最新萝莉社

Live blog: Senior Send-Off 2024!

Commencement Get Involved
May 6, 2024

Free of final exams and underclassmen, the Class of 2024 has Denison all to themselves for much of the week leading up to their Saturday Commencement. 

It’s a time of cheers and tears, of closed chapters and new beginnings. Over the next few days, we’re chronicling their last few days as students on The Hill. Follow along as we update through the week!

Saturday, May 11: The sun rises on Commencement day

Someone had to be first. That was the early morning 鈥 or was it late night? 鈥 logic of Cary Mauck 鈥24 as she walked downhill past the Sigma Chi House at 5:36 a.m.

Like Old West pioneers planting a flag, Mauck and her friend Ryan Darragh 鈥24 unfurled a blanket to become the first Class of 2024 members to arrive for the annual Senior Sunrise gathering.

It was an emotional time.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been crying for the last three hours,鈥 Mauck said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been up all night at Silverstein Hall, and we figured we might as well come down now.鈥

Within a minute, other bleary-eyed students materialized in clusters of three and four, spreading their blankets near the one belonging to Mauck and Darragh.

A class that arrived 最新萝莉社 having to socially distance due to Covid was bunching together for one last shared experience. More than 200 seniors greeted the sun鈥檚 arrival at 6:18.

鈥淲e know it鈥檚 a tradition, so we wanted to be a part of it,鈥 said Misaki Sato 鈥24, who gathered his group of five friends for a selfie with the sun starting to peek out over the Mitchell Center and Deeds Field.

Some members of the class had danced the night away outside of Silverstein. The party was still raging at 5 a.m. So was the music.

鈥淟et鈥檚 just sit here and exist,鈥 said one senior being comforted by a friend. 

Jeff Moore 鈥24, Billy Gimbel 鈥24, and Alex Sket 鈥24, members of the Big Red football team, entertained themselves by doing offensive line drills.

鈥淚 love hitting a good pass set in the morning, and I鈥檓 not even an offensive lineman,鈥 said Moore, a linebacker who already was hankering for breakfast at Aladdin Restaurant in the village. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe none of us remembered to bring a football.鈥

Jakob Lucas 鈥24, swaddled in a blanket from his bed, savored his last morning as a senior while pondering his future affiliation with his university.

鈥淚鈥檓 the first member of my family to go to Denison, but I might not be the last,鈥 Lucas said. When asked if he had younger siblings potentially coming here, he shook his head. 鈥淣o, but I will want my kids to at least take a look 最新萝莉社. It鈥檚 such a special place.鈥

As dawn broke in the eastern sky, Sara Frances Jones 鈥24 delivered the highlight of Senior Sunrise. The student known simply as 鈥淪F鈥 to friends stood up and addressed the crowd.

鈥淚 love you all,鈥 she shouted. 鈥淵ou guys, we made it. Class of 2024, I love you guys. I love Denison. I love Granville, Ohio.鈥

After receiving a round of applause, Jones walked up the hill to ready herself for Commencement. She had a message for those pondering a nap: 鈥淭ell all my fans out there that sleep is for the weak.鈥

Friday, May 10: Final farewells, forever friendships

On their way to Senior Soiree, Lisa Denstorff and Chris Aiello stopped at Deeds Field to have their picture taken touching the Woody Hayes rock.

For years, their sons, Clay Denstorff 鈥24 and Josh Aiello 鈥24, had put their hands on the rock to signify their commitment to the Big Red football program. The parents intend to do the same 鈥 even as their kids prepare to graduate.

鈥淥h, we鈥檒l both be coming back next year to support the players, coaches, and parents,鈥 Chris Aiello said under the giant white canopy at Reese-Shackelford Common.

Sometimes, it鈥檚 not just Denison students who make lasting friendships on The Hill. It鈥檚 the moms and dads, too. The Aiellos and Denstorffs were among the many proud parents mingling at the soiree.

Despite temperatures more suitable for autumn football tailgates, graduates and their families filled the Common for food, drinks, fireworks and live music.

Some Denison moms and dads sat with parents they first met four years ago. Others made new acquaintances waiting in line to have pictures taken in front of the illuminated 鈥淐lass of 2024鈥 sign.

It was a night of celebration and congratulations. A night when the parents kept pace with the offspring, elbowing their way onto the dance floor for MojoFlo鈥檚 torrid rendition of 鈥淧roud Mary.鈥

鈥淚鈥檒l be very upset if I don鈥檛 see you guys at least twice next season,鈥 Rick Denstorff said to the Aiellos.

When Denstorff sent his son off to Denison, he knew Clay would form enduring bonds.

鈥淭urns out, Lisa and I have made friends through Denison that I hope we keep for life,鈥 Denstorff said. 鈥淲e have a great community here.鈥

Baccalaureate, a joyous and solemn moment for students and families to pause and reflect over the past four years, opens the stage for Commencement.

Preparations for the event began last fall and continued right up until the processional music flows forth from the recently refurbished organ 鈥 which received a last-minute tune-up just four hours before this year’s event.

Secular and non-secular blessings from religions and cultures all over the world are invoked, and Swasey reverberates with music by a special baccalaureate choir, directed by vocal instructor Kevin Wines.

The choir is composed of graduating seniors, and it鈥檚 the last time Max Wisnefski will sing 最新萝莉社. A hugely talented vocalist, he鈥檚 performed in multiple campus productions. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really nice to get one final performance with the people I鈥檝e been singing with for four years,鈥 he said.

Maybe his favorite part of baccalaureate happens before the event. 鈥淓very year Kevin and his husband host a rehearsal at their home,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey grill and make delicious food for us. They also have four dogs 鈥 I鈥檓 obsessed with them.鈥

If Wisnefski鈥檚 lucky, he might be invited to another of Wines鈥 cookouts. He鈥檚 relocating to Columbus for a career that will combine his data analytic skills with his love for the performing arts. But before he gets established in Columbus, he鈥檒l pause in Granville, where his parents relocated a few months ago. Turns out they fell in love with the town on their visits to see his performances.

It doesn鈥檛 hurt that Wisnefski鈥檚 younger brother, Leo, is a Denison student too.     

The Denison Museum was alive with color and movement Friday afternoon. Artwork filled the walls, and proud families wandered the room, taking in the culmination of a four-year artistic journey.

Eight artists revealed themselves on the museum walls. The works were authentic, sometimes raw. Nadeem Jones鈥 monumental triptych of bold human and graphic forms explored his embrace of human diversity and the interplay between the spiritual and the physical.

Understanding many points of view and incorporating the randomness of life into a cohesive 鈥 and beautiful 鈥 tapestry is fundamental to Jones as an artist and a person.

Although his family resides in Charleston, West Virginia, an area not known for its demographic range, 鈥淢y mom is Muslim, my dad is Christian, and my girlfriend (Priyanshi Kanoria 鈥24) and I are both Hindu,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淭hese are my spiritual realities.鈥

Jones also majors in chemistry, and the joke among his professors is, 鈥淗ow many Nadeems are on campus?鈥 He鈥檒l continue to explore the complexities of the human body on a more literal level at medical school.

But first, he and his family took his paintings off the museum walls and stowed them in their car, a tangible marker of a remarkable education.

Casey Kim 鈥24 stood outside Slayter Hall in her cap and gown, a portrait of radiance on the eve of Commencement.

The computer science major was surrounded by family 鈥 a mother, father, and older sister who traveled from Seoul, South Korea, for their first trip to America in nearly 20 years.

The words of her mother, Youngin Kim, needed translating, but her feelings of pride did not.

鈥淪he says this is meaningful to her because it is meaningful to me,鈥 Kim said. 鈥淪he has seen me grow up a lot here.鈥

Commencements are milestone moments for families. They are a time for reflection. Not just about the last four years, but about all the experiences that go into arriving at such a happy place.

鈥淪ince I was young, my mother always wanted me to show gratitude in life, to laugh, to find humor in the world,鈥 Kim said.

To see all that she鈥檚 accomplished 最新萝莉社, winning multiple awards in computer science and the respect of her professors, it鈥檚 hard to imagine a time when education wasn鈥檛 important to Kim. But she dropped out of high school for several months in her junior year.

She loved tap dancing and wanted to make it her career. Kim competed in events around Seoul and even performed in the streets for money.

She told her parents to forget about college.

鈥淚 used to study hard, and then it was, 鈥楴o, I鈥檓 not doing this anymore,鈥欌 Kim said. 鈥淢y parents had a hard time raising me because I couldn鈥檛 see anything else but becoming a professional dancer.鈥

Her mother vividly recalls the rebellious streak.  

鈥淪he could see through it 鈥 she knew I wasn鈥檛 happy,鈥 Kim said, translating for her mother. 鈥淪he was worried about my future. She said I wasn鈥檛 showing gratitude in my life.鈥

Her family gave Kim the space she required. A fellow dancer in her late 20s offered advice that provided a moment of clarity. South Korea is a small country, the dancer said, and the chances of making a good living as a tap dancer were remote.

鈥淚 came to realize my parents were right, that I was limiting myself,鈥 Kim said. 鈥淢aybe if I go to college, have more experiences and see the broader world, I will find more opportunities.鈥

Kim went back to school a few months later and began to thrive. Her desire to learn had returned. So had her sense of humor. Asked what prompted her decision to drop out, Kim smiled and said, 鈥渂ad puberty.鈥

She spent one year at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts, earning an award for excellence in mathematics, before transferring to Denison because the university offered her better financial aid.

鈥淚 enrolled in the computer science program here and have grown so much as a person,鈥 Kim said.

The Mitchell Center will be awash in smiles Saturday as parents watch their graduates receive diplomas. There鈥檚 a story behind every journey, and Kim鈥檚 will continue in Pittsburgh, where she starts work next month for a robotics company.  

She鈥檚 grateful for the opportunity.

Taylor Trimble didn鈥檛 sleep in during the start of her senior week. At 9:30 Monday morning, she was at the Burton Morgan circle, getting ready to set off on her final tour as an admission docent. 

She鈥檚 led more than 100 tours over her four years 最新萝莉社, and although it鈥檚 a paying gig, it鈥檚 also a way for her to give back.

That鈥檚 what she鈥檚 planning to do, too, in her career as a lawyer. Last week, the President’s Medalist learned she has a full ride from American University Washington School of Law, where she鈥檒l study public interest law 鈥 specifically, juvenile justice. 鈥淚 got the call three days ago, and I was literally sobbing on the phone,鈥 she said. This summer, she鈥檒l continue her internship at the Urban Institute before starting at American in the fall.

But before she heads to Washington, D.C., there are a lot of goodbyes. She鈥檚 passed the torch to her friends at the Black Student Union, where she served as chief minister. 鈥淚鈥檝e been in BSU since freshman year, and it’s been super impactful to me,鈥 she said. We鈥檙e like a big family.鈥 

On Thursday, after she checked rooms and locked doors for res hall closure for non-graduates, part of her duties as a community advisor, Trimble attended a farewell brunch with the vice president of Student Life, Alex Miller. 

鈥淗e鈥檚 been such a big part of my life here,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e helped me plan the Black men鈥檚 professional development brunch. We connected our students with Black alumni and Black members of our board of trustees. I鈥檓 so proud of that and I hope it can continue.鈥 

Trimble鈥檚 also saying goodbye to her favorite faculty at the politics and public affairs department. 鈥淎nthony Ives鈥 class is where I decided to go to law school. I completely fell in love with reading 80 pages of case law every night,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ndy Katz has been like a second dad to me. Heather Pool has been amazing 鈥 they both wrote my recommendations.鈥

Amid all this, she鈥檚 had plenty of time for festivities with friends. Trimble鈥檚 birthday happens to fall on the day after Commencement. Last week, she and her friends spent a day at Kings Island amusement park, went to dinner in Columbus, and had brunch at the Big Apple Cafe in Newark.

This week has been a heart-wrenching and heart-warming combination of small moments with friends and faculty and big moments with her class 鈥 and it鈥檚 not over yet. Baccalaureate and Senior Soir茅e are up next.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a great four years,鈥 she said. 鈥淒enison has given me so much.鈥

The start of Senior Send-Off is all about hanging out with classmates. The end is welcoming family to campus one last time for the joy of witnessing Commencement.

So it鈥檚 fitting that the mothers of Kate Griffin 鈥24 and Jacob Brown 鈥24 are on The Hill together this weekend. Parents play a significant role in their children鈥檚 education, and Lisa Voight (Griffin) and Naomi Kushin (Brown) helped set the course for a friendship that鈥檚 been beneficial to the Denison athletic and academic programs.

鈥淲hen I was getting ready to transfer after my first year at Colorado State University, our moms connected online,鈥 Griffin recalled. 鈥淢y mother was looking for information about Denison and King Hall, and Jacob鈥檚 mom reached out. When I got to campus, Jacob was one of the first people I met.鈥

There鈥檚 a decent chance Griffin and Brown would have become friends without their mothers鈥 assistance. They were highly competitive athletes living in the same residence hall, sharing many interests. Both are docents.

As seniors, they decided to move in together with two other students in Lower Elm Hall 鈥 and became each other鈥檚 biggest supporters.

Griffin, a President鈥檚 Medalist and health, exercise, and sports study major, is a standout member of the women鈥檚 golf team that鈥檚 won three consecutive NCAC titles since her arrival. The Big Red are headed to the Division III NCAA Championships in Kentucky on May 21-23.

鈥淚鈥檝e gone to watch her play, and I don鈥檛 really know that much about golf,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not even sure when it鈥檚 appropriate to clap, but she鈥檚 having a great season.鈥

Brown, a data analytics major, has been as dominant as any Big Red male athlete this year. He qualified for the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships, winning his second consecutive heptathlon. He鈥檚 also poised to earn his first NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships invite after winning his third straight NCAC decathlon and being named conference Field Athlete of the Year.  

鈥淲e hype up each other a lot,鈥 said Griffin, a member of Denison’s Student-Athlete Advisory Council. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been that way since we met.鈥

While many of their classmates have few responsibilities this week, Griffin and Brown remain in training for national competitions. That doesn鈥檛 mean they aren鈥檛 savoring the spoils of Senior Send-Off. They went to Club Sizzle, participated in Senior Olympics, and rang the Swasey Chapel bells as part of the bucket list tour.

Griffin said the decision to transfer from CSU 鈥 she鈥檚 a native of Colorado Springs, Colorado 鈥 was the biggest and best move of her young life. She frequently mentions it to prospective students and their parents on guided tours of campus.

鈥淚 tell them th最新萝莉社 is a welcoming and kind environment,鈥 Griffin said, 鈥淎nd that everyone will find their people here.鈥

Griffin and Brown found each other 鈥 with a little help from their moms. 

Thursday, May 9: Decisions and last chances

Which senior would die first in the zombie apocalypse? Who carried the flag at the Class of 24 first-year Induction? Can you identify the song 鈥淜arma鈥 by Jojo Siwa in just the first second?

These aren鈥檛 the types of questions that come up on a normal class syllabus, but they鈥檙e on the final exam at the last senior trivia of the year.

Jack and Ron鈥檚 trivia, founded by Jack Woolcott 鈥21 and Ronald Tran 鈥21, has become a Denison senior staple 鈥 a weekly Thursday night trivia game held in the Slivy’s cafe. The role of host has been passed down from class to class. This year, Meghan McManus, Colleen Boyle, and Oliver Chairs served as question masters.

鈥淚 found out about trivia my freshman year because I was friends with the hosts from the club baseball team,鈥 Boyle said. 鈥淚鈥檓 still in touch with all the old hosts, and I鈥檒l definitely stay in touch with the future hosts.鈥

For the final trivia of the year, the theme was the Class of 2024. The categories included 鈥渟enior babies,鈥 鈥渟uperlatives,鈥 and 鈥渇reshman sizzle.鈥

This week’s champion was Team Rizzlers on the Roof. Their strong performance in the 鈥渇amily feud鈥 category, with crowd-sourced answers from the senior class, brought them to an early lead that no other team was able to match.

Additional points were awarded for wearing Denison merch or bringing family members. A row of parents, in town early for graduation, looked on. A few grandparents even took part in the fun.

鈥淚t was so much fun to be a host this year,鈥 Boyle said, 鈥渂ut I can鈥檛 wait to pass it on and see what next year’s hosts can bring to it.鈥

Sitting outside Swasey Chapel, watching her fellow seniors queue for the chance to ring the iconic bells, Allyson Schaaf 鈥24 vividly described the room where they were being led.

鈥淚t鈥檚 dark, spooky, and cob-webby,鈥 said Schaaf, a former chapel bell ringer. 鈥淚t feels like a place where you鈥檙e not supposed to be.鈥

Which only adds to the intrigue and makes it one of the top attractions on the annual bucket list tour during Senior Send-Off.

With its ancient brick interior and bell-ringer signatures scrawled on the slanted ceiling, the room has a very Scooby-Doo vibe. All that鈥檚 missing is a revolving wall triggered by a note struck on the small mechanical keyboard.  

鈥淪ome people have asked if we tug on chords up there to make the bells chime,鈥 Schaaf said. (No. It鈥檚 a keyboard.)

The bell ringers can play 16 notes on the keyboard, which in the 1970s replaced a system of levers that were operated by hand and foot.

The bells of Swasey 鈥 which is celebrating its 100-year anniversary in 2024 鈥 normally sound at 9:20 a.m., 11:20 a.m., and 4:20 p.m. On Thursday, they rang throughout the morning and early afternoon as seniors took turns on the keyboard.

鈥淲ill I be able to hear what I鈥檓 playing?鈥 asked Jacob Brown 鈥24, before delivering a credible version of the Star Wars theme.

The keyboard sits on an old table that includes a binder filled with sheet music of songs. The national anthem of India is not in that collection, but that didn鈥檛 stop Anish Gurjar 鈥24 from trying to play it.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 quite get the tempo right,鈥 Gurjar said.

One of the room鈥檚 highlights is the ceiling collage of signatures from previous bell ringers, dating to 1938. The identities of the keyboard players are supposed to remain anonymous until they graduate, cultivating the notion of a semi-secret society.

Over the years, some visitors to the tower have unscrupulously scribbled their names on the ceiling, upsetting the bell ringers who auditioned for the right to play. Respecting tradition, Jakob Lucas 鈥24 resisted temptation.

鈥淧utting your name up there would be the most random flex 最新萝莉社,鈥 Lucas said.

Several seniors said they were surprised the keyboard was on a much lower level than the bells, which are near the top of the 140-foot chapel. Most who made the bucket-list trek up four flights of stairs were happy to see how the operation works.

鈥淪wasey Chapel is such a special place on this campus,鈥 said Kate Griffin 鈥24. 鈥淚鈥檝e been listening to those bells for four years, and when I found out this was one of the options on the tour, I knew I wanted to come.鈥 

An overcast afternoon is the perfect time to pack your room 鈥 especially when your sister flies in from Zurich to help. Worth Hinshaw and his sister Emily enjoyed a little quiet and productive packing time together on Thursday before the rest of the Hinshaw family arrived on The Hill.

Saturday will be a very special day for the Hinshaw clan: They鈥檙e celebrating the double graduation of Worth and his cousin Kate. Hinshaw moms and dads, aunts and uncles, brothers, sisters, and cousins are arriving, mostly from Charlotte, North Carolina.

鈥淚t will be a mini family reunion,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 really funny is that even though we grew up down the road from one another, Kate and I didn鈥檛 realize we had both applied to Denison.鈥

Once on campus, the Charlotte cousins rarely interacted. They were on different athletic teams 鈥 Worth on track and field, Kate on field hockey 鈥  took different majors, and had different friend groups. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until the second half of this semester that we started hanging out together,鈥 Worth said. 鈥淚 think we both wish that we鈥檇 started that earlier.鈥

After Saturday鈥檚 festivities, the families will head home, but Worth won鈥檛 be with them. He鈥檒l spend Saturday night in Columbus before flying to Chicago to assist with the organizational studies summer session, a monthlong sojourn for rising juniors. They鈥檒l visit industry leaders and Denison alums in cities across the country to learn about behavior in the workplace.

Professor Sarah Hutson-Comeaux leads the program. Worth, a psychology major, found out about it when visiting her during office hours. 鈥淪he slid the paper about the program across her desk and said, 鈥榊ou should do this.鈥欌

Hinshaw went and was hooked. 鈥淚 knew I wanted to help people one way or the other, and I discovered that behavior is my favorite part of psychology.鈥 He took more classes to supplement his org studies learning and may be looking at a career in human resources. He鈥檚 already had a taste of that during a summer internship.

When Hutson-Comeaux approached him to be the program鈥檚 student leader, Hinshaw was all in.

鈥淵ou get a glimpse of adulthood and work life,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd you make all these Denison connections.鈥

Weeks in advance, Kwaku Akuffo 鈥23 thought of how he wanted to show his gratitude to President Adam Weinberg as he walked across the stage to receive his diploma.

The handshake is the most popular greeting at Commencement ceremonies. The old grip and grin. Weinberg also has been on the receiving end of fist bumps, elbow bumps, and high-fives.

Akuffo, a data analytics major, opted for the bear hug. Not the kind NFL first-round draft picks often apply to Commissioner Roger Goodell that resemble submission holds. It was quick, painless, and respectful.

鈥淚 wanted Adam to know how much I appreciate everything he does for the student body,鈥 said Akuffo, a data analyst for Northrop Grumman in Maryland. 鈥淭hat his small acts of kindness and gratitude don鈥檛 go unnoticed on campus.鈥

Weinberg said he鈥檚 never sure what greeting awaits him as students approach on stage. Years of practice have made him flexible in that moment.

鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 all about the students,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 their day, their celebration, and I鈥檓 happy to do whatever they want to do. I鈥檓 happy to shake hands, happy to hug, happy to high-five, happy to do elbows.鈥

The only exception came at the 2022 Commencement as Weinberg had just recovered from Covid. Even though he had been medically cleared to participate, the president didn鈥檛 want to risk anyone鈥檚 health. He recommended students limit body contact to fist bumps, elbow bumps, and even foot bumps.

鈥淗ead bumps are probably outside my area of expertise,鈥 he told the graduates.

Weinberg understands it鈥檚 an emotional day for students. The culmination of a four-year journey.

Seeing the emotion on their faces, he said, 鈥渞eminds me why I love our students at this college so much.鈥

So what will it be Saturday inside Mitchell Center for the Class of 2024?

A sampling of students said they are leaning toward handshakes but understand why Akuffo and others have gone for hugs.

鈥淎dam seems like a handshake guy,鈥 said Jack Nimesheim 鈥24. 鈥淚鈥檓 thinking handshake, but if other guys are hugging, I wouldn鈥檛 be against it. He鈥檚 worthy of one.鈥

Students appreciate Weinberg鈥檚 willingness to talk with them on their level.

鈥淚t鈥檚 crazy that I feel like I know him as well as I do,鈥 said Kate Griffin 鈥24. 鈥淚鈥檓 not quite sure what I will do Saturday, but I truly want to thank him for having such a great institution and helping me become my best self. That鈥檚 a tribute to the environment he鈥檚 created here.鈥  

Wednesday, May 8: Rivalries, natty suits, and never enough time

Roommates, teammates, fraternity brothers 鈥 none of that mattered during Wednesday’s Senior Olympics. Everyone was competition.

The field of play? Inflatable obstacle courses. The competitors? Beta Theta Pi brothers Mike Maynard, Worth Hinshaw, Jacob Brown, and Parker Smith.

鈥淛acob and Worth have the advantage since they鈥檙e on the track team, but I have the determination and heart,鈥 said Maynard, before challenging them in the bungee run. Two competitors attempted to sprint as far as they could before a bungee cord snapped them backward.

Maynard may have lost, but that didn鈥檛 stop him from having a good time.

The beautiful sunny spring day was the perfect environment for some friendly competition. A climbing wall race, an American Ninja Warrior course, and a golf skee ball course covered A-Quad.

What were once friendships turned into harsh rivalries within the laser tag maze. Screams from within could be heard from across the quad.

Before seniors take their next steps into the world of adulting, they relished the opportunity to play like kids again.

Nattily attired in a robin鈥檚 egg blue suit with a multicolor tie and matching pocket square, vice president of student life Alex Miller gave the question some thought.

How many suits does the university鈥檚 best-dressed administrator own?

鈥淚鈥檇 say 30,鈥 Miller said Wednesday at the senior brunch on Reese-Shackelford Common.

Holly Breymaier, executive assistant of student life, wasn鈥檛 having it. She said Miller鈥檚 collection could put most Savile Row haberdashers to shame.

鈥淚t鈥檚 double that, at least 60 suits,鈥 Breymaier said. 鈥淭here was a time when several students asked if they could start an Instagram account that showed all his different suits.鈥

Miller is taking his sartorial splendor to Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia, next school year as its new vice president of student affairs.

So it鈥檚 fitting he offered a toast to the Class of 2024 under the large white canopy on the Common. Miller arrived 最新萝莉社 in the fall of 2020 with students who, like himself, are preparing to depart.

He shared memories of their first semester on campus 鈥 Denison was returning to in-person classes amid the pandemic 鈥 that brought laughs and applause from the seniors.

鈥淲e鈥檙e leaving together, but I鈥檓 not getting a degree,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淢aybe I should lobby for one.鈥

As he mingled with faculty and students, Miller chatted with fellow clotheshorse Alex Pan 鈥24. 鈥淒r. Miller鈥檚 drip is serious,鈥 Pan said.

Asked if Breymaier鈥檚 estimate of 60 suits was an exaggeration, Miller said: 鈥淚 just know it鈥檚 not triple figures.鈥 

For at least two decades, Denison biology professors and graduating seniors have said their goodbyes over frozen confections.

Assistant professor Susan Villarreal, having just finished an orange cream bar, engaged in some playful banter with Mallory Hallwirth 鈥24 on Wednesday inside Talbot Hall during the department鈥檚 annual ice cream social.

鈥淚 have no more power over you.鈥

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 quiz me anymore on what we鈥檝e learned.鈥

鈥淚 could.鈥

鈥淭hat would be really mean.鈥

Professor and pupil shared a laugh. Hallwirth, who had Villarreal for two classes, enjoyed the casual atmosphere as classmates and instructors mingled inside and outside the building.

鈥淭his is fun,鈥 Hallwirth said. 鈥淵ou get to come back and talk to them as people as opposed to a student trying to ask all kinds of academic questions.鈥

It鈥檚 a scene being repeated across campus this week as departments host parties for their graduates 鈥 a chance for students to express their appreciation and get to know their professors on a personal level.

鈥淭he conversations are very relaxed,鈥 said Lina Yoo, an associate professor and biology chair. 鈥淭he seniors are relieved at this point. We鈥檙e just interacting as humans, talking about where life is taking them next.鈥

But these being Denison students 鈥 lifelong learners 鈥 it wasn鈥檛 surprising to hear some still discussing research ideas.

鈥淏ecause they鈥檙e seniors, we haven鈥檛 had some in class for a while,鈥 said Heather Rhodes, an associate professor and neuroscience chair. 鈥淪o events like these give us an opportunity to catch up.鈥

For the past two years, Tahkeese Brown has been creating a sense of belonging for students as a residence hall community advisor. On Wednesday morning, he faced his final assignment, accompanying a group of fellow CAs to check rooms after students left The Hill.

But before he could go, Grayson Blythe, an assistant director in Residential Communities and Housing, handed out framed shadow boxes with an honorary key to Denison. She made one for each CA graduate as a thank you for all they did for their communities, something senior director Josh Kusch expressed as well: 鈥淲hat you do matters. The Res Life team shows up the earliest and stays the latest. You sacrifice a lot. I appreciate you.鈥

Brown鈥檚 students have shown him their gratitude, too. 鈥淎 first-year student told me how impactful I was to them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to leave a legacy of love and happiness. Denison does so much for us, and I want to do something for Denison.鈥

He鈥檚 already packed his own room, a bittersweet process of sorting clothes and mementos to keep or donate. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking at all the things I collected during my time and remembering so much 鈥 but my mom would kill me if she saw all this,鈥 he said.

As Brown and his team, including good friend Adonte Mays 鈥25, made their rounds, they talked about their plans for the coming year. Mays is interning with JPMorgan Chase this summer before returning to The Hill, while Brown is moving home to Boston, where he鈥檚 looking forward to a career in marketing and PR and 鈥渕aybe some journalism on the side.鈥

The first person in his family to go to college, Brown began as a remote student during Covid. 鈥淚t was insane,鈥 he said. 鈥淐oming in my sophomore year, I was really nervous about getting a feel for a classroom setting.鈥

Once he came to campus, he joined the First Generation Network, a student organization program that provides resources and a sense of family 鈥 鈥渁 huge help,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a crazy ride, but I definitely have a new family.鈥

After giving a final presentation of his Black studies research Wednesday afternoon, Brown will be able to fully relax. His whole family is coming to celebrate his graduation. More than he probably realizes. 鈥淓very time I call back home,鈥 he said, 鈥淚 hear from someone else they鈥檙e coming.鈥

 

Tuesday, May 7: Yearbooks, campus cleaning, and volleyball

Bad weather couldn鈥檛 stop the dance party at the Senior Sizzle.

The soon-to-be-graduates danced the night away while lightning flashed outside at the Newark Station.

鈥淐lub Sizzle,鈥 as it was deemed this year, took the senior class off campus for a night of joy markedly different from their first-year sizzle, which was heavily impacted by Covid.

鈥淚t was nice to see everyone鈥檚 faces this time,鈥 said Emily Walker 鈥24. 鈥淣o masks makes a huge difference.鈥

A DJ played in the main room, and side games of trash can cup pong, cornhole, and beach volleyball raged on throughout the venue. A photo booth, goofy props included, helped make memories that would last forever.
 

Late Tuesday afternoon, surrounded by packing boxes and facemasks hanging from the ceiling (a remnant from last week鈥檚 鈥渇irst-year鈥 themed party) Denison sweethearts Colleen Boyle and Thomas Berry spruced up for the Senior Sizzle. Boyle and Berry joined their 500+ classmates for a sweaty and sandy night of dancing, volleyball, food, and fun at the Newark Station, the first time Denison has hosted the annual party off campus.

The couple met during a spring break Habitat for Humanity trip in Marion, South Carolina. The first night at their site, Boyle rescued a stray cat she named Pecan, but she wasn鈥檛 allowed to bring it into their accommodations. Berry gallantly volunteered to keep her and Pecan company during an uncomfortable night in the group van.

Pecan didn鈥檛 make back to Ohio, but the relationship did.

This fall, Berry will attend Ohio State University鈥檚 Moritz College of Law in Columbus. Boyle will be just 143.2 miles away in Cleveland, where she鈥檒l join a rotational management program with the e-commerce company McMaster-Carr.  

They鈥檙e already negotiating who鈥檒l be making the trip back and forth, but one thing鈥檚 for sure: Berry will be on hand when Boyle moves into her new apartment. 鈥淭he best thing about having a boyfriend is he鈥檒l carry all the heavy stuff up the stairs!鈥 she said. 

Berry just smiled and rolled his eyes.

At the midpoint of the week, Berry, a history major and former Big Red football player, has already said most of his Denison farewells. Last week鈥檚 history department banquet was the launching point for the leave-taking process with his favorite professors, including Adrian Young and Joanna Tague.

Now, with all his finals done, Berry is relaxed. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a lot of time to hang out with my buddies,鈥 he said.

Denison goodbyes are more like see-you-laters for Boyle, who was selected as Denison鈥檚 recent student trustee. She鈥檒l keep in touch with current students and travel back on campus several times a year.

One goodbye that was hard for both of them was with their Red Corps mentor Steve Krak.

鈥淪teve鈥檚 so awesome,鈥 Berry said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a great boss 鈥 you work hard but enjoy what you鈥檙e doing.鈥 Boyle chimed in: 鈥淵ou want to impress Steve.鈥 They both wrote thank you notes to him and several others on The Hill.

Those adieus are behind them, but there are still plenty ahead 鈥 and the toughest might be the relationships that simply ran out of time.

One of the people Boyle wishes she had discovered earlier is economics professor Jessica Bean, 鈥渙ne of the first professors I sought office hours for not because I needed help, but because I wanted to talk to her.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 the hardest to say goodbye to the things you just discovered,鈥 she said.

Berry agrees. Even after four years on The Hill, he said, 鈥淚 just wish I had more time.鈥

Perched atop a 60-foot boom lift, Andrew Barrick expertly maneuvered a 30-foot carbon-fiber pole to clean one of the tall, skinny windows of the Burton D. Morgan Center.

In the weeks leading up to Commencement, the term 鈥渉ard to reach鈥 does not enter the university鈥檚 lexicon. Denison brings in power washers like Barrick, owner of Power Clean, to make the glass gleam nearly 100 feet above Ridge Road.

鈥淥ur filtration system gets the minerals out of the water so there are no spots,鈥 Barrick said. 鈥淭hink of it as a spot-free car wash for your building.鈥

Beyond windows, Denison鈥檚 Facilities Services go to great lengths 鈥 and heights 鈥 to ensure the campus sparkles. The sound of Swasey Chapel鈥檚 bells are temporarily drowned out by the whirring, whining, bleating, and beeping of machinery tasked with beautifying the grounds.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a four- to five-week process to get ready for the weekend,鈥 said Jake Preston, director of the physical plant and capital projects.

Some facilities staff members refer to this as their 鈥淪uper Bowl week.鈥 Streets are swept. Crosswalks are touched up. Flowers are added. The Mitchell Center, home of Commencement, is inspected for chips in the paint and nicks on the walls.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got all eyes on Commencement,鈥 Preston said.

The view is spotless from the top windows of Burton Morgan. 

In the fall of 2023, Serkan Tan 鈥26  was the newly elected president of a campus photography club flush with ideas but no cash.

鈥淚 had a dead organization on my hands, and I don鈥檛 like having dead organizations on my hands,鈥 he recalled.

So Tan took his love for picture-making and decided to make memories for the Class of 2024. The politics and public affairs major pitched the idea of reviving the Denison senior yearbook, which hadn鈥檛 been published since the onset of Covid in 2020.

Student government approved his plan in January 2024, giving him $7,000 for 600 copies. The 55-page book 鈥 a gift to seniors 鈥 was designed, created, and filled by a handful of underclassmen led by Tan, Emmett Anderson 鈥25, and Eli Lishack 鈥26, with the help of Ben Wedepohl 鈥26 and Gabby Palmowska 鈥26.

The group managed a year鈥檚 worth of work in three months, getting the material to the printer in early April. Tan estimates he spent 140 hours of his spring semester taking photos, lobbying clubs and organizations for submissions, and putting out fires of varying intensity. He borrowed backdrops and lighting for portraits shot in Slayter Hall.

Neither Tan nor his staff were paid. Their reward came in the form of gratitude from the Class of 2024. On Monday, as Tan and Anderson began distributing the yearbooks at tables in Slayter, seniors could be seen leafing through the pages, some asking classmates to sign their books.

Even in the digital age, yearbooks hold a special meaning. Especially to the Class of 2024, which had many of its high school graduation traditions eliminated by the pandemic. Some got yearbooks mailed to them along with their diplomas. Others picked them up in the parking lots of their schools. Few had the opportunity to have books signed by classmates.  

The group plans to submit the yearbook to University Archives, which has digitized all editions dating to 1881.

鈥淚鈥檓 a photographer by nature,鈥 Tan said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 do yearbooks or graphic design. This was us doing our best. The seniors are generally pretty happy with the end product. That鈥檚 the gratifying part of this.鈥 

The first tears were shed hours before the final show. Lily Anderson 鈥24 thought of all the good times co-hosting a weekly two-hour music program with her twin sister, Claire Anderson 鈥24, on Doobie Radio.

There were the morning dance parties with friends inside the glass-enclosed studio at Slayter Hall. The time the phone malfunctioned and it sounded like a fire alarm, forcing Claire to utter something rarely heard by DJs: 鈥淚f you鈥檙e calling in, please stop.鈥 The live in-studio performances by local bands 鈥 some good, others simply memorable.

鈥淥ne friend had just learned the guitar two weeks earlier,鈥 Claire said, 鈥渁nd could play only one note.鈥

Seated across a studio desk from each other, Lily and Claire laughed as they livestreamed the playlist for their final show, 鈥淭winnem,鈥 a few weeks ago. Their good friends and fellow Doobie DJs, Brin Glass 鈥25 and Caroline Lopez 鈥25, sat in for parts of the last show. It was a bittersweet occasion 鈥 one of many playing out across campus for seniors in the semester鈥檚 waning weeks.

A last performance. A final game. A curtain call.

鈥淲e have been attending a lot of our friends鈥 final moments within their organizations,鈥 Lily said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing the end of our labor of love, I guess. It鈥檚 a weird feeling passing it down to different, but very capable hands.鈥

The twins moved 659 miles from their home in Mystic, Connecticut, made a conscious decision not to live together, and somehow grew closer.

One of their first acts on campus was to inquire about hosting a show on Doobie Radio, which began their sophomore year after an apprenticeship. Lily and Claire share not only the same blood but also a passion for music. Faye Webster, Weyes Blood, Jockstrap, Wednesday, Beach House. Their favorite songwriters became part of the soundtrack of their four years on The Hill.

Seventy-five shows later, Claire sat in the studio wearing a Dobbie Palooza shirt that appears to be signed by everyone 最新萝莉社. She recalled having trouble making friends her first month on campus as everyone鈥檚 expressions were walled behind Covid masks. Gradually, she began to meet people through work at the station, The Bullsheet, and the Bandersnatch. Claire got invited to play alto sax for local band The Cuties.

鈥淭he last four years have been the best four years of my life so far,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e feel very good about what we did here.鈥

The last song was a remix Claire made of 鈥淕imme! Gimme! Gimme!鈥 by ABBA. When it ended, the Doobie Sisters embraced. More tears.

They talked about meeting Doobie alums, the ones who walk into Slayter, press their noses to the glass, and tell the sisters how they once worked at the station.

Claire said: 鈥淚鈥檓 sure I鈥檒l come back to the Doobie and be like, 鈥楬ey.鈥欌 Right on cue, Lily finished her sister鈥檚 thought: 鈥溾業 did this once.鈥欌
 

Monday, May 6: The week begins

Every graduating class is special in its own way to President Adam Weinberg. The Class of 2024 earned his respect before its first year was even complete.

The students did it by 鈥渟howing up.鈥

In the grip of a global pandemic, Denison chose to hold on-campus classes in the fall semester of 2020 when other universities and colleges opted to wait. Addressing the seniors Monday night at a reception in Reese-Shackelford Common, Weinberg expressed his gratitude for their resilience during a 鈥渃razy鈥 first year.  

鈥淵ou showed up,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou leaned into it and you found a way to make it work, and you did it with a remarkable amount of humility and humor.鈥

Students also made the best of a rainy Monday night, gathering under a large white canopy for food and drinks. Weinberg mingled with members of the Class of 2024, walking from one high-top table to the next before addressing them formally.

The president told the seniors to savor the week, cherish their Denison friendships, and stay connected to the college.

鈥淵ou are the only class I know of that, for almost all of you, you were robbed of your high school graduation,鈥 Weinberg said. 鈥淚 want this to be a week that鈥檚 so good that it鈥檚 not just a great culmination of Denison, but it makes up for what you didn鈥檛 get to do in your last week of high school. I want this to be a week of celebration, fun, and friendship.鈥 

Taking a quick break from her last final 鈥 a project for her lighting and scenic design class 鈥 student stage manager Khushi Mohapatra comes out of Eisner鈥檚 computer room to chat with one of her mentors, Elizabeth Dauterman, the production manager at Eisner Center. 

Dauterman has brought her dog Blair for a visit, and Mohapatra has a penchant for four-legged furballs. In the last few days before Commencement, a few moments of pet therapy are good for the soul.

This will be the second Denison Commencement ceremony Mohapatra attends. Last May she was on hand when her boyfriend, Cordero Estremera 鈥23, graduated. This Saturday, he鈥檒l be there for her, along with her family from India. 

Although Mohapatra hails from India, she came to Denison from Hungary, where she had moved to pursue a promising career in tennis. 鈥淚鈥檓 actually the first person from Hungary to come to Denison,鈥 she says. 

Physical demands of the game eventually curtailed her career on the court, but Mohapatra, an econ major with a concentration in financial economics, has another ace to serve. She parlayed a summer internship with SkillArc, a career-planning service to match employers with non-traditional workers, into a full-time job offer. After graduation, she鈥檒l move to Columbus to start her new life.

As Mohapatra negotiates the finer points of buying a car and renting her first apartment, she says Dauterman has been 鈥済reat friend and mentor. She helped me understand how to demonstrate my skills as a stage manager translate to the work world. I want to do product management and business development 鈥 streamline processes to create something better.

鈥淎nd,鈥 she says, 鈥淚鈥檓 trying really hard to be her dog-sitter!鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got the job!鈥 Dauterman laughs.

For a first-time player, Stephen Young 鈥24 wasn鈥檛 getting cheated on his strokes. No underhand serves or lobs just to get the ball over the net. 

Young was launching balls all over the tennis court outside of Mitchell Center with his girlfriend, Sophia Sobota 鈥24. The couple offered running commentary with each shot, Sobota unable to stifle her laughter. It didn鈥檛 matter if balls double bounced or sailed out of bounds. They returned everything they could reach to keep rallies going.

鈥淲e鈥檙e playing by our own rules,鈥 Sobota said.

Isn鈥檛 that what Senior Send-Off is all about? 

After four years of adhering to strict schedules, the Class of 2024 is clearing its Google calendars for the week. Many students are taking the opportunity to either do something they鈥檝e never done on campus or doing it with greater frequency between now and Commencement. 

鈥淚鈥檝e got this week and maybe two months before it鈥檚 鈥榞o time鈥 for the next 40 years of my life,鈥 said Young, who鈥檚 landed a job as an underwriting analyst for AIG. 鈥淚鈥檝e never played tennis, so I thought I鈥檇 try it.鈥

Sobota, who works as a research assistant for Ohio State University鈥檚 College of Public Health, just relished the chance to be outdoors on a beautiful day. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 been so many times when the sun is shining and you’re in the library doing work,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 just want to hang out with friends this week.鈥

Alex Pan 鈥24 wanted to give classmates the opportunity to ride out of town the same way they rode in 鈥 on the back of a mechanical bull.

Four years ago, the Class of 2024 had a welcome week like no other in Denison history due to the global pandemic. It was a time of buffer zones and spaces made safe for everyone鈥檚 health. But in the days after Induction, first-years still found ways to share joy, especially astride a simulated bucking bronco in Mitchell Center.

鈥淭he mechanical bull was one of the most memorable parts of that week for a lot of students, and Alex wanted to bring it back,鈥 says Zora Whitfield 鈥24, who, along with Pan, is a co-governor of the Denison Campus Governance Association, or DCGA.

Planning a Senior Send-Off Week is no easy task, as Pan and Whitfield have discovered. The mechanical bull proposal for this year鈥檚 Sizzle didn’t work out, but the co-governors of the pandemic class understand the value of resourcefulness. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 no point in being territorial,鈥 Pan says. 鈥淥ur class wants to have a great experience, and it鈥檚 our job to bring it to them on a platter.鈥

Pan and Whitfield have brought innovative ideas to the traditional Senior Send-Off calendar, which begins Monday with a reception with President Adam Weinberg.

They have taken Sizzle 鈥 a party for first-years as they enter and seniors as they depart 鈥 off campus for the first time. 鈥淐lub Sizzle鈥 features sand volleyball, a DJ, food, drinks, and free transportation to and from the venue.

On the intramural fields, the Senior Olympics includes a bungee run, climbing wall, laser maze, obstacle course, and foam pit.

DCGA continues to partner with the Alford Community Leadership and Involvement Center, while contributions from 最新萝莉社鈥檚 Alumni and Family Engagement have allowed Pan and Whitfield to go bigger and bolder with input from classmates.

After Commencement, Whitfield is headed to Boston University to pursue a master鈥檚 in translation and implementation science. Pan is interning with the House Committee on Small Business in Washington, D.C.,  before enrolling in Brooklyn Law School in his native New York.

The former student government president is proud to represent the Class of 2024. Pan has many gre最新萝莉社 memories, and barely a week into his time on campus, he wrote about one of his early favorites 鈥 one that came to define the spirit of his resilient classmates: 鈥淚n terms of pure fun and adrenaline, it was Mitchell Night, because of that mechanical bull. I would get thrown off and I would get back on it!鈥

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