Crookston, Minn. - The highest honor given by the University of Minnesota, Crookston
will recognize three individuals and an organization who have provided
leadership and aided in the development of the U of M, Crookston, the Northwest Research and Outreach Center (NWROC), and Extension. This year's recognition will be held on Wednesday, November 4, 2009, and marks
the first time an organization has received the award.
Recipients of the 2009 Torch
& Shield Award are:

Orlyn
Miller has worked for the University of Minnesota for 22 years
and is currently director of
planning and architecture. He plays a major role in the development and
management of the capital planning and budgeting processes at the university.
For the past two decades, he has provided assistance on capital planning and
campus planning issues at the Crookston campus including Bergland Laboratory,
Early Childhood Development Center, Kiehle Hall renovation, Student Center, and
the two most recent residence halls, Evergreen and Centennial. Prior to his
work at the university, Miller was a member of a landscape
architectural/engineering firm, where he obtained broad experience in strategic
planning, project design, project management and governmental relations. Miller
and his wife, Sharon, have two children and four grandchildren.

Jim
Sims
was head football coach at the U of M, Crookston from 1976-1995. During his
tenure, the U of M, Crookston Technical College won three division team
championships, and he was named division coach of the year twice. Sims taught
health, physical education, and recreation and was the program manager for two
years. He went on to serve as the co-curricular activities director for the
high school in Thief River Falls, Minn., until he retired in 2007. In 2002,
Sims was inducted into the U of M, Crookston's Athletic Hall of Fame, and in
2008, he was inducted into the Minnesota High School Football Coaches
Association Hall of Fame. Sims, and his wife, Sharon, have two children and
three grandchildren.

Erma
J. Vizenor, Ph.D., was elected as the chairwoman of the White Earth
Reservation in 2004 and is the first woman to lead the largest tribe in
Minnesota. As chairwoman, she represents all districts on the White Earth
Reservation. Vizenor has worked her entire career in education on the White
Earth Reservation. She holds an undergraduate degree in elementary education;
a master's degree in guidance and counseling; and a specialist degree in education
administration from Minnesota State University Moorhead. A Bush
Leadership fellowship gave her the opportunity to earn a master's degree in
community decision-making and lifelong learning; and a doctoral degree in
administration, planning, and social policy from Harvard University.
Vizenor has two daughters and four grandchildren.

The Crookston Daily Times has roots dating back
to 1885 and was locally owned until 1972. It is currently owned by GateHouse
Media, a Fairport, New York-based company that owns approximately 500
media properties. The Times' operation also consists of the Valley
Shopper and the Halstad Shopper. The Times itself is widely
considered to be the smallest daily newspaper in Minnesota, and one of the
smallest dailies in the nation. The paper publishes Monday through Friday and
is a rarity in the business in that it goes to press in the afternoon and is
delivered in the afternoon. With eight full-time staff members, the staff at
the Times includes Publisher Randal Hultgren and newsroom staff
consisting of Managing Editor Mike Christopherson, City Editor Natalie J.
Ostgaard, and Sports Editor Derek Martin. Through a program with the Carl and
Eloise Pohlad Foundation and the Minnesota Newspaper Association, the Times
is also able to employ a Crookston High School student as an intern each
summer. Also, this school year, through the School to Work program in Fisher, a
Fisher High School senior Nickole Wurden is currently spending two hours each
morning in the newsroom.
The Torch & Shield Award presentation takes place in
conjunction with the U of M, Crookston's annual donor recognition. The Torch
& Shield Award was first presented in 1966 when it was initiated by Crookston
campus Founding Provost Stanley Sahlstrom. For more information on Torch &
Shield, visit www.umcrookston.edu/alumni/TorchShieldRecipients.htm.
Today the University of
Minnesota, Crookston delivers more than 25 applied-science undergraduate degree
programs and 50 concentrations, including several online degrees, in
agriculture; arts, humanities and social sciences; business; math, science and
technology; and natural resources. To learn more, visit www.UMCrookston.edu.
Contact: Corby Kemmer, director, development and alumni relations, 218-281-8434 (ckemmer@umn.edu); Elizabeth Tollefson, assistant director of communications, 218-281-8432 (ltollefs@umn.edu)