The new Trustees were approved in May, and will be
seated at the Sept. 29, meeting in Lincoln. They are: George “Reed”
Eberle, Jr., of Wilmette, Eric D. Graue of Lincoln, and Kathryn M.
Harris of Springfield.
“These new Lincoln College Trustees continue a tradition of
outstanding leadership for the College,” said Dr. David Gerlach,
President of Lincoln College. “These Trustees will help us shape the
future of Lincoln College as we return to our traditional role of
offering baccalaureate and master degree programs.
“We rely heavily on the creative and dedicated leadership of our
Trustees. There are many challenges facing higher education today,
and the insights and experience of the Trustees are essential to
assuring that Lincoln College can navigate those challenges while
continuing to provide an excellent education to our students,”
President Gerlach added.
The new Trustees begin their service at the September 29, 2018,
Board meeting. Lincoln College, which has campuses in Normal and
Lincoln, was the first institution named in honor of then-President
Abraham Lincoln and the only institution named after Lincoln while
he was alive.
The Lincoln College Board of Trustees appoints the President and
major administrative officers of the college. Board committees
oversee finances, development, planning, academic affairs and
student services, among other duties.
Here is a look at the backgrounds of the three new board members:
George “Reed” Eberle, Jr.
Eberle is managing partner of GDHWD & Eberle, Inc. in
Northbrook, a company specializing in bringing manufactures of
consumer products to the retail marketplace. Eberle works with
companies that are focused on selling into the Hardware/Home
Improvement channel as well as the Mass Merchandisers. He is a
consultant/partner in Geneva Industrial Group, a company that
sources, markets, and manufactures products in the Home Comfort
category for mass retailers.
Eberle went to work in 1988 at Eberle Sales as a manufacturer’s
representative. The company merged with GDHWD (Grossman, Debartolo,
Hannon, Wolens, and Dousman, Inc) in 1997.
He began his career as an Arbitrage Clerk in the Euro Dollar Pit at
CME and worked as a commodity desk manager obtaining his Series 3
and 7 licenses. Eberle earned his bachelor’s degree from the
University of Arizona in 1985. He is a volunteer liaison for the
Chicago Childcare Society and member of the Kenilworth Union Church
and is a past president of the Midwest Retailers and Manufacture’s
Association and member since 1989.
Reed is the son of Lincoln College’s long-time Trustee George R.
Eberle, who served on the Board from 1990 – 2014.
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Eric D. Graue
Graue, of Lincoln, is resident director of the
Springfield branch of Merrill Lynch. He is a financial advisor and
member of the Summer-Graue Group, a Merrill Lynch Wealth Management
team focused on delivering goals-based wealth management services.
He has a long history of leading volunteer boards in the local
community, including serving as the current chairman of the Abraham
Lincoln Memorial Hospital Foundation and past president of the
Lincoln/Logan County Chamber of Commerce.
At Merrill Lynch, he manages a team of 15 advisors, three advisor
trainees and eight support staff. He has been with Merrill Lynch
since 2005. Prior to that he was a senior consultant at IBM and a
consultant at Anderson Consulting, LLP.
Eric graduated from the University of Illinois with a degree in
general engineering.
Kathryn M. Harris
Harris, of Springfield, is the first woman and first
African American to serve as the President of the Abraham Lincoln
Association since its inception in 1909.
She retired in 2015 as the Library Services Director of the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library, formerly the Illinois State Historical
Library, after more than 25 years of service. She has served on the
board of the Illinois Humanities Council (now Illinois Humanities)
and is currently a “Road Scholar” for Illinois Humanities, where she
presents on the 1908 Springfield Race Riot, a seminal event that led
to the founding of the NAACP, and on “Mrs. Keckley: Friend and
Confidante of Mrs. Lincoln.”
Harris presents one woman first person shows which honor four
historic 19th century African American women: Harriet Tubman, Jarena
Lee, Phoebe Florville and Elizabeth Keckley.
She has held managerial positions at the Illinois State Library and
the SIU School of Medicine Library in Springfield. She has served on
the Board of the Illinois Library Association and Consortium of
Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois (CARLI).
In addition, Kathryn is past president of the Sangamon County
Historical Society and is a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement
Award from the Illinois State Historical Society. In 2015, she was
recognized by the Springfield Rotary Club and is a Rotary Paul
Harris Fellow. She was honored as a Woman of Influence by the
Springfield Business Journal and recognized by the Society of Public
Administrators.
Harris is a native of Carbondale and a graduate of Southern Illinois
University – Carbondale. She earned her Master of Library Science
degree from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.
[Mark Gordon
Public Relations and Media Manager
Lincoln College] |