四虎影院 Magazine Service, Athletics and Research Shape Students
A 四虎影院 education offers students many ways to learn, grow and develop their calling in life.
Using H4O to Bring H20 to the World
While in high school, Spencer Dusebout 鈥15 traveled to Belize with his Santa Barbara church to live in a Mayan community and soak up the culture. When he returned, he couldn鈥檛 forget the women and children from the impoverished village who walked for hours to reach the closest water supply. 鈥淚t looked more like coffee than river water,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his was the water they carried back for drinking, bathing and washing the dishes. That image stuck with us and inspired us to act.鈥
Spencer, then 16, co-founded Hands 4 Others (H4O) to bring clean water to the 1.1 billion people without access. He began raising funds with bake sales while giving impassioned presentations about their first project piping water to 3,000 villagers in Bondeni, Kenya.
The grassroots effort attracted the attention of adults and teenagers. 鈥淲e created a movement of young people who are trying to solve water crises,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e provided the kind of inspiration many teens were looking for.鈥
Since 2009, H4O has brought clean water to more than 100,000 people in 10 countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia. The organization has created a vibrant youth movement in Santa Barbara, the Bay Area, Denver, St. Andrews, Scotland, and England. For more information, see .
Spencer majors in both economics and business and religious studies. 鈥溗幕⒂霸 has given me everything I wanted: great academics, great people and a faith-based education,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t has integrated my desires and passions in business, helping others and expanding the kingdom of God. It鈥檚 been a perfect fit.鈥
In Spencer鈥檚 Business at the Bottom of the Pyramid class spring semester with Professor Rick Ifland, he learned more about applying his faith in the world. 鈥淪tudying business and religious studies and getting all the benefits of a liberal arts education, I have learned the value in using my God-given talents in the field and to glorify God,鈥 he says.
During spring break, the class traveled to Haiti to set up seven small businesses. 鈥淚鈥檝e traveled a good amount with H4O, but this trip was one of the most important things I鈥檝e ever done because it confirmed that we can use business to change people鈥檚 lives while showing them the love of Christ.鈥
Spencer says listening to Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus at the President鈥檚 Breakfast and on campus made an impact on his life. 鈥淵unus had the heart and desire to help people around him, he acted on it, and it worked,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople caught his vision and said, 鈥業 want to be a part of this.鈥欌
Spencer says he has experienced a similar response when explaining H4O鈥檚 vision to young people. 鈥淭hey want to get involved in something bigger than themselves,鈥 he says.
鈥淵unus鈥 charge in chapel, that this generation has the ability to change the world more than any other, is right on. One of the H4O tag lines is 鈥楤e the Generation,鈥 because we truly believe we can solve the world鈥檚 water crisis.
鈥淲e鈥檒l have to get our hands dirty and build from the bottom up. Sustainability rarely comes from the top down. We鈥檙e on the right track and we have the means to accomplish our goal. We want to change the world one person, one family, one village at a time.鈥
National Champion Sets Olympic Goal
When she shares her goal of qualifying for the 2016 Olympic trials, Warrior track star Elysia Hodges 鈥15 realizes that if she fails, the world will know.
An index card tacked over her desk motivates her with the times she needs to be one of the top 36 athletes in her events. In March, she claimed an NAIA National Championship in the women鈥檚 600 meters with a record time of 1:30.49 at the NAIA Indoor Track and Field National Championships. It鈥檚 just one of many records she holds.
Elysia followed her older sister Jenae as a high school track athlete. 鈥淚 never thought I was fast because my sister always told me I was slow,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut she didn鈥檛 run track her senior year because she thought I鈥檇 be faster.鈥
Family friend Jason Oatis, 四虎影院 assistant track and field coach, encouraged her to consider 四虎影院. But Elysia wasn鈥檛 sure she鈥檇 be good enough to run track in college.
Her senior year, Elysia was the San Marcos High School Women鈥檚 Athlete of the Year and set an Easter Relays and Santa Barbara County record in the 4脳400 meters. Head Coach Russell Smelley and Oatis persisted in recruiting her. 鈥淚t was God showing me this is where he wanted me,鈥 she says.
At 四虎影院, she has learned there鈥檚 more to life than running track. 鈥淚f I place all my value in it, I鈥檓 going to be disappointed,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e focused on my education and my walk with God as well as track. 四虎影院 has helped me keep things in perspective and correctly prioritize life. God is always first, and my education and athletic endeavors are ways I serve God. Coach Smelley promotes these priorities. He sees me and each athlete as a whole person, not just a runner.鈥
Elysia set new 四虎影院 records her first year in the 400 meters, 400-meter hurdles and a 四虎影院 track stadium record in the 400 meters. At her first 四虎影院 Collegiate Classic, she led the field in the 400-meter hurdles when she tripped over the eighth hurdle and flipped twice before bouncing back up. As she regained her feet, a runner passed her. But Elysia used the adrenaline to bolt to the finish line and win by two hundredths of a second. Her record time automatically qualified her for the NAIA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships, where she finished sixth. She earned All-American honors at the NAIA Indoor National Championships in the 400 meter with a third-place finish, setting yet another school record.
As a sophomore, she finished as national runner-up in the women鈥檚 400 meters on the last day of the NAIA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. She beat her own team record by 0.96 seconds.
鈥淢y goal for my college career was to break 54 and I did it my sophomore year,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥榃ow, maybe I can do more than I thought I could.鈥欌 That鈥檚 when she set the Olympic goal.
Smelley ticks off her 四虎影院 records: the 60, 200, 400, 400 hurdles, 4 x 100, 4 x 200, 4 x 400, distance medley, 600. 鈥淭he top-10, all-time performance lists are replete with her marks,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he is .01 from the school record in the 100 meters. She is a national champion. She has no peer in the realm of performance by a 四虎影院 track-and-field athlete.鈥
Much as she enjoys winning races, Elysia now focuses on her times. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 miss the opportunity to take a step toward achieving my goal at each practice or meet,鈥 she says.
Receiving a Well-rounded Education
Sara Reinis 鈥14 kept busy at 四虎影院. Elected sophomore class president, she acted in a production of 鈥淢acbeth鈥 and two Fringe Festivals, studied for a semester in San Francisco, volunteered three years for Potter鈥檚 Clay, served in Uganda with Emmaus Road, conducted major honors research, won a speech tournament, wrote and edited the Capstone section of the Horizon newspaper, captured the award for best Spring Sing skit, and helped emcee the musical event in March. She graduated with a degree in communication studies, which best fits her varied interests.
鈥淚 loved being in a small, liberal arts school where you can participate in so many different aspects of academia, ministry or internships,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e indulged all my whims, inclinations and passions without feeling I had to confine myself to one area. There鈥檚 freedom in this community to engage deeply in several areas while not spreading yourself too thin.鈥
The summer after her first year, Sara served in Uganda with the first Emmaus Road team at Faith Children鈥檚 Home. 鈥淣one of us knew each other that well, and we fully immersed ourselves in the relationships and truly connected with the Ugandan pastor and children,鈥 she says. Surprising the students, the pastor asked each team member to preach for 45 minutes several times a week. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 know we鈥檇 be preaching when we got there. Despite the language and cultural barriers, there was still a feeling of connectivity over shared beliefs and hope.鈥
Her senior year, Sara completed a major honors research paper probing the sexual objectification of women in evangelical discourse. She examined the messages sent to women about their bodies and sexuality. 鈥淢essages that reduce women to their bodies and their appearance are pervasive,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e talk to women about modesty and how they鈥檙e princesses, denying their full agency, leadership abilities and the complexities of their humanity.鈥
Her first year, Sara acted in 鈥淢acbeth鈥 with other women. 鈥淲e all had the chance to play Macbeth and Lady Macbeth and all the other characters,鈥 she says. She performed in the Fringe Festival twice, acting in plays written and directed by students. 鈥淥ur lines, the direction and the emphases were all changing as the play was being shaped while rehearsals were going on,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was an interesting and dynamic process.鈥
Sara鈥檚 comedic script for the Van Kampen Women鈥檚 Spring Sing Skit in 2013 about insects won the top award and displayed her writing skills. 鈥淚 always try to find a way to act as much as possible while doing the least amount of singing and dancing,鈥 she says. She delivered a witty monologue and a Beyonce impression toward the end of the skit.
In March, Sara joined with Shannon Balram, assistant director of residence life, to emcee Spring Sing, and the two women received rave reviews. Sara鈥檚 wit and love of performing helped her succeed.
鈥淭here鈥檚 still a part of me that wants to be involved in theater or the entertainment industry a bit, but it鈥檚 not my primary direction,鈥 she says. She鈥檒l take a year to explore potential careers, and she鈥檚 considering a doctorate in rhetoric or something related to media criticism.