Jeremy P. ("Jerry") Mulderig of Chicago died peacefully on March 7, 2020, at Amita/Presence St. Joseph Hospital, from complications related to cancer. He was 69.
Mulderig was born in Kingston, PA in 1950, the first child of Gerald A. and Mary F. Mulderig. He graduated second in his class of 1968 from Central Catholic High School in Kingston. At the University of Scranton, he was Editor of The Aquinas, the University student newspaper. In 1972, shortly after his graduation with high honors from the University, he moved to Germany, as a Fulbright Fellow, for advanced study at the University of Cologne. In 1973, he entered the English doctoral program at The Ohio State University, from which he received his Ph.D. in 1978. What followed was a distinguished 40-year career of scholarship and teaching in the areas of rhetoric and writing, 19th century literature and biography, and LGBTQ studies.
Mulderig's college-level teaching career began at Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa, in 1978. He taught at Oakland University in 1981-1982, then moved to the Newcomb College of Tulane University in 1982. In 1988, he accepted a position as Associate Professor in the English Department of DePaul University. From 1990 to 1997, he was Chair of DePaul's English Department. In 2004, in recognition of his excellence in teaching he was awarded membership in the prestigious Society of Vincent de Paul Professors, and upon his retirement in 2014, he received the Via Sapientiae, the University's highest honor.
A truly gifted writer, Mulderig was the author of many published academic research papers, and of multiple editions of The Heath Handbook. In the last five years of his life, he published two books with The University of Chicago Press, in each of which he edited and annotated the writings of Samuel Steward. The first of these, Philip Sparrow Tells All, was widely reviewed, including in the New York Times. The second, The Lost Autobiography of Samuel Steward, was launched in April 2018 to high acclaim from both popular and academic reviewers, including a review in the London Review of Books published weeks before his death.
In 2004, Mulderig purchased an apartment in Berlin, and subsequently enjoyed splitting his time nearly equally between his Chicago and Berlin homes.
Family and friends are planning a memorial service to be held in Chicago at some point in the future.
Mulderig is survived by a loving family: his brother Bob Mulderig and sister-in-law Karen Garman, and nephew and niece Patrick Mulderig and Emily Mulderig, all of Washington, DC; and sister Maureen Mulderig and brother-in-law Michael Johnson of State College, PA, and step-niece and -nephew Jennifer Johnson and Bryan Johnson. Equally important, he is survived by a community of hundreds of devoted former students, academic colleagues, and friends throughout the nation and around the world, many of whom have offered testimony to the significant role Jeremy Mulderig played in their lives. His impact on this world was profound, and he is, and will be, dearly missed.
Source: Published in a Chicago Tribune Media Group Publication from Mar. 15 to Mar. 16, 2020
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Jeremy P. (“Jerry”) Mulderig of Chicago died peacefully on March 7, 2020, at Amita/Presence St. Joseph Hospital, from complications related to cancer. He was 69.
Mulderig was born in Kingston, PA, in 1950, the first child of Gerald A. and Mary F. Mulderig. He graduated second in his class of 1968 from Central Catholic High School in Kingston and entered the University of Scranton that fall, ultimately declaring a double major in English and German. He was Editor of The Aquinas, the University student newspaper, and was also a resident assistant in his third and fourth years, perhaps his first role in positively influencing the lives of students.
In 1972, Mulderig was named a Fellow in the Fulbright Program; shortly after his graduation summa cum laude from the University, he moved to Germany for a one-year program of postgraduate study at the University of Cologne. He traveled extensively during the 1972-1973 year, beginning his lifelong appreciation of worldwide cultural diversity. In 1973, he entered the English doctoral program at The Ohio State University, from which he received his Ph.D. in 1978. What followed was a distinguished 40-year career of scholarship and teaching in the areas of rhetoric and writing, 19th-century literature and biography, and LGBTQ literature.
Mulderig’s college-level teaching career began at Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa, in 1978. He quickly earned a reputation as a dedicated teacher and colleague, and thus began to grow what would become a community of devoted students from around the country. He taught at Oakland University in 1981-1982, then moved to the Newcomb College of Tulane University in 1982. He continued his career as a celebrated teacher over the next six years at Newcomb/Tulane, earning accolades from students and academic colleagues alike, while specializing in academic courses in Language, Writing, and Rhetoric, a Program which he was instrumental in designing and implementing in the Department of English. He served as Associate Dean of Newcomb College from 1984 to 1986, overseeing the office that monitored student progress and provided academic advising and assistance to Newcomb students.
In 1988, Mulderig accepted a position as Associate Professor in the English Department of DePaul University, where he would spend a quarter century as a scholar, administrator, and teacher. He served as Director of First-Year Writing (1997-2000; 2004-2005) and Director of the Master of Arts in Writing Program in its first year (1989-90); he was a three-time recipient of NEH Summer Seminar grants. From 1990 to 1997, Mulderig was Chair of DePaul’s English Department.
In the summer of 2000, Mulderig participated in the DePaul Faculty-Staff development tour of Greece and Turkey, which allowed him the opportunity to visit sites associated with his academic focus on classical rhetoric. With his colleague Warren Schultz, he subsequently developed a short-term study-abroad program in Istanbul; he studied Turkish in the summer of 2002 and co-led the study-abroad program in 2005, 2007, 2009, and 2012.
Among many honors, Mulderig received an Excellence in Teaching award in 2000 and served as the keynote speaker at that year’s Honors Convocation. In 2004, in recognition of his scholarship and teaching, he was named to the prestigious Society of Vincent de Paul Professors, in the first cohort to earn that distinction; and upon his retirement in 2014, he was awarded the University’s highest honor, the Via Sapientiae, recognizing his many contributions in teaching, program development, and University service.
A truly gifted writer, Mulderig was the author of many published academic research papers and of multiple editions of The Heath Handbook. In the last five years of his life, he published two books with The University of Chicago Press, editing and annotating the writings of Samuel Steward. The first of these, Philip Sparrow Tells All, was widely reviewed, including in the New York Times. The second, The Lost Autobiography of Samuel Steward, was launched in April 2018 to high acclaim from both popular and academic reviewers, including a review in the London Review of Books published weeks before his death.
In 2003, Mulderig returned to Germany for the first time since his 1972-73 academic residency, and he was awed by the dramatic changes in the nation—and especially in its restored capital, Berlin—over the previous thirty years. He established a second home in Berlin in 2004 and subsequently enjoyed splitting his time nearly equally between Chicago and Berlin, and between his communities of friends in Germany and the United States. Even after his cancer diagnosis in late 2017, he traveled extensively, visiting friends and family while exploring new places and enjoying the comfort of favorite familiar ones, including three trips to his Berlin residence.
A lover of history and an architecture enthusiast, Mulderig served for twenty-five years as a docent with the Chicago Architecture Foundation, and he offered lectures on elements of the city’s architectural history on many occasions throughout those years.
Mulderig is survived by a loving family: his brother Bob Mulderig and sister-in-law Karen Garman, and nephew and niece Patrick and Emily Mulderig, all of Washington, DC; and sister Maureen Mulderig and brother-in-law Michael Johnson of State College, PA, and step-niece and -nephew Jennifer and Bryan Johnson. Equally important, he is survived by a community of hundreds of devoted former students, academic colleagues, and friends throughout the nation and around the world, many of whom have offered testimony to the significant role Jeremy Mulderig played in their lives. His impact on this world was profound; and he is, and will be, dearly missed.
Family and friends are planning a memorial service to be held in Chicago later this year. Gifts in Mulderig’s memory may be made to the Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation, the Michael J. Fox Foundation, or DePaul University.
Text and photo source: Jerry Mulderig's siblings; information forwarded by Helen Marlborough in email March 16, 2020
The DES is open to all faculty and staff of DePaul University who have retired from the university with 20 years of full-time service and are 55 years or older, or have retired from the university with 10 years of full-time service and are 62 years or older.
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Sunday, March 15, 2020
Friday, March 13, 2020
April 30, 2020 DES Spring Luncheon Cancelled
Good morning,
I hope this email finds you well. As we’ve all seen on the news, COVID-19 is greatly impacting our daily lives and the world around us. In the interest of the health and safety of our community, DePaul has taken proactive steps to limit the spread of COVID-19, or coronavirus. These actions include immediate steps to encourage social distancing—a practice that is encouraged by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We are taking critical steps to reduce the number of gatherings and the density of people on campus. Out of an abundance of care for our communities, the decision has been made to cancel the DePaul Emeritus Society Spring Luncheon on April 30. We appreciate your understanding as we continue to adjust to these uncertain times. Please continue to take care of yourselves and those around you.
Please share any questions you may have with us at: specialevents@depaul.edu or at 312.362.8253. We will continue to share news impacting the DePaul Emeritus Society via email, the blog (http://desretirees.blogspot.com/) and the DES Facebook group ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/117870507250/ ).
All the best,
Melissa Grady
I hope this email finds you well. As we’ve all seen on the news, COVID-19 is greatly impacting our daily lives and the world around us. In the interest of the health and safety of our community, DePaul has taken proactive steps to limit the spread of COVID-19, or coronavirus. These actions include immediate steps to encourage social distancing—a practice that is encouraged by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We are taking critical steps to reduce the number of gatherings and the density of people on campus. Out of an abundance of care for our communities, the decision has been made to cancel the DePaul Emeritus Society Spring Luncheon on April 30. We appreciate your understanding as we continue to adjust to these uncertain times. Please continue to take care of yourselves and those around you.
Please share any questions you may have with us at: specialevents@depaul.edu or at 312.362.8253. We will continue to share news impacting the DePaul Emeritus Society via email, the blog (http://desretirees.blogspot.com/) and the DES Facebook group ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/117870507250/ ).
All the best,
Melissa Grady
Thursday, March 12, 2020
In Memoriam - Hans Schieser
It is with great sadness that we learned that one of our former professors, Dr. Hans A. Schieser passed away on the 4th of March, 2020. He was a full professor at DePaul University teaching Philosophy of Education and Theoretical Foundations of Education for 22 years until his retirement on August 1st, 1991. He then moved back to his hometown in southern Germany and was still very active at many academies and colleges in Germany and Russia for another 20 years. He was survived by his wife Margret Schieser, his two children, Elisabeth Hiller and Peter Schieser, and his five grandchildren. Dr. Schieser was always proud to have taught at DePaul and was a great admirer of St. Vincent DePaul. He was firmly embedded in the Catholic faith and had a strong desire to do good works. He sincerely wanted to leave the world a better place than when he entered it, and he genuinely loved being a teacher, always trying to be a force of good for his students.
Holy Mass and the funeral were held yesterday in Ulm Germany where Dr. Schieser had moved right after retiring from DePaul at St. Michael zu den Wengen. His son, Peter Schieser, has notified us that if anyone would like to send condolences you may direct them to either his mother at:
Mrs. Margret Schieser
Veilchenweg 9
89134 Bermaringen
Germany
Or, if you would prefer to send an email, Peter has offered to print them off and give them to his mother as well. His email is pschieser@gmail.com.
It is always with great sorrow that we learn of the passing of one of our own, but we can also celebrate the life of Dr. Schieser and all of his gifts to this world as well. He will be missed, but his contributions to academia, education, and future generations will always live on.
May he rest in peace.
Source: Mission and Ministry email, March 12, 2020
Photo source: DePaul University Archives, March 12, 2020; photo date unknown
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
In Memoriam - Carol Goodman Jackson
It is with great sadness that we have learned of the death of Carol Goodman Jackson, retired Operations Manager for the College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences. Carol passed away peacefully on Sunday, February 23rd surrounded by her family.
Carol graced DePaul University with over 38 years of leadership and service. During this time, she epitomized what it meant to be a dedicated, productive, and highly respected member of the University community. Her work in LAS was critical to the success of numerous initiatives that improved the lives of DePaul students, faculty and staff including the inaugural drive to convert the university's student files to paperless, for which she received recognition. She was renowned for her problem solving skills as well as her creative initiatives that streamlined management and record-keeping processes. An exemplary personnel manager, Carol was involved in the hiring and training of hundreds of DePaul staff and student employees, many of whom would go on to serve the University at higher levels.
A bold and passionate advocate for equality and Civil Rights, Carol was one of the founding members of the DePaul University Black Leadership Coalition (DPUBLC) in 1996, and lent her considerable talents and energy to promoting and supporting DePaul's faculty and students of African descent. Sensing a critical void in the experience of DePaul's Black students, Carol was the visionary and founding organizer of the annual Students of African Descent Graduation Celebration in 1998 and served as either chair or committee member for every single graduation celebration that followed up to her retirement from DePaul in June of 2018. DPUBLC recognized her tireless and creative dedication and commitment by granting her the 2012 Sankofa Award and then the 2018 Legacy Award, DPUBLC's highest honor.
By the time of her retirement, DePaul University had also recognized Carol's extraordinary contributions with numerous awards including the Via Sapientiae, the University's highest honor, the Spirit of DePaul for 2015-2016, and the DePaul Women's Network (DWN) Woman of Substance and the Woman of Spirit and Action awards.
It was a blessing to call Carol by the name "friend." Her presence was always accompanied by her merry, generous laugh that was deeply contagious. Creatively talented and endowed with a clever wit, she was the mojo behind numerous family and friends' celebrations, and was constantly giving of herself to add light and happiness to their lives.
Most of all, to know Carol was to understand her deep, abundant love for her family and her powerful Christian faith. She was married to the love of her life, George Jackson Jr., for 31 years until his death separated them temporarily in 2011, and she was endlessly proud of her wonderful son, Eric, and her four beautiful grandchildren, Jali, George, Luis, and Jacquelyn, and her two beloved goddaughters, Evelyn and Lori. She is survived by them, as well as her loving family of devoted siblings, Ira, Cleo, Arillas, Lillie, Jimmie and Alice, whom she adored.
In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to a college fund for Carol's youngest grandchildren, Jali and George: gf.me/u/xphb6v
A Celebration of Life in honor of Carol will be held at DePaul University's Cortelyou Commons on the Lincoln Park campus at 2324 N Fremont St, Chicago, IL 60614, on Saturday, March 14, 2020, from 10:30 am to 1:30 pm; service will begin at 11:00 am.
Our condolences go to Carol's family and loved ones. May she rest in peace.
Source: Mission and Ministry email, March 4, 2020
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It is with sadness we learned of the death of Carol Goodman Jackson, retired operations manager of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences. Carol, who lived in Chicago, died on February 23, 2020 at the age of 64.
A memorial service will be held on Saturday, March 14, at the LPC Cortelyou Commons, from 10:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. Everyone is invited.
Memories may be posted on the Tribute Wall of In Touch Funeral and Cremation Services.
https://www.intouchfuneralandcremation.com/obituary/Carol-Goodman-Jackson
May she rest in peace.
Information Source: Laz Rice, email March 3, 2020.
Photo Source: DPU Distinguished Service Awards, 2015
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