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AROUND THE QUADS

Five Distinguished Alumni To Be Honored with John Jay Awards

By Lisa Palladino

Barry Bergdoll

Barry Bergdoll ’77

PHOTO: EILEEN BARROSO

Cipriani 42nd Street in New York City will be the setting on Wednesday, March 5, as the College honors five of its most accomplished alumni, presenting Barry Bergdoll ’77, Alexandra Wallace Creed ’88, Robert L. Friedman ’64, Jonathan S. Lavine ’88 and Ronald F. Mason Jr. ’74 with a 2008 John Jay Award for distinguished professional achievement.

Bergdoll is the Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art and professor of architectural history in the Department of Art History and Archeology. He earned an M.A. and a B.A. with honors from King’s College, Cambridge, and an M.Phil. and Ph.D., in 1982 and 1986, respectively, from GSAS.

Bergdoll’s interests center on modern architectural history, with an emphasis on France and Germany between 1750–1900; cultural history; city planning; and the intersections of architecture and new technologies. He has studied questions of the politics of cultural representation in architecture, the larger ideological content of 19th-century architectural theory and the changing role of architecture as a profession and architecture as a cultural product in 19th-century European society.

Bergdoll has organized, curated and consulted on numerous exhibitions, including “Mies in Berlin” (MoMA, 2001), “Breuer in Minnesota” (Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2002), “Les Vaudoyer: Une Dynastie d’Architectes” (Musée D’Orsay, 1991) and “Ste. Geneviève/Pantheon; Symbol of Revolutions” (Canadian Centre for Architecture, 1989).

He has written for Architecture, Harvard Design Magazine, The Yale Architecture Review and The New York Times and has written or contributed to several books. An edited volume, Fragments: Architecture and the Unfinished, was published in 2006, and a study of Marcel Breuer’s architecture is to be published this year.

Alexandra Wallace

Alexandra Wallace
Creed ’88

Creed was named executive producer of NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams in March 2007. This appointment made her the first woman to lead a weeknight network evening newscast in a decade, and she is one of a small group of women to serve in the top post of a Big Three daily newscast.

Creed also is an NBC News v.p., a position she has held since January 2006, and has overseen a number of areas in the News Division, including NBC Special Reports and NBC Nightly News.

Previously, Creed, who has a B.A. in English literature, was executive producer of Weekend Today and senior producer of Today beginning in March 2005. During her time as executive producer, Weekend Today’s ratings remained dominant and Saturday Today was No. 1 across the board.

Creed joined NBC News from CBS News, where she was a senior broadcast producer for The Early Show starting in May 2000, and was a senior producer for The Early Show and CBS This Morning. From 1996–98, Creed was producer for CBS Evening News with Dan Rather. From 1990–96, she was an associate producer for CBS This Morning, 48 Hours and the CBS foreign desk. Creed began her network career at the CBS News London bureau and has won six News and Documentary Emmy awards.

Robert L. Friedman

Robert L. Friedman ’64

Friedman is a senior managing director and chief legal officer of The Blackstone Group. Blackstone is a leading global alternative asset manager, operating the world’s largest private equity fund, one of the largest real estate opportunity funds, a leading fund of hedge funds business and other alternative asset management businesses.

Friedman joined Blackstone in 1999. He participates in the work of its private equity group and its mergers and acquisitions advisory group and also played a key role in effectuating its initial public offering in June 2007. Before joining Blackstone, Friedman had a 32-year career as a mergers and acquisitions lawyer at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. He became a partner there in 1974 and for a long time was a leader of its mergers and acquisitions practice and a member of its senior management.

A member of the Board of Visitors, Friedman has served as a director of eight companies and currently is a member of the Boards of Directors of Axis Capital Holdings Limited, Northwest Airlines and TRW Automotive Holdings Corp. He is a member of the Board of Advisors of Penn’s Institute for Law and Economics and is a trustee of the Nantucket Land Council as well as Chess-in-the-Schools and New Alternatives for Children.

Jonathan S. Lavine

Jonathan S. Lavine ’88

Lavine is a managing director at Bain Capital, a leading global private investment firm based in Boston, and the chief investment officer of Sankaty Advisors, its fixed income and credit affiliate. Lavine started Sankaty, one of the nation’s leading managers of leveraged loans and bonds, credit derivatives, mezzanine and distressed debt, in 1997; it now has 70 investment professionals in offices in Boston, London and Chicago and approximately $25 billion in committed assets under management. Before starting Sankaty, Lavine worked in Bain Capital’s private equity business, was a consultant at McKinsey and began his career at Drexel Burnham Lambert.

An active alumnus, Lavine is a member of the Board of Visitors, the President’s Task Force on Athletics, the Campaign Committee for Undergraduate Education and Faculty Development and the Leadership Committee of the Columbia Campaign for Athletics. He also is a member of the boards of Children’s Hospital Trust, City Year, Horizons for Homeless Children, and Stand for Children and is a director of the Boston Celtics.

Lavine earned an M.B.A., with distinction, from Harvard Business School. While at Columbia, he received the David Truman Award for outstanding contribution to the College’s academic affairs.

Ronald F. Mason Jr.

Ronald F. Mason Jr. ’74

Mason was appointed president of Jackson State University in February 2000. Prior to this appointment, he founded and was executive director of the Tulane/Xavier National Center for the Urban Community, which grew out of his work as the federal monitor over the recovery of the Housing Authority of New Orleans. As an appointee of the U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Mason was responsible for improving the city’s public housing.

A 1977 alumnus of the Law School, Mason simultaneously was Tulane’s senior v.p. and general counsel, where he oversaw the university’s business operations and was its chief legal counsel for 18 years. Prior to working at Tulane, Mason was executive counsel to the president of the Southern Cooperative Development Fund, which organized and financed low-income businesses and cooperatives across the Southeast. Mason was legal counsel and worked on special assignments, including management of a 300-acre experimental vegetable farm.

Jackson State has experienced unprecedented growth and enhancement during Mason’s tenure. Enrollment has grown by almost 3,000, the size of the campus has doubled, there have been more than $200 million in capital improvements, two colleges have been added, the endowment has quadrupled, the number of African-American Ph.D.s produced is second in the nation and research funding has tripled.

Among Mason’s awards and recognitions are the Mayor’s Medal of Honor from the City of New Orleans and the Martin Luther King Lifetime Achievement Award from Dillard, Loyola, Tulane and Xavier Universities.

For more information on the dinner, contact Ken Catandella, executive director of alumni affairs: 212-870-2288 or kmc103@columbia.edu.

 

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