Thursday, April 21, 2011

Bamboo Betty's First Annual Charity Motorcycle Show

Bamboo Betty's Bar and Grill
3800 Restwood Rd
Lexington, MN, 55114
Release 4/21/2011
CONTACT: Brandon Paul
Office: (763)786-1014


  The League R.C. will be hosting it's first annual season kickoff party and fundraiser at Bamboo Betty's Bar and Grill, 3800 Restwood Rd, Lexington, MN, 55114, on Sunday, May 29th 2011. Tickets are available for purchase at Bamboo Betty's, or from Tom Bolan, the president of The League, and the cost is $10 in advance or they will be available the day of the event for $15 at the door, food and drinks will be provided.

  The League R.C. is a motorcycle riding club and non-profit organization that was formed in 2010 by Bolan and a few of his close friends. The club is dedicated to improving their community through community service, charity rides and fundraisers. These types of events are the clubs sole purpose for existing. The leadership of The League strongly believes that bringing people together that have common interests and similar goals can produce a very positive impact on the community.

  The season kickoff and fundraiser will consist of a motorcycle show featuring three classes; custom, classic and sport. The show is open to anyone that wishes to enter, the only requirement is the purchase of an entry ticket. A sport bike stunt show will be put on at various times throughout the day by Minnesota's  professional sport bike stunt team, Authority Stunts. Live music by Pipe Dream and special guests to be announced. Food and beer or soda will be provided between the hours of 1 and 6 PM with entry fee. There will be many items, most but not all of which will be motorcycle related, in a silent auction as well.

  The funds raised will be used for the purchase of some equipment and other things associated with the operation of the club to help them continue their mission to raise money for charities as well as support the Minnesota Patriot Guard Riders on their missions related to our service members and their families. This spring, The League R.C. has teamed up with the Animal Humane Society of Minnesota to help animals in need and more than 50% of the proceeds from this event will go directly to that cause.

  For more information on the event, call Bamboo Betty's Bar and Grill at (763)786-1014, or visit The League R.C. on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-League-RC/153830764631256

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Isn't student-teacher and oxymoron?

  Cori Bolan is a full time student at Anoka Ramsey Community College, and after two years spent mostly on the Cambridge Campus, she will be transferring to St.Cloud State University to pursue her B.A. In education.
   Bolan is a non-traditional student, having started attending college at 27 years old, and after marrying and having two young children, with another that was to be born in the final weeks of her first semester of school. She graduated high school from Spring Lake Park Senior High, and moved on to attend beauty school immediately after graduation. After getting a cosmetology license, she became a hair stylist, working in that profession for nine years and still maintains her license today.
   She worked for a high level chain salon for a number of years before leaving to be her own boss at a salon that allowed her to rent her own chair and set her own prices. The move was challenging, but the salon business is a challenging one to begin with. She loved being a stylist, and valued the relationships she had built with her clients, some of which had been customers of hers since she started in the field. But she always felt that she wasn't living up to her potential. She felt she had more to offer the world than haircuts and expert color jobs.
   She felt that she needed a degree from a university.
   Now, the real challenge began. Bolan was married and had two small children, with another on the way. Her and her husband made the decision to move to Cambridge to live with her parents so they could both pursue degrees simultaneously and get as much schooling out of the way as possible. She had been out of school for almost ten years, so she was apprehensive about her return. Like many non-traditional students, the first few weeks of school can be hectic. But she fell in step with her peers and has been recognized as an exceptional student. She is a member and officer of Phi Theta Kappa, the international two year college honors society, she's on the dean's list, and she will be graduating with honors from Anoka Ramsey after this semester.
   The most difficult thing for her was not getting the grades, even though she has maintained a grade point average above 3.9. For Bolan, the hardest part of school to date has been deciding what she was actually going to school for. She knew she needed a degree in something to pursue a career that was more challenging and rewarding than that of a stylist, but a degree in what she had no idea. She at one time had planned to get a degree in psychology, and was inspired to do so by a psychology class she took her first semester. But the prospects for that seemed dim, and the job market was not extremely active in the field. Not only would it have meant at least eight years of school, but the schooling might have never ended. She didn't want to be in school until her oldest child was in high school, that she knew.
   Then, she had an experience that changed her path and finally gave her some direction. Between the fall 2010 and spring 2011 semesters she decided to be a teachers aide at Cambridge Elementary school for a week. She did it because she had considered education, but many of the schools required previous experience in the classroom before accepting new applicants into the program. She hadn't decided on education for sure, but at least she wanted to have the option if she did decide to go that route.
She spent a week in a third grade class and was immediately hooked. She loved the classroom, and really enjoyed spending time with the students. It was this group of children that helped her decide her future. She has plans to graduate and become a teacher, but her ultimate goal is to be a principal or school administrator. She has demonstrated the ability to remain at least moderately organized with three children under the age of five at home and a husband that is also an honors student and very busy. Bolan believes she has what it takes to run a classroom in an orderly fashion, and ultimately an entire school.
   So finally, after almost two years of college and over a decade of pondering, all it took was a group of third graders to convince her that she was supposed to be a teacher.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Story #6
Kathleen Hoffman Professor

   Kathleen Hoffman, a professor at Anoka Ramsey Community College, has been teaching for almost two decades. This isn't unusual, as many teachers are career educators, dedicating much of their lives to teaching. What is unusual however, is the fact that Hoffman never aspired to be a teacher to begin with.

   Hoffman has been a professor at Anoka Ramsey for about 14 years, and teaching in universities for almost 20 years. She currently teaches three to four classes a semester, which she said equates to approximately 60 hours a week, including grading papers. Hoffman has a masters degree in English, with an emphasis on teaching writing. Outside of the college campus she has taught technical writing to firefighters, and classes that cover a very broad spectrum of writing and communication skills to employees of the Minnesota Department of Transportation. On campus, she teaches English, honors leadership, study skills, speech, and creative and technical writing courses.

   She is the advisor for the Cambridge campus branch of Phi Theta Kappa, the international two year college honors society. Hoffman is a member of the honors committee, where she plans the honors courses to be offered each semester. Both of these positions allow her to get to know some of the colleges most successful students, and this relationship with the colleges best and brightest is helpful in her role on the internal scholarship committee.

   However, as successful as she has been as a teacher, Hoffman says it was never her plan to become one. As the owner of a restaurant along with her husband, she decided to attend graduate school. She didn't have any real reason to do so, nor did she have a particular degree she was planning on pursuing. During the course of her studies she worked as a teachers aide, a job she took not because she aspired to become a teacher, but because it helped to pay her tuition which was automatically deducted from her paycheck. She would teach her own classes, but with the guidance of a professor and according to a syllabus that had been prepared for her. She found that she really enjoyed teaching through her experience as a teachers aide, and she couldn't wait for the chance to direct her own classes and write her own course schedules.

   But even then, she says she never had an epiphany that she was to become a teacher. “Teaching was not my goal or my plan. I didn't have a plan, it just sort of happened.” she said when asked how she decided to become a professor. But become a professor she did, and she has become a very successful one to boot.

   Kathleen Hoffman never wanted to be an educator. But in the end, she discovered a love for teaching that pulled her in, regardless of the direction she was headed. When one looks at her accomplishments, and speaks to her students, it becomes apparent that Hoffman is a natural, successful, and well liked professor.

   Even though she never intended to become a teacher, there are many people that are very glad she ended up as one, including Hoffman herself.