Friday, August 15, 2008

Photographer Profile: Bill Albrecht


One of the privileges we have at ACU Today magazine is to work some talented freelance photographers in the process of producing each issue. We do not have an on-staff photographer, so all our work is outsourced to a variety of professionals who live across Texas and around the world.

Austin-area photographer Bill Albrecht is one. He spent nearly two years documenting the work to sculpt and cast and produce Jack Maxwell's Jacob's Dream on our campus. Bill traveled to spend time with Jack on campus and at places such as Blue Genie Art Industries in Austin, Deep in the Heart Art Foundry in Bastrop, and Leuders Limestone in Leuders (near Abilene).

Bill provided environmental portraits to us of 2008 Alumnus of the Year Chris Kyker for the Winter 2008 issue, and 2007 Alumnus of the Year Dr. James Womack for the Winter 2007 issue.

You can see some of Bill's favorite images of the Jacob's Dream assignment on his Web site at www.albrechtphoto.com and download PDFs of our story in the magazine here.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

ACU Sports Blog is Rolling


ACU Today sports editor Lance Fleming (’92) has started a blog for Wildcat fans at acusports.blogspot.com. He and others are writing almost daily about preparations for the upcoming year at ACU. If you're a football practice junkie and want to know who looked good in shorts and pads this week, this is the blog for you.

Hopes are particularly high for the football team, which is favored to win the Lone Star Conference and is ranked No. 5 in the nation (by The Sporting News). Featuring one of the most prolific offenses in college football, the Wildcats are coming off two consecutive years of appearances in the NCAA national playoffs.

Last year's team set more than 70 ACU, LSC and NCAA records, and the statistical carnage could be as great this season as last. If you have been putting off catching a Wildcat game in person, this is the year to fix that. You can follow the team on acusports.com each week, but the excitement of watching players such as quarterback Billy Malone, runningback Bernard Scott and wide receiver Johnny Knox, and a host of others, should not be missed.

Standing out among all the typical pre-season college football stories you'll find on the Web is one at www.promisekeepers.org/news/072808/football-team-joins-pks-manhood-movement chronicling the ACU football team's plans to take a break from preparation for the season by attending an Aug. 15-16 Promise Keeper's conference in Dallas. Head coach Chris Thomsen is to be commended for his emphasis on developing much more than his student-athletes' time in the 40-yard dash or weight room. I think you will be moved by what you read there.

You can get a similar insight into the ACU football program by watching the video clip, "Paying it Forward" I helped put together back in February with Martin Perry (’81) of Phillips Productions Inc. of Dallas. It profiles Wildcat defensive backs coach Desmond Gant who uses his faith and football knowledge to influence student-athletes on the ACU team. The story was part of a longer film produced for The President's Circle at ACU.

Watch it at www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgiuH7_nPeI

David Ramsey in Beijing

While vacationing in Colorado with my family recently, I enjoyed catching up one evening in Colorado Springs with longtime friend and 1981 ACU graduate David Ramsey. He and I and our spouses walked the grounds of the Broadmoor Hotel, where the U.S. Senior Open golf tournament was being held, and visited over coffee at a nearby Starbucks. David was helping with coverage of the tourney.

Another former Optimist writer who has distinguished himself (I am prejudiced about this, mind you), David is one of the featured columnists and sports writers for The (Colorado Springs) Gazette (www.gazette.com). A terrific (one of his favorite words) writer, he has won a number of awards for his freelance work in ACU Today magazine. He spent quite a few years as an award-winning sportswriter for the daily newspaper in Syracuse, N.Y.

David and his family also are happy globetrotters. His wife, Sheryl, is the daughter of the late ACU education professor Dr. Kelly Hamby, who helped establish a thriving mission work in Zambia. She was still recovering from jet lag from a trip to Zambia with her mother, Eleanor Hamby, when we met up with her and David in Colorado Springs. David's latest work-related assignment is in Beijing, covering the Olympics for his newspaper. Colorado Springs is the home of the U.S. Olympic Training Center and the headquarters for the U.S. Olympic Committee, so stories about the Games are of high interest to David's readers.

You can follow the stories he posts from China at www.gazette.com/sections/sports/livefrombeijing