By: Sarah Parlette ‘12
Published on

[Editor's note: This is part 6 of 11 in a series of Aquinas College student profiles
                                                being published on the Aquinas website throughout the spring 2012 semester.]
                                                
                                                “It didn’t occur to me that no one would be listening,” said senior Tyler Kalahar
                                                remembering the first broadcast of Sound. Kalahar can be credited with breathing life back into Sound, the Internet-streamed,
                                                on campus Aquinas radio station. Of all his time spent at the College the one moment
                                                that continues to come back to him is after having dedicated so much time to the station’s
                                                initial startup he and friend, Ryan Hinkle, were able to officially broadcast from
                                                the Sound Booth. The broadcast was short and neither had prepared any kind of programming
                                                but the moment was a euphoric one, a triumph of sorts that Kalahar remembers with
                                                a shining pride.
                                                
                                                Kalahar is a communication and psychology dual major who communication professor Dr.
                                                David Weinandy said possesses a certain quiet magnetism. “I love Tyler's smile,” said
                                                Weinandy. “Whether in class or in the hallway, when Tyler flashes his smile, which
                                                he does often, his whole spirit and soul light up the space around him. You cannot
                                                help but feel better about yourself when you have interacted with him.”
                                                
                                                For Kalahar, a Fairview, Michigan, native, whose high school graduating class was
                                                only 25, coming to Aquinas four years ago was a bit startling despite its small size.
                                                As for his experience at , "It’s been fun,” he said. “I've done a lot of things
                                                and am still going do a lot of things. I'm not stopping yet."
                                                
                                                Through working for the Campus Life Office and burying himself in extra-curricular
                                                activities like Programming Board, Kalahar has been able to get to know different
                                                groups of people. He believes that he has learned how to really listen to what others
                                                are trying to say and talk to people; a skill that is easier said than done and one
                                                that works well with his plans of going into student affairs after graduate school.
                                                "It’s great to learn theories and everything like that but it’s another thing to practice
                                                and learn how to listen to people and be able to tell what they are asking from you
                                                - or what you want from them - or if they even want anything at all,” he said, putting
                                                what he’s learned in to practice.
                                                
                                                Kalahar enjoys giving back to others by helping to create “me” time for other students
                                                who may be too busy to create it for themselves or who may not even know how. He likes
                                                to help others relax and become part of the Aquinas community. “It’s not traditional
                                                volunteer work by any means but it’s something.”
                                                
                                                As for what he would like his  legacy to be? It’s  Sound. He wants the station
                                                to be a niche for future Aquinas students like it was for him - something that they
                                                could happily become involved in and use as a channel to meet new people and express
                                                their ideas.
                                                
                                                For incoming students and anyone searching for something new, whether academic or
                                                extracurricular, Kalahar suggests that they look at what they have already done and
                                                build upon it. He said that students should push themselves to try new things otherwise
                                                they might miss out on something enjoyable and life-changing.
                                                
                                                “Tyler lives life in the moment,” said Dr. Weinandy. “If he is working at a job, he
                                                is working. If he is having a casual conversation with another, he is intensely listening
                                                and being present. If he is playing, he is playing. I love that he chooses and is
                                                dedicated to living each moment of life!”