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CLASS NOTES
1940s
Harold Bernhardt (BA 48) and his wife Marcia (BA 47, English)
received the 2005 Agri-Business Award from the Iron County (Mich.) Fair
Association.
1970s
Richard Allington (PhD 73) has been elected president of the
300,000-member International Reading Association. He is a professor at the
University of Tennessee.
Robert Burek (EDS 72/PhD 82) has retired as superintendent of the
Fenton (Mich.) Schools after 10 years of service.
Tom Hadzor (MA 79) has been appointed director of development of the
Duke University Libraries.
David Kapolka (BA 72) has accepted a position as technology product
specialist with Key Curriculum Press. Kapolka had been a mathematics teacher
and chair of the mathematics department at Forest Hills Northern High School
in Grand Rapids.
Carmi Margolis (MA 73) was among the featured presenters at the
Association of American Medical Colleges Annual Meeting in November.
Margolis is director of the Medical School for International Health at
Ben-Gurion University.
Judith D. Walton (PhD 85) has retired after serving as professor for
33 years and chairing the Department of Kinesiology for the seven years at
the University of Texas at Brownsville.
1990s
Amanda L. Baden (PhD 99) was honored as a Congressional Angel in
Adoption at a ceremony held by the Congressional Coalition on Adoption
Institute in Washington, D.C. Baden is an assistant professor of counselor
education at Montclair State University in Upper Montclair, New Jersey.
Olga Bonfiglio (PhD 95) has published Heroes of a Different Stripe:
How One Town Responded to the War in Iraq. Dr. Bonfiglio is currently a
professor and acting chairperson of the Department of Education at Kalamazoo
College.
Beverly Ferguson (MA 94) recently published her seventh short story
in the magazine Age Wise.
Kristen Gratten (MA 92) has received National Board Certification
from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. She is a
reading/language arts teacher at North Aurelius Elementary School in Mason,
Mich.
Christopher (MA 92) and Sarah Theule Lubienski (MA 91/PhD 96)
were featured in an article in the New York Times in January regarding their
study that found that when it comes to math, students in regular public
schools do as well as or significantly better than comparable students in
private schools. Christopher Lubienski is an assistant professor in the
Department of Educational Organization and Leadership, and Sarah Lubienski
is an associate professor in the Department of Curriculum and Teaching at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Susan W. Meston (PhD 99) has been appointed superintendent of the
Muskegon (Mich.) Area Intermediate School District. She had been the
district’s deputy superintendent.
Barbara Mieras (PhD 90) was one of five people honored by the Michigan
Women’s Foundation with its annual Women of Achievement and Courage Award.
Mieras is Davenport University’s executive vice president for advancement
and president of the Davenport University Foundation.
Robert L. Smith (PhD 96) has established Smith Educational
Associates, a consultancy specializing in workforce education programs.
2000s
Karen Klumpp (PhD 03) has been appointed vice president for
enrollment at Alma (Mich.) College. She has been at Alma College since 1987
and had been serving as interim vice president for enrollment.
Loukia Sarroub (PhD 00) received National Reading Conference’s Frye
Distinguished Book Award for 2005 for her book, All-American Yemeni Girls
(University of Pennsylvania Press).
Jim Ananich (teaching certification 04) was elected to the Flint
(Mich.) City Council from the 7th Ward. Ananich had taught social studies in
the Flint School District and served as aide to state Sen. Bob Emerson.
Ann O’Donnell (teaching certification 05) is teaching chemistry and
algebra at Elk Rapids (Mich.) High School. She had been a research assistant
in the Composite Materials and Science Research Center at the University of
Delaware.
Terry A. Sedlar (ma 03) was appointed principal at Mio AuSable
Elementary School in Mio, Mich.

In Memoriam
Richard Jackson (MA 70/PhD 81) died on December 14, 2005. He was
62. Mr. Jackson retired from the Michigan Department of Transportation as
assistant deputy director of the Bureau of Aeronautics in 1988. After his
retirement, he joined the faculty at the North Carolina A & T University
School of Education.

Banks and Hawkins Honored
as Distinguished Alumni
James Banks (MA 67/PhD 69) received the MSU Alumni Association’s
highest honor at its Grand Awards ceremony in October.
Banks, the Russell F. Stark Professor and
director of the Center for Multicultural Education at the University of
Washington, was presented the MSU Alumni Association Distinguished Alumni
Award. The honor is bestowed by the MSUAA to graduates who have
demonstrated outstanding volunteer service and who have achieved the
highest level of professional accomplishment and personal integrity and
character.
Banks is among the nation’s leading scholars, renowned for his efforts to
increase educational equality for all students and is widely considered
the founder of multicultural education. He has written and edited 20 books
and more than 100 journal articles, including the Handbook of Research on
Multicultural Education, a landmark publication that received the 1997
Book Award from the National Association of Multicultural Education.
In addition to Banks, Brian Hawkins
was honored with the Distinguished Alumni Award. Hawkins has had close
ties to the college over the years. He is president and chief executive
officer of EDUCAUSE, a professional association of 2,000 colleges and
universities dedicated to transforming higher education through
information technologies. He also serves on the College of Education’s
National Advisory Board. Hawkins received a bachelor’s degree in political
science in 1970 and a master’s degree in communications in 1972 from MSU.

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