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Class Notes: G-N

William (Bill) Galbraith: BA, 1946 (Journalism)

Whgal@starpower.net

Bill Galbraith worked 13 years for the United Press as an editor and a reporter covering a variety of federal agencies including the State department and the White House. For the following 25 years he worked for CBS News as news editor of the Washington Bureau. He closed his career with CBS as Director of News Operations in Washington.

Karen Gaudette: BA (Communications and Political Science), 2000

Karen is a reporter for The Seattle Times, covering food. She spent two years at the Associated Press in San Francisco, following her internship with Wall Street Journal Northwest in Seattle. She also worked for the Press-Enterprise covering the city of San Bernardino. Karen is a UW Alumni Association Career Connections contact for fellow Huskies. As an undergraduate she spent a lot of time working at The Daily, where she was editor in chief during the fall of 1999.

Alexia Gibbon: BA, 2004

Local Sales Assistant: KOMO 4 Television

Rolf Glerum: BA, 1955

Glerum started his professional career in 1959 as promotions specialist for the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, later to merge with Western Pine Association to form Western Wood Products Association. His responsibilities with WCLA included news and feature writing, trade show coordination, builder and architect relations, do-it-yourself news articles, and other related activities.

Read more about Rolf...

Robert Gluckson: MA, 1992

Robert Gluckson is teaching an online college level Photojournalism History course through Humboldt State University Extended Education. For more information on Robert Gluckson, including details of the online course, visit Gluckson's web site.

Jean Godden: BA, 1973

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Award-winning journalist and columnist (Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Seattle Times), city council member. She has been active in many community organizations, including League of Women Voters, Multiple Sclerosis Society, United Way Council of Planning Affiliates, Lake City Community Council, Lake City Elementary School Parent-Teachers Association, 46th District Democrats, King County Women's Political Caucus and the Uppity Ladies Book Club & Literary Circle.

Susan K. Godfrey: BA, 1970

Susan Godfrey is working for the University of Washington and looking for network opportunities with other communicators.

Daena J. Goldsmith: MA, 1988; PhD, 1990

Dr. Goldsmith is an Associate Professor in the Department of Speech Communication, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She has been there since 1993, serving as Associate Head, Director of Graduate Study from 1999 to 2002. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Illinois, she spent three years as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Speech Communication, University of Maryland, College Park. She was also a Visiting Professor Visiting Professor at the Communication Studies Department, University of Iowa, Iowa City.

Read more about Daena...

Leoule Goshu: BA, 2007

Goshu is spending the summer after graduation working on a research paper with Dr. Laura Briggs, Acting Head of Women Studies at the University of Arizona. He is critiquing a gay rights special interest group, Human Rights Campaign, for promoting corporations with questionable human rights records in third world countries. His work attempts to synthesize gay rights with the third world. Goshu will attend Harvard this September. The Seattle Times recently ran a story on Goshu featuring his time at the UW.

He was also named "Future Gay Hero" in the October 11th, 2005 edition of The Advocate.

Erica Graham: MA, 2004

Erica Graham is currently pursuing her Masters in Business Administration at the University of Michigan.  Prior to this, she worked in the film industry at a film production company.

Jack Greenewald: BA 1947, Journalism

Mr. Greenewald spent 25 years as owner of newspaper, printing and publishing companies, then purchased a travel agency and traveled throughout the world for thirty years.

Christine Gregoire: BA, 1969 Speech Communication

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

2004 Department of Communication Distinguished Alumna

The honorable Christine Gregoire is Washington's 22nd Governor. Prior to serving as governor, Gregoire served three terms as attorney general, the first woman to be elected to the position in Washington. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2003 WA State Physicians for Social Responsibility Award and the 2001 College of Arts & Sciences Distinguished Alumna award.

Travis Griffith: BA, 1999

Travis Griffith is the author of Your Father Forever, published in 2005 by Illumination Arts in Bellevue. Dr. John Gray, author of Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, said of the book, "Your Father Forever is an inspiring and reassuring book that touches our hearts and comforts our children." He has also completed a novel, which is currently being shopped with agents.

Reynaldo V. Guioguio: PhD, 1980

Dr. Guioguio is a Professor of Journalism at the College of Mass Communication, University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City. His academic activates include Former President, Philippine Communication Society (PCS); Affiliated with Philippine Social Science Council (PSSC) and Former Chairman, Graduate Studies Department, College of Mass Communication, University of the Philippines. He holds a post-graduate diploma in Communication Policy and Planning, Institute of Social Studies, the Hague, Netherlands.

Edwin Guthman: BA, 1944

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Reporter and editor (Philadelphia Inquirer, Seattle Star, The Seattle Times, and the Los Angeles Times). He received the Pulitzer Prize in 1950 for National Reporting while at The Seattle Times for his series on the clearing of Communist charges against Professor Melvin Rader, who had been accused of attending a secret Communist school. He served as press secretary for Senator Robert F. Kennedy.

Rebecca Haines: MA, 1985 (Speech Communication)

Rebecca Haines had a rare malignancy in 2004, and after a chemo pill and surgery at the University Hospital, she is now experiencing remission euphoria! She recently purchased a condominium and is speaking about her experience to a few small groups, to spread the word of hope and possibilities. She continues to work as a registered nurse at an assisted living facility part-time and swims 1/2 mile per week, which she says is "both exercise and recreation!" Her inspiring story of diagnosis and recovery is published in the support group newsletter for the type of tumor she had. Please see: www.liferaftgroup.org then click on "Coping," then "Member's Stories," then click on her name. Her story is called: "Fifty-one weeks from diagnosis to remission."

Hatti L. Hamlin, APR, Fellow PRSA: BA, 1972

In a career spanning 36 years, Hatti has counseled clients ranging from Fortune 500 corporations to government, non-profit and educational institutions. They have included household names like American Express, Clorox, Sara Lee, Microsoft and GE Capital, as well as local and regional companies ranging from wineries to consulting firms, Internet companies, hospitals, retailers, medical equipment manufacturers, utilities, banks and real estate companies.

Read more about Hatti...

Alexander Campbell Halavais: PhD, 2001

Dr. Halavais began as an assistant professor at the University at Buffalo (SUNY) directly after graduating from the UW Communications program. He now serves as the director of the MA in Informatics at UB, an innovative program that addresses the social and organizational aspects of information and communication technologies. His research looks at "social computing" and its impact on social change, journalism, education, and public policy.

Read more about Alexander...

Jay Hamilton: BA and MA, 1983 and 1986

Currently assistant professor in the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia.

Verna Harbaugh: BA, 1992 (Emphasis in Editorial Journalism )

huskeez@aol.com

Currently employed by Nootka Hotels, Inc., as Director of Sales for University Inn and Watertown (hotels are located in Seattle, WA, next to the University of Washington campus).

Board member & Marketing Chair - Greater University Chamber of Commerce.

Board member & Media Director - WA State Group Tour & Travel Association.

 

Rob Harper: BA 1969

When natural disasters hit Washington, many are left shaken, distressed and emotionally drained.

For Rob Harper, it’s a long day at work – and a way to make a difference.

The 1969 broadcast journalism alumnus is a public information officer for the Washington state Emergency Management Division. During emergencies and natural disasters, he helps the community to respond effectively.

Read more about Harper...

 

Joanne Harrell: BA Communications 1976; MBA Business 1979

Joanne Harrell has not only found her own success, she is also committed to supporting and empowering other women.

The Microsoft General Manager of the Enterprise Sales Strategy Group oversees a personal staff plus 115 of Microsoft top global executives, and she is a mother, community leader, and philanthropist.

Read more about Joanne...

Jack Hart: BA, 1968 Journalism

Jack Hart is a managing editor at The Oregonian, the Pacific Northwest's largest daily newspaper. He also has served as the newspaper's writing coach and staff development director, as editor of its Sunday magazine and as a general assignment reporter. He previously worked as a reporter at the Eugene Register-Guard and the Whidbey News-Times.

Read more about Hart...

Katherine G. Hendrix: PhD, 1994

Associate Professor, Department of Communication, University of Memphis.

Awarded the "Top 3 Paper" in the Spirituality Division for "The spirit that strengthens me: Teaching with a religious foundation," a paper she presented at the National Communication Association conference held in San Antonio, TX in 2006.

Read more about Katherine...

Jaime Herrera: BA, 2004

Jaime Herrera represents Washington state’s 18th district.

Read more about Representative Herrera...

Erin Hicks: BA, 2007

Assistant editor for menshealth.com in Allentown, PA.

 

Harry F. Higgins: BA 1986 (Broadcasting)

Mr. Higgins is a news photographer at KCPQ-TV, Seattle Fox News affiliate. He has been married to Moyra since 1991 and is a U.S. Navy submarine veteran. He is a member of NRA, NPPA, NGS, The Mountaineers, and the UWAA.

Randy Y. Hirokawa MA, 1977; PhD, 1980 Speech Communication

Currently the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Hawaii, Hilo, Randy Hirokawa also has taught at Pennsylvania State University and the University of Iowa. He is known widely for his expertise in the area of small group communication and decision-making effectiveness. His scholarship has contributed to the development of a theory called the "functional perspective," which is recognized as one of the three most influential theories of small group communication. His publications to date include three edited books, 36 refereed journal articles, and 24 book chapters.

Emily Hodge: BA, 2003

Emily Hodge is working as a nanny and planning her return to Italy where she hopes to live and work.

Jenni Hogan (Vesnaver): BA, 2002 Communications and Economics

jhogan@komotv.com

Jenni Hogan is the morning traffic anchor for KOMO-TV in Seattle, she also reports on transportation issues. After graduating from UW she headed to Lewiston, Idaho as sports director at KLEW-TV. She then moved to Portland, making the switch from sports to news, as the traffic anchor and general assignment reporter for KOIN-TV. She has been helped my many great mentors along her career path so far and believes in paying it forward. If you have any questions about the industry or just want to chat, she would love to hear from you.

Hillary Holman: BA, 2006        

Holman graduated from the UW with degrees in Communication, and Comparative History of Ideas. Her primary interest is in interpersonal and intercultural communication. She worked on her communication thesis under the guidance of Valerie Manusov and Lisa Coutu and owes much of her academic and post-academic sucess to their fantastic teaching. Since graduation, Hillary has worked with a peacebuilding and reconciliation program in Croatia where she has served on the facilitating team and as a small group facilitator, has taught English in Croatia, and has traveled in and around much of Eastern Europe. She is currently trying to learn Croatian language and is hoping to spend more time in the former Yugoslavia in the near future.

Piper Hopkins: MC, 2006

Piper Hopkins has a BFA from Parsons School of Design, New York, NY, and an MCDM from the University of Washington. Hopkins is an artist; you can read more about her at www.piperhopkins.com

David Horsey: BA, 1975

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

David Horsey is the Department of Communication’s 2008 Distinguished Alumnus. As the Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s award-winning editorial cartoonist, he has been driving and drawing throughout the United States as candidates for the 2008 presidential elections work for voters’ support.

Read more about Horsey | David Horsey talks about his time as an editor for the Daily and as a UW student. | Link to 2005 Career Lunch

Lorraine Howell: BA, 1982

lorraine@mediaskillstraining.com

After 12 years as a television news and talk producer, Lorraine Howell started her own business doing media training and presentation skills training:

mediaskillstraining.com

Rob Huff: BA (Journalism), 1995

robert.huff@aerojet.com

Rob Huff is the Communications manager for Aerojet, an aerospace and defense company headquartered in Sacramento, Calif. In this position, Huff is responsible for the company's media relations, employee communications and Web site production.

Lisa Hughes: BA, 1990

Emmy Award-winning journalist Lisa Hughes is news anchor for CBS4 News In Boston. She joined the station in June 2000 after working as a correspondent for CBS Newspath, the CBS-TV Station Group's satellite news service.

Read more about Ms. Hughes...

 

Karla Hulse: BA, 2004

Khulse@windermere.com

Karla Hulse

After graduation, Karla Hulse spent some months backpacking around Europe. She returned home to Seattle to start her career as a Real Estate Agent and is now working for Windermere Real Estate out of the Queen Anne office. Born and raised in Washington, Karla is familar with the area and enjoys approaching the real estate market from a professsional angle. She says "please feel free to contact me with any of your real estate questions!"

www.HOMESinNW.com
(206) 650-2735

Sandra L. Hunt: MA, 1992; PhD 1996; Med 2001 Speech Communication

Dr. Hunt writes:

"I am in the middle of a personal 10-year field experiment, so to speak, in which I am trying to find out how much influence one teacher can have in the public school system.

So far my efforts are proving fruitful. I am in my fifth year of teaching 4th grade. My school has shown that it is possible for a team to close the achievement gap in reading--we have gone from 60% to 90% of our students passing the reading WASL in the last four years. We are the only district school to meet the 90% goal two years in a row. We continue to make progress in writing and math. Mac Parks would be pleased to know that his statistics classes are being put to good use as I coach teachers on how to use student performance data to inform instruction. Also, several years ago, I set up a "4th-grade Teacher Roundtable," a monthly forum in which 4th-grade teachers plan and implement their own professional development. It has become so popular, the district is considering institutionalizing it for all grade levels. This year, I've joined the district's strategic planning team. I'm on the leadership subcommittee and will be helping to design a new 360 degree performance appraisal system for district administrators.

In addition to these endeavors, I am working on my National Board Teacher Certification. I find what I am doing engrossing, fulfilling, (my colleagues might say consuming) and of service to my students, the community, and my profession. I appreciate the knowledge and skills I learned in the Speech Communication Department every minute of the day."

John Hutcheson: MA, 2003

John is a captain in the U.S. Air Force serving the Pentagon in the Air Force Office of Public Affairs. He has been in the Air Force for eight years and earned a B.S. in Criminal Justice from Pennsylvania State University. His graduate work at the UW focused on the role the Bush administration and the news media played after September 11 in contributing to a resurgence of U.S. nationalism. John's committee members were David Domke, Nancy Rivenburgh and Patricia Moy.

Robin Imholte: BA, 2005

Account Executive: KOMO TV

Edward Inch: PhD, 1992

Edward Inch currently serves as acting dean of the School of the Arts at Pacific Lutheran University. In addition to his work as acting dean, Inch chairs the Department of Communication and Theatre. He has taught a wide range of introductory and advanced courses ranging from Introduction to Communication Studies to Executive Communication for MBA Students.

Currently, Inch’s research is focused on conflict resolution and dispute resolution. At the moment, he is working with the Massen Dialogue Project in the Balkans. The project’s aim is to create dispute resolutions for ethnic groups that will enable peaceful development of governing systems and political processes.

Carol Insalaco: BA, 2006

Insalaco is employed at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in the External Affairs and Communications department.  Her time is split between Publications (Internal and External Communications) and Media Relations (media and public relations).

Evelyn Keiko Iritani: BA, 1978

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Reporter (Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Los Angeles Times), winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 2004 (with Abigail Goldman, Nancy Cleeland and Tyler Marshall) for a seven-part investigative series on Wal-Mart.

Robin Forrest Jacobson: BA, 1972

Robin Jacobson worked for King Broadcasting for years and is now a Public Relations Manager for The San Juan Island Visitors Bureau.

Leo Jeffres: M.A., 1968

Leo Jeffres is a professor in the Department of Communication at Cleveland State University, where he has also served in a variety of administrative roles, including chair of the Department of Communication, graduate director, and the director of the Communication Research Center.

Jeffres’ research focuses on mass communication theory and methodology, neighborhood and urban communication systems, communication technologies, ethnic communication, as well as audience analysis. He also works with students on the content analysis of the “watchdog function” of the press.

Among his many accomplishments, in 1983 Jeffres traveled to the University of the Philippines as a Visiting Fulbright Associate Professor where he taught courses in culture and communication and conducted research on development communication. While in the Philippines he also taught a graduate seminar at the Asian Institute of Journalism in Manila.
More recently, Jeffres was named a fellow of the Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research in 1998. He was also a recipient of the “most prolific communication researcher” for the period of 1996-2001 by Communication Research Reports, as well as for the period of 1980-1985 by Journalism Quarterly.

More information on Professor Jeffres work...

Bruce Johansen: BA, 1972; PhD, 1979

Dr. Johansen has been at the University of Nebraska, Omaha since 1982. He is the senior ranking professor in the Department of Communication with a cross-listing in Native American Studies. He is the Frederick W. Kayser professor, which is a university research chair. His 18th book, "Indigenous peoples and Environmental Issues: An Encyclopedia" was published early in 2004 by Greenwood Press and is now being translated into Japanese. His book "Exemplar of Liberty" (1991), was released in Japanese (Tokyo: Mizusu Shoban) in 2006. "Native Peoples of North America" (a textbook) was published in 2005. He has written mainly in Native American Studies, but also in various ecological sciences, notably "The Global Warming Desk Reference" (Greenwood, 2001). He is also the Native American series editor for the Greenwood Publishing Group.

Dr. Johansen recently lectured at the University of Wales, Swansea, U.K. and on Native American legal history at the Catholic University of Lublin, Poland (this university was the teaching post of Pope John Paul II before he assumed the papacy). His new book, "Global Warming in the 21st Century," 3 vols. Westport, CT: Praeger, comes out in June, 2006. (For details: [www.greenwood.com], enter "Bruce E. Johansen"). He is also co-editing a 4-volume Encyclopedia of American Indian History with ABC-CLIO. That book is due out in 2007.

Alycia Johnson: BA, 2005

Assistant Buyer: Macy's NW

La'Chris Jordan: BA, 2001

Alumna and playwright/actress La'Chris Jordan was recently named as one of the "50 Playwrights to Watch" by the Dramatist Guild. See the July issue of The Dramatist!

Her play "The Source" is part of the Manhattan Repertory Theatre's Summerfest 2007 and she's appearing in "Birth" from August 22 - September 29.

Edmund K. Joyce: BA, 1977

Mr. Joyce is a radio-tv reporter/anchor at KPBS-Radio-TV in San Diego, California. He left St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands, where he worked as an editor/writer/reporter of the St. John Tradewinds, the only weekly newspaper on the island, and moved to San Diego in August 2004. He worked as an editor/writer for the Copley News Service, a wire service and feature syndicate, before moving to KPBS. In May of 2006, Joyce received the Excellence in Journalism award from the San Diego Press Club in the radio newscast category for coverage of the day without an immigrant boycott. He was also selected as a 2007 National Press Foundation fellow for "Understanding Violent Weather II" in Norman, OK (March 11-14). His coverage on "Immigration" was one of three entries nominated by APTRA's 2007 Mark Twain Awards. (Associated Press Television-Radio Association). He was also named the KPBS EOTEOM for February 2007 (KPBS Employee of the every other Month).

Dr. Tamar Katriel: MA, PhD 1980, 1983 Speech Communication

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

After graduation, Dr. Katriel took a teaching position with the Department of Communication, University of Haifa where she is now a Professor. Her areas of teaching and research are: Ethnography of communication, intercultural communication, anthropological approaches to media studies, anD rhetoric of public discourse in Israel. She is author of several books:

(2004) "Dialogic Moments: From Soul Talks to Talk Radio in Israeli Culture." Detroit: Wayne State University Press (Raphael Patai series on Jewish Folklore and Ethnography).

Katriel, T. (1999) "Milot Mafte'ah: Dfusei Tarbut Vetikshoret Beisrael." A Hebrew selection of twelve essays covering and integrating work previously published in English. Haifa: University of Haifa Press & Zmora-Bitan.

(1997) "Performing the Past: A Study of Israeli Settlement Museums." N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (series on Communication in Everyday Life).

(1991) "Communal Webs: Communication and Culture in Contemporary Israel." Albany: SUNY.

(1986) Talking Straight: 'Dugri' Speech in Israeli Sabra Culture." Cambridge: Cambridge University.

Polly Keary: BA, 2003

Polly Keary is a staff writer for the Monroe Monitor and the 2006 recipient of the Portfolio Award for news writers, the WNPA Better Newspaper Contest's top award. Keary took home the top award in 2005 too! In 2006, she visited the military hospital at Balad in Iraq, the base at Ramstein in Germany where many wounded soldiers receive further treatment before returning to the states, and Bagram in Afghanistan.

Robert Keatley, B.A. 1956

Robert Keatley has served as editor of three newspapers during his career in journalism in the U.S. and overseas. He now lives in Washington, D.C. After earning degrees from the University of Washington and Stanford University, he joined the Wall Street Journal, where he spent most of his career. He was a reporter in San Francisco, New York and Hong Kong, and became the Journal's diplomatic correspondent in Washington. Mr. Keatley was the paper's foreign editor in New York in 1978 before becoming editor of the Asian Wall Street Journal in Hong Kong in 1979, and concurrently publisher in 1983. In 1984, he was named editor of the Wall Street Journal Europe in Brussels, Belgium. He returned to Washington in 1992 to serve as a writer and editor specializing in international political and economic issues. He retired from the Journal in 1998 and returned to Hong Kong, where he was editor of the South China Morning Post, the leading English-language daily in the SAR. After completing his tour with the SCMP in 2001, he returned to Washington.

He is a director of the Washington Institute for Foreign Affairs, and is a member of the Cosmos Club of Washington, the Hong Kong Club and the Ladies Recreation Club of Hong Kong. In 1985 he received the UW Communications Department's distinguished alumnus award.

During the fall of 2005, Mr. Keatley taught a course on opinion-writing at the journalism department of Tsinghua University in Beijing, where he also served as a guest lecturer and participated in several conferences co-hosted by the department. In addition, he is founder and currently is editor of the Hong Kong Journal, an online quarterly hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. This new publication is devoted to articles about political, economic and social issues relating to Hong Kong and its neighborhood, and is intended to provide background information for those concerned about the territory and its development.

Zachary Y. Kerr: BA, 2004

Kerr received his Masters in Journalism and Communication from the Ohio State University and is currently works for the Columbus AIDS Task Force as an MSM HIV Prevention Specialist, where he provide HIV Prevention and Education to communities in Central Ohio.

Jeff Kerssen-Griep: MA, 1986; PhD, 1997

Dr. Kerssen-Griep is an Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director in Communication Studies at the University of Portland. He is also the 2004 recipient of the school's most prestigious teaching award, the Outstanding Teacher of the Year. Portland, the University of Portland magazine, describes him as "the exuberant ebullient erudite energetic elastic articulate amused educated openhearted Jeff Kerssen-Griep, who teaches all sorts of communication courses and is a scholar of what he calls 'facework' as a crucial aspect of learning."

Read more about Dr. Kerssen-Griep...

Pooja Khandekar: BA, 2000 Communication and Political Science

Ms. Khandekar is currently working on an MA in journalism from CA State University, Northridge and is a Web Editor for UW Educational Outreach.

Carlton Kim: BA, 2004 Communication and Business Administration

Upon graduation, Carlton spent two years in social work advocating for affordable housing and the elderly. Now, he works for a company that produces online content and marketing campaigns.

James King: BA, 1948 Journalism

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Retired Senior VP and Executive Editor of The Seattle Times Under his leadership, The Seattle Times grew from a strong Washington daily newspaper into a paper that was nationally recognized as one of the best in the Western United States.

Katie King: BA, 1983

Katie King is an online publishing specialist with wide-ranging journalism background and international strategic planning and business development experience. A writer, editor and experienced news and content operations manager, Katie works with clients to define and achieve content publishing goals. She formerly served as Senior Vice President for Global General News at Reuters, where she coordinated the launch of Reuters' global multimedia, multi-lingual online news reports which were the pioneering Internet news products in the United States and around the world. Prior to that she was responsible for creating and producing "What On Earth," a groundbreaking daily multimedia publication for kids that was distributed by cable giant TCI to schools across the country. Katie was a Fellow in Harvard's prestigious Nieman Foundation for leading U.S. and international journalists. For Reuters, she covered major news events in Latin America including the U.S. invasion of Panama and was chief correspondent in both Mexico and Brazil. She has lived and worked across Latin America and Europe and is fluent in both Spanish and Portuguese. This biographical information is taken with Katie's permission from her company web site.

Ann D. Kirkwood: BA, 1976 Communication BA, 1976 English

kirkann@isu.edu

Ann Kirkwood is the winner of an International George Peabody Award (2000) for a documentary, "Hearts and Minds," concerning teens and mental illness. This documentary, and a second one called "In Our Own Voice" also won an excellence in public broadcasting award from the National Educational Television Association and an excellence in public education award from the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill. Recognized in 2003 by the Idaho State Planning Council on Mental Health for exemplary educational programs on children's mental health, Ms. Kirkwood has advised the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill nationwide Technology and Communication Task Force. She is director of Red Flags Idaho, a school-based mental health program funded by the Idaho Governor's Office and now in its fourth year. She worked for 18 years as a reporter, editor and publisher at various newspapers across the United States, wining two national awards for editorial writing from the National Newspaper Association and numerous regional and state awards for reporting and editing. Following newspaper work, she was employed nine years for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare as a senior public information officer. While with the agency, she was active in the International Association of Public Participation and taught classes on stakeholder involvement and facilitation techniques. She now specializes in mental health, disabilities and communication technology as a senior research associate for Idaho State University.

Elaine Ko: BA 1975

Elaine Ko has been a community builder for more than thirty years, working for a variety of important organizations such as The Inter*Im Community Development Association (ICDA), where she is the executive director (as of March 15, 2006). From 2002 to 2006, Ko was ICDA’s operations director. Before ICDA, Ko was a regional manager and vice president for Primerica.

Read more about Elaine...

Tom Koenninger, B.A. 1953

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Retired editor of the Columbian (Vancouver) and an active volunteer in a wide variety of community endeavors (e.g., the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges as member and chair; Vancouver's Celebrate Freedom Committee, the Conservation Land Trust Advisory Board, the Vancouver National Historic Reserve Trust Board and Long Range Committee, the Clark College Alumni Association Board of Directors, the "Festival 150" Planning Committee, and the Lewis and Clark Commemorative Committee.) He has long been a member of the department's visiting committee.

John Komen: BA, 1958 - Communications Radio-TV

While a senior at the UW, Komen worked full time for The Associated Press in Seattle (he was recommended for The AP job as a radio-news writer by one of his School of Communications professors); worked for The AP in Seattle, transferring to Olympia in 1961 to cover state-house and political news; hired by KOMO-TV news in 1963 as a field reporter, became KOMO-TV News night anchorman and later 6 p.m. anchorman/news editor (director); hired by ABC-TV news in 1967 as correspondent based in New York City, covered 1968 presidential campaign assigned at various times to campaigns of Richard Nixon, George Wallace, Hubert Humphrey, Spiro Agnew (also covered 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Republican National Convention in Miami, Robert Kennedy death watch in Los Angeles, crash of nuclear-armed bomber in Thule, Greenland, various protest marches and city riots), colleagues in New York City included Peter Jennings, Sam Donaldson, Marlene Sanders, Ted Koppel, John Scali; returned to Seattle in late 1969 as 11 p.m. news anchorman for KING-TV news; hired by the Tacoma News Tribune newspaper in 1976 as chief editorial writer, became associate editor, then managing editor, promoted to editor, retiring in December 1995 as editor of the editorial page after 19 years with the News Tribune.

Alixandra Knapp: BA, 2004

After graduating from the UW, Alixandra Knapp spent time working in a research lab focused on stem cell biology, transplantation and gene therapy at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. She was awarded a full scholarship to Boston College in Massachusetts to pursue a graduate degree in molecular and cellular biology. Alixandra is currently finishing her degree, working at Children's Hospital Boston in clinical research and looking forward to pursuing more education.

Brian Knutsen: BA, 1981

In March 2005, Brian Knutsen was appointed General Manager of the Space & Intelligence Systems Mission Systems organization for The Boeing Company. Brian was editor of the University of Washington student newspaper, The Daily, in the fall of 1980 and graduated from the University in 1981.

S&IS Mission Systems, with headquarters in the Washington, D.C., area, has major business operations in Maryland, Colorado, California, Maine and Kent, WA. Mission Systems is the designated customer-facing organization for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), the National Security Agency (NSA), and the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), and it provides support for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Mission Systems is also a technology capability center for Global Situational Awareness for Boeing's Integrated Defense Systems unit.

Brian has over 20 years of service with Boeing, and most recently was as the director of S&IS Government Operations. He and his wife, Martha, and their two sons reside in Arlington, VA.

Don Kraft: BA, 1948 (Journalism)

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Don Kraft, founder of the Department of Communication's Fred Baker Endowment for Professional Education in Advertising and Public Relations, was president of Kraft Advertising from 1948 until its merger with Honig-Cooper in 1954. He was a vice president of Honig-Cooper until its Seattle office was acquired and became Kraft, Smith & Ehrig in 1959. He was president of that agency until it merged and became Evans/Kraft in 1984. At the time of his retirement in 1993, he was chairman of the parent company, then called EvansGroup.

Read more about Don...

Glenn Kuper: MA, 1990; PhD, 1998

Glenn Kuper is the communications director at the state Office of Financial Management (the Governor’s budget office).  Glenn has served as executive speechwriter for Governors Gary Locke and Chris Gregoire, deputy communications director for Gov. Locke, and communications manager at the Department of Ecology.  Prior to entering state government, Glenn was a communications professor at the University of Puget Sound, teaching presentational communication, argument and debate, and political communication, as well as serving as speech and debate coach. 

Mort Lachman: BA, 1939 Journalism

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Beginning as a writer for Bob Hope in the late 1940s, Lachman continued his career in television as a producer for numerous acclaimed series including: All in the Family, One Day at a Time, and Kate and Allie.

Robert Laing: BA, 1969; MA, 1972; PhD, 1975

After over twenty years working in foreign countries, Laing returned States’ side in 2006 as in currently working as a diplomat in residence for the State Department at Arizona State University doing lectures, speaking at career fairs and talking to students. Although Laing is 61 years old, he is uncertain about retirement as he’s trying to decide whether or not he’s going to serve another tour. However, in the end he wants to retire back in Seattle where it all began.

Read more about Laing...

Dan Lamont: MC, Digital Media, 2004

In the late 70s, while still a UW student and the photo editor of The Daily, Dan Lamont began working in the alternative media, first as staff photographer, then as Photo Editor and Special Projects Editor for the Seattle Sun. Mr. Lamont helped launched the Rocket, a biweekly music and entertainment magazine based in Seattle and Portland.

After leaving the Seattle Sun, he was as an Art Director for Murray Publishing and then joined the staff of the Seattle Weekly, where he stayed for about three years.

Except for a brief "busman's holiday" in the late '80s on the photo staff of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (where Evelyn Iritani was also working at the time), he has been successfully freelancing since 1982.

He is a regular contributor to many publications including Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, Smithsonian, Audubon, Stern, Der Spiegel, LeMond, the Times of London and dozens of others. He also works for various institutional and non-profit clients (the UW among them).

Mr. Lamont has become very involved in photojournalism education, teaching a ten-week course for an accredited art school as well as designing and teaching in two workshop series. He is involved as an advisor in the Seattle Central Community College photography program and he frequently guest lectures for college and university classes (as he did for Department of Communication professors Tony Chan and Kathy Gill spring, 2004).

He is active in professional groups and currently serves as a Director of the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP). He is President of the ASMP Educational Foundation.

Elizabeth Landau: BA, 2005

US Airways: Employee Communication Specialist

Sally Sue Lander: BA, 1992

Sally Sue Lander graduated cum laude in 1992. While going to school, and for about 6 years after, she worked in Seattle as a film production assistant. (she did movies such as "Dog Fight", "Sleepless in Seattle" and "Little Buddha.") She eventually moved to L.A., continued to work in the film industry, and got married in 2002. She was the 1st assistant director for the TV show "Alias" (season 4) and the assistant director on David Fincher's most recent film "Zodiac" (due out in October, 2006). She has also produced a few short films of her husband's - he has recently sold a script to Warner Brothers for Leonardo DeCaprio to star in and is going to be directing his first feature film sometime in 2007.

Production credits at the IMDB...

Greg Lane: BA, 1988

Greg Lane is the president and chief executive officer of the statewide public affairs cable television network. He took over this position in April, 2008. Lane, a graduate of the University of Washington in Communications, has been deputy chief of staff for Washington State Attorney General Rob McKenna since 2006. Before that he was the attorney general’s communications director, after also serving as a communications director in the Washington State Legislature from 1998 to 2005. Lane becomes TVW’s third president, following founding president Denny Heck and Cindy Zehnder, who was hired in October by Governor Chris Gregoire as her chief of staff.

TVW, often called the Washington state version of C-SPAN, provides unedited gavel-to-gavel television coverage of the Washington State Legislature, Supreme Court, executive branch, state boards and commissions, elections, and public policy events of statewide significance.

Wanda Zackovich Larson: BA (Journalism), 1949

Ms. Larson lives, writes and publishes in Portland, OR. Her Blue Unicorn Press, Inc. recently published Cain's Daughters, by Phyllis K. Collier (MFA, University of Washington). Ms. Larson's own recent book is narrative poetry of Sacajawea's journey, Blue Woman/Mojave.

Amy Laughter: BA, 2004

Development Program Coordinator: Villa Academy

Carrie Lee: BA, 2001

Carrie Lee is a Project Manager of Customer Solutions at AziMyth LLC. Her company develops technologies for information delivery systems.

Renee Lee: BA, 2003

rhlseattle@gmail.com

After graduating from the UW, Renee Lee went onto active duty as an Air Force public affairs officer. Her first assignment was a one-year remote deployment to the 51st Fighter Wing at Osan Air Base, Korea. In 2004, she transferred to Headquarters, Pacific Air Forces based at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, where she worked on staff in public affairs. She separated from active duty and joined the Air Force Reserve in 2006 and worked for the Office of the Governor, State of Hawaii, on the communications team. She is currently working back at Pacific Air Forces public affairs as a Reservist.

Lauren Leeds: BA, 2006

Lauren Leeds

Lauren Leeds married Lucas Mack (a 2004 Communication grad) and is working as an Advertising Executive and co-host for lifestyle show 'Great Day SA' at KENS 5 TV in San Antonio, TX. Prior to her move to San Antonio in 2006, she was a television news reporter at KVEW Television, the ABC affiliate, in the Tri-cities/Yakima market. She was proud to represent the Huskies in Cougar territory.

Sharon LeeMaster: BA, 1957

Sharon LeeMaster CFRE, became a third generation graduate of the University of Washington in 1957. Her grandmother was in the first class from the current campus, 1894. (Grandma Helen rode the street car from downtown Seattle where her family lived and boarded the barge to take her to the emerging campus. She was also the first woman to receive an advanced degree — Pharmacy!) Sharon’s husband, a UW graduate, wears Helen Anthony Carey’s class ring as his wedding ring.

Read more about LeeMaster...

Nancy Leson : BA, 1992

How does one become the Seattle Times restaurant critic? Try waiting tables for more than ten years across North America, followed by a late blooming education and you get class of 92’ alumni Nancy Leson.

Read more about Leson...

 

Sharon Levin-Rigbi: BA, 2005

Account Coordinator: JLM Partners

Caroline Li: BA, 2005

Caroline Li is the Associate Editor at Washington CEO Magazine, her first fulltime job since graduation. She covers retail, advertising, international trade and education.

Joanne Lisosky: PhD, 1997

Joanne Lisosky is an associate professor at Pacific Lutheran University's Department of Communication and Theatre. A former media professional, Lisosky now teaches a wide range of journalism and media courses, including: Journalism Writing, Media and the World, Human Rights-International Core, In-depth Investigative Reporting, Media Law, Children and Electronic Media, as well as Gender Communication. She also advises the award-winning student newspaper, The Mast.

Her research assesses the impact of media on children, media violence, and international children's television policy. During the fall of 2002, Lisosky was an academic consultant for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Nairobi, where she worked to secure grants for community multi-media centers in Brundi. In April 2003, Lisosky traveled to Uganda as a Fulbright Senior Specialist in communication and journalism at Makerere University, where she served as a teacher of journalism and academic consultant to students interested in media.

More information on Professor Lisosky's work...

Susan Loomis : BA, 1977

www.onruetatin.com

Read any good books lately? How about the one about a journalist who goes to France to learn the language on the arts of cuisine? Try the life of UW alumni Susan Herrmann Loomis, who not only lives and works in France, but operates a cultural and culinary cooking school from her 15th century home in the city of Louviers across the street from Norte Dame. Read more about Loomis...

 

Janet Luhrs: B.A. 1976

janet@simpleliving.com

Janet is the author of The Simple Living Guide, Simple Loving, and editor of the newsletter, Simple Living. For a complete bio on Janet, visit her website.

 

Ryan Madayag: BA, 2003

Ryan is a territory sales representative for Philip Morris. His territory is Seattle.

Scott MacFarlane: BA, 1979

Since graduating from the UW in 1979, Scott MacFarlane has transformed from a long-haired and free-spirited traveler to a slightly balding and successful writer and scholar.

Read more about MacFarlane and his book "The Hippie Narrative"...

 

Lucas Mack: BA, 2004

Lucas Mack married Lauren Leeds (a 2006 Communication grad) and is working as a feature reporter for KABB TV, the Fox affiliate in San Antonio, TX. After graduating for the UW, Lucas worked at KOMO TV's Northwest Afternoon for 18 months as the Audience Coordinator. Before his move to Texas in 2006, Lucas was the Action Cam reporter for KNDU-TV Channel 25 NBC in Kennewick, WA. He started there in 2005 and also hosted his own segment on "Northwest Today", the number one rated morning show in Yakima, Tri-Cities, Walla Walla and Pendleton, Oregon. He started "Music Mondays", where he featured different local musicians live.

You can go to www.kabb.com and click "News Video on Demand" to see some of the latest stories he has done like, "Student Boat Race" and "Auto Spa".

Eunice Malley: BA, 1972

eunicezrm@sbcglobal.net

Eunice Malley has been working as a technical writer for over 15 years for the last two years as an independent contractor. She is currently on contract with a State of California division. She has also taught communications courses for extended education programs, and has a resume writing service business specializing in career transition.

Don Manuszewski: BA, 1998

Don Manuszewski works on portions of the military's contingency planning for the National Capital Region, to include continuity of government and continuity of operations. He is also working on the Department of Defense's State Funeral Plan.

He has lived in Arizona, South Dakota, Turkey and Maryland and is retired from the Air Force and is now an Air Force civil service employee. In his response to the Communication Alumni Newsletter, spring, 2006 edition, he reports that his interests inside the business are crisis communication and contingency planning and outside the business: "My children; cooking; golf." In his spare time he is a driver for two ten year olds and a three year old.

David Marriott, B.A. 1967

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Prominent public relations practitioner, mentor to students. He specializes in crisis management, crisis communication, labor communications, litigation support and media training. Marriott is a 30-year public relations professional, nationally accredited by the Public Relations Society of America, and a member of its Counselors Academy. His career spans broadcast journalism, politics, corporate and agency public relations. He currently serves as a member and past president of the Centrum Foundation board, a member and past chair of the Seattle Center Advisory Commission and a member and marketing committee Chair of the Seattle Repertory Theatre board of trustees. He has also held board positions with Earshot Jazz Society, University of Washington School of Music Visiting Committee and the Seattle King County chapter of the American Red Cross.

Jefferson Marshall: BA, 1995 (Speech Communication)

Jefferson Marshall is a vice president of sales for McKesson Pharmaceutical , Southwest Region. He has been with McKesson Pharmaceutical since 2002. Before McKesson, he worked for Bestfoods and Phillip Morris. he is the winner of the Presidents Club Award for McKesson Pharmaceutical in 2005 and the Northwest Region Award of Excellence for McKesson Pharmaceutical in 2004.

Temple Mathews: BA, 1976

templemathews@yahoo.com

Temple Mathews is a successful screenwriter living in Southern California. He welcomes alumni, Husky fans, and other screenwriters to contact him.

Lori Lei Matsukawa, M.A. 1996

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Award-winning journalist and anchor (KING 5 News, KONG TV). Matsukawa's professional awards include ARBY Awards in 1987, 1989, 1992, 1996 and 2000, given by the Academy of Religious Broadcasting; a Society of Professional Journalists award for Economic Reporting in 1989 and the "American Scene Award," from the local chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in 1986. Matsukawa co-chairs a committee seeking to build a Japanese cultural and community center in Seattle. She also served on the Association Board of the YMCA of Greater Seattle. In 1999, she organized the Student Broadcast Project for UNITY, a multi-cultural journalism convention held in Seattle. She was chosen as an Asian-American Living Pioneer by the Northwest Asian Weekly Foundation in 1996. In 1993, she was given the Community Volunteer Award from the Asian Counseling and Referral Service, where she served as a board member and board president. She is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA). Matsukawa is a founding member of AAJA's Seattle Chapter.

Hillary J. Maynard: BA, 2004

Staff Writer: The Port Orchard Independent

Steve Maynard: BA, 1976

Steve Maynard is the South King County and religion reporter at The News Tribune in Tacoma. Maynard has written about religion for daily newspapers for 26 years. Prior to joining The News Tribune in 1987 as religion/higher education reporter, Maynard worked as a reporter for the Houston Chronicle and the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin. He earned his bachelor of arts degree in communications (editorial journalism) at the University of Washington and also has a master of arts degree in theology. Maynard served for six years as a board member for the Western Washington Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and was Region 10 (Pacific Northwest) director for SPJ for two years. He is secretary-treasurer for the Religion Newswriters Association.

David Mazzeo: BA, 2004

Alumni Director: O'Dea High School

Robert W. McChesney: MA and PhD, 1986 and 1989

Robert McChesney is Research Professor in the Institute of Communications Research (ICR) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the Executive Director of the Illinois Initiative for Media Policy Research, and Director of Graduate Studies at the ICR.

McChesney is the President and co-founder of Free Press, a national media reform organization -- www.freepress.net. He also hosts the "Media Matters" weekly radio program every Sunday afternoon on WILL-AM radio. From 1988 to 1998 he was on the Journalism and Mass Communication faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Read more about Robert...

 

Megan McDevitt: BA, 2004

Marketing and Event Manager: Georgia Institute of Technology

 

Dan McDonough: BA, 1948

Winner of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize (Local General or Spot News Reporting) with fellow alumni Linda Wilson (BA, 1979) and Laurie Smith (Attended, 1994 and 1995) for their coverage of the Mt. St. Helens story for the Longview (Washington) Daily News.

 

Dr. Jerilyn McIntyre: PhD, 1973 Communications

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

After earning a Ph.D. in communications and history from the UW, Jerilyn McIntyre began an academic career that took her to the University of Iowa, and then the University of Utah, where she served twice as interim president and seven years as vice president for academic affairs. McIntyre became president of Central Washington University in 2000. She continues to teach one course biannually. She is an innovative thinker in communication theory whose work helped define the nature of the field - a broader theoretical approach to communication. Her work on Jacksonville continues to inspire Communication faculty and students.

Neil McReynolds: BA, 1956

2005 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

nmcreynolds@seanet.com

Mr. McReynolds is President of McReynolds Associates, Inc., a Seattle-based firm that advises corporations, non-profit organizations and trade associations on how to increase the effectiveness of their boards. Also, in the spring of each year he teaches an MBA class on corporate governance in the Graduate School of Business at the University of Washington and he is a frequent speaker on governance at business and non-profit seminars. For the past decade he has consulted extensively with governing boards on their organizational structure and effectiveness. He is considered one of the foremost authorities in the Pacific Northwest on matters concerning corporate governance.

Read more about Neil | read about his guest presentation in the Department's News Lab...

 

Sean Means: BA, 1986

In the summer of 2004, Sean Means marks 11 years as movie critic of the Salt Lake Tribune. In addition to reviewing about 250 films a year, Means also covers Utah's film industry and the annual madness of the Sundance Film Festival. He lives in Salt Lake City with his wife, Leslie, and their two sons.

Robert Merry: B.A., 1968

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Robert W. Merry, publishing executive and author, is President and Publisher of Congressional Quarterly Inc. (CQ), the Washington-based publishing company that specializes in news and information on Congress, politics and public policy. He is the author of "Taking On the World: Joseph and Stewart Alsop - Guardians of the American Century," (Viking 1996). The New York Times called the biography a "rich and fascinating book .... a sensitive portrait, executed with .... critical acumen." The book won an Ambassador Award from the New York-based English Speaking Union.

Read more about Robert...

Ruth Gahnberg Miller: BA, 1938

Ruth Miller is a former reporter for the Yakima Daily Republic and The Seattle Times. She is proud to report that she is now 88 and still writing.

Kathleen Miller: BA, 1987

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Kathleen owns Blue Emu Communications, providing writing and marketing services for web and print publications. She also writes for several local publications and web sites including Seattle CitySearch and Puget Sound Business Journal. She is active in the Society for Professional Journalists and Association for Women in Communications. To learn more about Blue Emu Communications visit:

www.blueemu.com

Kenneth P. Miller: MA, 1987

Ken Miller has been working as Executive Director of the Midwestern Innocence Project, Inc. in Kansas City since 2004. Midwestern Innocence Project, Inc. is a non-profit corporation providing investigative and legal assistance to prison inmates with legitimate, provable claims of innocence. Their website is:

www.innocenceprojectmidwest.org

On a personal note, his daughter turned 10 in September 2005. He is also getting married in June to Anne Dennehy, a hospice nurse in Kansas City. The picture of Anne and Ken on the University of Kansas campus in October 2005.

Marcie Miller: BA, 2002

Marcie brought a rich background in journalism to her studies at the University of Washington. She was a reporter and columnist for Arusha Times in Arusha, Tanzania, Africa--her "Women's Voices" column highlighted women's issues in Tanzania. She also spent eight years at the Peninsula Daily News in Port Angeles, WA.

Marcie graduated Cum Laude from the journalism track of the Department of Communication with a minor in International Studies. She did her internship at The Herald, filing over 60 stories in 14 weeks on topics ranging from police beat news and transportation issues to diversity and elections.

As a reporter for the Whidbey News-Times she covers education and Navy news. She has reported on a major $45 million school bond, the memorial service for astronaut Willie McCool, Governor Gary Locke's visits to the Navy base, and the Iraqi war from a local angle.

Daniel Miller: BA, 2004

Assistant Vice President/Premier Client Manager: Bank of America

Ken Mochizuki: BA, 1976

Today, Mochizuki is a journalist and a renowned author of children's literature. An alumnus of the Department of Communication, he made his first trek back to campus in three decades to visit with aspiring journalists on November 30.

Read more about Ken...

Bryan Monroe: BA, 1987

Bryan Monroe

Bryan Monroe is the new vice president and editorial director of EBONY and JET magazines. He left Knight Ridder, where he was assistant vice president of news (and the second highest-ranking news executive) to join the executive editorial team of EBONY and JET. He is also president of the National Association of Black Journalists.

Read Bryan's complete profile...

Read about Bryan's awards and visits to our department...

Kristin C. Moran: MA and PhD, 1997 and 2000

Kristin C. Moran is an assistant professor of Communication Studies at the University of San Diego. She received her B.A. in Communication Studies from the University of San Diego and then attended the University of Washington School of Communications. Her dissertation titled "Mexican Telenovelas and Latina Teenagers' Understanding of Romantic Relationships: A Reception Analysis" examined the text/audience interaction through focus group and interview data. Her research interests include international communication with a focus on Spanish-language media in Spain, Mexico and the United States. Dr. Moran is a recipient of a TransBorder Institute Research Grant to study the impact of Spanish-language news in San Diego. Dr. Moran also researches the potential impacts of television on children and adolescents and includes her international focus by studying the expansion of children's television programming in a global context. Dr. Moran is USD's representative to BINACOM, Binational Association of Schools of Communication where she works to facilitate international communication research with an emphasis upon Mexico. Her work has been published in Global Media Journal, Journal of San Diego History and presented at the annual conferences of the International Communication Association, Global Fusion and the National Communication Association.

Clarence Moriwaki: BA, 1978

Clarence Moriwaki graduated from the University of Washington with a Bachelor of Arts in communications, advertising and broadcast journalism in 1978. Since then, Moriwaki has been successful in his career and active in community service.

Read more about Clarence...

Eric Nalder: BA, 1968

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Eric Nalder has received two Pulitzer Prizes, one for national reporting in 1990 and another for investigative reporting in 1997. He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer in public service in 1992. He has published one book, "Tankers Full of Trouble", which won the Investigative Reporters and Editors book award for 1994. He has received more than 60 state, regional and national journalism awards. He has taught interviewing and investigative reporting workshops in five countries, each year adding new techniques learned from journalists, cops, FBI agents, lawyers, social workers and other practitioners. He's been a reporter for 34 years, minus nine months spent as a pig farmer. He works on the investigative team of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and lives in Suquamish, WA. He has also lived in Norway, France, Lebanon and Afghanistan. This is his second stint at the P-I, having worked there previously from 1975 to 1983. He spent three and a half years at the San Jose Mercury News before joining the P-I on Aug. 30. Prior to that, he worked for The Seattle Times for 17 years. He also worked for the Everett Herald, Lynnwood Enterprise and Whidbey News Times. His wife Jan is also a UW graduate. His daughter Britt Nalder lives in Seattle and is a graphic artist.

Dane Narbaitz: BA. 1991

Dane Narbaitz, formerly Northwest area sales supervisor for Robert Mondavi Corp., has joined Long Shadows Vintners as Vice President, Sales and Marketing effective immediately. Long Shadows, led by former Chateau Ste. Michelle CEO Allen Shoup, is a consortium of ultra-premium wineries established in 2003. It brings a renowned group of celebrated international vintners to Washington State.

Read more about Dane...

Joan Neils: BA, 2004

Communications and Marketing Director: for J. Neils Enterprises, Inc.

Neil Neroutsos: BA, 1986 (Broadcast Journalism)

Neil Neroutsos went on to earn a masters in corporate public relations from Northwestern University (1991). Since then, he has worked in numerous marketing and communications positions. He is currently the media and public relations liaison for Snohomish County Public Utility District. He lives with his wife and two daughters in Shoreline.

Assunta Ng: MA, 1979 Speech Communication

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

2005 Department of Communication Distinguished Alumna

Assunta Ng is the founder and publisher of the Seattle Chinese Post and its English-language sister newspaper, the Northwest Asian Weekly. She began college in Oregon. But her heart was set on the UW. She finished her bachelor's degree in Asian History in three years, but she did not want to graduate. So, during her senior year, she took journalism classes. Before she knew it, she was writing for The Daily. Ng earned her teaching certificate in 1976 and taught for some years. She came back to the UW for a master's degree in Speech Communication. She founded the Seattle Chinese Post and Northwest Asian Weekly in 1982 and 1983 respectively.

My Tam Nguyen: BA, 2006

At the end of summer, 2007, My Tam Nguyen started at The City of Seattle as the Public Relations Specialist for the Department of Planning and Development. She's pleased to report one of their requirements was that this position required someone with journalism degree/background. Nguyen will be assisting the planning team with community relations, planning and outreach. She gets to do what she enjoys all day (graphic design, page layout, public service, web editing, interaction with people in the community). Her Vietnamese language abilities will definitely be utilized as a lot of the areas she is working in have high numbers of Vietnamese speaking populations. She reports she is "learning amazing things that will be happening to Seattle, and about green building/development as well. It's fascinating! I've found a wonderful fit here and am so happy to open this new chapter of my life."

Nguyen spent the summer and fall after graduation traveling and working with a non-profit. And moved on to a job in the media and communications field and a sales and marketing coordinator for ColorsNW Magazine.

Kris Nichols: BA, 2005

Project Manager: T-Mobile

Chris S. Nishiwaki: BA, 1995

Chris Nishiwaki graduated from the University of Washington with degrees in Journalism and Sociology. Born and raised in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

He is a Mercer Island-based freelance writer with over 13 years of experience in journalism. he started his journalism career as the tennis beat writer for the Bellevue Journal American (now the King County Journal). He has gone on to cover the state legislature and professional and local sports for the Lewiston News Tribune in Idaho and The Kansas City Star. He has also written for the Northwest Asian Weekly, The Seattle Times, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Northwest Nikkei, The Northshore Citizen and several other publications.

Read more about Nishiwaki...

Jody Nyquist: BA, MA; 1960, 1967 Speech Communication

2004 Department of Communication Alumni Hall of Fame

Jody Nyquist served on or chaired 46 graduate supervisory committees, was the moving force behind the UW Center for Instructional Development and Research (CIDR) and has authored six books, 11 book chapters and more than 50 journal articles on rethinking how to approach graduate education. She is the winner of many awards - including the 2000 National Communication Association's Teaching Scholar Award and the 2000 Distinguished Service Award from the Western States Communication Association.