PLYMOUTH’S NEWS & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE JUNE 2023 VOL 4 | ISSUE 6 OFFICIAL GUIDE INSIDE! 2023 Art In The Park BROUGHT TO YOU BY CLASS OF 2023
Chris Soutar
Scott Daugherty
Chris has lived in the Plymouth / Canton community since 1994. Some his local favorites are: Campari’s on the Park, Basement Burger, Mexican Fiesta II, Pizza Vino, Spoons Place, Central City Dance Center.
Chris has lived in the Plymouth / Canton community since 1994. Some of his local favorites are: Campari’s on the Park, Basement Burger, Mexican Fiesta II, Pizza Vino, Spoons Place, Central City Dance Center.
csoutrar@billbrownford.com
Office:(734) 524-2715
Mobile: (734) 765-8980
Scott has lived in the Plymouth / Canton Community since 2002. Some his local favorites are: Crow’s Nest (Canton), Golf at Pheasant Run Golf Course (Canton), Spoons Place, Palermo Pizza, DCFC Soccer.
Scott has lived in the Plymouth / Canton Community since 2002. Some of his local favorites are: Crow’s Nest (Canton), Golf at Pheasant Run Golf Course (Canton), Spoons Place, Palermo Pizza, DCFC Soccer.
sdaugherty@billbrownford.com
Office:(734) 524-2773
Mobile: (555) 555-1212
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16435
JUNE 2023
VOL 4 | ISSUE 6
KURT
KUBAN – Editor & Publisher
Kurt is an award-winning journalist, having served as a reporter and editor for several local newspapers and magazines, including the Plymouth Observer He has been a journalist for over two decades. He founded Journeyman Publishing, which also publishes The ‘Ville, in 2017.
SCOTT BUIE – Advertising Director/Vice President of Sales
Scott has 20+ years creating advertising campaigns for clients in Metro Detroit. After managing sales for radio stations for 17 years he purchased Street Marketing, where he works closely with a variety of businesses and events. Scott and his family have lived in the Plymouth/Northville area for over 23 years.
JENNY PEARSALL – Creative Director
Jenny has been in the design and print industry for over twenty years, holding various positions in graphic design, print buying, production and print management. She also owns Bovia Design Group, a company specializing in publications and corporate branding.
BRAD KADRICH – Writer
Brad is an award-winning journalist who spent more than 20 years covering the Plymouth community for the Plymouth Observer. He also spent 15 years serving his country in the U.S. Air Force.
BRAD EMONS – Writer
Publisher
Here is the list of readers who supported local journalism this month:
- William & Jean Marie Weber
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To secure space in an upcoming issue of The Rock, contact Advertising Director Scott Buie at (313) 399-5231, or via email at scottbuie@therockmagazine.com or advertising@therockmagazine.com.
Over the course of his four decades with the Observer & Eccentric, Brad established himself as one of the preeminent prep sports reporters in the state, winning many journalism awards along the way. His greatest joy is interviewing local athletes and coaches, and reporting on their efforts.
LARRY
O’CONNOR – Writer
Larry is a metro Detroit area journalist whose work has appeared in The Detroit News, Jackson Citizen Patriot and the Observer & Eccentric Newspapers. When he’s not meticulously chronicling people or events, he’s avidly rooting for his favorite soccer teams -- Manchester United and Glasgow Celtic.
TIM SMITH – Writer
Tim brings a penchant for telling personal stories that run the gamut from news to sports. During more than 35 years in journalism, mostly with the Observer & Eccentric, he has earned numerous state and national awards. The Wayne State grad is a published author and rec ice hockey player.
MICHELE FECHT – Writer
Michele is a longtime journalist whose first post-college reporter position was at The Northville Record before moving on to The Detroit News. She is an author, researcher, local history enthusiast, and community activist/ advocate.
WENSDY VON BUSKIRK – Writer
Wensdy graduated with a degree in journalism from Wayne State University. Her first job was working as a reporter for The Northville Record. Now, as a freelance writer and editor, she works for a variety of magazines, including The Rock. -Photo by Kathleen Voss
KEN VOYLES – Writer/Photographer
Ken is an award-winning writer, photographer and designer whose career has spanned nearly five decades in and around metro Detroit. He started his journalism career in Plymouth, working for the Community Crier. He is the author of two books on Detroit history, loves to travel and has finished his first novel.
BILL BRESLER – Photographer
Bill arrived in Plymouth in 1977 to work for the Community Crier. He also worked for the Plymouth Observer for many years. Bill, who taught photography at Madonna University, retired from what was left of the newspaper business in 2019 and now freelances. He’s happy to be back in the Plymouth community.
The Rock is a product of Journeyman Publishing, which assumes no liability or responsibility for any inaccurate, delayed or incomplete information. Any form of reproduction of any content in this publication without the written permission of the publisher is strictly prohibited. Comments are welcome at kurtkuban@therockmagazine.com
• kurtkuban@therockmagazine.com
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Summertime In Plymouth Means Art In The Park and Graduation
As the calendar finally turns to summer (yes!), it means the Plymouth Art In The Park festival is right around the corner.
Now in its 43rd year, Art In The Park will take over downtown Plymouth over a threeday weekend, July 7-9. Although the festival has humble beginnings, it now attracts more than 400 artists from around the nation, who exhibit and sell their paintings, sculptures, ceramics, jewelry, fiber, glasswork, woodwork, photography, folk art and so much more.
Art In The Park is Michigan’s second largest art fair (behind only Ann Arbor’s), and is arguably Plymouth’s signature event of the year. If you don’t believe me, just ask the more than a quarter million people who are expected to descend upon town that weekend, which means plenty of residual business for all our local stores and restaurants.
For the third year in a row, The Rock has partnered with Art In The Park organizers to publish the festival’s official guide, which you will find inside this issue. The guide, which begins on Page 11, is filled with festival highlights, a listing of all the artist’s and a map where they are located, plus profiles on a couple of the artists who will be exhibiting their work.
We hope the guide will make your AITP experience a little less chaotic, and help you pinpoint exactly where to find what you are looking for, not to mention the best way to get to and from the event (hint – take the shuttle from Schoolcraft College, where there is plenty of parking). And remember, even if art isn’t really your thing, the festival will feature plenty of outstanding food, entertainment and some of the best people watching this side of Kellogg Park.
Of course, summer also means the end of another school year and the celebration of another graduating class.
The Class of 2023 includes more than 1,300 students from PCEP, with Salem High leading the way with 461 graduates (followed by Plymouth with 444 and Canton with 440). All three commencement ceremonies took place June 11 at Eastern Michigan University’s Convocation Center.
In this issue you will also find the graduation lists of all three schools (thank you Schoolcraft College for sponsoring!), and lots of wonderful photos compiled by our talented photographers. I promise, the smiles are infectious.
There are few events as celebratory and joyous as a high school graduation ceremony. It is the end of a long journey for our students, and the beginning of a new one, with more than 1,300 students going on more than 1,300 different paths leading away from “The Park.”
The graduation coverage begins on Page 23
If any members of the Class of 2023 get the chance to read this, my advice is to go out and change the world in your own individual ways. Forget the expectations and pressures from others. Work hard, stay focused and just be you. And, remember, no matter where your travels take you or how far from Plymouth you go, The Park will always be a part of you.
Congratulations to you all. We can’t wait to see what you become.
Kurt Kuban is the editor of The Rock. He can be reached at
kurtkuban@therockmagazine.com. In this issue 11
6
43RD ANNUAL ART IN THE PARK OFFICIAL GUIDE
TREVOR NOWASKE’S NFL DREAM ALIVE WITH LIONS
23 ON THE COVER:
Downs backers tamp down casino rumors 4 Plymouth High School Class of 2023 24 Canton High School Class of 2023 25 Salem High School Class of 2023 26 ‘People power’ – volunteers clean up Wilcox Lake 30 Michigan Jazz Fest ready to swing 32 It’s Your Business: Z Plumberz 34 Michigan Phil ready to hit the road for summer 36
PCEP GRADUATES READY FOR NEXT STEP
Ryan Christopher Mahy gives the thumbs up after getting his diploma at the Salem High School commencement ceremony June 11 at Eastern Michigan University. Photo by Bill Bresler
Northville Downs' proposed move will boost Plymouth Township's fortunes and breathe life into a fading sport, backers say.
Detractors paint a less glamorous picture.
They contend a harness racetrack planned for the southwest corner of Five Mile and Ridge roads will only bring traffic headaches, if not a crime spike. A few naysayers assert the development is nothing but a backdoor to open a casino.
Don’t bet on the latter, township attorney Kevin Bennett retorts.
The attorney outlined several reasons why erecting a gambling house on the 128-acre site would be impossible under state law. Bennett spoke during a June 1 planning commission special meeting at Plymouth Township hall.
At the special session, commissioners voted to send the planned unit development site plan to the township board of trustees for final approval. The elected seven-member body will take up the matter sometime this summer.
A half-mile harness race track and three-story grandstand seating 480 spectators is the centerpiece of the proposed Northville Downs at Plymouth Township.
The raceway would open spring 2024 and host live events from May to September, said John Carlo, Northville Downs’ owner and director of operations. Auburn Hills-based PEA Group is representing the track owner during the PUD process.
To torpedo casino scuttlebutt, Bennett recited state gambling laws.
A gaming house would require statewide voter approval and local backing at the polls, Bennett said.
Another state regulation restricts gambling facilities to cities with a population of 800,000 or more. Plymouth Township has 27,938 residents, according to 2020 U.S. Census figures.
"It's a nonissue," Bennett said.
Despite those assurances, some residents refused to let go of the conspiracy theory at the public meeting.
A few suggested a Native American tribe could buy into the project and open a gambling house.
Bennett said Indian-run casinos are limited to federally designated tribal lands. No Native American reservations exist in southeast Michigan, the township attorney added.
"We really need to put this to bed," said Bob Doroshewitz, planning trustee who joined six colleagues in unanimously approving the PUD site plan. "This myth out there about a 56,000-square-foot casino is total nonsense."
Those spreading rumors either don't know the law or have a political agenda, said Kurt Heise, township supervisor.
“I guess I'm just going to have to say it one more time: The casino is virtually impossible under the state constitution,” Heise said.
During the project's unveiling in January, a proposed 53,800-square-foot gaming facility was listed as part of a "future phase." Those plans were later scrapped, Heise said.
Along with the track and grandstand, the Northville Downs proposal includes a 35,500-square-foot horse barn, a 23,000-square-foot racing structure, and a 3,200-square-
foot maintenance building.
“There’s no second phase,” Heise said. “When you are going through the planned unit development process, there are always drafts that are flying back and forth.”
If the track owner makes any site plan revisions, the multistep PUD process would start over, the township supervisor said.
Casinos aside, nearby residents are worried about the project bringing traffic headaches and unsavory visitors.
“It's a nice site plan, it's got a lot of nice features,” said Howard Hamerick, who lives near the proposed horse track. “The question is: How do you get there and how do you get out?”
Another resident recalled being less than impressed with the clientele during a Northville Downs visit a few years ago.
"I'm just going to say it: There were a lot of degenerates that were in that building, " said George Maitland, who lives in the Andover Lakes subdivision. That observation didn't mesh with the township police chief's findings.
During a Feb. 15 planning commission meeting, Police Chief James Knittel said he spoke to Northville law enforcement officials about the raceway whose current 48-acre site is expected to undergo a sweeping $113 million redevelopment.
City of Northville Police Chief Alan Maciag and Capt. Greg Hannewald informed their Plymouth Township counterpart crime is not a problem at the historic racetrack, Knittel said. Northville Downs opened in 1944 and is the state's last harness remaining venue.
Aside from Kentucky Derby day, which attracts a lot of visitors to the Downs, the existing facility doesn't require additional patrols, Knittel added. Northville Downs also hosts off-track betting.
4 | The Rock
“Generally, the type of clientele that goes to the track are senior citizens,” the police chief said.
The sports facility's addition is also not expected to create nightmare gridlock, a traffic impact study suggested.
An analysis by Detroit-based Fishbeck predicts the raceway will generate 288 additional vehicle trips on weekdays. That figure is about a tenth of the estimated 2,077 trips a manufacturing site would create.
The once-proposed 5 Ridge Corporate Park was expected to house eight businesses.
The former Detroit House of Correction site is designated for industrial use but was expected to be rezoned as technology and research under the township’s 2025 Master Plan. A swath along Johnson’s Creek is classified as public land.
Harness race events are also not expected to coincide with the
4-6 p.m. peak weekday traffic period.
The proposed harness racing venue "will not have a significant impact on current traffic conditions on Ridge Road and Five Mile Road," said Kyle Basset, Spalding DeDecker project manager, in a report to the planning commission.
The track’s arrival will pump more money into the
township. The municipality's share of breakage fees—pennies accumulated from rounding down betting payouts to the nearest dime—could reach $250,000-$300,000 annually, Heise said. That figure doesn't include anticipated tax revenue.
Other perks will be outlined in a yet-negotiated community benefit agreement, which is included in the PUD process.
Soccer fields and pickleball courts highlight the plan’s recreational amenities.
Under a shared services agreement, youth soccer's Plymouth Reign will manage three fields planned within the half-mile track's infield.
Likewise, a community organizer will oversee eight pickleball courts, Carlo said. The courts are part of a "flex space" planned outside the racing building. That area can be easily reconfigured for other events such as 3-on-3 basketball tournaments.
The track's owner assured planning commissioners that township residents will be able to play the increasingly popular paddle sport at the proposed facility.
“I don’t think our goal was to ever exclude anybody from pickleball,” Carlo said, “but have someone control it like the soccer fields.”
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pounds) and explosion categories.
Under the RAS or Relative Athletic Score, which computes potential NFL Draft pick’s measurables condensing them into one analytic number, Nowaske ranked 9.85 on a scale of 10. In the history of RAS testing since 1987, Nowaske ranked 38th all-time out of 2,500 linebackers.
“I wouldn’t have gone through the process if I hadn’t believed in myself,” Nowaske said. “I have a lot of confidence in myself. I knew the odds were stacked against me, but I also know my capabilities and what I’m able to do. It was kind of a shock to a lot of people at my (pro day) and had my numbers, but it wasn’t a shock to me. Like I said, I’m very confident in myself. I know my abilities and I’m just going to continue to prove people wrong.”
Proving People Wrong
Proving People Wrong
All Trevor Nowaske really wanted was to be given a shot to play in the NFL, even if he is considered a long shot.
The Detroit Lions are giving him that shot. And, as the undrafted free agent linebacker from Saginaw Valley State and Salem High School walked off the field following a June 1 organized practice at the team’s training facility in Allen Park, Nowaske’s belief in his own ability has never been stronger.
Although the life expectancy of an NFL player can be tenuous at best, Nowaske was just trying to be a sponge and soak up as much as he could.
“I’m just taking it a day at a time, trying to build good relationships,” he said. “Kind of how I got here was through hard
By Brad Emons
work and dedication and just go day by day, just stacking good habits, and what not. Just trying to take those principles and kind of apply them to where I’m at right now.”
The 2017 Salem grad who was a three-time All-Kensington Lakes and two-time All-Metro West selection, landed as a scholarship player at Saginaw Valley, where he red shirted as a freshman and slowly built up his football portfolio over the next four years for the Cardinals.
As a senior in 2022, Nowaske registered 98 tackles, including 9.5 for loss. He also intercepted four passes to go along with seven break-ups en route to All-Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference first-team honors after earning honorable mention as a junior.
In 44 career games, he proved to be a tackling machine with 232 total, including 20 for loss with 5.5 sacks (with five INTs). When Nowaske walked off the field in a season-ending 21-20 loss on Nov. 13 at Michigan Tech, he knew his football career was far from over and it could become the start of something big.
TURNING HEADS
Nowaske first caught the eye of NFL scouts during a GLIAC pro day on March 16 at the Legacy Center in Brighton where he ran a pair of 4.50 seconds in the 40yard dash and leaped 10 feet, 2 inches in the standing broad jump. And it was there when Nowaske began to turn heads as his measurables tested off the charts where he graded out as elite in both the speed and agility, as well as in the size (6-3, 237
It was no secret during his time at Saginaw Valley that Nowaske was considered a sure tackler who could easily be productive dropping into coverage while also possessing great ball skills. He also played with a relentless motor.
“Coming out of my senior year definitely wasn’t highly recruited by any teams at all, didn’t really talk to a lot of scouts, but I had my GLIAC pro day where I did pretty well,” Nowaske said. “The
Lions were there. I talked to the Lions after and came to their local day, which I felt like I did
Salem grad Trevor Nowaske’s
alive
Detroit Lions
NFL dream
with
6 | The Rock
well there, and obviously now I’m here, but I felt that’s what really helped to get me an opportunity.”
He met with the Lions staff and went through some additional drills before being signed as an undrafted free agent on May 12 by his hometown team.
“It was unreal,” said Nowaske, who now wears jersey number 59. “The day of the (NFL) draft, a lot of mixed emotions – high-
special. Really excited for the opportunity and we’ll see what happens.”
Nowaske was among nine rostered linebackers during the Lions’ OTAs. He and first-round pick Jack Campbell (Iowa) were the only rookies among nine during the first stage of camp.
“I played special teams throughout my college career and in high school, and now being an undrafted guy, it really helps if you can kind of play a role on special teams,” Nowaske said. “And that’s something I’ve talked to the special teams coach…and obviously we’ll see if there’s a chance, but it’s something I pride myself on. I just want to make a statement come camp.”
Although he came from an NCAA Division II program, Nowaske hopes to follow a long list of GLIAC players who have made it to the NFL.
Nowaske so far has been learning the mental side of the game where he is constantly delving into the playbook.
“That’s probably been the biggest adjustment,” he said. “I leave the facility at 6 or 7 at night, and after I go home, I’m studying more. That has been the biggest jump, but I feel like I’ve been here for a couple of weeks now I kind of understood what it takes and how to understand the playbook with all the checks and what not. It’s been a little bit of a jump, but I feel like it’s definitely slowing down day by day and that’s all you can ask for.”
‘ALL ABOUT FOOTBALL’
During the pre-draft process, Nowaske would meet with scouts. And one of the questions that popped up concerned what his outside interests or hobbies might be.
Nowaske is trying to become the second Lion to earn a spot on the 2023 roster with local Plymouth-Canton ties. He hopes to join 2022 first-round pick and All-Rookie selection Aidan Hutchinson (Michigan/Dearborn Divine Child).
low – kind of being an undrafted guy. You really didn’t know what to expect. But couldn’t have asked for a better situation being a hometown kid and being a Lions fan all my life. Like I said, being a part of this is unreal. Every day kind of waking up and it’s ‘Oh my gosh, I’m really here.’ Definitely still in awe, still a little star struck, but I’m adapting to it every day.”
THE NEXT LEVEL
While being a fan growing up and now walking around the complex in Allen Park, Nowaske is still pinching himself.
“Every day I see something new,” he said. “I’m still adjusting to everything, figuring out the hallways and what not. But honestly, just coming from a fan to now being a teammate of these guys has been really
“I hang myself on being physical,” he said. “Now a days, it’s all about speed -- and I’m fast as well. But it’s also about physicality at the linebacker position. I’m a very sure tackler. I’m good in space, I’m good in coverage, so I think those attributes will help me succeed at this level.”
Nowaske does have speed going back to his high school days. That became evident during his senior year at Salem where he was a member of the All-State fourth-place 4 x 100-meter relay team at the 2017 MHSAA Division 1 finals.
“The big difference is everyone is good, but you know I’m also a really good athlete,” Nowaske said. “The speed is better, but at the same time I can hang. I know that and I feel like I belong, so I think that’s important – self-confidence.”
The biggest eye opener for
“I told them, ‘I don’t have any and don’t plan on having any for a while,’” Nowaske said. “It’s all about football and that’s how it will continue to be until it’s not.”
Nowaske plans to take the same approach that he took in high school where he started for three years with the Rocks under coach Kurt Britnell before moving on to Saginaw Valley.
“Coach Brit, big props to him,” Nowaske said. “I still keep in touch with him and still have a relationship with him. My years at Salem -- we weren’t super successful I would say…we didn’t accomplish what we wanted to, but we definitely stacked year by year. We continuously got better and did the little things to try and build a culture. I kind of took those principles to Saginaw, and at the same time when I got up there, we weren’t very good and we kind of ended on a pretty good note, being 8-3.”
“It’s kind of funny,” Nowaske said. “We know of each other, but at the same time we didn’t. We also train at the same place, so we always crossed paths but we hadn’t formally been introduced to each other. We’ve talked a couple of times. We know similar people, so kind of a small world with him obviously being from Plymouth. And then I did find out we played on the same little league team, but he’s younger than me, so we both played for OLGC (Our Lady of Good Counsel). Yeah, it’s a small world being on the same team and I’m really excited.”
The Rock | 7
“I have a lot of confidence in myself. I knew the odds were stacked against me, but I also know my capabilities and what I’m able to do.”
Trevor Nowaske
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Art In The Park is meticulous, measured and ready to go
My family and friends know that around the holidays I go a bit overboard with my Christmas Village. I have been collecting homes, shops, trees, tiny people, park benches and other accessories for decades and spend a lot of time meticulously setting up the perfect quaint and cozy town in my foyer!
My absolute favorite thing about my village is when it is set up the end result is simply to sit back and marvel at it. I encourage people to bend down a bit, to see it at street level as if you could walk into the shops, be beside the people shopping for their loved ones, walking their dog, laughing with friends in our town square.
It wasn’t until recently that it dawned on me...this is actually what I do all year in planning and organizing Art In The Park. Every inch of downtown Plymouth (DTP) is measured and we also meticulously plan what will go where -- food carts, live musicians, electrical cords, buses, and of course the artists who have traveled far and wide to come to our “village.” All of the preparation ahead of time pays off when it’s time to flip the switch. We are open, we are ready, it is done.
Each year we add a new piece, something new to behold or treasure. This year we’re thrilled about all the new fantastic artists, wow factor entertainers, and creative foods to share with our visitors.
It may not be the holidays right now, but I know the weekend will be filled with magic. Art In The Park is when DTP is at its most vibrant. We hope you fully enjoy all the sights and sounds in town. We hope you find the perfect piece you were dreaming of, hug someone you haven’t seen for a while and grab a bag of fresh kettle corn! Over these three days, enjoy the hustle and bustle of our amazing community because this thriving downtown is very real.
Raychel Rork Director - Art In The Park
Volunteers are backbone of AITP
It takes around 100 volunteers to put on Art In The Park, from setup to teardown. They’re here around the clock day and night, from working the information booths to running the kids mural.
Art In The Park is a rigorous labor of love and we are so thankful to enjoy the weekend with this hard working crew!
I would especially like to thank my right hand, Kathy, for helping make Art In The Park so exceptional. You are a meticulous powerhouse and there’s no one else I would rather have with me at the helm. We do make one hell of a team.
Thanks to my Mom for continuing to both weigh in and pitch in with her expertise and a helping hand year round. And ultimately to mine and Kathy’s better halves Joe and Rich and ALL of our kids for embracing the crazy, climbing on board and helping us stay balanced... Thank You
OFFICIAL 2023 ART IN THE PARK GUIDE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE ROCK
2023 Art In The Park Sponsors:
Bold & Beautiful
Art In The Park brings eclectic mix of media to town
By Wensdy Von Buskirk
As Art In The Park gears up for its 43rd year in downtown Plymouth, it remains on the cutting edge of creativity. Organizer Raychel Rork says the festival, which takes over downtown Plymouth July 7-9, features artists exploring media in delightful ways.
“I think what we’re seeing a lot of this year is there’s a lot of artists pushing the boundaries and pushing the limits of what their art is or can be,” Rork says.
That means many surprises as you stroll amongst the 400 artists from across the country who will exhibit in Kellogg Park and surrounding streets.
BOLD ART
You might be stopped in your tracks by a juicy cantaloupe that turns out to be a exact ceramic replica, a life-size mannequin
WHAT: A celebration of creativity, music, and fun
covered in mirrored disco-ball tiles, or a gorgeous high-end shawl imprinted with a photo of the Detroit skyline.
Rork said she and the other jurists were impressed as they combed through submissions for this year’s fair. Today’s artists seem to be pushing limits, mixing media and exploring the limits of what can be done with clay, paint, photography and more.
“It was really fun jurying this year,” Rork says. “From their use of materials to bold, unapologetic creativity, you’re going to see lots of in-your-face, new, different and crazy stuff.”
Instead of making a simple coffee table, an artist will cut a hole in the center and suspend flower petals in resin. Instead of a traditional quilt, another will take a photograph of your cat
WHERE: Kellogg Park and downtown Plymouth
WHEN: July 7-9
HOURS: Fri., 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
WHO: 400+ artists along with food vendors, entertainers and visitors from throughout the region
HOW: Park at Schoolcraft College and take an air-conditioned shuttle to the show!
INFO: artinthepark.com
12 | The Rock
“We have multiple artists who have also participated in ArtPrize on a much bolder, larger scale,” Rork says. “They’ve competed with some of the best artists in our area and beyond.”
Of course, Michigan’s secondoldest art fair also features many familiar faces.
“It’s always exciting when we get something new that we’ve never seen before, but of course we love to get our favorites back,” Rork says.
AFRICAN CUISINE
As striking art takes over the vendor tables, bold flavors will be featured at various food stands. New this year is Fork In Nigeria, featuring African cuisine like Fufu, Puff Puff, and stewed meats over Jollof rice.
Egyptian Flair
This year’s Art In The Park celebrates the art of ancient Egypt. The theme will be reflected throughout the festival.
You’ll see it in the sidewalk chalk mural that takes shape at the corner of Main and Penniman, and the living mural, featuring human models painted into a scene.
It will also crop up in children’s activities, like the DIA’s make-and-take craft based on a traditional Egyptian musical instrument.
and incorporate it into a fabric landscape.
Even portraits of your favorite celebrities have surprising twists. The talent is world-class, Rork says.
You’ll also find a converted bike cart peddling fresh pressed sugarcane juices with lavender and rose petals. Grab-and-go as you browse to the sounds of reggae band Roots Vibration, playing throughout the weekend.
“You’ll feel like you’re in the Caribbean somewhere, sipping your lavender-infused mocktail,” Rork says.
As always, the festival features tons of hands-on children’s activities like sandy candy art, face painting, candlemaking, henna and adventure theater. It also showcases entertainment including comedy juggling, a vibraphone player and a living statue.
Admission is free, and a shuttle from nearby Schoolcraft College makes parking a breeze.
For more information on the festival, visit artinthepark.com.
And just for fun, the Penn Theater will show The Mummy, the 1999 film featuring Brendan Fraser, all weekend long.
Art In The Park organizer Raychel Rork says the theme will also be embodied by a six-and-ahalf foot sarcophagus she purchased from the former owner of Northville’s Marquis Theatre.
“I just had to have it,” says Rork.
As an art history major, Rork says the era offers tons of inspiration.
“We think it’s going to be really fun to honor these awesome cultural traditions in a respectful way,” she says.
“We have multiple artists who have also participated in ArtPrize on a much bolder, larger scale. They’ve competed with some of the best artists in our area and beyond.”
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Entertainment
Live at Plymouth Art In The Park
Art In The Park has always celebrated entertainers along with visual artists and this year is no different. Watch for fun, quirky, exotic performances all three days. Here’s a look at some of what you’ll see:
GEORGE TAIT, LIVING STATUE
With the throngs of AITP spectators all around him, somehow George Tait stands still for what seems an eternity. See if you can spot him in his trademark silver paint and stylish suit as he brings his unique brand of performance to Plymouth Art In The Park.
Location: COMPASS (Center of Main & Ann Arbor Trail)
ROOTS VIBRATIONS
Their reggae-style tunes provide just the right vibe for the festival. Their members come from the Caribbean and the funky streets of Detroit, and they’ll be bringing positive roots music to the main stage.
LOCATION : Corner of Ann Arbor Trail & Forest Ave.
JOHN DAVIS, VIBRAPHONE
Davis, who plays the vibraphone, has performed for nearly 50 years, with a repertoire that includes R&B, Latin, reggae and funk. He’s known for wearing bright colors and letting kids take over the mallets to play along.
LOCATION : Kellogg Park
LIVING MURAL
Kristen Dillenbeck Zipp of Portland, Ore. (formerly of Canton) combines her love of body painting and murals to create unique 3-dimensional work.
LOCATION : Booth 500, Ann Arbor Trail & Main
CHALK MURAL
Witness a stunning chalk mural take shape as artists from D&M Studio work on a masterpiece before your eyes! The street art demonstration will be sketched with chalk onto the pavement and will be a work in progress throughout Art In The Park.
LOCATION : Main & Penniman
KYLEE COMETDANCERR
Kylee is the current reigning two-time World Hula Hoop Champion in the Advanced/pro 16+ single hoop category and the group category with her team the Monarch Hoop Troop. Kylee’s style is in the details and her unique vision always creates something never seen before
THE MICHIGAN LEGO USER GROUP
The MichLUG’s primary goal is to share their passion for LEGO. While they specialize in doing large scale LEGO displays and town layouts, they can do just about any kind of display you can imagine. They are one of the most active LUGs in the world!
LOCATION : Kellogg Park
MY ADVENTURE THEATRE
Kids take center stage with My Adventure Theater. This interactive theatre troupe is an Art In The Park favorite, back by popular demand.
LOCATION : Kellogg Park
and impossible to not love. She can teach you flashy fun tricks that fit into any hoop flow.
LOCATION : COMPASS (Center of Main & Ann Arbor Trail)
The Rock | 15
Artist Spotlights
Devil’s in the Details
Paul King’s incredible illustrations bring celebrity portraits to life
That sound you will hear during the 2023 Art In The Park will be that of collective jaws opening from inside Paul King’s booth of drawings.
King, who lives about 20 minutes outside Traverse City, is bringing some 150 drawings of famous musicians, actors and “other notables” – which to anyone who has ever peered at one of his works look just like photographs.
“When people come into my booth they think they’re photos,”
By Tim Smith
break,” King said. “Those are typically dark. And then that gives me my facial perspective. And I fill it all in with a mid-tone gray and then I start air brushing in the darker scale and then I come back and flow in lighter scales, the whites, highlights.”
He’ll slow the process down considerably to make sure he accurately depicts “all the teeny skin bumps and stuff. Totally, the devil’s in the details.”
According to King, himself a former singer-songwriter and musician, doing a basic portrait takes nearly 24 hours.
“Drawing someone with a guitar takes about 34 hours.” King continued. “And full bands take from 10 days to two weeks.”
On sale will be a bevy of 11x14 and 16x20 portraits -- high-artquality prints of his work.
Practice Makes Perfect
Salem High student continues to grow as a painter and artist
One of the secrets of success is finding a passion and following it as long as possible. For 15-year-old Salem High School sophomore Mariyah Larji, that passion is to create head-turning works of art –colorful landscapes and still lifes suitable to hang on a wall.
And there’s a very cool bonus for Mariyah as she will be one of the youth artists at the annual Art In The Park at Kellogg Park, slated for the weekend of July 7-9. It is the second straight year where she will be selling her acrylic paintings, and she is looking forward to having a booth in the “Kids Section” yet again.
products on sale in her booth.
“I get a lot of, ‘Oh wow, this is so amazing, how old are you? Or ‘How did you learn how to do this, what’s your inspiration?’” Mariyah noted. “Usually I just say it’s a hobby of mine since I was young (age 4-5) and I just keep on practicing. That’s the one thing I can say, keep on practicing.”
The pandemic also played a role in her budding talent. With more time on her hands, she started painting much more often.
said King, set to appear July 7-9 at Kellogg Park. “I have to tell them no, these are all handdrawn and they are not photos. And then their eyes widen.”
He finds photographs on the Internet, such as one from the mid-1950s of a young Elvis Presley performing on Milton Berle’s variety television show.
After locating a potential drawing subject, King does a couple hours of research to make sure he knows every single detail before swinging into action. With a photo on an adjacent computer for a handy reference point, King uses a Wacom interactive drawing tablet to create his artistic magic.
“Typically, I start with the face, the almond shape of the eyes, the two nostrils and the lip
King said he began drawing caricatures around 2018, but found out people preferred more-realistic works and began doing his have-to-see-to-believe portraits. Visit Paul King Artwerks (www.paulkingart. com) to view samples of his work, including everybody from Aerosmith to ZZ Top.
“People say ‘How long does it take you to draw one’ and I said about 35 years,’” said King, with a laugh. “Portraits are kind of a lost art. It just takes time and knowledge. And then doing it, doing it, doing it.”
King is making his first appearance at Art In The Park, deciding to forego his usual go-to show – the single-day Beulah Art Fair taking place on Crystal Lake near his upper Michigan home on the same weekend.
AITP art lovers will be glad he made that choice.
Paul King will be located in booth #326 at Art In The Park.
“My sister (Zainub, 20) is pretty artistic and I like to copy her, you know?” said Mariyah, about who initially inspired her to paint. “She never did Art In The Park, but this is one thing I’m going to do because this is cool. I really like art and I want to be able to show off my art skill to everybody else.”
In 2022, Mariyah sold 41 of 45 paintings, primarily of skylines, oceans, ships, books and candles. Of course, she would like to break her own personal record this time around, but there are other important benefits to participating in Art In The Park.
“This is a really good learning opportunity for me, too,” Mariyah said. “I get to learn a lot more about what I like to do and I learn new techniques and I also meet a lot of other amazing artists.”
Mariyah also likes talking to people at the art show, not only about what prompted her artistic passion but about the finished
She and her mom would buy canvas-on-wood frames at Michael’s and enough acrylic paint and brushes to get to work. Mariyah often was guided by photographs she found on Google and Pinterest.
“One thing I discovered during Covid is that a lot of stuff you can blend out, so I kind of used my fingers to blend out the sky and the ocean just to make it more realistic looking,” she said.
By early June, Mariyah already has completed about 20 new works and figured to paint another 30 in time for Art In The Park.
Regardless of how the early July weekend goes for Mariyah, art will always be a part of her world.
“One thing about painting is that if I ever have so much going on in my life, with school work, I can just sit down, put on a TV show or music, just relax and paint something that’s fun and interesting,” Mariyah explained. “And when you’ve finished it’s a big accomplishment.”
Mariyah Larji will be located in Kellogg Park.
16 | The Rock
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Artist Listing by Media
ARTWEAR
DRAWING
GOURMET FOOD
Artist Name Booth #
Namewicha, Sawai 492 Mutkus, Lysette 530 Petrarca, Laura 829 Watson, Beverly 593 Iglesias, Carlos 245 Van Tonder, Patti 240 Wilsher, Donna 560-561 Cumming, Cindy 573 Johns, Huck 237 Fitzgerald, Emily 958 Liedtke, Christina 439
& BODY Crouch, LeAnn 592 Vukovits, Lisa 836 Mack, Ryan 218 Geister, Diane 317 Cochenour, Natalie 117 Brown, Brent 113 Wright, Jackie 4034 BODY ART Memon, Noor 255 Shah, Bani 89 Mccall, Jennifer 848 Nishwan, Shagida 729 Rasul, Zahabya 467 CANDLES Fleckenstein, Anna 866 McCallum, Anthony 559 Laney, Rodney 462 Beckley, Marie 745 Washington, Latanya 120 Whitcomb, Rachel 437
Silva, Carlos 830 Roberts, Kari 748 Schmidt, Doug 225 Green, Christinia 715 Cherry Hill Potters Guild 609-613 Pendleton, Marla 617 Mckenney, Justin 776 Thompson, Karleigh 589 Huber, Jamie 850 Kirk, Noah 139 Dunbar, Emily 595 Orsini, Olivia 955 Arndt, Michael 834 Cipielewski, Molly 4016 Village Potters Guild 495-497 Nelson, David 112 Kaiser, James 4004 Deon, Paige 441 Villaroman, Karin 219 Gelsanliter, Thomas & Sarah 201 Kang, Aya 537 McLean, Renay 447 Roy, Richard 360 Poole, Mark 425-426 Gutierrez, Luis 463 Ragan, John 4031-4032 DIGITAL ART King, Paul 326 Alferink, Brent 403 Lee, Genna 957
BATH
CERAMICS
Burton, Jodi 501 Wennersten, Jay 760 McKelvey, Brian 751 Wang, Maggie 321 Deighan, Christopher 814 Powers, Linda 867 Jahraus, Jon 217 Cruz, Susi 4005 Wittekindt, Owen 312 LaPorte, Chris 703 Kwiatkowski, Daniel 444 Eakin, Kristin 601 FIBER Stack, Dawn 242-243 Haney, Debbie 743 DeBastos, Lisa 959 Herrera, Patty 777 Hoover, Debbie 536 Tardif, Brittani 596 Whittenberger, Deborah 488 Keller, Kate 234 Pun, Patty 222 Makowski, Linda 732 Rangos, Laura 505 Stenzel, Kelly 229 Johnson, Landria 720-721 Vinson, Shirleigh 246 Moore, Lucy 305-306 Chico, Janet 207 Reese, Linda 211-212 Bourque, Tammy 506-507 De Araujo Nunes, Aline 956 Ehrenfeld, Lauren 875-876 Villaclara, Veronica 308-309 Hawkins, Leslie 868-869 Liu, Yu Chuan 563 Cantrell, Gene & Judy 119 Adams, Angie 835 Olsen, Kimberley 594 Dewey, Janice 416 Slack, Kaitlin 126 Moore, Amy 755 Kenny, Diane 132 Dryja, Killian 118 Antunes, Andreia 412 Sturm, Nance 481 Cocco, Carla 4030 Kohn, Karin 3000
Torres, Alyssa 3013 Larges, Sarah 107 Ellsworth, Debbie 960 Dawson, Triamjai 532 Yang, Ray 130 FOLK ART Baker, Marian 543 Lewis, Shannon 104-105
Miller, Paul 578-579 Anderson, Shawn 4035 Stewart, Chad 204-205 GLASS DeWitt, Jennie 446 Duszynski, Joy 118 Fenn, Daniel 453-454 Harr, Bobby 769 Niner, Rod 826 Woodruff, Kathryn 521 Kehr, Tracy 614 Shantz, Trish 778 Surowiec, Daedra 724
FLORAL
FURNITURE
Vigoa, Miriam 544 Banks, Cheryl 236 O'Connor, Mary 143-144 Terpstra, Paul 227 Skerratt, Nicolette 121 Moore, Ashley 3014-3015 Wastcoat, Constance 334 Meyers, Kimberly 840 McCallum, Anthony 558 Zuzga, Bryan 404 Post, Rich 232-233 Savage, Chris 253 Frick, Mikayla 330 Gardner, Tye 313 Jutzi, Timothy 128 Ryke, Josi 539 Zubalik, Samantha 3003 Rickey, Ryan 706 Marcum, Amy 970 Albrecht, Fred 838 Eatmon, Katie 831 Mills, Janice 342 Fideli, Lou 752-753 Colaizzi, Sherry 411 Merkle, Vera 736 Trump, Jennifer 853 Brooks, Alejandro 4014 Doan, Laura 975 Farida, Angela 4018 Wiggins, Gerald 464 Griffin, Brian 324 Malaney, Julie 3001 JEWELRY Collins, Nicole 590 Stratton, Jennifer 4024 Macklin, Scott 311 Pizzini, Gerri 818-819 Fox, Sean 3018-3019 Wacker, Jessica 597 Spry, Sharon 580 Ichikawa, Masako 833 Jearlds, Susan 3012 Brown, Leah 318 Kahmann, Eric 327-328 Trisko, Robert 704-705 Ruang, Wanpen 221 Brown, Carrie 354-355 Slaven, Mark 804 Manning, Rhonda 333 O'Neal, Helen 809 Perez , Luis 433 Prchlik, Emily 142 Davis, Dave 1829 Farinango, Jose 548 Clark, Valerie 127 McFadden, Ann 494 Wagman, David 854 Warner, Ginny 415 Welti, Angela 131 Hernandez, Humberto 307 Ragan, Brent 114-115 Quisling, Jodi 538 Osterhoudt, Linda 756 Trejbal, Willie 574 Didi, S 3004 Gollhardt, Karen 249 Hirt, Jenna 837 Copeland, Laurie 702 Madjar, Shandor 806 Lacey, Christina 491 Spampinato, Yvonne 746 Ziegler, Bart 252 Jalsa, Ann 103 Dugan, Lyndsey 470 Mcgraw, Merlys 874 Ragan, Aaron 358-359 Tekeli, Emre 608 Kisielewski, Iwona Luna 340
18 | The Rock
MIXED MEDIA
MUSIC
PAINTING
Keusch, Jason 502
Kunkle, Maxwell 4025
Muenala, Inty 820-821
Moore, Larry 427
Osgood, Esther 4033
Chapman, Zackery 963
Knapp, Mercedes 3016
PAPER
Clem, Mike 775
Fager-George, Daniel 400
Malasky, Stacey 250
Fackler, Ernest 953
McLendon, Michelle 345
Cutter, Dana 849
Potoff, Lindsey 4003
Jacobs, Christina 206
Herzberg, Todd 348
Kipp, EJ 964
PET
Oberdick, Ryan 141
Hall-Gabriel, Sheila 978
Darcy, Donald 413
Jackson, Lisa 349-350
Lawson, Julie 4001
Terrill, Angela 951
PHOTOGRAPHY
Hince, Tom & Kathi 214
Dietrich, Craig 133-134
Kaulins, Jan 700
Lamers, Michael 508-509
Wilson, Kyle 568
Wright, Suzette & Ron 125
Steed, Eric 873
Chumack, John 419-420
Kiley, David 473
Kimmet, Tiffany 754
Doherty, Christopher 576
McCormick, Pamela 841
Ryan, Marcus 504
Hart, Shannon 531
Schwartzenberger,
SCULPTURE
Headings, Ron 341
Hildenbrandt, Chris 812-813
YARD & GARDEN
De Volska, Hanna 877 Tiburzio, Ryan 101 Civitarese, Kelly 231 Iglesias, Percy 851 Berton, Sean 605 Stamper, Marianne 973 Ware, Karin 744 Vasquez, Allison 4007 Paternoster, Jose 138 Weinreb, Barbara 716 Bush, Spirit 555 Bonardi, Michael 1811 Szajnecki, Carly 3002 Gilbert-Collick, Susan 216 Patterson, Marilu 864 Moore, Mary Kay 523 Shuell, Robin 443 Bundesen, Charise 303 Vadakoottu, Sajeev 588 Stevens, Cheryl 344 Brown, Trinity 954 Lewis, Katherine 238-239 Peterson, Amy 452
Krepp, Stephany 442 Britt, Dylan 223-224 Hale, Robert 725-726 Wang, Isabel 950 Ulsh, Meredith 100 Daley, Sarah 865 Clarke, Larry 322 Wolf, Yuliya 709-710 Freedman, Tanya 961 Lincoln, Jon 402 Smith, Judith 469 METAL Hornbaker, Scott 827 Reeser, Jaron 357 Northrop, Alan 461 Abdelnour, Sam 332 Vliet Jr., Randy 852 Barkley, Robert 825 Ashley, Rachelle 600 Cook, James & Sharra 123 Illies, Stacey 762 lounsbrough, Brett 974 Rudder, Dillon 728 Weiss, Adam 764-765 Barcena, Sergio 3006
LEATHER
Headrick, Dustin 870 Williams, Betsy 203 Stecker, Betsy 478 Fontenot, Elizabeth 844-845 Hilton, Katja 701 Klapper, Melissa 534-535 Kimble, Ariana 4006 Peterson, Lauren 4008 Puntigam, James 1429 Schrotenboer, Tara 3007-3008 Chen, Mady 4019 Clark, Barbara 4017
Mazur, Ken 476 Gorodkine, Vladimir 1950
Bernardo, Chelsea 855 Walters, Peter 251 Cassidy Wood, Denise 801-802 Kim, Sang 302 Biton, Moises 517 Hojnacki, Marge 842-843 Hibshman, Alexandra 3005 McGee, Melvin 880 Sjoblom, Christy & Lynn 965-966 Hesselgesser, Robin 618 Garay, Carolyn 810 Cilluffo, Joseph 300 Domzal, Paulette 607 Mills, Sarah 4002 Mohr, Karri 740-741 Scarbrough, Wendy 228 Spraul, Barbara 604 Casseus, Cantave 346 Thiery, Thomas 1222 Dragan, Christopher 226 Lopez, Tali 623-624 Ravenna, Janet 486 Bridges, Sarah "Rah" 329 Medved, Michelle 977 Strassberg, Valerie 872 Smith, Sareka 540 Wise, Jodi 976 Callahan, Jen 603 Ganun, Lyon 405 Moughler, Carolyn 749 Dorris, Eric 524 Davis, Jenny 351 Barrett, Robert 860 Powers, Abigail 116 Kydde, Tim 417 Cowell, Laurie 335 Adamkiewicz, Catherine 435 Monroe, Michael 215 Abbott, Ron 361 Glover, Bill 805 Bidinger, Christopher 320 Taylor, Deanna 111 Minasyan, Araik 407 Grillo, Crocifissa 503 Fabinski, Austin 4020 Mullen,
526 Klaus,
972
Micah
Dina
817 Denyer,
Chad
Miguel 811 Rickman, Cathy 803 Keuvelaar, John 241 Gilley, Michael 490 Tanner, Deborah 564 Trivette, Nathan 519 Gilbert, Paul 315
Wade, Hunter 106
Tallon, Bobbie 4015
Anderson, Troy 581 Sumpter, Steven 493 Ozark, Andrew 301
Povinelli, Alfred 556-557 Aksamitova, Tess 815-816
David 4000 LaPlante, Mark 863 Zeldes, Erik 962 Tong, Linda 213 Stephens, Dan 967 Heekin, Kevin 319 Klinksiek, Sean 616 Zimmer DeMichele, Kelly 602 Fedor, Gwen 566 Fischer, Ann Marie 304 Cieslowski Jr, Richard 832 Favour, Renate 202 Bramblett, Carol 479 Boyce, Robert 336
Davis, James Ryan 727 Peterson, Donald 247-248 Lewis, David 807-808 Austin, Joyce 861-862 Rhoades, Roberta 527 Milarch, Mike 448-450 Hurn, Paul & Alyse 770 Mansour, Jordan 401 Johnson, Bobby 562 Sisolak, Karen 735 Sturk, Bob 230 Archer, Misty 208-210 Wesseling, Douglas 4023 Shiemke, Brett 591 Allen, Alexander 598-599 Singleton, John 129 Schafer, Robert 742 Clevenger, Dave 828 Liskiewicz, James 952 Grieshaber, Jamie 733-734 Dayvault, Laurie 717 Wojnar, Christopher 109 Minard, Ian 429 Linn, Robert 445 Paulino, Alessandra 410 Lambert, Robert 768 Aleksandrovich, Isai 533 Church, Mike 480 Johnson, Travis 3011 Middleton, Barry 871
Povinelli, Amy 338-339 Friel,
WOOD
Ruang, Pornthep 220 Rapaich, Diane 1244 Cantrell, Dale 440 Brown, Tiffany 722 Manosalva, Edgardo 621 The Rock | 19
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2023 Art In The Park Artist Map
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TAKING the NEXT STEP
Graduates earn their diplomas as they step into their future
By Brad Kadrich
Plymouth-Canton Community Schools
Board of Education President Shawn Wilson watched as some 1,350 high school seniors accepted their diplomas on June 11th, and felt one over-riding feeling.
Pride.
Members of the class of 2023 from Canton, Salem and Plymouth high schools took the next – biggest – steps in their lives during ceremonies at Eastern Michigan University’s Convocation Center earlier this month, with board members, faculty, parents, friends and family cheering them on.
Those next steps will be in a variety of directions, including four-year colleges, community colleges and into the workforce.
According to statistics provided by the district, nearly 800 graduating seniors are headed to four-year colleges or universities, while nearly 200 more are off to two-year colleges.
Nearly 40 are headed to a trade or technical education, while another 60 plan on taking a “gap” year before making decisions. Another nine planned to join a branch of the military service.
“Being a part of such a momentous occasion for our graduates and their families is humbling,” Wilson said. “Seeing the tears and smiles and hearing the stories of growth, resilience and perseverance is a powerful reminder of why we serve as school board members.
“I am so proud of all of the graduates.”
The Rock | 23
SPONSORED BY
PLYMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 2023 Photos by Bryan Mitchell
Abdallah, Chaza
Abdullah, Maseera
Ahmad, Saad
Ahmad, Uwaeish
Ahmed, Mazin
Ahmed, Sabyena
Ahmed, Waliullah
Akkala, Siddarth
Ali, Munsub
Allen, Lindsay
Allen, Noah
Alomary, Subhi
Amalraj, Nicholas
Amalraj, Trinity
Amoako, Kelvin
Amos, Stephen
Andrews, Easton
Apsley, Kaleb
Carr, Ahni
Carriere-Orsette, Brenden
Carvalho, Clara
Chapital, Nicholas
Chastang, Anton
Chavan, Suhani
Chorbagian, Andrew
Chowdhury, Razeen
Christesen, Carrie
Christianson, Brynn
Cleveland, Julia
Collins, Trinity
Connell, Aiden
Cooke, Andrew
Cooley, Nathan
Cosgrove, Evan
Cox, Ella
Fawaz, Sukayna
Fesko, Scott
Foley, Carson
Frey, Noah
Frohling, Andrew
Fulkerson, Macey
Gacaferi, Endrit
Gailitis, Allison
Gamache, Bradley
Gamache, Nathan
Garbacz, Bryce
Garrison, Lauren
Gaylord, Tyler
Ghantasala, Shravya
Gilbert, Ella
Gill, Sukhmani
Gillick, Monica
Glovatsky, Katherine
Gocaj II, Skender
Gotsis, Alex
Gozdor, Nicholas
Graham, Cameron
Granberry, Anaiah
Greene, Alexander
Gummadavelli, Vibha
Gummidela, Aakash
Gurchak, Nicholas
Hachigian, Ryan
Hafezi, Lili
Hakkani, Ayah
Hamernik, Alexander
Hamilton, Jackson
Harden, Alexis
Harris, Tyler
Hartmaier, Veronica
Harvey, Khalilah
Johnson, Devin Johnson, Emily Johnson, Leanne
Johnson, Taylor Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Zoe Jones, Jayla Julien, Christopher Jurge, Jessica Kabeer, Ehsan Kaldany, Rami Kandarpa, Aravind Kelly, James Keshavamurthy, Kavya Kirkwood, Robert Klimek, Tyler Klotz, Austin Knutsen, Noah Kostrzewa, Andrew Kretschmer, Mallory Krueger, Natalie Kuchka, Jacob Kudalkar, Ruchi Kuehneman, Hannah Kumar, Ishan Kunasegar, Janani Kundargi, Nidhi Laborde, Paige Laesser, Kelsey Laird, Ava Lala, Jayden Lannas-McComas, Ashton
Lapani, Harshal Lawson, Tyler
May, Terrell
McCarthy, Meghan
McClain, Chloe
McCloud, Jaidan
McHugh, Logan
McKenzie, Anissa
McLellan, Corrine
McVay, Darrielle
Mickey, Joshua
Mikulan, Zayne
Miller, Dakota
Miller-Godinez, Bryan
Modi, Misri
Moline-Freeman, Owen
Moody, Joseph
Moore Jr., Anthony
Moore, Curtis
Moore, Jivon
Montgomery, Krystal
Morden, Olivia
Movva, Pramith
Murdande, Aastha
Murphy, Donovan
Nader, Calvin
Nagali, Suprita
Nair, Reema
Nallani, Anish
Naumowicz, Ryan
Neher, Kaylin
Neme, Lillianna
Neme, Luke
Nieset, Luke
Nimon, Lars
Nissen, Natalie
Noel Jr., Garard
Petty, Daishauna
Phadnis, Rishikesh
Polk, Laker
Posey, Nicholas
Prouty, Sophia
Przybylo, Conor
Quan, Elijah
Quraish, Abdulwahab
Raab, Jeremy
Rahman, Safir
Ramkumar, Siddarth
Randall, William
Rashid, Moon
Razvi, Alina
Reed, Kyle
Rejc, Quinn
Rhein, Matthew
Riley, Brynn
Robertson, Emily
Rosiewicz, Ashley
Ross, Jon
Rubaii, Ahmad
Rudolph, Madison
Ruel, Sibrey
Saiyed, Zaid
Samal, Ronak
Samulski, Lillian
Sandhu, Guneet
Savoie, Joseph
Sayn, Brendan
Scappaticci, Ava
Marie
Schlanser, Adam
Schmidt, Zachary
Seitz, Olivia
Selders, Chelsea
Syed, Alisha
Syed, Fawzan
Syed, Umar
Tandon, Grishm
Thompson, Hannah
Thoms, Hannah
Thorn, Marshall
Timberlake, Gavin
Trombly, Jackson
Tsakoff, Olivia
Tsang, Cecilia
Aqeel, Ammar
Arval, Shreya
Asaro, Joshua
Atriss, Emann
Awad, Mira
Awan, Ritaj
Azzouz, Ava
Bagnasco, Benjamin
Bah, Khady
Battistelli, Peyton
Bazzi, Tamer
Beck, Demarius
Belleza, Paolo
Lorenzo
Belttari, Jonah
Beshears, Aidan
Beydoun, Tarek
Bhatt, Devon
Black, Jazzlynn
Blaies, Emma
Blake, Isabella
Bobak, Alexander
Bonnici, Maria
Boon, Cassidy
Borg, Christopher
Bowles, Gracie
Brandt, Benjamin
Bregu, Angela
Briese, Nicole
Britton, Ellington
Brown, Mitchell
Brown, Nicholas
Brown, Paige
Brown, Trisha
Bryden, Cameron
Buehner, Robert
Bukhari, Noufel
Burger, Robert
Burke, Kayla
Burnham, Jayson
Byrnes, Sean
Byson, Melaina
Cabrera, Colin
Calhoun, Rachel
Callaway, Benjamin
Capobres, Natalie
Cullin, Ty
Curnett, Maxwell
Currie, Cavan
Cusmano, Natalie
Dabade, Ashwin
Daniels, Orlando
Daniels, Paige
Daniels, Startese
Darjee, Aayush
Daugherty, Charlie
Davis, Joseph
Davis, Trayden
Dawson, Drew
Day, Sean
Deckov, Alana
Demarest, Andrew
Demers, Eagan
DeWitt, Nolan
DeYoung, Lauren
Dibbles, Raquel
Dickerson, Brooklyn
Digna, Sofia
Doyle, Connor
Drews, Aryne
Drews, Gavin
Drews, Rachel
Duggan, Allison
Duncan, Amelia
Duncan, Mallory
Eason, Jacob
Ebrahim, Jumana
Eggenberger, Zak
Eichner, Nolan
Eilola, Adrienne
Elkouri, Austin
Elliott, Emily
Elliott, Ryan
El-Sheikh, Yara
El-Sheikh, Yusef
Ezzeddine, Alexandra
Ezzeddine, Julia
Fabien, Natalie
Fakih, Batoul
Fares, Layal
Farmer, London
Fawaz, Mohammed
Hashm, Ali
Haskins, Mallory
Hassan, Mohammed
Haynes, Morgan
Hebel, Bethany
Lazaro, Dezirae
Learned, Ryan
Lehnis, Jackson Lemellari, Rando Leonard, Calvin
North, Alexander
Oberski, Hannah
O'Callaghan, Aidan
O'Farrell, Haley
Omayan, Islam
Onoriobe, Daisy
Ooms, Ariel
O'Quinn, Asia
Oras, Michael
Orris, Cullen
Osgood, Sydney
Oszust, Simon
Pado, Matthew
Pahal, Jaskrit
Palladino, Dominic
Pangborn, Chloe
Pardy, Noah
Parikh, Rohan
Parnell, Gabrielle
Passerman, Brendan
Patel, Diyaben
Patel, Kierin
Sembly, Ashston
Sethi, Sumedha
Seto, Kevin
Shah, Hetu
Shah, Sunny
Sharma, Ambika
Sheppard, Riley
Shi, Mengxiang
Shivalingayya, Nidhi
Sial, Asma
Simmons, Kaylin
Singh, Harmanjot
Singh, Kamreen
Singh, Suraksha
Singh, Taranvir
Skaff, Catherine
Sleiman, Ahmad
Smith, Corey
Smith, Gwendolyn
Smith, Madison
Solomon, Parker
Spray, Nolan
Tucker, Erika
Turl, Kathrine
Turner, Danielle
Turnquist, Hudson
Upadhyay, Shivansh
Vali, Taha
VanDerziel, Hailey
Vassel, Janelle
Vijayakumar, Samyuktha
Vulaj, Mira
Walter, Rachel
Wang, Ally
Wein, Brandon
Weissman, Lainey
Wenah, Ogechi
Wene, J
Wetzler, Megan
Wiener, Hillary
Willey, Maxwell
Williams, Alexandria
Williams, Lewis
Williams, Nolan
Willis, Jacob
Wilson, Evan
Wingrove, Caden
Wonsul, April
Woodward, Jaseon
Wooten, Alan
Wright, Kaidence
Hinojosa, Sebastian
Holmberg, Evan
Hoover, Ella
Horn, April
Horn, Elise
Hornbacher, Ella
Hubbard, Emma
Hudson, Jenna
Huggard, Charlotte
Husain, Isa
Hussein, Kareem
Hussini, Warif
Iacoban, Melany
Ignaczak, Avinash
Ignaczak, Revati
Isaevska, Sara
Izzi, Matthew
Jakubowski, Sophie
Janik, Hailey
Jariwala, Vraj
Javello, Savanna
Jeffrey, Paxton
Jim, Elijah
John, Snehith
Leslie, Christian Lew, Katelyn Li, June
Lin, Nuohan
Lippert, Mia
Lloyd, Ainsley Logan Jr., Antwan Lopez, Javier Lopez, Maricruz
Luchinsky, Sophie Lush, Carly Ma, Mariella Machnik, Shaun Macyda, Alexa Mak, Andy Makins, Brandon Manier, Noah
Marble, Michael Marco, Tate Marquez, Daniel Marur, Vasudha
Masood, Warisha
Massey, Tyler
Mathias, Joseph
Patel, Krish
Patel, Preeya
Patel, Ronit
Patel, Rushi
Patel, Soham
Paul, Johnna
Pavlich, Luke
Peper, Samuel
Perez, Vanessa
Peterson, Arianna
Peterson II, Jerry
Petrucci, Brennan
Spycher, Kaito
Starzyk, Brady
Stelmock III, Robert
Stibel, Sophia
Stoddard, Jacquelyn
Strait, Ashley
Stuebben, Daniel
Sulak, Nathan
Suliman, Yassin
Sullivan, Megan
Suszkiewicz, Nathan
Suszkiewicz, Rebecca
Wu, David
Xie, Andrew
Xie, Jing
Young, Kayla
Yusuf, Thameena
Zarreen
Zahra, Fatima
Zajdel, Brooke
Zerona, Jason
Zhobro, Chris
Zoltowski, Max
Zoschnick, Catherine
24 | The Rock
CANTON HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 2023 Photos by Johnny Heider
Aamir, Zaid
Abner, Brooklyn
Adams-Hinch, Madisyn
Ahmed, Ahmed
Ahmed, Sanya
Al-Shaer, Nadeen
Albaugh, Kyra
Aldrich, Luke
Aleem, Hafsa
Alkahwaji, Judy
Alsobrooks, Madison
Alt, Isabella
Anand, Madhumitha
Antonelli, Gabriella
Appert, Addison
Aquilino, Tyler
Araj, Angelina
Archer, Ryan
Arslan, Zain
Austin, Reece
Ayala, Aidan
Ayesh, Ahmed
Azarovitz, Nathan
Badger, Jenna
Bal, Gurjap
Bales, Sera
Baqai, Ammar
Barakat, Ayah
Caloia, Bradley
Capen, Joey
Carpenter, Christian
Carr, Aiden
Carson, Isabella
Carter, Kevin
Cassani, Nicholas
Chapman, Ashlyn
Chastang, William
Chaudhry, Danish
Chemotti, Ava
Choudhry, Ibrahim
Christenson, Julianna
Cialone, Elliott
Claerr, Aidan
Clark Jr., Jeffrey
Clark, John
Clark, Nathan
Cline, Savanna
Coburn, Ireland
Conner, Ava
Conner, Dylan
Conner, Roth
Contreras-Salazar, Miguel
Coon, Nathan
Correa, Antonio
Cover, Savannah
Crova, Benjamin
Fateh, Mariam
Faulkner, Ariana
Favor, Dante
Fedulchak, Paige
Finley, Sasha
Foate, Brianna
Folino, Brennan
Fowler, Miranda
Francis, Margaret
Furgiuele, Emma
Gadon, Karen Gail
Gallagher, Reagan
Genthe, Riley
Gerber, Riley
Gibson, Justin
Gibson, Leala
Gibson, Sophie
Gill, Damandeep
Gilliland, Ryan
Gilmour, David
Gjinaj, Loreta
Gladson, Jordan
Grapp, Robert Graves II, Derrick
Gray, Henry Grayson Jr., Terrence
Grech, Isabella
Gregory, Colin
Grenillo, Joseph
Gurgel, Ryan
Haddad, Christian
Hakim, Amatullah
Hall, Vincent
Hamdan, Lana
Hamilton, Peyton
Hammond, Trevor Hamood, Malik
Haque, Fariya
Haris, Hamza
Haris, Maham
Harris, Elizabeth Hart, Wesley Hartnett, Marissa
Hashem, Hannah
Jackson, Iven Jackson, Jalen Jacobs, Steven Jacobs-Ludwig, Brianna
Jaeger, Arrianna Jariett, Anthony Jaros, Alexis Jemison, Sasha
Jenkins, Aaralyn Jenkins, Garrett
Johnson, Aubrie
Johnson, Autumn
Johnson, Emma Johnston, Audrey Jones, Xavier
Jungkuntz, Josiah Kahanec, Brayden
Kaur, Dilvir
Kaur, Gurleen Kelly, Rachel Kennedy, Bailey
Linden, Eva
Lipman, Rachel
Locke, Andon
Lokhandwala, Ali
Lone, Aaizah
Loveday, Cameron
Low, Sydney
Macek, Brynleigh
Madasamy, Prethika
Maddock, Cameron
Madi, Anton
Maes, Elisabeth
Mahmood, Muneeb
Manenty, Raelin
Mangat, Kushan
Manno, Gabrielle
Marlow, Simon
Marsai, Noah
Marshman, Rowan
Martin, Ava
Marudo, Isabelle
Mazure, Keaton
McCaffrey, Aaliyah
Oynoian, Nina
Pacheco, Martin
Pando, Nikola
Pangburn, Star
Pangburn, Nathaniel
Parks, Kennedy
Parr, Reed
Patel, Aditya
Patel, Heena
Patel, Kajal
Patel, Meet
Patel, Milan
Patel, Samy
Patel, Sia
Patel, Tirth
Patete, Justin
Pathak, Vishesh
Patni, Aisha
Patterson II, Oronde
Pavlik, Trevor
Pawar, Juhi
Persinger, Alexander
Petree, Wesley
Pfeifer, Liam
Philipose, Philip
Piotrowski, Judah
Pirrie, Evan
Pocklington, Ainsley
Poovathingal, Tanya
Popa, Katelyn
Porco, Gabriel
Porter, Braiden
Postler, Emily
Poulos, Sofia
Presley, Christian
Quinn, Brady
Radomski, Maggie
Rahman, Jibraan
Ramesh Sharma,
Suraiya Iris
Ramlawi-Otzman, Adam
Ramos, Taylor
Raven, Marissa
Spieth, Calvin
Stergiou, Christina
Stone, Madeline
Street, Madison
Styron, Elena
Succurro, Giovanni
Suleiman, Omar
Sullivan, Abigail
Sultan, Reyaan
Sutton, Amir
Swint II, Mark
Syed, Nabeel
Tabar, Natalie
Tailor, Sanika
Temple, Madison
Testa, Luciano
Thartori, Klevis
Thibodeau, Mathew
Thigpen, Jaliyah
Thomas, Autumn
Tieu, Vivian
Towne, William
Trantham, James
Traynor, Ian
Ukrainec, Carli
VanSuch, Kaley
VanSuch, Kenna
Variot, Kaitlyn
Velilla, Ezekiel Gio
Veliu, Sami
Vivian, Lola
Vo, Lily
Waldron, Jeremiah
Walker, Gardayee
Walker, Quindlan
Waqar, Maryam
Washington, Douglas
Weaver, Brady
Weber, Jacob
West, Anna
West, Josiah
Whalen, Brett
Barkoot, Sophia
Barlow, Jack
Basch, Brooke
Bazzi, Adham
Beas-Penaloza, Jorge
Beaudoin, Austin
Belau, Luisa
Benedict-Blue, Malek
Bertram, Samantha
Bertsch, Shane
Best, Austin
Best, Gavin
Bhatt, Nyari
Bhullar, Ryba
Bhuma, Mishael
Binder, Ella
Bita, Vanesa
Boal, Grace
Boal, Isaac
Bogosov, Olivia
Bokhari, Sonia
Bolivar, Xavier
Bolstrum, Jacob
Bosanko, Alexis
Bostwick, Alyssa
Bourcier, Nicholas
Brooks, Jack
Brotherton, Madison
Burek, Katelyn
Burns, Brendan
Busch, Kayden
Cahill, Carly
Cahill, Lydia
Caicedo Leal, Santiago
Caliskan, Masis
Culhane, Ashleigh
D'Urso, Sara
Daniels, Nathalie
DaSilva, Nicholas
Davidson, William
Debek, Maya
DeBord, Jeremy
Decina, Luciana
Deleon, Edward
DeMers, Brett
Demianenko, Zachary
Deppong, Cara
Dervishi, Jonathan
Detary, Mary
DiCicco, Amelia
Dickison, Riley
Dobrowolski, Martin
Doci, Olivia
Dossantos, Lucas
Doyle, Darren
Dryja, Alexandra
Dunn, Tara
Dziamski, Anna
Ealem, Haley
Ealovega, Olivia
Edgerton, Claire
Elzaatari, Aya
Emery, Samantha
Emmadi, Sathvik
Endo, Maxfield
Ervans, Jaxon
Faber, Aubrey
Fanelli, Allison
Fanelli, Leah
Farnsworth, Maxfield
Farnum, Sage
Hassan, Rameen Hawk, Kirstin Hayes, Hannah
Haynes, Evan Hensley, Carmen Hilden, Coen Hill, Samuel Hill, Summer Hoehn, Nicole Hoffmeyer, Kayla
Holyszko, Alec Hook, Brayden Hummer, Lauren Huntley, Emory
Ibegbu, Kosi Ilyas, Eshal Ionescu, Alexander
Iqbal, Mazin
Ismaeil, Inji
Ismail, Adam Jaber, Kyle Jablonski, Dylan
Khalil, Effat Khatib, Anya Kim, Natalie Kim, Scott Knutson, Amanda Kocurek, Aidan Konini, Angelina Kovatch, Cooper Kozina, Christian Krishnan, Sashvat Kulas, Claire La Rue, Isabella Laidlaw, Cameron Lakhia, Shalin
LaRocca, Lauren
Larson, Zachary Le, Hannah
LeClair, Sara
Ledesma, Raul
Lee, Brayden
Leinbach, Lindsay
Lenon, Nolan
McClenahan, Alexis
McCollum, Brooke
McGee, Davion
McNutt, Jasmine
Mensing, Case
Mian, Hashir
Michalak, Sofia
Miller, Gareth
Miller, Mallory
Monforton, Alexander
Monteith, Johnathan
Montesi, Evan
Montgomery, Aubrie
Moore, Anneliese
Morris, Karlos
Mullinax, Joshua
Mulvaney, Luke
Murphy, Joanne
Naik, Sejal
Najduk, Joseph
Nalla, Varun
Nasser, Mahdi
Natogi, Vaneesha
Neil, Nicholas
Neuffer, Zachary
Newman, Aiden
Newman, Cara
Newman, Dallas
Nielson, Lucy
Nuechterlein, Jackson
Numburi, Kamal
Nuredin, Fiona
Oard, Carter
Orlowski, Amelia
Ormsby, David
Orta Ruiz, Josue
Osborne, Ava
Oyer, Camille
Reese, Kanisha
Reeves, David
Renaldi, Perrin
Reyes, Tristan
Riley, Kai
Rios, Janellys
Robbins, Robert
Robinson, David
Robinson, LaChyneil
Ross, Joshuel
Ryan, Abigail
Ryan, Kyle
Ryan, Samantha
Saad, Howaida
Sadowski, Michael
Sakakini, Julia
Salem, Lubna
Sandburg, Adam
Sankaravadivelu, Gokul
Schaefer, Lukas
Schmunk, Kyle
Schneider, Lucy
Schroeder, Elyse
Scott, Jaydon
Shenton, Alaina
Shines, Mashanti
Shisler, Kennedy
Short, Reese
Shu, Christine
Shuaib, Heba
Siddiqi, Kanzah
Siddiqui, Eyad
Simmons, Devan
Smith, Alyssa
Snyder, Carson
Sonberger, Alexis
Sovie, Connor
Wietfeld, Thomas
Wiggins, Evan
Wiley, Maximus
Will, Jack
Williams, Jamar
Williams, Rachel
Williamson, Ezra
Wingle, Madison
Wolverton, Sydni
Wood, Arthur
Wrobbel, Mackenzie
Xhambazi, Kristi
Yager, Madison
Yassine, Rami
Ye, Alexander
Ye, Dennis
Yokley, Rachel
Yonker, Carmen
Zaben, Mia
Zmikly, Emma
Zoubi, Jenna
The Rock | 25
SALEM HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 2023
Abdallah, Layann
Adams, Mackenzie
Ahlgren, Connor
Ahlgren, Olivia Ahlgren, Robert
Cakmak, Emre
Canedo, Miguel
Cannon, Benjamin
Cao, Erica
Caouette, Ava
Carey, Elliot
Carpenter, Carlie
Carson, Samuel
Carter, Alexander
Caruana, Peter
Cela, Dario
Celiker, Neva
Cercone, Michael
Chandrasekar, Veda
Chang, Alexander
Chaput, Vincent
Charara, Mariam
Chevela, Gabriel
Childers, Sarina Lee
Chismar, Aaron
Chokshi, Aryan
Chorkey, Kristian
Cipolla, Lynette
Claerhout, Megan
Clayton, Dylan
Codreanu, Thomas
Cordon, Mikaela
Corey, Brayden
Garver, Yamir
Gassman, Andrew
Gavin, Saharah
Gavric, Katarina
Glaspie Jr., Nolan
Goatley, Dominick
Goehmann, Sophia Goff, Emily
Goldberg, Ava
Gonzalez, Santiago
Gossett, Trinity
Grandon, Jorma
Gray, Mason
Griwicki, Lucas
Gusler, Angelina
Haddad, Zeina
Mariam
Halbert, Leah
Hall, Jacob
Hammoud, Mahdi
Harkins, Logan
Hazlewood, Jacob
Heathfield, Sydney
Hernandez-Arias, Andrea
Herndon, Jace
Hodges, Andrew
Holland, Virginia
Photos by Bill Bresler
Ahmed, Khadijah
Akhtar, Sameeha
Algahaim, Fatima
Alhinayti, Salma
Ali Bakkar, Shahd
Aljahmi, Malak
Allen, Gabrielle
Al-Taani, Kareem
Amer, Mohammed
Amin, Harsh
Andrews, Adam
Andrews, Sydney
Andrikos, Andrew
Anjum, Ramisa
Arshad, Muhammad
Ashrifeh, Adam
Ateya, Ammar
Austin, Gunnar
Avery, Cooper
Ayesh, Dania
Baig, Mah Noor
Bajorek, Madelyn
Banko, Justin
Barnes, Jordyn
Bauer, Savannah
Beaty, William
Beauchamp, Karsyn
Becka, Algent
Bednarz, Thomas
Belan, Emma
Belanger, Ethan
Berhan, Ba-akal
Bermudez, Cecilia
Beyer, Bruce
Bhatt, Mahi
Bhullar, Gursimran
Bielecki, Addison
Blake, Alyssa
Bohn, Alexandra
Bond, Tyler
Bone, Miles
Boyd, Macy
Bracken, Riley
Bradford, Donovan
Bradow, Lillian
Broucek III, William
Brown, Cha' Maiya
Buckberry, Lily
Bugaski, Christian
Bukhari, Laiba
Burgess, Renee
Burrell, Alana
Byrne, Logan
Cabean, Joseph
Cortez, Aidan
Cowger, Shyanne
Curran, Henry
Czyzak, Caleb
D'Agostini, Thomas
Dai, Ellie
Davuluri, Sravya
De la Cruz Reyes, Abdel
Deledda, Mia
DeMassa, Landon
Dennie, Maeve
Derry, Anna
Desai, Shubh
Dettman, Cooper
Di Tullio, Benjamin
Dieffenbaugher, Lucas
Discher, Joshua
Dixon, Ella
Domas, Brandon
Dorado, Sophie Kidist
Doroshewitz, Robert
Dorsey, Brett
Doyle, Nicholas
Droski, Kyle
Duerr, Eliot
Dunn, Anna
Edgerton, Megan
Edgerton, Michelle
Eichler, Maxamilian
El Hage, Elissa
El-Aroud, Yasmine
Elhady, Yusef
Ellis, Griffin
Erickson, Mackenzie
Evans, Aubrey
Even, Maximus
Fairley, Amaya
Farnstrom, Alyssa
Fava, Gabriella
Festian, Adam
Finley, Micah
Fisher, Cole
Flowers, Taji
Fowler, Nolan
Fraley, Mason
Franklin, Justin
Frazer, Park
Frederick, Joanna
Fugate, Daniel
Gacaferi, Agon
Gangur, Ashika
Garland, Madelyn
Garrett, Foster
Holman, Madisyn
Holmes, Natalie
Hotycki, Skyla
Huang, Zhi Yi
Hurst, Emily
Hussain, Armaan
Hutchison, Chase
Kaur, Navneet Kaur, Nimrat Keller, Hannah Kelley, Colin Kernahan, Andrew Kessen, Adam Khan, Abid Khan, Yasmeen Khondaker, Samantha Kilangodi, Sadhana Kim, Sean King, Jackson Kloostra, Jacob Knight, Samantha Kobylas, Connor Kodikal, Varun Koester, Gabriella Konopka, Antonio Kopacko, Ashley Kotob, Tarek Kroll, Jack Kruck, Addison Kucharski, Elliot Kuechler, Nathan Kulick, Isabell Laesch, Maya Lako, Amanda Lee, Chloe Lemieux, Alyne Lenardon, Annelisa Lesko, Savannah Levario Salazar, Enrique Leyden, John L'Heureux, Mary
Millen, Nicholas
Miller, Ian
Miller, Lily
Minier, Mitchell
Mitchell, Milan Modi, Kajal
Montgomery, Grant
Moorthy, Jason
Morton, Sylvie
Moss, Maria
Mostansar, Ummaymah
Moyers, Ella
Mullen, Ryan
Mullin, Nicholas
Munie, Jacob
Murden, Tashyra
Murphy, Madelyn
Murray, Renee
Musai, Mark
Mustafa, Nameera
Nakayama, Kelsey
Nalamothu, Sahithi
Nambiar, Nikhil
Nathoo, Khalil-Ali
Neary, Brianna
Nelson, Jack
Neuman, Kyle
Niemenski, Olivia
Nikam, Arnav
Njubigbo, Obiora
Noor, Anam
Novak, Jack
Nurnberger, Jade
Nutt, Merrick
Okada, Tsubasa
Olluri, Ari
Olson, Megan
Ontko, Katerina
Osman, Yousif
Owsley Jr., Robert
Pamplona, Ken Lordy
Parkinson, Donovan
Parks, Jillian
Parrado, Alejandro
Parrelly, Dominic
Parsons, Castor
Patel, Dhara
Patel, Isha
Patel, Om
Patel, Romel
Qasim, Muhammad
Qin, Eric
Qrie, Yasmine
Quan, Kirei
Rabeau, Michael
Rachwal, Kathleen
Raftu, Annamaria
Ramazetti, Makayla
Rao, Neha
Rathina Kumar, Kavin
Rearick, William
Rej, Isaac
Repp, Andrew
Reynolds, Marvin
Riess, Cameron
Rodriguez, Emily
Rose, Mya
Ross, Aidan
Rossio, Cole
Roth, Andreas
Rudzki III, Stephen
Rummel, Henry
Saad, Adam
Saad, Amar
Saadeh, Adam
Saini, Arnav
Sajadpour, Shyrod
Salame, Hasan
Salgado, Adrian
Samraj Ezhilsha Jose, Akshith Sam
Saravanan, Sailesh
Sarkesian, Andrew
Savage, Beatrice
Schornhorst, Katherine
Schuck, Olivia
Schultz, Carly
Schultz, Grant
Seaton, Caleb
Seidel, Adrian
Seo, Yena
Sepulveda, Julia
Shah, Alex
Shah, Jordan
Shah, Mustafa
Shalaby, Mariam
Shams, Sauleh
Sharif, Reena
Sharma, Isha
Shaw, Brooke
Syed, Zayd
Tambe, Aditya
Terwilliger, Morgan
Thampi, Neeya
Thawani, Dev
Theisen, Michael
Thetard, Luka
Thielen, Chase
Thomas, Jaywan
Thompson, Aysha
Topiwala, Rishi
Tostado, Jose
Tulchinsky, Isabella
Umstead Gonzalez, Javier
Unruh, Ava
Van Tol, Andrew
Varma, Sofia
Vasudevan, Vidvath
Huynh, Bonnie Iacovoni, Elijah
Ibrahim, Leen
Ilyas, Taha
Imam, Abia
Iqbal, Hana
Iqbal, Mariam
Irrinki, Rohan
Israel, Kennedy
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“I am on my feet 8-12 hours a day, if not more,” says David Zarek, who works in law enforcement and security. His job keeps him on the move, running up and down stairs, walking across roofs, and climbing ladders.
David’s diabetic peripheral neuropathy and three back surgeries caused nerve damage in his legs and feet, leaving him in considerable pain and thinking it might be time to retire. However, after ultrasound treatments at RealWave Neuropathy Treatment Centers in Southfield, David now plans to work for a few more years.
David credits his podiatrist for referring him to RealWave Neuropathy Treatment Centers.
“She started talking about this wonderful new company,” he says, but more importantly, she told me, “...my insurance also covers it.”
RealWave uses a specially tuned ultrasound machine to deliver focused energy to the affected area and treats the nerves involved to reestablish consistent electrical conductivity and normalize sensation.
At his first appointment, the nurse practitioner administered diagnostic tests to assess the nerve conductivity and blood circulation in his legs and feet. His treatment plan included RealWave ultrasound treatments and RealPulse treatments, a form of low-wave mechanical energy that increases blood flow and amplifies the positive impact of the ultrasound treatment.
After his second session of RealWave ultrasound, David says, “I started to notice a little bit of a difference. I noticed that parts of my feet weren’t hurting as bad. And, then it was getting progressively better as the weeks went by.”
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Asmall army of volunteers showed up at Wilcox Lake on May 20 for “Rouge Rescue” armed with hacksaws, chainsaws, loppers and pruners and ready to make an environmental difference.
With Wilcox Road west of Edward N. Hines Drive closed off and a Wayne County Parks wood chipper on hand, the crew of roughly 40 men and women had cleared out enough of the invasive buckthorn and honeysuckle bushes, which make it difficult for
native plants and trees like oak and maple to prosper.
Over the course of four hours, volunteers whittled and whacked branches, yanked them out onto the street and pulled them toward the chipper in continuous, assembly-line fashion. Estimates were given that more than 100 cubic yards of buckthorn and honeysuckle were removed –giving Old Village residents a fresh view of Wilcox Lake.
“We’ve probably cleared more than a football field worth
of understory in the forest here around Wilcox Lake,” said Marie McCormick, an Old Village resident, executive director of Plymouth-based Friends of the Rouge and member of Plymouth Pollinators. “It’s pretty remarkable, just the visual change is astounding. If you live in this neighborhood, or you’ve driven by the area, you’ll just be blown away by how much open it looks.”
And for anyone deciding to drive along the lake’s southern edge, they will see waist-high stumps as far as the eye can see. In October, the stumps will be cut down to ground level, treated with environmentally-safe herbicide AquaNeat and hit with a Bingo stamper to clearly identify which weeds literally are good to go – and hopefully not re-grow.
Wilcox Lake, adjacent to Old Village, is actually an impoundment of the Middle Rouge River.
“The Middle Rouge is the most dammed of any of the tributaries, because (famed industrialist and business magnate) Henry Ford
used the Middle Rouge. He was interested in harnessing hydroelectric power to fuel his (small) manufacturing facilities around southeast Michigan,” McCormick said.
SNUFFING OUT INVASIVES
Getting back to the work area during autumn to treat the stumps probably is the most important job yet to do, said Sam Davis, an education and monitoring assistant with Friends of the Rouge.
“Invasive species are really good at re-sprouting from stumps,” Davis said. “Even something that looks completely dead, you can come back in a couple months and it will have new growth on it.”
About the many shapes and sizes of the invasive woody plants which were physically jettisoned by Wilcox Lake cleanup participants, Davis added some perspective.
“These outcompete all of the other trees that are native to southeast Michigan. We’re just
giving the native trees a better chance to survive and grow,” Davis said.
The work to clear out invasive plants and weeds won’t just benefit other trees and native species on the land around Wilcox Lake, however.
If invasives are unchecked,
30 | The Rock
ultimately spreading into the lake, water quality would be hindered in several ways. Those include slowing water flow,
will be turned into mulch to enrich area parks.
According to Jan Waller of Old Village Association, with crew members wrapping up in early afternoon and soon heading over to nearby Bearded Lamb Brewing Company for discounted cold beverages, the response and result overwhelmed her.
more appealing place to come to, give a much better view of the lake,” Prinz noted. “It’s not going to be a bunch of overgrown weeds. You’re actually going to see more wildlife. There’s no disadvantage to doing this really.”
impeding the movement of lifesustaining nutrients to aquatic life and plants, and escalating runoff and erosion.
Carly Cirilli of Plymouth Pollinators said native plants are important for insects and other wildlife.
“It (the removal) provides more space for native plants to grow, which is important for pollinators (such as bees) because pollinators use those native plants for pollen,” Cirilli said. “Or, for butterflies and moths for laying their eggs on them. The more we can get these invasive species out, and the natives come back, we’ll have more pollinator habitat.”
Perhaps a spinoff benefit to the day’s work is that the several truckloads of wood chips were to be transported to a mill facility down the road near Phoenix Lake. From there, the wood chips
“I am just really thankful and really blown away by the amount of people that came out to do this,” Waller said. “Last year on our first day we had about 20 people and I got really emotional about that. Today is just phenomenal. If people show up it’s amazing what you can achieve in a few hours.
“For me, it’s a real sign of people power. It’s not about money, it’s about donating energy to something.”
LAKE IMPROVEMENTS
Steven Prinz, a member of Plymouth Rock Lodge No. 47, a Mason’s lodge located within Old Village, was among the volunteers doing gonzo work.
“It’s what Masons do -- we help build our communities and make them better places and that’s what the OVA (Old Village Association) is doing in this area,” said Prinz, during a short work break.
Prinz said the cutting, pulling and disposal of branches and limbs (some as thick as full-grown trees) proved to be therapeutic and a healthy way to give back to the community.
“It’s just going to make it a
Prinz, the liaison between Plymouth Rock Lodge No. 47 and the OVA, added that he and his fellow Masons always do whatever they can to assist the neighborhood.
For Prinz and other volunteers, their day of community service began with a short introduction by McCormick and Waller at Point Park (near N. Holbrook and Wilcox). Small branches of buckthorn and honeysuckle were presented to help guide workers as they made their way into the thick brush across the street.
Meanwhile, beginning this summer, a major environmental project is slated for Wilcox Lake. On the agenda will be dredging and installing fish habitat.
The Rouge River Area of Concert project remains out for bid. Federal EPA grants have been approved for that work.
“One of the things they’re going to be doing is digging down deeper in part of Wilcox Lake,” Waller said. “Over time, this is going to encourage more native (fish) species to use this as their habitat, because they will be able to go down deeper in the water in winter and survive.”
Environmental improvements
from Wilcox Lake projects also could help Waller realize her personal dream of a safe walking path encircling the lake, thus making Old Village more of a destination. The potential of such walkability enamored Waller enough to move her family from the United Kingdom to
Plymouth. “We chose to live here and one of the things I loved about Plymouth is its walkability. It reminded me of England.”
For more information about the Old Village Association, visit oldvillageplymouth.com. For more information about Friends of the Rouge, visit therouge.org.
The Rock | 31
Schoolcraft Ready to Swing
Free Michigan Jazz Festival returns
July 16 with 35 acts on six stages
The free 28th Michigan Jazz Festival returns from noon-9 p.m. Sunday, July 16 to Schoolcraft College with 35 acts performing on six stages. It is the triumphant centerpiece of the festival board of directors’ year-round mission to promote jazz education in schools.
"The only thing better than music is LIVE music,” says WRCJ 90.9 FM on-air host Maxine Michaels, adding she’s honored to play a part in the festival.
“There’s always a high level of musicianship and diversity, plus the joy of sharing the day with a crowd that appreciates and supports the art form known as jazz,” said Michaels, who will serve as MC at the Bill Bolle Stage.
The MJF board works yearround to keep the jazz tradition alive by presenting youth education programs and by organizing the festival.
"Jazz, an American art form, uses complex harmonies, creative melodies and improvisation which allows the performer to spontaneously create a melody which reflects
Michigan Jazz ScheduleFestival
Leven Open Air Stage, The Big Tent
Noon Bill Meyer’s SONEO
1:30 p.m. Sky Covington Featuring Club Crescendo
3 p.m. Aguanko
4 p.m. Kimmie Horne & Friends
6 p.m. Dave Bennett Quartet
7 p.m. Zen Zadravec
Bill Bolle Presentation Stage, Kehrl Auditorium
12:30 p.m. Terry Lower Trio with Edye Evans Hyde
2 p.m. Charles Greene Trio
3:30 p.m. Jonathan Blanchette’s Time-Jump
5 p.m. Ramona Collins
6:30 p.m. Signal Quartet
8 p.m. Dave Sharp Worlds Quartet, with Elden Kelly
By Kevin Brown
the performer's own musical ideas," said Craig Strain, MJF board president and music educator.
Sally Pinchock is on the MJF board and marketing committee. “We pay over 180 musicians to play, all from public donations," she said. The board acts as a 501 C-3 nonprofit to raise money to provide the free annual festival.
In a modification of the performer selection process, this year applicants were asked to submit a video of their group. The selection committee picked performers on criteria including talent, diversity, youth and the applicant's past performances at MJF. This season, more than 150 applications applied for 35 spots.
“This year our performers will include 19 acts that have not performed on our stages previously, with more youth, more diversity and a wider geographic footprint,” Strain said.
In addition to the six festival stages, there are two education clinics where students work with professional jazz musicians.
The festival is operated by the all-volunteer board of directors. It was created in 1991 to promote Michigan jazz musicians. The first festival was presented at Freedom Hill. In 1996 it moved to the Botsford Inn, and in 1999 to Schoolcraft College.
"We're so excited to welcome this great festival back to campus and invite the community to enjoy this free event,” said Glenn Cerny, Schoolcraft College president. “The Michigan Jazz Festival is the perfect opportunity to relax and enjoy the area’s best jazz music."
Beyond the festival, the MJF board presents fundraising events year round to pay performers and teachers at education initiatives presented in person and on the web. There is free parking and festival merchandise will be available. Schoolcraft’s Culinary Program will provide a variety of lunch and dinner fare. Beer and wine are also available.
For more information on the festival, visit michiganjazzfestival.org.
Cotton Club Rathskellar Stage, Lower Waterman
12:15 p.m. Playing with the Pros
1:45 p.m. Detroit Office of Civil Defense
3:15 p.m. Ingrid Racine Quintet
4:45 p.m. Aston Neighborhood Pleasure Club
6:15 p.m. Andrew Rathbun Quartet
7:45 p.m. Kathy Kosins
Vosgerchian Solo Piano Room, Rennolds Room
12:15 p.m. Duncan McMillan
1:30 p.m. William Marshall Bennett
3 p.m. Matthew Fries
4:15 p.m. Rick Roe
5:30 p.m. Brendon Davis
6:45 p.m. Michael Jellick
Salden Big Band Stage, Diponio Room
12:15 p.m. Dr. Prof. Leonard King Orchestra
2 p.m. MJF All-Star H.S. Jazz Band
3:45 p.m. Grand Rapids Jazz Orchestra
5:30 p.m. CSO
7:15 p.m. Jeff Trudell Big Band
Sally Bolle Cabaret Stage, Henry’s Cafe
Noon Barbara Ware & Cliff Monear
1:15 p.m. Sandra Bomar & Don Bartkowiak
2:30 p.m. Marvin Jones & Jay Valle
3:45 p.m. Emma Aboukasm & Scott Gwinnell
5 p.m. Sunny Wilkinson & Ron Newman
6:15 p.m. Ellie Martin & Mike Harrison
32 | The Rock
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It’s as simple as A to Z.
For the hard working team at Z Plumberz offering the most comprehensive plumbing solutions anyone could need, whether for a home owner or business entrepreneur, is at the core of who they are.
Simply put the local company is all about helping people find the right fixes for all types of perplexing plumbing problems.
Led by a dedicated team of plumbers
knowing their business from front to back, and up and down, is a critical aspect of what makes them so valued in the community.
“Training is a huge part of who we are,” says Tony Borrelli, another one of the company’s leaders. “We focus on learning, testing and all forms of education. We do a lot of training ourselves, with classroom work and ongoing instruction for all of our apprentices and any team members who are on the frontlines of the business. This is essential, especially with all of the technology changes happening every day it seems.”
Z Plumberz prides itself on being able to handle any type of work in a house, from the basement to the top floor, and considers itself a truly one-call shop when it comes to potential plumbing issues. Most of its general business is in the residential sector, working on everything, including the kitchen sink, so to speak.
“We have a large and very capable team and the capability of handling anything,” says Grybas. “That’s why people call us.”
master plumber with more than 20 years of experience.
“I like being able to help people out,” he says. “When we go into people’s homes most times we’re there on their worst day, and if we can make it better for them that’s pretty satisfying. When we take care of a problem it’s a good feeling for sure.”
and managers the company is an integral part of the family of companies operated by BELFOR Restoration, a nationally known property restoration firm.
“We don’t just sell stuff, we focus on
service,” says Peter Grybas, one of the franchise’s leaders. “We do it right from a to z, and we make sure our service work is done correctly and solves problems for people in need.”
Z Plumberz employs 22 staff, including master and journeymen plumbers, and
Operating since 2019, Z Plumberz has helped thousands of clients including residential customers, with plenty of repeat business. The company has also been involved in larger scale work, helping build out schools in Detroit, working on remodels for businesses like Starbucks and plenty of industrial jobs as well. Grybas, who went to school in Plymouth
Besides working on new plumbing systems for build outs, Z Plumberz focuses on service work, sewer repair and replacements, and technology challenges. Technology is a critical part of the company’s solutions and they can be found doing anything from adding smart home devices that handle automatic water shutoffs to touch-free faucets, heated toilets, showers with touch screens and anything else connected to the world of “smart house” systems.
More traditional plumbing services include water heater repair, toilet repair, drain cleaning and unclogging, faucet repair, shower and tub repair, dishwasher repair, hydro jetting, and trenchless pipe repair.
Considered by many as one of the best local plumbing outfits in Detroit, Westland, Canton, Plymouth, Novi, and surrounding areas, Z Plumberz takes pride in the trust it has built with its customers. A 24/7 in-house call center ensures homeowners can always talk to a live person on the phone and get a service scheduled right away.
and has lived in the community for nearly 50 years, owned the Penn Deli on Penniman Avenue at one time. His main role at Z Plumberz is focused on sales, marketing, administration, HR and, as he says, whatever needs the most attention.
Borrelli, who also lives in Plymouth, is a
“I love this business,” says Grybas. “I’m in the community and it’s important to me to make sure what we do is done right and helps solve the plumbing challenges we all seem to face at one time or another.”
For more information about Z Plumberz, visit www.zplumberz.com or call (734) 619-0880.
34 | The Rock IT’S YOUR BUSINESS Z PLUMBERZ
“I like being able to help people out. When we go into people’s homes most times we’re there on their worst day, and if we can make it better for them that’s pretty satisfying.
When we take care of a problem it’s a good feeling for sure.”
Plymouth resident Tony Borrelli, a team leader at Z Plumberz
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Many people may not realize it, but Michigan’s top regional symphony doesn’t shut down for the summer. In fact, it’s the perfect time for the Michigan Philharmonic to go on the road and share its brand of classical and summer-style pops music.
emphasizes patriotic and Americana themes as well as movie music and other popular pops compositions.
“Summer is one of our favorites to showcase who we are,” says Beth Stewart, executive director of the Philharmonic. “We truly enjoy performing outside and seeing so many faces in the various communities we visit.”
Led by longtime Music Director and Conductor Nan Washburn, who will be entering her 25th season leading the group this year, the concerts are planned throughout July and August.
First up is the Phil’s annual home town concert in Plymouth’s Kellogg Park. Set for Saturday, July 1, the annual “An American Salute” patriotic concert begins at 7 p.m. and includes a special guest conductor. The concert will be presented through the support of the Plymouth Community Arts Council and the Wilcox Foundation.
with an “Armed Series Salute,” the “1812 Overture” and “Stars and Stripes Forever” among many other pieces.
A week later, on Wednesday, July 12 the Philharmonic returns again to downtown Detroit and the Campus Martius Park along Woodward Avenue for another “Superheroes & Beyond” concert. This event is a celebration of movie themes with numbers from “Superman” to “The Incredibles,” as well as “The Sound of Music.” The free concert begins at 5:30 p.m.
Three days later music lovers can join the Philharmonic as it travels to Kensington Metropark for its annual performance along Maple Beach. The Saturday, July 15 concert features “Movie Icons & Superheroes.” The event begins at 7:30 p.m. and there is a fee to enter the park.
Michigan Phil travels again to the historic Eleanor and Edsel Ford Estate in Grosse Point, featuring another movie-themed performance. There is an event cost for the 6:30 p.m. concert; visit www.fordhouse.org for details.
“It’s a busy time for us,” says Stewart. “Not only are we deep into planning our next season but we offer many opportunities to enjoy music throughout the summer.”
A fundraising event for the Philharmonic is also being planned at the historic Wilcox House in downtown Plymouth this summer and another one in October to support the organization’s numerous educational programs for community youths.
This fall sees the beginning of the Philharmonic’s 78th season. With a goal to remind everyone that “All We Need is Music,” it will include a series of eight concerts from September through the spring of 2024.
With concerts in Plymouth, Milford, downtown Detroit, Grosse Pointe and Port Austin, the Phil’s free outdoor series
Guests are encouraged to bring chairs and blankets and take over Kellogg Park for what Stewart says will be a fun evening for young and old alike while also honoring veterans
Then in August the Phil makes its second trip to Michigan’s thumb area for “Movie Icons & Superheroes.” The Saturday, Aug, 19 concert will be performed at Gallup Park in Port Austin located along Lake Huron. The free show begins at 4 p.m.
On Saturday, Aug. 25 the
New for the season will be two concerts in Northville as well as traditional favorites like Halloween, holiday pops and the “minis masterpieces” series at St. John’s. Full details about the concert lineup and themes will be released to the public in July.
For information on any of the Philharmonic’s summer or fall concerts go to michiganphil.org or call (734) 451-2112.
36 | The Rock
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Introducing ER services at the new Henry Ford Medical Center – Plymouth.
Whether you live in Plymouth or nearby, we’re proud to bring full-service, 24/7 emergency care closer to you. With easy access and an experienced ER team, we’re ready to handle any emergency. And we’re just a few minutes down the road.
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