LuxEsto - The Digital Magazine of Kalamazoo College

ZooBits Winter 2024

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1960s
Joan M. (Van Deusen) West

Joan M. (Van Deusen) West ’64 received an Athena Lifetime Achievement Award in April 2023. Joan is a professor emerita of foreign languages and literatures at the University of Idaho (UI). In the mid-1980s, Joan was instrumental in involving female faculty and staff in informal meetings to discuss formation of a professional women’s association on campus. These meetings gave birth to Athena. Joan served as the group’s first president. She also was involved in the creation of a women’s studies minor, serving as its first coordinator and contributing courses in international women’s literature and women in cinema. She served on many master’s thesis and faculty committees and was one of three faculty to serve on the UI presidential search committee that hired Elisabeth Zinser, the university’s first female president.

“I graduated from Kalamazoo College in 1969, studied abroad in Madrid, Spain, during my junior year, and recently, for no reason, recalled an experience in Avila,” writes Kenneth H. Quigley ’69. “It was an ordinary day of my sojourn, but remarkable nonetheless. The recollection emerged as a short poem. …. As for what I have been up to during the last 50 years—I edited a weekly newspaper; became director of public information at Findlay College, Findlay, Ohio; then director of public relations at Ohio Northern University, Ada, Ohio; served as president of a public relations firm before launching my own public relations business; served as president of the Morehouse Publishing Group and then vice president North America for the Continuum International Publishing Group, London; and finished my career as director of endowment management services for the Episcopal Church Foundation in New York City. I credit my broad liberal arts education at Kalamazoo College with contributing to the range of careers I have enjoyed over the years.”

Sadly, Ken died on October 23, 2023, after submitting this note to LuxEsto. His obituary will appear in the Spring 2024 edition.

Ken’s poem follows:

Avila
By Kenneth H. Quigley

Thank you El Greco for the churches you blessed with your paintings.
We saw them all, or at least enough for that day.
So we cut class and headed for the hills outside of town.
Truants, for sure, conspiring to claim an afternoon
For wine and cheese and not much else.
We basked in the late fall warmth.
Time stopped for a time and we just, were, together.

Nobody talked.
The sun shone.
We slept.
Life put down roots.
That was 50 years ago.
How busy we have been.

1970s
Calvert Johnson

Calvert Johnson ’71 is the 2023 recipient of the Big Canoe President’s Award, presented by the property owner’s association board to honor an exceptional volunteer in the private residential community of Big Canoe, Georgia. Cal took on the role of chair of the advisory board for the Knowledge Series at Big Canoe Chapel in 2013, shepherding this recently rejuvenated organization. His many accomplishments around Big Canoe include serving as the chair of the Community Center Committee and of the association’s Conservation Committee, where he oversaw eight subcommittees. In that role, he co-chaired the Wildlife Subcommittee, which successfully fundraised for a bronze sculpture of a mother bear with three cubs. As the chair of the Board of Directors for the ArtReach Foundation from 2009 to 2011, Cal played a pivotal role in establishing a Middle East Institute in Amman, Jordan. Through this initiative, teachers and caregivers of Iraqi children traumatized by war received training in creative arts therapies. Cal’s contributions to Project America, a program supporting American war veterans and their families through art therapy, further demonstrate his commitment to healing and resilience in the face of adversity. From his work on the Board of Directors for the North Georgia Community Foundation to that as the concert manager and executive director of the Casual Classics Concert Series in Jasper, Georgia, Cal’s contributions have touched numerous causes, disciplines and regions.

Class of 1973 handing a check to President Gonzalez

In honor of their 50th reunion, the Class of 1973 was thrilled to present a check for $309,000 to President Gonzalez for an endowed, need-based scholarship in their class’s name. Pictured from the Class of 1973 are Craig Moore, Judy Gudelsky, Gail Raiman and Dave Fege.

Paul Guenette and family

Paul Guenette ’74 writes: In the summer of 1970, I had graduated high school and was set to attend Kalamazoo College in the fall. I received a paper-wrapped package in the mail addressed to “Champion Cross-Country Runner Paul Guenette” from cross country coach Rolla Anderson. Inside were my first real “running shoes”—a pair of blue Adidas Gazelles. Sneakers were still the rule in 1970 (or spikes on grass or cinder tracks), and I found these shoes magical. So new! I went on to become Rolla’s cross country MVP that fall.

Fast forward 53 years to present day. Recovering from major surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, doctors told me, “Walk, walk tall, just keep on walking.” Last Father’s Day, my kids gave me some new shoes: blue Adidas Gazelles. The very same. They had no idea, of course, of their significance. I completed my 2-mile morning walk today en route to 108 miles in September for the Prostate Cancer Foundation. I walked tall. Thanks, Rolla.

Robert Weinstein ’79 recently received the Gold Dome Award, the most prestigious honor from Centenary University in Hackettstown, New Jersey. The CEO and president of Robertet North America, Bob has worked in the flavor and fragrance industry since 1986, serving as president of the Global Ingredients Division at Firmenich before joining Robertet North America as president in 2012. He earned a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a B.A. in chemistry from Kalamazoo College, with additional studies at the University of Strasbourg, France. He has been a dedicated supporter of Centenary University’s academic programs and students.

1980s
Edwin Hortelano

The ChemQuest Group has appointed Edwin Hortelano ’83 a director. The global consulting firm focuses on tailored business strategy and optimization, technology acceleration, market intelligence, and mergers and acquisitions advisory services for the specialty materials industry. Over the course of his career, Ed has led teams on three continents in the development of materials and solutions for coatings, adhesives, release liners, holographic data storage and additive manufacturing. He will draw on this expertise primarily in support of ChemQuest’s technology development pillar. Ed earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from K and currently serves as a trustee for the College. In addition, he holds a doctorate in physical organic chemistry from Wayne State University.

Four K alum at the Blackburn family reunion

At the Blackburn family reunion in July 2023, held in Wilmington, Delaware, Kalamazoo College grads were well-represented among the 200-plus people attending. Pictured are Marti Haug ’82 of Portage, Michigan; Mary (Haug) Johnson ’84 of Clifton, Virginia; Langston Howley ’21 of Washington, D.C.; and Kevin Howley ’81 of Towson, Maryland. Marti and Mary have a sister, Barbara Haug ’86, who was not in attendance.

Alex Palladino ’87 was recently inducted into the West Michigan Tennis Association’s Hall of Fame, a subsidiary of United States Tennis Association. At K, Alex was two-time NCAA Division III doubles champion in 1986 and 1987, MIAA singles champion in 1987 and doubles champion in 1985 and 1987, and named MIAA Most Valuable Player in 1987. He was inducted into the Kalamazoo College Athletic Hall of Fame in 1993. Alex is the Spring Lake Public Schools tennis coach in Spring Lake, Michigan.

1990s

Keoki Williams ’91 was named to the 2023 Best & Brightest Executive M.B.A. list by Poets & Quants for Executives. Keoki is pursuing an M.B.A. at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. He holds a B.A. from Kalamazoo College with a double major in chemistry and biology, an M.D. from University of Michigan Medical School and an M.P.H. in health policy and management from University of Michigan School of Public Health. Keoki hopes to develop technology to make the U.S. healthcare system work better for both patients and providers. He is a practicing physician and heads the Center for Individualized and Genomic Medicine Research at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. For more than a decade, he has volunteered at a downtown Detroit clinic that provides free healthcare to the poor and underserved, and he was recently inducted into the American Society for Clinical Investigation. Keoki and his wife, Lanette, have three children.

BMW announced Julie Mehretu ’92 as the 20th Art Car artist at New York’s Guggenheim Museum in June 2023. The vehicle chosen as the next Art Car canvas is the BMW M Hybrid V8 race car, which will race the famed 24 Hours of Le Mans event in 2024. When an international jury met to select the next BMW Art Car artist, Julie was the unanimous choice. She has already begun work on her final design for the car, first on a 1/5-scale model before beginning work on a full-sized version. In fall 2023, Julie had her fifth exhibition at White Cube gallery in London, titled “They departed for their own country another way (a 9x9x9 hauntology).” The exhibition included three new series of paintings consisting of nine works each and focusing on enduring conflict, widespread displacement, and the asymmetry of power, using images sourced from current affairs, particularly the ongoing war in Ukraine and the events of the U.S. Capitol insurrection of January 6, 2021.

Theresa Gutierrez

Theresa Gutierrez ’95 has joined the Sustainability ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) team at Dix & Eaton, a strategic communication firm based in Cleveland, specializing in sustainability communication, change management, investor relations, crisis communication, media relations and marketing communication. Theresa, who serves as an assistant vice president specializing in content development and project management, has developed effective strategies for organizations of all sizes over her 25-year career. Prior to joining Dix & Eaton, she held corporate social responsibility and human resources leadership roles within the automotive, corporate aviation, information solutions and early childhood education sectors. Theresa holds a bachelor’s degree in human relations and resources and international studies from Kalamazoo College, as well as a Master of Science in administration from Central Michigan University.

Paul Unwin ’98 writes, “I moved to Seattle the summer after graduation and I’ve lived here since. I have two kids, one of whom is now in college herself. I’ve worked in the field of electromagnetic effects protection in aerospace for 20 years, first at Boeing and at Blue Origin since 2020. I’ve stayed active (with some breaks) in theatre and performance. I was a tenor in The Washingtonians choral group for several years, and I have performed in numerous free outdoor (unsanctioned) Star Trek and Star Wars plays. I’ve been studying German since 2015, because I have always felt that fluency in another language is like a magical power. I have a way to go, but I took my first trip to Germany (also my first to Europe) in 2023. I remain a fan of science fiction, board games and roleplaying games, but I don’t ride my bike that much these days.”

2000s
Mark Fino

Mark Fino ’02 recently accepted the position of head coach of the swim and dive program at Sewanee: The University of the South, in Sewanee, Tennessee. In 2022, Mark became the site head coach of the Chattahoochee Gold Swim Team in Cumming, Georgia, where he managed full- and part-time staff for 280 athletes. Additionally, he created and founded Dunmoor Swim Team Inc., a nonprofit swim team serving children from 4 to 16. Mark has coached collegiately for 18 years. His last collegiate head coach position was at John Carroll University in University Heights, Ohio. He coached the Blue Streaks for seven years, led the university’s men’s and women’s teams to four Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) titles from 2017 to 2020, and received eight OAC Coach of the Year awards. Before coaching at John Carroll, Mark served as an assistant coach at Oberlin College in 2002, was elevated to head women’s coach in 2004, and was then chosen to lead both the men’s and women’s programs in 2006. Mark graduated with a bachelor’s degree in psychology from K, where he swam for four years. He then completed all coursework toward his Master of Education in exercise science from Cleveland State University.

Aidis Suever ’09 is No. 13 on American Banker’s list of 15 rising stars among women in banking. The honorees, all women 40 years and younger, are nominated by an executive at their institution. When she was 12 years old, Aidis moved with her family to Walled Lake, Michigan, from Albania, where both her parents were bankers. After graduating from Kalamazoo College, she joined Ally Financial in 2009, and has worked at the $196 billion-asset Detroit bank ever since. As executive director of Ally’s auto customer care group, Aidis currently oversees the company’s call centers operated by third-party vendors in the Philippines and, more recently, in South Africa. She manages roughly 325 employees at Ally and oversees another 1,200 people employed by vendors.

2010s
Madeleine Chilcote in front of a medical monitor

Madeleine Chilcote ’17 is spending a year as a wildlife and conservation medicine intern at the Clinic for the Rehabilitation of Wildlife (CROW) in Sanibel, Florida. Maddie received her Bachelor of Science in biology, with a minor in German, from Kalamazoo College and her doctorate at Michigan State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine. In addition to clinical duties, CROW interns participate in research and conservation projects, give case and journal club rounds, and help teach students, staff and volunteers. Veterinary interns work closely with staff from all departments in the hospital to gain a better understanding of the rehabilitation process while working with over 200 different species of native and migratory wildlife.

Alex Lee

Alma College has hired Alex Lee ’19 as the Scots’ next head swimming and diving coach. Alex joins Alma from Vassar College, where he served as the lead assistant coach and aquatics director. Before Vassar, Alex worked as the volunteer assistant swimming coach at Carthage College, where he also served as Esports graduate assistant and producer of the team’s Twitch streams. Before moving to Carthage, Alex was assistant swim coach at Alma College, helping facilitate four school records during the 2019-20 season. He also served as the recruiting coordinator, helping to bring in 17 recruits to the 2020 recruiting class and 13 to the 2021 class. A four-year letter winner at Kalamazoo College, Alex swam his collegiate career for the Hornets. He graduated from Kalamazoo in 2019 with a Bachelor of Arts in history and completed a Master of Science in business with a sports management track at Carthage in 2022.

Kalamazoo County hired Taylor Van Winkle ’19 to lead county efforts on combatting climate change and advancing sustainable practices. Taylor will serve as the county’s inaugural climate sustainability coordinator, tasked with creating a countywide climate action plan toward promoting a sustainable future in the county. Taylor previously served as an associate planner for the city of East Lansing. She holds an undergraduate degree in biology and history from Kalamazoo College and recently obtained a master’s degree in urban and regional planning, with a focus on climate resiliency, from Michigan State University. She has experience developing urban greenspaces, securing grant funding and fostering collaboration with the community.

ZooBits Book Review
The Brisling Code book cover

Janet Oakley ’68 published The Brisling Code, a prequel to The Jøssing Affair and the third in her series of historical thrillers set in Norway during the World War II and post-World War eras. An experienced intelligence agent at 22, Tore Haugland faces certain danger when he accepts an assignment in occupied Norway, knowing that his predecessor was killed by the Gestapo only a week before. The dying agent left a mysterious message in his interruption code that London calls the “Brisling Code.” The mission is jeopardized when a ruthless SS officer with his own secrets is alerted to Haugland’s presence by a traitor. The Brisling Code is available in paperback and ebook, and an audiobook will be released this winter. It is currently on the long list for the Goethe award in post-1750 historical fiction.

Helen Rietz holding her book, A Disappearing West

Helen (Tatro) Rietz ’70 is excited to have published her first book of artwork. A Disappearing West features 70 of her paintings, in full color, including many from past museum and gallery shows, along with the stories and inspiration behind them. To learn more, email helenrietz@adisappearingwest.com, or visit adisappearingwest.square.site.

Lost in Taiwan book cover

Mark Crilley ’88 published his most recent book in May 2023. Lost in Taiwan is a graphic novel about stepping out of one’s comfort zone that pays tribute to Mark’s two and a half years living and teaching in central Taiwan after graduating from K. Many of the pictures were inspired by sketches made during that time. Set in a fictional town, the story features a traveler who finds himself lost in Taiwan searching for his older brother’s apartment and soon learns that this forced disconnect helps him explore and experience the big wide world around him. “The story’s sincere message of broadening cultural horizons is accompanied by detailed illustrations that resemble pencil line art and watercolor washes,” says Kirkus Reviews. “A visual love letter to Taiwan.” Mark is the author and illustrator of more than 40 books, including several acclaimed graphic novels.

The Rock that is not a Rabbit book cover

The Rock That is Not a Rabbit, the third collection of poetry by Corey Marks ’92, was recently published by the University of Pittsburgh Press as part of the acclaimed Pitt Poetry Series. Throughout this collection, change arises as something both desired and mourned in poems that reckon with a world where perspectives blur, names drift, “billowing, unattached,” and language yields a broken music. Meditative and richly imaginative, these poems cast and recast the self and its relation to other selves, and to memory, history, power and the natural world. Corey is the author of Renunciation, a National Poetry Series selection, and The Radio Tree, winner of the Green Rose Prize. His poems have appeared in Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day, AGNI, Gettysburg Review, New England Review, Ploughshares, The Sewanee Review and The Threepenny Review. He has received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Natalie Ornish Prize from the Texas Institute for Letters, and the Bernard F. Conners Prize from The Paris Review. A university distinguished teaching professor at University of North Texas, he directs creative writing for the Department of English.

Grow: Take your Business from Chaos to Calm book cover

Michael J. McFall ’93, co-founder and co-CEO of Biggby Coffee, has published his second book, Grow: Take Your Business from Chaos to Calm, a strategic blueprint for entrepreneurs trying to reach the promised land of stability and sustainability in their businesses. Grow emphasizes that the leader is the most important part of a successful and sustainable business, and shares tips on how to develop future leaders and cultivate a nurturing, loving workplace culture for employees. Filled with real-life examples from Mike’s 26 years of experience, Grow plants the seeds to help readers recreate themselves as the leaders their organizations need them to be and take their business from chaos to calm.


Have a ZooBit to Share?

Did you get married? Have a baby? Get a new job or move to a new city? Tell us about your recent travels, career developments, family updates, mini-reunions or anything else! Photos are welcome. Use our online form or email us to submit a note. If you email, please include your class year.


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InMemory Winter 2024

Virginia (Taylor) Hilf ’44 on December 23, 2022. Jinny was the first female editor of The Index, the student newspaper of Kalamazoo College, and received a B.A. in English from K.

Dorothy “Jane” (Prout) Bolenbaugh ’45 on April 11, 2022. After graduating from high school in 1941, Jane took typing classes at college in order to work for the U.S. Army and help in the war efforts for World War II. While working and continuing her studies, she met Ed Bolenbaugh, and they were married in August 1947. Ed and Jane later finished their college degrees at Purdue University. In 1951, Ed and Jane moved to their home on Clear Lake in Forest Lake, Minnesota, and had two children, Gary and Lynn. Ed passed away in 1967, and Jane started a new career working for the Girl Scouts before working at the Bible Book Shop (owner), Grace Alliance Church and the Yellow Bus Children’s Shoppe. She spent her free time tatting and selling her work at craft fairs, traveling abroad, and volunteering. She loved to play games, bird-watch and follow the Minnesota Twins.

John Learman

John Learman ’46 on January 4, 2023. Jack attended Kalamazoo College, where he played varsity tennis, before serving in the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II, after which he graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in industrial mechanical engineering. In 1951, he obtained a Juris Doctor degree from George Washington University Law School, where he met and married his loving wife, fellow law student Pat Lattimer. He received the Order of the Coif and practiced for over 50 years as an intellectual property lawyer. During his career, he served as a director of many civic and business organizations. Jack was a longtime winter resident of the John’s Island Club in Vero Beach, Florida, and a summer resident of Lake Huron’s Sanctuary Bay, north of Harrisville, Michigan, where he enjoyed downtime with four generations of extended family. He was preceded in death in 2022 by his wife of 71 years, Patricia Lattimer Learman. He is survived by three children and five grandchildren.

Alice Joyce (Bell) Brown

Alice Joyce (Bell) Brown ’47 on June 18, 2020, at home in Bloomington, Indiana. Alice graduated from Kalamazoo College with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry in June 1947. She married Douglas Burton Brown in December 1946. The couple moved to Illinois, where Douglas studied for the ministry at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary. During their nearly 62 years of marriage, Douglas pastored seven churches and served as general director of the Conservative Baptist Association of Pennsylvania for five years. After years of devoting herself to caring for their four children, Alice taught chemistry at Roosevelt High School in Wyandotte, Michigan, earned a master’s degree in guidance counseling from Eastern Michigan University, then served as a high school guidance counselor in Wyandotte and later as a middle school science teacher in Reed City, Michigan. Alice lived to give glory to God as a wife, mother and teacher. Her calm, cheerful and confident outlook on life strengthened and assisted her husband and was an example to all of diligence, excellence and contentment. She cultivated beauty and order in her surroundings and gratitude to God in her heart. Her reliance on the goodness and faithfulness of God was the foundation of her life. She was preceded in death by her husband, Douglas B. Brown. Alice is survived by four children, 15 grandchildren and 37 great-grandchildren.

Jane Leona (Richardson) Morgan

Jane Leona (Richardson) Morgan ’47 on July 26, 2023, in Tucson, Arizona. Jane was an insatiable, lifelong learner with a chemistry degree from Kalamazoo College and a Master of Science in library science from the University of Illinois Chicago Circle campus. Jane’s formal career was as a junior high school librarian for nearly 20 years in Park Forest, Illinois, District 163. She took great pride as the first to choose and introduce computer systems to the local schools in the early 1980s. Leisure time always included a good book. Family camping began in the early 1950s and evolved into backpacking, then RVing, traveling as far as Guatemala. Some kind of craft or sewing project could always be found underway. In Park Forest, Jane and her husband, Dean H. “Sar” Morgan ’49, were early members of the first United Protestant church in the world, Faith UP. In Sahuarita, Arizona, she and Sar literally helped to build Good Shepherd UCC. Finally, researching and finalizing the labyrinth at Rincon UCC in Tucson opened a new world for her. In each church, she actively participated in the Women’s Circle, book clubs, Bible studies and the choir. Jane was predeceased by her husband, Sar, of 56 years. Jane is survived by two daughters and a son, four grandchildren and four great-granddaughters.

Robert David Birkenmeyer

Robert David Birkenmeyer ’49 on July 9, 2023. Robert received his bachelor’s degree at K and his master’s in chemistry at Western Michigan University. He also served four years in the Navy as an airplane mechanic. Robert married his high school sweetheart, Mary Lou Wilhjelm ’47, on August 21, 1948. He was hired at The Upjohn Company as a research chemist and is credited with developing several well-known antibiotics. After a successful career, he retired from Upjohn in 1983. Robert enjoyed traveling with family and friends and had numerous beloved pets. He was active on the Galesburg school board, Galesburg ambulance, American Field Service exchange student program and Boy Scouts. Robert and Mary Lou lived in Ogden, Utah, for 15 years before moving back to Kalamazoo, where they resided in Friendship Village since 2009. Robert was active in woodworking, Wii bowling, the kitchen band and many other activities at Friendship Village. Robert was preceded in death by his wife in 2016. He is survived by his three children, six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren, as well as two foreign exchange children.

Geraldine Virginia (Lee) Jones

Geraldine Virginia (Lee) Jones ’49 on June 7, 2023, at Juniper Village at Brookline Wellspring Memory Care in State College, Pennsylvania. Gerry earned a bachelor’s degree in music and applied violin from Kalamazoo College. She received a master’s degree from Andover Newton Theological Seminary in Christian education in 1951. In 1960, she obtained her teaching certificate from the University of Michigan. She worked as a kindergarten teacher in the Flint (Michigan) public schools and retired in 1990. Gerry actively pursued her love of classical music all her life. She was a committed member of various orchestras and many prestigious chorales, which gave her opportunities to travel the world and sing. Traveling the world with her family, grandchildren and friends was her great delight. Gerry counted her friends as true blessings and remembered her trips with them as a cherished joy. Gerry’s large family was the source of her deepest love. Gerry lived her life with purpose and in perpetual motion by doing, teaching, learning, voting, singing, traveling and loving. She actively sought fun, laughed easily and found joy. Gerry was preceded in death by her husband, Ralph Jones. She is survived by two daughters, three stepchildren, eight grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

Stanley John Chalmers ’51 on August 13, 2022. Stanley served in the U.S. Army. He then worked for General Motors for 40 years, retiring as the personnel director. He moved from Royal Oak, Michigan, to Sarasota, Florida, in 1989. He enjoyed reading, boating and spending time with his grandchildren. Stanley was predeceased by his wife, Sandy. Left to cherish his memory are his son, daughter, three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Mary Jo (Rix) Horner ’51 on April 28, 2023, and Robert George Horner ’51 on September 5, 2023. Mary Jo and Robert met at Kalamazoo College, married in October 1951, and raised four daughters together in Battle Creek, Michigan. Bob enlisted in officer training shortly after their wedding and proudly served for four years during the Korean War. He then joined his father at the family car dealership, Horner-Coppin Chrysler Plymouth, where he worked for over 40 years, retiring in 1994. In retirement, Mary Jo and Bob enjoyed winters in Florida and travel to many wonderful places. Mary Jo enjoyed traveling, cooking, reading and playing bridge. She was a devoted volunteer for Leila Auxiliary/Bronson Battle Creek and St. Joseph Catholic Church Altar and Rosary Society. Bob loved being around people and socializing. He belonged to many business and social organizations over the years. He was a lifelong member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, helping with the Dad’s Club for many years. He enjoyed poker nights with the guys, playing bridge with friends and golfing. Most of all, both Mary Jo and Bob loved spending time with their family, which meant everything to them. When Mary Jo was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, Bob faithfully and lovingly cared for her until her death. Mary Jo and Bob were preceded in death by their daughter, Martha. Surviving are three daughters, Carol, Nancy and Jean, four sons-in-law, 12 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren (with two more on the way).

Gloria (Wallace) Foster

Gloria (Wallace) Foster ’53 on October 31, 2022. Gloria received a B.A. in English from Kalamazoo College and subsequently an M.A. from Northwestern University. Gloria taught elementary students at Bach School in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She later worked at the Health and Welfare Ministries of the United Methodist Church in Evanston, Illinois; the Institute for Living in Winnetka, Illinois; Garrett Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois; and the Mental Health Association in Evanston, Illinois. She also volunteered at the North Branch of the Evanston Public Library. Gloria was a longtime member of the Weavers Guild of the North Shore. Not only was she a proficient weaver, but she was accomplished in other textile arts. She was also an active gardener, enjoying the peace of her shady yard, where she grew a variety of native wildflowers as well as various shade-loving and pollinator-friendly plants. Throughout all, she remained a kind and gentle presence in the lives of those she touched and nurtured. She was predeceased by her husband, John (Jack) Foster ’52, in 2011. She is survived by their three children and a grandson.

Kenneth Lee Wendzel

Kenneth Lee Wendzel ’53 on July 14, 2023. He was a lifelong resident of Bainbridge Township, Michigan, and attended Kalamazoo College before he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1952. He trained to be a radio operator and served at Fort Eustis, Virginia, until he was honorably discharged. In 1956, he married Leola Weston, and they purchased an 80-acre farm where they raised their five children. He served as president of the Penn Yan school board until they consolidated with Watervliet Public Schools. In 1960, Ken went back to college at Indiana University to study income tax preparation and ran his own tax consulting business for 42 years. For 20 years, he also worked summers as a field man for Greg Orchards and Coloma Frozen Foods. In 1977, he sold the farm in order to concentrate on his tax business. Ken was elected a Berrien County commissioner in 1969 and served residents of his district for 30 years, including 20 years as chairman of the finance committee. He also served as a member of the Berrien County Building Authority and was a lifelong member of the Farm Bureau and the Michigan State Horticultural Society. At Salem Lutheran Church, Ken served as a Sunday school teacher as well as treasurer and president of the congregation. In 1981, he and Leola transferred to Grace Lutheran Church, where he served on the endowment committee. He enjoyed attending his grandchildren’s activities and sporting events and playing golf and fishing with his brother, Alton. Ken is survived by his loving wife of nearly 67 years, Leola; five children; 12 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.

Karen (Peterson) Fargo ’57 on December 20, 2022, in Wilmette, Illinois. Karen majored in history at Kalamazoo College.

Lois Jeanne (Meier) Williams

Lois Jeanne (Meier) Williams ’58 on July 24, 2023. Lois attended Kalamazoo College for two years. On September 6, 1957, she married Thomas Williams. She and Tom moved to Holland, Michigan, in 1964, where they raised four children. She worked for FMB and later Huntington Bank, retiring from there in 1998. She and Tom enjoyed traveling in their motor home and made many trips to northern Michigan. In the winter, they enjoyed cruising in the Caribbean. Many trips also were made with good friends to Las Vegas and local casinos—with the biggest winner buying dinner on the way home. Lois loved spending time with her family and friends. She was “mom” to many of her children’s friends, always welcoming them into her home. Preceding her in death were her husband, Tom, and granddaughter, Jennifer. She leaves behind longtime friend and companion Darrel Middlewood, with whom she reconnected in 2015, four children, 12 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Terry K. Brown ’59 on February 5, 2023.

59 lillya

C. Peter Lillya ’59 on September 15, 2023. At K, he not only earned a B.A. in chemistry, he was also a member of the first group of Light Scholars to participate in the study abroad program, which eventually became a standard feature of a K education. As one of the first recipients of a National Science Foundation Fellowship at K, he earned a Ph.D. at Harvard University working with Nobel laureate E.J Corey. Peter then joined the University of Massachusetts (Amherst) Chemistry Department in 1963, where he spent his entire career. He remained an enthusiastic, supportive and involved colleague long after his formal retirement in 2002. Peter’s colleagues and students remember him as an inquisitive, caring and gracious member of the community, whose research interests spanned the intersection of polymer science and chemistry, and who embraced innovation. He remembered students who had only taken a course or two with him and remained friends with and celebrated the careers of his many graduate students. Even after retirement, he continued writing chemistry problems used by thousands of students both here and abroad on the University’s online web learning system. Peter was both a lifelong outdoorsman and athlete, pursuing hiking, camping, rock climbing and cycling. A love of travel took him around the globe, often visiting children in far-flung locations. A passion for arts, particularly music, made him a supporter and fan of many local arts organizations. His concern for justice and nature also led him to support political and nonpolitical causes, investigating issues for the League of Women Voters, being a member of the Union of Concerned Scientists and volunteering for local and statewide political campaigns. To the end of his life, Peter was devoted to his family and friends, loved good conversation and company, and remained curious about the world. He is survived by his loving wife of 61 years, Maija (Zadins) ’61; two children; and three grandchildren.

Julia Frances (Holmes) Ward

Julia Frances (Holmes) Ward ’59 on December 5, 2022, after battling Parkinson’s disease and dementia. Julia served as a counselor for three years in Northville, Michigan, then as a school counselor for three years in Fairbanks, Alaska, where she met Sam Ward, a retired Naval aviator who taught math and electronics at Lathrop High School. Julia and Sam married on December 18, 1971. Julia enjoyed fishing and the art of tatting, making countless doilies and bookmarks. Later, they moved to Kodiak Island, Alaska, to teach at Kodiak High School, and Julia gave birth to their son, David. After retiring from teaching in 1978, the family moved to a 120-acre farm near West Plains, Missouri, where they ran a small herd of Angus-crossed beef cattle, and Julia managed an extensive garden. Julia canned and preserved foods, baked bread and made her own butter and yogurt. She and Sam kept several hives of bees, processing their own honey, and maintained a small fruit orchard. From 1983 to 1985, the family lived in South America, serving as support staff for Wycliffe Bible Translators in the Peruvian jungle. Julia served as an elementary teacher while Sam repaired avionics and communications equipment for the pilots and translators. Julia’s authentic faith and love for others showed in her church and community involvement, teaching Sunday school and playing piano and organ. She served in several women’s organizations, including the Ladies Auxiliary of Gideons International, the Women’s Aglow Fellowship and the Order of the Eastern Star. Julia was preceded in death by her husband of nearly 40 years, Sam, and step-son, James Ward. Julia was the proud and loving grandmother of three grandchildren.

David G. Jacobs

David G. Jacobs ’60 on September 8, 2023. David was born in Kalamazoo to Ardell and Pauline (Kurtz) Jacobs ’24. While attending Kalamazoo College, he met the love of his life, Sandra Haefner, in her hometown of Decatur, Michigan. David later transferred to Western Michigan University to join Sandy, and they were married June 16, 1962. After a short stint as an accountant, David was commissioned as a 2nd lieutenant in the United States Air Force and became a weapons controller. This was the beginning of an outstanding career, which spanned 22 years, taking him to numerous locations around the world, including Michigan, Mississippi, South Dakota, the Philippines, Texas, Australia, New Mexico, Korea, and Florida, where David eventually retired in 1984, with the rank of major. After retirement, David owned and managed several rental properties. David and Sandy had an abundance of friends and enjoyed bowling, dancing, kayaking, playing cards and traveling in their recreational vehicle. David was preceded in death by his brother, his sister, Mardell Arent ’51, and his son Steven. He is survived by his wife of 61 years, Sandy Jacobs, his daughter, Kathy, his son Scott, and four grandchildren.

Dan Charles Pell

Dan Charles Pell ’63 on July 12, 2023. Dan received a football scholarship to Kalamazoo College, where he played for three years before joining the Army. Stationed at a missile site near Gruenstadt, Germany, he married the love of his life, Ann Meyle, on January 15, 1965. The adventurous couple embarked on a European journey, exploring the continent on a tight budget of $5 a day in their $250 Volkswagen Beetle. Upon returning to Plainwell, Michigan, Dan pursued a career as an electrician and became a proud father to two sons. Known for his resourcefulness, Dan undertook various projects, taking particular pride in constructing a mortise and pegs barn entirely by hand, using lumber salvaged from a dismantled barn. Everyone liked Dan; he was quiet, always had a smile on his face and never had an unpleasant word for anyone. Dan helped sons Jack and Jim with their athletic careers, playing basketball in the driveway, throwing the football around the backyard, and baseball catching while Jack practiced pitching and Jim worked on his swing. Dan was preceded in death by his beloved granddaughter, Cassaundra. He is survived by his wife, Ann; two sons; six grandchildren; his adored great-grandchildren; and his constant companion, his dog, Sunshine.

Raymond Stowell Blanford

Raymond Stowell Blanford ’64 on August 25, 2023. Ray majored in math at Kalamazoo College and joined the Army in 1966. He was stationed in Washington, D.C., when he met Sue while playing football outside their apartments. They were married in Lansing, Michigan, in 1967. After his military service, he was trained as a computer programmer and embarked on a lifelong career as a systems engineer and software developer, ultimately working for Northrop Grumman for 30 years on U.S. government contracts. He was a well-respected expert in the industry and became indispensable to his colleagues, finally retiring in 2022. Ray was devoted to his family and loved sharing every occasion with them, big or small. He was an ever-present supporter, playmate, consoler, joke-teller and source of wisdom. He was kind, sincere, generous and never put himself first. He volunteered for his church, neighborhood and his son’s schools. He was an exquisite present wrapper, cookie decorator and pumpkin carver. He was up for anything. He loved to travel, especially to see his grandchildren. He cared deeply about the people around him and always made sure they knew. A longtime resident of Annandale, Virginia, he is survived by his wife of 56 years, Susan Ward Blanford; his sister, Ellen Anne Teghtmeyer ’66; his son; and two grandchildren.

Keith L. Bekofske

Keith L. Bekofske ’65 on August 27, 2023. Keith was a 1965 graduate of Kalamazoo College, majoring in physics as part of the 3/2 program in engineering with the University of Michigan. He received his Ph.D. in aerospace engineering from the University of Michigan. Keith retired to Clearwater, Florida, where he enjoyed traveling and being a math tutor for many years. Keith is survived by his wife, Eileen McBride Bekofske; two daughters; and four grandchildren; as well as two brothers, including Carl Bekofske ’64 (Karen Glomp ’63); and nieces and nephews, including Nancy (Bekofske) Walkup ’95 and Laura (Bekofske) Fritz ’91.

Galen K. Pletcher

Galen K. Pletcher ’65 on September 21, 2023. Galen majored in philosophy at K and earned M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in philosophy at the University of Michigan. He taught philosophy and comparative religion for 45 years at the University of Michigan, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, and the State University of New York College at Potsdam. In the latter institution, he also served as dean of arts and sciences. He is survived by his wife, Helen Main McLean Pletcher. His first wife, Cecilie Ann Sewejkis, died in 2003, and their two children survive. He is also survived by his sister, Pat Conway ’72.

Richard C. Brandt ’66 on August 27, 2023, in Paradise Valley, Arizona. Richard graduated from Kalamazoo College with a B.A. in economics and received an M.B.A. in marketing and operations research from Columbia University in 1968. His extensive career focused on new product development first for Proctor & Gamble, and then for pharmaceutical companies, including Abbott Laboratories/Ross Division, Bausch & Lomb and Dahlberg (Miracle Ear Division). Later in life, Richard owned a Cottman Transmission franchise in East Syracuse, New York. Along with his quiet philanthropy, Richard’s unassailable business acumen and enthusiasm for new ideas left an enduring mark on those fortunate enough to cross his path. During his time at Ross, Richard met and married Carol E. Severance (1949–2012) and they had two children. Richard is survived by his son, his daughter and two grandchildren.

Mark Eugene Sutter

Mark Eugene Sutter ’66 on June 1, 2023, unexpectedly. In the early 1960s, after a year at Kalamazoo College, Mark joined his parents and siblings in Palo Alto, California, and completed his B.A. at San Jose State. He had a long and successful career as a quality assurance manager in the manufacturing and defense industries. In 1977, Mark married Dale Dunlap; they eventually became a family of five, establishing residency in Mountain View. Throughout his children’s school years, Mark generously volunteered his time to many extracurricular activities and committees. He possessed a quick wit, a fantastic recall for details and a sharp sense of humor. He was the go-to guy for any family member or friend who needed help building or fixing anything, and his passing leaves a void that cannot be filled. Mark leaves behind many loving family members and friends, who will forever miss his corny jokes, silly songs and remarkable mechanical superpowers.

Gretchen VanAtta Loro ’68 on July 25, 2023, after a long illness. Gretchen had a very interesting life and many adventures, including meeting and marrying a Latvian mussel fisherman and living on one of the Frisian islands in the North Sea. After her first husband passed away, Gretchen returned to the United States and met and married her second husband, Antonio Loro, a well-respected art appraiser, restorer and artist. Gretchen was a talented artist in her own right and exhibited her work in several galleries in Houston. Her husband passed away while they lived in San Diego, and then she moved back to The Woodlands, Texas, to be near her sister, Mary VanAtta Kelly ’66. She will be greatly missed, especially for her very dry but very quick sense of humor.

Judith Lee O’Loughlin ’70 on September 21, 2023. Judith was born to John ’43 and Maxine ’44 Dam and attended Kalamazoo College before embarking on a long journey of travel in order to be a woman of the world. She ended up in Staten Island, New York, where she met Eddie O. Her charm was irresistible to Ed, and they were soon married. They lived a long and happy life together, full of travel, music, friends, family and laughter. Judith graduated from the College of Staten Island with a Bachelor of Science in psychology and began master’s coursework in gerontology before she became pregnant with her only child, Meghan. Judith later returned to the workforce and was most noted for her work with Community Agency for Senior Citizens. Judith was an active member of Brighton Heights Reformed Church in Staten Island, where she ran the soup kitchen every weekend and led community outreach programs to support individuals living in poverty, then became an active member of St. John’s Lutheran Church. Judith and Ed moved to Poughkeepsie, New York, where she enjoyed her love of birds, nature and gardening. Judith encouraged her grandchildren to be creative and artistic and taught them to make a mess because life was too short to worry about it. Judy will rest in eternity with her husband, Edward, whom she lost just 10 months before her death. Judith is survived by her daughter and two grandchildren.

Daniel Jon Strehl ’70 on August 3, 2023, in Tucson, Arizona. He worked for many years for the Los Angeles Public Library. Dan had a lifelong interest in gourmet cooking and African art (after study abroad in Sierra Leone) and was survived by his beloved parrot, Charlie.

James R. Hodges II

James R. Hodges II ’73 on March 23, 2022. Jim’s career started in St. Louis, Missouri, and eventually landed him in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where he was the owner of Invisible Fence of the Prairie for many years. This incorporated his love of dogs with his desire to be his own boss. He had recently retired and was enjoying planning trips and catching up with friends and family. Throughout his life, Jim was always involved with dogs, through kennel clubs, breeding dogs or installing invisible fences to keep dogs safe in their yards. Jim also enjoyed writing poetry and all things historical or political. Grateful to have shared in his life are his daughter, son, granddaughter and grandson.

John Wagner

John Wagner ’73 on October 31, 2022. Intelligent, inquisitive and with a wry sense of humor, John never shied away from supporting the underdog and putting his efforts toward doing the right thing. For 32 years, he educated and coached high school students. Beyond being a teacher of mathematics and English, he was passionate about problem-solving, curiosity, developing relationships, and preparing good humans to go out into the world. John courageously fought his own demons during his life, and he went on to support many others through 12-step programs and grief groups. He was nonjudgmental and open to hearing everyone’s story, and people freely told him theirs. John’s generosity will be missed by all those who were lucky enough to be taught, coached, tutored, fed and loved by him. He leaves behind a heartbroken family, including his wife, Jill Stefani Wagner, daughter and son-in-law, and four grandchildren.

Steven Kimberly Jackson

Steven Kimberly Jackson ’80 on June 16, 2023. Steven graduated from Kalamazoo College before moving to Bisbee, Arizona, and later settling in Tucson, where he taught high school and fulfilled a dream of coaching a sports team. Steven had a passion, combined with precision, for building. He and his brother, Kevin, completed a summer cabin and a magnificent barn on family property outside of Northport, Michigan. After retiring from Caliber Funding, where he worked in IT, he continued refining his building skills, renovating his home in historic Armory Park. With his heart set on creating a design of his own, he fell in love with a wild piece of land in Groom Creek, outside of Prescott, Arizona. Surrounded by good neighbors, he began building his cabin in his methodical and practical style that always yielded a satisfying and elegant beauty. Steven often hiked the trails out past the Desert Museum and camped up high on Mount Lemon. He wholeheartedly loved being outdoors. He took his love of sports and the outdoors to the golf course, improving his game in his relentless way. Steven is survived by his daughter and siblings.

Veronica (Horter) Mutchler

Veronica (Horter) Mutchler ’91 on June 20, 2023, after a long and courageous battle with cancer. Roni graduated from Kalamazoo College with a degree in biology. She performed her Senior Integrated Project at The Upjohn Company in Kalamazoo, which led to her first job as a research scientist. She later worked at the Van Andel Institute and Zoetis. Roni was dedicated to her career and well-respected by her colleagues. She enjoyed a challenge and welcomed opportunities to learn and broaden her knowledge of both human and animal health. Roni met Joe Mutchler, the love of her life, during her sophomore year at K. They married soon after graduation and built a beautiful life together, which included three wonderful children, Nicole, Ryan and Grace. She was a dedicated wife and mother, maintaining a healthy balance between work and personal life. Roni was an exceptional hostess and truly enjoyed entertaining. Her other favorite activities included swimming in her pool, beach time and sunsets at Lake Michigan, kayaking, spending time with family and friends, and working in the yard. Ever true to her Catholic faith, Roni was selfless and always put the needs of others before her own. Roni’s courage and strength inspired those around her. She faced the gravities of cancer with a resilient and hopeful spirit, keeping her beautiful smile and kind heart through it all. She was very loved and will be greatly missed. In her memory, Roni’s K friends have created a scholarship, Roni’s Friends, to benefit a student who has been touched directly or indirectly by cancer. Classmates who would like to contribute to or learn more about the Roni’s Friends Scholarship may contact Mitch Veldkamp ’91 at mjveldkamp@gmail.com.

Faculty, Staff and Friends of the College

Nanette Beaton

Nanette Beaton on August 27, 2023. Nanette married John Beaton in 1954, and they emigrated from Scotland to the U.S. They settled in Kalamazoo, where she volunteered for Planned Parenthood and worked for the Kalamazoo Nature Center before joining the staff of Kalamazoo College, working there until her retirement in 1993. She had a pragmatic outlook and valued her independence, while delighting in everyday joys like fresh flowers and oatmeal cookies. Nanette was an avid naturalist and artist who loved quiet time, intellectual pursuits, reading, spending time with grandkids and great-grandkids, and exercise and sports, including tennis, golf, yoga and downhill skiing. She was preceded in death by her husband, John. Surviving are her three children, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Alan E. Schwartz after sunset on July 27, 2023. A trustee of the College from 1969-1972, Alan was a founder and partner at Honigman LLP as well as a business, civic and Jewish community leader in Detroit for more than half a century. He was known for his brilliance, elegance, public service, ability to create consensus, sound advice, business acumen, and deep love of community, arts, the Jewish faith, and family, especially his wife of 67 years, Marianne. Alan was inducted into the International Institute of Metropolitan Detroit Hall of Fame in 1984 and named a Detroit News Michiganian of the Year in 1987. In 2013, then Detroit Mayor Dave Bing created the Alan E. Schwartz Award, making him the first recipient of the award given annually to an individual in recognition of outstanding commitment to community service. Alan was predeceased by his wife, Marianne Shapero Schwartz. He is survived by three children, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

George M. Nielsen on September 14, 2023. George was born in Wadsworth, Ohio, in 1934. After graduating from Ohio Wesleyan University, George earned a Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 1963, he joined the faculty of Kalamazoo College as an assistant professor in the mathematics department. He was named associate professor in 1970, and professor in 1982. George taught mathematics at K for 36 years, also serving as an international student advisor for 20 of those years.

George was known for his sincere interest in all his students. In 1988, students selected George as the recipient of the prestigious Frances Diebold Award in honor of his involvement with the student body. He made numerous trips to Detroit to help solve visa difficulties, attended weddings, sent notes of congratulations on achievements, and kept in touch with many students after graduation. George served on numerous faculty committees, led senior class processionals and participated in the awarding of honorary degrees as faculty marshal, and attended countless College functions, including lectures, music, theatre and sporting events, alumni receptions and special events. He graciously opened his home to welcome former faculty, staff and students when they returned to Kalamazoo, often providing transportation to and from the airport. In 1995, George received the Weimer K. Hicks Award, which honors a current or retired employee of the College who has provided long-term support to the College beyond the call of duty, or who has provided excellent service in the performance of his or her job. George retired from Kalamazoo College in 1999.

George Nielsen with a student
George Nielsen on the phone
George Nielsen on the quad

Kathleen White Smith on March 18, 2023. Born Kathleen Nora White in Chicago, her parents Richard Joseph White and Grace Mary (Colburn) White descended from Irish immigrants. Her father was a salesman, and her mother a kindergarten teacher. Growing up on Chicago’s north side, Kathy attended Our Lady of Mercy School and Immaculata High School. In most summers, she enjoyed Chicago Cubs (close to home) and White Sox (across town) baseball games with her father and visiting her mother’s cousin and her family in Waupaca, Wisconsin. For her undergraduate education, Kathy was a student at Mundelein College, located on the shore of Lake Michigan, where she pursued majors in French and history and graduated summa cum laude in 1967. She was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. Kathy remained forever grateful for the mentorship of Professor Elsa Copeland, who instilled in her a lifelong love of French language and culture. Awarded a Fulbright Fellowship, Kathy spent the 1967–1968 academic year at the Université d’Aix-Marseille in France and traveled extensively throughout Europe. (She was heavily exposed to tear gas in riots in Paris in 1968.) She undertook graduate study at the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a focus on 20th-century French literature, earning her Ph.D. in 1973.

In that year, Kathy began her academic career at Kalamazoo College, where she rose to the rank of professor of romance languages and literature. She taught courses in French language and literature, first-year (writing) seminars, and, in her early years, Italian language. She served for many years as chair of the Division of Foreign Languages. Kathy was awarded the Florence J. Lucasse Lectureship for Outstanding Teaching in 1993, the highest honor bestowed by the College on its teaching faculty members. She was also the first professor appointed to the rotating position of associate provost at the College. Kathy presented numerous papers at professional conferences and often organized or moderated panel discussions. Her scholarship encompassed trauma and historical memory (motivated in part by the presence of Holocaust survivors in her girlhood Chicago neighborhood) and immigration. She spent sabbatical leaves at Harvard University and in Strasbourg, France. Kathy received fellowships from the Mellon Foundation, Camargo Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities and others. In later years, Kathy provided color commentary (history and culture) during trips to France for large and small groups.

When Kathy joined the faculty of the College, she was one of a small number of female professors and administrators. She never forgot the guidance of senior colleagues, especially Eleanor Pinkham and Caroline Ham. In turn, during her years as a senior faculty member, Kathy became an indispensable model, mentor, ally and friend to women across the College community. Throughout much of her career, Kathy gave well-received talks in Stetson Chapel. She was a much sought-after advocate for younger professors seeking tenure and promotion. Kathy retired from the faculty in 2019.

In 1984, Kathy married Tom Smith, another Kalamazoo College professor, in Stetson Chapel. That was the beginning of a happy 38-year union. Kathy and Tom often traveled to the other’s professional meetings, and they spent sabbatical leaves together. She was welcomed into Tom’s extended family and enjoyed trips to visit his relatives. Kathy looked forward to spending time at their cabin in the North Woods of Michigan, where she was surprised by how much she loved being surrounded by nature. Other interests included visiting with faculty colleagues and current and former students, hanging out with their dogs, reading mysteries, gardening and cooking, knitting, photography, and sports (watching, that is).

In January 2023, Kathy was diagnosed with vascular dementia. She died from cardiac arrest in March. Tom was with her in the hospital as she left this life. She will be greatly missed by friends and family and remembered especially for her quick mind, kindness and humor. A celebration of her life was held on September 30, 2023, on the Kalamazoo College campus.

Kathy Smith in front of a blackboard
Kathy Smith with students reading a book
Kathy Smith in graduation garb

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The Power of Partnership

The Power of Partnership by Sarah Frink

The office building where Sleeping Giant Capital resides sits on the corner of South and Rose streets in downtown Kalamazoo, dressed in limestone, granite, and brick, with an impressive glass atrium. The building represents the kind of investment folks have been making in the city of Kalamazoo, as its downtown teems with new businesses, restaurants and residential units.

What you’ll find inside the walls of Sleeping Giant is an example of what makes Kalamazoo—home to the Kalamazoo Promise, multiple colleges and universities, and a wide variety of companies—worthy of such investment: an innovative educational collaboration that offers Kalamazoo College and Western Michigan University students a new way to gain practical business experience in a fast-paced, real-world setting.

President Gonzalez speaking with the class
President Jorge G. Gonzalez (pictured center with Professor Amy MacMillan) speaks to students at Sleeping Giant Capital on February 16.

On a February afternoon, the offices of Sleeping Giant Capital are buzzing with excitement. At the front of the room sit two special guests: Kalamazoo College President Jorge G. Gonzalez and Western Michigan University President Edward Montgomery. They are here to talk with students about this new experiential learning practicum offered through WMU’s Center for Principled Leadership and Business Strategy and K’s Department of Economics and Business. Surrounding them are the 40-some students of the practicum, its faculty, and a host of community and educational leaders.

On the Kalamazoo College side of the partnership, L. Lee Stryker Associate Professor of Business Management Amy MacMillan integrates elements from a strategic marketing management course she co-teaches at K. From Western, Leadership and Business Strategy Co-Directors Derrick McIver and Doug Lepisto ’04 tap into a Leadership and Business Strategy (LBS) course they co-teach at the WMU Haworth College of Business. Lepisto and McIver are also the co-founders of Sleeping Giant Capital, an investment firm that has raised $62 million to date focused on empowering local professionals to acquire, operate and grow West Michigan businesses. When combined, these elements create an immersive experience that goes outside the classroom and operates like a real-life consulting firm.

Doug Lepisto
“My life and work have been shaped by Kalamazoo College, WMU and the Kalamazoo community,” said Doug
Lepisto ’04. “Bringing those pieces together is a ton of fun and truly rewarding.”

The collaboration between K and WMU, Lepisto explained, began with an email from Kalamazoo College Trustee Jim Heath ’78, a former Stryker executive and current people coach and business consultant. He was familiar with the work Lepisto and McIver were doing at WMU, as well as with the experiential learning opportunities MacMillan and Associate Professor of Economics and Business Tim Moffit were providing at K. Heath connected Lepisto and MacMillan, and they met in the spring of 2022.

MacMillan said, “We realized immediately that we shared this common vision. We wanted to create immersive experiences for our students that stretched them outside their comfort zones and positioned them where they can thrive and succeed as leaders in the real world. So, wouldn’t it be cool if we could take our mutual programs to the next level by collaborating and joining forces, and at the same time, help a Kalamazoo-area business? It just felt really good.”

The effort was not without challenges. The two institutions were on different schedules—WMU on a semester system, K on a quarter system—but with support from administration, they were able to craft an 8-week accelerated program where students would sit on six- to eight-person teams and offer consulting services to a West Michigan-based company.

The client that term was AVB, a leading regional construction and development firm. Teams were given a problem statement that included budgetary, geographic and time constraints, and tasked with creating individualized marketing strategies that would help the company enter new market segments. The work included performing research with stakeholders within the markets to gather key insights and presenting their strategies, including the financial impact of their recommendations, to AVB at the end of the project. Set up as a competition, the practicum included AVB offering a $5,000 prize to the winning project team.

Ryan Hanifan and Pieter Slager
Ryan Hanifan ’23 and Pieter Slager ’23 in downtown Kalamazoo.

After the event, Pieter Slager ’23, a business major, explained how the teams worked: “There are analysts within the group, which is the role I was in, and those were primarily students taking the course for the first time. We were led by two team leads, who were taking this course at Western for the second time. As an analyst, some of my daily work included primary and secondary research, making presentation slides or different business memos, evaluating data, and then analyzing our client’s business practices, as well as competitors’, to see where the business might be falling behind or maybe performing better than competitors.”

Along the way, students developed critical business competencies like strategic thinking, communication, and building collaborative relationships, as well as learning practical skills, such as building pitch decks and issue trees, financial modeling and how to deliver effective presentations to a client. All classes were held at the offices of Sleeping Giant Capital and students were expected to attend dressed in business casual or professional attire.

Business major Greta Wedge ’23 said, “When we first got there, the professors from Western very much set the tone that this is serious, there is a dress code, and it’s going to be a quick pace.”

For the K students, the brisk timeline was a challenge, but not an unfamiliar one.

Ryan Hanifan ’23, a business major, said, “At K, we aren’t strangers to dynamic and fast-paced projects. We often work collaboratively within smaller groups, learning in trimester-long time frames. Our school is accustomed to high performance expectations, and we thrive on healthy competition.”

Slager said that the opportunity to immerse himself in an environment that was not typical for academia was a highlight. “We were going to this private equity firm downtown. Morgan Stanley had an office across the hall. So, it’s a class, but nothing about it is like a class, and you’re gaining real world experience. You’re in a private equity firm for multiple hours a week, and we were able to meet some impressive professionals from the West Michigan area and across the country.”

Wedge said, “It was really interesting to go there and have that experience consulting with a real company…They came in and talked to us, we were able to ask them questions, we had opportunities for interviews with them—as well as with other professionals in their industry and in the education industry. So it was, overall, a robust program and a great experience, especially as a young professional. It gave me a wide range of experiences that I think will be applicable to life after K.”

Hanifan appreciated the diversity of thought that came with blending students from the two higher ed institutions.

“One of the neat aspects of our collaboration was the diverse range of perspectives and experiences that were brought together. At K, as a business major in a liberal arts college, we engage in a broad spectrum of courses. This pairing with Western allowed us to witness the unique blend of specialized expertise and interdisciplinary learning. It was fascinating to see the cohesion that emerged.”


Wedge agreed adding there was a mutual benefit. “I think K teaches us how to think critically and globally and how to interpret and experience the world around us. And I think Western teaches their students a lot of concrete skills, like developing presentation decks and effective strategies for using PowerPoint to present. So, I felt like that collaboration was a great way to share information and see how other students think and see the world outside of a K perspective.”

The students also valued the diversity of thought provided by professors from two different colleges.

“It worked out really well—the diversity in personalities and perspectives from our managing partners was an advantage,” Hanifan said of MacMillan and Lepisto. “Each one brought their distinct viewpoint, and we had to carefully assess and reconcile the feedback to determine the direction we wanted to take. It enabled us to explore different angles and consider a variety of approaches, resulting in better decision-making.”

Fatima Ortega
Fatima Ortega ’23 talks about her experiences with the group.

At the February event, Fatima Ortega ’23, a triple major in business, computer science and Spanish, talked to the audience about how the class helped her become more experienced in the business world and gave her practical experience as a computer scientist under the guidance of both professors and peers. “This experience taught me a lot about how professors could give you the opportunity for something, but it all depends on the students themselves creating an environment where they are working together, (helping) each other grow,” Ortega said. “Usually in a class setting, the professor is the one that gives you the experience. So, I’m glad that I have been able to work with a great team. They’ve let me grow. They’ve been very upfront about things that I need to work on and what I’m doing well.”

President Gonzalez asked what inspired Ortega, with three majors and a very full slate of classes, to sign up for this particular class.

“I have taken many classes with Professor MacMillan, and I always love her energy,” Ortega said. “I trust her fully that she’ll give us the best experience. And I’m very proud to be here.”

Emilio Romo ’23, a business major, noted at the event that “being immersed in a business environment surrounded by a group of great minds has really helped me personally to excel and refine my strengths. Here, you’re encouraged to take initiative and develop your skills to adapt to changing situations and uncomfortable situations.”

After the students spoke, MacMillan reminded the audience that the collaboration goes beyond WMU and K, noting, “This experience would not be what it is without a partner client, a company willing to share their information, their time, and their resources with the students, let us dig in and analyze the business, collect data, analyze data, and make recommendations.”

AVB Chief Operating Officer Greg Dobson attributed the company’s participation with the class in part to his own experiences as a college student and intern.

“At WMU, as a senior I was selected by the president of the university—at that point it was Dr. Diether Haenicke—to intern in his office, later becoming his executive assistant, and because of that experience, which changed the entire trajectory of my life, I realized the value of being a student and working on something at the same time. And from that moment on, I always wanted to pay that forward.

“At AVB, we’ve had a long tradition of having interns be involved in our company. So, when Amy and Doug called and said, would you want to be involved in this, I thought about all those people that have been involved in the formation of my life and in our company being so successful. The fact that we had these great professors to seek input from was inherently awesome, and then they pulled in a bunch of great consultants, and we saw, we can really learn something. Participating in this process has provided the big win-win-win: a win to K and WMU, a win to the students and a win to AVB. For all these reasons it is a pleasure and a true privilege to be here.”

President Gonzalez shared his appreciation for the partnership with WMU and for the efforts of Lepisto, McIver and MacMillan. “As a faculty member, the easiest thing to do is to stay in your classroom where you control everything that happens from minute one to minute 55,” said Gonzalez. “When you agreed to do something like this, all that is out the door, and everything is uncertain…(Here) you have some faculty members who are incredibly entrepreneurial and willing to go out of their way to do something really special.”

He went on to emphasize that “this is the future of Kalamazoo. This is the future of this country. We are creating entrepreneurs, we are creating people that are going to look at products from different perspectives.…We have civic leaders, we have business leaders, we have students, we have faculty members getting together to make a better future…I really hope this program continues to grow and expand because the opportunity that this group of students have had this term—I hope that we have hundreds of students over the years that are able to have this experience.”

The winning team holding their prize check
Team 6 wins! From Left: AVB President of Commercial Construction Andrew Schipper, Alexis Petty ’23, Ryan Hanifan ’23, Brianna Grant (WMU), Chloe Gancitano (WMU), Greta Wedge ’23, Jessica Hurracha (WMU), Trenton Sands (WMU), and AVB Chief Operating Officer Greg Dobson.

Some in attendance said that it only made sense that an innovative idea like this practicum would take root in a place like Kalamazoo. And for the students of Kalamazoo College, it was an experience they will not soon forget. Wedge and Hanifan were proud to be on the winning team that earned the $5,000 prize. Slager was so invested in his team that he continued to work with the WMU students for no additional credit after K’s term ended, even going in to work during K’s spring break (WMU’s semester ended a few weeks later).

Wedge said, “One of the biggest highlights for me is that I am more excited about my future in the corporate world. You’re always excited about the theoretical future, and this was a concrete experience where I could see myself being happy and fulfilled after college, which is reaffirming. I feel like a lot of students come out of college and it’s like, I picked this major, I did all of this work, I don’t know if I love it. Then you have an experience like this one and you’re like, yeah, this is what I should be doing. This is my passion.”

The class holding up Western and K College flags

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Diverse Paths to Diplomacy

Lisa Prothero, Kyle Hartwell and Jess Tesoriero at the U.S. State Department

Diverse Paths to Diplomacy

By Fran Czuk


Lifelong learning, tight-knit community, varied opportunities and global perspectives: sometimes it’s hard to tell whether Lisa (Brenneman) Prothero ’08, Kyle Hartwell ’07, and Jess Tesoriero ’07 are talking about their Kalamazoo College experiences or their work for the U.S. Department of State.

Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that these three graduates of a tiny liberal arts college in Michigan have found themselves working together in the State Department’s Operations Center in Washington, D.C. They can draw clear lines between what they learned and experienced at K, and the skills they use constantly in their roles as watch officers in the 24-hour communications and crisis management center.

Although they took different paths to the Operations Center, they revel in the small-world feel of working side by side as K grads to monitor world events, prepare briefings for department leaders and coordinate communication and crisis response.

Jump to the bottom of the story to learn the the definition of some key terms used!


Kyle Hartwell ’07

Kyle Hartwell in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Kyle Hartwell ’07 visited historic Lalbagh Fort while working in the U.S. embassy in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

A foreign service officer, Hartwell was a watch officer in the Operations Center from July 2022 to summer 2023, when she took on a position as political-military desk officer for the Republic of Korea.

Born and raised in Ann Arbor, Hartwell came to K with no idea what she wanted to do with her life, other than study languages and become fluent in something besides English.

At K, Hartwell ended up with a major in German and a concentration in classical studies—plus “almost a minor” in religion. She was on the swim team every season that she was on campus. Hartwell briefly thought she might want to be an archaeologist, but after participating in an archeological dig in Ireland, she decided it was not for her.

“The encouragement to try different things was so helpful,” Hartwell said. “Sometimes you have to figure out what you don’t want to do.”

Kyle Hartwell in a K jacket in an Estonian bog
Hartwell shows off her K pride on a hike in an Estonian bog during a tour working at the U.S. embassy in Tallinn, Estonia.

In terms of finding out what she did want to do, Hartwell spent a crucial six months on study abroad in Erlangen, Germany. She wrote her Senior Integrated Project (SIP) on the German work culture and market, based on an internship with a company that made corporate swag.

After graduation, Hartwell returned to Germany in 2007 on a yearlong Fulbright fellowship. She stayed until 2011, teaching English at the university in Erlangen, to private business clients, and at a senior center in Nuremberg.

When she felt she had learned what she could from teaching English, she returned to the U.S. to study international affairs at the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. While there, she got an internship at the State Department that would set her on course for the next 10-plus years.

The internship led to the Pathways Program, a training program for recent graduates, which then led to a job in the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. She joined the Foreign Service in 2016. 

As a foreign service officer, Hartwell has been assigned to the U.S. embassies in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and Tallinn, Estonia, and to the State Department Operations Center.

Lisa Prothero ’08

Prothero recently transitioned over the summer from a senior watch officer to the Bureau of International Organizations, where she now works on multilateral sanctions issues. She is a member of the civil service, meaning she is based primarily in Washington, D.C.

She came from Sturgis, Michigan, to Kalamazoo College knowing she wanted to study language, especially German. She graduated with a double major in German and international studies, with a minor in French.

During her time at K, Prothero was heavily involved with Kaleidoscope, serving as co-president her final year. She studied abroad in Erlangen for six months, completed an internship with the Green Party and wrote a literary analysis in German for her SIP.

Lisa Prothero and her Mom at K graduation
Prothero is pictured with her mom at her graduation from K.

“I studied a lot of advanced language, and some of those classes were really small, so there was nowhere to hide,” Prothero said. “I enjoyed that and felt it helped me thrive academically. With the breadth of classes, I was able to study things like philosophy and anthropology that I had never delved into before. Meeting people who were passionate about different issues and building relationships with people who had different points of view and focus, who were smart and intentional and driven, was another highlight for me. I was grateful for those kinds of experiences.”

At graduation, Prothero knew she did not want to live abroad or teach. Initially unsure what else she could do with a degree in language, she decided to focus on her international studies major and went straight into a master’s program in international affairs at the George Washington University. She completed internships with the Internal Revenue Service and with a nonprofit focused on women’s economic empowerment.

After receiving her master’s, Prothero started at the State Department in 2010, with a stint as a watch officer in the Operations Center. She built her career working in several different offices focusing on U.S. citizens living and traveling abroad, as well as a few years working on North Korean issues. She also spent a few years outside the State Department working in counterterrorism at the FBI. She eventually returned to the Operations Center as a senior watch officer.

Jessica Tesoriero ’07

Tesoriero is a foreign service officer currently serving as a Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) watch officer. Unlike Prothero and Hartwell, she followed a direct path to the State Department, as her interest in international relations began before high school and grew through her participation in high school Model United Nations.

A Maryland native whose family lived in the Ann Arbor area at the time she attended K, Tesoriero double majored in political science and French, and she spent her study abroad on a homestay in Dakar, Senegal.

For her SIP, she wrote a comparative historical analysis of the two Camp David summits of the Arab-Israeli peace negotiations. She completed an internship at Wayne State University’s Center for Peace and Conflict Studies.

Tesoriero sitting on LandSea
Tesoriero and friends overlooking the Adirondacks

Tesoriero participated in the LandSea orientation program at K before returning as a program leader.

Outside of academics, Tesoriero participated in LandSea before returning as a leader, sang in several choirs, participated in two other students’ performance-based SIPs, was a member of Kaleidoscope, lived in the Women’s Resource Center for a year, and tutored students at Woodward Elementary School.

“I loved that at K, you could do all of the things you wanted to do,” Tesoriero said. “We weren’t supposed to be stuck in our bubble. We were supposed to be part of the broader community, and that really stayed with me.”

Tesoriero and her host mom in Dakar
On study abroad in Dakar, Senegal, Jess Tesoriero ’07, left, is pictured with her host mom.

Tesoriero went from K to grad school at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan. As part of a class on sustainable development, she returned to Dakar, and even visited her host family, when the class selected Tesoriero’s proposal to use Senegal as a case study. She also went to Jordan on a National Security Education Program Boren fellowship to learn Arabic. While there, she joined a choir that offered her the opportunity to travel to Israel and Jerusalem for the first time.

“That was a really interesting experience, as an American Jew, to go into Israel for the first time with a group of ex-pats and Palestinian Jordanians,” Tesoriero said. “Even skills that weren’t directly part of my K-Plan brought me to places where I wanted to go and allowed me to see things from different perspectives.”

During grad school, she completed internships with the State Department and with National Defense University. She then spent four years as a civil servant in a counterterrorism rewards program, including a rotation in Kabul, Afghanistan, and one in a U.S. senator’s office as a foreign policy advisor.

Her next position was as part of the team that supports the secretary of state when the secretary travels. After that, she moved to the foreign service, serving tours in Lagos, Nigeria, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, Israel, before joining the INR Watch.

From K to the State Department

Hartwell, Prothero and Tesoriero knew each other slightly at K. They had mutual friends; Hartwell and Prothero think they had some German classes together. For the most part, however, they traveled in different circles.

In the Watch, each has served in a slightly different role, with Prothero managing a team and Tesoriero handling highly classified information for the Bureau of Intelligence and Research. In addition, the nature of the 24-hour center and the shift work required to cover that means they don’t always work at the same time. Yet they are all part of a tight-knit team.

“I think it’s rare in a professional environment to build the relationships that we’re able to build working at the Operations Center,” Prothero said. “You’re in intense situations with people, you’re working 12-hour shifts, you’re working overnights, holidays. You’re giving up a certain part of your personal life to serve in this professional capacity. You have to rely on each other and trust each other, because the stakes are high, so the bonds you form and the connections you make are special and strong and very enduring.”

Depending on shifts and assignments, Tesoriero said, the three alums work closely together at times.

“There’s one chair called the emergency action officer, and it’s their job to pay attention to crises popping up around the world,” Tesoriero said. “When Kyle sits in that chair, say there’s a suspicious package at an embassy; her colleague in a different chair is going to get the phone call, and they’re going to say it out loud, because they parrot everything they hear on the phone. My ears are going to perk up, because I’m looking for broad changes; maybe this isn’t just one suspicious package; maybe this is a bomb, maybe there’s a bigger plot, maybe there’s a protest that’s going to escalate and an entire region is going to destabilize. Then I would talk to Kyle and say, ‘What are you hearing? What are you thinking?’ We share notes and try to figure out what’s happening and who needs to know about it. Lisa, the senior watch officer, is who we’ll tell when we decide to escalate something to the secretary or other principals.”

That sharing of perspectives emerges from a strong K foundation.

“I manage a team of five people and they have such diverse and interesting experiences,” Prothero said. “At K, you come back your junior or senior year from abroad and almost everyone’s been gone for six months, and you’re talking to each other about what you did and what you learned. I try to lean on my team and draw from the unique experiences that they have. I have people who speak Arabic and I have people who served in Mexico, Lithuania, India and everywhere, so I’m able to draw on that and celebrate everyone’s unique and diverse backgrounds. I find that to be incredible and rewarding and it reminds me of K.”

“One of the things that makes K unique is that so many people study abroad,” Hartwell said. “When you come back, you’re not like, ‘Oh my gosh, nobody gets it.’ Everybody gets it. They just had a different experience, and because everyone goes to a different place, it opens your eyes. Even if you only went to one place for study abroad, your friends will be in other places, and so you can follow along their journeys. Even though I was focusing on Germany and learning German, my best friend from K was learning Mandarin, and that was my first exposure vicariously, through him, to learning about China.”

Leveraging others’ diverse backgrounds and experiences is a key skill in the State Department.

“When you have 17 different people looking at the same reports, it’s so interesting to see the different perspectives that people have and the different conclusions that people can draw,” Tesoriero said. “My favorite part of the job is always related to DEIA—diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility. There is a direct relationship between DEIA and intelligence work because our unique lived experiences shape the conclusions we draw. Getting people into both the Foreign Service, and into the entire intelligence community, from diverse backgrounds, and making it a positive and supportive environment for everybody who is in, will make us better at our jobs, and it will make our institution better.”

Much like K, the State Department offers depth and breadth.

“There are so many varied opportunities in the State Department,” Prothero said. “I have friends who work in, for instance, public diplomacy, which is outreach and engagement and those types of things. I worked in consular issues for five or six years, and that was satisfying and rewarding work. Everything you do has a direct impact, whether it’s helping an American citizen overseas who is in trouble or helping facilitate the issuance of visas to people to go overseas or to come to the United States. You’re looking at different fraud cases or helping people immigrate. You don’t have to focus on one area. On the other hand, there are a lot of civil servants who are in jobs that require deep or specific knowledge. There is an opportunity there for people to stay in one office and develop their careers based on their areas of interest or areas of expertise.”

Prothero in front of the Secretary of State's Plane
Lisa Prothero ’08 poses in front of the U.S. Secretary of State’s plane.

For Prothero, the Watch in particular offers an opportunity to step back and see the big picture of what is important to the highest-level diplomats and policymakers, as well as to help ensure those people have the best information possible.

“Working at the State Department since 2010, and seeing different administrations come through, the goal of diplomacy is always there, but sometimes the path you take to get there is different,” Prothero said. “I think the department is full of good people trying to do good work. To me, the ultimate goal of promoting diplomacy in the world and serving as a resource for Americans overseas never goes away. Seeing how we are enacting, applying and advancing that through different leadership is really informative.”

K’s focus on global perspective and study abroad is valued throughout the State Department, Tesoriero said.

“It shows that you can live and work abroad, if that’s your goal, but it also shows that you can work in different environments, that they can literally put you anywhere and have you do anything,” Tesoriero said. “And that is a fantastic selling point for future opportunities.”

“In the Foreign Service, you work at a U.S. Embassy for one to three years,” Hartwell adds. “One year if you’re somewhere really dangerous; if it’s a really nice place, you can stay there for three years. You cannot stay more than four years at a single job. We have worldwide availability, which means that we declare ourselves available to go anywhere in the world that the U.S. government wants to send us. We have a little bit of choice in where that is; we have to apply for and compete for jobs every time we have to get a new one, but we are guaranteed that we will get a job. I think it’s really interesting to be able to change your job but still have the safety of keeping a job. You get to reinvent your life every couple of years, while still having some structure. I feel very lucky to be able to do it.”

Terms to Know

U.S. Department of State/The State Department: An executive department of the U.S. federal government responsible for the country’s foreign policy and relations. The State Department negotiates treaties and agreements with foreign entities, advises the U.S. president on international relations, administers diplomatic missions, and represents the United States at the United Nations.

United States Foreign Service: The primary personnel system used by the diplomatic service of the U.S. federal government to carry out the foreign policy of the United States and aid U.S. citizens abroad.

Foreign Service Officer: A commissioned member of the United States Foreign Service, who formulates and implements U.S. foreign policy. FSOs serve one- to three-year terms overseas as members of U.S. embassies, consulates and diplomatic missions as well as on assignment in Washington, D.C., at command centers, service academies and Congress. At least every four years, they apply and compete for new jobs within the service.

Civil Service Officer: Civil service officers help drive diplomatic principles and initiatives from U.S. locations, working on issues ranging from improving trade opportunities for U.S. businesses, to helping Americans adopt children from overseas, to monitoring human rights issues.

Operations Center (Ops): Composed of two parts—the Watch, and Crisis Management and Strategy—Ops exists to get the right information to the right people at the right time.

The Watch: Watch officers monitor news across the globe, assist U.S. citizens abroad, alert and brief officials on relevant developments and facilitate telephone diplomacy.

The Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR): As both a bureau in the Department of State and a member of the Intelligence Community, the INR is the only U.S. intelligence organization whose primary responsibility is to provide intelligence to inform diplomacy and support U.S. diplomats.

For more information on internship and scholarship opportunities at the State Department, visit careers.state.gov/interns-fellows/.

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