Joanne Tolkoff Graphic Design Portfolio

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Portfolio


ASSIGNMENT: Art center catalogue showcase the diversity of courses and original artwork of the adults and children atteding the school.


ASSIGNMENT: Tri-fold brochure for a local entertainer reflecting the acrobatic playfulness ofu his e, cshow.

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REGISTRATION

The deadline for pre�registration is May 15, 2006.

Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Permit #5 Baldwin City, KS Baker University

C

Participant information Name

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onvocation

�as you want it to appear on your name tag�

Phone ___________________________________________ Mailing Address __________________________________ _________________________________________________ Church or other affiliation _________________________ Special needs_____________________________________ Registration Costs Please register for free and paying events REGISTRATION

Baldwin City, KS

�includes all meals for the participant� Registrations received by May 15, 2006.......$70.00 Registrations received after May 15, 2006....$75.00 TOURS: Bus Tour: Roots of the Civil War....................$15.00 Walking Tour: Historic Baldwin City..............Free Walking Tour: Baker University Campus.......Free �including the Quayle Rare Bible Collection�

Additional meals for guests

Banquet..............................................................$ 8.00 Casual dinner.....................................................$ 8.00 with music from the Ballad of Black Jack

Saturday night...................................................$19.00

Please make checks out to Baker University. Mail this form with your check to: Kansas Area Archives of the UMC PO Box 65 Baker University Baldwin City, KS 66006

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onference Schedule

Friday Participants may wish to arrive on Friday afternoon to take advantage of several different tours of this historical area of northeastern Kansas and of the campus of Baker University, founded in 1858 by Methodists anxious to see Kansas enter the Union as a free state.

The third biennial Convocation of Archivists

is to be on the Baker University campus July 14�16, 2006. Church historians, conference and district staff members, and archivists from the fifteen conferences making up the South Central Jurisdiction of the United Methodist Church will have the opportunity to learn and share their ex� periences researching, documenting and celebrat� ing their local church histories and collecting, preserving and managing historical collections.

Conference Website www.bakeru.edu/library/archivists.html

At the opening banquet on Friday evening, author and Baker Alumnus Don Coldsmith will talk about the Circle of History, exploring the importance of local history. Those who choose to go on the bus tour in the afternoon will see the Circle of History in action.

Saturday Saturday’s programs include a keynote by Jasonne Grabher O’Brien about the history of women in ministry. Breakout sessions will focus on the care of local history materials and using them to share the history and work of the United Methodist Church in our communities and in the world. The confer� ence is especially fortunate to host Dale Patterson, Archivist�Records Administrator at the GCAH, who will be giving several presentations. After all of that hard work, share a casual dinner

and listen to Don Mueller, Composer and Director, and a couple of members of the Ballad of Black Jack cast perform numbers from this musical about a local incident from the Bleeding Kansas era.

Sunday Sunday morning worship will take place in the chapel that was brought to Baldwin City in 1996 from Sproxton, England. The opportunity to purchase and re�assemble the chapel here in northeast Kansas was made possible by an Olathe couple with the bless� ing of a generous English village Methodist congregation.

Speakers

Don Coldsmith is a Past President of Western Writers of America. He has been a finalist for the Western Writers’ Golden Spur award six times, winning the award for best original paper� back in 1990 for his book The Changing Wind. Jasonne Grabher O’Brien is Associate Director of the Hall Center for the Humanities at the University of Kansas. Before joining the Hall Center, O’Brien served as assistant profes� sor of history at Farleigh Dickinson University in Madison, NJ and was an Andrew W. Mellon fellow at the Pontifical Institute for Mediaeval Studies in Toronto.

P.O. Box 65 Baldwin City, KS 66006-0065 1-888-726-1554

Dormitory lodging (two per room)

Total Costs...........................................................$____.___

rchivists

July 14 -16, 2006

Email ___________________________________________

Friday night.......................................................$19.00

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of

ASSIGNMENT: Tri-fold conference brochure showcasing the history of the campus.


Athletics

1858-1911 1890 As early as 1856, the Rev. Osmon C. Baker – the first American Methodist bishop – began discussions of creating a university in the Kansas-Nebraska Territory. A number of towns around the area competed for it, but with a donation of 800 acres from the Palmyra Association, the small town along the prominent Santa Fe Trail was selected as the home of the first university. Known as “saints’ rest,” the community with close ties to the Methodist Episcopal Church was selected as the perfect location for an institution of higher learning. Though Kansas wouldn’t become a state for another three years, Baker University was chartered on February 12, 1858. The university was developed on the acreage south of the town of Palmyra, which would later evolve into Baldwin City. With Werter Renick Davis as its first president, the university officially opened Nov. 12 in a small building known as the Old Castle, which remains on Baker’s campus today.

Osmon Baker

1893, Foot ball Team Football had been popular around Baker’s campus since 1887, but it wasn’t until three years later that an official intercollegiate match was played. The three major universities in Kansas at the time – Baker, the University of Kansas and Washburn University – formed a football league in 1890 and the first game was played on November 22. Baker beat KU 22 to 9. Throughout the season, Baker would go on to win two more games, defeating Washburn and KU a second time, tying the Kansas City YMCA in the final game of the season. Four years later, the Board of Trustees decided the game was too violent, banning football from Baker’s campus. The football team was reinstated in 1909.

Wert er Reni ck Davi s

“When President Davis came to Kansas, a great struggle was in progress. Kansas was the first battleground between slavery and freedom. What seemed but a baptism of blood, however, proved a baptism of life and power. Kansas received the noblest colonists that ever came to an uninhabited waste.” - from William Alfred Quayle’s Eulogy for Werter Davis

Old Cast le

1866

Olive Willey

First Graduates Upon graduation, James Cavaness was Baldwin Postmaster before going on to work as a school administrator and journalist in several posts throughout southeast Kansas.

1864 William Schofield, financial agent for the University, made a personal request of support from President Abraham Lincoln. He believed that Baker’s Free State leanings would appeal to the president. Lincoln responded with a $100 donation put toward construction of Parmenter Hall.

James

Willey taught at public schools before becoming a professor of Greek and Latin at Lewis College in Glasgow, Missouri.

James

Willi amSchof i eld

1906 1890

Phog Allen brought startling success to Baker University in the early days foreshadowing his historic record for the University of Kansas. Allen played under legendary basketball inventor James Naismith for two years before becoming a coach. From 1907 to 1909, Allen coached at KU, Baker University and Haskell Institute taking the train every day between each school. During the 1908-1909 season, Allen led Baker to a winning record of 22-2.

Willi amAlf red Quayle

William Alfred Quayle was one of Baker’s true Renaissance men. When he graduated from the college as valedictorian in 1885, Quayle had learned the classics, poetry, oration, nature and religion. Upon graduation, he immediately began teaching Greek. After a brief hiatus, Quayle was made a full-time professor of Greek and vice president of the university. In 1890, only five years after his graduation, he was appointed Baker University president.

1906, Women’ s Basket ball

Women played in the first campus basketball game in 1897, scandalously clad in bloomers.

1911, Baseball

1920-1945

Pho g Allen

Cavaness Hall James Hall, who married Olive Willey after graduation, went on President to be president John Wesley Horner of Lewis College in Glasgow, Missouri, and then served as a Methodist minister in Missouri and Kansas.

1900

Alphaeus Asbury Brenton (A.A.B.) Cavaness was part of one of Baker’s earliest loyal families. His father, Urban C. Cavaness, ran a transportation service to Baker in its early years. His brother, James Mulloy Cavaness, was one of three students in Baker’s first graduating class in 1866. In the new century, Cavaness donated hundreds of acres that would later become Baker’s sports complex.

Emil Liston “I had a choice of being a doctor, baseball pitcher or coach. My folks wanted me to be a doctor, but I cast my lot with coaching and have never regretted it. The pay might not be as great, but there has been real compensation in developing young men.”

While attending Baker, Emil Liston, class of 1913, competed on a mud field and track. When he returned as athletic director in 1920, he solved that problem while helping students through the Great Depression. In 1934, construction of a field and stadium was the object of a new financial assistance program for students. In lieu of tuition, students laid the stone walls that line Liston Stadium today. The stadium was dedicated on Armistice Day in 1939 in remembrance of the Baker alumni who lost their lives in World War I. As Baker’s football and basketball coach during his 25 years at Baker, Liston also was instrumental in the creation of the National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball (later Athletics), providing smaller universities the opportunity to play in a national tournament. In 1975, Liston was inducted into the National Basketball Hall of Fame. 1907, Women’ s Tenni s

1904 While a student at Baker, James Percy Ault worked as an observatory assistant in the magnetic observatory of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. After graduating in 1904, Ault would go onto become a true explorer, joining the Carnegie Institution of Washington as a magnetic observer. In 1909, Ault joined the crew of a new research vessel, The Carnegie, and began a life exploring the seven seas where he mapped ocean floors and discovered new flora and fauna. Ault was heralded in Time Magazine in 1929 as“the Carnegie’s commander of all oceans.” An oceanic peak discovered 300 miles northwest of Hawaii by the Carnegie ship’s research would go on to be named Ault Peak.

James Percy Ault

Charlie

Richard At the end of the 1994 football season, the Baker Wildcats had been ranked in the NAIA top 25 for a consecutive 128 weeks. Charlie Richard, who gained acclaim for his college career as quarterback at Baker rival William Jewell College, joined the Wildcats in 1980 as football coach. Richard led the Wildcats on an amazing ride – 11 conference titles, 10 national appearances, 5 final four appearances and 1 national championship game. Though Richard was never able to win a national title, he had the highest winning percentage of any coach in NAIA history at 81 percent. With a record of 123-28-1, Richard was named Coach of the Year by the Heart of America Athletic Conference five times and by NAIA District 10 three times. In 2004, Richard was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame and in 2006 into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame.

Phot o graph court esy of Carnegi e Inst it ut i on of Washi ngt on, Depart ment of Terrest ri al Magnet i sm

1903

1911

Robert Benjamin Hayes, who in 1903 became one of Baker University’s first African-American graduates, went on to find considerable academic achievement in black institutions throughout the South and Midwest. Gaining success in a segregated world, Hayes served as president of George R. Smith College in Sedalia, Mo., from 1916 to 1925 and as dean of New Orleans University from 1925 to 1935.

1910

1980-1994

Sept. 24, 1911, crowds made their way to Baldwin’s Methodist Church to hear U.S. President William Howard Taft, give a speech on world peace. Preparations included construction of a new bridge on the south end of campus to keep a man of his girth from sinking into the mud.

On August 31, 1910, the train through Baldwin City was running a little late, but Baldwin townspeople didn’t seem to mind as they gathered at the Santa Fe Train Depot to greet U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt while on his way to dedicate John Brown Memorial Park in Osawatomie.

1923, George Bretnal

1946, Karl Spear

1956, James Irick

1966, Charlie Mansfield

1971, Eugenia Askew

1983, Dan Harris

1985, Rick Weaver

Presi dent Theodore Roosevelt

The Baker Relays began in 1924 as an annual track and field meet, incorporating high schools and junior colleges. Today, the meet continues as an annual NAIA competition.

1926, Track Meet

Photographs courtesy of Baker University Archives except where noted.

ASSIGNMENT: Design a seven-panel display commemorating 150 years of history for Baker University. Each panel is 3.5 feet wide by 6.7 feet tall. The panels were displayed at various events during the sesquicentennial year.

Photographs courtesy of Baker University Archives.


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“If I’ve seen farther than other men, it is because I’ve stood on the shoulder of giants.” – ISSAC NEWTON

,EADING THE 7AY BAKER UNIVERSITY > Ì 15 0 C A M P A I G N 1

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,EADING THE 7AY THE SCIENCES >Ì 150 CAMPAIGN 1

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Baker University ’s $26.4 million 8

campaign to build a new science building needs those with strong shoulders on which generations will stand. Though the biology, chemistry, physics, math and computer science departments are highly respected, students and teachers constantly strain to overcome the limitations of an 80-year-old building. The importance of this work is immense and its effects far-reaching. By supporting “Leading

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the Way: The Sciences at 150,” you will be a giant in the lives of students and in the future of scientific discovery.

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Mulvane Hall, which currently houses the physical

This poses difficulties for non-science majors who are required or want to take lab courses. There is no space for additional equipment. Some faculty members store equipment at home because there is not enough space to use it or keep it in Mulvane Hall. Doubling up on office space inhibits private conversations that are critical to mentoring young people. Faculty offices have been whittled by room dividers that offer little privacy or space and do not foster collaboration. Today’s educators are professing the inextricable link among the sciences, yet the separation required by Mulvane Hall’s construction does not easily allow collaboration.

sciences, is 80 years old. Though one of the most beautiful buildings on campus, it does not and can not meet the requirements of a modern-day science program. When vacated by the sciences, Mulvane Hall will be renovated for other classroom and campus needs created by the University’s growth. Renovation of Mulvane will cost $4 million, which is included in the $26.4 million campaign.

Environmental Concerns

Dr. Roger Boyd, Ph.D – Professor of Biology Emeritus, Director of Natural Areas

“An external review of our department last year indicates that we need to continue to emphasize our excellent field biology programs while at the same time increasing our courses in cellular and molecular biology. This will increase the demand for additional technology and equipment. We desperately need new facilities to house and utilize new equipment. “Most of our peer institutions have new or recently remodeled facilities, and we must be in a position to compete if we are to continue to be attractive to good, strong students in the areas of the sciences.”

As one might expect, there are many ventilation, temperature control and electrical issues with an aged building. These issues affect the types of scientific experimentation that can take place. Adding to the difficulty is the physical location of departments within the building. For instance, chemistry labs were built on the first floor, which means that chemicals vent out of the building at sidewalk level. Computer science and physics are on the top floor of Mulvane where sensitive instrumentation is subject to building sway.

Links between the various disciplines in the sciences are many; for example all living things obey the laws of physics and chemistry, making the understanding of these disciplines essential for the biologist. Mathematics provides the foundation for all sciences as a tool to understand and explain observed phenomena, and computer science is essential in this area of massive data sets, like the sequence of bases in the human genome.

Teaching/Learning Issues The learning process is made difficult because of a lack of laboratory space. Experiments must be removed at the end of class so instruments for the next class can be set up. In addition, lab classes fill up quickly with science majors and there is an inability to add more lab sessions.

Lack of space in a biology lab makes it difficult for students to perform experiments. Overcrowded storage provides no space for supplies or equipment. 4

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Overview

A Deserving Program One in five Baker students is a biology, chemistry, computer science, math or physics major. The number of students attracted to Baker’s science program has grown dramatically in the last 10 years. Graduates will tell you, as will employers, that they owe a great deal of their success to remarkable teachers who became their mentors.

“Furnished as all Europe now is with Academies of Science, with nice instruments and the spirit of experiment, the progress of human knowledge will be rapid and discoveries made of which we have at present no

Despite learning and teaching in less than optimal circumstances, Baker students are passionate about their disciplines, well-educated and fare extraordinarily well in their chosen professions. • The rate of placement of Baker graduates in medical schools of their choice is 73 percent compared to the national average of 47 percent.

conception.”

North

– BEnjAmin FrAnklin

• 50 percent of science graduates further their studies at graduate or professional school where they perform extremely well. Stanford, Vanderbilt, Yale, and the University of Kansas are among universities that have accepted recent graduates. • Chemistry students conducted research on the way light is produced when certain chemical reactions occur. The Kansas Academy of Science selected it as the finest undergraduate research project in the state. • Computer Science students developed multi-language software and designed a pocket PC program that interacts with drug databases. Both projects were completed for businesses. • Math and engineering students analyzed parking for the Jazz District of Kansas City, leading to construction of a neighborhood parking lot. Students later presented the project at a national business conference and competition where they shared first prize with the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

The new Allied Sciences Hall is designed to foster collaboration among the disciplines and demonstrate the excitement of science. While care has been taken to meet laboratory and other special needs of biology, chemistry, physics, computer science, and math departments, classrooms, offices and gathering areas are dispersed on various levels of the building to encourage collaboration. The new building increases the number of large teaching laboratories from 7 to 11 and adds 6 smaller laboratories for student research projects. Varying size classrooms will be “smart” classrooms that utilize state-of-the-art technology.

Faculty offices on all three floors are at the west end of the building. However, faculty members from each discipline will be intermingled among the floors to maintain close association with colleagues and students. 150

Leading the Way

Building by the

Numbers

74,380 Number of square feet

12,190 Square feet for biology

Student gathering areas, which do not exist in Mulvane Hall, are placed strategically throughout the building. These discussion AKER UNIVERSITY and studyBareas foster a sense of a t 1 5 0 are C A M Pto AIG N 1 8among 5 8 - 2 students 0 0 8 community and faculty members.

Square feet for chemistry

The plan recognizes that important ideas are formed and many lessons are learned 0 through informal1 5conversation.

Square feet for math and computer sciences

Leading the Way THE SCIENCES at 150 CAMPAIGN

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7,830 4,380 Square feet for physics

4,270

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21 Number of faculty offices

Mabee Memorial Hall

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Students vie for space in the chemistry lab.

Conference rooms and study areas 15 0

“Now I have two gigantic lab benches to myself. At Baker there is no way that would have been possible. I certainly had to be careful where I set up some of my experiments and I had to trust that other students wouldn’t touch them.

3 Number of floors

1 Rotunda extending from the first floor to the roof

“One of my fears going from Baker to graduate school was ‘Did a small school like Baker prepare me?’ I stepped into my first semester of advanced organic chemistry and I picked up where we left off. I felt like I was at the same place or ahead of students who graduated from research institutions.”

Science Building

Laura, Class of 2002, is working to improve protein-based vaccines used to fight bio-terrorism.

Laura Driver Peek Self Fellow and graduate student in the University of Kansas Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry 6

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ASSIGNMENT: Four-color 20-page fund raising booklet outlining the case for the construction of a new science building.


ASSIGNMENT: Four-fold student recruitment brochure


ASSIGNMENT: Tri-fold student recruitment brochure


History

of Yizkor Books The first yizkor book, Memorbrüch of Isaac ben Samuel of Meiningen, was produced in 1296 in Nuremberg, Bavaria (Germany) as a written record of the Jewish communities decimated and individuals slaughtered from the Rhine to the Danube—the length and breadth of Ashkenaz. Its entries dated back to 1096 when, one Sabbath in springtime, the knights of the First Crusade murdered the Jews of Speyer. The original purpose of the yizkor book was primarily liturgical. It was hoped that by invoking prayers and making donations to the less fortunate in memory of those “who gave up their life for their faith”, the living would help their ancestors’ finding eternal rest in paradise. The practice has continued – in various ways -- to this day. In the wake of the events of 1933-1945, yizkor books – some with hundreds of entries -- re-emerged as one of the most important tangible Jewish culture remnants. In addition to enabling memorial prayers for centuries of antecedents, some also included contemporary entries commemorating outstanding personages and organizations ranging from political, intellectual, artistic, professional, and recreational, as well as philanthropic and spiritual, much to be lost in the Holocaust.

Metivta’s

Book of Remembrance Yom Kippur 5774/2013

The yizkor book holdings of the Dorot Jewish Division of The New York Public Library are the most extensive in the United States. In order to preserve and to provide universal access to these extremely important books, the Library, in partnership with the National Yiddish Book Center, has undertaken to digitize the entire collection.

Artwork by Joanne Tolkoff

ASSIGNMENT: Duo-fold brochure - Back/Front


Program FAREWELL RABBI SUSAN GOLDBERG

Thank You

RUACH

Spirit - breathing life into our community Eli Rarey, storytelling

KAVANAH

Jason Carr

Rhiannon Lewis and Aaron Ky-Riesenbach

Jean Bovet & Christelle Fischer-Bovet

BRI’AH

Sylvia Carbone

Sally Dworsky and Brian Joseph

KEHILIDAD

Community - deepening connections inside our temple community and extending ourselves out into our neighborhood Josh Schorr, Kehilidad All Saints Episcopal Church: Otto Vasquez, Maria Zuira, Bernabe Soto, Annie Wells, Alexandra Conrads, Gabriella Velasquez

KO’ACH

Jennifer Bergmark & Ed Levy Richard & Lynn Browers

Gabrielle & David Klatsky Raphael Leib & Anne Bazile Marguerite Malakoff & Lloyd DeForrest

Joshua Holo & Andrea Martins Selma Holo & Fred Croton Bernard Friedman & Lesley Hyatt Les & Linda Kaye

Audrey Mandelbaum & Dave Moore Robin Neuwirth-Bishop & Mike Bishop Elise Pearlstein & Jory Felice Erica Silverman & Linda Torn Jeanne Simonoff

Nelson Katz Nancy Keystone & Michael Schlitt Lara Kislinger & Lance Jasper

Karl Hess

Cantor Ken Rothstein

Josh Holo

Mike Schlitt

Brian Joseph

Josh Schorr

Bill Burnett

Betsy & Howard Kahn

Jan Schwartz

Alexandra Conrads

Ellen & Matt Kennedy

Delaine & Russ Shane

Lisa Demidovich

Henry Leventon

Bernabe Soto

Michele DeRosa

Rhiannon Lewis

Susan Stone

Sally Dworsky

Moe Macarow

Joanne Tolkoff

Danny Feingold

Jill & Rachel Nemiro

Flori Turchin

Bill Fishman

Robin Podolsky

Otto & Gabriella Vasquez

Dan Goldstein

Eli Rarey

Annie Wells

Ken Gordon

Ondine Rarey

Catherine Woot

Megan Grosz

Aaron Ky-Riesenbach

Maria Zuira

Mary Gumport

Larry Riesenbach

**and to everyone else who did not make it to this list in time!

Desserts by Mary

SHMOOZE ON

in honor of

Bradley Zweig & Wendy Lopata

Ken Boros

COOKIES, TEA AND COFFEE

Fund event

Rabbi Susan Goldberg

...PARTy PLANNERS AND HELPERS Ali Berzon

Josh Schorr and Ken Boros, Fundraising

Ruach

Susan Zucker

Ross Berg

RUACH FUND

a TBI

Kevin Stricke & Wendy Camacho

Bill Fishman, Henry Leventon, Cantor Ken Rothstein The Quartet: Ellen Kennedy, Betsy Kahn, Danny Feingold and Bill Burnett The Quartet

stories and song

Raquel & Mark Kislinger

Strength - to sustain, to transition, to go forward as friends

HAVDALAH

An evening of celebration,

PLEDGES & DONATIONS

Intention - to study with a full heart, l’dor va dor, from generation to generation

Creation - bringing creativity to our traditions

Farewell, Rabbi Susan

ASSIGNMENT: Event program conveying the spirit and the fundamental values of the institution.

Saturday, June 8, 2013


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