Rockland Colleges Join Forces to Raise Scholarship Funds
Transcription
Rockland Colleges Join Forces to Raise Scholarship Funds
SPRING 2014 Scene For Friends and Alumni of Rockland Community College Rockland Colleges Join Forces to Raise Scholarship Funds More than 500 students, faculty and staff from RCC, Dominican College, Nyack College and St. Thomas Aquinas College gathered in March at RCC’s Fieldhouse for an “Evening of Hope,” a fund-raising venture that brought in more than $5,000. This year’s Evening of Hope, held on March 21, benefited the Melissa Dimataris Performing Arts Scholarship at RCC, established in memory of the talented and charismatic performing arts student who graduated from RCC in May 2013 with a prestigious SUNY Chancellor’s Award and then lost her valiant battle with leukemia in October 2013. The $500 scholarship will benefit two RCC students annually and is offered to students studying theater or musical theater. “Melissa epitomized academic and artistic excellence and exceptional service,” said Patty Maloney-Titland, Professor and Chair of Performing Arts at RCC. Christopher Plummer, Director of the Cultural Arts Theater at RCC, said, “The scholarship in Melissa’s name remains as a lasting tribute to the legacy of a young woman who touched so many lives.” For more information about Rockland Colleges Care, contact Diana Carey at [email protected]. This is the ninth year the four local colleges have come together to sponsor an event to raise funds for a cancer-related cause, with the venue alternating each year among the colleges. The colleges have now formalized their affiliation as a new organization, Rockland Colleges Care. The host college chooses the recipient organization, usually in honor of a student affected by cancer. Nyack College will host the next event in Spring 2015. “This event is wonderful in so many ways, but most importantly, it inspires college students to get involved in the community and give back to the people and organizations that really need our help and support,” said Diana Carey, event organizer and Assistant Professor of Exercise and Human Performance at RCC. During the Evening of Hope, RCC President Wood and Performing Arts students and faculty gather around a poster depicting Melissa Dimataris, in whose memory the fund-raising event was held. Officials of the four member colleges of Rockland Colleges Care: Earl Miller, Executive Director of Community Relations, Nyack College; Dr. Kirk Manning, Vice President and Dean of Student Development, St. Thomas Aquinas; Sister Mary Eileen O’Brien, OP, PhD, President, Dominican College and Dr. Cliff L. Wood, President, Rockland Community College. Photos by Jon Jon Chua RCC in the Community COLLEGE CELEBRATES LIFE OF NELSON MANDELA The life and legacy of Nelson Mandela, former President of South Africa and human rights leader, was honored at RCC by students and community members at two well-attended campus events in March and by the naming of a room in the Student Union after him. At the request of the Student Government Association, the College’s Board of Trustees voted in March to rename Student Union Room 3214 (2nd floor) the “Mandela Activity Center” until the end of Spring semester 2015. Another student group, the African Student Association, organized an event to honor Nelson Mandela with an African Night Celebration, featuring dancing, music, a fashion show and food on March 28. On March 30, a Community Coalition Event brought together a broad spectrum of organizations and individuals from the community who united in the Cultural Arts Theater to celebrate Nelson Mandela’s legacy. David Dinkins, former mayor of New York City, served as keynote speaker. The event also featured poetry, dance, music and storytelling by local performers. MANDELA TRIBUTE Former NYC Mayor Dinkins (seated) with RCC President Cliff L. Wood and Rockland County Executive Ed Day at the Community Coalition Mandela Tribute. CONGRESSWOMAN LOWEY OPPOSES CUTS TO PELL GRANTS Congresswoman Nita Lowey meets with RCC students to hear how they would be impacted by proposed cuts to Pell Grants and other education funding. Front Row: Jearl Flewah; Congresswoman Lowey; Dana Stilley, Associate VP of Enrollment Management; Madelene Aponte, Assistant Director of Financial Aid. Back Row: Prasun Shah; Stacy Charles; Yasmin Charway; Dr. Cliff L. Wood, RCC President; Tricia McEniry, military veteran; and Mendel Taub, Student Trustee. SCENE Editor: Tzipora Reitman Director of Communications Staff Writers: Jamie Kempton, Maralin Roffino Photography: Collette Fournier GOVERNOR CUOMO HOLDS PROPERTY TAXES FORUM AT RCC Graphic Design: Ginny Apostolides Margaret Thompson, single mother of an RCC student, discusses her struggle to pay property taxes with Governor Andrew M. Cuomo at his Cut Property Taxes Forum held at RCC in March. [email protected] (845) 574-4595 www.sunyrockland.edu www.facebook.com/sunyrcc 2 Learning Opportunities The 3D printer produces a variety of prototypes. Robb Engle (r), vice president of engineering for Sono-Tek, an Ulster County based manufacturer of precision nozzles, consults on 3D printing opportunities with Thomas Della Torre, RCC’s Associate Vice President for Academic & Community Partnerships. HAVERSTRAW 3D PRINTING SMART LAB Sono-Tek in Milton, NY, a company that manufactures precision nozzles, saves time and money by using the 3D Printing Smart Lab at RCC’s Haverstraw Center to make prototypes. Robb Engle, Sono-Tek’s vice president of engineering, explained that he simply e-mails designs for his prototypes to RCC’s Smart Lab, where staff produce the items from the 3D printers the next day, saving the company from having to make metal prototypes in house. The Smart Lab, whose services are available to New York companies free of charge, offers three 3D printers, a 3D laser scanner and 4 CAD workstations in a newly renovated “proof-of-concept” center. Nima Safaie ’13 helps fulfill 3D printing requests. job seekers. Services offered include business creation and development, including: finance, marketing, IT, sales, human resources, volunteers and more. Employment support is offered by RCC Career Services and the Workforce Investment Board. The organizations at the Business Services Mall include iCAN, RCC, RSVP, SBDC, and SCORE. Students and alumni are involved in the project, helping to make the resource available to the community. James Pac, a student intern at the Smart Lab, works for a local manufacturer doing SolidWork drawings and 3D models. Nima Safaie ’13, who is continuing his studies at the SUNY Purchase on RCC’s main campus, works with the 3D printers. “The 3-D Printing Smart Lab is a sandbox,” said Thomas P. Della Torre, Associate Vice President of Academic and Community Partnerships “We invite manufacturers to come here to work, play, test, prototype, experiment and train.” The facility is located in a historically significant, newly renovated twofloor facility that includes training rooms, classrooms, conference rooms and a science wet lab, in addition to the 3D printing and CAD equipment. The entire facility is overseen by a 24 hour-state-of-the-art security system. The Haverstraw Center also features a newly installed Business Services Mall, which provides a wide variety of support services for businesses and For further information, contact Dr. Brian Merritt, Director of the Haverstraw Center, at 845-786-2413. SUNY COBLESKILL TO OFFER BBA ON WEEKDAY EVENINGS OR SATURDAYS With the success of the first Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) degree program at RCC, SUNY Cobleskill plans to add weekday evening courses starting Fall 2014. “The students at RCC have been dedicated, hardworking and engaged,” added Dr. Marilu Marcilla-Gomez, a member of the SUNY Cobleskill faculty who teaches in the program at RCC. Since December 2013, twelve students have been pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration on the RCC campus through a seamless partnership between RCC and SUNY Cobleskill. In SUNY Cobleskill’s Weekend College program, all classes are held on Saturdays in the traditional classroom setting at RCC. The program provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become effective managers. “The Saturday program gives me the opportunity to work full-time and meet other like-minded hardworking students,” said Arra Gentile, a student in the program. Due to busy weekend schedules, students have requested evening courses as an alternative to weekend classes. To accommodate their needs, in Fall 2014 a new part-time program will be offered Tuesday and Thursday evenings at RCC as an alternative to the full-time weekend program. “The students at RCC have found a unique opportunity in the partnership established with SUNY Cobleskill,” said Giovanni Scaringi, adjunct faculty at both RCC and Cobleskill. “These cohort students have matriculated into a solid Business Administration program at SUNY Cobleskill.” Fellow student Joel Santana noted, “This program is very convenient and affordable without sacrificing quality in education.” The Bachelor of Business Administration degree completion is ideally suited for students who have completed an AAS degree in Business Administration or equivalent coursework at RCC or from another accredited college or university. For more information contact: SUNY Cobleskill’s Office of Professional and Continuing Education (PACE) 518-255-5528, [email protected] or www.cobleskill.edu/pace 3 Chancellor’s Awards Trio from RCC Earn SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Student Excellence Student veteran and pair from New Square overcome long odds to reap honor Three Rockland Community College students – one a combat veteran, and two from the Village of New Square, NY, are recipients of the 2014 SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Student Excellence. All three overcame personal and educational challenges to succeed in college and attain the highest honor offered by New York’s state university system. The winners are: Norm Cottrill, who served with the US Navy in the Persian Gulf War and later as a parachutist with the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division before making the transition to civilian and student life; Lipa Schmeltzer, an internationally renowned Jewish singer and composer who was raised in New Square’s strict religious culture lacking any secular education; and Mendel Taub, a lifelong New Square resident who, like Schmeltzer, reached beyond the confines of his community to become a student leader at RCC. The Chancellor’s Award for Student Excellence recognizes students for integrating academic excellence with other aspects of their lives, such as leadership, community service, arts and/or career achievement. Cottrill, Schmeltzer, and Taub, all have earned membership in Phi Theta Kappa, the international honor society for students of two-year colleges. NORM COTTRILL An indomitable spirit has fueled Norm Cottrill’s activities as a sailor, soldier, student and veterans advocate. He served in the Navy from 1989-1993 as a Petty Officer Third Class aboard the USS Nashville, an amphibious ship transporting Marines to combat zones in the Persian Gulf War. From 1994 to 1997 he was deployed as an Army Specialist in the 82nd Airborne Division in Fort Bragg, NC, rigging parachutes, until he sustained injuries while undergoing parachute maneuvers. LIPA SCHMELTZER As a child growing up in New Square, for Lipa Schmeltzer, any exposure to mainstream culture was extremely limited. What his teachers mistook as a lack of intelligence proved instead to be a concentration problem that was neither identified nor helped. “I was nicknamed a dreamer,” he says. “I couldn’t focus, but that didn’t mean I wasn’t smart or had a low IQ. I remember being bullied. Some of it still haunts me. When you have obstacles, you can either fall back, or grow. I wanted to make something of myself, and wanted to give hope and strength to others.” Using music as his “universal language,” Schmeltzer has composed more than 100 songs – with lyrics in English, Hebrew and Yiddish – and has released 15 solo CDs and performed in more than a dozen countries. Schmeltzer has gained popularity by fusing traditional Hasidic music and lyrics with contemporary music styles. Music is not the only vehicle he uses to uplift spirits. In 2010 he built a synagogue in Airmont, NY, that maintains a non-judgmental and opendoor policy toward its congregants. “Everyone is welcome, regardless of who you are or how you look,” he says. He also visits hospitals, children’s organizations and prisons to spread cheer through his music and positive outlook. Schmeltzer, 35, is expected to graduate in May with an associate’s degree in Performing Arts/Liberal Arts. He hopes to transfer to a four-year college in the area to pursue a degree combining music and performing with therapy. He and his wife, Miriam – who enrolled at RCC at Schmeltzer’s urging – live with their four children in Airmont. At RCC, Cottrill, 43, combined his interests in veterans’ affairs and multi-media production. He produced a documentary about a classmate and fellow veteran who suffered a traumatic brain injury and symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Cottrill’s interviews with World War II veterans were featured in local print and broadcast media. He plans to produce another documentary chronicling the stories of local veterans from all conflicts since World War II. MENDEL TAUB also made the difficult decision to seek broader educational choices outside his insular community of New Square. He had studied Torah and Talmud, but yearned for much more. “My dream was to get a GED,” he says, referring to a high school equivalency diploma. “Because I was taught that secular education was not good for the soul, it took a lot of self-motivation and self-discipline for me to overcome years of a rigid mentality.” A communications and media arts major, Cottrill volunteers at RCC’s Multi-Media Production Center, producing, hosting, and editing segments for RCC-TV. He hopes to obtain a position writing and producing for television or radio, and he also wants to continue his veterans’ advocacy. Cottrill serves as inaugural president of RCC’s chapter of SALUTE, the Veterans National Honor Society, and was inducted into the Phi Sigma Omicron honor society. In his hometown of Chester, NY, he launched an unsuccessful bid for mayor and serves as an alternate Planning Board member. “I wasn’t a good student, so I never thought college was possible,” says Cottrill, who is married with three grown sons. “But excellence is achievable. If other veterans see what I’ve done, they’ll know that nothing is impossible.” 4 Taub’s older brother, Abraham Taub ‘12, winner of the SUNY Chancellor’s Award in 2012, mentored him on the path toward higher education. Accompanying his brother and RCC President Cliff L. Wood to the award ceremony in Albany, reaffirmed Mendel’s conviction to pursue a secular education. Three months after his admittance to the Rockland BOCES program, he earned his GED, serving as valedictorian for his GED class. Taub’s zest for learning and active engagement has flourished at RCC. He is the student representative to the Board of Trustees and vice president of fellowship for Phi Theta Kappa, among other leadership positions. He assists other Yiddish-speaking RCC students with their cultural transition. His strong interest in law led to an invitation to speak at the Yale Writers’ Conference, presenting on the laws of book publishing. Taub, 19, is set to graduate in May with an associate’s degree in Liberal Arts: Humanities and Social Science, and intends to transfer to a four-year institution to prepare for a career in law. “To get a college degree is like winning the lottery,” he says. “Two years ago I didn’t dream that this was obtainable. I now know that you can accomplish anything; where there is a will, there is a way.” Excellence in Adjunct Teaching Timothy Mante and Deirdre Rock are among 43 honorees statewide to receive the inaugural SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching. It is the highest honor conferred by New York’s state university system. Adjunct Teaching is the newest category to be recognized with Chancellor’s awards. TIMOTHY MANTE, a Criminal Justice/Corporate Homeland Security instructor, brings to the classroom more than 20 years’ experience in law enforcement with the New York Police Department, having served in one of NYC’s busiest police precincts in a culturally and socio-economically diverse neighborhood. Since joining RCC’s adjunct faculty in 2010, he has developed or redesigned eight courses, including the development of two online courses, History of Policing, and Terrorism and Homeland Security. Outside of academia, Mante works as an operations manager for a large security company, managing the private security needs of 50 locations employing 500 employees. He earned a BA in Geography from SUNY Plattsburgh and an MBA in Management from Manhattan College. DEIRDRE ROCK spent 10 years as an elementary school teacher before joining RCC as an English Skills adjunct in 2009. She added the role of Teacher Education instructor in 2010. She has effectively prepared students of diverse abilities to progress to a college-level curriculum, as evidenced by a 95% passing rate in their end-of-semester assessments. She also mentors students on careers and instituted a Financial Literacy Academy to broaden their awareness of monetary functions and investment strategies through games and mock entrepreneurial activities. Working under a federal Title III initiative for enhanced student performance, Rock was instrumental in helping redesign RCC’s Efficient Reading course and in compiling an Instructor Toolkit. In her teacher education course, she exposes students to the importance of diversity within the elementary classroom setting through the use of multimedia, anecdotal writing and ethical dilemma journals. “To be awarded this honor is the ultimate symbol of appreciation for my professional passion – teaching,” Rock said. “Throughout my career, I have always relished the opportunity to share lessons about diverse cultures and to bridge the academic gap for all. Being an educator has allowed me the priceless opportunity to build relationships with young persons from all communities and give counsel to direct their future success.” Rock has volunteered since 2007 in the counseling department of the Urban Assembly School for the Performing Arts in Harlem, where she offers guidance to groups and individuals. She holds a BA in English and Psychology from SUNY Albany and an MS in Education from Fordham University. SAVE THE DATE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 19 Mante was cited for his innovative teaching methods, use of technology in the classroom and student mentoring, among other activities. To lend immediacy to his lessons, he devised a scenario placing students in a role as police officers and provided practical guidance from his experience as a patrol officer and crime scene investigator. He has mentored more than 60 students who have graduated from RCC and transferred to four-year colleges. 31st Annual RCC Foundation GOLF OUTING BENEFIT SPOOK ROCK GOLF COURSE “Winning this award is acknowledgement for the hard work adjuncts invest in teaching and helping students understand the material from a real-world perspective,” Mante said. “I try to help students understand how things and systems work in the hopes that this information will help them obtain jobs in their chosen career paths.” Join the Rockland Community College Foundation for golf, lunch, cocktails (beer, wine, soda), dinner and raffle prizes 5 If you would like more information or to place your reservation please call the Foundation Office at 845-574-4576 Alumni Spotlight DEBBIE SCHWAM COTE ’81, RESEARCH COMPANY CO-FOUNDER Debbie Schwam Cote ’81 knew from an early age that she wanted to devote her life to helping people. The clinical nursing courses she took at Helen Hayes Hospital as part of her nursing curriculum at RCC helped channel her desire to assist patients with neurological conditions. “I liked the practical aspect of nursing and rehab,” she says. “Being a ‘neuro’ nurse was a good fit for me.” Cote’s nursing background served as a cornerstone as her career pivoted to clinical research with pharmaceutical firms, and it continues to support her work as an entrepreneur. She is co-founder of a fledgling niche company in California named BioSpero International, a contract research organization, or CRO. It provides clinical trial monitoring and patient recruitment services to pharmaceutical and biotech firms seeking approvals for neuroscience-based drugs. “Getting drugs to market is another way of helping people,” Cote says. “My experience in nursing plays a very important role in my work. Nursing provides the fundamental structure for everything we do.” Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in NYC, working alongside Ivy League-trained neurosurgeons and researchers.” Her first exposure to biotech companies came during a five-year stint at Mount Sinai Medical Center in NYC, where she directed outpatient clinical trials for the hospital’s movement disorder center. Cote has worked for a succession of pharmaceutical, biotech and CRO companies throughout the country, performing clinical research relating to such neurological disorders as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease. She authored a chapter in a recently published book on worldwide clinical trials for Alzheimer’s patients, focusing on increasing enrollment and retention of such patients. Although family and work obligations prevented her from completing her BSN degree at Dominican College in the early 1980s, Cote never regretted her decision to begin her professional career immediately after graduating from RCC. “RCC gave me a lot of options,” she says. “It gave me what I needed to go far in my profession and accomplish my goal of helping people.” Cote lives in San Mateo, CA, with her husband, Art, a paramedic whom she met at Columbia. They have two grown sons. After graduating from RCC with an AAS in Nursing, Cote spent seven years as a neurological ICU nurse and research coordinator at DAN THORN ’10, TV NEWS ANCHOR As a news anchor and reporter at WVNSTV 59News in southern West Virginia, Dan Thorn ’10 has reported live on massive rockslides shutting down major interstates, stood in knee-deep flood waters and in wind-whipped snowstorms that made on-air reporting difficult, to say the least. But to him, no challenge is too daunting if you love what you do and want to pursue your life’s ambition, wherever the path may lead. That is just one of many lessons Thorn learned as a student at RCC. “You need to get out of your comfort zone and open up your mind to new things and new ideas,” he says. “Follow your passions and realize that with your potential the sky’s the limit.” Thorn has served as an evening weekday anchor at WVNS in Ghent, WV, since August 2013. He co-anchors four evening broadcasts, writing his own scripts, assisting producers and taking charge of various functions in the newsroom. He was initially hired by the station as a weekend anchor and evening reporter, which involved plenty of shooting, writing and editing of stories, as well as producing and anchoring his own shows on two network affiliates on weekends. Thorn’s interest in broadcast journalism took root at RCC. A native of New Windsor, NY, who attended Newburgh Free Academy, he opted to pursue a different avenue than his classmates for college, enrolling at RCC where his mother, Carolyn, was completing her Nursing degree. He praised the collaborative spirit and encouragement he received from RCC faculty, especially English professors Dan Masterson and Reamy Jansen and Communications professor Richard Connolly. “I was able to enjoy so many things at RCC, from poetry to sports and much more,” says Thorn, who won the Best News Segment award at the 2009 RCC-TV Video Festival. “I was able to mature before going away to a four-year college.” After graduating from RCC with an AA in Liberal Arts and Sciences, Thorn earned a BS in Broadcast Journalism from Brooklyn College, CUNY, before embarking on his professional career. He remains thankful to RCC for starting him on a track toward career success. “Choosing RCC was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made,” he says. “What RCC says is really true. You can start here and go anywhere.” 6 Foundation RCC FOUNDATION LEADERSHIP AWARDS LUNCHEON RAISES $55K The Rockland Community College Foundation’s annual Leadership Awards Luncheon raised more than $55,000 towards scholarships, student support and special projects. Distinguished guests included Dr. Nancy Zimpher, Chancellor of the State University of New York, and Ed Day, Rockland County Executive, among many others. The theme of the event was “We Are One.” Performing Arts students sing “One” from the musical, A Chorus Line, in keeping with the theme of “We Are One” at the RCC Foundation Luncheon in April. (Standing l to r) John Alexander, Key Bank; Alden Wolfe, Chair, Rockland County Legislature; Ed Day, Rockland County Executive; Dr. Arlene Clinkscale, Chair, RCC Board of Trustees; Dr. Cliff L. Wood, RCC President and Mitch Gusler, Chair, RCC Foundation. (Seated l to r) Robert Ludwig and Elizabeth Solages, Faculty/Staff Awardees; Dr. Nancy Zimpher, SUNY Chancellor; Marcello Russodivito, Business Awardee and Dr. Kenneth Hansraj, Alumni Awardee. ALUMNI NOTES Harrison Bader ’13, Communication Media Arts, was featured on a reality TV show, House of Food, which premiered March 31 on MTV. Bader spent several months in Los Angeles filming the show, in which he and seven other up-and-coming chefs live together in a house like The Real World and compete in cooking challenges similar to Top Chef. He is now taking courses at the Culinary Institute of America and hopes to open a restaurant someday. FIVE ALUMNI RECEIVED THE FORTY UNDER FORTY AWARD IN FALL 2013: Lauren Debra Alinkofsy ’04, Christopher Day ’05, Chris Frawley ’94, Tom Ossa ’03 and Yonaira Sanchez ’05. Lisa Reece ‘88, M/TS Honors, Math & Science, teaches biology and independent study science research at Warwick Valley HS. She was one of 50 educators from across the country selected to spend a week at the Siemens STEM Institute in Washington, DC, learning how to integrate innovative STEM techniques into her classroom. She was recently featured in Hudson Valley Magazine as a STEM program innovator. She earned a BS in Environmental and Organismal Biology and an MS Ed in Adolescence Education from Long Island University. Yves Andre Vital ‘01 opened a law office, Vital & Associates PLLC, in Spring Valley. He served as president of the Student Government Association 2000-01 and was a varsity basketball player on the Hawks. Vital received the Chancellor’s Award for Student Excellence and the PreLaw Scholarship from Kantrowitz, Goldhamer & Graifman, PC. 7 Milestones FORMER TRUSTEE NAMED TRUSTEE EMERITUS Isidro “Papo” Cancel ’71, a former RCC Board of Trustees member and chair, has been granted Trustee Emeritus status by the Board of Trustees. The honorary designation is conferred on trustees who have served for at least 10 years and established a record of outstanding service to the board, the College and the local community. Cancel is the 11th trustee awarded emeritus/ emerita status in the college’s 55-year history and the first since 2002. Others include Rita Grayson, Joan Orazio and John Shankey, and deceased trustees Stephen Goldberg, Jacqueline Holland, Frank Manley, Andrew Norman, Crystal Potter, Fred Van Wort and Belle Mayer Zeck. Cancel, the first Hispanic appointed to the board, served from 19912003, including a term as chair from 1996-1998. He cited two projects of which he is especially proud to have helped bring to fruition: the traffic light at RCC’s College Road entrance and the design and approval of the Technology Center, which opened in 2006. He also advocated for an improved Haverstraw facility and better bus transportation to the main campus from northern Rockland. “I’m honored to be named Trustee Emeritus and I am in great company with past trustees who have been chosen,” Cancel said. “Being a trustee involved a lot of work and time, but the satisfaction I got from seeing the students graduate made it all worth it. Serving on the board was one way I could pay back RCC for opening up opportunities for me in higher education.” Cancel was born in Puerto Rico and came to Haverstraw with his family at age 2. He graduated from North Rockland HS in 1968 and from RCC in 1971 with an AA in Liberal Arts. He earned a BA in Physical Education from SUNY at Brockport and a master’s in Guidance and Counseling from Long Island University. Cancel spent 36 years in the North Rockland School District as a physical education teacher, attendance officer, school counselor, football coach and girls softball coach. He was inducted into the RCC Sports Hall of Fame in January 2014 and the North Rockland HS Sports Hall of Fame in 2013. Cancel has devoted himself to community service for more than four decades. He is Deputy Supervisor of Haverstraw and a member of the Haverstraw Town Board; a 42-year volunteer firefighter and former captain of Rescue Hook & Ladder #1 of Haverstraw; a volunteer with local food bank, homeless and holiday toy drive programs; a member of St. Peter’s parish council and board and past president of Head Start of Rockland, among many activities. He and his wife of 32 years, Patricia, live in Thiells. APPOINTMENT Ben Naylor, Assistant to the President/ Secretary to the Board of Trustees, comes to RCC with more than six years’ experience in office management and executive support. Since April 2013 he served as an administrator in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering in Brooklyn. In that role, he managed an interdisciplinary research program and center. He also assisted in coordinating major fund-raising events that helped yield more than $4 million for the center. Previously, Naylor served as office manager for the Cook Political Report in Washington, DC, and as a research analyst for Global Strategy Group in New York. Naylor, who recently relocated to Suffern, earned a BA in Government from Georgetown University and took coursework towards a Master’s in Professional Studies from the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University. PASSINGS Richard Capper ’89, of Haverstraw, died February 16, 2014, due to complications from Marfan’s syndrome while on duty for the NYS parks in Harriman State Park. Mr. Capper, who was 49, earned an AAS in Electrical Technology. He worked 23 years for the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, and was a certified EMT and a 20-year member of the Haverstraw Volunteer Ambulance Corps. He hailed from New Shoreham, RI, graduated from Malverne High School on Long Island, and had lived in Rockland since 1981. He is survived by his stepmother and other family members. Christopher John Ferrantello, 26, of Orangeburg, NY, passed away on April 18, 2014. Chris was a full-time student at RCC and a talented musician who recently gained global recognition for his accomplishments as a dubstep DJ/producer. Chris was known for his selfless nature, his contagious laughter, and his passion for animals. He is survived by his parents, step-parents and sister. France Robie ’65, of New City, died on March 21, 2014 at the age of 90. She earned her AAS in Nursing from RCC at the age of 41 and worked at Rockland Psychiatric Center and Nyack Hospital as a charge nurse until a stroke led to her retirement in the 1970s. She is survived by her children and grandchildren. 8 Achievements RCC ALUMNI EARN PHI THETA KAPPA ALL-ACADEMIC HONORS Two recent RCC students, Jake Meiseles ’13 and Catherine Kaczor, who have already transferred to four-year colleges, were awarded bronze membership for third-team honors on the Phi Theta Kappa New York All-Academic Team, part of a nationwide program recognizing high-achieving students in community colleges around the country. At RCC, Meiseles was president of Hillel, vice president of Sigma Chi Eta, a Student Ambassador, and student editor of First Inkling magazine. Meiseles expects to graduate from Cornell in December 2015 with a BS in Industrial and Labor Relations and hopes to pursue a career in law. Meiseles is now enrolled at Cornell University, and Kaczor is studying at SUNY New Paltz. Phi Theta Kappa is the national honor society for two-year colleges. Nominations for the award are based on outstanding academic performance and service to the college and community. Meiseles and Kaczor were honored with the other New York recipients at a recognition luncheon held April 2 at Empire State Plaza in Albany. Yaacov (Jake) Meiseles receives his Phi Theta Kappa award, with Nancy Zimpher, SUNY Chancellor and Andrew J. Matonak, President of Hudson Valley Community College and of the New York Community College Association of Presidents (NYCCAP). Catherine Kaczor compiled a 3.7 GPA at RCC while majoring in Liberal Arts: Humanities and Social Science. She got turned on to a career in mass media through a course taught by Richard Connolly, Assistant Professor. “He taught everyone in the class to be critical thinkers, not just robots who can take tests,” Kaczor says. She praised the faculty for the personal interest they took in each of their students. Meiseles graduated from RCC’s Mentor/Talented Student Honors Program in December 2013 with a 3.91 GPA, earning his AA degree in Liberal Arts: Humanities and Social Science. His courses with Dr. David Beisel helped convince him to minor in history at Cornell, and he credited Ian Newhem, Associate Professor, with improving his writing skills. He also benefited greatly from Dr. Thomas Butler’s biology courses. “Until I came to RCC, I really did not feel important as a student, I felt like one in the crowd,” says Kaczor, who also was active in the College’s music community as a singer and musician. STUDENTS/ALUMNI Outlook Named “Best All Around Newspaper” for Fifth Year Febin Bellamy, a sophomore in the M/TS Honors program, was selected to attend the 2014 Clinton Global Initiative University in Tempe, AZ (March 21-23). Bellamy is vice president of Just Save One/RCC, a chapter of a larger philanthropic organization founded by Kennedy Ogoye ’11. The chapter is collecting first-aid supplies and raising funds to improve health and education in economically deprived communities as part of their Project India initiative. Artwork by five RCC students was selected for inclusion in the BEST of SUNY Art Show to be held at the NY State Museum in Albany this summer. They are: Ally Crum, Christian Gilliam, Christopher Moore, Minori Sakai and Vincent Vicidomini. FACULTY Victor Coronel, PhD, Professor of Science, was the keynote speaker at an international science conference held at the National University of Engineering, UNI, in Lima, Peru (January). His lecture, “La Fisica de los Instrumentos Musicales,” was about the physics of musical instruments. In addition, he ran the all-day workshop about how to teach physics using simple objects. Kaczor transferred in the Spring 2014 semester to SUNY New Paltz, where she is majoring in digital media production. She hopes to pursue a career in audio engineering in television, music or other entertainment fields. Outlook and its writers and editors have been honored by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Region I Mark of Excellence award in the category, “Best All Around Newspaper.” Region I covers the Northeast and the Mid-Atlantic, a very competitive area for this award. This is the fifth consecutive year that Outlook has won this prestigious “Best All Around Newspaper” recognition. The Society of Professional Journalists is a broad-based journalism organization, dedicated to encouraging the free practice of journalism and stimulating high standards of ethical behavior. Its members are working professional journalists, anchors, reporters, major newspaper publishers and editors, journalism educators and students. Outlook editors are: Marina Watts, Editor-in-Chief; Suzanne Peguero, Managing Editor; Julie DeVito, Production Manager; Anuj Chokshi, Photography Editor; and Benedict Tagle, Sports Editor. Sara Macel, adjunct faculty, Art, recently published a photographic monograph book, May the Road Rise to Meet You, which has been featured in The New Yorker, Wired Magazine, and in an article, “Inspirational Photography Books for 2014,” in The Telegraph. Sara Macel’s photographic monograph book, May the Road Rise to Meet You was featured in The New Yorker and Wired Magazine. Minori Sakai, Untitled, 2011, Gelatin Silver Print 9 Heritage & Cultural Events Irish Heritage Celebration Performing Arts cast and crew of The Lonesome West, a play by contemporary Irish playwright Martin McDonagh, directed by Christina Schaudel (center). The play depicts violent relationships in the Western Ireland town of Leenane. African American History Month Performing Arts students Nikita Bernard as Madam C.J. Walker, haircare entrepreneur; Diana Buxton as Zora Neale Hurston and Dameon Reilly as Langston Hughes enact a scene in A Glimpse of the Harlem Renaissance at RCC’s Cultural Arts Theater. Haitian Heritage Celebration Michelle Timothee ’05, chef at La Talaye Catering, demonstrates preparation of the traditional Haitian soup known as Soup Joumou, a mildly spicy soup made with pumpkin, beef and vegetables. The soup is served in Haiti on New Year’s Day to celebrate the anniversary of Haiti’s independence on January 1, 1804. Haitian artist Klode Garout Michel displays her work in the Technology Center Rotunda. Her paintings are characterized by a distinctive rotational method originated by her father, internationally known Haitian artist Jean Claude Garoute Tiga. 10 Women’s History Month Erica Kaplan, Instructor of Performing Arts, introduces the audience to the lives and works of important female jazz artists in a presentation, “Important Women in Jazz History.” Jewish Heritage Celebration Ari Lesser, a popular singer-songwriter, rapper and spoken word artist, brings Jewish concepts to life in an entertaining and unique way. Diversity Quilt Philip Bleiwas, a Computer Science major, displays his design for the Diversity Art Quilt project in March. Philip was among many students who participated in the creation of a quilt that celebrates the many cultures of the diverse College community. The project was initiated by the Holocaust Museum & Study Center and supported by RCC and the African American Historical Society. Chess Event Chessmaster Gennady Sagalchik ponders his move against RCC student Kenneth Reyes (white shirt) at the College’s 26th Annual Chess Event. The Chessmaster played 16 contestants in the competition, which resulted in a draw with Reyes. 11 Non-Profit US POSTAGE PAID Monsey, NY 10952 Permit No. 302 JUNE 6.................. Child Care Resources of . Rockland Breakfast JULY 12................. REDC–Procurement Technical . Assistance Ctr. 22................. Rockland County Concert Band 23................. Hudson Youth Leadership Academy Talent Show 10................. REDC-Procurement Technical Assistance Ctr. 10–13........... Outdoor Shakespeare Festival 17–20........... Outdoor Shakespeare Festival AUGUST 10-11............ New Student Orientations 19................. Foundation Golf Outing 20-21........... New Student Orientations For details, check calendar of events online at www.sunyrockland.edu or call 845-574-4032. www.facebook.com/sunyrcc LIKE