One of the great joys in the Communications office is being able to catch up with 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni who are shining their light brightly along whatever paths their journeys have taken them.

The COVID-19 pandemic may have canceled our 2020 Reunion weekend, but over the course of the year we had the chance to talk with and write about many amazing Lawrentians, graduating as far back as 1954 and as recently as 2019.

Most-viewed 杨贵妃传媒视频 stories of 2020: Read聽.

Here are eight who caught our attention in our second annual Eight Alumni, Eight Stories end-of-year feature.

If you haven鈥檛 read these stories, we invite you to do so now. See story links below.

_ _ _

Jack Nilles 鈥54

Photo of Jack Niles '54 infront of a bookshelf
Jack Nilles 鈥54: 鈥淲e鈥檙e still in the middle of a giant experiment.鈥

Living amidst Los Angeles鈥 traffic congestion, Nilles floated the wild idea that employees could be productive working from home or in neighborhood offices instead of commuting to corporate headquarters. This was in the early 1970s. He studied it. He wrote books about it. He was called the father of telecommuting. But corporate America mostly shrugged. Then, in 2020, when the pandemic sent employees en masse to home offices, people started paying attention.聽鈥淚 keep saying lately, 鈥榓fter 48 years, I鈥檓 an overnight success,鈥欌 Nilles said.

_ _ _

Jim Miller 鈥80

Jim Miller 鈥80, running outside surrounded by greenery.
Jim Miller 鈥80: 鈥淚 felt a sense of urgency.鈥

The one-time 杨贵妃传媒视频 cross-country star has been running marathons ever since he caught the bug while an undergrad here in the late 1970s. It turns out he was pretty good at it, qualifying for the U.S. Olympic Trials in the marathon in both 1980 and 1984. He hasn鈥檛 stopped running. In August, just days before turning 62, Miller ran a marathon in 2 hours, 53 minutes, 59 seconds.聽That鈥檚 significant because it made him just the fourth runner in the world known to have run marathons in under 3 hours in six different decades.

_ _ _

Katy Hopkins 鈥85

Katy Hopkins 鈥85, seated in front of a wind instrument being repaired
Katy Hopkins 鈥85: 鈥淚 said I鈥檇 love to help out, but I can鈥檛 keep up.鈥

Like many in the arts world, Hopkins found her livelihood at a standstill when the pandemic hit in the spring. The operator of Yahara River Woodwinds, an instrument-repair shop in Stoughton, Wisconsin, Hopkins quickly learned that musicians don鈥檛 need instruments repaired when much of the music world has shut down. She quickly pivoted and began making masks, which led to requests for specially made masks that music students could wear while practicing and performing. When her alma mater reached out, Hopkins, already overwhelmed with orders from around the country, agreed to teach students in the Theater Department Costume Shop to create the masks.聽Those masks are now being worn by students across the Conservatory.

_ _ _

Andrea Lewis Hartung 鈥05

Andrea Lewis Hartung 鈥05 standing in a hallway
Andrea Lewis Hartung 鈥05: 鈥淚鈥檇 say the victories are bittersweet.鈥

As a student at 杨贵妃传媒视频, Lewis Hartung knew she wanted to go to law school. She just hadn鈥檛 quite centered on what path she would take in law. She eventually landed at Northwestern University鈥檚 Pritzker School of Law, where she worked as a student in the school鈥檚 Center on Wrongful Convictions. It鈥檚 there that she found her passion in post-conviction work.聽She would eventually join the faculty at Northwestern and now spends her days both teaching and working cases for clients believed to have been wrongfully convicted.

_ _ _

Dr. Ben Weston 鈥05

Dr. Ben Weston 鈥05 posing in front of a building.
Dr. Ben Weston 鈥05: 鈥淥ur public health infrastructure is not designed for this.鈥

biology major while at 杨贵妃传媒视频, Weston credits his work in the classroom and as a leader in Student Life with preparing him for the lead role he鈥檚 taken in battling the COVID-19 pandemic. Besides teaching at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, working two shifts a week in the emergency department at Froedtert Hospital, and serving as the Office of Emergency Management鈥檚 director of medical services for Milwaukee County, Weston has taken on the temporary role of medical director of the Milwaukee area鈥檚 COVID-19 Unified Emergency Operations Center.聽To say the least, he鈥檚 had a busy year.

_ _ _

Alex Damisch 鈥16

Alex Damisch 鈥16 smiling while competing in a game of jeopardy
Alex Damisch 鈥16: 鈥淔or Jeopardy!, you make it work.鈥

While at 杨贵妃传媒视频, Damisch was a regular in the Quizbowl student club. She also was a trivia master for the Great Midwest Trivia Contest. If there was a brain game to play, she was in. It turns out that was great training. It paid off when she finally got her shot at聽Jeopardy!. For three straight days, she was on a roll, winning more than $35,000 along the way.聽鈥淎fter I taped the shows, I thought to myself, 鈥楳an, it went by so fast, and I was always so focused on my next move, I hope I remembered to smile.鈥 Spoiler alert: I did not.鈥

_ _ _

Spencer Tweedy 鈥19

Spencer Tweedy 鈥19 paling the drums
Spencer Tweedy 鈥19: 鈥淭hankfully, we all get along really well.鈥 (Photo by David Zoubek)

When you grow up a Tweedy, singing around the house is just the way life happens. So, when the pandemic hit and Spencer and his brother, Sam, were homebound with their famous father, Jeff Tweedy, founder, singer, and guitarist of Wilco, and their mother, Susan, entertainment ensued.聽A bathroom rendition of Jeff Tweedy鈥檚聽Evergreen聽featuring Jeff, Spencer, and Sam ended up on ABC鈥檚聽Jimmy Kimmel Live听补苍诲听The Tweedy Show聽debuted on Instagram.

_ _ _

Kir-Sey Fam 鈥19

Kir-Sey Fam 鈥19, sitting on a couch with laptop and smiling.
Kir-Sey Fam 鈥19: 鈥淭here was a bit of firefighting going on in different areas during launch.鈥

Even before he graduated from 杨贵妃传媒视频 in June 2019, Fam had himself a job offer as a software engineer at Disney+. The streaming service hadn鈥檛 yet launched, but the buzz was huge. It鈥檚 not often you step from the stage at Commencement and immediately land in the midst of one of the most talked about media developments in the world. When it launched, Disney+ had 10 million sign-ups the first day, 29 million in the first three months, and a new bankable star in Baby Yoda. Fam was part of the team that made it all happen.

See 2019 edition of Eight Alumni, Eight Stories聽.