08Dec2011

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M T H E M O N TA G E

William Van Hoogstraat, known by his students and friends as Bill Vann, was always ahead of schedule, but when students arrived for his 9 a.m. class Monday, Dec. 5, the door was shut and the room was dark and empty. That same morning, STLCCMeramec students and faculty were told that instructor Vann, 71, died in his sleep. He is survived by his wife, sons, daughter and grandchildren. Design instructor Chuck Groth worked with Vann at the PostDispatch in the early 90s. The two also worked closely in and outside of the classroom. Groth said Vann’s commitment to his students came naturally. “I think that’s one of the greatest tributes that you can think of for Bill is the impact he has had on his students,” Groth said. “I was online yesterday and saw tributes to Bill from students who had graduated 10 or more years ago saying how this man had such an influence on their art careers and lives.” One of these former students included Chris Powers. Powers graduated from Meramec in 2006 and currently owns his own design company. “Not only did he teach me the principals of how to approach a problem as a professional designer and to look outside the box–his lectures on the business was, and continues to be, an indispensable part of what drives me as a creative,” Powers said. Powers still references his notes and recorded lectures from Vann’s courses. “When I have a problem, or even an ethical question, I think WWBD (What Would Bill Do),” Powers said.

STLCC-student Mary Davis sat in the first floor of Humanities East in the art gallery room where she served as a part-time attendant and an unofficial publicist. She was known to call students in to explain exhibits and chat about art. Davis, 88, a student of STLCC for 25 years, died Wednesday after a short illness. A memorial is currently being planned in her honor. Professor of Art Margaret Keller described Davis as a student and a dedicated worker. “She was always here, this was her life. She took classes all the time, art classes, she worked in the gallery as the gallery attendant, she was always in there,” Keller said. After a career at Southwestern Bell, now AT&T, Davis decided to retire and take classes at Meramec. Davis, who was a part of Meramec’s Photo Club, Bacchus Club, International and Student Government for a time, was widely known around campus. Racking up over 100 credit hours, having been a STLCC student since 1986 and working as a part-time employee of Meramec’s art department, Davis kept busy. Campus Life Manager Steve Brady said that Davis lent a hand in different clubs. “Mary started out being in the Photo Club, she also got involved in the Bacchus Club and student government. It was cool with student government, she would always help us read scholarships when we had the student to student book scholarship,” Brady said.

Stories continued on page 5. @themontage

Voume 47 Issue 6

www.meramecmontage.com

December 8, 2011

A larger-than-life painting with shades of pink and orange set on an easel at the far west wing of the BOPP Chapel Funeral Home. The waist-up of an elderly man with thick-rimmed glasses is depicted. More colors – yellow, blue and red – drape from a pedestal to the left of the canvas. Uldis Alks’s self-portrait carries his legacy. Yellow, blue and red are the colors of the subject of the painting’s division of the Latvian Student Fraternity and are only a few of the colors Alks wore close to his heart. Alks, 77, died Monday, Nov. 28 after a heart attack. His memorial service and burial were held on Dec. 3. “I was lucky enough to see him two days before [he died] at Thanksgiving,” his former wife Annabelle Alks said. “We were always close friends, best friends.” Alks and Annabelle divorced in 2004. Nine years earlier, Alks retired from the National Geospatialintelligence Agency (NGA) and in 1997, a coworker from the NGA, Roger Becker, contacted Alks. “Roger called him up one day and asked him if he wanted a job,” Annabelle said. “He didn’t want to do nothing [after he retired].” There was an open position in the geography department at STLCC-Meramec and he knew Alks was looking for something to do after retirement. Alks signed on as an adjunct geography instructor and shared an office in what is now a classroom in Science West 105 with faculty members John Gribb, David Wamsley and Becker. “He always told me I saved his life,” Becker said.

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