Dear Alumni and Friends, The start of another school year here on the Eastern Washington University campus is always an exciting time, and this fall is no different. Another big freshman class is now settled
Editor – Kandi Carper ‘05
Graphic Design – Ryan Gaard ‘02 Copy Editor – Teresa Conway, Judy Crabb Contributing Writers – Kandi Carper ’05, Dave Cook, Dave Meany, Brandon Hansen ‘08, Sam Buzby ‘07 Photography – John Demke ’98, Pat Spanjer ’80, Eric Galey ’84, Ryan Gaard ’02, Von Klohe ‘88
in, part of another record student body that is
Editorial Board – Doug Kelley ’83, Jack Lucas ’77, Pia Hallenberg ’98, Kory Kelly ’98, Gina Mauro ‘90
approaching nearly 11,000 students.
Vice President for University Advancement – Michael Westfall
The energy from winning a football national championship has carried over to everything on campus, as Eastern’s commitment to
Director of Alumni Advancement – Lisa Poplawski ’94 and ‘01 EWU Alumni President – Kevin Linn ‘88 EWU Foundation Chair – Rob Neilson ‘81
excellence and success in the classroom has
Contact Us
never been stronger. There is definitely a new
Eastern Magazine Letters or comments
sense of pride people feel when they talk about coming to EWU. The university is trying to capitalize on this momentum as it charts a new course for the future. In the spring, I announced the creation of a new Strategic Planning effort, which includes valuable input from a diverse group of students, faculty, staff and community members. By the end of this year, EWU will have a bold plan known as “Inspiring the Future,” with clear action plans and short-term attainable goals. This is critical, because the academic direction and focus of the university have changed, and new demands from the region and state require us to reassess the best ways to utilize our resources. The university must take a fresh approach to meet the new funding challenges facing higher education in the state of Washington. In the end, the strategic path will reflect Eastern’s interest in strengthening our role as an innovative, relevant and inclusive leader in the education field. You can learn more about this process at www.ewu.edu/inspiringthefuture. Speaking of which, you will find the stories in this issue very inspiring. The cover story takes you inside the comic book world of a creative and successful EWU alum. Two other graduates are profiled in an inspiring story about their lifelong friendship. You will also learn how Eastern is taking the lead in preparing the next generation to be leaders in the renewable energy field. Your support, ideas and feedback are very meaningful during these challenging times. We look forward to hearing from you, or better yet, seeing you around campus this year.
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FALL 2011
upfront
THE MAGAZINE for Eastern Washington University Alumni and Friends
E-mail: Phone: Write:
easternmagazine@ewu.edu 509.359.6422 Eastern Magazine, 300 Showalter Hall, Cheney, WA 99004-2445
Address Changes Alumni Correspondence Class Notes Submissions E-mail: Website: Phone: Write:
ewualum@ewu.edu http://alumni.ewu.edu 888.EWU.ALUM or 509.359.4550 Office of Alumni Advancement 506 F St., Cheney, WA 99004-2402
Support Eastern Washington University For information about making a gift to Eastern, please contact the Office of Alumni Advancement. E-mail: Website: Phone: Write:
ewualum@ewu.edu www.ewu.edu/supportewu 509.359.4550 Office of Alumni Advancement 506 F St., Cheney, WA 99004-2402
Eastern, a magazine for alumni and friends of Eastern Washington University, is published fall, winter and spring by University Marketing & Communications, and mailed free in the U.S. to alumni of record. This issue, and previous issues of Eastern magazine, may be viewed at www.ewu.edu/easternmagazine.
Sincerely, Rodolfo Arévalo, PhD President
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On the cover Todd McFarlane is one of the hottest
artists and most creative minds in the history of comic book publishing. A cartoonist, writer, toy designer and entrepreneur, he is best known for his comic book series Spawn. Cover concept Todd McFarlane, design by Ben Timmreck
Contents 10
McFarlane Spawns an Empire
14
Powering Up the Future
18
An Enduring Friendship
From student janitor in Showalter Hall to creative genius behind the McFarlane Group of Companies
Eastern plans to become the Inland Northwest’s center for alternative energy education
Upcoming movie documents alum’s life-changing story
22
Big Careers Start at Eastern
Making it to the big leagues in sports marketing
10
14
18
22
Departments 2
Up Front
4
Letters to the Editor
5
On the Road
6
EWU Beat
26
Class Notes
33 In Memoriam 34 The Back Page 35 Alumni Events Calendar
6 Fall 2011
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Letters
to the
Editor
We want to hear from you! Send us your letters. Letters may be edited for length or clarity and civility.
Favorite Professors Acknowledged I was very pleased to see Professor Lawrence Kraft’s picture among those on the front cover of the spring/summer issue of Eastern magazine. He was my debate coach from 1966-1970. EWU’s debate team was large and very active, and it was the ‘60s, a time when many of us believed that anything worth doing was worth overdoing. He didn’t just coach us, he was an ambassador from the outside world of adulthood, a world where integrity, personal responsibility and restraint were important. He was a gentleman in the fullest and best sense of the word, but I don’t think any of us really appreciated how important it was to have such a man influencing our lives. I certainly didn’t realize it until I became a high school teacher and debate coach and had to do the things Mr. Kraft had done. If a teacher is one who touches the future, then Mr. Kraft was most certainly one of the best I had at EWU.
I attended EWU from 1988-94, getting both a bachelor’s and master’s degree from the mathematics department. As the department was relatively small, I had several of the professors for multiple classes. I had one professor for 13 different classes! While it is difficult to choose only one of my professors as my favorite, I must say that Dr. Kit Hanes was particularly engaging and talented. His expertise was in geometry, and one of his many special skills was “blackboard management.” During each lecture, he managed to perfectly fill all of the blackboards, no matter how many, or few, with precise equations and text that was always the same size and spacing, without any space left over. This was a visual demonstration of how organized and clear thinking Dr. Hanes was, and his lessons imparted the same clarity of thought to me, which has served me well throughout my career.
Lloyd Smith ’90, ’70 East Wenatchee, Wash.
David Turner ’94, ‘92 Norman, Okla.
I received my spring/summer edition of Eastern magazine and enjoyed reading the article about favorite professors. I was pleased to see a picture of my favorite professor, Dr. Hank York-Steiner, on the cover. I have never met a more caring, kind, compassionate, intelligent teacher. I learned something from each of his classes that I reference to this day. I graduated from Eastern in 2004, and have been a special education teacher in sunny Arizona for the past five years. I think of him often and wonder if he really knows what a huge impact he had on my adult college career and my life. Thanks so much for writing this article. Those who teach like to know they are appreciated.
I would like to congratulate your staff on consistently putting together a beautiful publication. I look forward to receiving my copy as it is always filled with interesting stories and beautiful pictures. From a fellow writer and publisher, kudos to you and your staff! Just my two cents – Steve Blewett should have been mentioned as “my favorite professor” for your article. He was a fantastic teacher who provided me with guidance that enabled me to succeed in my profession. I frequently cross paths with him as he remains involved in Spokane MarCom – just proving his commitment to the industry. I admire him and aspire to be as talented a professional as he is!
I really enjoyed the favorite professor article in Eastern magazine. The professor who most impacted me was Captain Bob L. Gregory, one of the new team of ROTC instructors brought in to save the ROTC program. Eastern had finished last, or next to last, every year in the performance of its students during Advanced ROTC summer camp at Ft. Lewis. Captain Gregory was personally charged to shape up the program, beginning with my class. He was really ruthless in his determination to get us ready and we finished third out of the more than 100 west coast schools that summer. We were number one in physical training. I believe there were 25 of us at summer camp, and we commissioned all 25. Five years later, I was a company commander in the 1st Cavalry Division in Vietnam and ran into LTC Gregory who was waiting to take command of a 1st Cavalry Battalion. A couple of months later, while home on leave, a major news story surfaced about the North Vietnamese Army capturing an American brigade commander. It turns out that LTC Gregory had assumed command of a battalion and his helicopter was shot down, all on board were killed. The NVA couldn’t resist embellishing the story. All of the bodies were eventually recovered. In a side note – I retired from the Army in 1983, and have lived in Augusta, Ga., since 1986. If Georgia Southern had won their last football playoff game this past year, Georgia Southern would have played EWU in the championship game. We would have been an incredibly long-odds house divided with my wife Bobbie being a GSU Class of ‘66 grad, and daughter, Ansley, a GSU Class of ‘11 grad.
Allison Benjamin ’04 Colbert, Wash.
Gary Lawhead ’62 Augusta, Ga.
Kawna Harder ’04 Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
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On the Road with
Eastern Magazine ’05 Krystn and ’05 Marc Axton, with their children, Noelia and Orland, recently took a vacation to Disneyland. Marc played basketball and Krystn cheered throughout their years at EWU. They live in Europe, where Marc is playing professional basketball. Newlyweds ’07, ’03 Kristin (Cox) and ’01 Donald Sims took Eastern magazine with them on their honeymoon to the Cook Islands in July. The photo was taken on One Foot Island in Aitutaki. The couple lives in Spokane, where she is a physical therapist at Alderwood Manor. Don is the associate athletic trainer at EWU.
’64 Rod Ostboe and ’94 Wendy Ostboe Holsten took Eastern magazine with them on their summer tour through seven countries in Europe. They took this picture in Paris, in front of Sacre Coeur. Rod is a retired middle school teacher and gymnastics coach. Wendy is a 5th grade teacher in the Richland School District.
’67 Lt. Col. (Ret.) Jerry P. Mellick, traveled from his home in Spokane to see history being made as NASA launched the Space Shuttle Atlantis at Kennedy Space Center in Florida in July. This marked the end of NASA’s 30-year space shuttle program.
Where in the world will Eastern magazine next be spotted? Eastern alumni are invited to send photographs of themselves holding up the current issue. Please include some information about yourself with your submission. Due to space constraints, we may not be able to publish every submission, but the extras will be posted on the Eastern Magazine Facebook fan page. Send to easternmagazine@ewu.edu or Eastern Magazine, 300 Showalter Hall, Cheney, WA 99004-2445.
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ewubeat Eastern Community Feeds the Need The fourth annual Eastern Washington University community food drive, held in August, generated more than two tons of food and $14,000 for the Cheney Food Bank, Cheney Outreach and Spokane’s 2nd Harvest. Of the total cash donations, more than $6,400 will go to the Cheney Food Bank, and along with the food donations, will go a long way toward stocking the shelves to meet the high demand. Cheney Food Bank director John Matthews says the money raised represents half of his yearly budget. Another $4,620 will go to the backpack for food program for Communities in Schools of Spokane County. This will provided 28 children with a weekend backpack filled with food, and is part of a nationwide effort to reduce the dropout rate and help children in need. Donations generated during the food drive will also benefit 2nd Harvest Inland Northwest and Cheney Outreach, which received $1,000 and 80 backpacks filled with school supplies for children this fall. Chair Nadine Arévalo, (EWU first lady) and co-chair Kathleen Warren credited the success of the food drive to the great community spirit during these difficult economic times.
Pass Through the Pillars Tradition Continues Members of another freshman class marked their first steps on campus with a walk through the traditional entry point to campus, the Herculean Pillars, and up the brick pathway that leads to historic Showalter Hall. Faculty, staff and alumni lined the pathway cheering on the students as they began their Eastern journey on Sept. 19, 2011. The Pass through the Pillars event was just one of many welcoming activities held on the Eastern campus for the 2011 freshman class. EWU is expecting more than 1,500 freshmen this year, putting it right on par with the previous year’s class - which was one of the largest ever. The entire student body is approaching nearly 11,000. The Alumni Association and students created the gateway in 1915. Comprised of two prominent stone pillars, it was designed to send a message of hope and renewal in the aftermath of the Cheney Normal School fire of 1912. Stone and granite from the original school were used to build the monument.
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Next Generation of Campus Housing Students will have the option of living in a new residence hall, fall quarter 2013. In December 2010, the EWU Board of Trustees approved a budget for a new residence hall to be constructed on the parking lot below Streeter Hall on Cedar Street, across from the University Recreation Center. Construction of the approximately 101,000 square-foot, 350-bed hall is projected to cost $25 million. ALSC Architects, Inc. was competitively selected for design of this project. In spring 2012, construction is scheduled to begin, with an estimated completion date of September 2013. In 2008, Housing and Residential Life hired a consulting firm to put together a comprehensive housing master plan, a process that included interviewing and surveying students, faculty, staff, administration and community members. Areas of interest were the use of space, more privacy in bathrooms, improved accessibility for people with disabilities and more comfortable common areas. Residential Life is a self-sufficient operation and acquires funds for projects like the new residence hall from bonds, which will be paid off later from the revenue generated by residents. The design may be altered slightly due to budget adjustments. This new residence hall will become a model for the next generation of campus living at Eastern Washington University.
Chaves Elected Chair of NCAA Administration Cabinet The value, image and visibility of Eastern Washington University continues to expand on a national scale, as EWU Athletic Director Bill Chaves has been elected chair of the NCAA Administration Cabinet for the 2011-12 academic year. The cabinet, which consists of 21 members from various Division I institutions and conference offices, is responsible for administrative functions within Division I athletics, including governance issues, review of applications for reclassification to Division I status and all committee selections. “I look forward to continuing to represent the Big Sky Conference in the NCAA’s governance structure, as well as working with a talented group of professionals who do a tremendous job in carrying out the duties of this Cabinet,” said Chaves. Chaves has served as the Big Sky representative on the NCAA Administration Cabinet for the past three years. Upon entering his fourth and final year of service, he was elected chair of the esteemed governing group. His term will conclude in June 2012.
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ewubeat Sendak National Tour Exhibit Comes to Eastern EWU Libraries is one of 40 libraries nationwide selected to host “In a Nutshell: The Worlds of Maurice Sendak,” a traveling exhibition on display Oct. 28 through Dec. 16, 2011, at the JFK Library on the Cheney campus. The exhibit reveals the push and pulls of New and Old Worlds in Sendak’s work, and shows how his artistic journey has led him deeper into his own family’s Jewish history. Maurice Sendak is best known as the illustrator of more than 100 picture books, including Where the Wild Things Are and In the Night Kitchen. He was born to Polish immigrants in Brooklyn in 1928, and his childhood was typically American in a number of ways. The exhibit is an exploration of Sendak’s illustrations and picture books, revealing connections between these iconic works and his childhood, family and the popular culture of the time. The colorful exhibit panels feature illustrations of ferocious creatures, curious children and vibrant neighborhoods, alongside thematic explorations of the Jewish culture and history. The national tour of the exhibit has been made possible by grants from the Charles H. Revson Foundation, the Righteous Persons Foundation, the David Berg Foundation and an anonymous donor, with additional support from Tablet Magazine: A New Read on Jewish Life. The exhibition is free and open to the public during the library’s regular hours of operation, Monday-Thursday, 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m.; Friday, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday, noon-5 p.m. and Sunday, 1-9 p.m. Eastern Washington University Libraries is sponsoring free programs and other events for the public in connection with the exhibition, including an opening reception, Nov. 2; Really Rosie, the Musical, a performance by the Spokane Area Children’s Chorus, Nov. 9; Tell Them Anything You Want, Maurice Sendak video and panel discussion, Nov. 14, and a presentation by Rita Berman Frischer, Nov. 30. These EWU events are made possible through the EWU Foundation Diversity Grant. Contact Nadean Meyer at 509.359.4262 or nmeyer@ewu.edu or visit http://research.ewu.edu/sendak.
International Student Elected ASEWU President EWU’s student body has selected Oscar Ocaña to serve as president of the Associated Students of EWU for the 2011-2012 academic year. Ocaña received 48 percent of all votes cast in the May 3 election, and he holds the honor of being the first international student elected as student body president at Eastern. “I believe strongly that we can create many opportunities for those who work hard every day to become successful in academics and life,” says Ocaña. “Together we can create something big for our community, Eastern Washington University and the state through education, diversity and unity.” An economics major from Mexico, Ocaña transferred to Eastern from Spokane Falls Community College in August 2010. He is a 2010-11 merit-based EWU International Ambassador Scholarship recipient and serves as the public affairs officer of the International Student Association (ISA) of EWU. More than 22 percent of EWU’s students are ethnic minorities - a much higher percentage (55 percent) represents the first generation in each family to attend college. EWU currently has nearly 500 international students from more than 30 countries.
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Hall of Fame Inductees Honored Five individuals and the 1949-50 men’s basketball team were inducted into the 11th Class of Eastern Athletics Hall of Fame in ceremonies on campus, Oct. 1, 2011. The 1949-50 men’s basketball team finished 23-7 and won the Evergreen Conference title with a 13-1 mark in the league’s second year of existence. Despite falling short in advancing to the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Tournament, legendary Eastern head coach Red Reese called the team “my best basketball club.” Individual inductees include a pair of standouts from the 1940’s – sprinting sensation Holt Brewer and basketball standout Jack “Rabbit” Roffler. Brewer set school records in the 100-yard and 220-yard dashes, and competed in the 1948 Olympic Trials. Roffler was a “dribbling and driving lay-in artist” who helped Eastern to a collective record of 79-16 and two NAIA Tournament berths. Baseball pitcher Richard “Curly” Rousseau was also inducted for his record-breaking performance on the mound in 1970. Rousseau earned honorable mention All-America honors, as he had five shutouts in 1970, setting the school record for both a single season and career. His 1.09 earned run average, in 1970, ranks second in school history, as he finished 6-2. He has since gone on to serve as president of the Eagle Athletic Association, helping that fund-raising group break records as well. The other two inductees competed in the school’s infancy in the NCAA Division I ranks. Former football cornerback and punt returner Rob Friese was a small-town football player from Lebam, Wash., who became a record-breaking Eastern football player from 1982-85. He helped Eastern to a 9-3 record, as a senior in 1985, and the quarterfinal round of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs (then known as I-AA). He had 169 tackles, nine interceptions, 16 passes broken up and a 12.1 average per punt return in his career. Volleyball setter Suzanne Vick earned second-team All-Northwest Region honors in 1989, when she helped lead Eastern to the NCAA Tournament after winning Big Sky Conference regular season and tournament titles. She helped Eastern win its first-ever Big Sky Conference regular season and tournament titles to advance to the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament, finishing 25-7 overall and 14-2 in the league. Vick set the single season school record with 1,367 assists. Six former EWU administrators were also honored with the Eastern Athletics Hall of Fame Service and Contribution Award. The administrators are headlined by former EWU President H. George Frederickson (1977-87), who spearheaded Eastern’s drive to National Collegiate Association (NCAA) Division I status after being a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) for most of the school’s history. Helping Frederickson and Eastern along the way were Ken Dolan (former assistant to the president), Russ Hartman (former vice president for business and finance), Jim Kirschbaum (former board of trustees chair) and Bill Shaw (former chief financial officer). Also honored posthumously will be former athletic director Ron Raver, who was inducted into the Eastern Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001. Raver was represented Oct. 1 by his wife, Karen, and son, Tim. They were relentless in their vision and faced a lot of tumult along the way. But 30 years later, after the school mesmerized the region with its 2010 NCAA Division I Football Championship, they deserve a debt of gratitude for what they accomplished through their perseverance.
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Being at EWU was just the first step of doing something Todd McFarlane autographs Halo toys at Comic-Con 2011 in San Diego in July.
positive with my life. Getting a degree doesn’t get you the dream job right away, but a degree shows people that you have discipline. It shows that for four years you were regimented.
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By Brandon Hansen ‘08
How many people can say their career involves Spider-Man, Mark McGwire’s record-setting home run ball and a comic book hero called Spawn? Not many. In fact, Todd McFarlane stands alone as a creative force, a man who re-invented the comic book industry by helping start Image Comics. He now oversees an entertainment company, a toy company and a gaming studio with former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Shilling. And to think, during the early 1980s, McFarlane was once a student janitor, working in Showalter Hall at Eastern Washington University, a job which helped him pay for school and rent. “At no time did I think I’d be a janitor for the rest of my life, it was a means to an end,” he said recently. “The good thing about it was I knew how every one of those offices worked. If you needed something with registration, I was like free help. I could have been a quasi-president with that stuff.” McFarlane was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, in 1961, but he spent much of his childhood in Southern California, where he learned to play baseball. It was baseball that brought McFarlane to Eastern. After moving back to Calgary as a teenager, and finding that he was a weak skater in a hockey-crazed country, McFarlane became one of the best baseball players in the city. “If they told me that I could play centerfield in the majors back then, I’d drop everything and do it,” he said. “In a perfect world, I’d get to be on a team and play baseball during the day and then at night, I’d do my comic books.” While baseball was his life as a teenager, the self-admitted doodler was intrigued when he walked by a spinner rack in a mom and pop corner store. “Out of the blue when most people reach the age that they drop comic books, I went in and bought five or six,” McFarlane explained. “I decided that instead of having 20 different styles of artwork, I wanted to learn how to draw American comic book heroes. It gave me tunnel vision in my art.” But the diamond still beckoned. He tried out for Gonzaga University but ended up at Spokane Falls Community College.
Due to team politics, McFarlane found himself riding the bench until a scout from the Seattle Mariners saw him play and suggested he play on a tournament team to increase his exposure. It was while playing for that team that EWU baseball legend Ed Chissus saw McFarlane. “He came up to me and said ‘wow kid you had a hell of a tournament,’” McFarlane said. Chissus recruited McFarlane to play for the Eagles, who competed at NCAA Division I in the Pac-10. McFarlane’s demanding schedule of school and baseball, along with his on-campus job as a janitor, didn’t leave him much free time, and he already had a girlfriend. “I left my sweetheart at home and wasn’t a partier,” McFarlane said. “I’d get home at 11 at night and that’s when I would do my comic books.” Once his sweetheart, Wanda Kolomyjec, finished high school, she joined McFarlane at Eastern, and the two lived in a small trailer by the train tracks in Cheney. He said he remembered the train would blow its horn, like clockwork, at 2 every morning waking them up. When it appeared that Major League teams weren’t looking at McFarlane, he focused on getting into the comic book industry. He had worked in a comic book store in Spokane on the weekends, and he started sending out sample packages of his work to companies – about 700 of them. He received about 350 rejection letters. “Finally, I think they got tired of me sending so many sample packages,” McFarlane said. He remembered one day he was walking home from his janitor job when Wanda greeted him with the news: a call from Marvel Comics. “I had to catch myself,” McFarlane said. “I still had to study for a final.” In the comic book industry equivalent of freelance work, McFarlane was slated to produce an 11-page backup story entitled Scorpio Rose, in the Marvel/Epic Comics book Coyote, in March of 1984. “It’s the equivalent of starting in the mail room,” he said. While working freelance and continuing to build his relationship with Marvel, McFarlane remained in Cheney with Wanda. The two married in July of 1985, and Wanda graduated from Eastern with a biology degree. “Here I am working for the ‘big guy’ and still lived in Cheney,” he said. “I
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In April 2011, Todd and Wanda McFarlane hosted the EWU golf team for dinner at their home during the Big Sky Conference Championships held in the Phoenix area. Back row, left to right: Kellien Holmstedt, Wanda McFarlane, Todd McFarlane, Morgan Lee, Jayme Carbon, Head Coach Brenda Howe, Associate Athletic Director Marc Hughes, front row, left to right: Sara Callagy, Neddy Martinez, Dana Stapleton and McFarlane’s dog Rikki.
didn’t have to go to the big city and be a big shot.” McFarlane used what he learned about structure and regiment from playing baseball. As a freelancer, you need to be self-motivated. “It definitely played a part because there is no boss,” said McFarlane. “You have to mentally do that yourself.” When he got a box of his first comic book, McFarlane walked down the street giving free samples to anyone who would take them. After going through the uncertain nature of freelance, McFarlane and his new wife moved into a suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia. That’s when his comic book career really started to take off. He penciled issues of Incredible Hulk and assignments with DC Comics, such as the Batman Detective comics and two issues of Batman: Year Two. “I climbed out of the mail room,” McFarlane said. And according to the artist, his work ethic set him apart. “I had shown that I could do two books in a month, and the editors said I improved the artwork,” McFarlane said. And that’s when everyone’s favorite web-crawler, Spider-Man, called. Marvel’s signature superhero was in a bit of trouble in the late 1980s. “Spider-Man was in artistic disarray,” McFarlane said. “Spider-Man was in a time warp, when (classic comic book artist) John Romita drew Spider-Man in the 1960s, because it was so good, nobody wanted to mess with the classic icon. When you got a check from Marvel, it was John’s Spider-Man that was on it.” There were three different Spider-Man comic books, and Marvel assigned McFarlane to the Amazing Spider-Man, the longest-running in the series. And to make things even better, it was about to publish its 300th issue, meaning collectors would be gobbling it off the shelves.
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“I, luckily, got the granddaddy book,” he said. McFarlane’s bold approach still impresses fans today, as he took the 1960’s Spidey and brought him into the modern age. “I’d be a fool to try and create a poor man’s version of John Romita’s Spider-Man, so I was just going to try and come up with my own style,” he said. “If somebody had updated him every five years people probably wouldn’t have noticed my version as much,” McFarlane said. McFarlane’s approach is still seen in how Spider-Man is drawn today. He gave him more webbing, bigger spider eyes, made the spider logo on his chest bigger, drew Spider-Man moving more like a spider, and made the character’s web slinging almost leap out off the page at the readers. He also played a part in creating one of the most famous Spider-Man villains, Venom. This classic comic book had been McFarlanized and copies were flying off the shelves, outselling the competition by huge numbers, but that didn’t mean all things were peachy. “My bosses didn’t quite take it that well,”McFarlane said of the changes he made to the Spider-Man book. “I would have odd conversations, where they would point their finger and reprimand me.” Yet sales were going up? “We were in first place out of the 100 top books,” McFarlane said. “It was bizarro conversations.” Marvel would eventually give McFarlane his own comic book, Spider-Man, and it shipped in September 1990, selling 2.5 million copies, and setting an industry record for mainstream comic books. McFarlane took a hiatus from work in 1991, when his first daughter was born. He and his family moved to Portland, Ore., a few months later. It was during this time that he started thinking about starting
It was also during this time that McFarlane took a calculated risk – buying major league baseball player Mark McGwire’s 70th home run ball for $3 million. his own publishing company. The lack of creative control in the mainstream comic book industry was becoming troublesome. “When I started at Marvel I was the guy who wanted to start a union,” McFarlane said. “Eventually I got frustrated and a couple of buddies and I decided to start our own company.” McFarlane had seen many comic book artists taken advantage of, even the famous ones, and was determined not to have that happen to him. “I had done a lot of reading and I had seen that they take advantage of your art, or you become the old man and they stopped giving you work,” he said. “I had seen a couple of older gentlemen get the negative treatment.” Soon after, McFarlane, along with some of the best Marvel comic book artists, announced they’d be leaving the company to start Image Comics. It would be different in the fact that every one of those artists would have control over their individual creations. “I knew there was momentum going into this venture,” McFarlane said. But first they had to come up with those individual creations. McFarlane went back to his high school days and pulled out a character he had created when he was 16 years old. The dark, brooding character was Spawn, and when Image Comics published Spawn No. 1, it sold 1.7 million copies, the most for an independent comic book to date. And this is where the genius of McFarlane set in. “I can’t see myself in the position where I’m leaving myself leaning on any one thing,” he said. “What if the Spawn comic book is just a fad?” He left the inking duties of Spawn in 1998, and founded McFarlane Toys and McFarlane Entertainment. McFarlane Entertainment’s film and animation studio has produced an Emmy award-winning animated series of Spawn, and, in conjunction with New Line Cinema, a commercially successful Spawn movie. The toy industry was buzzing about McFarlane Toys’ level of detail and the quality of its products, along with the fact that its “toys” were intended more for adults than kids. But that didn’t prevent McFarlane from having a lot of doors shut in his face while trying to get license deals. It was also during this time that McFarlane took a calculated risk – buying major league baseball player Mark McGwire’s 70th home run ball for $3 million. “Even though I had blown my life savings on a baseball, it brought
Stan Lee, former president and chairman of Marvel Comics, with Todd McFarlane
me a lot of media attention,” McFarlane said. Attention that caused a lot of people to start paying attention to, not just his comic book, but also his toy and entertainment companies. The toy company, which started out with just Spawn as its signature item, has since captured numerous rock bands, TV shows, movies and all major North American sports league deals. A dot-com bust had caused other toy companies to drop their sports figurine lines and McFarlane Toys was there to pick up the slack. “Now after 10-plus years of sports licenses, I’m still ahead in the game,” McFarlane said of buying the home run ball. “That home run ball was literally the ante to get to the poker table.” Now the comic book artist has a commercial portfolio so diverse that it’s hard to keep track. “It just keeps fracturing,” McFarlane said. “If one thing doesn’t go well it won’t put me out of business.” With so many things going on, McFarlane has had to become wellversed in the language of business. But, he’s certainly more comfortable being the artist, something that began as a child and was fostered at Eastern. The university no longer has a baseball program, something that McFarlane says is a bit of a downer. “As a guy who likes his baseball, it’s a bit of a sad mark,” he said. “When you say you played for a Pac-10 program, and then say it was at Eastern, you have to start backpedaling because they shut the program down.” But that hasn’t diminished what McFarlane took from the university, or his feelings about the importance of a college education. “Being at EWU was just the first step of doing something positive with my life,” McFarlane said. “Getting a degree doesn’t get you the dream job right away, but a degree shows people that you have discipline. It shows that for four years you were regimented.” From a janitor, to an industry leader, McFarlane said that in order for someone to be successful, they have to set goals and achieve them, not just talk about their dreams. And McFarlane would know, having spun his own dreams into reality. E
Fall Fall2011 2010
13
Powering Up for the Future By Kandi Carper ‘05
If we build it, they will come. “It” is Eastern Washington University’s Alternative Energy Education Demonstration site. “They” are K-12 students – our future engineers, scientists and renewable energy entrepreneurs, as well as EWU education and engineering students.
14
EASTERN
The vision is that Eastern will become the Inland Northwest’s
center for alternative energy education. By creating a learning/ teaching center on campus, students, teachers and the general public will be able to explore, test, experience and increase their knowledge about wind, solar and fuel cell technology.
“We are building on EWU’s history of engaging students from
elementary school to higher education by continuing to strengthen the university’s relationships with regional schools and businesses that work in the energy field,” said EWU President Rodolfo Arévalo. “This project will have a tremendous impact on the economic future of the Inland Northwest and the state of Washington. “
The timing couldn’t be better, as our country and the Inland
Northwest explore the development of renewable energy sources that will meet the needs of future generations.
Additionally, energy-based business partners will work with the
university to provide important, viable economic strategies, and help prepare employees with the scientific and engineering education necessary to accomplish the goal of energy independence.
The Alternative Energy Education Demonstration Site project builds
assemble their materials.
on the strengths and passions of the university’s faculty, who care
deeply about the education of K-12 students and the teachers
Washington Energy Education Consortium. This will be a partnership
who teach them, as well as others who want to prepare first-rate
between K-12 schools and higher education institutes, collaborating
engineers. The project will allow engineering students to participate
to teach science, using project-based alternative energy models.
in class projects and engineering research, and will give EWU another
The consortium will host the Annual Energy Academy as a way to
one-of-a-kind opportunity for community engagement.
encourage K-12 students to pursue engineering and computer
science careers. The university will provide professional and
EWU professors Rodger Hauge (education) and Jeff Donnerberg
EWU will serve as the organizing partner of the Northeast
(engineering) have teamed up for almost four years to take their
curriculum development in the field of renewable energy.
math and science/alternative energy curriculum to K-12 schools to
educate students. As they have collaborated with teachers in the
teachers, to challenging everyone to think big about the endless
community, the vision has grown to include this demonstration site
possibilities in the renewable energy field, the project will be a
on EWU’s campus.
cutting-edge facility that leads to a brighter future. E
The project will feature four types of solar installations with an
From field trips to internships, from preparing engineers and
accessible data kiosk; a small building equipped with the latest
If you would like to support the EWU Alternative Energy Education
sustainable building features; sustainable landscaping; a wind
Demonstration Project, or would like more details, please contact
machine; a mini-solar car racetrack; solar boat troughs; an activity
Tim Szymanowski, director of Development, 509.359.6132,
“pad” for student projects and a picnic area where students can
tszyman@ewu.edu.
Fall 2011
15
If you are an Eastern alum or faculty member and have written a general interest book or have a music CD on the market (self-published works will be included if space allows) and would like to have it considered for inclusion in Eastern magazine’s Sights and Sounds section, please send it (along with your contact information) to: Eastern Magazine, 300 Showalter Hall, Cheney, WA 99004-2445.
sights&sounds
House of Words
The Nearness of You
Poems by Jonathan Potter, EWU Librarian Korrektiv Press
Sarah Shea ’05, BA music composition
House of Words is a collection of poems
a delight to the ear and the soul, filled with
arranged in four movements echoing the structure of an Elizabethan sonnet. The book opens in wonder, dwelling in a world in which words and the gestures of language provide access to the freshness deep down in things. But even in that initial movement, a gap is evident which grows as it confronts contradiction and death. Subdued receding of resignation follow, tentatively emerging into the light of faith.
Potter, EWU faculty librarian, had his
poem, You and I, read on Garrison Keillor’s Writer’s Almanac show on National Public Radio on Feb. 28, 2011. With several million listeners across the nation, the show affords the poems it features perhaps the single widest audience for new poetry in America.
Potter lives in Spokane with his wife,
children and dog. His poetry has appeared in Z Miscellaneous, Christianity & Literature, Poems Niederngasse and Korrektiv. korrektivpress.com
Eastern alumna Sarah Shea has released her first CD, The Nearness of You. Her debut CD is classic melodies.
The CD features 12 tracks of relaxing jazz
vocals, including Shea’s personal favorite, I’ve Got You Under My Skin. With the exception of Fever, all of the vocals were recorded in Sequim, Wash. Fever was completed in one take and purposely left “raw.”
Other classic standards include The
Nearness of You, Sunny, Cheek to Cheek and Summertime, among others.
The album also features Eastern alums
Jon Hamar ’99, BA music composition, on bass and Mark Ivester ’78, BA music, on drums. Also on the album is Al Harris (arranger, producer, piano), Craig Buhler (clarinet, sax and flute) and Ed Donohue (flugelhorn).
You can preview the songs and purchase
the CD online at CD Baby, one of the largest online distributors of independent music.
In Earshot of Water
Notes from the Columbia Plateau By Paul Lindholdt, PhD, English professor University of Iowa Press Whether the subject is the plants that grow there, the animals that live there, the rivers that run there, or the people he has known there, Paul Lindholdt’s In Earshot of Water illuminates the Pacific Northwest in vivid detail. Lindholdt writes with the precision of a naturalist, the critical eye of an ecologist, the affection of an apologist, and the selfrevelation and self-awareness of a personal essayist.
Lindholdt first came to Eastern as a
lecturer in 1994, becoming a full professor in the English Department in 2007. His areas of interest include American literature, environmental studies and creative writing. He has won awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Society of Professional Journalists; has published some 170 books, book chapters, scholarly articles, essays, columns, reviews and poems. uiowapress.org
www.cdbaby.com/cd/sarahshea sarahsheajazz.com
Fall 2011
17
By Kandi Carper ‘05
If a movie about your life was being made, who would you want to play you? For most of us, that’s just a fantasy, but for two Eastern alums it’s become a reality. “A-list” actors are being considered to play Pete Peterson ’74 and
Sheehan, a best-selling author who lives in Las Vegas, wrote the screenplay for the movie. Filming is scheduled to begin later this year, with a projected release date of 2012, or early 2013. Location shots will take place next year, as
weather permits, at Hayden Lake, just north of Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho.
Jack Sheehan ’73, in the upcoming movie, Hayden Lake. Peterson said that “someone crazy like Sean Penn” should play his role, but since the movie takes place when Peterson and Sheehan are in their teens and twenties, his first choice would be Elijah Wood (Lord of the Rings). When Sheehan was asked who he’d prefer to play him he laughed, “Brad Pitt, of course.” But since Pitt isn’t the right age, he’d choose Adam Brody. “He looks sort of like me at that age – an introspective type, an observer, someone who’s watching what’s going on around him.” Hayden Lake tells the story of Peterson and Sheehan’s lifelong friendship and recounts a boating accident that changed Peterson’s life forever.
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EASTERN
Left to right: Pete Peterson and Jack Sheehan at their first birthday party in 1950, with sisters Susan Sheehan and Terry Peterson.
Photo courtesy Mike Hays
Jack Sheehan and Pete Peterson, April 2011, photo: Colin Mulvany, The Spokesman-Review
During their early years, Peterson and Sheehan lived parallel lives.
boat were discovered floating in the lake that night and the next
They were born 20 days apart in the summer of ’49. Their moms were
morning, but tragically, its passengers – two 16-year-old girls – were
best friends; their dads were both dentists in Spokane. The two South
missing and presumed drowned. Their bodies, and Peterson’s boat,
Hill families socialized together and summered at Hayden Lake. “Our
disappeared into the deep, dark water below.
lives were so similar for the first 10 years, it’s a wonder we got along at all,” said Sheehan. “We were as close as brothers.”
Earlier that summer, Peterson was developing a bad-boy reputation in the close-knit upscale Hayden Lake community – he
The two friends are pictured together in faded black and white
was too wild, too reckless. He had been involved in some minor
family photos – as infants resting in the arms of their fathers, as curly-
juvenile trouble, which made it easier for people to blame him for the
haired toddlers, and as young boys on a Hayden Lake dock.
accident. At the time, there was even talk of a possible manslaughter
Their families were together through the good times, and the
charge, something that never materialized.
bad. When Peterson’s mom Edith was diagnosed with breast cancer
Sheehan believed Peterson when he said he didn’t see anything
in 1960, Sheehan’s mom Lillian was there to support her. Edith passed
before his boat exploded. He may have been the only one who
away two years later, leaving 13-year-old Peterson, his sister and dad
believed him.
on their own.
The Accident The Accident
The Burden The Burden
“Everyone told me that I had killed two girls,” said Peterson. He carried
At 15, Peterson drove one of the hottest jet boats on Hayden Lake,
this burden with him for years – through high school at Saint Georges
a polished wooden Tollycraft Cruiser. He and a female friend were
School, and later, during a short stint at the University of Washington.
out for a ride the night of Aug. 15, 1964, when the boat suddenly
By 1969, the Vietnam draft hung like a dark cloud overhead, and,
exploded, ejecting and nearly drowning the two of them. They were
since Peterson was going nowhere in college, he decided to enlist in
rescued by a passing boater and taken to shore.
the Army. His goal was to win the Medal of Honor – something that
Parts of a 13-foot fiberglass boat that had collided with Peterson’s
would make his dad proud of him.
Fall 2011
19
The following year, he left for Southeast Asia, commissioned as a lieutenant. He saw this as a way to redeem himself. He also saw things he never wanted to see again – death and destruction.
with the Coeur d’Alene Press, contacted Peterson and told him, “We found your boat and you didn’t do it.” Tom Michalski, a beer truck driver and skilled amateur diver from Post Falls, Idaho, was scanning the bottom of Hayden Lake, when
“I look back on some of this stuff now, and can’t believe it was me,”
he got a sonar blip signaling something was in the water below.
he later told Sheehan. “You get in a state where you’re kind of numb
Michalski discovered the wreckage of the Tollycraft, buried 172 feet
to it all.”
below for nearly two decades. A few days later, he found the bodies of
That numbness went away one day when Peterson’s unit was
Barbara Horne and Carol Thornton, the two missing girls.
getting ready to make camp and a pair of booby traps were triggered.
Sometimes an accident is just that – an unavoidable accident. It
A split second before the explosion, he bent down to pick up a radio,
was no one’s fault. The bow of the smaller boat was buried in the side
escaping death, but taking shrapnel in his arm. Others in the unit
of the Tollycraft Cruiser. An oversized replacement screw was stuck
weren’t as lucky. Peterson helped get one man to safety, and he
in the throttle of the girls’ boat, causing it to lock in the fast-forward
found the foot of another young soldier so he could be buried intact.
position. The smaller boat’s lights were found in the off position. The
He was honored for his bravery, receiving the Purple Heart and the
girls couldn’t stop their runaway boat from slamming into Peterson’s
Bronze Star. Once again, his life was spared. He returned home shortly
boat.
afterwards, determined to move forward.
Vindication Vindication
Peterson said that he was glad his dad was alive when the boat was discovered and saw that it hadn’t been his fault. Television footage of the recovery of the boat shows an emotional
After returning home to Spokane, Peterson and his old friend
Peterson standing on the dock at Mokins Bay at Hayden Lake. You
Sheehan reunited. Sheehan was completing his master’s degree in
can see a mixture of relief and sadness on his face, as he relived the
English at Eastern. He suggested that Peterson join him; they could
events of that August night 18 years earlier.
drive to school together. So Peterson went to Eastern, earning his BA
“I kept thinking, what if I would have left a few minutes later, or
in management in 1974. That’s where he met Gayle Halverson, (’75 BA
gone a different way?” said Peterson. “I thought if only I’d have done
education) his future wife.
something different.”
In December 1982, Peterson was working as a manager at a J.C. Penney store in Spokane, when he got the call that changed everything. Ric Clarke, an old high school friend who was a reporter
20
EASTERN
From Article to Scr From Article to Screenplay
In 1964, the allegations came in three-inch, front page headlines in
the local newspapers. Absolution came in 1982, buried on page 4 of section B. That wasn’t enough for Sheehan – his friend deserved more. So Sheehan did what he does best, he wrote an article, Buddies, for a Nevada magazine in 1984, to further exonerate Peterson. Shortly after Sheehan’s article appeared, he got a call from the actor Jon Voight, who wanted to buy the film rights to the story. Sheehan turned him down, but the story stayed with him and at a friend’s suggestion, Sheehan went ahead and wrote his first screenplay, which went on to win the Nevada Screenwriters Award in 1988. Because of Sheehan’s celebrity connections, as a writer and a talented golfer, the screenplay eventually made its way to Warner Bros. in 1987. Patrick Dempsey, then 22, (“Dr. McDreamy” on TV’s Grey’s Anatomy) was being considered to play the role of Peterson. But as the project moved forward, Sheehan became increasingly uncomfortable with the studio’s changes to the story. Drugs and sex were suggested by a producer, as a way to spice up the movie, but Sheehan was adamant that the character of his friend not be twisted in that direction. In 1991, the screenplay made its way to ABC TV for a movie of the week project. The same thing happened. Sheehan says he could agree
Peterson and his wife Gayle live in Spokane Valley. They have three children and five grandchildren. Gayle is the Head of River Day School in Spokane. Pete recently retired from Washington Auto Carriage and is enjoying his free time, playing golf and spending time with his grandchildren.
to some minor changes for dramatic effect, but not to changes that portrayed his friend as someone he wasn’t. In 1992, the screenplay was back in Sheehan’s office, where it would stay for 18 years.
Hayden Lake – the Hayden Lake – the Movie
In 2010, Sheehan and Jim Page, an old friend from Hayden Lake, were talking about the screenplay, when Page recommended that his son, Ryan, could get the movie made with Sheehan’s story intact. Ryan Page grew up hearing about the mysterious accident. Ryan Page and Christopher Pomerenke, the writing and directing team behind Blood into Wine, and the upcoming comedy Queens of Country, came on board to finally bring Hayden Lake to the big screen. Their plan is to make it a period piece, filmed the way classic Hollywood movies were made in the ‘50s and ‘60s. Peterson understands the interest in the story, but after 47 years, it ends the same way. “There are still two girls who are dead,” Peterson said. “Two families lost their daughters. Whether I hit them, or they hit me, it doesn’t change anything.” In the end, it’s really not about which actors portray them. Both Peterson and Sheehan feel that there’s a story to be told – a story of two men, as close as brothers, whose friendship and loyalty have spanned a lifetime. E
Jack Sheehan continues to write and enjoys playing golf in Las Vegas, where he lives with his wife Carol, and their children, Lily and J.P. During the past 35 years, he’s written 18 books and more than 1,000 articles for regional and national magazines. He’s sold three screenplays to Hollywood, and is frequently hired as a keynote speaker.
Fall 2011
21
big careers start at Eastern Major League Talent
By Sam Buzby ‘08
t’s no secret how many Eastern graduates love sports, and why shouldn’t they? Thousands of Eastern alumni and fans were there that unforgettable night in Frisco Texas, including one alumnus who not only loves sports, but has turned his passion into a career that is only getting bigger. Jared Rose grew up north of Spokane in Chewelah, Wash.,
in business administration and marketing, Rose accepted a position
the type of small town where you can’t help but be involved with just about everything. Rose brought that sense of community engagement with him to Eastern when he enrolled in the fall of 1996. “I looked at EWU as a natural extension of my small town,” said Rose. “I knew that at Eastern I had the chance to be more than just another face in the crowd.” Rose began his time at Eastern with ambitions to become a history teacher and cross country coach at a small rural high school like his own. Shortly thereafter, he realized that “history buff” was really more his hobby, and his true calling was with sports marketing. “I have a fascination with the marketing/advertising field, and sports have always been a part of my life,” said Rose. “Combining the two into a career seemed like a great fit.” That winning combination led Rose to two successful sports marketing positions in the Spokane area. In December of 2000, immediately after earning his bachelor’s degree
as media relations and promotions director for the Spokane Indians Baseball Club. It was a seasonal job, which allowed Rose to attend graduate school at Marshall University during the off-season, where he earned a master’s degree in athletic administration. In 2003, Minor League Sports Zone gave Rose their “Rising Star” award, expressing that he was “a major league talent in a minor league market,” a statement that still motivates Rose to this day. After a
22
EASTERN
promotion to sponsorship director and five rewarding seasons with the Indians, Rose left in 2005, when he accepted the vice president of marketing position for the newly-formed Spokane Shock Arena Football team. Not only did the Shock provide a major career jump for Rose, but he also likes to point out that he was the first official employee in the championship team’s history. “One of my proudest moments was helping the Spokane Shock on their way to winning the 2006 league championship in the team’s first year,” said Rose. “The entire Shock experience was a major accomplishment, almost unthinkable. We went from expansion team to dynasty in the blink of an eye and I will always be proud, not only of that achievement, but the way in which it was attained.” After meeting head-on every challenge the Spokane sports landscape could throw at Rose, it was no surprise when he learned his name was coming up on the radar of a professional sports team across the country. Last year, Rose found himself with a new opportunity at the Palace of Auburn Hills, home of the Pistons NBA Team in the sizable sports market of Detroit, Mich. “Although I was not actively pursuing a career move, I was contacted about filling a vacant director of corporate marketing position at Palace Sports and Entertainment,” said Rose. After three rounds of phone interviews and a flight to Detroit, he was offered the job and eagerly accepted, starting his new life in Michigan within a matter of weeks. Just over a year into his new position in the Motor City, Rose balances his time between some admittedly “mundane” days, filled with dayto-day sales tasks, and “off-the-charts exciting” The relationship I developed days. The later could include anything from over the years with Dr. Jordan entertaining clients at VIP events alongside the impacted my passion for EWU likes of Tim McGraw, to hosting sponsor parties with none other than Detroit Piston Rodney more than anything else. I Stuckey, a fellow Eagle. “Over the course of the wouldn’t mind if someday the year, we host roughly 300 events at various venues,” said Rose. “I don’t attend every event, road led me back to Cheney but I certainly don’t maintain a normal 9-to5 schedule. When you’re in the sports and to put my passion for sports entertainment field, you have to be willing to marketing to work for the sacrifice a lot of nights, weekends and holidays in order to enjoy working in such an exciting and team I am most passionate highly rewarding field.” about and the school that Whether he’s getting in a few holes of golf has given me so much. with professional basketball players, or rubbing elbows with the world-class entertainers his company brings to Detroit, Rose never forgets where he came from. As he reflects on a career that is still relatively young, Rose needs little prodding to speak about those who have influenced his success along the way. While still a student at Eastern, Rose worked in the EWU Athletics equipment room with bosses Kerry Pease and Ginny Knox. Pease and Knox had a major impact on Rose’s career path, encouraging him to get involved and experience every aspect of collegiate athletics Eastern had to offer. “They displayed remarkable confidence in me to do whatever task they assigned, and I never once felt like I was just a student worker,” said Rose. But possibly the most significant piece of inspiration for Rose’s future accomplishments came with the opportunity to serve alongside then EWU President Steve Jordan on the steering committee for the first Governors Cup game. “The relationship I developed over the years with Dr. Jordan impacted my passion for EWU more than anything else,” said Rose, “I wouldn’t mind if someday the road led me back to Cheney to put my passion for sports marketing to work for the team I am most passionate about and the school that has given me so much.” E
Rose with Spokane Shock 2006 AF2 championship trophy.
Rose (pictured right) cheers on the Eagles at 2010 National Championship game in Frisco, Texas
Rose playing golf with Pistons forward Jonas Jerebko
Fall 2011
23
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classnotes Alumni Photo Album EWU Fans Visit Husky Stadium for Season-Opener Eagle pride came out in force Sept. 3, 2011, in Seattle when Eastern alumni and friends descended on Husky Stadium for the EWU vs. UW football game and tailgate! This was the first meeting of the 2010 FCS National Championship Eagles and the FBS Pac-12 Huskies. Eastern dominated the Huskies in total offense 504-250. But four turnovers led to the narrow victory by the Dawgs, who clinched the win with an interception in the end zone with 29 seconds left on the clock, and a final score of 30-27. Junior All-America receiver Brandon Kaufman had 10 catches for 140 yards, Nicholas Edwards had 12 grabs for 108 yards and a touchdown and Greg Herd had seven catches for 87 yards and a TD. Each player had career highs for receptions and yards in the game. Sophomore Ashton Clark added four grabs for 73 yards and a touchdown.
Women’s basketball head coach Wendy Schuller, Brad Schuller and their children
Sam Anderson, EAA president and Thorne Tibbitts ‘61
Dennis Snellman ’95, Anthony Hundt ’97, Becki Hundt, Atom Duszynski ’97, Jeff Mitchell ’97 and Chan Erdman ‘95
Kevin ’80 and Linda Fairhurst ’80, Von Klohe ’88, Lisa Poplawski ’01, 94, Brenda Klohe ’90 and Nancy Tsutakawa ‘70
EWU Pride in the Aloha State Alumni and friends gather to show support for their Eastern Eagles wherever they go – Seattle, South Dakota or Montana – as the 2011 football season gets underway.
26
EASTERN
Eastern alumni got together in Hawaii June 24 and 25, 2011, to share stories, laughs and Eagle pride with former classmates and new friends. Pictured from left: Katie Hardwick ‘80, Fran Bierig ‘76, Roland Ariola ‘76, EWU Director of Alumni Advancement Lisa Poplawski ‘01 and ‘94, Cheryl Ariola ‘76, John Dang ‘76, Lyn Kinoshita ‘77 and Dale Kegley ‘80.
’10 s ’10 Gerald Claghorn, BS biology, has been awarded a fellowship through the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, as he works on his PhD. He is in the Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology Program at the University of California, Riverside, Calif. ’10 Erin C. Cleveland, MEd French, has been awarded a Fulbright Classroom Teacher Exchange to Bretagne, France, for the 2011-12 academic year, to teach English as a foreign language to middle school students. ’10 Ramona Peacock-Bowman, BA business, has been hired by Professional Realty Services of Washington’s Spokane office to work within the Spokane and TriCities areas. ’10 Scott A. Snodgrass, BA criminal justice, and ’10 Megan Hooper, BA education, married April 23, 2011, in Oakesdale, Wash. The couple works and resides in Cheney.
’00 s ’09 George E. Stoess, BA management, and ’03 Gina T. (Bogath) Stoess, welcomed their son Henry Frederick, born Jan. 10, 2011. ’08, ’05 Shannon Blue Webb, MSW, BA criminal justice, was awarded “Woman of the Year,” by the National Association of Professional Women. She currently is employed by Pioneer Human Services, as a member of their clinical team. She lives in Bellingham, Wash. ’06, ’93 Guy Breshears, MA history, BA education, married Peggy Chan in May 2011. The couple is moving to Hong Kong, where he will teach. He has donated a large amount of his research materials and books to a special collection in the EWU Library. His third book, To Seize Their Lands: Manifest Destiny in Washington Territory, was recently published by Heritage Books, Inc. ’06 Adam D. Harki, BA business, has been accepted, and is enrolled at Suffolk University Law School in Boston, Mass., where he has been awarded a renewable merit scholarship.
’06 Sarah C. Rathbun, BA criminal justice, married Toby Quiring, May 19, 2011, at Makena Cove, Maui, Hawaii. She works for the Kootenai County Juvenile Detention Center, as a detention counselor. The couple lives in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. ’06 Jacqueline May Wilson (Gorski), BA music, received her doctorate of musical arts in bassoon performance and pedagogy from the University of Iowa, spring 2011 and will be joining the faculty of the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire as a lecturer in bassoon this fall. ’05, ’01 Ryan C. Grant, MEd, BA education, and ’99 Paula R. Grant, BA education, welcomed their son Conner Daniel, born May 10, 2011. ’05 Thomas “Pete” Ryan, MSW, has been hired by the South East Alaska Regional Health Consortium Behavioral Health Division as a behavioral health clinician at the Alicia Roberts Medical Center. ‘05 Kathleen Senff, BA management, and ’00 Nathan Ward, have opened their own clothing store, “Tulees U” in Mount Vernon, Wash. ’04 Allison Benjamin, BS public relations, has been hired by Washington State University College of Nursing, as its marketing and communications manager. She formerly worked at Cancer Care Northwest. She has served several years on the Spokane Regional MarCom Association board, including serving as president, 20092010. ’04 Erin Reed, BS dental hygiene, and ’03 Travis Reed, DPT, BS exercise science, welcomed their second child, daughter Trinity Ziara, on Feb. 18, 2011. Travis is the director of North Bend Physical Therapy. ’04 David Tempel, BA education, and his wife ‘04 Sara (Borck) Tempel, BA marketing, welcomed their son Ryan David, born May 19, 2011. They live in Ephrata, Wash. ’03 Marty L. Gonzales, BS communication studies, is the director of Mobius Kids Children’s Museum, located in River Park
Square in downtown Spokane. He was selected as one of the top 20 Under 40 young professionals in the July/August Issue of the Inland Business Catalyst Magazine. ’03 Kara A. (Hendrick) Lamb, BA criminal justice, and her husband William, welcomed their son Nolan William, born on the couple’s third wedding anniversary, Aug. 18, 2010. They live in Spokane. ’02 Gavin Staeheli, BA education, has been recently hired by Keller Williams Realty Spokane as an agent. He previously worked for Safeco Insurance. ’01 Patrick O. McLaughlin, BS biology, recently completed his family practice residency in Greeley, Colo. He graduated from the University of Washington Medical School in 2008, and has been living in Greeley for the past three years with his wife Andrea and daughter Meagan Kate, born March 8, 2011. They are moving to Wenatchee, Wash., where Patrick will start his family practice career at Columbia Valley Community Health Center. ’01 Danni Marie Orne, BA health service administration, has been hired by Alderwood Manor as executive director. She previously worked for Burien Nursing and Rehabilitation in Seattle, and has 12 years of related experience. ’00, ’98 Kriste Colley-Valdez, MS applied psychology and BS developmental psychology, has opened a life and career coaching practice, Coaching Toward Empowerment. She does in-person, e-coaching and tele-coaching, helping women define, reach and live their dreams. She lives in Lawton, Okla.
’90 s ’99 Amy (Bouchard) Brooks, BA human resource management, was elected as vice president of communication and outreach for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, (UNLV) chapter of the Nevada Faculty Alliance, a political action committee and nonprofit organization with a mission of advancing higher education in Nevada.
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classnotes ’99 Lora (Botha) Clothier, BA PEHR, is opening BioJunction Sports Therapy in west Seattle. Prior to opening her own clinic, Lora worked for more than eight years at G2 Sports Therapy in north Seattle and she recently wrapped up an interim contract with the Pro Sports Club in Bellevue, Wash. A volleyball player at Eastern, she continues to play the indoor season with USA Volleyball, one of the world’s leading organizations for the sport. This summer she joined other elite players for the 2011 USAV Open Championships. ’99 Marcus McCollum, BA electronic media and filmic art, has been signed as a director to Hello!, a production company that produces content for a wide-range of media including commercials, interactive and music videos. The past six years, he was with Crossroads Films. His work includes comedic spots for brands such as Toyota, Hershey’s, Honda, Turbo Tax and Time Warner. He lives in Lancaster, Calif. ’99 Julie Silbar, BA interdisciplinary studies, has been promoted from director of business systems support group to vice president of hospitality systems and central reservations at Red Lion Hotel Corporation in Spokane. ’98 T.J. Brill, BA marketing, has been hired as a vice president and commercial loan officer for Inland Northwest Bank. He previously worked for Banner Bank in Spokane, and has 13 years of banking experience. ’98 Patsy Gayda, BA liberal studies, has been named Spokane Teachers Credit Union’s vice president-branches. She joined the credit union as a teller in 1985, rising through the ranks to become director of branch operations in 2004. She is treasurer for the Greater Spokane Valley Chamber of Commerce and she is a board member for Women Helping Women. ’98 Monica Gyarfas, BA human resource management, has earned the “Professional in Human Resources Certification,” from the Human Resources Certification Institute. She is a human resources administrator for Global Credit Union.
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’98 James P. Moran, BA education, has been awarded a James Madison Fellowship by the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation of Washington D.C., in its 20th annual competition. Moran is a teacher at Pathways Middle School in Meridian, Idaho. His is one of 57 fellowships awarded in 2011.
’96 Kyle Rydell, BA education, has been hired as the Republic School District superintendent. He has been principal of Trent Elementary School in the East Valley School District in Spokane Valley since 2007.
’98 Leslie Czernik, BA English, has been appointed events chair for 2011-12 for the Spokane Regional MarCom Association. She works for Pearson Packaging Systems.
’95 Colin C. Conway, BA business, is a commercial real estate broker with Kiemle & Hagood Company, specializing in the sale and leasing of retail real estate. He is also a partner in a new martial arts studio, Kenpo Karate Studio, in downtown Spokane.
’97, ’92 Martin Patrick Hughes, PhD and BS chemistry, has been hired as manager of Product Development at Boehringer-Ingelheim’s Ben Venue Laboratories in Bedford, Ohio. He is moving from Columbus, Ohio, with his wife Evan and their two children.
’95 Chad Larsen, BA education, has been hired as the athletic and activities director for Bellingham High School, in Bellingham, Wash. Prior to that, he taught and coached at Meridian High School for 11 years and he became the athletic director there in 2008.
’96 Brenda Boateng, BS communication studies, has been promoted to review board coordinator in the department of evaluation and quality at the United Network for Organ Sharing. She was formerly a referral coordinator at Hospice of Virginia. She lives in Richmond, Va.
’94 Lori A. Johnson, MEd, has been hired as the new principal for Broadway Elementary School, in the Central Valley School District in Spokane Valley. For the past 16 years, she has served as the principal at Liberty Elementary and Junior High School in Spangle, Wash. She has 22 years of education experience.
New This Year Welcome to “Eagle Village” The tailgate area in Lot 12, behind Roos Field has been revamped and renamed “Eagle Village.” It’s the “go-to spot” for tailgating at Eastern football games. The Village will have activities for all ages, along with a DJ and live music. Miller Lite Touchdown Club Thanks to Odom Corporation and Farmers Insurance Agent Bryan Jarrett, fans will now be able to watch the Eagles at field level in the “Miller Lite Touchdown Club.” This new addition will be in the south end zone (scoreboard end). Admission is $30 (doesn’t include game ticket). It does include a 40 ft. x 40 ft. tent with tables and chairs outside the tent, all-youcan-eat food and two drink tickets per person. There’s a limit of 200 spectators, on a first-come, first-served basis. 6th Man Club To jump start his tenure at Eastern, men’s basketball Coach Jim Hayford has created the 6th Man Club. The goal is to get EWU fans personally connected to the basketball program. For more information, go to the 6th Man Club, www.goeags.com.
’93 Chris S. Johnson, BA business, has been promoted to director of accounts receivable, credit and collections at TrueBlue, Inc., in Tacoma, Wash. He has been with the company since 2006. ’90 Jarrod Boyle, BA recreation management, and his wife Ali, are the owners of Alexandria Nicole Cellars, which was named the 2011 Washington Winery of the Year in the spring 2011 edition of Wine Press Northwest.
’80 s ’89 Greg Bever, BA liberal studies, has been elected to the Board of Trustees of AAA Washington. He is the publisher of Spokane’s Journal of Business and also serves on the board of directors for Greater Spokane Incorporated and the Community Colleges of Spokane. Throughout his career, he has served on many other boards including SIRTI, Spokane Convention and Visitor’s Bureau and the Washington State Parks Foundation.
’88 Mary L. Kienholz, BA business/liberal arts, has had her books, Opium Traders and Their Worlds, Vol. 2, and Adventures in Poetry, published by iUniverse.
’86 Marchelle Mae Fias, is a professor at Brown Mackie College, where she teaches public speaking. She lives in Meridian, Idaho.
’87 Todd LaRue, BA business, is the director of national accounts for Lens Care, General Eye Care, Eye Vitamins for Bausch & Lomb. He lives in Sparta, N.J.
’86 Bobby C. Sells, BA criminal justice, retired Sgt., honorable discharge, served from 1971-74. He resides in Nashville, Tenn.
’87 James J. Sullivan, BA management, married Teresa Concepion Albare Ramirez, Sept. 12, 2009. He lives in Redmond, Wash.
’85 John Clemens, BA marketing, has been hired by MetLife Home Loans, as a senior mortgage loan officer. He has 13 years of local mortgage industry experience.
’86 Gregory Deckard, BA management, has been re-elected to the Independent Community Bankers of America’s board of directors and has been appointed chairman of the organization’s Regulatory Review Committee. Deckard is chairman, president and CEO of State Bank Northwest.
’85 Joseph B. Harris, BA physical education, has been a varsity boys basketball coach and physical education teacher at Chelan High School, in Chelan, Wash., for 20 years. He was inducted into the Washington Interscholastic Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame on July 21, 2011.
Welcome New Alumni The class of 2011 was the first to “walk” on the red turf in The Inferno at Roos Field on June 11. Eastern’s Alumni Association welcomed its newest members – 2,519 undergraduate students and 660 graduate students (master’s and doctoral degrees).
Associate Professor Mimi Marinucci of the
Women’s and Gender Studies Department was this year’s keynote speaker at the undergraduate graduation ceremony. She was the recipient of the EWU President’s Award. Marinucci also received a Professor of the Year award, as well as Faculty Merit Awards for Scholarship, Teaching and Service. The keynote speaker for the graduate students’ Commencement was Assistant Professor Amanda Reedy from the School of Social Work, who received the Graduate Faculty of the Year award.
At
Eastern
at
Bellevue,
160
Eastern
undergraduates were eligible for the June 16 commencement ceremony.
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classnotes ’83 Randall Guidinger, BA radio/TV, has been hired by Numerica Credit Union as branch manager of the Lyons branch in Spokane. He previously served as branch manager of Kitsap Credit Union in Silverdale, Wash., and has more than 21 years of credit union industry experience. ’81 William Anthony O’Daly, MA English, has completed his eight-book series with the publication of World’s End, a translation of the late-career and posthumous poetry of Chilean Nobel Poet Laureate Pablo Neruda. All volumes are published by Copper Canyon Press. The celebratory reading-performance, with Spanish classical guitarist Louis Valentine Johnson, was held June 4, 2011, in Grass Valley, Calif.
’70 s ’77 Nicholas D. Sweers, BA journalism/ history, is vice president of global communications for Motorola Solutions, Inc., in Schaumberg, Ill. He oversees all international and U.S. media relations, internal communications and industry analyst relations. ’73 Michael Grant Cahill, BA psychology, was presented with the Secretary of the Army Award for Valor, posthumously, for his heroic actions during an attack at Fort Hood, located outside of Killeen, Texas. Cahill served as a civilian contractor at the time of the attack on Nov. 5, 2009, and is credited with being the first to try to stop the shooting rampage before being slain.
’73 Jerald R. Litt, BA geography, has been appointed to the Washington State Transportation Commission. A resident of East Wenatchee, he has worked as a planning professional for his entire career, retiring from public service after 13 years as the community development director for the city of Lacey, Wash. During his 10 years as the Douglas County planning director, he spearheaded Douglas County’s successful implementation of the Growth Management Act. He also has worked as a planner in Chelan and Douglas counties, and served as president of the Washington State Association of County and Regional Planning Directors.
2011 Distinguished Alumni Award Winners The EWU Alumni Association announced the recipients of the Distinguished Alumni Awards at the annual Benefactors’ Appreciation Dinner in May. Since 1973, the awards have recognized 96 alumni for their outstanding achievements in professional fields and exceptional lifetime contributions in their communities. This year’s award winners are: Jamie Manson PhD, ’94, Outstanding Achievement in Professional Endeavors Manson was honored for his strong record of career achievements. He returned to EWU in 2003, to join the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry as an associate professor. He is passionate about teaching and research, and has not only received grants from the National Science Foundation, but is known internationally for his work in the field of inorganic chemistr y. Larry Soehren ’81, Service to Community Soehren has contributed to the regional community through his service and volunteer work. He is vice president Pictured left to right, Jamie Manson, Larry Soehren and Dave Carter. and COO of Kiemle and Hagood, Spokane’s largest commercial real estate services company. He has spent countless hours working with various civic, nonprofit and other professional organizations to improve our region’s economy, vibrancy and quality of life. The two most outstanding examples of his work are with the YMCA and the Public Facilities District in Spokane. Dave Carter ’77, Community Building Carter was recognized for his work to promote equity and to advance underrepresented groups. He has been a Spokane County public defender for more than 20 years, guiding juveniles through the judicial system. In his career, Carter has represented more than 5,000 troubled youth and has dedicated himself to improving life for this most vulnerable population.
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’70 Rock Peterson, BA management, owner of Brien Motors in Everett, Wash., was honored by his peers with the Robert P. Mallon Dealer of the Year award, May 19, 2011, at the Washington State Auto Dealers Association’s annual convention. The committee noted his continued community involvement and contributions to organizations such as the Edmonds Art Center, Housing Hope, United Way and others. In 2009, Rock also won the Executive of the Year award from the Everett Area Chamber of Commerce.
Proceeds benefit the Eastern Fund and are used for the area of greatest need, including student scholarships, academic projects and the Governor Martin Alumni House. For more information call the Alumni Advancement Office at 888.EWU.ALUM.
Eagle Athletic Association is the official booster organization for Eagle Athletics. Since, 1983, the EAA has encouraged the involvement and financial support of alumni, parents and friends of the university’s athletic programs. “We had a great spring, which culminated in a very successful fund drive,” said Sam Anderson, EAA president. “I am proud to say that we have eclipsed the mark of 1,000 memberships.” The EAA is dedicated to continuing the tradition of excellence by providing nearly 300 student-athletes with the opportunity to succeed both academically and athletically. The EAA has eight different membership levels to choose from. All membership levels have privileges associated with them. Some of these privileges include: VIP/donor hospitality access, season seat priority purchasing, donor parking and program recognition. For more information go to www.goeags.com/EAA, or call Krysta Plato, 509.359.6208. Become a fan of the EAA on Facebook.
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$200 $100 $500
Join the EAA, the Team Behind the Teams
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Alumni and Individuals Graduating seniors and their parents Corporate
1,000 Members and Counting!
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The tax-deductible bricks are 4” x 8” and display special messages chosen by you. You may add your class year, collegiate organization or a special message. Bricks are also a great opportunity to congratulate a recent grad, celebrate a degree or accomplishment, or honor a loved one. Order now! Go to www.ewu.edu/brick to purchase your brick, see photos of existing bricks, learn more about the “Pass through the Pillars” tradition and view a special video presentation.
’67 Mark W. Kuntz, BA business, retired June 23, 2011, after 40 years in the construction and metal fabrication industries. He is retiring to his home of 33 years in Kennewick, Wash.
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Create a personalized engraved brick to be set in the Hello Walk - the pathway between historic Showalter Hall and the Gates of Knowledge.
’69 John O’Neil, BA English, retired after nearly 30 years with the Cottonwood Library in Cottonwood, Ariz., were he served as director.
E
Make Your Mark
’60 s
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’70 Jon Heimbinger, BA finance, was recognized by the Washington State Senior Games in July 2011, with its premier “Spirit of the Games” Award. For the past 13 years, the 63-year-old Spokane businessman and lifetime athlete has traveled to Olympia, bringing one or two basketball teams with him, to compete in the Washington State Senior Games. For the past 33 years, he has served on the Spokane Regional Sports Commission Board and he has been inducted into the Inland Empire Hall of Fame, the Northwest Region Softball Hall of Fame, Inland Northwest Sports Hall of Fame and the Spokane Falls Community College Hall of Fame.
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Still Red. Just Greener. What’s up? • Printing costs
EWU Office of Alumni Advancement spent approximately $115,000 on printing in the past fiscal year.
• Mailing costs
We also spent approximately $40,000 on mailing.
That’s an increase of 30 percent in printing and mailing costs over the past three years!
What’s goin’ down? • State funding for EWU
More than 45 percent decrease over the past three years.
What can we do? • We are committed to keeping you informed. • We will improve our communication with you. Going more green and saving more green – it’s the right thing to do.
What will you notice? • Less clutter in your mailbox – hooray! We will be mailing less paper to you.
• Enhanced event communications in Eastern magazine
You can still receive three issues annually by mail, or request to receive Eastern online only. Just drop us a line at easternmagazine@ewu.edu – we love 21st century technology.
• Greater opportunities for updating your email address so you can still receive special event info.
What can you do? • Here’s your “To-Do Today List”:
Visit us online at alumni.ewu.edu 32
EASTERN
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To be included in “In Memoriam,” we require a newspaper obituary or a letter of notification from the immediate family. We extend our sympathy to the families of the following alumni and faculty.
inmemoriam ’10 s Carlos E. Slaughter ‘11, age 22, died June 23, 2011, Camas, Wash.
Stephen R. Frey ’68, age 67, died July 17, 2011, Spokane, Wash.
’00 s
Judith A. Wooley ’68, age 71, died June 4, 2011, San Rafael, Calif.
David A. Saling ’02, age 51, died July 2, 2011, Spokane
Samuel Ellsworth Indorf ‘67, age 69, died May 4, 2011, Spokane
’90 s
Margaret “Peggy” Rudolph ’65, age 85, died June 18, 2011, Spokane
Marc Alan Avery ’95, age 51, died April 7, 2011, North Bend, Wash. Sheila M. Adams O’Grady ‘95, age 67, died May 5, 2011, Omak, Wash.
James R. Miller ’64, age 68, died May 15, 2011, Aberdeen, Wash.
’80 s
Katherine Snipes ’64, age 89, died April 14, 2011, Spokane
Robert Van Zee ’87, age 72, died July 20, 2011, Spokane
Marian E. Warren ’63, age 89, died March 13, 2011, Independence, Ore.
Darrell C. Nelson ’81, age 69, died Oct. 31, 2010, Las Vegas
Judith Lee McElvain ’62, ’61, age 72, died May 5, 2011, Spokane
’70 s Karen (Heilsberg) Johns ’76, age 59, died July 9, 2011, Spokane Barbara Jo Wilkerson ’76, age 58, died July 19, 2011, Bellingham, Wash. Diane Pearl Woodman ’75, age 60, died July 3, 2011, Valleyford, Wash. Craig Allen McCollim ’74, age 66, died May 30, 2011, Bozeman, Mont. Jon A. Kingman ’73, age 68, died May 9, 2011, Spokane Valley James G. Pollard ’73, age 72, died July 10, 2011, Spokane
Hetvina Hamlin Thompson ’62, age 97, died July 18, 2011, Spokane David Crowell ’61, died May 2011, Anchorage, Alaska Joseph H. Mertens ’61, age 75, died April 29, 2011, Spokane Donald Robert Smith Jr. ’61, age 77, died May 12, 2011, Spokane Lois Evanoff ’60, age 93, died May 2, 2011, Spokane
Col. James Wagner, USAF, Retired ’73, age 88, died May 13, 2011, Spokane
Carl (Bud) Boe ’54, age 82, died May 25, 2011, Federal Way, Wash.
David W. John ’72, age 83, died March 22, 2011, Omak, Wash.
Virgil R. Durand Jr. ’52, age 80, died May 23, 2011, Rathdrum, Idaho
Frank R. Mace ’70, age 93, died April 12, 2011, Cheney, Wash.
Verla Mae Palmer ’52, age 83, died May 20, 2011, Campbell, Calif.
’60 s
’40 s
Donald J. Campbell ’68, age 84, died May 14, 2011, Kennewick, Wash.
Robyn Ann Strayer, 48, of Newport, Wash., passed away May 20, 2011, from a brain aneurysm. She worked at Eastern as an Education/NCATE coordinator and adjunct professor. Strayer served 21 years as crytologic technician and instructor in the U.S. Navy, retiring as a Chief Petty Officer in 2002. She received her bachelor’s degree while in the Navy and her MS degree in psychology from EWU in 2006.
Coach Brent Wooten
Theodore Aust Teitzel ‘59, age 73, died July 6, 2010, Chehalis, Wash. Ralph Gene Montroy ’56, age 80, died May 22, 2011, Spokane
Bill M. Womble ’69, age 64, died April 30, 2011, Houston, Texas
Charles E. Miller, PhD, 84, died June 24, 2011. Miller retired from Eastern’s Department of Education in September 2002. He was responsible for bringing the oneroom school house, built in 1905, from the Newport, Wash., area to the Cheney campus. The building, now the Cheney Normal School Heritage Center, was originally known as the Jore Schoolhouse. The building symbolizes Eastern’s historical significance as a teacher preparation institute, and provides a venue for seminars and presentations related to the history and development of education in the Inland Empire and the Pacific Northwest.
’50 s
James Pugh ’73, age 73, died May 14, 2011, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho
Nick Joe Ecklor ’69, age 76, died May 15, 2011, Fort Worth, Texas
Faculty/Staff
Frances (Torpey) Shumway ’40, age 93, died July 3, 2011, Lacey, Wash.
’30 s Wilbert E. Nuetzmann ’38, age 94, died March 14, 2011, Verlot, Wash. Jane Pauline ’34, age 97, died May 5, 2011, Pasco, Wash.
Former head football coach, wrestling coach and athletic director at Eastern Washington University, died Aug. 29, at age 72. He was a three-sport athlete at Walla Walla High School, where he played for his father, Boots Wooten. He lettered three seasons at the University of Washington, with two Rose Bowl trips. He spent more than 30 years as a physical education professor at EWU.
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Did you know … You can drink lattes in the library, sit in comfortable overstuffed chairs, and it’s OK to talk?
A lot has changed since JFK Library opened in 1968.
In fact, on one night, partying is encouraged!
See for yourself at “Casino Royale.” EWU’s 9th annual Oktoberfest 5-10:30 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011 JFK Library on the Cheney Campus Dinner - Victor Azar (Victor’s) Beverages - Latah Creek Wineries, Walla Walla Vintners, Northern Lights Brewing and Golden Hills Brewery Casino jazz – by the Don Goodwin Group Live auction, with something for everyone, from computers to exciting getaway vacations. Tickets: $35, $175 for a table of six, $15 EWU students, available online, www.ewu.edu/oktoberfest, or by calling 509.359.2264. All proceeds go to the EWU Libraries’ Collection Endowment Fund to purchase books, journals and electronic resources for students, faculty, staff and the EWU community at large.
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Start something big at EWU events. For more information and to register, visit http://alumni.ewu.edu or call 888.EWU.ALUM.
alumni
eventscalendar October 8
22 EWU Alumni Pregame Event (Sacramento) Pregame 3:30-5:30 p.m. Join alumni and Eagle fans at the official tailgate at Sacramento State University. Enjoy a barbecue, beverages, giveaways and more.
Oktoberfest, Casino Royale JFK Library, 5-10:30 p.m. For more information contact Carol at 509.359.6915, or visit www.ewu.edu/oktoberfest.
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Homecoming Weekend Homecoming parade, pep rally/bonfire and bed races 7 p.m., at First St. and “C,” in downtown Cheney and ending at “E” St. Put on your best clown face, ring master suit or bearded lady costume and join the fun while you rally the team to victory.
- thegreatest show on
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Homecoming Jazz Concert Featuring the Eastern Jazz Ensemble, Collegians (vocal jazz) and special guests Ferris High School Jazz Orchestra 7:30 p.m., Showalter Auditorium, Cheney Campus
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Annual Alumni Tailgate Decorating Contest various locations around Roos Field, 1:30-2:30 p.m. Tune up your barbecue grills and get ready to battle for tailgate superiority. New entry categories and great prizes!
15
EWU Football* vs. Northern Colorado Roos Field, Kickoff 4:05 p.m.* Look for the Alumni Association tailgate tent in parking lot P-12 lot behind Roos Field, 2 ½ hours before game time to get your tattoos, noise makers and grilled hot dogs.
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EWU Football* vs. Portland St. Roos Field, Kickoff 1:05 p.m.* Look for the Alumni Association tailgate tent in parking lot P-12 lot behind Roos Field, 2 ½ hours before game time to get your tattoos, noise makers and grilled hot dogs.
January 16 Alumni Board Meeting, Cheney 28 Alumni Appreciation Night, Cheney Bring the entire family to the EWU vs. Montana St. men’s basketball game. Kids pregame activities, poster signing and discounted concessions available. Bring a can of food or nonperishable food item and help us restock the shelves at the Cheney Food Bank. Sponsored by Washington Trust Bank.
Feb/March East Meets the Old West at the Annual Alumni Beer Sampling in Spokane. This annual tradition has been moved to the late winter when we are all looking for a reason to escape the winter blues. Look for some new twists and turns to the event this year. Location and date, TBA. For more information regarding alumni activities and updated event details, visit http://alumni.ewu.edu/events, or call 888.EWU.ALUM or 509.359.4550. *For a detailed and updated schedule of all fall athletic events, ticket prices and to reserve your seats, visit www.goeags.com.
What’s New with You? Did you get a promotion, start a new career, win a Nobel Prize, get married, retire, move or have a baby? Send us your news and we’ll share it with alumni and friends in an upcoming issue. We can also update our records with the new information. Send your note with a click! http://alumni.ewu.edu. Or send this form to Class Notes, EWU Alumni Advancement, 506 F St., Cheney, WA 99004-2402 Phone: 888.EWU ALUM or 509.359.4550 Fax: 509.359.4551
Name (Former Name) Class Year (s) Degree (s)
Address
Is address new?
Phone (s)
E-mail (s)
News
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EASTERN Magazine
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e c m o o m H i ng U W E Oct. 10-15, 2011
- the-
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