UAA Seawolves are the BEST in the WEST UAA Seawolves are the
Transcription
UAA Seawolves are the BEST in the WEST UAA Seawolves are the
accolades SPRING/SUMMER 2008 A P U B L I C AT I O N O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F A L A S K A A N C H O R A G E F O R A L U M N I A N D F R I E N D S ! E R SC e h t e r a s e v l o w a e S T S E UAA W e h t BEST in F R O M T H E E D I T O R CONTENTS Seawolf Sports................2 Basketball Teams Dear Friends: New Sports Center I'm pleased to present the Spring/Summer 2008 issue of Accolades, a biannual magazine published by UAA's Office of Advancement. This 2 UAA Debate Team issue is packed with incredible stories of donors, students, alumni, fac- Speaks Up........................6 ulty and programs. As an alum myself, I'm particularly proud to feature our NCAA Div. II Western Region men's and women's basketball cham- Celebrating the Arts pions on the cover of this issue. It's been heartwarming to see the & Humanities.................12 state of Alaska rally behind its 2008 home team, its home town 6 University. There are many talented people that helped to create Accolades. This Visual Arts and Music Theatre and Dance Creative Writing and Literary Arts issue features pieces by staff writers Jessica Hamlin, Peter Porco and Alaska Quarterly Review Ann Marie Wawersik. We are lucky to include two student contributors The Humanities in this issue too: Morgan Sneed and Jennifer McMullen. Other Community Campuses Advancement team members that served as story advisors included Scholarly Research Beth Rose, Ivy Spohnholz, Julia Martinez and Stacey Marsh. I am incredibly grateful to work with such a fantastic team of professionals. 12 Faculty Accolades........22 Spotlight on Alumni......23 As you read through the stories of this issue, I hope you feel inspired. Alum Tracks Each piece, whether it be about the new low-residency MFA program, the Seawolf Debate Team, the basketball champions or a featured alum, is a testimony of the great things happening at UAA. If you haven't been on campus in awhile, I invite you to stop by and experience the Generous Donor............30 23 Sonja Sheffert incredible energy of success and discovery. It is indeed great to be a Seawolf! Best, Kristin DeSmith Editor UAA Accolades Spring/Summer 2008 Volume 7, Number 1 Published by UAA University Advancement Editor: Kristin DeSmith Contributors: Jessica Hamlin, Peter Porco, Ann Marie Wawersik Graphic Design: David Freeman All photos by Michael Dinneen and Clark James Mishler unless otherwise noted For more information about stories included in UAA Accolades, to make a gift to UAA or to order additional copies, please contact: University Advancement University of Alaska Anchorage 3211 Providence Drive . Anchorage, AK 99508 Phone: (907) 786-4847 Toll free: 1-877-482-2232 e-mail: [email protected] To learn more about UAA, visit www.uaa.alaska.edu. F R O M T H E C H A N C E L L O R Dear UAA Alumni, Friends and Family, This Spring/Summer edition of Accolades will provide a small glimpse of the many wonderful programs and events at UAA. I think you’ll agree that it’s quite impressive. The issue kicks off with a tribute to our history-making year in the Athletic Department. Not only did both UAA men’s and women’s basketball teams reach the NCAA Division II semifinals, but our Track & Field team set nine school records in their opening meet in Las Vegas and our Ski Team finished 8th in the United States. It’s been quite a year. All of these successes make it more apparent than ever that we need to build a new sports facility to replace our 30-year-old Wells Fargo Sports Complex. We’re working on it! Success at UAA isn’t limited to our Athletic Department. Read in these pages about our remarkable Debate Team. Through the years UAA debate teams have earned regional, national and international recognition. At the 2007 World Universities Debating Championship, the UAA team reached the semifinal round beating teams from Stanford, Yale, Cambridge and Oxford. Their performance made them the top debate team in North America and put them in the top two percent of teams in the world. An amazing achievement. Our Music Department, Art Department, and Department of Theatre and Dance are celebrating their own successes, many of which involve collaboration and interaction with our community. Jazz Week, Symphony of Sounds, gallery shows, dance performances, operas and a season of full-length plays make UAA a vital part of Anchorage’s arts community. We cannot accomplish all of this without your support. I was particularly moved by Erica Cline Blackledge’s story of friendship and loss that led to the creation of the Quianna Clay Debate Scholarship. I think you, too, will be inspired by this story. From athletic events to theatre performances, UAA is a place that continues to provide experiences that feed our spirit, inform our minds, and expand our horizons. Thank you to our students, staff, faculty, friends, alumni and supporters for creating a vibrant UAA! Sincerely, Fran Ulmer Chancellor accolades 1 The BEST in the WEST This year UAA enjoyed the greatest single season of basketball in the school’s history. Both the men’s and women’s basketball teams each had record-breaking success, and together the Seawolves had an astounding 59-11 combined record for the 2007-08 season. The men’s team won the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC) and the West Regional titles, while the women’s team finished 2nd in GNAC play and went on to win the West Regional championship as well with their surprising upset to the No. 2 team in the nation, who had previously been undefeated. 2 accolades Both teams went on to the “Elite Eight” NCAA Division II quarterfinals with the men traveling to Springfield, Massachusetts and the women to Kearney, Nebraska. For only the second time in the history of the NCAA Division II basketball playoffs, both the men’s and women’s teams from the same school won their quarterfinal games and moved into the national “Final Four.” UAA is especially proud of all its fine student-athletes. Both teams were nationally ranked throughout the year, with both teams finishing No. 4 in their respective final polls. The Seawolves were also awarded the men’s and women’s GNAC Players of the Year as well as the men’s Coach of the Year. SEAWOLF SPORTS WOMEN Name Position Ht. Yr. Hometown (Previous School) 2 Jennifer Salazar G/F 5-9 Sr. Houston, Texas (South Houston HS/Garden City [Kan.] CC) 3 Elisha Harris G 5-7 Jr. West Jordan, Utah (West Jordan HS/Coll. of Eastern Utah) 4 Kalhie Quinones G 5-7 Sr. Loveland, Colo. (Thompson Valley HS/Otero JC/Utah State) 5 Limor Pelleg G 5-5 Jr. Rishon LeZion, Israel (Gymnasia Realit/Israeli U-21 National Team) 11 Erin Cunningham G 5-6 Sr. Yuba City, Calif. (Marysville HS/Yuba CC) 13 Dasha Basova F/C 6-3 Jr. Moscow, Russia (Northeastern [Colo.] JC) 15 Ruby Williams F 5-10 Jr. Phoenix, Ariz. (Maryvale HS/Central Arizona Coll.) 20 Ashley Thompson F 5-10 Jr. McCammon, Idaho (Marsh Valley HS/Coll. of Southern Idaho) 21 Maria Nilsson G/F 6-0 Sr. Skovde, Sweden (Sanda HS/Northeast Nebraska CC) 24 Danielle Dekel G 5-10 Jr. Kibbutz Ein Shemer, Israel (Ribet (Calif.) Academy/Central Arizona Coll.) 25 Nikki Aden G/F 5-8 Fr. Portland, Ore. (West Linn HS) 30 Lillie Parks F 5-11 Jr. Rialto, Calif. (Eisenhower HS/Chaffey College) 33 Krista Leman G 5-6 Fr. Ninilchik (Ninilchik HS) 41 Jess Merkley F/C 6-1 Fr. Anchorage (South Anchorage HS) 54 Rebecca Kielpinski C 6-2 Jr. Mandan, N.D. (Mandan HS) RS Denise Benavides G 5-3 Fr. Houston, Texas (Alief Hastings HS) Richard Orr Brad Norton Brad Norton No. MEN No. Name Position Ht. Wt. Yr. Hometown (Previous School) 1 Kevin White G 6-4 195 Fr. Manly, Australia (Scots College/San Diego Christian) 2 Chris Bryant G 6-4 200 Sr. Metlakatla (Metlakatla HS/Drake) 3 Lonnie Ridgeway G 6-3 195 Fr. Anchorage (Heritage Christian) 11 Doug Hardy G 5-11 185 Jr. Anchorage (Bartlett HS/Idaho State) 14 Luke Cooper G 6-0 165 Sr. Melbourne, Australia (Parade College/Eltham Wildcats) 21 Cameron Burney F 6-7 185 Jr. Steamboat Springs, Colo. (Steamboat Springs HS/Otero JC) 22 Phillip Hearn G/F 6-6 200 Fr. Anchorage (West HS) 23 McCade Olsen F 6-8 215 Sr. Riverton, Utah (Riverton HS/Eastern Wyoming CC) 25 Jeremiah Trueman F 6-9 210 Jr. Stratford, New Zealand (Nelson College/San Diego Christian) 30 Kyle Doerr F 6-7 205 Fr. Rapid City, S.D. (St. Thomas More HS) 32 Colin Voreis F 6-7 230 Fr. Vermilion, Ohio (Vermilion HS) 34 Carl Arts F 6-6 210 Sr. Valdez (Valdez HS) 45 Jared Kettler C 6-6 220 Sr. Dana Point, Calif. (St. Margaret's Sch.) RS Kenny Barker G 6-3 210 Sr. San Diego, Calif. (Clairemont HS/UAF) accolades 3 SEAWOLF SPORTS S ince the Wells Fargo Sports Complex (WFSC) was built in 1978, it has served as the home base for a great number of athletic achievements for the University of Alaska Anchorage. The original building was designed for recreational use by non-traditional commuter students and housed only three competitive sports: basketball, riflery and skiing. In 1979, the UAA women’s ski team won the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) national championship and skier Britta Kjellstrand became the first UAA national champ in any sport. The ice rink was installed in 1980 and within four years the UAA hockey team gained NCAA Division I status. In 1989 the hockey team won the NYE Frontier Classic, now called the Kendall Hockey Classic, for the first time, and has enjoyed four more championships since then. To accommodate the large and loyal fan base, UAA hockey has been playing games at the Sullivan Arena since 1982. This last year the Carrs/Safeway Great Alaska Shootout celebrated its 30th Anniversary. The beloved event was held its first five years at the Buckner Fieldhouse on Fort Richardson, but quickly outgrew that facility and has enjoyed great success at the Sullivan Arena, being televised nationally by ESPN since 1986. Still, the Seawolves’ basketball teams have enjoyed winning over 80 percent of their home games at the Wells Fargo Sports Complex which seats 1,100. In 2001, UAA joined the newly formed Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC) and has been leaving a strong Seawolf mark. The cross country and track and field programs have racked up a long list of competitive accolades including nine individual conference champions. Our running athletes now use the state-of-the art, indoor complex the SportsDome at Changepoint to train year-round. Then, on March 8, 2008 the Seawolves had a landmark day. The track and field teams set nine school records in their opening meet in Las Vegas. The ski team finished 8th in the USA. The women's basketball team defeated Billings and set a new school record for wins in a season. And the men's basketball team defeated Western Oregon by 30 points, claimed the GNAC title and set a new record for wins in a season. It was truly a historical day for all the coaches and student athletes. Three decades after opening the Wells Fargo Sports Complex, UAA now serves more than 15,000 students and student athletes participate in 11 different competitive sports. Each year the UAA athlete and fan participation grows, almost as fast as the list of winning accolades. However, UAA’s current sports facilities are considered the least adequate compared to other universities competing in our conference. We have less than half the available recreation space (85,000 square feet compared to 215,000 square feet) considered appropriate for our school body size. A new UAA sports complex has been proposed that would serve as a facility for student athletes, physical education majors, student recreation, community health and recreation and as an additional venue for public events. UAA Chancellor Fran Ulmer is working with a dedicated team to develop the best plan for this new, multi-use sports arena. The planning team is led by Vice Chancellor for Administrative Services, Bill Spindle, and Vice Chancellor for Advancement, Megan Olson. "We will involve the UAA family, our neighbors and the Anchorage community in this process,” said Chancellor Ulmer. “Construction of a sports complex to meet the needs of both our students and the Municipality is an important step in strengthening community partnerships and developing the Anchorage campus.” After Gov. Sarah Palin vetoed the $1 million in planning money last year, the team reached out to hundreds of university and community members to get their feedback on building a new sports facility on UAA’s campus. The research found that public support of UAA sports was incredibly strong. Construction of a sports complex to Eighty-four percent of people surveyed meet the needs of both our students believe a new facility would improve UAA programs and 83 percent believe a new and the Municipality is an important facility would make UAA more attractive to perspective students. After hearing feedstep in strengthening community back on both sides of this issue, UAA offipartnerships and developing the cials have developed a two-phase plan to turn this project into a reality. Anchorage campus. Phase 1 of this plan includes building a sports facility on UAA-owned land north of student housing on the corner of Providence – UAA Chancellor Fran Ulmer Drive and Elmore Road. This new sports facility would not be a mega-facility as originally envisioned, but rather a 13,000 square foot facility designed to accommodate 10 of the 11 intercollegiate sports. This new proposed location would also provide on-campus students easy access to the facility. Phase 2 of the plan includes building a separate 7,500-seat hockey arena that would be developed in partnership with the Municipality of Anchorage. Location for this facility is still under consideration. As UAA moves forward with Phase 1, we continue to welcome feedback. Several preliminary sports complex and arena concepts are available for viewing and comment at GoSeawolves.com. Seawolves Outgrow Their Den accolades 5 UAA Debate Team coaches Steve Johnson and Shawn Briscoe stand at the center of the award-winning team. UAA Debate Team SPEAKS UP Debate traces its roots back to ancient Athens, where citizens gathered in forums to discuss and debate the most pressing issues of the day. Even today, debate is part of our every day life. Debates are prevalent in political elections, on high school and college campuses worldwide, and in every day conversations with friends and business colleagues. The University of Alaska Anchorage Seawolf Debate Team was founded in 1982 as part of the Anchorage Community College by professor Dr. Doug Parry. Starting on a shoestring, the team would hold regular practices, but when they wanted to compete in tournaments out of state they would have to go hat-in-hand to local businesses for money. Some years they would compete in four or five tournaments, and others only one or two, depending on the economy and continued next page accolades 7 UA A D E B AT E T E A M how much money they could muster. The team had a very successful start, and within a few years they were the dominant community college debate program in the region. In 1989, Arliss Sturgulewski, who is a great friend of the University, cooperated with Dr. Parry and other friends of the debate program to include it in the state budget to fund the team for the very first time. Since then, the University has funded the Seawolf Debate Team. The Seawolf Debate Team is the only intercollegiate forensics program in Alaska. It represents UAA, the University of Alaska system, and the State of Alaska in competitive speech and debate activities against not unlike a competitive sports team, the pursuit of excellence in com- students from around the world. UAA debaters compete against some of petitive debating is a significant undertaking. Typically there are the most prestigious schools in the world, including the University of between 12 and 16 debaters that are qualified to be on the traveling Cambridge, Yale University, the University of Oxford, Stanford University squad, and of that squad anywhere between six and 10 debaters travel and many others. Director Steve Johnson came onboard with the to any given tournament. “Most debaters have some common personality traits,” said Steve Johnson. “They’re gregarious, social and are very aware of regional, national and international events and politics. They’re genuinely interested in how those events relate to them. Debaters tend to be somewhat egocentric – you have to be to be a good debater. To represent your arguments with confidence in a way that will be compelling requires that you believe in what you’re saying. And to believe in what you’re saying, you have to believe in yourself.” Johnson works hard to identify a debater’s strengths and weaknesses, and puts a lot of effort into making sure they reach their full potential as a debater. “That’s what really fascinates me as a coach,” Johnson said. “What is going to make this debater the best they can possibly be? Do they need to be challenged more? Rewarded more? How you put the pieces together in any one individual takes a lot of thought and hard work.” What is Debate? The simplest description of a debate is that a resolution is proposed and different groups of people argue different sides of that motion. Debate is an essential tool that hones communication, analytical and research skills while deepening knowledge on specific topics in politics, history, economics, law and philosophy for developing and maintaining democracy and open societies. “The best analogy to make is to ice skating,” said Johnson. “There Michaela Hernandez proves program in 1995 and has led the team to success on numerous are a variety of different sports that stem from ice skating, from hockey her point during a public occasions. Coach Shawn Briscoe joined the winning team in 2007. to pairs dancing, to singles performance, but they all use ice skating as debate. At right, Nick Byrne argues his point. At the beginning of a semester, the Seawolf Debate Team starts with between 25 and 35 people. To qualify for a slot on the traveling team, students commit a great deal of time and energy to prepare and practice; 8 accolades the medium. Academic debating is the same way.” Collegiate debate formats practiced in the U.S. include parliamentary, Model Congress, Model UN, mock trial events – all of these are competitive debating in different forms. The Seawolf Debate Team practices the World Universities Debating Championships (WUDC) format, also called the international format. This is the most widely practiced collegiate debating format in the world. What separates the international style of debate from others is that it’s considered extemporaneous, meaning debaters don’t know what the motion is until 15 minutes before the debate begins. “We have a rough idea of what the topic will be,” said Johnson. “We do our best to prepare by researching what’s going on in the world. We put together a book of our research that comes with us to our competitions.” The WUDC format has four teams of two people each in a round. Two teams argue on the pro side, and two argue on the con side. However, all teams are competing against each other, so the teams strive to be more convincing than the others. This adds a whole dimension of strategy to the debate. “You get eight very different perspectives,” said Johnson. “It makes things very interesting, especially when there are creative, intelligent and engaged people participating.” “I love so many aspects of debate that it is hard to pick one,” said Severin Randall, a member of the Seawolf Debate Team. “I am passionate about argumentation. It sounds geeky, but how to analyze and structure arguments fascinates me. I also love following current economic and political events all over the world. I am not sure where else I could find other people willing to talk about the recent elections in Serbia or terrorist groups in Nigeria.” Successes The Seawolf Debate Team has been successful since its beginning, consistently earning regional and national recognition for the University while competing on the National Parliamentary Debate Association (NPDA) circuit from 19952005. The most significant achievement of this era was Ben Garcia and Chris Richter’s 2002 National Championship where they beat more than 200 other U.S. teams to be ranked the best debate team in the nation. Named Rookie of the Year in 1999, Quianna Clay debated for UAA Debater Severin Randall from 1998-2000. She joined the team at the end of her sophomore year participates in a public after being hand selected by Steve Johnson. “I had Quianna in a public debate and discussion on speaking class, and when she got up to speak she just blew me away,” the controversial Pebble said Johnson. “She had an extraordinary presence, and people gravitat- Mine project. ed toward her. She went from never having debated before to being Rookie of the Year at the end of her first year of competition. At the end of her second year, she was in semifinals at Nationals. Of all the teams in the U.S., she was in the top four.” After refocusing the program from NPDA to International Style Debate in January 2005, the Seawolves garnered immediate international attention by winning the Rotterdam Open Tournament in the Netherlands. The team also won the U.S. Universities Championships in 2005 and placed second to Harvard University at the U.S. Universities Championships in 2006. At the 2007 World Universities Debating Championship, the team of Chris Kolerok and Tom Lassen reached the semifinal round, beating teams from Stanford, Yale, Cambridge and Oxford. Their performance ranked them in the top two percent of teams in the world and as the top debate team in North America. accolades 9 In its third year, the tournament continues to grow and has generated a strong presence on UAA’s campus and in the community. In 2006, the program started with 12 teams. In 2007 it grew to 20 teams. Now in 2008, 28 teams, or 56 students, are involved. The tournament is open to all UAA students who aren’t currently on the competitive debate team. The program provides students the opportunity to hone their critical thinking and advocacy skills by bringing students together for a series of five Tuesdays during the dark, cold months of January and February. Students learn how to debate and are paired up to compete against one another for the grand prize of $2,000. Winners selected from each individual debate go onto a semifinal round, and the top two winners from each semifinal round proceed to compete in the final round. Students discuss anything that’s controversial, including alternative energy, health care, predator control and more. “We try to choose topics that are timely and that will make students feel connected,” said Johnson. “I heard about the Cabin Fever Debates and thought it sounded like fun,” said Randall. “My partner and I ended up winning the ’07 tournament and Professor Johnson encouraged me to begin attending team practices regularly. It was an intimidating but exhilarating experience that really got me hooked on debate. Before I even did my first debate, I knew it was something I wanted to do because when I watched the competitive team do a demonstration debate, I couldn't wait to have my chance to talk. It was really exciting this year when I was part of the competitive team demonstrating how to debate to other new people. Ben Garcia and Chris Richter Engaging the Community topped a field of 282 debate teams The team’s missions are to provide opportunities for people to participate The team is about more than just competitive debating. It hosts a at the 2002 National Parliamentary in critical public discourse, and to train others in skills needed to partici- major public policy debate each semester, inviting members of the public Debate Association’s annual pate in the political process as engaged contributors. to campus to engage in discussions on important and relevant topics. championship, beating such One of the difficulties the team faces is that they are the only colle- Everything came full circle.” The team also reaches out to the local middle and high school communi- intellectual powerhouses as Notre giate debate team in Alaska so to compete they have to travel Outside. ties by hosting the Alaska State High School Drama, Debate and Dame, UC Berkeley and Rice “We don’t have any home games,” said Johnson. “That’s one of the Forensics Tournament each year. University. reasons we decided to start the Cabin Fever Debates, our intramural debating tournament.” Learn more about the Seawolf Debate Team by visiting http://www.uaa.alaska.edu/seawolfdebate/. Visit http://greenandgold.uaa.alaska.edu/podcasts/ to listen to a podcast interview with Steve Johnson, director of the Seawolf Debate Team. Professor Johnson is an associate professor in the Department of Communication and Discourse Studies, and is the director of the Seawolf Debate Team. He has been involved in competitive debating for more than 20 years. He has held a variety of leadership positions in academic debating, including president of the National Parliamentary Debating Association, the largest intercollegiate debating organization in the U.S. Johnson is active in international debating and currently serves as the secretary for the World Universities Debating Council. He has also been involved with the Chinese English Language Debating Championships since 2004, and has served as chief adjudicator for the past two years of the tournament. 10 accolades UA A D E B AT E T E A M H o n o r i n g a Fr i e n d Encouraged by her parents to stay close to home after graduating from high school at 17, Erica Cline Blackledge enrolled in classes at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Her plan: stay in Alaska for two years, satisfy her general education requirements and then transfer to a college out of state. Inspired by her involvement in debate at Robert Service High School, Erica immediately auditioned for UAA’s Seawolf Debate Team and joined the team her freshman year. As a result of her involvement with the team, Erica ultimately decided to complete her degree at UAA. Erica kept busy by double majoring in management and marketing, and double Erica Cline Blackledge and Quianna Clay minored in communication and justice. During her second year on the team, Erica met her debate partner and friend Quianna Clay. Steve Johnson sensed a connection between Erica and Quianna and knew they would make a great pair. During the next few years the team known as “Alaska CC” (Clay-Cline) formed a unique bond. They traveled throughout the country and competed internationally together in parliamentary debate. Together they practiced for countless hours, briefed issues and conducted research. “The bond between debate partners is hard to describe,” said Erica. “We could finish each others’ sentences.” The team received two citations from the Alaska State Legislature for their success and eventually advanced to semifinals at National Parliamentary Debate Association Nationals. After graduating from UAA, “Alaska CC” parted ways, both attending law schools out of state. After completing her first year of law school, Quianna was returning from a trip to the Kenai Peninsula and was tragically killed in a car accident. “Qui taught me that you can’t take life too seriously,” said Erica. “I tend to take things too seriously, but Quianna always made sure I would take a step back from it all and relax – she made me enjoy life. She had a great heart.” Erica and her husband, who is also a UAA grad, knew they eventually wanted to make a philanthropic contribution to the University. “I knew that once we were in a position to give back to UAA, the Seawolf Debate Team would be our focus,” said Erica. The couple recently started the Quianna Clay Debate Scholarship in honor of a great friend and debater. The scholarship will keep Quianna’s memory alive, while helping to support other students who make the commitment of time and energy to participate in debate. Erica Cline Blackledge now works as an attorney for an international law firm in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Find out how you can give back to UAA. Contact UAA’s Office of Development at (907) 786-4847 or visit www.uaa.alaska.edu/advancement/giving/. accolades 11 T h e A RT S & HUMANITIES C E L E B R AT I N G C E L E B R AT I N G T H E A RT S & H U M A N I T I E S Symphony of Success: Music at UAA n any given day during the school year the melodic sounds of saxophones, violins, and even an occasional oboe greet visitors as they enter the UAA Fine Arts Building. Students in this academic program not only concentrate on honing their craft, but are steeped in the practice and theory of music. UAA’s Music Department is a source of musical energy that spills joyfully into the campus community and beyond. Faculty and student concerts, student recitals, as well as recordings are dynamic contributors to the cultural climate of Southcentral Alaska. This year Alaska Pro Musica, one of the most durable combos in the state, consisting of faculty members Walter Olivares on violin, Mark Wolbers on clarinet and department chair Timothy Smith on piano, released a new CD. “Stravinsky: L’Histoire du Soldat,” the trio’s first nationally distributed album, featured two world recording premieres by composers with strong connections to Alaska: Craig Coray, an adjunct instructor in the department who lives in Anchorage, and Kenneth Benshoof of Seattle, Wash., who was raised in Fairbanks and has family there. In addition to teaching, UAA’s music faculty participate in community music organizations and perform with local symphonies, opera companies, concert choirs and orchestras. They offer performances and master classes at local schools, directing or assisting with youth symphonies, judging district and state solo and ensemble competitions, and hosting jazz, keyboard and choral festivals. Members of the faculty have gained national recognition as composers, writers and recording artists and have presented concerts statewide and throughout the U.S., Asia and South America. The faculty serve as models for students, who during their career at UAA, perform in local music events, teach in the community, work at local music stores and participate in Anchorage music organizations. Academically, students choose one of three degree programs: Bachelor of Arts in Music, Bachelor of Music in Performance, and Bachelor of Music with an emphasis in Music Education. There’s also a minor in music for students majoring in other academic areas. Students benefit from what can only be called an optimum physical learning environment. Classes are held in the Fine Arts Building, a modern $30 million facility with state-of-the-art, 220seat recital hall; clean, well-lighted classrooms; computer access, a listening lab, soundproof practice rooms, lockers and quiet areas for study and relaxation. UAA strives to not only educate students, but to serve as a public square for the community. Annual events such as Jazz Week and the Symphony of Sounds offer a chance for students and faculty to showcase their skills, but also gives the community the opportunity to hear the incredible music being performed at UAA. Whether playing for themselves or the community, students and faculty in the music program know the truth of the Confucius statement that says human nature is impossible without music’s special pleasures. O A Collage of Mediums: Art at UAA I n “Sankofa: Years & Caretakers,” an exhibition of monoprints featured at the Alaska State Museum earlier this year, UAA art professor Garry Kaulitz traveled into his past to reclaim it and therefore move forward. He laid his personal history before the viewer, chronicling the past and stepping into the future. Through the UAA Art Department and its programs, both students and faculty delve into art history but also recapitulate the past and embrace the future through their practice and learning of sculpture, photography, ceramics, painting, metal-smithing, drawing, digital imaging, foundations and other disciplines. The result is an art education that addresses the difficult and critical issues of our time while encouraging students to pursue an educated imagination to “make a difference in society.” The art department takes a comprehensive multi-studio approach to encourage independent thinking, foster energetic creativity and develop in every student knowledge of art’s critical and historical functions. Prof. Kaulitz and other members of the talented faculty help their students acquire technical skills, confidence in working with a variety of materials, and the knowledge necessary to evaluate the great heritage of past and contemporary art and design. Students choose either a Bachelor of Arts program that gives them the experience of problem solving in a liberal-arts context; a Bachelor of Fine Arts program that gives them professional art training; a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Digital Graphics and Design whereby they receive training in applied arts; Art Education, for teacher preparation; or a Continuing Education program as either as a pre- or post-baccalaureate student. Study of the past, imitation and re-invention of proven techniques of artistic creation, and artistic discovery are milestones on the road to knowledge and practice of art. V I S U A L ART MUSIC Opposite page: UAA art professor Garry Kaulitz pulls a colagraphic print while students Nancy Stallings and Sandra Lower look on. Above: Alaska Pro Musica members and UAA music professors Walter Olivares, Timothy Smith and Mark Wolbers. accolades 13 Swing, Saunter, Set, Stage: Theatre and Dance at UAA T THEATRE and DA N C E C E L E B R AT I N G T H E A RT S & H U M A N I T I E S he show always goes on for the UAA Department of Theatre and Dance. The production of plays and dance performances keep the university’s stages and studios busy throughout the year. Production is at the heart of the award-winning theatre program. Every year, UAA Theatre produces a series of full-length plays on its state-of-the-art Mainstage, a convertible thrust stage that’s one of the most thrilling playhouses in Alaska. Students also produce and direct full-length and one-act plays in the Jerry Harper Studio Theatre. The Theatre and Dance program enjoys strong ties to the in fact, was a 1999 production of “King Lear” that depended for world beyond the campus. Its actors, for example, are not limited much of its success on a 69-year-old veteran actor in the title role. to students. The plays are cast at open auditions, and besides That was Jerry Harper, who died in 2005 and whose name graces theatre majors and non-majors, directors recruit members of the community. One of the highlights of the history of theatre at UAA, the studio theatre. This year, the department ventured into a new kind of arena. The cast of “She Stoops to Conquer,” the Restoration comedy by Oliver Goldsmith that was a Mainstage production in late winter, produced a handful of intentionally silly videos, under the title “She Stoops to Gossip.” During the run the cast posted them on the online video farm, YouTube. The department schedules special Mainstage shows as “High School Matinees” so Anchorage secondary school students can attend the theatre at deeply discounted rates. The UAA Dance program is among the most vital in Alaska and is the first in the state to offer dance-degree programs, leading to a B.A. in theatre with a dance emphasis or a minor in dance. UAA Dance, too, maintains an active performance role within the community through its continued residencies for guest artists – important names in the field of dance who teach, perform and direct performances while forging ties to such organizations as Out North Contemporary Art House, Alaska Design Forum, Homer Arts Council, International Gallery of Contemporary Art, Alaska Dance Theatre and others. Those who support UAA Theatre and Dance show their affection for one of the greatest arts organizations in Alaska in 14 accolades many ways. They become season subscribers, saving more than Photo by Micha Sanders Above: The 2005 UAA production of Shakespeare’s last play, “The Tempest,” was called a “work of enchantment” by one newspaper reviewer. Right: Theatre and Dance faculty member Katya Kuznetsova shows how the freedom and grace of dance lift the spirit. 30 percent of the cost of individual tickets. Staffers at the UAA Theatre box-office (907) 786-4849 can explain how to subscribe. Among next year’s scheduled Mainstage productions are Shakespeare’s “As You Like It,” Euripides’ “The Trojan Women,” and the musical “Godspell.” Supporters contribute to the Masterpieces of the Theatre Foundation Account to help pay for honorariums, equipment, travel and training. They donate to the William R. Wilson Scholarship Account to support the production, publication and encouragement of original drama at UAA; to the Dayle Skore Memorial Foundation Account to provide scholarships and awards to students admitted to the Theatre and Dance program; and to the Chandler Braley Memorial Dance Scholarship fund to give financial aid to a male dancer in the UAA Dance Program. The UAA Alumni Association piggybacks on UAA Theatre and Dance productions through its “Curtain Call” program. This is a pre-play reception for interested alumni who visit the campus and watch the play at a discount. The department also offers “Backstage Tours” to invited members of the public who pay a fee to learn about the Theatre and Dance program. Prior to an evening’s show, they take a guided tour of the theatre house and the set. This occurs during two of the season’s Mainstage productions, once for each show. For anyone not involved in theatre, a Backstage Tour is perhaps the best way to walk the boards and smell the greasepaint. A New Way of Writing at UAA W hen it comes to change and growth, leading UAA into the 21th Century, the university’s literary arts program stands Another CWLA program about to start is the Northern Renaissance and Art Series, an intellectual and aesthetic festival proudly beside its science departments, researchers, business of public lectures, readings and performances by writers, scien- and nursing schools and other programs. tists, artists, musicians and cultural leaders, all at the top of their The Department of Creative Writing and Literary Arts (CWLA) is game. Not just students and faculty will enjoy these talks and pre- currently undergoing its most sweeping developments since it sentations, but the general public will be invited as well. They will grew out of the English Department some 10 years ago. occur during the students’ summer residency but at other times at This year CWLA is inaugurating a new, low-residency mode of delivery. The revised program, to begin in July, will give graduate UAA as well. Through presentations and events like the Northern students the flexibility to live a genuine writing life without having Renaissance lecture series, the new CWLA program will exert an to uproot their families and leave jobs and homes. It is the first extraordinary impact on the Anchorage community. time low-residency creative-writing instruction has been offered One of the principal themes of the lecture series – one as strong in the arts at UAA as in the sciences – is the forging of links in Alaska. During the three-year Master of Fine Arts (MFA) program among disciplines. This notion conforms well with one of CWLA’s administered by CWLA, graduate writing students – at home main objectives, which is to infuse the study of writing with cross- wherever they may live – write and study under the guidance of disciplinary and cross-cultural elements. Both the lecture series individual writing mentors. The mentors include CWLA core and MFA program will foster intellectual and artistic dialogue faculty as well as a large body of notable writers and teachers among artists grappling with ideas of landscape and humanity. from across Alaska and around the country. The program’s foundation is the 12 days of summer residency in Anchorage when the core faculty, all guest mentors and the students gather for an intensive session of lectures, craft workshops, manuscript critiques and public readings. Altogether, MFA Creative Writing students at UAA participate in four summer residencies. Noted fiction author Ron Carlson will be this year’s keynote speaker during the residency that begins July 13. JASON WENGER MEMORIAL FUND/SCHOLARSHIP Jason Wenger was a 27-year-old student pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing at UAA when he was shot dead in a random killing in Anchorage in early December. His death shocked the Department of Creative Writing and Literary Arts as well as the broader community. The man charged with killing him has been charged also with killing his own father and wounding three other people in a rampage. Jason’s thesis was in fiction and he had been expected to graduate in May. His MFA was awarded posthumously during a memorial ceremony at UAA on Jan. 15. In Jason’s honor, the University has established a fund for the Jason Wenger Memorial Writing Award. As of early March, the fund balance was about $6,000, raised through donations. CWLA professor Jo-Ann Mapson, who was CREATIVE Jason’s thesis advisor, says the first award in Jason’s name will be given out this year to a graduate writing student who demonstrates exceptionally strong literary talents and whose thesis is exemplary. Those interested in supporting future writing scholarships at UAA as well as the establishment of the Northern Renaissance Science & Art Series, which is part of the new, low-residency MFA writing program, can make a taxdeductible donation to the Excellence in Creative Writing & Literary Arts Fund. Please send donations to CWLA or to the Advancement Office, adding the line, ATTN: Excellence in Creative Writing & Literary Arts Fund. The address is the same for either: UAA, 3211 Providence Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508. For more information, please call (907)786-4394. 16 accolades W R T I T I NG C E L E B R AT I N G T H E A RT S & H U M A N I T I E S Alaska Quarterly Review: A quarter-of-a-century of literary excellence T he Alaska Quarterly Review (AQR), published by the University of Alaska Anchorage and edited by Professor Ronald Spatz, turns 25 this year. Founded in 1982, AQR has received widespread acclaim and has directed the nation's attention to the literary arts in Alaska. A quarter-of-a-century of literary excellence was celebrated on Feb. 3, 2008 at the Loussac Library in Anchorage. The event marked the opening of a month-long Alaska Quarterly Review 25th Anniversary Photographic Exhibition featuring some of Alaska’s best photographers and contributors to AQR. Anniversary celebrations in Homer, Fairbanks, Sitka and Nome also marked this milestone, and additional events are planned for We have stayed true to our Bethel and Palmer, with a second mission – to produce a round of events in Homer and Fairbanks. Deemed by The Washington Post Book World as "one of the nation's best literary magazines," and most recently national, front-line literary journal featuring new and emerging writers, poets, by the Sunday New York Times Book playwrights, essayists and Review as "fresh treasure," Alaska photographers. Quarterly Review demonstrates that the University of Alaska Anchorage has AQR Editor Ronald Spatz an important place in the larger literary world. “We have stayed true to our mission – to produce a national, front-line literary journal featuring new and emerging writers, poets, playwrights, essayists and photographers. We are honored that the Alaska Quarterly Review has helped put Alaska on the literary map,” said Spatz. “It has been an honor and a privilege to work on this project since the very beginning.” Professor Spatz also serves UAA as the dean of the University Honors College and director of the community outreach Web site, LitSite Alaska. www.uaa.alaska.edu/aqr accolades 17 THE H UMANITIES C E L E B R AT I N G T H E A RT S & H U M A N I T I E S Ask the Questions Discover the Answers n a world where scientific and technological knowledge is said to double every five years or less, the humanities can pride themselves on holding to the eternal verities, the study of what makes us human in spirit and desire through the ages – philosophy, history, language. But in the humanities no less than in the sciences, knowledge advances, as it must advance, if the race is to survive. Because, as H.G. Wells put it not so very long ago, “Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.” The humanities at UAA complement the sciences and deepen students’ understanding of themselves and their world. The Department of History and Geography, for example, takes as its subject everything that human beings have ever thought and done, to the extent that it was remembered, that what was remembered was recorded, and that what was recorded has survived. The learning of history is, by definition, one of humanity’s greatest challenges. Small wonder it is often defined as interpretation and argument without end. And yet knowledge of history is the principal means by which humans discover and preserve their collective identity, through which they glimpse their potential and acquire, if they’re lucky, a clear-eyed view of their limitations. At UAA, students undergoing the intellectual discipline of history examine and interpret the often fragmentary and incomplete documentary records of human activity and try to balance the scientific technique and creative imagination at the heart of the historical enterprise. All this so they can weave fragments of evidence into an intelligent account of human experience. The department offers UAA students a B.A. as well as a minor in history. The award of honors in history recognizes distinguished achievement by undergraduate majors in the study and writing of history. The UAA Department of Philosophy also seeks to develop its students into well-rounded agents of their own destinies, whether they choose to major or minor in philosophy, or wish to acquire the Certificate in Applied Ethics. In either case, students avail themselves of a variety of courses in the central areas of philosophy. They grapple with the most fundamental problems in the field, building confidence so they emerge fully aware of the great historical dilemmas and especially their application to contemporary issues. A brief sample of recent faculty presentations at professional conferences shows the breadth of scholarship the department supports, to the benefit of both I faculty and students. Assistant Prof. Raymond Anthony, for example, delivered a paper last year in Sweden on developing an animal ethics through the philosophy of technology. Associate Prof. and department chair Tom Buller’s paper, delivered in Barcelona a few years ago, was titled “Brains, Lies and Neuroimages.” And Assistant Prof. Stephanie Bauer appeared in Nova Scotia three years ago to ask, “Can traditional models of autonomy suffice?” Philosophy at UAA takes the measure of man and woman from crown to foot while delving deeply into the human soul and its unending negotiations with the external world. Students who pursue a degree in Philosophy at UAA – through the Philosophy track, the Applied Ethics track, or the Law track – appreciate at a rock-bottom level that today the fight for truth and justice in the human condition goes hand in hand with the pulse of neurons, business-investment in the Third World, and the prosaic needs of our animal cousins. The hallmark of the humanities is perhaps the human capacity for language. And at UAA, where some 2,000 students enroll in courses in American Sign Language, Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Alaska Native Languages, Korean, Latin, Russian and Spanish, at levels from beginning to fluency, language is a linchpin in the students’ understanding of cultural diversity. About 100 students study language as their undergraduate concentration. But whether the focus is on language as major or minor or a means to a more sophisticated cultivation of the self, the UAA language student emerges better prepared to live and work in a world in which contact with other cultures is more frequent and in which appreciation and respect for linguistic and cultural diversity is more important. Two new instructors in the UAA Department of Languages illustrate the high value it places on language proficiency, creativity and teaching. The Rev. Koun Franz, a new term instructor of Japanese, was trained as a priest at the Soto Zen monasteries of Zuio Temple in Ehime Prefecture and Shogo Temple in Kumamot Prefecture. Rev. Franz also holds a master's degree in Creative Writing in Fiction from Eastern Washington University. Ms. Margarita Kharlova, from Barnaul, Russia, is the 2007-2008 Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant in Russian. Ms. Kharlova teaches elementary Russian courses and holds focused conversation sessions with advanced-level students of Russian. In addition, she is completing a degree in cognitive linguistics at the Linguistic Institute, Barnaul State Pedagogical College. Broader knowledge and appreciation of our fellow citizens of the world and of our own place within it – this is the great humanities project since the time of the Ancient World. Today’s world is immeasurably more complex than the world of antiquity, which makes that project even more crucial – a responsibility taken seriously at UAA. C O M M U N I T Y CAMPUSES Arts & Humanities on the Community Campuses U AA’s four community campuses – based in Kenai, Kodiak, Palmer and Valdez – enable the university to stretch its arms through much of Southcentral Alaska, extending its educational mission and cultural and scientific influence well beyond Anchorage. Consider that two of the most important cultural events of the year – not just in Alaska but in the American Northwest – are offered by outposts of UAA: Prince William Sound Community College’s Last Frontier Theatre Conference in Valdez, and the Kachemak Bay Writers’ Conference in Homer, produced by UAA’s Kenai Peninsula College (KPC) through the college’s Homer branch, Kachemak Bay Campus. KPC boasts a faculty of high accomplishment in the arts and humanities. Associate Prof. of History Cathryn Pearce, for example, has achieved international fame through her expertise on maritime wrecking – the malicious practice of luring ships onto rocks and disaster through the use of false lights. The BBC documentary series “Timewatch” featured Dr. Pearce in a show on maritime wrecking that aired in the U.K. in December. Her paper on the topic, titled “Luring by False Lights,” will be read in June at the 5th International Congress of Maritime History in Greenwich, England. Meanwhile, KPC Associate Prof. of Art Celia Anderson, adjunct faculty member Joy Falls, several KPC art students and a KPC graduate all had original art work exhibited at the Kenai Fine Arts Center. The arts and humanities enjoy a flowering at the other community campuses as well. Kodiak College, for example, prides itself on offering an opportunity for a truly liberal education through its Department of English, one that gives students time-honored tools for self-discovery and exposure to enduring ideas. Arts classes at Matanuska-Susitna College have led to exhibits of student works in Wasilla. And at Prince William Sound Community College (PWSCC), where the play’s the thing, a proposal to have an Associate of Fine Arts in Playwriting was approved by the Statewide Academic Council and was approved by the Board of Regents in April. The linchpin of dramatic writing at PWSCC is Dawson Moore, whose own plays have been produced in San Francisco, New York, Italy and elsewhere. Moore directs the Last Frontier Theatre Conference. His own playwriting students in Valdez have gone on to enjoy their own success. One, Mollie Ramos, has seen her plays accepted at the Valdez conference, the Fairbanks “8-x-10” festival and others. Few events in the Alaska arts calendar compare with the Last Frontier Theatre Conference or the Kachemak Bay Writers’ Conference. Both events occur in June and draw nationally known figures in theatre, fiction, poetry and creative non-fiction. The conferences shine a glowing spotlight on UAA, give Alaska’s own playwrights and writers unparalleled views into the mysteries of their crafts, and make a positive contribution to the state’s economy by drawing scores of Outsiders. Award-winning author Amy Tan was the keynote speaker at the 2007 Kachemak Bay Writers’ Conference. Below: a writer at the conference takes in the breathtaking scenery of Homer, Alaska. Beautiful Valdez, Alaska, and its Convention Center provide the backdrop every June for the nationally renowned Last Frontier Theatre Conference, when scores of new scripts receive stage readings and professional critiques, all of it under the eye of director Dawson Moore (red tie). accolades 19 S C H O L A R LY RESEARCH C E L E B R AT I N G T H E A RT S & H U M A N I T I E S Associate Prof. of History Cathryn Pearce has been recognized internationally and featured on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) for her expertise on maritime wrecking. Read more about her work on page 19. The Other Side of Research: Scholarship and Creative Activity esearch isn’t all lab coats and beakers. The “other” side of research, called scholarship, is the branch of learning based in the humanities: philosophy, literature, history and fine arts. In these fields, the focus is seeking to understand how humanity adapts to and is affected by all the scientific data we are collecting. How can we not only survive, but actually thrive? The humanities at the University of Alaska Anchorage examine the characteristic of reality, the purpose of human existence, the properties of knowledge and the qualities of sound reasoning, eloquent communication, and creative expression. They study the problems of right conduct in personal, social and political life. They also consider the properties of the divine, the sacred and the mysterious. In these tasks, the humanities reflect upon the world’s heritage of the arts, history, languages, literature, religion and philosophy. Funding for research is always challenging, and individuals in the humanities have fewer opportunities to win grants than their traditional science counterparts. There is a great need to encourage more scholarship; funding and support are crucial to stimulating innovation. UAA support is available through the Chancellor’s Fund for Research and Scholarship and the Office of Undergraduate Research and Scholarship (OURS) of the University Honors College. Other sources are the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). "Our ambition is that every motivated student at UAA should have the opportunities for hands-on inquiry and discovery that will enrich their undergraduate education and point them toward successful professional lives," said Ronald Spatz, Dean of the University Honors College. Currently at UAA, scholarship in the philosophy department may help promote more humane treatment of animals, and the dance department will host a festival this spring which celebrates the universality of the common language of moving one’s body with rhythm. Imagine an art exhibit that encourages us to reconsider our past and try to understand the lessons such reflection can provide as we look to the future. The reward for enhancing scholarship is the advantage it gives to the communities who engage in it. New knowledge gives a competitive edge that increases the standard of living for those who utilize it, from our university campus to the nation as a whole. Scholarship opportunities at UAA can be right outside the door or on the other side of the world. Whereas science isolates a single issue for analysis, the humanities let us see the issue in the bigger picture as it affects our humanity. And scholarship is an effective way to captivate student’s attention and ignite learning. R Heather Flynn in Machu Picchu Help Shape the Future with Your Legacy With a planned gift to UAA, you can help shape the future of higher education in Alaska. To make a difference in our community and state, a bequest – a gift through your will or living trust – is an excellent way to provide for the outstanding higher education UAA provides. Through a bequest, you can direct specific assets, your entire estate or a percentage of your estate to UAA. Or, a charitable gift annuity allows you to easily arrange a planned gift to the University while receiving a steady stream of income payments for life. You can even pick what program your gift goes to. “I believe it’s my job to give back,” said Heather Flynn, M.Ed. ’88, who has donated annually to support the UAA/APU Consortium Library. She has also planned an estate gift for UAA, set up through her will. Flynn makes it a point to give away 50 percent of her income every year to support a variety of charities that hold special meaning for her. “I’ve been fortunate and am financially stable, and UAA has helped with that.” Whichever way you decide is best for you; your legacy will have a positive impact on generations to come. I want to know more about gifts to UAA that provide me with income for life. Send information on including UAA in my will. Name:_________________________________________ Address:_______________________________________ ______________________________________________ Phone:________________________________________ Office of Advancement . University of Alaska Anchorage 3211 Providence Drive . Anchorage, AK 99508 Rates will go down on July 1, so make your gift now and enjoy a higher payout rate for the rest of your life. Sample CGA Rates effective July 2008 for a single beneficiary Age 60–5.7%, Age 70–6.5%, Age 80–8.0%, Age 90+ –11.3% FACULTYACCOLADES Dr. LeeAnn Munk, Chair of the Department of Geological Sciences, went to Antarctica where she studied the transport of metals from glaciers to lakes for the McMurdo Long Term Ecological Research project. This research was part of the National Science Foundation (NSF)-OPP Grant awarded to the Byrd Polar Research Center at Ohio State University. Leonard F. Kirk, assistant director of UAA's Aviation Technology Division, was one of several aviation experts interviewed on PBS's "The News Hour With Jim Lehrer" for his part in developing a new GPS-based system known as ADS-B, which provides navigation aids, weather data, surveillance, communications and flight information services and is more accurate than radar. Kirk also was interviewed by a radio station in New South Wales, Australia for a live broadcast throughout Australia. Dr. Jocelyn Krebs, UAA biology professor, received a $225,000 three-year research grant titled, Role of the Williams Syndrome Transcription Factor (WSTF) in Xenopus neural development. The award will provide supplies and salaries to support student research in Krebs' lab. The award was given by the Whitehall Foundation, a non-profit corporation focused on assisting basic research in vertebrate (excluding clinical) and invertebrate neurobiology in the United States. Krebs’ research is also supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Dr. Travis Rector, UAA physics and astronomy professor, won a $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to develop a new physics and astronomy curriculum that can be used nationwide. He hired Andrew Puckett who on his own during Christmas break discovered archival data that allowed NASA to refine its forecast on what's now being called "Asteroid 2007 WD5," a massive rock about 160 feet long and hurtling toward Mars. The discovery made international news. 22 accolades Dr. Diddy Hitchins, Professor Emerita of political science and international studies, was appointed as a Fulbright Senior Specialist. She will work with the University of Quebec at Montreal (UQAM) to design the prototype of a series of far northern Canadian faculty development institutes with study tours. Dr. Khrys Duddleston, UAA assistant professor of biological sciences, was selected to participate in the 2007-2008 American Society for Microbiology Scholars-in-Residence Program. Only 13 biology educators from around the country were selected to participate in this yearlong residency aimed at improving student learning in the microbiological and biological science. Craig Coray, UAA adjunct instructor of music, authored “Dnaghelt’ana Qut’ana K’eli Ahdelyax: They Sing the Songs of Many People,” a book on Dena’ina songs. It was published by Kijik Corporation in conjunction with the National Park Service and will be distributed among inland communities to help revive the traditional language, song and dance. ENRI faculty, postdoctoral scientists, and graduate students presented five papers at the American Geophysical Union Meeting in San Francisco. They highlight a series of findings including: CO2 released at Toolik Lake, AK; shrub abundance on the North Slope; areas switching from being carbon sources to carbon sinks; rates of soil N cycling; and Alaska lakes vegetation and salmon return intensities. Many of these findings are supported by National Science Foundation (NSF), International Polar Year (IPY) and Biocomplexity awards to Drs. Welker, Sveinbjornsson and Sullivan and represent the culmination of many years of field research projects in Alaska and Greenland. Sherry Simpson, UAA professor and chair of creative writing and literary arts, has published a new book. “The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska” is a collection of lyrical essays recounting Simpson’s adventures exploring the great state of Alaska and the similar elements of soul searching. The book is available from all major book retailers. S P O T L I G H T O N ALUMNI Christian Muntean Working in communities ripped apart by famine, disaster, and even war, and seeing the people of those places desperate and hurting, has caused one Alaskan to dedicate his life to solving those problems. Christian Muntean is that man. As the executive director of Beyond Borders, an Alaska faith-based, humanitarian, nonprofit agency dedicated to empowering communities by building strong leaders and promoting healing through the sharing of their Christian faith, Muntean works on these problems every day. Continued on next page SPOTLIGHT ON ALUMNI w w w. u a a a l u m n i . o r g Muntean first got started on this path shortly after high school when he began doing missionary work. “While working in the Middle East in my early 20s…I realized I needed more training,” Muntean said. He came home and went through the sociology program at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Upon graduating, he worked for various emergency relief and rehabilitation programs in areas like Sudan, Kenya and Kosovo. Muntean has since come home to Alaska where he’s working to help wounded rural Alaska communities move beyond their tribulations through the Beyond Border’s Transforming Leaders program, which trains leaders in rural areas. According to Beyond Borders, the rural communities of Alaska lead the nation in rates of suicide and poverty, as well as sexual, substance and domestic abuse. “Our vision for rural Alaska is that hurting communities will become healing communities,” Muntean said. “We work with any leader who desires to see his or her community do well.” “One thing that drives me has to do with the time I’ve spent in conflict and war zones,” Muntean explained. “You can feel a real sense of despair that nothing will change because you never hear of a willingness to change.” Working in Alaska has been somewhat different. “Some years ago, I began to recognize that the Alaska Native people were different,” Muntean said. “And that fills me with hope.” It has taken a lot of learning for Muntean to get to this point. His experiences in the field have been vital to his understanding of peoples and cultures, but his education gave him greater insight into underlying themes within those cultures. “I didn’t recognize it at the time, but after I graduated I realized what an absolute top-notch training I received from UAA,” Muntean said. “In my first assessment of a refugee camp, I clearly remember referring back to both theoretical and assessment models I had been introduced to at UAA.” Muntean said this helped him identify issues within the village that were being intentionally hidden. It wasn’t just the subject matter that held interest for Muntean inside the halls of UAA, but the professors that captured his imagination. Several professors captivated him during the course of his study. “They had a very clear sense of interest in their subject, they enjoyed teaching and their classes all made me consider switching majors at some point,” he said. Profile by Morgan Sneed–JPC 201 Morgan Sneed, 26, is a Journalism and Public Communications major at UAA. He is a combat correspondent for the U.S. Air Force. He does video production and documentation for the Air Force and has recently begun doing broadcast journalism. Alumni giving impacts scholarships at UAA Back Row: Sarah Aiken, Letitia Churchill, Michelle Steffens; Center: Lindsey Moore 24 accolades Scholarships are an investment in a young person’s future. For many UAA students, scholarships mean the difference between holding two jobs or one, or being able to attend school at all. For other students, scholarships reward their creativity and talent. Every scholarship at UAA nurtures Alaska’s future teachers, engineers, managers, artists, nurses and scientists, among others. The cost to attend UAA for an undergraduate resident can run as high as $6,000 per year; room, board, transportation and other costs can run another $9,000. To reduce the financial burden and keep students focusing on acaThis scholarship will demic success, financial aid and assist me in completscholarships are available. Nearly ing my life-long goal of half of all students at UAA receive some sort of financial aid. Last year, continuing to assist friends and alumni gave generous and empower those in outright gifts and endowments, proneed and to show them viding more than $465,000 in scholarship funds. Overall, UAA offers stuthat other people care dents more than 200 private scholarabout them. ships, changing the lives of hundreds – Jennie Schroll, Master of Social Work of students. The UAA Alumni Association provides a handful of UAA’s scholarships – the Alumni Scholarships. These scholarships are awarded annually to six students, one from each of UAA’s schools and colleges. Since 1982, the Association has provided more than $83,000 in scholarship support to students. These scholarships are made possible by the generosity of alumni who contribute each year through the UAA Annual Fund and the Alumni Association's annual scholarship raffle sponsored by Alaska Airlines, combined with earnings from the Alumni Permanent Scholarship Endowed Fund. This is just one way the Alumni Association is giving back to UAA in support of today's students. Seawolf alumni show strong support of UAA The Rasmuson Challenge to Alumni ended on Dec. 31, 2007, meeting 100 percent of the $100,000 dollar-fordollar match of eligible gifts. The net result was $200,000 of impact from the generosity of UAA alums. Alumni giving also exceeded that amount with an additional $7,925 in gifts. Gifts from this challenge grant have touched every corner of UAA, including all of UAA’s schools and colleges, 38 different departments, several extended campuses and at least 51 specific University of Alaska Foundation funds. Quotes from Scholarship Recipients “Your financial support has opened the door to many new and exciting possibilities which will hopefully become realities. I thank you for your investment in my future.” – Michelle Steffens, Bachelor of Arts in Economics “Politics is my passion. Alaska politics right now are in serious need of new, honest faces. I think that receiving a scholarship helps to keep me focused on the goal of becoming that much needed new face.” – John H. Roberson III, Pat Brakke Memorial Scholarship Winner “This scholarship has further inspired my motivation to obtain my degree and to continue to be involved with my university and community. I am proud that the University of Alaska Anchorage offers numerous interesting, goal oriented and constructive activities for students.” – Sarah Aiken, Bachelor of Science in Geomatics “Your generosity has enabled me the freedom to focus on my studies and has lightened my financial worries. I am forever grateful for this gift and only hope that one day I can do the same for someone else.” – Letitia Churchill, Associate of Applied Science in Nursing “Thank you for your generous contribution to my education; my dreams seem even more realistic.” – Lindsey Moore, Master of Education in K-12 School Counseling These students are just a select few of the lives touched by scholarship support. Financial support provided by scholarships truly makes a difference for a student’s education and future career goals. To find out how you can designate your annual gift to the Alumni Permanent Endowed Scholarship Fund visit www.uaa.alaska.edu/giving, or contact Stacey Marsh, Executive Director of the UAA Alumni Association, at (907) 786-1941, or Julia Martinez, Director of Annual Giving, at (907) 786-1278. * The amount of the scholarship award is influenced by the market and the earnings available to be distributed from the endowment each year. Additionally, fundraising activity earnings from the UAA Alumni Association annual raffle also impact the amount of the scholarships. Dr. Matthew Johnson F.A.M.I.L.Y. is everything to Dr. Matthew Johnson, an ’84 graduate of UAA’s Bachelor of Social Work program. Johnson is founder and president of F.A.M.I.L.Y. Rules, Inc., one of the fastest growing parenting programs in the United States. He has been teaching “Positive Parenting With A Plan (Grades K-12): FAMILY Rules” since 1986, and in 2000 decided to put his teachings into a book. His book and teachings have proven to be a huge success, with Dr. Johnson speaking in 80 cities throughout the United States and Canada each year to share his experiences with professionals and parents. Dr. Johnson also has a private practice, providing psychological counseling and testing services to children, adolescents, adults, couples and families. “A lot of parents ‘fly-by-the-seat-of-theirpants’ while parenting, but FAMILY Rules provides parents with a game plan to guide them along,” said Dr. Johnson. Having grown up in a dysfunctional family, Dr. Johnson understands how the lack of organization, structure, accountability and communication can lead to marital and family chaos in the home. FAMILY Rules targets the entire family system for change, not just the child(ren). Each person in the family is required to improve his or her attitudes and behaviors in a positive manner. Dr. Johnson’s book is used across the nation in schools, treatment facilities, churches, juvenile and divorce – Dr. Matthew Johnson courts, child protection and foster care agencies, and as a textbook in graduate programs. In 1980, Dr. Johnson, also known as “Dr. J,” came to Alaska from Salem, Oregon to attend UAA on a full-ride basketball scholarship. “Alaska was the last place I thought I’d play ball, but it was the best thing that could’ve ever happened to me,” said Dr. Johnson. At 6’9”, Matthew was one heck of a basketball player. One of his proudest moments at UAA was when he scored his first two collegiate points against James Worthy of North Carolina in the Great Alaska Shootout, aired nationally on ESPN. But his experience at UAA wasn’t all about basketball. After taking a career inventory test in high school, Matthew learned that he would enjoy being a taxi driver, bartender, forest ranger or a counselor. He chose to go the counselor route, earning his Bachelor of Social Work degree with emphases on family and child welfare. “At the time, UAA didn’t have a Master of Social Work program, so I gained a lot of great experience in Anchorage with my bachelor’s degree before moving onto graduate school,” said Dr. Johnson. “I wouldn’t have gotten that kind of experience anywhere else but in Anchorage.” After earning his B.S.W. degree at UAA and gaining some experience in Anchorage, “Dr. J” moved to New Jersey to work on his Master of Social Work degree at Rutgers University. From there he went to George Fox University to complete his Master of Arts and Doctor of Psychology degrees in Clinical Psychology. “Dr. J”, his wife, their four kids and their dogs currently call Grants Pass, Oregon home. He enjoys swimming and fishing in the Rogue River, biking and shooting hoops with his kids. “I’m so proud of my kids,” said Dr. Johnson. “They’re awesome basketball players, great students, well-behaved and a great testimony to the success of my career as a parenting professional.” What’s next for “Dr. J”? “I plan to continue to take over the world one family at a time,” said Dr. Johnson. “My long-term goal is to kick Dr. Phil’s butt. I want to take over his market and send him packin’! I’m kinder, gentler, funnier, taller and I have more hair.” Alaska was the last place I thought I’d play ball, but it was the best thing that could’ve ever happened to me. accolades 25 Don’t watch from the sidelines – Photo courtesy of Gregg Segal Join the team! Kendra Guffey dons her pirate swag for a photo shoot with Los Angeles Magazine. This photograph was taken at the Eco Dive Center in Culver City, California, where Kendra works as an assistant dive instructor. Kendra Guffey Being a scuba instructor, a costumer, a Web designer and a reality-show pirate is all in a day’s work for UAA alumna Kendra Guffey. Not only does Guffey balance working five jobs, she also finds time to do volunteer work and takes pleasure in traveling the globe. The 1990 graduate might be best known for appearing on the CBS reality show ”Pirate Master,” which followed 16 modern-day pirates in their quest for gold worth $1 million on the Caribbean island nation of Dominica in summer 2007. The program, still featured online at cbs.com, continues to generate fan mail for Guffey, who says she was the only “true pirate” on the show, having participated in a pirate guild for years. Since her appearance on the show, she has been featured in several magazines and has made appearances at charity events. Adventure has always been a way of life for Guffey, 39, who grew up in Alaska hunting, fishing, hiking and clamming with her family. Guffey’s parents are commercial fishermen in Prince William Sound, and Kendra spends time on their boat when she comes home to visit. She considers herself a skilled outdoorswoman with a competitive drive. “She is interested in almost everything,” testifies her mom, Carole Guffey. Guffey’s many interests meant she took her time figuring out her major at UAA before settling on completing an English degree. “English has helped me with the ability to work almost any job,” Guffey says. And as varied as her jobs have been, they’ve all required her to communicate effectively. Although she works as an assistant scuba instructor at Eco Dive Center in Los Angeles, Guffey also performs as a pirate in theatrical groups at festivals, movie openings, fairs and various entertainment events. She’s also pursuing studies in costuming at Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles, hoping to become a costumer for film and television productions. An adventurous spirit has informed all of Guffey’s life choices, from climbing to Everest Base Camp in Nepal at 17,655 feet, to shark diving in South Africa, to landing a gig on a reality television program. Her next adventure – climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro to help raise money for diabetes research. Although she eventually wants to return to her home state for good, Guffey says she plans on “seeing the world above and below the ocean.” In fact, Guffey considers her greatest accomplishment since graduating from UAA is living out her dreams — as a real pirate would, she says. “I am proud of the way I live my life.” The UAA Alumni Association provides alumni networking activities, career services, campus events, legislative affairs outreach and regional alumni programming. We have been working hard to increase our activity and communication with UAA alumni locally, regionally and across the globe and it’s being noticed. UAA Alumni and the Alumni Association are more visible and active today than ever before! No matter where you live, or what your expertise is, there is a place for you in the UAA Alumni Association. Visit www.uaaalumni.org today and take a look at the opportunities available. If you live in Anchorage, join the Events Committee and help plan fun, social, networking activities that draw alumni together. Do you like to write and be creative? The Communications Committee may be the perfect place for you. If you want to help advocate for higher education in Alaska and allocating resources to UAA, the Legislative Outreach Committee will give you the opportunity to influence the future of higher education in Alaska. Have just a few hours here and there to give? Volunteer for a specific activity or event that you can give two, three or four hours to on a specific day. You say you don’t live close enough to get involved? We say don’t worry – you still can help! Sign up to be a Regional Contact and help promote membership in your area! We’ll even work with you to help identify alumni living and working near you so you can get together and network, or just stay in touch with each other. Our 15-member Board of Directors represents the 30,000+ alumni of UAA. If you are interested in representing the members of the Alumni Association and helping to shape our future, consider running for a seat on the Board of Directors. Application information is available at www.uaaalumni.org. This is YOUR Alumni Association – don’t stand on the sidelines and watch, join the team and get involved today! Call the UAA Alumni Association today at (907) 786-1942 or visit us on the Web at www.uaaalumni.org. It’s a great day to be a Seawolf! Stacey Marsh Executive Director, UAA Alumni Association Profile by Jennifer McMullen – JPC 201 Jennifer was born and raised in Alaska. She is a Journalism and Public Communications student at UAA. Jennifer works part-time for Starbucks Coffee, where she is a barista and supervisor. She enjoys playing the piano, snowboarding, hiking, camping and hanging out with her family and friends. After graduating from UAA, Jennifer hopes to work as a magazine journalist. 26 accolades “Wolf Wrack” is one of the 11 Big Wild Seawolves that hang in the Wells Fargo Sports Complex. “Wolf Wrack” was created by Debbie Deboc and sponsored by the Nye Family of Dealerships. SPOTLIGHT ON ALUMNI w w w. u a a a l u m n i . o r g UAA ALUMNI Give Back A record number of nearly 1,500 alumni donors gave to UAA during FY06-07. These alums gave more than $220,000 to UAA, more than any previous year. In 2007, alumni giving revenue accounted for 6 percent of total philanthropic dollars raised, triple that of 2004. Collectively since 2004, UAA alums gave more than $746,000 dollars in philanthropic support. The alumni participation rate for 2007 topped 5 percent, the strongest showing to date. 21% So far this year (FY07-08), more than 1,100 alumni have given to UAA – well on the way to breaking last year’s record. There were 463 new alumni who gave for the very first time in 2007, doubling from the prior year. 49% 30% UAA has an alumni donor in each of the 50 United States. To date in 2008, alumni account for 66 percent of UAA’s total donors, although corporations still represent the greatest source of philanthropic revenue to UAA. These numbers refer to the University of Alaska Anchorage FY07. FY07 started on July 1, 2006 and ended on June 30, 2007. Where do Alumni Give ? Unrestricted/The UAA Annual Fund* Scholarships Program Support & Faculty Excellence * The UAA Annual Fund is the most flexible and strategic fund to support UAA. These unrestricted dollars allow impact to students and programs as opportunities arise. Photo courtesy Linda E. Allen Brenda Fickey career. Her time away from the classroom provided her the opportunity to concentrate on her own writing, at which point she decided to focus on children’s literature. “I’m proud of publishing my first book in the shadows of my husband’s “Hank Baker is alone in death,” said Fickey. “Instead of folding in on myself, I was driven to write the his belief that his father book in his honor. My second book restored my joy and excitement for what lies is still alive. Corporal ahead, beyond my teaching career, toward a new career in writing.” Baker was declared Fickey attributes many of her successes to the experiences she gained at the missing seven years University of Alaska Anchorage. “Throughout my teaching and writing careers, earlier, after the Battle I’ve fallen back on the techniques I learned at UAA,” said Fickey. “The educaof Belleau Woods in tion courses I took at UAA, literally all of them, helped me define my own special France at the end of techniques and success stories.” Upon her graduation from UAA, Brenda immeWorld War I. When diately started teaching. She acquired an adjunct teaching position at Wayland Hank finds a skeleton in Baptist University, and also worked as an adjunct professor at UAA. One of her the woods near his family's property, questions arise about who it was. He decides most memorable experiences at UAA was being on the “other side” of a college to investigate the mystery on his own with the help of two friends. Will he discover classroom, helping others to become more profithe skeleton is his missing father or someone else?” cient writers. These words describe the book Whispering Darkness, While teaching at UAA, Fickey received two written by Brenda Fickey, a 1990 graduate of UAA’s “Who’s Who Among Colleges and Universities” Master of Education program. Fickey is an educator and awards. In 2007 she was named the “Cambridge children’s novelist currently residing in Aurora, Colorado. – Brenda Fickey Who’s Who for Educators and Professionals.” Whispering Darkness, her first novel, was published in Currently, she keeps busy by teaching language arts, science, history, and March 2007, and her second novel, Echoing Silence, is in the works. Both books are music and drama to 7th and 8th graders at Centennial Christian Academy, a set in southern Arkansas and are based loosely on stories her grandmother once small private school in Aurora, Colorado. Nearing the end of her 28-year stint as shared with her. To begin the third book in her series, Brenda will travel to Arkansas an educator, Brenda is excited to launch into her career as a full-time writer. during the summer of 2008 to begin research for her next novel. Her fan base con“I’m just getting started on what I hope to be a very satisfying and enjoyable sists mainly of children between eight and 12 years old, but she also has fans in career as a children’s novelist,” said Fickey. “Someday I hope to be an awardtheir 90s that enjoy reliving their childhood through Brenda’s words. winning writer or have my books on the big screen, but that’s still a dream!” In 1998, Brenda’s husband became ill and in 2000 his health prompted their family Throughout my teaching and writing careers, I’ve fallen back on the techniques I learned at UAA. to move to Colorado. To care for her husband, Brenda set aside her teaching accolades 27 DRIVE WITH PRIDE! Support the University of Alaska Anchorage Alumni Association by purchasing your very own UAA license plate! Order numbered plates or get creative and personalize your plates. Each plate costs $50. All proceeds from the plates support UAA Alumni Association activities. For more information visit www.uaaalumni.org or call (907) 786-1941. To order your plates online visit https://www.dmv.alaska.gov/dmv_online_ services/akpages/akplate.aspx. Go Seawolves! 2007 Alumni & Friends Achievement Awards Pictured from left to right: Shane Mitchell, Debra Lopez, Eric Lopez, Melanie Baca Osborne, Garry Mealor, Summer Engler and Leo Bustad. Not pictured: Lynn Koshiyama, Libby Roderick Shane Mitchell, Community Service Award Leo Bustad, University Service Award Lynn Koshiyama; Garry Mealor, Distinguished Teaching Award Libby Roderick, Staff Award for Excellence Summer Engler, Student Spirit Award Eric and Debra Lopez, Special Recognition Award Melanie Baca Osborne, Past Presidents’ Club Award It’s never too early to think about next year. For a complete list of award categories, visit www.uaaalumni.org. 28 accolades On Friday, Feb. 15, 2008 the University of Alaska Anchorage Alumni Association recognized the recipients of the 2007 Alumni & Friends Achievement Awards. Each recipient was recognized for exceptional and outstanding service in his or her respective category. The Alumni & Friends Achievement Awards were created in 1986 to honor individual alumni, faculty, staff, students and volunteers who have contributed their time, efforts and creativity to the promotion of UAA, the State of Alaska and the communities in which they live. SPOTLIGHT ON ALUMNI w w w. u a a a l u m n i . o r g ALUM T R AC K S ‘00s ’01 Shannon L. Blood, A.A. General Program, has recently become the new director of corporate communications at Northwest Trustee Services. Her new role is to direct the communication initiatives for this and other affiliated companies including Northwest Title, LLC; Routh Crabtree Olsen, PS; Foreclosure Expeditors/Initiators, LLC; Alaska Trustee, LLC; and USA Foreclosure.com. ’01, ‘07 Micaela H. Jones, A.A.S. Accounting, M.B.A. Business Administration, spent 10 years serving our country in the U.S. Air Force and spent time in the area of operations during Desert Storm. She has since started a career as the regional director of Real Estate and Development for Providence Health and Services, Alaska. She is married to UAA graduate Tracy D. Tucker (’93 B.B.A. Accounting) and has five children. ‘02 Gary S. Weiler, B.B.A. Management Information Systems, returned to Alaska in July 2007 from a twoyear deployment to the Gulf Region Division in Baghdad, Iraq with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. . ’03 Dr. Michael R. Howarth, M.F.A. Creative Writing and Literary Arts, earned a doctorate in English from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, with the completion of the dissertation, “Under the Bed Creeping: a Psychoanalytic Approach to Gothicism in Children’s Literature.” ‘07 Sadat Aliu, B.S. Civil Engineering, was recently hired as a staff engineer in the civil engineering department at R&M Consultants, Inc. Since joining R&M, Aliu has been providing design support on the AWWU C-2 A-B sewer upgrade and Arctic Boulevard rehabilitation: Tudor to Raspberry projects. ‘07 Kamryn A. Brooks, B.A. Music, now works in the Business Development Department of Chugach Alaska Corporation. ‘07 Linnzi E. Doerr, B.B.A. Accounting, was hired by R&M Consultants, Inc. as accounting supervisor. Prior to joining R&M, she was the office manager for Northwest Food Services. ’08 Aurora Hustad, B.S. Natural Sciences, has recently joined PND Engineers, Inc. as an environmental scientist in the Anchorage office. ‘92 Curtis Finch, M.Ed. Public School Administration, is the current superintendent of Mecost-Osceola Intermediate School District in Big Rapids, Michigan. ’94 Roald E. Helgesen, B.A. Political Science, has been selected by Southeast Regional Health Consortium (SEARHC) to be its new president and chief executive officer. Helgesen is a former SEARHC vice president of administration. ’97 Carol M. Swinson, B.A. Journalism and Public Communications, separated from active duty in the U.S. Coast Guard in June 2007 at the rank of lieutenant after five years of service. She also worked as a public relations writer at a community college and as a copywriter at advertising agencies in both New Mexico and Alaska. She currently lives in Jacksonville, Florida. Carol is married to Billy Swinson and is a stepmom to Jennifer (13) and Tyler (10). ’03 Jeremy E. Shiok, M.F.A. Creative Writing and Literary Arts, was recently hired at the architecture firm Bezek Durst Seiser as a business development manager. He will manage the company’s marketing plan, proposal development and contracts quality review procedures. ‘03 1st Lt. Nickoles A. Steward, B.A. Justice, was recently designated a naval aviator while serving with Helicopter Training Squadron 18 in Milton, Florida. Steward was represented with coveted “Wings of Gold,” marking the culmination of months of flight training. ’04 Elizabeth L. Pendlay, B.A. Political Science, was recently hired by the North Dakota Supreme Court as a clerk. ’05 Matthew Gilbert, B.A. English, interned at the Cabinet level and at the Department of Defense in the summer of 2006. He was invited to the South Lawn of the White House to see President Bush re-authorize the Voting Act of 1965. The UAA Admissions and Financial Aid staff celebrates earning the1st place trophy for the Large Group category in the 2007 Homecoming Spirit Contest. The staff transformed their department, complete with a hockey rink, volleyball court, press boxes, locker rooms and spirited fans! ’08 Emily L. Tweto, B.S. Psychology, joined OrthoSynetics as executive administrative assistant. She will be working in the Information Technology Department, and will also help manage the day-to-day operations of the Dallas office. ’98 Capt. Don R. Leaver II, B.S. Technology, received orders to Iraq for 15 months and is scheduled to return in December 2008. He plans to take his UAA house flag and take pictures with it throughout Iraq. ‘70s ‘90s ’06 Jessica A. Reyna, B.A. Psychology, was recently hired by AT&T as an events manager. She will be responsible for event planning, sponsorship support and community relations initiatives throughout Alaska. ’06 Sterling Sears, B.S. Aviation Technology, has joined Alaska USA Trust Co. as trust and investment services officer. He is responsible for assisting clients in identifying their individual investment goals and developing customized investment programs to meet their needs. ’90 Kevin D. Davis, B.S. Civil Engineering, joined Ulteig Engineers in Sioux Falls. Davis has 17 years of experience and is licensed in Alaska, Colorado, Alabama and Alberta, Canada. ’90 Brenda D. Fickey, M.Ed. Secondary Education, became a published children’s book author as of March 2007 with her first book, Whispering Darkness. She is currently working on her second book, to be released in 2008. Fickey is also listed in the 2007/2008 Cambridge Who’s Who among Women Professionals and Educators. ’78 Gail Dekreon, B.A. Sociology, has been appointed as the 2007-2008 president of Soroptimist International of San Francisco, a volunteer service organization for women in business, management and the professions. Got news? Please send all updates to [email protected] and be sure to include your full name, degree, year graduated and any information you would like to share with your fellow alumni. For more information on the UAA Alumni Association, visit http://www.uaaalumni.org. accolades 29 GENEROUS DONORS UAA Annual Giving: A New Tradition, Growing Strong Giving to UAA transforms lives and builds stronger futures, and the University of Connecticut, and completing every gift makes a difference. UAA alumni are supporting the a post-doctoral research fellowship at growing tradition of annual giving with their philanthropic gifts to Indiana University, Sheffert is now a cogni- their alma mater. tive psychology professor and the under- Currently, UAA alums are contacted in a variety of ways to graduate program director of the Psychology hear why their support is important and to learn about their Department at Central Michigan University. opportunities to give. In 2007, the total philanthropic dollars given by alums to UAA hit a record of more than $220,000. “Attending UAA was a very positive experience for me,” said Sheffert. “I learned the nuts and bolts of science and research, and I had many opportunities to work closely philanthropic dollars and why their participation in giving matters. with faculty advisors. My research experi- Being a part of UAA’s success not only feels good, but also makes ence at UAA was key for my acceptance into our community, economy and our state a better place to live—for graduate school and it essentially secured this generation and the next. Additionally, the level of alumni my future. UAA opened so many doors participation in giving can leverage larger support from for me.” corporations and foundations. Photo by Timeless Moments Annual giving to UAA is on the rise. This trend will continue, as more alumni understand why UAA is a great investment for their Sonya Sheffert “I decided to give to UAA because I received scholarships in Anchorage native Sonya Sheffert graduated from UAA in 1989 with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology. After earning her Ph.D. at college and I understand how even a small amount of money can make a huge difference for a student.” Giving to UAA a lifetime of opportunity Annual Gifts . Scholarships . Special Gifts . Endowments . Planned Giving Support UAA this year with a tax deductable gift. For more information on the ways to give, please contact the Office of Development at (907) 786-4847 or toll free at 1-877-482-2230 or www.uaa.alaska.edu/giving. Office of Advancement University of Alaska Anchorage 3211 Providence Drive . Anchorage, AK 99508 Non-Profit Organization US Postage PAID Permit No 107 Anchorage AK