For Carroll School of Management freshman Karen Zheng, passing up an opportunity is never an option. So when the councilmen and mayor of her hometown in Harrison, NJ, asked her to create the official seal for Harrison’s 175th anniversary last year, she accepted the challenge – even though she’s only been living there since seventh grade.

Town seal of Harrison, N.J
Harrison, N.J., seal designed by Karen Zheng '19.

Councilman Anselmo Millan gave Zheng full control in the design process, telling her to incorporate Harrison’s “beehive of industry” past with its future. “He [Millan] kept telling me it was my seal and to do what I wanted,” says Zheng, who was recently honored by Harrison for her design, which will remain the official seal for the next 25 years. “I didn’t feel like it was just my seal; I wanted everyone to like it.”

Zheng, who was recruited for the project by one of her high school teachers during her senior year, says she was surprised the town trusted her enough to create the seal since she had no real knowledge of Harrison’s past. “I kept researching what Harrison was like before versus what it’s like now.  I turned to the councilmen for advice and I incorporated the old and the new. I was really anxious the entire time, I didn’t want to fail.”

Asked how she designed the seal, Zheng laughs. “I can’t draw, I’m not an artist.”  With no prior graphic design experience, she traced templates she created in a Microsoft Word document. 

Though the process was overwhelming at times, Zheng says the positive response was well worth it. The experience made her realize that accepting a challenge is rewarding, and she hopes fellow BC students would do the same. 

Karen Zheng '19.
Karen Zheng '19 at an event honoring her for creating the official seal for the 175th anniversary of her hometown of Harrison, N.J. With her is Randi Shu, her advocate during the design process.

“People don’t ask unless they believe in you and see potential.  Anything challenging is a great way to learn and prove to others that there’s something in you,” says Zheng, a student in Options Through Education (OTE), an enrichment program for financially disadvantaged students.

OTE Director Ines Maturana Sendoya is not surprised at Zheng’s achievement.  “Karen looks at a challenge and takes it right on,” she said. “We look for that in our OTE students, and Karen really exemplifies it.”

Zheng, like other OTE participants, has “done a lot with limited resources,” added Sendoya, but also embodies what BC looks for in all its students.  “When we tell our students to go set the world aflame, this is an excellent example of doing that – doing something bigger than yourself,” she said.

Siobhan Sullivan | News & Public Affairs