Categories
1970s Class Notes

Stuart Gibson (BSJ73)

Stuart Gibson has joined the Dutch tax education and research research foundation, IBFD (International Bureau of Fiscal Documentation) as Chief Editor, US. After retiring from the Tax Division of the US Department of Justice in 2013 (and before joining IBFD), Stuart had worked as Director, International Tax, at Bloomberg Tax & Accounting, Counsel in the Washington, DC office of Schiff Hardin LLP, and Editor of Tax Notes International, at Tax Analysts.

Categories
1990s Class Notes

Steven Friess (BSJ94)

Steven Friess and his husband, Miles Smith, welcomed a son, Nevada Ebbess Friess, born Oct. 18, 2019. Friess is a freelance journalist based in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Categories
1980s Class Notes

Judy Fahys (MSJ87)

Judy Fahys is the first Mountain West reporter for the Pulitzer prize-winning nonprofit InsideClimate News after a daily news career at the Salt Lake Tribune and NPR Utah/KUER. Not only does she write about climate change, energy and the environment throughout the region, she’s also helping to build ICN’s growing National Environment Reporting Network.

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2000s Class Notes Featured Class Notes

Todd Johnson (BSJ08, MSJ09)

Todd Johnson has been hired as Chief Content Officer of The Grio, a leading news and entertainment site dedicated to providing African-American audiences with compelling stories and perspectives. Johnson first joined theGrio.com shortly after it launched in August, 2009, as a video journalist and reporter. Johnson was eventually promoted to Managing Editor, helping guide the news site through multiple transitions before it was acquired by Byron Allen’s Entertainment Studios in 2016. Prior to his return to The Grio as Chief Content Officer, Johnson served as Editorial Director of NBCBLK, a division of NBC News Digital. Johnson will be responsible for elevating The Grio’s voice and branding, its overall editorial strategy and growing its audience.

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1950s Featured Legacies Legacies

James Robertson Driscoll (BSJ55)

James Robertson Driscoll (BSJ55), a former advertising executive, died Nov. 9, 2019. Driscoll was born on Jan. 14, 1933 and grew up in Winnetka, Ill. After graduating from Lake Forest Academy in 1951, Driscoll attended Medill, and then began a long and successful career in the advertising business in Chicago before joining New York based Warwick & Legler, Inc. in 1959.

While at Warwick, Driscoll was promoted to Executive Vice President and led the development of international advertising campaigns to market the full portfolio of Seagram’s beverages. Following his retirement, Driscoll and his wife Cookie relocated to Ohio.

Driscoll served through several outreach ministries which included a long-term international mission in Porto, Portugal. He was happiest spending time with his wife Cookie, his six children and his seven grandchildren. Among his many passions were jazz music, photography, golf, skiing, bird watching, nature and the great outdoors.

Driscoll knew how to make friends with people throughout his life. His joy for living and his infectious enthusiasm drew many people close to him. He would greet everyone with his bright smile and his imaginative sense of humor, and he often went out of his way to make others smile and laugh. Driscoll is survived by his wife, his six children, seven grandchildren and six great grandchildren.

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/ncadvertiser/obituary.aspx?n=james-robertson-driscoll&pid=194491967

Categories
1960s Legacies

Jeanne L. Gleason (BSJ63)

Jeanne L. Gleason died Nov. 18, 2019. She was 77.  Gleason earned her bachelor’s degree from Medill and a master’s degree from the University of Chicago. She worked as an elementary textbook editor at Scott Foresman, Silver Burdett Ginn, Pearson, and Houghton Mifflin.

She is survived by her brother Robert Gleason, her nephew David and her dear friend and caregiver, Ruth Otey.

Categories
1950s Featured Legacies Legacies

Charles Thomas Alexander (non-alumnus)

Charles Thomas Alexander, professor emeritus at Medill and former director of the Medill News Service, died Nov. 15, 2019.  He was 91. Alexander was born in Minneapolis on Sept. 21, 1928, but his family home was in Mount Vernon, Ind. After receiving his bachelor’s degree from Duke University, 1950, he served in the military during the Korean War and studied for two years at the Boston University School of Theology. He obtained his master’s degree in journalism from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and began his journalism career with the Washington Star in 1956 as an assistant city editor. He then became managing editor of Delaware’s Wilmington Morning News and Evening Journal in 1961, and then an editor and publisher of the Dayton Journal Herald in Ohio. He returned to Washington, D.C. in 1975 to serve as a professor of journalism and director of the Medill News Service. He retired in 1994.

He loved sports, music, theater, travel and the church, and served as an elder of the Georgetown Presbyterian Church for over 30 years.

A long-time Alexandria resident, he is survived by his wife of 68 years, Elizabeth; his daughters Elizabeth and Lucy; and grandchildren Charlie and Emma.

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/washingtonpost/obituary.aspx?fhid=2192&n=charles-alexander&pid=194516040

 

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1940s Featured Legacies Legacies

John H. Worthington (MSJ48)

John Henry Worthington, a navigator and proud WWII veteran, died Oct. 16, 2019. He was 97. He graduated from Temple University and earned his master’s degree from Medill in 1948. He lived in Evanston and worked for the Chicago Sun Times, before moving to Michigan, where he worked for The Detroit News for eight years. He completed his career as an editor and publisher of the D.A.C. News . After his wife’s death, Worthington moved to Foxboro, Mass., where he took up golf, gardened, went on walks with his beloved pet, Diva, and enjoyed a leisurely retirement.

Worthington is survived by his children, grandchildren, and brother.

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/detroitnews/obituary.aspx?n=john-worthington&pid=194373301&fhid=15208

Categories
1960s Legacies

Carol E. Kramer (MSJ65)

Carol Kramer, a magazine editor and newspaper reporter, died Aug. 13, 2019. She was 79.

Kramer was born August 16, 1940, in Chicago, graduated cum laude from Marquette University, and then received her master’s in journalism from Medill.

She was a reporter at the Chicago Tribune, a writer on the New York Daily News Sunday Magazine, and an editor at the paper’s short-lived afternoon edition, the Daily News Tonight, started by Clay Felker.

She was a lifestyle editor at 7 Days, a city weekly that folded in 1990, and an editor at Allure, Martha Stewart Living and Real Simple, among other publications. She volunteered every week at a local homeless shelter for nearly a decade.

Friends and coworkers remember that she always dazzled them with her encyclopedic knowledge of history, Broadway show tunes, English literature and arcane Catholic doctrine. She could rattle off presidential history — and list the presidents — with envy-inducing speed.

Kramer was a deft headline writer, an accomplished accordion player and a wonderful cook. According to her friends, her heart was enormous, her wit, biting, her oxtail stew, sublime.

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nytimes/obituary.aspx?n=carol-kramer&pid=194024838

 

Categories
1950s Legacies

Mrs. Betty Suiter Hegner (BSJ54)

Betty D. Hegner, a writer, editor, and conservationist, died Oct. 6, 2019, at the age of 87. Born 1932 in Montana, she was a regional reporter in her local 4H chapter.  In high school, she edited the newspaper and yearbook and served as a crew member for many theatre productions. She graduated second in her class and won multiple scholarships to attend Medill.

After graduating, she worked as a writer and editor for Institutions, a Chicago-based publication for which Richard Hegner’s company provided commercial art content. Through that connection the couple met and they married in 1960. In 1965 they moved from Chicago to their beloved farm in Harvard, Ill.

Betty and Richard started Hegner Real Estate in a remodeled chicken coop on their farm in 1972. They saw a keen opportunity with the RE/MAX concept and purchased the master franchise for Northern Illinois in 1977. Together, they built RE/MAX into the leading real estate brand in the region. Avid conservationists, Richard and Betty planted over 300,000 trees on their land and in 2009, they received the award for “Outstanding Tree Farmers of the Year” from the Illinois Tree Farm System. The Hegner Theatre Wing at Florida Studio Theatre in Sarasota, Fla., is a testament to their commitment to the arts.

Betty served on the boards of directors for the Soil & Water Conservation District of McHenry County, Woodstock Fine Arts Association, and Raue Center for the Arts. She and Richard started the CARES Foundation and the Hegner Family Foundation. She belonged to the Natural Organic Farmers Association, League of Women Voters, Parent-Teacher Organization, and the National Organization for Women.

Betty is survived by her children, step-grandchildren, great-grandchild and brother.