LuxEsto - The Digital Magazine of Kalamazoo College

Brewing A Dream

Brewing a Dream by Andy Brown featuring an image of Dongkeun Jeon with his branded beers
Dongkeun Jeon ’16

If you love beer, you’ll love to know that Kalamazoo College’s undeniable mark on the craft beer industry is growing and has gone global. Chances are you’ve heard of brewpubs and brands crafted in Michigan by K alumni, such as Bell’s, the Cedar Springs Brewing Company, Bløm Meadworks and Three Blondes Brewing. But what about the Satellite Brewing Company, in Seoul, South Korea?

Dongkeun Jeon ’16 founded the business in 2017 as a brewpub in his native country, and since, it’s grown to include multiple canned varieties that are gaining footholds as some of Korea’s most popular libations.
The beers are well-known partly thanks to a Satellite Brewing marketing partnership with NARA Space Technology Inc., a company specializing in small space systems. The project sent a Satellite Brewing beer—Would You IPA—into space, about 27 miles into the stratosphere through a helium balloon, an idea Jeon developed while at K by studying Red Bull’s marketing strategies.

However, Jeon credits the business-pitching lessons he learned as an economics major at K through faculty such as L. Lee Stryker Associate Professor of Business Management Amy MacMillan for being the greatest influencers of his brewery’s success. Those lessons prompted him to knock on the doors of convenience store executives, who were facing consumer movements that wanted Korean craft beers in the stores’ coolers, to promote his products.

Those coolers, at three chains including 7-Eleven in particular, are now stocked with Satellite Brewing varieties such as Beer with Whelk, created through a partnership with canned whelk maker Yoo Dong and dedicated to pairing with various kinds of sea snail; Juicy Fresh Beer, developed with a Korean fruity chewing-gum brand; Buldak Mango Ale, established through a connection with Samyang’s Spicy Buldak Ramen; Mars-I-Lager, a Vienna lager; and Rocket Pilsner, a German-style beer.

Beer with Whelk quickly became the highest-selling beer at 7-Eleven convenience stores in Korea, a mark of popularity passed down to Juicy Fresh Beer when it was launched. And such success, through distribution channels such as other convenience stores and additional businesses, is prompting Jeon, the youngest beer executive in Korea at age 28, to dream of growing his company into the country’s largest brewery.

“Many craft beer executives are in their 40s and 50s, so many of the store executives are inspired by my age and story,” Jeon said. “It’s allowing us to win other distribution channels as well, with places like the Korean version of Walmart or Meijer—nearly every channel that can sell beer.”

Before finding this successs, Jeon arrived in Michigan after thirsting for a liberal arts education in the U.S. and learning from former K attendees such as Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller, a Nobel Prize winner.

“K College was the perfect place for me at the time, especially considering the scholarships and notable alumni,” Jeon said. “Professors allowed me to explore many options and extracurricular activities along with my interest in entrepreneurship. There was the rigorous homework, and yet professors gave me a lot of permission and flexibility to pursue my interests, even in Korea. I ran a nonprofit organization in Korea called SAGE, which stands for Students for the Advancement of Global Entrepreneurship, and I was able to build a great entrepreneurial network.”

Jeon graduated from K in just two years and one term, leaving an indelible impression on faculty such as MacMillan. Jeon’s work ethic and ambition left no doubt he’d be successful in whatever he chose to do.

“He might be the only student I have ever let take Advertising and Promotion before he took the pre-requisite, Principles of Marketing,” MacMillan said. “I told him he’d need a thorough understanding of the textbook we read. I quizzed him on it verbally and he’d obviously read the entire textbook. He readily conversed about the core topics. Then, on the first day in class in Advertising and Promotion, he was there in the first row and he very eagerly wanted to talk with me after class about the big book I was assigning. He’d already read it. He has a voracious appetite for learning.”

That appetite for learning extended beyond the classroom. Jeon once connected with Kalamazoo AirZoo leaders so he could learn how he might meet former astronaut Buzz Aldrin. He even once requested to be absent from MacMillan’s class so he could drive 11 hours to Philadelphia and attempt to meet businesswoman Arianna Huffington at a conference.

“He is one of the most motivated and driven students I have ever had,” MacMillan said. “He combines an out-of-the-box creativity with a drive to get things done. Some people are ideas people and some are tactical. Dongkeun is both. He has visionary ideas and he won’t stop at anything until he gets it done.”

MacMillan and Jeon stay in contact and he has served as a guest speaker in her classes, where he draws rave reviews from students.

“In fall 2020, during the first full year of online teaching,” MacMillan said, “I was trying to think how I could make the course exciting and motivating for students in such an unusual, exhausting environment. I challenged student teams to create a marketing plan to launch a fashion or clothing brand into South Korea. I thought it would be wonderful to get Dongkeun as a speaker on Zoom to help us better understand South Korea and to learn from his entrepreneurial experience starting successful breweries. He immediately said yes and enthusiastically joined us although it was after 1 a.m. for him. Enthralled students peppered him with questions. He gave students confidence that they might be able to launch their own business, possibly even internationally. They were inspired to see another young person, a recent K grad, doing something on such a big scale. We all feel pride and joy in Dongkeun’s success, with me at the top of that list.”

About the time he graduated from K, Jeon sensed an opportunity to build his knowledge of beer in Michigan.

“At the time, I had no knowledge at all about beer,” Jeon said. “I started to search for who might be able to help me and I reached the founder of the Short’s Brewing Company in Traverse City. I asked him to think of me as additional labor and give me a chance to learn how to brew in his brewery by working for him for free.”

The craft beer market, Jeon said, seemed to be plateauing in the U.S., but the industry, according to his research, was ready for growth in Korea. The Short’s Brewing experience provided Jeon with job knowledge. He also spent three weeks in Europe visiting about 90 breweries before re-establishing roots in South Korea to develop support from investors, leading to more marketing partnerships and pitching presentations that continue today.

“Our company’s slogan is ‘Brewing Your Dream,’” Jeon said. “I think we’re achieving that motto and I’m proud of myself. I’m proud that I’ve been able to turn my ideas into reality. Next, I want to be the number one craft brewery in the Asia-Pacific region and then the world. Sometimes I feel like I’ve operated the business for more than 20 years because of its success, but it’s been only about five years. I think that’s quite an amazing achievement. Maybe in a couple of years we could be in the United States. Nobody imagined about 10 years ago what K-Pop’s or Korean drama’s influence would be, and now it’s widespread. I think our food-and-drink culture could be next.”EOS

Hand opening can of mango ale

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Diving Deep Into Friendship

Diving Deep into Friendship by Zinta Aistars, image of man diving

Coming together to talk about how their lives have intertwined over the years, the two friends find even more commonalities between them—much to their mutual delight. 

“So many twists and turns in our lives come back to Kalamazoo College,” says Lynn (Achterberg) Offerdahl ’85 about her friendship with Jeff Gorton ’00. 

One point in common comes up again and again. And again. 

“Our diving coach, Ron Bramble,” Offerdahl says. “He was everything. He was such an extraordinary human being, like a second father to me.”

“An exceptional coach,” Gorton agrees. “My life changed because of K and because of Ron. To have that caliber of coach—incredible.”

Offerdahl came to Kalamazoo from St. Joseph with a goal of getting into Division I Nationals. She had first heard about K from her grandmother, a Kalamazoo College alumna, but a scholarship took her to Western Michigan University instead for her first two years before transferring to Kalamazoo College for her junior year. 

“I wanted to compete in the Nationals, but then Western canceled that program,” Offerdahl says. “I had good enough grades to be accepted by several schools, but not the scholarships. Kalamazoo College turned out to be perfect—a smaller academic atmosphere where I could thrive, including the chance to do my foreign study in Germany. I couldn’t have orchestrated it better. It was God’s providence.”

A generation later, another K freshman was about to become a diving star on campus—and beyond. 

“I was a good student, not great,” Gorton says. “A late bloomer in high school. My high school coach told me I might be able to get half of a scholarship to Michigan State University, but I wasn’t thrilled about such a big school. Bob Kent was the swim coach at K then, and when he learned that I was undecided about where to go, he came to my house. My mother made brownies. And I was enamored with the idea of a coach that cared enough to come to my house to recruit me.”

Gorton decided on K. His decision didn’t come without sacrifice. His parents took out a second mortgage and Gorton signed up for work/study and a financial aid package. 

In their respective diving careers as Kalamazoo College students, both excelled. In her senior year, Offerdahl won the NCAA Division III championship on the three-meter board, becoming Kalamazoo College’s first female national champion. 

Gorton earned five national championships as a Kalamazoo College student. In his senior year, he held the NCAA record on both the one-meter and three-meter boards, every Kalamazoo College diving record, and every MIAA diving record. He was named diver of the year at the NCAA Division III Championships in his senior year. 

Yet diving was not the only pursuit the two had in common. Both Offerdahl and Gorton decided on an art major. Offerdahl also pursued a physical education minor and teaching certificate, while Gorton added on a business minor. 

Oil painting of divers climbing a latter
An art major at K, Offerdahl donated three of her large-format oil paintings to the College. They are on display at the K Natatorium.

“I preferred to paint in oil,” Offerdahl says. “I would photograph athletes at Kalamazoo College and then paint them. I had three large-format oil paintings that I recently donated to K’s new natatorium.”

“I prefer watercolor,” Gorton says. “But for my Senior Integrated Project—my SIP—at K, I had an exhibit of oil paintings—where I, too, used swimmers as my subjects! I then got an internship at the marketing and advertising agency, Biggs|Gilmore.”

“You did? Biggs|Gilmore? I worked there, too!” Offerdahl calls out, and the two burst into laughter at another connection found. 

Gordon pencil drawing of skeleton
Pencil art project by Gorton while a student at K.

Those artistic skills would later play a part in connecting the two once again—but first, it would be diving that would intertwine their paths and form the basis of a new friendship. 

“During my senior year, I had some success in diving in Fort Lauderdale,” Gorton recalls. “I got to know U.S. Olympic coach Tim O’Brien there, and he asked me what I was doing after I graduated from K. Tim is the son of Ron O’Brien, former eight-time U.S. Olympic diving coach for Olympic diving champion, Greg Louganis.”

Coach O’Brien invited Gorton to return to Fort Lauderdale after graduation to continue his training at the International Swimming Hall of Fame Aquatic Complex. 

“I vividly remember standing on the balcony of our hotel and asking Ron Bramble, do you think I can do this?” Gorton says. “He said, ‘Absolutely you can do this!’ That moment triggered an alteration in the entire direction of my life. After graduation, I moved to Fort Lauderdale.”

As chance would have it, Offerdahl lived in Fort Lauderdale with her husband, John Offerdahl. Back during her first college years, at WMU, Offerdahl had met John, an aspiring football player. John later played for the Miami Dolphins in the NFL. 

“I remember that whole transaction,” Offerdahl says. “Ron had asked me to judge one of the meets there. He would keep telling me—you have to meet Jeff.”

“Ron would tell me stories about Lynn and her husband, John,” Gorton echoes. “He told me I needed to meet them.”

The dinner Ron Bramble arranged was a meeting of athletic minds—and appetites. 

“John gave me half of his steak,” Gorton laughs. “Today, it’s the other way around.”

Friendship established, the athletes would remain in close contact as Gorton started working for the Offerdahls during the day and training for the next four years under Coach O’Brien in the afternoons. 

“I missed the finals at the Olympic trials by just a couple of points,” Gorton says. “Only the top two finishers go on to the Olympics. I took it as far as I could, but that was the end of the line for my diving.”

While Gorton was competing, Offerdahl and her husband established a chain of restaurants, called Offerdahl’s Off-the-Grill. It was the outgrowth of their initial chain of gourmet bagel shops, now become fast-casual dining, open for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Gorton with Offerdahl family
Gorton with the Offerdahl family at the U.S. Diving Indoor Nationals.
Lynn and John Offerdahl
Offerdahl with her husband, John, outside Offerdahl’s Off-the-Grill.
Gorton Family
The Gorton family in 2021.
NCAAs podium with Bramble and Gorton
Bramble and Gorton at the NCAA Championships in 2000, where Bramble was named Coach of the Year and Gorton was named Diver of the Year.
Gorton, Bramble, and Kent posing together
Bramble, Gorton and Coach Bob Kent at Senior Night in 2000.
Lynn Offerdahl and diving coach Bramble
Offerdahl credits Bramble with bringing out the best in her as an athlete and a student.

“I always wanted to go into cooking,” Offerdahl says. “I taught school for a while, while John was in the NFL, but then we decided to write a business plan. Neither of us had any experience in the food business, but as an athlete, I was passionate about nutrition. Our first bagel shops were only open for breakfast and lunch. By the time we met Jeff, we had shifted from just bagels into grilling. His graphic design skills were just what we needed, so we hired him as our marketing guy. He designed our menus, packaging, everything—and we still use some of his designs today!”

“Still?” Gorton asks.

“Still! I wish we could hire Jeff back. I ask to be fired every day,” Offerdahl laughs. 

Gorton met his wife on a pool deck. She was a swimmer at Hope College. They married shortly after graduation and after diving ended, started a family that today includes five children. The Offerdahls have raised three. 

“We opened nine shops together with the Offerdahls,” Gorton says. “I worked for them for seven years, but then, as our family grew, we missed our family in Michigan. We wanted to return to the Midwest.”

The friends discover another connection. Gorton today is the vice president and general manager of Stryker’s Sage business in greater Chicago. He first began working for Stryker Corporation in 2007, where one of Offerdahl’s sons is also employed. 

“What K did for me,” Gorton says. “I learned how to learn there. Fortunately, I did better in academics than my parents may have feared—my swim team consisted of really smart people and that brought me up. I loved the K community, the great relationships we had with professors. And I still talk about my study abroad experience in Madrid, Spain. Most of all, my life changed because of our coach, Ron Bramble, and his unwavering belief in what we could achieve. I wanted to win because of him, for him.”

“The relationships at K were amazing,” Offerdahl adds. “Everyone there was so darn smart, so I kept trying to do my best, too. K gave me confidence. Our professors cared, they wanted to see us succeed. But Ron called out the very best in me. He even prayed with me when I was feeling anxious, bringing me back to my faith. And Jeff—he has become a part of our family.”

“Ron was awarded Coach of the Year in 2000,” Gorton says. “That meant a lot to us.”

Offerdahl nods. “We both got to realize our goals—because of Ron, because of our friendship, because of Kalamazoo College.”  EOS

Ron Bramble was a champion diver, a teacher and a diving coach in Kalamazoo area schools and colleges for over 30 years. At K, Bramble coached seven national championship performers, as well as numerous conference champions, All-Americans and Academic All-Americans. He was named NCAA Division III Men’s Diving Coach of the Year in 2000 and 2003. Bramble passed away in 2005, leaving an indelible legacy and cherished memories in the hearts of K divers. In 2014 he was inducted posthumously into the Kalamazoo College Athletic Hall of Fame, and in 2021 the diving well of the new Natatorium was named in his honor, thanks to the generosity of Bebe Lloyd ’98.

Coach Bramble with K divers Offerdahl and Peterson
Offerdahl (right) with Bramble and Gail Peterson ’87.

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Lights, Camera, Access!

Lights, Camera, Access, a story by Andy Brown featuring an image of  student Angela Mammel working a theatre tech booth
Angela Mammel ’22 working on a production design

Angela Mammel ’22 had an opportunity this past summer they might not have been able to pursue without a little help from some Kalamazoo College alumni and a fund that honors an old friend. 

Mammel, a theatre major, has built their talents—along with a great deal of respect in K’s Festival Playhouse—as a projection designer, working to add layers to scenery through images and film that are projected on stage. Their recent credits at K include Unzipped, a play written by theatre major Rebecca Chan ’22, unveiling the struggles and realizations behind Chan’s personal racial discovery; and The Conviction of Lady Lorraine, a one-person show written and performed by Dwandra Nickole Lampkin, a Western Michigan University theatre professor, and set at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated.

“Projection design combines my passions for graphic design, theatre and storytelling in a way I really like,” Mammel said. “It’s such a new field, I hope it’s bringing me some extra skills I can one day take to the table professionally.”

Earlier work and acclaim provided Mammel with an opportunity to intern at the GhostLight Theatre in Benton Harbor, Michigan. However, an hour-long drive one way to the theatre from Kalamazoo seemed daunting given the cost of gas, which would add up fast with a daily commute.

Enter from stage left alumni such as Joseph Bigelow ’74.

Bigelow’s memories from his time as a theatre major at K prompt him to relate with students like Mammel. Such understanding led him—along with other alumni such as Barbara Ostroth ’74 and Paul Eads ’73, and former theatre department leader Clair Myers—to create a helping hand in the Vincent Liff Memorial Fund, which targets the roadblocks that could derail experiences like Mammel’s.

“There were things I just couldn’t take advantage of because I didn’t have an extra $100 to do something off campus,” Bigelow said. “When I decided to create and endow the fund, access was the impetus. We wanted technicians and designers and people interested in the backstage aspects as well as actors to have access to what they needed, and hopefully, that’s what it provides.”

Clair Myers
Former theatre department leader Clair Myers

Mammel was grateful to be among this year’s beneficiaries.

“I honestly feel I was able to have that internship because of the funding that I received,” they said. “It gave me the extra gas money I needed and I learned so much through working in a different theatre setting. I helped with building sets and learning about sound, and Kalamazoo College lets you do everything in this theatre program so I had a wide range of experience I could bring to the table for them.”

The Vincent Liff Memorial Fund allows theatre students to obtain small grants at the theatre department’s discretion, empowering students to attend more conferences, receive more internships and gain more ambitious career experience. Faculty, such as Professor of Theatre Arts Lanny Potts, are just as grateful for it as the students.

“We once asked ourselves what institutional money we had available for students to do an internship or to go to a conference or to go do something professionally somewhere,” Potts said. “The answer was there wasn’t any—none. Being a student at K means thinking about doing job searches, internship searches and apprenticeships, getting resumes together and doing online interviews. Then imagine doing all of the things that you would need to do in order to get an outside gig and questioning whether you can do it financially. We’re grateful to have the Liff fund available to say for a student, ‘We can supplement this experience for you with these finances and make it happen.’”

At K, Vincent Liff ’73 was the lead in the theatre department’s production of the musical Celebration in his first year. He also had a starring role in The Entertainer and was Professor Clair Myers’ assistant director for the summer production of Boys From Syracuse. His sophomore year, he interned in the casting office at the New York Shakespeare theatre company. Liff then pursued two terms abroad in Spain during his junior year, before conducting a Senior Integrated Project (SIP) with the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in London during its production of Richard II.

Vincent Liff with two other men
Vincent Liff (left)

As a professional, Liff was fortunate to have a family connection to theatre through his Uncle Biff, a New York City stage manager, producer and agent. Yet in his own exceptional 30-year career, Liff was a casting director. He first worked for Otto-Windsor Casting, a 1970s New York casting agency that was responsible for the original productions of Grease, Over Here and The Wiz.

Continuing his passion for theatre, Liff partnered with Geoffrey Johnson in 1975 to form Johnson-Liff Associates, which oversaw the casting of more than 150 Broadway and touring productions such as Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera, Dreamgirls, Cats, Miss Saigon and the revival of The Producers as well as the television miniseries, The Holocaust. The partnership dominated casting in New York for more than 25 years. Liff mentored dozens of young actors and worked with outstanding directors and producers during his career before he died from cancer in 2003.

Ostroth attended the same high school as Liff in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Altogether, Ostroth and Liff were close friends for more than 35 years even after their years at K led them both to New York City.

Barbara Ostroth
Barbara Ostroth

“He helped me land on my feet in New York City with my first job as a receptionist for the producers of Grease,” Ostroth said. “We often met up with other friends at the Hungarian Bakery across from the Cathedral of St. John the Divine on Sunday afternoons for warm croissants and to pour over the Arts and Leisure section of the New York Times. We enjoyed exploring all the cultural opportunities that New York had to offer. I deeply admired his encyclopedic knowledge of actors, plays and musicals, directors, show songs and more, not only for Broadway but also movies and TV. He always saw the potential in actors and their careers.”

Paul Eads is a Los Angeles-based TV and film production designer who attended the Yale School of Drama in addition to K. He credits Liff for enabling some of his opportunities as well. Eads has earned three Emmy Awards in his career for his work on NYPD Blue, Murder One and Boston Public.

“Vinnie was one of the most gregarious people I think I’ve ever met,” Eads said. “It wasn’t superficial either. He was a very generous soul who listened to what you had to say. We were very close friends and housemates senior year when I was trying to figure out what to do for my SIP. Vinnie suggested that I write cold letters to a number of set designers. We went to the library and got out a yearly journal of all the different shows that opened and closed on Broadway. From that he picked a few set designers that he thought were really good based on his experience with his uncle.”

From that effort, which Eads used to request internships, he received a few responses including one that was especially intriguing.

“I had seen a play in Detroit called Ain’t Supposed to Die a Natural Death, which was written by Melvin Van Peebles,” he said. “I thought it was one of the coolest sets I’d ever seen with a junky car on stage. It was very urban and gritty, and just wonderful in its details. The set designer was Kert Lundell and he was one of the guys I wrote to. When he responded, he said, ‘Sure, come to New York,’ and I went there for my SIP. It was a great experience that set me off on my path in life, and I’m certain I’m not the only one that had that sort of experience with Vinnie.”

Liff and his wife with Betty Ragotzy
Liff and his wife with Betty Ragotzy, co-founder of the Barn Theatre.

Myers said Liff took full advantage of the K-Plan when K had a year-round academic schedule. The hope is that the fund will help more students have comparable experiences to Liff’s through opportunities like summer internships, because his activities helped enable his remarkable career.

“I don’t think there has been a K alum who had as great a career in the Broadway theatre as did Vinnie,” Myers said. “He was at the forefront of the move to having a casting director bring together a full range of potential actors, including unknowns, for a Broadway show. Many actors owe their careers to him.”

And thanks to the people Liff touched, his name will continue to benefit K students for years to come. Others can also donate to the fund by going to K’s “Give to K Page” or by contacting Matthew Brosco, senior associate director of planned giving in the Kalamazoo College Advancement Office, at Matthew.Brosco@kzoo.edu.

“I think those of us who support this memorial fund hope the current K students who receive the grants will feel the connection with generations of past theatre arts students who walked the walk before them,” Ostroth said. “Our wish is that they will learn more about what a dedication to theatre is all about through the example of Vinnie’s life path.”EOS   

Angela Mammel, Dee Dee Batteast and Lanny Potts looking at a script sitting in theatre seats
Angela Mammel ’22 (center) received a grant that helped support their internship at the GhostLight Theatre in Benton Harbor, Michigan, thanks to the Vincent Liff Memorial Fund. Angela’s experiences at K include projection work on The Conviction of Lady Lorraine last fall; they are pictured with guest director Dee Dee Batteast and Professor of Theatre Arts Lanny Potts.

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President’s Letter

President Jorge Gonzalez

In January, I had the privilege of moderating a panel for The Council of Independent College’s Presidents Institute. The topic was a fascinating new book by Richard A. Detweiler, president emeritus of the Great Lakes Colleges Association, entitled The Evidence Liberal Arts Needs: Lives of Consequence, Inquiry, and Accomplishment (MIT Press 2021). The book offers compelling evidence that a liberal arts education has a distinctly large and lasting impact on lifetime success, leadership, altruism, learning and fulfillment.

Among the findings, Detweiler found that adults who had experienced an authentic educational community through close relationships with faculty and mentors were 21–26 percent more likely to act as leaders as adults. Similarly, alumni who had experienced an authentic learning community were 26 percent more likely to report altruistic behavior as adults, and had a 33–66 percent higher probability of living a more fulfilled life. (I should note that Kalamazoo College was among the colleges and universities from which the survey participants were randomly selected.)

Detweiler found that faculty engagement on a personal level—including conversations with faculty members on academic and non-academic topics outside the classroom—was one of the factors that seemed to have the greatest impact on life success. 

Such empirical evidence comes as no surprise to those who have experienced a liberal arts education; the opportunity to build meaningful connections with faculty members, coaches and staff is one of the primary reasons students come to Kalamazoo College, as shown in our first-year surveys, as well as one of the most cherished experiences our alumni take away from their time at K. 

We see this reflected in the stories shared in this issue of LuxEsto: We have Lynn Offerdahl ’85 and Jeff Gorton ’00, who were championed and then became champions thanks to the support of diving coach Ron Bramble, who never stopped believing in their abilities. There is the remarkable trajectory of Dongkeun Jeon ’16, who found a mentor in Professor Amy MacMillan and turned his aspirations into entrepreneurial success in South Korea. And then there’s the story of Vincent Liff ’73, a theatre alumnus who was generous with his time and his connections, who inspired friends and classmates to create a fund to help current theatre students make the most of their K-Plans. All these stories illustrate K’s fellowship in learning, and how it can lead to meaningful careers, relationships and contributions to a brighter world.

Saludos and lux esto,
Jorge G Gonzalez sig 1
Jorge G. Gonzalez
President

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