Throughout his lengthy career in hotel management, Bill Shaw, MBA ’72, has taken hospitality, as well as giving back to the community, to a whole new level.
As founder of Cheree Berry Paper, Cheree Berry, BFA ’00, focuses on the wedding industry, and her invitations regularly appear in Martha Stewart Weddings.
Reunion weekends provide a time for reconnecting to friends and to the university; Avigail Goldgraber, AB ’06, stays involved, serving as co-chair of her 5th Reunion Executive Committee.
An advanced imaging technique has revealed that some U.S. military personnel with mild blast-related traumatic brain injuries have abnormalities in the brain that have not been seen with other types of imaging. The abnormalities were found in the brain’s white matter, the wiring system that nerve cells in the brain use to communicate with each other.
It is among the most indelible images of Cold War-era film: Slim Pickens, as Major “King” Kong, riding an atom bomb to extinction, cowboy hat waving in the wind. The scene is from Stanley Kubrick’s pitch-black political satire Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964). On June 17, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum will present a free outdoor screening of Dr. Strangelove in conjunction with the exhibition Cosima von Bonin: Character Appropriation.