During homecoming festivities this year, 杏吧视频 will recognize six outstanding alumni who have made contributions to the university and their fields.
From a renowned cardiac surgeon who was the inspiration for an NBC television show to a young alumnus who aims to transform the lives of local children, this year's Alumni Association Award winners have many notable accomplishments in a wide range of professions.
Read their stories below.
Photo by Scott Shaw
Gina Gibney launched her namesake dance company in New York City in 1991, serving as CEO, choreographer and artistic director. Since then, the dance company has blossomed into a $6 million-a-year operation, expanded to a second building, rents rehearsal space to other artists, mounts critically acclaimed productions and offers a variety of classes.
Gibney also is a social activist, providing movement workshops in more than 12 states and seven countries to help survivors of domestic violence express themselves through dance and find a sense of relief.
鈥淲hat is so remarkable is to witness the transformation 鈥 of a woman exhaling for the first time, a woman laughing from the belly because she is at home in her body in a way she hasn鈥檛 been in years, or maybe ever,鈥 Gibney said.
Her many accomplishments and initiatives have earned Gibney a reputation as a contemporary-dance powerhouse. Last year alone, Dance Magazine named her to its list of The Most Influential People in Dance Today and she received the 鈥楨rnie鈥 Award from Dance/USA鈥攖he national service organization for professional dance鈥攆or extraordinary leadership and empowering artists.
The first time Kathy E. Magliato held a beating human heart鈥 steadying it at the request of a surgeon鈥攕he was transformed. The young physician knew in that instant she wanted to be a cardiac surgeon.
Today, she is a cardiothoracic surgeon at Providence Saint John鈥檚 Health Center in Santa Monica, California, and among the relatively small number of women to hold that title. Her specialty areas include congestive heart failure, heart and lung transplants, heart disease in women and artificial-heart technology.
Her career has been so compelling that, in 2016, NBC used her New York Times best-selling memoir, Heart Matters, as the basis for Heartbeat, a medical drama that aired for one season. Magliato served as the show鈥檚 executive producer.
More recently, Magliato鈥攚ho also has an Executive MBA鈥攄eveloped a device to detect heart disease early and noninvasively, especially in women.
鈥淚 hope that, instead of operating on one or two patients a day,鈥 she said, 鈥淚 could change the course of heart disease in hundreds of thousands of patients a day by utilizing this diagnostic technology.鈥
When Janice Eatman-Williams learned of the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, she sprang into action. She organized campus and community-wide donation drives in 2016 and 2017, securing more than 12,000 bottles of water, 250 water jugs, 20 cases of cleaning wipes, dozens of water filters and more than 500 pounds of nonperishable food items鈥攁nd drove goods to the city four times along with other volunteers.
She鈥檚 also traveled extensively in the southern United States to help people who suffered from the damage of hurricanes Katrina and Isaac.
The Cleveland native demonstrates this same kind of dedication in her own community She has worked at 杏吧视频 for more than 20 years, mostly as assistant director for service-learning programs. She鈥檚 currently director of school-based outreach, organizing volunteer activities for students, faculty and staff, such as the Flint water drive. She also does community outreach, providing children and families access to academic assistance, life-skills training and college preparation.
鈥淭his is not merely a job,鈥 said Eatman-Williams. 鈥淚 feel that I am walking [with] a particular purpose.鈥
Takeshi Tottori said that you can play 鈥淲here鈥檚 Waldo?鈥濃 or, more accurately, 鈥淲here鈥檚 Takeshi?鈥濃攚hile leafing through 20 years of Japan Alumni Chapter meeting photos because he appears in all of them. Not only has Tottori attended every celebration since the first in 1998, he has organized and hosted each one.
It鈥檚 鈥渢he most effective way of refreshing my daily life with the feeling of [being] connected with CWRU,鈥 said Tottori, a Tokyo native.
Tottori said that at the university, he met students from around the globe who are 鈥渇riends for life.鈥
Today, he works as an intellectual property manager at Hiroshima University, helping professors protect and commercialize their work.
Tottori has been on university alumni committees that connect graduates with each other and current students, foster engagement in locations where there aren鈥檛 alumni chapters and bring together leaders of regional chapters.
"I think Takeshi's real contribution has been in sustaining the Japan chapter,鈥 said Dan Clancy, executive director emeritus of The Alumni Association and the award鈥檚 namesake. 鈥淚 am honored he is receiving this award.鈥
Community service is in Dont茅 Gibbs鈥 DNA.
He began volunteering at a local food pantry with his family at age 6, bred on service by his grandparents and childhood church.
鈥淵outh engagement and community uplift became my guiding principles,鈥 he said.
As a graduate student, he was president of the Black Student Association at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. And as an alumnus, he has served on the board of the university鈥檚 African American Alumni Association.
He also works on revitalization efforts in the nearby Fairfax neighborhood, mentors children in greater Cleveland and coordinates volunteers at Manna Food From Heaven, which serves meals at homeless shelters.
He鈥檚 also delivered more than 1,000 presents鈥攊ncluding board games, sleds, movies and cookware鈥攖o East Cleveland families as a part of Dont茅鈥檚 Gift Express, an initiative he started to help others during the holiday season.
In addition to his volunteer activities, Gibbs is the Gund Fellow at the George Gund Foundation, working on economic development and community revitalization projects.
After Dick Reminger earned a law degree by taking evening classes鈥攚hile working full time as a trucking company safety director鈥攈e worried no one would hire a recent night-school graduate. So, in 1958, he opened his own firm.
Sixty years later, the firm now known as Reminger Co. LPA has more than 140 lawyers in 14 offices in three states, working in a range of areas that include defending trucking companies, hospitals and physicians in court.
鈥淚 always thought a law firm should be developed and managed as you develop and manage a family鈥攖hat is 鈥榝irm and fair,鈥 鈥 Reminger said in his 1998 book, Closing Argument: Reflections on Building a Life and a Law Firm. 鈥淲hen you have the respect of the people you lead, you can accomplish anything.鈥
Reminger retired from the firm in 1991, but continues as an adviser.
He鈥檚 also an accomplished painter, with his landscapes and seascapes exhibited around the world, including in Ireland, Germany and Bermuda.
Reminger said he began painting during his legal career as a form of therapy to 鈥渃lean out my mind on the weekend.
Distinguished Alumni Award
Gina Gibney (WRC 鈥79; GRS 鈥82, theater)
Professional Achievement Award
Kathy E. Magliato, MD (MED 鈥90)
Newton D. Baker Distinguished Service Award
Janice Eatman-Williams (MNO 鈥01)
Daniel T. Clancy Alumni Service Award
Takeshi Tottori (GRS 鈥82, metallurgy and materials science)
Young Alumni Award
Dont茅 L. Gibbs (CWR 鈥10; SAS 鈥12)
President鈥檚 Award for Excellence
Dick Reminger, JD (ADL 鈥53)