Eddie Garcia: A Master Communicator at Age 23

by Kathy Jonas

Eddie Garcia at the National Academy of Arts & Sciences.

Eddie Garcia at the National Academy of Arts & Sciences.

While it is unfortunately true that mass shootings have become pretty regular news events, Eddie Garcia (Northern Illinois University, ‘18) found a compelling way to tell the story of the 10th anniversary of the shooting at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb.

“Shooting Anniversary Newscast,” produced by Garcia and Mateo Avila, was nominated by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for a 2018 Emmy in the category of Best Student TV newscast. He and Avila attended the Chicago Chapter event in November of 2018.

The shooting occurred on Valentine’s Day, 2008, when a gunman entered a large lecture hall, killing five people and injuring 17. The shooter ended up taking his own life.

Garcia and Avila, as producers, created, organized, and wrote the script, airing it as the first show of the semester. They start out the piece – which can be viewed on YouTube – doing personal stories about the five students who lost their lives by interviewing parents, friends and others who knew them. Another segment highlights a “reflection walk” that took place on campus where families and friends could walk and stop in particular rooms to reflect on each person who died. Other parts of the half-hour newscast delve into security on campus, an interview with a first responder, an interview with a survivor and information about the scholarships given in honor of the victims.

On Feb. 14, 2008, five Northern Illinois University students were shot and killed by gunman Steven Kazmierczak before he took his own life at Cole Hall on the NIU campus in DeKalb. (Chicago Tribune)

“Gathering all of the correct information was our main priority,” says Garcia. “Our goal was to honor the victims while revealing details about the tragic event.” He says they wanted to tie it together with the more recent school shootings.

“We were saddened to see that shootings that occurred here on campus 10 years ago, are still occurring regularly.”

A senior majoring in broadcast journalism and media communications, Garcia credits Phi Kappa Theta, which he joined his freshman year, with giving him the tools to build on what he calls the foundation of his career—the importance of communication. He credits his parents with providing his life foundation and says his mother is his biggest cheerleader.

“Everything that has happened to me is about communication,” he says. “I really want to help others succeed too and realize that we are all in this together.” He was inspired by the late Paul Allen (Washington State University, ‘75), who he heard deliver his Man of Achievement speech at the Phi Kappa Theta National Conference in Washington DC in 2017. Allen, 65, the co-founder of Microsoft, died October 15, 2018 of Non Hodgkins lymphoma.

“The entire conference was about leadership and the impact we can leave. It truly was an amazing experience,” he adds. He was impressed by the work ethic he saw there and even as a member of the executive committee he liked the way you had to learn to communicate with others to achieve a goal. “This helped guide my career.”

He became hooked on broadcasting when he went to college and entered the school’s television production area. He immediately knew it was what he wanted to do. But his true passion is sports. While a student, he has produced a weekly sports program, Top Shelf Sports, which is a part of class curriculum, serving not only the university but the nearby local community.

Garcia recently visited ESPN and hopes to make Bristol, Connecticut his home following graduation in December.

Beni Enas, General Manager of the Northern Television Center, and a former producer at CNN, among other media outlets, says Garcia is mature beyond his years. “He’s what I want to be when I grow up,” Enas says with a laugh.

“He is a born leader. In television production, there are a lot of moving parts so everyone is expected to follow your lead. He sets the bar high and everyone wants to rise up to that.” His natural passion for sports is obvious and it inspires others, Enas says.

Enas has no doubt that Garcia will achieve great things. “He has ‘it,’ whatever ‘it’ is.”

Phi Kappa Theta G.O.L.D. Council welcomes Cody Barbo

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA | Jan 31, 2019 – The Phi Kappa Theta Foundation is pleased to announce Brother Cody Barbo (San Diego State University, ‘12) has been added as a member of the G.O.L.D. Council.

Brother Barbo is an entrepreneur and two-time founder from San Diego, CA. Cody currently serves as Founder/CEO of Trust & Will, the easy, fast and secure way to set up your estate plan online. Cody also serves on the San Diego State University Alumni Board of Advisors.

Barbo formerly served as CEO for Industry, a ‘LinkedIn’ for the service and hospitality industry.

Cody is also the former CEO of Associated Students, a $30M non-profit in San Diego.

It is the mission of the Phi Kappa Theta National Foundation to enhance the quality of the educational, spiritual and fraternal programs of the National Fraternity and its local chapters, by providing funding for those programs, and offering guidance as to their implementation.

View Cody Barbo's profile on LinkedIn

Discover more about the Phi Kappa Theta Foundation and its vision

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On behalf of Phi Kappa Theta’s graduates of the last decade, this council will serve as ambassadors for and advisors to Phi Kappa Theta Foundation and its elected/appointed leadership.

Phi Kappa Theta is a national fraternity that fosters five areas of development within its membership: leadership, fraternal, intellectual, social, and spiritual. Currently, the Fraternity has 37 active chapters. The mission of Phi Kappa Theta is to actively develop men to be effective leaders who passionately serve society, Fraternity and God.

www.phikaps.org

Postcards From A Postgraduate

Brother Jesse Greaves Explores the USA and the World

by Kathy Jonas
Indiana University, ‘78

Jesse, fifth from top right, with his Chapter back in 2015.

As an astronautical engineer, Jesse Greaves (RPI, ‘18) will be focused on the space above, but the last few years have given him the opportunity to appreciate the ground below.

Realizing he might not have a break for quite a long time, the recent graduate of Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy, New York, embarked on a journey that would take him across the United States and Europe prior to classes starting at the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he is working on a Ph.D. Eventually he wants to work for a large space company and then become a professor.

In December, after completing a co-op at the MIT Laboratory in Lexington, Massachusetts, he flew out to Los Angeles to visit a friend who was working at a NASA jet propulsion lab, and they started a road trip across the United States. The two of them would later go on to backpack across Europe following graduation.

“I traveled some as a kid, but this was so much fun,” says Greaves. “Seeing new cultures and experiencing new landscapes are awe inspiring.”

As a collegiate brother, Greaves said he joined the fraternity in his sophomore year after leaving the lacrosse team. He says the team did not provide the exploration and variety he was looking for in college in order to expand his horizons. The fraternity provided those opportunities.

At Phi Kappa Theta, he became the Chapter’s scholarship chair and then served as Vice President of Operations, maintaining the house by waxing floors, painting and making sure the property was kept in good shape. “It was a stressful year of my life, but the house gave so much to me; I had to give back to the house.” Through a brother, he was able to apply for the internship at the Lincoln Lab.

“I fit in with Phi Kap because it was the friendliest, most personable place,” he says. “We support each other. No matter what anyone gets into, we have each other’s back.”

As someone who skied before he walked, Greaves, 23, enjoys hiking, ice climbing, white water rafting, rock climbing and photography, so travel was a natural thing for him.

A few of Jesse’s travel tips (he has a lot more):

  • Watch a sunset in Canyonlands National Park in Moab, Utah, which Greaves says is more impressive than the Grand Canyon with canyon after canyon after canyon created by the Colorado River. Sunset at Zion National Park in Utah is also gorgeous

  • Go to the WWII Museum in New Orleans

  • Drink real absinthe in Barcelona. The strong, licorice-tasting drink is sipped after putting cubes of sugar on a fork, squirting water on the sugar to dissolve it in the drink and partaking in the famous concoction as did Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso and Vincent van Gogh

  • Try to find the hidden architectural pieces in Prague, a city that Greaves found surprisingly vibrant and exciting

  • Listen to Mozart in a small church in Vienna

  • Go ahead and indulge in the pasta and pizza in Italy and Rome in particular. It’s a nice ubiquitous, inexpensive treat following a visit to the Vatican and the spectacular St. Peter’s Basilica, which he called the most awe-inspiring cathedral, with Barcelona’s La Sagrada Familia Basilica (slated to be finished in 2026 after 144 years in the making) the most artistic and impressive

  • Cliff diving in Naples on the Amalfi Coast. What better way to end a trip?

Main Image: Brother Jesse Greaves (RPI, ‘18) enjoying the view of Prague in the Czech Republic.

Making Resolutions?

Plan for your Role as Chapter Leader!

by Dan Bureau, PhD
University of New Hampshire, ‘95
Board of Trustees
Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs at the University of Memphis

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Resolutions are often made the end of one year and the beginning of the next because people are ​scientifically proven to be ready for change​. There is a mindset that comes with making resolutions: I have not achieved my goals in the past year (or years) but now I feel ready to make that change. When considering what changes you need to make, also give pause to how those changes will ultimately impact those around you and what strategies you need to enact in order to achieve those goals.

As you consider some of your resolutions for 2019, think about what you need to do relative to your role in Phi Kappa Theta. Leaders can always turn things around even with really difficult situations, but you have to be ready. Here are three resolutions you might adopt in your role as a leader in your chapter, your alumni association, or as part of any other committee/board on which you serve that is connected to Phi Kappa Theta.

1. I will be more focused on listening to others than only asserting my opinion​. You have been elected/selected based on qualifications. Therefore, you have a right to give your opinion and it is likely one that has been considered in depth at some point. However, good leaders listen as much as they talk (if not more).

Ask questions even if you think you know the answers.

- Dan Bureau, PhD

Talking at people does not really work unless they are clear on your rationale and also how it will impact them. Moving forward, ask questions even if you think you know the answers. For example, rather than share with a brother that you wish he would pay his dues, ask “what can we do to make this experience worthwhile for you so that you invest in it by paying dues” or “what can we do to help you make the payments towards your dues” rather than assume it is just how he chooses to prioritize. Paying dues is one example, but this resolution can be applied to all aspects of leadership.

For more information check out​ this article from Inc. magazine​.

2. I will seek to engage others rather than doing everything myself or letting the elite few who do work tackle these tasks.​ It is easy just to get something done the way you want it, but as you and your fellow leaders conduct themselves this way it lets many others all around you just opt out. This is a challenge particularly for those who are concerned with their legacy of leadership versus the overall effectiveness of their organization. The truth is that your greatest legacy of what you achieve as a leader will come long after you are gone: the test is whether those after you can carry on in a way that is making the organization successful.

What you achieve as a leader will come long after you are gone: the test is whether those after you can carry on in a way that is making the organization successful.

- Dan Bureau, PhD

As a leader, make the resolution that you are going to seek out brothers (recall the ritual here) and ask them what could help them become more involved. In what are they interested in helping? What are their ideas? Leadership needs to be shared in order to be impactful. Engage others and while the initial work may seem harder, you will empower others, including those who “follow you” to step up and make the difference.

For more information on leading toward results AND relationships, ​check out this blog post​.

3. I resolve to be focused on leadership as acts versus position.​ This is a reality for any leader. The way it impacts our Fraternity though is that the act of leadership can feel more positional than relational. Anyone can lead and they may lead differently or the same as you but we often default to those in positions of leadership versus all the leadership potential around us. There is a body of research focused on countering this view of leadership. While leadership needs to have “leaders” and “followers” it is important to be clear that anyone may need to step up to lead in a given situation. If you are a positional leader in your chapter/alumni association/other PKT context, then you may or may not be the right person to demonstrate leadership in other ways. For example, if a brother is struggling with something, sometimes the best way to demonstrate leadership is to make sure someone who he is most closely connected to is prepared to connect with him in a way that feels helpful.

Central Michigan University hosts a leadership camp annually. ​Check out their overview of what’s called the social change model of leadership​. This focuses on many things, most notably that leadership is not just position.

These three resolutions connect powerfully around any sort of change management efforts. If you identify change is needed then once you listen to learn, you may feel better informed to implement change that people will buy into. If you engage others in change, they will feel invested more or at least that their voice was heard. Finally, if you focus on leadership as a function versus position, and a function that anyone at anytime can step into, then you will empower people to new heights.

Resolutions often fall apart, so if you start one of these (or all of them) and something goes wrong, then consider what needs to change for you to successfully complete. Also, there may be a need for you to apply these resolutions differently depending on the context of the situation (for example, at some point there are issues within Phi Kappa Theta that simply are driven by the policies of the Fraternity), but keeping these resolutions in mind will help you reflect as a leader on what you can do, what you can do with others, and how you all can work together to make your Phi Kappa Theta experience one that is positive, educational, fun, and impactful to you, your campus and society.


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About Dan:

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Dan Bureau joined Phi Kappa Theta at the University of New Hampshire, and graduated in 1995. He later earned a PhD. in Higher Education and Student Affairs at Indiana University. Dan works for the University of Memphis as the assistant vice president for student affairs. He also volunteers for the Council for the Advancement of Standards through the Association of Fraternity/Sorority Advisors. Dan enjoys spending time with his family, playing tennis and staying fit.