Knox in the News

Highlights of Recent Coverage

March 26, 2011

Student lounge named for Knox president

Filed under: Students, President in News, Events — Kristin @ 1:07 pm

From The Register-Mail:
Knox College held a ribbon cutting and dedication ceremony Friday of the long-awaited, newly renovated student lounge in the basement of Seymour Union.

While the lounge’s many amenities, such as a performance area and wide range of table-top games, came as a surprise to the students, none was more shocked than Knox President Roger Taylor, as Student Senate President Sam Claypool announced the name of the Taylor Student Lounge.

Taylor choked up upon hearing the lounge was named for him, as the crowd cheered and encouraged a speech.

“For the first time in 10 years,” he said with tears in his eyes, “I’m speechless.”

Claypool said Taylor was the “automatic” choice when the Student Senate first began discussing naming rights to the lounge, which was just approved by the Knox Board of Trustees on Tuesday.

“In the first year that the committee was created four years ago, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ telling all my friends about it, but after some bumps got in the way, we all lost sight of it and didn’t think it would ever come to fruition,” Claypool said. “President Taylor never took his eyes off of it, and it’s because of him that we’re here today.”

Knox College faculty members named ‘Scientists of the Year’

Filed under: College News, Sciences, Faculty — Kristin @ 12:53 pm

From The Register-Mail:

Two Knox College faculty members in the Department of Computer Science, John Dooley and David Bunde, have been named 2011 Scientists of the Year by the Quad City Engineering and Science Council.

Dooley was chosen as the council’s Senior Scientist of the Year, and Bunde was selected as Junior Scientist of the Year. They received their awards Feb. 24 at the 49th Annual National Engineers Week Banquet in Davenport.

The QCESC annually recognizes local scientists, engineers, and teachers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The Scientist of the Year awards are given to individuals whose exceptional achievements and outstanding contributions have made a lasting impact on their profession.

March 18, 2011

Midwest events

Filed under: Events, Community — Kristin @ 12:37 pm

From The Chicago Tribune:
Illinois

March 31-April 2: Knox-Rootabaga Jazz Festival, Galesburg. This is the festival’s 31st year, with featured performers including the Funky Butt Brass Band, Knox Alumni Big Band, Knox Faculty and Friends Combo, Julian Lage Group and the Knox College Jazz Ensemble. Fees vary; 309-341-7265; tinyurl.com/67wkwhq. Miles from Chicago: 200

March 17, 2011

Author, artist Dawes to present reading at Knox College

Filed under: Speakers, Events — Kristin @ 12:12 pm

 From The Register-Mail:
Kwame Dawes, an author and artist whose credits include an Emmy Award-winning documentary and a book on reggae legend Bob Marley, has been named the 2011 Honnold Fellow at Knox College and will present a lecture and poetry reading during his visit next week.

During his three-day residency on the Knox campus, Dawes will be featured in the two free, public events. He also will meet with Knox College students and faculty in classes and informal conferences.

Dawes will give the 2011 Honnold Lecture, “Chameleon of Suffering: Art, Empathy and Citizenship,” at 7 p.m. March 24 in Kresge Hall, Ford Center for the Fine Arts. The lecture will examine the role of the artist in society and the value of art in engendering citizenship through the insights of empathy.

Dawes will read from his own poetry at 4 p.m. March 25, in the Muelder Room, Seymour Library.

The lecture and reading are free and open to the public.

March 16, 2011

Making History

Filed under: Speakers, Commencement — Kristin @ 12:16 pm

From The Huffington Post:
We live in an age of what historian Thomas Frank calls instant forgetting. It’s not just that we forget things — it’s that we seem to replace the past with inexplicable fictions…

That renewal casts a pall on this era. For as fruitful as President Obama’s Administration has been, it would be hard to argue that his legislative triumphs have been accompanied by a renascence of public progressivism. Somehow the old, tired mantras of a bankrupt ideology — smaller government, deregulation, tax cuts above all — have carried the day in our discourse. Americans, it would seem, have already forgotten what got us in this mess in the first place…

It’s an ironic failure. Barack Obama may have rocketed to political stardom with his speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, but it was another address — one devoted to a retelling of history — that made many progressives sit up and take notice at the beginning of his national career. On June 4, 2005, then-Senator Obama delivered the commencement address at Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois. It was a masterpiece of a speech, and it offers now what it offered then: a tantalizing glimpse of an Obama presidency that could tell a good story about progressivism.

March 13, 2011

Student examines life after factory closing

Filed under: Students, Community, Faculty, Research, Publication — Kristin @ 12:04 pm

From The Register-Mail:

By Rebecca Beno
Knox News Team
More than six years after Maytag left the city, there’s an overall sense of resiliency in the lives of former employees of the manufacturing giant, according to an extensive survey conducted by Knox college faculty and students.

The survey, Maytag Employees in Transition, was mailed to a random sample of 425 former Maytag workers. Researchers wanted to know what happened to the final wave of 902 union workers who were displaced in September 2004 when production shut down and moved to Reynosa, Mexico. A list of management workers let go at that same time was not available.

‘We wanted to see if we could find some answers,’ said Marilyn Webb, distinguished professor of journalism at Knox College and director of ‘The Maytag Project.’

About the study
The study was led by Webb, with additional support and cooperation of Knox College and professors Richard Stout, of economics; Diana Beck, of education; Mike Godsil, of photography; and of Suzanne Michaels, a sociologist at the City University of New York; Dave Bevard, the former president of Maytag’s International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union local; and a team of Knox students and Journalism Program Fellows including recent graduates Ryan Sweikert, Levi Flair (now a graphics designer), and Knox senior Annie Zak, current editor-in-chief of the college newspaper, participated.

It was a unique study in that it also included a group of former Maytag workers themselves in designing the survey.

Of the 452 survey mailed, 133 were returned, which represents a 31 percent response rate. Recipients of the survey were randomly chosen, but were representative of the proportions of the 902 workers who were men and women, who retrained and who didn’t, and those who had lived in specific wards in Galesburg and the surrounding area.

Bevard said former workers who have not done well did not answer the survey.

‘The feeling is “what good can it do me?'’ he said.

Researchers determined that results might be skewed toward those who have more successfully recovered rather than toward those who have had a rougher time. More women than men and only a fraction of members of minority groups answered surveys.

The closing remains a sore topic for many.

‘A lot of people are close-mouthed about things. It probably hurts for them to talk about it,’ said former employee John Eskridge, 50, who was part of the study design team. ‘For some people, it brings on a lot of emotion. It changed their lives a lot. A lot of people out there, it was the only place they ever worked. Generations of families worked there.’

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