News
Read about what’s happening in PBKACA! Our top news is below. Also check out:
Announcing our 2024 PBKACA Scholarship Winner – Ezra Redeatu
This year’s winner is Ezra Redeatu, a senior at Lane Technical High School. He will be attending University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the fall to become an electrical engineer.
Here is the letter he sent to PBKACA:
I am so thankful to the Phi Beta Kappa Association of the Chicago Area for providing me with this scholarship. Not only is it helping me pay for college, but it has connected me with a wonderful community of academically driven minds. Being able to learn more about Phi Beta Kappa and its goals through the scholarship has been a blessing and I think it’s important that I share more about who I am and how I got where I am now.
The most important thing about me is my family, which has always supported my aspirations. My parents immigrated here together around twenty years ago, having had to leave everything they knew behind. Through the challenges they exemplified hard work. They both went back to school while raising three amazing children, while becoming a lawyer and an accountant. My sisters, while annoying as you might expect from younger siblings, are also extremely kind-hearted and supportive. It is thanks to my wonderful family that I had the freedom to pursue whatever fascinated me and become the person I am today.
Ever since I was young I have been enthralled with technology, always curious about how the mystical devices around me worked. This fascination led me to work with my church’s technology team. I helped set up and monitor the building’s audio-visual system and eventually was responsible for teaching others how to use everything from the recording cameras to the live streaming software. Through working with the team, I learned valuable lessons in collaboration and mentorship which have helped increase my passion for electrical engineering.
Working with the technology team, I realized what interested me most wasn’t the outside hardware where I traced wires and set up speakers. I was most interested in the software, the code that made things run and the logic behind it. To quench my curiosity, I went to Khan Academy, where I learned JavaScript and first explored programming on my own. Eventually this passion grew to my course schedule, leading me to take countless computer science electives and gain proficiency in languages such as Java, Python and C++and learn about app development, microcontrollers, AI and cybersecurity.
I finished many projects through these classes, including an android app to help tourists navigate Chicago, an automated drawer that opens at the push of a button on my phone, and an AI that uses naïve bayes algorithms to finish a sentence. The most memorable project was done with a Particle Argon where I received gas prices from the internet with the goal of finding the best price. I set the servo motor to point at the gas price on a dial and lip LRFs red or green relative to how good the gas price was. I used a webhook to collect the data every day at noon. While working on this project, I had to learn many new skills, which required many hours of effort put into debugging errors and gaining a greater grasp of methods in different libraries. These, many hours eventually led to greater programming literacy and more efficient solutions key skills I can use in any future project.
Through accomplishments like my Particle Argon project, I learned the greatest lessons and aspire even more to be an electrical engineer. While I attend the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I plan to continue to grow in my chosen field and make valuable contributions to my community with the many lessons I learned to get to this point.
2023 annual dinner and presentation of our Distinguished Service Award
This year PBKACA presented this year’s Distinguished Service Award to Dr. Allison Arwady, former Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health.
Allison Arwady, MD, MPH, most recently served four years as the Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH), leading the nation’s third-largest city’s health department, including through the COVID pandemic.
Prior to that, she was CDPH’s Chief Medical Officer, overseeing Chicago’s disease control, environmental health, emergency preparedness, and behavioral health divisions. Earlier in her career, she worked for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), including as an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer. With CDC, she worked on HIV and tuberculosis in Botswana, and international outbreak responses in Saudi Arabia (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) and Liberia (Ebola). While based at the Illinois Department of Public Health, she responded to disease outbreaks across the state. She has a bachelor’s degree from Harvard University, a master’s degree in public health from Columbia University, and completed medical school and clinical training at Yale University. Dr. Arwady is a board-certified internal medicine physician and pediatrician and continues to see primary care patients regularly.
Dr. Arwady described the plans, preparations, decisions and surprises in her career in public health, especially as the face of Chicago’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. She emphasized the need for us to raise our voices to support public health for all.
Here are some pictures from our dinner.
Announcing our 2023 PBKACA Scholarship Winner – Juliza Ariza
This year’s winner is Juliza Ariza, a senior at Lane Technical High School. She will be attending Hobart and William Smith Colleges in the fall to become a nurse‐practitioner.
To PBKACA Members:
My name is Juliza Ariza and I am extremely thankful to be this year’s recipient of the Phi Beta Kappa Association of the Chicago Area Scholarship. I am appreciative of the financial support I have received, as it will enable me to continue my education at Hobart and William Smith Colleges.
During my time in Hobart and Williams Colleges, I plan to receive my master’s degree with a major in nursing and a minor in psychology. In addition to my academic pursuits I was a member of the Palestinian Dance Club and the Words to Smiles Club during my time at Lane Technical High School. I am a very dedicated student, despite having worked consistently at numerous part time jobs and having joined numerous extra‐curricular activities throughout my high school career.
I plan on accomplishing my goals of becoming a nurse‐practitioner and developing into a powerful source of the nation’s healthcare system. I was inspired to become a nurse‐ practitioner because I am a first generation Latina student. Latinos, altogether, contribute only 4.9% of medical and health professionals. Latina women represent less than 2% of those in healthcare requiring advanced degrees and I plan on adding to that percentage. Thanks to your generosity, I will be able to work with more determination and perseverance.
By awarding me the PBKACA scholarship, you have lightened my financial burden and allowed me to focus primarily on academics. I plan to excel in all my academic endeavors. I hope that you understand how extremely thankful I am to have received this scholarship. It was a delightful meeting with members of the PBKACA Scholarship Committee and I look forward to another meeting with you soon. Thank you so much for your time and consideration.
Sincerely,
Juliza Ariza
2022 PBKACA Annual Meeting Back In Person
We are back in person for our Annual Meeting and keynote address by Barry Sullivan on Thursday, November 18, at 6:30 p.m at Beane Hall at Loyola University.
PBKACA is proud to present this year’s Keynote Address by Dr. Barry Sullivan, Cooney & Conway Chair in Advocacy and the George Anastaplo Professor of Constitutional Law and History at Loyola University Chicago. Dr. Sullivan’s address is titled “Lessons of the Plague Years.”
Open to all, members and non-members alike. If you cannot attend, please consider making a donation to our Scholarship Fund.
Please register at pbkaca.org/upcoming-events/.
Dr. Barry Sullivan previously was Dean of the School of Law at Washington and Lee University (1994-99) and a partner in the law rm of Jenner & Block (1980-94 and 2001-09), where he was co-chair of the Supreme Court and Appellate Practice Group. He has argued cases in state and federal appellate courts throughout the country, including the Supreme Court of the United States. During his time in private practice, he was also a Senior Lecturer at the Harris Graduate School of Public Policy of the University of Chicago.
Professor Sullivan has held several leadership positions in the American Bar Association, including serving as founding chair of the Coordinating Committee on AIDS and the Law. He has been the Arthur Cox Visiting Fellow at the University of Dublin, Fulbright Canada Research Chair at the University of Alberta, Visiting Law Fellow of Queen Mary College, University of London, Fulbright Professor at the University of Warsaw, a recurring visiting professor at the University of Bayreuth, and a visiting professor at Northwestern Law School. In 2022, Professor Sullivan was a member of the “founding faculty” of the Flying University for Ukrainian Students. He is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Middlebury College and the University of Chicago Law School. Professor Sullivan began his legal career as law clerk to Judge John Minor Wisdom of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans and later served as an Assistant to the Solicitor General of the United States. He is a member of the American Law Institute.
Rockford University 2022 Phi Beta Kappa Inductees
This year, the Phi Beta Kappa Chapter at Rockford University (Eta of Illinois) inducted 8 student members. Pictured are the inductees and Phi Beta Kappa officers: Professor James Marshall, Ph.D., chapter president, Professor Stephanie Quinn, Ph.D., vice president, Professor Catherine Forslund, Ph.D., secretary/treasurer; Anika Marie Flores ’22, Jessica Jazmin Pequeno Mendoza ’22, Bin Meng ’22, Marissa Louise Ott ’23, Maram S. Quhshi ’22, Alberto Rivera ’22, Stefanie J. Rodriguez ’22, Casey Sheetz ’22
https://www.rockford.edu/academics/pbk/
Announcing our 2022 Scholarship Winner – Ricardo Barajas-Lopez
This year’s winner is Ricardo Barajas-Lopez, a senior at Back of the Yards High School. An excellent student, he is also active in both the gaming and poetry clubs. He will be attending University of Southern California in the fall.
Here is Ricardo’s letter to our scholarship committee:
Dear PBKACA,
Ever since I was three years old, I’ve had an unfathomable passion for video games and I knew that I wanted to become a video game developer. My ultimate goal has been to work for Nintendo, whose video games are the reason behind my interest in computer science and programming. Video games are becoming more and more integrated into our daily lives, and I would love to work with the gaming giant to inspire others to pursue the field. However, to work in such a prestigious company I knew I would need to stand out.
Once I was in high school, I began searching for colleges that offered programs that would make my dream a reality. The University of Southern California was everything I wanted. The computer science games program USC offers is like none other. From game design to 3D modeling, it covers many of the aspects that go into development and combines two of my interests seamlessly – computers, gaming and art. 3D modeling is essential because it is the framework for the visuals, and can be one of the first impressions an audience has of a game. I believe the courses offered there will be rigorous enough to fully prepare me to become a successful game developer. I am most especially excited about the semester long gaming projects, which will truly put my knowledge and creativity to the test.
I have always treated school as a gateway to opportunities far beyond my wildest dreams. All throughout high school and middle school, I have given my academics my full attention and earned outstanding grades on every report card. The fruits of my labor came in the form of an acceptance letter from USC. This university offers one of the best programs in the country, but has a very expensive tuition. Financial aid from USC and FAFSA were not enough to cover full tuition and that’s where Phi Beta Kappa swooped in to save the day.
With all of the gratitude in my being, I accept the Phi Beta Kappa Association of Chicago Area scholarship. I had always known that paying for college was a challenge my family would face. I feared the financial burden tuition would have on us, yet the PBKACA has made attending the University of Southern California a reality.
With gratitude,
Ricardo Lopez BarajasAnnouncing our 2021 Scholarship Winner – Karely Ramirez
This year’s winner is Karely Ramirez of Senn High School. She will be attending DePaul University in the fall. She plans to pursue a career in medical sciences.
Here is Karely’s letter to our scholarship committee:
Dear PBKACA Scholarship Committee:
I want to begin by saying thank you very much for this opportunity. As a younger kid growing up in a low-income household with immigrant parents, the thought of pursuing higher education after high school was terrifying. I knew I would be the first one to attend college as well, which only added to the uncertainty. Questions ranging from, “How am I ever going to pay for college?” to “What if I am not as informed as I should be?” surfaced constantly.
Nevertheless, I have always been one to challenge not only myself, but also my circumstances. With the COVID-19 pandemic striking toward the end of my junior year and lasting into the entirety of my senior year, I knew I had to adapt to this new situation. My father unfortunately lost both of his jobs as a cook, leaving my mother as the only one providing a stable income. Knowing the financial burden this would put on my family I began working as a cashier not only to aid in costs but to alleviate any stress my parents may have felt about paying for college in such difficult times. Being granted this scholarship is a tremendous help.
During my elementary and high school years, my parents have always supported me in becoming involved with my personal interests, which allowed me to discover my passion for science, the community and the arts. It means a lot to me that I had the space to nurture my creativity. I hope to continue to make my parents proud by pursuing a career in medical sciences. I am forever grateful for the opportunities this scholarship has brought me. I will utilize it to enhance my knowledge at DePaul University and to become more conscious of the ways to better the world around me through my future career.
Thank you,
Karely RamirezPBKACA Annual Meeting Goes Virtual
Please join us for our virtual Annual Meeting and Election on Thursday, November 19, at 6:15 p.m. The meeting will include a panel discussion on “Learning During Lockdown,” featuring four of our members:
- Daniel Egel-Weiss received his key from The George Washington University and is a 2020 graduate of Harvard Law School. He is currently an associate at the law firm of Kirkland & Ellis.
- Stephen McClure received his key from West Virginia University where he earned B.A. in linguistics. He teaches English at the University of Illinois at Chicago and currently acts as IT coordinator and tech support person for his department, the Tutorium in Intensive English.
- Geraldine K. Piorkowski, Ph.D, received her key from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. A retired clinical psychologist, she was Chair of the Psychology Department at Roosevelt University and on the faculty of the Northwestern Medical School and the University of Illinois at Chicago in the past.
- Matthew Rice received his key from Albion College where he earned his B.A. in chemistry. Over his 30 year career at Merck, he has focused on how patients are diagnosed, treated, and managed. Over the past six years, he has been part of Merck’s Medical Affairs organization, where he has managed a team of cardiometabolic directors who engage in scientific exchanges with research and scientific leaders.
We will also hear from Jose Muniz, our 2020-21 scholarship recipient, who is now a freshman at Northwestern University.
Please register at pbkaca.org/upcoming-events/. Make sure that your email address is correct when you register so that we can send you a link to the Zoom meeting and program for the event. If you intend to invite guests, please kindly forward them the link when you receive it.
Announcing our 2020 Scholarship Winner – Jose Muñiz
This year’s winner of the Phi Beta Kappa Area of Chicago Association is Jose Muñiz of Back of the Yards High School. He will be attending Northwestern University in the fall and plans to major in mechanical engineering.
Here is Jose’s letter to our scholarship committee:
My name is Jose Muñiz and, apart from going to Northwestern next year to study mechanical engineering, I am also this year’s PBKACA Scholarship recipient. Receiving this award is such a great honor both to me and my parents. This scholarship not only means that my hard work throughout the past four years of high school have paid off, but also represents a sign of hope.
In the midst of the current global issues, receiving that call of congratulations was a relief and lifted a great weight off my family’s shoulders. My parents both came from Mexico during the 1990’s and, having little schooling in their homeland, they pushed education on both my sister and me. They have also supported every one of my wildest dreams. From wanting to be a train conductor to an astronaut to a scientist to a mechanical engineer, they always told me I can do it and encouraged me to do my best, not just in my academics but also in my community. Receiving this wonderful scholarship means that their hard work raising me also paid off and that they will not have to stress over how they are going to pay for my studies after high school. This is my way of thanking them for their countless sacrifices. My goal is to make my parents proud to see their first child go off to college in the U.S. This scholarship has made their smiles wider and made them even more proud.
The scholarship means hope. The world is experiencing some tough times right now, but receiving this money means that I am now able to work hard and focus on my studies to become an engineer and make this world a better place. Innovation is critical during these times and I feel that being active not just in our studies but also in community is absolutely necessary if we want to continue to make human life easier and more enjoyable. I will not have to worry about the struggle to find money to continue studying. Focusing on my goal to help the world out is now my only priority thanks to this generous association.
Once again, I would like to thank everyone who forms part of this amazing association and those who sponsor it. I will not take this opportunity for granted and will continue to work hard to make a difference.
Thank you,
Jose M. Muñiz
Hon. Rebecca Pallmeyer is the recipient of our 2019 Distinguished Service Award
PBKACA is proud to present this year’s Distinguished Service Award to Rebecca Pallmeyer, Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Rebecca R. Pallmeyer graduated from Valparaiso University and earned her law degree from the University
of Chicago Law School. Following a one-year clerkship with Justice Rosalie Wahl of the Minnesota Supreme Court, Judge Pallmeyer practiced commercial litigation with a Chicago law firm.
From 1985 until 1991, Ms. Pallmeyer was an Administrative Law Judge with the Illinois Human Rights Commission, a quasi-judicial agency responsible for enforcement of the state’s anti-discrimination laws. On October 1, 1991, Ms.
Pallmeyer was appointed a United States Magistrate Judge for the Northern District of Illinois. She served as Presiding Magistrate Judge from 1996 until 1998. In 1997, President Clinton nominated her for a seat in the U.S. District Court in Chicago, where she has served since October 1998.
Judge Pallmeyer served from 2013 to 2019 as a member on the Committee on Court Administration and Case Management and since 2018 has served on the United States Judicial Conference. She is an honorary fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers, a fellow of the American Bar Foundation, and a member of the ALI-CLE Employment and Labor Law Advisory Panel. Since 2006, Judge Pallmeyer has served on the faculty for the annual ALI-CLE program, Current Developments in Employment Law, held in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Judge Pallmeyer is past President of the Lawyers Club of Chicago, past President of the Richard Linn American Inn of Courts, and an active member of the Chicago Bar Association, the Chicago Chapter of the Federal Bar Association, the Women’s Bar Association of Illinois, and the American Bar Association. She is the immediate past Secretary to the ABA Labor and Employment Law Section.
Judge Pallmeyer was sworn in as Chief Judge for the Northern District of Illinois on July 1, 2019.Book Club Selections for 2020
PBKACA Book Club
For more than two decades the PBKACA Book Group has gathered on Sunday afternoons to engage in stimulating, thought-provoking discussions of good fiction and non-fiction books. Book group members come from an array of educational and professional backgrounds.
The atmosphere at book discussions is so relaxed and free-wheeling that it allows for an unfettered exchange of ideas and feelings. Several book group members agree that the PBKACA Book Group is their favorite of all book groups to which they belong.
The book group meets on designated Sundays from 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Nix Restaurant in the Knickerbocker Hotel, 163 E. Pearson. Join us for one or all of the following dates. For more information and to RSVP, contact Gerry Piorkowski at drpiork@aol.com.
2020 Selections
February 2: My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor
March 1: Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk
April 5: Permanent Record by Edward Snowden
May 3: The Dutch House by Ann Patchett
June 7: Young Radicals: In the War for American Ideals by Jeremy McCarter
July 12: Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
August 2: The Fall of Language in the Age of English by Minae Mizumura
September 13: A Tale of Love and Darkness by Amos Oz
October 4: The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
November 1: The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Pioneers Who Brought the American Ideal West by David McCullough
December 6: The Martian Chronicles by Ray BradburyRockford University Spring 2020 Forum Series
The Rockford University Forum Series presents speakers in a variety of disciplines who have achieved success both nationally and locally, and performers of stature in the arts. The Forum Series’ central programming focus is geared toward students. Lectures and performances are concerned with intellectual, social, and cultural matters of general interest to deepen and broaden students’ education at Rockford University.
See this link for topics and dates: https://www.rockford.edu/artslectures/forum/
UIC Phi Beta Kappa Chapter 2019-2020 Lectures
Given the PBK tradition of promoting knowledgeable and collegial discussion of topics in the liberal arts and sciences, the UIC chapter of Phi Beta Kappa recently initiated a series lectures for the academic year 2019-2020 to which the community is invited. Each of the lectures will be presented by one of our chapter members. Suitable for a general audience, each lecture will highlight some aspect of that member’s scholarly interests.
Our first lecture—“The Legacy of Columbus’ Travels”—was delivered by David Diego Rodriguez from the UIC Department of Hispanic and Italian Studies.
Our second lecture—“Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Healthcare”—was delivered by Alan Schwartz from the UIC College of Medicine
Our remaining lectures are as follow:
February 12, 2020
“The Bilingual Cognitive Advantage: Does it Really Exist?”
Gary Raney, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology
Lecture Hall, Humanities Institute, 3:00-4:30March 18, 2020
“Out of Africa: Human origin and migration from DNA analysis of current and ancient sources”
Simon Silver, Emeritus Professor, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Medicine
Room 1-470, Daley Library, 3:00-4:30Please join us.
Announcing our 2019 Scholarship Winner – Yailin Benitez
This year’s winner is Yailin Benitez of Prosser High School. She will be attending the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign in the fall. She plans to major in education and then go on to become an elementary school teacher.Here is Yailin’s letter to our scholarship committee:
Thank you for giving me the honor and privilege for being this year’s scholarship recipient. I guarantee that the money I have been gifted will be put towards financing many educational opportunities that will make you proud. The revelation of being this year’s scholarship recipient has come as a great surprise, a miracle truly.
PBKACA has changed my life for the better in two ways, by offering financial support as well as empowering me as a young female. Like many students in Chicago, I come from a low-income minority family. One of the biggest challenges I face due to my situation is that my future has always been uncertain. Not because of my potential or academic capabilities, but rather the ability to financially support my endeavors. I have always been eager to learn, and I knew from a young age that I wanted to go to university. While I studied vigorously to succeed academically, I dealt with self-doubt and anxiety. In the back of my mind, I persistently feared my efforts would be fruitless. I always knew that my family would never be able to afford university tuition fees. My mind is now better at ease with the financial support PBKACA has given me. I am extremely grateful that my dream to further my education has become a reality.
In regards to PBKACA empowering me as a young female, the Scholarship Committee highlighted the power and impact a woman can have in the modern world. One of the first things I noticed during my interview is that the organization itself is lead by strongly independent, compassionate, intelligent, and hard-working women. In a male-dominated society, it is truly inspiring to see women having important and prestigious positions in the workforce. It has made my ambitions to one day achieve great things to become more realistic in my mindset. I am more motivated and hopeful that I too can one day inspire young people to pursue furthering education to make their dreams a reality. With the $5,000 scholarship, I will be able to pursue my dream of becoming an elementary school teacher, a job in which I can cultivate and nurture the goals and ambitions of generations of young students.
I am excited to attend the University of Illinois in Urbana Champaign this fall and to see how the next four years will unfold. The money I have been given will go towards purchasing books, school supplies, housing expenses, studying abroad, etc. Thank you again Phi Beta Kappa Association of the Chicago Area Scholarship Committee for the honor of receiving this year’s scholarship.
With best regards,
Yailin Benitez
Valparaiso University 2019 Phi Beta Kappa Initiates
In May, Valparaiso University inducted new initiates into Phi Beta Kappa. They are pictured here, after the initiation ceremony.
Photo credit to Valparaiso University.
Rockford University Spring Forum Series
The Rockford University Forum Series presents speakers in a variety of disciplines who have achieved success both nationally and locally, and performers of stature in the arts. The Forum Series’ central programming focus is geared toward students. Lectures and performances are concerned with intellectual, social, and cultural matters of general interest to deepen and broaden students’ education at Rockford University.
See this link for topics and dates: https://www.rockford.edu/artslectures/forum/
Scott Samuelson presents “Kicking the Bucket List: Death and the Art of Shining” live on Sept 25
We are excited to share an opportunity with all of our associations courtesy of the Eastern Illinois Association. For its 28th Annual Phi Beta Kappa Lecture, the association will be streaming the program LIVE on YouTube tomorrow, September 25, at 6:00 p.m. Central Time.
(Full Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAppV7W2CyI)
About the Lecture
Scott Samuelson will present The 28th Annual Phi Beta Kappa Lecture,”Kicking the Bucket List: Death and the Art of Shining.” Scott Samuelson is the author of The Deepest Human Life: An Introduction to Philosophy for Everyone (University of Chicago Press 2014). Professor of Philosophy at Kirkwood Community College in Iowa, Samuelson’s latest book, Seven Ways of Looking at Pointless Suffering: What Philosophy Can Tell Us about the Hardest Mystery of All (Chicago 2018), was in part inspired by his work teaching at Oakdale Prison in Coralville, Iowa.Dr. Gary Slutkin is the recipient of our 2018 Distinguished Service Award
The Phi Beta Kappa Association of the Chicago Area is pleased to announce that the recipient of our 2018 Distinguished Service Award will be Gary Slutkin. Dr. Slutkin is Professor of Epidemiology and Global Health at at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health. He is formerly of the World Health Organization, the Founder and CEO of Cure Violence, and an innovator in health, behavior change, and data based approaches to local and global problems.
Cure Violence is listed No. 12 among the top 500 NGOs in the World by The NGO Advisor. It is ranked 1st among all organizations in the world devoted to reducing violence. Cure Violence has been statistically demonstrated to reduce shootings and killings by 41% to 73% by extensive independent studies. Some communities are reducing their rates to zero. The Cure Violence method is working in over 60 communities in 25 cities in the U.S. and on five continents including programs in Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador, Colombia, Trinidad, Jamaica, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, Israel/West Bank, and Syria.
Dr. Slutkin’s work has been featured as the NY Times Sunday Magazine Cover Story, “Blocking The Transmission of Violence”, the award winning documentary film, “The Interrupters”, and in over a dozen books. He has appeared on The PBS News Hour, CNN, 60 Minutes and in dozens of other television and radio stations, is quoted regularly in the NY Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, USA Today, The Guardian, Financial Times, The Economist, and other leading publications. National and international awards include the U.S. Attorney General’s Award for Public Safety, The Order of Lincoln Award, and the UNICEF Humanitarian of the Year Award.
Our Annual Dinner to honor Dr. Slutkin is Thursday, November 15, 2018 at Beane Hall, Loyola at 6:30 PM. Please put the date on your calendar – you can reserve your space in early September. Open to all, members and non-members alike.
Rockford University Fall Forum Series
The Rockford University Forum Series presents speakers in a variety of disciplines who have achieved success both nationally and locally, and performers of stature in the arts. The Forum Series’ central programming focus is geared toward students. Lectures and performances are concerned with intellectual, social, and cultural matters of general interest to deepen and broaden students’ education at Rockford University.
See this link for topics and dates: https://www.rockford.edu/artslectures/forum/
Announcing our 2018 Scholarship Winner – Catherine Oliva
This year’s winner is Catherine Oliva. She is the valedictorian at VonSteuben High School and will attend Northwestern University in the fall. She plans to major in chemistry and then go on to medical school.
Here is Catherine’s letter to our scholarship committee:
I want to genuinely thank you for awarding me this scholarship. Growing up, my mother taught me that money doesn’t mean everything, and I agree. For example, I realized that the love and support of my loved ones was worth more than green paper. However, in some cases, money seems to be the only resort. With that being said, I’ve seen my mother work sixteen hour shifts to both pay the bills and give her family luxuries in life. She would either come home late at night from work or return the next day. I recall how much my heart ached from seeing her work that hard to provide.
Thus, I grew up seeing my mother as my role model. I knew I couldn’t work while going to school, so my repayment to her was working hard in school to achieve her dream for me: becoming valedictorian. Through the four years at Von Steuben, I was faced with late study nights, while balancing extracurricular activities, such as dancing, National Honor Society and Spanish Honor Society. Despite having a full schedule, I knew that seeing my mother’s face as I was named valedictorian was worth all the restless nights. Unfortunately, I didn’t think being valedictorian would automatically guarantee me entrance into college, because of how many other qualified applicants there were.
Little did I know that the PBKACA scholarship would answer my prayers and help me pay for college. However, did more than that. Now I am able to attend Northwestern University (my dream college since I was a little girl) and alleviate the financial stress for my family. I am eternally thankful and will use this scholarship to further my education at Northwestern as chemistry major on the pre-med track.
I am actually writing this statement sitting in my dorm room at Northwestern, since I am part of Bio & Chem EXCEL summer program. Without PBKACA and guidance of my family, who knows how I would be spending my summer? However, because of both, I am able to get an early start and pave an even more permanent stance in dreams of becoming a doctor. Just like my mother, I hope to make my mark in the medical field and work to especially aid those in underprivileged areas.
Best regards,
Catherine Oliva
Passing of Judge George N. Leighton – 1912-2018
Former Neal & Leroy partner, Judge George N. Leighton, a longtime state and federal judge who was the first African-American to set on the Illinois Appellate Court and the namesake of the Cook County criminal courthouse, died Wednesday, June 6, 2018 at the age of 105.
Remembering Judge Leighton, managing partner Langdon Neal said, “He will go down as one of this nation’s greatest civil rights lawyers. Not just in [the] advancement of racial equality, but [for his work] fighting for everyone to ensure the Constitution protect[s] all individuals.”
Judge Leighton grew up near New Bedford, Massachusetts. The son of Cape Verdean immigrants, he left school in the seventh grade after his mother found him a job on an oil tanker bound for the West Indies.
Though helping support his family meant he was unable to finish grade school or attend high school, Judge Leighton never lost his determination to become educated. He read voraciously and won an essay contest for a scholarship to Howard University in Washington, D.C. The college initially didn’t want to accept him—he hadn’t finished middle school, much less graduated from high school—he persuaded the university’s president to admit him as an “unclassified student.” In 1940, Judge Leighton graduated magna cum laude and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He went on to enroll, on scholarship, at Harvard Law School.
Rockford University 2018 Phi Beta Kappa Inductees
This year, the Phi Beta Kappa Chapter at Rockford University (Eta of Illinois) inducted 6 student and 2 faculty members. Pictured are the inductees and Phi Beta Kappa officers: Professor Jules Gleicher, Ph.D., PBK secretary/treasurer, Professor James Marshall, Ph.D., PBK chapter president, Amy Quintero ’18, Noah Nieber ’18, Jonathan Hernandez ’18, Lauren Johnson ’18, Jennylyn Caterina ’18, Elisha Beston ’18, Professor John Burns, Ph.D., Professor William Gahan, Ph.D, Professor Stephanie Quinn, Ph.D., PBK vice president.
Trenati Baker Update
January 2018
Greetings!
I am going into my second semester of my sophomore year at Amherst College. I’ve officially declared both my Black Studies and Political Science majors. I’ve nearly completed the Black Studies major, and I’m working hard to plow through Political Science.
This school year, I took on more leadership roles on campus. In addition to being a part of the Dance and Step team and the African and Caribbean Dance troupe on campus, I am working as a Resident Counselor of the Black Culture House and a Diversity Intern with the admissions office. This semester I will also start working as a research assistant with Professor Drabinski in the Black Studies department, and I will serve as the Event Coordinator of the Black Students Union.
Although this past semester was tough socially as my friend groups changed and I experienced a higher volume of academic stress, I am doing well at Amherst and have matured and grown more than I think I ever have in the last year and a half. I’ve learned the importance of self-care and the importance confronting mental and emotional health.
This semester, I look forward to more learning, more good times, and larger social networks; however, I feel anxiety about the summer. I really want to be back home in Chicago this summer (I stayed on campus this past summer and worked as a tour guide). I am working on several summer job applications—hopefully I get a good one back home. On the flip side, I feel excited about junior year. I’ve been speaking with my advisor, and I really want to study abroad all next year! Right now, Trinidad, Brazil, Cuba, and South Africa all seem cool.
All in all, everything is going well, and I am super appreciative of this scholarship and the opportunities and growth it has helped give me access to at Amherst. Thank you!
Update from Zobia Chunara, 2012 Scholarship Recipient
August 2018
Dear PBKACA,
My time as an undergraduate at Yale passed by quickly, with many highs and lows, self-discoveries, new friends, and late nights spent studying. After graduating, I worked in a clinical research lab through the Yale Program of Applied Translational Research where I learned about the intersection of heart failure and renal dysfunction. This internship afforded me the opportunity to work with patients at the hospital, and here I realized my interest in medicine. I proceeded to apply to medical school, and now I am a first year student at the University of Illinois College of Medicine.
I would like to thank the PBKACA for awarding me their scholarship so many years ago. Because of their belief in me, and their generous contribution to my education, I was able to attend Yale without having to worry about the financial burdens it would create for my family. I hope that in the future, I too can help students attend college and give back what PBKACA gave me.
Zobia Chunara
Yale University ’16
University of Illinois College of Medicine ‘22Congratulations to PBKACA President John Ashton!
December 2017
This month, Pearl Poet Productions presented the world premiere of the new musical “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: A Rock ‘N’ Roll Musical,” at the East Stage in the Raven Theatre Complex.
Originally penned by the unknown author dubbed as the “Pearl Poet” and retold by native Chicagoan John C. Ashton, “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: A Rock ‘N’ Roll Musical” spun the medieval legend of Sir Gawain, a knight of King Arthur’s Round Table, and the heroic challenge he accepts on behalf of his king.
Read the review on Picture this Post.
John Ashton, Ron Gorny, Noah Berman (the actor who played King Arthur, PBK key from Middlebury College), Roselind Lindau, David Hirschey and Karen Devlin.