SN 5.15.2021

(J-Ad) #1
Page 6/The Sun and News, Saturday, May 15, 2021

Outside of school, Haven
has been active at Gun Lake
Community Church. She has
served as a youth ministry
student leader, a children’s
ministry volunteer, youth
ministry worship leader,
worship team member, sound
booth team, and more.
Her hobbies outside of
school include playing bas-
ketball, music (especially
guitar and piano) and
Spanish.
She said she is most
proud of the legacy she is
leaving behind and that many
staff members have
expressed their love of her
character and her actions.
She said her greatest accom-
plishment is being the person
she is today.
She plans to attend
Judson University in Elgin,
Ill., and will join the music
business and entrepreneur-
ship degree program. She
also plans to be part of the
choir, guitar ensemble and
women’s basketball team.
Gavin Denman, son of
Bryan and Karin Denman.
His honors and awards
during high school have
included the coach’s award
in tennis, state qualifier for
Business Professionals of
America, serving as BPA
state parliamentarian, and
National Honor Society.
His extracurricular activ-
ities also included Y-Mentors,
Youth Advisory Council, and
being a representative for
Leadership Barry County
Board.
His hobbies include ten-
nis, being with friends, play-
ing video games and invest-
ing.
Denman will attend the
University of Michigan’s
Ross School of Business
with plans for a future in
finance.
Emma Fabiano, daugh-
ter of Andrew and Michelle
Fabiano.
She has numerous high
school activities, including
National Honor Society, ski
club, Engineering Club,
Students for Life, equestrian
team where she’s been a top

10 rider three years, volley-
ball, Science Olympiad, and
BPA where she was a state
qualifier two years.
Outside of high school,
Emma is busy with 4-H,
being a volunteer at the
Barry County Animal
Shelter, and a volunteer at a
therapeutic riding barn. Her
hobbies include riding and
showing her horses and gar-
dening.
She lists her greatest
accomplishments in high
school as being the vice pres-
ident of her class and being
the class salutatorian.
She plans to attend Grand
Rapids Community College
this summer and transfer to
MSU in the fall to major in
finance with a minor in com-
puter science.
Sam Morton, son of
Robert and Sue Morton.
His high school achieve-
ments and honors have
included National Honor
Society; jazz band honors at
Central Michigan
University’s jazz festival in
2020 and 2021; and varsity
tennis, earning sportsman-
ship, doubles chemistry and
the coach’s awards the last
two years.
His high school activities
have included varsity tennis,
ski club, marching band and
jazz band, drummer and
video switch operator at Gun
Lake Community Church,
trumpet teacher, youth group
leader and the 2021 high
school musical.
Sam lists his hobbies as
writing jazz music; playing
trumpet, drums and piano;
and learning more about
space and math.
He plans to attend St.
Olaf College in Northfield,
Minn., to pursue degrees in
jazz, music composition and
mathematics/physics.
He lists his greatest
achievements as writing a
Big Band performance piece
and having it performed by
the TKHS Jazz Band, being
named first-chair trumpet,
and scoring a 1440 on his
S AT.
Ellie Rogers, daughter of

Russell and Katherine
Rogers.
Her high school activities
and awards have included
TKDKH Dive where she was
named most valuable diver
her freshman year, softball,
four years in musicals,
Young Life, National Honor
Society secretary, and honors
choir.
She has been a member
of the YAC Circle of Giving,
helped with NHS blood
drives, toy drives and food
drives.
She enjoys hanging out
on Gun Lake, making Target
runs, thrifting, and driving
while listening to music. Her
interests include Minecraft,
Panda Express orange chick-
en and chai lattes.
Her greatest accomplish-
ments at TK were being
named a top senior student
and learning to balance
school and extracurricular
activities.
She plans to study in the
math or physics fields at the
University of Michigan.
Carly Snyder, daughter
of Durk and Debra Snyder.
She has been a bowling
team member for four years
and was named all-confer-
ence all four years. She also
was named All-State
Division 2 bowler in 2019
and most valuable bowler in
the TKHS 2018-19 season.
Carly also played softball
(currently varsity captain)
and freshman volleyball,
participated in musicals and
plays, was a NHS member
and sang in honors choir.
Outside of school, she is
a student helper in the pre-
school room at Brightside
Church, hostess at Brann’s in
Caledonia, has donated
blood, and is part of a youth
bowling league at Spectrum
Lanes.
Her hobbies include
bowling, softball, recreation-
al swimming, spending time
in the Upper Peninsula with
family, taking walks in the
woods with her dog, and
singing/acting.
She lists her greatest
accomplishments at TK as

earning the highest honor
roll for all semesters, being
named Rotary Student of the
Month, and being awarded a
certificate of merit by the
Michigan Technological
University Chapter of the
Society of Women Engineers.
Carly plans to attend
Davenport University with
the intention of becoming
part of the nursing program
while also being a member
of the Davenport bowling
team. She hopes to become a
pediatric nurse.
Ben Van Hoven, son of
Gregory and Marianne Van
Hoven.
He is a member of the
school’s National Honor
Society chapter.
His hobbies and interests
include video games, music,
and drives with his friends.
Ben listed his greatest
accomplishment at high
school as being in the top 10
academically.
He plans to attend
Northern Michigan
University in Marquette to
major in biochemistry.
Michael Willshire, son
of Greg and Cindy Willshire.
Willshire has earned
many bowling honors during
high school, including being
named to the All-Conference
team the past two seasons.
He also was named to the
honorable mention all-con-
ference team for the 2018-
season. In 2019-20, he was
the high school season
Region 9 champion. In the
2020-21season, Willshire
rolled a perfect 300 game in
competition and finished

with a 211 average for the
season.
He also earned highest
honors all four years of high
school.
His hobbies include
bowling and playing video
games.
Michael plans to attend
Davenport University to
study cyber-defense. He also
plans to be a member of the
Davenport men’s bowling
team.
Paige Zellmer, daughter
of Robert and Becky Zellmer.
Her high school activities
include track, volleyball,
National Honor Society, stu-
dent council and TK Packers.
Outside of school, she
has worked with the
Thornapple Area Enrichment
Foundation, YAC, and is a
member of Far Out Volleyball
Club and KP athletics in pole
vaulting.
Her hobbies include run-
ning, working out, art, espe-
cially drawing and ceramics,
hiking, snowboarding, ski-
ing, and hunting.
She lists her greatest
accomplishments at TKHS
as being in the top 10 of her
class, earning all-conference
honors in track, academic
all-state honors, going to
state competition in pole
vault, and being named to
the highest honor roll all four
years.
She plans to study pre-
med at the University of
Michigan, majoring in bio-
chemistry with a minor in
art. She will also be a walk-
on to the rowing team. Her
career goal is to become

either a dermatologist or
emergency room doctor.
Caedon Zube, son of
Nate and Brandy Zube.
His high school activities
have included being NHS
president, Science Olympiad,
BPA, Engineering Club,
Close Up, TK Packers, being
an AP Scholar with Honor,
earning highest honor roll all
four years, and earning the
College Board National
Rural and Small Town
Recognition Award.
Outside of school,
Caedon has served as the
YAC grant committee chair,
worked at Big O’
Smokehouse, is currently the
student sanitation leader, and
practices Historical European
Martial Arts through the
Swordsmanship Museum
and Academy.
His hobbies include col-
lecting knives and military
memorabilia, investing in
trading cards, hiking, and
watching eSports. He lists
his greatest accomplishment
at TKHS as being in the top
10 and qualifying for nation-
als in his first year of compe-
tition with BPA.
He plans to attend the
University of Michigan to
major in history and dou-
ble-minor in international
studies and Asian language
and culture. He plans one
day to become a U.S. diplo-
mat in South America or
Asia. He will also be fencing
for the U-M Fencing Club
and plans to learn Portuguese
outside of school.

Pennock COO addresses


Middleville Rotary Club
Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
Fifteen months after
arriving at Spectrum Health
Pennock to be its chief oper-
ating officer, Bernie Jore is
glad he made the move to
West Michigan.
“That was always our
plan. We wanted to move to
the west side of the state,”
Jore said Tuesday when he
was the featured speaker at
the weekly meeting of the
Middleville Rotary Club at
Middleville United
Methodist Church.
Jore, who now lives in
Middleville, came to
Spectrum Health Pennock in
February 2020 after a long
career at St. Mary’s Hospital
in Saginaw, now known as
Ascension St. Mary’s. A
native of Alpena, he held a
variety of positions, includ-
ing director of human
resources, director of trauma
and surgery and vice presi-
dent of nursing.
During his talk, Jore
spoke about efforts the hos-
pital has made to bolster its
ranks of medical profession-
als, particularly in areas like
orthopedic care.
“We’re committed to
keeping care local. We know
we can take good care of
people and we can provide
high-quality services,” he
said.
Jore also spoke about the
Baum Family Surgical
Center that opened last fall.

To date, nearly 650 surgeries
have been performed in the
surgical center, he said.
Jore is particularly excit-
ed about a new addition to
Spectrum Health Pennock’s
array of services – dorsaVi, a
wireless sensor technology
that measures and analyzes
the way we move.
“I really feel this is where
physical therapy is going in
the future. This is simply a
way to track muscle move-
ment,” Jore said. “It’s a high-
tech way that we can run
algorithms, put them through
a computer, and we can fig-
ure out what people are
doing, what muscles are
injured, and measure what
might be the best possible
exercise they can do in order
to help build strength in that
muscle.”
While the dorsaVi system
is being only used for reha-
bilitation, he said it’s not
Pennock’s intent to limit its
use to just that purpose.
“Our intention is to move
it into our wellness center, so
that we can use this to help
support local athletics,” he
said. “We want to be able to
go into the high schools and
actually have the athletes get
hooked up to this. We can
watch how they’re pitching.
We can see how they’re run-
ning for cross country. We
can work with the girls’ vol-
leyball team. We can see
what the kids might need to
strengthen in order to stay

healthy.”
One of the dorsaVi mod-
ules Pennock has acquired
measures running technique,
Jore said.
“We realize we’ve got a
lot of runners in our commu-
nity, and there are a lot of
runners that do injure them-
selves, [and] we feel like if
we could get them hooked up
to this, we could actually see
why they’re having prob-
lems, [such as] shin splints.
We can actually see why
their knees are hurting,” he
said.
In closing, Jore spoke of
the generosity of area resi-
dents in support of the hospi-
tal.
“It was a little over $
million to build that surgery
center ... $8 million came
from the community, from
Barry County. That’s impres-
sive,” he said. “When you
have a project that you’re
putting together, and [two-
thirds] of the project gets
paid by the community, and
it’s with simple asks and
people stepping up and help-
ing out, that’s impressive.
That’s not what I’m used to.”
Jore’s wife is an adminis-
trative assistant for
Thornapple Kellogg Schools,
and their children are in fifth,
seventh and ninth grades.
The Rotary Club meets at
noon every Tuesday at the
United Methodist Church,
111 Church St., Middleville.

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