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January 9, 2001
Contact: Louise Donahue (831) 459-5312; ldonahue@cats.ucsc.edu
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AWARDS LUNCHEON AT UC SANTA CRUZ CELEBRATES OUTSTANDING ALUMNI,
FACULTY, STAFF, AND STUDENTS
For Immediate Release
SANTA CRUZ, CA--A professor of women's studies, the national editor of the New
York Times, and a media specialist have been selected to receive the highest
awards bestowed annually by the UC Santa Cruz Alumni Association.
Bettina Aptheker will be given the Distinguished Teaching Award for her more than
20 years of teaching and service; Katherine Roberts (Kresge '74), national editor
of the New York Times, will receive the Alumni Achievement Award; and David
Kirk, whose work at the UCSC libraries has been crucial in expanding the university's
video and digital media collection, will get the Outstanding Staff Award.
The Alumni Council, the association's governing body, selected the winners based
on nominations from students, faculty, alumni, and staff. The three award winners
will be honored at a February 3 luncheon on campus that will also recognize 10 students
receiving the association's College Service Awards and 15 students winning the association's
Scholarship Fund. The February 3 awards luncheon will be held from noon to 2 p.m.
in the Porter College Dining Hall at UCSC. The cost is $12 per person. For luncheon
reservations, call (800) 933-SLUG by Friday, January 26.
Many UCSC students consider Aptheker's popular Introduction to Feminism course
a rite of passage and cannot imagine leaving Santa Cruz without having experienced
it, according to Jorge Hankamer, former dean of humanities.
"In many of her courses, Bettina incorporates art, poetry, guest speakers, slides,
videos, music, and engaging readings," Hankamer wrote in nominating Aptheker
for the award. "She transforms each class experience into a multimedia chapter
of a well-planned story."
Memories of Aptheker's courses linger with alumni and students alike. "Bettina's
multifaceted teaching style transforms a class into an event," wrote Shawnee
Undell in nominating Aptheker. "In a lecture of 500 people, I always felt she
was speaking directly to me. And so did the other 499 people in the room," recalled
Undell.
Aptheker has a national reputation for her pedagogical talents and as a builder of
women's studies. She was the sole lecturer in women's studies at UCSC from 1980 to
1987 and became its first ladder-rank faculty member in 1987. Her book, Tapestries
of Life: Women's Work, Women's Consciousness and the
Meaning of Daily Experience, is a classic in women's studies.
Alumni Achievement Award winner Katherine Roberts "represents the best of a
Santa Cruz education," said Alumni Council member Douglas Foster, a fellow at
the Alicia Patterson Foundation and former director of the graduate school of journalism
at UC Berkeley.
Named national editor in November, Roberts had been the newspaper's op-ed page editor
since 1995 and had worked in several other positions at the New York Times.
"Katy Roberts is a creative force as an editor and a splendid role model and
mentor for other journalists," said Howell Raines, New York Times editorial
page editor. "She has a remarkable ability to inspire writers to stay right
on top of the news and simultaneously achieve a high level of intellectual analysis."
Foster said that under the direction of Roberts, the op-ed page became an increasingly
lively section of the newspaper. "Intellectuals, activists, business leaders,
and politicians mixed it up in Katy Roberts's pages, a kind of commons, in a way,
for contemplation of the issues which are important in American civic life,"
said Foster.
Roberts received a bachelor's degree in politics at UC Santa Cruz in 1974 (Kresge
College), studied Russian language at the University of Toronto, and received an
M.A. degree in journalism and Russian area studies from Indiana University in 1977.
Outstanding Staff Award recipient Kirk's encylopedic knowledge of film has placed
him in a rare position for a nonacademic staff member. "Because of David's hard
work, our film and video collection is comparable in size and scope to that of UC
Berkeley," wrote Gregory Careaga, media development librarian at the McHenry
Library Media Center, in nominating Kirk.
In his more than 27 years at UCSC, Kirk has built a reputation as someone who can
track down the most obscure video, becoming a savior for teachers who had nearly
given up hope of finding just the right title for their classes. Those who work with
Kirk, who grew up in Santa Cruz, often mention his commitment and willingness to
share his knowledge.
Although he plans to retire in 2001, Kirk has seen to it that his spirit lives on
at UCSC. In 2000, he established the David Kirk Video Endowment with his own money,
and the fund has swelled with the contributions of alumni, faculty, and members of
the community who have donated in Kirk's name.
Kirk has also served as a valuable role model and mentor to many students, especially
those struggling with issues of sexual identity in the early years of gay liberation
in the 1970s. Frasier Emmy-award winner Chuck Ranberg was one of many such
students who found Kirk an inspiration. "Just by living his life, he demonstrated
there was nothing to fear," Ranburg said. "It is people like Dave who made--and
still make--the experience of UCSC unique and irreplaceable."
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Photos of the recipients may be downloaded from the web at: http://www.ucsc.edu/news_events/download
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