
28 minute read
Sports
Brian Diemer has been at the helm of Calvin’s cross country program for 36 years. For 34 of those years, he’s also been atop the MIAA.
Diemer has been the Calvin head men’s cross country coach since 1986 and a distance coach with the Calvin men’s and women’s track and field team since the spring of 1987.
In 2006, he added head women’s cross country coaching duties at Calvin to his responsibilities.
His list of accolades is long. He led the Calvin cross country program to 43 titles— more than any coach in MIAA history— 34 with the men’s program and nine with the women’s program. Last fall he led the Calvin men’s team to its 34th consecutive MIAA title, the longest active championship streak in the MIAA. Diemer also guided the Knights to national prominence. In men’s cross country, he led Calvin to four national titles, winning crowns in 2000, 2003, 2004, and 2006.
He also led the men’s team to national runners-up finishes in 1998, 2001, 2002, and 2012. In addition, he helped the Calvin men win 28 Great Lakes Regional titles.
On the women’s side, he was at the helm for eight Great Lakes Regional titles and four top-four national finishes, including a second-place finish in 2008.
He coached countless All-Americans in both cross country and track and field. On the track, he coached five individual national champions, including three in his own specialty race: the 3,000-meter steeplechase.
Diemer was named Great Lakes Regional Cross Country Coach of the Year 23 times—19 times in men’s cross country and four times in women’s cross country. In 2000, 2003, 2004, and 2006, he was named the NCAA Division III National Coach of the Year.
Diemer arrived at Calvin in the midst of a decorated international track and field career. He ran collegiately at the University of Michigan, where he ran cross country and track and field. As a senior, he captured Big Ten and later NCAA Division I national championships in the steeplechase, the event that propelled him to the Olympic level. In 1984, he qualified for the Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, winning a bronze medal in the steeplechase. He also qualified for the 1988 and 1992 Summer Games. In 1989 he won the Glen Cunningham Award, presented annually to the top distance runner in the U.S. In 1992 he served as captain of the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Team. Diemer was the gold medalist in the steeplechase at the 1990 Goodwill Games and silver medalist in the 1995 Pan American games in Argentina. Diemer also won the silver medal at the U.S. Olympic Festival in 1995 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In 2000, he was named to the Grand Rapids Sports Hall of Fame.
When reflecting on his acceptance of the Calvin men’s cross country position in 1986, Diemer recalled his own recruitment by then Calvin director of athletics David Tuuk, who was retiring as Calvin’s acting head cross country coach.
“It seems like a short time ago that Coach David Tuuk asked if I would do the ‘hands on’ coaching his final two years until his retirement. My stint was to be a twoyear term, with no chance of continuing because I was not faculty or staff at Calvin College. Apparently, some concessions were made, because I will be finishing 36 years of coaching at Calvin next month.”
In the fall of 1986, the Calvin men’s cross country team took a narrow second behind rival Hope for the MIAA title. The following fall, Calvin captured the title and ignited a
STORIED CROSS COUNTRY COACH RETIRES AFTER MORE THAN THREE DECADES BY JEFF FEBUS ’92

historic streak. The only interruption was the canceled 2020 MIAA fall cross country season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I will miss the kids and challenging them to ‘strive for excellence’” reflected Diemer. “They always gave me so much of their heart and effort. They would do the work I asked for, and they would start believing in themselves. To see that was and is a beautiful thing.
“I will miss working with the coaches who bought into this whole program. They have given so much of themselves for the kids and Calvin. To share the special moments together as coaches and athletes when goals and dreams were realized is one of the greatest feelings of all time.”
Calvin director of athletics Jim Timmer offered words of appreciation for Diemer’s work: “I can’t thank Brian enough for his tremendous work and leadership. I was a freshman student at Calvin the year he took over the men’s cross country program, and it has been amazing to see his work through the years. We wish him all the best in his retirement and salute Brian and his family for the tireless sacrifices that they have made for Calvin.”
Diemer will now turn his attention to his wife, Kerri; his four children, Kelsey, Kaitlin, McKenzie, and Matthew; as well as his growing number of grandchildren. He continues to co-own Everett’s Landscape, a west Michigan company that was started by his father, Everett Diemer, in 1956.
“I am really looking forward to a slower pace of responsibility in this next phase of life,” said Diemer. “My wife, Kerri, and I want to be readily available for each other and to see our kids and grandkids. It’s a phase of life we have always looked forward to, but it has indeed come faster than I can believe. Where did these 36 years go? It’s been great. Thanks for the opportunity to work at Calvin University and with the best group of kids in the world!”
ALUM RUNNER RETURNS TO COACH KNIGHTS
Calvin University has named Nicole Farr Kramer ’10 as head men’s and women’s cross country coach. “I am extremely excited for this opportunity,” said Kramer. “It’s tough to put into words what it means to come back to Calvin and follow in the footsteps of a legend in Coach [Brian] Diemer. I think about my own college experience and how special it was to be a Calvin Knight every day that I coach. To come back to the school where I had a transforming student-athlete experience is incredible.” “We are thrilled to have Nicole back on campus as our head cross country coach,” said Calvin director of athletics Jim Timmer. “She was an outstanding student-athlete at Calvin and I am confident she will bring those same qualities back to campus as a coach.” Kramer graduated from Calvin with a degree in sports management and business communications. At Calvin, she was a member of four MIAA championship teams in women’s cross country and four in women’s outdoor track and field.
She later ran one year of indoor track and field at Bowling Green State University, where she earned a master’s in sports administration. She has spent the past two years at Concordia University Wisconsin, most recently as the associate head track and field/cross country coach. “My coaching philosophy is built around faith, family, academics and athletics— in that order,” Kramer said. “It’s vital to make sure our priorities are straight and to keep everything in perspective with the gifts God has given us. That being said, we will continue to strive for championships, a strong culture, and a memorable student-athlete experience.”
CALVIN HONORS TOP STUDENT-ATHLETES WITH ANNUAL AWARDS
BY JEFF FEBUS ’92
Since 1951, Calvin has annually presented the Beré Memorial Award. The Beré honors the top senior male student-athlete, based on athletic ability, scholastic rank, character, and leadership. It is given in memory of Joe Beré, a Calvin student who was killed in a 1949 auto accident on his way to watch a Calvin basketball game. This year the award was given to two outstanding student-athletes.
This is the 49th year that Calvin has given the Tiemersma award— presented annually to the top senior female student-athlete. The award honors Kay Tiemersma, the first woman physical education teacher in the member schools of the Christian Schools International organization, and a pioneer in women’s sports. Its presentation is based on athletic ability, scholastic standing, character, and leadership.
JULIAN ITURBE ’22

MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
A graduate of Colegio Emil Friedman School (Caracas, Venezuela), Iturbe is the most decorated individual in Calvin men’s swimming and diving history. He was a four-time MIAA Most Valuable Swimmer and a 20-time NCAA III All-American at Calvin over the last five years.
Due to an extra year of eligibility because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Iturbe was a five-time All-MIAA selection, the only individual in MIAA history to achieve that feat. He is also just the third individual in MIAA men’s swimming and diving history to be named the MIAA Men’s Most Valuable Swimmer four times. He won 14 MIAA individual titles during his career, including five titles in the 500 freestyle and four in the 200 freestyle. He is the MIAA record holder in the 100 freestyle, 200 freestyle, 500 freestyle, and 200 IM and was also a part of MIAA record-setting teams in the 200, 400, and 800 freestyle relay as well as the 200 medley relay.
In addition, he is the Calvin record holder in the 100, 200, and 500 freestyle, 200 and 400 IM, and has been a part of all five of Calvin’s current standing school-record (200, 400, and 800 freestyle and 200 and 400 medley) relay teams.
He helped Calvin win MIAA (team) championships in 2018 and 2021, with his anchor leg of the 400 freestyle relay as a freshman in 2018 cementing the league title for the Knights over Albion by a six-point margin as he edged an Albion swimmer for the win by five-tenths of a second.
Of his 20 All-American finishes, eight were in individual events. This past March he posted the best individual finish of his Calvin career at the national meet, placing
fifth in the 50 freestyle and sixth in the 100 freestyle. He helped the Calvin men’s swimming and diving team place 12th as a team at both the 2019 and 2022 NCAA III Championships.
Iturbe graduated with a degree in engineering with concentrations in both electrical and chemical engineering along with a minor in biochemistry.
A graduate of Grand Haven (Michigan) High School, Van Andel was a five-year member of the Calvin men’s soccer program.
On the pitch, Van Andel was a four-year starter at centerback. He was named a Division III All-American this fall by both the United Soccer Coaches (first team) and D3soccer.com (third team).
He was named the MIAA’s Most Valuable Player this past November and landed a spot on the All-MIAA first team for a fourth consecutive season. Van Andel helped Calvin capture the 2021 MIAA regular season title last fall while also earning a bid to the NCAA III Tournament with the Knights finishing 17-4-2 overall and reaching the Round of 16 of the NCAA III Tourney.
Due to an additional year of eligibility because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Van Andel became a member of five MIAA regular season championship teams. He is the only player in MIAA history to do so.
He helped the Calvin men’s soccer program produce an overall win-loss record of 90-11-4 that included five MIAA regular season titles, three MIAA tournament crowns, four trips to the NCAA III Tournament, three trips to the Sweet 16, two trips to the national semifinals, and one trip to the national championship final.
In the classroom, Van Andel earned his undergraduate degree in environmental science and conservation last spring where he was a Dean’s List student and a four-time member of the MIAA Academic Honor Roll. He is currently a graduate student at Calvin.
Van Andel was named the Division III Scholar All-American of the Year by the United Soccer Coaches. In addition, he was named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District Team. He has been a four-time member of the MIAA Academic Honor Roll.
A graduate of Grand Rapids (Michigan) Christian High School, Heeringa was a four-year member of the Calvin women’s cross country team, Calvin women’s indoor track and field team, and Calvin women’s outdoor track and field team. This past fall, she garnered All-American honors in cross country by placing 17th at the NCAA III Championships. She continued her All-American campaign last winter, placing fifth in the 3,000 meter run and running the anchor leg on Calvin’s fifth place distance medley relay team at the NCAA III Indoor Track and Field Championships.
In cross country, she was named to the AllMIAA first team in 2021 and to the All-MIAA second team in 2019. She was a Great Lakes All-Region selection in both 2019 and 2021. She placed third at the NCAA III Great Lakes Regional Championships this past November and helped Calvin finish 17th as a team at the national meet.
She has been a two-time qualifier for the NCAA III Indoor Track and Field Championships, earning All-American honors in the mile run as a sophomore. She is a three-time Great Lakes All-Region selection for indoor track and field and a two-time Great Lakes All-Region selection for outdoor track and field.
This past winter she set Calvin indoor track and field records in the mile run, 3,000 meter run, and as a member of Calvin’s distance medley relay team. She helped Calvin place 25th as a team at the NCAA III Indoor Track and Field Championships this March.
She graduated with a chemistry major and a psychology minor. She was a threetime member of the MIAA Academic Honor Roll and a regular member of the Calvin Dean’s List. She was named to the Division III All-Academic Team twice in cross country and three times in track and field.

DREW VAN ANDEL ’22
MEN’S SOCCER

SADIE HEERINGA ’22
WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY

FIRMLY ROOTED, GLOBALLY CONNECTED
BY LYNN BOLT ROSENDALE ’85
SAVE THE DATE for the
president’s inauguration on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022, at Calvin University.
CALVIN UNIVERSITY WELCOMES ALUMNUS WIEBE BOER FROM NIGERIA AS NEXT LEADER
Firmly rooted within the Calvinist tradition and Reformed heritage of Calvin University and globally connected, coming from one of the most populous and diverse cities in the world, Wiebe Boer ’97 believes he is uniquely positioned to lead Calvin University as its 12th president.
Boer’s experience working across the private and social sectors in four countries over the past two decades has provided him with a distinctive perspective—one that Calvin’s board of trustees trusts will help guide the nearly 150-year-old institution into innovative territory.
Boer most recently served as CEO of Shell–All On, a renewable energy investment company in Lagos, Nigeria. He has spent his career promoting economic development in Africa.
The son of Christian Reformed missionary parents, Boer was born and raised in Jos, Nigeria. He graduated from Calvin in 1997, with a history degree, and earned a PhD and two master’s degrees from Yale University, also in history. He has spent the last 12 years in Lagos.
His wife, Joanna Bachew ’03, has a master’s in human resource management from the University of London and most recently served as the CEO of Empire Jane, a Nigerian soft home furnishings company. The couple has four sons.
Following Boer’s appointment, Spark spoke with the new president about his past experience, his connection to the university, his leadership style, and his hopes for the future of Calvin University. Some of the following responses were also taken from an interview with Calvin faculty and staff.
How did the position of president of Calvin University first come across your radar and what made you think that it sounded like something you could do?
I think it was in November that I read Michael Le Roy’s newsletter from Calvin that said Michael was not continuing and there was going to be a search. I started reading the profile, and I was thinking, “Wait, this actually looks like me.” So I started asking a few questions even though I was an unusual candidate without any university administration experience. I was told that because of all the changes in American higher education, there was an interest in a candidate that is from outside the space. So I put my hat in, and then to be honest, I didn’t think I would actually ever hear anything back.
As it kept going forward, Joanna was asking, “Are you sure you want to do this?” After I had interviewed, I honestly thought I was going to hear, “Hey, thanks for all the effort. You came all this way. You’re not the person, but we’d actually maybe like you to be on the board at some point, and maybe you can contribute that way.” So when I heard, “You are the one that we selected,” it was incredibly emotional because it did feel like it was a call to me.
My parents both went to Calvin 60 years ago, Joanna and I are both alumni, and the first president of Calvin, Geert Boer, is actually my great-great grandfather’s cousin. There is family tradition going way back. I grew up in the Christian Reformed church on the mission field. Calvin is this institution that’s been such a part of my life, and here it was calling me to play this role.
President Boer talks with Student Senate president Nain Miranda on a site visit with Sun FundED leaders during the evaluation phase of a new partnership to bring solar energy to Calvin.
How do you think the skill set you’ve developed over the last several years has prepared you for this next chapter in Calvin’s history?
I haven’t had the academic administration experience, but I am aware that there are a lot of changes happening in American higher education. I see all of these dynamics that are altering the landscape, many of them are demographic; there are forces that are beyond any of our control. There is a need for someone who is able to look from the outside in, learn a new sector, and then think of ways to innovate. Several times in my career I’ve moved to completely new sectors, and basically built them in whatever country or business to which I was called. I think that experience, as well as an innovative approach to problem solving and resilience developed from running companies in Nigeria have prepared me for this role.
I also believe we need to discern what the future of Calvin and higher education can be, and then we need someone who can drive that movement and be an evangelist for that movement. This is something I’ve done with impact investing, with African philanthropy, with renewable energy in Nigeria. And, I really look forward to doing it now with Calvin University.

What was it like for you as a student at Calvin, and how does this shape how you want to interact with students now?
When I came to Calvin, it was really the first time in my life that I was in a community where everybody looked like me. We think that’s what third-culture kids, or missionary kids, yearn for, right? But I’m on the other side. I didn’t want anybody to mistake me for not being from Africa, from Nigeria, so it was actually a pretty difficult transition at first. I got very involved: I was on the cross country team, the track team, Student Senate. I pursued a history major, and it was in the classroom where the issues of faith and learning, the significance of faith for any subject, any topic, was just something that delighted me.
I was in Grand Rapids reasonably often as a child, but it’s very different when you are actually moving here. What it made me realize, when I’m coming back now, is that we need to ensure that the campus is a place where everybody feels welcome, and where diversity is appreciated. I think there is some work that needs to be done in that direction. But I’m looking forward to making that happen and to building a global campus where everyone feels welcome from the minute they express an interest in Calvin.
Would you have been surprised as a student if someone had told you that in 25 years you would be Calvin’s president?
Yes and no. As a student, the college president is not really at your level. I imagine I would have thought there’s no way that is possible. I don’t fit in enough here, and that’s not really my personality. But on the flip side, my childhood ambition was to be the UN Secretary General.
How do you think Calvin’s liberal arts education prepared you for life?
It’s one of the things I talked to students about in Nigeria because the Nigerian system is modeled after the British system, in which you are assigned what you are going to study. You arrive believing you want to study law or medicine and you are assigned zoology, and then you have to spend four years studying something you have no interest in, and you aren’t allowed to study anything else.
So, particularly in that context, the liberal arts education is amazing. When you arrive on day one, you don’t have to know what you want to study. Even many of the students who come in thinking they know exactly what they’re going to study, by the end of the first semester have been exposed to so many other things, they’ve completely pivoted.
For me, as a historian, I still studied science, and math, and economics, so that by the time I graduated, I had a much broader base. And even for engineers or nurses or other professionals, graduating with that grounding expands who you are and what you know; it makes your life more rich.



Top, from left to right: President Boer, his wife, Joanna, Andrea Le Roy and former President Le Roy. Bottom left: President Boer greets staff and faculty during a welcome reception his first week at Calvin. Bottom right: President Boer with Adejoke Ayoola, newly appointed dean of the School of Health.

How has your faith impacted your life? And, particularly, how does it impact you now in this season of transition?
I grew up on the mission field; my dad was a pastor. He was a Calvinist theologian. He’s a Kuyperian to the core. For those of us who are CRC missionary kids, who were raised in that Reformed tradition, we understood that whether your father or mother was a pastor or a missionary, or an engineer, or they’re in the government, or whatever, it’s all valid as part of the renewal of the world. And it really empowered me to know that my father is a pastor, but I am not called to be a pastor. I have been able to work at the highest levels in many great organizations around the world as an agent of renewal.
I’ve always considered, “Will this job, or this opportunity, provide a way to create impact?” What’s exciting is that this is an opportunity to directly influence, in a very positive way, the lives of thousands of young people going through the most important formative period of their life and at the same time position Calvin as a global institution, which has influence far beyond the students on campus.
What did you do in your previous role before joining Calvin?
The role I had at Shell was to establish a company that invests in renewable energy companies in Nigeria. Considering that Nigeria’s close to the equator, with almost endless sunlight, you would think that solar and renewable energy would be quite popular and prevalent. Strangely, it’s not. Nigeria has the largest energy access gap in the world. There are 100 million people who are not on the electricity grid, which is one-third of the population of the United States. The remaining one hundred million are basically sharing 4,000 megawatts, which is probably the amount of power that half of Grand Rapids uses.
What has happened is Nigerians are now the world’s largest users of diesel generators, so they’re burning immense amounts of carbon to power the nation, generator by generator. Our mission was basically to invest in companies that will bring renewable energy products to the market, particularly to low-income communities and small businesses. Without power, education is poor, health care is poor, economic activity is limited, even security is poor. Once electricity is available, it changes everything. Every investment we made was usually fulfilling or empowering the dream of a young Nigerian entrepreneur. It was incredibly impactful and inspiring.
You’ve pivoted in your career a few times in the last 20 years. What have you learned from that?
While I have pivoted between sectors, the commonality has always been about seeking opportunities to create impact and innovation. Whether that was in economic development or philanthropy or renewable energy, I’ve had the same approach throughout. I’ve learned there is a cycle, and you need different leaders for different parts of the cycle. There are times when you need people to start something; there are other times when you need people to turn things upside down and around. Every institution is at a different point and needs a different skill set at a different time.
For Calvin, we’re at this moment where American higher education is transitioning and being disrupted. We need to not only keep up with the impact of that, but get ahead of it. We almost have to reposition Calvin as a 150-year-old startup, and to me that is exciting.
What are your hopes as you make this transition?
My desire is to connect well with everybody here. The last time I came to campus as a new student, there was an adjustment; there’s going to be an adjustment now. We lived in a city with 25 million people. That is two and a half times the population of all of Michigan. So, moving to a smaller town, and moving into this new environment, is a big cultural adjustment, but my family is looking forward to that. I’d like to ask everyone in this community, “Let’s be part of this journey together.” I think we’ll learn a bit from you, and you’ll learn a bit from us.”
PHOTO CREDIT: STEVEN HERPPICH On Monday, May 9, 2022, 45 men received their bachelor’s degrees, while another 31 men were awarded associate degrees during an event dubbed by the Detroit Free Press as “a first of its kind in modern history.”

Family and friends joined together with Calvin University and Calvin Theological Seminary faculty, staff, and administrators, state legislators, and staff of the Michigan Department of Corrections to witness the first time that bachelor’s degrees were awarded behind bars in the state of Michigan. It was a grand celebration at the Handlon Correctional Facility in Ionia, Michigan, that was spared none of the pomp and circumstance of a traditional graduation ceremony.
For many of the graduates, the last time their family members heard their names read was at their sentencing. The emotions in that moment were likely disappointment, anger, sadness, shame, guilt, and regret.
But on this day, the men dressed in black caps and gowns walked one-by-one past faculty decorated in full academic regalia and received their diploma and a handshake from Calvin University president Michael Le Roy. The reading of their names was symbolic. It reminded the graduates that they are more than a number. It symbolized a restored dignity.
The beautiful white tent with coverage on all sides shielded the view of 15-foot barbed-wire fencing just steps outside. The black gowns concealed the numbers that span the upper backs of the men’s blue uniforms.
These coverups were temporary, but the transformation of these 76 men is not. Their education through the Calvin Prison Initiative (CPI) program has been formative.
It all began with a single step of obedience. It has developed over the past seven years with a community committed to doing the work. It will continue to bring about reform and renewal in the hearts of these men and in the communities they serve because, in the words of John Rottman, who taught the first course at Handlon, “CPI, in my view, has always been God’s idea and God’s work.”
Shaping Hearts
SHAWN ENGLAND
Calvin Prison Initiative graduate Class of 2020

WATCH THE HIGHLIGHT VIDEO FOR THE CALVIN PRISON INITIATIVE COMMENCEMENT
Shaping Hearts+Minds
BY MATT KUCINSKI REFORMING PRISONS

—ERIC BOLDISZAR ’20
READ MORE STORIES ABOUT THE CALVIN PRISON INITIATIVE ONE STEP OF OBEDIENCE AT A TIME
2010
Calvin Theological Seminary faculty and students visit Louisiana State Penitentiary (also known as Angola), the largest maximumsecurity prison in the United States. For years, Angola was known as one of the bloodiest prisons in America until a local seminary was granted permission to teach classes within the prison walls. This is where seeds for CPI were planted.
2015
The Calvin Prison Initiative program, a partnership between Calvin University, Calvin Theological Seminary, and the Michigan Department of Corrections, is formed and the first cohort of 20 men begin to pursue a bachelor’s degree at Handlon Correctional Facility.
2018
Students from the CPI program start to be paroled. To date, 14 students have been paroled and all 14 are gainfully employed. This leads CPI to establish a Calvin-owned house near campus for paroled CPI students who are finishing their degree on the main campus. (Note: National statistics show that education reduces recidivism by 43%.)

2011
John Rottman, professor of preaching at Calvin Theological Seminary, teaches the first non-accredited class at Handlon Correctional Facility.
2017
Eric Boldiszar, a student in the first cohort, creates and facilitates a restorative justice conference from behind bars that receives national recognition from the National Association of Community and Restorative Justice. The conference inspires faculty from Hope College and Western Theological Seminary to also start a program, launched in 2021.

2018
CPI partners with the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC) to build a new school building that houses a food-tech program, classrooms, and an office for CPI. The building, a first for MDOC, has state-of-the-art features and is designed to look like an old red schoolhouse with a 100-year-old bell.
2021
CPI organizes the first consortium of colleges and universities in Michigan that either have a program in a prison, just started a program, or are planning to start a program. CPI provides resources and best practices for these schools.
2022
The classes of 2020, 2021, and 2022 receive associate and bachelor’s degrees in a grand celebration held on the property of Handlon Correctional Facility. This summer, CPI is preparing teams of five to 10 graduates to transfer to other prisons and provide leadership for academic, peer mentoring, and ministry programs. The original vision of the program is now a reality.

2020
The first cohort in the CPI program completes the requirements for their bachelor’s degrees. An in-person ceremony celebrating the class of 2020 happens in 2022 (due to COVID).
2021
CPI is awarded a $1 million grant to continue to provide and develop best practices for Michigan colleges and universities to develop or start higher education programs in prisons. “From the moment you are arrested and throughout your time in prison, you are treated as a number and not a name. A thing and not a person. A crime and not a human being. This program came into prison and reminded me I am not ‘something else,’ I am a child of God. In prison, life can get dark. Calvin helped to bring the light back into this dark place. They have helped to give meaning to time spent wasting away.”
—RYAN COLTER ’20

CALVIN CELEBRATES CLASS OF 2022 COMMENCEMENT
WATCH THE VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS FROM COMMENCEMENT 2022


EMMANUEL ESSIEN
student body president Class of 2022


