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STUDENTS OF NOTE Students Elect New Officers R CC’s student leaders for 2017-18 are aiming to make college life a little less stressful. Fatima Farooq was elected as Board of Trustees student representative by her fellow students, and Mahira Kauser was voted in as president of the Student Government Association. Farooq says, “I interact with almost every group on campus,” and intends to publicize her email address for students to share their concerns, which she will discuss with the Board. An Early Admit student, she spent her senior year of high school at RCC and graduated from Clarkstown South HS in June. An alumna of Suffern High School, Kauser is also eager to have a dialogue about student concerns, saying with a smile, “I love to talk.” She grows more serious when discussing the stress that RCC students feel, and hopes to find ways to help. The newly-elected officers of the Student Government Association (l. to r.): Shennel Grizzle, treasurer; Mondi Mulya, vice-president; Mahira Kauser, president; Kyle Dunnigan, secretary; Fatima Farooq, student trustee; and Emmanuel Gaston, chair of the Student Activities Board. Kauser cites a recent ice cream social sponsored by the Student Activities Board as an ideal stress-relief event. Farooq also wants to see more cause-oriented activities such as the SGA’s highly-successful blood drive. Both women would like to convince larger numbers of students to view RCC as more than a place to take classes and make them aware of RCC’s many resources. Kauser, a student in the Sam Draper Honors Program seeking a degree in Liberal Arts: Math & Science, was the chair of SAB and event coordinator for the Muslim Students Association, while also volunteering for the RCC Food Cupboard, SOAR and off-campus organizations. After graduating in Spring 2018, Kauser intends to attend a four-year college with a goal of becoming a neonata l nurse practitioner. Farooq has held leadership roles within SAB, Muslim Students Association and Lunar Society. She also started a nonprofit organization that raises funds to help people in war-torn areas and also aids the less fortunate in Rockland County. On track to graduate from RCC in Spring 2018, Farooq plans to seek a double major at a four-year college in emergency medicine and nonprofit management, and hopes to work with Doctors Without Borders and to expand her own nonprofit. RCC Students Receive More than $200K in Scholarships S cholarships totaling $210,000 were presented by the Rockland Community College Foundation to 165 continuing and transferring students at a May ceremony. The largest award, a two-year, full-tuition Jane Cohen Memorial Scholarship to Pace Roevely Rancell, winner of a two-year full tuition scholarship from Pace University, with Pace representative Justin Santore University, was granted to Roevely Rancell, a Performing Arts major. Honors student Travis Peterson received the Joseph H. Smith Jr. Scholarship, worth $10,000, for a student transferring to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Daniel Greeley, a military veteran RCC Professor of Mathematics Peter Arvanites with student Travis Peterson, winner of a scholarship to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute studying Nursing, one of several students winning multiple awards, took home five scholarships, worth a total of $5,000. The RCC Foundation offers more than $350,000 in student scholarships each year, and has awarded more than $4 million since its inception. Student veteran Daniel Greeley, winner of multiple scholarships, with his wife and daughters after the awards ceremony SCENE | 7