DM Leader Gregory P. Demetriou Named One of Long Island’s “Outstanding CEOs”

Direct-mail marketing entrepreneur Gregory P. Demetriou has received an Outstanding CEO Award from Long Island Business News, recognizing him as one of Long Island’s leading executives.

Demetriou, founder and CEO of the Lorraine Gregory Communications Group in Farmingdale, NY, was honored along with 19 other Outstanding CEO recipients at a ceremony at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury, NY, on May 9.

Originally a detective with the New York City Police Department, Demetriou retired from the force in 1981 after being wounded in a shooting incident that led to his receipt of an NYPD Medal of Honor. He and his brother, the late Bob Demetriou, established a high-volume mailing operation for a brokerage firm in 1988. Four years later, Demetriou and his wife, Lorraine, formed the Lorraine Gregory Corp. and purchased Bi-County Mailing, a small mailing company in Bethpage, NY.

Today, the Lorraine Gregory Communications Group comprises Bi-County Mailing and its affiliates American Mail Communications, Direct Printing Connection, and Precision Envelope & Printing Co. The family-run business offers a full spectrum of graphic communications services including mailing and list management, consultation, project management, writing and editing, graphic design, e-mail marketing, digital and offset printing, bindery, services, and variable data printing.

The group’s mission is to develop and expedite marketing campaigns that enable businesses and organizations to reach their target markets and audiences. The company serves a client list of over 1,200 businesses and not-for-profits from its Farmingdale facility, where 34 people are employed.

Demetriou was one of the inaugural recipients of the annual Outstanding CEO Awards, created to recognize business and not-for-profit executives on Long Island who have consistently demonstrated remarkable leadership skills, integrity, values, vision and a commitment to excellence, financial performance, community, and diversity.

The May 9 ceremony also included a posthumous tribute to Leroy R. Grumman, co-founder and later chairman of the legendary aviation company that bore his name. Its latter-day incarnation, Northrup Grumman, was one of the sponsors of the event. A complete account with bios of all the recipients can be read here.

Ursula Burns of Xerox to Be Honored with NYU’s Prism Award on June 13

Ursula Burns, chairman and chief executive officer of Xerox, will receive the 2013 Prism Award from the NYU School of Continuing and Professional Studies (NYU-SCPS) Graphic Communications Management and Technology (GCMT) M.A. program on June 13.

Presented annually, the Prism Award recognizes distinguished leadership in the graphic communications media industry. The 2013 Prism Award will be presented to Burns on Thursday, June 13, 2013 during the 27th Annual Prism Award Luncheon, which will be held at Gotham Hall in New York City. The event is a major networking opportunity for graphic communications professionals and is the most heavily attended gathering of its type for the industry in the New York metro area.

“I am grateful for the honor,” said Burns, who is a graduate of the Polytechnic Institute of NYU. “This award reminds me of our obligation to the next generation of graphic communications professionals, and I share the enthusiasm for an industry that has seen much change, and for the possibilities yet to come.”

The net proceeds of the Prism Award Luncheon help to fund student scholarships as well as student and program support for the NYU-SCPS GCMT graduate program, which prepares the next generation of media communications industry leaders. Since its inception, the Prism Award Luncheon has raised millions of dollars for scholarships for students in the GCMT program.

Previous NYU Prism Award recipients include Steve Forbes, chairman and editor-in-chief of Forbes Media LLC; Thomas J. Quinlan III, president and chief executive officer of RR Donnelley; Vyomesh (VJ) Joshi, former executive vice president, HP’s Imaging and Printing Group; Cathleen Black, former chairman of Hearst Magazines; Antonio M. Perez, president and CEO of Eastman Kodak Company; Anne M. Mulcahy, former chairperson and CEO of Xerox Corporation; and Janet L. Robinson, president and chief executive officer of The New York Times.

Guy Gecht, CEO of EFI, is this year’s Prism Luncheon chair. The event’s Advisory Board co-chairs are Martin Maloney, chairman of Broadford & Maloney, Inc., and Kathy Presto, vice president, strategic sourcing, of Williams Lea North America. Serving as co-chairs of the Prism Committee are Laura C. Reid, vice president of production at Hearst Magazines, and William “Buzz” Apostol, vice president, sales, Americas at X-Rite/Pantone Inc.

The June 13 ceremonies also will include the presentation of a student award to a distinguished graduate of the M.A. program in Graphic Communications Management and Technology.

Gotham Hall is located at 1356 Broadway (36th Street) in Manhattan. Tickets for the Prism Award Luncheon are priced from $750 per person to $6,000 for a sponsor’s table of eight and $10,000 for a co-chairmanship (which includes a dais seat as well as a table of eight).

Tables, ticket reservations, and additional information are available through the NYU-SCPS Office of Development. Contact Melissa Malebranche at 212-998-6950, by fax at 212-995-3663, or by e-mail at melissa.malebranche@nyu.edu. More information about the Prism Award Luncheon and Scholarship is available here.

Gamma Epsilon Tau Fraternity Will Honor Connors and Romano at “Gold Key” Ceremony

Gamma Chapter of Gamma Epsilon Tau, the national graphic arts honor society, will honor Mike Connors and Frank Romano at its 2013 Gold Key Awards ceremony in New York City on May 29.

The Gamma Gold Key Award will be presented to Mike Connors, Managing Director, Production Department, The New York Times. Starting his career with the newspaper in 1976 as a mailroom feeder, he became a member of the department’s management team in 1984 and went on to run it from 1998 to 2004. That year, he became Deputy Plant Manager, and in 2008, he was promoted to his current position.

Connors is being recognized by Gamma Chapter for his steadfast support of industry education. As coordinator of Diversity Events at The Times production plant in College Point, Queens, he directs the mentoring program with the Queens Satellite High School for Opportunity and also supports the GED Plus Program in the Bronx. He is an active member of the industry advisory commission to the High School of Graphic Communication Arts and the New York City Department of Education’s CTE (Career and Technical Education) program.

In March 2012, Connors partnered with PENCIL as the career development business partner for the GED Plus program, which aims at inspiring innovation and greater student achievement by partnering business leaders with public schools. He also helped to initiate a paid student intern program at The Times College Point facility, where he organizes the annual golf fundraiser. In its fifth year, the event will provide $30,000 for programs assisting learning and physically challenged children at PS 107, the Hour Children Program, St. Mary’s Hospital, and The Catherine McCauley Center.

Connors holds a BS in management and an MBA from St. Peter’s University, where he is a member of the adjunct faculty.

The Founders Gold Medal & Citation Award will be presented to Frank Romano, Professor Emeritus at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). After a career spanning 54 years in printing and publishing, he arguably is the most widely known and highly regarded of all specialists in graphic communications.

Many in the industry know him as the editor of International Paper’s Pocket Pal series for 30 years or have read one of the thousands of articles he has written. He is the author of 53 books including the 10,000-term Encyclopedia of Graphic Communications (with Richard Romano), the standard reference work in the field. He also is a consultant and an editorial contributor to WhatTheyThink, the industry’s foremost online news and information service.

Romano lectures extensively around the world and was the principal researcher on “Printing in the Age of the Web and Beyond,” a landmark study for the Electronic Document Scholarship Foundation (EDSF). He has been quoted in many newspapers and publications as well as on television and radio. He appeared on the PBS program History Detectives and serves as president of the Museum of Printing in North Andover, MA. As a forensic typographer, he has been an expert witness in legal cases concerning forgery, most recently in a case involving Facebook.

Gamma Epsilon Tau is a national, coeducational, collegiate printing fraternity in which students of printing and publishing can meet and interact in a professional and social atmosphere.  It has eight chapters at colleges and universities that offer degree programs in graphic communications.

Gamma Chapter of Gamma Epsilon Tau is located at the Department of Advertising and Graphic Design (ADGA) of New York City College of Technology, part of the City University of New York. Gold Key honorees in recent years include Vicki Keenan, Bob Sacks, Annette Wolf Bensen, Michael Cunningham, Florence Jackson, Diane Romano, and Russell K. Hotzler.

The 2013 Gold Key Awards dinner will be held on Wednesday, May 29 at Club 101, 101 Park Avenue, New York City. For more information or to purchase tickets, contact ADGA Prof. Frank Adae at (718) 260-5833 or by e-mail: fadae@citytech.cuny.edu

Milestone Celebration Planned for Luminaire Awards on April 15

 

 

 

 

Described by its organizers as “the Academy Awards® of Media Production,” the Luminaire Awards event will celebrate its 25th anniversary in New York City next month by honoring five outstanding professionals in graphic communications.

First bestowed in 1988, the Luminaire Awards recognize industry members whose spirit, creativity, commitment, and inspiration have led the transformation of the industry. Today, the Luminaire Awards program is one of the best attended and most influential events of its kind in the NYC-metro region.

The 2013 Luminaire Awards will be presented on April 15 at the Pierre Hotel in a ceremony that commences with a reception 6 p.m. The honorees are Kevin Brucato, director of operations, Prudential; Lynn Fantom, chairman & CEO, ID Media; Bill Kasdorf, vice president and principal consultant, Apex Content; Chris Noble, senior director of print operations, ESPN Digital and Print Group; and Brian Sallaberry, associate vice president, publishing operations, Victoria’s Secret Direct, NY.

Producing the event are IDEAlliance and its Digital Enterprise Education & Research (DEER) Foundation, a 501(c)3 non-profit charitable organization created to promote research and education for graphic arts and the media industry. Fundraising proceeds from the Luminaire Awards support student scholarships through the Graphic Communications Scholarship Foundation (GCSF), which provides financial assistance to students pursuing careers in graphic communications in advertising, design, media, printing, and publishing.

Online registration, including single tickets and table-of-10 reservations, is available here. Event sponsorships also are being sought, and those interested can learn more about them by downloading the prospectus or by contacting Georgia Volakis, IDEAlliance’s director of events and membership, at 703-837-1075 or gvolakis@idealliance.org.

The 2013 Luminaire Awards Committee includes Paul Nicholson (Showtime Networks), chair; Dave Stadler (Blue Ocean Worldwide), vice chair; and members George Ashbrook (E-Graphics), Brenda Barozzi (pipe line ps), David Luke (GCSF), Laura Reid (Hearst Magazines), Diane Romano (HudsonYards & Caps Visual Communications), Howard Weinstein (Candid Litho), and Michelle Weir (HP).

Metro Firms Make Winning Impressions in “The Mohawk Show”

Metro region printers and design firms are among the winners of The Mohawk Show, a competition that honors the impact of the graphic design industry and the important role that design plays in our culture.

Tristate honorees captured one of four Best in Show awards and four awards in the Finalist category.

The Mohawk Show, sponsored annually by Mohawk Fine Papers, gives printers and designers a chance to catch the eye of their peers and potential clients by having their entries reviewed by an esteemed panel of jurors and viewers of the traveling exhibit. The Mohawk Show 12 jury included: show chair Stanley Hainsworth, Tether, Inc., Seattle; Jorge Alderete, Illustrator, Mexico City; Michael Jager, JDK Design, Burlington, VT; and Susana Rodriguez de Tembleque, SY Partners, San Francisco.

Hainsworth said of this year’s winners, “We saw some very modest projects rise to the surface because the design, paper and execution elevated them to winner’s status in a very strong field of entries.”

“After seeing the amazing entries from all over the world, what struck us most is that, contrary to some opinions, print is definitely not dead,” said Jane Monast, director of communications for Mohawk.

Mohawk Show 12’s Best of Show winners will each receive a $5,000 award, and Finalists receive $500 each. Winners in another judging division, Special Category, each receive $2,500. (There were no tristate honorees in Special Category.)

Piscatello Design Centre (New York, NY) designed and Finlay Printing (Bloomfield, CT) printed “Visiting Artist Program: David Gibson Poster” (pictured above), a Best of Show winner, for Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT).

Tristate winners in the Finalist category are as follows:

Chris Piascik, illustrator (Bloomfield, CT), designed “1,000 Days of Drawing” with himself as the client. The printer was TPI Solutions Ink (Waltham, MA). Paper: Mohawk Options Navajo Smooth Brilliant White.

Son&Sons (New York, NY) designed “Interface Folio No.5” for Interface. The printer was UniqueActive LLC (Cicero, IL). Paper: Mohawk Superfine Eggshell White.

Kate Spade New York (New York, NY) designed and Dolce Printing (Graytor) (Maywood, NJ) printed “Things We Love.” with Kate Spade New York as the client. Paper: Mohawk Superfine Smooth Ultrawhite.

Kate Spade New York (New York, NY) designed and Dolce Printing (Graytor) (Maywood, NJ) printed “Spring 2011 Mailer” with Kate Spade New York as the client. Paper: Mohawk Superfine Smooth Ultrawhite.

To download the complete list of winners, click Mohawk Show 12. Our congratulations to the metro region honorees.

PIA Reports Tristate Winners of “Premier Print Awards”

Firms from New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut are among the winners of the 2012 Premier Print Awards, the world’s most prestigious international print competition.

Printing Industries of America (PIA) says that more than 2,800 entries were submitted for judging in this year’s competition. Tristate winners are listed below. The Premier Print Awards web site presents a list of the 109 Best of Category award winners (“Benny” recipients) as well as listings of companies that received Awards of Recognition and Certificates of Merit.

All Benny-winning pieces will be featured in a full-color publication mailed by PIA to 10,000 print buyers. They also will be recognized at the Premier Print Awards Gala during Graph Expo 2012 in Chicago on October 7. The Best in Show winner will be announced during the awards gala, which also features the InterTech™ Technology Awards and the web2awards.

Our congratulations to the tristate recipients.

Award of Recognition

Earth Color (Parsippany, NJ): Service Catalogs (4 or more colors, printers with more than 250 employees); Programs (4 or more colors)

Compu-Mail LLC (Niagara Falls, NY): Calendars; Direct Mail Campaigns, Business-to-Business

xweet LLC (Long Island City, NY): Media Kits

Best of Category

CRW Graphics (Pennsauken, NJ): Environmentally Sound

Brooks Litho & Digital Group (Deer Park, NY): Booklets (4 or more colors, printers with 20 employees or less)

Compu-Mail LLC (Niagara Falls, NY): Campaign

Conformer Products (Great Neck, NY): Envelopes

xweet LLC (Long Island City, NY): Media Kits

Certificate of Merit

Fusion Cross-Media (Manchester, CT): Customized/Personalize/Variable-Data Digital Printing

All-State Legal (Cranford, NJ): Cards

Earth Color (Parsippany, NJ): Booklets (4 or more colors, printers with more than 250 employees); Product/Service Catalogs (Cover – sheetfed; Interior – web); Product Catalogs (4 or more colors, printers with more than 250 employees); Direct Mail Campaigns, Consumer

Hatteras (Tinton Falls, NJ): Presentation Folders/Portfolios (4 or more colors); Business and Annual Reports (4 or more colors throughout, printers with 101 – 250 employees); Promotional Campaigns, Business-to-Business

Perfect Printing (Moorestown, NJ): Print/Graphic Arts Self-Promotion (Printers with 21 – 50 employees)

Riegel Printing (Ewing, NJ): Booklets (4 or more colors, printers with 51 – 100 employees) (twice); Diaries and Desk Calendars; Other Special Finishing Techniques

American Packaging Corporation (Rochester, NY): Flexographic Printing (twice)

Diamond Packaging (Rochester, NY): Calendars; Specialty Inks or Coatings, Fragrances, or “Invisible” Printing Inks; Environmentally Sound; Cartons and Containers; Print/Graphic Arts Self-Promotion (Printers with 101 – 250 employees)

Hammer Packaging (Rochester, NY): Labels and Wraps—Cut and stack, sheetfed; Labels and Wraps—Rolled products/pressure-sensitive

Island Pro Digital (Hauppauge, NY): Print/Graphic Arts Self-Promotion (Printers with 20 employees or less)

Overnight Labels (Deer Park, NY): Flexographic Printing

xweet LLC (Long Island City, NY): Media Kits

Steve Forbes Accepts 26th Prism Award from NYU-SCPS at Record-Setting Event

Steve Forbes (right), chairman and editor-in-chief, Forbes Media LLC, accepts the Prism Award from Mike Federle, COO, Forbes Media LLC.

The graphic communications industry continues to struggle with declining sales, squeezed profit margins, restricted access to capital, and business pressures of every imaginable kind. But, none of that has dampened the enthusiasm of those who support the Prism Awards, a high-profile achievement recognition program that rings with optimism every year under the auspices of New York University’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies (SCPS).

On June 21, the event marked its 26th anniversary with a record turnout and another record for revenue generated on behalf of the M.A. program in Graphic Communications Management and Technology at SCPS. A large part of the draw was the presence of this year’s Prism Award recipient: Steve Forbes, chairman and editor-in-chief, Forbes Media LLC. The ceremony, which took place at Gotham Hall near Herald Square, also featured the presentation of an Alumni Achievement Award to Michael J. Mulligan and a Student Achievement Award to Eunic M. Ortiz.

The Prism Award has been given annually since 1986 in recognition of distinguished leadership in the graphic communications media industry. The Prism Award luncheon is the industry’s longest-running and most successful educational fundraising event, having collected millions of dollars for graphics studies since its inception.

This year’s ceremony was emceed by M.A. program advisory board co-chairs Martin J. Maloney (Broadford & Maloney) and Kathy B. Presto (Williams Lea North America). Prism Award committee chairs were Francis A. McMahon (Océ North America) and Laura C. Reid (Hearst Magazines).

All proceeds from the $750-per-seat event fund scholarships for students enrolled in the M.A. program in Graphic Communications Management and Technology, which has been in existence since 1981. Every year since then, many high-ranking industry executives have served on the M.A. program’s advisory board as curriculum consultants and as providers of internships and career guidance. The program, managed by academic director Bonnie Blake and assistant director Ansley Dunn, also enlists industry professionals as adjunct lecturers.

Enrolled in the cross-disciplinary program are working professionals as well as full-time students, including a significant number of international participants. Topics of study include executive leadership, entrepreneurial thinking, finance, global marketing, managing the media mix, and graphic communication technologies.

Michael J. Mulligan (left), recipient of the Alumni Achievement Award, with Martin J. Maloney, co-chair of the advisory board for the NYU-SCPS M.A. program in Graphic Communications Management and Technology.

Mulligan, the Alumni Achievement Award recipient, credited the program with helping him to reimagine the mission of Advanced Business Group Inc. (ABG), a New York City digital printing company he founded in 1992. Billing itself as the city’s leading digital print provider for business, ABG offers a full range of quick-turnaround production solutions and marketing support services. Mulligan said that attaining an M.A. in the program led him to rethink his role as the CEO of the company that he started and continues to transform.

Accepting the Student Achievement Award, Ortiz described herself as “the epitome of the digital consumer.” Professionally, she is a senior account executive at Fleishman-Hillard, where she develops online, digital, video, and social media campaigns for clients in corporate, government, and technology- related industries. She also has served as a Web, digital, and social media manager for the New York City Council.

Maloney congratulates Eunic M. Ortiz on her receipt of the Student Achievement Award.

Ortiz said that what she wanted in graduate studies “was a program where I could not only learn another level of leadership and management skills, but a program that would be up to date on the work I was involved in daily. I needed a program that could keep up with me.”

“The experience I’ve had while in the Graphic Communications Management and Technology program has exceeded my every expectation,” she declared.

Among the media properties managed by Steve Forbes are the namesake bi-weekly magazine, with a circulation of more than 900,000; the RealClear group of Web sites, including RealClearPolitics.com, which together with Forbes.com are said to reach 33 million readers every month; and 21 local-language licensee editions of Forbes publications for readers around the world.

The Prism Award recipient also has written or co-authored four books and was, in 1996 and 2000, a campaigner for the Republican presidential nomination.

Forbes told the Prism Award audience that while there are few “playbooks” to guide people in their career and life choices, a good education can help everyone to cope with the inevitable uncertainties ahead.

“The true source of wealth in an economy is people’s minds,” Forbes said, adding that the ingenuity of educated people is what gives value to oil, microchips, and other commodities prized by business and society.

He advised the students in the audience to accept the fact that at some point, “a crisis will hit you” during the pursuit of entrepreneurial ambitions. When it hits, he told them, the question to ask is, “What is the purpose of communications? What are you trying to achieve?” With the help of a big-picture focus, Forbes said, “you’ll have a little more serenity—just a little more—in terms of going forward.”

Still an advocate of the political and social changes he called for during his quests for the Republican presidential nomination, Forbes briefly addressed the subject of health care and its future after the Supreme Court’s pending decision on the national health care plan put forth by the Obama administration. According to Forbes, the controversy surrounding the health care debate misses the point.

“Why is the demand for health care seen as a crisis, and not as an enormous opportunity for entrepreneurs?” he asked. “How in the world do we get the patients in charge again, like the consumer is in charge of everything else?” Permitting the purchase of health insurance coverage across state lines would be one way of spurring entrepreneurial competition and “turning scarcity into abundance” in the health care marketplace, Forbes said.

GCSF Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary with Scholarship Grants to 27 Students

First-time and multiple recipients of GCSF scholarships on stage with GCSF trustees in the Joseph Urban Theatre, Hearst Tower, New York City.

“We saw that there needed to be a future workforce for the graphic communications industry, and we saw that we needed to do something about it.”

With that simple but far-reaching plan in mind, Bill Dirzulaitis and the other founding members of the Graphic Communications Scholarship, Award and Career Advancement Foundation (GCSF) set out to finance their vision of a self-sustaining scholarship fund for the industry’s next generation of creative talent. On June 20, GSCF marked the tenth anniversary of the realization of that goal by presenting $40,000 in grants to 27 students commencing or continuing college-level studies in graphic communications.

The presentation ceremony at the Hearst Tower in Manhattan also featured the bestowal of a GCSF Service Award to Dirzulaitis as well as the recognition of Matthew McDowell (Pantone Inc.) as this year’s recipient of GCSF’s Champion of Education Award.

The student scholarship winners either attend or are entering colleges and universities with degree programs in graphic communications. Their areas of study include advertising, design, interactive media, printing, publishing, journalism, digital asset management, and photography.

Conceived by a small group of metro area industry members who wanted to coordinate fundraising for graphics education, GCSF is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit group that channels 100% of the money it raises to scholarships. To date, the group has awarded $313,000 in 94 grants endowed by a long list of graphics industry donors. Most of the 2012 recipients are in their second, third, fourth, or fifth years of qualifying for the stipends.

GCSF has no professional staff and relies entirely on the voluntary efforts of its officers and trustees. Its scholarship selection committee picks recipients by examining their SAT scores, grade-point averages, portfolios, letters of recommendation, and application essays.

GCSF also provides advisement, mentoring, internships and work-study opportunities for students enrolled in graphic studies degree programs at Pratt Institute, New York University, Rhode Island School of Design, The School of Visual Arts, and Carnegie Mellon University, among other institutions. (See video.)

As Pantone’s national sales manager, McDowell has spearheaded that company’s steadfast support for GCSF since its earliest days. In his acceptance remarks, he told the student recipients that in order to stand out among the 720,000 graphic designers now at work in North America, they would have to work hard at building their portfolios, their reputations, and their brands.

“Become lifelong learners,” he said, “and be sure to be proud of your work.” McDowell also urged the recipients to “network, network, network” at the many industry meetings and events where participation by students is welcome.

David Luke (left), president of GCSF, congratulates Matthew McDowell (Pantone Inc.) on his receipt of the foundation’s Champion of Education Award.

“Bill made it happen,” said Mark Darlow, a GCSF founder and trustee, of Dirzulaitis’s leadership in getting the foundation off the ground. Accepting his service award, Dirzulaitis—a president of the New York metro area’s principal trade association for 15 years—said that one of the drivers was the realization that while the industry was changing rapidly, its traditional workforce was aging at the same pace.

Meeting in borrowed space and keeping handwritten records on tablets (the paper kind), the founders raised and distributed $5,000 worth of grants in the first year. They also consolidated a number of existing scholarship funds that were not being actively managed. Since then, said Dirzulaitis, who served as the foundation’s first treasurer, GCSF has raised more than a half a million dollars to underwrite industry education.

Bill Dirzulaitis (left), founding treasurer of GCSF, accepts a Service Award from GCSF trustee Mark Darlow.

GCSF’s present slate of officers includes David Luke (president), Steve Kennedy (vice president), Ellen F. Hurwitch (second vice president), Jerry Mandelbaum (treasurer), Nick Patrissi (secretary), and Richard Krasner (immediate past president). The foundation (www.gcscholarships.org) may be followed on Twitter as @GCSF1.

Dwight E. Vicks, III to Receive John Peter Zenger Medal at Franklin Event

Dwight W. Vicks, III, President of Vicks Lithograph & Printing (Yorkville, NY) has been named by the Printing Industries Alliance’s Franklin Committee as recipient of the John Peter Zenger Medal at its 60th Franklin Event celebration on September 19, 2012 at The Lighthouse at Chelsea Piers (5:30-10:00 pm).

The Zenger Medal, by an open-industry nomination process, is awarded to an individual employed in the graphic communications industry within New York, northern New Jersey and northwestern Pennsylvania who has exemplified outside of his or her professional role exemplary character in the form of selfless courage, charity, activism or service.

Mr. Vicks was nominated for his work in supporting thyroid cancer research including the establishment of the International Thyroid Oncology Group (ITOG). which Dwight serves as Treasurer and Secretary. His wife, Jean, was diagnosed with medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) in 1999, when very little was known about this rare form of cancer and afflicted individuals were faced with few options.

His personal investigation of the disease uncovered little information about it, and the doctors and medical facilities that were trying to develop treatment protocols were scarce and geographically dispersed. Dwight then decided to cut back on his industry and community involvement and devote all his time, energy and resources to thyroid cancer.  In 2005, he resigned his position as Treasurer of Printing Industries of America, even though there was an excellent probability that he would have been elevated at some point to its Chairmanship.

Through contact with the physicians and institutions, he was able to bring this small medical community together in regular informal meetings to discuss treatment options and clinical trials. In 2007, Dwight was the driving force behind the establishment of ITOG, a non-profit organization comprised of endocrinologists, oncologists, thyroid surgeons and radiation specialists from North America, Europe and Australia. As of this date, the ITOG membership consists of over 50 of the world’s leading physicians and research scientists who focus on the treatment of thyroid cancer that has metastasized outside the thyroid gland.

In 2011, Dwight was named by Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, one of the top cancer facilities in America, as a member of “The One Hundred” for his unflagging optimism.  He has quietly and singlehandedly raised over $500,000 in the race for an MTC cure and subsequently started a broader fundraising effort called “Team Jean” which is already halfway to its goal of raising an additional $500,000 in 2012 and anticipates a similar target in 2013.

For more information on how to contribute to “Team Jean” or to register for the Franklin Event, contact either PIA President Tim Freeman (tfreeman@PIAlliance.org, (716-691-3211) or Vice President Vicki Keenan (vkeenan@PIAlliance.org, (908-233-4124).