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Fashionable Career

Melissa poses atop The Eiffel Tower during a recent trip to Paris.
Melissa poses atop The Eiffel Tower during a recent trip to Paris.

By Doug Goodnough

Since high school, Melissa Lefere-Cobb ’95 was determined to live in New York City and work in the fashion industry.

Thanks to a unique Siena Heights degree program – along with a relentless work ethic—she said she was able to achieve both of those goals. For more than two decades, Lefere-Cobb has worked her way up to the pinnacle of the fashion industry. She is currently the division head for Herve Leger, a well-known French fashion house, in New York City.

She said Siena Heights’ fashion merchandising program started her down the “runway” of her very successful career path. She learned about the program while a student at Jackson (Mich.) Lumen Christi High School.

“It was a great program that allowed me to go to Siena for three years, and then my junior year I spent at the Fashion Institute of Technology,” Lefere-Cobb said of the fashion merchandising major, which is no longer offered. “It served me well.”

Read more . . .

SHU Family Legacies

With a 100th Anniversary theme of “Legacy,” a Siena Heights education has been a family affair for many over its distinguished history. Reflections Magazine asked alumni to submit their family legacy stories, and the response was fantastic! Over the following pages, learn about how “The Siena Effect” impacted the lives of these families in so many ways.

Jacob Chi, Maurice Chi, Margaret Chi and Jane Chi.
Jacob Chi, Maurice Chi, Margaret Chi and Jane Chi.

Chi Family

Legacy names: Margaret Chi ’82 (aunt); Jane Chi ’82 (aunt); Maurice Chi ’84 (nephew); Jacob Chi ’85 (nephew).

Our Siena Heights legacy: from Maurice Chi—The Chi legacy started with my Aunt Margaret Chi, who received a full scholarship from Siena Heights College in 1948. It was her dream! But because of the civil war in China at the time, she was not able to obtain the passport. Soon after when the country changed its political system and shut off from the world, so did her dream. It was not until 1978, thirty years later, did she finally have the courage to write to Siena Heights College. The sitting president, Dr. Louis Vaccaro, welcomed her not only with her scholarship reinstated, but also granted her sister, my other aunt Jane, a full scholarship. Together they came, and both pursued their Master’s degree in education. They graduated in 1982. Then in 1981 my brother Jacob and I also attended SHC. I completed a double major in math and CIS with the Outstanding Male Student Award in 1984. Jacob received his B.A. in music a year later. Without the generous financial support from the college, none of these would be possible. We built successful careers thereafter: Jacob held the baton for the Pueblo Symphony and led other orchestras across the continent, and I became an IT professional in corporate Americas like IBM and Thomson Reuters. We are forever grateful to the college for the knowledge, the friend-
ships, the fulfillment, the value of being, the faith to God, and the love from the Dominican Sisters who enlighten us all.

Read more . . .

Charles Fort Receives Yaddo Fellowship

Charles Fort recently received a Yaddo Fellowship. He said his plan is to write villanelles for his manuscript-in-progress: “One Had Lived in a Room and Loved Nothing, 220 Villanelles,” and to lengthen its sections on Bergman films, Dante’s Inferno, and his ancestors’ journey from Savannah, Ga. to Liberia on May 14, 1868, after the Civil War. He said, “At Yaddo, I shall walk under the parasol of Plath, Langston Hughes, Ted Hughes, Baldwin, Jacob Lawrence, Virgil Thomson, Bernstein, Capote, Copeland, Porter, others.” He will also write prose poems to complete his tetralogy-in-progress: “Brother Can You Spare Me a Time Machine?” He said, “As a student at Siena Heights (College), the English Department awarded me summer scholarships three times to attend the Cranbrook Writers Conference on the grounds of Cranbrook Art Academy. … They published my earliest work in Cranbrook Magazine. In one issue they had 15 of my poems! I still have a copy of the magazine. As a young poet, it was one of the most inspiring places to meet writers and editors. My gratitude goes to Siena for presenting me such experiences as a student.” His end-of-the-year poem, “The Atlas of Eros,” is below.

The Atlas of Eros

The two-headed coin determined who won the war
after the storm of the century made landfall
blew out twin transformers in the train tunnel.
Above ground the live oaks split in two.
The newlyweds caught their second breath in wildfire
stranded two nautical miles from the border.
We collaborated and created dance and poetry.
Afro Psalms was first read, performed, and exhibited
at the Museum of Nebraska Art in Kearney, Nebraska
Friday, January 12, 2001. My wife, Wendy, choreographed
one poem from Afro Psalms, my sonnet redoublé
titled: Stepping Out. We walked on marbled floor.
The curator wore white gloves and placed each painting
on the easel in front of two hundred fifty guests.
Our two young daughters, Claire and Shelley,
sat in the front row like noble angels.
We performed despite my wife being diagnosed
with Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma forty minutes before.
We did not cancel. It was a just and miniature world.
It was the last dance of her life.
My wife’s love letters, unread for thirty-two years,
fell out of the moving van at my feet.
I lifted her silver-forged hairbrush
music box, dancer, and pulled rope for a curtain call.
Was I seeing double, opera glasses,
pirate’s telescope, hunter’s binocular,
the rings of Saturn and the pastel-stars
that fell to the floor of the proscenium
her understudy a funhouse mirror?
We walked into the reception hall.
I wore a second-hand tuxedo and your mourning veil
after betrothal was death’s betrayal.
One in a Million played on a boom box at the reception
thirty years later on the sun porch These Arms of Mine .
Two young daughters danced under a maypole.
My surprise renewal of vows left me a widower.
Professor/Minister. Friends. Two rings exchanged.
I picked up Donald Hall at the Lincoln Airport
to visit my classes and read his poetry.
He met my wife and two daughters
our eight pound toy fox terrier named Mojo.
We drove past Crete, Nebraska
a town that was much smaller than its name.
Donald pointed to the traffic sign:
“That is the town where the woman lives
who gave Jane a bone-marrow transplant
and I wrote letters to her in gratitude.”
Hall wore thick-cuffed corduroy pants.
After his reading we toasted
glasses of Loch Du, black whiskey
cured in charred sweet oak cask.
One year later my own wife was gone.
My wife, mother of two daughters, 11 and 16,
survived nine months. We almost lost her in the spring.
The Omaha doctors tried one experimental treatment.
It did not work. In the fall we prepared our belief
in bone-marrow transplant. Brother Tom, her genetic-twin
matched in blood, ancestry, and tethered to heaven.
and her white count rose and her platelets danced.
My wife became too ill for a transplant of roses.
We prepared our home for hospice.
My wife was too weak to be driven home.
I drove our daughters home
as they wept in the back seat.
The clock stopped on September 22, 2001
at the exact hour and a photograph
blew across the floor, windows closed,
lifted by grace and the hunger of gravity.
I wished for something stronger than this life
something alive in a lamp to trick death.
My youngest daughter spoke in a low voice:
We should have found a jar for her last breath.
I lifted two objects at one time
monocle and hourglass, its spindle,
miniature time-capsule, metronome
set to the estuary of my heart
a double-time march into a killing field.
I was taught how to pull even numbers
out of the failed magician’s top hat.
He had me write the definition of love on scrap paper
and burned it for holy matrimony.
I walked conjoined-twins born with extra thumbs
to the weary traveler’s wishing well.
There were two sailors bon voyage
who awakened with double vision, thirst,
seeing two warships on the horizon
under thunder crown and double rainbow.
It was not the twenty-two tornadoes
that swept across the map from west to east.
It was the two-inch baby rattler in Oklahoma
that slid under the doorjamb I feared.
Its newborn, halved tongue, hissed into a psalm.
I learned two alphabets in second grade
slept in one room with three brothers in twin bunk beds.
I was given a Rose of the Winds by the guidance counselor
become a writer or secret agent in a double-vested suit.
I sang in the Roosevelt Junior High Boy’s choir
noted for my singing two octaves higher
than classmates who ended up playing cornet.
I found two choices for everything in the world
a single passenger holding the Atlas of Eros
sky diving out of a twin-engine plane
my professor tweed or black suit
to carry my wife’s urn into our home.
I moved back into the miniature world
two young daughters balanced on my shoulders.
I learned early and I learned well
that identical twins born with brown eyes led separate lives
and two times two, times two, equaled love asunder.
There was no twin planet. Earth’s dominion
had reached the woman seated next to me,
co-pilot, heaven, and no return flight.

— Charles Fort