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Managing Editor Sam Bohne Features Editor Christine Trevino Odds & ENDS Editors Monika Bickham Ryan Collins Charrea Sykes Assistant Editors Gabrielle Rosas Heather Schrering Chelsea Tomala Fact-Checking Chief Kristina Budgin Production Manager Najja Parker

Illustration Editor Heidi Unkefer Typography Editor Marcus Nuccio Ad & Marketing Christopher Abbey Gloria Kim Web Director Mirko Velimirovic Designers David Schmitt Kara Janachione Lily Machmouchi Samantha Raggioli Thumy Phan

Advertising & Business Manager Sylvia Leak Account Representatives Miranda Cummings Femni Awesu Sales Designers Zach Stemerick Heidi Unkefer Marcus Nuccio Michael Scott Fischer

ADMINISTRATION
Faculty Advisers Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin Zach Dodson Department Chair Nancy Day Computer Specialist Omar Castillo

PHOTOGRAPHERS
Angela Conners James Foster Madeline Taussig Rena Naltas

ART & DESIGN


Art Directors Allyson Wakeman Hannah Rebernick Production Manager Michael Scott Fischer Asst. Art Directors Andrew Fortnum Flo Katzenbach Mallory Hawes Photo Editor Angela Conners

ILLUSTRATORS
Adam Glab Ali Cantarella Christopher Dazzo Heidi Unkefer Ian Tormey Kelsey Bates Ryan Higgins

cover
Illustration Heidi Unkefer Logo Design Hannah Rebernick

ADVERTISING
General Manager: Chris Richert

SUMMER/FALL 2013 ECHOMAGONLINE.COM


Columbia College Chicagois an urban institution committed to access, opportunity and excellence in higher education. Columbia provides innovative degree programs in the visual, performing, media and communication arts to more than 10,000 students in 120+ undergraduate and graduate concentrations all within a liberal arts context. Columbia is the largest arts and media college in the nation. Columbia College Chicago is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. The college is accredited as a teacher training institution by the Illinois State Board of Education. Echo is produced in the College Magazine Workshop, which is open to students

in all departments. Contact Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin (speshkin@colum.edu) for information. Designers, photographers, illustrators, web and app developers can enroll in Independent Study and receive credit for Publication Design or work as freelancers. Contact Zach Dodson (zdodson@colum.edu) for information. Echo magazine is published twice a year by the Columbia College Chicago Journalism Department. Echo is a student-produced publication of Columbia College Chicago and does not necessarily represent, in whole or in part, the views of college administrators, faculty or students.

A STUDENT PUBLICATION OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO

For further information visit colum.edu

ODDS
10 EXotic Eats
TaKe a biTe oN The WilD SiDe by Chelsea Tomala

16 Pack uP

hoW To PRePaRe FoR ChiCagoS SummeR FeSTiValS by Sam bohne

11 bEEr Pairings 12 tv and ME

gRab a gRoWleR aND Some gRub by heather Schrering

17 hot dog!

SeVeN FaCTS abouT ThiS ChiCago FaVoRiTe by Chelsea Tomala

WhaT i leaRNeD FRom a ChilDhooD iN FRoNT oF The Tube by Ryan Collins

18 trick or trEat

FouR DiSheS ThaT hauNT uS by Sam bohne

thrilling thriFt

20 thE road to cEo

Come FoR The aRT, STay FoR The DealS by Sam bohne

hoW ThRee CReaTiVe ChiCagoaNS FouND TheiR Way To The ToP by Kristina budgin

13 closE EncountErs 14 shaPE uP!

oDD eleVaToR behaVioRS aRe all Too FamiliaR by Christine Trevino

21 caMPus looks alt transit

a FielD guiDe To CuRReNT STuDeNTS by Charrea Sykes

uNCoNVeNTioNal exeRCiSe oPTioNS by Sam bohne

SeVeN WayS To geT aRouND ToWN uNDeR youR oWN PoWeR by Kristina budgin

24 27 30 34 38

The leTTeR WRiTeRS alliaNCe PReSeRVeS The aRT oF CoRReSPoNDeNCe by Sam bohne

Mail adMirErs

aN iNSiDe looK FRom FouR loCal aRTiSTS by Christine Trevino

studio tour

a DRum gRouP bRiNgS WeST aFRiCaN CulTuRe To ChiCago by Najja Parker

thE bEat goEs on

The iNSighTS aND ouTlooKS oF aSl iNTeRPReTeRS by Kristina budgin

talk With your hands

ChiCago FaShioNS PluS-SiZe PioNeeRS by monika bickham

blogging big

42 48 52 56
Ends

the hidden havens behind chicagos famous stages By Angela Conners with Heather Schrering

secret spaces

Restorative Justice provides an alternative to incarceration By Charrea Sykes

Another way

What lies beneath LIncoln park? By Christine Trevino

Hidden Truths

On death, dying and Facebook By Heather Schrering

Posthumous posting

62 Holy Shit, Im Old! Unforgettable highlights and


lowlights of our youth By Kristina Budgin

63 The Rest is Silence Remember these iconic sounds?


By Heather Schrering

By Christine Trevino Pro advice for dressing up your finger tips By Najja Parker

72 SAY WHAT? 10 words we need now Nailing It

64 Timeless Toys Perennial playthings in the millennial age


By Heather Schrering

73 Lyrical Lessons Relationship advice, good and 74 The Art of War Veterans talk about the

bad, from 90s boy and girl bands By Charrea Sykes

65 Flash Forward The future lives of video game characters


Gabrielle Rosas & Ryan Collins

66 Room and Hoard Sharing living quarters in all its complexity


By Chelsea Tomala

transformative power of art By Gabrielle Rosas

67 Tweet, Like, Pin So what are we doing on social media?


By Kristina Budgin

By Kristina Budgin

75 Doing Well at Doing Good Four tips for effective charitable giving 76 Kick me! seven successfully funded passion projects 77 Second City Firsts Made in chicago: what, when, where and

68 R.I.P. Technology Epitaphs for dearly departed devices


By Sam Bohne & Charrea Sykes

By Gabrielle Rosas

Oh Boy! The evolution of boy band style


By Monika Bickham

who of famous windy city inventions By Christine Trevino & Kristina Budgin

69 Dont look! Chicagoans are adapting to the New CTA cars


By Sam Bohne

Section Opener Illustrations by Heidi Unkefer

From the Editor


Photo by Angela Conners

The word Chicago is derived from the Native American word Chicagoua, meaning wild onion. From the North Side to the South Side, and the lakeside to the West Side, Chicago is a wild city filled with eccentricities and hidden gems. This semester, the Echo staff peels back the layers of the wild onion to expose odds and ends, from alternative ways to get around, to extinct technology, to freaky foods and campus looks. Echos feature section runs the gamut from Facebook mourning to fat fashion. This semesters staff spent hours researching, collaborating, writing and designing to bring these stories to life on the printed page. We started with preliminary ideas, pushed them around the table, and brainstormed with our designers. We immersed ourselves in research, sometimes risking our health in the process, and reached out to sources far and wide. We refined and shaped our stories, put them through numerous layers of editing, fact checking and copy editing, and then proofread several times. The result is the full package of creativity you now hold in your hands. Peel back the pages of Echo and explore the wild onion.

Sam Bohne Managing Editor

Echo | summer/Fall 2013 7

ODDS

EXOTIC EATS
Take a bite on the wild side
By Chelsea Tomala Illustration by Ryan Higgins

TAKO YAKI (OCTOPUS BALLS)


New Tokyo Japanese Cuisine 3139 N. Broadway St.

You dont have to travel far to find

exotic foods. Our city of neighborhoods provides plenty of culinary curiosities. Echo checked out five daunting dishes. Follow in our footsteps the next time youre feeling adventurous.

THE EXPERIENCE

The golden ball squished when I grabbed it with my chopsticks. I popped the whole thing in my mouth and bit the fried outer layer. A mush oozed out, along with a rubbery chunk. The mixture tasted like belly-button jam and smelled like someone taking their gauges out. The regrettable taste lingered for the rest of the night. If you love weirding out your dinner companions, this is the food for you.

MARINATED JELLYFISH
MingHin Cuisine 2168 S. Archer Ave.

RISK LEVEL: High

THE EXPERIENCE

ROASTED BONE MARROW WITH HERBS


The Purple Pig 500 N. Michigan Ave.

THE EXPERIENCE

The jellyfish is cut into strips and served as a cold salad with thin cucumber sticks and shredded carrots. It was squishy without being chewy and didnt have much flavor; the zesty Thai sauce overwhelmed it. After a few bites, the blubbery texture started getting to me, especially after I bit into a particularly fat piece with a gooey center.
RISK LEVEL: Medium

Its served in the bone, which is split to expose the marrow, and accompanied by thick, buttery toast, herbs and capers. I dug a small knife into the marrow and spread it like butter on a piece of toast. I took a bite and smiled; it was good! The flavor resembled bacon grease, but in a good way.
RISK LEVEL: Low

STINGRAY SHU CHEE


Sticky Rice 4018 N. Western Ave.

THE EXPERIENCE

The shu chee curry sauce was the first thing I tasted. But then I encountered hard pieces in the soft meat: clear, bone-like cartilage, which I spat out. This dish tasted like a mild whitefish with the stringy consistency of crab meat. It was actually delicious.
RISK LEVEL: High

BEEr pAIrIngS
grab a growler and some grub
By Heather Schrering Illustrations by Michael Scott Fischer

wITH doZenS oF breweries scattered around the city and new ones opening every year, its safe to

say Chicago knows craft beer. Echo, with advice from Mark McDermott, Examiner.coms craft beer enthusiast, suggests these combos to help this city of foodies marry these two passions.

DEEP DISH PIzzA


PIeCe BReweRY and PIZZeRIaS golden aRM SPITeFul BRewIngS BITTeR BIKeR douBle IPa

LASAGNA
FInCHS BeeR CoMPanY golden wIng Blonde ale. loCal oPTIonS voKuHIla

CHILI CHEESE FRIES


HalF aCRe BeeR CoMPanYS oveR ale HaMBuRgeR MaRYS MaRY HoPPInS

CHICKEN GYRO
HalF aCRe BeeR CoMPanYS daISY CuTTeR Pale ale RoCK BoTToMS IPa HoPoTHeSIS BeeR CoMPanYS IPa

BACON CHEESEBURGER
RevoluTIon BRewIngS BoTToM uP wIT HaMBuRgeR MaRYS gangSTeR HoPPed-uP aMBeR ale 5 RaBBIT CeRveCeRaS 5 vulTuRe

FISH TACOS
MeTRoPolITan BRewIngS KRanKSHaFT gooSe ISlandS SoFIe 5 RaBBIT CeRveCeRaS golden ale

FALAFEL
HalF aCRe BeeR CoMPanYS goSSaMeR golden ale 5 RaBBIT CeRveCeRaS 5 gRaSS

BLUEBERRY PANCAKES
aTlaS BRewIng CoMPanYS dIveRSeY Pale ale HaMBuRgeR MaRYS SPeaKeaSY SaISon

CHOCOLATE CAKE
aTlaS BRewIng CoMPanYS andRoMeda MIlK STouT RevoluTIon BRewIngS eugene PoRTeR

GRILLED CHEESE
MeTRoPolITan BRewIngS dYnaMo aTlaS BRewIng CoMPanYS old dISHeveleR BaRleY wIne FInCH BeeR CoMPanYS THReadleSS IPa

BRATWURST
aRguS HolSTeIneR lageR BRadeRBRu u BRewIng CoMPanYS CHICago PIlSeneR

CALIFORNIA ROLL
5 RaBBIT CeRveCeRaS 5 lIZaRd HaMBuRgeR MaRYS Blonde BoMBSHell aRguS BReweRYS PegaSuS IPa

Echo | oddS

11

THrIllIng THrIFT
Come for the art, stay for the deals
By Sam Bohne Illustration by Marcus nuccio

a: PiLSeN ViNTage aNd THRifT 1430 w. 18 TH ST.


listen to live music while scrounging racks for retro finds from corny kitchenware to totally 80s dresses.

C: ModeRN CooPeRaTiVe 818 w. 18 TH ST.


This is the place to find furniture and dcor, from mid-century furnishings to vintage knick-knacks. Pick up a sofa that Betty draper would covet.

eVeRy SeCoNd fRiday of the

month, the Chicago Arts District in Pilsen opens its doors for art enthusiasts to feast their eyes on an array of artwork. Thrift stores lining West 18th Street stay open late, too, providing an opportunity to build a wardrobe or furnish your apartment without breaking the bank. Check out these shops on your way home from the galleries.

b: kNee deeP ViNTage 1425 w. 18 TH ST.


with a sea of shirts, Knee deep offers a Second Friday Midnight Sale from 6 p.m. to midnight. dont miss the cowboy boots.

d: CoMeT ViNTage 1320 w. 18 TH ST.


Ready to take a blast to the past? with racks of clothing from the 20s to the 70s, Comet vintage is the perfect place to pick up anything from retro dresses to dishes.

Tv AnD mE
By Ryan Collins Illustrations by Thumy Phan

what I learned from a childhood in front of the tube


doug taught me that its oK to wear the same clothes every day. RoCkoS ModeRN Life taught me to name my pets after weird adjectives. STReeT SHaRkS taught me new words like jawsome. aaHHHHH!! ReaL MoNSTeRS taught me that one mans disgusting trash is another mans delicacy. THe ReN & STiMPy SHow taught me how vile and malicious our pets truly are. dexTeRS Lab0RaToRy taught me that Im allowed to be annoyed with my older sister. THe MagiC SCHooL buS taught me that school is potentially fun. aNiMaNiaCS taught me that its not stupid to laugh at jokes I dont understand.

aS a CHIld, I was influenced by the


odd adventures of my favorite cartoons. when I watched doug eat his liver and onions, I nearly puked. as I grew older, I began to realize that my favorite toons taught me valuable life lessons and gave me great common-sense tips. Here are a few that have stuck with me over the years.

KNOW YOUR CHARACTERS?

CaPTaiN PLaNeT aNd THe PLaNeTeeRS taught me that cleaning up the earth is cool, especially if its done with magical rings that shoot fl ames.

1.

2.

3.

4.

THe aNgRy beaVeRS taught me that wild animals have first-world problems too.

answers: 1. dexters laboratory, 2. doug, 3. Ren and Stimpy, 4. Captain Planet

8 3 1 4 2 7

Odd elevator behaviors are all too familiar

Close Encounters
By Christine Trevino Illustration by Ian Tormey 4 Someone pretending to listen to music

being sandwiched into a claustrophobic metal box with a group of strangers is just plain awkward. Here are the characters we commonly encounter:
Lets face it: 1 Someone pretending to text

This guys eavesdropping on that phone call.


5 Someone hastily eating

As long as he keeps the special sauces, miscellaneous spice packets and mystery meats under control, you should be fine.
6 Someone who pushes all the buttons

Elevators are generally a reception-free zone, and this gal knows it. On the bright side, shell definitely ignore you.
2 Someone listening to music way too loud

Take a deep breath. This jokester will make you late.


7 Someone reading

Drowning out the world can help, though the lasting damage to his eardrums might not be worth the temporary relief it provides.
3 Someone talking on the phone

Its easy to admire her focus and dedication, but watch out for that books sharp corners.
8 Someone with way too much stuff

If the elevator breaks down, this guy is prepared for a long wait.

This person has killer cell service. Youll soon have surprising insights into his personal life.
Echo | odds 13

SHApe up!
Unconventional exercise options
By Sam Bohne Infographic by Andrew Fortnum

Want to get in shape? Take this quiz to find a class that fits.

YES
Try Flirty Girl Fitness Pole Dance class.
1325 W. Randolph St.

YES
Try Zombie Survival Parkour at ZombieFit. Visit zombiefit.org for class schedules.

YES
Do you fear a zombie apocalypse?

NO YES
Will you install a pole in your bedroom? Try sword fighting in Forteza Fitness FightingFit! class.
4437 N. Ravenswood Ave.

NO
Do you long to join the circus?

YES
Have you dreamed of being a stripper?

START HERE
Do you like to dance?

NO
Do you want to be your own bodyguard?

NO
Try Studio Lamours burlesqueinfused Fitness Tease and Tone class.
939 W. Randolph #300.

NO YES YES NO
Do you enjoy shaking your booty? Try MSA & Circus Arts adult contortion private classes.
1934 N. Campbell Ave.

Are you afraid of heights?

Try Flywheel, a cycling class with a house DJ.


710 N. State St.

NO NO
Maybe fitness just isnt for you. Time to practice the age old art of being a couch potato. Can you walk in a straight line (when youre sober)?

YES
Try Yallah! Dance Studios Level Belly Dance class.
116-122 West Illinois #5W.

YES
Try Beginning Tightwire class at Aloft Loft.
2000 W. Fulton St.

NO
Try TSNY Chicagos Flying Trapeze class. 5917 N.
Broadway St.

pACk up
By Sam Bohne Illustrations by Heidi unkefer

How to prepare for Chicagos summer festivals


FAnnY pACk BASICS

ITS FeSTIval SeaSon, which

means its time to fi nd your fanny pack. Yes, the favorite accessory of 80s moms, tourists and Hulk Hogan is perfect for double-fisting hot dogs at the Taste of Chicago or dancing your butt off at Lollapalooza. Strap on this bad boy on and pack in these necessities to make it through the festival season like a well-prepared scout.

fLiP fLoPS waterproof, washable footware is a concert essential.

HeadbaNd/ baNdaNa Keeps the sweat out of your eyes, and doubles as a fl ag if you lose your friends.

wiPeS For sweat, mud, blood and runny eye makeup.

PoNCHo Protects you during Chicagos unexpected summer storms.

PLaSTiC baggieS To keep anything important dry.

VaPuR waTeR boTTLeS Theyre light, refillable, and roll up when empty.

SO YOur BOYFrIEnD WAnTS TO gO TO rIBFEST...BuT YOurE A vEgAn. ADD THESE TO YOur FAnnY pACk: eNeRgy baRS Youve got to fill up on something while hes gobbling BBQ pulled pork. baCoN STRiPS adHeSiVe baNdageS For street cred. VegaNSTeVeN aPP So you can stop for some grub on the way home.

SO YOur rOOmmATE WAnTS TO gO TO nOrTH COAST...BuT YOu HATE ElECTrOnIC DAnCE muSIC. ADD THESE TO YOur FAnnY pACk: HeadPHoNeS To block out the womp womp beats as you whip your hair back and forth to willow Smith. NeoN SHuTTeR SHadeS To fi t in with the crowd, brah. SPoTify aPP So you can listen to good music.

SO YOur BEST FrIEnD FrOm THE SuBurBS WAnTS TO gO TO lOllA...BuT YOu CAnT HAnDlE THE HEAT. ADD THESE TO YOur FAnnY pACk: QueNCH guM To replenish electrolytes after you sweat a gallon of fluids. wayfaReR SuNgLaSSeS To look indie and original while blocking the sun from your eyes. LoLLaPaLooZa aPP To create your own schedule so you dont miss your favorite band.

SO YOu WAnT TO gO TO pITCHFOrk...BuT YOurE nOT A HIpSTEr. ADD THESE TO YOur FAnnY pACk: LiST of iNdie baNdS Brush up on names like Parenthetical girls and Taco leg. If you forget, make something up and nonchalantly say, Youve probably never heard of them. fake MuSTaCHe So you can fi t in with the hipster crowd. SHaZaM aPP To identify songs by bands youve never heard of.

Hot Dog
By Chelsea Tomala

Seven facts about this Chicago favorite

There are about 2,500 hot dog joints in the Chicago metropolitan area.
Hot Dog Culture in American: Man Bites Dog by Bruce Kraig

Photo Illustrations by Flo Katzenbach In the words of Dirty Harry, Nobody, I mean nobody, puts ketchup on a hot dog. A steaming weenie should be plopped in a poppy-seed bun and topped with neon green relish, tomato slices, a pickle spear, diced onions, sport peppers, a dash of celery salt and mustard. Thats how you serve a hot dog in the Windy City. In honor of July being National Hot Dog Month, here are seven frankfurter facts.

Los Angeles

Baltimore/ Washington

New York

Chicago

Chicago places fourth among top hot dog consuming cities.


Information Resources Inc., based on 2012 data via National Hot Dog and Sausage Council

On Independence Day, Americans eat enough wieners to span the United States more than five times (150 million wieners).
National Hot Dog and Sausage Council

Fans at baseball parks will consume more than 20 million hot dogs this season.
2013 Survey from Hot Dog and Sausage Council

From Memorial Day to Labor Day, 818 hot dogs are gobbled up every second (seven billion total).
2012 Press Release from National Hot Dog and Sausage Council

Dick Portillo opened his first restaurant in 1963 in Villa Park, Ill. the same year the Oscar Mayer jingle debuted and children began singing, Oh I wish I were an Oscar Mayer weiner!
Hot Dog: A Global History by Bruce Kraig Never Put Ketchup on a Hot Dog by Bob Schwartz

Travelers at OHare International Airport consume 725,000 more hot dogs than those at Los Angeles International Airport and New Yorks LaGuardia Airport combined.
National Hot Dog and Sausage Council

Echo | odds

17

Trick or treat
Four dishes that haunt us
By Sam Bohne Photos by Chelsea Ross

These odd dishes may spook your tastebuds. Try them if you dare!

The Mother Loaf

Maple Bacon Long John

The Meatloaf Bakery, 2464 N. Clark St. A cupcake made of seasoned beef, pork, veal, onions, ketchup, herbs and seasonings, topped with Yukon mashed potatoes.
Echo! Pour on the gravy. Heck No! Dont dunk it in milk.

Glazed and Infused, 813 W. Fulton Market A yeast-raised treat with a maple glaze, topped with a slice of peppered maple bacon.
Echo! Itll remind you of a hearty pancake-and-bacon breakfast. Heck No! Vegetarians beware.

Chicken n Waffles Pizza

Durian Fruit Freeze

Dimos Pizza, 3463 N. Clark St. A slice topped with crme fraiche, tiny waffles, breaded chicken, butter, mozzarella and drizzled with maple syrup.
Echo! Dinner and breakfast in one slice! Heck No! All the calories of dinner and breakfast, too.

Joy Yees Noodles, 2139 S. China Pl. A fragrant smoothie made from the odorous, spiky- husked durian fruit, which is native to Indonesia and Malaysia.
Echo! A healthy serving of fruit. Heck No! Hold your nose.

The road to ceo


By Kristina Budgin Illustrations by Michael Scott Fischer
3 4

How three creative Chicagoans found their way to the top


Jim Snediker Founder and CEO of Stock Manufacturing Co. Its never too late to try something new. 1. BA Journalism from University of Dayton (2005) 2. Worked inside sales at Marcus Evans, providing training events for corporations 3. Worked inside-sales at Trek Freight services, LLC 4. Higher-level sales and brand management at CareerBuilder.com, helping companies with social media and online marketing strategies 5. Co-founder of Left of Trend, a Chicago-based flash sale eCommerce site 6. Founder and CEO of Stock Manufacturing Co. (2012)
6

12

12

10

11

8 7

Millie Tadewaldt Co-founder and CEO of CakeStyle Try to find something that you feel lucky someone is paying you to do it. 1. BA Communications, BS Design from University of California, Davis (2003) 2. Part-time web developer for UC Davis while in school 3. Intern at ad agency Crocker/Flanagan (now Astone/Crocker/Flanagan), an ad agency 4. Started New Media Methods, a web application development studio 5. Studied law and business and received a J.D. from Harvard Law School 6. Interned at Hale and Dorr (now WilmerHale) Legal Services Center while attending law school 7. Served as a summer associate/intern at management consulting firm Bain & Company, Inc. 8. Worked as a consultant for The Boston Consulting Group 9. Managing Director at Sandbox Industries, where she now launches startups 10. Co-founder of DashMob, an insta-savings website, while still at BCG 11. Co-founder and Chairwoman of Doggyloot, a pet eCommerce site for discounted toys, chews and treats 12. Co-founder and CEO of online personal styling site, CakeStyle (2011)

Gregory Jaros Founder and CEO of Spare To Share Surround yourself with people who are smarter than you, and dont be afraid to fail. 1. BS Computer Science from DePaul University (1986) 2. Worked as a coder for Northern Display, Inc. while at DePaul 3. Worked as a consultant at Andersen Business Consulting 4. Worked as a consultant at Technology Solutions Corporation 10 5. Founder and consultant at Diamond Technology Partners 6. MBA from University of Chicago Booth School of Business (Entrepreneurship and Marketing) 7. Worked as a traveling consultant for Diamond Technology Partners while attending University of Chicago 8. Started The Premium Connection, a cigar-of-the-month club, while at the University of Chicago 9. Chief Information Officer at PayNet Inc. 10. Founder, partial owner and CEO of Spare To Share (2011)

CREATIVE
Big, Curly Hair Casual Clothing

CORPORATE
Hair In Neat Bun

Accessories
Mac iPhone Vintage sunglasses Excessive jewelry Exposed tattoo Leather messenger bag 2008 Volkswagen Beetle

Campus looks
A field guide to current students
By Charrea Sykes Illustrations by Ali Cantarella

Buisness Attire

Accessories
PC Android Designer sunglasses Simple jewelry Covered tattoo Oversized designer bag 2013 BMW 320D Corporate edition

Job
9-to-5

Job
Freelancer

Personality
Relaxed Go with the flow

Whos going into a creative field? Whos destined for a corporate job? Sometimes its pretty obvious long before graduation. Do you see yourself in one of our profiles?

Personality
Stressed Punctual

Alternative Transit
Seven ways to get around town under your own power
By Kristina Budgin Illustrations by Dave Schmitt

Scooter (nonmotorized)
Average cost: $70 (31 CTA rides) Echo! Scooters are portable and lightweight. Heck No! Its a kids toy not the most dignified form of transportation.

Unicycle
Average cost: $90 (40 CTA rides) Echo! Who doesnt admire a unicyclists grace, balance and overall awesomeness? Heck No! Lack a well-defined center of gravity? Youre screwed.

So, parking meter rates are up again. No big dealyoull ride the CTA. Then the price of a 30-day pass jumps to $100. Have you ever thought theres something more out theresome other way to travel? Cheaper, greener ways of getting around may pay for themselves in as little as three weeks of regular commuting.

Running Shoes
Average cost: $120 (53 CTA rides) Echo! Youll have nearly limitless route options and Olympian buns and thighs. Heck No! You might sweat to death, freeze to death, drown and/or get blown away en route.

Rollerblades
Average cost: $120 (53 CTA rides) Echo! Theyve got all the perks of walking, but its even faster. Heck No! Lots of things to carry? You run the risk of looking like a pack-mule on wheels.

Long-board
Average cost: $200 (89 CTA rides) Echo! You can get around quickly and easily without fearing for your life in downtown traffic. Heck No! Uneven sidewalks, potholes and gravel can be your demise.

Scooter (electric)
Average cost: $210 (93 CTA rides) Echo! Theyre more portable than mopeds, and you dont have to worry about physical exertion. Heck No! If the battery dies, looks like youre walking.

Commuter/Touring Bike
Average cost: $600 (267 CTA rides) Echo! Bike lanes on many busy streets make for an easier, more scenic ride to work. Heck No! A driver who doesnt see you cuts you off. The car wins. Every time.

Echo | odds

21

features

mail admirers
The letter writers Alliance preserves the art of correspondence
By Sam Bohne Photo by Angela Conners

The TAPPinG of typewriter keys filters out onto Walton

Street. Periodically, a ping echoes through the cozy room. Fingers press keys, hands push levers, and purple ink presses into lime green paper. Soon the paper will be pulled out, folded, placed in an envelope and sent away. The letter enthusiasts have gathered today in Humboldt Park to type and write. Some are adults who remember the typewriters of their youth; some are children encountering the old machines for the first time. This Sunday afternoon meet-up was coordinated by Kathy Zadrozny and Donovan Beeson, founders of the Letter Writers Alliance. Zadrozny and Beeson write their own letters: Zadrozny in fountain pen, and Beeson on an old typewriter. In a world of fast-paced emails and text messages, these writers unplug, crafting letters by hand to friends and Alliance members.

Were not anti-email, or anti-Twitter or anything like that, Zadrozny says. We use all those tools. Thats all they are, tools. So everything has a use, and letters definitely have a use. One of the best things about it is you send a little piece of yourself in a letter. The duo started the Alliance in 2007 as a way to form a community around the art form of personal correspondence. Much to their surprise, the Letter Writers Alliance has grown to nearly 4,000 members across the world; about 410 live in Chicago. At the time, Zadrozny was volunteering at the Newberry Library, working with papers from the Polish Womens Alliance. The letters helped women who had just moved to Chicago find good health care and good schools for their children, and it kept them from feeling isolated in an unfamiliar place.

Yea, us and all our friends, Beeson adds, finishing her thought.

Letters bring people together, Beeson adds. They got the idea in 2007, during a craft fair for their stationery shop, 16 Sparrows.

And I love letters! they both shout.

Nobody writes letters anymore

So they decided to do something about it.

[The Polish Womens Alliance] had this community for people so they didnt feel like they were the only ones, Zadrozny says. And I thought, Maybe this is something we can do for letter writers. [The Polish Womens Alliance] had this community for people so they didnt feel like they were the only ones, Zadrozny says. And I thought, Maybe this is something we can do for letter writers. Kimberly Adami-Hasegawa, a member of the Letter Writers Alliance since 2009, has been composing letters since she was a child. She consistently writes to 12 people, some of whom she met through the Alliance. I like that its slower and quieter. I just think its more fun than receiving an email, Adami-Hasegawa says. Its also more permanent. There are so many people out there that just delete it. Delete, delete, delete, delete, delete, Beeson says of email, punching her finger up and down for emphasis. Its just too easy to get rid of email correspondence, whereas discarding a letter is more dramatic and less likely to happen by accident. Heidi Marshall, head archivist at Columbia College Chicago, agrees. She recalls working with a collection of documents from a religious organizations leaders and finding that a chunk of one leaders history was lost because his email correspondence had not been saved. Nobody thought about the fact that he had done all of his work in the 1990s on a computer, and nobody thought to take off all of the correspondence and general letter writing from that, she says. They, of course, wiped the computer and got rid of it. Marshall was struck by the irony: She could read letters dating back to the 1830s, yet she couldnt read messages that were only about a decade old. Awareness about the need to preserve electronic documents has improved since then, she says, but years worth of history have already been lost. Weve probably lost a generations worth 20, 25 years worth, she says. The digital trash bin is one hazard; the overload of material is another. As someone who works with archives, the other aspect that I see is were going to lose information because theres too much of it, Zadrozny says. Theres going to be such a glut of digital information thats meaningless because of the way that people treat email. And, they note, ink and paper still have more impact. An email does not have that same gravitas, Beeson says. And I say this having had very important email conversations with people. Consider the difference between a birthday card and an email birthday greeting, or a thank-you letter and a thank-you text. The effort of crafting and sending a physical message still pays off. Marshall says letter writing is a more conscious act

than sending an email message, posting on Facebook or tweeting. The act of letter writing requires the writer to clear off some physical and mental space. You have different purposes, she says. Youre consciously sitting down to do this. And you have to collect your thoughts in a way you know you cant correct. Zadrozny finds letter writing therapeutic at times. Writing a letter forces her to stop and think about whatever the topic is, which is particularly helpful when shes grappling with something difficult. By the end of the letter, I kind of almost solve my own problem, Zadrozny says. And because Im writing it by hand, I have to think about it its just not clack, clack, clack. So why dont more people write letters? Obviously, it takes more time. It also costs more; letter writers pay for stationery and stamps, along with the pens or typewriters they use to compose their correspondence. And, Beeson says, messy handwriting holds some people back. But for those who invest in the process, the rewards come in the mail, one letter at a time. We really try and stress that you just need to write letters, Beeson says.

Echo | features 25

Studio
an inside look local artists from four
By Christine Trevino Photos by Angela Conners

Tour

Summer in the city ushers in some of the largest art fairs in the country, and exploring one of these shows is the perfect way to spend a warm, breezy day. Its also a great opportunity to become familiar with work from some of the citys local, dedicated and, of course, talented artists. Its hard to be a small-business owner and, in many cases, even harder to do so in the art world, where oftentimes one-person operations require someone to quickly switch from artist to salesperson. These four Chicago-based artists are succeeding, making one-of-a-kind work in various mediums. They have participated in art shows and fairs, both big and small, including the Renegade Craft Fair, Ravenswood Art Walk, One of a Kind Show Chicago, and Art on Armitage. You can see their work online and throughout the city if you just look around. They kindly let Echo into their cool, creative spaces, and gave us a glimpse of where the artistry truly happens.

Echo | features 27

Jen Husted-Goss
Illustration

Describe your style:

Quirky, cute and abstract.


Tell me about your workspace:

Its a hodgepodge of furniture and equipment. My wood desk was an antique I found on Craigslist. The orange work bench is my favorite piece of furniture in here. Some guy had it in his garage for who knows how long, probably 30 years. Its bright orange, huge and perfect.
Check out her stuff out at

etsy.com/shop/ArthursPlaidPants

Betsy Siber
Jewelry

Describe your style

Colorful, vintage and simple.

Tell me about your workspace

I believe you need to work in a setting that is visually appealing to you. I love all of the colorful details in my studio, like my spray-painted yellow storage drawers and my fabric-covered pin boards. I have a working sink, proper ventilation for my soldering area, counter space at the perfect height for me and lots of other little perks. I am truly happy to sit down and work in this space.
Check her stuff out at

foxgloveaccessories.com

Hiroshi Ariyama
Screen prints

Describe your style

My style is not only the way I print the image, but the feeling that each of my prints evokes. The feeling that people take away from looking at my work varies, but Im hopeful that they remind viewers of their own experience and memories of the city.
Tell me about your workspace

As my business developed, I started to look for a space where I could make, experiment, store and show my artwork. In 2012, I moved into a larger combination storefront studio space where theres enough room to do all that.
Check out his stuff out at

ariyamastudio.com

Nino Rodriguez
Graffiti Art

Describe your style

My style is a combination of Aztec-influenced art and designs and Chicago graffiti art.
Tell me about your workspace

Right now, I am working out of my friends new art studio in the Portage Park neighborhood. I like using the space to throw paint around. I also work from the upper floor of my home, where I create my art and T-shirts. We have several rooms devoted to creating works of art, which is good for me because I like to focus and keep the noise to a minimum.
Check out his stuff out at

tselone.blogspot.com

Echo | features 29

The Beat goes on


Sekou Conde, far left, and some members of Snk.

A drum group brings West African culture to Chicago


By Najja Parker Photos by James Foster

lets go from the top.


Drums slide across the green and yellow tile floor toward the legs of waiting chairs. Legs hug the bottom of the djembe drums, securing them in place. Hands lift in anticipation of the break. Daada daada dada da da. Palms strike the drumheads. Thumping and thudding fills the cafeteria at Betty Shabazz International Charter School in Chicago. Practice has begun. Its the final month of training for West African percussion ensemble Snk (sn-ney-kay). Sekou Conde, the groups founder, listens for any glitches in the rhythm. Bumbum bumbum bum bum bum. No, but you got to know how to get in and come there, Conde calls to one of the djembe drummers. If I could just figure it out, then I can just work on it, she replies in frustration. Bumbum bumbum bumbum bum bum bum. She squints her eyes and studies Condes hands as they rise and fall. She mimics his rhythm and nails it. At the beginning of each year, Conde invites new members to learn how to drum, sing and dance their way across Chicago with the rest of the group. He began with six members in 2006; today, Snk has 16 members, ranging in age from five to 67. A lot of it came from word of mouth, Conde says. People asked me if they could be a part of it, and it kind of went from there. Word of Snks dynamic, educational and interactive performances also spread. The group has performed more than 300 shows at schools, festivals and other events, exposing audiences to a style of drumming they may have never heard before. Students need to know that there are other countries and other cultures outside of theirs, says Catrina Conley, program manager of Discover Music: Discover Life, which develops and implements fine-arts curricula for schools. If they cant go there and experience it at least there is a group that can bring that to them.

Keken keken bum ba bum bum.


Traditionally, West African drumming was used for rites of passage and agriculture. Today, it recognizes those same traditions, while embracing engagement as well. Its bringing listening back to the human experience. Its bringing interaction. Its bringing active listening. Its bringing call and response, says Michael Taylor, a percussionist and instructor at the Old Town School of Folk Music who specializes in West African djembe and dounun drums. Theres something about djembe thats a magnet to humans more than a lot of other percussion drums. It exercises things that are uniquely good for us as a human race. That sense of interaction is readily apparent during Snk rehearsals. Each time a drummer perfects a rhythm,

someone shouts owwwww or ayyeeee! Even practices have the air of celebration. Snks lively rehearsals translate into electrifying performances. They are phenomenal young brothers and sisters presenting the culture in a professional way. They rock, says Vaune Blalock, whose son, Akeem, is part of the group.

and make sure no weeds take over. You have to love it and make sure it gets all of the proper nutrients it needs to grow, and thats what we strive to do, Conde says. We plant a lot of seeds.

You would have to be a corpse to not feel good after hearing some djembe music. Michael Taylor
The music is so great. Taylor says of the high energy, upbeat drumming style. That energy is complemented by the costumes worn by drummers and dancers: green, yellow and red garments that exude the spirit of Africa.
Snk rehearses twice a week from 6 to 8 p.m. You know how to turn the lights out, right? asks the school custodian. Theyre there on that wall, he points his subtle way of reminding Conde that 8 p.m. is nearing. Before the drummers pack up, they do a few more run throughs. Conde wants to make sure Snk is ready for a performance at an upcoming food drive. Snk also partners with Africare and NAFAGuinee, two charities that provide food, shelter and medical assistance to people in Africa. Participating in events and partnerships like these dovetails with Snks mission of keeping African culture alive. Thats why Conde chose the name Snk, a word that means cultivation in the language of the West African Mandinka people. When you place a seed in the ground, you have to take care of it

Thirteen-year-old Akeem Blalock Cotton joined the group because his mother, Vaune, wanted to connect him to his roots. If we lose all of our traditions and concepts, we will cease to exist, she says. The boy took to the drums and the community. My son loves the Snk posse like they are his brothers, and they are, Blalock says. That sense of family is evident in the nicknames members assign each other. Andrea Najwii Vinson, one of the five dancers, is known as Mama Andrea. Its wonderful. Its family. We have a good time, Vinson says. She and the other adopted family members join Condes two nephews, niece, sister and father, who are also members of the group. Conde sits in the middle of the group, listening to the final rehearsal. He taps his foot and nods his head in satisfaction. Bum ba bum bum. Keken keken. No glitches. The school custodian returns to find the lights still on and the music still going strong. Chairs slide back to their designated spots against the mural-covered walls. Drums return to their cases. The members of Snk form a circle and hold hands. The custodian stands outside the circle for a moment, then unclasps two hands and joins the circle. Together, they all say asha. Hope. Practice has ended.

Echo | features 31

talk with your hands


The insights and outlooks of ASl interpreters

By Kristina Budgin Illustration by Heidi Unkefer

The walls of Grand Tots Daycare in Cedar Lake, Ind., are covered with colorful hand-drawn pictures. A rainbow of small coats and backpacks hangs from hooks in one of the spacious classrooms. Two children in plastic aprons sit at a low table, painting paper plates. After setting them on the window sill to dry, they pick up small plastic mallets and play a round of Dont Break the Ice until Miss Maria and Miss Sarah call them over for story time. They select The Very Cranky Bear and sit down on the plush rug. Miss Maria reads the book, changing her voice for each of the characters and pointing to pictures on every page. The children glance at the book but mainly focus on Miss Sarahs elaborate gestures and dramatized facial expressions. Theyre watching the story thats being read to them in American Sign Language, or ASL. The Gallaudet Research Institute estimates that ASL is the primary language of between 500,000 and two million Americans. Like other languages, ASL is part of a distinct culture that exists within a world where hearing is the norm. And straddling the line between these two cultures is a group dedicated to bridging communication and cultural gaps: ASL interpreters. ASL interpreters and educators strive to make the hearing world more accessible to and mindful of deaf individuals. They are the voice and ears of the deaf and hearing people they work with. In the process, they dispel some of the myths commonly held about them and the non-hearing world.

Myth #1: Interpreters are just translators ASL is not based on English, and words and concepts dont all have direct translations. Moreover, according to Robert Stearns, a full-time interpreter at Advocate Illinois Masonic Center, ASL is very blunt, lacking the euphemisms common to English and other languages. As a result, Deaf culture is more direct than hearing culture.

Interpreters need to take this into account. Brianne DeKing, a full-time ASL video interpreter for Sorenson, a 24/7 video relay service, says interpreters have to do more than literally translate in order to account for the fact that whats appropriate in a culturally Deaf context may not be acceptable in a hearing-culture situation. Cultural mediation is very grey, DeKing says. Theres not always a right or wrong. Cultural mediation is interpreting the mood and spirit of the communication, including tone of voice, pauses, vocabulary choices, intensity and culture-specific norms. This can be challenging for interpreters because they have to judge the emotional intensity of whats being said and translate it into another language, Stearns says. Facial expressions are extremely important in this process, DeKing says, because they convey tone and emotion, and add clarity through grammar and punctuation. ASL is a language in itself, and its not a written language, she says. Its a visual language. Those visual cues are essential to clear communication in ASL. Stearns likens them to inflection, tone and pitch in spoken language. How you say it totally changes how people react to you, Stearns says. Interpreters dont just translate words, but also the meaning embedded in the culture, so they must go beyond language to embrace deaf culture, DeKing says. They make an effort to be fully immersed in the culture with deaf people, deaf friends [and] other interpreters. This can include choosing to study with a deaf teacher. Lynn Cachey, teacher and Lab Manager in Columbia College Chicagos ASL Department, says deaf teachers, like her, have a better understanding of deaf culture. Deaf teachers are able to show a different variety of different signs based on their own life experiences. As anyone whos miscommunicated through text messages or email knows, words alone are not enough for clear expression of ideas or intentions. Any kind of communication can easily be misinterpreted, DeKing says, even one as direct as ASL.

Pioneering daycare
Grand Tots Daycares ASL program, the only one of its kind in the six surrounding states, is designed to help children who are deaf or hard of hearing, as well as those whose parents are deaf, prepare for integration into mainstream classrooms. Theres such a gap there, says Cheryl Reynolds, The children are gradually introduced to hearing classroom settings to executive director of the nonprofit school. Theyve lost three years of learning, socialization skills, all kinds of education and learning because theyre not put in that environment. expose them to the school environment theyll be in the following year. This is especially important for the CODAs, or Children of Deaf Adults, who, unlike the deaf or hard-of-hearing kids, will not have interpreters to help them adjust to a hearing environment.

Echo | features 35

asl is a language in itself. anD its not a Written language, its a visual language.
brianne DeKing

Myth #2: DeaFness Is just the aBsenCe oF hearInG Some people are born deaf, while others acquire deafness later in life. Some identify themselves as big-D Deaf, or culturally deaf, and take pride in shared values, traditions and behaviors. Others identify as little-D deaf, which simply indicates a lack of hearing, and plenty fall somewhere in between. Theres no right or wrong, its just what that individual chooses to identify themselves with, DeKing says. Regardless of where they fall on this spectrumand whether they consider themselves Deaf or deafthey identify as part of a culture, Stearns says. This is partly in response to a history of discrimination against deaf people (known as audism), which is prohibited under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. But Stearns says Deaf culture is based on more than just deafness. I see not one Deaf club, but little pockets of Deaf communities, he says. Stearns acknowledges the complexity of acting as a connector between this diverse culture and the equally diverse hearing world. We say, I dont work for deaf people, I work with deaf people, he says. And were not helpers. We dont help deaf people. We dont help hearing people understand deaf people. We just work with everyone. DeKing agrees, emphasizing the interpreters role as the vehicle for communication. She says hearing individuals are as much her clients as the deaf individuals because the goal of interpretation is to empower the deaf person and to give them equal access. Myth #3: InterpretatIon Fully BrIDGes the Gap Watching DeKing interpret for Nick, a deaf college student, was nerve-wracking. The classroom swelled with noise from people talking simultaneously. Some spoke softly or quickly or changed what they were saying midsentence. How could she weed through all the noise and chaos to convey everything to Nick? As hearing people, we take for granted the amount of information we get just by being barraged by it, Stearns

says. Deaf people dont have both the advantages and disadvantages of all that extra information and distraction. Because they literally cant overhear information, they need to be actively paying attention to a visual source. Further complicating the process are dialect differences, which exist in ASL just as they do in English. A sign that means one thing in New York can mean another in Chicago, or mean nothing at all. And interpreters encounter some of the same hindrances to communication as hearing people do. For example, Stearns says, If a deaf person is drunk, they slur their signs just like we slur our speech. Sometimes interpreters struggle not to interject their opinions. DeKing recalls her dilemma when assisting a deaf person with a phone call and realizing that the caller was trying to perpetrate a scam. Should she speak up? When is it appropriate to step over that fine line that divides the interpreters Code of Ethics and personal ethics? The hardest thing is when you really disagree with something thats being said and you still have to just render the message completely faithfully, Stearns says. You have to leave your judgment, personal opinions and beliefs outside of [interpreting]. Interpreters admit that its sometimes difficult to not become emotionally invested in the people they work with. You try not to cross that boundary, but its hard not to be emotional at times, because we are only human, DeKing says. Myth #4: InterpretatIon Is just a joB Stearns work as an interpreter has altered the way he communicates with people in the hearing world. He finds himself employing processing timethat brief interval while the interpreter grasps whats being said before relaying iteven when conversing with hearing people. It helps him focus on what people are trying to say and reply more thoughtfully. He also appreciates the variety of situations interpreting has exposed him to. Hes interpreted events such as concerts, budget meetings, individual education plans and college classes at all levels, ranging in subject matter from neuroscience to Chinese architecture. I have

a lot of weird, little worldly experiences that really I would have had no business having in my early 20s because I dont have kids, I dont manage budgets, and Im not a concert promoter, Stearns says. But somehow through this profession, you end up in these different little outlets all over the place. Cheryl Reynolds, executive director of the nonprofit Grand Tots Daycare, is amazed by the power of her
stearns stories mY name is sex.
So [my] second sign class ever in school, my teachers like, okay, were going to give you temporary sign names until i get to know you and can really give you one that you deserve. So she teaches us nice to meet you and then she assigns mine. Because i had two jobs at the time, she assigned me the name work. This is how you say work, with two fists facing the same direction. So everyone gets their sign name, and we were supposed to introduce ourselves: hi, nice to meet you. my sign-name is this. So i finally get to her, and i sign this: [gestures] hi, nice to meet you. my sign-name is work. She just bursts out laughing, and i was like, what? what did i do?! She was like, you just said sex twice in that. So this is sex. its like two people laying down, doing the bump-and-grind, if you will. So work, sex, meet you, sex. So i was just like, oh my God, nice to fuck you. my name is sex.

profession to change lives, including her own. She recalls the Christmas program last year, when three of the Grand Tots children performed. The parents were so amazed that their kids got up on stage and signed all the songs, she says. They didnt [need] an interpreter because their kids did Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer through sign. Thats awesome that they get to see this.

pYsCh WarD
i had a deaf person come into the hospital while i wasnt on duty. he was arrested for being violent. i asked him a few questions, and he said, no. im not mad for no reason, and explained he had been trying to alert someone about possible child abuse, and the person he was trying to report started a fight. when the police arrived, the deaf person was pinned on the ground, with the other man holding him and his hands down. So he couldnt speak. The police thought he was violent, so they brought him in, in handcuffs. he was in tears. he was just trying to do some good. i spent about 30 minutes fighting off tears of rage, and then said, i will interpret whatever you need me to interpret to make sure your story is understood and clear, and we get someone here to back you up. we were able to, but the most heart-wrenching thing about this is that this happens all the time, and theres not an interpreter there to clarify things and fix whats messed up. And the other thing is, ultimately, [its] just kind of something that we have to accept: were not fixers, were just there to communicate. But frequently, communication itself is the problem, even between people speaking the same language. it happens daily. we see headlines: Police officers shoot deaf man. he wasnt responding to their orders to put his hands down, or put the gun down or whatever. how could he? if youre shouting at him and hes not facing you, he doesnt even know youre there. luckily, ive only really encountered that once.

sex

WorK

meet You

sex

Echo | features

37

BIG
BLOGGING
Chicago fashions plus-size pioneers
By Monika Bickham Photos by Rena Naltsas

Meet Gabi of GabiFresh! insists a large poster at

Bloomingdales on Chicagos Magnificent Mile. A crowd gathers around an assortment of bite-sized cupcakes and cold bottles of San Pellegrino, watching for the woman on the poster: well-dressed, curvy, with shoulder-length ombr hair and sunglasses. Moments later, she appears in the flesh, rocking a black knee-length dress and thin heels while pushing a rack of clothing from Bloomingdales expanding plus-size collections. A small group of women stares starry-eyed at Gabi; one even starts to fan herself. To them and Gabi Greggs 24,000 Twitter followers, she is legendarypart of the growing plus-size fashion blogging community knocking down fashion barriers and promoting body acceptance in Outfit of the Day posts. Its really important to have a community space and push for things, Gregg says. Ive seen an impact just in the four or five years Ive been blogging. Its a completely different space and its awesome. Gregg, who also writes a column for InStyle magazine, is one of several plus-size Chicago bloggers who represent the fashion interests of women who arent built like supermodelswhich is most of us. The average dress size for American women is 14, and yet, larger women have few fashion choices. These bloggers advocate for those who dont fit the fashion norm. Their avid followings are evidence of the niche they fill.

AMANDA STILWELL, 33

Blog: thickofit.com Inspirations: Gabi Gregg (gabifresh.com), Nicolette Mason (nicolettemason.com), Natalie Perkins (definatalie.com) and Tiffany Tucker (fatshopaholic.com)

As a child, Stilwell dreamt of becoming a fashion designer. Today, the Uptown resident works in marketing and public relations, which has helped her promote her fat-loving feminist blog, In The Thick of It, which she launched in 2010. Stilwell was introduced to the world of fat fashion through an online LiveJournal community, Fatshionista, in 2004. There she witnessed countless fatshionistas uploading photos of their personal styles, and decided to start cataloguing her own style. Her blog garners 200,000 followers on Tumblr alone. I think people, regardless of size, should be able to have options for clothing, and should not be discriminated against overall, Stilwell says. TIFFANY TUCKER, 23

Blog: fatshopaholic.com Inspirations: Denise Huxtable from The Cosby Show, Clarissa from Clarissa Explains it All, and Solange Knowles

The self-proclaimed fat shopaholic launched her blog as a productive outlet for personal hardships and to express her love of clothing. It receives 9,000 to 15,000 hits per month She describes herself as a fat acceptance advocate by default. I feel the main purpose of my blog is to show fashion, but I think that being fat and very visible in life, because I often wear strange things, is a form of being part of fat acceptance, Tucker says. Her quirky style is heavily influenced by the 90s and fictional characters. Her goal is to inspire plus-size women to be bolder and experiment with fashion through personal styling and shopping.

AMBER MCCULLOCH, 34

Blog: stylepluscurves.com Inspirations: 30s and 40s pinup, Christina Hendricks

A proud southern belle now living in Lincoln Square, McCulloch describes her blog as the voice of the modern woman. Her style is ultra-feminine; she is rarely seen without red lipstick and pearls, and she fancies vintage pinup looks. McCulloch was inspired to start her blog in 2011 after getting compliments on the street and hearing fellow curvy women complaining about the lack of form-flattering clothes. I think the biggest myth that concerns me is thinking plus-size is out of the ordinary, that its something different, she says. The majority of women in the United States are a size 14 and above. Its not this little niche; its the majority of women. She hopes one day to create an affordable and flattering plus-size clothing line.

Echo | features 39

Secret Spaces
The hidden havens behind Chicagos famous stages

Reggies Chicago, 2105 S. State St.

Photos by Angela Conners By Angela Conners with Heather Schrering

FAMOUS FACES LIKE Modest Mouse and Andrew Bird, as well as lesserknown groups like Chicago-based Outer Minds, have drawn Chicagoans to the citys concert halls. But tucked behind the stages or in grungy basements are quiet retreats that many of us likely havent seengreen rooms. These clandestine hangouts, some gritty and raw, some cluttered with vintage furniture, often become historical collages where musicians leave their marks behind for the next act: a band sticker, a swoopy autograph, a silly drawing. Echo visited five of Chicagos most notable venues to get an inside look at the hidden gems behind the stages.

Echo | features 43

Schubas Tavern, 3159 N. Southport Ave.

The Abbey Pub, 3420 W. Grace St.

Echo | features 45

Lincoln Hall, 2424 N. Lincoln Ave.

The Hideout, 1354 W. Wabansia Ave.

Echo | features 47

Restorative justice provides an alternative to incarceration


By Charrea Sykes Illustrations by Kelsey Bates

Another way
Sitting on a concrete slab behind steel doors with just a small slot window, Sherrow Pinex leans against his bed and presses his knees to his chest. After five long years in prison, he finally cries. His younger brother is dead. Pinexs brother struggled to stay out of trouble while he was in prison. He would always tell me how much he waiting on me and I would tell him just hold on, Im coming, says Pinex, 23. Dont worry. When I get out Im gone help fix everything. Now he blames himself for not being there to protect his little brother. Pinex, who has since been released, is like many young people who have committed a crime and served the punishment. They do their time, are released with no new skills to help them stay out of trouble, and consequently many return to prison. According to the 2012 report, by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice, Juvenile Recidivism in Illinois: Exploring Youth Re-Arrest and Re-Incarceration 86 percent are re-arrested within three years of their release. Other states have similar re-arrest rates, according to the report, which calls for services and programming to keep young people from reoffending. Advocates of restorative justice also argue for services and programming, but see it as a way to keep youth in school and out of prison. Restorative justice is really the future of our justice system in the U.S. and globally, says Lisa Rea, president and founder of Restorative Justice International. Its a change that is needed in a broken justice system that is good for victims, cost effective, and transforms offenders.

The idea behind restorative justice is helping convicted youth face what theyve done and make amends. Practices such as peer juries, victim/offender circles and a host of other programs promote change by involving communities in justice and rebuilding relationships that may have been broken as a result of the crime. Restorative justice is not a new concept. The idea that criminals must make restitution goes back thousands of years. What is relatively new is the concept that both victim and perpetrator should be involved in a dialogue about the crime in a process that is not connected to the legal system. In 2007, the Chicago Public Schools Board of Education approved a new Student Code of Conduct eliminating the punitive zero tolerance policies and replacing them with restorative justice practices. One of the

Restorative justice has to have heart in order to work.


Susan Trieschmann

first schools to successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of these approaches was Christian Fenger Academy High School, located in Chicagos Roseland community. In an effort to reduce misconduct and improve attendance, Fengers Culture and Climate Specialist, Robert Spicer, implemented several restorative justice practices. These include a peer jury program, in which an offender comes before a group of upperclassmen, who evaluate the crime and come up with a way to repair the harm done to the victim. Spicer also implemented victim-offender mediation, family group conferencing (holding the parents or guardians of the offender accountable and involving them in the resolution) and peace circles, which create communication between people who are in conflict and help them resolve issues as they arise. The effects have been dramatic and positive. Since 2009, misconduct has gone down 80 percent, attendance has gone up 10 percent, and arrests have gone down from well over 275 to a little over 15 in a school year, Spicer says. Restorative justice also worked for 17-year-old Alex Smith*, who recently returned to school after a one-year suspension for selling marijuana on school property. After getting suspended, Smith was hired at Curts Caf in Evanston, where owner Susan Trieschmann employs and mentors at-risk youth. She gives us a second chance when nobody else will, Smith says. At first he was angry about his suspension, but he came to realize he was the one to blame. He is now excelling in honors courses at Evanston Township High School, competing with the gymnastics team, and babysitting on the side. Restorative justice has to have heart in order to work. Here at the caf, we dont focus on fancy terms and lingo, we just build relationships and let it just work,

Trieschmann says. Smith realizes that his past actions still have consequences. My family lost a lot of respect and trust for me before and that really hasnt changed, he says. But Im not doing it for them anymore; I just want to better my life. Pinexs experience stands in stark contrast to these success stories. He was 18 when he was convicted of home invasion and incarcerated at East Moline Correctional Center. He will never see his younger brother again. Hell never be able to show him a better way. Hell leave the facility not with new skills and connections, but with a fiveyear hole in his life and a conviction on his record. I didnt get the chance to show society who I really was, Pinex says. He wishes he could have had an opportunity to explain the pressures of being a young man on the South Side of Chicago, but not to use that as an excuse. He wishes he could have repaired the damage he did. Life was hard and complicated where I grew up at, he says. Hes not the only one who was harmed by his incarceration. His family was devastated. Things crumbled, Pinex says. His younger sister got pregnant at 15 and his older sister grew distant from the family after becoming a victim of domestic violence. Advocates of restorative justice argue that offenders like Pinex and their victims can be better served by less punitive responses to crime, even as they acknowledge that these approaches are not universally appropriate. But when it works, they say, restorative justice helps offenders take responsibility for their crimes and learn from them, lessening the chances that they will repeat them.

* Smiths name was changed to protect his privacy.

Echo | features 49

What lies beneath Lincoln Park?


By Christine Trevino Photos by Angela Conners

LINCOLN PARK is a bustling place. Chicagoans and

tourists flock to the neighborhoods many attractions, crowding the sidewalks and lining the streets with their cars. But its even more crowded underground, where as many as 12,000 bodies lie buried, lost to history. These remains are the motivation behind Hidden Truths, a web-based project by Pamela Bannos that examines the Chicago City Cemetery, the sole burial ground for Chicagoans during the mid-1800s. The webbased project is innovative and interactive, containing large amounts of historical detail. Bannos, who teaches photography at Northwestern University, has been aggregating original city documents and conducting interviews since 2007 to bring Lincoln Parks history to light.

Im interested in hidden histories and changing stories, and thats how the perspective of an art project happens, Bannos says. My goal wasnt ever to count the bodies and dig up the bones. It was always to get us to question the past. I met Bannos on a chilly spring evening at the Couch Tomb, a large mausoleum just north of the Chicago History Museum. Today, the tomb marks the area near the south end of what was once the Chicago City Cemetery, a graveyard that made up a chunk of the oldest part of the Lincoln Park neighborhood. It consisted of the Catholic cemetery, the Jewish Cemetery, a potters field (common grave) and the general City Cemetery. Bannos has placed markers at these historical sites, as well as at the Couch Tomb and the Kennison boulder, a landmark at the north end of where the City Cemetery once was.

Echo | features 53

My goal wasnt ever to count the bodies and dig up the bones. It was always to get us to question the past. Pamela Bannos
The history of this area is somewhat muddled, thanks to a combination of inadequate record keeping and the mistaken belief that original cemetery documents burned in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. Those missing documents reappeared in an abandoned Chicago warehouse in the 1980s; since then, historians have been attempting to put the pieces together, and Bannos has been translating those efforts for the public. Bannos is currently working on a book. You can lose yourself in an early chapter of Chicagos history at her website, hiddentruths.northwestern.edu. For now, whet your appetite with these intriguing elements of the story. STATE BONES According to the Illinois 1989 Human Skeletal Remains Protection Act, all unregistered graves, artifacts, markers and human remains more than 100 years old become property of the state upon discovery. In 1998, construction began on a new parking facility near the Chicago Historical Society (now the Chicago History Museum). Workers unearthed a number of skeletal remains, as well as an occupied iron coffin. They were all sent to the Illinois State Museum in Springfield. The bones included remains of 81 people; none were complete skeletons. I went and visited them, Bannos says. Theyre all in Ziploc bags. CEMETERY CHARACTERS Ira Couch (1806-1857) Couch was a businessman and owner of the Tremont House Hotel, built in 1833. He grew wealthy from his real estate ventures and often traveled with his wife and daughter. When he suddenly died during a trip to Cuba at age 50, his body was shipped back to Chicago and eventually placed in the Couch mausoleum, near what is now the Chicago History Museum. The mausoleum cost $7,000 and reportedly was so heavy it required eight horses to pull it into place. To this day, it is unclear how many bodies are buried inside. Conflicting articles and accounts suggest there could be up to 13, including Ira. However, the Couch family also has a family plot in Rosehill Cemetery, where Iras name is engraved on a gravestone. Why the Couch mausoleum still stands in Lincoln Park is also disputed. The Encyclopedia of Chicago claims the
Exposed bodies removed from graves City council stops selling family plots

Two cemeteries Creation of the in Chicago Jewish Cemetery

part of Millimans land is incorporated into the cemetery

IMPORTANT EVENTS

1836

1846

1850

1851
Secret burials occur People begin illegally selling plots

PRESSURE FOR REMOVAL By the 1860s, there was a growing movement for parks in Chicago. People were becoming more and more concerned about the citys growing population and need for these breathing spaces, says Julia Bachrach, park historian and preservationist for the Chicago Park Districts Division of Planning and Development. The timing was ideal. Dr. John Rauch, a physician who served as the citys health and sanitary superintendent, had raised concern about burying people by the lake, saying it would contribute to diseases that were killing Chicagoans: cholera, dysentery, scarlet fever and smallpox. In 1866, the city passed an ordinance declaring that the dead could no longer be buried within city limits. In 1862, an attorney discovered that Jacob Millimans land had been illegally purchased by the city. The issue was brought to the Superior Court of Illinois. In A History of Lincoln Park, and the Annual Report of the Commissioners, the record states that the Superior Courts decision was reversed by the Supreme Court in 1865. Rather than pay the children, the city decided to give them back their fathers land, but remove the bodies. More than 1,000 bodies were dug up. This is the major disinterment, Bannos says. The bodies were moved to newer, more modern cemeteries: Rosehill, Graceland, Cavalry Catholic and Oakwoods. The ordinance was passed that prohibited any more burials in the city limits, so at that time, all those cemeteries were outside the city limits, says Diane Dr. John H. Rauch (1828-1894) Lanigan of Graceland Cemetery. As the city grew, all those cemeteries came to be in the city limits again, and thats Rauch determined that the cemetery was contaminating the citys water supply with disease. He published a booklet, how they are today. The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 destroyed much of the Intramural Interments in Populous Cities, and Their Influence upon remaining City Cemetery, including markers. Improper Health and Epidemics, urging the city to stop interments with record keeping made it even more difficult to make sense the ultimate view of converting these grounds to a public of the ravaged landscape. All primary documents were park, which shall contribute to the health, pleasure, and assumed to have burned in the Chicago Fire, Bannos says. credit of our city. They only just surfaced in the 1980s. Jacob Milliman (1815-1849) Milliman owned a piece of land adjacent to city limits. After he died of cholera, the city bought his land. That money was wrongfully pocketed by the new guardians of the children. Years later, an attorney discovered the David Kennison (1736?-1852) Kennison arrived in Chicago in 1840 and managed Mooneys Museum, according to the 1884 History of Chicago, Volume 1. He claimed he was born in 1736 and was the last survivor of the Boston Tea Party. He also declared involvement in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, according to the Illinois Catholic Historical Review. If this were true, he would have been 115 when he died. Chicago threw him the biggest funeral the city had ever seen. The mayor, city council, militia companies, fire department, marching bands and numerous officials attended, according to an 1852 account in the Chicago Daily Journal. Over time, the city lost track of Kennisons remains. In 1903, Chicago historical groups Sons of the Revolution, the Sons of the American Revolution and the Daughters of the American Revolution placed a plaque in honor of Kennison on a large boulder at Wisconsin Street, just east of Clark Street. It reads: In Memory of David Kennison, the last survivor of the Boston Tea Party, who died in Chicago, February 24, 1852, aged 115 years, 3 months and 17 days, and is buried near this spot. Bannoss research has placed Kennisons actual gravesite two city blocks away from the boulder. The Hidden History of Old Town places his actual age at 85 in 1852.

family refused to relocate the mausoleum, and the Illinois Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Couches when the issue was brought to court. Others say it was too expensive to move and the city and family gave up trying.

land had been illegally acquired. Disagreements about the Milliman tract of land became significant in the eventual conversion of the property from cemetery to park.

final City Cemetery plots are sold

City allocates cemetery land for parkland conversion

Records reveal city illegally acquired Milliman Tract Major disinterments begin

Lincoln Park Commissioners assume control of land

City Cemetery closes

1859

1860
People offered deals to move loved ones

1863

1866
Burials end

1869

1870

Cemetery conversion to park begins

Echo | features 55

posthumous postinG
on death, dying and facebook

By heather Schrering Photos by madeline Taussig


now 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 born

Two dAyS AfTer Greg Hoctor died in 2009, his survivors created a Facebook

page in the 18-year-olds honor. The first post was a Daily Herald link: Man killed in car crash. I still cant believe it, reads one of the first posts, followed by more from family and friends expressing sorrow and disbelief, grieving and sharing. Three days later, Gregs sister Sarah posted: Please in memory of Gregory DO NOT DRINK AND DRIVE. I hope that you all learn a lesson from this. NO ONE EVER THINKS IT WILL HAPPEN TO THEM BUT IT DOES. Some people shared memories: Remember at daycare when you used to throw rocks at me and call me fatass? Well it made me sad then, but I think its hilarious now. Rest in Peace. Youll be remembered =) Others left general farewells: Were gonna miss you, man. R.I.P., buddy.

THERES NO REASON TO BURN THE PHOTO ALBUM, NO REASON TO DELETE THE FACEBOOK PAGE.
Vicki Quade

Several years later, Hoctors Facebook memorial page is haunted by many of the 449 friends and family members who joined it. Its a digital grave. Over the past decade, social media platforms like Facebook have added a dimension to the way an online generation copes with death. There are more than one billion Facebook users worldwide; of those, more than two million are dead, according to ifidie1st.com, a website that invites social media users to record their last words to be blasted out to their social networks in case they die unexpectedly. Their digital ghosts linger.
DEALING WITH DEATH

There are two main types of posthumous pages. Memorial pages are created by family or friends to communicate with each other after losing a loved one. Some are private, and only people in the group can post. Personal Facebook pages can also become places where survivors grieve their loss in the virtual company of other mourners. Death has typically been an [issue] that was discussed and handled in pseudo private ways, and were seeing that shift in social media, says Jed Brubaker, a researcher at the University of California, Irvine, and co-author of the study Beyond the Grave: Facebook as a site for the expansion of death and mourning, published this year in The Information Society. In many ways, Im seeing it re-sensitize people by letting them

participate in death and mourn in too. Friends visited Quade and took ways that they wouldnt have been able her for walks, helping her through her to otherwise. grief. Before, you got cards saying, Brubaker says mourners often Im so sorry for your loss, and many apply traditional memorialization people still have to deal that way, practices to social media. They visit Quade says. But the lucky ones who memorial pages or groups as though have a support system online are able they are graves. This allows them to share more, and I think that takes to remain connected with other your grief and helps you spread it out. mourners and support each other as well as share memories of the past. NO FILTER She was vibrant until the very end, Posting about death on Facebook fighting cancer all the way, posted has its down sides, too. You might Chicago playwright Vicki Quade after not like some of the responses, says her 89-year-old mothers recent death. Christine Beattie, a counselor at Quade, who used Facebook to vent HOPE for Bereaved, a nonprofit her frustrations during her mothers in Syracuse, N.Y. that offers free illness, found the responses from grief counseling. Were in a society her virtual friends uplifting. After today [in which] you can almost say her mothers death, Quade posted an anything you want. Theres no filter album on her own Facebook timeline on feelings. titled She lived a long and good life. Two years after Hoctors fatal car Each photograph gives a tiny crash, news broke that he was not the glimpse into her mothers life. One one driving the car. Man left dying sepia-toned photograph shows her friend in wrecked car, returned to at 21 as a military volunteer during party, reads a Naperville Sun article World War II. Her brunette curls posted on Hoctors memorial page. frame her porcelain face as she smiles, Wow. What a piece of shit, posted eyes looking in the distance. In one commenter. another, she sits on a couch reaching Beattie, who has been counseling for a bundle of balloons at her 72nd the suicide group at HOPE for 33 birthday party, her face beaming, years, says dramatic deaths, like brunette curls faded to white. suicides and DUI-related accidents, Vicki, all our love, thoughts and often generate hostile comments on prayers are with social media sites. Such comments you, consoled a friend in a comment. destroy grieving family and friends, Losing your mother is not easy. Beattie says. On Hoctors site, they Sixty-three others left comments were removed, but the hurt still lingers. on Quades album and 95 friends Everyone calling Kevin a scumbag liked it. Using social media and that he should rot in hell doesnt to announce her mothers death solve anything, wrote Matthew prompted several real-life interactions, Williams in December 2011, in

Echo | features 57

I CHECK MY FACEBOOK EVERY DAY HOPING YOUD WRITE ME AND THIS SHITTY REALITY IS JUST A DREAM.
October 2012 post

response to a post about the driver of the car. It just fuels the torment and suffering of two people I considered friends. Even well-intended comments can misfire when they are disseminated so publicly. You simultaneously have to talk to everyone, and you dont know who youre talking to, which is kind of distressing, Brubaker says. One way to avoid distressing comments is to unfriend people who have died. But doing so complicates grieving, Brubaker says, because of the symbolism of permanently de-friending someone. Such an action is final because there is nobody to accept a friend request if you change your mind. I cannot delete any of my deceased friends from my Facebook page, Quade says. In the past, when someone died, that was it, that was the finality, they were gone. But now with Facebook, that finality doesnt have to be there, and maybe thats not good. [Maybe] Facebook is a detriment to grieving in that it doesnt allow us to close the door, but maybe we dont have to close the door.
DEATH NOTIFICATION

Samantha OBrien, a graduate student at Bellarmine University in Louisville, Ky., recalls a disorienting Facebook moment: I just found out about Kim Chi, does anyone know what happened? read a post in her graduating class Facebook group. Moments later, a former classmate linked an article with the headline Louisville native dies while hiking in central Kentucky with a thumbnail photo of Kim Chi Son.

To see something that serious [in my newsfeed] was overwhelming, OBrien says. Such sudden and unsettling death notices are becoming more common in the digital age, when people remain connected for years after they might otherwise fall out of touch. Its not uncommon for people to have thousands of friends on Facebook, making unexpected death announcements inevitable. Theres a really big contextual difference, Brubaker says. So rather than having these times where we would go and honor and memorialize the dead, now these moments exist, for better and for worse, inside of this kind of everyday, casual social media practice. News about someones death spreads instantaneously online, even if families arent ready to talk about it or reveal it to everyone. When OBriens classmate passed away, word spread like wildfire, generating a frenzy of posts on her high school Facebook page. Within minutes, several of her closer friends began posting warnings: I think her family wants to keep it private, just a heads up guys I felt like I invaded their privacy, OBrien says. While I still wanted to know, I felt kind of guilty about it, I guess. I should respect their privacy.
BEYOND THE GRAVE

Facebooks power to help people reconnect can be awkward after someone dies. OBrien recalls Facebook asking her to wish her friends late brother a happy birthday. Its just a reminder that this person is actually dead, OBrien says. You

can write on their Facebook wall [because] their Facebooks still here, but theyre not. Brubaker points out that individuals grieve differently, with people choosing when they are ready to visit the cemetery or take out an old photo album. But on Facebook, the systematic push of information encroaches in a new way on how people grieve. After Columbia College student Chris Richkos grandmother passed away in 2011, family members who were administering her Facebook page sometimes posted status updates from her account. If LOVE could have saved her, she would have lived forever! Today I honor my mom, one of his aunts wrote. Richko found such posts jarring. It brought back all of the feelings of when she died, he says. Richko had another unsettling experience after visiting the Facebook of a girl he knew in high school. The first couple of postings were, Hey, whats up? I miss you, and you couldnt really tell that she wasnt alive, but then I scrolled down, and people were putting R.I.P. at the end [of their posts], Richko says. He felt sad that nobody had reached out to him over the phone or some other personal way. Richko never expected to find out about a friends death alone in his room at 2 a.m. while scrolling through his newsfeed. You see that, and you feel so alone. You sort of feel betrayed by everyone, he says. I wanted to write, I miss you, and I was thinking about you, but its pretty much pointless.

Its better to just think about it. Facebook is more of a place for people that are alive.
POSTING MEMORIES

to the deceased person. Its none of my business, but here I am reading it, and other people can read it.
ADAPTATION

Brubaker compares Facebook to a scrapbook, pointing out that its a timeline for a reason. Quade agrees. That Facebook page is really no different than an old photo album, Quade says. Theres no reason to burn the photo album, no reason to delete the Facebook page. Facebook is a place thats designed to broadcast the thoughts and feelings of its users, Brubaker says in his study. But the public nature of Facebook draws into question whether its an appropriate place to express something as personal as grief. While scrolling through his deceased friends timeline, Richko saw posts that were, to him, too personal and made him feel uncomfortable. I check my Facebook every day hoping youd write me and this shitty reality is just a dream, says an October 2012 post to Richkos friends wall. He found other posts to be disrespectful, especially given that his friend passed away from a drug overdose. Just tokin back enjoying life. Im missing the hell out of you and Amber, reads one post Richko would prefer not to see. What happened to going to someones grave and putting flowers down? Richko asks. [Facebook] is not an authentic way of remembering someone, because sometimes people will post ridiculous thingsabout something they did in the past that was illegal, and its just like, why are you posting that? The lines between public and private blur in situations like these. Reading other peoples messages, its hard to resist, but at the same time I kind of have this weird guilt, like I shouldnt be reading this, OBrien says. This is like a private thing that this person is trying to communicate

Facebooks role in mourning is still evolving. Brubaker says people will adapt to its role in the process over time. We develop new ways for interpreting and understand what these media are and what they mean, he says. So itll be interesting to see how the social statuses shift as well. Its possible that Facebook will be a positive force, helping survivors celebrate the life of someone who has died, much like the Mexican holiday Da de los Muertos puts a

positive spin on death with gifts and feasts. Brubaker says people will begin to adjust to social medias role in accepting death as Facebook becomes more and more integrated into our daily lives. But its also possible that the impersonal mode of notification will make death harder to accept because people will learn of their losses so suddenly, without context or support. Richko, for one, isnt optimistic. No one needs to tell you anything, you just find out through Facebook about everything nowadays, he says. Theres less direct connection between people. Everything is posted now.

Echo | features 59

ends

Holy shit, Im Old!


Unforgettable highlights and lowlights of our youth
By Kristina Budgin Illustrations by Adam Glab

The Motorola razr was released in 2004. We survived

Y2K. Friends debuted in 1994. Have you ever had one of those moments when you said, That happened when ?! Holy shit, Im old! Bet youre having one right now. Echo combed through the news archives for major events

in pop culture and history during our youth. From major developments in science and technology to the unpredictability and stupidity of celebrities, we found some things worth remembering and others wed like to forget.

Pop culture
The Motion Picture Association of America creates NC-17 Dr. Seuss dies of cancer Sir Mix-a-Lots Baby Got Back hits No.1 on Billboards Hot 100 Chicago icon Michael Jordan retires for the first time Wonderbra makes its U.S. debut with the Push-Up Plunge Bra Pixar releases its feature film, Toy Story Frank McCourts Pulitzer-Prize winning memoir, Angelas Ashes, is published American premiere of James Camerons epic film Titanic The FDA approves Viagra Chicago Bears running back Walter Sweetness Peyton dies at 45 Dave Eggers A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius is published The original Apple iPod hits stores Michael Jackson dangles his 9-month-old son, Prince Michael II, over his hotel balcony in Berlin Paris Hiltons sex tape is released

History
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Sue, the worlds largest, most complete T.Rex, is unearthed The World Wide Web becomes available to the public The four L.A. police officers who beat black motorist Rodney King are acquitted Federal agents raid the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas The World Series is canceled for the first time since 1904 A heat wave kills hundreds of Chicago residents Dolly the sheep is successfully cloned from an adult cell Princess Diana dies in a car crash in Paris I didnt have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky. -Bill Clinton Y2K crisis sparks anxiety over global data systems Vermont is the first state to legalize civil unions between same-sex couples The Patriot Act is signed into law NASAs 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft finds signs of ice Arnold Schwarzenegger is sworn in as governor of California Mark Zuckerberg launches Facebook

The series finale of Friends airs

Tom Cruise jumps on Oprahs couch

Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans

tHe Rest is
remember these iconic sounds?

silence
sounds, like smells, can trigger feelings of nostalgia. As technology advances, some sounds are going extinct, along with the memories they conjure. Do you remember these sounds?

FoNT: QUICKSAND

By heather schrering Illustrations by Mallory hawes

VIDEOTAPES
The magnetic tape rewinding between spools inside a plastic shell never moved fast enough on family movie nights, especially when the previous movie renter forgot to rewind. That high-pitched, mechanical hum tortured you while you waited impatiently for the abrupt click of the VCR. The VHS cassette revolutionized home entertainment, only to be overtaken by the DVD in the early 2000s.
FoNT: Slab serif X-high FoNT: TELEPHONO

TYPEWRITERS
The metallic clicking of clunky keys hammering against the platen resonated in newsrooms, offices and households for more than 100 years until the tapping of plastic keyboards attached to computers replaced the music of the typewriter in the 80s.
FoNT: BANK GOTHIC FoNT:

DADDY LONG LEGS

Rotary Phone
No phone number could be kept secret with the rotary phone. The length of the circular hiss and the number of clicks revealed who was on the other end of the call. The rotary phone all but vanished by the 80s when people began to prefer the quick beep-boops of push-button models.

could go on for minutes. Dial-up access notoriously tied up the phone lines. Then DSL and speedy broadband silenced the scratchy, unpleasant clamor of dial-up. According to the Federal Communications Commission, only 6 percent of adult Internet users in the U.S. used dial-up by 2010.

CELL PHONE KEYPADS


Before the smartphone, cellular devices had buttons. Many fi rst-generation cell phone users recall the clicks, taps and ticks produced by real keypads, especially those of us who preferred the multi-tap approach to texting over T-9. One of the fi rst touch screen smartphone designs was IBMs Simon Personal Communicator, released in 1993. According to Pew research, 46 percent of adults in the U.S. had smartphones in 2012.

DIAL-UP INTERNET
It began with the drone of the telephone dial tone, followed by beeps as the phone dialed. Then came the shrill, robotic noise that resembled aliens talking, helicopter propellers rotating or children screaming in a blizzard. If the router and the telephone line had a dispute, this irritating sound

ECHO | ENds

63

Timeless Toys
Perennial toys in the millennial age
High-tech gadgets have pushed aside many of the low-tech toys of our childhood. But a select few are surviving and even thriving, thanks to play value that doesnt translate into a digital format.
By Heather Schrering Illustration by Michael Scott Fischer & Samantha Raggioli

PlayDoh
According to Tim Walsh, toy and game inventor and author of Timeless Toys: Classic Toys and the Playmakers Who Created Them, brothers Cleo and N. W. McVicker began selling a flour, water, salt and borax wallpaper-cleaning compound in 1927. After the invention of vinyl wallpaper, which can easily be cleaned with soap and water, the mix took on a new life as a modeling compound, evolving into a multimillion-dollar toy brand by 1960. The doughs recipe is a closely guarded secret.
Echo! Mop-top Hair Shop Play-Doh play set: Aint nothin like squeezin, cuttin and stylin spaghetti-strand Play-Doh hair through the head of a little plastic guy. Heck No! Homemade modeling compound. Sorry, Mom. It just doesnt smell the same.

Lego
Danish manufacturer Kirk Kristiansen had a hunch parents wouldnt stop buying their children toys during the Great Depression, so he launched LEGO, a combination of the Danish words that means play and well. Among the first LEGO toys was a simple wooden duck on wheels. The company began producing plastic automatic binding bricks in the 1940s, and added locking studs in 1958. LEGO is still family-owned. The play pattern is not given to the child, saying, Here, do this, Walsh says. Its open-ended, saying, Here, create whatever you want.
Echo! LEGO Mindstorms: Awesome + totally awesome = motorized humanoid LEGO robot. Heck No! LEGO video games: Clever concept, but I just want to build stuff.

Mr. potato head


Forty-three years before his film debut in Toy Story, Mr. Potato Head was actually a potato. The first kits contained 30 sharp-pegged accessories, from eyes to hats, allowing kids to transform any vegetable or fruit [into] a funny face man, according to the box. When George Lerner came up with this idea in 1949, toy companies feared it wouldnt catch on because of fresh memories of food rationing during the Great Depression and World War II. But three years and many obstacles later, Hasbro brought Mr. Potato Head to life. He was the first toy advertised on television, which quickly spread the spuds popularity; his bigscreen debut further added to his fame. Despite his many transformations, including appearing in plastic in 1964, Mr. Potato Head remains a favorite.
Echo! Star Wars Potato Heads: With names like Luke Frywalker, Yam Solo and Spuda Fett, who wouldnt love these guys? Heck No! Mr. Potato Head and His Tooty Fruity Friends: Katie Carrot, Pete the Pepper, Cooky the Cucumber and Oscar Orange. Theres only one fruit there.

Crayons
Tickle Me Pink and Robins Egg Blue are two beloved Crayola crayon colors invented by Edwin Binney and Harold Smith. The Pennsylvania cousins, who owned a pigment company in the late 1800s, added color to a paraffin-marking tool and marketed it to parents. Binneys wife, Alice, coined the term Crayola in 1903. Today, more than 100 billion Crayola crayons have been sold around the globe. Theyre cheap, portable and eminently pleasing. The little pop the crayon makes when you separate it from the paper, Walsh says You cant get that with an iPad.

Echo! The 120-count box. No one says it better than Crayola: From red, yellow, and blue to gold, copper and silver, too!

Heck No! RoseArt. This knock-off brand is inferior and waxier. It has to be Crayola.

FLASH FORWARD
The future lives of video game characters
By Gabrielle Rosas & Ryan Collins Illustration by Kara Janachione IMAGINE THIS:

Its the year 2100 and all our 20th and 21st Century heroes, anti-heroes and villains have moved to Chicago. Take a look at where they settled.

Leon Kennedy and Sonic the Hedgehog Neighborhood: The Loop The stoic Mr. Kennedy finally tired of fighting zombies and saving the world. Now he patrols the financial district, where he feels comfortable surrounded by hordes of the undead.Sonic, who received a speeding ticket while on a quest for gold rings, is working as a trader. Link and Tingle Neighborhood: Boystown Hylian men seem to have an affinity for effeminate garb and phallic weaponry. Link, who needed some space from neurotic Princess Zelda, is dating a man named Sheik. Tingle plays third wheel, downing fairy shooters at Roscoes. Princess Peach and Lara Croft Neighborhood: Gold Coast Princess Peach married into wealth, gained control of the Mushroom Kingdom and bought a condo here with Lara Croft. But then Peach was captured by Bowser. She now awaits a misdirected Italian man in a castle far away. Ms. Croft, whose impressive collection of ancient artifacts is on display in their foyer, defends the fort. Mario Neighborhood: Wicker Park After Peach dumped him for a wealthy entrepreneurfor the fifth time the Mushroom Kingdoms heroic plumber made his way to the citys hippest hood, where his wellgroomed mustache helped him fit in. But its his creative use of alternative transportation (who knew dinosaurs were so fuel efficient?) and his startling array of exotic plant-life that truly established his place in this neighborhood. Tommy Vercetti Neighborhood: West Loop After 30 years in confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, Tommy Vercetti was let loose into a foreign world of portable phones, overpriced coffee and Facebook. Chicago is a far cry from Vice City, but the political corruption makes him feel at home, and he doesnt need to worry about his short temper getting him in trouble. Donkey Kong, Crash Bandicoot and Spyro Neighborhood: Lincoln Park Zoo Body-slamming crates has taken a toll on Bandicoots mind. He now inhabits the Regenstein Small Mammal-Reptile House, muttering something about mangos. His longtime friend, Spyro, makes daily attempts to escape his enclosure, usually setting fire to patrons in the process. Donkey Kong, who is easily swayed by material luxuries, is just in it for the free bananas and health care.

Echo | Ends

65

ROOM AND HOArd


Sharing living quarters in all its complexity
By Chelsea Tomala Photo by Angela Conners What is the worst part about living Sharing your abode can lead to new with them? friends, unfortunate fall-outs and I got a text message at 7 a.m. on a self-discoveries. Echos unscientific survey Saturday telling me to turn the heat of 53 young people yielded up one degree. some surprising statistics. Their boyfriends/girlfriends also becoming roommates. How many roommates do you currently have? Whats the weirdest thing your roommate has ever done?

0 21% (11) 1 36%% (19) 2 19%% (10) 3 23% (12) 4+ 2% (1)


Are you satisfied with your current living situation? yes no

Dirty, dirty, messy, dirty... steal your things, loud, invade your privacy, always in the bathroom/kitchen when you need it, parties, friends, smoking, being psychotic in general. Her hair is everywhere.
What is the worst thing you have ever done to a roommate?

Got drunk and set off all the smoke alarms. She would stare at me, come in very late at night (3 a.m.) and then gave me earplugs. He cooks and cleans. One time I came back into the room and there was a full standing suit of armor in the room. New decoration. No warning. Slept in the nude (we shared a room). Kept a rice cooker in her room.
Have you ever hidden something from your roommates that they probably should have known about? yes no

85% (44) 15% (8) skipped (1)

What is the best part about living with your roommates?

Woke them up with firecrackers and a fire extinguisher in the house.

37% 63%

Theres always someone to talk to when you come home. They become like a family away from family. They are who you count on first. Hearing the murmurs of people talking or making breakfast in the morning always being around people who are as weird as you. He cooks and cleans. I dont have any and thats the best part because roommates are hell on earth!

I once dipped my roommates If yes, please elaborate. toothbrush in the toilet just because I Toilet paper. was unhappy with my living situation. I dropped tater tots in the crack in I witnessed my cat puke in my old between the stove and the counter. roommates boot, and I didnt clean it I cant get to them, but I can see them up because she hadnt done the dishes decomposing. all week. Bills. If she isnt here, I wont let her pay half. She isnt using the services. I refused to clean the bathroom for an I am. So I pay more and just tell her a entire semester, resorting to showering smaller amount. at the gym in order to avoid the responsibility. Had really loud sex that woke them up and then yelled at them naked in the kitchen.
Do you think you are a good roommate? yes no

98% 2%

Tweet, like, pin


So what are we doing on social media?
By Kristina Budgin Illustrations by Dave Schmitt 50%

Facebook
THE STATISTIC: 64 percent of our respondents visit Facebook multiple times a day. THE PROGNOSIS: 86 percent of our respondents are genuinely disappointed on a regular basis, 75 percent need to raise their standards for what gains their approval, and FarmVille is on the 100% 41% 86% 71% 68% 1% 42% 40% 75% brink of virtual economic collapse. update their status check for notifications procrastinate comment on someone elses post/status play FarmVille comment on someone elses photos peruse other peoples profiles Like something

A 2013 report by the Pew Internet & American Life

Project found that 67 percent of online adults (ages 18 +) used social media sites as of December 2012. According to Nielsens State of the Media Report for 2012, 32 percent of people ages 18 24 used these sites in the bathroom. Inspired and slightly disturbed by statistics like these, Echo polled 91 people with an online survey to find out exactly what they are doing on social media. Heres what we found:

Instagram
THE STATISTIC: 52 percent of our respondents rarely or never use Instagram. THE PROGNOSIS: 62 percent of people abuse Photoshop, and 100 percent 50% like to show others what amateur photography looks like. 100% 52% 62% 50% 62% 48% 69% take pictures of food take pictures with friends or family share pictures on Facebook edit pictures take pictures of alcoholic beverages take pictures of something other than food, booze or people 100% 50%

Twitter
THE STATISTIC: 45 percent of our respondents use Twitter. THE PROGNOSIS: 43 percent might be informative narcissists, 74 percent found an alternative to newspapers, and 45 percent have the ability to condense their thoughts, feelings and lives into 140 characters or less.

43% tweet about what theyre doing 30% use #witty hashtags 74% read the newsfeed for updates 19% have a conversation 38% check a celebritys recent tweets

Pinterest
THE STATISTIC: 16 percent of our respondents use Pinterest multiple times a day, and 63 percent of female respondents use the site at least a few times a month. 50% THE PROGNOSIS: Get married, cook, make the home pretty, make yourself look 100% pretty theres either a very smart man behind Pinterest or a very bored 1950s housewife. 26% 63% 67% 54% 35% 50% 54% pin re-pin look at something food-related look at DIY arts and crafts look at anything wedding-related look at clothes and/or shoes look at home dcor 24% 14% 0% 5% 39% 15% 19% 100% 50%

The Office
THE STATISTIC: 65 percent of our respondents have used social media while in the bathroom. THE PROGNOSIS: 19 percent of these people make us suspicious and 5 percent simply creep us out. Social media shall not be hindered by natures call, and FarmVille is having a virtual Dust Bowl. update their Facebook status tweet play FarmVille take pictures with Instagram Like something on Facebook use Pinterest chose the ever-mysterious other option

Echo | Ends

67

Oh BOY!
The evolution of boy band style
By Monika Bickham Illustrations by Kara Janachione

FROM POP SINGERS to R&B crooners and rockers,

theres no denying popular male bands have made an indelible mark on us. Im not just talking about their relatable lyrics and dreamy eyes; Im talking about their attire. No matter how ridiculous, their clothing has been the stamp on their perfect pop-culture package.

1920s 1940s: Doo-wop crooners and barbershop quartets wore two-piece suits in eye-catching colors (bow-ties and pocket squares included). Their style was as slick as their perfectly gelled tresses. 1950s: Upping the ante on their suit-savvy brethren before them, boy bands of the 50s made bold statements with glitter, bright colors and way too much hair gel.

1960s: The 60s boy bands were a buffet of pastel-colored threads, flared pants, printed shirts and skinny-legged pants, resulting in some of the most iconic styles to date.

1970s: The look of the 70s was polished with a touch of eccentricity. With form-fitting bellbottoms and skin-tight, button-down shirts, these heartthrobs sent fans into a frenzy. Goodbye gel and hello hairspray.

1980s: Thick gold chains, sneakers and Kangol hats were this decades claims to fame: hiphop inspired style mixed comfort and swank.

1990s: Nothing was off limits! *NSYNC could prance around in oversized, checkered suits one day and sport jerseys and pleather jackets the next. 2000s: Denim was still popular, but more fitted. Letterman jackets were in and skinny jeans were almost unheard of. It was still cool to be flashy, but when was it ever not?

2010s: Now boy bands mix and match the best of each decade. This decade created swag with skinny jeans, waistcoats and leather jackets.

Dont look!
Chicagoans are adapting to the new CTA cars
By Sam Bohne Illustrations by Chris Dazzo

After decades of sitting in two-person seats and

staring at the backs of strangers heads while riding the L, riders are adjusting to the Chicago Transit Authoritys Bombardier 5000 series rail cars, which feature inwardfacing benches and hanging straps. Many Chicagoans find riding the new cars awkward because they are forced to face the people sitting across from them. Where do you look? asks Michael Fisch, PhD, an assistant professor at University of Chicago who is working on a book about Japans public transit system and urban life. You know these people. You travel with them every day, but you never speak to them, so youre very intimate with them and yet, youre totally estranged. This, in turn, encourages people to be less social and engaged, according to Gwendolyn Purifoye, a PhD candidate at Loyolas Department of Sociology who studies social interactions on and around mobile public places. Instead, riders focus their attention on their phones or books as a way to avoid interactions.

Its all about personal space, Purifoye says. Youre exposed to more people. Youre exposed to more body parts. Youre exposed to more faces. Purifoye thinks the new train cars have changed some riders behavior. Shes seen people hang from the straps while taking photos, and stretch out on the longer bench seat for a nap. You definitely can lie down more comfortably in that particular train style, she says. Shes noticed that women tend to avoid sitting between two men, and that people generally divert their gaze from one another. They dont want people looking at them thinking theyre staring, she says. In the end, however, Chicagoans are going to have to adjust and learn to practice civil disattention, says Gary Fine, PhD, an ethnographer at Northwestern University. That means that even if youre looking at someone, even if youre across the car, you act as if you cant see them, he says.

Echo | Ends

69

sAy wHAt? 1
10 words we need now
By christine Trevino

A.) INTErVALYIcIsM b.) tongue, that ITS ON THE tip of your LINGUIsTIc PEEVE c.) rETAIL word you cant quite remember. PUrsUANcE d.) PrEordEr Wait, thats not quite the right word. sTrEss dIsordEr (Posd) E.) Sometimes there simply isnt a term for dEsTINEsIA F.) FoUrTHMEAL exactly what you mean. Try matching G.) METEorILLoGIcAL H.) then the concepts with the words, sEMANTIc sATIATIoN check your results to find out whether

That feeling after youve poured your heart into an email/text message, but cant bring yourself to hit send.

The way a word you repeat over and over stops sounding like a real word.

chicagos weather on a day that includes snow, sleet, rain and sun.

Using the number of songs as a measure of how long it takes to get somewhere or do something.

The sudden lull in once-raucous conversation, causing everyone to turn and stare silently.

The feeling of disgust caused when people mispronounce certain words.

Being stalked by online ads for something awesome you just bought.

When you walk into a room and forget why youre there or what youre looking for.

they are authentic or we made them up.


a. Intervalyricism | b. linguistic Peeve | c. retail Pursuance | d. Preorder stress Disorder (PosD) | e. Destinesia | f. Fourthmeal | g. Meteorillogical | h. semantic satiation | i. Jarring hush | j. Textual regret
Key: 1 j. (echo), 2 h. (real), 3 g. (echo), 4 a. (echo), 5 i. (echo), 6 b. (echo), 7 c. (echo), 8 e. (real), 9 d. (echo), 10 f. (real)

The meal obsessively thats too late rehearsing your to be considered a food order before reaching the counter. midnight snack but too early to be breakfast.

10

nAiling it
By Najja Parker Illustration by Kara Janachione

Pro advice for dressing up your finger tips


one color of polish. Paint your nails with a complementary color, then dip. dEsIGNs: Attach stickers or temporary tattoos to your nails and apply a topcoat. oMbr EFFEcT: Apply a base coat. Using dry brush strokes, add a second color, starting from one end. Blend with a brush dipped in polish remover. TEXTUrE: Polish your nails, let them dry, then dip nails in a contrasting color and dab with plastic wrap or anything with a raised pattern. dEcALs: Paint invisible tape with polish, cut into shapes, attach to nails and cover with a topcoat. doTs: Dip a bobby pin or a small brush handle in polish, then dab on nails. GLITZ: Attach jewels and add a topcoat.

NAIl ArT Is all the rage, from catwalks to the Museum of Modern Arts pop-up nail salon. If you want in on the trend but cant afford to pay someone else to paint your nails, dont despair. A lot of it is just trial and error, says Chicago nail artist Tacarra Spifster Sutton. And thats something you can do at home. Start by taping around your nails to protect your skin or putting lotion on your cuticles so that extra polish will wipe right off. Then try Suttons top nail art tricks: MArbLE FINIsH: Place a few drops of two or three polish colors in a cup of water. Swirl with a toothpick. Dunk each nail for a few seconds. sPEckLEd Look: Spray hand sanitizer in a cup of water with several drops of

lyRicAl lessons
relationship advicegood and badfrom 90s boy and girl bands
By charrea sykes no scRUBs Tlc I dont want no scrub, a scrub is a guy that cant get no love from me. Hanging out the passenger side of his best friends ride, trying to holler at me. BottoM line: Date people who have their own cars. Bye Bye Bye *NsyNc Dont wanna be a fool for you, just another player in your game for two. You may hate me but it aint no lie, baby bye, bye, bye. BottoM line: Be gentle with peoples hearts.

gots tA Be B2K I wanna be the gots ta be in your life. Gots ta be the one that makes you sad, gots ta be the one you never had, gots ta be the one that you want so damn bad. Gotta be, gotta be, gotta be, your everything. BottoM line: Date people who have total control over you.

poison Bell BIV DeVoe Its driving me out of my mind, thats why its hard for me to find. Cant get it out of my head, miss her, kiss her, love her. That girl is poison. Never trust a big butt and a smile, that girl is poison. BottoM line: sometimes we get obsessed with people who arent good for us.

neveR HAd A dReAm come tRUe s clUB 7 I never had a dream come true, till the day that I found you. Even though I pretend that Ive moved on, youll always be my baby. BottoM line: sometimes you get stuck on someone.

invisiBle mAn 98 DeGrees I wish youd look at me that way, your beautiful eyes lookin deep into mine. Telling me more than any words could say. But you dont even know Im alive, Baby to you all I am is the invisible man. BottoM line: We always want what we cant have.

Bills, Bills, Bills DesTINys chIlD Can you pay my bills? Can you pay my telephone bills? Do you pay my automo bills? If you did then maybe we could chill. I dont think you do. So, you and me are through. BottoM line: Money can buy you love.

i wAnt it tHAt wAy BAcKsTreeT Boys Tell me why! Aint nothin but a heartache. Tell me why! Aint nothin but a mistake. Tell me why! I never wanna here you say, I want it that way. BottoM line: some people want the unattainable.

no moRe 3lW You do or you dont, dont. You will or you wont, wont. No more. No More. Baby Im a do right. BottoM line: repeat your plea for emphasis, even though its hopeless.

wAnnABe sPIce GIrls If you wanna be my lover, you have got to give. Taking is too easy, but thats the way it is. BottoM line: Dont be selfi sh.

ECHO | ENds

73

The Art of War


By Gabrielle Rosas

Veterans talk about the transformative power of art


The back of a Humvee is a powerful place to be. Its the

gunners domain, a nest of bullets, sweat and heat. Combat missions require a perpetual state of piqued alertness; the gunner must stand at the ready, a stoic figure perched atop a metal beast. Its a powerfully lonely existence. For Greg Broseus, who fought in Iraq in 2004, life as a gunner wasnt as lonely as his later descent into posttraumatic stress. In response, he produced a series of blackand-white self-portraits depicting his inner turmoil, as well as his struggle with severe panic attacks.

I had a lot of emotions that I still didnt know how to put out into the world, says Broseus, whose photos were part of an exhibition called Radical Vulnerability at the National Veterans Art Museum in 2011. There was something really powerful that actually did happen throughout the course of making those photographs. Although some veterans, like Broseus, benefit from documenting their dark journeys through art, the process isnt easy. A theme we run into a lot here at the museum is how war transforms art, says Destinee Oitzinger, Gallery Coordinator at the National Veterans Art Museum. We get a lot of different answers. Lyndsey Anderson, assistant manager of visitor experience at the Rubin Museum in New York, agrees. A specialist in Himalayan and Tibetan art, Anderson helped create tours related to the programs as they relate to the veterans. It really is all about perception, and a lot of people have a very narrow perception, says Anderson, who also served in the Iraq War. Not every [veteran] had the same experience, so not [every veterans] art is going to look the same. Echo spoke with several local war veterans about how war transformed them and their work.

Greg Broseus, 29, photography major at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago War: Iraq | Duty: Humvee gunner When I first got home, I was really withdrawn. I didnt want to talk to anybody except for the people I had deployed with because I didnt want to share certain stories. What Im focusing on with my photography is looking at the structures which we as a society experience. I feel like theres a huge gap between the civilian society and the military society that hasnt existed in the past.

Edgar Gonzalez-Baeza, 32, part-time teaching artist at Bremen Community High School War: Iraq | Duty: Psychological operations and logistics My art now has a sense of purpose or coherence. I dont know how much of it I can point to and say, Its because I went to war. That definitely informs the content and perspective. But whatever work I make, it has to have a really strong conceptual base. I can no longer make a doodle; this doodle has to have a purpose, whether its a sketch for a future project or an idea for a tattoo Ill get somewhere down the line. Everything has to lead to something.

Bill Crist, Jr., 62, public speaker at the National Veterans Art Museum in Chicago War: Vietnam | Duty: Medic, infantry, aviation It took me 30 years before I could actually start drawing anything. [After the war] I just went totally out of control, violent and everything like that, so I ended up in the psych ward for three months. And there I had an art therapist, Sally. And she was fantastic; I dont know how she drew that stuff out of me. I never was any type of artist. But I like to pull people into my experience with me as though theyre going on patrol with me. Every time I do something, I want to make it jump off the paper and grab you by the head.

doing well At doing good


Four tips for effective charitable giving
By Kristina Budgin

IF yoU WANT to contribute to the greater good but you

have no time to volunteer, you might consider making a donation to a charitable organization. But how much of your money will go toward the cause and how much will be absorbed by staff salaries and other overhead costs? Its a question many Americans should be asking. According to the 2012 Atlas of Giving Report, Americans

donated almost $370 billion to nonprofits. Nearly 75 percent of that was individual donations. These donors dont always research charities before making donations, according to Christopher Einolf, PhD, assistant professor at the DePaul University School of Public Service. Certainly you have enough time to do that.

1. 2.

CheCK the Mission stateMent

Look at whether [the charitys] mission is your mission and whether they seem to be active in providing programs, says Richard Steinberg, PhD, Professor of Economics, Philanthropic Studies and Public Affairs at Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis. Mission statements usually can be found on the charitys website.
VolUnteer

3. 4.

researCh finanCial rePorts

All nonprofits must fi le a Form 990, an annual tax report that reveals how much money they receive and spend, including the cost of administration and staff salaries. These forms usually can be found on an organizations website or at GuideStar.org. But, Einolf warns, If you make a mistake on your Form 990, or even if you just outright lie, you almost certainly wont get caught.
giVe UnrestriCteD fUnDs

Steinberg says volunteering provides an insiders view on how a charity works, how its run and what its accomplishing. If volunteering is not an option, Einolf suggests talking to friends who volunteer. This approach is helpful, he says, because donors feel like they trust a charity because someone they trust trusts the charity.

These donations give the charity the freedom to use the money where its needed most, says George Krafcisin, a pro-bono consultant for Chicago-area nonprofits. If you trust the people who are running the charity, then you should trust them to figure out how to best spend the money, Einolf adds.

THErEs No sUcH THING As THE PErFEcT cHArITY, so doNT LET MINor FLAws kEEP YoU FroM GIVING. rIcHArd sTEINbErG, Phd
learn More here
GUIdEsTAr: www.guidestar.org Provides financial reports on nonprofi t organizations as well as information on the organizations mission, legitimacy, impact and programs. bETTEr bUsINEss bUrEAUs wIsE GIVING ALLIANcE: www.bbb.org/us/wise-Giving Provides reports on national charities and evaluates them based on how they are run, how they spend their money, the truthfulness of their representations and their willingness to make basic information available to the public. ILLINoIs ATTorNEY GENErALs bUILdING bETTEr cHArITIEs: www.illionisattorneygeneral.gov/charities/index.html Under Illinois law, fundraisers and charitable organizations must register each year with the Attorney Generals office. This site provides potential donors with access to information on Illinois organizations income, expenditures, programs and administration.

ECHO | ENds

75

kick me!
By Gabrielle rosas Photo by Angela conners
home Updates 1 Projects 7 comments 0 chicago,Il Publishing

seVen sUCCessfUlly fUnDeD Passion ProJeCts

7
projects

$750
pledged of $750 goal

PLAY

2013
seconds to go

back This Project


$1 minimum pledge

crYsTAL bAcoN
like 81 people like this. Be the first of your friends. Tweet embed http://kck.st/Xbmyzi

A sculptural tribute to the most delicious of all meats, bacon.


GoAL: $2,000 PLEdGEd: $2,786 echo! Favorite breakfast food forever memorialized. heck no! Not edible.

crowdfunding has empowered some wacky and weird projects. Echo took a look at some of the recent bizarre but successful chicago-based campaigns.

launched: Jan 31, 2013 funding ends: May 16, 2013 remind me

GArLIc & GrEENs

MAMAs TEETH, TENTAcLEs ANd cLAws: A GIANT MoNsTEr PLUsH ToY THE LINk QUIck-rELEAsE JoYsTIck sHAFT

A soul food audio cookbook that allows you to smell, touch and, yes, even taste the ingredients in the photos.
GoAL: $1,100 PLEdGEd: $2,234 echo! The smell of a fresh, tasty meal, no skill required. heck no! ruining the pages with copious amounts of drool. THE brIdE- AN EPIc cHAINMAILLE wEddING drEss

A humongous, scary octopus creature complete with a huggable brood of developing baby octopi eggs.
GoAL: $800 PLEdGEd: $1,132 echo! cuddling with a cthulhu-like creature. heck no! cuddling with a cthulhu-like creature. FIrE brEATHING drAGoN boATLAkEs oF FIrE ANd bEYoNd!

A joystick with a detachable shaft (insert immature laughter here).


GoAL: $12,000 PLEdGEd: $22, 578 echo! No more worries about jamming an unwieldy mechanism into your luggage (insert more immature laughter). heck no! Potential for sexual innuendo. A book oF dwArVEs

A chainmail wedding dress made of 10,000 aluminum rings.


GoAL: $1,350 PLEdGEd: $2,106 echo! Battle-ready wedding wear in case tensions with the in-laws get extreme. heck no! More function than fashion.

A 30-foot boat with a 25-foot mast, a water cannon and, of course, a fi rebreathing dragon at the bow.
GoAL: $2,500 PLEdGEd: $2,550 echo! let the epic Viking role play commence! heck no! Insanely high nerd factor.

A field guide to fantasy dwarves, including Dwarven cuisine and fashion.


GoAL: $2,000 PLEdGEd: $5,429 echo! Diplomatic relations between humans and dwarves strengthened. heck no! Nerdy beyond reason.

Second City Firsts


Made In Chicago: The what, when, where and who of famous Windy City inventions
By Christine Trevino and Kristina Budgin Infographic by Dave Schmitt Created at the request of Bertha Palmer Chicago Worlds Fair The Palmer House Hotel of 1893 Inventor (and Pizzeria Uno founder): Ike Sewell Home Insurance Building THE FIRST BROWNIE FIRST SKYSCRAPER Architect: William Le Baron Jenney

Pizzeria Uno DEEP DISH PIZZA Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893 1943 FERRIS WHEEL 1893 1893 1885

Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893

CRACKER JACK

Chicago
inventions
1920-1950 1930 1891

1893

Inventor: George Ferris

Inventors: F.W. and Louis Rueckheim Unveiled at Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893 FIRST ELECTRIC DISHWASHER

Universal Fastener Co.

1851

1886

FIRST ZIPPER

Inventor: Whitcomb L. Judson THE CHICAGO BLUES

Inventor: Josaphine Cochrane TWINKIES WRIGLEYS GUM Willie Dixon Inventor: James Dewar Continental Baking Co.

Buddy Guy Muddy Waters

Eddy The Chief Clearwater Debuted Juicy Fruit in 1893 Inventor: William Wrigley

Echo | Ends

77

CIVORIMILEV OKRIM

OICCUN SUCRAM

REFEKNU IDIEH

REHCSIF TTOCS LEAHCIM

YEBBA REHPOTSIRHC

SRENNOC ALEGNA

HCABNEZTAK OLF

MUNTROF WERDNA

SEWAH YROLLAM

MIK AIROLG

NAMEKAW NOSYLLA

KCINREBER HANNAH

ILOIGGAR MAS

ENOIHCANAJ ARAK

TTIMHCS DIVAD

NAHP YMUHT

IHCUOMHCAM YLIL

ONIVERT ENITSIRHC

NIGDUB ANITSIRK

ENHOB MAS

SNILLOC NAYR

MAHKCIB AKINOM

SASOR ELLEIRBAG

ALAMOT AESLEHC

REKRAP AJJAN

GNIRERHCS REHTAEH

SEKYS AERRAHC

Echo | Ends

79

CHRISTOPHER ABBEY

MICHAEL SCOTT FISCHER

HEIDI UNKEFER

MARCUS NUCCIO

MIRKO VELIMIROVIC

GLORIA KIM

MALLORY HAWES

ANDREW FORTNUM

FLO KATZENBACH

ANGELA CONNERS

HANNAH REBERNICK

ALLYSON WAKEMAN

LILY MACHMOUCHI

THUMY PHAN

DAVID SCHMITT

KARA JANACHIONE

SAM RAGGIOLI

MONIKA BICKHAM

RYAN COLLINS

SAM BOHNE

KRISTINA BUDGIN

CHRISTINE TREVINO

CHARREA SYKES

HEATHER SCHRERING

NAJJA PARKER

CHELSEA TOMALA

GABRIELLE ROSAS

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