Juniata

Magazine of Juniata College
Spring 2026

photo of George Fattman '58
photo of George Fattman '58

Juniata

Magazine of Juniata College • Spring 2026

Letters to My First-Year Self

Sharing what they wish they knew then, alummi pen letters to their younger selves

On the cover: George Fattman '58

Digital Exclusive: Behind the Cover

Letters to My First-Year Self

Sharing what they wish they knew then, alummi pen letters to their younger selves

illustrative 150th anniversary mark

A Legacy Lived Through Generations

At the heart of Juniata’s 150th Jubilee, celebrated on April 23, 2026, was a defining idea: Juniata is not just a place, but people who embody a set of values. Five Juniatians from across the generations brought that truth to life, each reflecting the College’s enduring mission to prepare students for lives of purpose, meaning, and impact. Phoebe Norris, Class of 1879, transformed opportunity into care, becoming one of the first women physicians of her time. Nancy Slaughter Lee, Class of 1932, forged a path where none existed, carrying the hopes of her family into a life of teaching, making an impact on young minds. William Phillips, Class of 1970, guided by curiosity, pursued discovery to its highest level as a Nobel Prize–winning physicist. Greg Anderson, Class of 1999, reimagined success through community, building connection over commerce. Jahnavi Patel, Class of 2026, represents the global, forward-looking spirit of today’s students, bridging cultures and disciplines. Together, their stories illustrate a legacy not simply remembered, but continuously made — an investment, compounding across 150 years, in those who ask more, reach further, and ultimately say: I am Juniata.

illustrative 150th anniversary mark
Norris
Slaughter
Phillips
Anderson
Patel

A Legacy Lived Through Generations

At the heart of Juniata’s 150th Jubilee, celebrated on April 23, 2026, was a defining idea: Juniata is not just a place, but people who embody a set of values. Five Juniatians from across the generations brought that truth to life, each reflecting the College’s enduring mission to prepare students for lives of purpose, meaning, and impact. Phoebe Norris, Class of 1879, transformed opportunity into care, becoming one of the first women physicians of her time. Nancy Slaughter Lee, Class of 1932, forged a path where none existed, carrying the hopes of her family into a life of teaching, making an impact on young minds. William Phillips, Class of 1970, guided by curiosity, pursued discovery to its highest level as a Nobel Prize–winning physicist. Greg Anderson, Class of 1999, reimagined success through community, building connection over commerce. Jahnavi Patel, Class of 2026, represents the global, forward-looking spirit of today’s students, bridging cultures and disciplines. Together, their stories illustrate a legacy not simply remembered, but continuously made — an investment, compounding across 150 years, in those who ask more, reach further, and ultimately say: I am Juniata.

Spring 2026

Juniata
College
Magazine

Recurring

Living & Learning

Campus news and athletics, plus the voices of faculty, students, and alumni

Forever Juniata

Alumni news, events, class notes, profiles, and remembrances
  • Then & Now
    One small class, generations of Juniata graduates to follow
  • I Met an Alum
    Finding each other, all over the world
  • Parting Shot
    Serving Together: Students roll up their sleeves for MLK Day, giving back alongside local firefighters

Cover Stories

illustration of hands with binary code in the background

Rooted and Rising

As Juniata concludes its year-long sesquicentennial celebration, our gaze shifts to the future and the continuing stories of people, place, and purpose.

Features

photo of mlk day of service

Field Notes

Juniata observes a day on, not a day off
photo of yearbook clippings

Letters to My First-Year Self

Sharing what they wish they knew then, alumni pen letters to their younger selves
photo of President Troha left double quote graphic Dear Friends,

As we complete our year of celebration, Juniata’s 150th anniversary has offered many opportunities to honor the legacy of learning, sustained by the generations who followed, while also reflecting on who we are today and where we are headed.

In this issue, you will read how Juniata is engaging generative artificial intelligence tools thoughtfully and intentionally. Our faculty and students are exploring these tools not as substitutes for thinking, but as resources that must be guided by judgment, creativity, and ethical reflection. This work reflects a broader commitment to preparing graduates who are not only technologically capable, but also critically aware and socially responsible.

That same shared spirit of purpose is reflected throughout these pages, from students pursuing excellence in the classroom and in their communities to faculty and alumni whose work extends Juniata’s values far beyond campus. Just as the Class of 1915 created the College’s first yearbook to stay connected with one another and with Juniata, today’s students navigate a digital landscape with the same intention. Across 150 years, the College has remained rooted in purpose: to help students learn how to think, how to engage with others, and how to lead with integrity.

Thank you for being part of this continuing story. Together, we honor the values that define Juniata while embracing the opportunities that will shape its future.

James A. Troha, PH.D., President left double quote graphic

Digital Exclusive: Behind the Cover

From concept to camera: combining human sketches and AI to fast-track photo direction before stepping behind the lens.

By Tracy Kretz, Executive Director of Strategic Marketing and Brand Design

The photograph on a magazine cover is the first handshake with the reader. Getting it right matters — and that work starts long before Nate Ulrich photographs our subjects.

My process always begins with sketches. Black Paper Mate® Flair pen, dozens of concepts, no attachment to any of them — but maybe a little intuition as to which is going to be successful. At this stage, I’m not thinking about surface details. I’m focused on the shape of the idea.

From there, I move into rough digital compositions to test the concepts visually. Earlier in my career, this phase could cost hours — sometimes days — of compositing stock photography or staging reference shoots to communicate a direction. While a refined sketch may be useful to start the conversation, I’ve found that higher-fidelity mockups create better discussion. People react more strongly to something they can see than to something they must imagine.

One discipline I’ve built into my process: I try not to make concepts too real too early. An overly finished mockup can anchor people to details that won’t survive the final photography or storytelling. The goal at this stage is traction, not polish. In this case, the AI generated image was more polished than I intended, but it did the job.

For the Spring 2026 issue, the MarCom team decided to lead with “Letters to My First-Year Self” — alumni writing to their younger selves about what they wish they’d known. The story is deeply human and nostalgic, and that’s where I started. I pulled phrases, themes, and emotional cues directly from the letters and used them as creative ideation prompts.

Rather than spending days building traditional composites or staging photo shoots, I used a workflow using AI image generation. The direction was entirely human: built from my sketches, references, and art direction vocabulary. AI accelerated the visualization.

The exploratory mockups took just over an hour — from prompt architecture to image generation. Using traditional compositing methods (for multiple concepts) would have taken days. Beyond the time savings, this technique changed what was possible in the room — the team could react to ideas earlier, refine direction faster, and align around a concept with clarity. Below, I’ll review how I generated the selected winning cover concept.

The Tool and Prompts

I started by talking it out (voice-to-text, stream of consciousness), then tightened the transcript and used ChatGPT to convert it into a polished image prompt for rapid prototyping.

Prompt:
Create a photorealistic, editorial-style magazine cover photograph in a vertical 8x10 (4:5) aspect ratio, matching the composition in the sketch (masthead area at top, subject centered/left, open space on the right for cover lines). Use the attached reference image for composition direction.

A Caucasian man in his 70s stands facing the camera from the waist up. He has short gray hair, glasses, and a warm, proud smile — the expression of someone reflecting positively on the education that shaped his life. He wears a solid navy blue polo shirt (no visible logos).

He is holding a large, ornate gold picture frame with a wide, decorative border. His hands/arms are positioned from the bottom of the frame, holding it close to his torso (secure, natural grip; frame centered in the lower third of the image). The frame is in color and clearly detailed.

Inside the frame is a black-and-white yearbook portrait of the same person as a first-year student — a younger version that resembles him closely (matching facial structure, recognizable eyes/smile). The yearbook portrait is a classic school photo: head-and-shoulders, simple backdrop, slightly vintage tone, but still crisp enough to read as a formal yearbook image.

Background: softly blurred (shallow depth of field), calm and not visually busy — a neutral indoor or campus-adjacent setting with subtle, indistinct shapes/colors. Lighting is soft and flattering, natural feeling, with clean, realistic skin tones. Color grade should feel warm, optimistic, and modern (true-to-life, not overly stylized).

Cover/layout constraints (important):

  • Leave clear negative space on the right side for typography (cover lines), without distracting objects.
  • Keep the subject’s head below the top safe area to allow for a masthead.
  • No text, no watermarks, no extra people, no duplicated frames, no distorted hands or warped borders.

Sketch Ideation and Reference Images

The Results


This image is one of three concepts presented to the team. It was the winning direction.

What you’re seeing side by side tells the story: an AI-generated composite used to align stakeholders on a concept, and the actual photograph that came out of the photoshoot. The resemblance to the original conceptual intent isn’t a coincidence — that alignment was the goal from the start.

The composite didn’t just win the room — it went to work. I used it to brief Nate Ulrich before the photoshoot, giving him something concrete to react to rather than a verbal description to interpret. He could see the framing, the mood, the compositional intent. We even shared it directly with George Fattman ’58 so he understood what we were building toward before he stepped in front of the lens.

That’s the value of this workflow, and it isn’t really about speed. Speed is a byproduct. What this process creates is clarity, agency, and trust. The creative team moves with shared understanding. The subject walks into the photoshoot, knowing what we’re after. The stakeholders have already reacted, refined, and committed. The mockup doesn’t just accelerate the process — it builds the conditions for better work.

What this process reinforced for me is that creativity is not simply making images, it is making meaning. Meaning, both in the crafting and interpretation, require judgment, emotion, and intent. AI can accelerate the process, but it cannot make the work matter. That is and will always be rooted deeply in human creativity.

photo of flags hanging from Founders Hall

Place

Outside Founders Hall, flags mark 150 years of education, integrity, and service at Juniata College.

Place

Outside Founders Hall, flags mark 150 years of education, integrity, and service at Juniata College.

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