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2011 Senior Edition

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Senior Edition of the 2010-2011 School Year

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Page 1: 2011 Senior Edition
Page 2: 2011 Senior Edition

Who’s going where? Class of 2011 college plansAlbion CollegeNicholas DiamondKaitlin Pytleski

Alma CollegeAshley Halm

Aquinas CollegeEmily Blakowski

Auburn UniversityMichael Olenyn

Belmont UniversityRyan Demeniuk

Brigham Young University (Idaho)Sydney AdamsJonathan HawesDylan Moffit

Brigham Young University (Utah)Jacob CloughErik Schoenhals

Calvin CollegeStephen Bradford

Carnegie Mellon UniversityRohan Arepally

Case Western Reserve UniversityRyan Finstad

Central Michigan UniversityAustin BaileyTessa BaronAlexander BoydMia CarusoJerome Craft Jr.Maggy DoyleJacob HansenCeleste JamesSteven Kelly Jr.Sean LargentMarina LeanderBrianna MehargChelsea MillerJacob MillerMaxwell NielsenStephanie Pastrana ValeroMax QuarlesAnthony RussoBrandon StolpeSara SzatkowskiJames WatsonJarek Zagar

Clemson UniversityCourtney Merlo

College for Creative Studies

Darby BarberClaire DonaldsonBrandi GunnTaylor Shallal

College of WoosterColleen Kill

Colorado State UniversityCourtney Miller

Columbia College of ChicagoAmanda Hess

DePaul UniversityAndrew Harding

East Carolina UniversityAllison Anglim

Eastern Michigan UniversityJames Martin

Ferris State UniversityTrevor IngerHayley MartoneBrandon O'Rourke

Florida Gulf Coast UniversityAlexander Folz

Grand Valley State UniversityVictoria AndersonKyle AndridgeAlexandra BouzaBradley BrummittPatrick ConnorsAlexandra CoxEmma GuschewskiJuli HalacogluNicole HunterAdam KetnerAndrea KretchmanOlivia McCainJenna NiewiadomskiErik NorstromLauren WetzelJoseph Zarantonello

Illinois StateAlexandra Frackowiak

Kalamazoo CollegeSteven Leonowicz

Kansas City Art InstituteBrianna Lamarche

Kansas State UniversityBrandon Lamarche

Kendall College of Art and DesignLogan Davids

Kettering UniversityAshley GaaboEmily MahonChristopher Oskoian

Lake Superiour State UniversityBaizley Howell

Macomb Community CollegeJill Matthijs

Miami University of OhioMeghan Moore

Michigan College of BeautySarah Beauchamp

Michigan State UniversityKevin AdamsAustin AielloFarah AlidinaKelsey AndridgeRebecca AshburnMatthew BennerRobert BlakeDevin BoyleSamantha BoyleRebecca BrownKevin BrowningJason BullPatricia RodriguezKyle CoatsLauren CochranStephanie CosentinoJacqueline CoxTyler CurtissMegan DaceyKelsie DarinPhillip DeatonDillon DiCiccoNicole DowellLauren DutchikKatherine FeeleyCatherine FosterDennis Gistinger Jr.Ju Yeon GohJacob HeckTaylor HughesAlexander JonesJenna JonjuaJonathan KammanKelsey KenaanAshley KoepkeAlexander LaBrecqueKatherine LandisKelsey LovelandLauren MarchellettaAnthony McAllisterMichael McKinleyJenna Mellerowicz

Madeline MichaelsJulia NagyErica NowakSean O'ConnellWhitney RaskaMichael RecklingColleen ReidyAdam RitchieMolly RobbinsStuart RobertsonRichard Shaieb Jr.Daniel StashukPaul Stur IIITyler SzuraRobert SzymanskiHeather ThomasMackenzie ToccoAustin TretheweyAndrew TurnbullDominic WaldorfBlake WiesemannEmily Wood

Michigan Technological UniversityJennifer Pilibosian

Oakland Community CollegeRyan AlbertCraig BrittinghamNicole ChapmanBrittany ChristofelTyler CoppMark DusevicEmily EmertonJoseph FarrellJordan FormicaDavid FoxJohn FritschEmmaclaire HurstElizabeth KobsJamie LushkaSean MarkaityLynn MatthijsJonathan RaffaMikayla RowePaul SchaedigJustin SchultzStephanie SiewertJeremy SittoJared SmithAngela StewartSkyler VanDerSys

Oakland Technical CampusTerrence Cox III

Oakland UniversitySamantha AndrewsBrian BrownKatherine ButterfieldTyler CapaMatthew ChmielEvan ConoverEthan CookBrian D'Annunzio

Andrew DibbleReid DicksonTaryn DicksonTrent DrumhellerBrenda Echeverri-AlvaradoAlycia FonsJacob FoxDaniel FredericksBeatriz GabrielBrandon GomoluchNina GrubbaAlexis HafnerPeter HartNicole JamilBrianna JohnsonMitchell JohnsonMichaela JudkinsMarta KuczynskiNikolla LulgjurajFrancesco MinaudoMarisa MontalbanoPetrina MunacoMonica NowakNicholas PaddyBrandon PirroneAshton PrasatekMichael PulisHayley RaskaAlec SangerTroy ScantamburloAlexandra SekulovskiGenelle SeldonScott ShermetaroAlexa ShouneyiaTrent Shull Jr.Marianna SteppLauren UlajAdam WebberKelsey Young

Ohio State UniversityKaitlin Keenan

Ohio Wesleyan UniversityJessica BrewerOS Tech Campus Cosmo.Amelia Hacker

OTECHAdam JumpMichael Stamper Jr.

Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteKelsey McNeely

Ringling College of Art and DesignAudrey Benjaminsen

Saginaw Valley State UniversityValerie AdamsKristin Hinchman

Saint Louis University

Kelsey Jackson

School of the Art Institute of ChicagoKatie Doyle

Seoul National UniversityJiwon Lee

Sienna Heights UniversityBradford Henry

Spring Arbour UniversityMeagan Joiner

Steps at RCSNadeen Spivey

Texas Tech UniversityJonathan Jasniak

Universal Technical InstituteChandler Clay

University of ArizonaDerek FrancisZachary Francis

University of California BerkeleyNicolas Mertz

University of DaytonLauren Bovenzi

University of Detroit MercyHarrison Ju

University of MichiganAnne Marie BarryKristen BatkoBryana BaylyDevon ComptonSarah DittrichLaura FlemingJustin HartPratika IyerRoshni KalbaviVishaal KalwaniJill KellyChristine KimJacob LanduytAlyssa LawlerJillian LongtonDaniel MooreBrock NelsonKaitlin NucciMauli PatelKelsie PitellMargot RobertTara Van VeenVincent ViggatoRenee Wiwel

University of Michigan-FlintJillian Hoffman

University of MississippiHaley BerichEric Dean

University of MissouriDylan Wilcox

University of Mount UnionJoseph Stephan

University of PittsburghDesta Gebregiorgis

University of Southern CarolinaKara Kovack

University of TennesseeCarly Frensley

University of Western OntarioMatthew Caloura

Wayne State UniversitySam HarrisAndrew MacIntyreGurman MinhasNimretpal SinghKelsey SkinnerMaxwell White

Western Michigan UniversityAaron HebdenKelly BeaverMerna BehnamAnthony BowlsonSamantha CrossDanielle CummingsNicholas EhardtBrian KuzdakMarcus LiskaMonica ManciniSheldon MediciKayla NicaiseElizabeth RaglinKollin Rajelrachel StuefJohn Woodward

Western State College of ColoradoSara Harbin

WINGSBevin Fraser

2 SENIOR EDITIONTHE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE 2011

Page 3: 2011 Senior Edition

Lee will be attending Seoul National University School of Medicine in Seoul, South Korea in the fall. This is Korea’s equivalent to Harvard Medical School; it puts Lee on a fast track to finish her undergraduate and medical studies in only six years, according to Lee.

A major factor in her decision to leave the United States was that her ex-tended family resides in South Korea. She has not been close to her family since she moved to America in kindergarten.

She is leaving her friends and a normal college experience behind in order to be closer to this extended family.

“I’ll miss my friends and the whole college experience that I’ll have had here, but I’m really excited to go to Korea again and live there for awhile,” Lee said.

After graduating this June, Doyle plans on attending the School of the Art Institute in Chicago to study Sculpting in hopes of later entering the school’s fashion design pro-gram as an upperclassmen.

Even when she was young-er, Doyle knew that a tradi-tional university was not the best choice for her. She in-stead chose to attend one of America’s largest independent schools of art and design, lo-cated in one of America’s larg-est and busiest cities, accord-ing to the school’s website.

“I have a creative mind and I knew that a traditional college wasn’t right for me,” Doyle said. “I really fell in love with art last year. I am really excited to be able to go to a school where I can do what I love all of the time.”

Clay will be attending Universal Technical Institute—a trade school in Chicago--to pursue dreams of working in the automotive industry. This school is one that operates 51 weeks per year and that allows students to learn through doing hands-on work with cars, according to Clay.

Not attracted to a university setting, Clay first became interested in attending the Universal Technical Institute after seeing an advertise-ment on television.

This school offers Clay the opportunity to gain specialized knowledge in automobiles and make connections in the industry. He hopes to enter an extended program that would allow him to focus entirely on the mak-ing of Porsche cars.

“I like working with my hands,” Clay said, “so I can’t wait to be able to work all day on something that I want to do in life.”

After developing a set plan for the course of his life over the next 20 years, Fox has decided to jump directly into his career and travelling the world as opposed to go-ing off to college in the fall.

Aspiring for a career as a federal judge, Fox will spend his time sitting in at Courthouses and making connections that are neces-sary for a future career. He also plans on continuing with travelling, one of his hobbies.

The receipt of a diploma is not as important to Fox as the experiences and envi-ronment that he believes lie before him next year.

“A diploma is simply a diploma,” Fox said. “It is not being in a building that al-lows you to learn. I could hit the wall and all I could tell you is that it exists. It is the environment and people you learn from that makes the difference.”

They are moving on. As graduation swiftly approaches, some students will

be headed out of state, some will be headed out of the country.

A few students will not be going to college, a few students will be pursuing their dream careers in trade school.

Every student has unique plans and an idea of where these plans will take them in life.

Crossing over

Designing her dreams

Polishing a passion

Creating a career

Back to beginnings Senior students showcase their unorthodox plans for the year following graduation

(Compiled by Kelsey Jackson and Zach Francis)

(photo by Chandler Clay)

Choosing to move back to his home country of Germany, Re-ithmeier will be attending the Technische Universitat Munchen, or the Technical University of Munich, to study Automotive Engineer-ing.

Reithmeier came to the United States before his junior year of high school and is now planning for his return to the country he grew up in. He is still considered a citizen of Germany, so his college edu-cation will be considerably less expensive than an American school would have been, according to Reithmeier.

This is not the last time that Reithmeier is planning on moving to a foreign country. One of the reasons that he chose to attend col-lege overseas is because of his desire to continuing moving around and travelling.

“I do not want to stay in any one place for more than five years,” Reithmeier said. “I constantly want to be moving around.”

(photo by Nick Cruz)

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(photo by Chandler Clay)

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(compiled by Kelsey Jackson and Zach Francis)

3SENIOR EDITION THE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE2011

Page 4: 2011 Senior Edition

4 SENIOR EDITIONTHE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE 2011

Ever since elementary school, the question “what defines a leader?” has been asked and re-asked and asked again. There have been assemblies, workshops, books, movies… And the has-sle would have been prevented if the teachers had just pointed out senior Bryana Bayly.

Bayly’s leadership planted its roots on the Hart Middle School Executive Board of Student Council five years ago.

Now, as a senior, Bayly’s leadership has bloomed as she is now the President of Student Council and the Vice President of National Honors Society.

Junior Natalie Bick, a member of both Student Council and National Honors Society, says that Bayly does a lot of good on both leadership boards.

“She threw a couple ideas out there that we never really con-sidered before… and she made us really successful,” Bick said.

One idea that Bayly cultivated was produced through the letters students wrote to soldiers earlier in the year.

Throughout the course of the year, Bayly also served on the Pink Paws Homecoming Game Board and was a valuable as-set to the cheer team, according to teammate and junior Lauren

Dante. “You can tell by her attitude… that she

really has a passion for leadership,” junior Mark Wrobbel, a member of Student Coun-cil, said, “and she’s done a really great job this year.”

Finding your voice is never easy. For some, it’s a long, agoniz-ing road to discovery.

But not for senior Sara Harbin. She’s blazed her own trail since middle school, preferring not to stick with the status quo, and in-stead do what feels right to her. In Harbin’s world, there is no such thing as normal. Everything is instead about expression, and find-ing your own style and personalty. She encourages others to do the same, offering her advice as incentive.

“I live by the saying that ‘you should go with who you are and be who are’ and I feel that everyone is kind of in their shell. They should follow their own voice. I guess I was raised like that and this is my style. I like it, and I like to express who I am,” Harbin said.

For her, everyday is another day to experiment and try some-thing new. Whether it’s a crazy new fashion or a wild hairstyle, nothing is off limits.

“I used to go to Salvation Army all the time and I had this long green fuzzy sweatshirt and black and white skirt that I would wear over these red pants. It was the silliest thing but I used to do a lot of really crazy things,” Harbin laughed.

And as far as the next hair color goes?“I don’t know… I don’t really think about

it,” Harbin said. “One day I can be like, ‘I want my hair pink!’ And I’ll go dye it pink and that’s all it takes.”

10Most Influential Seniors

Influence: The capacity or power of persons to be a compelling force on or produce effects on the actions, behavior, or opinions of others.*

LeaderBryana Bayly

RevolutionarySara Harbin

*Definition from Dictionary.com

Compiled by Danielle Linihan and Lindsey Scullen

Page 5: 2011 Senior Edition

They call her “The Cake Lady.”Or as the rest of us know her, senior Pratika Iyer, and since

sophomore year she’s been baking up a storm. But these aren’t your typical cakes, and this isn’t just for a bake sale—they’re art and it’s a business. And better yet, Iyer’s hard work has earned her not only a lifelong profession but an early entry to the Uni-versity of Michigan’s business school, making her quite the en-trepreneur.

“It started as just a hobby but then more people showed interest and started ordering them, so I figured it was something cool to go into,” Iyer said. “I made this business plan called ‘the Cake Lady’ with my cakes and everything in BPA and I made it to nationals with that. I’m going to get a degree in business. Then after I go to business school I want to go to pastry school and get a degree in baking and then open up my own cake place.”

For Iyer, this is her passion, her dream. It’s her key to suc-cess and a way to pursue her love of art.

“At home I still draw and paint, but my drawings just sit there,” Iyer said. “Cakes can be enjoyed by everyone. You get to eat it at the end of the day so it doesn’t just sit there and collect

dust,” Iyer said.

5SENIOR EDITION THE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE2011

She’s the quirky Luna Lovegood of the senior class. She’s the insightful Leonardo DaVinci of tomorrow. She’s Audrey Ben-jaminsen.

Benjaminsen has plans crafted of attending Ringling Col-lege of Art and Design in the fall.

With a National Silver Key Portfolio, ten Regional Individual Gold Key Awards, and 19 total Regional Awards in the Scholastic Art Awards competition alone, Benjaminsen is leaving her high school artistic environment with well-deserved confidence in her craft.

Art teacher Diane Heath said, “What’s unique about Audrey is that she doesn’t have a narrow focus on her medium. She uses whatever medium will convey what she wants to convey best… and she does it well.”

According to Heath, Benjaminsen’s diverse portfolio caught the attention of many college admissions officers, one of whom went as far as to say that Benjaminsen’s combined portfolio was the best she’d seen all year.

Benjaminsen’s inspirations come from life’s color pallet. Her art reflects her interpretation of the world to the point

where she “no longer can distinguish what is art from what is not,” as her 2011 award-winning portfolio says.

“I really just like people,” Benjamins-en said of where her art comes from, “and art mirrors the humanities… It shows that everything is in balance.”

Senior Jonathan Raffa bounds across the stage, perfectly portraying every emotion of his character as if it’s second na-ture, because for the night, it is. For the night, he’s not Jonathan Raffa; he’s Bobby Randall, and the date isn’t 2011, it’s 1928. This isn’t just the stage of the Good News! musical. It’s a college campus, a dorm room, a whole other world.

For Raffa, acting and entertaining the crowd is more than a personal goal. It’s something he loves and strives towards.

“The response from the crowd really gets you in your char-acter more and you really feel like you’re not in 2011 in an audi-torium. You feel like you’re in the 1920’s being your character,” Raffa smiled, recalling a few fond memories of the experience with his actors and cast members.

“I think what I like most about it [acting] is being able to be with the people who are acting with you,” he said.

As an actor and an entertainer, Raffa knows what it takes to put on a good show. He knows how to channel the determination in his blood that’s been pushing him since day one.

He thinks back to his first experience in the spotlight. “In eighth grade I had my first perfor-

mance. I got up and that was the first time I’d ever performed and I loved it. I immedi-ately knew that that was wanted to do with my life, just perform,” Raffa said.

EntrepreneurPratika Iyer

ArtistAudrey Benjamison

EntertainerJonathan Raffa

Page 6: 2011 Senior Edition

Last year, senior Bradley Brummitt was walking down the hallway when he saw senior Amanda Hess faint and fall to the ground. Before she awoke, he had her in his arms. He stayed at her side until his words drew laughter and smiles.

“Brad, you’re so nice to me,” Hess said. And he’s nice to everyone. Famous for his hugs, Brummitt is about to take on a whole

new class of fame when he moves on to college at Grand Valley State University.

With 1473 friends on Facebook, and just as many outside of the cyber world, Brummitt is a valuable character in the lives of many.

“Brad is the most genuine, kind-hearted person you will probably ever have the change to meet in your life,” Hess said.

In harmony with his kind heart, music has accompanied Brummitt through his high school career whether singing in choir, recording music in his closet at home, or performing on stage.

Brummitt just finished playing the part of Slats, a football player in Good News, the spring musical.

And his heroic qualities can be seen in his music-making as well.

“Brad has an amazingly positive out-look and the most contagious smile,” cho-ral accompanist Traci Bartell said.

6 SENIOR EDITIONTHE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE 2011

Nothing good comes without practice, and for senior Devon Compton, practice finally paid off. On her last year on the varsity golf team she won the Miss Golf award, as well as a scholarship to U of M.

“Miss Golf is an award given to the best golfer in the state. Yeah, [she deserved it],” junior Gabby Yurik said of her team-mates’ efforts.

Of course, achieving an award as prestigious as Miss Golf wasn’t easy for Compton.

“The beginning of the season wasn’t going so great for me,” Compton said. “I was having a lot of trouble in the summer with just shooting numbers and shooting scores. But I was really working hard at it then just trying to bring in my game a little tighter. Eventually it paid off, so that was good.”

Endless hours of practice aren’t new to Compton either. Ten years of her life have been dedicated to game. In many ways, golf defines Compton and helps to shape who she as is a person, a player, and a teammate. It’s a lifestyle, a love, and a pastime all at once. Compton looks forward to her dreams of playing on the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour, but for now,

she’s focused on the current road ahead.“Yeah, LPGA all the way. That’s my

goal. But for now I’ll be studying business and kinesiology up at U of M and hope-fully that helps me with my golf game. Be-ing up there with the girls and the team and working on my game… it’ll just help a lot,” Compton said.

A man with a white beard, a red suit, and a bag of toys vis-ited the Senior locker bank this past Christmas. He rang his bell and children of 17 and 18 years came from every locker to see him. He spread Christmas cheer by ho-ho-ho-ing loud for all to hear. But the man didn’t have time to hear the wishes of all the little boys and girls before passing time came to an end and the security guards forced the man to go to class. The man’s name was Anderson Egerer.

Senior Anderson Egerer is the comedian, the icon, of the Senior Class.

“During class, he’ll read out loud in one accent and then switch to a different one half-way through,” senior Kristen Hinch-man said.

According to Egerer, he owes his humor to his “funniest uncles who were [his] role models growing up.”

Egerer plans on attending either Michigan State University or Western Michigan University next year to double major in busi-ness and engineering.

When he’s not working at Rojo Mexican Bistro or Blake Heath Golf Course, working out at Lifetime Fitness, or impersonating the fat guy in the red suit, he’s with his friends.

“Nothing can be better than spending your spare time with your best and closest friends,” Egerer said.

HeroBradley Brummitt

AthleteDevon Compton

IconAnderson Egerer

Page 7: 2011 Senior Edition

7SENIOR EDITION THE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE2011

“[W]hen I’m in anatomy, I study not for the grade or for myself really, but for the patients that I will be treating in the future,” senior Jiwon Lee said.

Lee does well in school by looking past school, by aiming toward success in life. Lee does well in school by aiming toward success as a surgeon, the life goal she’s had since her freshman year, she said.

Lee is graduating with a 4.0 GPA, as Valedictorian. Lee is graduating with the Department Award for Math. Lee is graduating as a National Merit Commended Student after

having scored in the top 50,000 out of the nationally high-scoring 1.5 million students on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test (PSAT.)

Lee is graduating having scored in the top thirtieth percentile out of the national pool of fifth year French students.

Labeling herself as the best of the best with her grades and test scores, Lee has furthermore been awarded scholarships to the University of Michigan, Northwestern University, and Seoul National University. She was also honored at Channel 7’s ‘Brightest and Best’ celebration on May 16.

And it’s not only in pen and on paper that her aptitude is re-vealed.

No matter what Lee is doing, “she’s always very focused and driven,” senior Valerie Adams said.

Lee is graduating, also, as Key Club’s presi-dent. She led the Key Club to what Loren Gos-ling, Key Club advisor, said was “one of its most successful years ever.”

When it comes to helping people out, nearly everyone can name someone who is kind in the halls or offers to help out a teacher. But how many people can name someone who bene-fited hundreds of students, as well as generations of students to come?

Did senior Sam Harris come to mind? As the pioneer and president of Stoney’s Spanish National Honor Society, he knows a lot about helping others and benefiting the school as a whole.

It started out with a little curiosity—curiosity as to why there wasn’t a Spanish NHS. As a five year Spanish student his passion for the subject drove him to take the next step and act on it.

“The whole Spanish four class was like, ‘Oh, French has an NHS, why doesn’t Spanish?’”

But [Sam Harris] was the one that personally went up to Frerichs and asked, ‘Hey, can you sponsor it?’” Senior Kelsey Kenaan said of her friend and advisor. She along with the other advisors spent hours with Harris to help plan out the meetings and events. Although it started out rough, Harris and the others had a vision for Spanish NHS.

“It opened up the opportunity for ev-eryone in Spanish because that’s the one language doesn’t have something like that,” Harris said, looking back on the overall suc-cess of his and the others efforts. “It’s a way for anyone who is an honor student in Spanish to get into a group and put it on a resume and say, “Hey, look what I did. I’m really good at Spanish and I have this club

AcademicJiwon Lee

AdvocateSam Harris

10Most Influential Seniors

Influence: The capacity or power of persons to be a compelling force on or produce effects on the actions, behavior, or opinions of others.*

Categories DefinedLeader: This person is a positive role model for others and always gets the job done.Revolutionary: This person does not accept the status quo and has a positive vision for the future.Entrepreneur: This person has started on her career path and will likely shape the future market place.Artist: This person has affected others with her visual art.Entertainer: This person has affected others with his music, dancing, or acting.Academic: This person sets the academic standard for the class.Icon: This person everyone knows that, for better or for worse, the senior class would not be the same without him.Hero: This person inspires others with his courage and strength of spirit and is universally admired by others.Athlete: This person has had the greatest impact on SCHS sports.Advocate: This person defends a cause, sticks up for the underdog, and is always helping others out.

Page 8: 2011 Senior Edition

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SENIOR EDITION8 THE STONEY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL SOURCE 2011