President Richardson on Women Leaders Podcast, Episode 138


In honor of Juneteenth, the Women Leaders podcast features an honest discussion about race and gender between President L. Song Richardson and Dr. Angel Mason, director of athletics at Berry College. These two women leaders tap into the importance of celebrating the victories, while also pointing out the challenges still ahead, and discussing why we need to be comfortable with being uncomfortable. Listen to this meaningful conversation.

From Ice Age to Ice Skates: Anthropology Professor Competes at National Competition

ID: Caucasian womam in black and purple ice skating dress, on ice skates on the ice
Photo by Kevin R. Phelan/U.S. Figure Skating
By Julia Fennell ’21
Krista Fish ’97, associate professor and chair of the Anthropology Department, competed in April at the 2023 U.S. Adult Figure Skating Championships in Utah.
Fish does the bulk of her training during non-teaching blocks, when she skates four to five times a week for an hour, plus off-ice workouts four days a week.
“I think that the focus I learned by being a student on The Block and now teaching on The Block helps me maintain my focus during training — the focus that both skating and The Block Plan require seem to be interrelated and support each other,” says Fish.
Fish started to skate in high school and continued with it during her time as a student at CC, where she would skate at Honnen Ice Arena after class. Upon entering graduate school, she turned her focus to running, as skating was an expensive hobby for a graduate student. However, she found that her brain couldn’t totally disengage from work during these runs, and she started looking for another workout that would better help her maintain her work-life balance. 
In 2016, Christina Rader, assistant professor of economics and business, suggested that she and Fish skate a lunchtime public session at Honnen, and the rest is history.

Three Major Events Coming to Robson Arena this Summer

ID: Robson Arena building at twilight with 2 bicycles out front
By Julia Fennell ’21
This summer, Colorado College’s Ed Robson Arena is the host venue for the 2023 World Jump Rope Championships, 2023 USA Weightlifting National Championships, and the 2023 U.S. Open Taekwondo Festival. Approximately 3,800 total athletes will compete at these three events, resulting in a huge increase in revenue to the Colorado Springs area.
“We continue to work to be a strategic resource and centerpiece for the Colorado College and greater Colorado Springs communities,” said Justine Square, executive director of Robson Arena.
Ed Robson Arena policies and regulations, including the clear bag policy, will be in effect for all events. Please visit the arena’s website for more information.
Read the full article for more details and ticketing information.

Two CC Students Named 2023 Goldwater Scholars

ID: a caucasian woman with shoulder length straigh hair and an asian man with short hair, both wearing glasses, standing at the bottom of some steps in front of plants, smiling at the camera. The man has his arm around the woman, both are in pants and wearing sweaters.
John Lê '24 and Victoria Rosa '24 are pictured in Barnes Science Hall on April 26, 2023.
Photo by Murphy Brasuel '96.
By Julia Fennell ’21
Victoria Rosa ’24 and John Lê ’24 are two of 413 students across the country to be named 2023 Goldwater Scholars. This esteemed award is given annually to college sophomores and juniors who are pursuing research careers in the engineering, mathematics, or natural science fields. Only five students from Colorado were selected as Goldwater Scholars this year.
“The engagement between students and faculty on meaningful research is made possible by a variety of funding sources, including the Faculty and Student Collaborative Grant and Venture Grants, which results in the ability to nominate four very strong candidates for the Goldwater Scholarship every year,” says Goldwater Campus Representative Murphy Brasuel ’96, associate professor of analytical chemistry and Bridge Scholars program director. “The opportunities on campus allow students to get early experience in research which open doors for opportunities off campus. It is wonderful that both of the CC Goldwater Scholars selected this year are CC Bridge Scholars.”
Both Lê, of Garden Grove, California, and Rosa, of Naperville, Illinois, participated in the pre-New Student Orientation Bridge Scholar Program in 2020.
The Goldwater Scholarship Program, which covers the cost of tuition, books, and room and board up to $7,500 a year, honors Senator Barry Goldwater and has offered awards since 1989. This year, over 1,260 students were nominated by 427 institutions, according to the scholarship’s website.

Please RSVP to Join Our Summer Tree Walk  


Led by Becky Wegner, Certified Arborist with SavATree, the Saturday, June 24, walk begins at 10 a.m. and will last 1.5-2 hours. Meet at the pickleball parking lot of Monument Valley Park (just west of the Mesa Road bridge, near 222 Mesa Road). Learn about the variety of trees in the southern half of the park, including the rare lacebark pine in MVP's Pinetum. Free and open to everyone.
Please RSVP at info@fmvp.net Bring: water, sturdy shoes, sunscreen, pen and paper, and camera (if you like). NO PETS please!

CC Students Help Welcome the Nuggets Nikola Jokić Home in Serbia

ID: a basketball arena in dark blue and yellow, with the words KK Joker and a crown on the wall. Other writing is written in a different language.
A photo of the KK Joker Arena at Hala Mostonga. 
Photo by Michael Braithwaite ’24
Thanks to a Venture Grant, Zeke Lloyd ’24 and Michael Braithwaite ’24 are currently overseas, writing stories about Ukrainian refugees in Slovakia and Russian migrants in the country of Georgia for the Colorado Springs and Denver Gazettes. However, they recently took an impromptu trip to Serbia to cover Nikola Jokić's return to Sombor after the Denver Nuggets’ championship win. Check out their article!

Heyer wins Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Award to Algeria

ID: a caucasian man with short blond hair, a mustache and beard, wearing a maroon button down shirt, standing in front of a tree and some flowers, smiling for the camera.
By Megan Clancy ’07
Colorado College alum Samson Heyer ’21 has been honored with a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Award. With the Fulbright, he will be placed in Algeria, serving as an assistant teacher of English at a university in Algiers.
“It is an honor to receive the Fulbright and an exciting opportunity to live in Algeria,” says Heyer. “I was able to study abroad as an undergraduate in Amman, Jordan. I wanted to return to the Arab world, yet still be exposed to new experiences and culture in North Africa.”
Heyer’s placement in Africa’s largest nation provides him with a direct link to his studies at CC, where he majored in history and political science with a focus in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and minored in Islamic studies. He also hopes it builds a bridge to his future occupation. “I hope to pursue a career in academia. Working at a university in Algeria will be a great step towards my professional ambitions,” he says.
Fulbright’s English Teaching Assistant programs place awardees in classrooms across the world to help local instructors teach students English.

Photo of the Week

ID: students of different ethnicities, wearing hates and writing in notebooks in the background of a hand holding a Linaria Vulgaris plant. The hand has purple and yellow nail polish.
Linaria vulgaris (Plantaginaceae) seen during the BE202 Field Botany class visit to Blodgett Peak on June 6.
Photo by Lonnie Timmons III
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