re: Columbia College Chicago
Transcription
re: Columbia College Chicago
Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago Alumni Newsletters Alumnae Winter 1993 re: Columbia College Chicago Columbia College Chicago Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/alumnae_news This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation re: Columbia College Chicago (Winter 1993), Alumni Magazine, College Archives & Special Collections, Columbia College Chicago. http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/alumnae_news/44 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Alumnae at Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni Newsletters by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. re e COLUMBIA COLLEGE e CHICAGO NO.7 /WINTEH 1993 A tri-annual publication for the Alumni, Friends, Faculty and Staff of Columbia College Chicago ROOMS WITH A VIEW Columbia College Acquires Its First Residence Hall Columbia has acquired the landmark Lakeside Lofts building at 731 S. Plymouth Court and will convert it into the college's first residence hall, Columbia president Dr. John B. Duff announced. The nine-story, 158,000 sq. ft. former printing plant in the historic Printers Row neighborhood, located three blocks from Columbia's South Loop campus, was designed by noted architect Howard Van Doren Shaw in 1895 and converted into 96 luxury loft apartments in 1984. It will house over 300 Columbia students beginning in September. "With the purchase of this classic Chicago building and its conversion to residence hall space, Columbia College is poised to enter an exciting new phase in its rich and remarkable history," Duff said. 'The educational opportunities in the arts, media and communications that we currently provide to a mainly commuter population can now be further extended to our growing numbers of out-of-state and international students." Each fully-furnished 1100 sq. ft. suite will house four students and will include two bedrooms, a living area, study area, kitchen, dining area, bathroom, 12 foot high ceilings and oversized windows and closets. Kitchens (See DORM, page 2.) Columbia's new residence hall at 731 5. Plymouth Court, only three blocks away from the campus. (DORM, Continued.) are equipped with a large refrigerator, freezer, dishwasher, and full-size range. The college is considering setting aside some floors as single-sex and others as "scholars only" floors with noise restrictions, Duff said. A percentage of space will also be set aside for scholarship students at a discounted rate. Commercial space located on the first two floors of the building will be converted into rooms for recreation and educational support such as a learning resource center, computer lab, student lounge, game room and rehearsal space. Duff said that although the college currently assists outof-state and international students in locating housing, none of that housing is as conveniently located as the new residence hall, which will place students in a secure neighborhood within a three minute walk to the main campus. In addition to out-ofstate students, a number of students who currently commute long distances to Columbia are also expected to be interested in the dorm. At a recent college open house, 134 prospective students signed up to receive information about the facility. "The educational oppartunities ...that we currently prollide to a mainly commuter population can naw be further extended to our growing numbers of out-of-state and international students," said President John Duff. Columbia Acquires Production Equipment of Major Recording Complex Columbia College has acquired more than $1 million in sound production and recording equipment from the Zenith/dB recording complex, 676 N. LaSalle Street. The college has also agreed to lease the entire recording facility for a seven year period (with a three year option) and will convert it into classroom and lab space for the college's sound program, according to Doug Jones, program director. The 14,000 sq. ft. facility, which will be renamed the Columbia College Audio Technology Center, Lily Maso, a junior saund engineering major, and Mike Kravchuck, a senior sound engineering major, at Columbia's Audio Technology Center on LaSalle Street. page two houses two complete film mix suites, a video post production suite which is one of the most advanced in the city, a 24-track music recording studio, two voice-over and production rooms, and full transfer and dubbing facilities. Jones said that with the addition of the lab space, the department will now be able to house all of its sound classes under one roof. AI Parker, chair of the radio/ sound department, described the acquisition as one of the most exciting developments in the department's history. "It will enable us to give our sound and radio students almost unlimited access to a leading production facility that has been used by a number of award-winning producers and directors in the television and film industry. Our students will not only be able to do post-production work of the highest quality, they'll also be able to explore a wide range of acoustical problems and solutions and learn how to do maintenance on some of the most sophisticated machines in existence. This acquisition says to the current or prospective sound student that if you want to get a job in the business - to learn the needs of the industry - come to Columbia." New Board Members Join Columbia Columbia has elected eleven new members to its board of trustees They are: Pilar Bautista, media relations representative for Amoco Corporation. Robert L Otapman, founder, president and chief executive officer of Proliance Companies, a property casualty insurance company. Madeleine K.B. Condit, principal in the Kom/Ferry international executive search firm. Frank Heffron, president and chief executive officer of Major League Baseball International and former chairman of the finance committee of the United States Olympic Team. Sir Simon Hornby, chairman of W .H. Smith, one of the world's largest chains of bookstores. Michael E. Jackson, vice president for operations of the Chicago Branch of Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited and president of Columbia's Alumni Association. Dr. Katherine Keough, associate dean and chair of the department of education at Xavier University in Cincinnati, and writer and co-host of "AIDS in the Public School," an award-winning PBS special. Paul G. Marks, chancellor of the Massachusetts Higher Education Coordinating Council. Gordon J. McOendon, vice president of Saul, Stone and Company, a commodities dealer . Richard Wehman, president of Sterling/Kay-E! Company, a Chicago manufacturer of precast concrete products. Robert A. Wislow, chairman of the board of U.S. Equities. Ptnd G. Msulcs Robert A Wislow page three What's News... Departmental News: Columbia to Train Interpreters for the Hearing-Impaired Columbia has been awarded an $80,(XX) grant by the Illinois Depart- ment of Rehabilitation Services to create the state's first four-year undergraduate program to train interpreters for the hearing· impaired. The program, which will begin in fall1993 under the auspices of the English department, will offer comprehensive training in American Sign Language, integrated field work in interpreting skills, sign-tovoice interpreting, an interpreting practicum, a placement service and a range of electives in psychology, sociology and multi-cultural studies. "We believe this program will not only provide comprehensive interpreting services to the deaf community, but will also prepare students for careers as sign interpreters for the deaf," said Dr. Philip Klukoff, English department chair. '1n particular, there is a critical need for more minority interpreters for the deaf, and the college will make a special effort to attract minority students into the program from high schools, two-year colleges, and the Chicago community at large." There are approximately 26,100 people out of a general population of three million people in the Chicago area who are deaf and potentially in need of interpreting services. Studies also suggest that there are only 105 freelance interpreters currently working in the Chicago area, a disproportionately small number of whom are minority. Moreover, with the passing of several recent pieces of federal legislation, including the Americans with Disabilities Act, there will be an increasing demand for interpreting services in many different social sectors. Klukoff said that the program will be the only interpreter training program in downtown Chicago. "Although the program will in some ways resemble those offered at other colleges nationwide, it will be unique in its emphasis on providing students with practical hands-on interpreting experience, its wide range of electives in social sciences, humanities and multicultural studies, and its focus on community involvement and community resources for the hearingimpaired," he said. In addition to the four-year program, a concentration in interpreter training will be offered to students who have chosen majors in other disciplines. The program will also include courses designed to enhance the professional development of interpreters who are already practicing in the field. The English department currently has two part-time faculty members, one of them deaf, who teach courses in American Sign Language. The department will hire a full-time faculty coordinator to direct the program and will set up a laboratory/resource center equipped to handle a projected student enrollment of 30-40 students per year. Among the new projects and activities funded by Columbia's 199095 Title III Grarit is the development of new courses in Black Music Studies. The new curriculum will include such classes as Folk Music Spirituals and Gospel Music, Black Popular Music in America, The Jazz Tradition and Black Classical Music and Musicians. Columbia's Graduate School was recently admitted into the Council of Graduate Schools, a Washington D.C.-based organization whose current membership comprises 401 universities and colleges in the U.S. and Canada that have significant involvement in graduate education. "Recognition by the Council of Graduate Schools is an honor that will allow Columbia to receive national exposure and technical assistance," said Graduate School Dean Lya Dym Rosenblum. "Professional networking is at the -,..,re of an institution's ability to pt~ge fuur evaluate its current offerings and continue the search for new ways to meet the needs of its constituency." Not many dancers can say that their repertoire includes pieces on the ozone layer, the periodic table or the formation of a water molecule and table salt. But youngsters at Chicago's "Stairway of the Stars" Dance Studio wl,.o have been collaborating with Columbia's Institute for Science Education and Science Communications can. The African-American children, ages 10 to 15, study scientific concepts and then communicate their newfound knowledge through dance, choreographed by Columbia College student Heidi Baumann. The troupe has so far performed at sites throughout Chicagoland, including Lake Forest College, the Museum of Science and Industry, the Adler Planetarium and various teachers' workshops. Video tapes of their performances have been shown all over the world at scientific conferences and cultural events. The advising department's new orientation brochure "Explore Columbia" won first place for Best Orientation Handbook in the National Orientation Directors Association's publication contest. Faculty News: City Stoop Press, comprised of English department faculty members Karen Lee Osborne, Fred Gardaphe and George Bailey, recently won a 1992 Gregory Kolovakos Seed Grant Award from the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses. The money will help fund City Stoop's next title, South Side Stories (edited by English faculty member Steve Bosak). The press publishes short fiction representing the diversity of voices under the regional theme of Chicago. Works published thus far are New Chicago Stories and West Side Stories. Kudos ... Playwright-in-residence Paul Carter Harrison is the recipient of a 1992 Meet the Composer/Reader's Digest Commission for his operetta "Goree Crossing." The new work, composed by New York composer Olu Dura, will premiere at the Pegasus Theater during its 1993-94 season under the direction of Douglas Turner Ward, artistic director of the nationally acclaimed Negro Ensemble Company in New York. Following the initial performances, the operetta will travel to Saint Louis, Atlanta, San Francisco and New York. Jane Ganet Sigel, director of the Dance/Movement Therapy Program, is preparing to go to China as the educational ambassador and guest of Beijing Normal University. She will be lecturing and conducting experimental workshops. Her teaching and method of body awareness has already been featured in newspapers and magazines in mainland China. Pulitzer Prize-winning photography faculty member John White was one of five journalists to conduct the Freedom Forum's 1992 Photography Seminar in Eastern Europe last autumn, titled "Sharing the Visions, Photojournalism in the U.S.A." His first speech was at the University of Moscow. He also spoke with and studied the work of students and journalists in Prague, Czechoslovakia, Warsaw, Poland and Budapest, Hungary-- acquainting them all with Columbia College Chicago! Fiction writing instructor Gary Johnson's radio documentary "Gramma Elsie" has been picked up by the national radio documentary series "Soundprint'' (distributed to 111 markets). His oral history I documentary focuses on his 86-year-old grandmother Elsie Fay Johnson, and was originally produced for WBEZ-FM (Chicago's NPR affiliate) and the Chicago Community Trust's "Chicago Matters" project. November 13. 1992 f>l'fTO J}f; UAb ~~- 1111\f!K GIERSZEWSKI 5 500.00 FIYE..HVND8EO and oo;100 Mark Gierszews/ci (center) was first place winner in the Chicago Hilton & Towers' holiday card design competition. Shown with Mark, from left, are Hilton general manager Gary Siebert, seamd prize winner Dll'Did Stepen, Columbia president Dr. John Duff, and third prize winner Agnes Ibarrientos. Students in the Creative Strategies in Advertising Design class last fall competed to design a holiday card for the Chicago Hilton & Towers. Mark Gierszewski won first prize. The Hilton sent cards with his design to 2,000 of its corporate customers. Second prize winner was David Stepen and third prize winner was Agnes lbarrientos. Each year hundreds of photo students from across the U.S. apply to the Eddie Adams Workshop, a prestigious, four-day, round-theclock photojournalism seminar in upstate New York. Out of the 836 that applied in 1992, 100 were accepted - six of whom were from Columbia College: James Cottle, Laurie Essig, Laura Jamow, Paul Vozdic, Yvette Dostatni and James Linehan. What kinds of films are the Steven Spielbergs and John Hughes of tomorrow making? What kinds of films will receive Emmy and Oscar awards in the next five or 10 years? If you attended the film & pt~ge fi'De video department's fall screening, you might have found some clues. Ten film & video students were given Outstanding Achievement awards by a professional jury. Three works were selected in the screenwriting category: ''My New Roommate" by Narimon Atibaed; ''The Evil Threat Among Us" by Daniel Callahan; and ''The Romantics" by Steve Danielson. The three winning works selected from the editing category were ''Woven Paths" by Louis Anastas; "Romantic Block" by Andrew Ryann; and "Aging Bull" by Doug Sawyer. Two cinematography awards were given for ''The Collector" by Anne Northrup and ''My New Roommate" by Tristan Gros, Scott Rodgers and Oral User. WCRX-FM celebrated its lOth anniversary on the air this fall. Columbia's student-run radio station has the potential of reaching three million Chicago area listeners, and can now boast of training future DJs, news and sports talents, programmers and producers for over a decade! The Michael Merritt Endowment The performing arts community lost one of its greatest talents when Michael Merritt succumbed to cancer. He was an extraordinary set designer for over one hundred productions, including "Glengarry Glen Ross," "Oleanna," "Awake and Sing," and "House of Games." He worked with such noted artists as David Mamet and Arthur Miller. Michael will be greatly missed by Columbia, where he taught in the theater department for several years. "His intelligence, creativity and concern for Fund students played a major role in the enhancement of our curriculum," said Sheldon Patinkin, chair of the theater /music department. ''He was constantly looking for new and better ways of communicating to the students and inspiring them." Recently, an endowment fund was established to perpetuate the legacy of Michael Merritt through an annual student scholarship award and professional designer award. Many gifts have already been received; for more information, call (312) 663-1600, ext. 522. Michael Wesley Merritt 1945 - 1992 News from the Planning and Placement Office The career planning and placement office seeks Columbia graduates in all fields to serve as resources to students, provide job and internship leads, and participate on panels at career-related events. Alumni participation as employer representatives would be especially welcome in the school's Arts and Communication Career Fair for Minority Students planned for April16. To become a part of the alumni network, please indicate so in the "What's News With You?" coupon on page 10 and send it to the alumni relations office. The planning and placement office has recently hired a new career advisor, Paula Eubanks, a business and education journalist who works with alumni in journalism, marketing communication, English, fiction writing and management careers. To reach her or other advisors, call (312) 663-1600, ext. 280. Alumni seeking career advancement in the radio broadcast field are encouraged to check our job board listings. At the beginning of the year, approximately 50 job openings at radio stations throughout the Midwest were posted. The job leads for positions ranging from on-air talent to promotions and sales - are the result of an especially successful mailed solicitation of stations. Other types of employers are being considered for future mail solicitations. page six A Little Survey Goes A Long Way! The response to the alumni survey has been outstanding! Over 700 surveys have been returned with more coming in each day. Your confidential information and comments are very important to the college. With this information, we can build a stronger program for Columbia's students. If you haven't returned your survey yet, please take a moment to do so. Your opinions really matter. Alunmi board members recently gathered for a holiday dinner at the home of Alunmi Association president Michael Jackson. Also attending to meet the board were Columbia's new president Dr. John Duff and wife Estelle Shanley. (L-R) Sue Tipton, board member Rlzy Saleh, and board parliamentarian Dare Tipton (L-R) Christine Mach, Estelle Shanley, Columbia College president Dr. john Duff, and board member Michael Mach Dear Fellow Alumni: Frequently noted in this newsletter and in other publications of the college is the dramatic growth in enrollment that has taken place over the past decade. Less often remarked is the consequent increase in the number of Columbia alumni who are out making their mark on the world. In 1982, Columbia could claim 3,100 alumni; today, that number exceeds 13,000. You and other alumni are a vital college resource, and for the first time in Columbia's history, that importance has been recognized by the election of the president of the alumni association to the Columbia College Board of Trustees. My election as a trustee took place on November 5th, and I look forward to representing alumni interests, particularly in the area of academic and student affairs. I will keep you informed through this column of policy issues that affect the college's students and alumni. I'm pleased to tell you that Columbia's new president, Dr. John Duff, has also indicated he will pay close attention to the interests of college alumni. I recently hosted a dinner at which Dr. Duff heard firsthand from alumni association board members their thoughts on a range of college issues. He expressed a sincere interest in helping to ensure that the needs and opinions of the alumni are heard at both administrative and board levels. Finally, my thanks to the more than 700 alumni who responded to the first mailing of the alumni survey. Those of you who didn't respond have a second chance; a copy of the survey is enclosed with this issue of RE. The more we know about you and your concerns, the better we can serve you. I thank you for your interest and support of Columbia College. Sincerely, v'~ d ael . ckson, I Prest ent, Columbia Co {k~ e Alumni Association page seven AI u m n No t e s • I '53 '76 '85 Bill Eubank, better known around Chicago as "Billy Bumble" the Oown, has been inducted into the World Oown Hall of Fame and the Midwest Oown Hall of Fame. He's been downing for 15 years... Louis LaVigne is a father of six and grandfather of ten. His varied career has taken him from copywriting to advertising and marketing and running his own business. He is currently an assistant store manager for Edison Bros. Stores Inc./ Big and Tall Shops. Juanita Bratcher is the publisher and editor of Copyline magazine and author of the soon-tobe-released book Harold: The Making of a Big City Mayor... Eileen Hogan Heineman is the principal of St. Gertrude School in Skokie. The school was recently commended for its strong language arts program ...Chris Mitts has left WGO-AM and joined WBBM-AM as an account executive. Lisa Kaczor is a general assignment reporter for WLUC-TV in Marquette, Mich...Michelle Weinberg is an attorney and has started her own practice. '69 Robert Charles Carner directed his first feature length film, "A Killer Among Friends," starring Patty Duke. He was also a co-writer on the film. Larry Wayne Lauer, a.k.a "Strange Wayne," is a morning air personality for KGOT radio in Anchorage, Alaska and operates a home studio. He recently completed narration on a new Alaska video postcard. Previous postcards have won New York CINE awards. '70 Dan Laffey of Ontario, Canada has won two national awards for his news camera work from the Canadian Society of Cinematography. He is employed as an ENG camera person for Global Television. '71 James D. Schiller of Chicago is the president of Digitall, Inc., a post-production company that does music, commercial, video, and voice overs. '72 Wayne Crawford has been appointed to a tenure track position in the department of English at Western lllinois University. '74 Jay Boersma, a professor at Governors State University, has developed a national reputation for his photography. Several of his pieoes are included in the permanent collection at the Art Institute of Chicago. He is currently planning a show in New York. ..Eric Futran was awarded the International Association of Business Communicators' Silver Quill Award of Excellence for Feature Photography. Several of his photos were used in the opening audiovisual presentation at the Democratic National Convention in New York. He has also completed work on his fifth cookbook and is already working on his next two...Mark Ludwig is presently employed as a camera operator on the television series "Civil Wars," a Steven Bochco production for 20th Century Fox. He has also worked on the television series "Twin Peaks" and the motion picture "The Last Boy Scout." '78 '80 Robert Allen of Chicago has started his own law firm, Tamvakis & Allen. '82 Jim Nge is~ video communications director for Harcourt, Brace, Jovanivich, where he prepares video tapes for law school graduates in preparation for the bar exam... Bob Worthington is the host of Unistar Radio Network's "Solid Gold Saturday Nite." The show was nominated by Billboard magazine as the Nationally Syndicated Radio Program of the Year for the 5th consecutive year. '83 Karen Fishman has won the 1992 Elynore D. Mesirow Creativity Award from the Publicity Oub of Chicago. The award was for a program for Dean Foods which included the song "Ballad of the Billboard Birds"...Peter Wagner played an umpire in the movie "A League of Their Own" which starred Madonna and Gina Davis. When he's not acting he freelances as a professional sports photographer. '84 '86 Anthony Kremer of Las Vegas is the president and technical producer of Kinetic Productions, which specializes in ENG video production. He also freelances as an audio technician for many cable tv boxing events and the Jerry Lewis Telethon ...Jerome Mark Mikulich is the chief engineer I producer for Pia yroom Recording Studio. He recently completed work with Mercury/Polygram artist Lidell Townsell and also produces for Chicago-based Oubhouse Records and Fly Records America ...Paul Mpistolarides is a producer for Linger Group Productions. He produces "Speedweek," the weekly show on auto racing for ESPN, and runs his own Betacam service...Rusty Silber is a sports writer for the Waukegan News-Sun. He also hosts the cable show "Sports," covering high school and college athletics. '87 John Netherly is studying to be a licensed funeral director and embalmer at the Worsham College of Mortuary Science. He is also a newly ordained deacon at Metropolitan Missionary Baptist Church in Chicago...Timothy Pfeiffer is a surgical-media specialist for Loyola Medical Center. He recently received a first place award from the National Association for the Care of Children's Health for his tape "Understanding Spina Bifida -The School Age Child." '88 Lee Bey is a reporter for the Chicago SunTimes and teaches news reporting at Columbia... Martin Gessl is pursuing a graduate degree in marketing at UIC. He is currently selling real estate and teaching a karate class at Columbia... Cary Noren, who wrote and produced promos for WFLD-TV in Chicago, has Eileen Hildebrand was recently promoted to corporate photographer at the Enesco corporation, which specializes in giftware...William Richter recently joined Lenoir-Rhyne College as assistant professor of communication... Phillip Solomonson has been named assistant director for marketing and development at Sangamon State University...David Spearman is a teacher at Sojouner Truth Elementary School as well as a freelance camera operator for WCFC-TV, Channel38 and the City of Chicago cultural events for WCW-TV, Channel21/49. Peter Wllgner, '83 pllge eight '90 Samira Robinson, '89 relocated to Los Angeles. He now freelances for Warner Bros., Fox and the Disney Otannel...Shelley Flannery-Pasma, after a tenyear career in broadcast engineering, went back to college and received a master's in cormseling psychology from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School...Jeff Salenger is an accormt executive for Sprint Publishing & Advertising...Mary Skawski is happily employed as a graphic designer for Nall ... Barbara Yonan is keeping busy as an illustrator for Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth A venue, Fairmont Hotel and the Srmday Oticago Tribrme, just to name a few. '89 Kimberly Bacon, a computer graphics artist for Pioneer Press, is involved in the conversion of traditional layout process to state-of-the-art Macintosh publishing ...Rick Cruz has returned to Oticago and opened Rave Recording Studios with three friends. He is the studio manager and chief engineer...Albert Linschoten, a.k.a. AI Joseph, is an on-air talent for WCGO radio talk show and news... Steven McKinney is an accormt executive with WSSD radio in Chicago. He is also working on two shows for the station ... Samira Watson-Robinson edits and writes for the Catholic Charities newsletter "Forever Free." She also works on special events planning and frmdraising for the Women's Board...Stephan Rose is the head of corporate sales for the Daily Planet Ltd. which specializes in corporate, broadcast and music videos and documentaries. Gregory Brown plans to graduate from Governors State University this spring... Pete Cherwin opened his own photography studio and color lab in Aurora. He recenijy photographed an automobile for Car Craft magazine ...Angela Doll, a.k.a. Alex Thompson, has been playing locally with her band "Vertigo in Children" - which she calls an alternative yet accessible rock group...Tricia Fumett is the Oticago area research assistant for M1V Networks. She also plans to marry Jeff Mladic. '91, whom she met while at Columbia ...Roger Jansen is the new owner of the Avalon Nite Oub in Oticago. At 24, he is the yormgest club owner in the city. Under his ownership the club has worked with national acts such as Echo & the Brmnymen, Izzy Stradlin, and EMF...Julie Lennon loves her new position as production coordinator for the Impact Division of Foote, Cone & Belding...Sue Malinowski is the new assistant production manager at Northwest Teleproductions... Rex Robinson is now a photojournalist for the Reporter Newspapers where he started out as a stringer... Lori Lynn Zaitz is employed by Walt Disney Studios as assistant to '91 Bernard Burrell has moved back to Britain where he is a freelance writer and hosts a weekly show on the United Kingdom's only international radio station, Spectrum. He encourages any alums passing through to contact him for a free tour of London ...Thomas Conizadi is a top accormt executive for Pioneer Press Newspapers and brokers advertising for the Srm-Times Co. He also planning to marry Kim Bacon, '89, this year...Dave Evans is the new associate producer for the Library Cable Network in Naperville... Dina Giobbia is a production assistant for Business Commrmications Review magazine ... Lisa Gironda is a fulltime theater teacher for Mother McAuley High School, where she also graduated in '85...Alan Grimm is a freelance cinematographer I videographer and recently completed work on "Little Cupcakes, Big Cheese" ...Colleen Halloran is currently a guest artist for Columbia's student choreographic workshop, of which she was also a summer scholarship recipient. She is a featured choreographer for Link's Hall production of "Next Generation Project" ... Elise Dubois-LeGrand has been working as an assistant editor for The Nursing Spectrum, a publication for registered nurses. Last year she received a first place Gold Circle award from Columbia University for her essay which appeared in Columbia College's Hair Trigger 13...Joyce Littleton is the new production manager of the Wednesday Journal, Forest Park Review and Oticago Parent newsmagazine... Jacqui Podzius, after a year with the Associated Press, has relocated and writes for the Corpus page nine Otristi Caller-Times. She will primarily cover political stories... Diane Weyermann had her documentary "Moscow Women" aired on WTTW, Otannelll . The film was selected as the best documentary film in the regional academy awards by the Motion Picture Academy of Arts & Sciences and was recently screened at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam and the Film Festival of International Cinema Students in Tokyo...Otis Williams, president and dean of the Love & Faith Mission, also heads the "Men on Mission" sports & amusement park cormcil where Columbia students are welcome to play basketball and volleyball. '92 Judith Hurwich of Chicago won a certificate of merit for her film "1he Bridge Oub" which was recently screened at the Music Box Theater... Kara Kane has moved to Tucson, where she is exploring the southwest region and working as an accormt coordinator for Zimmerman & Associates. In her position she works with political campaigns and small business p.r. and advertising... Carol Luat has appeared in both Wisdom Bridge's and Halsted Thea't er Centre's production of "Madame Butterfly." She also acted in "Light in the Heart of the Dragon" at Chicago's Theater Building and has composed music for an NBC pilot with Second Gty... Sue Sentowski is the director of affiliate relations for MediaTracks Comrnrmications. The company produces a public affairs program called "Radio Health Journal." Roger Jansen, '90, (right) with Joe Lynn Turner of Deep Purple Deceased Marie L. Jones '53 McNeal Jones '86 Patricia Linder '87 Joseph J. Jadwick '88 Dean of Students Hermann Conaway Dies Hermann Conaway, 45, dean of students at Columbia College Chicago, died December 15 in St. Joseph Hospital. Cause of death was a massive heart attack. Conaway had been a member of the Columbia College staff since 1980, first as assistant dean of student services and, beginning in 1981, as dean of students. He also taught in the management department. "Hermann Conaway was an invaluable member of our administration whose commitment to the Columbia College family was legendary," said president John B. Duff. "He always had the time to counsel a distressed student, assist a colleague, or brighten a meeting with his presence. He leaves a legacy of compassionate and tireless work on behalf of our students and the entire college community." Mike Alexandroff, president emeritus, called Conaway's death "a tragic and irreparable loss for the Columbia College community. He was a consummately talented college administrator, a teacher of rare quality and a respected and influential leader in the causes of minority opportunity and human equality in education and in life." ''Hermann's contributions to the growth and development of the college were unequalled. As a colleague, he brought passionate commitment to his task and an enthusiasm and energy that both sustained and guided us during many difficult situations. He was a tireless advocate for students' rights, a leader in the higher education community, and a devoted friend of students everywhere," said executive vice president and provost Bert Gall. Born in Mississippi in 1947, Conaway moved to Chicago as a child and graduated from Kenwood elementary school and Hyde Park high school. He earned a bachelor's degree in science and commerce from DePaul University in 1976 and a master's degree in public administration from Roosevelt University in 1978. Prior to joining Columbia, he was administrative manager of the Northwestern University Law School from 1976 to 1980. Conaway initiated several programs at Columbia that recognized student and staff achievement and developed leadership, including an annual luncheon for students with outstanding records in scholarship and service, a program recognizing employees with lengthy tenures, and, for the past two years, a student leadership conference. In recognition of Hermann Conaway's career achievements at Columbia, the faculty and staff have established the Hermann Conaway Student Leadership Scholarship Fund, which will benefit students who show potential for leadership through their academic and extracurricular activities. Open to applications from all students, the Conaway Scholarship Fund will be particularly sensitive to the needs of minorities. Those wishing to continue Hermann's important work at the college may send contributions to the Development Office, 600 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60605-1996, or call (312) 663-1600, ext. 522. What's News With You??? "RE:" is sent free of charge to all alumni and donors. Subscription costs are deferred through contributions to the Annual Fund. If you are not already an Annual Fund participant, your voluntary contribution would help defray the costs of producing and mailing. Whether or not you contribute, you will still receive your copy -but sending both your check and news about yourself for our Alumni Notes would be doubly appreciated. Editor: Mary Margaret Spagnolo College Relations & Development Columbia College Chicago (312) 663-1600, ext. 421 Everyone wants to know so let us tell them! Send us news about you- professional or personal. Photos are welcome. And let us know if the address you give below is new. Mail this coupon to: Alumni News, Columbia College Chicago, 600 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, lllinois 60605. Name:___________________________________________________________ 5~----------------Home Address (street, city, state & zip),_________________________________ Day Phone________________________Home Phone._____________________ Major/Year_____________ Employer_______________________ Position,_______________________ News.___________________________________________________________ Is the address above new?____