In the weeks and months leading up to Annual Day, the Greenhills School Annual Day Committee plans to share progress of our preparations as well as introduce and profile professionals who will be attending this event to speak. In keeping everyone up to date, we hope to build early excitement for the January event and show the development of the ongoing plans.
Friday, December 31, 2010
Thomas Hoatlin
For more than a decade Thomas Hoatlin has served as the Director of Development for the Ann Arbor CIL. Certified in Fund Raising Management by Indiana University's Center on Philanthropy, he directs all Ann Arbor CIL fundraising efforts, with responsibilities centered on donor acquisition and cultivation, special event oversight, sales, marketing, and public relations.
For nine years he has served as Co-Editor of the Ann Arbor CIL's Access Magazine and Resource Directory. Responsibilities include advertising sales and prospect acquisition, content support, graphic design and production direction.
Mr. Hoatlin coordinates a collaborative program with the University of Michigan Hospitals, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Having paraplegia from a random shooting in 1991 he manages a peer program that combines hospital rehabilitation staff with peers that have spinal cord injuries and provides real life experience, resources and emotional support to patients and their families.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Julia Hawley
Julia Hawley attended Greenhills for high school graduating in 2006. She attended the Stephen M. Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan and graduated in December 2011 with a BBA. Julia joined the Solar Car Team at Michigan her sophomore year. She served as Business Director for two years and traveled to Australia to race with the team in the 2009 Global Green Challenge. Julia will be moving to Boston in February to work full-time for Google.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Annual Day: Tios
Carolyn DeChants
Carolyn DeChants is a 2005 graduate of Greenhills. She studied political science and French at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, MI and graduated in 2009 with honors. She currently lives in Kalamazoo and works as an AmeriCorps VISTA member for Great Lakes PeaceJam, an organization dedicated to empowering youth and connecting them with Nobel Peace Laureates.
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Tory Dicarlo
Tory's love of travel, discovery, and adventure began when she was at Greenhills. She did her senior project in India and Nepal. After graduating from Greenhills in 1998, she went to the University of Michigan and took advantage of their long summers to explore various corners of the earth. Immediately after graduating from U of M, Tory moved to Australia to work in an outdoor gear shop and explore another hemisphere. The travel bug bit Tory hard in Australia, but she realized she could not live there forever. After returning to the United States, her goal was to find a job that allowed her to travel. Her love of helping others, languages, and exploration were married when she found a job as a mission coordinator with Operation Smile. While she was not paid much, she was sent around the globe to plan medical missions for the organization. Her travels took her to India, China, Vietnam, Kenya, Morocco, Bolivia, and Venezuela. She got to know the cultures from a unique perspective as she spent countless hours in remote hospitals. At this point she was not only in love with travel but with healthcare. She progressed in the organization, then became the Director of Programs in Latin America. She moved to Panama then Colombia and traveled to 14 countries in the region. Some of her most memorable work was done in Haiti, to which she traveled immediately after the earthquake. Tory is currently back in Ann Arbor pursuing an MBA at the University of Michigan. After graduating this May, she plans to work for Abbott - a global healthcare company - where she will continue making her passion her paycheck by helping others and bringing cultures together.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Howard Booth
Howard Booth, an EMU professor of biology, recently earned a silver medal in the pole vault (9 feet, 2 inches) in the 60-64 age group at the United States Masters National Indoor Track and Field Championships, which took place March 29-30 in Boston. Booth also placed seventh in his age group in the long jump with a leap of 14 feet, 6 inches.
Professor Booth says that his class would be about: "my multiple passions of teaching biology, a love of nature and a life long love of athletics. I would propose to weave together:
-Having taught over 18,000 Biology (Zoology & Human Physiology) students in my 43 years at EMU
-A lifetime of hiking, camping, insect photography, bird watching, wind surfing, kayaking, trail running and mountain racing----
and
-Becoming a world champion in the pole vault (Masters, Male 65-69, 2010)"
Professor Booth says that his class would be about: "my multiple passions of teaching biology, a love of nature and a life long love of athletics. I would propose to weave together:
-Having taught over 18,000 Biology (Zoology & Human Physiology) students in my 43 years at EMU
-A lifetime of hiking, camping, insect photography, bird watching, wind surfing, kayaking, trail running and mountain racing----
and
-Becoming a world champion in the pole vault (Masters, Male 65-69, 2010)"
Monday, December 13, 2010
Emily Blauw
Emily Blauw is an example of not giving up on her dreams. Even though, Emily, at the age of 16, was involved in a car accident, on Valentine's Day 2001, which resulted in a spinal cord injury that left her a quadriplegic; she pursued her education. Graduating from West Ottawa High School, Hope College and Western Michigan University with a Master of Arts in Speech-Language Pathology. Emily landed her dream job and is working as a speech pathologist at Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital treating pediatric and stroke patients.
Emily's platform is EMPOWERING CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES. She will be a spokeswoman throughout Michigan where she can combine awareness, acceptance and understanding of disabilities to the general public.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Andy Buchsbaum
Andy Buchsbaum: Regional Executive Director, Great Lakes Regional Center
Andy Buchsbaum directs the National Wildlife Federation’s regional Great Lakes office. Andy and the 20-person staff use media, litigation, lobbying, and research to fight for the health of the Great Lakes. Projects include cleaning up toxic hotspots in the Great Lakes, stopping Asian carp from invading the lakes, preventing the diversion and unwise use of Great Lakes water, protecting the Great Lakes from climate change, stopping a mine from leaking acid drainage into Lake Superior, and reforming education institutions to enable kids to spend more time outdoors.
An attorney, Andy has testified on a wide range of Great Lakes issues before Congressional committees and state legislatures. Recently, much of Andy’s time has been spent as co-chair of the 110-member “Healing Our Waters – Great Lakes Coalition,” the primary coalition championing Great Lakes restoration. Andy also was one of the lead negotiators on the Great Lakes Water Resources Compact to protect the Great Lakes from diversions and unwise water use. He also is a Trustee for the Great Lakes Fishery Trust and a Board member of the Leslie Science and Nature Center.
Andy got his undergraduate degree from Harvard College, his law degree from Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Master of Laws from Georgetown University Law Center. For the past fifteen years he has taught environmental law courses at the University of Michigan Law School.
Prior to joining NWF in 1998, Andy was the senior attorney for the Midwest office of the National Environmental Law Center and the Program Director for the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan. He has published numerous reports and studies on environmental policy, law and science.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Professor Martin Katz
"Martin Katz must surely be considered the dean of collaborative pianists,” said the Los Angeles Times last season. In 1999 Musical America created a new award for him: Accompanist of the Year. One of the world's busiest collaborators, he has been in constant demand by the world’s most celebrated vocal soloists for more than a quarter-century. He has appeared and recorded regularly with Marilyn Horne, Frederica von Stade, Jose Carreras, Cecilia Bartoli, Kiri Te Kanawa, Kathleen Battle, David Daniels, and Karita Mattila, just to name a few. Season after season, the world's musical capitals figure prominently in his schedule. Throughout his long career he has been fortunate to partner some of the world's most esteemed voices: Renata Tebaldi, Cesare Siepi, Katia Ricciarelli, Tatiana Troyanos, Lucia Valentini, Nicolai Gedda, Regine Crespin, Grace Bumbry, Monserrat Caballe and many others have invited him to share the stage in recitals on five continents.
Mr. Katz is a native of Los Angeles, where he began piano studies at the age of five. He attended the University of Southern California as a scholarship student and studied the specialized field of accompanying with its pioneer teacher, Gwendolyn Koldofsky. While yet a student, he was given the unique opportunity of accompanying the master classes and lessons of such luminaries as Lotte Lehmann, Jascha Heifetz, Pierre Bernac, and Gregor Piatigorsky. Following his formal education, he held the position of pianist for the US Army Chorus in Washington, D.C. for three years, before moving to New York where his busy international career began in earnest in 1969.
In more recent years, invitations to conduct orchestral evenings have come with increasing frequency. Mr. Katz has partnered several of his soloists on the podium for orchestras of the B.B.C., Houston, Washington, D.C., Tokyo, New Haven and Miami. His editions of works by Handel and Rossini have been presented by the Metropolitan, Houston Grand Opera and the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. He has also been pleased to conduct several staged productions for the University of Michigan’s Opera Theatre and the Music Academy of the West.
Finally, the professional profile of Martin Katz is completed with his commitment to teaching. Since 1983, Ann Arbor has been his home, where he has been happy to chair the School of Music's program in accompanying and chamber music, and play an active part in operatic productions. He has been a pivotal figure in the training of countless young artists, both singers and pianists, who are working all over the world. The University of Michigan has recognized this important work, making him the first Arthur Schnabel Professor of Music. Mr. Katz is the author of a textbook which covers all the facet of his art, “The Complete Collaborator,” published by Oxford University Press.
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Susan J. Ashford
Sue Ashford has enjoyed a 27 year career as a professor. She studied to do this work at Northwestern University, earning a PhD in Organizational Behavior. She studies all the funny things that happen in organizations as people try to work together to achieve important outcomes. She both teaches and does research on this topic. She taught for 8 years at Dartmouth College before becoming a Wolverine in 1991. She teaches leadership and negotiation at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. Her research focus is on how individuals can maximize their effectiveness in organizations, whether it is by being proactive, seeking feedback, selling issues up the organization, negotiating with others, or leading well; and whether the individual is a new hire just entering the organization or the top manager in a division or firm.
Sue has held leadership positions herself, serving as an Associate Dean for the University of Michigan Business School from 1994-1995, as the school’s Senior Associate Dean from 1998 – 2002, and as the Associate Dean of Leadership Programming and the EMBA from 2007-2010. She continues to run the school’s Executive MBA program.
Sue holds the Michael and Susan Jandernoa Professorship in Management and Organization, an honorary title recognizing her performance in both teaching and research. She teaches regularly in Michigan’s Executive MBA programs and for various companies and organizations. Her calling lies in helping others to achieve what they want to achieve in their careers by being more aware of and skillful in their interpersonal and organizational behaviors.
Sue has held leadership positions herself, serving as an Associate Dean for the University of Michigan Business School from 1994-1995, as the school’s Senior Associate Dean from 1998 – 2002, and as the Associate Dean of Leadership Programming and the EMBA from 2007-2010. She continues to run the school’s Executive MBA program.
Sue holds the Michael and Susan Jandernoa Professorship in Management and Organization, an honorary title recognizing her performance in both teaching and research. She teaches regularly in Michigan’s Executive MBA programs and for various companies and organizations. Her calling lies in helping others to achieve what they want to achieve in their careers by being more aware of and skillful in their interpersonal and organizational behaviors.
John Whittier-Ferguson
John Whittier-Ferguson is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Michigan, where he has taught since 1990. He attended Kenyon College (graduating in 1977), and did his graduate work at Princeton University (1985-1990). In the years between 1977 and 1985, he played music professionally, waited tables, did a good deal of bike touring and bike racing, lived in a couple of fairly primitive (and wonderful) houses in the North Carolina piedmont, spent lots of time outdoors and also taught English at two different Quaker High Schools (three years at Baltimore Friends School; two at Carolina Friends School). His research interests center around literary modernism: works written from the end of the 19th century up through the Second World War, with particular focus on the poetry of T. S. Eliot, W. B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, and the prose of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf.
Elaine Chottiner
We are pleased to introduce one of our speakers, Elaine Chottiner. Here we provide a biography of Dr. Chottiner, in her own words:
"I grew up in McKeesport, a small steel town near Pittsburgh. Bullwinkle and Rocky got stuck in McKeesport several times. Fortunately, I didn't. I came of age in the late sixties and arrived at the University of Michigan in 1967. I graduated with a B.A. in Russian literature and went to California where I worked on a Ph.D. in Slavic Languages and Literature at Berkeley for two years. I spent three years working as an affirmative action analyst at the University of California, completed the pre-medical requirements and returned to Michigan in 1976 to attend medical school. I graduated in 1980, completed my internal medicine residency in 1983 and my fellowship in hematology and oncology in 1986. I remained at the University as junior faculty from 1986-1991 - teaching, seeing patients and doing basic laboratory research in molecular genetics. In 1991 I decided to focus upon patient care and joined a private practice at Saint Joseph Mercy Hospital where I have been a hematologist/oncologist for twenty years. I specialize in breast cancer and blood disorders. I have been a member of the Committees on Practice and Communication for the American Society of Hematology for 12 years. I'm leaving my practice at the end of the year to return to the University of Michigan as a hematologist. I've come full circle (or maybe that's not true -- I hope I don't end up back in McKeesport)."
Dr. Chottiner is the first of the many speakers that we are excited to introduce to you. Here, you will have access to the profiles of all of our speakers. This year, we have a range of fascinating and personable speakers that we hope you are excited to meet and learn from!
"I grew up in McKeesport, a small steel town near Pittsburgh. Bullwinkle and Rocky got stuck in McKeesport several times. Fortunately, I didn't. I came of age in the late sixties and arrived at the University of Michigan in 1967. I graduated with a B.A. in Russian literature and went to California where I worked on a Ph.D. in Slavic Languages and Literature at Berkeley for two years. I spent three years working as an affirmative action analyst at the University of California, completed the pre-medical requirements and returned to Michigan in 1976 to attend medical school. I graduated in 1980, completed my internal medicine residency in 1983 and my fellowship in hematology and oncology in 1986. I remained at the University as junior faculty from 1986-1991 - teaching, seeing patients and doing basic laboratory research in molecular genetics. In 1991 I decided to focus upon patient care and joined a private practice at Saint Joseph Mercy Hospital where I have been a hematologist/oncologist for twenty years. I specialize in breast cancer and blood disorders. I have been a member of the Committees on Practice and Communication for the American Society of Hematology for 12 years. I'm leaving my practice at the end of the year to return to the University of Michigan as a hematologist. I've come full circle (or maybe that's not true -- I hope I don't end up back in McKeesport)."
Dr. Chottiner is the first of the many speakers that we are excited to introduce to you. Here, you will have access to the profiles of all of our speakers. This year, we have a range of fascinating and personable speakers that we hope you are excited to meet and learn from!
Keynote Speaker: Michael Oneal
We are pleased to introduce you to this year's Annual Day keynote speaker. Mr. Oneal will give the morning address, which will be followed by the breakout sessions. We will be providing biographies, throughout the coming weeks, of all the speakers so that students have as much information about the fascinating professional they will have a chance to hear on January 25th.
Michael Oneal is a senior business writer for the Chicago Tribune covering a broad array of subjects ranging from global economics to child-product safety. He has led a number of award-winning projects for the business section and was a member of the six-person reporting team that won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Journalism for a series of stories on unsafe toys that helped focus public awareness on the issue, leading to major changes at the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. He has reported in China, India, Europe and throughout the United States.
Oneal was Tribune’s lead reporter on the global economic crisis, reporting in Washington and Chicago, and was responsible for chronicling the bankruptcies of both his own employer, Tribune Co., and its chief rival, Sun-Times Media Group. Other notable projects have included a multi-part, front-page series telling the story of how Boeing Co. pulled itself back from the brink against Airbus, which Tribune nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and a series of stories on the Sears takeover, which won the breaking news award from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Another front-page series on how one American company’s fateful outsourcing decisions changed lives forever in India and Indiana received an honorable mention from the Overseas Press Club and was a finalist for the Scripts Howard Foundation National Journalism Award.
Prior to joining the Tribune, Mr. Oneal was co-founder and executive editor of a financial Website called SmartMoney.com, which won several major awards including the 2001 National Magazine Award for New Media Design. Oneal spent nine years prior to that writing and editing for BusinessWeek magazine in New York and Chicago. He began his career with American City Business Journals as part of a start-up team that launched highly profitable weekly papers in San Jose, Sacramento and Milwaukee.
Mr. Oneal was a 2001-2002 Knight-Wallace Fellow at the University of Michigan and earned his B.A. from Stanford University. His freelance articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, SmartMoney, Golf Digest and Italy’s Corriere della Sera. He grew up in Ann Arbor, MI., where he graduated from Greenhills School in 1978. He currently lives with his wife, Anne, and five-year-old son, Charlie, in Chicago.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Finding Your Calling
The Annual Day Committee has finalized our theme for the day. We have entitled the theme, "Find Your Calling" and we summarize the idea below:
As Greenhills students we are given innumerable opportunities to excel. Our vision for Annual Day is that speakers can share how they became successful by doing what they love. With this information, we hope students will see their opportunities in a new light and discover how to use their education to build a life filled with purpose and success. As speakers lecture on their own personal experiences they can also provide helpful information on excelling professionally in a field that they are dedicated to. Through listening to driven and passionate speakers we hope Greenhills students will be motivated to pursue their own passions and use them to build a life of meaning. We don’t expect students to decide their future immediately. We only hope to show that a career can be more than a way to make money, but instead a way to live a purposeful life.
As Greenhills students we are given innumerable opportunities to excel. Our vision for Annual Day is that speakers can share how they became successful by doing what they love. With this information, we hope students will see their opportunities in a new light and discover how to use their education to build a life filled with purpose and success. As speakers lecture on their own personal experiences they can also provide helpful information on excelling professionally in a field that they are dedicated to. Through listening to driven and passionate speakers we hope Greenhills students will be motivated to pursue their own passions and use them to build a life of meaning. We don’t expect students to decide their future immediately. We only hope to show that a career can be more than a way to make money, but instead a way to live a purposeful life.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
The Annual Day Committee Members
Annual Day is a student run event, and the Annual Day Committee is the group responsible for putting it together. Every year, three juniors are selected to coordinate, plan, and execute the day. They come up with the theme, compile a list of speakers, and work on the day from June until January.
This year, we are the Annual Day committee:
Grace Judge is a junior. Last year she won a prestigious school writing award, a McDowell award, for her essay "Cultural Change as Exhibited in the Memoirs of 18th Century English Prostitutes". Grace has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she volunteered at the Ann Arbor Art Center and organized and attended visits to the Sudanese refugee family from Grand Rapids, making them feel at home by bringing food and supplies to them, taking them to the zoo, and baking with them.
Grace Mangigian is a junior. She is an award-winning member of the forensics team, last year's State Champion in Storytelling, and an integral part of the Greenhills Theater community, who most recently starred as Emily in a production of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. Grace has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she served as a youth advocate for disability rights with the Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living.
Kathryn Randolph is a junior. She is a member of the cross country team, the choir, she participates in school theater, and she is an award-winning member of the forensics team. She is a co-founder of the school's Young Democrats of America chapter. Kit has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she went to Ireland, Wales, England, and took a road trip across the east coast. She finished off her summer with a weeklong backpacking trip in the Upper Peninsula’s Porcupine Mountains.
We're looking forward to putting together a fun and rewarding day for both speakers and students this year!
This year, we are the Annual Day committee:
Grace Judge is a junior. Last year she won a prestigious school writing award, a McDowell award, for her essay "Cultural Change as Exhibited in the Memoirs of 18th Century English Prostitutes". Grace has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she volunteered at the Ann Arbor Art Center and organized and attended visits to the Sudanese refugee family from Grand Rapids, making them feel at home by bringing food and supplies to them, taking them to the zoo, and baking with them.
Grace Mangigian is a junior. She is an award-winning member of the forensics team, last year's State Champion in Storytelling, and an integral part of the Greenhills Theater community, who most recently starred as Emily in a production of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. Grace has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she served as a youth advocate for disability rights with the Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living.
Kathryn Randolph is a junior. She is a member of the cross country team, the choir, she participates in school theater, and she is an award-winning member of the forensics team. She is a co-founder of the school's Young Democrats of America chapter. Kit has attended Greenhills since 2006. Over the summer, she went to Ireland, Wales, England, and took a road trip across the east coast. She finished off her summer with a weeklong backpacking trip in the Upper Peninsula’s Porcupine Mountains.
We're looking forward to putting together a fun and rewarding day for both speakers and students this year!
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