2026 LAS Alumni Award honorees represent achievement and commitment
Kayleigh Rahn
June 11, 2026
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Marchoe Northern
(Image provided by Marchoe Northern.)

Marchoe Northern’s journey to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign began with two goals. She wanted to play Division I women’s basketball and pursue a world-class education. At Illinois, she found both. 

Her experience in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences became the foundation for a lifelong commitment to learning and leadership. For her incredible impact, Northern (BS, ’97, chemical engineering) was one of seven individuals recognized during the 2026 College of LAS Alumni Award ceremony.  

As a small forward for the Illinois women’s basketball team, Northern balanced the intense demands of athletics with the rigor of chemical engineering coursework. Coaches like Theresa Grentz helped shape her mindset beyond the court. 

Before a tournament on the West Coast, Grentz had the team rehearse what it would feel like to win. So, Grentz set up a ladder under the hoop. The women calmly lined up shortest to tallest and cut down the net, and graciously shaking the other team’s hands, practicing a tournament championship.  

“When we won that weekend, we did exactly as we were told,” she said. “We held our composure, cut down the net, and went to the locker room. But you could not contain the noise and excitement once we were together in that locker room. This was a great lesson I share with teams even today. Envision success. Show up expecting to give your best and have that success.” 

That discipline was equally critical in the classroom. Raised in the Detroit area by a single mother, Northern had long been drawn to science and math. Early exposure to engineering through programs and internships solidified her interest. At Illinois, she navigated a unique academic path with the Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, which is rooted in LAS while engaging with the Grainger College of Engineering. Rather than seeing this as a complication, she embraced it as an opportunity. 

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basketball players on the court
(Image provided by Marchoe Northern.)

“With this program, I got the best of both worlds,” she said. LAS provided breadth with courses from chemistry to political science and beyond while engineering sharpened her technical and analytical skills. This interdisciplinary experience became central to her lifelong learning. It wasn’t just about mastering one field; it was about finding a way to learn across many. 

Northern’s involvement on campus extended beyond academics and athletics. She was active in programs like the Minority in Engineering Program and the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers. 

Now, she has worked for nearly three decades at Procter & Gamble. Starting as a process engineer in manufacturing just weeks after graduation, Northern steadily expanded her expertise. She earned an MBA, transitioned into marketing, and eventually earned senior leadership roles, including global assignments in Switzerland and executive positions in North America. Today she is the president of Procter & Gamble’s Fabric Care, North America business, leading the company’s largest category and most iconic brands, including Tide, Downy, and Gain. Northern was named one of the 2022 Ad Age’s Leading Women, is a member of The American Chemistry Council Board, and the University of Illinois Foundation. 

At P&G, she has worked across multiple business units, from oral care to home care, applying her foundation in chemical engineering to a variety of contexts. “It doesn’t feel like the same job every day,” she said. “It’s been about continuing to grow, learn, and stay relevant.” 

That adaptability is more important than ever in a rapidly evolving world, headlined by the increasing complexity of reaching consumers in the digital age. While technologies, especially AI applications, enable unprecedented efficiency, she emphasized that human creativity and judgment remain essential. Finding the balance between innovation and authenticity is a form of continuous learning, she said. 

Looking back, Northern sees her time at Illinois, particularly within LAS, as her training ground, and today, Northern’s focus has shifted toward developing others. She is deeply committed to mentoring the next generation of leaders and ensuring that opportunities continue for those who follow. For her, mentoring is about contributing to a legacy, fostering curiosity, resilience, and interdisciplinary thinking. 

“I didn’t just want to do something for myself with my career,” she said. “I wanted to turn around, look to others, and give back. It doesn’t happen by just wanting it, but in providing access to opportunity. Talent is universal but access isn’t.”

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LAS alumni council members with award recipients
Pictured from left are LAS Alumni Council member Karen Shafer, alumni honorees Micki Kendall, Connie Frank, LAS Dean Venetria Patton, alumni honorees Kalia Coleman, Sasha Ebrahimi, Marchoe Northern, and LAS Alumni Council member Luis Narvaez.

The 2026 College of LAS alumni award honorees were recognized during a banquet in April. Other honorees included:

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awardee portraits
(Images provided.)

Alumni Achievement Award

Rosemary A. Joyce   

PhD, ’85, anthropology

Rosemary A. Joyce is an international voice in contemporary debates, politics, and ethics in anthropology and archaeology focusing on Mexico and Central America. Through field research in Honduras and more recently in Mexico, Joyce has examined “the way things make people and people make things” in the context of social histories, gender, and inequality. She is a professor of anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. 

 

Alumni Achievement Award

Mikki Kendall   

BA, ’05, history

Mikki Kendall is a writer, diversity consultant, and public speaker, who has been invited to PBS News, NPR, the Chicago Public Library, the American Library in Paris, WGN, and WNYC. She is the New York Times-bestselling author of “Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women that a Movement Forgot” and has published essays around the world.  

 

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awardee portraits
(Images provided.)

Humanitarian Award  

Connie Frank   

BA, ’65, English

Connie Frank has created a history of extraordinary civic leadership and philanthropic vision across education, the arts, community well-being, and medicine, having established transplant clinics at UCSF and UCLA. Frank envisioned the University of Illinois’ Connie Frank CARE Center as a vital resource for students in need of guidance, advocacy, and support. The center is a hub for students to find individualized non-clinical case management, basic needs support, assistance with problem-solving, and access to emergency resources in times of distress or crisis.

 

Outstanding Young Alumni Award

Kalia Coleman   

BA, ’07, political science

Kalia Coleman has worked throughout her career to promote diversity and equality in the legal system. Coleman is a former federal prosecutor who is now partner at a law firm. She was named one of the Top Women in Law by the Law Bulletin Media and JTB 5 under 40. Coleman serves on the board of directors for Legal Prep Charter Academy and Youth Guidance and as a leadership advisory committee member for the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

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awardee portraits
(Images provided.)

Outstanding Young Alumni Award

Sasha Ebrahimi   

BS, ’16, chemical engineering

Sasha Ebrahimi has garnered a strong reputation in research and mentoring as a scientific leader at GSK within the emerging drug delivery platforms team. His breakthrough research in the field of antibody drug conjugates, oligonucleotide-based therapeutics, and diagnostic tools to detect clinical markers of disease has led to distinctive awards and honors including the American Institute of Chemical Engineers 35 Under 35 in 2023 and the Wunderkind award from STAT News in 2024.

 

LAS  Dean’s Quadrangle Award

The LAS Dean’s Quadrangle Award was inaugurated in 2000 to honor extraordinary friends of the college. Honorees have demonstrated profound support for the college’s diverse mission and personified the unique benefits and responsibilities that define a liberal arts and sciences education.

Norman Whitten

Norman Whitten is a professor emeritus of the Department of Anthropology whose leadership, scholarship, and gifts have had a lasting impact on the college. Through his previous roles as head of anthropology, director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and curator at the Spurlock Museum,  Whitten strengthened interdisciplinary research, enriched teaching, and expanded cultural resources for LAS students and faculty. His lifetime of generosity has helped sustain programs that enrich learning and scholarship across the college.

Editor's note: This story first appeared in the Spring 2026 issue of The Quadrangle.

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