveler. Through current circumstances, she has found herself single, without a job or a home, and poised for a great adventure.

 

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“You could consider me homeless and unemployed, but I prefer nomad and self-employed, as I pack up my skills and head off with my small backpack and even smaller savings to circumnavigate the globe (or at least go until the money runs out). Get ready to tag along for the ride…starting now!”

 

All images copyright Lynn Strough and Travelynn Tales

Reprinted with permission

travelynnlogo

Star Wars Day

Star Wars Day
Here are a few from Star Wars Weekends. Top: Jake Lloyd, Daniel Logan. Bottom Jeremy Bulloch, Davie Prowse, and Ray Park

By: Katelyn Kohane

 

Today is Star Wars Day, May the Fourth be with you.

 

When I sat down to write this article, I was curious as to where the saying came from and how it got started. While doing my initial research, all signs pointed to Margaret Thatcher being the first to say it. The day she found out that she had become Prime Minister she said, “May the Fourth be with you,” in celebration of her victory. Star Wars fans immediately fell in love with the saying and henceforth it became known as Star Wars Day.

 

While “May the Fourth be with you” seems like an interesting, but random, Star Wars tidbit in the month of May, it’s actually just the icing on the cake. Most of the movies were released in May and George Lucas’ birthday also happens to fall in the month of May. It’s like it was all planned out a long, long time ago…

 

The relationship between Star Wars and the month of May continues from the silver screen to Star Tours at Walt Disney World. Star Tours is a Star Wars simulator at the Hollywood Studios in Orlando, Florida. Every weekend throughout May is dedicated as “Star Wars Weekends.”

 

I actually worked on the ride for many years and my vast Star Wars knowledge came in handy when working there. During my time there I made many great friends and enjoyed being a part of Star Wars Weekends! They were so fun. I would camp in line with friends to meet the celebrities that would come and hold talk shows, walk in parades, and sign autographs.

 

This year, to celebrate Star Wars Day in all its glory, I will certainly wear a Star Wars shirt. Hopefully, if I’m not too busy, I will carve out some time to watch a Star Wars movie. So to all the Star Wars fans out there… May the Fourth be with you!

 

Katie works in the film industry as a camera operator and has worked on films like ‘All You Can Dream’, ‘Set Up’ and a TV show called ‘American Fallen Soldier.’ She loves helping WKTV with the Citizen Journalism team and working as a tech at Amway Grand Plaza Hotel. Katie loves working in the film industry and loves watching movies just as much!

Circle Theatre hosts the Jellicle Ball as “CATS” opens its season

Those famous "CATS" are getting ready for the Jellicle Ball set to come to Circle Theatre this month.
Those famous “CATS” are getting ready for the Jellicle Ball set to come to Circle Theatre this month.

Circle Theatre will open its Main Stage season with a production of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “CATS” starting on Thursday, May 5 at 7:30 p.m.at the Aquinas College’s Performing Arts Center, 1607 Robinson Rd. SE.

Under the direction of Todd Avery, the 2016 Audience Choice Musical will take audience members on a visually breathtaking journey filled with heartfelt song, dance and impressive acrobatics paired with stunning makeup and elaborate costuming. “CATS” tells the story of the annual gathering of Jellicle cats at which one time, one special cat is selected to ascend to the Heaviside layer.  A true musical theatre phenomenon, “CATS” is one of the longest-running musicals in both West End and Broadway history.

“This season is particularly exciting because we are truly offering something for everyone and we’re also the first community theater in Grand Rapids to put on a production of ‘CATS’,” says Lynne Brown-Tepper, Managing Director of Circle Theatre. “The talent of both the performers and the production staff this season is one of the best I’ve seen in all of my 16 years at Circle.”

Audience members looking to delve even further into the “CATS” experience can “Meet the Cats” at a special meet-and-greet session with members of the cast following performances on May 7, 15 and 20. “Meet the Cats” tickets are $5 and include a mix and mingle for “paw-tographs” and a special photo op with select felines on the stage. Tickets are limited and can be purchase at the box office or online.

“Circle Theatre feels like home to so many people and we want to extend that to our audiences through our performances,” said Director Todd Avery. “You’ll see powerful acrobatics, plenty of awe-inspiring makeup and costuming choices and some incredibly talented vocalists fully embodying their feline character.  Audiences won’t want to miss any of it.”

2016 celebrates Circle’s 64th year of producing plays and musicals for West Michigan audiences. Other Main Stage productions this season include comedic farce “Perfect Wedding,” musical comedy “First Date” heartfelt comedic play “Over the River and Through the Woods,” jukebox spoof comedy musical “Rock of Ages.” Circle Theatre attendees can also look forward to the Magic Circle family production of classic tale “Charlotte’s Web.” Circle’s unique and diverse Summer Concert Series performances include “Any Way You Want It: Arena Rock Anthems,” “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough: The Music of Michael Jackson,” “Made in the Mitten: Michigan Music Greats” and “Classic to Cosmopolitan: Nashville Past & Present.” All performances will be held at Aquinas College Performing Arts Center.

“CATS” shows are May 6 and 7, 11-14, 18-21 at 7:30 p.m. and May 15 at 5 p.m. For more information or to purchase tickets, call the box office at 616-456-6656 or visit Circle’s website www.circletheatre.org.

On the Shelf: Epic reads for the beach from Schuler Books & Music

51IgIj7k4bL._SX329_BO1,204,203,200_“The Fireman” by Joe Hill

 

Reviewed by: Whitney Spotts, Events Coordinator, Schuler Books & Music, Lansing

 

Joe Hill can truly do no wrong. His newest novel nods to the epic novel, “The Stand,” by his father (Stephen King), but approaches the fallout of a worldwide epidemic from a thoroughly modern viewpoint. As a nurse, Harper Grayson is in a position to help when a contagion that causes spontaneous combustion sweeps the world, dividing people into the infected, and the fearful non-infected. Without a clear understanding of how the illness is spread and wildfires beginning to decimate swaths of civilization, populations panic and extermination crews begin to wipe out carriers. Having become infected herself with the “dragonscale” a pregnant Harper is forced to flee her uninfected husband Jakob. With the help of the mysterious Fireman, Harper makes it to a hidden band of dragonscale survivors who have learned to tap into the illness to prevent combustion. But with the danger from healthy marauders and the increasingly cult-like feel of her new community, Harper is far from feeling secure for the future of her child. I couldn’t put “The Fireman” down!

 

 

6114a9mAzNL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_“The North Water” by Ian McGuire

 

Reviewed by Pierre Camy, Schuler Books & Music, Grand Rapids

 

Faced with few options in his career, disgraced army surgeon Patrick Sumner joins the crew of the Volunteer, a whaling ship bound for the Arctic waters at the turn of the 20th century. During the voyage, Sumner uses his medical and forensic knowledge to track down the murderer of a cabin boy he had recently treated for horrific abuse. McGuire’s descriptions of the world of whaling are so vivid and realistic that you practically smell the stench and blood, see the filth, feel the cold, and experience the violence. I have rarely inhabited the world of a novel as completely as in this gripping literary thriller à la Cormac McCarthy.

 

 

Unknown“Invisible Influence” by Jonah Berger
Reviewed by: Charity McMaster, Schuler Books & Music, Grand Rapids

 

A perfect delve into perceptions with some surprising insights, “Invisible Influence” focuses attention on the hidden agendas ingrained in us.  Historical memory reaches back farther than we think and global perceptions have a much wider reach than we realize. Berger engages the reader without lecturing, arousing the interest we all have in everybody else’s business.  Few books can so easily slip from sociological study to a mainstream must-read; Berger has a natural talent for it.  Perhaps you’ll even prompted to try your own little social experiment.  At the very least, up your beach read game.

 

 

when-we-collided“When We Collided” by Emery Lord

 

Reviewed by Holly Frakes, Children’s Book Buyer

 

Veronica Cove is a charming vacation town where Jonah and his family have lived their whole lives. When his father dies, Jonah and his siblings are left to pull the pieces back together while their mom is crippled by grief.

 

Vivi has moved to this small town for the summer with her artist mother. She loves everything about it — the people, the ocean and especially Jonah and his family.  She is a whirlwind, coming into their lives and bringing joy and excitement and love. But Vivi has a dark, sad past of her own and it will sweep through her life and those of the people around her like a raging summer storm.

 

A gut wrenching novel about the fact that everyone can get lost in this life. This is not just a book to read, but a story to experience. Highly Recommended!

 

For more reading suggestions, visit schulerbooks.com.

 

 

 

Catchin’ the vibe: Kentwood shines spotlight on its adaptive sports program

Garrett Bazany in Kentwood's adapted water ski clinic.
Garrett Bazany in Kentwood’s adapted water ski clinic. (Photos provided by Garrett Bazany)

Garrett Bazany has always been active, participating in track, cross country and skiing. So when a trampoline accident left him paralyzed from the chest down, it is no surprise that the accident didn’t change his resolve to stay active.

 

“I think I was down in the dumps for a little while,” said Bazany, who is a student at Calvin College. “It was during my recovery when I was starting therapy that I resolved to be as independent as possible.”

 

After making that commitment, the toughest obstacle Bazany faced was waiting the mandatory year from the time of his accident – to prevent further injury – before he could pursue the world of adaptive sports. And the Grand Haven resident didn’t have to look too far to enter that world since  Kentwood Parks & Recreation Department is one of the few places in West Michigan that offers a variety of adaptive sports programs.

 

Kentwood’s adaptive sports program is the focus of this year’s The Vibe, a Kentwood Parks & Recreation Gala fundraiser event, set for May 13, from 6 – 10 p.m .at the Bluff Banquet & Conference Center, 2035 St. SE.  Bazany is the featured speaker for the event.

 

“Kentwood has always been a very inclusive community and extremely diverse,” said Kentwood’s Recreation Program Coordinator Katelyn Bush, who oversees the adaptive sports program. “Even within its regular programs, the city has worked to be very inclusive and accessible.”

 

The adaptive programs are specifically designed for those with physical or cognitive limitations. The program which has been around for more than 25 years, is run by a certified therapeutic recreation specialist, which Bush is. The programs include a golf league, bowling league, adaptive swim, archery club, bocce league, canoe, kayak, and rock climbing.

 

An action shot from Garrett Bazany's GoPro camera.
An action shot from Garrett Bazany’s GoPro camera. (Photo provided by Garrett Bazany.)

“We will host our first ever adaptive track and field event at Grand Valley State University,” Bush said, adding that the event is scheduled for June 18.

 

Perhaps the most popular program is the adapted water skiing.

 

“Inevitably, someone always says ‘oh is that why we have a boat in the garage,’ when they find out about the water ski program,” Bush said with a chuckle.

 

There is a an adapted water ski clinic and private lessons all of which are run through a cooperative with East Grand Rapids at EGR’s Reeds Lake. The water ski clinic was the first  adaptive program Bazany participated in.

 

“You kind of sit in this cage structure and are strapped in,” Bazany said. ” I remember the water being cold. There this is rope that pulls you and if you feel comfortable, you can hang on to the rope and start to control the ski.”

 

Within just a couple of rides, Bazany was able to control the ski. He enjoyed it so  much that he began taking private lessons in water skiing and now does both water and snow skiing.

 

“I was use to doing these things before my accident and was facing that I couldn’t do them anymore,” Bazany said. “These programs challenged me to let go, be free and be active.”

 

“It’s a great thing to give people who are facing a tough time. It really gives them the opportunity to explore something new and enjoy what they are doing.”

 

Individual fees cover most of the cost of the adaptive programs, Bush said, adding that while The Vibe event is a fundraiser for the Parks & Recreation Department, the purpose for focusing on the adaptive program is to create more awareness about the different programs Kentwood’s Park & Recreation Department offers.

 

“This year it is the adaptive program,” Bush said. “We also have kids and family programs. We coordinate senior enrichment programs and special events. The Vibe is to educate people that there is always something going on.”

 

Tickets for this year’s The Vibe program are $75 per person and available at www.kentwoodvibe.com or call 616-656-5270. For more information on the programs offered by the Kentwood Parks & Recreation, such as the adaptive programs, visit www.yourkprd.org.

 

 

 

 

 

And the winner is: 2016 Eclipse Awards

The Eclipse Award winners take one final photo together after Thursday's gala.
The Eclipse Award winners take one final photo together after Thursday’s gala. Center, in a blue shirt, is Hyperion Award recipient David Lowing.

It was a night of glam and posh as nominees for the 2016 Eclipse Awards entered the ballroom of Grand Rapids’ City Flats Hotel on Thursday, April 28.

 

The annual awards are designed to celebrate West Michigan filmmakers and the films they create. A call for entries was made at the end of 2015 with judges from around the globe narrowing the record number of entries down to nominees. Past Eclipse winners were selected to place their votes for winners in each category with those winners being announced last night.

 

It was a packed house as more than 200 people came to recognize friends, colleagues, and newcomers of the West Michigan film industry, and it was a newcomer whose film garnered the most awards.

 

Producer DJ Viernes’s film “shehimher,” a seven-minute piece about the blooming relationship between two woman – one who has a son -made his mark on the judges and the West Michigan film community.

 

Heather Baker-Jason, John Hanson, DJ Viernes, and Jodi Morton from the film "shehimher."
Heather Baker-Jason, John Hanson, DJ Viernes, and Jodi Morton from the film “shehimher.”

“Wow, you know who I am,” Viernes said from the stage as he accepted The Eclipse Award for Best Director. After the event, Viernes said he has mostly been working independently with this being his first time entering The Eclipse Awards.

 

“John [Hanson] was the one who said ‘hey, there is this local films awards’ and maybe we should enter,” Viernes said. “We had previewed the film at UICA’s Open Projector Night and won that.”

 

Set all to music, with no dialog, “sheherhim” not only garnered Best Director for Viernes but also Best Original Score for Theo Ndawillie II and Best Narrative Short with Viernes saying, “I dedicate this film to the LGBT community and to those who want to start families.”

 

Other big winners were Kyle Misak whose film “The Million Dollar Nickel” bought home two awards Best Editing and Best Writing in Produced Content; and Brett Deacon and Evan Hollingsworth won for Best Animation and Best Cinema Trailer.

 

Alex Bolen and Sophie Bolen. Alex was the presenter for Best Actor which went to his sister, Sophie.
Alex Bolen and Sophie Bolen. Alex was the presenter for Best Actor which went to his sister, Sophie.

The “awww” moment came when Alex Bolen, who won for Best Cinematography and Videography last year, announced this year’s Best Actor winner, his sister Sophie Bolen for “Rodeo Girl.” At 16, Bolen is the youngest to receive an Eclipse Award.

 

“I was really super surprised,” Alex Bolen said after the event. “I do not think they even knew she was my sister when they asked me to present for that category.”

 

A special tribute was given to Chuck Peterson who had been the station manager at GRTV and was a freelancer within the film community. Peterson, who was known for his passion for free speech, lost his battle to cancer last June. Local band Soil & Sun performed while images of Peterson appeared on the screen.

 

This year’s Hyperion Award for Outstanding Leadership in Film, Television, and Production Community recipient was David Lowing, owner of Lowing Light & Grip. Lowing has been involved in the local film industry for about 30 years serving as a leader and mentor to filmmakers and content creators across a wide range of disciplines and formats. He said he was surprised when he first learned he would be receiving the award, which recognizes the contributions of an individual in the  West Michigan film industry, and was honored to have been chosen.

 

Here is a complete rundown of the winners:

 

Best Writing in Produced Content
Kyle Misak and Jesse Charles – “The Million Dollar Nickel”

 

Best Cinematographer
Steve Steketee – “Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park: A Grand Rapids Treasure”

 

Best Editor
Kyle Misak – “The Million Dollar Nickel”

 

Best Original Score
Theo Ndawillie II – “shehimher”

 

Best Narrative Short
DJ Viernes – “shehimher”

 

Best in Local and Regional Segments and Promotional Pieces
Mallory Patterson and Randy Strobl – “Meet Maren”

 

Best in Online Programs, Segments and Promotional Pieces
Brian Gotberg and Harper Philbin  – “Lucky Jay”

 

Best Director
DJ Viernes – “shehimher”

 

Best Documentary
Josh Reed – “My Personal Pink Time”

 

Best Animation
Brett Deacon and Evan Hollingsworth – “Project Liberation”

 

Best Cinema Trailer
Brett Deacon and Evan Hollingsworth – “Project Liberation”

 

Best in Local TV and Cable
Noah DeSmit – “Cooking with Angus: Mozzarella”

 

Best Actor
Sophie Bolen – “Rodeo Girl”

 

Best Music Video of an Original Performance
Tyler Wiewiora – Brian’s Song

 

Sponsors of the event included WKTV Digital Media, Ferris State University’s TV & Digital Production, West Michigan Film Office, West Michigan Film Alliance, Compass College of Cinematic Arts, and Grand Valley State University’s Film and Video Production. The Eclipse Awards Film Festival featuring films from this year’s event will air later this year in the fall. For more information, visit www.theeclipseaward.com.

AT&T lauches “Puede Esperar” campaign to combat smartphone use while driving

Texting While DrivingBy: Mike DeWitt

 

It only takes one second, one glance down at your phone, to completely change a life. As technology and social networks continually innovate the way we communicate, they constantly vie for our attention throughout the day. Even when driving a car, a metal box hurling down the freeway at deadly speeds, it can be tempting to stay engaged to our social circles around us.

 

Back in 2010, AT&T created the It Can Wait campaign: a strong and simple message to put down your cell phone while driving. Now, in response to a recent findings on distracted driving, AT&T has shifted their campaign to reach U.S. Hispanics – Puede Esperar.

 

Puede Esperar is a direct response to new research that found 83 percent of Hispanics admitting to using their smartphone behind the wheel. That number is higher than an already staggering 71 percent of Americans as a whole that admit to distracted driving. Of that 83 percent, half admit to using their smartphone to social network while driving, more than a quarter (28%) take selfies or photos, and nearly 70 percent send texts messages.

 

The Puede Esperar campaign focuses on education and practical tools to help combat distracted driving. The campaign includes:

https://youtu.be/1o-fbDPw8aE

•    The AT&T DriveMode app is now available in Spanish and open to all carriers. The app helps curb the urge to text and drive by silencing incoming text messages once the car reaches 15 MPH.

•    A 360-degree video experience that simulates the potentially deadly consequences of glancing at your phone while driving. The video can be viewed on your smartphone.

•    A coast-to-coast virtual reality tour visiting local high schools and community events in more than a dozen cities by year-end.

•    A website to help share information and resources.

 

While the most recent campaign focuses on reaching the Hispanic population, it’s a problem that everyone needs to address.

 

“Now more than ever we need to focus on those who put themselves at high risk behind the wheel,” said Sandra Howard of AT&T. “We want them to know the dangers and take the pledge. Ultimately, we want them to keep their eyes on the road, not on their phones.”

 

Since the original campaign launched in 2010, It Can Wait has helped grow awareness of the dangers of distracted driving, inspired more than 8 million pledges to keep their eyes off their phones and on the road, and collaborated with AT&T data scientists on research that shows the impact statewide anti-texting laws have on the rates of texting while driving.

 

Remember, that text, snapchat, photo, tweet, and instagram post isn’t worth a life. Put away your cell phones and focus on the road ahead.

Kelloggsville students make a statement against the recent violence in their community

Kelloggsivlle High School students Melody Szatkowski and Analise Cabrera were part of a handful of students who recently led a silent protest against violence in their community.
Kelloggsivlle High School students Melody Szatkowski and Analise Cabrera were part of a handful of students who recently led a silent protest against violence in their community.

While some were getting ready for prom and others were just enjoying a beautiful Saturday, a handful of Kelloggsville students were silently protesting about the violence in their community.

 

“I don’t like living with the violence,” said Analise Cabrera, a Kentwood resident who is an 11th grader at Kelloggsville High School. Cabrera, like all the students holding signs on the corner of 44th Street and Division in front of the RiteAid, has personally been touched by violence. Her friend, Michael White, a former Kelloggsville student, was killed in March by two out-of-district students.

 

“There are a lot of people sitting back and just watching what happens,” Cabrera said. “We need people to step up and do something.

 

“We are doing what we can do and we want to just make an impact on others. You have to start somewhere.”

 

Kelloggsville student Alexandrea Groters and Calvin College student Morgan VonThaden were part of the silent protest last Saturday.
Kelloggsville student Rebecca Minier with D.O.C.K director Laurie Zuverink and GRIL leader Jordan Seebeck..

Interns for the after-school program D.O.C.K., Discipling of Christ’s Kids, the four students participated in the leadership program GR Initiative for Leaders (GRIL U). A faith-based training for teens, the nine-month program is designed to help students find their passions and then show them the tools they have available to share that passion, said Noele Stith, who is part of GRIL U.

 

“It is designed to show them they have a voice and how they can use that voice in a positive way to encourage change in their community whether that community is home, school, a place of worship, or a neighborhood,” Stith said.

 

In the GRIL U program, students set aside two hours of service for their church or organization, in this case specifically for D.O.C.K. The students meet with a mentor once a month and with that mentor, work on learning about the causes that interest them. The topic of violence came to the forefront after Kelloggsvile student Isaiah Blue was shot in January and then the murder of White a couple of months later.

 

Kelloggsvile student Alexandrea Groters and Calvin College student Morgan VonThaden were part of the silent protest last Saturday.
Kelloggsvile student Alexandrea Groters and Calvin College student Morgan VonThaden were part of the silent protest last Saturday.

“For me, it was important for people to understand what violence is,” said Melody Szatkowski, a Wyoming resident and 11th grader at Kelloggsville High School who stood on the corner holding a sign with the definition of violence. “It is behavior involving physical intent to hurt, damage or kill.

 

“I hope this creates a better understanding of what violence is because it is not just killing, but hurting and damaging someone or something as well.”

 

The students stood out on the corner from about 10 a.m. to noon holding signs and saying little. Cars drove by, beeping their horns in support and a few students stopped to chat with the protestors.

 

The event was one of three that took place within a week all organized by students who participated in the GRIL U program. There was one on human trafficking at RiverTown Mall on April 20 and another on voter registration on April 27.

New study shows Kentwood offers a lot to your business

Kentwood sealBy: Mike DeWitt

mike.dewitt@wktv.org

 

The City of Kentwood prides itself on being business friendly. It’s a city looking for ways to create jobs, generate commerce, and offer opportunities for those looking to open a business in Kentwood.

 

Now Kentwood has another pitch to potential business owners: One of the best places to open a small business in America.

 

In a study of 1,268 small-sized cities in America, Kentwood came in at number 51.

 

Revised Kepley
Mayor Kepley is focused on keeping Kentwood business friendly

“The City leaders, past and present, have intentionally focused City staff and services to be ‘Open for Business’,” noted Mayor Kepley. “It is exciting to see our efforts result in a national ranking.”

 

The study compared cities with a population size between 25,000 and 100,000 residents across three different dimensions – business environment, access to resources, and business costs. Those three dimensions where then broken down further into 15 relevant metrics that were weighted accordingly.

 

Kentwood scored well enough to place itself just outside of the top-50. In fact, Kentwood sits atop the nation when it comes to inexpensive office spaces.

 

The ranking doesn’t act as validation for the city but instead registers as verification that Kentwood is open and ready for business.

 

Other rankings of note – Wyoming comes in at 230 and Holland tops the list at number 1.

Seniors to Sophomores: ‘Don’t Repeat Our Mistakes’

Seniors Luis Rodriguez, Tan Le and Joey Timm tell students to stop procrastinating
Seniors Luis Rodriguez, Tan Le and Joey Timm tell students to stop procrastinating

By: Erin Albanese — School News Network

 

Don’t procrastinate. Learn to manage your time. Do your homework. Work on getting and keeping your grades up.

 

Those were words of advice from high school seniors who visited sophomore classes recently to help steer their younger peers onto the right path to graduation and beyond. They explained what they would have done differently during their early days of high school, and shared what they wish people would have told them as sophomores. Wyoming High School is a 10th- through 12th-grade school, so the sophomore class is the youngest in the building.

 

About 50 seniors volunteered to intervene with sophomores because they noticed too many students not focused on their schoolwork, said Cheryl Small, accounting and personal finance teacher.

 

“My students get frustrated when they see them acting differently than they should be acting,” Small said. “They came to me and said, ‘We want to talk to the sophomores.'”
Seniors came up with ideas for connecting with their younger peers by talking about their own regrets and mistakes and the consequences of their actions.

 

Senior Luis Rodriguez gives advice to sophomores
Senior Luis Rodriguez gives advice to sophomores

“We are telling you guys to try hard in school,” said senior Luis Rodriguez. “When I was in your position I had Cs and Ds, and now I am like busting my butt trying to get all As. I have a 3.0 exactly, but I could have a 4.0 if I was trying in school like I do now.”

 

Senior Joey Timm added this: “Don’t tell yourself you’ll wait until next year to get better grades. Do as well as you can from the beginning, because it’s really hard to bring your GPA up than to keep it up.”

 

Destroy procrastination as a habit, said senior Tan Le.

 

“Students are the ones in control of what they do, how they do it and how they should do it,” Tan said. “What I wish my parents or my teachers thought to tell me was, ‘Put away your electronics for one hour and just do your homework.'”

 

Small said her students can be role models for the whole building and inspire younger students to be examples as well. They also shared information on applying for college, volunteering and extracurriculars.

 

Sophomore Lauren Kramer said she enjoyed hearing from the upperclassmen. “I thought it was nice to hear that point of view to get a perspective on what they felt they need to hear as sophomores,” Lauren said. “I feel like it’s going to help a little bit.”

 

Be sure to check out School News Network for more stories about our great students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan!

In Cambodia: Sights and Sounds of Siem Reap

23By Lynn Strough

Travelynn Tales

 

This is the fourth installment chronicling the adventures of Lynn Strough, a local artist and writer who’s been traveling the world since November 2014. Lynn’s travels have (so far) taken her to Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Cambodia, Japan, Slovenia, Croatia, Ireland, England, France, Italy… and I’m sure we’re forgetting a few destinations. To learn more about her journey, go here.

 

Siem Reap, Cambodia, is the gateway city to Angkor Wat, with exotic appeal, as well as the ease provided by being set up for the tourist trade. If you are looking for adventure, with all of the comforts of any major tourist destination, and a much cheaper price tag than most, you might want to consider a trip to Cambodia.

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I’d booked a guesthouse ahead, based on a recommendation from a traveler I met in a hostel in New Zealand (hostels are great for swapping travel tips!) The Okay Guesthouse was $18 a night for a private room with bathroom and fan, $23 if you wanted AC, and at 90-100 degree temps, the AC was worth an extra $5 a day. It also boasted a beautiful rooftop pool and a row of hammocks for your snoozing pleasure. You can spend a little less for something super basic, and possibly not quite as clean, or spend hundreds of dollars a night if you want something 4-star, it’s all available here.

 

My room at the guesthouse was fairly basic, not quite what the rooms looked like on their website, but hey, the price was right. It was clean, and quiet, and cost less than an 8-bed hostel with shared bath in other countries. Then, a nice surprise when I got back from visiting Angkor Wat – the desk manager asked, “are you in room 222?” We have a surprise for you. We are upgrading your room to the villa!”

 

“That’s great!” I said, perplexed. “But why?” He said, “We just want you to be happy.” I am happy, but I’m even happier now!

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The new room is about the same size,  but it has a little nicer decor, a phone, a small packet of tissues, thicker towels, and there are rubber flip-flops by the bathroom to wear in the shower. Other than that, it’s about the same, but still, it was very nice of them. The staff are friendly and helpful, and they keep the place looking lovely.

 

They even sent someone to move my bags, while I went up and swam in that serpentine pool, which I thought about a lot while climbing temple steps in 90 degree heat earlier. I splurged and had a happy hour drink for a couple of dollars, while watching the sun set behind an unlit lamp by the rooftop pool, so it looked like the lamp was lit by the sun, and thought about how life is beautiful and how lucky I am!

 

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What else is there to do in Siem Reap besides exploring stone temples? Lots of things, it turns out, although hanging by that pool isn’t a bad thing to do in and of itself. The market is a great spot to check out, and it’s only a 20-minute walk or a five-minute, $2 tuk tuk ride away. It’s huge and spills out into the surrounding streets, blocks and blocks of sensory overload, smells, colors, tastes, noise! You can find just about anything you can think of there, shop after shop of colorful clothing, silk scarves, shoes, hammocks, lamps, beads, bangles, and buddhas; fruits, fish, vegetables, and foods you’ve never seen before.

 

You can get a massage on the street or in a spa, for a fraction of the price at home, or have your feet nibbled by fish. 

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You can also attend a local circus! Not the kind with animals, rather think of a small cirque du soleil, in a tent, with very talented young Cambodian men and women who sing, dance, and perform amazing feats of acrobatics, all while telling a story about Cambodian history and culture. The circus, Phare, is the product of a school of art and performing arts that was started to help get kids off the streets. I saw the show Sokha, about a little girl haunted by visions of the atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge. Intense story, but told with compassion, and yes, even humor, and an uplifting ending.

 

One of the hard parts of visiting Cambodia is seeing the poverty here, and the after effects of the land mines. You will see people missing hands and legs and feet, some trying to make a living selling you books near the market. This is hard to see, and you may experience travel guilt (why are we able to fly off to foreign countries, while people here earn $2 a day, if they’re lucky), but also remember that tourism helps boost the economy here and provides jobs and income for many families. The inequities in the world are mind-boggling, and not a problem easily solved. If I have any thoughts of hardship, not having a job or a home right now myself, they are made irrelevant by what I see here, and I’m reminded once again of just how lucky I am.

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All of this fun is at a very affordable price for Westerners. Just to give you an idea, my hotel bill, at the end of a full week, was $221.75. This included seven nights hotel room ($161), $18 for my driver to Angkor Wat from 5am until 5:30pm, $18 for a ticket to the circus, $6 for a two-hour tuk tuk tour, $1.75 to have my laundry done (usually I do it myself in the sink, but the sink was tiny, and hey, for less than $2?!), a two-hour massage for $12 (a pre-birthday splurge), and a $5 fare to the airport. Not a bad price tag, when some people spend that on one night of hotel expense in a major US city.

 

And this was for solo travel. If you’re traveling with a companion, you can cut most of this expense in half.

 

25Food, of course, was extra, but you can have a nice meal for $3 to $4. If you really want to splurge and add an appetizer, wine, and dessert, you might spend up to $15 or so. Overall, it’s probably less than you’d be spending on food staying at home! It’s $20 to get into Angkor Wat for a day, one of your major expenses here, but totally worth it, and it helps fund the restoration of the site.

 

And there are other things you can do in the area, like visit the land mine museum, or the silk farm a few kilometers outside of town. The silk farm is free, and it’s worth a blog post of its own (go here to read it).

 

About Lynn Strough

Lynn is a 50-something year old woman whose incarnations in this life have included graphic designer, children’s book author and illustrator, public speaker, teacher, fine art painter, wine educator in the Napa Valley, and world traveler. Through current circumstances, she has found herself single, without a job or a home, and poised for a great adventure.

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“You could consider me homeless and unemployed, but I prefer nomad and self-employed, as I pack up my skills and head off with my small backpack and even smaller savings to circumnavigate the globe (or at least go until the money runs out). Get ready to tag along for the ride…starting now!”

 

All images copyright Lynn Strough and Travelynn Tales

Reprinted with permission

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Kentwood celebrates paying off 15-year bond for Justice Center

City of Kentwood has officially paid off its $10 million bond for the Justice Center.
City of Kentwood has officially paid off its $10 million bond for the Justice Center.

There are a couple of things that 62B District Court Judge William Kelly is proud of when it comes to the City of Kentwood’s Justice Center. One, that it was completed on budget and on time and two, the functionality of the facility.

 

“I wouldn’t trade this facility for any courthouse in West Michigan,” Kelly said.

 

And Kelly can add one more thing to that list: the city officially has paid off the $10 million bond issue within its 15-year time frame. To celebrate the achievement, there will be an open house Friday, May 6 at the Justice Center, 4740 Walma Ave. SE,  next to Kentwood City Hall.

 

“The city did it through financial prudence,” Kelly said about paying off the bond, adding that because of that Kentwood has earned AA+ bond rating, which is very rare for a municipality.

 

It was in the face of overcrowding and the need to add police officers to its city that then Mayor Bill Hardiman went to Kentwood residents and told them that if they approved a millage to add an additional 20 police officers to the current 50-member force, city officials would find a way to build the center that would house the 62B District Court and the Kentwood Police Department, according to Kelly.

 

The millage was approved and the Kentwood City Commission set about to do what had been promised.

 

“It was hard for the city commission,” said Kelly, who has served as the district judge for 37 years. “It was the first time the city had ever gone for a bond for a general obligation.”

 

The commission approved a $10 million bond for 15 years to be paid out of the general fund. Several key city officials were involved in the design of the new Justice Center including Kelly, former police chief Richard Mattice and former public works director Ron Woods, who was in charge of overseeing construction.

 

Before the Justice Center, the city had to rent trailers to house some staff from the police and finance departments. Within the current city hall, the former district court space became the city commission chambers and the former police department space became the mayor’s offices.

 

“We are thrilled to make the final payment for Kentwood’s Justice Center,” said Mayor Stephen Kepley. “Our citizens made a significant investment and we have ensured that the facility is paid off on schedule and is adequately maintained for the long-term benefit of the community.”

 

A couple of years later, the city would take out a $15 million bond for a new fire station and public works facility along with the remodeling of city hall and two other fire stations. In 2008, voters approved a library millage for the construction and maintenance needs of the current library facility, which was the last building within the city complex located off of Breton Avenue.

Meet some of The Eclipse Award nominees!

By WKTV

 

It’s always fun to celebrate talent and hard work, and that’s what happened Monday evening when WKTV feted many of The Eclipse Award nominees at a soiree (aka ‘Eclipse Lounge’) held at Rockwell’s in Grand Rapids. It would have taken far more than mere rain leaking through the roof to dampen the excitement as attendees enjoyed appetizers, refreshments and kudos.

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Heather Baker-Johnson and her husband, Ben

 

We spoke with several nominees to find out what, if anything, they felt upon hearing of their nominations. Emotions ran the gamut.

 

Nominated for Best Actor for her performance in shehimher, fledgling actor, Heather Baker-Jackson, said she felt honored to be nominated. “It was an amazing project,” Baker-Johnson said. “It’s actually the first time I’ve ever acted and I loved the experience of being involved with filmmakers. It’s a nice, creative outlet and I’m open to it. I’m having a blast!”

 

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Liz Nolan

Also nominated for Best Actor, for her work in Two for the Show, Liz Nolan is on the other end of the spectrum–she’s been acting since she was six years old. “Being nominated is quite an honor,” Nolan said. “It’s for all of us, the greater good, and for the good of the industry. It was exciting to work with a good actor (Michael McCallum, who wrote, directed and acted in the film) who is present and focused. It was synchronicity. It’s my most favorite role so far, the most challenging and the most interesting.”

 

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Charlotte Rinderknecht

Charlotte Rinderknecht attended the soiree in honor of the late Larry Lauria, with whom she co-produced the animated film, Pete’s Odyssey, the story of a female bird who must spread her wings and leave her parents’ nest. “I’m here to honor Larry’s memory and talent,” said Rinderknecht. “The project was Larry’s brainchild and it is his legacy. He worked with Bloomfield College’s fledgling animation program. The students worked full time on the project for four weeks. They worked so hard, and Larry pushed them as far as he could.”

 

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Harper Philbin

Harper Philbin’s web series, Lucky Jay has already garnered a plethora of awards, but greatness knows no bounds. “I was very happy to see the series get Eclipse noms for producing, writing, directing, editing and acting,” Philbin said. “When I finished the series, I thought it might only play to college professors as sort of an in-joke, but I’ve been pleasantly surprised that the series has found a broader audience–enough good feedback that we decided to shoot a second season this June!”

 

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Kelly Loughlin

Science fiction aficionado and Indiana native Kelly Loughlin was nominated for Best Producer for her work on Interference. The Grand Valley State University senior had pitched the script to her fiction class. “I produced, wrote and directed it,” Loughlin said. “It’s about a kid with a ham radio in the 1960s who communicates with a cosmonaut as he is re-entering the earth’s atmosphere. There were only two actors, and we translated the lines for the cosmonaut from English to Russian. The film is about connecting with someone who doesn’t speak the same language–how do we do that? The Eclipse Award is a great honor, especially while I’m still in school. It affirms that I am on the right track.”

 

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Andrew Behm

Former WKTV intern, Andrew Behm was nominated for Best Narrative for his work on the film, Portrait, a story that follows the relationship of a photographer and her significant other. “When I cast the film, the role was open for any gender,” Behm said. “I didn’t want it to fall into any stereotype.” The Eclipse Award is Behm’s first big award. “I was so honored to be nominated. I felt validated. I worked very hard on the film.”

 

 

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Dave Purnell

Dave Purnell received a nomination for Best Original Score for the film, INK 180. The story follows an inner-city tattoo artist who removes or covers tattoos for free for victims of sex trafficking. “The music plays a crucial role in the film,” said Purnell. “I’m excited and it feels wonderful to be nominated.”

 

Interviewee
Josh Reed

Josh Reed’s film, My Personal Pink Time, was nominated for Best Documentary. The film follows the life of a friend who was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 33. “She wanted everything documented,” said Reed. “Treatments, chemo, radiation, all of it. It meant a lot to me because cancer has affected my family. You can’t really know what it’s like until it happens to you or someone close to you. I wanted to get the word out.” Reed said it felt cool to be recognized for his work.

 

michael and josh
Michael McCallum and friend

Michael McCallum is in a league of his own. The filmmaker has won so many awards over the years, we’re certain that he must have lost track by now. (OK, so we lied. He knows. His films have won 75 major awards on the film festival circuit and received 132 nominations.) His film, Two for the Show was nominated for Best Direction, Best Editing, Best Writing in Produced Content, and McCallum was nominated for Best Actor as well. “I was confident in the film that people would have an opinion about it,” McCallum said. “Having it be honored with nominations is just icing on the cake. I’m incredibly proud of the film and everyone involved in helping create it.”

 

Sherryl Despres

Sherryl Despres, nominated for Best Actor for her work in Rodeo Girl, said getting the nomination was a pleasant surprise. “But it is also an affirmation. I’ve been acting since I was a child growing up in California and quit for a few years. But I’ve seen as good or better talent here in Michigan than I ever saw there. I can’t think of any greater honor than to be recognized with the likes of my fellow nominees by these talented people whose work I respect and admire.”

 

Reid Petro

Sporting three Best Cinematographer nominations–for Alaskan AdventureIt’s Your Move, and The Million Dollar Nickel–Reid Petro said the news really made his day. “I was extremely honored–honored to be nominated along with all of these other amazing artists that I admire and am inspired by. I know it’s cheesy but I was definitely in awe.”

 

Congrats to all of our nominees and we look forward to seeing you Thursday night for The Eclipse Awards ceremony. Great work, everybody!

Kelloggsville officials officially break ground on high school renovations

A rendering of the Kelloggsville High School's new front
This is a rendering of the Kelloggsville High School’s new front entrance.

While it is evident that construction has already started at the Kelloggsville High School, school officials and board members made it official with a ground breaking ceremony at the school on Monday, April 25.

 

About 80 people came out on the bright sunny afternoon to celebrate the start of the construction at the building located at 23 Jean St. SW. School officials again thanked the voters and those involved in getting the $33.9 million bond issue approved in February 2015. The bond issue passed with a two-to-one margin, 334 to 126.

 

“We are excited to make the high school the center of the district, the way it should be,” said Kelloggsville Superintendent Samuel Wright.

 

Kelloggsville school officials and representatives "break ground" on the district's high school renovation project.
Kelloggsville school officials and representatives “break ground” on the district’s high school renovation project.

“I can only imagine the impact that it will have on the community with all the kids going through this building,” said Frank Stank, president and CEO of Owen-Ames-Kimbell, which has been working with Kelloggsville Public Schools and the community on the project.

 

The bulk of the bond proposal, according to Wright, has been dedicated to the high school with major changes planned for the building that originally was constructed in the 1920s. There have been several additions to the structure over the years including a remodel of the school’s cafeteria from a 1998 bond issue. The last major construction project for the district was the Kelloggsville Middle School in 1994.

 

The remainder of the bond money will be used for upgrades, including security cameras, at the district’s other facilities.

 

Among the changes for the high school includes a revamping of the front of the building which will move the entrance of the school from Jean Street to Division Avenue and allow students to exit with the light at 48th Street and Division Avenue. The new entrance will allow for added security in the building as visitors will only need to enter the front of the building to access the school’s gymnasium, media center and the public areas, said Jim Ward, a resident and media specialist who has been working with the district.

 

The school also will have a new competition gym which will be able to host varsity games (currently the games are at the middle school), an indoor track facility, and state-of-the-art media center. Kelloggsville Director of Curriculum Tammy Savage said the goal is to have all of these facilities open to the public which includes the library being open possibly two nights a week.

 

Members of the Kelloggsville High School band perform as people gather for the ground breaking ceremony at Kelloggsville High School.
Members of the Kelloggsville High School band perform as people gather for the ground breaking ceremony at Kelloggsville High School.

The rest of the high school project includes renovations and additions of classrooms, the auditorium receiving theater-style seating for 480, technology upgrades, and security and safety improvements including the addition of security cameras and card access along with a new fire alarm system. The entire project is expected to take about two years with completion scheduled for 2017.

 

“We’ll meet back here in the fall of 2017,” said Kelloggsville School Board President Tim Pomorski in his closing remarks. He adding it will be for the ribbon cutting ceremony for the newly renovated Kelloggsville High School.

 

Kelloggsville was formed in 1859. It is about four-and-half square miles and straddles the cities of Kentwood and Wyoming.

 

 

 

Superintendent Announces Retirement

DavidBrittenBy: Erin Albanese — School News Network

 

The way Superintendent David Britten approaches his job is hands-on, vocal and in a way that touches others’ lives. He’s at many athletic and extracurricular events, he’s outspoken about issues that affect students, teachers and classrooms, and he’s known for encouraging every child he meets.

 

Britten will continue to work hard to improve the lives and education of students while heading the small, low-income district until June 30, 2017, when he plans to retire, he recently announced.

 

Britten, 61, in his eighth year as superintendent, said his retirement will come after two lengthy careers in education and the military.

 

“I have as of this year had 42 years of two very stressful careers,” Britten said. He noted that he loves the intellectual part of serving as superintendent and working directly with students, but is tired of dealing with the state government on education issues and budgets.

 

His Heart is with Students

 

Britten is a vocal leader in the district and a public-education advocate. He is known for speaking out on many issues that affect education, and for his familiar presence in school buildings, at athletic events and extracurricular activities.

 

“I don’t know if I’d be retiring if I was still principal at Lee Middle/High School,” he said. “There’s a lot of energy to be derived from being around kids.

 

“It gets harder and harder to do that in this job,” he added. “As more and more requirements come down from Lansing, and as we have to keep squeezing our budget and cutting administrative costs, I have to take on more roles that keep me from being around kids.”

 

A graduate of Grand Valley State University, Britten was an Army reservist for eight years starting at age 19. He taught at Muskegon Catholic Central High School for two years before beginning active duty in the U.S. Army, which was his career until he took early retirement in 1995.

 

After that, Britten served for six years in Wayland Public Schools as an elementary principal. He then served as Lee Middle School principal from 2002 to 2004, which evolved into a combined post as Lee Middle/High School principal until 2008.
Big Shoes to Fill

 

Godfrey-Lee School Board President Eric Mockerman said the board is in the process of determining how to proceed with a search for a replacement, possibly with help from a search firm or adviser. The board is surveying parents and staff members about what they would like to see in Britten’s successor.

 

Plans are to post for applicants early next school year, conduct interviews around January and make an offer by spring break. “We really want to have someone coming into place by March or April of next year so we can have a couple months of transition,” Mockerman said.

 

Mockerman hopes choosing a new leader will be a tough decision. “We have a lot to offer at Godfrey-Lee and I’m hoping we get some really good candidates,” he said.

 

Britten is leaving “big shoes to fill,” he added. “It’s a tremendous loss. He’s been a tremendous and visionary leader for the district.”

 

The district is in the first full year of a human-centered design process, which involves exploring ways to revamp education in the district. Britten said he’s confident the process will continue after his departure.

 

“That was a big push by Dave to change the way we as a district think and go about educating kids,” Mockerman said.

 

Rebranding Godfrey Lee

 

Britten has been an active presence in the district, which consists of a majority of Hispanic students, as it has grown from 1,400 to 2,000 students since 2002. It has also experienced a large increase in the percentage of students who qualify for free and reduced lunch, now at 95 percent, and in those who live in poverty, at 37 percent.

 

Britten has been at the helm during efforts to beautify the district, equip it with technology on par with more affluent schools and build community support. He also implemented a plan that helped turn high school achievement around after it was designated a Priority School, meaning among the lowest 5 percent in achievement, according to the state’s Top-to Bottom list rankings in 2010. The designation was lifted last year.

 

“The most rewarding part about being superintendent has been being able to rebrand this district,” Britten said. “It’s a much more successful district than people thought it was… It had a bad image. Now it’s a place people want to come to.”

 

Mockerman said Britten’s commitment is remarkable. “He’s been an amazing example of how involved people can be. He is deeply involved in the lives of the kids. He’s at every event going on.

 

“He lives for the kids. It’s amazing.”

 

Be sure to check out School News Network for more stories about our great students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan!

Michigan Masonic Library offers a glimpse into the world of the Free Masons

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By: Dylan Rettler

 

The Free Masons, an ancient organization with diverse origins arguably from ancient Egypt to the architectural schools of medieval Europe, continues its outreach to the Grand Rapids Community by way of The Michigan Masonic Museum and Library.

 

This project demonstrates not only marked differences that the Freemasons appreciate from the past, but also the organization’s continuity of adherence to timeless ideals and traditions. The overwhelming disclosure of Masonic information the library offers speaks to the former, while the latter is reflected by the consistency of rites and conduct expressed through degrees. The diversity contained within the Masonic Library stacks of over 8,000 items has topics with potential relevancy to the general public, the academic community and those with general curiosity. All are the target audience for whom the Masonic Library seeks to enlighten.

 

Michigan Masonic Library 2The existence of the Michigan Masonic Museum and Library is a testimony to the progress Masonry has made through the decades. Turbulent times in the Brotherhoods history necessitated covertness, resulting from a tendency towards persecution of the organization and its members, sometimes manifesting itself in outright illegality of their existence. Not until 1717 in England did the order officially announce its presence.

 

Since the official decree of its existence, the brotherhood has made a divulgence of a massive amount of self-referential material, much of which is available within the Michigan Masonic Museum and Library. This release of information, among other things, clearly indicates the Masons have experienced a marked transformation.

 

Currently, the Masons are not a secret society, but a society that has secrets. Theses secrets are limited to ideas such as means of recognition, i.e. handshakes, body postures and terms designating a true initiate.

 

While the Museum demonstrates the aformentioned metamorphosis, it also expresses certain fundamentals that are etched upon the continuum of ideals and traditions still appreciated by modern masons. Belief in a supreme deity, the brotherhood of man, and the recognition of an immortal soul are three long-held requirements for membership well documented within the stacks of the library. An additional exemplification of the consistency the order has maintained is illustrated through the symbolism the library shelves reveal.

 

Two of the most iconic signs are the square and compass. The square represents a standard of interpersonal integrity and honesty a Mason holds himself to while the compass denotes certain introspective boundaries of conduct that are adhered to. This solidarity concerning traditions also manifests itself above the library within the congregational halls of rite. Temple Chambers are still arranged as they were long ago, ubiquitous with symbolism and often a reflection of the Temple of Solomon. The library leaves no doubt that the Masons have preserved among other things much of its primary beliefs, symbols and traditions from ancient times.

 

Michigan Masonic LibraryThe Masonic Library has made significant progress in its mission to inform and educate Grand Rapids and other communities about its organization. The Library, once a far off collection in Alma Michigan, has come now to rest for more than a decade on the foundation floor of 233 Fulton St.

 

One noteworthy addition is an impressive collection of museum artifacts, some dating back to the 1700s. Another advancement keeping in step with the now, is the Library’s online content found online at the library website, Facebook and YouTube (indexed at Michigan Museum and Library). The collection is now readily available to the Grand Rapids community, and is the largest collection of any Masonic Library in the state.

 

The library museum continues to speak as the dual dynamic of change and preservation previously illustrated. The library also represents an ongoing invitation, offering more than a glimpse as to who the Freemasons are and what they represent.

Wyoming residents certainly purged making city’s community clean-up day a big success

Residents unload trash into the dumpsters during the Wyoming Community Clean-Up Day.
Residents unload trash into the dumpsters during the Wyoming Community Clean-Up Day.

Of those who came, most didn’t mind waiting to dump their trash and other items at the Godfrey-Lee Athletic Field this past Saturday. They were just happy that the City of Wyoming was hosting the Community Clean-Up Day event.

 

“We’re just appreciative that the City of Wyoming did this,” said Wyoming resident Michael Donavan, who also works at Godfrey-Lee. Donavan said his family recently helped his father clean out his garage and he came with a truck and trailer full of items.

 

“The wait is not that big of deal,” said Wyoming resident Melissa Digiovanna, who had her own vehicle along with a friend’s truck full of items. “It is just super awesome that the city is doing this.”

 

Early indicators showed that the Wyoming Community Clean-Up Day was to be a success as the original story on now.wktv.org had more than 425 Facebook shares. City officials said there was a line when the event opened at 8 a.m. this past Saturday with one of the four dumpsters completely full shortly after opening.

 

The line to get into the Community Clean-Up Day at one point was backed up to where Joosten Street intersected with Godfrey Lee Avenue.
The line to get into the Community Clean-Up Day at one point was backed up to where Joosten Street intersected with Godfrey Lee Avenue.

Nancy Stoddard, who works in the city’s treasurer’s office and was part of the organizing committee, had hoped for about 300 cars. Final count was 332 vehicles  – including some small U-Haul-style trucks. About 130 of those vehicles dropped off household hazardous waste and 33 20-yard roll-offs of trash were collected. Stoddard said she was still waiting on total tonnage collected.

 

Stoddard said the committee, which was the city employee group Looks Good Committee, already has begun thinking about next year’s event which includes checking with Godfrey-Lee about possibly having the same location. “I have been checking into grant opportunities,” Stoddard said. This year’s event was unwritten by grants. Also Stoddard said next year, organizers are planning to start with eight dumpsters on the ground to help move people through faster.

 

“The area that we had this year was so spacious, we really had room for more,” Stoddard said.

 

Megan Kretz, a resource recovery specialist from the Kent County Department of Public Works and who was helping with the event, said the way the Community Clean-Up Day had been organized and laid out, it really didn’t seem like a first-time event. Cars entered through Joosten Street into the Godfrey-Lee Early Childhood Center’s west parking lot and curved around exiting on to Godfrey Avenue. There were several checkpoints where people could unload household hazardous waste, gently used items to the Salvation Army, recycle items and trash.

 

“It’s a wonderful event,” said Matthis Fields who was with the Salvation Army. “I love doing these type of events. It’s a beautiful day. Nice weather and I am just so glad to be here.”

 

As Fields talked, one of the volunteers walked by with a fireplace in an unopened box to put on the Salvation Army truck, which was about two-thirds full by noon.

 

“This just happens to be one of the good parts, events like these,” Fields said with a smile.