communication and fine arts 2015

14
Arts Communication [ 2015]

Upload: central-michigan-university

Post on 23-Jul-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Newsletter contributors

PhotographersRobert BarclayPeggy BrisbaneSteve Jessmore, ‘81

Graphic Designer Amanda St. Juliana, ‘06

WritersDan Digmann, M.A. ‘15Darcy Orlik, ’92, M.S.A. ’95Josh PalmerSamantha SmallishHalle Sobczak

VideographersMason FlickAaron Jones, ‘06, M.A. ’12

features 3 A letter from the Dean

4 CCFA programs play pivotal roles with CMU basketball

6 Graphic design students create the looks for many New Venture Competition client materials

CMU’s Sixth Man Band

A look behind the scenes at News Central 34

2015 College of Communication and Fine Arts Day

Client meeting to talk product design options

7 Printing in 3D

8 Awards and highlights

10 Virtual environments in reality

11 Hartman, Rau retire

development12 Honor Roll of Donors

13 Development update

ccfa.cmich.edu 989-774-1885

CMU is an AA/EO institution, providing equal opportunity to all persons, including minorities, females, veterans and individuals with disabilities (see cmich.edu/ocrie). Produced by University Communications. UComm 9331-(8/15)

Take a video tour of CCFA’s award-winning programs

talents in a new location this year – Beaver Island. The Department of Journalism received full reaccreditation, placing the Department of Journalism as one of two accredited journalism programs in Michigan. Finally, the School of Music has a new Morey initiative. Students and faculty in the Department of Communication Disorders and the School of Music are partnering with the Laurels nursing and rehabilitation center to enhance communication, quality of life and positive interactions in individuals living with dementia.

Introducing new CCFA Dean Janet Hethorn In addition to the departmental and programmatic changes, there also are personnel changes this year. I would like to extend a warm welcome to Janet Hethorn. She will serve as the new dean for the College of Communication and Fine Arts. She joins us from the University of Delaware, where she was leading the interdisciplinary Design Institute. Joining Dean Hethorn in the CCFA dean’s office is Lesley Withers. Lesley will continue to serve the college in the role of interim associate dean. Her strong interpersonal communication skills and her commitment to collaboration are evident in her research, teaching and administrative style.

On a personal note, I will be returning to my role as professor in the Department of Communication and Dramatic Arts. I have enjoyed working with the talented and dedicated faculty, staff, students and alumni within the college. The College of Communication and Fine Arts is a strong and vibrant college. I am looking forward to contributing from the third floor of Moore Hall.

Shelly Schaefer Hinck, interim dean College of Communication and Dramatic Arts

DeanA letter from the interim

CCFA embraces collaborative opportunities with other programs and colleges

Collaboration, innovation, change and creativity represent the activities addressed in this newsletter; the College of Communication and Fine Arts understands the importance of partnerships and the development of forward thinking educational opportunities.

Whether it is creating opportunities for Broadcast and Cinematic Arts students to work closely with CMU Athletics in providing media coverage for women’s basketball, men’s baseball and other sports or partnering with the College of Education and Human Services in the development of a MakerBot 3D innovative printing center, CCFA understands the value of collaboration. In this newsletter you will find just a few of the many partnerships, awards and recognitions that the faculty, students and staff within CCFA have received.

Snapshot of collaborative efforts The college continues to move forward in the introduction of new curricular majors, the evaluation of current department programs and community outreach and student recruitment. In addition to the new MakerBot 3D printing center, the Department of Art and Design has received approval to offer a major in art history. In response to acute industry needs and in cooperation with the Department of Marketing, the School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts now is offering a new electronic media sales minor. The Department of Communication and Dramatic Arts has successfully completed program review for both the communication and the theatre areas within the department. Additionally, summer theatre shared its

Lesley Withers

Janet Hethorn

Shelly Schaefer Hinck

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 3

CCFA programs play pivotal roles with CMU basketball

Chris Fowler, CMU basketball point guard

Tenor saxophone player Samantha Quart, left, along with other Sixth Man Band members, fire up the the crowd at a CMU basketball game.

The CMU women’s and men’s basketball programs produced a pair of historic seasons in 2014-15.

The women were led by senior guard Crystal Bradford, who the Los Angeles Sparks selected as the seventh overall pick in the WNBA draft, and the men captured their first Mid-American Conference regular-season championship since 2003.

Historic, yes, but neither season would have seemed so fulfilled without key support from programs within the College of Communication and Fine Arts.

See here how CCFA fires up the energy and excitement of the games beyond the on-court action.

On the same teams

Basketball standouts include CCFA students The College of Communication and Fine Arts had a strong presence on the court of McGuirk Arena this past season.

CMU men’s basketball point guard Chris Fowler led the Chippewas in scoring (16.2 points per game) and assists (6.1). Off the court, the Southfield senior can be found pursuing another passion, majoring in theatre and interpretation.

CCFA programs also played a large role in recruiting a star transfer for the women’s basketball team. Junior Jasmine Harris says she chose to transfer from the University of Massachusetts to Central Michigan University

and major in broadcast and cinematic arts after receiving a tour of the broadcast school.

“I came to visit and the director of the broadcasting school

gave my parents and I a tour of everything that you have to offer, and it was pretty much done after that,” Harris said. “I knew where I was

going.”

View Jasmine Harris video, produced by BCA graduate student Mason Flick and first place winner in the News Feature/Michigan Association of Broadcasters College Television Category.

The Sixth Man Band brings arena to lifeBy Samantha Smallish

Some fans show their support by attending games. Others send their best wishes via social media. And yet others take a more creative approach.

The five players on the court work every day to perfect their skills and win games. But the CMU women’s and men’s basketball teams wouldn’t be complete without their sixth player.

The Sixth Man Band performs at every men’s and women’s home basketball game, and the group of CMU students lives up to its name.

From pregame to the final buzzer, the Sixth Man Band supports the teams unlike any other fan – through their music.

“We cheer them on, we’re their music when they’re warming up,” said Samantha Quart, a tenor saxophone player in the band. “We try to do songs that really pump them up and make them want to play even harder.”

Come game time, Quart is full of energy and ready to support her Chippewas through 40 minutes of play.

“It’s really like I’m in the game,” she said. “We support them 150 percent, every game, no matter what.”

The Bay City senior is a music education major, and she hopes to transfer her passion for music from the court to the classroom.

Aside from the Sixth Man Band, Quart also has participated in the Chippewa Marching Band and in various ensembles. These activities, along with her off-campus job and work in the classroom, have prepared Quart for life after the final buzzer.

“All of my involvements have made me good at multitasking,” she said. “Also, I’ve built a lot of relationships with professors and fellow musicians who are going to be writing music and books that I’ll eventually use in my classroom, and I connect with them because we were part of the same college.”

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 5

School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts students Adam Jaksa and Matt Kearney provide their insight and analysis during a CMU basketball television broadcast.

‘We cheer them on, we’re their music when they’re warming up.’

- Samantha Quart, a tenor saxophone player in the Sixth Man Band

View opening to Sports Central, a student-produced show aired on MHTV

Broadcasting students go big time working with ESPNBy Halle Sobczak

Opportunities for student growth and career development are everywhere in the School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts. This now includes a blooming relationship with ESPN.

The premier sports network expanded its coverage of MAC athletics last year to include basketball. With such a high quantity of basketball games throughout the season, ESPN enlisted the help of CCFA to make the expanded coverage possible, through the involvement of students.

“If you would have told me three years ago that as a junior in college I would be working for ESPN, I would have told you that you were crazy,” said broadcast and cinematic arts major Matthew Kearney.

Kearney said the opportunity to work with ESPN has been incredible.

“We get so much more exposure because the ESPN platform is available for anyone who has access to the Internet,” he said. “It’s surreal to think about how many people have access to our content now.”

CMU Intercollegiate Athletics Director of Multimedia Services Todd Edwards said the partnership has enabled students to learn about video production and gain hands-on experience as well.

“We take any student with a good attitude, a strong work ethic and a willingness to learn,” Edwards said. “The students who work for us have every chance to learn and perfect their skills. With our new working relationship with ESPN, student opportunities are greater than ever before.”

As if having the opportunity to broadcast for ESPN was not enough to fire up BCA students, it also was the most successful season the CMU men’s basketball team has seen in years.

“The coaches and student-athletes make us feel like we’re a part of the team,” Kearney said. “They really appreciate us and make us feel like what we do plays an integral role.”

Erin Cross and Domonique Byrd bubbled with anticipation as they sat at a classroom table with a poised team of three College of Communication and Fine Arts students, Laura Clift, Zachary Smith and Kellie Spanos, majoring in graphic design.

This was a big day for Cross and Byrd – an undergraduate health administration major and biology graduate student, respectively – who created the product AcneFix to enter in Central Michigan University’s New Venture Competition. They were seeing the final packaging and marketing material designs for the oral skin care beverage they were set to pitch at the annual event.

“Oh my goodness,” Cross, a Benton Harbor senior, said as she spun the fully designed four-ounce plastic bottle in her hands. “It looks amazing!”

Product AppearancesThe three other students watched with equal amounts of anticipation as Cross and Byrd enthusiastically pored through the mocked-up packaging, labels and logos. It also was a big day for Clift, Smith and Spanos, who, along with teammate Nathan Kerinen, created the looks for AcneFix.

Clift, Smith and Spanos were doing some pitching of their own as they presented the pieces they crafted through months of creative collaboration between themselves and their clients.

“I can’t believe how it all came together,” said Clift. “Seeing it all come to life makes me even more excited about doing this kind of work after college.”

This big day started at a classroom table, but it quickly was transformed into a corporate conference table as the conversations about cost-saving measures and label appearances continued.

Graphic design students create the looks for many NVC client materials

6 College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015

The College of Business Administration’s Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship leads the New Venture Competition as a forum for learning, identifying, nurturing and showcasing emerging entrepreneurs and their businesses. The event is open to students of all academic disciplines. There also is an agreement with the College of Communication and Fine Arts to have graphic design students available to design product logos, business cards, websites and commercial packaging.

Much of this is coordinated through the graphic design class “Design Bureau,” which Art and Design Professor David Stairs teaches.

“Having this experience really helped me to see some of the issues and concerns I’ll have to address in the working world,” Smith said as he flipped through collections of his product sketches.

Graphic design student Laura Clift presents the final packaging details to the New Venture Competition clients who created the product AcneFix.

Final packaging and design for AcneFix as created by CCFA graphic design majors Laura Clift, Zachary Smith, Kellie Spanos and Nathan Kerinen.

Innovative center will support students in two separate colleges

Wightman Hall 143 underwent remodeling this summer to make space for a lab of 3D printers and the construction of CMU’s MakerBot Center of Innovation, the first of its kind at a public school in the Midwest.

MakerBot, the company that creates the printers, will supply the university with approximately 30 3D printers that will be programmed to work with computer software to generate a three-dimensional rendering of an object. The rendering could then be sent to a 3D printer, which would use plastic filaments of varying thicknesses to sculpt, or print, the object.

The Provost’s Office is contributing $90,000 toward the project, with the College of Communication and Fine Arts and the College of Education and Human Services each contributing an additional $130,000.

Larry Burditt, chair of the department of art and design, said the opportunities this new technology provides will greatly impact students.

Broadcast and Cinematic Arts joins Marketing and Hospitality Services Administration for academic minorA new electronic media sales minor is offering students in-depth sales and marketing training for careers with media companies or clients of those companies. The minor is offered through the School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts in the College of Communication and Fine Arts and the Department of Marketing and Hospitality Services Administration in the College of Business Administration.

The minor combines broad marketing and sales management theory with experiences that focus on specific electronic media measurements and applications. The program culminates with hands-on, intensive experience in the sale of underwriting messages for WMHW-FM, MHTV and News Central 34. The program was developed to help prepare students for business roles such as marketing director, media researcher, station general manager and local or national sales manager.

Printing in 3D

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 7

“In addition to traditional media such as sculpture and ceramics, there will be opportunities that are less apparent such as wearable art and creation of packaging and product design,” Burditt said. “We are anxious to see what this latest combination of creativity and technology will bring.”

3D printers also can be used to create jewelry, sculptural work and clothing.

Dale-Elizabeth Pehrsson, dean of the College of Education and Human Services, said the MakerBot Center of Innovation could be used for both apparel merchandising and design and interior design.

“The MakerBot Center of Innovation will offer tremendous potential for faculty collaborations within the college and across campus and also for community partnerships,” Pehrsson said.

Highlighting college departments’ honors and awards

andNational Regional Recognition

8 College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015

Weber excels at national forensic tournament Sophomore marketing major Audrey Weber was a semifinalist in the Lincoln Douglas debate at the National Forensic Association tournament, where she made it into the final four from a pool of 84 schools.

C. Alan Publications accepts music theory/composition junior’s marimba quartet Junior music theory/composition major Ryan Elvert had a marimba quartet – two marimbas, four players – titled “Drops” accepted for publication by C. Alan Publications in Greensboro, North Carolina, which offers the highest quality literature by the world’s most talented and prestigious composers. Elvert, a percussionist, created “Drops” after deciding that he wanted to write a percussion piece that was mallet based.

Students receive Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence Awards The Society of Professional Journalists recognized CMU students with 2014 Mark of Excellence Awards. In the Newspapers division, Adrian Hedden was a finalist in the Sports Writing (Large) 10,000+ Students category, and Samantha Smallish, Kate Woodruff and Jessica Fecteau won in the Best Independent Online Student Publication category for their work on Grand Central Magazine. In the Television Broadcast division, Clayton Cummins won the Television Breaking News Reporting category, Erica Francis won the Television General News Reporting category, and Mason Flick was a finalist in the Television Sports Photography category.

Audrey Weber Society of Professional Journalists Ryan Elvert

Click to listen to “Drops”

National and Regional Awards and Highlights continued...

Radio station recognized as best in U.S., television station best in state for 14 yearsStudents from Central Michigan University’s School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts are putting their stamp on the world of broadcasting and earning top industry honors. 

CMU’s radio station, WMHW-FM, won the Broadcast Education Association’s Student Media Advisors Signature Station award for the first time in CMU radio broadcasting history, and CMU’s Moore Hall Television won the Michigan Association of Broadcasters’ College Television Station of the Year award for the 14th consecutive year.

In addition, at the Great Lakes Broadcasting Conference and Expo in Lansing, CMU students won first place for college television in the News Feature, Mini-Documentary and Digital Media Experience categories. They swept the category of Talk Show/Scripted Show, earning first place, second place and honorable mention designations. Students also were awarded second place in the Daily Newscast/Sportscast and News Feature categories and honorable mention in the category of Current Events Program.

Alumna’s digital composite wins juried Art Walk Central prizeDepartment of Art and Design alumna Kristi Cranson, ’15, earned the first place juried prize at 2014 Art Walk Central and Honorable Mention at the 2015 Annual Juried CMU Student Art Exhibition for her piece “A Lifetime.” This digital composite is composed of more than 1,000 photos of Cranson’s six children over the past 20 years.

Cranson composition

Central Michigan University’s School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts students earn state and national awards.

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 9

Faculty study virtual team collaborations Jeff Smith, assistant professor in the School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts, and Lesley Withers, interim associate dean in the College of Communication and Fine Arts, recently published with other co-authors an article based on their ongoing study of team collaboration in virtual worlds. To better understand how to prepare professional teams to collaborate in virtual environments, 200 students from multiple universities trained to work together in Second Life® and participated in focus groups about their experiences of presence, identity, openness and interactivity.

Cross-disciplinary event explores technology’s environmental influencesMade possible by a grant from CCFA’s Center for Innovation, Collaboration and Engagement, Movements for the New Proscenium envisioned a cross-disciplinary collaboration and produced a live dance event that explored the role technology plays in the construction of people’s physical and virtual environments.

Movements for the New Proscenium choreography was inspired by sculpture and biological concepts including DNA, making organisms, speciation and biodiversity. Dancers were fitted with experimental electronic music systems sewn into their costumes as well as wearable video cameras.

The performance, which took place in the Moore Hall Townsend Kiva, was created by CMU’s Modern Dance II and III students and as well faculty Jay Batzner (music), Ann Dasen (costume design), Wiline Pangle (biology), Daren Kendall (art) and Heather Trommer-Beardslee (dance).

College of Communication and Fine Arts programs created the core of some dynamic ventures that connected the virtual and physical worlds.

Virtual environments in reality

10 College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015

JOHN K. HARTMAN Hartman, emeritus professor of journalism, was at CMU for 31 years. During that time he taught numerous journalism classes and served as chair on two occasions. He helped the department achieve accreditation for the first time 18 years ago and helped it maintain that accreditation through three subsequent reviews. He was nominated for the Faculty Excellence in Teaching Award on three occasions. Hartman also taught and consulted at King Saud University in Saudi Arabia for

two-week periods in 2008, 2009 and 2010.

In addition to teaching, Hartman was a Spirit of Detroit Award recipient in 1997 and is author of “The USA TODAY Way” (1992) and “The USA TODAY Way 2 The Future” (2000). Hartman’s research focused on free young-adult targeted daily newspapers and online news sites as well as the decline of college newspapers. He was quoted in major publications such as the New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and the Times of London. He presented findings on college newspapers at the Convergence Conference at the University of South Carolina in 2012. Hartman was a delegate to the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston and he covered the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver. He lives with his wife, Kay, in Powell, Ohio. They have three children and seven grandchildren.

BETSY RAU Rau, a CMU alumna, taught in CMU’s Department of Journalism for seven years. During her tenure she was advisor of the award-winning online magazine, Grand Central, taught several journalism courses as well as courses within the social media online certificate program. Before teaching at CMU Rau taught for more than 30 years in the Sacred Heart, Vestaburg and Midland school districts.

Honors bestowed on Rau include being inducted into the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame and CMU’s Journalism Hall of Fame, receiving the Michigan Interscholastic Press Association’s John V. Field Award, and being named teacher of the year in the Midland and Vestaburg school districts as well as receiving the Walmart Michigan Teacher of the Year Award in 2004.

Hartman, Rau retire

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 11

eventsUpcomingFor a complete event

listing visit ccfa.cmich.edu.CMU Marching Chips Alumni Band 8 a.m. Coffee Hour Saturday, Oct. 3Stadium Club Lounge

9 a.m. RehearsalKelly Shorts Stadium

11 a.m. ParadeLine up at Lot 15 (S of Barnes Hall)

3 p.m. kick-off for  CMU vs. Northern Illinois

Alumni Village (Tailgating)12 noon to 3 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 3Rose Ponds

November 2015Journalism Hall of Fame 5 p.m.Saturday, Nov. 14 Powers Ballroom

School of Music Events

September 2015Alumni Awards Banquet

6 p.m.Friday, Sept. 11

Bovee University Center Rotunda

CMU and You Day9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 12Music Building Lobby

October 2015HOMECOMING

WMHW Alumni Radio TakeoverFriday, Oct. 2 through

Saturday, Oct. 3Dr. Jerry Henderson Radio

Complex, Moore HallSchool of Broadcast and

Cinematic Arts

BCA Mentor Fair11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 2Moore Hall 101

University Art Gallery Exhibition Schedule

University Theatre Schedule

More than $10,000John G. ’76 and Andrea Dickey Genette ’78

$5,000 – $9,999+Kevin ’74, ’76 and Elizabeth Campbell ’77 +Timothy M. Jackson ’86 +Sam and Trudy Staples

$2,500 – $4,999Kimberly D. Clarke ’82 Megan Goodwin and Bruce Roscoe ’87 Ruth A. Stevens ’80 and Steve Latus Chris and Pete Orlik +Dr. George E. and Elizabeth G. Ross Jane Scherzer

$1,000 – $2,499Kimberlee ’98 and Mark Baczewski ’97 Stephen M. Banyon ’70, ’71 Tim ’85 and Pattee Bender ’84, ’86 Sara M. Bourque Susan C. Bourque Tony Dearing ’79 Neal ’73 and Anne Eichler ’72 Ed Fernandez ’84 +Grant G. Skomski ’86 and Mary Jane Flanagan Ellen Dennis French ’79, ’86 and Steven French

Robert ’69 and Gaile Griffore ’68 Roger Hart ’80 and Lisa Adams Hart Sylvia ’79 and Robert Hays Shelly and Ed Hinck Sharon K. ’92 and Sam E. Howard Richard E. Janis Diane S. Krider Mike and MaryBeth Minnis ’79 Linda M. Morey ’04 +Rose M. Prasad Teresa Stevens ’85 Jim ’75 and Heidi Truxton ’74 Patrick Tucker ’05 and Brianne Frucci-Tucker ’04 Jim ’65, ’68 and Carol Wojcik ’68, ’75, ’89

$500 – $999Gary Alan Beck Dr. Lindabeth Binkley Steve ’85 and Marion Bradley ’85 Carrie A. Brickner ’87 Louis A. Day +Dr. Claudia B. Douglass William Donald Fritz, Jr. ’83 Anne E. ’02 and Eric R. Gaertner ’95 John B. Greg Lee Hobson Robert and Sue Johns Kristine Grace Kelly ’74 +Ted ’48* and Ginger Kjolhede Randi and Lynne L’Hommedieu Dennis Michiel Majors ’79

Scott J. McQuillan ’92, ’96 +Michael ’80, ’93 and Laurie Morris Elliott and Emelia Parker Steven J. Phenicie ’70 Gerald L. ’66, ’68 and Jeanne Ann Reed Joseph D. Rivard Manuel R. Rupe Rosemary Saunders Hazel F. Schoch Gavin J. Smith ’76 and Mary C. Mertz-Smith Daniel L. Steele

+ Denotes Bell Tower Society Member. Membership in the Bell Tower Society is based on cumulative gifts to CMU, totaling $50,000 or more.

* Deceased

2014-2015

CCFA Honor Roll of Donors

12 College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015

2015 College of Communication and Fine Arts Day

The Legacy Society The Legacy Society recognizes donors who have chosen to benefit the university through planned giving. Planned gifts include bequests, charitable remainder trusts, charitable lead trusts, charitable gift annuities, gifts of property subject to life estate, gifts of life insurance or gifts of retirement plan assets. Such planned gift arrangements may result in far more significant gifts for CMU than may be possible during the donor’s lifetime.

Jeffrey D. Brasie ’70, ’76 Kimberly D. Clarke ’82 Kelly J. Crawford Dale A. ’76 and Karen Duncan Ed Fernandez ’84 John G. ’76 and Andrea Dickey Genette ’78 Charles ’87 and Susan Goff ’89 Jim and Debi Goodrich Kirk ’77 and Janet Hewlett ’77, ’84 Dr. Vernon L. Higginbotham ’42 Mark R. Holen ’70 Edward Hutchison Richard Charles Jackson ’77

Development update

We all work hard for our money. If you’re like me, you also try to keep a careful eye on money coming into and leaving your financial accounts. Aside from bills, we all have choices about how we like to spend our disposable income.

Now perhaps you enjoy spending your hard-earned money on clothes, sporting events, electronics or collectibles. Do any of you share some of your income with charitable organizations such as churches, civic entities or local community groups? If you do share your financial resources with any of these charitable organizations, I would like to personally thank you. Thank you very much for embracing philanthropy in your everyday life.

Philanthropy also can extend over to institutions of higher education. I would ask that when you and your family are determining where your charitable dollars will go, that you take a serious look at Central Michigan University. With a decrease in government funding, we at the university are more dependent on charitable gifts to help make a first-class education affordable for our students. Gifts of cash, check or credit card are the most common and easiest gifts to make. They also are tax deductible for the year in which the gift is made.

I welcome you to consider making a gift to your alma mater CMU. All gifts can go toward your area(s) of interest within the College of Communication and Fine Arts. To start up a conversation about giving back to CMU, feel free to contact me at 989-774-1698 or [email protected].

Fire up, Chips!

Mark Baczewski, director of development College of Communication and Fine Arts

Where does your money go?

Mark Baczewski

Timothy M. Jackson ’86 Dannie Smith Joiner ’67 Dr. Eric* and Mrs. Joan Kadler James ’84 and Sherry Knight ’86 James D. Kuderko ’78 Dale E. ’75, ’79 and Carol Malewska Robert Dodd ’79 and Debra McIntyre-Dodd ’83 Dr. Allen and Mary Montoye ’78, ’82 Matthew E. Mooney Ph.D. ’91, ’95 Keith P. ’82 and Janet M. Naughton ’83 David ’65, ’88 and Kathleen Ochander ’68 Sarah (Rowley) ’81 and Dan Opperman John ’84 and Wendy (Gager) Sinicki ’85 Gavin J. Smith ’76 and Mary C. Mertz-Smith Sam and Trudy Staples Philip A. Tower ’85, ’88 William E. Valle Steven Mark Violetta ’81 John R. Wilkinson ’75 Jim ’65, ’68 and Carol Wojcik ’68, ’75, ’89 George and Gladys Zubulake

College of Communication and Fine Arts 2015 13