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5 questions with...law professor Juscelino Colares
By the time he was 16, Juscelino Colares knew he wanted to be a lawyer when he grew up. The only difference between Colares and many other teenagers with the same dreams? He actually started law school then. Colares grew up in Brazil, where he started college at the age of 16. Law is an undergradua...
5 questions with…account clerk, novelist Becky Sloan
When Becky Sloan was about 13, her love for writing took root. Now, nearly 60 years later, she’s published her first novel, Branches—a work that took years of writing, rewriting, editing and retooling in order to be fit for print. Sloan’s long journey led her to realize four crucial words of wisdom...
5 questions with…law professor, avid skier Maxwell Mehlman
For Maxwell Mehlman, everything happens for a reason. Take, for example, his entire career. “Everything that has happened to me was part of a sequence of fortuitous events,” Mehlman said. When Mehlman graduated from law school at Yale University, he headed to Washington, D.C., to practice. He took...
5 questions with...Case Democrats leader Mel Sayre
When President Barack Obama presented his fifth State of the Union address Tuesday night, it was a bright night for junior Mel Sayre. After all, as 2012 calendar year president of Case Democrats, she devoted much of her spare time in the fall semester to helping his reelection. She spent Tuesday ni...
5 questions with…development director, former music agent Brian Sokol
He started off as a young man from Akron with a love for music; years later, he worked the red carpet at the Grammys, rubbing elbows with some of the music industry’s elite. No, we’re not talking about a member of The Black Keys. We’re talking about Brian Sokol, who now serves as the executive dire...
5 questions with…global activist Mai Segawa
Throughout senior Mai Segawa’s time at ϳԹ, she has been involved in a number of outreach and aid activities. Her sophomore year, she coordinated a jewelry sale and a benefit dinner on campus to aid victims of the tsunami in Japan. As a rising junior, she created the Adop...
Special edition: 5 questions with…the university archivists
ϳԹ has a long, storied past—from the founding of Western Reserve College in 1826 and Case School of Applied Science in 1880 to the subsequent renaming to Western Reserve University in 1882 and Case Institute of Technology in 1947, and then, finally, the federation of the...
5 questions with…study abroad adviser, competitive Scrabble player Lisa Brown
Having visited “more countries than [she] can count on [her] fingers and toes,” Lisa Brown just may be one of the most well-traveled people on ϳԹ’s campus. And that’s incredibly important, considering her job. Brown serves as the study abroad adviser in the Center for International...
5 questions with…ϳԹ crossing guard Mark Chavis
When he started guiding students and employees safely across the bustling Euclid Avenue and Adelbert Road intersection, ϳԹ police officer Mark Chavis thought it was just temporary. At the time, the Euclid Corridor project was taking off, and the police department decide...
5 questions with…Grammy nominee, music instructor Bruce Egre
When the nominees for the 55th annual Grammy awards were announced last week, artists, producers and engineers around the world waited with bated breath to see if they would be among those selected for the musical honors. But not Bruce Egre, an instructor of audio engineering in the Department of Mu...