Fall 2011 - Dominican University Newsroom
Transcription
Fall 2011 - Dominican University Newsroom
Non-Profit Organization US Postage PAID Dominican University 7900 West Division Street River Forest, IL 60305 dom.edu Fall 2011 Address Service Requested The Magazine of Dominican University Named by U.S. News & World Report as a top 20 master’s level university and a “Great School, Great Price.” Sustainability is a shared priority. Printed using soy inks. Available online at dom.edu/magazine OUR MISSION PA S S I N G G L A N C E S As a Sinsinawa Dominican-sponsored institution, Dominican University prepares students to pursue truth, to give compassionate service and to participate in the creation of a more just and humane world. The University Art Collection P A SDominican SING GLANCES The Dominican University Art Collection Over the past 100 + years, Dominican University has acquired a rich, diverse and historically significant art collection, due primarily to generous donations from alumnae/i and local art patrons. The collection encompasses pieces from all over the world and from local artists, Dominican faculty and alumnae/i, rare 100 painting from Chicago artist Joan Mitchell, and apieces + years, Over thea past Dominican University has acquired rich, from Salvador Dali, Jean-Francois Raffaelli, Georges Rouault and Oak diverse and historically significant art collection, due primarily to Park artist Carl Krafft. from alumnae/i and local art patrons. The generous donations collection encompasses piecesappraisal from all and overrestoration the world firm, and from In collaboration with an external student local artists, Dominican faculty and alumnae/i, a rare painting from interns have undertaken the important task of researching and cataloging Chicago artist Joan Mitchell, pieces from Salvador each piece. To date, more than 50and works are included in the Dali, catalog and Jean-Francoise Raffaelli, Georges Rouault and Oak Park Karl Krafft. the goal is to create an online gallery to document andartist preserve the collection electronically. In collaboration with an external appraisal and restoration firm, student interns have undertaken the important task of researching and cataloging each piece. To date, more than 50 works are included Dominican University supporters may makeanpersonal gifts of to non-cash assets in the catalog and the goal is to create online gallery document including real estate, works of electronically. art, antiques and other objects of value in and preserve the collection accordance with the university’s gift acceptance policies. Additional tax benefits may be associated with such gifts as well as other long-term giving arrangements including life income gifts, bequests and other options as partPictured of an overall financial and estate Forpainting more information, is the early 20th-century oil onplan. canvas by American contact impressionist Louis Betts at of Mrs. Hines her daughter. University Advancement (708)Edward 524-6307 orand development @dom.edu. The recently restored painting now hangs in the President’s Office. Pictured is the early 20th-century oil on canvas painting by American impressionist Louis Betts of Mrs. Edward Hines and her daughter. The recently restored painting now hangs in the President’s Office. Stars On and Off the Field Probing the Biological Basis of Memory Fulbright Scholar Aims to Transform the World of Children Sustainable Strength for the Future Dominican’s Priory Campus: Seriously Serene Fall 2011 From the President The Magazine of Dominican University Dear Alumnae/i and Special Friends: I confess that I am an obsessively loyal fan of the Dominican Stars, and I deeply value the role that NCAA Division III (DIII) athletics plays in the development of young adults. So, join me in celebrating 30 years of varsity sports at Dominican University — and take a sneak peek at our new outdoor athletic facility! As I mentioned in my annual letter to alumnae/i, athletics is thriving at Dominican, even though our compact campus presents some home field and court challenges. This past year, for instance, two of our teams were Northern Athletics Conference (NAC) champs and went to their respective DIII national tournaments; women’s basketball climbed all the way to the top of the NAC South Division and won their first NAC division championship in program history; three coaches were voted NAC Coach of the Year; two student-athletes were named NAC Players of the Year; and we had three All-Americans, including our first in softball. In addition, just recently, Dominican Director of Athletics Erick Baumann ’93 was ranked as the 15th-most successful soccer coach in the NCAA — across all divisions! The fact that DU athletes also are high achievers academically is an important part of the story. This year there are more than three dozen Presidential and Dean’s Scholars on our varsity rosters. Sixty-eight Dominican Stars were named NAC Scholar-Athletes last year and the Athletics Department GPA has been over 3.0 for 10 semesters in a row! Oops, I hope that my pride does not jinx that one! These are fine young women and men, who represent the university with distinction. Speaking of distinction, let me refer you to two other articles in this magazine that highlight additional reputation-building opportunities for our small, but aspiring, university. Last spring, with the leadership of Senior Vice President Amy McCormack, Dominican launched its campus sustainability plan, 4Rfuture. In August, Illinois Lieutenant Governor Sheila Simon joined me in front of Parmer Hall, to formally sign the Illinois Campus Sustainability Compact. For Dominican, sustainability is about more than the environment; it represents the promise of a decent life for future generations. I like to think that, in some way, the scholarship of Dominican faculty is advancing that promise, which is why I am delighted to see faculty achieving recognition and external support for their good work. I refer you to the article about an NIH-funded The DU Stars soccer teams kicked off their 2011 season on a new synthetic turf field. research study underway at Dominican in neuroscience. Such funding also provides exceptional opportunities for students to work collaboratively with faculty on solutions to real-life problems. A rigorous, relevant and well-rounded Dominican education — that is our goal, and that is the subtext of this magazine. Dominican University is committed to the development of the whole student — intellectually, socially, spiritually and physically — so that she or he can participate in the creation of a more just, humane and sustainable world. I know that so many of our alums are already out there doing such transforming work. That makes me very proud. Sincerely, Donna M. Carroll President DU NEWS DEPARTMENTS 2 E ndowed Chairs: Marks of 21 Faculty Briefs Distinction and Excellence 24 Class News 3 BSB’s 2011 Community Leaders GSLIS Alums Named Top Librarians See the Newest Campus Changes: Lewis Link Expansion is Open, DU Stars Christen New Soccer Field 4 2 011 Ethics and Leadership Lecture New Staff Appointment Hooray for Harry! 11 24 35 In Sympathy 36 Calendar of Events Back Cover Passing Glances BACK F E AT U R E S Stars On and Off the Field 6 Seriously Serene 11 5 5 A Season Filled with World-Class Performers A Photo Essay of Dominican’s Priory Campus Sustainable Strength for the Future 14 16 Alumnae/i Spotlight: Christopher Koetke Probing the Biological 18 Basis of Memory PRES I DE N T Donna M. Carroll VICE PRESIDENT, UNIVERSITY ADVANCEMENT Grace Cichomska CHI E F MARKE TI N G AN D COMMU N I CATI ON S OF F I CE R Jeff Kraft E DI TOR Tina Weinheimer ART DI RECTOR View the online version of Dominican Magazine for the content included in the printed magazine and recent issues you may have missed. dom.edu/magazine 20 More Than a Philosophy Fulbright Scholar Aims to Transform the World of Children Pam Norpell DES I GN Pagliuco Design Company Dominican University 7900 West Division St. River Forest, IL 60305 708 366 2490 dom.edu [email protected] Dominican University Magazine is published semiannually by the Office of Marketing and Communications. Reproduction in whole or part is prohibited without written permission. ©2011 Dominican University 2 DU NEWS DU NEWS Endowed Chairs: Marks of Distinction and Excellence GSLIS Alums Named Top Librarians F A or a host of reasons, endowed chairs are considered one of the most valuable and important gifts to a university. A vital resource for attracting distinguished and acclaimed faculty, endowed chairs recognize the scholarship, research and expertise of faculty, which strengthens the curriculum, elevates the profile and reputation of the university, and enhances the recruitment of potential faculty members. Dominican is proud to announce the appointments of three endowed chairs for the 2011-12 academic year. Minow manages the Stanford Copyright and Fair Use website and founded the Library Law blog. She serves on the boards of the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the Freedom to Read Foundation. She co-authored with Tomas Lipinski, The Library’s Legal Answer Book. Mary Minow, AMLS, JD A master researcher and scholar who has achieved significant renown in the field of library and information science, Mary Minow, AMLS, JD, has been appointed the Graduate School of Library and Information Science (GSLIS) Follett Chair. Endowed through a gift from the Follett Corporation, a leading provider of educational solutions, services and products that empower schools, libraries, colleges, students and lifelong learners, the Follett Chair is the highest academic honor bestowed by the GSLIS. Recently confirmed by the United States Senate as a board member of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), Minow is currently a consultant, lecturer and author, and former librarian and library trustee. Her specialty is consulting on library legal issues for libraries nationwide. With a career emphasis on intellectual freedom, Minow was the first recipient of the California Library Association’s Zoia Horn Intellectual Freedom Award. dom.edu / magazine While at Dominican, Minow will teach courses in the doctoral and master’s degree programs, and pursue research and development related to new ebook models for libraries and library legal issues such as intellectual property, intellectual freedom, The Americans with Disabilities Act, public records and privacy law. In addition, she will be working to expand continuing education offerings to the library community. Rev. Oliver F. Williams, CSC, PhD Rev. Oliver F. Williams, CSC, PhD, has been named as the Christopher Chair in Business Ethics for the Brennan School of Business. A specialist in the areas of business ethics, corporate governance and Catholic social teaching, Williams is the editor or author of 15 books as well as numerous journal articles on business ethics. He is the director of the Center for Ethics and Religious Values in Business in the Mendoza College of Business at the University of Notre Dame, as well as an associate professor of management. A former naval officer, Williams earned his doctorate from Vanderbilt University and his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Notre Dame. He is a Catholic priest in the Congregation of Holy Cross. He served as associate provost of the University of Notre Dame from 1987-94 and is a past chair of the Social Issues Division of the Academy of Management. In 2006, he was appointed a member of the three-person board of directors at the United Nations Global Compact Foundation. The United Nations Global Compact is the world’s largest voluntary corporate citizenship initiative with more than 5,000 businesses around the world as members. The Christopher Chair in Business Ethics was established in 2002 by Doris and Jay Christopher to focus on ethical business practices, through annual lectures, workshops and other faculty and student initiatives that ensure that ethics are taught and practiced in every part of the curriculum. While at Dominican, Rev. Williams will be a guest and keynote lecturer for undergraduate and graduate classes, as well as to the broader university and business community; and he will collaborate with BSB faculty on enhancing the integration of ethics across the curriculum. Eboo Patel, PhD As mentioned in the Spring issue of Dominican Magazine (dom.edu/magazine/pluralism) Eboo Patel, PhD, founder and executive director of Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC), will serve as the Lund-Gill Chair at Dominican University for the 2011-12 academic year. Patel will teach an honors seminar course in the fall on the history and theology of interfaith movements. In the course, students will participate in service learning and will complete an interfaith project. Patel is the author of the award-winning book Acts of Faith: The Story of an American Muslim, the Struggle for the Soul of a Generation, and a regular contributor to the Washington Post, National Public Radio, USA Today and CNN. BSB’s 2011 Community Leaders “Community sustainability” is at the heart of the Brennan School of Business’s Community Leadership Program (CLP), which begins its third year this fall. This program was created by Dominican, the Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation and the Communityworks Partnership to identify and foster the professional and personal development of emerging and existing leaders in Oak Park and River Forest. Facilitators from the Brennan School of Business, along with dozens of experts in various fields, work with participants over a nine-month period to discuss and enhance their skills in areas including creative problem solving, developing and managing talent, negotiation and conflict resolution, project management and strategic planning. The three-fold goal is to develop emerging leaders, expand participants’ community perspectives and foster networking. All participants live and/or work in the Oak Park/River Forest communities, so in addition to building a network of contacts within the communities, the participants form teams to work on developing projects that will benefit the communities. This past summer, 15 emerging leaders ended their year of development and leadership by delivering three presentations on topics and issues affecting the communities. nthony Molaro MLIS ’08, a current student in Dominican’s Graduate School of Library and Information Science PhD Program, and John Schumacher MLIS ’10, have been named to the Library Journal’s 2011 list of “Movers and Shakers.” The prestigious annual list highlights 50 people throughout the country who are shaping the future of libraries. Molaro is the director of Highwood Public Library, and Schumacher is the school library director at Brook Forest School in Oak Brook, IL. Molaro was included in the list as an “information activist.” He is an active blogger, public speaker and an advocate for a modern understanding of the role of librarians in a democratic society. He co-founded Chicago Deskset, a group of librarians, bibliophiles and information professionals who host social gatherings and support the community. Previously, Molaro was the head of technical services and technology at Messenger Public Library in North Aurora. John Schumacher was recognized on the list as an advocate and “extreme librarian.” In his work with elementary students, he uses creative tactics to get kids reading. He frequently takes students to Anderson’s Bookshop to hear authors talk or to check out the latest books. He posts lists of new books on the bathroom walls at the school, engages the students with the use of two-dimensional QR codes, and has the older students write book recommendations and reviews. He also encourages reading by setting personal reading goals for himself and racking up more than 2,000 items in 2010 and then updating the school on his progress. To read more about Molaro, Schumacher and the other “Movers and Shakers,” go to libraryjournal.com. See the Newest Campus Changes Lewis Link Expansion is Open, DU Stars Christen New Soccer Field T he construction barriers are down, the doors to the expanded Lewis Link are open, and the renovation of the DU Stars soccer field is complete! Over the summer, the Lewis Link space was nearly doubled, providing much needed office space for RCAS and GSLIS faculty and student advising. For the soccer field, the renovation includes replacing the natural grass playing surface with synthetic turf, fencing off the facility and adding a press box to the west sideline. “We are excited about the changes to the soccer facility,” says Erick Baumann, director of athletics and head men’s soccer coach. “The surface alone will be a tremendous benefit for our student-athletes as it will ease some of the obstacles that continuous training and play can have on a natural surface.” With the first phase of the renovation complete — the surface renovation and fencing in the facility to create a stadium-like appearance — the second phase will commence next summer and will include a new press box complete with data connections and open-air roof level access for video. Additional amenities to the stadium include more bleacher seating, an improved public address system and a new scoreboard. Admission to all the DU Stars athletic events is free, so be sure to attend a game and cheer on your DU Stars! Go to dustars.com for a complete athletics schedule. 3 4 DU NEWS DU NEWS New Staff Appointment 2011 Ethics and Leadership Lecture T he upcoming season for Dominican University’s Performing Arts Center (DUPAC) is filled with world-class music and thought-provoking theater, including a refreshing, earthy lineup of artists featured as part of the Traditions Series, World Arts Series and a Theatre Arts Lab Series. Individual tickets and ticket packages are on sale now for each series. For more information and to purchase tickets, go to dom.edu/pac. On Tuesday, October 18, Dominican’s Brennan School of Business welcomes Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland and international human rights advocate, who will give the 2011 Ethics and Leadership Lecture. Mary Robinson, the first woman president of Ireland (1990-1997), former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002), and founder and former president of Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative (2002-2010), has spent most of her life as a human rights advocate. The recipient of numerous honors and awards throughout the world, President Robinson now chairs the Council of Women World Leaders and is president of the Mary Robinson Foundation — Climate Justice, a center for thought leadership, education and advocacy on the struggle for global justice. She is also the honorary president of Oxfam International and a member of The Elders, a group of world leaders who contribute their wisdom, independent leadership, and integrity to tackling some of the world’s toughest problems, with the goal of making the world a better place. Go to dom.edu/bsb to learn more about the Ethics and Leadership Lecture or other upcoming events and lectures. A Season Filled With World-Class Performers 2011-2012 DUPAC Schedule M att Hlinak has joined Dominican University in the new position of assistant provost for continuing studies. A specialist in adult learning, new program development and online education, Hlinak comes to Dominican from the School of Continuing Studies at Northwestern University where he managed the professional development certificate programs and taught courses in employment law, legal writing and business writing. He previously taught communications at the University of Illinois and also has administrative and teaching experience in the proprietary education sector. Hlinak holds a JD from the University of Illinois and a master’s degree from Northwestern University. Mary Chapin Carpenter President’s Signature Concert Saturday, October 15, 2011 7:30 p.m. Country-laced, melodic folk singer-songwriter Gypsy Music by Jules Styne Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim November 11-13, 2011 The classic musical about Gypsy Rose Lee’s rise to stardom Canadian Brass Holiday Concert Saturday, December 3, 2011 7:30 p.m. High-spirited virtuosity and musical humor The Gift of the Magi Theatre for Young Audiences Adapted by Jon Jory December 3-4, 2011 O. Henry’s classic story of love, sacrifice and the true meaning of giving ETHEL with Robert Mirabal Saturday, January 28, 2012 7:30 p.m. Music inspired by the sun mythology of Native America The Mystical Arts of Tibet Saturday, February 18, 2012 7:30 p.m. Promoting world peace through sacred performing art The Art of Dining by Tina Howe February 23-26, 2012 A delicious comedy about the psychology of food The Night of the Iguana by Tennessee Williams April 12-15, 2012 A provocative exploration of human passion Marvin Hamlisch and Nicole Cabell 32nd Annual Trustee Benefit Concert Saturday, March 10, 2012 5:00 p.m. A very special concert to support student scholarships Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives Saturday, April 21, 2012 7:30 p.m. Grammy-winning, platinum-selling renaissance man of country music Ragamala Dance Saturday, March 24, 2012 7:30 p.m. A celebration of the universal balance of body and nature, soul and earth Hooray for Harry! D Many attended Potterpalooza fully dressed as their favorite Harry Potter characters. ominican’s Potterpalooza community celebration was a highlight event of the summer for some 250 children and family members, many of whom joined in the fun dressed as their favorite character. Amidst an environment that in many ways reflects the mythical Hogwarts, the event featured a community dinner in the dining hall, photos with costumed characters, classes such as “Defense of the Dark Arts,” “Divination,” “Charms,” “Herbology,” “Potions” and “Care of Magical Creatures,” all taught by DU’s own professors; campus tours, Potter Jeopardy and wand making. The campus tours featured recreated scenes from the books and movies. With all available tickets selling out within the first week, and the release of the final movie just days later, the excitement and anticipation for the celebration was especially high. And for all the fans saddened by the conclusion of the book series, the Potterpalooza event included a preview of the final movie, along with an extensive recommended reading list of other engaging books suitable for all reading levels. Canadian Brass ETHEL Go to dom.edu/newsroom to view a video recap of the spectacular event. Ragamala Dance Marvin Hamlisch The Mystical Arts of Tibet Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 5 6 F E AT U R E F E AT U R E on and off the field Make no mistake. Athletics at Dominican University is not all fun and games. For the more than 180 undergraduates who make-up the university’s 12 varsity sports teams, it means daily three-hour practices when they are in season along with intensive physical training. Two, and sometimes three times a week the student-athletes host, or travel up to three hours away to games by bus to the campuses of the 12 other Northern Athletics Conference (NAC) teams in Illinois and Wisconsin, as well as to selected non-conference games and tournaments. And, because they are first and foremost students, they do it all while maintaining a full course load, so their coursework is completed in the evenings and into the wee hours of the morning. Goalkeeper and team captain Max Gutbrod, Class of 2012, ranks fifth nationally with 0.31 goals against average. He was named by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America to the 1st Team All-Region as well as to the NAC All-Conference First Team. dom.edu / magazine Indeed, being a Dominican student-athlete requires much more than athletic talent. It requires commitment and dedication, and if that isn’t enough, Athletic Director and Head Men’s Soccer Coach Erick Baumann ’93, adds a few more expectations to the list – leadership qualities, strong character and a competitive attitude both on the field and in the classroom. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 7 8 F E AT U R E It is certainly these qualities that contributed to Dominican’s incredible success in 2010-11. This past year, five teams — men’s soccer, women’s soccer, women’s volleyball, women’s basketball and women’s softball — topped off their winning seasons with trips to the NAC championship tournaments. Two other teams — men’s and women’s tennis — qualified for their respective NAC tournaments. Not only did the men’s soccer team capture first place for the NAC regular season and in the championship tournament, they advanced for the ninth year in a row to the NCAA Division III championship tournament. The volleyball team captured their first NAC tournament championship and went to the NCAA Division III national tournament for the first time in program history. Though limited resources and facilities have been a consistent challenge throughout the history F E AT U R E of Rosary/Dominican athletics, the coaches and administration have consistently found ways around the constraints. Today just five of the 12 sports teams practice and compete on campus, requiring the teams to shuttle to practice sites up to 45 minutes away each day. When it comes to home games, the “home field advantage” rules don’t typically apply. “The competition for recruiting prospective players is as high as it has ever been, but the programs and majors Dominican offers are a big draw to our students. The academics, geographic location and the opportunities available through a small school are very attractive,” says Baumann – who is the 15th-winningest men’s soccer coach in the NCAA (for all levels) and seventh-winningest active coach. “Our coaches are excellent recruiters because they overcome obstacles to field truly competitive teams.” While the university history of competitive athletic programming extends back to the 1970s with the Rosary Beads teams, it was following the appointment in 1980 of the university’s first full-time athletic director, Joe Leary ’77, that the decision was made to transition from intramural competition to varsity athletics. In 1981, in addition to a full slate of intramural teams, the first “Rosary Rebels” teams (women’s volleyball, women’s tennis, women’s basketball and men’s basketball) joined the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference (CCAC). The following year, sports scholarships were made available to incoming athletes, providing additional opportunities to attract talented athletes. “The move to the NAIA brought us to a new level of competition and demanded a high level of accountability, commitment and understanding from the athletic department, the coaches, the players and the faculty,” says Marilyn Gerken Benakis, former registrar who For the past 10 semesters, DU’s student-athletes boasted a combined 3.0 grade point average or higher. helped orchestrate and ensure compliance with the many college and conference academic, eligibility and reporting requirements. “To participate, we had to ensure that every athlete met and maintained very specific eligibility requirements. There was a learning curve for everyone that wasn’t always easy.” “The players at the time were trailblazers in many respects,” recalls Bill Brucks, former athletic director and head men’s basketball coach (1983-1996). Brucks was the assistant men’s basketball coach during the transition to the NAIA. “The seasons were long and grueling. We had to recruit athletes who could meet and maintain both the college’s and the NAIA’s strict academic standards and requirements. “Also, when the Igini Sports Forum was under construction, we didn’t have a gymnasium so our practices were at 6 a.m. at Trinity High School,” Brucks says. “It was an adjustment coming to a small Athletic Highlights 1970s The Rosary Beads/Rosary Rebels teams compete in volleyball, basketball, cross country, tennis, floor hockey, swimming, water polo, badminton, bowling and ice skating. dom.edu / magazine institution where they played in front of a few hundred fans instead of the thousands of fans that many of the athletes were used to as stars of their high school teams. Yet, each player was truly a member of the student body and every one of them graduated.” Despite the sacrifices and challenges prior to the opening in 1988 of the Igini Sports Forum (known previously as the College Center), Tom Trefilek, head women’s basketball coach from 1987-1993 and again from 2000-2002, remembers not only the competitive spirit among the athletes, but also the incredible support of the faculty, administration and student body. “The school was incredibly supportive in helping us build a competitive athletic program and there was genuine enthusiasm for the teams from the sisters, faculty and students,” he says. “Everyone worked together to create a tradition they could be proud of.” With the many winning seasons came multiple district and conference titles and trips to the national NAIA tournaments, including three consecutive trips to the NAIA national tournament for the Lady Rebels basketball team from 1991-1993. “We were in a very tough conference and it was very exciting to see the women develop as players,” Trefilek says. “They had a vision of what they wanted and they worked hard to achieve it.” Over the years, the athletic program grew and strengthened and new teams were added. Coinciding with the university name change, in 1997, the Rebels became known as the Dominican Stars. The most significant transition occurred in 2000 when Four teams join the NAIA and CCAC College Center/Igini Sports Forum opens Rosary Rebels become the Dominican Stars Men’s soccer team advances to NCAA Division III Final Four 1981 1988 1997 2009 1982 First athletic scholarships awarded 1987 1994 2000 2010 2011 Marty Blazek sets the Illinois state scoring record in Men’s Basketball with 2,955 career points Lady Rebels basketball team makes fourth consecutive trip to NAIA National Tournament Dominican joins the NCAA Division III Women’s basketball team captures NAC division championship to become the first worst-to-first turnaround in NAC history Athletics Hall of Fame hold first induction ceremony honoring five individuals Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 9 10 F E AT U R E the university moved from the NAIA to the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA), Division III, signaling the end of athletic scholarships. “The transition was based on both student and institutional need, though initially there wasn’t a lot of confidence that we could succeed in Division III,” says Trudi Goggin, dean of students. “Being a part of the NCAA brings great value to the university as it builds our reputation and attracts students.” “Growing an institution does not happen by chance. It requires strategy and timing,” says President Donna Carroll. “It was time to move to the NCAA. Division III’s focus on the scholar–athlete aligned with our aspirations as a university.” “Athletics is an essential component of the university experience and is an incredible source of pride, spirit, culture and camaraderie on campus.” It took a few years to complete the move to NCAA Division III as new sports teams were added to assure gender equity and to meet conference requirements. Today, Dominican fields six women’s and six men’s teams. “The NCAA is much bigger and more focused on traditional-age student-athletes,” explains Baumann. “And, in Division III our players must meet different academic requirements.” “Athletics is an essential component of the university experience and is an incredible source of pride, spirit, culture and camaraderie on campus,” Goggin says. “The program provides growth and leadership development, and healthy engagement in the campus and greater community. Our student-athletes know they represent the university when they are out in the community.” F E AT U R E Following a highly successful high school soccer career, senior Max Gutbrod, Slinger, WI, knew he wanted to keep playing at the most competitive level possible in college, so he initially pursued several NCAA Division I opportunities. Just a few weeks shy of signing on at a Division I school, Gutbrod sat down with the DU coaches and players and felt an immediate difference. “I knew DU’s reputation as a soccer powerhouse, and when I saw the beautiful campus and learned about the business degree program, I made my decision to come here,” DU’s star goalkeeper and team captain says. “It’s been an incredible experience, and I’ve grown and learned so much being a part of the team. Coach Baumann is a great leader and I have relationships with my teammates and classmates that I know I couldn’t get any place else.” “While there have been many wonderful victories on the field, some of our greatest victories have taken place off the field, or came from our losses,” Goggin says. “Academics and personal development are more important than any athletic outcome, and our coaches really utilize these teachable moments.” The magnitude of those off-court/field victories and excellence in the classroom is significant. For the past 10 semesters, DU’s student athletes boasted a combined 3.0 grade point average (gpa) or higher. This past academic year, 68 athletes were named as scholar-athletes by the NAC for maintaining a minimum 3.25 gpa while competing on at least one varsity athletic team. Three of DU’s men’s basketball players were named to the 2010-11 NABC Honors Court, while for the second year in a row, the women’s volleyball received the Team Academic Award for maintaining a minimum 3.3 gpa throughout the year. Other student-athlete achievements include an Academic All-American, three All-Americans and nine All-Region honors. And, in recognition of the teams’ stellar leadership, three DU head coaches – Erick Baumann (Men’s Soccer), Christine Paciero (Women’s Volleyball), and Michael Lane (Women’s Basketball) – were named Coach of the Year by the NAC. “Though we have a long way to go and continue to work toward improving our facilities, we are proud of our accomplishments,” Baumann concludes. “We graduate student-athletes who are engaged in their community, and they are proud to come back and support the school.” This past season, Dominican’s Female Athlete of the Year Sarah Budz, Class of 2012, set records all around for her stellar performance on the softball field, the basketball court and the classroom. For her achievements on the softball field, Budz was named All-American by the National Fastpitch Coaches Association, was named to the Capital One Academic All-America Softball Team and as the NAC Player of the Year. For her basketball achievements, Budz achieved All-Conference honors and First Team Academic All-District honors. dom.edu / magazine seriously serene ven after becoming a “new campus” for Dominican University in 2001, the Priory Campus remains a sanctuary of calm, recognized for its beauty and serene and spiritual environment. The outside of the majestic building is surrounded by peaceful gardens overflowing with flowers and vegetables, ivy-covered walkways and a tranquil lily pond, while the inside spaces include the warm, quiet chapel; gothic-style archways and windows; and of course the hustle of students — interrupted occasionally by squeals of laughter and chatter from toddlers and young children. In addition to student housing, the Priory is home to Dominican’s Graduate School of Social Work, School of Continuing Studies, the Rose K. Goedert Center for Early Childhood Education, and the Siena Center, and space is subleased to ELS for students studying the English language. Throughout the week and well into the evening hours, the campus hums with classes, residence hall life, and Dominican-sponsored and community lectures and conferences featuring noted speakers and dignitaries. We extend an open invitation to all alumnae/i and friends to visit the Priory Campus to experience the beauty and serenity for yourself! 11 14 F E AT U R E F E AT U R E top: Dominican’s community garden is maintained by volunteers. A portion of the harvest is donated to a local food pantry. Middle: The permeable pavers in the west parking lot are engineered to cleanse the rain water as it percolates into the ground to naturally hydrate surrounding trees. Bottom: Students, faculty and staff can check out a bike for free from the main desks at the Main and Priory campuses. hrough the back door of the Albertus Magnus Arts Center (formerly the Science Building), down a steep flight of stairs, past the noisy boilers, in a dark and dingy back room is located one of the greenest features in Dominican’s sustainability efforts. The 90-year-old cistern doesn’t look like much, but this simple water tank is able to collect gallons upon gallons of rainwater from the roofs of the original campus buildings and excess water that is pumped out of the basement of Centennial Hall. After the cistern was restored a couple years ago, the water collected has been used to irrigate campus and to replenish water for the air conditioners in Parmer Hall, saving four to six million gallons of potable water a year. The cistern is just one of many ways that Dominican is conserving resources by retrofitting old technologies and using new innovations. Under the direction dom.edu / magazine of Amy McCormack, senior vice president for finance and administration, the university has launched an overarching sustainability planning effort titled 4Rfuture. The title pays tribute to the traditional three Rs of green living: reduce, reuse and recycle. The fourth R in the plan stands for respect. “Respect for our Earth and the future state of living on it is the umbrella for all of these green initiatives. There are many opportunities to live a more conscious lifestyle and support the economy and sustainability,” McCormack says. The 4Rfuture initiative has brought together a group of more than 25 faculty, staff and students to serve on a sustainability planning committee. In addition, events have been held on campus about topics such as local food, community gardening, geothermal energy, carbon emissions from energy and transportation. McCormack hopes to make sustainability planning more a part of the curriculum and get more students, faculty and staff involved. In the fall, Physical Plant will hire two sustainability stewards, student workers who will help promote 4Rfuture on campus. In addition, a student internship will be established to work on sustainability tracking and assessment, developing best practices and policies, and programming of events to educate and build awareness on sustainability topics. “I’m hoping that down the road 4Rfuture and student awareness become integrated in not only the sustainability program, but the curriculum and their personal lives as well,” McCormack says. Several sustainability projects have already been completed on campus. More than a decade ago, permeable pavers were installed in the west parking lot. The holes between the pavers allow rainwater to filter through to the ground and to the roots of trees and plants. This also prevents unnecessary runoffs into the sewer system. A bioswale behind Parmer Hall also filters and diverts the water from the roof of Parmer through an area with native trees and plants. The original ventilation system in Lewis Hall was retrofitted to air condition the building, allowing the university to remove the inefficient window air conditioners. Energy-efficient lighting and boilers were installed on campus, and a building automation system controls the energy settings on campus. The university also uses innovations such as occupancy sensors, solar-powered lights, day lighting and heat recovery to save energy. Construction of new buildings, such as Parmer Hall and the parking garage, have also involved green elements. Parmer Hall was built following Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) criteria, and builders used recycled content and local materials. The parking garage uses day lighting, so light levels automatically dim if natural light levels are high. greenhouse gas emissions, there would also be a financial incentive to utilizing geothermal and solar technologies. The university is also in the process of planning future sustainability projects. Over a year ago, Dominican launched BikeDU, a free bike-sharing program on campus. Due to its popularity, the program is looking to expand by offering more bikes and giving students the chance to rent bikes for an entire semester. As part of the 4Rfuture planning effort, McCormack hopes the university will be able to further evaluate sustainability commitments and pledges. In August, the university formally signed the Illinois Campus Sustainability Compact, and is evaluating the requirements of the American College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment. McCormack explains, “signing such commitments needs to be well informed and done with integrity because there are implications that will drive future planning.” Another organic project on campus is a community garden that was planted in the spring at the Priory Campus. Staff, faculty and students planted and maintained the garden throughout the summer and donated a portion of the harvest to a local food pantry. The university is also investigating the feasibility of using geothermal technology and solar power to provide energy to campus. One of the largest contributors to greenhouse gas is carbon emissions from energy use. Not only would the university be able to significantly reduce its Dominican has been committed to conservation since the first buildings and the cistern system were built in the 1920s. “Some say sustainability is the mega movement of this century,” McCormack says. “I think sustainability has been part of the fabric since the founding of the university and will continue to move us forward.” Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 15 16 F E AT U R E F E AT U R E ALUMNAE / I SPOTLIGHT hristopher Koetke MBA ’07 is one of those fortunate individuals who knew from an early age exactly what he wanted to be when he grew up. “I was in sixth grade and sitting in the back seat of the car stressing about what I wanted to be when I grew up when it just hit me. I wanted to be a chef,” Koetke recalls. “Whenever we had company over, I always ended up in the kitchen, so I guess it was destined to happen.” With that plan in mind, at the age of 13 he landed his first job in a professional kitchen. After several years of correspondence back and forth with famed chef Julia Child, at age 16 he had the opportunity to meet the grande dame of cooking herself, and his fate was sealed. His career has taken him to positions in several of the world’s finest restaurants in France and the United States, as a certified executive chef and a certified culinary educator. Today, as the vice president of culinary arts programs for Laureate International Universities and the executive director of the School of Culinary Arts at Kendall College in Chicago, Koetke provides strategic leadership for all of Laureate’s culinary arts programs, which are offered at nine institutions in nine countries. He is also the host of the Emmy-nominated cooking show, “Let’s Dish,” on the Live Well HD Network. “I am eternally fascinated by food — once it is in your blood, it never gets out,” Koetke says. “Food is a creative outlet – thus, the name culinary arts. It is an art form that involves creating something very special as well as very social.” celebrity chef & culinary educator “I am eternally fascinated by food – once it is in your blood, it never gets out.” In 2009, Christopher Koetke MBA ’07 (right) was named Cooking Teacher of the Year by the International Association of Culinary Professionals. Of all his accomplishments, he is most proud of his role as a teacher. dom.edu / magazine And like all arts, Koetke says, the culinary arts involve a journey of discovery. “The fun thing about a journey with food is that it doesn’t have a foreseeable end. Like many chefs, I have gone through phases believing and following different styles,” he says. “The culinary arts is a profession where upward mobility is intrinsic.” as he assumed positions of greater leadership. In 2009, the International Association of Culinary Professionals named him Cooking Teacher of the Year, and under his leadership, the school received the Academy of Culinary Arts Cordon d’Or Gold Ribbon Cooking School of the Year Culinary Academy Award for 2008. “If someone had told me at the age of 15 that one day I would have a national television show, write a book, contribute to magazines, manage culinary schools in nine countries and work with many of the world’s greatest chefs, I wouldn’t have believed it,” Koetke says. “While I’ve worked hard for it, I’ve been incredibly fortunate.” Koetke’s belief that education opens many unexpected doors led him to pursue his master’s in business administration at Dominican. “Having my MBA has been terrifically invaluable to me as a chef. To be successful I have to understand business and how to make a profit. Dominican is a great place and I’m proud to have gone there for my degree.” This past spring, the Brennan School of Business presented Koetke with its Alumnae/i Award for Professional Achievement. “I have found myself in situations meeting with financial experts and lawyers that I was never prepared for as a chef. Having a business background has been essential to what I have accomplished, and without my MBA I would not be in my current position,” he says. “Chefs needs to understand business because restaurant failures are not the result of culinary mistakes, they are business mistakes.” While Koetke wears many hats in his position, of all of his accomplishments he says he is most proud of his role as a teacher, where he shares critical lessons in discipline, patience and detail. “As a teacher, I’ve been able to touch and influence lives, and many of my students have gone on to great careers. They’re not just making money — they are making a difference.” Koetke’s career is evidence of that fact. Since joining Kendall College in 1998 as a culinary instructor, his teaching career progressed rapidly Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 17 18 F E AT U R E F E AT U R E 19 Probing the Biological basis of Memory When Robert Calin-Jageman, PhD, a behavioral psychologist, came to Dominican in 2007 to launch the university’s neuroscience program, his appointment generated interest both on and off campus. Excitement was high when the program officially launched a year later, but it was a $250,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to fund an innovative research project that put the program on the map. Calin-Jageman and his collaborator and wife, Irina Calin-Jageman, PhD, — a neurobiologist who works with neurons and their genetic material – are the principal investigators for the project. “We’ve had some press and lots of excitement, and it’s been great,” says Robert Calin-Jageman. “But the real excitement is the work itself and where that might lead.” Known to their students as Dr. Bob and Dr. CJ, the Calin-Jagemans are combining their respective areas of expertise to identify the genetic and neural changes that occur when long-term memories are formed. Simply put, what is the molecular basis of memory? And what about its corollary, the physiological basis of forgetting? “We don’t know if forgetting represents the decay of long-term memory processes or an active erasure process,” Dr. Bob says. “This area of memory research is still new enough that almost no one has looked at it yet.” The basis of the Calin-Jagemans’ research is the principle that, when an animal learns something new, that knowledge must be stored permanently somewhere in the brain. “It takes biological support to remember something,” Dr. Bob explains. “Ultimately, that memory depends on the animal using its genes in a novel way — either activating or deactivating them.” The Calin-Jagemans’ project, “Mechanisms in the Expression and Decay of Long-Term Habituation Memory,” relies on sea slugs (Aplysia californica). This species is ideal for studying the neurobiology of learning and memory due to its relatively simple nervous system, dom.edu / magazine consisting of just 10,000-20,000 large, easily identified neurons. Contrast that with the 100 billion neurons in the human brain, and it’s easy to see the appeal of sea slugs, at least in the laboratory. Despite this neural simplicity, though, the animals can be trained at a very rudimentary level, making them doubly well suited as laboratory subjects. In this case, Dr. Bob and his undergraduate lab assistants train the animals by habituating them to accept touch. “Habituation — learning to ignore a stimulus — is the simplest thing an animal can remember,” he says. “Normally, when sea slugs are touched, they curl up in a ball. When we touch them over and over in the same place, they stop curling up, but only when touched in that same place.” What’s more, the animals remember the next day and several days after that, curling up the untrained side of their tail but not the trained one when touched. Some animals are harvested one day after being trained, while others are harvested one week later. Dr. CJ takes over in the next phase. “We break open the cells of the particular neurons that control the trained area — it’s only five or six out of 20,000 in the entire animal — and let out the genetic material so we can harvest the RNA and quantitate how expressed genes have changed very precisely,” she says. “By knowing the sequence of the genes I’m interested in, I can see whether the training has activated specific genes or not.” Robert Calin-Jageman, PhD, Irina Calin-Jageman, PhD Comparing neurons from the trained side of the body with those from the untrained one allows identification of genes regulated in learning. By harvesting animals at different times, we can track the memory as it fades. There may ultimately be some public health benefits from this research. “If we can identify genes that are important for keeping a memory, maybe we can figure out the corresponding genes in humans, which could allow doctors to boost patients’ memories and better treat or even prevent memory loss,” Dr. Bob says. “But we don’t want to overhype that possibility. These benefits may not even come during our lifetimes.” says. “There are relatively few labs trying to trace memory this far into the biological system.” Additionally, the pair believes their emphasis on using undergraduate laboratory assistants stood out to the NIH. “This is a perfect project for undergraduates to work on because these animals are easy to handle, which allows the students to focus more on what they’re doing and why they’re doing it, and they can be involved in many parts of the protocol,” says Dr. Bob. “This is giving them significant research experience.” ||| There may ultimately be some public health benefits from this research ||| By funding the project, the NIH seems to agree with the project’s long-term potential. “Results may have implications not only for the treatment of memory disorders, but also for a variety of attentional processes thought to depend on habituation,” the Calin-Jagemans wrote in their public health relevance statement with the grant submittal. The Calin-Jagemans believe that one aspect of their proposal that stood out to the NIH is the specific combination of expertise each scientist brings to the project. “I’ve worked with neurons for a long time and Bob has worked with sea slugs for a long time, but we’d never contemplated putting the pieces together until now,” Dr. CJ The NIH grant funds two student laboratory assistants per year, year-round, for the grant’s entire three-year lifespan. Additionally, the Office of the Provost is matching that portion of the grant, meaning that the Calin-Jagemans now have four undergraduate research positions funded. “These students will build real skills in the lab, go with us to conferences and be part of our publication team,” Dr. CJ says. “We hope it will be exciting to them.” Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine F A C U LT Y B R I E F S F A C U LT Y S P O T L I G H T S Office of the Provost everal years ago Marie Masterson, PhD, assistant professor of early childhood education, set out to “transform the world of children through the power of positive relationships,” and today, as Dominican’s newest Fulbright Scholar, she is well on her way to making that dream a reality. “It’s a devotion…a calling…a passion for me, and I love what I do,” she says. A member of the School of Education faculty since 2010, Masterson has focused her energy on developing a training model that approaches the role of teachers in students’ lives in a different way, refocusing attention on positive discipline. “This is much more than a philosophy or set of strategies,” Masterson explains. “Research shows that with positive, responsive, teacher-child interactions in social and learning domains, the high school failure rate can be cut in half. Teachers have the power to mediate risk factors, nurture social competence and turn children on to learning.” “We’re teaching a way of life, not just techniques,” Masterson explains. “We want to treat children with respect based on the Golden Rule, and to nurture authentic, growth-fostering relationships. It is life changing when we realize the impact our words and actions have on the way others respond. We must first influence teachers, so that they can in turn understand their own impact in the lives of the children. All children need someone to believe in them — to nurture their strengths and ignite their life purpose and mission. We want to empower teachers to be leaders who will carry forth a vision for equity, compassion, justice and advocacy in the field of early childhood education.” Rosary College of Arts and Sciences Daniela Andrei, assistant professor of chemistry, presented her research at the 12th Tetrahedron International Symposium – Challenges in Organic and Bioorganic Chemistry, held in June in Sitges, Spain. She and her students also presented their research results at the 242nd American Chemical Society National Meeting in August. Daniel Beach, department chair and professor of psychology, participated in a National Geographic expedition to Antarctica where he conducted a research project to assess the number and distribution of penguin species on the Antarctic Peninsula. Beach also was interviewed on WGN radio in June about the psychology of mob action in conjunction with a wave of mob violence in downtown Chicago. Tonia Bernardi Triggiano, associate professor of Italian, published an article titled “Dante’s Heavenly Lessons: Educative Economy in the Paradiso” in Essays in Medieval Studies. more than a philosophy Masterson received her grant award through the Fulbright Specialist Program (FSP) in the spring of 2011, and for six weeks over the past summer worked in Fulbright Scholar Aims to Transform the World collaboration with faculty of Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand, to plan and implement a new professional development program for quality Since coming to Dominican from Old Dominion improvement in early childhood education University in Norfolk, VA, Masterson has maintained environments. In addition, she provided training in a jam-packed schedule that includes research, and positive discipline practices for teachers, researchers, writing professional books and papers and presenting parents and professionals using The 101s Guide at state and national conferences. Previously the to Positive Discipline for Young Children, the early early childhood specialist for the state of Virginia, childhood education behavior guidance text book she continues to serve as an educational consultant Masterson co-authored with renowned child behavior to the Virginia Department of Education and Head expert Katharine C. Kersey, EdD. The FSP promotes Start; as a textbook and journal peer reviewer; and linkages between U.S. academics and professionals as a member of many advisory councils, and their counterparts at host institutions overseas. committees and task forces. While she U.S. faculty members and professionals are awarded professes that advocacy for children is her grants enabling them to engage in short-term “fun,” when she isn’t working, she spends collaborative projects at host institutions in more time traveling with her similarly “globally than 100 countries. The U.S. Department of State focused” family and playing the violin. Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs funds the international travel costs and provides a stipend. “It is my desire to create through intensive training, a more peaceful world for children “Though the laws in Thailand have changed, corporal and families. I chose to come to Dominican punishment and punitive practices are very much because my work aligns directly with the ingrained within the culture, so it is difficult to university’s mission of giving compassionate change peoples’ beliefs,” Masterson says. “However, service and participating in the creation of our research shows that training in the 101s positively a more just and humane world.” impacts teachers’ attitudes, practices and interactions dom.edu / magazine Cheryl Johnson-Odim, provost, has been elected to the Chief Academic Officers Task Force of the Council of Independent Colleges (CIC). She also facilitated a workshop on the Chair/CAO relationship for the CIC in Louisville, KY, in May. with children and families. This work is about integrating the human rights of children into school policies around the world. of Children Marie Masterson PhD Judy Beto, professor of nutrition sciences, was a keynote speaker at the Hawaii Dietetic Association in May, lecturing on the value and impact of nutrition intervention. She also presented an interactive workshop, “Statistics 101: How to Evaluate Published Research,” at the spring clinical meetings of the National Kidney Foundation. Alisa Beyer, assistant professor of psychology, wrote the article “Improving Student Presentations: Pecha Kucha and Just Plain PowerPoint,” published in the April 2011 issue of Teaching of Psychology. She also presented “Assessing the Validity of Peer Assessment of Oral Presentations: Has Psychology Arrived in Lake Wobegon?” at the American Psychological Association Conference in August. In April, she presented “Individual Differences, Associated Behavior and Language During Positive and Negative Valence Elicited Reminiscing Task (ERT)” at the Society for Research and Child Development Conference. Richard Calabrese, professor of communication arts and sciences, recently completed his third year hosting a weekly series of seminars on enhancing work relationships at Alexian Brothers Medical Center. Sr. Mary Clemente Davlin,OP, professor emerita of English, wrote the essay “God and the Human Body in Piers Plowman” as part of a festschrift for C. David Benson for Chaucer Review, vol. 46, in summer 2011. Her recorded lectures on Dante’s Divine Comedy were released on CD by Now You Know Media in 2011. She also published “In Memoriam Charles Muscatine (1920-2010)” for her former teacher, in Chaucer Review, vol. 45. Jennifer Dunn, assistant professor of communication, was awarded the top paper prize from the Rhetorical Theory and Criticism Interest Group at the Central States Communication Association (CSCA) annual conference for her paper “Virginity for Sale: Problematizing Public Discourses of Virginity and Prostitution.” In addition, she advised three undergraduates who had papers accepted for presentation at the CSCA Undergraduate Honors portion of this year’s conference. She is also now the chair and program planner for the CSCA’s Media Studies Interest Group for 2011-2012. J. Brent Friesen, associate professor of chemistry, wrote an article, “Dehydration of 2-Methyl-1-cyclohexanol: New Findings from a Popular Undergraduate Laboratory Experiment,” in the Journal of Chemical Education. He also wrote “Phytoconstituents from Vitex agnus-castus fruits” in Fitoterapia (2011), a peer-reviewed journal. Friesen also attended the Teaching Guided-Inquiry Organic Chemistry Labs workshop at the University of Minnesota this summer. Joseph Heininger, assistant professor of English, presented the paper “The Cosmopolitan and the Vernacular in Roddy Doyle’s The Deportees and Other Stories” at the national meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies in April. Margaret Heller, web services librarian, presented the talk “Chicago Underground Library’s Community-Based Cataloging System,” at Code4Lib in February. She also presented the lecture “Using the READ Scale to Track the Effort of Assessing Electronic Resource Access Issues” at Electronic Resources in Libraries in March and the paper “The Library Catalog as Social Glue” at Media in Transition in May. Alexis Howe, assistant professor of Spanish, presented the paper “Inconvenient Truths: Disappearance and Miguel Littín’s film Dawson, Isla 10” at the CineLit Conference held at Portland State University in February. Rogelia Lily Ibarra, assistant professor of Spanish, wrote the article “Gómez de Avellaneda’s Sab: A Modernizing Project” for the fall 2011 issue of Hispania, the official journal of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese (AATSP). She was awarded a Dominican Faculty Research Summer Grant to continue her project: “Annotating Romance: The Function of the Footnote in Gómez de Avellaneda’s Guatimozín.” Bill Jenkins, assistant professor of theatre arts and technical director of the Performing Arts Center, presented “Impact of Homicide on Families of Murder Victims” at the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty’s national conference in January. He also presented “How Victims Experience Defense Team Contact” at the National Alliance of Sentencing Advocates and Mitigation Specialists conference in March. Over the summer, he provided training on working with victims of trauma to victim advocates and state prosecutors in Illinois, North Carolina and Louisiana. He is also volunteering as theatrical consultant for the renovation of the Madison Street Theatre in Oak Park. Hugh McElwain, professor of theology and chair of the department of theology and pastoral ministry, presented the lecture “Hunger: Politics and Morality” at the Irish-American Heritage Center in May. The lecture explored themes in the film about Irish patriot Bobby Sands and the hunger protest that resulted in his death. Caren Messina-Hirsch, visiting lecturer of nutrition sciences, led the Dominican University nutrition sciences team to victory again this year by achieving third place in the Third Annual Burger Throwdown competition in June. Her team’s “Abodanza Burger” featured an innovative layered presentation of the regions of Italy, including polenta, basil chutney, Italian salsa, salami and Italian sausage, with an all-beef patty on tomato foccacia bread. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 21 22 F A C U LT Y B R I E F S Nkuzi Nnam, professor of philosophy and director of the Black World Studies program, was presented the 2010 International Scholastic Development Award by African Lifestyle Magazine. In April, Nnam presented a paper, “Igbo Work Ethic,” at the 9th Annual Conference of The Igbo Studies Association at Howard University Law School. In addition, he read a paper, “Ofo Na Ogu: Igbo Ethical Teachings,” at the 35th Annual Conference of National Council for Black Studies in March. He also presented a paper, “Igbo Women: The Year 2000 and the Decade Thereafter,” at the 19th Annual Conference of The National Association of African American Studies in February. He also organized Dominican’s first annual Black World Music Festival this summer. Valerie Rangel, adjunct professor of apparel design and merchandising, presented a paper titled “Tailored for Twitter: Fashion as Spectacle in the Digital Age” at the 2011 National Pop Culture Association & American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) conference in San Antonio, TX. Susan M. Strawn, associate professor in apparel design and merchandising, published a chapter titled “Entrepreneurial Applications” in the book Artisans and Fair Trade: Crafting Development by Mary A. Littrell & Marsha A. Dickson, (Kumarian Press, 2010). She also was a featured guest speaker on the NPR program “On Point” with Tom Ashbrook in February. The program’s topic was the relationship between social media and revivals of contemporary handcraft. F A C U LT Y B R I E F S Brennan School of Business Peter Alonzi, professor of economics and finance, presented the paper “Universal Life Insurance – Has It Always Simply Been a Question of Duration?” at the Academy of Economics and Finance in Jacksonville, FL, in February. David Aron, associate professor of marketing, co-authored with Wayne Koprowski, assistant professor of management, the article “Caging the Guerrilla Consumer: The Report from Illinois” for the Journal of Academic and Business Ethics. He and Koprowski also presented “Alternatives and Implications: Legal Remedies for Guerrilla Consumer Behavior” at the 2011 MBAA International Conference in March. Dan Condon, professor of economics and quantitative methods, presented a paper, “Religious Contributions: A Historical Perspective,” at the international conference of the National Business and Economics Society in March. Robert Irons, associate professor of finance, Peter Alonzi, professor of economics and finance, and Dan Condon, professor of economics and quantitative methods, presented a panel discussion titled “We Have Met the Enemy and He is Us” for the Brennan School of Business’s U.S. Bank Center for Economic Education in March. Mickey Sweeney, professor of English, edited the 2010 issue of Essays in Medieval Studies, an interdisciplinary journal of medieval studies featuring papers delivered at the annual meeting of the Illinois Medieval Association. She also published an article in the spring 2011 issue of Enarratio Tina Taylor-Ritzler, assistant professor of psychology, wrote the article “A Catalyst-for-Change Approach to Evaluation Capacity Building” in the spring 2011 issue of the American Journal of Evaluation and the article “Development and Validation of the Cultural Competence Assessment Instrument: A Factorial Analysis” in the winter 2011 issue of the Journal of Rehabilitation. She also presented a panel presentation titled “Culture/Diversity Courses: What to Cover? What do Students Learn?” at the Midwestern Psychological Association Conference in May. Fr. Richard Woods, OP, professor of theology, wrote the book, Meister Eckhart: Master of Mystics, which recently was released in the United States by its publisher, Continuum. He also presented a paper titled “Mystical Union in the Teachings of Ibn ‘Arabi and Meister Eckhart” at the Conference on Philosophy and Mysticism between Europe and Asia, held by the Council for Research in Values and Philosophy at Notre Dame University-Louaize in Beirut, Lebanon, in May. The paper will be published in the proceedings of the conference. Woods also was named to the editorial board of Medieval Mystical Theology, now the official journal of the Eckhart Society. His series of 12 recorded lectures on “Celtic Spirituality” was released on CD by Now You Know Media in September. dom.edu / magazine Carol Tallarico, associate professor of economics, and Arvid Johnson, dean and professor of management, co-authored the article “The Implications of Global Ecological Elasticities for Carbon Control: A STIRPAT Formulation” for the fall 2010 issue of the Journal of Management Policy and Practice. They also presented a paper titled “Ecological Impact Elasticities for Fossil Fuels in OECD Countries and Their Policy Implications” at the 2011 annual meeting of the Midwest Decision Sciences Institute. The paper was published in the conference’s peer-reviewed proceedings. Christopher Stewart, assistant professor, was named editor-in-chief of World Libraries, the international journal of the Dominican University Graduate School of Library and Information Science. Stewart was also named editor of the Metrics column for the Journal of Academic Librarianship. Stewart was a featured speaker and panelist for the program “The 21st Century Academic Library Building: A Forum on Recent Planning, Design, and Construction of New Library Space” at the 2011 annual conference of the American Library Association. K.R. Vishwanath, clinical assistant professor of management, and Arvid Johnson, dean and professor of management, co-authored the article “Servant Professorship and Its Implications” for the winter 2011 issue of the International Journal of Education Research. Tonyia J. Tidline, associate professor and director of the PhD program, presented a paper at the refereed First Annual Conference on Information and Religion, hosted by Kent State University in May. The paper, titled “Speaking of Spirituality,” explores information practices inherent in The What Matters Colloquium, a series of discussions created to familiarize new faculty with the university’s mission and administrative structure. Graduate School of Library and Information Science John W. Berry, professor, was named an “Illinois Library Luminary” by the Illinois Library Association in February, joining 19 other distinguished colleagues for significant contributions to state, national and international librarianship. Janice Del Negro, assistant professor, received the 2011 Storytelling World Resource Award for Storytelling: Art and Technique, a book she co-wrote with Ellin Greene. Michael Kruger, adjunct assistant professor of marketing science, and Arvid Johnson, dean and professor of management, presented a paper titled “A Comparison of Distributional Assumptions for Rapid Screening of Retail Sales Data” at the 2011 meeting of the International Academy of Business and Public Administration Disciplines. The paper was published in the conference’s peer-reviewed proceedings. Kathleen Odell, assistant professor of economics, moderated the panel discussion “Does Microfinance Really Work?” at the 7th Annual Chicago Microfinance Conference, held at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business in May. Kathleen Prunty, adjunct professor, presented “Values Centered Learning: A Philosophy of Innovation and Excellence” for the Chief Learning Officer LearningElite Forum National Webinar in June. She also presented “Enhancing the Customer Experience: Philosophies and Strategies for Success” at the Nancye B. Holt Management National Symposium in March. Prunty also received the LearningElite Award from Chief Learning Officer magazine in March. Khalid A. Razaki, professor of accounting, published the article “The Feasibility of Using Business Process Improvement Approaches to Improve an Academic Department” in the spring 2011 issue of the Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice. The paper was presented at the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Business and Behavioral Sciences in February 2011. Razaki also co-published with Wayne Koprowski, assistant professor of management, an article titled “Coming of Age for a Consulting Company: An Entrepreneurial Transition Case Study” in the Journal of Business Cases and Applications. Razaki and Elizabeth Collier, assistant professor of ethics, published an article titled “Ethics: The Soul of a Business Capstone Course” in the Journal of Academic and Business Ethics. Mary Pat Fallon, assistant professor, wrote the article “The Status of the Irish Research eLibrary,” published in the April 2011 issue of World Libraries. Ed Valauskas, instructor, presented several lectures at libraries and museums in conjunction with the National Library of Medicine exhibit, “Harry Potter’s World: Renaissance Science, Magic and Medicine,” in spring 2011. He also presented “Open Access Scholarly Journals, Libraries, Scholars, and Research: Content Creation and Preservation on Campus,” at the LIBRAS Annual Membership Program in May. He gave two lectures, “Plants in Print: The Age of Botanical Discovery,” and “Treasures: The Rare Book Collection at the Lenhardt Library,” at the Lenhardt Library of the Chicago Botanic Garden in May. Valauskas also published the introduction to the first issue of Uncommon Culture, a peer-reviewed scholarly journal on cultural activities in Europe, for which he also serves as co-editor and advisory board member. In May, he celebrated the 15th anniversary of First Monday, a monthly peer-reviewed open-access journal dedicated to research about the Internet, for which he serves as chief editor. School of Education Chris Hagar, associate professor, was a member of the program committee and track chair for the education and training panel of the 8th International Association for the Study of Information Systems for Crisis Response & Management conference “From Early-warning Systems to Preparedness and Training,” held in Lisbon, Portugal in May 2011. Greg Harman, assistant professor, wrote the article “An Hour in the Classroom: Pushing & Pulling Students Towards Ideas” for the fall 2010 issue of Teaching & Learning: The Journal of Natural Inquiry. He also wrote the article “Turn With Students: Making Conversation a Priority in Teacher Education” for the summer 2011 issue of Critical Questions in Education. Ken Haycock, professor, gave the annual Follett Lecture on “Advocacy Revisited: New Insights Based on Research and Evidence.” He also wrote the articles “Exemplary Public Library Branch Managers: Their Characteristics and Effectiveness” for Library Management, “Connecting British Columbia (Canada) School Libraries and Student Achievement: A Comparison of Higher and Lower Performing Schools with Similar Overall Funding” for School Libraries Worldwide, and “Designing and Evaluating Library Leadership Programs: Improving Performance and Effectiveness” for Australian Library Journal. Haycock also was named the incoming chair of the American Library Association’s Committee on Accreditation. Anita Miller, assistant professor and coordinator for online learning, presented “Collaborative Action Research: Teacher-Researchers Coming Together Virtually to Enhance Student Learning” at the 2011 Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education (SITE) International Conference in March. Kate Marek, professor, wrote the book Organizational Storytelling for Librarians: Using Stories for Effective Leadership, published by the American Library Association in January. Her book chapter “The Role of Organizational Storytelling in Successful Project Management” was published in Convergence of Project Management and Knowledge Management by Scarecrow Press in December. In April, Marek delivered the keynote address for the Kansas Beta Phi Mu annual meeting, the organization’s first-ever to be held via web conferencing system. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 23 24 CLASS NEWS You always belong to the Dominican University community. Class News provides all alumnae/i of Dominican University with an opportunity to share news and celebrate important life events. Class News is prepared through the Office of Alumnae/i Relations in cooperation with class agents. If you would like to be a class agent, have news to report or have questions, please contact our office by email at [email protected], by phone at (708) 524-6286, by fax at (708) 366-4197 or by mail at Office of Alumnae/i Relations, Dominican University, 7900 West Division Street, River Forest, IL 60305. Due to privacy reasons we do not publish the contact information for your class agent(s). For questions or contact information, please contact our office. Please note: the magazine cannot publish pregnancy and engagement announcements. Class News items are submitted by alumnae/i and do not represent positions, policies or opinions of the Office of Alumnae/i Relations, or Dominican University. The class news published in this edition was collected before May 15, 2011. News submitted after May 15, 2011, will appear in the next edition of the magazine, Spring 2012. Thanks for sharing your news! Save the Date for Alumnae/i Weekend! Formerly known as Reunion, this annual event will bring together alumnae/i of many generations, including special celebrations for classes ending in 2 and 7. Be sure to save June 8-10, 2012, for a weekend of reconnecting with your classmates. To view the schedule of events, register online and see which of your classmates will be attending, go to dom.edu/aw2012. Are you receiving our monthly e-newsletter? Send your email address to us at [email protected] so you can stay in the loop on upcoming events and university news. dom.edu / magazine CLASS NEWS 1934 attends meetings of their Garden Club, Audubon Society and Arts Council. She says Hi! to all survivors of the class of 1945. Catherine Power Becker is still learning new tricks on her Apple laptop. Her daughter, Connie, gifted her last Christmas with an Apple One-to-One arrangement where she can frequent the Apple store as often as she desires for one year. She wonders what the communication modes will be when her now 1-year-old grandson, Brett, is 87? Camille Pascal Berley wrote from Florida that she and her husband, Fred, celebrated their 65th anniversary in June 2011 with their family. As of this writing, they have 10 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. I had a phone message from Genevieve “Gwen” Locke, who has moved into assisted living in Kenosha, WI. She said that things were going “as well as possible.” (clockwise from bottom right): Alice Field Bolger ’34 celebrated her 100th birthday with daughterin-law, Jane Vanderheiden Bolger ’58; niece, Erin Green Groden ’66; and daughter, Mary Barbara Bolger Anderson ’68. Alice passed away in July 2011. Please keep her family in your prayers. 1942 Eloi Watson Doss is recovering from a fall resulting in a broken hip. Eloi recently celebrated her 90th birthday. 1945 A Mass of Christian Burial was held at Christ the King Church in Chicago on January 5, 2011, for Marguerite Graffy. Marge earned her master of arts degree from Northwestern University in music education and performance and served as a music educator/administrator with Burbank School District #111 for more than 40 years. Marge is remembered as a faithful servant of Christ the King Parish as choir member, CCD program volunteer and Eucharistic minister. Sarah Anne Broderick Busse was voted “Woman of the Year” for St. Gerald’s Parish in Oak Lawn, where she is on the board of the Women’s Club, a member of their Senior Club and a former Eucharistic minister and CCD teacher. Joan Isermann Ludwig wrote that after 38 years in her four-bedroom house she decided it was time to sell and move to a retirement community, San Camillo, on the west side of Milwaukee. She is not too far from her old neighborhood and since she is still driving, can keep in touch with friends in that area. Mary Elizabeth Howe Carolan wrote that she and her husband, Larry, still live in Racine, WI. They have four children, nine grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. One of her grandchildren, Katherine Carolan, received a master of arts in teaching in 2007 from Dominican. I wish I could have seen her during that time. If any of you send a family member here, please let me know. Gay McDowell Burmeister wrote “Hooray! We’re still alive!” She and her husband, Marsh, have managed to outlive most of their friends, six dogs and the 50-year shake roof on their house. Marsh still practices patent law from home and Gay still Sr. Marie Bertrand (Mary) Wright called me from the Mound to say she really had no news to tell me but I tell you I think the Motherhouse would be much poorer without her many generous services! I had a good visit with Catherine McGarr Krickl this spring when Ascension Parish sponsored a lecture on the paintings of Rouault here at Dominican, and I joined them for evening prayers afterward in our chapel. She and her husband attended and we talked about their family. It was good to hear about all her children, two of whom I taught here at DU. I had a telephone visit with Eugenia “Genie” Bley Lenert while at an appointment with my dermatologist. The nurse who took my statistics found out that I was a Rosary graduate and said “My mother went to Rosary” and we discovered her mother graduated in 1945! The nurse was Genie’s daughter, Marsha Moran, who then arranged a phone call to Genie at the end of my appointment, and we had such a great time talking about old times. We’re still trying to get together for a longer visit. You may have already seen from the Spring 2011 Dominican Magazine that I lost my brother in December 2010. He and I were always good friends and I miss hearing from him very much but know he now is free from all suffering and at peace with God. I was blessed to be able to get to Washington for good visits with him last October and again in November. I will close now and thank all those of you who answered the postcard and plead with the rest of you to please do the same! I send you all my love and prayers. –Sr. Mary Woods, OP, class agent 1946 By the time you read this Class News column, our 65th class reunion, June 3-5, 2011, will be history. I hope many of you were able to be on campus that weekend to attend some of the functions. We are all in our 80s now and understandably less active than we might like to be, but we continue to pursue our interests and remain involved with our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren as well as with our friends. Betty Johnson Sine, an English major who later worked in advertising, and her husband live in Lampe, MO. They retired to the Ozarks, where there are the oldest geological formations in the world as well as many rivers and streams. Betty’s family is very active in Indian affairs. Betty said that some time ago their basement had flooded and her Rosary yearbook and her class picture were ruined. We hope that Sr. Jeanne Crapo, OP, with her experience in the Archives at Dominican, can find replacements for Betty. Sr. Jeanne is now deeply involved in writing the history of Rosary/Dominican, a prodigious undertaking. Earlier this year, Marie Lonier Duffy awaited the August birth of her first great-grandchild. Marie and her husband, who live in Rolling Meadows, have six daughters and 10 grandchildren. Marie occasionally sees Dorothy Catalano Keleher who lives in Hillside. Dorothy and her husband have 10 children. Eileen Cremer Peck lives in Wild Rose, WI, which is near Stevens Point. Eileen says she is in good health and still drives; in fact, her driver’s license is valid until she is 90. She has two sons, two daughters and eight grandchildren. Barbara McQuaid Whitmore, who lives in Evansville, IN, has six sons and one daughter. She feels fortunate that her sister lives very near her in Evansville and they can enjoy spending time together. Rosemary Murphy Highland resides in a retirement home in Rockford, IL. Mary Claire, one of Rosemary’s two daughters, a retired music teacher, is now associated with a new multiple sclerosis research group at the University of Iowa, which is studying the effect of organic foods on MS patients. Already Mary Claire is experiencing improvement in her condition. Rosemary’s daughter, Rita, continues teaching microbiology at the Rockford campus of the University of Illinois College of Medicine. Camilla Ingrassia McGuire, still a resident of New York City, recently enjoyed a vacation in Mexico where she “soaked up the warmth before returning to the not-so-warm New York City.” Camilla regretted that her two troublesome knees would prevent her from attending the class reunion in June. Corinne Cohan Travis and her husband, John, live in Alexandria, VA, near their daughter, Monica, and her husband and three daughters. Corinne and John are always included in Sunday dinner plans at their daughter’s home. Monica is a physical therapist and her husband is a pharmacist. Ann Linberger Troyan’s daughter, who works and lives in New York City, entertained two of Ann’s teenage grandsons and their family during Christmas week. The heavy snowfall which closed New York airports the day after Christmas did not alter the young family’s plans to return home to Indianapolis. They immediately rented a car and “drove straight through,” Ann said. She added a comment which all of us can appreciate: “Oh, to be young again!” Genevieve Hanley Lennon visited her daughter, Theresa Lennon Conroy ’73, and her husband, Bill, in Washington, D.C., last year. Genevieve attended the class reunion. Betty Gloudeman Scharfenberger is as busy as ever at the retirement home in Milwaukee where she has lived for 11 years. Serious back pain has not allowed Betty to plan another extensive vacation trip right now, so she is devoting her energy to redecorating her apartment. Never a dull moment for her! It seems we may have a second Energizer Bunny in our class: Edwina McDonald, who lives in Washington, D.C. Several years ago, Edwina injured her right leg in a fall and that injury has somewhat curtailed her activities. But not too much! Edwina is an active member of both the John Carroll Society and the (Junipero) Serra Club, a Eucharistic minister at her parish and she writes a monthly letter for the sick and disabled members of the parish who are unable to get to church. Her comment on growing older is a feeling we all share: her sadness in losing friends in death or those who have moved away from D.C. to be near their families. Edwina asked to be remembered to all of her Rosary classmates. Virginia Tracy Haley’s granddaughter, Bridget Gavin, married Scott Davis (a graduate of Dominican University) in July at St. Juliana’s Church in Chicago. Ann O’Shea Spengler lives in Lemont. Her daughter informed us that Ann is recovering from pneumonia. Mary Kiley Bowman visits her four children who live out of town as often as possible and she regularly sees her four children who live in the Chicago area. Life is busy! Mary has 21 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. My life is full but moves at a slow, arthritic pace. I remain active in the book discussion group to which I have belonged for 30 years. Not much “moving around” is required for reading! Anne, our daughter, lives near us and Hank and I see her often. Our son, George, flies in from Milwaukee to see us whenever he can. Aren’t families a cherished blessing? May you and your loved ones, always be well and happy and safe. Caritas et Veritas. –Betty Campbell Meyer, class agent 1949 Dear Classmates, A wonderful time was had by all who were able to attend our annual 49’ers luncheon. Thanks also to those of you who were unable to attend but sent in updates via letter: Barb Perry Curley shared, “We recently celebrated our 60th wedding anniversary. It reminded me of the party where I met my husband, Tom. I invited about 15 classmates and my older brother invited about 20 fraternity brothers in town for a Purdue/ Northwestern game for a back-to-school party. We were seniors and the fellows were back from service. Five marriages ensued. (You’re welcome, classmates!)” Marie Doleshek Krakora writes, “I am so proud to have gone to Rosary College. My son, Joseph, received his bachelor of science in organizational leadership from Dominican while working as a sergeant for the Lake Forest Police Department. A granddaughter, Yvonne Lyden, is attending Dominican now to receive her master’s in elementary education. So I have a three-generation background with myself, my son and my granddaughter at Rosary College/ Dominican University.” Rosemarie Brady Sullivan keeps busy visiting her three sons and their families, and enjoying the time they spend with her in California. Mary Kuhn Morgan and husband, Bernie, are not traveling far this year—but by foot they’re still logging some miles in their neighborhood. A recent walk through their local green “hill” reminded Mary of “Golders Green” in London. Patricia O’Donnell Wadden enjoyed a recent visit in Florida from Lois MacDonald Simms ’51 and Marilyn Donne Myers. Pat reports that she is feeling good. Mary Al Finucan Hendee and husband, Kirby, recently moved out of their apartment and into a house nearby with their daughter. Carol Cook Woods still works as a substitute teacher. She retired from the Morton Arboretum last December but still volunteers there occasionally. At the end of April, she assisted a French sculptress as she erected a large outdoor installation made of wood. Marguerite Kuhn Kowalski travelled the rivers of Russia this past spring. Joan Janda Belza enjoyed a mini Rosary reunion at her home in Pebble Beach, CA, with Marianne Brabec Powers ’63 and Noreen Barrett Shively ’50. Pat O’Donnell Wadden and her son also visited on their way south. Over the past few years, Joan and husband, Jan, have volunteered as gardeners at the Carmel Mission. Joan writes, “I continue to give tours to the many students who make field trips to our beautiful mission, where Blessed Junipero Serra is buried. We have visitors from all over the world. I facilitated the translations of our self-guided tour so that we now have 13 different languages to present to the tourists. As for Jan and myself, our 60th has come and gone. We enjoy good health and our family, and have been fortunate to make trips to Egypt, Jordan and the Baltic.” Fran Dineen Quetsch shares, “Dick and I are fine for a couple of old folks. We still try to stay in shape though I will admit neither of us moves quite as fast as we used to.” Fran and Dick had a busy summer with two graduations, a wedding in Missouri and a trip to Vail. In the last year, Dorothy Wolf Cormack became caregiver to husband, George. She reports that while not very ambulatory, George is a very good patient. Dorothy continues to lead bereavement ministry and Eucharistic Adoration and is part of a women’s Bible study group at her parish, St. Andrew’s. She is also president of the Delavan Service League, which raises money for the less fortunate in the community. Dorothy reports that they are all wonderful outlets for her and keep her on her toes. Virginia Conahan Boyle and husband, Austin, celebrated their 60th anniversary last April, with great excitement and many out-of-town visitors. Virginia’s family is well-represented at Dominican: one granddaughter earned two master’s degrees in education and administration; Virginia’s grandson is currently in the post-bac program, and a daughter-in-law is working on a degree in education. Charleen O’Connor Berens writes, “My Jim died June 7, 2010, from complications of Alzheimer’s disease. It was a peaceful death and all that we Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 25 26 CLASS NEWS could ask for. I continue to go to our Alzheimer’s support group meetings twice a month, thinking my experience could help someone else who is dealing with this dreadful disease. Cardiac rehab gets me out of the house three times a week. Life is good and I give thanks every day for all the blessings I have, including nine grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.” –Sr. Cleo O’Loughlin, OP, class agent 1950 Patricia Cella Dennis sent me “A Prayer for Growing Old Gracefully,” which I’m sure many of you have seen and which I love. It says so many witty and wise things, including “…keep me free from craving to straighten out everybody’s affairs…” and “… keep me from the fatal habit of thinking I must say something on every subject and on every occasion…” On the other hand, Pat offers these words to students at Dominican University today: “Do not be afraid to cast your nets afar and trust in God’s wonderful providence to guide you.” She herself lived in many states during a long career and now lives in Laguna Woods, CA, where she’s taking a class to learn her new computer. Sr. Adrienne Schmidt, CSJ, sent her note on stationery with a Cubs logo, explaining that she is an avid baseball, basketball, hockey and football fan. All Chicago teams, I assume. She lives in the Sisters of St. Joseph motherhouse in LaGrange, and when she’s not cheering her teams on, she’s crocheting baby afghans for their gift shop. A series of CDs on Dante’s Divine Comedy made by Sr. Clemente (Marge) Davlin, OP, and published by Now You Know Media is on sale through their website. In addition, Marge is tutoring one day a week at Malcolm X College in Chicago. She recently attended the 60th wedding anniversary celebration of Jean Dougherty Quigley and her husband, Bernard. One of my close Rosary friends, Mary Catherine “Dolly” Kern Dady Colbert died in her home in California just before Christmas 2010. I am sorry I did not actively search out more news but I am also in mourning for my oldest daughter, who died suddenly in March 2011. She was mourned by family here and in Ireland and was buried on St. Patrick’s Day. Those of you who have lost a child know the pain of this. –Virginia Lyons Mullery, class agent 1952 Dorothy Ann Shields De Spain celebrated her 80th birthday like Hollywood royalty. dom.edu / magazine CLASS NEWS Greetings to all of you! Most of us are 80 years old this year...imagine? Dorothy Ann Shields De Spain had three wishes fulfilled for her 80th birthday: she and her son, Steven, flew to southern California and climbed to the top of the Hollywood sign. Later, Dorothy embarked on a cross-country bus tour following old Route 66 to Palm Springs. On returning home, family and friends celebrated with a Hollywood-themed party, giving Dorothy a Lifetime Achievement Award and an Oscar. Dorothy writes, “All my wishes came true. I felt like the ‘Queen of Hollywood’!” Keep in your prayers Mary Topping Blossfeld, who passed away recently—we worked together a few years doing class letters until she finally moved south. I’m still living at the Villa St. Benedict in Lisle. Stay well and God Bless! –Marilyn “Rokie” Rokop Citari, class agent 1956 A phone message was received from Betty Blum Carr extolling good times during her winter sojourns in Florida and Cancun, Mexico. Carmelita “Carm” Vitullo Albachiara wrote that she had double knee replacements and they both hurt! She is still active and can walk and talk, for which she really thanks the Lord. Even more exciting was the article she enclosed concerning her daughter, Adrienne, who is hearing impaired and has worked for the Veterans Administration at Hines Hospital for 25 years as a contract specialist. Adrienne was named an AbilityOne Procurement Champion by the Department of Veteran Affairs. Carm was so excited for her daughter that she sent a copy with a letter to President Obama, and she received a reply from the White House! Last March, Carm hosted the annual “gathering of the Vitullo clan.” Some 111 guests attended this year from far and wide. Barbara “Parse” Parsons had twofold news. One, she marched in Madison with thousands of her compatriots for their right to collective bargaining. Also, she was recently a featured speaker for a women’s event on the UW-Platteville campus. She delivered stories regarding the triumphs and trials of women at the college since she first joined the faculty 22 years ago. Anne O’Brien Gonski enjoys her life in a senior independent living community with lots to do and a wonderful climate. She is looking forward to the biannual meeting of the Fribourg group in fall 2011. Joan Adele “Scotty” Scott is now living in a senior care facility and in delicate health...we hope some classmates will get in touch with her. Her address (with one of her nieces) is the same one she used before going into the facility. Sally Love Gardiner writes via email, “I’m mother of four (author, artist, business owner and psychiatrist), grandmother to nine and 7/8ths, great-grandmother of one, friend to many and I thoroughly enjoy and stay busy enjoying all of the above.” She sends love, prayers and thoughts to all. Diana Blancato Cortina relates that she had double heart surgery in September 2008, still works full time as administrative assistant at the Village of Melrose Park and is working with Dominican’s Literacy Center teaching English one-on-one to a student. Diana enjoys having her daughter and granddaughter live with her and is proud that her granddaughter is a Trinity National Honor Society scholar, a National Italian Honor Society member and a Dominican Scholar. Two granddaughters play softball, one for Trinity and one in Parker, CO. Kay Penn-Hawken is in the process of selling her home. Pat Bach Steele “resigned” from teaching CCD at her parish and three days later the Holy Spirit recruited her to sponsor a catechumen for RCIA. There was a great turnout from our class at the reunion in June and a great response for the class gift in support of Dominican. Pat was unable to attend as her daughter and her two girls, Noelle and Maia, were visiting from Australia for a few weeks. Love, thoughts, prayers to all our classmates. –Pat Bach Steele and Kay Penn Hawken, class agents 1957 I received news that Jean Horrigan-Delhey loved her trip to China and Tibet. “Tibet was one of the highlights of my life.” Another great moment for Jean was the November marriage of her grandson followed by a family reunion. Jean also met up with Ann Lee Tyler and discussed the 2012 class reunion. Rita Cleary Smith was also able to have a great visit with Jean in Florida. I also learned from Audre Coia-Kurowski that in May her youngest daughter, Karen Anne, graduated from law school at the University of WisconsinMadison. For Lent, Audre sang in a community choir performing with the Fox Valley Orchestra. They performed Faure’s Requiem. Audre recalls doing this piece in the early 50s at Rosary. Ciao (Dominican University’s Italian Organization) celebrated La Festa di San Giuseppe, the feast of St. Joseph on March 18 in a special way. There was an Italian Mass, followed by a grand table celebration, a tradition that dates back to the Middle Ages in Sicily. All money collected was donated to the Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters and Sarah’s Inn shelter of Oak Park, in the name of St. Joseph. I had a wonderful time at our 50th reunion; and I look forward to seeing all of you next year for our 55th. Blessings on our class! I love hearing from you. Peace and Love, –Ellen Bendry, class agent 1958 Sometimes I ask myself: whatever else is there for a class agent to do after the emotional high of Reunion 50? Fortunately, after attending the annual class agent meeting, I came away with a list of “Resources and Benefits for Alums” that I can pass on to you. Thereby looking good in your eyes. Most of the following perks depend on having your Alumnae/i Association membership card at the ready. So, dig out the card we were given shortly after commencement. (I see that mine was signed by Director Anna Marie Sciaraffa ’49 way back then.) You may check out books in person from the Rebecca Crown Library. (No remote access to its electronic resources is allowed.) Shop the Stepan Bookstore for 10% off on select merchandise such as official university apparel, mugs, license plate holders and books by Dominican authors. Depending on space availability and at the discretion of the dean of the academic area of interest, alums may audit most undergraduate courses free of charge. Register on the first day of class or during the add/drop period. Auditing is not permitted in studio courses in art, music, or theatre; physical education courses; independent/directed study; service learning; or other courses designated by the university. Best to contact the school of interest for more information. Your card will get you in to use the fitness center, gym, track and racquetball court. Visit dom.edu/athletics/facilities for a schedule of hours. You can get discounted tickets for selected events at the Dominican University Performing Arts Center (DUPAC), which we used to call the Fine Arts building. If you’ve given the university your email address, you can check for offers in the monthly alumnae/i e-newsletter. You may participate individually or field a team (!) in a variety of intramural activities. Email imsports@ dom.edu for specifics. If you would like to hold an event at Dominican, contact Scheduling and Event Services. Restrictions and fees explained with your inquiry. Did you know that children and grandchildren of alums who enroll as full-time undergraduates may qualify for annual Legacy Scholarships? For more information, email [email protected]. Haven’t found your card yet? Don’t despair. Lost or stolen cards may be replaced for a $10 fee. Contact [email protected]. In fact, for specifics on any one of the aforementioned benefits, use that contact also, or phone the Alumnae/i Office at (708) 524-6286. Oh yes, now I remember. The answer that never changes is that the class agent is always here to receive your news to share in the next class letter. Contact me with your news! –Donna Smietana Joy, class agent 1960 Hello to all! On our way home, after spending the winter in Florida, we stopped in Joplin, MO, to spend Easter with my son and his family. We passed through southern Illinois and Missouri and saw firsthand the heavy flooding. The weather has not been kind this spring. I hope all of you have been all right. After reading the last Dominican Magazine, I learned that we lost one of our classmates. We express our deepest sympathy to the family of Barbara Clute Janek. This winter I spoke with Mary Markley Moriarty. She had been to Chicago in February to help her daughter who had pneumonia. I also spoke with Jeannette McBride Murray. She had surgery in the summer and was doing quite well. Betty Banas Cella and Karen Loan Haggerty got together for lunch and some good conversation this past winter. Betty said that she and her daughters were planning a trip to California, in May, to visit Betty’s sister. Mary Jo Knuth wrote a note to me from sunny California, in which she said how much she enjoyed our 50th reunion. Keep in touch. –Jo Scaccia Maday, class agent 1964 Mary Lou Campbell Hartman retired from the Princeton library and is taking classes at Princeton and the local arts center when she isn’t visiting her nine grandkids in Boulder, San Diego and Baltimore, volunteering at a residential rehab center, and serving on the board of the Delaware Raritan Greenway Land Trust as co-chair and as a trustee of Future Church in Cleveland. She attended the American Catholic Council in Detroit in June and then, in October she is moving to London for two weeks to see how it feels to live there. Way to go! In July, she was off to Finland with 5W to celebrate the 2011 EU cultural capitals of Turku and Tallinn. Bev Brazis Opelka writes “life is good. I am happy to report that I still have my Mom in my life (soon to be 94) and am constantly reminded from others about this blessing. Bill and I will be married 36 years; second time around worked OK for us. I continue to study voice privately and sing wherever the opportunity presents itself. I am serving as an interim choir director for my church (with no experience) and loving it. In season, golf remains a passion though I wish my handicap were better. And, for some 20 years I have served as board member for our local arts agency, Palos Fine Arts, keeping the arts focused in our community, for which I am very proud. Peace and best of regards to everyone.” Sylvia Perry Rudolph is enjoying Huntley but did escape to Florida last winter and to Ireland in May. Other travels are to Kansas City, MO, (even in summer!) to see grandkids, Caterina and Franco. Silvia Hajek Jorgensen, sold her Concord, MA, house and moved to Quincy, IL, to help her sister care for their mother. On the trip she had a wonderful reunion lunch with Guy and Joan Canale Szurberla. Silvia reports, ‘What a wonderful reunion! I had not seen them for about 25 years—it seemed like yesterday. It was hard to leave all my connections in Concord, especially Ann Elliott-Holmes in Cambridge whose friendship is so dear to me.” Silvia will be moving to Altus, OK, to help with daughter, Lisa, and baby. Mom and Dad are Air Force pilots with separate assignments. First time back to Oklahoma—“Oh where are Kay Cavanaugh, Maggie Smith and the others? I still get in touch with Nancy Burke Grivel occasionally.” I was delighted to hear from Joan Canale Szuberla who was selected by her peers for inclusion in the 2011 listing of The Best Lawyers in America®, in the practice area of civil rights law. Joan writes her younger son has wed a lovely woman from France and she has been in touch with Marge Melun, Judy Anderson Brindley, Judy Schenk Fierke and her friend for 60+ years, Ann Elliott-Holmes. She also enjoyed a visit with Silvia Hajek Jorgensen. Ginny Gaul Cullen fled the Midwest winter for Naples, FL and a side trip to Costa Rica. Her Trinity reunion for 1960 had 22 classmates and five of them also enjoyed a harp concert by Sue De Vale Carter. She travels to NC to see her son and New Orleans to see a daughter. Another 50th reunion (Immaculate Conception— Elmhurst) was had by Peg Hartnett Telesca, who retired last June after 25 years in religious education at St. Mary of Sorrows Parish in Fairfax, VA. She is taking classes at the Osher Learning in Retirement Center at George Mason University and spending time with granddaughter, Grace. Joann Casciato Hillebrand has not slowed down—she is serving a second term as treasurer general of the World Union of Catholic Women’s Organizations—meeting yearly in Rome. “This past October, we held our centenary assembly in Jerusalem, almost 500 women were in attendance. Maureen Cox O’Doherty accompanied me.” Joanne asked for prayers for her family. Daughter, Angela, is undergoing a series of tests to see if she can donate one of her kidneys to her father who is on dialysis. After 16 years on the job, Mary Sullivan Feeley is retiring as executive director of the Illinois Podiatric Medical Association to increase her volunteer work for Catholic Charities and other areas helping women in the workforce. Any ideas and/or contacts are welcome. She also enjoyed her 50th Trinity reunion and welcomed her sixth grandchild —three here and three in Boston. Mary writes “We need to have more gatherings of 1964 alums who are still in the Chicago area. We had fun at Rosary and we have fun when we see each other at the official reunions. So, why not increase the frequency of the fun? I’ll offer my place for a wine and cheese or whatever gathering. How about it?” I second that idea! Many of us enjoyed those 50th high school reunions. Nancy Jones Eppolito writes “My 50th high school reunion in Dixon, IL, last fall was a huge success—three days of nonstop fun and reconnecting with old classmates. The following week, Antonio and I went to Italy and had a wonderful trip covering the country from the north to the south. We also traveled to Sicily in April for 10 days. Must be I’m married to an Italian!” Patty Keeffe Smith was also in Naples, FL, and met Marge Melun with husbands for the Dominican trustee reception in February. “We had a great visit with a reception, dinner at a French restaurant, and a long, leisurely breakfast the next day.” As much as I love getting news, the downside is forwarding the bad news. I regret to report the loss of Joyce Miley McDonald (a grammar school and high school classmate) and Pat Cusack Millet. I was able to attend Pat’s wake (she was a second cousin) and, while somber, it celebrated her life of service, including her work as a Third Order Dominican. These losses remind us how special those years at Rosary were—it is still special— support it with prayers and contributions—and plan to be there in 2014! Hugs to all, –Mary McGough Schultze MALS ’70, class agent 1965 When last I wrote in September 2010, we were headed to Tunisia. Great trip until Steve suffered a major stroke in Tataouine that immobilized his right side. Thanks to a wonderful tour agency and superb travel insurance, we made it safely home in only two weeks. Steve’s been making great strides (literally) in therapy. I was diagnosed with bladder cancer that wasn’t eradicated in July so I had intrabladder chemo early this year and things are looking good. Roxie tussled a muskrat to a draw and landed a trip to the vet. Tootsie was hit by an emergency vehicle and wound up in intensive care for a week. We soldier on. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 27 28 CLASS NEWS Hearing of Steve’s stroke, Marilyn Colby sent word from Montreal: “There is a note on turmeric and stroke repair on the dr.mercola.com site for March 2, 2011. Quiet and snowy here in Montreal.” Kash Creadon Sullivan wrote that her ocular myasthenia gravis is under control. She was coming off steroids and didn’t need any new drugs. So last Thanksgiving found her thankful that she has long-term disability from the ABA. She’s still marketing her nephew, filmmaker Patrick Creadon, who’s expanding into directing TV shows. On the mend is Dianne Farr Knittle. Pneumonia knocked her low on New Year’s Eve. On the plus side, she has lots to celebrate. She and Bill were set to return to the U.S. Naval Academy in July for refresher training as Blue and Gold Officers. Last summer Diane found all 107 of her cousins and many of their children from both sides of her family. The Farr side family reunion was set for July in Cleveland. Maureen McMahon Hibbot wrote that Richard’s new hip was working perfectly, so she signed on for a total right knee replacement (no cartilage left) in November when daughter, Jane, was due. By spring her knee was great, in time for her and Richard to spend June and July touring the states and visiting friends they hadn’t seen in a long time as well as joining the McMahon family reunion at the end of June just after attending her 50th high school reunion. Maureen is joining Marifred Broucek Cilella in campaigning to expand our 50th DU reunion beyond campus. Mull it over for the next few years and let them know what you think. Peter and Sheila Durkin Dierks headed to Seattle in July. Son, Brian, was working in Thomassique, Haiti, running the mechanicals on a hospital until labor unrest sent him back to Boulder in the spring. With his tour up in July, he was interviewing with Doctors Without Borders for a new assignment. Maria Tsinonis Stavrakos wrote to remind me that she had written a long letter for the spring newsletter and I had listed her as MIA and printed not a word. So here’s a year’s worth of Maria’s news: Last year she and Harry traveled to Istanbul. The highlight of the trip was a private audience with their ecumenical patriarch, Bartholomew. She added that the local guides “...Christian kids, born, reared and schooled in a Muslim country...” added a whole new dimension to their understanding of Istanbul. By fall, Maria was off to Aspen to see the fall color and then the ski season and hope of making up for the couple of years her knee kept her from her favorite sport. Then, she retired. Harry kept on working, but his long-time office manager packed it in and is pursuing all her other interests. Ellen Rooney Kelly continued her treks to Minnesota to visit her 90+ mom. She’s retired from her job with the city of Freeport and has taken up a job with a nonprofit. She’s also granddaughter Clementine’s No. 1 fan and part-time baby tender. Several folks not mentioned above have a presence on Facebook. Check out Anne Smith Carignan, Kim Regan, Marlene Guzy Spicuzza, Paulette Serritella Davies and Peggy Duggan von Briesen. And of course let us know what you’re up to. –Mar Poelking Sclawy, class agent dom.edu / magazine CLASS NEWS 1966 Maureen Connolly, MD’s “DINE: Navajo People” appeared in The Country Doctor Revisited: A 21st Century Reader, a collection of essays, poems and short stories written by rural health care professionals on the experiences of doctors and nurses practicing medicine in rural environments such as farms, reservations and migrant camps. 1967 Karen Moran Duffy and husband, Charlie Struckhoff, sold their nine-bedroom house last June and moved to Edison Lofts, above the Sheraton Hotel in St. Louis, with outstanding views of the rail yards, the Arch, Busch Stadium and a slim peek of the Mississippi. Karen spent September 2010 in California with daughter, Kate, waiting for baby #2 to arrive: Maysaa Fatine Ejjed, little sister for Jinane Salma Ejjed, 3. Karen received the Champion for Literary Arts award from the Arts and Education Council of St. Louis, for promoting multicultural literature and arts in the region for 35 years. She was also interviewed for the April 2011 issue of St Louis’ culinary magazine, Sauce. She was one of the featured “Game Changers: 11 Visionaries who have altered St. Louis’ Culinary Scene. Their Experience. Their Words.” Mary Ellen Boyle Callow just completed a hiking trip with Road Scholar into and around the Grand Canyon (but not all the way down to Phantom Ranch at the bottom) and also hiked in Sedona and Tucson. Mary has six grandchildren now and has started to work less and ease into retirement, although she still maintains an estate planning law practice. She serves on the Trinity High School board and also on an advisory board for the Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters. She says, “I still feel a debt of gratitude to the Dominicans for 16 years of my education. I’m striving to maintain my mental, emotional and physical health so I can be with all of my classmates at the 2012 Reunion, since old friendships are such an important part of my life. My life partner is a classmate of mine from grammar school and we re-met at a reunion two years ago. He is also my hiking companion and we have a lot of fun together. Life is good.” Elizabeth Dreyer is professor of religious studies and has been a member of the Fairfield University (CT) faculty since 1999. Previous faculty appointments include the Catholic University of America, and the Washington Theological Union in Washington, D.C. Elizabeth is the author or editor of nine books and numerous articles, chapters in books and dictionary/encyclopedia entries. She lectures on topics such as medieval theology and spirituality, medieval women mystics, lay spirituality, the Ignatian spiritual tradition and the theology of the Holy Spirit. Most recently Elizabeth served as general editor for the nine-volume series Called to Holiness: Spirituality for Catholic Women. She wrote the inaugural volume for the series, Making Sense of God: A Woman’s Perspective. She writes, “While I was on the road with this series in six cities, it was brought home to me the deep spiritual hunger of Christian women in mid-life and beyond. Challenging life situations and questions about religious affiliation motivate many women to seek spiritual resources of all types. It was a humbling and gratifying experience. I will soon retire from full-time teaching which means writing and lecturing in a much more leisurely fashion. We will continue to discover other worlds/cultures and visit friends and family, especially our two children and almost-three grandchildren in Portland, OR.” Margaret Hunt traveled to Cleveland for a reading of her new play, A Kids’ House, in May 2011. Described as the author’s latest “tender comedy,” A Kids’ House is the story of three college roommates learning about life and love in the 60s. “It was part of the First Mondays @ the Alcazar, a reading series run by my fellow playwright Jean Seitter Cummins at the Alcazar Hotel in Cleveland Heights, OH,” writes Margaret. “I came from New York, Jane Duggan from Detroit, and Barbara Schaefer and Diane Schulte Stein came as well. In April 2011, Jean won the Lake Erie Playwrights Competition for her play, Pray for the Missing Girls. Jean and I had a mini-reunion last fall, when she came to New York for a reading of my play Think or Die at the Actors Studio. Two plays of ours were chosen as semifinalists for the prestigious 2011 Eugene O’Neill National Playwrights Conference, held in July 2011 in Waterbury, CT. My play Ravens Feed Us had a reading at Primary Stages, an Off-Broadway theatre here in New York. As works-in-progress, both Think or Die and Ravens had their very first readings at Dominican in 2007 (at our 40th reunion) and in 2008 (at Homecoming).” Jean Seitter Cummins offers her own update: “In April 2011 I received word that my adaptation of Alexandra Lapierre’s novel Artemisia is a semifinalist for the prestigious National Playwrights Conference (the O’Neill). The competition is very stiff—about 80-100 plays jockeying for six slots. But even to come this far is a great honor. A reading of my radio play, Archie’s Girl (a spoiled American heiress inherits her father’s butler) took place in June. Radio drama returns to Cleveland!” Ogg was born on February 21, 2011. We recently purchased a home just north of Bethel Springs, TN, so we can be in Memphis to snuggle Charlie in less than two hours. This is a perfect “grammagrampa” home—it sits on 10 wooded acres (there’s even a small pond) with five bedrooms, three baths and an unfinished walkout basement where we envision tricycles circling round and round. We intend to keep our home in Wyoming as well, at least for now, and gradually acclimate to the summer heat and humidity of the South. Our daughter, Monica M. Ogg, PhD, continues to do research at USAMRIID on Fort Detrick at Frederick, MD.” Marilyn Meister Fischer writes “Apart from spending time with our grandchildren (son, Chris’s, two who live nearby—Brendan, 11, and Carly, 4), highlights are travel-related: three cruises on the HAL Eurodam in the past 13 months with our son, Eric, who entertained nightly in the Eurodam piano bar. First we cruised the Caribbean; second, the Mediterranean; and the third and longest cruise brought us to England, Scotland, Norway and the Baltic. Carl and I then took the train to central Sweden from Copenhagen to visit my grandfather’s birthplace and to meet cousins. While there, we attended a week-long village celebration commemorating the 100th anniversary of an ancestor’s discovery of a 1000-year-old Viking tapestry in the village church. This Swedish sojourn (particularly getting to know a young 33-year-old cousin and family historian) was the highlight of my 2010 highlights. A couple of shorter fall trips took us to Georgia and North Carolina. In November 2010, I rented a condo on St. Augustine Beach for five nights with Joan Ambrose Walsh MALIS ’86, Ellen O’Connor Nick and Barb Schaefer. It was a wonderful mini-reunion! Looking forward to seeing everyone at DU for our 45th!” Jane Duggan writes, “My photos were featured at the Swords into Plowshares Gallery in downtown Detroit in August 2010. The show was titled ‘Portraits of Global Labor’ and was very well received. I continue as secretary-treasurer of my union local. This is an elected, full-time position and a lot more than I bargained for when running. I am glad to be serving, though, at such a difficult time for workers and unions. To maintain some balance, I do Irish set-dance two nights a week... one in Detroit, one in Windsor, Ontario. Set-dance has been a great source of new friends and a chance to learn about my own heritage.” Susan Steffaniak Farina writes, “Yikes 45 years already??!!??!! I plan to attend our reunion. The last one (40th) was grand fun and set the stage for a further mini-reunion for a small group the following summer. All my chicks have come home (Washington, D.C., area). Son, Matthew, and Blaise married last May and live in Fairfax, VA. Daughter, Rachel, and Kevin have been married for eight years and have three adorable little boys who are the light of our lives. Son, John, recently found a job out here, and relocated from San Diego, CA, to Annapolis, MD. I’m still the librarian and assistant principal at our local parish school and love it. Occasionally on Monday mornings I’m tempted to retire, but the mood rapidly passes.” Mary Win Hesseling Ogg writes, “Our biggest news is that our son, Michael, and his sweet wife, Beth, gave us our first grandchild. Charles Murphy Terry Beeson Sheahan and granddaughter Murren Mary in Baltimore. Terry Beeson Sheahan writes, “I still work at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum as writer and editor, traveling between my cabin on the Missouri River and Washington, D.C. My twin daughters both work in branches of humanitarian aid. Meg is with Doctors Without Borders; Kate has worked many years in Africa. I am a first-time grandma—Murren Mary was born last August. Recent travel has included a tour of Jane Austen sites in England and a trip to Istanbul, both on my bucket list. Though life has brought some loss and grief, overall life has been very, very good to me.” Karen Breitenbach writes, “I am my own boss, working part time as an independent contractor as WyzAnt tutor, Delta Group substitute teacher and music teacher with TakeLessons. I keep meaning to advertise for music students…although it requires long hours in preparation and lessons, I love it!” Diane Schulte Stein writes, “This has been a busy and untypical year for us. I have been retired since June ’06 and Ken retired at the end of December ’09. We enjoyed a quick trip to Los Angeles in Feb. ’10 to visit my mother and two of my brothers then celebrated the arrival of our first grandchild! Daughter, Laura’s, little miss Juniper Zim arrived on April 1, 2010. We spent most of April in D.C. with them; I spent July through the end of November there, when Laura returned to work. We spent five fabulous days in Cancun, Mexico, with friends and family for the wedding of our son, Tom, to Heather Rich in March 2011—truly a wonderful, warm paradise (especially after the winter we have all endured). We were in Los Angeles in June 2011 to celebrate my mother’s 90th birthday. All of my siblings were there along with daughter, Laura, Wes and Juniper. My mother met her first great grandchild; Juniper’s middle name, Zim, is a shortening of my mother’s name, Zima.” Linda Becker Madura writes, “I’ve been retired for the past six years during which time I cared for my mother until her death in 2008. I taught high school French and adult education Italian; I worked for many years in Lombard School District 44 as an administrative assistant; I was the manager of the Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus; and my final 11 working years were spent with the City of Naperville in the Department of Transportation, Engineering and Development. My husband, Jeff, has already gone beyond his 40th year of teaching at Benedictine University in Lisle, and doesn’t plan on retiring for another five years or so. Our family welcomed its third grandchild when Isaac James Earel was born in December 2010. He lives in Le Claire, IA, with our daughter, Anne, and her husband, Jim. Our other two grandsons, Jackson (12) and Jayson (7), belong to our daughter, Karen Madura Sheeman ’92 and her husband, Mike, who live in Plainfield. After raising two girls, how did Jeff and I wind up grandparents of three boys?! It is an ongoing education! In October 2010 I traveled to Tucson, AZ, to visit Mary Cay Debowski Wesolowski who was my very best friend at Rosary and still is after 47 years. She and Wayne have adapted well to the desert environment. He is still teaching chemistry at the University of Arizona but is easing into retirement, and Mary Cay cares for her mother who will turn 94 in October. Mary Cay and Wayne have two married sons: Tony and Stephen. Through Facebook, I’ve located a handful of Rosarians from our class. We keep in touch in a rather casual way, but it’s very nice to know that they are out there! I’d love to reconnect with Laurie Lawrence, with whom I’ve lost touch. Can anyone help me with that? I’m putting the 45th reunion on my calendar; I would certainly enjoy seeing some of my old friends once again.” Tory Cusack Hartman is mostly retired and lives in Boulder, CO, with daughter, Seanna Hartman ’93, MAT ’00. Daughter, Krystal, and her son, Valentine, and daughter, Jasmine, her “heart’s delights” live in Costa Rica, where Tory visits whenever possible. Roxanne Calibraro writes, “As I write this, I am preparing to retire my 10 and one-half-year-old labrador retriever guide dog, Carnation, after nine years of faithful and loving service. She is truly a soul mate dog for me and it will be a hard transition as I leave to train with a new dog in two weeks. This process has been a rollercoaster of emotions but I know it is the right thing to do and Carnation will stay with me in retirement and be a pampered pet and mentor for “New Dog.” Hopefully, you will all be able to meet “New Dog Somebody or Other” at the 2012 Reunion. And, I am easing into my own retirement, too. After law school at DePaul University, I spent 14 years at the Illinois Attorney General’s Office and I am now completing my 25th year at the Better Business Bureau of Chicago. I still serve on the alumni board at Guide Dogs for the Blind in San Rafael, CA, and am a commissioner on the Commission for Citizens with Disabilities in Arlington Heights. When I am actually sort of retired, I will have more time for writing and church activities and hopefully still walking two dogs.” Elizabeth McGrath reports, “I’m reviving my local consulting business and traveling for pleasure. In August 2010, I spent a weekend in South Bend with Lynne Yancey Crowley’s entire family as they gathered from across the U.S. to honor their mother. Florence Erhard Yancey ’40, who passed away October 2009. On Saturday, each of the siblings cooked or baked one of their family’s “heirloom dishes” and shared stories, pictures, home movies and performed skits. A highlight of the afternoon was a style show of Florence’s vintage clothing modeled by her children and grandchildren. I was honored to be included in the festivities. Joanne Jacques Geist and I haven’t yet enjoyed our “Joanne’s retirement celebratory lunch”…she’s very busy with married children—most with children of their own—in town (Naperville) and out of state. I spent time with Carol Johnson Rubsam in Kansas City the week before Thanksgiving 2010. Turns out Joanne and I were both in Kansas City at the same time…and still didn’t see each other! Please start taking notes…regarding how your life is unfolding…fascinating reading for you to send me for the next Dominican Magazine! [email protected] –Elizabeth McGrath, class agent 1968 Julie Joyce Goldberg and husband, Charles, made their long-awaited return to South Korea last September. Charles is writing about life in a farming village on the cusp of modernity, and Julie is helping friends with English and math. She is also brushing up on the Korean language she began to study 43 years ago. Connie Kearns McCarthy retired as dean of university libraries, emerita, at College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA. Edna “Del” Del Zoppo Hancock and husband, Gil, (now retired from potting), still live on the Atlantic shore of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. Five years ago, Del built a new weaving studio and, to help finance it, opened Point Michaud Beach House on the second floor of the seaside building. Check it out at www.pointmichaudbeachhouse.com. Del’s summers now include a lot of laundry in addition to the vegetable gardens and the weaving studio. Most winters they spend a couple of months of R&R in a small town in Jamaica. Please keep Del and her family in your prayers; her mother Edna “Dolly” Lewis Del Zoppo ’43, long-time supporter of the university, passed away last March. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 29 30 CLASS NEWS CLASS NEWS enrollment at both the high school and Johnson County Community College; she is teaching the introductory college chemistry class at the high school. She also is the coach/sponsor of two extracurricular activities: Scholars’ Bowl (aka Quiz Bowl), and FIRST Robotics, both of which have done very well this year. Mary Beth’s husband, Joe, is still teaching at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. Marilyn Freehill Jancewicz, Marita Hoy Fenley, Carol Welch Matusak and Carol Anderson Kunze with student Caitlyn Workman. Dominican University hosted a luncheon on May 24 for four members of the Class of 1968 to meet the first recipient of the Class of 1968 Endowed Scholarship for Study Abroad, Caitlyn Workman. Caitlyn, who had just returned from four months of study in France said, “Without the financial assistance provided by this scholarship, I would never have had this extraordinary opportunity.” Carol Anderson Kunze, Carol Welch Matusak, Marilyn Freehill Jancewicz and Marita Hoy Fenley, with many others, helped establish this scholarship endowment for study abroad. –Mary Duncan Gemkow, class agent 1969 Judy Dodane O’Dwyer recently retired and relocated to her hometown of Ft. Wayne, IN. She is looking forward to traveling with her husband and returning to volunteering in the community. –Susan Kreuz McCoyd, class agent 1974 George Tenegal MFA/Schifanoia recently released his debut CD Romantic Russian Rarities, piano music of unknown and little-known Russian composers, recorded in Chicago at WFMT’s studio. 1975 It was a wonderful honor for our classmate Maria Kuhn to be named a Caritas Veritas recipient at Reunion 2010. She has made significant contributions to our society by her lifelong devotion to helping people understand themselves and others. She has been a psychosocial counselor for more than 25 years, has established two multifaceted counseling centers and served as an educational consultant to schools, children, young adults and their families. Maria has served as a health consultant and trained many professionals in this multidisciplinary field. She has also been an advocate for caregivers, so they can be recognized for the support they give and that they need. Congratulations to her on such a wonderful achievement. Mary Beth Ahern Mattingly came in for Reunion 2010 by train; this was her first reunion in some time. Marianne Daniels Hansel and I met her at the train stop in Naperville. Mary Beth teaches at Mill Valley High School in Shawnee, KS, about 20-30 miles west of Kansas City. This year she is teaching four sections of the College Now/ honors chemistry and two sections of honors physics. The College Now chemistry is a joint dom.edu / magazine The other surprise classmate was Mary Greey Hickman who flew in from Shippensburg, PA. She attended reunion with her mother, Gertrude Pinion Greey ’50 (who was celebrating her 60th reunion) and her aunt, Sr. Genevieve Pinion, OP, who came in from the Mound. Cheryl Hausing Feldman also attended Reunion 2010. She worked for many years for the U.S. Post Office near her home in Cary, but two years ago moved to the Passport Office at the federal building in downtown Chicago. Vicki Ploplis is doing heart research in the Notre Dame, IN, area; she still has mice subjects that she worries about, but what I am envious about is all the foreign conferences she gets to attend. Foreign travel also played a large part in Debbie Basile Fitzsimmons and her husband, Dick’s, lives recently: they visited daughter, Alicia, studying abroad in Rome, and took a side trip to London. Judy Hansel Keeley joined Mary Beth, Marianne and me for lunch on the Friday of Reunion; unfortunately, Judy, her husband, John, and their two children were leaving for Seattle the next day. –Mary Alice Griesinger MBA ’94, class agent 1976 Deborah Bowser Joyce lives in Wood Dale, and works as a freelance French translator. She recently mourned the passing of her sister-in-law and Rosary classmate Jo Ann Joyce on April 8, 2011. –Mary Gallagher Banaszak, class agent 1977 Betty Sellen lives in Oswego, IL, and works as a humanities instructor at Waubonsee Community College. Betty also works as a pro-life coordinator at St. Peter’s Church in Aurora. 1978 Jacklyn Egolf is back in the Chicago area, and recently returned to campus for the May Remembrance Mass as a lector. She says hello to all her classmates and looks forward to seeing everyone at Alumnae/i Weekend in June 2013. 1979 Ron Abraytis invites classmates to check out his blog: busyworkingmonster.wordpress.com He is working on a new novel and adds that his seven years of volunteering at Children’s Memorial Hospital “is still the most fun and fulfilling thing I do.” Eva Klaus Bellinger writes, “After spending the last 26 years raising five kids, I went back to school last fall and cleaned the rust off my Spanish. I can now tell Sr. Philip Mary Reilly that I have mastered the subjunctive mood. I also took beginning French in order to speak to my Senegalese son-in-law. I took a five-week crash course in teaching English as a Second Language at Wisconsin English as a Second Language Institute (WESLI). I’ve been an ESL tutor for three years, and I am trying to invent a job for myself as a classroom aide with both special education and ESL experience. I am presently tutoring a Gambian woman and leading a weekly conversation group for Chinese children. Some of the kids can speak three words in English, some of them can speak three paragraphs, and they range in age from 5 to 13. So we have some interesting challenges and a lot of fun.” Sybil Leak Davis lives in Reston, VA, just outside of the District of Columbia. “I am semiretired with three adult children and a 12-year-old from my second marriage. It is wonderful and challenging at the same time.” She enjoys quilting, attending openings of friends’ art exhibits, and “life and the cherry blossoms.” Marg Doss is now a national-board-certified teacher, Exceptional Needs Specialist. She adds simply, “Nice to have that accomplishment. My coworkers surprised me one morning and everybody came in to the gym for cake to celebrate!” Cathy Hollatz Fitzsimons writes from Carol Stream, to report that she is an accountant for an international freight forwarder, Jet-Speed Logistics, and has been married for 22 years to G. Martin Fitzsimons. They have two children, Brendan, a freshman at UIC, and Kristin, a junior at Glenbard North High School, and are active in their parish, St. Isidore. Dominic Calabrese (second from right) received a Golden Trumpet Award from the Publicity Club of Chicago. Dominic Calabrese received a Golden Trumpet Award from the Publicity Club of Chicago (PCC) for outstanding achievement in public relations. Dominic, who is public relations director at The Chicago Lighthouse for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired, took honors for the entry, “Chicago Lighthouse: A New Milestone.” The entry recounted how the agency, through a 1980 strategically executed media plan, generated a significant number of national and local media placements about its expansion project. Nancy Greco took her mother to Austria in May as an 85th birthday celebration. She was back in time to open as the countess in a production of The Women at Circle Theatre in late June. Lynn Marie Higgins is currently battling small cell lung cancer. She writes, “I am responding well to treatment. In my retirement, I am living in Jacksonville, FL, and am enjoying the gift of each day pursuing a balanced physical, intellectual and spiritual life. I have family and cherished friends. Holy Spirit Parish holds me close. I am blessed.” Theresa Kaminski authored Citizen of Empire: Ethel Thomas Herold, an American in the Philippines. Theresa Kaminski deserves our congratulations. “My news is that after 10+ years of long work, my second book was published in June by the University of Tennessee Press as part of its Legacies of War series. The title is Citizen of Empire: Ethel Thomas Herold, an American in the Philippines.” You go, girl! Lauren McCormack is alive and well and living in LA with his wife, Melissa. After a dozen years working in Chicago as an air traffic controller, he spent an extended period of time in Costa Rica in an intensive language program and then returned to Chicago to work for the Bosnian Refugee Center teaching ESL and citizenship. He also did some acting and producing. Today, he’s working in HR for an LA-based company and is a founding member of the Seaglass Theatre Company. Robin Nystrom was ecstatic to learn that one of her favorite performers, Bobby Kim, would be performing while she was in Seoul. A friend wrangled second row seats. She writes, “The show exceeded my expectations. But wait, it gets better. I freelance for a Korean-American paper, writing drama reviews, and the editor suggested I toss their name out there and see if I could swing an unscheduled interview. Well, I did and… had the chance to sit and talk for almost 45 minutes, one-on-one with someone I admire immensely! The rest of the trip was fascinating too, but that was the highlight of the year, hands down. And if you’re curious, Bobby Kim is on iTunes under his own name and his group, the Buga Kingz!” Jim Twist reports, “My household includes myself; my wife; my 87-year-old father; my son, Mike; his wife, Ashley; my grandson; Otis, the dog; and Pancho, the turtle; all in a bungalow in Brookfield.” While I thought that sounded like the basis for a cute children’s book, Jim retorted, “A black comedy on a premium /uncensored network like HBO is more like it.” 1991 Since my game plan is to stay in touch a couple times a year to gather and pass news, please make sure that I or the alumnae/i office has up-to-date contact info. If you haven’t heard from me, it’s because we’re missing something. Reach me at [email protected]. Catherine Gosanko Burnham is a four-time Team USA participant/athlete in the duathlon; she received a bronze medal in 2002 at the Duathlon World Championships in Weyer, Austria. Catherine is member services manager for the Prairie Stone Sports and Wellness Center in Hoffman Estates. Donald Howard had a new grandchild earlier this year. Tom Mack opened a new podiatry office in Brookfield. Mary Sue Denson Wysocki’s and Michael Hattie’s sons both came back safely from Afghanistan. Tina Marinelli Kaveney MBA ’85 is still involved in Relay for Life, as is Pauline Toman Brunet with the Special Olympics. Anna Pesci Ali has moved back to the Chicago area from Florida. She arrived just in time for the blizzard in February. What a welcome! Her mom also passed away recently. —Rosanna Grimm Bateman, class agent Grace DuMelle and husband, Walter Podrazik, and their company, Heartland Historical Research Service, were recently featured in the Chicago Tribune. Grace researches histories of Chicagoland area homes. Grace is also an assistant librarian at the Newberry Library in Chicago. She speaks to history and genealogy groups about how to research. She is the author of Finding Your Chicago Ancestors: A Beginner’s Guide to Family History in the City and Cook County. I’m on the hunt for Michael Da Pisa and Anthony Armonda—they are listed among the missing. Anyone know where Susan Cottrell Haslwanter and Francine Schultz are? 1992 Greetings everyone! Can you believe it’s been almost 20 years since we graduated?? This coming June 2012 will be our 20th reunion, so please mark it on your calendars! It seems like only yesterday that we were dragging ourselves out of our dorm rooms multiple times in the middle of the night for false fire alarms. Does anyone remember the noisy “ghost” in the chapel during our sophomore year… only to find out the “ghost” was actually a video game coming from the Grill? How about late-night Johnnie’s runs? Thank you to everyone who sent me updates! I’d love to get some more from you. Please join our Facebook group—Rosary College/Dominican University Class of 1992. Instead of sending out individual emails asking for pictures and updates, I will only be messaging people in this group (it’s much faster), and so much fun to reconnect with old friends in the group. So please join! I know that a lot of you are involved with eldercare at this point in your lives, but don’t forget to make time for yourselves and have some fun! –Lyn Rohde, class agent 1982 Mary Beth Schnecke Fortier relocated to Tennessee in December 2010, in part to get away from New England winters. She writes, “Timing is everything!” –Susan Jelinek Troppito, class agent 1985 Jan Fedorenko is the senior media manager at ABC News in Chicago. Laura Gunnarson Buhrmaster and son, Cameron. Laura Gunnarson Buhrmaster has lived on the Northwest side of Chicago with her husband, Scott, and son, Cameron, for 12 years. Cameron is in fifth grade at Queen of All Saints School. Laura worked at a preschool in Evanston for three years, but is now enjoying life as a stay-at-home mom. She enjoys cooking in her spare time. –Lisa Chmela Grzywa, class agent 1990 Thanks to all who friended me on Facebook or supplied a new email address. Keep those news notes coming! Katie and David Granvold, children of Jennifer Sutton Granvold. –Hilary Ward Schnadt, class agent Patrick Kettner; wife, Lisa; and son, Henri. Jennifer Sutton Granvold recently relocated to Dallas, TX, along with her husband, Jeff, and twins, Katie and David, who are now 11 years old. They love it there, and enjoy playing with their new dog. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 31 32 CLASS NEWS CLASS NEWS 1993 Debbie Brown Dibbern recently enjoyed a trip to Disneyworld with her husband, Bill, and their kids, Matthew (13) and Emma (9). JoAnn Mizgajska Cassell works at McGladrey as a director in the Assurance Department specializing in employee benefit plans. She lives with her husband, Tom, and daughters, Natalie (10) and Maya (3), in St. Charles with their miniature schnauzer, Lucy. Last year she took up running and has competed in some 5K races. This year, she has decided to take it up a notch and hopes to run the Chicago Marathon, as a member of the American Cancer Society running team, DeterMination. She will be running in memory of her father. Hey everyone! Hope all of you are well. Since my last update, I moved to Crystal Lake. I had a chance to visit with some of our classmates a few months back at the home of Melissa Marquardt Nowak ’94 and Jim Nowak ’92. Melissa just returned from a business trip to India. Now she is back to “life in the locker room” as she calls living with Jim and their three boys. I met Paul Connelly’s new addition, Paxton, who is adorable. He turned 1 in February. Marsha Hanson Spurlock MLIS ’96 and her husband, Clay, are enjoying being new parents to Emily Grace Spurlock, who was born on February 1, 2011. Marsha is enjoying being a stay-at-home mom. They have already taken Emily to her first lesson in Scottish dancing! Julie Maloney Stephan is still teaching in Calumet City and getting ready to send daughter, Allison, off to college soon. I am starting a Class of 1993 Facebook page, so look for it soon. I hope we can all stay better connected through the power of social media! –Bridget Loar Harvey MLIS ’96, class agent 1996 house in Brookfield! I am a stay-at-home mommy... and enjoying every minute of it!” –Katie Dinelli and Matthew Toles, class agents 1998 2006 Rick Cortina MBA ’08 was recently promoted to assistant vice president, project manager, in the Program Management Office for Cole Taylor Bank, which manages the company’s project portfolio. Dora Elias-McAllister successfully defended her dissertation proposal and is pursuing a PhD in higher education at the University of Maryland. Verlena Simms recently completed a two-month tour in Turkey teaching conversational English to two Turkish families. –Scott Hanak, class agent -Annie Hughes and Diane Schultz, class agents 2000 Julie Nowak Houston and husband welcomed the fourth addition, Charles Allen, to their family on December 30, 2009. His older brothers—CJ, Caleb and Carter—are fascinated by their newest little brother. -Gigi Benitez and Christopher Phills, class agents 2001 Manal El Hrisse is a programs producer for Aljazeera Network and presents a weekly segment on Aljazeera TV. 2007 Colleen Barron received her master of science in clinical psychology from Benedictine University and passed her initial licensing exam. She is currently working with the severely mentally ill in a long-term residential care facility. Colleen also recently started working toward a doctorate of psychology degree at Argosy University. Tina Fabiano graduated medical school from Nova Southeastern University and will be doing her residency in the internal medicine division of the University of Chicago Northshore Hospital. Binyamin Jones and RoJenia Judkins Jones welcomed a baby boy, Omer Binyamin Jones, on December 29, 2010. Omer weighed 8 lbs, 14 oz and measured 21" long. Jacob Clearfield was accepted to the Medical College of Wisconsin for his residency and will be studying physical medicine and rehabilitation. Natalie Felix recently graduated with a master’s of science in speech and language pathology from Saint Xavier University. Patricia Montalbano Roberts and family. Patricia Montalbano Roberts moved back to Illinois after living in Arizona for seven years. She has been married for 13 years and has four kids ages 18, 12, 10 and 6. She has her own jewelry design business, which you can check out at www.bellisimobracelets.com. Liam Michael Guess, born September 15, 2010, to Mark Guess and wife, Amy. Megan Marie Dziadzio, daughter of Kim Jachino Dziadzio and husband, Michael. Mark Guess and his wife, Amy, welcomed the birth of their son, Liam Michael Guess, born September 15, 2010. Liam weighed 7 lb, 3 oz, and was 19.5" long. Mark is currently vice president, manager of public relations, at Charter One. The Guess family resides in Chicago’s Norwood Park neighborhood. Kim Jachino Dziadzio and her husband, Michael, welcomed the birth of their daughter, Megan Marie, on November 13, 2010. She weighed 6 lb, 12 oz and was 19" long. –Saraliz Jimenez, class agent 1997 –Ali Hecimovich and Chrissie Lukuch, class agents 2002 Thank you again for sending updates—I hope I didn’t forget anyone! If you have more information you’d like printed in the next magazine, please feel free to email me at [email protected] or through Facebook, under Melissa Mascari SantoPietro. –Melissa Mascari SantoPietro, class agent dom.edu / magazine Alyssa, Kaitlin and Ellen Krivak with baby sister, Sabrina Adele, daughters of Linda Turek Krivak and husband, Tony. Linda Turek Krivak is mom to Kaitlin, 10; Alyssa, 7; Ellen, 5; and newest addition, Sabrina Adele, born November 11, 2010. She writes, “Our four girls, plus my husband, Tony, and I live in a ONE bathroom Stephanie Lieberman recently graduated from John Marshall Law School and successfully passed the Illinois Bar Exam and is participating in the Avon Walk for Breast Cancer. In September 2010, Roberta Garippo opened a dance studio with her sister Carla Garippo ’05 in Highland Park called Center Stage Academy of Dance. Monica Prus is in her first year at the University of Illinois at Chicago pursuing her master’s in graphic design. Melissa Mascari SantoPietro and daughter, Chiara. I am still enjoying my job as a stay-at-home mom to my daughter, Chiara (4). She signed on with a talent agent about six months ago, and she loves the print work she gets to do. When she starts kindergarten next year, (gasp!) I will be going back to work as a TV producer, but part time. We adopted a 2-year-old dog, Rocco, about eight months ago, and we are all enjoying him very much. Dorothy Paape MBA ’09 married her boyfriend of seven and a half years in 2010 and they recently purchased their first home in Algonquin. She also has been working at SPINS Inc, a marketing research firm that provides information and services to the natural, organic and specialty gourmet industry. Crissy Atwood Barnat MLIS ’10 married Robert Barnat. The newlyweds honeymooned in the Riviera Maya, Mexico. Marjorie Wynkoop-Sullivan closed on her new home with her husband in Broadview. Marjorie is a case manager/supervisor at Oak-Leyden Developmental Services. –Debbie Stewart and Maria Conforti, class agents Stephanie Adams Taylor is a massage therapist and was valedictorian of her massage school (Institute of Therapeutic Massage). She is also using her theatre arts degree by playing the role of Meg in Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley at the Prairie Players Theatre in Galesburg, IL. She recently finished stage managing August: Osage County with the New Ground Theatre in Davenport, IA. She and her husband recently opened a retail store, The Gaming Goat, in Elgin. Concetta Cipriano started her clothing line, Cettina, last year. In January 2011, she was selected as one of six designers in residence for the Chicago Fashion Incubator at Macy’s on State Street. She is currently a resident of the program, where she is working on launching her wholesale line for Spring/Summer 2012. Katy Thoman recently graduated from St. Louis University Law School, passed the Missouri bar exam, and is now working as an assistant public defender for the Missouri state public defender’s office. Elizabeth Fiona Trischan, on March 4, 2011. Stefanie Piatkiewicz currently works with Mindful Practices, an organization dedicated to bringing wellness to communities from all walks of life. She teaches hip-hop yoga to children in the CPS schools. She is also on work-study at the Lou Conte Dance Studio where she continues her dance training. She is also currently training with YogaFit to obtain her 200-hour RYT yoga certification. Lastly, she is dancing with the classical modern dance company Duncan Dance Chicago (DDC). Mihnea “Mike” Haiduc plays basketball for CSU Sibiu, a professional basketball club based in Sibiu, Romania. Their season runs from August to May, after which Mike returns home to Chicago. Giana Giuffre Galeno has been working at Lincoln Park Zoo as a keeper since 2008. She works in the bird house (raises endangered chicks), animal hospital (everything from goats to snow leopards) and Regenstein African Journey building (hippos and rhinos). She got married in November 2010; her husband works for the Traveling World of Reptiles and does educational reptile shows, so she has 15 or more reptiles, amphibians, etc., in her basement at any given time! Tony Arbogast and Katie Carlin Arbogast bought a house in Minooka, IL, in summer 2010. Crystal Williams is working full-time as a professional fundraiser and pursuing a master’s in nonprofit administration at North Park University. Thank you for your submissions. Please be sure to keep us updated! Email your class agents at [email protected], or join the Facebook group, Dominican University-Class of 2008. –Catherine Joy Calixto, class agent 2009 Michelle Behnke lives in Maidenhead, United Kingdom, and recently received her master’s degree in communities, organizations, and social change from the City University of London in England. Deanna Foley Fiorentino married in February 2011 and resides in Des Plaines. She works for a coupon clearinghouse and continues to be involved in theatre in the Chicago area. She is looking forward to her upcoming trips to Europe and Australia. Bridget Enright Villegas is a first grade teacher in Joliet. In 2009, she earned a master of arts degree with reading specialist certification. She and her husband were blessed to welcome a son, AJ, into their lives in January 2010. –Melissa Bond, Lindsay Buoniconti and Shannon Sromek, class agents Mark Carbonara graduated from Western Illinois University with a master of science in college student personnel and is currently working at North Central College in Naperville. Mark is an area hall director and oversees the residence halls for all first-year male students on campus. Mark was also recently appointed to a two-year term as the state advisor for the Illinois Residence Hall Association (IRHA). Over the past year, Kelly Adler has been working as a marketing assistant for an inside sales team called the business development team at HUB International, the ninth-largest insurance brokerage firm. Kelly moved to Forest Park and keeps up with news of Dominican’s women’s soccer team! –Mark Carbonara, Adam Heusinkveld and Stephanie Lieberman, class agents 2008 Hollie Benedik recently displayed her senior thesis project from Dominican in an art exhibit called “Wounded in Action: An Art Exhibition of Orthopaedic Advancements.” The exhibit, which included pieces from a number of other artists, ran from June through August 2011 at the Chicago Cultural Center. More information about the artwork can be found online at www.woundedinactionart.org. “Who would have thought I could display my senior thesis work again,” writes Hollie. “It feels great!” 2010 Ashley Boyd is pursuing a dual master’s degree in art therapy and counseling with a concentration in the treatment of substance abuse and addictive disorders at Adler School of Professional Psychology. She recently developed an art curriculum for a nonprofit organization working with individuals with developmental and intellectual disabilities. This past summer Ashley showed her fabric sculpture work at an art exhibition on animals of flight and mandalas. She started an art therapy practicum internship this fall at Riveredge Inpatient Hospital. Marnecia Brownlee is in graduate school at Loyola for a master’s of social work with a focus in family and children services. She recently started a job through the nonprofit organization where she completed her DU internship. Marnecia also works for an after-school program at Northlake Middle School. Andre Burrell is in his first year of graduate school at DePaul in the Loop for a master of science in software engineering. Andre works in DePaul’s IT department and as a student grading assistant for his professors. Michelle Calvert was part of the Dominican Volunteers USA Program. As a Dominican Volunteer, Michelle worked as a third grade assistant teacher in Atlanta and lived in community with five Dominican Sisters. In June, she started a master of science in education program at Northwestern University. Elizabeth Fiona Trischan, daughter of Julia Cisneros Trischan and husband, Chris. Julia Cisneros Trischan and her husband, Chris, welcomed their first child to the world, daughter Paolo Cosentino works for Tukaiz, a design company. He currently works on the interactive development side. In his free time, Paolo has been taking classes to become a certified EMT. Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 33 34 CLASS NEWS After graduation, Ivana Debro spent two months in Europe with family. Shortly after her return to the states, she found a job in the accounting field with an international firm located in the Willis Tower. I N S Y M PAT H Y Rene Seigneur is pursuing an MBA in international business/finance and accounting at Benedictine University in Lisle. Maryann Dreas spent last school year as an English teacher in a village in the Republic of Georgia, teaching 8-to-18-year-old students. She reports, “This is the best thing I’ve ever done. Now, I’m back with my college sweetheart and ready for the next adventure. The first year after college is so unsure and daunting, but that’s part of the fun—that we can be anything we want. The world is still ours, so let’s go get it.” After graduating from DU, Edgar Torres returned to his previous post as the lead designer for printing company Dot Press, then transitioned to a position as lead designer at a small, start-up marketing company called CMO Inc., which publishes the Un Buen Doctor magazine and website. Edgar also works as a freelance graphic designer around Chicagoland while starting his own business creating all-occasion invitations. Kelly Gallois is pursuing her master’s degree at Rush University College of Nursing along with fellow alum Gabrielle Mazade. Kelly and Gabrielle recently completed their medical-surgical nursing and psychology quarter. They work with Chicago-area patients in varied settings such as inpatient, rehabilitation, psychiatry and postoperative care. Tracy Williams is a medical ambassador for the American Cancer Society, where she assists in the creation of nutrition education campaigns and presents the Cooking Smart program to local churches in Chicago’s northwest suburbs. Tracy also has a side business with Mary Kay Cosmetics, which will soon feature a nutrition component. Elizabeth Gonzalez finds herself living every day by the Dominican mission, giving compassionate service and participating in the creation of a more just and humane world in her job teaching at-risk preschoolers. Roslyn Anderson teaches third grade at St. Bernardine School in Forest Park, and also shares her musical talents with the parish. Roslyn celebrated completing her first year of teaching with a trip to Alaska. Annie Hussey completed her year of service with Dominican Volunteers where she worked as a marketing and program assistant at WomanCraft, a green social enterprise of Heartland Alliance. In July, Annie started a position as marketing and communications coordinator at Global Handmade Hope, a fair trade company located in Park Ridge. After graduation, Che’Carra Jackson worked at Dominican with Trudi Goggin and the Office of Alumnae/i Relations. Last October, she accepted a position as receptionist at Sedgwick Claims, a third-party insurance company handling workers compensation, liability and disability claims. Che’Carra has received two awards for upholding Sedgwick values of excellence and giving great customer service. Caitlyn Kamm is currently pursuing a master’s degree at Iowa State University in the history of textiles. Penelopi Kokkinias recently started a new job at Life Fitness. Jennifer Langer is currently in graduate school at Concordia University in River Forest, continuing her studies in the field of gerontology. Zach Maher is pursuing a master’s degree in security and intelligence studies at the University of Pittsburgh’s Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. Katie Lynn Pistorio works at the Dominican’s Rose K. Goedert Center for Early Childhood Education while finishing her master’s degree in special education. Cynthia Rodriguez is a Title 1 teacher for Catapult Learning in Chicago, working with K-8 students who need extra assistance in reading and math. In her spare time, she travels as much as possible. Jennifer Ruler is an assistant manager for Nordstrom’s Woodfield location. She is also exploring the possibility of starting her own clothing line. Lisanne Scannicchio became a licensed leasing agent last October and works for a property management company in Oak Park. She recently started the two-year master’s program in clinical psychology with a concentration in counseling and a specialization in adolescents at the Chicago School of Professional Psychology. dom.edu / magazine Zlatan Hodzic began working on the floor at the Chicago Board of Trade for a proprietary trading firm last September and currently assists traders in monitoring their positions and hedging their options trades with S&P futures. Whitney Mullins has been working as a substitute teacher in District 84 in Franklin Park, where she student-taught while at DU. After graduating, Amy Kenat worked as an editorial intern at a Loop publishing company where she wrote and edited magazine articles, video scripts and social media content. Currently, she lives in the city and works full time as a writer for a relationship-marketing agency. –Annie Hussey, class agent School of Education Hector Lopez MAEd ’10 develops and coordinates the ESL Credit Program for Southwest Texas Junior College. Hector is dedicated to the students of the southwest Texas region, especially at-risk and underserved student populations. Hector lives in Uvalde, TX, with his wife and three children. Graduate School of Library and Information Science Kathleen McSwain MALS ’82, director of the Chicago Ridge Public Library, received the 2011 Robert R. McClarren Legislative Development Award. Kathy has been the organizer and the planner for the Illinois Libraries and Legislator Breakfast, hosted each April in Springfield. She was instrumental in the success of the Save Illinois Libraries campaign, which promoted library funding. In February 2010, Kathy helped promote the successful ILA “Snapshot of a Library.” Libraries all over the country contributed photos and recorded statements of individuals visiting libraries proving the importance of public, school and specialty libraries in their respective communities. Dan Zamudio MLIS ’01 held a solo exhibition of his photographs at the Chicago Cultural Center called “Chicago and the Diana: Toy Camera Images by Dan Zamudio.” Dan’s work can be seen at www.sulzenfineartstudio.com. Liz Garcia MLIS ’05 is the new manager of the Chicago Public Library’s West Lawn branch. She is currently working on her doctorate degree in library science at Dominican. Janice Gintzler MLIS ’07 lives in Crestwood, and recently traveled cross country by train to visit Yosemite National Forest. Janice is a secretary of program resources for Northern Illinois United Methodist Women, and a member of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, Kathy Kelly’s peace with justice organization. Evan Boyd MLIS ’09 has accepted the position of bibliographer at the rank of assistant professor at the University of Northern Iowa’s Rod Library. Allison Richmond MLIS ’09 is the school librarian for Camdenton High School in Camdenton, MO. Brennan School of Business Michael Stark MBA ’89 is chief operating officer and chief financial officer for Coral Chemical Company in Zion. Renato Urvaneja MBA ’95 lives in Campinas, Brazil, and was recently named the CFO of South America for Owens Corning. Christopher Koetke MBA ’07 received the Brennan School of Business’s Outstanding Alumni Award during Dominican University’s commencement exercises in May. Christopher is executive director of Kendall College School of Culinary Arts. Under his leadership, the school was awarded the 2008 Academy of the Culinary Arts Cordon d’Or Gold Ribbon Cooking School of the Year. Also under his leadership, the school launched a sustainability initiative, which in 2007, was awarded the Green Award from Foodservice Consultants Society International. Weeping may remain for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning. A lumnae / i Ruth McGrath O’Keefe ’35 Adelaide Daly Clark ’40 Catherine Dugan O’Connor ’41 Edna “Dolly” Lewis Del Zoppo ’43 Frances Earle Bell ’44 Marguerite Graffy ’45 Jacqueline Lord Brisch ’46 Ruth Polanco Stitzel ’46 Mary Margaret Winterfield Rogers ’47 Katherine Kerwin Ryan ’47 Mary Patricia Cooney ’48 Irene Hellyer Rodgers ’48 Lois Bovington Camp ’49 Mary Jurich ’49 Mary Kern Dady-Colbert ’50 Marie Thomas Knorr ’50 Marilyn Stone Vonesh ’50 Sr. Thecla Simon, CSA MALS ’56 Patricia Ricci Doyle ’57 Elizabeth “Nancy” Reuland Welch ’57 Jo Ann Lyden Nowlan ’58 Sr. Joanice Theobald, OSF MALS ’59 Sr. Rosella Namer, FSPA MALS ’61 Gale Mayo Ebersberger ’62 Kate Butler Peterson ’62 Mary Susan Baumbach Smith ’63 Ruth Broche ’64 Annabelle “Nippy” Lisic ’64 Patricia Cusack Millet ’64 Patricia Piepho MALS ’65 Jacqueline Van Hal ’68 Frances Johnson Bradbury MALS ’71 Mary Watrous MALS ’71 Elizabeth “Betty” Howard Aamodt ’57 MALS ’72 May Brottman MALS ’74 Jo Ann Joyce ’76 Ronald Lewis MBA ’79 Jennifer Brandt ’81 Diane Fiorda MBA ’82 Cristine Hiatt Sakalas MALIS ’83 William Wleklinski MALIS ’86 Mary Erlewine Handrick MLIS ’97 Kathleen Rozak MSEd ’99 Kelley Shelton MLIS ’01 Cathy Barlow ’11 N on - g raduating A lum nae / i Mary Pitzenberger Charles Margaret Lahey Laisy Helen Mouzakeotis Vivian Stiell Pace Kathleen Paver Dolores Race Shirey D ominican S isters Sr. Maristella Goebel, OP* Psalm 30:5 U niversity F riend John A. Donahue^ Jack Goedert^ Fr. Edmund Fitzpatrick* B rother - in - law of Carolyn Noonan Parmer ’52+ Ellen Bendry ’57 Moira Donahue Murray ’71, MBA ’82 Note: This list reflects all the deaths received between December 1, 2010 and July 1, 2011. Please call the Office of Alumnae/i Relations at (708) 524-6286 regarding omissions or discrepancies. M other of Kathleen O’Keefe Anderson ’67 Mary Eileen O’Keefe Bateman ’68 Edna Del Zoppo ’68 Joan Hopkins ’72, MALS ’73 Mary Welch-Sauer ’81 Jeanne Sullivan Goss ’79, MALIS ’82 Loretta Welch Rodriguez ’82 Maria Ibarra ’08 Ahmed Youssef ’11 Dasheena Harris** Dick Walstra* S ister - in - law of Carol Welch Matusak ’68 Deborah Bowser Joyce ’76 Marie Dirr Von Ebers ’79* To make a gift in memory of a loved one, please call the Office of Annual Giving at (708) 524-6298, or visit dom.edu/give. U ncle of Victoria Kathrein ’05 *Staff/Faculty **Student ^Friend +Trustee F ather of Thomas Kourim ’77 Jacklyn Egolf ’78 Kate Green Marek MALS ’80 Coreen “Cory” Venditti Pope ’81 Rosalind Radcliff Parker ’08, MSOL ’10 Nicole Brochmann ’02 Mia Duarte** M other - in - law of Donald Hamerly* Maria Onofrio Ventimiglia ’99* H usband of Helen Hillenbrand Conroy ’42 Charleen O’Connor Berens ’49 Blanche Foley Antonello ’51 Donna Davin Lindgren ’59 F ianc é E of Craig Scott* D aughter of Virginia Lyons Mullery ’50 B rother of Alfia Giannasi Sassetti ’51 Helen Callahan ’63 Gail Waterloo Spindler ’75 Esperanza Plana* A unt of Deborah Hart ’62 Dorothy Hart ’62 Mary Ann McGrath Howie ’65 Madeleine McGrath Gallagher ’66 Kathleen McGrath Swantek ’71, MALS ’80 John Kelly MBA ’81 Julia Doloszycki* C ousin of Sr. Clemente Davlin, OP ’50* Mary Lou Walsh Hugar ’60 G randfather of Joanna Marek MLIS ’08 Monica Guzman ’11 Shannon Seegers ’11 Talonda Burnett* Lauren Cifonie** Corey Rudolph** G randmother of Christie Anderson ’02 Kristen Koll ’02 Michael Zubik ’08 Cassie Hileman ’09 Katie Pistorio ’10 Albert Galang** Molly McGrail** Daryle Tan** G reat - G randmother of Teresamarie Cervone ’08 Danielle Cervone** S tep - B rother of John Tsouchlos* S ister of Helen Hillenbrand Conroy ’42 Mary Kerwin White ’44 Mary Lou Gladstone McCabe ’52 Joan Gladstone Berg ’57 Marilyn Bongiorno Doherty ’58 Kathleen Mullaney* Fall 2011 Dominican University Magazine 35 36 CALENDAR OF EVENTS Come be a part of the many events Dominican University has to offer. October November January Art Exhibit: Fictional Landscapes September 21 – October 29 O’Connor Art Gallery Lund-Gill Lecture: Eboo Patel Acts of Faith: Interfaith Leadership in a Time of Global Religious Crisis Tuesday, November 1, 7:00 p.m. Martin Recital Hall Winter Commencement Saturday, January 14, 2012, 1:00 p.m. Lund Auditorium Homecoming & Family Weekend Friday, September 30, through Sunday, October 2 Albertus Magnus Lecture: Trevor Bechtel Discernment and Community in the Twitter Age Thursday, October 13, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium Art Exhibit: Cosmic Commentaries November 2 – December 14 O’Connor Art Gallery Founder’s Day Celebration Thursday, November 3 Eighth Annual Hispanic Heritage Reception Friday, October 14, 6:00 p.m. Social Hall Memorial Mass and Brunch Sunday, November 6, 11:00 a.m. Rosary Chapel President’s Signature Concert — Mary Chapin Carpenter Saturday, October 15, 7:30 p.m. Mazzuchelli Lecture: Jeanette Rodriguez Resistance, Faith and Social Change Tuesday, November 8, 5:30 p.m. Martin Recital Hall Ethics and Leadership Lecture: Mary Robinson Encouraging Corporate Social Responsibility Tuesday, October 18, 6:00 p.m. University Club, Chicago Siena Center Lecture: Mary Gordon Reading Jesus: How Story Shapes Us Thursday, October 27, 7:00 p.m. Martin Recital Hall Albertus Magnus Lecture: George Coyne, SJ Children of a Fertile Universe: Chance, Destiny and a Creator God Thursday, November 17, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium Siena Center Advent Lecture: Edward Foley, Capuchin, How the Pendulum Swings: The New Translation of the Roman Missal Tuesday, November 29, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium December Siena Center Advent Program — Dianne Bergant, CSA, PhD Is God’s Reign of Peace Really Possible? Thursday, December 2, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium Caritas et Veritas Dinner and Lecture: Angel Méndez Montoya, OP God-talk That Nourishes and Delights Monday, January 23, 2012, 5:00 p.m. Shaffer Silveri Atrium, Parmer Hall Art Exhibit: First Love January 25 – February 25, 2012 O’Connor Art Gallery February Albertus Magnus Lecture: Heidi Russell In the Beginning…Recasting the Christian Story in Light of Scientific Developments Thursday, February 2, 2012, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium Siena Center Lecture: M. Cathleen Kaveny Catholics in the Public Square: Prophecy, Civility and Truth Thursday, February 9, 2012, 7:00 p.m. Priory Auditorium March Art Exhibit Student Exhibition March 7 – March 24, 2012 O’Connor Art Gallery 32nd Annual Trustee Benefit Concert Marvin Hamlisch, Nicole Cabell Saturday, March 10, 2012, 5:00 p.m. dom.edu / magazine The Annual Fund supports scholarships, international study, service opportunities and faculty who encourage our students to be responsible global citizens. “ My time at Dominican has been an extraordinary experience. I have deepened my faith through my involvement with University Ministry and expanded my worldview under the guidance of supportive professors.” Brent James George Smith, Class of 2014 Dean’s Scholarship Recipient Hometown: Carol Stream, IL Majors: Corporate Communications and Theology Activities: New Hope Catholic Worker Farm trip, Mission to the Mound, Dominican Preaching in Action national conference you make the amazing 28th Annual Alumnae/i Children’s Christmas Party Saturday, December 3, 12:30 p.m. Dining and Social Halls “Lessons and Carols” A Candlelight Service of Prayer and Music A Dominican University Christmas Tradition Tuesday, December 6, 5:00 p.m. Rosary Chapel You make the amazing possible for students like Brent with your gift to the Annual Fund. * See page 5 for a listing of 2011-2012 Performing Arts Center events and performances Give to THE ANNUAL FUND 2011-2012 Dominican University Office of University Advancement 7900 West Division Street River Forest, IL 60305 (708) 524-6298 dom.edu/give