New Miller Family Endowed Scholarship Fund at WMed will provide medical school scholarships for Kalamazoo Public Schools graduates

Ken Miller Imagine Gala 2019
Ken Miller addresses the crowd of more than 400 guests at the 4th Annual Imagine Gala at the medical school's W.E. Upjohn M.D. Campus in downtown Kalamazoo.

In Ken Miller鈥檚 eyes, the Early Introduction to Health Careers (EIH) pipeline programs at听WMed are a beacon of opportunity, innovation, and inspiration for students from southwestern Michigan.

So, as he stood before a crowd of more than 400 guests Saturday at the 4th Annual Imagine Gala at WMed鈥檚 W.E. Upjohn M.D. Campus, Miller was filled with pride following the announcement that $550,000 has been raised for the new Miller Family Scholarship Fund. The endowment will provide medical school scholarships for students from the region, with preference given to Kalamazoo Public Schools graduates who successfully completed EIH.

The pipeline programs at WMed are designed to champion the biomedical science and healthcare career aspirations of youth from groups traditionally underrepresented in those fields. The programs also provide a platform for WMed students to design and teach interactive learning experiences to help elementary and high school students develop leadership, team-building, and problem-solving skills.

EIH was first launched in 2014 by Dr. Cheryl Dickson, the medical school鈥檚 associate dean for Health Equity and Community Affairs. Since then, the pipeline programs have blossomed and now serve more than 180 students, including 49 KPS sophomores in EIH 2 and 80 fourth and fifth graders from KPS in EIH 1. Additionally, the EIH model is being used to serve more than 50 eighth graders from three school districts in Calhoun County as part of efforts there to create programming and support for a healthcare career pipeline.

鈥淚 cannot tell you how proud my wife, Julie, and I are to be able to be a part of this, to know that at some moment in time there will be a Miller Family Scholar who will achieve their medical degree and will be participating in this community for the betterment of all of us,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淭hat is something that excites me to no end.鈥

The new scholarship fund was made possible through the generosity of Ken and Julie Miller and Jerry and Sue Miller, as well as the philanthropic efforts of other community donors. The scholarship fund is named in honor of the Millers鈥 parents, Harold and Virginia Miller.听

鈥淭hey were beautiful, simple people who believed to their very core in education because they didn鈥檛 have the opportunity for it but they believed in it for us,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 have opportunity. That is what the EIH program does. It gives opportunity to those who otherwise wouldn鈥檛 have it.听

鈥淭here will be a point in time, actually we are at that point in time, when an individual out there today will progress, step by step, through early elementary, through high school, will go on because of The Kalamazoo Promise to college, will go from college to WMed because of scholarships and never pay a dime of tuition,鈥 Miller added.

The Millers have been stalwart supporters of the medical school from the time Western Michigan University President Emeritus John M. Dunn unveiled his vision of what would become WMed more than a decade ago. In many ways, Ken Miller, who is a member emeritus of the WMU Board of Trustees, a WMU alumnus, and CEO of the Millennium Restaurant Group, played a direct role in bringing the medical school to life as he chaired the search committee in 2007 that chose Dr. Dunn as WMU鈥檚 eighth president.

Ken Miller told the crowd at the Imagine Gala that their continued support of the event and the medical school would ensure that WMed and the EIH pipeline programs remain beacons of inspiration and innovation for the community and young students who call the community home.

The Imagine Gala helps with needed funding for EIH pipeline programs at WMed. Guests receive the red-carpet treatment and this year they took part in a 鈥淗avana Nights鈥 inspired evening that featured authentic Cuban cuisine, drinks, and desserts, as well as Orquesta Ritmo, a 12-piece Latin ensemble from Lansing that provided music for nighttime dancing and unwinding under a large sailcloth tent in the W.E. Upjohn M.D. Campus courtyard.

As guests at this year鈥檚 event took in the news of the new scholarship fund, William D. Johnston, the medical school鈥檚 founding donor and a close friend of Ken Miller, told the crowd that the $550,000 raised for the new Miller Family Scholarship Fund 鈥渋s a really great start鈥 but more work still needs to be done.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want you to think for a moment that the endowment is done,鈥 Johnston said. 鈥淲e are changing the condition that we鈥檙e in. Very few other medical schools in the country are doing this. I鈥檓 extremely proud of (Dr. Hal B. Jenson, WMed鈥檚 founding dean), and the team that have developed this pipeline program.鈥