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Old photgraph of a soldier in the Teacher's Regiment State cover fall November 2011
Teacher’s Regiment: The nation’s war tore at Illinois State during the University’s early years.

Volume 12 • Number 2 • Fall 2011

Charles Hovey

Books to battle: Hovey put Illinois State in Civil War annals

Illinois State Normal University (ISNU) was caught up in national politics soon after the school was established in 1857. Students and faculty alike talked of John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry, the Lincoln-Douglas debates, and the election of Illinois’ favored son as president. Soon after Abraham Lincoln took office, campus conversation turned to South Carolina’s succession, the

Panda bear

Scientist’s saga of saving the giant panda species

During his 30-year career as a reproductive biologist who specializes in rescuing threatened animal species from demise, David E. Wildt ’72 has used his high-tech scientific skills to help save such exotic creatures as the Florida panther and the black-footed ferret of the American Great Plains. But Wildt’s greatest challenge—and the biggest thrill of his

Autism puzzle

Alumna succeeds in reaching, teaching autistic children

For a year her job gave her stomach aches. Standing in front of high school juvenile delinquents from gritty neighborhoods put Kari Dunn Buron in knots. The physical education teacher was only 21 and it was her first teaching experience. “I was not that much older than they were and they were a lot more

Mock trial team

Mock trial team finds national success

The Illinois State mock trial team toils away in the campus shadows with minimal support or recognition, yet shines brightly among its national competitors. The small percentage of individuals who realize the University even has such a team inevitably ask how a school that doesn’t offer a law degree ended up with an award-winning program

公民参与一般

ISU lauded nationally for active citizenship program

Illinois State’s efforts to engage students in activities that sharpen skills related to political processes and leadership have been lauded, as the University is the sole recipient of the 2011 New York Times Political Engagement Project (PEP) Program of Excellence Award. Part of the American Democracy Project, PEP addresses the problem of political disengagement in

Agriculture Professor Emeritus Clarence Moore

Where are they now? Clarence Moore

Fifty years ago, in 1961, I joined the ISU Agriculture Department, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. It’s hard to believe that I’ve had an affiliation with the department for half a century. I retired from ISU in December of 1989, but continued to teach part-time for a couple of years and have kept

Mail to the Editor: November 2011

Mail to the Illinois State magazine editor for November 2011: RELIVING OLD MAIN To the Editor, I came to ISNU from a small Oklahoma college. I had classes on the second floor and it was a special comfort for me to enter Old Main (“Artifacts & Memories,” May 2011). It was the only spot on

Tim Glover throws javelin

Redbird captures national championship in javelin

Sophomore Tim Glover joined an elite group of Illinois State student-athletes earlier this year when he won the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championship in the javelin. He took the event in June with a mark of 263-06 at Drake Stadium in Des Moines, Iowa. The throw earned Glover All-America honors, and set

Football team makes Special Olympics connection

Defensive linemen drive through opposing offensive protection and take out whoever has the football. ISU’s Colton Underwood excels in the job. The 6-foot-4, 245-pound sophomore was deadly on the field last season, finishing with 16 tackles, including two sacks. And yet when 3-foot-2, 50-pound Wyatt Whitlow encountered Underwood at a Special Olympics Young Athletes event

Arch Madness tourney is around the corner

Start planning your trip to the St. Louis area during the first two weekends of March to support both Redbird basketball teams. The 2012 State Farm Missouri Valley Conference men’s basketball tournament is March 1-4. The Millennium in downtown St. Louis will be the team hotel. The following weekend, March 8-11, the women’s basketball team plays

Katie Broadway and Paige Roser

Weisbecker Scholarship Fund: A family of Redbird fans

Finding a little extra in a young family’s budget is not easy, but Amy and Randy Roser have supported Redbird Athletics for more than a decade. This is why they do it.

Ronnell Robinzine

Black Colleagues Association: Desire to make a difference

Not many high-schoolers know what they want to do with their life. Ronnell Robinzine ’09 was different. Even before he was old enough to drive, he wanted to be a lawyer. “I saw lawyers as leaders making a difference in society, and I wanted to make a difference,” he said.

Jenni McCool

O’Daffer Fellowship: Going the extra mile

Not many people would drive four hours every day for three years to pursue a dream. That is what Jenni McCool, Ph.D. ’09, did when she chose Illinois State for her doctorate. Moving to campus wasn’t an option for McCool, who didn’t want to uproot her two toddlers and husband from their home in Macomb. But

Illinois State University Scholarship recipient: Garrett Anderson

Disability Concerns scholarship: A lasting impression

Garrett Anderson ’10 is the first in his family to graduate from a four-year college. This puts him one step closer to a career helping fellow veterans. More importantly, his graduation left a lasting impression on his 4-year-old daughter. “She was at my graduation and she thought it was the greatest thing in the world,”

Alumni Association directors elected

There is new membership within the Alumni Association following a board of directors campus meeting in September. Tim Pantaleone ’07 of Bloomington was elected to his first, three-year term. He is a finance supervisor at State Farm Insurance Companies. While on campus he was a manager for the softball team and entertained as Reggie Redbird.

Keep in touch during extended vacations

你前往warme吗r climate for winter? Make certain you receive this magazine and other important Illinois State mailings while away from your home address. Simply send your seasonal address to Alumni Relations, along with the dates for the change of address. Doing so also guarantees that you’ll receive information about alumni events

Amy Rude and Judith Sevel

Professor provides welcomed push into Red Cross

的力量与教师克丽r to Amy Rude ’07, M.S. ’11. While finishing her master’s degree in social work this past spring, Rude’s participation in a relief effort with the American Red Cross was made possible through intervention from her academic department. Rude was able to help flood victims because of

Michael Szymczak

Alum inventor creates OrigAudio products

Travel is a passion for Michael Szymczak ’06. Music is equally important, which explains why Szymczak started the company OrigAudio with a friend. They developed portable audio products, including a fold-and-play speaker set powered off an iPod, and a unit that turns common objects—such as a cup—into a speaker.

Protecting pay, benefits for service members

John R. Davis ’78 is director of legislative programs for the Fleet Reserve Association, which represents enlisted members of the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. The association protects the pay and benefits of service members and their families. Davis appeared before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense this past summer to voice concern

Award-winning alum lands at local radio station

School of Communication alumna Jamie Reed ’07 has been behind a microphone since her days at ISU’s student radio station, WZND. There three years, she took on the roles of music director and general manager. Now Reed is the award-winning, on-air talent for Bloomington’s WBNQ. The Illinois Broadcaster’s Association named her the first place recipient

Alum’s Great Urban Race is a winner

Inspired by The Amazing Race, Joe Reynolds ’03 decided in 2007 to energize communities across the country with an event called The Great Urban Race. Teams of two loved completing clues and racing to the finish line. Success was so immediate that Reynolds created a company in Chicago called Red Frog Events. Soon there was

Amanda Thomason and Mike Williams

How we met: Amanda Thomason and Mike Williams

While attending Illinois State, Amanda Thomason ’05 and Mike Williams ’04, M.S. 07, never expected they would live next door to their future spouse. Amanda met Mike when her sorority, Alpha Gamma Delta, paired up for an exchange with the fraternity next door, Alpha Gamma Rho.

Legacy November 2011

Redbird legacy: Following mom into education

When Estella Hensley ’34, ’71, attended Illinois State in the 1930s, she never predicted a legacy in the making. She earned a teaching certificate with her mother’s persuasion and began her career in a Central Illinois country school. For nearly 10 years she taught first through eighth grades, and did so much more.