
Tuesday,
March 14, 2006
Bill's Bulletin

Bill’s Bulletin
is a feature of HCC Connection Online where President
William F. Messner shares news about all-college initiatives
and the college’s expanding involvement in the
region.
Enrollment Management
The issues of recruitment, retention and reporting have become
increasingly important as enrollments have flattened over the
past two years and more of the institution's resources are
dependent upon tuition and fees. In response, the college has
established an enrollment management group drawn from staff
and faculty across departmental and divisional lines. Co-chaired
by vice presidents Erica Broman and Doreen Larson, the group
held its first meeting during the week of March 6. While the
group will ultimately focus on developing an enrollment management
plan, it will initially focus on developing a variety of specific
action items for stimulating enrollment for the fall 2006 semester.
Breakfast Series
Over the past academic year the president's office has sponsored
a series of six breakfast meetings with community leaders and
organizations. The purpose of these meetings is to identify
ways in which the college can be a more responsive community
partner. The meetings have included local clergy, leaders of
community-based organizations, elected officials, and superintendents
from school districts that typically send students to HCC.
The feedback received from individuals attending these sessions
has been helpful in directing the institution's energies as
it attempts to carry through on its efforts at being responsive
to community needs. The next breakfast, with municipal department
from Holyoke, will be held March 22.
Jack Kent Cooke Foundation
The college has partnered with Mount Holyoke and Amherst colleges
in two separate and successful grant applications to the Jack
Kent Cooke Foundation to promote the transfer of students to
these selective institutions. In early March, the Cooke Foundation
awarded a total of ten grants to selective institutions of
higher learning across the country to develop pathways for
students who, under normal conditions, would have little hope
of gaining access to elite colleges. HCC was fortunate to be
a partner in two of the ten successful applications. Resources
gained from these grants will financially support the students
while also bolstering staffing and programs that facilitate
the transfer process.
Saint Patrick's Road Race
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This
year's Holyoke Community College St. Patrick's Day
runners
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The college has entered a team of
15 individuals in the St. Patrick's Day 10K Road Race on
March 18. Suitably titled the "Certain to be Hurtin' Walk/Run
Team", the group is comprised of faculty and staff whose racing talents
will be on full display through the streets of Holyoke. The editors of this
bulletin will print race results in our next edition, assuming all participants
have finished
by that time.
Institutional vision
Over the past year the college has worked closely with
Educational Marketing Group, Inc., of Colorado (EMG)
on market research,
vision, and positioning. In January, after much work with
campus and community members, EMG representatives presented
an institutional
vision statement to the college trustees. Based on that statement,
the college has now developed an institutional tagline that
captures the essence of the promise HCC makes to its students.
That tagline is “Futures Inspired.” Faculty and
staff who developed this tagline feel that it addresses how
the college assists its students no matter their educational
goals. In the coming weeks the college will begin to roll out
the new tagline in publications, letterhead, ads, signage and
more. Additionally, working with Bauza and Associates, a local
Hispanic marketing firm, the college has launched a Spanish
language advertising campaign featured billboards and radio
spots that will run through April.

Grinspoon
Foundation taps four HCC students for awards
Congratulations go out to four HCC students who have been chosen to receive
the 2006 Entrepreneurship Initiative Spirit Award by the Harold Grinspoon
Charitable Foundation. At a banquet scheduled for April 5, Sonya Yelder,
Peter Leclerc, Barbara Paulo and Danielle Carriveau will each receive $2,000
to further their entrepreneurial ambitions.
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Danielle
Carriveau |
Barbara
Paulo |
Sonia
Yelder |
Pete Leclerc |
Each year, the Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation disburses
$65,000 to budding entrepreneurs across Western Massachusetts.
The foundation also
provides stipends to faculty members to promote entrepreneurial spirit
on their campuses.
The foundation will pay for each of the awardees to attend the April 5
banquet at Chez Joseph. At that banquet, students from around the region
will compete for an additional $500 in prize money, provided by area bankers
and other business leaders.
All HCC students and faculty are welcome to attend the Harold Grinspoon
Charitable Foundation Entrepreneurship Initiative Spring Banquet. Tickets
cost $10 each and should be purchased by March 30 by contacting Kelly O'Connor,
HCC Kittredge Center for Business and Community, Room 419. You may also
contact O’Connor at koconnor@hcc.mass.edu .
For the last nine years, Sonia Yelder has
run Sophie’s Choice Catering
out of her Springfield home. Last year she opened Catered-to Events so
that she could incorporate other aspects of event management into her services.
The award money will go toward a website and promotional materials.
Holyoke resident Peter Leclerc is owner and
creator of Tumblebus, a mobile children's entertainment/recreational business.
Tumblebus is a full-sized
bus that has been converted into a safe and mobile mini-gymnasium, which
provides regularly scheduled physical fitness sessions for area daycare
centers, schools and playgroups. The award will enable Leclerc to upgrade
his bus and provide better recreational instruction to children in the
Pioneer Valley. Leclerc is working toward an associates degree in business
administration.
Chicopee resident Barbara Paulo opened Shear
Extreme hair salon in Northampton three years ago. Through her business,
Paulo supports Locks of Love, a
charitable organization that makes wigs for individuals who have lost their
hair due to illness. She is currently helping HCC’s Waiting to Excel
club, which is collecting hair for a similar charity, Wigs for Kids. Paulo
is working toward a degree in business administration at HCC. She will
use the award money for the education and training of herself and her staff.
Holyoke resident Danielle Carriveau owns and
operates Carriveau Photography, a studio that specializes in fine art photography.
She plans to use her
award to upgrade her equipment and to pay entry fees for the Paradise City
Arts Festival in Northampton as well as the Amherst Arts show. Carriveau
is a graphic design student at HCC.
Photo
exhibit celebrates diverse families
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The Akamatsu Family |
The Rhodes family |
As part of HCC’s celebration of Diversity month, the
college has installed Of Many Colors: Portraits
of Multiracial Families, a photographic and text exhibit that challenges viewers
to question the climate of racism that lingers in society.
The exhibit has been installed in the 3rd floor lobby of the
Frost Building and will be on display until March 24.
Created under the auspices of the Amherst-based Diversity Projects,
Inc., the exhibit uses photography and brief interviews to
explore the experiences of inter-racial families living in
and around the Pioneer Valley. Some families share their experiences
with adoption; others, with inter-racial relationships. Assembled
in 1994 by Diversity Projects Co-director Peggy Gillespie and
photographer Gigi Kaeser, the exhibit has toured schools, galleries,
and museums throughout the United States.
For Gillespie, whose daughter is of African-American, Native
American and white ancestry, Of Many
Colors was a deeply personal
project.
“When my best friend’s daughter told my then preschool child that
her brown doll was ugly, that was the beginning of knowing I had to re-examine
and tackle the issue of racism - not only for the sake of my daughter and our
family, but to address the needs of all families facing challenges of race and
identity,” she said.
Gillespie and Kaeser let their portraits make the case against bigotry.
“It is hoped by coming forward and revealing their stories, these families
will help educate young people and adults about the nature of love and change
stereotypes
and preconceptions,” she said. “Each family involved (in the exhibit)
hopes that, eventually, race will not ever prevent love and closeness between
people.”
HCC
staff, faculty share Peace Corps stories
For a generation of young college graduates in the 1960’s
and 1970’s, the Peace Corps was the answer to the perennial
question: what do you do when money is scarce, your professional
resume is blank, and the future is uncertain?
On March 1, the 45th anniversary of the Peace Corps founding,
four former Peace Corps volunteers – all HCC employees – shared
the answers they received when they volunteered for the program
three and four decades ago. Turns out, the international aid
program changed their perspective of themselves, their education,
and the world.
“Kennedy’s vision was that volunteers from the United States would
journey abroad—not as rich tourist, but as regular people who would show
foreign countries that Americans were not monsters,” said HCC sociology
professor Larry Leavitt, who did his Peace Corp commitment in the Philippines
from 1965 to 1968.
As a young adult, Leavitt and his fellow Peace Corps volunteers saw the program
as a way to travel to far-away countries, defer student loans, and gain work
experience. It became a life-altering experience – for them, and for the
people they met.
“I speak from the perspective of a person whose family was a recipient
of Peace
Corp volunteers,” said Orlando Isaza, special assistant to the president
for community affairs. “At twenty years old I was a young active student
with strong ideas about the United States and foreign policies. Back then, I
felt that the U.S. was an imperialist government determined to dominate other
countries.”
In Isaza’s native Columbia, the Peace Corp was part of a project called
Alliance for Progress.
“The volunteers were responsible for designing a housing development, which
would allow families to have low monthly payments over a fifteen-year span. This
project
lifted families like mine own out of poverty and gang-riddled communities. Meeting
the actual volunteers challenged my
 |
Adjunct
ESL Professor Maggie Sweeney
|
monolithic views of the United States.
I found that these people were human beings just like myself,
who did not necessarily
agree with the foreign policies of their government, changing my attitudes
and stereotypic thinking” he said.
Michele Sedor, associate coordinator for SABES (System for Adult Basic Educational
Support), was a Peace Corps volunteer in Morroco.
“My experience showed me how I viewed the world,” she said. “It
gave
me an awareness of how people live, how we live as Americans and the privileges
we have in this country.”
Today, Maggie Sweeney works as an adjunct ESL professor. Decades ago, she was
a Peace Corps volunteer in Tunesia.
“In the earlier years of the Peace Corps, it appeared that the United States
was patriarchal in our view,” she said. “The United States tended
to believe young people could serve their country by serving other countries
who needed extra help. Today the Peace Corp has a more mature attitude, that,
while still helping people of interested countries in meeting their needs, the
Peace Corp aims for cross-cultural understanding which will promote a better
understanding of Americans.”
Young
@ Heart chorus wows HCC
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Former
HCC professor Jeanne Hatch, left,
sings "Walk on the
Wild Side"
|
On March 8, HCC hosted a spectacular performance
by the Northampton-based Young @ Heart chorus.
If you could not attend, you missed a high-energy performance of dancing,
singing, and just plain partying that left the audience howling and hooting
for more. Composed of performers who range in age from 70 to 95, the internationally
renowned chorus surprised the audience with unique renditions of pop tunes
like the Zombies’ “She’s Not There,” Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing
in the Dark” and Led Zepplin’s “Stairway to Heaven.” They
received a standing ovation for a heart-felt performance of Bob Dylan’s “Forever
Young.”
“I don’t know what I expected when I came to the show, but
it was great to hear songs I remember sung by people I wouldn’t even
think knew the songs,” said HCC student Candace Clement, 24.
One of the most-watched performers in the show was Jeanne Hatch, 79, a
retired HCC speech and theatre instructor. Hatch wowed her former colleagues
when she belted out Shot Gun’s “Please Send Me Someone to Love” and
Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side.”
“I have always loved to perform and it was a thrill for me to be
back at the college and sing,” said Hatch who retired in 1999 after
teaching for 30 years.
Poetry reading
will benefit HCC Foundation scholarships
 |
Maria Luisa Arroyo |
Martin Espada |
Daniel Shanahan |
On March 28, the Avanza coalition
and HCC will sponsor Holyoke in Native Tongues, a joint poetry
reading by celebrated authors
Martín Espada, Daniel Shanahan, and María Luisa
Arroyo. The reading is free and will begin at 7 p.m. at Open
Square, 383 Dwight St.
Autographed works by all three authors will be available for
sale, and proceeds from a specially produced broadside will
be donated to the HCC Foundation for student scholarships.
Refreshments for the event will be provided by the Black Sheep
café. This event is free of charge.
The author of eight volumes of poetry, Martin
Espada has been
called the “Pablo Neruda of North American authors.” His
works have garnered many literary awards and have appeared
in The New York Times Book Review, Harper’s and The
New Yorker. A professor at the University of Massachusetts, the
Brooklyn-born Espada spent nearly 20 years working as tenant
lawyer in Boston. He and his family currently reside in Amherst.
Born in Manati, Puerto Rico, Maria Luisa
Arroyo was raised
in the North End of Springfield. A poet, translator, and single
mother, Arroyo works as the transition counselor for the CARE
Center in Holyoke. She is also a doctoral student in Germanic
languages at Harvard University. Her poems have been published
in a number of journals including CALYX, The Women’s
Review of Books, and The Bilingual Review.
Holyoke native and HCC alum Daniel Shanahan has
published three books of poems and is currently writing “The Ground We
Stand On,” a collection of poems that focuses on the
characters, landscape and culture of Holyoke and the Pioneer
Valley in the last century. A former shipyard welder, he is
the founding member of the Stone Soup Poets, a Boston-based
poet society, and Drumlin, a collaborative arts ensemble whose
performances include poetry, story-telling, songs, mime and
meditation. A Northampton resident, Shanahan is currently employed
as a mortgage advisor in West Springfield.
Campus
Briefs
 |
New
admission director
Marcia A. Rosbury-Henne
|
New admission
director joins HCC
On March 6, HCC officially welcomed Marcia A. Rosbury-Henne,
the college’s new admissions director. Henne comes
to HCC from Mt. Wachusett Community College, where she served
as the associate director of admissions for more than five
years. She takes over the helm from Mark Broadbent, who served
as HCC’s interim admissions director for more than
eight months. Broadbent will now happily return to his work
as the coordinator of transfer affairs. Rosbury-Henne can
be found in the admissions office, Frost 221.
Vet-Tech club
makes low-cost rabies shots available
You are invited to bring your dog to a low-cost rabies clinic
at Northampton’s Dave’s Pet City on March 25, from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sponsored by HCC’s Veterinary Technician Club, the clinic
will offer rabies shots for $10 per dog, and professional nail
clipping for $7. Payment should be made in cash. All participants
should bring their dogs’ current vaccination records so technicians
can determine the correct vaccine. Dr. Walter Jaworski, a licensed
veterinarian, will supervise the clinic. Notification of your dog’s
vaccination will automatically be sent to your town hall for licensing
purposes.
The clinic will also include a raffle, good for a gift certificate
to Dave’s Pet City, and a bake sale. Tickets to the raffle
are $1. The proceeds from this event will go to the HCC Vet Tech
Club. Dave’s Pet City is located at the corner of King Street
and Bridge Road, next to the D’Angelo’s sub shop. There
is plenty of free parking available.
For more information, call the HCC Vet Tech Club at (413) 552-2507
Free creative writing
workshop open to all
A free 10-week program is inviting all
would-be writers to share the stories that only they can tell.
Tell me something I can’t forget is a free weekly workshop
that will begin Thursday, March 23, from 1 to 2:45 p.m. in
HCC’s Marieb Building, Room 124. You do not have to be
enrolled in college courses to take advantage of this opportunity.
It is free to all who truly want to write.
The workshop will be facilitated by Lynn Bowmaster, who will
employ the Amherst Writers & Artists workshop method to
bring out the best in each participant. This method is based
on the belief that everyone is a writer - each, with a unique
voice. The workshop will focus on every type of writing, including
stories, poems and personal essays.
To find out more, or to register, call Jan Lamberg at (413)
534-8736 or Lynn Bowmaster at (413) 584-3373. You may also
email questions to lamberg_Janice@hotmail.com.
This program is sponsored by the Holyoke Community College’s
Writing Group.
Notices
It's easy
to apply for a scholarship
The process for applying for an Holyoke Community College Foundation scholarship
just got easier. The form can now be completed entirely on line. Students
can find the link for the application right on the home page of the college's
website. They can also click on www.hccscholarships.org.
The scholarship deadline in March 31. The Foundation has over $100,000
available in award money to students in all academic programs and in amounts
varying from $750 per academic year for full-time students to more than
$2,000.
Upcoming
Campus Events:
Student Activities and Events:
Contact Vivian Ostrowski (413) 552-2418; vostrowski@hcc.mass.edu for
more information.
Every Tuesday,
noon
Every Friday at 1 p.m.
Campus Walks
You can sneak some physical activity into your day by joining
the campus walking brigade every Tuesday at noon or Friday
at 1 p.m.. Meet at the
fountain. Different leaders, including everyone’s favorite, Ace
the Vet-Tech Dog, or one of his canine friends, will join us.
Now - March 24, Frost Building, 3rd floor corridor
"Of Many Colors - Portraits of Multi-racial Families"
The Office of Student Activities is sponsoring a free photo exhibit focusing
on multi-racial families exhibition produced by Amherst’s Family
Diversity Projects, Inc. Come view this insightful exhibit. Free and
open whenever the campus is open.
Saturday, March 18 and Sunday, March 19
HCC Joins the Holyoke's Annual St.
Patrick's Day festivities
On Saturday, March 18, several members of the HCC community will join
in the 10k St. Patrick’s Day road race. Look for the HCC T-shirts
and cheer us on!
On March 19, HCC has sponsored a float and will send a contingent of
students, staff and faculty to march in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade,
March 19.
Anyone wishing to ride on the HCC float or march with the HCC contingent
should contact Vivian Ostrowski at (413) 552-2418. You can show up at
the KMart Plaza at 11 a.m. or park at HCC and take a van to the Plaza
at 10 a.m. To reserve a spot in the van, call Vivian Ostrowski
March 22, 11 a.m., Frost 343
Open forum on free speech and civility
The Independent Commission on Free Speech and Civility will hold an open
forum so that members of the HCC community can share their thoughts,
feelings and suggestions for promoting free speech and civility on campus.
The commission will give students, faculty and staff of HCC the opportunity
to express their views on past issues of tension, including the September
29, 2005 incidents. Participants will also be able to make recommendations
for the future.
Friday, March 24 - Saturday, March 25, Leslie
Phillips Forum
The 9th Annual HCC Jazz Festival
March 24, 8 p.m.: John Ambercrombie performs with the Amherst Jazz Orchestra.
$10 for adults, $8 for students and seniors (HCC faculty, staff and students
get in free with ID)
March 25, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.: A series of free clinics and musical
performances.
Professional jazz educators from our area will critique each group. Saturday’s
events are free and open to the public.
For more information or to sign up for a clinic, call (413) 552-2485.
March 27 - April 19
“Stories of War and Return”
Over the next several weeks, HCC will explore the issues faced by returning
soldiers through talks, poetry, arts, and film. Six nationally known
speakers will come to campus to present their perspectives: Chris Hedges,
Brian Turner, Doug Anderson, Michael Casey, Charles Berkowitz, and Kristin
Henderson
• Monday March 27, 9 a.m. Frost 309
Chris Hedges, a Pulitzer-prize winning journalist, classical scholar,
and professor will speak about his 15 years as a war correspondent.
•
Tuesday, March 28, 11 a.m., People’s Bank Conference room in
the Kittredge Center
War veterans Brian Turner, Doug Anderson and Michael Casey will read
from their works.
Turner is an Iraq War veteran and author of “Here, Bullet” a
collection of poems. Anderson is a Vietnam war veteran, playwright and
author of “The Moon Reflected Fire” and “Blues for
Unemployed Secret Police.” Casey is a Vietnam war veteran and
poet who was the first Vietnam veteran to publish a volume of war poetry.
•
Wednesday, April 12, 11 a.m.
Filmmaker Charles Berkowitz with his documentary “Achilles in Vietnam.” The
location of this event has not yet been determined. For more information,
call Vivian Ostrowski, (413) 552-2418
•
April 17 – May 1, Frost 3rd Floor
Iraq: A War A collection of Pulitzer prize-winning photographs from Iraq
This collection of photos taken by staff of the Associated Press will
be on display in the 3rd floor lobby. HCC photography instructor Frank
Ward will speak at a grand opening ceremony on April 18 at 1 p.m.
• Wednesday April 19, 7 p.m., Frost 265
In her memoir “Driving by Moonlight: A Journey Through Love, War,
and Infertility” U.S. Navy spouse and author Kristin Henderson
writes about the military spouse’s perspective on deployment
and homecoming. She will share her thoughts at this event.
HCC's Taber Gallery
Contact Amy Johnquest (413) 552-2614; ajohnquest@hcc.mass.edu for
more information.
Monday, February 27 to Thursday,
March 30
The campus and public are invited to view Burnt Unit, an exhibition
of mixed media digital photography and welded steel sculpture by artists
Jeff Derose and Michael Martindell.
HCC Connection is published every other Tuesday (or
thereabouts) and is distributed to the campus community,
and friends of the college, and local media.
To be added to our email distribution list, please email: Kimberly Wilson, kwilson@hcc.mass.edu
To submit campus event information
for inclusion in HCC Connection, email Natalia Munoz, nmunoz@hcc.mass.eduwith
details including date, time, location, cost if any, open
to public or not, web links (if appropriate) and contact
information (name, phone number, and email). Deadline: end
of day Friday before publication.
Natalia Munoz
Assistant Director of Marketing and Public Relations
Holyoke Community College
Phone: (413) 552-2183 Fax: (413) 552-2479
cell: (413) 348-8515 (emergency)
nmunoz@hcc.mass.edunmunoz@hcc.mass.edu
Holyoke Community College
is the Commonwealth’s oldest community college, serving almost 9,000
students annually in 82 associate degree options and 42 certificate programs,
and over 4,000 in noncredit and workforce development courses. The college
has the highest transfer rate of any community college statewide, holding
articulation agreements with 27 colleges and universities. Recognized for
its Honors Program, distance learning curriculum, learning communities,
and service to students, HCC anticipates opening its state of-the-art Kittredge
Business Center in Spring 2006.
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