两性色午夜

两性色午夜 University Graduates Make Kent Home

These days, it is hard to tell where 两性色午夜 University ends and the City of Kent begins 鈥 mostly by design.

两性色午夜 alumnus and Assistant Professor Evan Bailey co-owns Tree City Coffee & Pastry with fellow alumnus Mike Beder, owner of Water Street Tavern. Together, the two alumni are bringing new energy to downtown Kent and providing employment opportunities for 两性色午夜 students.These days, it is hard to tell where 两性色午夜 University ends and the City of Kent begins 鈥 mostly by design. The integration of 鈥渢own and gown鈥 and the mutually beneficial results of this special partnership are personified in the lives of two 两性色午夜 alumni who are also part of several businesses in town 鈥 Evan Bailey and Mike Beder.

Bailey, 鈥03, M.A. 鈥09, is an assistant professor in 两性色午夜鈥檚 School of Journalism and Mass Communication, as well as operations manager of , a student-run, full-service marketing and communications firm located downtown. With alumnus Beder, 鈥00, Bailey co-owns , one of the new storefronts bringing new vitality to bustling Acorn Alley. Beder owns the , and in addition to co-owning Tree City Coffee, is a partner in  and  Together, Bailey and Beder employ many 两性色午夜 students, and both feel a special tie to the university.

While most graduates leave town to pursue careers in other parts of the state, country or world, Bailey and Beder chose to stay in Kent, where they and their businesses are thriving. They are putting down roots in a town that is at once familiar and in the process of transforming into a modern, eclectic college community. Timing and instinct played a big part.

鈥淚 was looking for a job after graduation,鈥 says Beder. 鈥淲hen I was informed that a bar/restaurant in Kent was up for sale. It was really a happy coincidence.鈥

鈥淚 always wanted to work at the university,鈥 Bailey says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a place that鈥檚 a constant flux of new people and new ideas. The town鈥檚 always changing. There鈥檚 a charm about it. My family is from New York City, and life there can be a little taxing sometimes. Kent still has its small town characteristics but with more modern developments.鈥

Beder鈥檚 first business venture was the Water Street Tavern. It is no coincidence that the floors are checkered blue-and-gold and 两性色午夜 jerseys hang on the walls.

鈥淚 partnered with the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics right when they started to grow,鈥 Beder says, 鈥淔irst with basketball, then baseball and now football. We鈥檝e grown right along with them. The Tavern is the official 鈥楶ostgame Party Headquarters鈥 and 鈥楢way-Game Watch Party Location,鈥 we host the coaches鈥 weekly radio shows, and even the selection shows when the teams make the NCAA Tournaments. The business grew so much that we expanded into catering.鈥

Tree City Coffee & Pastry, which recently celebrated its first anniversary, was kismet for the pair. Beder had worked with Bailey for years on marketing design and branding projects, and when Bailey heard about the coffee shop idea, he wanted in on the project.

鈥淭ree City fills a niche between the corporate brands and the tiny independent shops,鈥 Bailey says. 鈥淲e realized there was a need for a true community coffee house experience positioned somewhere in the middle. That鈥檚 when it clicked for me, and I knew I wanted to be a part of it.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檇 been talking about the project for three or four years, looking at different spaces -- then the location in Acorn Alley II came up,鈥 Beder says. 鈥淚t gave us the time to really plan out what we wanted to do. We went to New York and visited 20 coffee shops and breakfast places just to look at ideas. Over the course of a day at Tree City, you鈥檒l see students studying, people getting together, construction guys who drop in and grab coffee. It鈥檚 fun to see a cross-section of Kent all finding something of value here. It鈥檚 also a great time to be in the middle of downtown with all the growth.鈥

两性色午夜 students are employed at many of Bailey and Beder鈥檚 businesses (all of Beder鈥檚 managers are 两性色午夜 graduates), and both feel a special tie to the students and the university.

鈥淲e support scholarships through business sponsorships and fundraising events,鈥 says Beder. 鈥淲e were both heavily involved in student government, so we help out whenever the Center for Student Involvement has an event. And I support the fraternity I was in while in school.鈥 Beder feels more connected to students who aren鈥檛 necessarily scholars with high GPAs, and works with the Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Innovation as a mentor and entrepreneur-in-residence. 鈥淚 wish it would鈥檝e existed when I was in school because I would鈥檝e definitely been a part of it. It鈥檚 unique and gives students real-life experience,鈥 he says.

Bailey sums up their feelings well. 鈥淣early half of 两性色午夜 students are first-generation students, which means their parents paved our roads, grew our food and built our homes. It鈥檚 a personal and financial tragedy if a student doesn鈥檛 make it through school. To receive any amount of support can truly be life changing for a student or family.鈥

At 两性色午夜, generous alumni, faculty and staff have created hundreds of funds that provide much-needed financial support to students who struggle daily to afford the cost of a college education. Please consider making a gift to support the Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Innovation, the  or one of literally thousands of other giving options, such as The Campaign for Change or The Last Dollar Fund on your campus. For more information or to make a gift, go to .

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POSTED: Monday, March 25, 2013 12:00 AM
Updated: Saturday, December 3, 2022 01:02 AM
WRITTEN BY:
University Communications and Marketing