Kohawks around the world
Transcription
Kohawks around the world
C O E C O L L E G E COURIER W I N T E R Kohawks around the world Efforts highlighted in Kenya, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and Swaziland Study abroad pictorial Student entries featured in ACM contest Contemporary Issues Forum Sir Salman Rushdie on modern literature Faculty Profile Terry Heller reflects on 38 years at Coe 2 0 1 3 UPPER GAGE MAKES WAY FOR PHIFER COMMONS T he upper lobby of Gage Memorial Union was transformed over the winter into the Jim and Linnie Phifer Commons. Student Senate unanimously voted to designate $225,000 over a three-year period toward the project, using unspent funds returned by clubs and organizations. An additional $25,000 was contributed by Sodexo Dining Services. The project resulted from brainstorming between Career Services, Admission and student groups that use the space for their meetings. In response to concerns raised by students about the lack of functional space for group use, upper Gage has been transformed into a student-friendly environment. “We wanted prospective and current students to be excited about the space,” said Student Body President Anna Barton ’14. “We had heard enough from students that we wanted to give Coe the union it deserves.” The cold, industrial and uninviting space has been transformed into one that features a fireplace, comfortable seating and tables, and computer stations and a printer. The remodeling included flat screen televisions and a drop-down projector screen. “This renovation presents an opportunity to thank President Phifer and his wife, Linnie, for their years of service to the college,” Barton said. James Phifer is retiring in June after serving 18 years as Coe’s president. David McInally has been selected as the 15th president in the 160-year history of the college. McInally, who currently serves as executive vice president and treasurer at Allegheny College in Meadville, Pa., will take office on July 1. In advance of an official open house, the Phifer Commons hosted the appetizer portion of the 39th annual International Club banquet on Feb. 24. Cuisine from around the world was featured at the popular community event. TOP TO BOTTOM f Student Body President Anna Barton ’14 and Vice President Max Stanford ’14 announce the project to remodel the upper lobby of Gage Memorial Union in honor of Coe President Jim Phifer and his wife, Linnie. The newly remodeled Jim and Linnie Phifer Commons hosted a large crowd of International Club banquet attendees on Feb. 24. The refurbished Gage lobby offers computer stations and printer for student use. Comfortable furnishings and flat-screen televisions are among the modern features of Phifer Commons. O N T H E C O V E R DeAnna Marguglio ’13 won third place in the people category of the 2012-13 Associated Colleges of the Midwest study abroad photo contest with her May photo from a Swaziland primary school. More study abroad photo contest entries, and information on the Swaziland trip and efforts by Kohawks around the world are featured in this issue of the Courier. C O E C O L L E G E COURI ER Vol. 112 No. 3 Winter 2013 F E AT U R ES 10 EDITOR Lonnie Zingula CREATIVE DIRECTOR Christina Kroemer PHOTOGRAPHERS George Henry ’49 Dan Kempf Celebrated author Sir Salman Rushdie asserted that literature has a place in bringing the truths of the world to light. He also encouraged Coe students to write if they feel their stories must be told. 12 SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTOR Ryan Workman WEBMASTER Andy Molison ’03 DIRECTOR OF MARKETING AND PUBLIC RELATIONS 14 Orphanage business knows no recession 16 Educating Afghanistan now full-time work for Kharoti DIRECTOR OF ALUMNI PROGRAMS Jean Johnson ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT Heather Daniels ’95 COE COLLEGE PRESIDENT James Phifer Address changes and inquiries regarding alumni records may be addressed to Amber Oritz, Office of Advancement, phone (319) 399-8542, or email: [email protected]. Visit the Courier online at: http://coe.edu/courier Many alumni have added their email addresses to Coe’s home page. To add yours, write the Office of Alumni Programs or visit Coe’s website. Contact the Courier editor at: [email protected] or (319) 399-8613. The Coe Courier is published for alumni of the college, parents of current and former students, and recent contributors to Coe’s Annual Fund. The magazine is published in the spring, summer and winter by Coe College, 1220 First Avenue NE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52402. 10 Entrepreneur and businessman Kevin McGuire ’89 has endured the Great Recession and struggling economy of recent years even as his orphan rescue efforts have thrived in Nigeria and Sierra Leone. 12 A decade after first realizing his dream to educate girls and boys in his native Afghanistan village, the quest continues for Mohammad Khan Kharoti ’75. Rod Pritchard VICE PRESIDENT FOR ADVANCEMENT Dick Meisterling Retired Korir champions hometown health clinic After 32 years in management, Kip Korir ’74 could have chosen to retire in urban Kenya, where essential amenities are readily available. Instead, the Kohawk Athletic Hall of Famer stayed in rural Kericho and has worked to improve the lives of 10,000 people served by the Kebeneti Health Center. CLASS NOTES ASSISTANT Courtney Steinford ’14 PROOFREADER James Larkin Contemporary Issues Forum with Sir Salman Rushdie 18 Coe service in Swaziland grows 20 Photos from study abroad 36 Faculty Profile: Terry Heller Groundwork laid in in 2006 has resulted in biennial opportunities for Coe students to lend a hand in impoverished Swaziland. 14 From 72 photos submitted by 18 students in the annual Coe off-campus study photo contest, 10 were entered in the 2012-13 ACM study abroad photo contest. Howard Hall Professor of English Terry Heller feels lucky to have found his teaching career at Coe College. Now, as he prepares for retirement 38 years later, he is glad he was able to serve this small liberal arts college and the many students he has helped discover a bigger world. 16 D EPA RTM EN TS 2 SLINGA DA INK/ PUSHA DA PEN 5 CAMPUS BRIEFS 18 8 SPORT SHORTS 24 CLASS NOTES 20 FIELD STATION MEMORIES PRE-DATE COE Long before I had heard of Coe College, I had heard of the Wilderness Field Station. My family had a cabin on the South Kawishawi River near Birch Lake. A group of university women had North Woods Night every Wednesday during the summer at the Ely Junior College. Dr. R.V. Drexler and others working and learning at the station would come and make a presentation at least once a summer. The first one I remember was S E N D A L E T T E an evening of leeches. Too many species of leeches to count, but some good soul at the station was doing a study on them. It kept me out of the lake for a couple of weeks. We loved the information from the Wilderness Field Station and I am so glad that it is still going strong. After I joined the Coe family, it was fun to see Dr. Drexler out of the lab and enjoying the north woods. Anne Murphy Worth ’70 Kansas City, Mo. R The Courier invites letters on its contents or topics related to the college. Letters may be edited for style, length and clarity. Send letters to: [email protected] or Coe Courier 1220 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402 GETTING TO ELLEN: A MEMOIR ABOUT LOVE, HONESTY AND GENDER CHANGE By Ellen Krug ’79 A March 28 reading and book signing is scheduled at Coe for the memoir of Minneapolis attorney Ellen Krug ’79. “Getting to Ellen: A Memoir about Love, Honesty and Gender Change” was published by Stepladder Press. “Getting to Ellen” tells the story of Krug’s start in life as a boy named Ed, who grew up in an alcoholic household W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E in New Jersey, and then later, in Cedar Rapids. When he was 15, Ed fell in love with Lydia, a kind and loving 16-yearold. Soul mates, Ed and Lydia planned out a life done right, a Grand Plan which eventually came to fruition – Ed’s successful career as a trial lawyer, a house in the best neighborhood, two beautiful and adoring daughters, and money in the bank. that Ed loved, including Lydia. Against this backdrop, Ed struggled with the legacy of Tom Terrific, his alcoholic father, who later committed suicide when Ed was an adult. Secrets revealed after Tom Terrific’s death, as One Christmas, Lydia surprised Ed with a pastel drawing of their daughters drawing in chalk, “Welcome Home Daddy!” The drawing was symbolic of Ed’s picture-perfect life. All was perfect except for one thing: Ed lived in the wrong gender. For much of his life, he fought an internal battle “with bare knuckles in the mud” resisting an inner voice that told him he was actually female. Giving into that voice would mean losing everything C O L L E G E 2 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u THE INHABITANTS well as the national tragedy of Sept. 11, forced Ed to honestly understand who – and which gender – he really was. By Jason Bradford ’10 The debut poetry collection by Jason Bradford ’10 highlights the strangeness that can be found in familiar environments. “The Inhabitants” features poems based on close observations of the way individuals interact with flora and fauna. Eventually, Ed transitioned to Ellen. Her transition was possible only through grit, determination and tremendous luck. Along the way, Ellen was helped by Thap, a friend since middle school, and Mark, Ellen’s brother. A therapist, Sam “the Hammer,” played a crucial role in helping Ellen to understand that above all else, loving yourself as who you truly are is key to finding inner peace. “Getting to Ellen” helps remind us of the need to be authentic and true to one’s self, regardless of the costs. It is much more than a unique story about some things lost and others gained. Krug’s memoir offers perspective on the life challenges that all of us face – transgender or not. Krug is a freelance writer for several publications and frequent lecturer on the life lessons learned during her gender journey. She presently serves as executive director of a Twin Citiesbased nonprofit organization. “Getting to Ellen: A Memoir about Love, Honesty and Gender Change,” 326 pages, is available through Stepladder Press, Amazon. com, eBooks, and select bookstores. Visit www.gettingtoellen.com for information about readings, including one scheduled for 4:30 p.m. March 28 in Kesler Lecture Hall at Coe. DECLARING WAR: CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND WHAT THE CONSTITUTION DOES NOT SAY By Brien Hallett ’66 “Declaring War” directly challenges the 200-year-old belief that Congress can and should declare war. By offering a detailed analysis of the declarations of 1812, 1898 and the War Powers Resolution of 1973, the book demonstrates the extent of the organizational and moral incapacity of Congress to declare war. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E “To exist is to affect the existence of another, positively and negatively,” notes Bradford. “These poems are the result of my close consideration of broad concepts: being, the animal, the human, and the environment they share, and their relations.” This book invokes Carl von Clausewitz’s dictum that “war is policy” to explain why declarations of war are an integral part of war and proposes two possible remedies – a constitutional amendment or, alternatively, a significant reorganization of Congress. It offers a comprehensive historical, legal, constitutional, moral and philosophical analysis of why Congress has failed to check an imperial presidency. The book draws on Roman history and international law to clarify the form, function and language of declarations of war, and John Austin’s speech act theory to investigate why and how a “public announcement” is essential for the social construction of both war and the rule of law. Brien Hallett ’66 is an associate professor at the Matsunaga Institute for Peace at the University of HawaiiManoa, where he teaches courses in peace and conflict resolution. His primary research interest is the declaration of war and the historical, legal, constitutional, moral and philosophical issues that surround it. Hallett is the author of “The Lost Art of Declaring War” (1998). He previously taught English composition and language at the University of Hawaii, and in Taiwan, Japan and France. After graduating from Coe, he served four years in the Marines. The chapbook was released at a Jan. 31 reading at the Hearst Center for the Arts in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Copies of “The Inhabitants” are available at the Hearst Center and University Book and Supply in Cedar Falls and Red Cedar Books in Waterloo. It can also be obtained directly from Final Thursday Press (www.finalthursdaypress.com) and online at Amazon.com. The collection features cover art by Iowa City artist Mary F. Coats. This debut collection has been praised by “Blood Almanac” author Sandy Longhorn. “‘The Inhabitants’ is a book concerned with the ephemeral and fragile nature of life, from the human to the avian, from the inset to the ocean-dwellers, from the trees and the wind to the micro-organisms,” she said. “In each poem, Bradford searches, relentlessly and with precise observation, for what binds the living together. At one point the speaker states, ‘Maybe the pang beneath my ribcage is/connection,’ and it is on that “maybe” that the entire collection hinges. These are poems of translucence and haunting, poems that force us again “Declaring War,” 287 pages, is available in paperback for $32.99 from Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107608573. C O L L E G E 3 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u Light.” He has published two books, one of poetry, “The Heretic Hotel,” from the Laurel Poetry Collective, and one of nonfiction, “A Season on the Mat: Dan Gable and the Pursuit of Perfection,” from Simon & Schuster. Zavoral lives in St. Paul, Minn. and again to remember that we inhabit only this one moment and what we do with this moment matters.” J.D. Schraffenberger, author of “Saint Joe’s Passion,” says “even the animals that populate these poems appear as though from the realm of dream, or from a longforgotten mythology we need desperately to recall – from a hummingbird caught in the poet’s throat, to a sparrow nested in his stomach, to the pair of uncannily real owl statues perched in a field. Here is a longing for connection to the real, for an ecological integration humans have never quite been able to attain...[These poems] will charm and unsettle you in the most necessary ways.” Bradford lives in Center Point. He is a graduate of both Coe and the University of Northern Iowa, and he is the blog editor of Cant Journal. Final Thursday Press is the awardwinning, Cedar Falls-based literary publisher of perfect-bound collections and chapbooks of literary poetry and fiction released in limited, numbered editions. The press focuses on works by regional writers and sponsors public readings at various locations in the Cedar Valley. “The Inhabitants,” 32 pages, is available for $8.95 (plus $1 for shipping) from Final Thursday Press, 815 State St., Cedar Falls, IA 50613. YOU POOR BABY (4) Don’t bother turning it on. It’s already on. It’s always on. Take this blank sheet of paper and slide it behind the roller and turn this knob and scroll up the paper. Drop the bar over the paper. There: an 8 1/2 x11 screen-saver. Now, start keying in something — typing, we used to call it. Note the robust, affirmative thwack sound — first heard 140 years ago in Kleinsteuber’s Machine Shop in Milwaukee, where Christopher Latham Sholes (Home-Row Sholes, as we call him) sat on a work bench before a contraption he and two friends had hammered and hair-pinned together, and tapped out “the quick brown fox,”or its approximation. O, the beautiful, bountiful progeny! The first Underwood, heavy and black, reeking dependability, its strutting oval keys to become today’s cuff links. And the sleeky, cheeky Blue Royal, with its rounded-off keys. And the first Corona, with a fold-away space lever, midwife of the prose of Pyle, of Hemingway. And look: I carried this green Olivetti Underwood — light as a postage stamp, tough as a sewer rat — to countless press boxes...but why go on? The IBM Selectric, with its evil silver tumor pivoting to slap print on the page, begot word processors, which begot computers. Computers! Let us bow toward the West and Bill Gates! Let us lose our files and our minds in our misguided march from machines that never, not once, forced us to do either. “Sequences Dark and Light,” 36 pages, is available for $10 from Red Bird Chapbooks (www.redbirdchapbooks.com). fails to diminish Buster’s fascination with felines. When Cat = 100 and Hotdog = 4, there’s little chance that the dog will simply take his focus off kitty, especially if he’s not hungry. In “Dog Algebra,” Tammie Johnson Rogers ’82 solves the equation by offering a simple, straightforward, natural and effective way to overcome training situations that positive reinforcement fails to resolve. The common sense principles described in this book will help every dog owner develop a more trusting, confident, respectful and enjoyable relationship with their canine companion. “Dog Algebra” is amazing, uncomplicated, winning advice all served up in a concise, easy to read book authored by a highly experienced educator of dogs and their people. Rogers and her husband, Robert, live in Brownstown, Ill., where they own and operate DarnFar Ranch, a full-service professional dog training facility. In 2011, they founded Committed Canine, a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to the training and education of service dogs and their disabled handlers. Rogers previously authored “4-H Guide: Dog Training & Dog Tricks” (Voyageur Press, 2009) and “T.E.A.C.H. Your Own Service Dog” (www.Lulu.com, 2011). In “Dog Algebra,” she uses her 25 years of working with dogs and their people to continue her discussion on how to forge a happy, respectful and loyal partnership. “Dog Algebra,” 122 pages, is available in paperback for $10.69 from CreateSpace. ISBN 1479170631. DOG ALGEBRA: WHEN POSITIVE REINFORCEMENT FAILS TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM By Tammie Johnson Rogers ’82 SEQUENCES DARK AND LIGHT By Nolan Zavoral ’65 After 25 years writing for newspapers, Nolan Zavoral ’65 quit to write the kind of poetry found in “Sequences: Dark and W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E Sometimes things just don’t add up. Using positive reinforcement to train a dog can be a fun, rewarding and successful endeavor... until a cat saunters into the room. Using food to redirect Buster’s attention away from Miss Kitty is often recommended, and as often it C O L L E G E 4 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u FELLER HONORED WITH PRESTIGIOUS WORTH SEAGONDOLLAR PHYSICS AWARD as the Outstanding Chapter Advisor nationally in 2000, serving two terms as SPS Zone 11 Councilor, providing leadership for SPS’s program to study the effectiveness of the Undergraduate Research Experience in Physics, serving two terms as Sigma Pi Sigma President, and having led the planning for both the 2008 and 2012 Sigma Pi Sigma Congresses, to great acclaim. In every way, he has served the Physics Community, Sigma Pi Sigma, and the Society of Physics Students with distinction.” Feller earned his Ph.D. at Brown University and has taught at Coe since 1979. His research in physics centers on the atomic structure and physical properties of glass. Working with Coe Physics Professor Mario Affatigato ’89 and more than 200 student colleagues, he has published nearly 140 papers in the refereed literature of the field. Also, Feller has edited a number of books on glass science. He and his students have given more than 200 presentations at well over 100 national and international conferences. B.D. Silliman Professor of Physics Steve Feller B.D. Silliman Professor of Physics Steve Feller was recently presented with the prestigious Sigma Pi Sigma Worth Seagondollar Award at the 2012 Quadrennial Physics Congress, held in Orlando, Fla. Presented only once every four years, the award recognizes extraordinary levels of service and commitment to Sigma Pi Sigma - the National Honor Society in Physics – as well as the Society of Physics Students (SPS). During the award presentation, it was noted that Feller “has been both an exemplary researcher in the area of glass physics and an extraordinary mentor of young scientists at Coe College, directing both his own research group as well as the college Research Experiences for Undergraduates program, and has been an inspirational leader for its Society of Physics (SPS) Chapter, recognized W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E Since 1983, Feller and his colleagues have garnered more than $7 million from a large number of foundations, including the National Science Foundation, to support physics research at Coe. He has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including being named as a Fulbright Scholar, a Distinguished Iowa Scientist by the Iowa Academy of Sciences, and the Iowa Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation. He is an active member in several professional associations, including The American Ceramic Society, the American Physical Society and the Society of Glass Technology in the United Kingdom. He is a past national president of Sigma Pi Sigma. Feller also has a research-level interest in numismatics, the study of the history of money. In this area, he has published over 50 articles, parts of several books, and in 2007 he co-authored (with his daughter, Ray) “Silent Witnesses: Civilian Camp Money of World War II,” – now the standard in the field. C O L L E G E 5 C O U R I E R CONE PAINTING SETS SOTHEBY’S RECORD Marvin Cone ’14 just took a giant step out from Grant Wood’s shadow. Cone’s 1936 oil painting, “Stone City Landscape,” has sold at auction for $752,500 — a record for the Cedar Rapids native who has not enjoyed the worldwide fame of Wood, his lifelong friend, colleague and collaborator in the Stone City Art Colony of 1932 and ’33. Sotheby’s New York sold the Cone work Nov. 29 during its American Art Auction, which tallied $27.6 million, exceeding expected sales of $24.2 million. The Cone piece, privately held for 25 years, far exceeded its expected selling range of $120,000 to $180,000. Multiple bidders drove up the price, but Sotheby’s officials said they cannot divulge the buyer’s identity. “It seems as if collectors are paying more attention to his work,” Cedar Rapids Museum of Art Curator Sean Ulmer told the Gazette. “He’s had other strong sales in the past, but this piece is particularly stunning.” Sotheby’s also sold Cone’s “The Appointed Room” for $80,500 on Sept. 28. Other recent sales range Marvin Cone ’14 in his studio in Old Main in 1948. w w w . c o e . e d u from $4,740 for “In a Paris Park” and $34,160 for “Cloud Patterns,” both in September, to $186,000 for his “Farm Silhouette,” sold at Jackson’s in 2011. Known as a Regionalist painter, Cone (1891-1965) explored various subjects during his prolific career. The Cedar Rapids Museum of Art holds more than 500 of his works, ranging from landscapes, clouds and circus scenes to architecture, doors and stairs. Cone returned to his alma mater as a French instructor in 1919 and started Coe’s Art Department in 1934. He taught for more than four decades at Coe, retiring in 1960 and remaining as artist-in-residence until 1963. A gallery named in honor of his wife, Winnifred, in Stewart Memorial Library contains more than 60 of his paintings and drawings. The Coe holdings are particularly noteworthy in that the majority of the pieces were personally selected by Cone himself, as representative of major stylistic watersheds in his career Bathing birds was one of 21 thematic displays in the 25th anniversary exhibit of Third Grade Clay. “THIRD GRADE CLAY” CELEBRATES 25 YEARS IN COE ART GALLERIES Nearly 1,200 third graders from 21 area elementary schools displayed their artwork at Coe as part of a quarter century collaboration between the college and the Cedar Rapids Community School District. “Third Grade Clay” ran Jan. 18 through Feb. 3 in the Marvin Cone and Eaton-Buchan Galleries of Sinclair Auditorium. In its 25th year, “Third Grade Clay” provides young artists with the opportunity to show threedimensional work in a professional environment. Generally, the young artists from each elementary craft an individual piece of clay in conjunction with the theme selected by the school, yielding nearly two dozen creative displays. The program was initially organized W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E by Coe Art Professor John Beckelman to give young students an outlet to display their three-dimensional work. While elementary schools typically have lots of wall space to display paintings and drawings, Beckelman says it’s more challenging for elementary school art teachers to find places to showcase clay creations. In the mid-1980s, Beckelman and local elementary art instructors began a dialogue about creating a show at Coe, and the third grade level was believed to be ideal for the young artists to display their work. As a result, the “Third Grade Clay” art show was created and has become a community tradition. COE’S CHAPTER OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY HONORED The American Chemical Society (ACS) has awarded the Coe College student chapter with an Honorable Mention Award for the 2011-12 academic year. The Coe chapter was selected from more than 350 ACS student chapters around the country. In addition, Chemistry Professor Martin St. Clair, who serves as faculty C O L L E G E 6 C O U R I E R advisor to the chapter, received special commendation for his work to make it a successful organization. “Few faculty members are willing to make the great commitment of time and energy that a successful chapter requires,” said ACS President Bassam Shakhashiri. “Professor St. Clair’s efforts certainly represent the best in undergraduate science education and mentoring around the country.” In all, the Society Committee on Education of the ACS presented 46 outstanding, 81 commendable and 114 honorable mention awards. Lists of award-winning chapters were published in Chemical & Engineering News and in the November/December issue of inChemistry. The awardwinning chapters will also be honored at the 245th ASC National Meeting in New Orleans on April 7. COE FACULTY TO PARTICIPATE IN ACM’S MEDITERRANEAN TRIVIUM SEMINAR A dozen faculty from an eclectic set of disciplines in the Associated Colleges of the Midwest (ACM) – geology to art to political science, to name a few w w w . c o e . e d u from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. In the months leading up to the trip to Italy, the seminar leaders will refine the syllabus to integrate the particular expertise of the participating faculty, who will share in leading discussions. – have been selected to participate in the Mediterranean Trivium: Earth, Sea, and Culture, a seminar exploring the interplay between humans and the natural world over time. This is the second of the ACMMellon Seminars in Advanced Interdisciplinary Learning (SAIL), a five-year program aimed at supporting faculty as they develop innovative, multi-disciplinary curricula for upperlevel students. The series of seminars, two at international sites and three at locations in the U.S., is funded by a generous grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. At each location, according to the leaders, the seminar will focus on the interrelation between natural and cultural environments, and how the specific conditions at the sites have inspired efforts by people over the centuries to shape, alter and manipulate their surroundings. The faculty have outlined multidisciplinary curricular projects they plan to develop as a result of their participation in the seminar, such as creating new courses or course modules, or adding interdisciplinary materials and depth to courses they currently teach. Informed by the experience in Italy, they will work on those projects throughout the 2013-14 academic year. The three Coe faculty members who were selected for this seminar are Assistant Professor of Art Andrea Kann, Professor of Chemistry Marty St. Clair and Assistant Professor of History Angela Ziskowski. Other seminar participants, who applied as teams of three, are from Carleton, Luther, and St. Olaf Colleges. They will be led by the trio of Colorado College professors who proposed the topic and developed the preliminary syllabus for the seminar. Juniors Anna Barton ’14 and Max Stanford ’14 were reelected president and vice president in January’s Student Senate elections. The Mediterranean Trivium will include an intensive, 11-day onsite portion in Italy this summer. Based in Florence, the group will take day and overnight trips to Rome, Pisa, Pompeii and Mt. Vesuvius, and other areas. The itinerary is built around a series of case studies, all of which can be approached 2 0 1 3 C O E Barton and Stanford both received a Clark Merit Scholarship for the 201213 school year. Their platform focused on finishing what they started with initiatives targeting the environment, student life, campus dining, accessibility and campus safety. STUDENT SENATE LEADERS REELECTED “We’re particularly pleased with the broad range of disciplinary and regional expertise among the participants,” said ACM Senior Program Officer David Schodt “Along with their depth of knowledge, the group as a whole has a lot of experience in creating innovative curriculum and, in turn, implementing new curricular models. That’s clear from their accomplishments as teachers and scholars, as well as from the potential projects they proposed in applying to participate in this seminar.” W I N T E R member of Student Affairs Committee and has twice represented Coe at NCAA-sponsored conferences. A guard for the Kohawk men’s basketball team, he has been named to the Academic All-Iowa Conference Team. Stanford also served as a student representative on the Presidential Search Committee. Barton, from St. Paul, Minn., is a business administration and economics major and a member of the College Scholars Program. She is vice president of administration for Delta Delta Delta sorority. She participates in Religious Life activities, serves on the Student Affairs Committee and is a member of the Sustainability Council. She works in the Writing Center and gives back to Coe by working for Phonathon. Student body leaders Max Stanford ’14 and Anna Barton ’14 Stanford, of Superior, Colo., is an elementary education major and a member of the College Scholars Program. He is a member of the Student Athletic Advisory Committee and works as a tour guide for Admissions. He also serves as a C O L L E G E 7 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u FIRST OUTRIGHT IIAC TITLE FOR COE FOOTBALL It was another record-breaking season for the Kohawk football team in 2012. Coe won the outright Iowa Conference title, while finishing the season 10-0. Coe put together an 11-game winning streak, the third longest in the country at the time, dating back to last season. Coe’s league title was the fourth in school history, while they completed the 10th undefeated season in school history, the first since 1993. Coe opened the season with defending Midwest Conference champion Monmouth. The Fighting Scots advanced to the second round of the playoffs last year and looked to provide an early test for the Kohawks. Gage Mohs ’14 rushed for 173 yards and three touchdowns, while being named to the D3football.com National Team of the Week, in Coe’s 33-3 victory. Week two brought the first football game between Coe and Cornell as members of different conferences. While it was the closest game between the rivals in five years, Coe beat the Rams 34-14 for the 13th straight win in the series. The Kohawks’ final non-conference game was at Washington University in St. Louis. Coe led from start to finish in the 20-14 victory that saw quarterback Mark Atwater ’16 rush for two scores. Coe opened Iowa Conference play with a pair of blowouts, as it shutout Buena Vista 51-0 on Homecoming and beat Loras 69-7. Coe’s first road league game was in Dubuque, as the Kohawks faced the defending Iowa Conference W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E Defensive end Frank Weymiller ’13 became the first three-time football All-American in Iowa Conference history. champions. It was a back-and-forth affair, but a Mohs’ touchdown with :48 to play, followed by a twopoint conversion, sent the game to overtime. Jared McNutt ’13 found Jared Kuehner ’13 for the gamewinning touchdown, as Coe won 41-38 in double overtime. selected to host an NCAA Division III Playoff game, but 17th-ranked Elmhurst came out on top 27-24. The Bluejays featured Gagliardi Trophy Winner Scottie Williams, the third winner of the national player of the year award Coe has faced the last four years. The Kohawks traveled to Simpson the following week in a game featuring the only two remaining unbeaten teams in the league. It was all Coe, as McNutt was 28-of-30 passing in the 47-7 victory. McNutt’s passing percentage was the second highest in NCAA history. The Kohawks finished the season ranked 15th in both the D3football.com Top 25 and the AFCA Coaches Top 25 poll. Coe locked up the league title with back-to-back 35-7 victories over Wartburg and Luther. In the final regular season game of the year, the Kohawks turned the ball over the first two times they touched it, but overcame that for a 34-13 victory against Central. For the second time in school history, Coe was C O L L E G E 8 Wide receiver Jared Kuehner ’13 leaves Coe with five school records. C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u VOLLEYBALL WINS 15 STRAIGHT IN IIAC The defending Iowa Conference champion Kohawk volleyball team was picked to finish second by the league coaches in the 2012 preseason poll. Coe finished the year 20-13 and 6-1 in league play to take second place behind Wartburg. Coe opened the season at the Augustana Tournament, where the Kohawks went 3-1 with wins over Clarke, Knox and Blackburn. After a rough tournament at Augsburg, Emily Ryan ’13 earned All-Iowa Conference honors for the third time in her career. where the Kohawks dropped four straight matches, Coe bounced back to beat Luther in five games in the Iowa Conference opener for both teams. After splitting its matches on the first day, Coe finished second at the Simpson Invite with a 3-1 record. Coe then hosted Central in its home opener and hit .319 to sweep the Dutch 3-0. It was the first shutout of Central in school history. The Kohawks ran their winning streak to five, as they won the Grinnell Invite. The Kohawks W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E opened the tournament with a 3-0 win over Central for Coe’s second shutout victory over the Dutch in the same week. The Kohawks then picked up a 3-1 win over Grinnell before ending the tournament with a 3-0 win over Rockford. Coe recorded nine straight wins going into the first week of October as they beat Loras 3-0. The win over the Duhawks was the seventh shutout in Coe’s nine-match winning streak. After dropping their final two matches of the WisconsinPlatteville Invite to St. Catherine and Wisconsin-Platteville, the Kohawks picked up two Iowa Conference wins over Dubuque and Simpson. The win over Simpson was the 15th straight in league play and clinched a berth in the IIAC Tournament. In between the league wins, Cornell downed the Kohawks 3-0 in a Bremner Cup Series match. Coe saw its streak of 15-straight regular season Iowa Conference victories come to an end, as 11thranked Wartburg beat Coe 3-0 for the regular season conference championship. Third-seeded Loras knocked off the second-seeded Kohawks 3-1 in the semifinals of the Iowa Conference Tournament. Rachel Schaefer ’15 had a matchhigh 27 kills, the most by an Iowa Conference player this year and a new school record. She hit .362 in the match on 58 attempts. Alissa Wittenburg ’15 was named to the All-Iowa Conference team after leading the league in digs with 111. with 114 and ranked second in kills with 93. Schaefer was also fourth in aces with 12, while ranking seventh with a .278 hitting percentage. Rachel Bosworth ’15 ranked fifth in the conference with a .315 hitting percentage. Alissa Wittenburg ’15 led the league in digs with 111. The Kohawks return five of six starters next year. Coe also has three All-Iowa Conference players returning to the lineup. Emily Ryan ’13 led the Iowa Conference with 266 assists, while Schaefer led the league in points C O L L E G E 9 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u Truth in storytelling Rushdie makes the case for literature at Contemporary Issues Forum by Rod Pritchard Speaking at the 10th Coe College Contemporary Issues Forum, celebrated author Sir Salman Rushdie asserted that even in the modern information age, literature has a place in bringing the truths of the world to light. He also encouraged Coe students to write if they feel their stories must be told. Rushdie is best known for writing “The Satanic Verses,” which became a center of controversy in the Islamic world. Consequently, the spiritual leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, called the book “blasphemous against Islam” and issued a fatwā calling for Rushdie’s death on Valentine’s Day in 1989 – 24 years to the week before the author’s appearance in Sinclair Auditorium. In response, Rushdie lived in hiding under police protection in the United Kingdom for several years. A native of India, he has lived in New York City since 2000. An eclectic writer and noted public intellectual, Rushdie has been awarded many of the world’s top literary prizes. For his masterwork of magic realism, “Midnight’s Children,” Rushdie won the prestigious Booker Prize, and later, the Best of the Booker. His memoir “Joseph Anton” (his secret alias while in hiding) was published in September. Rushdie was named by Foreign Policy magazine as one of “2012’s Top 100 Global Thinkers.” In terms of his conflict with the Ayatollah, Rushdie quipped, “One of us is dead – do not mess with novelists.” In fact, Rushdie explained that several of the dictators he portrayed in his novels were either assassinated or died under mysterious W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E circumstances, confirming that “the pen is mightier than the sword.” “Dictator elimination appears to be a service that I can perform,” deadpanned Rushdie to the delighted audience. During his presentation, Rushie compared the private acts of imagination that manifest themselves in literature to the public, political business of the world. He recalled that throughout the history of novels, literature was expected to bring people news. For example, he explained that when Charles Dickens wrote “The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby,” it conveyed important information about the dreadful conditions of poor children in substandard schools in the north of England to the rest of the country. “His novel literally brought that information to large parts of the country which didn’t know it was happening, and it was partly instrumental in changes in the law in England that made those kinds of abuses illegal,” said Rushdie. Another example Rushdie cited was when President Abraham Lincoln reportedly said, “So, you’re the little woman who started this big war” to Harriet Beecher Stowe, reflecting the enormous impact she had with the publication of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” “You would think that this informational function of literature is less important now that we have so many other ways of getting the news, with so many other media to tell us what’s going on, but I have a feeling that the more ways there are for us to find out what’s happening, the less we find out,” said Rushdie. “Literature can still, in fact, fulfill a very important role C O L L E G E 10 C O U R I E R in this area of bringing information. I’ve always felt, as a reader, that the literature of the world can bring us, as nothing else can, the experience of what it is to live in countries and societies which are not our own, and thus to understand what the world is like.” The author discussed the frequent conflict between writers and the people in power – the conflict between literature and politics – which he became caught up in after the publication of “The Satanic Verses.” “I’ve often thought that this may be because both writers and politicians are in a way engaged in the same business. Both of them are trying to make portraits of the world and encouraging you to buy them. The difference is that when writers do this, they put on the title pages of their books ‘a novel’ so that you know it is made up. Politicians neglect to mention that they’re making it up,” said Rushdie. The author expressed concern that many people today are being defined more narrowly, based on a subset of their political views, which he believes inevitably leads to conflict. “These days, identity politics seems to ask us to define ourselves not by the things we love, but by the things we hate,” observed Rushdie. According to Rushdie, literature provides a vehicle to find compromise in people. He encouraged audience members to seek commonality rather than differences with others. “The more broadly we understand ourselves as human beings, the easier it is to find common ground. This is the thing w w w . c o e . e d u regimes usually shut down that discourse to create their own realities, which he called “unfreedom.” Given his own experience, it is not surprising that Rushdie has become a strong advocate for freedom of speech, which provides the foundation for people to tell their stories. He believes that writers and artists should take the lead in pushing the boundaries to expand human understanding, even when powerful forces push back. that literature has always known. Each of us is 100 people; we are not one. And each of us, when we meet another person, is meeting another 100 people,” said Rushdie. “I think one of the things literature can do is to encourage a world view which in turn encourages tolerance and civilization, and sets itself up against this other view, identity defined by hostility, which leads to extremism and bigotry and conflict.” Rushdie contended that the storytelling conveyed through literature is essential and unique to our humanism. When asked his advice for young writers, Rushdie replied, “Everybody who I’ve known who is a real writer has just had this thing eating at them. It’s not a choice. It’s a necessity. You write the book because it’s necessary (for you as the author), not for the world, but for you. And then if you’re lucky, the world might agree. Write the books you have to write.” “Man is the storytelling animal. We are the only animal in the world that does this strange thing of telling itself stories in order to understand what kind of an animal it is,” said Rushdie. Noting that families are defined in part by family stories, Rushdie noted that the familiarity with these stories draws everyone more closely into their families. Conversely, an individual who doesn’t know the family stories really doesn’t belong to the family. Below, Left to Right “Stories are how we tell ourselves who we are,” said Rushdie. “We live in what have come to be called grand narratives – the big stories.” He cited history, religion and nation as examples of grand narratives. Living in a free society, Rushdie asserted that we have the ability to take those stories and remake them, to argue about them and to discard them, to satirize them, to poke fun at them or to revere and defend them. He affirmed that authoritarian Celebrated author Sir Salman Rushdie was greeted by Howard Hall Professor of English Terry Heller and his wife, Linda, and Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty Marie Baehr and her husband, Mark Timko, at a reception and dinner preceding the Contemporary Issues Forum. As the 10th Contemporary Issues Forum speaker, Sir Salman Rushdie encouraged Coe students among the Sinclair Auditorium crowd to write the stories they feel must be told. Sir Salman Rushdie signs autographs for students following his Feb. 12 appearance at Coe. Established by the late K. Raymond Clark '30, the Contemporary Issues Forum presents the views of distinguished leaders whose work has received national or international recognition. The forum has featured former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, former Poland President Lech Walesa, deep-sea oceanographer Robert Ballard, civil rights activist Myrlie Evers-Williams, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau, ecological expert Jared Diamond, award-winning documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Leonard Pitts. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 11 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u RETIRED KORIR CHAMPIONS HOMETOWN HEALTH CLINIC BY LONNIE ZINGULA After 32 years in management with international tea trader Finlays, Kip Korir ’74 could have chosen to retire in urban Kenya, where essential amenities are readily available. Instead, the Kohawk Athletic Hall of Famer stayed in rural Kericho and has worked to improve the lives of 10,000 people served by the Kebeneti Health Center. “I felt I needed to contribute to the livelihood of the community,” he said. The clinic was started in 1965 in a two-room mud building. It was initially sponsored by a mission hospital 100 miles away and was staffed by a nurse. A doctor was sent once a month to examine patients and transport serious cases for hospital treatment. The service was discontinued in 1982, and the clinic – now consisting of seven rooms and a staff house for the nurse – was left to a local church to manage. Between 1985 and 1990, the clinic was not operational because the church was unable to purchase drugs or employ staff. In 1992, Korir bought land adjacent to the clinic and began building the home he shares with his wife, Linner. With no running water, they rely on roof water to meet their household needs. “We don’t use much,” he said. Meetings were held with church members with a goal of reviving the clinic for residents who otherwise traveled on foot over 15 miles to the nearest clinic or waited for one of the few available vehicles to take them to a hospital 35 miles away. The church group raised funds which were used to build a three observation rooms. Finlays donated 15 beds for the clinic and Korir bought mattresses himself. He also organized the purchase of drugs on credit from the store that supplied drugs to the company hospital. “WE GAVE THE MONEY AND WE SAW THE RESULTS. WE KNOW IT WASN’T WASTED.” The government also started supplying vaccines to be used on clinic days to immunize children. However, the clinic continued to employ its staff from funds generated from the small fees charged for treatment of those who could afford to pay. At times, clinic staff was not paid for months until adequate funds were generated. The low ^HNLZSLK[VOPNOZ[HMM[\YUV]LYHUKTHKLP[KPMÄJ\S[[V H[[YHJ[X\HSPÄLKWLYZVUULS After graduation from Coe, Korir returned to his native Kenya and went to work as a junior manager for Finlays, the world’s largest independent tea trader with extensive tea and horticultural interests in Kenya, South Africa, Sri Lanka and China with primary markets in the United Kingdom, United States, Asia and Europe. “As a biology major at Coe, my botany knowledge and liberal arts education was useful in the operations and enabled me to progress through the ranks of employment to the position of corporate affairs director and deputy to the CEO of the company in Kenya,” Korir said. He retired in December 2007 after 32 years of service, having put his six children through college; Pamela and Mike in Kenya and Cindy Korir ’96, Diane Korir ’01, Karen Korir ’02 and Dan Korir ’07 at Coe. Since retiring, Korir has served as chairman of the clinic’s management committee. “I use my lawn mower to cut grass at the clinic and, during dry seasons, I use my pickup to transport water from a nearby river for use at the clinic since we still rely on roof water,” he said. The clinic employs a nurse, two patient attendants, a lab technician and a watchman who doubles as a custodian. Twenty patients are seen on an average KH`^P[OHZTHU`HZ]PZP[PUNVUVMÄJPHSJSPUPJKH`Z each Tuesday and Thursday. The prevalent diseases in the area are malaria, dysentery, diarrhea and typhoid. Upper respiratory tract infections are also frequently reported. Emerging health concerns include diabetes, cancer and high blood pressure, due to the rapid changes in people’s lifestyles. Also, unprotected handling of pesticides is causing unnecessary but preventable ailments. Former Coe Cross Country Coach Dick Landis, who was also an assistant track coach while Korir was winning team and individual Midwest Conference [YHJR[P[SLZH[*VLZH^[OLJSPUPJ»ZULLKZÄYZ[OHUK during one of his frequent visits to Kenya, where he works in a children’s home about 70 miles from Kericho. Landis, from Big Sky, Mont., raised nearly $5,000 from people who knew Korir at Coe and got it matched by the charity Bread and Water for Africa. The money was donated toward construction of a permanent water supply for the clinic along with a microscope Landis was able to acquire. On a return visit last spring, Landis cut the tape on a new delivery room named in his honor. “They’ve done wonderful things with very limited resources,” he said. Landis envisions Coe students traveling to Kenya and volunteering at the clinic for “an international experience of a lifetime.” Anamosa, Iowa, veterinarian Brian Darrow, an Iowa State track teammate of Korir’s brother, Dave, has also assisted the clinic since launching a rabies program in Kenya. After the clinic received a grant to pay for a water line, his $5,000 donation was used PUZ[LHK[V[PSLÅVVYZWHPU[HUKI\`H[HUR[VJVSSLJ[ rain water. “I felt really, really good when we visited there (in 2012),” Darrow said. “We gave the money and we saw the results. We know it wasn’t wasted.” Despite the improvements, Korir said the clinic still lacks essential equipment, such as refrigerators for vaccines and lab materials, wheelchairs, baby cots, ward beds, electronic centrifuge, a hemoglobin machine, measuring cylinders, baby weighing scales, and sterilizing equipment. The drug supply is limited and funds are lacking to employ and house X\HSPÄLKZ[HMM “As a resident of this community, I try my best to get PU[V\JO^P[ONV]LYUTLU[VMÄJPHSZMYPLUKZHUKKVUVYZ who can come forward to assist to improve the health of the needy local population who suffer or lose their lives from preventable diseases,” Korir said. )LJH\ZLVM[OLKPMÄJ\S[`JSLHYPUNKVUH[LKNVVKZ[OYV\NOJ\Z[VTZ2VYPYYLJVTTLUKZTVUL[HY`KVUH[PVUZHYL the best way to assist the clinic. Tax deductible donations for the Kebeneti SPA Dispensary can be sent to Bread and Water for Africa, 2550 Huntington Ave. Suite 200, Alexandria, VA 22303 or online at www.africanrelief.org. Note on checks or through the website that gifts are intended for “Kebeneti clinic.” Gifts totaling $5,000 or more will be matched dollar for dollar by Bread and Water for Africa. S Kenya is a country in East Africa that lies on the equator. With the Indian Ocean to its southeast, it is bordered by Tanzania to the south, Uganda to the west, South Sudan to the northwest, Ethiopia to the north and Somalia to the northeast. e LEFT TO RIGHT: Patients wait outside Kebeneti Health Center in Kericho, Kenya. Coe Athletic Hall of Famer Kip Korir ’74 (left) with members of the Kebeneti Health Center Board of Directors. Former Coe Cross Country Coach and assistant track coach Dick Landis of Big Sky, Mont., cut the ribbon in May on a delivery room named in his honor at the Kebeneti Health Center in Kericho, Kenya. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 13 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u E ntrepreneur and businessman Kevin McGuire ’89 has endured the Great Recession and struggling economy of recent years even as his orphan rescue efforts have thrived. McGuire and his wife, Phoelisa, of Urbandale, Iowa, are co-owners of ABC Herrington Sign and Display, Kindy’s Promotional Apparel and McGuire Properties. “Business is tough,” he said. “We’re adjusting everything we do.” The businesses support their personal dedication to orphan causes. In 2006, McGuire helped launch the Cornerstone of Hope Orphanage at the childhood home of co-founder Eric Idehen in Benin City, Nigeria. Six years W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E later, the Des Moines-based non-profit has opened a second orphanage in Sierra Leone and planning is underway for a third in Senegal. “It’s a great organization,” said McGuire, who visited Sierra Leone in September for the opening of the orphanage in Pujehun. “Everybody works really hard.” Located near the border with Liberia in a former military barracks used by both sides in a civil war, the Sierra Leone facility opened with three orphaned children and a capacity to house 20. Bullet marks on the rented building provide a lasting reminder of its history. “It’s a neat justification that a place where people waged war is now a place to care for children,” McGuire said. C O L L E G E 14 C O U R I E R After partnering with the government to undertake the strenuous verification process, more than 100 orphaned children have been identified within a 10-mile radius of Pujehun. Land purchased on the edge of town is where the orphanage plans to establish a permanent presence under the leadership of Jeff Corneh, a Pujehun native who joined forces with Cornerstone of Hope after moving to Des Moines from Atlanta in 2010. “We heavily believe education is the way for these children to get out of the poverty they’ve been striken with,” McGuire said. The Benin City orphanage provides housing for up to 50 children, with some w w w . c o e . e d u staying for six months or less before being adopted, mostly by Nigerian parents. “We almost can’t keep kids in the orphanage, which is probably the best thing that could happen,” McGuire said. A girl currently in the process of being adopted by a Des Moines couple will mark the organization’s fourth international adoption into an American family. “The hardest government to deal with is the United States,” noted McGuire, who credited U.S. Rep. Bruce Braley for his involvement as an advocate for adoptive Iowa couples. With three children of his own, McGuire takes personal satisfaction in being part of an organization that provides love and shelter for orphans while paving the way for them to join new families. “I look at these kids like they’re my own kids in my own house,” McGuire said. “I get more out of it than I probably am giving.” As for Sean, 14, Kyle, 13, and Megan, 7, they chip in helping to lick envelopes and mail newsletters for Cornerstone of Hope. “I think it’s a great witness for them,” McGuire said. “I hope they want to help people too.” For more information on the Cornerstone of Hope Orphanage or to arrange for a group presentation, visit www. thehopeorphans.org. The non-profit organization also has a page on Facebook and will host the fifth annual Night Under the African Stars fundraiser in West Des Moines on Oct. 12. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E PHOTOS, LEFT TO RIGHT: Pujehun native Jeff Corneh (center) with Kevin McGuire ’89, the orphanage manager and children in Sierra Leone. Kevin McGuire ’89 (left) with a volunteer and Cornerstone of Hope co-founder Eric Idehen at the orphanage in Benin City, Nigeria. Kevin McGuire ’89 with Elijah and Patrick, two of the first children brought to the orphanage in Benin City, Nigeria after it opened in 2006. Cornerstone of Hope co-founders Eric Idehen and Kevin McGuire ’89 on land purchased for construction of a permanent orphanage in Pujehun, Sierra Leone. Eric Idehen and Kevin McGuire ’89 visit a school in Sierra Leone. Nigeria is situated at the extreme inner corner of the Gulf of Guinea on the west coast of Africa. It borders with Chad to the northeast, Cameroon to the east, Benin to the west, and Niger to the northwest. Sierra Leone is a country in West Africa that is bordered by Guinea to the northeast, Liberia to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the southwest. C O L L E G E 15 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u Educating Afghanistan now full-time work for Kharoti The school in Shin Kalay, Afghanistan is being rebuilt with bricks salvaged from the original school that was destroyed by rebels in 2008. A 400 girls and 800 boys, ages 6 to 22 – attended Green Village Schools. By October 2008, none did. Enrollment totals about 700 boys, while 170 girls are schooled in private homes because of continued unrest in the area. Since retiring from his job in nuclear medicine in 2011, Kharoti has been working full time in support of Green Village Schools, the Portland, Ore.-based nonprofit organization he founded in 2002. Rebels from north of Helmand province descended on Shin Kalay, razing the compound and making off with every donated pencil, textbook, ream of paper, chair, desk, computer, and even metal support structures. In 2010, Green Village Schools partnered with New Mexico’s PeacePal and Afghan Sister Village Project to receive a grant to start an advanced education center in Lashkar Gah. Kharoti retired from Kaiser Permanente and spent five months in Afghanistan setting up the project. The center is equipped with 30 computers and Internet access. Four university graduates were interviewed via Skype and hired to teach computer science, Internet and English to 116 boys and 132 girls. decade after first realizing his dream to educate girls and boys in his native Afghanistan village, the quest continues for Mohammad Khan Kharoti ’75. Kharoti first opened a school in Shin Kalay (or, “Green Village”), in 2001, while the Taliban still controlled Afghanistan. Six female and 10 male first-grade students grew quickly to 15 girls and 60 boys split into two grades. Through the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the subsequent war, Kharoti continued to develop the school. By 2007, roughly 1,200 students – about W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E The school has since been replaced by mud brick classrooms built adjacent to the central mosque. Construction was financed by Afghan Appeal, a London-based NGO, and teacher salaries were paid by Green Village Schools through June 2011. Now, the village elders are responsible for arranging with the Afghanistan Ministry of Education to pay teacher salaries. C O L L E G E 16 C O U R I E R Kharoti proudly notes that three young women from the original school in Shin Kalay have enrolled in medical school. w w w . c o e . e d u Mohammad Khan Karoti ’75 has dedicated his life to building schools in his native Afghanistan. Workers have begun rebuilding the school in Shin Kalay, Afghanistan. Their tuition is being paid by the LBW Trust, an Australia-based charity that supports needy students in countries where cricket is played. Nearly 100 boys from Shin Kalay have also gone on to college, and dozens have found jobs and a better life because of their education. Born in Afghanistan’s Zabul Province in 1943, Kharoti lived in a nomadic caravan until he was seven. In 1950, his parents settled for the first time on land in the Nada Alie District of Helmand Province that was made suitable for farming by an American Foreign Aid project. At age 12 he started primary school – something no one in his village had ever done – attending school in the morning and working the family farm in the afternoon. He finished primary and nursing school in Afghanistan and, through the sponsorship of an American physician, attended middle school and high school in Lebanon. He came to Coe via Clinton, Iowa, where he attended community college and lived with the family of an American student he had met in Lebanon. After receiving his bachelor’s in general science in 1975, he returned to Afghanistan and entered medical school in Jalalabad. He practiced general surgery until he was forced to flee to Pakistan with his family in 1987. In 1989, assisted again by the Dean W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E McGinty family of Clinton, Kharoti and his family immigrated to the United States and he began working at Kaiser Permanente in Portland. In appreciation for those who helped him rise above a childhood as an illiterate nomad, he has devoted his life to the creation and expansion of schools in rural Afghanistan. With rebuilding the school in Shin Kalay his top priority, Kharoti has become something of a celebrity, giving talks across the U.S. and in England. He was a house guest of Gen. David Richards, chief of the British Defense Staff, gave a presentation to the U.S. Peace Institute in Washington, D.C., and will be a speaker March 23 at the 2013 TEDx conference at Concordia University in Portland. the school in Shin Kalay and is planning another in Sarkar, a village east of Lashkar Gah. Construction is slated to begin when he returns to Afghanistan in April. “I’m greedy,” Kharoti said. “When I build one school, I want to do another. That’s my style in life.” For more information on Green Village Schools visit www.greenvillageschools.org. While he supports the U.S. troop withdrawal from his homeland, Kharoti maintains that education is the path to peace for Afghanistan. Only then, he said, can Afghans take responsibility for themselves and better understand the international community. “I think education is the main thing for Afghanistan, particularly in the countryside,” he said. “I think it’s very important that Afghans discuss their problems with Afghans.” Which is why he won’t stop at rebuilding C O L L E G E 17 C O U R I E R Afghanistan is a landlocked sovereign state forming part of South Asia, Central Asia, and to some extent Western Asia. It is bordered by Pakistan in the south and the east, Iran in the west, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and China in the far northeast. w w w . c o e . e d u “The students thought they were going to go over and change lives, but it was their lives that were changed.” A landlocked country in southern Africa, Swaziland is bordered by Mozambique to the northeast and by South Africa to the southeast, south, west and north. COE SERVICE IN SWAZILAND GROWS Groundwork laid in 2006 has resulted in biennial opportunities for Coe students to lend a hand in impoverished Swaziland. M ay Term in Southern Africa is the brainchild of Henry and Margaret Haegg Professor of Biology Paula Sanchini, who first accompanied three Coe students on a trip to Swaziland in 2006. While assisting the Episcopal Diocese of Iowa with the construction of a school, the Coe group also brought Iowamade chlorinators to Swaziland, where 77 percent of the population lives in rural homesteads and only 40 percent of the rural population has access to safe drinking water. Pathogen-free drinking water is especially important in the southern Africa country where more than a quarter of adults between ages 15-50 and almost 40 percent of women are HIV positive. Sanchini invited Associate Professor of Nursing Anita Nicholson to join the effort in support of a parish nursing program, and a May Term course was born in 2010. A dozen Coe nursing and biology students accompanied Sanchini and Nicholson to Swaziland, where they provided training in the use of chlorinators to purify drinking water and observed an important network of rural health providers. The students also worked side-by-side with parish nurses. Students traversed mountainous dirt roads unlike anything they would encounter in the U.S. to spend a night in the home of a parish nurse while visiting patients in communities miles apart. “These students slept in homes where there was no running water, they ate with their hands on dishes that here in the U.S. would probably be thrown away, and got to experience just a wrinkle of time that these people live in every day,” said Christina Grimm ’13. The care points provided many children with their only meal of the day, consisting of mealie-meal and beans. “These kids had mismatched clothing, boys would be seen in little girls bright pink jumpsuits, and sometimes genders were difficult to determine because most of the kids had shaved heads or very short hair due to the lack of water access they had to bathe themselves,” Grimm observed. The experience has motivated Nicholson to begin selling handcrafted earrings to raise funds to train a replacement for the 72-year-old Dlamini. For more information, email [email protected]. The Swaziland Parish Nurse Program started in 2001 to assist in the fight against the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Under the direction of Thandiwe Dlamini, the only accredited trainer in southern Africa, 50 parish nurses have been trained since 2001. Most of the parish nurses are retired and living in the rural communities they serve. They walk long distances on rural mountainous roads to provide health care to clients suffering acute and chronic illnesses. They play a major role in supporting families with prayer, counseling and educating clients and their families on adherence to medications, and training caregivers. In May 2012, students spent 10 days alongside parish nurses. They visited neighborhood care points and first grade classrooms with teams of nurses and a dental hygienist. “We saw global health on the front line through this experience,” said Nicholson. “The students thought they were going to go over and change lives, but it was their lives that were changed.” W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 19 CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Associate Professor of Nursing Anita Nicholson and Coe students discuss child care techniques with Swaziland women. — Photo by Christina Grimm ’13. Children entertain themselves while waiting in the lunch line at a Swaziland care center. — Photo by DeAnna Marguglio ’13. DeAnna Marguglio ’13 and Barb Anderson ’13 return from an overnight stay at the home of a parish nurse in Swaziland. — Photo by Christina Grimm ’13. Associate Professor of Nursing Anita Nicholson with Swaziland Parish Nurse Program director Thandiwe Dlamini. At age 72, Dlamini is the only accredited parish nurse trainer in southern Africa. Since visiting in 2010 and 2012, Nicholson has been raising funds for the program and, more recently, to train Dlamini’s successor. C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u AROUND THE W RLD S PHOTOS FROM STUDY ABROAD From 72 photos submitted by 18 students in the annual Coe off-campus study photo contest, 10 were entered in the 2012-13 Associated Colleges of the Midwest study abroad photo contest. See more of the Coe student submissions on the Web at coe.studyabroad.weebly.com DeAnna Marguglio ’13 won third place in the people category – and a spot on the cover of this issue of the Courier – with her May photo from a Swaziland primary school. “At lunch time, the teacher brought out a storage bin of washed dishes and shouted, ‘Everybody find your number, make sure you have your number.’ The students immediately crowded around the storage bin to receive their dishes. This photo captured the excitement of the students who retrieved their dishes first and were excited to head to the lunch line,” Marguglio said. W IRELAND by Amanda Kohn ’13: “Muiredach’s High Cross, one of the tallest high crosses in Ireland and sculpted in the 10th century. The tower behind was part of the monastery community that once lived at Monasterboice.” T ITALY by Aaron Oppegard ’14: “In 2012, the term YOLO became a cultural phenomenon. It stands for ‘You Only Live Once’ and its message is similar to ‘Carpe Diem.’ It is used as a reminder that people should seize the day because they only have one life to live. I took this photo in Cinque Terre, Italy, while staring out at the sea in one of the most beautiful countries in the world. It was the embodiment of a YOLO moment and it was a fitting time to see that the phrase had been scrawled onto a post by another traveler.” Ting Wang ’13 received honorable mention with her September photo of a bullfighting stadium in Seville, Spain. “Bullfighting, as a traditional Spanish sport, attracts numerous foreign visitors every year. As a result, a bullfighting stadium is one of the must-see tourist destinations,” she said. “Since I was a little girl, I was always fascinated by bullfighting and, therefore, insisted on visiting this stadium during my Seville trip. Not surprisingly, I was immediately drawn by the scene and all the imageries from the old times. It was absolutely beautiful and splendid!” TURKEY by Anna Barton ’14: “Looking over the walls of the Knights of St. John Castle in Bodrum. My breath was taken away by this beautiful sea bay with sailboats anchored, floating peacefully in the warm breeze. Traveling through the Turkish countryside seemed to always take my breath away. I love how the blue color changes with the depth of the water and the contrast of the white homes and green hills surrounding the bay.” S FRANCE by Hannah Foss ’13: “It was late March, sunny, and nice enough to lay down on the grass in a local park and write letters to family and friends back home. The winter was a low time for me in my study abroad year, and my communication with people back in the U.S. was a huge help in maintaining sanity and happiness. Here, finally, the sun is starting to come out. Using my coat as a blanket, I’m rereading what I’ve written.” TURKEY by Anna Barton ’14: “Reality hit when I saw this little boy walking the streets of Istanbul trying to peddle food around 7 p.m. My trip to Turkey made me realize how incredibly fortunate and blessed I am. To me, this photo symbolizes reality. Now I don’t take for granted all the blessings in my life. Seeing this little boy, with his drawn expression made poverty real. I gave him some lyra and he walked away, but he is a part of my lasting memory, and my reality. He won’t be forgotten.” X ITALY by Lauren Dubay ’13: “In Italy, thousands of padlocks are attached to a multitude of landmarks. This image shows a unique ‘love lock’ I found. After World War II, a trail reopened between two cities in Cinque Terre and it became a lovers’ meeting point. Today the trail between Riomaggiora and Manarola is called ‘Via dell’Amor’ or ‘Pathway of Love.’ To symbolize a couples’ everlasting love, a padlock is placed. In one area, there may be thousands of locks signifying a bond we all share… the ability to love and be loved.” T JAPAN by Katelyn Marshall ’13: “Cherry-blossom viewing on a Kyoto mountain in early April. I had just arrived in Japan, and I was fascinated by the trees that made it look like the mountain was covered in snow — but spring was just beginning!” JAPAN by Helvia Garcia, foreign exchange student from Nagoya Gakuin University in Kyoto, Japan. ’49 Mary Bowlsby McCall and her husband, Jim, of Santa Rosa, Calif., celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary. ’50 H A V E N E W S ? Information compiled in “Class Notes” comes from a variety of sources, including direct correspondence from alumni, clipping services and news releases. The college received these class notes by Jan. 5. The deadline for the Spring issue is April 1. Announcements older than one year at the time they are submitted will not be published. Please follow these basic guidelines when submitting information: NEWS – At least the following basic information should be provided with any submission: name and class year, spouse name and class year if Coe alum, city and state of residence, and your news. Please spell out acronyms. MARRIAGES AND ANNIVERSARIES – Include both spouses’ full names (including birth/maiden names, where applicable) and complete date. Please notify us after your wedding; we cannot publish based on an engagement announcement. Anniversaries will be noted only in five-year increments (25th, 30th, etc.). BIRTHS AND ADOPTIONS – Include child’s first name, legal names of parents (mother’s birth/ maiden name will be published if Coe alumna) and complete date. DEATHS – Include full name, complete date and city/state of residence at time of death. Please include a newspaper obituary, if possible. PHOTOS – Digital photos must be at least 300 dpi when sized to 3.75 inches wide. Please save the file as a TIFF or JPEG file. We must have the photographer’s permission to print a copyrighted photo. Please indicate if you would like prints returned. Submit information to: Courier editor at [email protected] or phone (319) 399-8613 or fax (319) 399-8210. Mail to 1220 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402. Information may also be submitted online at www.coe.edu/alumniupdate. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E Melvin Collins of Downers Grove, Ill., participated in “Honor Flight Chicago” to Washington D.C. on Aug. 1. ’51 James Ka’upena Wong Jr. of Waianae, Hawaii, received the Kukui o Lota award from the Moanalua Gardens Foundation in recognition of his contributions to the perpetuation of hula. One of Hawaii’s most revered chanters and master of ancient Hawaiian instruments, James still has a voice that is clear and strong. ’56 Jerry Henderson and his wife, Pat, of Ocean Ridge, Fla., won the silver “right angle” (second place) in the Atlanta Sectional of the Seniors Division of the International Boomerang Association. ’58 Jerry Thompson of Fairfield, Iowa, has retired after 51 years in the financial planning business. ’60 Anne Clayton Sereda and her husband, Donald, of Kansas City, Mo., celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on June 30. John Wilcox and his wife, Sandra, of Batavia, Ill., celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary on Nov. 2. ’62 Robert Haddad and his wife, Crystal, of Freeport, Ill., celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Oct. 6 by taking an Alaskan cruise and having a family get-away to Lake Nebagamon, Wis. 24 C O U R I E R John Havick of Stone Mountain, Ga., had a paper, “The impact of the internet on television-based society,” published in the June issue of Technology in Society. It was one of the top 25 downloaded articles over the past 12 years of the journal. ’65 Don Dempsey of Highland Park, Ill., finished a 17-month interim pastor assignment (his fourth) at the Presbyterian Church of Palatine on Dec. 31. He began a new interim head of staff position at the Kenilworth Union Church on Jan. 2. Kenneth Hach of Alta, Iowa, is listed in Stanford Who’s Who for his work in the renewable energy industry in the United States for the past four decades. He is president of Wind on Rails Inc., a corporation dedicated to funding, designing and constructing a 5000 MW HVDC transmission line from central South Dakota to eastern Illinois in order to transport wind generated energy to the East Coast market. ’67 Michael Mead is editor of Captive Insurance Company Reports after many years as a columnist for the leading thought leadership magazine in the insurance industry. He remains president of M.R. Mead & Co. Michael and Marjorie Wolf Mead ’68 live in Crivitz, Wis. ’68 John Johnson Jr. of Highland, Ill., retired after practicing law for 30 years. ’69 Edwin Cochran of Grinnell, Iowa, retired after practicing dentistry for 39 years. Tim Mauldin of Norman, Okla., completed membership on the American Cancer Society High Plains Division board of directors after nine years of service. w w w . c o e . e d u Artis VanRoekel Reis of Des Moines, Iowa, retired in July after 17 years as a judge. She continues working part-time as a senior judge and as an adjunct professor at Drake University Law School. ’70 Alexander “Pat” Julien of Carrboro, N.C., is “mostly” retired from a career in psychology and law. He now spends his time acting and screenwriting. ’71 Roger Thomas of Ottumwa, Iowa, has retired from teaching and is now a sports correspondent for the Ottumwa Courier. ’74 Yvette Leung Wong of West Des Moines, Iowa, retired from teaching and is an academic assistant at Des Moines Area Community College. Thomas Millen of Lilburn, Ga., retired Sept. 1 as registrar at Emory University after 37 years. ’75 Honee Hess of Worcester, Mass., is executive director of the Worcester Center for Crafts. She previously served nearly 27 years as education director at the Worcester Art Museum. Michael Vance is a senior analyst at Cape Cod Community College. He previously served Coe for 17 years, resigning in October as manager of administrative computer services and programmer/analyst. He and Candy Freeman Vance ’77 live in Yarmouth, Mass. ’78 Steven Kennedy was honored in October by the Houston Audubon Society for his role as archivist and editor of books containing the works of his late uncle Charles Kennedy, which were instrumental in the award-winning documentary films “Pale Male” and “The Legend of Pale Male.” Steven W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 inherited the unpublished photographs, essays, haiku poems and papers of his late uncle, the New York City naturalist and photographer known for his passion for birds and especially Pale Male. Steven’s charge from his uncle is to “make my life’s work available to anyone who might enjoy them when I’m gone.” Steven subsequently produced two books, “Owls of Central Park” and “Pale Male and Family.” An adjunct professor of special education at the University of Northern Colorado, Steven and Debra LaPour Kennedy ’77 live in Aurora, Colo. ’84 John Kruger of Hayfield, Minn., was 2011-12 Minnesota State High School Coaches Association assistant boys’ basketball coach of the year. Eric Wolfe of Marion, Iowa is a psychiatric technician at the Abbe Center for Community Care. ’86 Erika Linden of Des Moines, Iowa, is chief compliance officer at Des Moines University. ’80 Amy Peterson Case of Vancouver, Wash., received her Ph.D. in public health policy Aug. 3 from the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston. Janet BoxSteffensmeier of Columbus, Ohio, was named a 2012 distinguished scholar at Ohio State University. Over the next several issues of the Courier, this column will be dedicated to ways that you can get involved or stay involved with Coe College. One of the easiest ways to stay involved with Coe is through alumni gatherings. You don’t need to live in Cedar Rapids to attend Coe events. Coe College may be visiting a location near you. Watch for invitations to events in your area through the mail and via e-mail. These events often involve the Coe president and other college administrators updating you on exciting events at the college from athletics to new buildings to admissions. These events are where you can learn the latest Coe news and ask questions. Alumni may also sponsor an event in your area. The Alumni Office will work with you to plan and organize the event. Susan Norval Nisan is the new principal of Valley Charter High School in Modesto, Calif., the oldest early college high school in California. Bellos Nisan is nearing completion of a multi-lingual Assyrian dictionary for Hewlett-Packard. They live in Turlock, Calif. ’83 Dr. Kelly Clark of Glenview, Ky., joined Behavioral Health Group (BHG) as chief medical officer in July. BHG is a leading provider of opioid addiction treatment services. Kelly serves as president of the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine, where she has practiced medicine for several years and served as medical director of a number of opioid treatment programs. She is on the faculty of the Virginia Tech Carillion School of Medicine; a fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, where she serves as a director; and a distinguished fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. C O L L E G E ’88 Alumni Council update ’81 C O E ’87 Kristen CrabtreeGroff of Sioux City, Iowa, is an associate professor of education and chair of the Division of Education at Briar Cliff University. If you prefer, visiting campus is another great way to stay involved with Coe. The annual Homecoming festivities bring a large number of alumni back to Coe every fall. Watch for details in your mailbox toward the end of every summer. The Coe campus also hosts events like the Contemporary Issues Forum, Thursday Forum and Marquis Series that alumni are welcome to attend. Alumni basketball games, golf outings, dinner and theater and other special events also bring alumni to campus. Watch the Courier, your mail or e-mail, and visit the Coe website under alumni gatherings (www.coe.edu/alumni/ alumnigatherings) for event dates. As always, feel free to reach out to any members of the Coe College Alumni Council if you have questions or comments. We all enjoy hearing from alumni and are here to represent you. You can find a current list of alumni council members at www.coe.edu/alumni/ volunteerforcoe/alumnicouncil. And, remember to keep your information up to date at www.coe.edu/alumniupdate. Go Coe! Heather Daniels ’95 President, Coe College Alumni Council 25 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u ’89 Carl Bloom of Cape Girardeau, Mo., received his Ph.D. in English (American cultural studies) in May from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He has since accepted a one-year position in the English Department at Southeast Missouri State University. Zainal Ahmad-Mokhtar of Kajang, Selangor, Malaysia, received his master’s in human resource management from Northern University of Malaysia in October. He is on assignment to the Malaysian government as strategic vice president of human capital management at the Ministry of International Trade and Industry. ’94 Laurie Arbore Granner of Kansas City, Mo., is a producer for the nationally syndicated “A Night on the Town” radio series. The show celebrates the history of the Broadway musical and is heard on a variety of public and commercial radio stations. Laurie spends her spare time singing, volunteering as a guest co-host during pledge drives on Kansas City Public Television, and is a part-time announcer on KCUR 89.3 FM, Kansas City’s flagship NPR station. Jennifer Haldeman Doak of Freeport, Ill., opened JLD Marketing Consultants, a marketing firm specializing in helping small- and mid-sized businesses create cost-effective marketing strategies. Jason Hess of Omaha, Neb., is vice president of the Union Pacific’s National Customer Service Center. Julia Samuels of Ashburn, Va., is a program manager with PCS. ’95 Dan Delaney of Minneapolis is operations analyst in the Registrar’s Office at the University of Minnesota. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 Vicki Pingel Wittenberg of New Ulm, Minn., is associate director of alumni relations and special events at Minnesota State University. Wesley Hilleshiem of Cedar Rapids was recognized by the Society of Financial Service Professionals as a Top Leader in FSP’s 40 and Under Program. A trust officer at BankIowa, he is past president of the Eastern Iowa chapter of the Financial Planning Association. ’96 Emily Vrabac Mulligan of Lawrence, Kan., is a freelance marketing consultant and writer. ’97 Brad Hoyt of Quincy, Ill., is manager of athletics and intramurals at John Wood Community College, where he also serves as head men’s basketball coach. Joanna Woepking Settles of Mount Pleasant, Iowa, received her Ph.D. in educational sociology from the University of Iowa in May. ’00 Angelia Bowman of Alexandria, Va., is pursuing her master’s in project management at George Washington University. Susanne Ebacher-Grier of Greenwood, Ind., is an adjunct professor of baking pastry arts at Ivy Tech Community College. Jeremy Shipley is a postdoctoral fellow researching the history and philosophy of mathematics at the University of Lorraine in Nancy, France. Nancy Williams Sebast of Cedar Rapids is a stay-athome wife and mother. She is homeschooling her kindergartenage son. ’01 Matthew Hemesath of New York, N.Y., was a costume designer on season seven of “America’s Got Talent.” This fall was his fifth season on the wardrobe staff of “Saturday Night Live.” He regularly works on “The View,” “30 Rock,” “Sesame Street,” “Good Morning America” and “The Today Show.” C O E C O L L E G E 26 Seth Wallace is co-defensive coordinator/defensive backs coach for the 2012 Division II Football National Champion Valdosta State Blazers. He and Erica Severson Wallace ’02 live in Valdosta, Ga. ’04 Dr. Masumi Fottrall of Gering, Neb., specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation at Regional West Physicians Clinic-Rehabilitation Medicine in Scottsbluff. She completed her residency in June at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio. Mary Schlaphoff of Seattle is a healthcare management consultant with Milliman. She received her MBA in June from the Foster School of Business at the University of Washington. Katie Utter Sarchett and Brian Sarchett ’05 of Berrien Center, Mich., celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary. Katie works for the retail trade partner support team at Whirlpool, where Brian is a senior merchandising manager. He led Lake Michigan Catholic to an undefeated division championship in his first year as head boys’ varsity soccer coach. ’04 Hallie ClodfelterMoyer of Fort Campbell, Ky., is a member service representative at the Navy Federal Credit Union. She’s returning to school this spring to finish her master’s in special education. Angela Johnson of Madison, Wis., is arts coordinator for Madison Children’s Museum. C O U R I E R ’07 Kelsey Dieckbernd of Machesney Park, Ill., is a nurse at Swedish American Hospital in Rockford. Jase Jensen is an attorney with Steve Howes ’83 at Howes Law Firm in Cedar Rapids. Jase received his J.D. from Drake University in 2012. He published an article, “First Americans and the Federal Government: Tribal Consultation, Agriculture, and a New Government-toGovernment Relationship at the Start of the Twenty-First Century” in the summer edition of Drake Journal of Agriculture Law. Luke Johnson of Omaha, Neb., is director of vocal activities at Iowa Western Community College in Council Bluffs. He completed his master’s in music education at VanderCook College of Music in July. Kaija Straumanis of Rochester, N.Y., was featured in a New York Times article about the annual meeting of the American Literary Translators Association. One of the conference organizers, Kaija is a Latvian translator and editorial director of Open Letter Books, the University of Rochester’s literature in translation press. ’08 Daniel Luethke of Englewood, Colo., is a substitute teacher and accepted his first role in a student film at the Colorado Film School. Sarah Taucher of Chicago is a nurse at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital. Margaret Welchhance of Coralville, Iowa, is an overnight shift leader at Integrated DNA Technologies. ’09 Sarah Beck Wondra of Washington, D.C., received her Master of Philosophy in education from University of Cambridge in October. w w w . c o e . e d u Gold swept Crimson in 2013 alumni basketball Feb. 9 in Eby Fieldhouse. Abby Frick of Denver is a Neuro ICU nurse at the University of Colorado. In the women’s game, Kohawks from the last four years topped less-recent alumnae 6352. Sarah Anciaux ’11 scored a game-high 22 points and Kayla Lincoln ’11 chipped in 19 for Gold. Crimson was led by Cassidy Brandt Wolfe ’07 with 17 points and Lisa Thornburg ’08 with 11. Katherine Mraz of Allston, Mass., is pursuing her master’s in social work at Boston College. Johanna Schnell of Grand Rapids, Minn., is studying for doula certification with Birth Arts International in order to provide professional labor support for mothers during childbirth. She previously converted a school bus into a kitchen and traveled across the country serving free vegetarian and vegan meals to the hungry and the curious. It was Gold 73, Crimson 72 in the men’s game. The Dunkerton duo was up to their old tricks, as Brian Brungard ’08 scored a game-high 20 points for Gold and Kyle Kuenstling ’08 led Crimson with 15. Brad Axdahl ’06 and Dan Borngraeber ’11 rounded out a balanced scoring attack for Gold with 13 and 12 points, respectively. Chris Kehe ’08 also scored in double figures with 10 points for Crimson. Wiletta Waisath of Los Angeles is pursuing her master’s in public health at UCLA. ’10 Hillary Allen of Denver is in grad school getting her Ph.D. in neuroscience. Kari Oldfield of St. Paul, Minn., is a law student at Hamline University. ’11 Front row, left to right – Cassidy Brandt Wolfe ’07, Amber Karkosh Bolen ’08, Erica Langland Nosbisch ’07, Sarah Dolan Meyer ’07, Jamie Dalbey Schadt ’02, Dougie Peters ’81, Abbey Biedenfeld ’10, Kaitlin Breitbach ’11 and Leslie Ware ’12. Back row – Jessica Lincoln Shaffer ’02, Lisa Thornburg ’08, Morgan Bailey Burbach ’06, Shanon Nelson ’08, Erin Jones ’08, Head Women’s Basketball Coach Randi Peterson, Sarah Anciaux ’11, Sarah Waskow ’12, Calie Sobaski ’09, Kayla Lincoln ’11 and Steve Wise ’87. Danielle Jamison Gathers is a neonatal ICU nurse at Saint Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., where she and Tyler Gathers ’09 live. Ankit Rana of Lalitpur, Nepal, is a business manager at Biruwa Ventures. Tyler Weeda of Lincoln, Neb., is a trainer for the University of Nebraska wrestling team. ’12 Amanda Hanson of Riverside, Iowa, is a nurse at the University of Iowa. Josh Kleinmeyer of Iowa City, Iowa, is a sales associate at CRST Logistics. Front row, left to right – Steve Wise ’87, Brandon Yansky ’07, Scott Jackson ’88, Brian Brungard ’08, Nat Tagtow ’04, Dougie Peters ’81, Brad Axdahl ’06, Cory DeShaw ’06, Ryan Baade ’12 and Nate Clapham ’06. Back row – Jake Raney ’12, Jeff Hrubes ’88, Jeff Schwarting ’90, Chris Kehe ’08, Head Men’s Basketball Coach Bryan Martin, Zach Dillon ’07, Nick Palmer ’05, Kyle Kuenstling ’08, Fred Rose ’11, Doug Showalter ’76, John Raley ’81 and Dan Borngraeber ’11. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 27 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u MARRIAGES ’74 Peggy Hoffman and Leonard “Buddy” White of Colleyville, Texas, on Nov. 20. ’96 Lisa Daily and David Koch of Belle Plane, Iowa, on June 9. ’98 Barry Smith and Amy Schoen ’07 of Cedar Rapids on Oct. 6. ’00 Jill Grinstead and T.J. Mathis of Wever, Iowa, on June 2. Jill is the human resources leader at General Electric in West Burlington. Tanner Pump and Sara Stewart of Dallas on June 30 in Iowa City, Iowa. ’01 Michelle Smothers and David Omar of Mount Vernon, Iowa, on Sept. 15. ’04 Isaac Young and Steffany Zabokrtsky of Des Moines, Iowa, on Sept. 22. ’05 Jill Drummond and Joe Rydell of Cedar Rapids on Aug. 18. Jill is a customer program consultant at Alliant Energy. ’06 Andrea Pignotti and Joe Fallat of Danvers, Ill., on June 2. ’08 Cori Duffus and Allen Hare of Rossville, Kan., on June 16, in Grinnell, Iowa. Cori received her master’s in special education from the University of Kansas in May. Andrew Machacek and Katie Noonan of Winthrop, Iowa, on July 21. ’09 Zach Huitink and Chelsea Cushing ’10 of Syracuse, N.Y., on July 28, in Lexington, Ky. ’12 ’05 Among those attending the Aug. 25 wedding of Liz Nicklos ’05 and Mike Stephenson were (front row, left to right) Michele Goddard ’04, Jenn Streck Doxsey ’05, Liz, Emily Dussault ’06 and Cassie Schoon ’03. (Back row) Kristy Goodfellow ’05, Heather Petsche ’05, Lizzie Schoon ’05, Bree Graczyk ’07, Megan Gilligan ’05, Lindsey Bowen Vajpeyi ’05, Fatma Zahra ’04, Lisa Piskor ’06 and Tanner Curl ’07. Also attending but not pictured were Rishi Vajpeyi ’04, Kayla Goodfellow ’05, Eugenides Hermes ’07, Andrea Roeger ’07 and Sarah Small ’08. The couple lives in Minneapolis, where Liz is a marketing communications consultant with Health Partners. Matthew Ferlitsch and Rebecca Lampe of Riverside, Iowa, on Aug. 18. ’09 Among those attending the July 14 wedding of Brittni ’03 Among those attending the June 23 wedding of Zach Fromm ’03 and Stephanie Sutton were (front row, left to right) Kevin Eisenmann ’03, Jason Schwass ’03 and Julian West (Grinnell ’07). (Back row) Ryan Keller ’04, Carly Gates ’04, Kat Hudson Poshusta ’04, Katie Wiedemann Schwass ’03, Sean Pearl ’76, Emily Wall ’03, Stephanie and Zach, Jacob McCandless ’04, Erin Redmon McCandless ’04 and April Elsbernd ’03. The couple lives on the Mississippi River north of Dubuque, Iowa, where Zach teaches seventh grade social studies. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 28 Hamdorf ’09 and Chad Reifschneider ’09 were (front row, left to right) Liz Rizzi ’09, Jeremy Squires ’08, Rebecca Reedy ’09, Chad and Brittni, Josh Hennings ’10, Kelvin Lee ’09, and Jenni Duff Archibald ’89. (Second row) Emily Behrens ’12, Skylar Price ’09, Katie Flores ’09, Jaimie Lynch ’09, Elizabeth Reedy ’09, Ashley Axdahl ’09, Adleigh Schwager ’09, Susan Gilmer Nordmeyer ’09, Cami Reifschneider ’12, Chelsie Reifschneider Stensland ’06, and Vicki Dewell Hamdorf ’84, mother of the bride. (Back row) Ross Clapham ’06, Jordan Wilkens ’10, Sam Hammes ’10, Zach Brugman ’09, Landon Nordmeyer ’09, Andrew Durham ’10, and Matt Walter ’09. C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u ’63 Frank Nakamura and his wife, Eva, of Honolulu, twins, Warren and Cindy, on June 10. ’91 Noelle Lange Davidson and her husband, Michael, of Glendale, Calif., a son, Jacob, on Aug. 5. ’96 Carlyn Watkinson McGreal and her husband, Michael, of Chicago, a son, Duncan, on July 13. ’99 Angie Huitink Fuentes of Fairfax, Va., a daughter, Kate, on Aug. 26. Stacie Otte Holden and her husband, Nick, of Lakeville, Minn., a daughter, Ava, on Oct. 18. ’00 ’02 Ellie Jensen and her husband, Jeffrey Stine, of Mountain View, Calif., a son, Oliver, on July 19. Ellie has begun a fellowship in hospice and palliative medicine at Stanford Hospital. Sara Simmons Griffith and her husband, Sky, of Wapello, Iowa, a daughter, Ava, on June 16. Teresa Ford Hansen and her husband, Jeff, of Omaha, Neb., a son, Austin, on Sept. 24. Mari Steele Wilson and her husband, Chad, of De Soto, Iowa, a son, Henry, on Oct. 15. ’06 ’03 Shannon Heindel Salazar and her husband, Todd, of Columbus Junction, Iowa, a daughter, Peyton, on June 9. Shannon teaches junior high reading and coaches seventh grade volleyball and high school softball in Wapello. ’04 ’05 Emily Zeller Gotto and Ryan Gotto ’06 of Marion, Iowa, a daughter, Jensen, on April 20. Stephen Clingman and his wife, Amanda, of New Virginia, Iowa, a son, Kinnick, on Aug. 20. Elizabeth McNaught Gicquel and her husband, Nicolas, of Seattle, a daughter, Juliette, on Aug. 19. ’07 Vicki Lamos Trueg and her husband, Scott, of Jesup, Iowa, a son, Declan, on Feb. 6. Matt Stoner and his wife, Amy, of Cedar Rapids, a son, Weston, on July 9. Paternal grandparents are Dan Stoner ’74 and Cathy Humphries Stoner ’74 of Mount Vernon, Iowa. ’08 Hayley Bright Hegland and Sam Hegland of Cedar Rapids, a daughter, Sienna, on July 16. Jill Steffen Scanlan and her husband, Steve, of Grinnell, Iowa, a son, Liam, on June 22. Amanda Stegeman Sonntag and Matthew Sonntag of Chicago, a daughter, Genevieve, on Oct. 18. ’09 Melissa Andersen Morris and her husband, Tyler, of Tekamah, Neb., twin girls, Elliot and Finnley, on Sept. 26. Emily Jungk Cortez and her husband, Rod, of Chicago, a daughter, Abigail, on Aug. 20. ’01 Wendy Andrews Nielsen and Nick Nielsen of Marion, Iowa, a son, Connor, on Nov. 2. Heather Baum Plucar and Chris Plucar ’02 of Huxley, Iowa, a son, Parker, on Dec. 11. Kirsten Weeks Markwell and her husband, Scott, of Chicago, a daughter, Genevieve, on July 17. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 29 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u DEATHS indicates decedent was a member of the Coe College Heritage Club. For information, contact Heritage Club Director Kelly Allen at (319) 399-8582 or [email protected]. ’34 Janet Murray Fiske, 99 of Vashon, Wash., on Nov. 13. She traveled and worked in France and Greece before earning her master’s from Columbia University. A longtime resident of Moscow, Idaho, she helped build its first recycling center, reclaim Paradise Creek as “the city’s waterfront,” and develop bicycle and walking trails. She helped preserve the old post office that now houses City Hall, the Carnegie Library and the 1912 Center with its Fiske Family Meeting Room. In 2006, Moscow Mayor Nancy Chaney declared a day in Janet’s honor, in recognition of her contributions to the community over the years. She and her husband, John, also received the city’s civil rights award, and were crowned king and queen of the annual Renaissance Fair. Janet co-authored two books with her mother, “Hurrah for Bonnie Iowa” and “Bonnie Iowa Farm Folk,” about the early days of her Iowa pioneer forebears. She is survived by four children, Jonathan Fiske ’66, 2319 Sherman Ave., Evanston, IL 60201, Lindsay Hofman of Vashon, Anne of Newport, N.C., and Fred of Syracuse, N.Y.; a sister, Winifred Murray Kelley ’40 of Des Moines, Iowa; 10 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. ’35 Nedra Arendts Niles Snouffer, 98, of Santa Monica, Calif., on Nov. 1. She lived in Dallas for 64 years and was the first director of The St. Michael School from 1950-68. She was active in Episcopal School organizations, W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 both in the state and nationally. From 1968-79, she was head of the Hockaday Lower-Middle School. She is survived by a son, John Niles; two grandsons; and three greatgrandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made to Coe College, 1220 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402. ’39 Cleo Byers, 96 of Parker, Colo., on Nov. 27. He was an infantry captain in World War II. He received his master’s from Oregon State University in 1948 and moved to the Los Alamos (N.M.) National Laboratory in 1951 to do research for his doctoral thesis. He received his Ph.D. in physics in 1955 and remained at Los Alamos until his retirement in 1980. After retirement, he continued to work at Los Alamos as a consultant in criticality safety until 1992. He is survived by two sisters, Darlene Nevins and Carol Slach; four children, Bruce, Sharon Caskey, Loren and Julie; six grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Lucile Ryan Wesson, 95, of Garner, Iowa, on Nov. 18. She worked in banking until retiring in 1972. Elsie Stone Gable, 95, of Cedar Rapids, on Dec. 5. She worked in truck sales for over 40 years. She is survived by a son, Robert Gable of Avon, Ind.; a sister, Doris Loeff of Littleton, Colo.; three grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. Dolores Storrs Blomquist, 98, of Fort Myers, Fla. on Sept. 28. ’40 Joyce Dollman Hoover, 94, of Dubuque, Iowa, on Oct. 28. She was a teacher in Clear Lake, Oelwein and Dubuque until 1969. Ellsworth Eye, 92, of Ft. Lauderdale, FL, on Nov. 21. C O E C O L L E G E 30 ’41 Margaret Cowguill Brust, 93, of Fairfield, Iowa, on Nov. 15. She was an active member of the National Beta Sigma Phi Sorority and worked at one time as a secretary to the Dean of Medicine at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and later worked in the administration department at Pasadena City College for several years. She is survived by two children, Gretchen and Sam.; a brother, Jay; a sister, Ruth Gross; a granddaughter; and a great-grandson. ’42 Robert Dudycha, 92, of Wheaton, Ill. on Sept. 15. He was a chemical technician for Swift and Co. (ConArgra). He is survived by his wife, June, 200 Wyndemere Circle Apt. E313, Wheaton, IL 60187; two sons, Donald and Alan; four grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. ’43 Donald Berry, 94, of Seattle, on Aug. 10. He is survived by a brother, Vaughn; three children, Vaughn, Roxianne Morris, and Sheilah Harlow; five grandchildren; and a greatgranddaughter. Bernice Brandau Sweeney, 90, of Orlando, Fla, on Dec 21. She is survived by four children, Daniel Sweeney Jr. of Alexandria, Va., Peggy Forbes of Evanston, Ill., Tricia Sweeney of Seekonk, Mass., and Joel Sweeney of Longwood; seven grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. David Connell, 91, of Perry Township, Ohio, on Aug. 11. He served in the Army during World War II. He received his master’s from the University of Iowa in 1947. After 37 years of service, he retired as controller of the Ohio operations of Ekco Housewares. He was preceded in death by his wife, Naomi Hall Connell ’41. He is survived by three children, David H. of Los Altos, Calif., John of C O U R I E R Akron, and Cathy of Perrysburg; a grandson; and a brother, Robert of Mount Pleasant, Mich. ’44 Retired Air Force Col. Don Ford, 90, of Medford, Ore., on Dec. 29. He was a member of the Army ROTC at Coe when orders to active duty were received. He graduated early as part of “The Coe 22.” He spent 32 years in the military, having enlisted in the Army in 1942, then the Air Force and serving until his retirement in 1974. He served in the 2nd Armored Division in Europe during World War II, then the Korean conflict. He earned three Meritorious Service Medals and a Bronze Star. Upon his retirement, he worked for the state of Oregon in various positions until his second retirement in 1980. He received his master’s in education and psychology from Washington University in St. Louis, Mo., in 1958. He earned his Ph.D. in education and Latin American studies from St. Louis University in 1966. Finally, he completed a post doctorate fellowship at the University of Oregon in 1974. He worked extensively for the Latino Center in Eugene, where he regularly practiced his Spanish. He is survived by a brother, Robert Ford ’50, 155 Alwine Ct., Hiawatha, IA 52233; five children, Dan of Seoul, South Korea, Chris of Keller, Texas, Jim of Ashland, Steve of Medford, and Leslie Sully of Columbia, S.C.; eight grandchildren; and a greatgranddaughter. Memorial contributions may be made to Coe College, 1220 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402; or Jesuit Association, 4511 W. Pine Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63108. G. Audrey Gunnison Williams, 90, of Walker, Iowa, on Nov. 30. She was a farmer, the office manager of the Iowa State University Extension office in Cedar Rapids for nearly a decade, and worked in the loan department at First Trust and Savings Bank w w w . c o e . e d u for three years. She is survived by her husband of 69 years, Lynn, 2221 320th St., Walker, IA 52352; a son, James Williams of Walker; a daughter, Jeanne Dudley of Troy Mills; three grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. ’45 Elaine Eklind Dreier, 88, of Arlington Heights, Ill., on Dec. 15. She is survived by four children, Don, Ken, Chris and Greg Dreier ’75, 2200 Patriot Blvd. #217, Glenview, IL 60026; two grandsons; and a brother, Howard Eklind. Dorothy Kucera Niebes, 89 of Fairborn, Ohio, on Oct. 20. She worked for the Fairborn City Schools for 21 years, retiring in 1989. She is survived by her husband of 67 years, Oscar “Flash” Niebes, 1004 Adams St. Fairborn, OH 45324; three sons, David of Atlanta, Alan of Houston and William of Fairborn; five grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. ’46 Mary Sayles Blaida, 87, of Homestead, Fla., on May 30. She is survived by a brother, John Sayles; two sons, Terrence and Phillip; a daughter, Janet Buchanan; seven grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren. ’47 Phyllis Larsen, 87, of San Francisco, on Nov. 9. She was the author of “Ghirardelli Original Chocolate Cookbook,” which sold 200,000 copies, a food consultant and artist. Robert Roth, 85, of Washington D.C., on July 16. After graduating in 1951 from the University of Illinois with a Ph.D. in geology, he worked at the National Bureau of Standards (later known as the National Institute of Standards and Technology) from 1951-91 as a supervisory research chemist in the Microstructure Section, W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 Mineral Products Division and then as chief of the Solid State Chemistry Section, Ceramics/ Inorganic Materials Division. Following his retirement, he served as scientist emeritus to the NIST Ceramics Division as well as a consultant to the Structure Determination Methods Group of the American Ceramic Society. He served as a senior editor for numerous volumes of Phase Diagrams for Ceramists and Phase Equilibria Diagrams, which serve as resources for industry in the design and processing of technological ceramics. His publications include over 200 technical papers in the fields of x-ray crystallography, crystal chemistry and phase equilibria of ceramic materials. Some of the materials he helped develop have been utilized for: increasing the fidelity of phonograph needles used in record players; improving sonar during the Korean War; fuel rods of modern nuclear reactors; containment of nuclear waste; the solid-state electronic chip; cubic zirconium; fire retardant ceramic tiles used to surround the Space Shuttle; and counterfeit-proof ink used in new American currency. His awards include: Spriggs Phase Equilibria Award, Lifetime achievement in the field of experimental ceramic phase equilibria, American Ceramic Society, 2003; Wilhelm R. Buessem Award, Pennsylvania State University, 2001; John Jeppson Award, American Ceramic Society, 1995; Sosman Award, American Ceramic Society, 1991; Gold Medal, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1986; NBS Special Service Award, Meritorious Publication, 1963; and the Silver Medal, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1962. Patents include: US-4,606,906 Aug. 19, 1986 for “Process of Synthesizing Mixed BaO-TiO2 Based Powders for Ceramic Applications” and US-2,849,404 Aug. 26, 1958 for “Morphotropic Piezoelectric Ceramics.” He is survived by his wife of 58 years, Audrey, 804 Amber Tree Ct. #201, Gaithersburg, MD 20878; three children, Stanley, Gail and Diana Roth Lazar; and five grandchildren. C O E C O L L E G E 31 ’48 Dr. Alfred Brendel, 96, of Cedar Rapids, on Nov. 20. He served in the Navy as a pharmacist mate during World War II. He earned his medical degree from the University of Iowa in 1951. He was a family practitioner, serving communities in the Central City area for 33 years and a deputy medical examiner for 36 years. He served as attending physician for the Linn County Home from 1959-84. He was preceded in death by his wife, Louise Gage Brendel ’46. He is survived by four children, Chris of Minneapolis, Nancy Meggers of Roscoe, Ill., Jon of Center Point, and Peter of Tiffin; six grandchildren, including Sara Meggers Carey ’99, 9S155 Chandelle Dr., Naperville, IL 60564; and four greatgrandchildren. Evelyn Thompson Pratt, 85, of Cedar Rapids, on Nov. 26. She received her master’s from the University of Iowa and was a teacher in the area for over 30 years. She is survived by a daughter, Sandra Lippert of Schertz, Texas; and a brother, James Thompson of LeGrand. M. Muriel Van Gorkom Schultz, 86, of Prescott, Ariz., on Sept. 20. She is survived by her husband of 65 years, La Vern Schultz ’48, 9 S. Murphy Way, Prescott, AZ 86303; three daughters, Janet Schultz ’75, Jody of Seattle, and Laurie; a son, Jeff; six grandchildren; and two sisters, Evie and Marge. ’49 William Moody, 89, of Park Ridge, Ill., on Aug. 14. He was an Army veteran of World War II. He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Jane, 211 Lake Ave., Park Ridge, IL 60068; four children, John, Ruth Woroch, Allen and Marjorie McCarthy; four grandchildren; and a brother, Eugene. Marjorie Northrup, 98, of Venice, Fla., on Feb. 16. She served in the Marine Corps during World C O U R I E R War II. She received her master’s in education and taught for many years in Iowa, New Hampshire, Connecticut and New York. She is survived by a daughter, Carol Dubourg of Torrington, Conn.; a son, Jay of Niantic, Conn.; seven grandchildren; and five greatgrandchildren. Wayne Northrop, 85, of Egg Harbor, Wis., on May 17. He served in the Army from 1945-48 and was a banker with Central DuPage Federal Savings and Loan in Wheaton, Ill. He is survived by his wife Jeri; two sons, Steve of Fish Creek and Chris of Batavia, Ill.; six grandchildren; and a greatgranddaughter. Ken Savel, 86, of Ogden Dunes, Ind., on Sept. 14. He is survived by three children, Ann Savel Griffin ’76, 2027 Bever Ave. SE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52403, Jerry, and Nancy Ashby; and four grandchildren. Richard Wallace, 88, of Marion, Iowa, on Nov. 29. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He taught art in Cedar Rapids schools for over 22 years. He is survived by four sons, Daniel and David of Cedar Rapids, Steve of Marion, and Michael of Lisbon; a daughter, Julie Zimmerman of Chicago; and seven grandchildren. ’50 Alfred Cherry, 90, of LeRoy, Ill., on Aug. 7. He was a Marine Corps veteran of World War II. He played fastpitch softball for the Burlington Bees and the State Farm Chiefs. He is survived by his wife of 59 years, Betty Jean Cole; a son, J. Kevin Cherry of Watauga, Texas; a daughter, Barbara Jenkins of LeRoy; four grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; two brothers, David of Dallas and Daniel of Marana, Ariz.; and a sister, Dorre Lin Ray of Ashland, Ore. John Reimers, 89, of Crystal Lake. Ill., on May 7. He served in the Army, earning the Bronze Star. He worked for the Chicago w w w . c o e . e d u DEATHS and Northwestern Railway for 44 years. He is survived by a daughter, Susan, of Crystal Lake; a son, Peter of Cary; two grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter. ’51 Marilyn MacKenzie Threlkeld, 83, of Sweetwater, Texas, on Sept. 21. She was an elementary teacher in Abilene before earning her master’s from Hardin-Simmons University in 1979 and became a counselor. She established endowed scholarships at McMurray College, Coe College, Texas Tech and Texas State Technical College. She is survived by three children, Richard and Dave, both of Arlington, and Anne Wright of Norco, Calif.; and six grandchildren. ’52 Donald Elfstrom, 82, of West Chicago, Ill., on Nov. 3. He served in the Air Force and later received his master’s in education and journalism at the University of Iowa. He made his career as a teacher. He is survived by his wife, Marjorie, 1235 Thomas Dr., West Chicago, IL 60185; four children, Kristin Tiernan of Dubuque, Iowa, Rebecca Slagell of Hampshire, and Eric and David, both of West Chicago; and nine grandchildren. CORRECTION: Robert Fisher, 85, of Davenport, Fla., on April 28. He is survived by his wife, Marjorie, 423 Arnold Palmer Dr., Davenport, FL 33837; a son, Douglas; a daughter, Nancy; and two grandchildren. ’53 Richard Brickley, 83, of Anamosa, Iowa, on Sept. 24. He served in Korea with the Air Force. He earned his master’s in trumpet performance at the University of Iowa and his principal’s certificate from Denver University. He was a music adjudicator and concert W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 band clinician throughout Iowa and Colorado. He served as director of bands at Washington High School in Cedar Rapids from 1968-76. He is survived by four children, Carolyn Brickley ’75, P.O. Box 177, New Sharon, IA 50207, Roy, Del, and Brad; four grandchildren; a great-granddaughter; a sister, Rosalie Shada; and a brother, Bud. Marilyn Mather Lefebure, 81, of Forsyth, Mo., on Sept. 22. She retired from Norwest Mortgage Co. in Cedar Rapids after almost 21 years in 1993. She is survived by a daughter, Leslie Perkumas of Tucson, Ariz.; three sons, Steven of West Chester, Pa., Randall of Big Pine, Calif., and Brian Lefebure of Lee’s Summit; nine grandchildren, and a great-grandson. ’55 H. Tom Griffith, 78, of Evanston, Ill., on May 22. He was a longtime investment banker. He is survived by his wife, Joann, 2 Arbor Lane Apt. 210, Evanston, IL 60201; three children, Lydia Morrissey, Susan Lisheron and Sam; four grandchildren; and two siblings, Richard and Jenny Wisniewski. David Gustafson, 80 of Milwaukee, on July 31. He served in the Army during the Korean War as an anti-aircraft artillery tank commander. He spent his career in the food industry and was owner of J.C. Roeder Co. He is survived by two children Caroline Ault of Mequon and Tim of Cedarburg; five grandchildren; and three siblings, Warren, Steve and Gail McCarthy. ’56 Wilbur ‘Bill’ Salzbrenner, 82, of Cedar Rapids, on Oct. 4. He served in the Army during the Korean War. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Pat, 1124 Clifton St. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402; two sons, Jim of Mount Vernon and John of Marion; seven grandchildren; and a greatgrandson. C O E C O L L E G E 32 ’57 Ann Hasler Bey, 76, of Cedar Rapids, on Dec. 7. She was an active member and president of the Kappa Delta sorority and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. She was a volunteer for the Cedar Rapids Community Theater, Paramount Theatre, Cedar Rapids Symphony Guild and St. Luke’s Hospital. She was president of the Cedar Rapids Children’s Theater. In 1984, she began a new career teaching business classes at Kirkwood. From 1986 to 1997, she taught business, language arts and writing classes in the Cedar Rapids School District. She is survived by a brother, Jim Sibert; a sister, Faye Hasler Holm ’61, 659 Garfield Ave., Lake Bluff, IL 60044; two daughters, Kathy Bey Towe ’90 of Cedar Rapids and Suzanne Hilton; a son, Craig; and two grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made to Coe College, 1220 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402. ’58 John Barlow, 82, of Cedar Rapids, on Dec. 31. He was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, participated in the ROTC program, was manager of the football team, and a member of the Clan of ‘C.’ He worked for Merchants National Bank of Cedar Rapids, was president of Barlow-Moon Dry Cleaners, and president of Barlow Land Co. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Mary-Jane, 2035 Foxbourne SE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52403; two daughters, Elizabeth Barlow Putnam and Susan Barlow Toll; and four grandchildren. ’59 Barbara Hashagen Thomas, 75, of Madison, Wis., on Sept. 7. She was a high school teacher. She was the sole staff person for the American Indian Language and Culture Education Board, an advisory body to the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, from 1984-99. She is survived by her husband, William, 3230 Tallyho Lane, Madison, WI C O U R I E R 53705; two daughters, Jennifer of Denver and Sarah of Milwaukee; a son, William Jr. of O’Fallon, Ill.; and two grandchildren. John Vikdal, 75, of Cedar Rapids, on Nov. 24. He was a music teacher. He is survived by his wife of 28 years, Cherie Clark, 3108 Ridgemore Dr. SE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52403; a son, Mark; three daughters, Christa, Jina, and Jonna; several grandchildren and greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Karen Merick. Herbert Wakai, 80, of Oakland, N.J., on Sept. 17. He was a dentist. ’60 Thomas Chirikos, 74, of Tampa, Fla., on Nov. 23. He earned his master’s and Ph.D. in economics from Ohio State University, where he was a professor in the College of Medicine from 1968-78. He held a joint appointment in the College of Administrative Sciences. He was a professor emeritus in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the USF College of Public Health. He moved to Tampa in 1985 and became the founding chairman of the Department of Health Policy and Management. Since 1997, he was also a member-in-residence (health economics) at Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute. He was a prolific author of research publications in the fields of health economics and of labor and human resource economics. He was awarded National Science Foundation and OECD fellowships and was inducted into Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society, and Omicron Delta Epsilon, the Economics National Honors Society. He is survived by his wife, Linda Waddell Chirikos ’60, 12401 N 22nd St. Apt. H403, Tampa, FL 33612. Owen Winterberg, 76, of Cedar Rapids, on Dec. 22 in Fort Myers, Fla. He was vice president of SCI Financial Group/Wells Fargo Bank and spent his last three years w w w . c o e . e d u with RBC Wealth Management. He served with the Army during Vietnam. He is survived by his fiancee, Mardene Marquart; a son, Richard of Marion; a daughter, Lisa Winterberg Tesar ’89, and her husband, Terry Tesar ’90, 1820 35th St., Marion, IA 52302; six grandchildren; and a brother, Ferris of Colleyville, Texas. ’64 Robert Brecht, 70, of Silverdale, Wash., on Oct. 13. He received his master’s in guidance counseling from the University of Oklahoma. He served 22 years in the Air Force, retiring as major in 1986. He is survived by his wife, Carol, 11730 Brian Lane NW, Silverdale, WA 98383; two children, Renee and Scott, both of Spokane; and three grandchildren. ’67 Jack Wright, 69, of Belmont, Calif., on May 16. After retiring from his position at the San Mateo County Office of Education, he volunteered with the Ombudsmen program. He is survived by his wife Sandra, 2611 Read Ave., Belmont, CA 94002; two sons, Chris and Kevin; and two grandchildren. ’71 Marjorie DeSotel Ongie-Hall, 79, of Cedar Rapids, on Dec. 16. She received her teaching degree from Westmar College. She was an elementary education teacher in the North-Linn Community School District until her retirement. She is survived by four children, Marcia Burns and Mary DeSotel of Cedar Rapids, Lorri Ripperda of Tyndall, S.D. and Brian DeSotel of Walker; six grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. M. Grant Purdy, 63, of Des Moines, Iowa, on Dec. 8 of cancer. She received her master’s in physical therapy from Des Moines University in 1991. She worked for 18 years at Mercy Medical Center. She had a passion for bagpipe music and was a long-time member of the W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 Iowa Scottish Pipes and Drums. She is survived by her long-time companion, Ruth Quinn of Des Moines; a sister, Sarah of St. Paul, Minn.; and two brothers, Tom of Ben Lomond, Calif., and David of Canby, Ore. ’79 Kerry Ferguson, 55, of Ames, Iowa, on Oct. 2. He was a financial advisor with AIG. He is survived by three children, Stephanie of Marshalltown, Kurtis of Peoria, Ill., and Rebecca of Ames; his parents, Robert and Phyllis of Ames; and a brother, Kevin of Elmhurst, Ill. ’98 Sarah Thorsen, 37, of Verona, Ill, on Aug. 19. She worked for Rosecrance in Rockford, before moving to Madison, Wis., to begin her career with TDS MetroCom, working eight years in customer service. She is survived by her parents, Gary and Becky; and two brothers, Ben and Luke. ’04 Kristina Kye Hee Roeder, 29, of Cedar Rapids, on Sept. 2. After working as a cashier at Econofoods, she took a position in the office of local attorney Charles Litow and eventually moved on to waitressing positions with Buffalo Wild Wings and Cranky Hank’s Pizza. Proud of her heritage, Kristina was a regular youth attendee at the Korean Culture KAMP sponsored by Iowans for International Adoption and moved on to assist the organization by serving as an intern and camp counselor. She is survived by her parents, Randy Roeder ’86 and Nancy Kraft, 536 Greenfield St. NE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52402; and a sister, Jennifer Sook Hee Roeder. C O E C O L L E G E 33 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u FACULTY STAFF For a more complete list of faculty accomplishments, visit www.coe. edu/dean and click on “faculty accomplishments”. Professors Mario Affatigato ’89 (physics) and Wendy Dunn (psychology) co-presented “Nuts and Bolts: How to Create an Institution-Wide System for Assessment” at the Annual Conference of the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association in Chicago. Technical Director and Lighting Designer and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Theatre Arts Jonathan Allender-Zivic shared “Building scenery for outdoor theatres” and “Fun in the Technical Production Classroom” at the national conference of the United States Institute for Theatre Technology. He performed professional lighting design work for more than a dozen of theatre performances at the Circa 21 Dinner Playhouse in Rock Island, Ill., Festival 56 in Princeton, Ill., and The Old Creamery Theatre in Amana, Iowa. Professor of English Charles Aukema presented two short flash fictions at Unspeakable Practices V hosted by Brown University. Deb Bahr ’06 was promoted to associate chief information officer. Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty Marie Baehr was selected to serve on the Executive Committee of Advisory Board of Deans with the Associated Colleges of the Midwest. She also served the ACM as a consultant evaluator for the Costa Rica Tico Scholarship program, a member of the Strategic Planning Task Force, and a member of the Steering Committee for Teagle- W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E funded “Introducing Change: Introductory Courses and the Nature of Faculty Work.” She served the Higher Learning Commission as a member of the Institutional Actions Council, a consultant reviewer, and a facilitator of Assessment/ Assessment Academy Workshops. She and Athletics Director John Chandler co-presented “Intentional Integration of Academic and Athletic Programs” at the ACM Faculty Career Enhancement Project (FaCE) conference. United States and Europe with the Iowa Ambassadors of Music and was invited to participate in the Festival de Musique Française, where he conducted members of the National Police Wind Band of France in a portion of Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments. He and Teaching Artist in Trumpet Alan Naylor edited “Spoon River” for concert band which was recorded professionally by the Dallas Wind Symphony, the United States Marine Band, and the Ohio University Wind Symphony. Associate Professor of Political Science Lynda Barrow wrote a case study, “High Drama in Honduras: Constitutional Crisis and the Overthrow of President Zelaya,” which was accepted for publication by the Georgetown Institute for the Study of Diplomacy. She served as guest lecturer, presenting “Religion and Politics in Comparative Perspective” at Divine Word University, Madang, Papua New Guinea. Assistant Professor of Stead Department of Business Administration and Economics Jia-Yuh “Jay” Chen passed the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) Level III exam, the final test requirement to become an official CFA charter holder. Assistant Professor of Sociology Emily Bowman accepted the position of review editor for The Information Society: An International Journal. She shared “Visible and Invisible Differences: How Culture Shapes the Educational Experiences of International Graduate Students from Western Countries” with Sigrun Olafsdottir at the Midwest Sociological Society conference. Assistant Professors Emily Bowman (sociology), Evangeline Heiliger (gender studies), and Steve Shanley (music) co-presented “Passports Please: How New Faculty Learn to Navigate WAC at 4-Year Colleges” at the International Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) Conference. Alma A. Turechek Professor of Music William Carson authored an article that was published in Volume 9 of the book series Teaching Music Through Performance in Band. He performed as a conductor and clarinet soloist throughout the C O L L E G E 34 Adjunct Assistant Professor of Rhetoric Jane Claspy Nesmith presented a poster, “How can we use writing to make service learning projects successful?” at the International Writing Across the Curriculum conference. position with the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance Commission. She also accepted a position on the governing board of the Tanager Place Research Center, which will oversee the creation of the Research Center and will work toward the goals of advancing scholarship in the field of human services administration for children and adolescents at risk and linking that research to improved, evidence-based practices for the delivery of services to this population. Assistant Professor of Anthropology Julie Fairbanks participated in the Central Eurasian Studies Society (CESS) Regional Conference in Tbilisi, Georgia, as presenter of “Tradition for New Times: Soviet Ethnographic Literature and Contemporary Adyg Discourse” on a panel called “Soviet Rule in the Caucasus and Its Enduring Legacy” and also as discussant on the “Cross-cultural representations of the Caucasus from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern Era” panel. B.D. Silliman Professor of Physics Steve Feller presented Associate Professor of Music “Glass Forming Limits: A Joseph Dangerfield served as Simple Model Based on Shortadjudicator for both the Fulbright Range Structural Unites” at the Association, Moscow, and the Summer Seminar sponsored by Fulbright Association Peer Materials Science & Engineering Review Committee, Washington, of Iowa State University. D.C. He was invited to participate in a broadcast of Iowa Assistant Professor of Religion Public Radio’s WorldCanvass Christopher Hatchell signed Radio Show, during which he a book contract with Oxford joined in a discussion about University Press for his manuscript Women in Post-Socialist Eastern entitled “Naked Seeing.” Europe and shared samples Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of the works of noted Russian Fellow Assistant Professor of composers Sofia Gubaidulina Gender Studies Evangeline and Irina Dubkova. He was one Heiliger had the following book of 100 composers invited from chapter published by SUNY throughout the United States Press: “Ado(red), Abhor(red), and Germany to collaborate in Disappea(red): Fashioning Race, writing the Cage100 Party Piece, Poverty and Morality Under a composition commemorating Product (Red)™” Chapter 9 the 100th birthday of composer of Fashion Talks: Undressing John Cage. In addition, his the Power of Style. She was composition, Pulse, was invited to present “EcoBucks commissioned by the University and the Gender of ‘Green’” as of Iowa Symphony Orchestra. part of the EnviroThursday series at Macalester College and James Y. Canfield Professor “Promiscuous Economies and of Psychology Wendy Dunn Everyday Queer Survival” at accepted a three-year volunteer C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u the National Women’s Studies Association Conference. Professor of Teacher Education Roger Johanson was selected by Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad to serve on the STEM Advisory Council Regional board, whose goal is to boost student achievement in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education and promote STEM economic development. He presented “Constructivist caution: concept development with computers and manipulatives” at the Iowa Association for Teachers of Mathematics conference and “Constructivist Dilemma: Promoting concept development with computers and manipulatives” at the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics conference. Josh Johnson joined Coe as PC, ResNet and eClassroom Technician. Assistant Professor of Art Andrea Kann presented “Time After Time: Pilgrimage, Spectacle, and Cultural Memory in Contemporary Florence” at the 2012 Association of Art Historians conference in Milton Keynes, England. She was invited to contribute her essay, “Strangely Familiar: Marvin Cone and the Circus,” to accompany the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art’s Marvin Cone retrospective exhibit, available online at www.crma.org/ Content/Collection/MarvinCone.aspx. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Music Dean Karns with Betty Bang Mather edited and annotated the Informed Performance Edition of Bach’s Overture-Suite in B Minor, BWV1067 for flute and keyboard, published by Theodore Presser Company. Assistant Professor of History Bethany Keenan was accepted to be one of 16 summer scholars in the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers “”France’s W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 Haunting Past: Debating 20th Century History and French National Identity Since 1990” held in Paris. Professor of Philosophy John Lemos wrote the book “Freedom, Responsibility, and Determinism: A Philosophical Dialogue” which was accepted for publication by Hackett Publishing. He also wrote the article “Libertarianism and the Wrongness of Prepunishment,” which was published in The Public Affairs Quarterly. Assistant Professor of English Gordon Mennenga was invited to participate as a panelist at the national conference of Association of Writers and Writing Programs. He was invited to share “Shakytown,” a monologue presented at the “Walking the Wire: This Will Never Work” festival held at Riverside Theatre, Iowa City. Iowa Public Radio also included an excerpt of “Shakytown” in a broadcast prior to the monologue festival. He also gave a public reading of Eric Olsen’s book “We Wanted to Be Writers,” in which he is a featured writer. Amber Mulnix ’10 was named manager of Jenzabar services and support. Teaching Artist in Trumpet Alan Naylor released his album “Legacy,” his debut recording as a leader. Assistant Professor of Music Steve Shanley composed musical arrangements for the Cedar Rapids Municipal Band, for which he also performed as conductor and music director. In addition, he prepared arrangements of musical theater, performed by Theatre Cedar Rapids; arrangements for orchestra and jazz band, performed by Linn-Mar High School; and arrangements for marching band and show choir, performed by more than 50 Iowa middle school and high school ensembles. Head Football Coach Steve Staker was honored with rededication of the Fredericksburg football field in his name. Sumner-Fredericksburg opened its season Aug. 24 with a victory over Turkey Valley on “Steve Staker Field.” Steve taught and coached at Fredericksburg from 1968-2004, leading the Falcons to state titles in track in 1992 and football in 2001 and a runner-up finish in football in 2002. Adjunct Assistant Professor of Rhetoric Karla M. SteffensMoran presented her paper, “Images of Women in Music Videos: Thirty Year History of MTV,” at Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland for the International Women’s Day Women in Media Conference: Representations Past and Present. Chemical Hygiene Officer Susan Noreuil served as the state director for the Iowa Science Olympiad, a competition during which more than 300 middle and high school students compete in math, science and engineering. Assistant Professor of Biology Paul Storer and Molly Schlichenmayer ’13 were accepted to be part of the Fostering Undergraduate Talent – Uniting Research and Education (FUTURE) in Biomedicine summer research program at the University of Iowa to study the expression of procalcitonin and CGRP by microglial cells in the trigeminal ganglion and cerebral cortex and to evaluate glial contribution to the pathophysiology associated with migraine headache. Kylee Schmitt Pusteoska ’97 was named director of advancement services, replacing Kelly Russell. National Fellowship Advisor Ann Struthers was selected to read Paul Engle’s poem “Song of the Cedar” for the “City of Associate Professor of Nursing Anita Nicholson presented “Challenges and Rewards: Pediatric Nursing in South Africa” at the 2012 Pediatric Update Nursing Conference. C O E C O L L E G E 35 C O U R I E R Literature” broadcast on Iowa Public Television. Assistant Professor of History Brie Swenson Arnold was accepted to be one of 30 summer scholars in the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Institute “The Visual Culture of the American Civil War” at the City University of New York Graduate Center. On Dec. 20, she and her husband, Quinn, celebrated the birth of a son, Nathan. Professor of Computer Science and John F. Yothers Professor of Mathematics Calvin Van Niewaal was reappointed to serve a three-year term on the Province Governor’s Council of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music fraternity. Wanda Wagner, 86, of Blairstown, Iowa, died June 10. She was a secretary in the Coe Admission Office for 20 years. She is survived by two sons, Jon of Centerville and Monte Wagner ’74, 1948 Benton Iowa Rd., Blairstown, IA 52209; a daughter, Dana of North Liberty; four grandchildren; a great-granddaughter; a brother, Charles “Bud” Walrod of Des Moines; and a sister, Carolyn “Sally” Vedda of Tucson, Ariz. Associate Professor of Theatre Arts Steven Marc Weiss participated in a five-week advanced training program in Viewpoints and Suzuki movement techniques with members of Anne Bogart’s SITI Company in New York City. Associate Professor of Mathematics Jonathan White ’90 served as chair of the Iowa Section of the Mathematical Association of America. Assistant Professor of History Angela Ziskowski delivered “The Development of the Bellerophon Myth in Early Corinthian History” for the Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World (AAMW) Lecture at the University of Pennsylvania. w w w . c o e . e d u Retirement calls Jewett-scholar Heller Given the shrinking job market of the mid1970s, Howard Hall Professor of English Terry Heller feels lucky to have found his teaching career at Coe College. Now, as he prepares for retirement 38 years later, he is glad he was able to serve this small liberal arts college and the many students he has helped discover a bigger world. “This was a dream job for me,” Heller said. Growing up on the family farm near Hooppole, Ill., Heller was a first generation college student, a background he has shared with countless students as a First Year Seminar instructor virtually every year he’s been at Coe. After undergraduate studies at North Central College in Naperville, he went on to earn his master’s and Ph.D. in English at the University of Chicago. After a year of teaching at the University of Missouri in St. Louis and another year as a junior Fulbright lecturer at the University of Turin in Italy, Heller arrived at Coe in the fall of 1975. While his main role has been to improve students’ reading and writing skills and to stimulate their love of literature, Heller has quietly become part of Coe’s history. deprecated his contributions to the WAC Program, his appreciation and support of the program have been steadfast and invaluable. It’s hard to imagine the college ever finding anyone who will match Terry’s understanding and commitment to the WAC Program’s principles and practices.” With Visiting Professor of English Ann Struthers, he obtained grants that launched the series of visits and readings by Midwestern authors that continues today. Heller and Struthers founded the Coe Review Press in 1993, which published the 1996 anthology of Coe faculty and staff writers, “Holding On & Letting Go,” and the 2001 sesquicentennial collection of alumni writers, “Turning Up the Leaves.” He helped develop the creative writing major at Coe and twice worked to renew the American studies program. He chaired Coe’s English Department in academic 1980-81, 1988-89, 1995-96 and from 2005 to 2009. In 1998, after the computer age arrived at was very enthusiastic about and interested in whatever subject he was teaching and brought a quirky sense of humor and a tireless energy to his class discussions.” A summer research project on Jewett’s historical novel, “The Tory Lover,” launched Petsche’s senior thesis project, which was subsequently added to Heller’s online archive of all things Jewett. Noting that Heller filled in for her advisor on sabbatical and then continued in that role, Petsche said, “Terry took a personal interest in his students and did everything he could to help us further our academic success.” Second behind the pleasure of working with bright and eager students like Petsche, Heller lists associating with kind, generous, enthusiastic and hard-working colleagues as a career highlight. “My main mentors at Coe have been Neal Woodruff, Charles Cannon, David Hay and Bob Marrs,” he said. “They, especially, have been important to helping me subvert the darker aspects of the master/pupil dynamic that is always a part of education. These four have helped me approximate what I consider the ideal college teaching relationship between myself and my students, in which I am a partner and assistant in their learning.” “Love isn’t blind; it’s only love that sees.” His teaching includes a popular film course focusing on monsters – his “baby” – and a creative writing course that annually results in a new edition of Fantasticoe, a publication of student fantasy fiction. A leading Sarah Orne Jewett scholar, Heller’s main teaching and research area is 19th century American fiction, but he has taught American literature from the beginnings through the 20th century. — Sarah Orne Jewett Coe, he launched the Sarah Orne Jewett Text Project, a labor of considerable love that will continue well into retirement. For his efforts, Heller fields occasional emails every month from all over the world with questions regarding Jewett and her work. “What’s gratifying to me is to provide things others find useful,” he said. “That’s why I teach.” Count Heather Petsche ’05 among the grateful. Now a librarian in Washington, D.C., Petsche took several of Heller’s courses at Coe, from a J-Term He was one of the inventers of the once annual, now historical Shakespeare Birthday class on fantasy writing, to literary Party. In the early 1980s, he served on the analysis at 8 a.m., to committee that developed the Writing a class on Russian Across the Curriculum (WAC) and Writing literature. “By the Center programs. end of the semester, “Terry helped craft a flexible, theoretically I was sure that sound writing program beautifully everyone in Russia adapted to the needs of our college is depressed and and our students,” said The Esther and writes exclusively Robert Armstrong Professor of Rhetoric depressing things,” Bob Marrs. “While Terry has always she said. “But Terry W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E C O L L E G E 36 Heller also lists Struthers, Stead Family Professor of English Gina Hausknecht, Coe President Jim Phifer and former Coe English Professor Wendy Bashant as people who have helped him succeed. All are invited to a retirement party in Heller’s honor at 3 p.m. Friday, May 3 in Clark Alumni House. Howard Hall Professor of English Terry Heller with a statue of Mark Twain. C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u BY GEORGE A L O O K B A C K AT C O E T H R O U G H T H E L E N S O F G E O R G E H E N R Y ’4 9 sampling of photos from the George T. Henry College Archives at Stewart Memorial Library, this page is dedicated to Coe’s history as captured through the lens of George Henry ’49. The collection includes an unparalleled record of the life of a college over more than half a century by a single photographer. 50 YEARS AGO Emeritus Professor of Chemistry Ben Peterson ’18 in 1963, two years after retiring. Peterson taught chemistry at Coe from 1920-61 and continued to work in his lab in Carnegie Science Hall (now Stuart Hall) for several years thereafter. YEARS AGO 10 YEARS AGO Trustees Bill Shuttleworth and Bill Whipple ’35 discussing photos of the remodeled library in 1988. W I N T E R 2 0 1 3 C O E Former President George H.W. Bush visits with trustee John Strohm ’79 and his wife Mary Pat Link in Clark Alumni House. Bush visited Coe on Feb. 27, 2003 as the first Contemporary Issues Forum speaker. C O L L E G E 37 C O U R I E R w w w . c o e . e d u Non-Profit Org. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 26 Cedar Rapids, Iowa 1220 First Avenue NE Cedar Rapids, IA 52402 Change Service Requested Parents: If this issue of the Courier is addressed to your son or daughter who has established a separate permanent residence, please notify us of that new address. Call (319) 399-8542 or email [email protected]. We are no longer resending the magazine to corrected addresses provided by the U.S. Postal Service unless specifically requested by the addressee. Circulation will resume to the corrected address with the next issue. Are you worried about rising taxes? Despite the uncertainty in the economy, you can lessen your tax burden, increase your future income and support Coe. Here are three ways. CREATE SECURITY FOR YOU AND YOUR LOVED ONES You can make a gift to Coe while creating security for you and your loved ones with a charitable gift annuity. It’s as simple as transferring your low performing investments such as CDs and bonds to Coe in exchange for fixed lifetime payments. You might be surprised at how much higher your income could be and the payment you receive will never change. GROW YOUR NEST EGG NOW AND IN THE FUTURE If you own appreciated assets such as stock or real estate that are producing little or no income, one idea is to transfer these assets to fund a charitable remainder unitrust. The most common unitrust will pay you income each year based on a percentage (that you set) of the trust assets. Your income has the potential to increase over time with growth in the trust. This means more income for you and more remaining assets to help Coe in the future. The benefits of this trust include a charitable deduction, potential for increased income paid out for life, and bypass of capital gains tax on the sale of your appreciated property. REDUCE TAXES WHILE HELPING COE AND YOUR HEIRS A bequest of your IRA funds is one of the easiest ways to help Coe while also reducing taxes for your estate and your heirs. By designating Coe as the beneficiary of your plan, your estate can enjoy valuable tax savings. Rather than facing a high tax burden, your heirs may benefit from estate gifts of low taxed assets such as your home or stock. Visit coelegacy.org to view an illustration of the benefits of a charitable gift annuity or a charitable unitrust or contact Kelly Allen, director of the Heritage Club, at [email protected] or 1-800-332-8404, ext. 8592 or 319-329-8943.
Similar documents
SERVICE TRUMPS SUN AND FUN FOR COE SPRING BREAKERS
the upper lobby of Gage Memorial Union. Student Senate unanimously voted to designate $225,000 over a three-year period toward the project, using unspent funds returned by clubs and organizations. ...
More information