Fall 2009 Huntingdon College Magazine

Transcription

Fall 2009 Huntingdon College Magazine
Huntingdon
C o l l e g e
M a g a z i n e
Fall/Winter 2009 — Donor Report Issue
Huntingdon’s
Legacies
Message
from the President
What is your legacy? What will you hand down to your successors in your
family, at work, or, in a broad sense, to humankind?
Huntingdon College Magazine
Fall, 2009, Volume 88, Number 1
As we conclude the observance of Huntingdon’s 100th year in Montgomery, we have thought a great deal about the College’s legacies. We’ve
thought about the beautiful Collegiate Gothic buildings and the campus
designed by Frederick Law Olmsted; but as lovely as our campus is, our
legacy is far more than bricks and mortar. Huntingdon’s legacies lie in the
faculty and staff who have purposed their lives to inspire young minds to go
forth, and in the students and alumni who have done so, applying wisdom
in service to our world. Most importantly, our legacies are the ideals of Faith,
Wisdom, and Service by which this college has existed since its founding.
Chair, Board of Trustees
David Hudson Jr. ’81
President
J. Cameron West
Vice President for External Affairs
Anthony Leigh
Editor, Huntingdon College Magazine
Associate Vice President for
Communications and Marketing
Suellen Sellars Ofe
For this issue, we chose to write about two academic legacies that have
moved forward by giant steps this year: our music program (page 6), and
our legacy of liberal arts education (page 4), which is continuing in our
Quality Enhancement Plan, ACT: the Art of Critical Thinking. Of course, for
colleges and universities, the term “legacies” often refers to students who
enroll where one or both of their parents studied. We uncovered numerous
stories like that—some of which you can read in the Class Notes section of
this magazine.
Magazine Contributors
Kelsey Loftin ’11, Tim Lutz
Webmaster, Director of Publications
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05
And then there are the friends of Huntingdon who have so generously contributed to the life of the mind through their monetary support—so many
that they can’t all be mentioned here—which makes it fitting that the Donor Report is included in this issue.
Director of Alumni Advancement
and the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships
Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86
Director of the Huntingdon Society
Marilyn Boswell
Today, 156 years after our founding and 100 years after our move to Montgomery, Huntingdon still devotes itself to the education of the young people in this region within the United Methodist tradition of liberal arts. Indeed,
John Wesley is quoted as saying, “Think and let think.” Let it be so.
Director of Development Operations
Cathy Wolfe
For the College,
Director of Young Alumni Advancement
EmilyBeth Dickinson ’06
Huntingdon College Magazine
is published by the Office of Communications,
Huntingdon College.
J. Cameron West
For change of address, please write the
Office of Alumni Advancement, Huntingdon
College, 1500 East Fairview Avenue,
Montgomery, Alabama 36106.
Magazine Design
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05
Anthony Leigh
President West with L-R, Emily
Webster Cosgrove ’07; President West’s daughter, Grace
West; and Jenny Miller ’06,
outside the President’s Box
at the Homecoming football
game in October.
Phone: (334) 833-4564 or 1-877-567ALUM
E-mail: [email protected].
Web: http://www.huntingdon.edu
Printing
Davis Direct
Su Ofe
Contributed
Contents
2
1
Features
Huntingdon’s Legacies
4 ACT: Continuing the Legacy of Liberal Arts
6 And the Beat Goes On: A Legacy of Music
8 A Legacy of Involvement
10 Snapshots of Lives Changed: A Legacy of Travel/Study
9 Commencement Recap
Departments
1
12
20
63
President’s Message
Huntingdon Happenings
Class Notes
Coming Events
2008–09 Donor Report
42 Donor Report
1. Travel-study gives students a taste of the world
(page 10)
2. Dr. Frank Buckner co-chairs an initiative that
equips students to “Think Better” (page 4)
3. Emily White ’09 delivers the Graduate Address
at Commencement 2009 (page 9)
4. Freshmen find the newly refurbished Ligon Hall
is a comfortable home-away-from-home
(page 12)
5. The marching band has introduced
a symphony of new sounds to the music
department (page 6)
Front Cover: (L-R) Meggie and Claire Bridges, both
members of the Class of 2011, are members of a
legacy family (page 27). Photo by Su Ofe.
Back Cover: Neal Posey III ’13, grandson of Huntingdon’s first athletic director and the man responsible for planting the seed for intercollegiate athletics at the College, Neal Posey, and
his wife, Jean Strawn Posey ’70, poses in front of the scoreboard that reflects his name
and his namesake. Neal’s legacy family is listed on page 28. Photo by Su Ofe.
“It is not so very important for a person to
learn facts. For that he does not need a
college. He can learn them from books.
The value of an education in a liberal arts
college is not learning of many facts, but
training of the mind to think something
that cannot be learned from textbooks.”
—Albert Einstein
When the Class of 2014 enters Huntingdon
College in the fall of 2010, their learning
experiences will be different from those
of their peers by virtue of more than just
timing and personalities. A new curriculum will begin next fall—one that centers
on the acquisition and application of the
powerful skill of critical thinking. These curricular changes are part of the Art of Critical Thinking (ACT), Huntingdon’s Quality
Enhancement Plan (QEP), developed
in response to a new requirement for
regional accreditation from the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools, and
designed to help students become rational and fair-minded critical thinkers who
can think actively, read closely, and write
substantively about significant issues.
Most people would agree that the world
could use a hefty dose of critical thinking skills. From the baker who was told to
decorate a cake with Olympic rings and
promptly wrote “Olympic Rings” in cursive
on the cake, to the journalist who wrote
the headline, “Federal Agents Raid Gun
Shop, Find Weapons,” all one need do is
watch the Monday “Jay Leno Show” or
Google “stupid headlines” for evidence of
the need to stop and think things through
before proceeding on a task, solving a
problem, or making an argument.
The teaching of critical thinking fits naturally in a liberal arts setting. From liberal arts
colleges’ earliest beginnings, the method
of educating has been wide exposure
to a broad range of subjects in order to
train the mind how to think and how to
learn—to inspire and support the life of
the mind so as to equip thinkers for lifelong learning. But, somewhere between
medieval times and now, the emphasis
of mind-training became diluted, and the
tendency for teachers to, for example,
require that students recite a chronological list of the European monarchy instead
of understanding the cause and effect of
the ideas that drove the major developments of each monarchy, became the
norm.
Enter Robert B. Barr and John Tagg, of
Palomar College (Calif.), whose seminal article in 1995, “A New Paradigm for
Undergraduate Education,” is still sending
ripples to educational shorelines nearly 15
years later. They contend that colleges
must shift from an “instruction paradigm”
to a “learning paradigm,” and that students, rather than being lectured to, must
be active in their learning—even to the
point of teaching each other—in order
to be fully engaged in the educational
experience.
Huntingdon’s 10-year accreditation review is this fall, and one of the components
of that review process, as for all regionally
accredited colleges, is a required Quality
Enhancement Plan, or QEP. The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools’
directives about the QEP are that it must
address the quality of students’ education and that results must be measurable.
Huntingdon faculty and administrators first
chose an emphasis on students’ first year
experience, later honed to an emphasis
on critical thinking, as the subject of the
College’s QEP. The choice grew from a
variety of factors, all of which pointed to
a need to change students’ minds about
the reasons for, expectations about, and
benefits of higher education so that they
could embrace and appreciate the
power they obtain inherently by learning
how to think.
To that end, three members of Huntingdon’s QEP Working Committee, co-chair
Dr. Frank Buckner, professor of religion
and philosophy; Dr. Kyle Fedler, vice
Dr. Chad Eggleston, assistant professor of
religion, conducts a study session for the
Hebrew Scriptures course.
Anthony Leigh
of Liberal Arts
Continuing the Legacy
ACT: The Art of
Critical Thinking
Su Ofe
to re-enter the core requirements next
year, as well.
For an educational experience to be
effective, it must constantly evolve as the
world changes and new sets of people,
who have developed new mind-sets
because of the world they have been
part of, enter it. Buckner sees critical thinking as an over-arching skill that transcends
changing times and minds. “If we do the
class correctly, students will realize that
critical thinking is power,” says Buckner.
“What we’re asking [students] to do is to
join a new community. We’re saying that
it’s not the opinion you hold, it’s the argument you supply to back your opinion that
matters.”
president for academic affairs and dean
of faculty; and co-chair Dr. James Truman,
assistant professor of English, attended the
International Conference on Critical Thinking in California last summer. There, they
learned best practice scenarios and ways
of teaching this important skill.
Symposium (LAS) classes were or the First
Year Experience course is, it will be about
training for a skill that will help you throughout the remainder of the curriculum, and
throughout life,” says Buckner, who has
been a faculty member at Huntingdon
since 1987.
Marketed internally under the phrase,
“Think Better,” the implementation of critical thinking training at Huntingdon will be
three-fold. To begin, first-year students will
take the course, PACT: Practicing the Art
of Critical Thinking. Replacing courses that
are now English 103 and First Year Experience 101, PACT’s intent hearkens back to
the original purpose of a liberal arts education: to train the mind to learn and to
think. Classes will be kept small—20 students or less—to facilitate class discussion.
A great deal of writing will be required, in
order to train students to synthesize their
thoughts with appropriate words. Critical
Thinking Intensive courses will then pepper
the remainder of the core curriculum in
Phase II, culminating in a Senior Capstone
experience, Phase III.
LAS, part of the core curriculum from 1996
through 2003, was a series of three discussion-based courses that replaced the previous requirements for religion and speech
courses. In 2004, the College replaced LAS
with three required religion courses and a
new course, the First Year Experience, or
FYEx, which introduced students to issues
they would face in college, such as time
management, study skills, and the Honor
Code. “What the LAS students had was
the commonality of a shared experience,
which affected retention, and the ability, after three courses in which class discussion and close reading of important
texts was paramount, to read closely and
to think critically about what they were
reading. PACT will use shorter readings but
the same discussion-based pedagogy
and will require that students participate
in their learning through group projects,
writing assignments, and even teaching
each other on certain subjects.” Buckner
added that he expects a speech course
Buckner says that critical thinking will
then become the spine of the curriculum. “The PACT course, for example, will
not be about content, as the Liberal Arts
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Dr. Kyle Fedler, vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty, sports
a shirt with the ACT slogan: “Think Better.”
Su Ofe
Most Huntingdon faculty are already well-versed in discussion-based pedagogy. Here Dr.
Jennifer Fremlin, associate professor of English, teaches a first-year English class.
Heath Miller ’10, a biology major from
Guntersville, Alabama, is volunteering his
time to get the word out about ACT. “I
think that the new curriculum will not only
give students the knowledge they need to
succeed in their prospective career fields,
but also give them the ability to think and
to analyze solutions for themselves,” says
Miller. “Learning is about more than just
regurgitating facts back to a professor.
Learning is about taking facts that you
are taught, applying them to situations
you are in, and making logical and wellthought decisions that apply to the problems that you face. I think that the Art of
Critical Thinking initiative will produce
more well-rounded students who are then
better able to position themselves in a
competitive job market.”
5
Su Ofe
A Legacy of Music
A walk through Smith Music Building
reminds one of being a guest at a musical smorgasbord. From various rooms, the
banquet of sounds includes a barbershop
quartet blending tenor, baritone, and bass
voices; world-respected pianist Dr. Vadim
Serebryany teaching a Brahms piece;
Pedro Luis Mayor ’02, on piano, and tuba
player Julian McGuire ’13 (Music/Biology;
Montgomery, Ala.) marrying a bass line to
a jazz tune; and a voice student practicing Italian diction to perfect an aria. Percussion, brass, and woodwinds roar and
thump from the front lawn as the marching band rehearses. In nearby Flowers Hall,
swells of organ music sway the steeple as
professor of music emeritus Dr. Harald Rohlig, an icon at Huntingdon since 1954, plays
the magnificent organ he designed.
Since Huntingdon’s earliest days, music
has filtered through the cracks and crevices of practice rooms to kiss the ears
of the college community, and performances have brought neighbors, friends,
and enthusiasts to campus. Classical training is at the heart of the major. In all of
these ways, music at Huntingdon today
is much like its beginning years. But stride
through Smith Music Building and listen
more closely. What’s different about the
Huntingdon music of today is the diversity.
Once a department of only voice and
piano majors, the College now has percussion, woodwinds, brass, piano, voice,
and a classical guitar major. In addition,
a much wider aggregate of students who
are majoring in other areas but who participate in music activities that include
choir, marching band, barbershop, concert band, pep band, and indoor percussion, is served and enriched by this ambitious and talented music faculty.
At the heart of the program stands Gene
Davis, department chair and a member
of the faculty since 2007, with 30 years of
choral directing and teaching in Montgomery public schools and community
choirs under her baton. She heads 16
music faculty, five of whom are full-time.
Master classes and workshops enhance
teaching and learning in the department.
Su Ofe
And the Beat Goes On
The Huntingdon First Scarlet & Grey Marching Band has boosted a new era of musical
diversity in the Department of Music.
Like any art form, music is arguably equal
parts joy, work, passion, expression, and
talent. The Department of Music, which
maintains its accreditation through the
National Association of Schools of Music
(NASM) as well as through the College’s
regional accreditation agency, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
(SACS), offers a Bachelor of Arts in Music
and P–12 teacher certification in both
instrumental and choral music. In recent
years, new faculty have not only filled positions created by retirements and vacancies, but have also brought a passion for
the joy and expression of music, and not
just the work of it.
Last year, the addition of Dr. Vadim Serebryany catapulted Huntingdon’s piano
instruction to a new level. An artist who
performs all over the world, Serebryany
has brought piano instruction with pizzazz.
“He’s witty, focused, playful, and passionate in his approach to music and in
his instruction—and he just plain loves to
teach,” says Davis. He stokes his own passion by putting fingers to keys in concert
appearances throughout the world. This
summer, he was the only pianist among
an international faculty representing the
world’s best symphony orchestras teaching and performing throughout Japan.
He appears regularly with a cellist and
violinist in a group they call Trio +, and
with Huntingdon faculty and music graduates in free recitals for the Montgomery
community.
Su Ofe
Eleven part-time instructors focus their
talents on those who want to master
expertise on their respective instruments.
Whether full- or part-time, faculty motivation is the same, says Davis. “It’s straight
from the heart. All of us love music, and all
of us love teaching, and we want to give
that passion to every student.”
Gene Davis is the chair of the
Department of Music.
The rest of the full-time faculty quintet includes Dr. Jennifer Canfield, who
entered the score this year, bringing
expertise in choral music education. She
also teaches some of the department’s
church music courses. Harold Blankenship,
who heads the marching band, has many
years of experience teaching and directing bands in public schools, which means
he knows nearly everyone in the business.
His forte is recruiting. Dr. Dennis Herrick,
professor of music and a member of the
faculty since 1988, leads the trumpet section for the Montgomery Symphony and
can usually be seen performing whenever
there is great music in Montgomery. And,
of course, there is Davis, who heads the
annual choral competition at the Alabama National Fair and regularly adjudicates for competitions among various
school districts and vocal associations.
These five faculty and an impressive list of
adjuncts, many of whom perform with the
Montgomery Symphony, spin the Montgomery musical world like a pizza—one
with everything on it. Increasingly, the College itself is at the center of that world. The
College’s Elizabeth Belcher Cheek Piano
Concert Series has expanded from one
annual event to five performances this
year; a new organ recital series named in
honor of Harald Rohlig has added three
public recitals; and young events like
A Service of Lessons and Carols, Psalmfest, and the spring Concert Band performance draw enthusiastic crowds. In
addition, the College hosts a week-long
piano camp for beginning students in the
summer; the band hosts an honor band,
the AISA band competition, a spring invitational band, and a summer spirit camp;
and the College hosts the annual BlountSlawson Music Festival, Boykin Festival, and
biennial Vann Vocal Festival and Institute,
as well as performances by groups such as
ClefWorks and the Montgomery Chorale.
At this writing, the National Association of
Teachers of Singing Alabama chapter just
held their fall workshop and master classes
on campus. Next year, the department
intends to further expand performance
opportunities for students, to include a
women’s choir, a men’s choir, and a jazz
band.
The symphony of sounds, styles, and experiences available to Huntingdon music
students is no less than thrilling to Davis.
Several years ago, the department had
dipped to just twelve majors but is steadily
building numbers again. “This is a different
department than it was just a few years
ago. Our focus today is not only on performance, but also on music education. We
are educating a new generation of musicians to encourage and inspire new music
makers in their studios, classrooms, and
churches. There is enthusiasm and love lifting every note we play or sing. I can’t wait
to hear what happens next!”
The annual Service of Lessons and
Carols is both a beautiful ceremony
and a public presentation of the
depth of talent in the Concert Choir.
John Williams
The music faculty and a few friends combined their talents to present “Faculty Follies and
Serious Stuff” to kick off the 2009–10 academic year. Seated on the piano is Madame
Camille Elebash-Hill, performing her rendition of Peggy Lee’s hit, “Fever.”
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
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A Legacy of
Involvement
LL
ee Ann Hundley Boykin ’87 has
made more than a million dollars for Huntingdon College since
she graduated. Her love for Huntingdon has sparked a succession of students from the youth group she directs at
First United Methodist Church, Dothan, to
enroll, continuing the work she began as
an admission counselor for Huntingdon
shortly after she graduated.
“I feel like I have been able to give back
some of what Huntingdon gave to me by
encouraging students to consider Huntingdon for their College home,” says Boykin.
Boykin was an active Huntingdon student.
Involvement with Chi Omega fraternity,
work-study, planning Chapel services,
completing two internships in her major,
Homecoming activities, the Huntingdon
Singers, service organizations, and many
other clubs filled her time. “I’ve never
looked back! The best way I can describe
it is that Huntingdon fit for me. I loved the
friends I made and the family feeling I had
with my professors,” says Boykin.
She was not ready to leave Huntingdon at
the end of her four years, so she stayed
on as an admission counselor, recruiting
students from Alabama and West Florida.
Su Ofe
Some of Boykin’s babies joined her for this
photo, including, back row, L-R, McDowell
Pinckard ’12, Ben Cheney ’10, and Kelsey
Loftin ’11; and front row, L-R, Kelly Frazier
’10, Boykin, Will Francis ’12, and Woods
Lisenby ’11.
Boykin says that when she gave tours, she
loved sharing her own and her friends’
Huntingdon experiences with prospective students. “It was great when I toured
a family and could tell that they fit here,
too.”
Since then, she has become a wife,
mother, and youth director, but has never
stopped sharing the best of Huntingdon
with others. Her enthusiasm has influenced youth group members Leah Nesbitt Kottyan ’05, Shannon Cheney ’07, Ben
Cheney ’10, Gillian Lisenby ’08, Woods
Lisenby ’11, Sarah Francis ’11, Will Francis
’12, McDowell Pinckard ’12, Kelly Frazier
’10, Ben Marsella ’10, Alison King Dempsey
’09, Morgan Lester Basso, and Kelsey Loftin
’11 in their decisions to enroll.
Dempsey remembers Boykin bringing
members of the youth group to see the
Miss Huntingdon Pageant and to support
Shannon Cheney, a pageant finalist.
Will Francis says he sat back and relaxed
while his friends were struggling with their
college decisions. “Lee Ann brought me
to a Host Day at Huntingdon when I was
only a 14-year-old. I’m not sure if Lee Ann
knew the phrase, ‘Get’em while they’re
young,’ but that’s exactly what she did,
and it’s one of the key factors in knowing
my college of choice before I even got to
high school.”
Ben Cheney still turns to Boykin for advice.
“She exposed me to the College early,
bringing us here on mission trips and telling
stories about the fun she had here—especially with the fraternities on campus.”
Boykin has been supportive of “her students” and their friends throughout their
college years. “I check in with my students
and have my church send care packages
to them each year,” she says, sharing a
list of ways she has embraced Huntingdon as a way of life and gotten Huntingdon’s name out there: “I have Huntingdon items in my office and let people
know I’m an alum; I wear my Huntingdon
clothes proudly; I talk to parents about
financial aid and scholarships, and even
call Huntingdon staff when I think it might
help; and I take my youth to any event on
by Kelsey Loftin ’11
campus that I can work into a recruitment
experience.”
Boykin is doing her part to make sure that
Huntingdon College will be around to produce countless generations of Hawks who
will enter to grow in wisdom and go forth
to apply wisdom in service.
Among the reasons she encourages youth
in the same path she followed is Huntingdon’s deep connection with and service
to the United Methodist Church. Boykin
graduated with a degree in social work,
then completed a second HC bachelor’s degree in psychology. Because she
recognizes the need for trained leaders
in youth ministry, she is grateful for the
training she has received at the College
through Conference seminars and workshops. “Having religion professors who
are willing to teach in local congregations makes me proud of my alma mater.
I also appreciate the increased emphasis
of connecting current students [who are
studying toward careers in worship leadership and in youth, children’s, and music
ministry] with churches in the Conference
who are looking for student workers. ”
Huntingdon has grown with the students,
culture, and world through the years, and
Boykin has experienced that first-hand. “I
love that I had a different college experience than my aunt who attended 30
years before I did, and that I had a different experience than the youth from my
church who are attending Huntingdon
now, but that we all have had very special,
life-changing years with Huntingdon.”
Boykin is an example that school spirit
should not fizzle once graduates make
it across the stage to accept their diplomas, but should live on long after. She has
already made plans for that. “When I die, I
have told my husband to include Huntingdon as a place where people could make
donations, so I hope that someday there
might be a big check coming,” she says
with a wink.
Kelsey Loftin ’11 is an English major from
Dothan, Alabama, who plans for a career
in publishing.
2009
Commencement
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Su Ofe
2
Su Ofe
Su Ofe
Su Ofe
1
3
1.
Continuing the legacy of excellence in education and teaching inspired by his
parents, Dr. Rick Chappell, a research professor of physics at Vanderbilt University,
presented the Winn and Gordon Chappell Academic Enrichment Award in their
memory to associate professor of sport sciences and physical education Dr. Lisa
Olenik Dorman, who served as the director of the Staton Center for Learning
Enrichment last year, as well. Winn and Gordon Chappell, now deceased, were
beloved teachers and professors emeriti of English and history, respectively.
2.
Wanda Howard ’81 (left) is a perennial supporter of Huntingdon athletics and the
marching band. Currently serving as the alumni representative on the College’s Board
of Trustees, she has contributed much to the lives of women athletes, including new
graduates Tiffany Jordan ’09 (center) and Dusti Doss ’09.
3.
In a separate ceremony, Adult Degree Completion Program graduates who
completed their degrees at sites across the state came together to accept their diplomas and to celebrate the long-anticipated
moment. G. Gordon Martin, senior vice president for Alabama Power Company and a former member of the Huntingdon Board of
Trustees, gave the Commencement Address.
4.
Baccalaureate speaker Dr. Marquita Furness Davis (seated), commissioner for the Alabama Department of Children’s Services, looks
on as Robert “Sid” McAnnally, partner and shareholder in the firm Maynard, Cooper, and Gale, delivers the 2009 Commencement
Address.
5.
Amy Beard Hulsey ’90, instructor of accounting, was selected by the members of the Classes of 2009 and 2010 to be honored with the
Julia Lightfoot Sellers Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
9
Snapshots of
Changed Lives
A Legacy of
Travel-Study
“The journey of discovery lies not in seeking new landscapes,
but in seeing with new eyes.”—Marcel Proust
Huntingdon Plan Travel, part of regular tuition and fees for
students in their junior or senior year, took students in groups
with faculty and staff to Costa Rica, Panama, Paris, and
Hawaii this spring. International travel-study was introduced
to the Huntingdon experience under President Allen Jackson in 1987 and has been a central component of the Huntingdon Plan since its inception in 1996. The reason? New
landscapes awaken student awareness of the power of
seeing and knowing with new eyes.
1.
Biology faculty Dr. Jim Daniels (back row, orange shirt),
and Dr. Allen Tubbs (back row, green shirt), took a
group of students to the mountains and rainforests in
Costa Rica.
“One of the most gratifying things about teaching at Huntingdon is that
faculty are truly encouraged and supported in efforts to broaden students’
horizons and to create opportunities for students that they might not otherwise have. By taking Huntingdon students to Costa Rica, where I’ve been
conducting research since 1987, I hope to expose them to cultures, habitats, and adventures they would not otherwise experience, and to inspire
them to get outside of their comfort zones and pursue their dreams.”
—Dr. James Daniels, associate professor of biology
2. Evelyn Hanning ’10 (Psychology/Biology; Montgomery, Ala.) explores
the rainforests of Costa Rica.
3.
Bright colors and bright smiles were part of nearly every
picture from the cameras of a large group of students who
traveled to Paris. Participants on this trip took a semester-long
course to prepare for the history, art, and geography they
would see, and to learn a bit of the language, as well.
“To say that I was lucky to travel to Paris in January 2009 is an
understatement! I had traveled to Europe before, but not with the
course work and preparation Huntingdon offered. Having studied
the semester prior to our trip, I and others found that we gained
much-valued perspective and appreciation for the places we at
first knew only in the classroom, but were then experiencing and
loving for ourselves.”—Julie Wahl ’10 (not pictured; Biochemistry;
Lebanon, Mo.)
3
All photos contributed.
10
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
4
4.
Courtney Bunce ’11 (background) and Kati Bryant ’12 (foreground; Athletic Training; Petal, Miss.)
worked with children as part of a mission trip to Panama.
“I never really thought much about the Huntingdon motto until I went on the Panama trip with campus ministries. Huntingdon really does give students the skills and the knowledge they need to grow in
wisdom and to apply wisdom in service to others. Not only was our mission trip to Panama an incredible opportunity to share our faith in service to other people, but it was also an awesome time to grow
as individuals and as a team. Being a part of such an educational and spiritual trip is definitely lifechanging.”—Courtney Bunce ’11 (Psychology/Youth Ministry; Pike Road, Ala.)
5.
“The Hawaii trip was an amazing experience. Not only did we
get to learn about the life of a
small Hawaiian island with good
food, shopping, and exploring
the beaches, but we also got
to do it as a big group. I don’t
think there will ever be another
Huntingdon trip like ours. We’ll
never forget about surfing, the
local stores, moped rides, or hiking to the local WalMart. I can
only say one thing to summarize
our trip. Aloha, Hawaii!”
—Riley Prescott ’10
(Psychology; Columbus, Ga.)
Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78 (not pictured), professor of chemistry, led a large
group to Hawaii. One of the participants was Riley Prescott, front row, far right.
Huntingdon
Happenings
The Hawks on the Hill Internship program
places students in internships from Goat
Hill (Montgomery) to Capitol Hill (Washington, D.C.) working for government offices,
officials, or agencies. Some internships
are paid, some are not, and some can
be completed for credit. Students of any
major are welcome. For instance, a biology or chemistry student might look for a
placement in the FBI or ABI forensics lab;
a psychology major might look for a spot
in the Alabama Department of Children
and Family Services.
Su Ofe
In addition, Huntingdon has partnered
with American University’s Washington
Semester Program to offer in-depth study
in D.C. (8 credit hours), combined with an
internship (4 credit hours), and sometimes
adding a research project (3 or 4 credit
hours) and international study to the mix.
Su Ofe
Two of the most valuable experiences students may ever have are interning and
studying in places or settings that challenge them beyond their comfort zones.
Huntingdon’s new Hawks on the Hill program brings students both opportunities.
Huntingdon has a long history of placing
students in internships in political settings.
Although not part of the Hawks on the Hill
program, Shane Stinemetz ’10 (Political
Science; Prattville, Ala.), Deborah Garrett
’11 (History; Pelham, Ala.), and Cole Muzio
’11 (Political Science; Millbrook, Ala.),
interned with U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions ’69,
and Suzanne Inman ’10 (Communication
Studies/History; Clanton, Ala.) interned for
Congressman Spencer Bachus in Washington, D.C., this summer.
New Spaces Debut
Ligon Hall reopens after renovation.
The old adage is true: change is the only
constant. This year, new spaces on campus are built around two “C”-words—community and convenience. On the east side
of campus, Ligon Hall was restored to its
original (1947) intent after a six-month, $1
million renovation, to house 100 freshman
women in double rooms. Now, Ligon is the
only residential facility that offers wireless
Internet access throughout the building.
Next door, the footprint of Massey Hall
will soon be known as “Massey Beach,”
where a sand volleyball pit, picnic tables,
and spaces for relaxing and gathering will
be constructed. In front of Delchamps Student Center, “The Grove” is a new space
for outdoor displays and gatherings celebrating the First Amendment. In Java City
(Houghton Library basement), a newly
installed C-store (“C” for convenience)
gives students easy access to items for
daily living, such as toiletries, over-thecounter medicines, and snacks. On the
library’s second floor, the new Kathryn
Tucker Windham Room, dedicated last
spring in honor of the Class of 1939 alumna,
gives library patrons a quiet place to study.
Flowers Hall is abuzz in preparation for the
new Jean Rodgers Prayer Chapel in Flowers 207, named in honor of Jean Rodgers
’49, who served as the College’s registrar
for 32 years. Later this year, the west side
of campus will bustle as several offices,
including the registrar, college travel and
event planning, the business office, and
student financial services relocate from
the Cloverdale Campus to the James W.
Wilson Center on the main campus.
A C-store has been added to Java City.
Kathryn Tucker Windham ’39 came to the
opening of the room named in her honor
in Houghton Library last spring.
Amanda Spiegel ’08 (left) is one of many
HC students to have served on “the Hill.”
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Hawks on the Hill
Internship/Washington
Semester Programs
Introduced
Students pay tuition at Huntingdon as
normal, but study in Washington, D.C.,
and other places around the world in this
comprehensive program (some costs are
extra). Dr. Jeremy Lewis, professor of political science, is coordinating the Washington Semester program.
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Wisdom
Contributed
Music, Religion, and PE Programs Grow
A major in Youth Ministry, a minor in Christian Education, a major in P–12
Physical Education, and P–12 teacher certification in both instrumental and
vocal music have enhanced the curriculum in the Departments of Religion,
Sport Sciences and Physical Education, and Music this fall. The programs—
most of which restore areas of study that were discontinued at one time
because of low student enrollment—were initiated in response to renewed
student demand, community need, and an ability to match new faculty in
positions necessary to restore the programs. “As a liberal arts college that
serves, primarily, this region of the Southeast, we are constantly looking for
ways we can prepare our students to match their skills to societal needs,”
said Dr. Kyle Fedler, vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty. “Huntingdon has long been known for excellence in teaching, music,
and ministry, and these programs extend the College’s sphere of influence
in the lives of young people throughout the region.”
Leigh Joins
Huntingdon as VPEA
Former deputy state treasurer
Anthony Leigh, a native of Sheffield, Alabama, joined the College as vice president for external
affairs in January 2009. He is pictured at left with his wife, Wendy.
In his position with the Alabama
Treasury Department, he oversaw
media relations, marketing, and
legislative activities. Prior to his work with the treasury, he served as a legislative assistant and organizational director for U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions ’69
for three years.
“This is an exciting time in the life of the College, and I am honored to
be here to work with President West and all of the constituencies of the
Huntingdon family to continue the positive momentum surrounding Huntingdon,” says Leigh. “To me, the heart of a college is its people, and I have
been so blessed in my first few months here to have an opportunity to meet
hundreds of friends and alumni of the College, to hear of their love for Huntingdon, and to be inspired daily by the wonderful group of students who
call Huntingdon their home.”
L-R, A.J. Julian ’10, Julie Wahl ’10, Fe Gulledge ’09, and
Kent Hagan ’10
Students Present Research at
Symposium
Huntingdon CHEM 446: Metals in Biological Systems students presented two original research presentations at
the 2009 Joint Annual Research and Creative Activity and
Nano-Bio Symposium at Alabama State University in March.
The students and their presentation titles were:
• Kent Hagan ’10 (Biochemistry/Biology; Opelika, Ala.), Fe
Gulledge ’09 (Biochemistry; Trussville, Ala.), A.J. Julian
’10 (Biochemistry; McCalla, Ala.), Kimberly Matthews ’09
(Biochemistry; Wetumpka, Ala.), and Julie Wahl ’10 (Biochemistry; Lebanon, Mo.), “Conversion of a Protein into
a Metalloprotein: Energetic and Conformational Studies
of Oxytocin and Bovine Serum Albumin in the Presence
of Transition-Metal Ions.”
• Kayla Bratcher ’10 (Biochemistry; Ashford, Ala.), Ben
Marsella ’10 (Biochemistry; Dothan, Ala.), and Zachary B.
Sealy ’10 (Biochemistry; Montgomery), “Energetic Studies of a ‘Metallointercalator’-Transition Metal Complexes
Capable of Both DNA Binding and DNA Intercalating.”
• Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78, professor of chemistry
and chair of the Department of Chemistry, was a coauthor on both of these papers.
Leigh earned a bachelor’s degree in government from Wofford College,
where he was presented with the President’s Award upon graduation
and now serves on the Wofford College National Alumni Executive Council. Leigh has been selected to serve as one of 40 national young leaders
who will visit Germany next summer on a mission of improving U.S.-German
understanding and relations. He and his wife are active members in the
Montgomery community and are members of Frazer Memorial United
Methodist Church.
Su Ofe
(Above) Miss Huntingdon 2008 Riley Prescott ’10 (Psychology; Columbus, Ga.) crowns Miss Huntingdon 2009 Logan
Elizabeth Henderson ’11 (Biology; Dothan, Ala.) at the conclusion of the pageant in March.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
(Left) The Mr. Huntingdon 2009 pageant ended with (L-R)
Juddson Seebrat ’10 (Business Administration; Montgomery) as second runner-up; Jon Powers ’10 (Accounting; Lillian, Ala.) named Mr. Huntingdon; Heath Miller ’10 (Biology;
Guntersville, Ala.) as first runner-up; and Mr. Congeniality
was Hall Copeland ’10 (History; Montgomery).
13
Dr. Jeremy Lewis and Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78 cross the bridge to Top
Stage during Commencement 2009.
Dr. Jeremy R.T. Lewis, professor of political
science, has been honored with membership on the editorial board for Open
Government: A Journal on Freedom of
Information. He was also notified of the
acceptance of two chapters he authored
for the Handbook of Public Information
Systems, Third Edition, edited by G. David
Garson and Chris Shea, forthcoming in
2009 by CRC Press. The only author to have
two chapters in the anthology, Dr. Lewis’
topics are, “From Electronic FOIA (EFOIA)
to e-Government: The Development
of Online Official Information Services,
1985–2009,” and “Tide of Security Secrecy,
Tide of Transparency: The G.W. Bush and
Obama Administrations, 2001–09.”
Dr. Elba Morton, adjunct assistant professor of Spanish, successfully defended her
doctoral dissertation at the University of
Alabama April 28.
A manuscript written by Dr. Maureen
Kendrick Murphy ’78, professor of chemistry, “An electromagnetic spectrum for
14
and programs in Hawaii, Illinois, Saudi Arabia, Texas, and
Oklahoma, and has taught at the college level at the University of Missouri-St. Louis; the University of South Carolina,
Conway; Lewis-Clark State College, Lewiston, Idaho; and
Shorter College. Canfield, who was part-time last year
while completing her doctoral studies, joined the Department of Music full-time this year. She is a vocal specialist.
‘millennial’ students: Teaching light, color,
energy, and frequency using the electronic devices of our time,” was accepted
for publication by the Journal of College
Science Teaching, a peer-reviewed journal published by the National Science
Teachers Association (NSTA).
Music professor Dr. Vadim Serebryany
participated in the 2009 Affinis Music Festival in Hiroshima, Japan, this summer. The
festival, which is in its 21st season, brings
together principal players from the major
symphony orchestras of Japan with their
counterparts from Germany and the U.S.
Serebryany was the only pianist. The musicians played in chamber groups with
Japanese musicians and gave workshops
or lectures. Serebryany gave a paper on
the music of Johannes Brahms in addition
to playing quintets with members of the
Chicago Symphony, North German Radio
Symphony, Boston Symphony, and NHK
Symphony (Tokyo), among others. “It was
a wonderful experience and a great privilege for me,” he says.
A paper written by last year’s BEI Northern Ireland exchange student, Kirsty Cole,
and her business professor, Dr. Brenda
Sonner, was accepted for presentation
at the International Academy of Business and Public Administration Disciplines
Conference. The paper, “How Important
Is Salary and How Realistic Are Student
Expectations, U.S. vs. Northern Irish Business Students?” finds that all students are
unrealistic about salary expectations, but
that U.S. students were more unrealistic
than Northern Ireland students.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Dr. Allen Tubbs, associate professor of biology, was among a panel of judges for the
annual Alabama waterfowl stamp competition this year. The winner was Clarence
Stewart’s painting of a northern pintail
drake. The stamp will be issued in 2010–11.
Tubbs also participated in the 70th annual
meeting of the Association of Southeastern Biologists in Birmingham last spring.
Accounting professor Barbara White
(below) was honored with the 2009 Alabama Society of CPAs Public Service
Award during the ASCPA 90th Annual
Conference June 4 in Birmingham. She
and the Huntingdon accounting program
were recognized by the more than 600
leaders in the industry, public accounting,
and educators, along with national AICPA
representatives in attendance.
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Su Ofe
(Left to right) Dr. Chad Eggleston, Dr. Jennifer Canfield, Dr. Henry Walding,
and Dr. John Saunders joined the Huntingdon faculty this year. Eggleston,
who completed his Ph.D. at Duke University this fall, teaches in the Department of Religion. He earned his Master of Divinity magna cum laude at Duke
University and Bachelor of Arts cum laude at Samford University. At Duke, he
taught on a Lilly Foundation Doctoral Fellowship and was recognized with the
Dean’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. His academic specialty is Hebrew
Scriptures. Saunders serves as chair of the Department of Communication
Studies. He completed his Ph.D. at the Pennsylvania State University last fall
and his Master of Arts and Bachelor of Arts degrees at the University of Memphis. He has taught at Penn State, the University of Memphis, and Columbus State University. Walding, an associate professor of education, earned
his B.S. at Southwestern State University, Weatherford, Okla.; his master’s
degree at Central State University, Edmond, Okla.; and his Ph.D. at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He has completed post-doctoral studies
at the University of Texas at Austin and Washington State University, Pullman,
as well as completing the National Superintendents’ Academy. Walding is
an experienced teacher and administrator, serving schools, school districts,
Su Ofe
Faculty/Staff News
Su Ofe
Dr. Jennifer Fremlin was promoted
to associate professor of English.
Contributed
Su Ofe
Service
Members of the Sigma Nu fraternity donated their time and lots of energy to help with
Extreme Makeover: Montgomery last winter. Working alongside Ty Pennington and his crew,
they demolished and rebuilt a family home.
Dr. Paul Gier was promoted
to professor of biology.
Huntingdon’s SaveFirst team completed
its second successful year of service to the
community. This year, 20 trained Huntingdon students provided critical services to
400 families at a free tax preparation site
in Montgomery—helping them to secure
nearly $1 million in tax refunds and saving
them $95,000 in commercial tax preparation fees. SaveFirst is a program of Impact
Alabama. The Huntingdon team is trained
by accounting professors Amy Beard
Hulsey ’94 and Barbara White.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05
Huntingdon Continues
Work with SaveFirst
Above: 2009–10 Huntingdon College Ambassadors are (L-R) Chad Cotant ’11 (Biology; Dothan,
Ala.), Julie Wahl ’10 (Biochemistry; Lebanon, Mo.),
Alex Taylor ’12 (Mathematics; Tallassee, Ala.), HannahLee Dickinson ’10 (Chemistry; Sylacauga, Ala.),
Olivia Ziglar ’11 (Biology; Montgomery, Ala.), Andy
Patterson ’10 (Athletic Training/Biology; Pleasant
Grove, Ala.), Heath Miller ’10 (Biology; Guntersville,
Ala.), Katy Jo Farrill ’11 (Elementary Education; Lynn
Haven, Fla.), Charlie Hearn ’11 (Business Administration; Birmingham, Ala.), Terah Phillips ’11 (Communication Studies; Ozark, Ala.), Kyle Eller ’10 (Cell
Biology/Mathematics; Niceville, Fla.), Steven Laye
’10 (Biology; Elkmont, Ala.), Clare Shannon ’11 (Biology; Birmingham, Ala.), Lynley Godwin ’11 (Human
Performance; Brantley, Ala.), Aarendy Gomez ’12
(Political Science; Centreville, Ala.)
Left: The Kappa Sigma fraternity collected more
than $1,000 with the promise of shaving their heads
for every $25 collected this fall. The Shave to Save
project benefited breast cancer research.
15
Sharing Skills and Changing Lives
Students in the Adapted Physical Education course with Dr. Lisa
Olenik Dorman, associate professor of sport sciences and physical
education, have begun an Adapted Sport Day program for Brewbaker Junior High special education students in their CommunityBased Integration (CBI) Program. The intent of the program, which
began October 15, is to teach prerequisite sport skills necessary
for participation in lifetime physical activity.
Dorman, an adapted sport specialist, arranged the cooperative
effort with Susan Moon Goldthwaite ’86, who teaches the Brewbaker special education courses and leads the CBI. The Brewbaker students are bussed to the College once each month for
Adapted Sport Day—usually one hour of learning skills the children
can then use in daily living and in recreational sports for the rest of
their lives. The Huntingdon students are assessed on their ability to
apply the concepts discussed in the APE course, if they choose to
participate in the project. “Our students are quickly adapting to
the service-related needs of these children, some of whom have
multiple physical and cognitive disabilities,” says Dorman. “As they
get to know the children as people who have real and immediate needs, they are able to empathize and understand the tremendous challenges the children face. The children, in turn, are
impacted through their experience with the college students. It’s
a win-win situation for all.”
As veterans of service know, helping others can be contagious.
When college students realize they can impact the lives of others
in positive ways, it not only gives them a sense of purpose and
direction, but also helps them realize where their talents can meet
the needs of the world, says Dorman. “Several weeks ago, I had
one of our students work one-to-one with a young girl who has
a visual impairment, cognitive disability, and uses a wheelchair.
We were working on football skills. When the program was over,
he told me it was the hardest thing he had ever done. The next
week, he stopped by my office and asked me to give him more
work to do at the next program. That’s exactly the impact I hope
a cooperative project will have on our students’ lives.”
Brewbaker’s Community-Based Integration Program provides
educational services for students with special needs, incorporating functional academics with community integration. The curriculum focuses on strategies that prepare students to function
as independently and productively as possible in an integrated
community. A life skills curriculum places special emphasis on the
basic skills necessary to ensure a student’s success as a citizen,
consumer, worker, and family member. Students are taught academic, daily living, pre-vocational, social, and community integration skills. The program commits to teach students with special
needs to learn, work, live, recreate, and socialize just as their nondisabled peers.
Dorman says others in Huntingdon athletics, including Head Football Coach Mike Turk and Head Volleyball Coach Megan Aiello,
have given their time and staff time to the project, as well. “The
project is already growing with Huntingdon involvement,” says
Dorman. “I can foresee tremendous possibilities as we move
forward.”
Photos by Su Ofe
Faith
Church in Ravaged
Katrina Area
Receives Grant
to Create “A
Patch of Eden”
Bayou La Batre First UMC Senior
Pastor Connie Farnell received an
$8,000 grant from Huntingdon’s
Rural Leadership Initative this spring.
Presented by RLI director Mike
Gaby, the grant funds the planting
of a garden in an unused 11 acres
near the church, which is located
on a hill overlooking the Katrinaravaged community. The garden will feed hungry neighbors and will depend
on the help of donated services for sustenance. Finally, the garden will provide
room to plant and harvest hot peppers that will be marketed in the area, further
spreading awareness of the project. Gaby read all of the proposals. “Two things
about this project especially impressed the grant committee,” said Gaby. “First,
that the project involved so many different people and organizations—not only
engaging others in the community but also those in the church. Second, that the
project is sustainable; therefore, this grant is a catalyst for an ongoing ministry.
This is a ministry that doesn’t just give something away, but also allows people to
be involved in multiple ways. In other words, this is not ministry to someone but
with someone, and it is self-replicating.”
Duffey Institute Offers
Workshops
Huntingdon’s Paul A. Duffey Institute for Church
Leadership held two events for leaders at
small churches this fall, intended to maximize
effectiveness in teaching, music, and worship
attendance. The Teacher and Music Training Workshop included choral music training
led by Ms. Gene Davis, chair of the Huntingdon Department of Music, and a workshop on
organ music led by Dr. Harald Rohlig, professor
emeritus of music. Dr. Ed Trimmer, Chapman
Benson Professor of Christian Faith and Philosophy and dean of the Duffey Institute, was the
keynote speaker for the “Spiritual Formation
and Christian Education” seminar. Separately,
Rethink Church training extended a project
of the United Methodist Church to the tri-county area. The program encourages small
churches to be active in their communities and to reach out to new members, rather
than waiting for new members to find them.
Dr. Ed Trimmer, dean of the Duffey Institute, known nationally for his expertise in youth ministry,
leads a workshop for United Methodist youth directors presented by the Duffey Institute and the
Alabama-West Florida Conference.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Aarendy Gomez ’12 (Political Science; Centerville, Ala.) participated in the Hispanic
Youth Leadership Academy held at Drew
University this summer. Components of the
program were leadership within the United
Methodist Church and the Hispanic/Latino
community, preparation for college and
graduate school, and advocacy. Through
participation in HYLA, Gomez also attended
the annual meeting of a Hispanic caucus
called MARCHA, held in Chicago.
Students Serve in 3.0
Wes Anderson ’12 (Religion; Clanton,
Ala.), Sheridan Farnell ’12 (English; Irvington, Ala.), and Allison Comer ’09 (Religion/Psychology; Montrose, Ala.) were
selected for participation in the first year
of 3.0 Summer Internship. The brainchild
of the Reverend Don Wooley at Pleasant
Valley and Westside UMCs in Mobile, 3.0
was funded by a grant from the Quad W
Foundation and brought 16 college-aged
interns into Mobile for two months of intensive work with inner-city families. Anderson
worked at Pleasant Valley UMC designing, building, marketing, and teaching in
a children’s day camp; Comer worked
with abused women and children in West
Wilmer; Farnell worked with refugee families, mostly from Muslim backgrounds,
at Whistler UMC. “[The refugee families]
were so sad to have left their homes but
so happy for a new life here, and so very,
very thankful—they humbled us so much,”
says Farnell. Both Farnell and Anderson
acknowledge that it’s difficult to get back
to the world of college life after living
through this experience. “What we did
there was so important, so life-giving,” says
Anderson. “We learned that ministry is not
about reaching down to lift someone up,
it’s about reaching out—getting beside
people and sometimes beneath them to
lift their vision to new possibilities for their
lives.” Comer is now a graduate student
at Asbury Theological Seminary.
17
In the
Hawks Nest
Information from Sports Information Director Tim Lutz
Football
The Hawks finished the regular season with an 8-2 record for the second straight season, but the caliber of teams played caught the
attention of the NCAA, who awarded the Hawks with a Pool B bid
to the postseason and an opportunity to play for the NCAA-Division
III championship. Although the Hawks, ranked fourth in the South
region, hosted and lost to Mississippi College in the first-round playoff game, quarterback Justin Ridgeway ’09 (History; Frisco City, Ala.)
set a new single-season record for passing yards, while Alex Baronich ’10 (Human Performance; Baton Rouge, La.) rewrote the singleseason rushing record book. Behind Ridgeway and Baronich, the
Hawks’ offense was ranked number one among all of Division III in
total yards. Defensively, Keith Anthony ’12 (Sport Studies; Montgomery) surpassed the single-season record for interceptions and led the
team in total tackles. While the Hawks are great athletes, they also
do well in the classroom, with three placed on the National Football
Foundation’s Hampshire Honor Society after the 2008 season.
Cross Country
The women’s cross country team captured the GSAC championship for the first time in the program’s short history this year. Caitlin
McMahon ’12 (Undeclared; Cortland, N.Y.), the league’s Freshman
and Runner of the Year last season, repeated in the latter title this
season, bettering her own school records in the two-mile, 5K, and
6K events. Coach Nate Rucker was named GSAC Women’s Cross
Country Coach of the Year. After winning the GSAC Championship
in its first-ever season last year, the Huntingdon men’s cross country team came in second in the league this year. Kent Hagan ’10
(Biochemistry/Biology; Opelika, Ala.), an All-GSAC performer both
seasons, was named Runner of the Year this year, capturing the individual championship by less than a second. Jeff Jenkins ’12 (Coaching Education; Opelika, Ala.) also enjoyed a strong second season
with the program, capturing All-Conference accolades.
Softball
Under first-year head coach Gynger Williams, the softball team
posted a 17-22-1 overall record and earned the No. 3 seed in the
GSAC conference tournament last spring. Nicole Hill ’09 and Ashley Blocker ’11 (Biology; Alpine, Ala.) each earned All-Conference
accolades, while four were named to the All-Academic team.
Volleyball
The volleyball team enjoyed one of its most successful seasons under
fourth-year head coach Megan Aiello, leading the GSAC in blocks
as a team for the third consecutive season while ranking 36th nationally in service aces per set. For the third consecutive season, Kayla
Schuran ’10 (Cell Biology; Middleburg, Fla.) and Clare Shannon ’11
18
(Biology; Birmingham, Ala.) were named to the All-GSAC Team.
The Lady Hawks also tied for a league-high six members on the
All-Academic team, including Shannon, Carrie Cabaniss ’10
(Biochemistry; Montgomery), Jessica Sharker ’11 (Biology; Montgomery), Christine Whiten ’11 (Biochemistry; Trussville, Ala.), Alyssa
Eason ’12 (Biology; Dadeville, Ala.) and Abby Carter ’11 (Psychology; Charlotte, N.C.).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Under the direction of first-year head coach
Wes Anania, the Huntingdon women’s soccer team doubled its win total from 2008.
Courtney Fredenburg ’11 (Human Performance; Mobile, Ala.) and Renee Tatom ’13
(Undeclared; Post Fall, Id.) formed a solid
punch for the Lady Hawks, with Fredenburg
named to the All-Conference Team and
Tatom to the All-Freshman Team. On the
men’s team, Morgan Burke ’12 (Undeclared;
Mobile, Ala.) earned All-Conference honors
as the team finished the season at 3-15. Jarryd Keene ’11 (Athletic Training; Enterprise,
Ala.) averaged 6.20 saves per contest, a
mark that led the GSAC.
Basketball
For the first time since joining the GSAC, the women’s basketball team advanced to
the conference championship game, while finishing with a 16-12 overall record. Huntingdon Athletic Director Buzz Phillips was named GSAC Coach of the Year, while Tiffany Jordan ’09 and Lori Bonds ’10 (Elementary Education; Atmore, Ala.) each earned
All-Conference accolades for the third time during their careers. The Lady Hawks also
tied for a league-high four student-athletes on the GSAC All-Academic team. Under
the direction of second-year head coach Mike Pugh, the men’s basketball team
advanced to the GSAC championship game and finished with a 13-13 overall record.
Jeremy Pittman ’09 was named the GSAC Player of the Year after leading the league
in points, rebounds, 3-point field goal percentage, blocked shots, defensive rebounds,
and minutes played. In his first season with the Hawks, Reggie Sprouse ’12 (Athletic
Training; Montgomery) also earned All-Conference honors, while Heath Miller ’10 (Biology; Guntersville, Ala.) and Chris Roberts ’11 (Coaching Education; Verbena, Ala.)
were recognized as All-Academic team members.
Golf
During a strong inaugural season
that featured a team victory in
only its seventh tournament, the
women’s golf team showed steady
improvement through the 2009 fall
season. Ali Hamil ’13 (Chemistry; St.
Augustine, Fla.) posted a schoolrecord low round of 76 in the second round of the BSC Fall Southern Shootout, while averaging a
team-best 85.2 strokes per round.
The Huntingdon men’s golf team
finished sixth at the NCAA-Division
III Championships and won 7 of its
10 regular-season tournaments last
spring. Mack Duke ’12 (pictured;
Coaching Education; Orange
Beach, Ala.) became the second consecutive Hawks golfer to earn the prestigious Phil
Mickelson Award, which is presented annually to the nation’s top freshman, while also
being named to the PING First-Team All-America. J.P. Kircher ’11 (Communication Studies; Pittsford, N.Y.) was recognized as a Third-Team All-America selection, while head
coach Matt Mahanic ’07 was selected as the Division III Eaton Golf National Coach of
the Year. The team is ranked second nationally in the final fall 2009 Golf World/Nike
Division III Coaches’ Poll.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05
Soccer
Baseball
Led by league Coach of the Year D.J. Conville ’98, the baseball team finished the
2009 season with a 26-15 overall record,
capturing the Great South Athletic Conference regular-season title before falling in
the tournament championship game. John
Otterson ’09, Josh Bennefield ’11 (Elementary
Education; Pleasant Grove, Ala.), and Alex
Sanford ’10 (Human Performance; Prattville,
Ala.) earned All-Conference honors, while
Brad Vest ’09 and Kyle Eller ’10 (Cell Biology/
Mathematics; Niceville, Fla.) garnered both
All-GSAC and All-South Region accolades.
Huntingdon also had three players recognized on the All-Freshman team and nine
named to the All-Academic squad.
Tennis
The women’s tennis team fell short of capturing its third consecutive GSAC tournament
title. Despite the loss, the Lady Hawks have
won 22 of their last 23 matches against GSAC
opponents. Huntingdon placed four players
on the GSAC All-Conference team, led by
freshman Madison Jackson ’12 (Elementary
Education; Dothan, Ala.), who was selected
as the league Freshman of the Year. The
Lady Hawks also had four selected to the
All-Freshman team and two named to the
All-Academic squad. The men’s team captured its second straight GSAC tournament
title, defeating Maryville in the finals. Glenn
Rudolph ’09 was named the league’s Player
of the Year, while Jonathan Hibbert ’12 (Business Administration; Montgomery) earned
Freshman of the Year honors. B.J. Foroughian ’11 (Chemistry; Baton Rouge, La.) and
Sean Jackson ’12 (Business Administration;
Hudsonville, Mich.) also captured All-Conference honors, while Hibbert, Jackson, and
Sean Buysman ’12 (Business Administration;
Suwanee, Ga.) were named to the All-Freshman squad.
19
Class Notes
A Baker’s Dozen Ways to Support (and Stay Connected with) HC
Make a gift to the
Huntingdon Fund
for Scholarships
ceremony or Commencement, we’d love
to see you on campus. Check the calendar of events on the Huntingdon Web site,
www.huntingdon.edu.
Annual gifts to the Huntingdon Fund for
Scholarships made possible the awarding of more than $7 million in institutional
aid for students last year. Did you receive
a scholarship to HC? Have you given this
year? Contact Martie Bailey McEnerney
’86, director of alumni advancement and
the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships, at
334-833-4564, [email protected].
Make a planned gift
through your will
Recruit students
Tell us about students in your community
who would be a good fit for Huntingdon!
Contact Laura Hinds Duncan ’94, vice
president for enrollment management, at
334-833-4497, [email protected],
or complete and send the Alumni Legacy
Grant form in this magazine (page 40).
Join the Huntingdon
Society
Individuals and businesses who contribute at least $1,000 a year to Huntingdon
are members of the Huntingdon Society.
Members receive invitations to special
functions of the College and help the College advance to the next level of excellence. Contact Marilyn Boswell, director
of the Huntingdon Society, at 334-8334566, [email protected].
Purchase a Huntingdon
College license plate
If you live in Alabama, visit the Probate
Judge in your county and ask for an HC license plate. Most of the cost supports the
Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships!
Attend HC events
From concerts, plays, athletic events, lectures, and art exhibits to traditional Huntingdon gatherings such as the tree lighting
20
Individuals who have included Huntingdon College in their estate plans are inducted into the John Massey Heritage
Society. You may also make a planned
gift through an annuity or a charitable remainder trust that provides income to you
until your death. Contact Anthony Leigh,
vice president for external affairs, at 334833-4528, [email protected].
Tell us your good news
We love to hear good news from our
alumni—keep us in the loop! Contact Su
Ofe, associate vice president for communications and marketing, at 334-833-4515,
[email protected].
Identify job and
internship opportunities
Help our students find internships and jobs
by contacting the Center for Career and
Vocation. You can post jobs online (it’s
free!) or post your own résumé at www.
hirehawksgrads.com. Contact Emily Webster Cosgrove ’07, director of the Center
for Career and Vocation, at 334-833-4556
or [email protected].
Host an alumni gathering
Would you be willing to host a party in your
home or business, or to help someone else
in your area coordinate an event? Contact Martie McEnerney.
Endow a scholarship
An endowed scholarship is a lasting reminder of your generosity to the College
and/or a tribute to someone’s love and
affection for Huntingdon. We’ll be happy
to discuss endowment and other naming
opportunities with you. Contact Anthony
Leigh.
Stay connected through
social networking sites
Be sure we have your email address so
that you can receive regular College updates (contact Su Ofe) and/or receive
the Alumni e-Newsletter (contact Martie
McEnerney). You can also be a supporter
of the College on Facebook (once you
have a Facebook account, just search for
Huntingdon College); follow HC on Twitter @gohuntingdon; be connected to HC
through LinkedIn; and keep up with our
young alumni by visiting http://huntingdonyoungalumni.blogspot.com.
Show your Scarlet and
Grey spirit
Dust off your HC sweatshirt or purchase a
new one in the Huntingdon bookstore and
wear it proudly in your community. Dress
your kids in Huntingdon t-shirts. Be a human billboard for Huntingdon!
Nominate outstanding
alumni
Each year, the National Alumni Association recognizes alumni who have excelled
in professional achievement and College
loyalty with awards presented during the
Reunion Weekend. Do you know someone
who should be considered? We welcome
your nominations for any or all of the three
categories: Achievement Award, Loyalty
Award, and Outstanding Young Alumni.
Nomination forms are available on the
Web site in the Alumni & Friends section
with options to submit online or to print a
form and mail it to the alumni office, www.
huntingdon.edu/alumni_and_friends/
alumni_awards/#nom. Please submit your
nominations for the 2010 awards by December 31, 2009.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Throughout Class Notes, we are pleased to share stories about
some of Huntingdon’s legacy families and individuals of note,
designated by a shaded box. We know, however, that there are
so many more stories we could tell—so many connections with
the College’s past and future through the people who have been
part of this great college. If you know a story that we could share
in a future edition of Huntingdon College Magazine, please e-mail
Su Ofe at [email protected]. We look forward to sharing your
stories, as space allows.
A Note from Amy Klugh, President,
National Alumni Board:
Dear Alumni and Friends,
I hope this edition of the Huntingdon
College Magazine finds you well!
When you receive this magazine, I
want it to remind you of the wonderful people that make Huntingdon
what it is! Speaking of wonderful
people, I know some great ones ...
they just happen to work in the Office of External Affairs and serve on
the Alumni Board.
We can use your help by supporting
the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships; nominating worthy alumni
for Alumni Achievement, Loyalty, or Young Alumni Awards; and
attending or hosting alumni events on campus and in your area.
You can find out about all of these at www.huntingdon.edu. While
you’re on the Internet, be sure to sign up for the Alumni E-newsletter mailing list. We want to keep you informed about your Huntingdon College! There are so many wonderful events on campus
... won’t you come back and join us?
A future Hawk, the granddaughter of retired adjunct assistant
professor of German Karen Hyman, gives Hank the Hawk a
generous smooch at a recent football game
Hope to see you soon!
Amy Klugh
Friends, Staff, and Faculty
• Dr. Betty Collier (right) served as a physical education professor
at HC for nearly 40 years, also chairing the May Day program.
Now 90 years old and living in Ft. Walton Beach, Fla., she may
be one of Huntingdon’s oldest living professors emeriti. Before
moving to Montgomery, she was one of the first women air traffic controllers in Atlanta. In Memphis, she served as an instructor
for the blind. In Montgomery, she was a ham radio operator
working not only in the U.S. but also overseas, making connections for families with loved ones in the military. Dr. Collier
moved to Ft. Walton Beach after retirement from HC and after
her husband died, to be nearer to her son, Henry Collier ’69,
and his wife, Anne, who attended Huntingdon in ’66 and ’67.
Until recent months, Dr. Collier was an avid weaver, participating for more than 10 years in the annual St. Simons Arts and
Craft Show in FWB. For touching so many lives at Huntingdon,
Dr. Collier leaves a lasting legacy.
• Dr. Kenneth Deal, a former professor of English at Huntingdon,
now teaches at Booker T. Washington Magnet High School,
where he was honored with their teaching excellence award
this year.
• Dr. William E. Hamm moved to a new home in Waverly, Iowa.
He is a retired college/foundation president.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
21
Alumni
1930s
• Ruth McFaden Nettles ’30 is 101 years old. She moved from
Mobile to Birmingham in 2003 to be closer to her daughter.
• Annie Ruth Hagood Whitten ’33 was posthumously inducted into
the Atmore Hall of Fame following her death June 13, 2009. She
was selected for her contribution to education.
• When Helen Marsh Bothfeld ’39 (now deceased) graduated in
1939, she may not have realized she was beginning a family tradition that rivals any other for the number of alumni produced
and for giving to Huntingdon College. After Helen and her sister, Dorothy Marsh Fairchild ’42, graduated and married, they
supported their children’s enrollment, including Robert Bothfeld
Jr. ’70, Bronwyn Bothfeld Nickles ’73, Cindy Fairchild Birden ’76,
and Holly Bothfeld Miller ’76. Holly met her husband, William
Terry Miller ’75 at Huntingdon. Holly and Terry sent their daughter, Heidi Miller ’04. Bronwyn and her husband, Jim, encouraged their son, Robby Nickles ’04. And throughout the years,
Helen’s husband, Bob Bothfeld, has endowed 14 scholarships at
the College. Together, their legacy of love has supported not
only their own family but also many future students for the College. The family has established such a tradition that when Heidi
graduated, she wore a robe embroidered with the initials of all
those in her family who had gone before her. To the Marsh/
Bothfeld/Fairchild/Miller/Nickles families, we say “Hawk ’em!”
• A new book by Kathryn Tucker Windham ’39: Spit, Scarey Ann,
and Sweat Bees: One Thing Leads to Another, is a compilation
of her childhood memories of the Deep
South in the ’20s and ’30s. Kathryn credits
her English professor at Huntingdon, the
late Dr. Rhoda Coleman Ellison, with fostering in her a love for and confidence
about writing, which has led to her
career as a master storyteller, journalist,
the author of more than 24 books. Kathryn enjoyed her 90th birthday in June. Several hundred friends came to her party
in downtown Selma and serenaded her
with a rousing comb chorus.
1940s
• Frances Hastings Moore ’46 succeeded her older sisters, Anna
Riley Hastings and Sara Read Hastings, who were students in a
prep program offered by Woman’s College of Alabama, circa
1929–30. Two nieces, Mildred Ivey Thomas ’71 and Mildred Virginia Gray ’64, followed suit, as did Frances’ daughter, Louisa
Meriwether Moore Elmore ’84.
• Christina Tompkins Rood Crawford ’47 reports she remarried at
age 80 and is still going strong at 83.
• Rosemary Schafer Johnson ’47 and her husband, Kenneth E.
Johnson ’50, are excited about their move to Quincy, Calif., to
be with their son.
• Jean Atkins Sensing ’47 resides in Fulton, Ky.
• Sara Cody Gaskin ’48 reports that she is still kicking, but not
quite as high.
• LaNelle Andrews Rowe ’48 and her husband, Sam, celebrated
60 years of marriage in June with a party given by their son and
his wife.
• Dorothy Rainer Sellars ’48 is celebrating the 56th season of her
dance studio in Opp.
• Betty Finlay Brislin ’49 almost never
misses a Huntingdon alumni event.
She is pictured at Homecoming 2009
with Marilyn Boswell, director of the
Huntingdon Society.
• Janet Kelly Collins ’49 lost her husband, James, in 2003 and has since
moved to the Cottages, a gated
community.
• Ruth Milner Morrison ’49 reports that
she is trying to see as much of the
fascinating world as possible. She
has traveled around the world on
the QE2, as well as a cruise to Dubai. She is pursuing the Seven
Wonders of the World and has checked Petra this year. She will
visit Machu Picchu next.
1950s
• Jane Jackson ’50 enjoys living in Prattville, Ala., with family.
• Jean Gilmore McClurkin ’50 can hardly believe that she is 82
years old. She is still very active and has a new hobby of making
necklace and earring sets.
• Marilyn Cogburn McLeod ’44 has moved from Atlanta to Evans,
Georgia, near her oldest son.
• Caroline Poole Ryan ’50 is selling the house she has lived in for
51 years and moving to a smaller townhome. She serves as the
organist for her church and enjoys traveling with her friends.
• Martha Holley Norton ’44 has been a widow for 14 years and
lives in Burlington, N.C. She attributes her ability to be active in
gardening and at church to the aid of Tylenol and muscle rub.
• Virginia Lee Monroe ’51 has moved to a retirement community
in Auburn, Ala., after living in Pensacola for 42 years.
• Frances Carter Conover ’45 reports she is 85-1/2 years old and
going strong!
• Virginia Elizabeth Tate Herod ’45 has retired after enjoying many
years of being a church organist and teaching piano. She and
her husband recently celebrated 63 years of marriage.
• Orren LeRoyce Royal ’51 and his wife, Madelyn Palmiter Royal
’50, had three sons and a daughter together. Sadly, Madelyn
passed away the evening Orren retired from his medical practice, five years ago.
• Marion Waters Barrow ’52 and her husband have moved into a
retirement complex.
• Betty Gensert Towey ’45 loves staying in touch with the members of the Class of 1945. She says she loves and misses her dear
classmates.
• Patricia Britton ’52 is enjoying her time traveling with four other
retired principals. She has also taken up flower arranging as a
new hobby.
• Grace King Tribble ’45 is living in Macon, Ga.
• Anne Salyerds Francisco ’52 is happy to have a new grandson.
She lives in Norcross, Ga.
• Mary Alice Garner ’46 has four children, 10 grandchildren, and
10 great-grandchildren, all living in the Jackson, Miss., area.
22
• Mary Collins Golden ’52 lost her first child, Gwen, years ago, but
has a daughter, Karen, and two granddaughters.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Sue Austin Norwood ’52 lost her sister, Annie Ruth Reed ’32.
Sue’s daughter, Sharon Norwood Chastain ’82, is a psychiatrist
in Knoxville, Tenn.
• Miriam Pace ’52 enjoys volunteer work, especially with the local
public library. She also stays active by swimming three miles a
week.
• Betty Jean Vaughn ’52 enjoys retirement and lives on Lake
Lanier.
• Barbara Snider Miller ’53 enjoys her two grandchildren and her
time serving on the Homewood Sr. Center board.
• Betty Smilie Christiansen ’54 enjoys her four grandchildren and
traveling. She and her husband are involved in their church and
community.
• Betty Perry Gibson ’54 lost her husband, Charles, in November
2008.
• Gwendolyn Prater Glass ’54 still teaches piano at age 76. She
has been teaching for 56 years.
• Sara Stembridge Perry ’54 had a great time at her class reunion
in 2009! She works at her church as the communications coordinator and serves on the Hoover Beautification Board. Sara’s
Huntingdon family tree includes cousins Laura Elizabeth Smith
’41 and June Dorenthea Adcock McLain ’50.
• Wynell Jordan Sachs ’54 celebrated her 50th anniversary with a
great trip to Egypt in September 2008.
• Shirley Parker Watkins ’56 of
Auburn, pictured with her husband, William “Wick” Watkins,
was honored with the Alumni
Loyalty Award during Reunion
Weekend last spring. Shirley
and Wick are generous donors
to the College and consistent
members of the Huntingdon
Society.
• Barbara Duggan Wilson ’56
and her husband, Stan, are
in good health and enjoying
retirement in Auburn, Ala.
• Mary O’Brien Cox ’57 has lived in Americus, Ga., since 1997. Her
husband, Roy A. Cox ’56, died in March 2005. She is active in
church work, both locally and on the conference level.
• F. Warren Davis ’57, of Drum Point, Md., (seated, front, next column) was the first of four siblings to graduate from Huntingdon.
A Korean War veteran, he attended thanks to the G.I. Bill and
the hard work of his mother, Flora. He married the former Elizabeth (Betty) Berkstresser ’56, who died several years ago. His
sister, LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58, brother, Eldon Davis ’61, and
brother, Ronald Davis ’66, followed the Huntingdon tradition. All
four of the Davis siblings went on to successful careers: Warren,
at IBM; LaVerne followed her passion for photography; Eldon
was a financial advisor for A.G. Edwards; and Ron, now retired,
enjoyed a career in naval architecture. Eldon, who died in
1997, married the former Michelle (Mickey) Butte Davis ’61 after
graduation (Mickey’s brother was Warren’s classmate, Ronald
Butte ’57). Ron recently married his long-time friend and former
Huntingdon classmate, Linda Fitzpatrick ’65. (Linda’s cousin is
alumna Doris Teague ’73.) Now, the circle grows wider as Warren’s grandson, Daniel Davis, is a member of the Class of 2013,
and Daniel’s sister, Caitlin, may enter in 2011. The Huntingdon
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
connection may have been planted many centuries, ago,
however. Warren, who has been completing family genealogy,
recently discovered that their 20th great-grandmother was Matilda, the first Countess of Huntingdon (1072–1131 A.D.), a predecessor of Selina, the Countess of Huntingdon (1707-1791), for
whom the College was renamed in 1935. Pictured in this photo
behind Warren are LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58; Caitlin Davis;
LaVerne’s husband, Bill Ramsey; Billie Davis (mother of Daniel
and Caitlin); Beth Davis (Warren’s wife of 23 years); Daniel Davis
’13, Ron Davis ’66, and Linda Fitzpatrick Davis ’65. LaVerne, Ron,
and Linda serve on the National Alumni Board.
• Sue Cross Savage ’57 and her group of “Huntingdon Honeys”
from 1957 enjoyed another fun time together in September
2008 at Lake Burton and Highlands as guests of Joan Johnston
Diversi ’57 and her family. They have met as a group almost
annually since graduation.
• Sue Liu Wen ’57 is still teaching some students (ages 7 through 79)
and having lots of fun, challenges, and learning experiences.
She and her husband, Wen-Yang, have two grandchildren.
• We often remember the members of Huntingdon classes who
have preceded current classes as those who lit the way for others to follow—and now that is more than just figuratively true.
Flowers Hall and the walkways in front are newly visible at night,
thanks to the Class of 1958, who donated to a 50-year reunion
class gift intended to improve the lighting around Flowers Hall
last year. Thank you, Class of 1958, and gift agent Binnie Sowell
’58, for a legacy of light!
• LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58 believes retirement is wonderful. She
visited 14 countries in 2009 with Friendship Force International
and in travels with her husband and others. She enjoys gardening, working on a lifetime of photographs, and competing with
other photographers in a camera club.
• Flora McDonald Speed ’58 enjoyed her 50th reunion at Huntingdon, where she reunited with many of her friends and
classmates.
• Martha Vickery Bigby ’59 is a retired elementary school principal who enjoys her time traveling and visiting her grandchildren.
She is the president of Baldwin County Retired Educators.
• Jane Solomon Davis ’59 and her husband, a retired pediatrician, live in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• Rhona Howell Summerford ’59 lives in Falkville, Ala. She is a
retired teacher.
23
• Charles E. Tucker ’59 and his wife, Carol McManus Tucker ’60,
are moving into a new home. Charles has retired as research
director and naturalist at Weeks Bay National Estuarine Research
Reserve (NOAA).
1960s
• Kemmla Viego Cernuda ’60 and her husband have enjoyed 40
happy years of living in Bradenton, Florida. In January 2009 they
celebrated their 42nd wedding anniversary.
• Elizabeth (Libba) Oglesby Johnson ’60 has
moved back to Prattville, Ala., with her
husband, Ed, a retired Presbyterian minister. Libba’s Huntingdon family tree has
many branches, including her mother,
Mary Collier Oglesby ’30; aunt, Lora
Oglesby Quinn ’37; two sisters, Mary Ann
Oglesby Neeley ’54, and Lenore Oglesby
Kirkpatrick ’56; and Mary Ann’s husband,
Aubrey Neeley ’59, and grandson, Graham Neeley ’11.
• Elizabeth Johnson Ragsdale ’61, wife of Tom Ragsdale ’60, was
appointed by the governor of Georgia, Sonny Perdue, to the
Professional Standards Commission. She is the Second Congressional District representative.
• Emily Davis Cato ’62 enjoys traveling. She was in Spain and
France in November 2008 and India and Nepal in January 2009.
In March, she traveled to Iran.
• Martha (Margo) Knowles Williams ’62 retired in July 2007
from Miami Dade College. She is continuing as an adjunct
professor.
• Warren “Buddy” Allen ’63 of Texarkana, Ark., former general
manager of Domtar Industries, was recognized with the 2009
Ray H. Cross Community Service Award from the Technical
Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry and the Paper Industry Management Association. Allen earned his master’s degree
at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business after
graduating from Huntingdon. In 2005, he was named Mill Manager of the Year by PIMA.
• Ruth Parks Andrew ’63 is living in Spokane, Wash.
• Sandra Tiller Barton ’63 enjoys her four grandchildren and the
leisure time she has with retirement.
Bob Zellner ’61 of Southampton, New York, spoke to a group of
students, faculty, and staff about his book, The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A White Southerner in the Freedom Movement, during
a Presidential Colloquy at Huntingdon last spring. He related his
story as the son and grandson of Klansmen and the incidents (in
particular, a sociology class at Huntingdon) that propelled him to
the position of field secretary for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee in Alabama during the violent years of the
Civil Rights Movement. The book received a positive review from
Publisher’s Weekly and a starred review from Library Journal, calling it, “A story that is sometimes horrific, always interesting, and
ultimately inspirational about a white Southerner’s commitment
to racial injustice. This powerful portrait of a courageous man is
highly recommended.” The book has been optioned for film by
director Spike Lee. Screenwriter Barry Brown, who has completed
the screenplay, was present for the Colloquy.
• Carl Flowers Jr. ’63 still enjoys growing his Christmas trees.
• Judith Sanford Broadway ’63 travels frequently, visiting Santiago,
Chile, recently. She is planning trips to Edinburgh, the Orkney
Islands, and the Hebrides.
• Frank Rives Houston ’63 has retired after serving as mayor of the
town of Coosada for 30 years. He is looking forward to spending
time with his grandchildren.
• Inell Rentz McGee ’63 lives in Selma and is retired from teaching
at Southside High School. Her husband, W. Herbert McGee ’62,
passed away November 27, 2006.
Members of the Class of 1959 gathered for the traditional 50th Reunion Breakfast at the home of President J. Cameron West during Reunion
Weekend in April. Pictured (L-R) are, back row: Judy Wilson Nunn, Lydia Blake Gillespie, H.G. “Duck” Rutherford, Charles Lowery, Tommy Denton, James Yarbrough, Charles Tucker, and Aubrey Neeley; front row: Barbara Taylor Landwehr, Marcia Mathews Reichert, Faye Byrd Hall,
Doris Bolton Gaines, Jane Solomon Davis, Martha Still Rodgers, Judy McNease James, Catherine Giglio Lamar, Peggy Springfield Pennington,
and Mary Jo Freeman Barnes.
24
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Marquerite Whitehead Edwards ’66 works as a self-employed artist, doing portraits on commission. She has painted 15 Supreme
Court justices and 7 Appellate Court judges’ portraits that hang
in Alabama judicial buildings.
• Kathryn Prestwood Bush ’67 and her husband are retired and
enjoy gardening, traveling, and spending time with their
grandchildren.
• Mary Sue Doler Grooms ’67 lost her husband of 57 years after a
long battle with Parkinson’s. She has 14 grandchildren.
The Classes of the 1960s were represented in this photo shot during Reunion Weekend in April. Unfortunately, a roster of those pictured is not available.
• Corrie Anderson Owens ’63 retired from teaching music at
Lurleen B. Wallace Community College in December 2006. She
worked there for 15 years, many of which were spent working
with friend and fellow Huntingdon alum Jerry Padgett ’65.
• Donna Brannon Coon ’64 announces the marriage of her third
child, Martha Lynn Coon, to Hannes Walter Wieck, January 3,
2009, in Sewanee, Tenn.
• The Reverend Dr. Ervin Dailey ’64 serves as president of the
Chickasaw Chamber of Commerce. He is a member of the
Chickasaw Utility Board and curator of the city’s new art
museum.
• The family of Barbara Adams Herring ’67 has been entwined
with Huntingdon for eight decades. Barbara’s mother, Margaret Rogers Adams ’39, entered as a student the same year Dr.
Hubert Searcy entered as president. Barbara began her Huntingdon years 32 years later, Dr. Searcy’s last year as president.
The mother and daughter enjoyed being on campus with 10
of the same professors and staff, and both lived in Pratt Hall.
Their Huntingdon family tree includes Barbara’s sister-in-law,
Martha Ruth Herring Faircloth ’62; son-in-law, Steven Kurt Gardner, presently a student in the Adult Degree Completion program at Huntingdon’s Daphne Campus; her husband’s cousins,
Paul Rambo ’70 and Joe Rambo ’87, and Joe’s wife, Lisa Boykin
Rambo ’88 (whose brother is alumnus Allen Wesley Boykin ’87,
and mother is alumna Lois Cowan Boykin ’66; and whose father,
Jack Boykin, served on the Board of Trustees during the administrations of Presidents Jackson and Bigham).
• Sandra Hurst Dunaway ’64 celebrated her 43rd wedding anniversary October 23, 2008. She has two grandchildren and enjoys
being active in her church.
• Joan Jolly Huckaby ’64 has enjoyed traveling to Ireland, New
York, and Southwest Canyon country. She has grandchildren
that range in age from 3 to 12.
• Erwin Josef Lischke ’64 lives on a small ranch in western Montana, where he raises alpacas.
• Long-time Huntingdon trustee
and board secretary Betty Thurman McMahon ’64 of Birmingham was honored with the
Alumni Loyalty Award during
Reunion Weekend this spring.
She is pictured with her husband, John. Together, they are
among Huntingdon’s most generous donors.
• Annella Trobaugh Smith ’64 married Lowell C. Smith January 18,
2008. They live in Clanton, Ala., part of the year and in Cape
Coral, Fla., the rest.
• Carolyn Ann Ragan Crutchfield ’65 and her husband, William
Earl Crutchfield ’66, live in Crossville, Tenn.
Ronald Davis ’66 (center) was inducted into the Alabama Society
of the Sons of the American Revolution last fall. His induction was
conducted by Col. Stan Phillips, USAF-Ret. (left), president of the
General Richard Montgomery Chapter of the SAR, and Col. Larry
Cornwell, USAF-Ret. (right), registrar for the group.
• Jeanne Bailey Gamble ’65 teaches British and American literature to high school juniors and seniors in the Huntsville City
School System.
• Donna McCourry King ’67 has been married for 42 years and is
active in the National Society of the Daughters of the American
Revolution.
• Frances Wright Munger ’65 has moved to Birmingham to be
closer to family after losing her husband of 37 years.
• David George Myrick ’67 is retired and living in Mobile.
• Gene Shelton ’65 has caught lots of fish lately. His son is in the
State Department. His daughter just completed a year at the
South Pole research station.
• Marion Earl Dowling ’66 and his wife, Shirley Chase Dowling ’68,
have six grandchildren and are both enjoying retired life.
• Michael Dowling ’66 retired at the end of 2005 and moved to
Tucson, Ariz., to be near his daughter and three grandchildren.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Kaye Bethune Cutchen ’68 retired after teaching English for 30
years. She is doing volunteer work with various community organizations in Eufaula, Ala.
• Patricia Tanner Mingledorff ’68 loves living in Birmingham. She
and her husband, Larry, have five grandchildren.
• Rebecca McFee Robertson ’68 is retired and has a new
granddaughter.
• Carol Morse Tew ’68 enjoys life in Montgomery as a retired elementary school teacher.
25
• Donald C. France ’69 will publish his seventh novel, Ghost of a
Chance, early this fall.
• Charlotte DuBose Gaston ’69 was featured in the Montgomery
Advertiser for her 40 years of work in interior decorating. Her
store is located on Vaughn Road east of Bell Road, where Gaston constructed a new building in 1997.
• Jean Carpenter Murray ’69 is semi-retired after more than 8
years in higher education and 17 years in public safety. She is
as an ESL tutor and travels the country.
1970s
• Judy Duncan Bilyeu ’70 retired in the spring of 2008 and lives in
Aiken, S.C.
• George (’70) and Sarah
McCarthy (’69) Mingledorff are the parents of
alumna Lisa Mingledorff
Lane ’97, another legacy
family. George and Sarah
are enjoying retirement,
with the help of their three
grandsons.
• Susan Whitaker Owen ’70
has been married to her
husband, Ken, for 40 years. They are enjoying life in Wetumpka,
Ala., with their grandchildren and a multitude of volunteer
activities.
• Sally Owen Weaver ’70 and her husband, Woody, live in Tallassee, Ala., and have two children.
• Dee Koza ’71 (right), an active member of the National Alumni Board,
served as the chair of the Founders
Day Committee last year.
• Reverend Michael Dean McLaurin
’72, a pastor living in DeRidder, La.,
served as the Bible study leader
at the 176th Session of the Liberia
Annual Conference of the United
Methodist Church.
• Merritt W. Moseley ’72 has three
grandchildren and is proud to
announce the newest, Julia, who
was born in July 2008.
• Andrew Hudgins ’73 has a new book
of children’s poems, Shut Up, You’re
Fine, available in a bookstore near
you. Among other books and publications, he is also the author of Saints
and Strangers (1985), which was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize; The NeverEnding (1991), a finalist for the National
Book Award; and Ecstatic in the Poison
(Overlook Press, 2003). His book-length
poem, “After the Lost War: A Narrative
(1988),” in which he addresses the soldier’s life during the Civil War, won the
Poets’ Prize. His awards and honors include the Witter Bynner
Award for Poetry, the Hanes Poetry Prize, and fellowships from
the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. He teaches at
Ohio State University.
26
Brigadier General Jim Mungenast ’71 of Knoxville, Tenn., led the
initial mobilization of reservists following the 9/11 attacks, served
as acting director of intelligence for the European Command
during Operation Iraqi Freedom, and was appointed mobilization
assistant for the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, during which he oversaw approximately 1,200 intelligence reserve
professionals. He was awarded the Alumni Achievement Award
from the National Alumni Association during Reunion Weekend
last spring. There to celebrate with him was his wife, Mary Jean
Sheets Mungenast ’73.
• Janice Ruth Pylant ’73 has retired after 30 years of teaching. She
enjoys tennis, golf, biking, hiking, and volunteer work.
• Katherine “Kitty” Mooresmith Harris ’74 works as the nurse
manager for medical ICU at Baptist Medical Center in
Montgomery.
• Mary Katherine Manning ’74 and her husband, Harry Truslow,
have moved to Montgomery from Shreveport, La. Kathy is a
retired teacher, guidance counselor, and school administrator.
• Ruth Renfroe May ’74, a retired teacher, lives in Grassy Creek,
N.C.
• Phyllis Killion Ward ’74 and Mike Ward ’76,
chief of security at Huntingdon, are part
of a succession of legacies, which include
Phyllis’ brother-in-law, Gene Autry Townson
’73; aunt, Marie Pierce Morgan ’38; mother,
Mildred Morgan Killion ’71; and now Phyllis
and Mike’s daughter, Sarah Elizabeth Ward
’10. Their sons, Mikey and Adam, may follow. The Wards have served as foster parents for a number of young people over
the years. Phyllis wrote: While I was in the
9th grade, my mother made the impressive
decision to attend college. Huntingdon was
her choice. I watched her as she soaked up
the college experience as dry earth soaks
up a steady rain. After she graduated, I enrolled. Huntingdon
was an obvious choice for me. It was familiar territory and the
professors made my learning challenging and fun. When Chief
and I began dating, he chose to attend Huntingdon, partly
because of the great school it was and partly because the
woman he was in love with was already a student there. We
courted on campus. We have fond memories of the stacks in
the library since he did his work-study there. Huntingdon prepared us well for our careers and lives in the community. The
call to service has been a foundation in both of our lives and
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
because we believe we have been “blessed to be a blessing,” we have both worked in serving professions. We are very
pleased that our daughter, Sarah, is now in her senior year at
Huntingdon. She has found a great community among faculty,
staff and students, and we are confident that she will “go forth
in service” after graduation.
• (L-R) Meggie ’11 and twin sister Claire Bridges ’11 and their parents, Gary ’77 and Jane Jenkins Bridges ’78, have made Huntingdon a family affair. Gary and both of his siblings met their
spouses on campus, including Gary’s brother, Tony Bridges ’85,
who married Beth Bridges ’91, and his sister, Judy Bridges Michel
’80, who married Michael Allen Michel ’86. Meggie and Claire
are also pictured on the cover.
Members of the Classes of the 1970s gathered for this photo during the Reunion picnic lunch, (L-R) Julia Corbin Gordon ’79, Gary
Holt ’79, Cindy Smith Belin ’79, Debbie Doss Dahl ’79, Debra Freisleben ’79, George E. Mingledorff III ’70, Jane Jenkins Bridges
’78, Gary Bridges ’77, Barbara Whatley Christenberry ’78, Kathy
McLeod Lawrence ’79, and Wilma Anderson Tucker ’79.
• Brantley High School, Alabama, has named their basketball
court in honor of Anthony “Tony” C. Stallworth ’78, who served
as head coach of the Bulldogs from 1990 to 2006, with 306 wins,
139 losses, and 3 state championships.
• Leslie Burson Davis ’75 has moved to a new home in Prattville,
Ala.
• Ellen Evans Haulman ’75 works as the assistant director for
instruction for the Alabama Commission on Higher Education.
• William Terry Miller ’75 and his wife, Holly Bothfeld Miller ’76, are
living in Jacksonville, Fla. Terry retired from GM/GMAC.
• Elizabeth Burnette Newsome ’75 works for the Virginia Department of Transportation as the federal submissions officer and
lives in Bruington, Va.
• Roxanne D. Hannon-Odom ’75 earned her Doctorate of Education in curriculum and instruction from the University of West
Florida in May 2008.
• Dr. Sarah Elizabeth Penry Pitzer ’75 serves as the director of the
Latin American and Latino Studies Institute at Fordham University in New York. (Her professional name is Elizabeth Penry.) Her
husband is a professor of anthropology at NYU.
Members of the Class of 1979 enjoyed dinner together during
Reunion Weekend in April: (L-R) Gary Holt, Carole Crampton Ellers,
Conway Ellers, Cindy Smith Belin, Debbie Doss Dahl, Wilma Anderson Tucker, Kathy McLeod Lawrence, Jerry Lawrence, Becky
Brown, Jeff McKee, and Julia Corbin Gordon.
• Ansley Callaway Rice ’75 and her husband, Herbert William
Rice ’74, are living in Rome, Ga., where Herbert is a CPA with
Howse & Rice P.C.
• Elaine Andrews Boyer ’79 and her husband, Randy, live in Coosada, Ala., where Elaine teaches second grade at Coosada
Elementary School.
• Jenny Mettey Stockbridge ’75 and her husband, Derry, live in
Marietta, Ga. Jenny is a data architect.
• Angelia Cale ’79 serves as a chemistry supervisor at the University of South Alabama Medical Center.
• Ray Lee Overton III ’77 is alive and well and living in Lawrenceville, Ga.
• Tommye Jane Cobb Cauthen (T.J.) ’79 lives in Theodore, Ala.,
with her husband, James, and their two sons. She works as a
medical technician for Infirmary Health System.
• Sarabeth Owens Snuggs ’77 has served for the Florida Retirement Systems for more than 30 years, culminating her service
as director in 2003.
• Dr. Dianne Petrov Burke ’78 was profiled in “Women in Business”
in the Montgomery Advertiser, Sunday, July 12. Dianne is a successful dentist in town.
• Kim Basler Glass ’78, the mother of one son, has been teaching
for 17 years.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Gary Hinton Holt ’79 and his wife, Angella, live in Montgomery
with their two children. Gary is the purchasing manager for
Daehan Solution Alabama.
• Dona Burrell Ivey ’79 teaches grades five through eight and
lives in Meridian, Miss.
• Lyn Wilbert Keaster ’79 is in her 30th year of teaching children
with learning disabilities. She has twin boys.
27
1980s
Look out! Wherever these four alumni are lurking, trouble is sure
to be close behind. Pictured with President West and proclaiming that they had more fun than any other class ever, (L-R) Judy
Bridges Michel ’80 (see Judy’s family connections with the Bridges
family in the late ’70s); Terri Smith Francis ’80 (see her family, right);
Barbara Whatley Christenberry ’78; and Lynn Skene ’77, whose
sister is Mary Skene ’73; relived memories during the President’s
Reception, part of Homecoming 2009. Lynn was the first Christian
education major and graduate—she proposed the idea for the
major to President Allen Jackson. She was also the Red Lady on a
frequent basis from 1973–77, when the friends would meet, decide
it was time for a Red Lady run, and then turn off the lights floor by
floor in the residence halls as they ran screaming throughout the
buildings. (Terri, known as “Munch,” was in charge of the lights.)
• Martha Rebecca Daniel ’80 serves as an educational technology specialist with the Houston Independent School District in
Houston, Texas.
• Thomas Irving Graham ’80 and his wife, Linda, live in Lafayette,
La.
• Foster Thomas Hicks ’80 lives in Millbrook, Ala., and works as the
division safety officer for Baptist Health in Montgomery.
• Gail Sanford Kendrick ’80 is retired but serves as the governor’s appointee to and chairman of Elmore County’s Board of
Registrars.
• Terri Smith Francis ’80 is the mom of two Huntingdon students,
Sarah ’11, an elementary education major, and Will ’12, an English and political science double-major.
• Barry Mohun ’80 was honored with the 2009 Glen Clem Award
as the Junior College Coach of the Year by the Birmingham
Tip-off Club in March. Mohun is in his 11th season as the head
coach of the Shelton State Community College men’s basketball team.
• Janet Lenz Griffin ’81 and her husband, John, are living in Panama City, Fla.
• Judith Riley Plum ’81 works at Wiregrass Rehabilitation Center in
Dothan, Ala. She is also a practicing licensed massage therapist
and a member of Wiregrass Forge, a blacksmithing club.
• Martha Hollingsworth Posey ’81 and her husband, Terry Neal
Posey ’81, are living in Pike Road, Ala. Their son, Neal ’13, is a
freshman at Huntingdon (see back cover). Neal is the grandson of Huntingdon’s first athletic director, Coach Neal Posey,
who served the College for decades, and his wife, Jean Strawn
Posey ’70. Martha’s sister, Nancy Hollingsworth Wong ’79, lives
in Concord, N.C.
Reunion Weekend reunited members of the Classes of the 1980s, L-R, back row: Linn Boykin McAuliffe ’86, Joan Paine Cumbie ’84, John Crawford ’82, Bernadette Ruocco Mullins ’84, Sandy Boren-Barrett ’84, Becky Brown Hopkins ’80, Wendy Evers Bryan ’85, Monica Kneiley Ward ’86,
Lisa Baughn Bond ’84, Carla Barwick Vaughan ’86, Minnie Lamberth ’83; front row: Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86, Celia Smith Rudolph ’80, Terri
“Munch” Smith Francis ’80, Tommye Cobb Cauthen ’79, Bill Bond ’83, John Michael Bryan ’82
28
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Mike and Fran Jones ’82 came back
to campus for Homecoming 2009.
They live in Decatur, Ala.
• Priscilla Gaines McMillan ’82 works
as a tennis ins-tructor and lives in Talladega, Ala.
• Donna Whaley Shirey ’82 lives in Felton, Del.
• Robyn Renee Bryant ’83 lives in
Woodland Hills, Calif., where she is
a professional artist and musician.
Robyn’s beautiful work can be seen
and heard on her Web site, www.robynbryant.net.
• Tommy Dismukes ’83 is serving as the director of enrollment
management and operations for the Adult Degree Completion Program at Huntingdon. A member of the Huntingdon staff
as director of financial aid in the mid-1990s, Tommy went on
to work for the Kentucky Higher Education Association (KHEA),
then returned to Huntingdon as vice president for enrollment
management in 2004, achieving five consecutive years of
record enrollment increases.
Jim Leonard, Margaret Camille Thornton Leonard ’81, David Allred ’92, and Glenda Atwell Allred ’91 accepted the Montgomery
Area Business Council on the Arts (MABCA) Small Business Award
for their full-service communication firm, LWT Communications,
last fall. The award was presented by Huntingdon President J.
Cameron West, who serves on the MABCA board.
• Shirley Bowman Muhammad ’83 lives in Marietta, Ga.
• At the College’s Founders Day Convocation
last spring, Dr. Jacqueline Allen Trimble ’83,
chair of the Department
of Language and Literature, was presented with
the Dr. John N. Todd
III Exemplary Teacher
Award by President West
(far left) and Dr. Kyle Fedler, vice president for academic affairs
and dean of faculty (right). After accepting the award, which
was a surprise, Jackie realized her family was seated in the balcony. Dr. John N. Todd III ’50 established this honor as well as a
similar recognition for a junior faculty member, which was presented to Dr. James Daniels, associate professor of biology.
• Terri Hester Cribb ’84 teaches art classes and oil painting classes
to adults and children from her studio in Madison, Miss. She is
actively involved in her church, Parkway Hills Methodist, and is
also an active member of the Mississippi Art Colony.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Richard Yates ’82 of Lilburn, Ga., the father of Kathryn Yates
’09 and husband of Lisa Sells Yates ’83, was presented with
the Alumni Achievement Award during Reunion Weekend. He
is the global director of Bottler Solution Services at the CocaCola Company. The Yates/Sells legacy family includes (L-R) the
Reverend Ed Sells, Lisa’s father, who served on the College’s
Board of Trustees and received an honorary doctorate from
Huntingdon, her mother, Betty, Lisa, Rick, Kathryn, and Kathryn’s brother, Connor.
• Linda Wall Killinger ’84 serves as the financial assistant for her
church, a part-time position. She also leads the first- and second-grade children’s choir and an active Girl Scout troop of
fourth- and fifth-grade girls.
• Drew Smyser ’12, son of Carol Faulkner Smyser ’84, found that
he shared his mother’s love for the campus as soon as he visited—and the similarities don’t end there. Both served as Rush
chairmen for their respective fraternities (Sigma Nu and Chi
Omega). Drew’s Sigma Nu chapter room is Carol’s old residence hall room. Drew works in the Office of External Affairs as a
work-study student with Carol’s college roommate and current
director of alumni advancement, Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86.
Carol served as director of alumni relations in the late ’80s. Prior
to her work with alumni, she worked in the Office of Admission
serving students in the North Alabama area, where the family
made their permanent home after their time in Montgomery.
• John Alan Racine ’85, and his wife, Tonja Waddle Racine ’87,
live in San Jose, Calif.
• Jim Abbott ’86, athletic director for Oklahoma City University,
was named NAIA-ADA Athletics Director of the Year in 2009.
During his seven years in his current position, OCU has added
11 new varsity sports, more than doubled its population of student-athletes, captured 13 NAIA national championships and
numerous Sooner Athletic Conference team championships,
and added successful fund-raising ventures. He also created a
chapter of the Chi Alpha Sigma National Student-Athlete Honor
Society at OCU. He will be recognized at the 2010 NAIA Awards
Banquet in Cincinnati, Ohio.
• Melinda Wainwright Singleton ’86 of Hoover, Ala., works in clinical research out of Irvine, Calif.
• Patricia Stevens Smith ’86 married Paul Bradford Smith, December 27, 2008.
• The Reverend Charles Allen Walker ’86 serves as a pastor and
lives in Myerstown, Penn.
• David Layne Beasley ’87 is the head baseball coach for Berry
College. David and his wife, Cindy, have three children and live
in Rome, Ga.
• Linda Olsen Eichas ’87 lives in Cocoa Beach, Fla., and works for
Brevard Community College as an administrator.
• Melinda Caprara Hinds ’87 lives in Montgomery and works at
LifeSouth Community Blood Centers as the district community
development coordinator.
29
A Legacy of Success
Athletic director Buzz Phillips (far left) and head golf coach Matt
Mahanic ’07 (far right) led members of Huntingdon’s NAIA Golf
National Championship teams from 1985, ’86, ’87, and ’88 to
mid-field just before kick-off of the Homecoming game to honor
their legacy of greatness. L-R, beginning next to Phillips: Randy
Holcombe ’86, a four-year team member, was a two-time AllDistrict and two-time All-Southern States Conference player. He
lives in Montgomery with his wife, Lucy, and daughter, Lindsey.
Robert Birmingham ’87, a four-year team member, serves as
executive vice president and regional trust manager for Regions
Bank in Montgomery. He also serves on the board of directors
for the Southern Golf Association. He and his wife, Jeannine,
have two children. Charlie Crawford ’87, a Hawk for two years,
works for the Alabama Department of Public Health after serving as the head golf professional at Arrowhead Country Club in
Montgomery for seven years. He and his wife, Kathleen, have
two children. Scott Warzecha ’88 played on three championship teams and was a four-time All-American. During those four
years, Scott accumulated a number of individual victories. He
was inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame in 1998.
After a three-year career as a professional golfer, he went into
sales, and is working for a security and surveillance company in
Lexington, S.C. Scott is married to the former Kay Noble ’86, and
they have two boys. Patrick Wood ’88 played on three championship teams and was an All-American in 1985. During his four
years as a Hawk, Patrick had two individual victories and was
inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame in 1999. After
• Susan K. Hughes ’87 lives in Hartford, Ala., and works for First
National Bank of Hartford.
• Thomas Eugene Strickland ’87 works as a program manager and
lives in Franklin, N.C.
• Lt. Col. Scott Hayes ’88 has been appointed commander of the
357th Airlift Squadron at Maxwell-Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery. The 357th is part of the Air Force Reserve’s 908th Airlift
Wing, flying the C-130 Hercules cargo transport. Scott and his wife,
Angelyn Bryant Hayes ’86, live in Montgomery with their children.
• Rebecca Ross Segrest Hollingsworth ’88 and her husband, Raymond, live in Shorter, Ala. She is a teacher at the Montgomery
Academy.
30
a two-year career as a professional golfer, he began his career
at Jackson Hospital, where he serves as director of development
for the Jackson Hospital Foundation. Patrick is married to the
former Juliann Marie Albritton ’86; and they have two children.
David Schreyer ’89 was a member of three national championship teams and was a four-time All-American. During his four
years as a Hawk, he accumulated nine individual victories. He
was inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame in 2001.
David also represented the United States twice in the World
University Games, winning two gold medals. Since graduating,
David has enjoyed a successful career as a professional golfer,
with 88 victories world-wide. He is the all-time leading money
winner on the NGA Hooters Golf Tour. He spent five years on the
Nationwide tour and one year on the PGA Tour and is one of a
handful of golfers to shoot 59 in a PGA-sanctioned event. David
is a teaching instructor at Braelinn Golf Club in Peachtree City,
Ga. Kevin Pettit ’90, a four-year Hawk who played on the 1988
championship team, had one individual victory and helped
the team win many team titles. Kevin is a member of the PGA
of America and is the general manager and head golf professional at Indian Pines Golf Club in Auburn, Ala. He and his wife,
Kelly, have two children. T.R. Bowser ’90 was a four-year Hawk
and played on the 1988 championship team, where he was
awarded All-American and Academic All-American status. He
works for Endo Medical Sales in Dothan, Ala., where he lives with
his wife, Traci, and daughter, Taylor.
• Jennifer Gaston Rodopoulos ’88 was named one of Montgomery
Public Schools’ Teachers of the Year after competing with more
than 2,200 elementary and secondary teachers throughout the
district. She is a 5th grade language arts teacher with more than
20 years of experience at Forest Avenue Academic Magnet
School. She and her husband, Stephen Kelly Rodopoulos ’90, live
in Montgomery.
• Philip House ’89 graduated from the University of Georgia College
of Pharmacy May 2. He is working as a pharmacist and living in
Suwanee, Ga.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
A Legacy of Service
Rannie McCall ’87 (pictured standing, white suit, at a tailgate
event in 2005) lived to give. That’s why, although he was very ill
with a heart condition that would ultimately take his life, Rannie
set up and taught an after-school computer skills class for youth
at Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church in Montgomery.
After he learned that the church had an unused computer lab,
Rannie, who had always wanted to teach, asked if he might
use the space to teach computer skills to the children from
one of Montgomery’s poorest neighborhoods. The church not
only gave him the space and necessary equipment, but also
allowed him use of their minibus to shuttle the students home
and provided snacks for the students. The church said the cost
of the program, at an estimated $3,000, could have a return in
the millions of dollars if just one child was lifted from poverty. “All
1990s
• Debra Kirkman McLaughlin ’90 changed careers and became
a teacher. She has been married for 18 years and has three
children.
• Michael Dees ’91 was named to the Top 40 Under 40 List by Business First magazine in Louisville, Ky., last year. He is president of AIS
Benefit Concepts.
• Lane Patrick Wilson ’91 serves as a financial advisor for Morgan
Stanley Smith Barney and resides in Hampton Cove, Ala.
• Dr. Alexandra E. Acosta Conniff ’92 lives in Eufaula, Ala., where she
works as a teacher.
• Kelly McCollum Crosby ’92 and her husband, Erick, announce the
birth of their son, Samuel Hayden. Proud big brothers are Davis,
age 10, and Will, age 8.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
children who take part in Rannie’s program are from the housing
projects in Montgomery and have limited exposure to the outside
world,” the Reverend Michael Thurman, who pastors the church,
told the Montgomery Advertiser in an article in May 2007. “He is
trying to not only teach them computer skills; but also to inspire
them to set goals.” Huntingdon joined the cause by donating
the time necessary to update and debug the computers for use.
For the same article, Rannie told the Advertiser, “When these
kids first started with me this fall, none of them had any desire
to attend college. After a few months in the program, now over
half of them talk about career and college plans.” Sadly, Rannie passed away September 23, 2007, but the way he applied
wisdom in service to the young people in one of Montgomery’s
poorest neighborhoods will be his legacy.
• The Huntingdon family remembers the warm smile and exuberance of Cari Ann Nolan
Slider ’92, who died of an
apparent heart attack February 22. Cari Ann, of Garland,
Texas, was a physical education major and played soccer
all four years at Huntingdon.
She has one daughter, Abby
Slider. Caldwell Elementary
School (K-5), where Cari taught, has established a fund in Cari’s
memory, “Cari’s Cause.” The majority of Caldwell is economically
disadvantaged, and Cari was known for buying coats and shoes
for the children there, among other acts of kindness. The fund will
continue some of the good work she began.
• Eric Senglam Wong ’92 lives in Le Mars, Iowa.
31
• Jennifer Brooke “J.B.” Kendrick ’92 and Carl Leon Donaldson
III were married June 27, 2009, in a beachside ceremony over
which the Reverend Misty Edwards Roberts ’89 presided in Carillon Beach, Fla. J.B. and Carl live in Atlanta.
• Bruce David Burleson ’93 is loving his new hobby of golf. He is a
retired USML master sergeant.
• Stan Michael Dura ’93 works for the University of Las Vegas.
• Becky Morgenstern Jones ’93 was married to Dean Jones of
Corby, Great Britain, on April 25, 2009, at the Capital City Club
in Montgomery. Heather Morgenstern ’95 served as maid of
honor, Cammy Love Fulmer ’95 served as matron of honor.
Becky and Dean live in a suburb of Chicago.
• Debra Gandy Adams ’97 and her husband, the Reverend David
Adams, are living in Charleston, S.C., where Debra works as a
dentist.
• Lennie GaNelle Arrington ’97 of Columbus, Ga., married Jeffrey Vaughn Brand in June. GaNelle finished her master’s and
education specialist degrees at Troy University and is employed
with Columbus Psychological Associates as a mental health
therapist.
• John Jason Brandon ’97 has moved to a new home in Lexington, S.C.
• Georgia Banks Martin ’97 and her husband, Roger, live in
Montgomery.
• Jenifer McLean Lee ’93 lives in Harrison, Tenn., and works as a
health counselor.
• Mike Hamilton Valerazo ’97 serves as a major league scout in
the Southeast and in Latin America for the Chicago Cubs.
• Sarah Manikas Rech ’93 completed her Master of Education
degree, specializing in community counseling, and has attained
an ALC for the State of Alabama. She is working toward her LPS
and is employed by Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School
as a middle school guidance counselor.
• Future Hawk Jonah Wren Wood is
the daughter of Stacy Smith Wood
’97, who serves as art director for
Auburn Magazine (the Auburn University alumni magazine), and Jason
Wood ’95.
• Amy Tracy-Salgado ’93 has moved to Nutley, N.J., and works as
an analyst in New York.
• Dr. Ronald Bo Smith ’93 has moved to Dusseldorf, Germany,
where he is working as the manager for Polymeric Surfactants.
• Elizabeth Kirkemier Storie ’93 married Phil Storie June 3, 2008, in
Negril, Jamaica. They live in Birmingham, Ala.
• Jerry Edgar Clark Jr. ’94 lives in Gardendale, Ala., and works for
Nexity Bank as the senior vice president.
• Laura Hinds Duncan ’94 has returned to the Huntingdon Office
of Admission as vice president for enrollment management.
Following her graduation from Huntingdon, Laura served as
an admission counselor, assistant director, and director until
2003, when she moved to alumni advancement, and finally
to the Adult Degree Completion Program. Under her leadership, ADCP achieved its strongest enrollment since its founding.
Laura completed her master’s degree in public administration
at AUM and is working toward her doctorate.
• Valeria Weaver Atchison ’96 and her husband, Lewis, are living
in Chelsea, Ala., where she works as a QA engineer.
• Julie Zorka Baker ’96 has moved to a new home in Plano,
Texas.
• Nanci Ellen Smith Berch ’96 was featured in her local paper, The
Daily Post Athenian, for her work as a personal trainer at the
Athens-McMinn Family YMCA. Nanci and her husband, Dr. John
Kenneth “Bubba” Berch ’98, have a 2-year-old son, Tripp. John
teaches chemistry at Tennessee Wesleyan College and serves
on the National Alumni Board. Another legacy family, Nanci’s
brother, Brian Smith ’94, is the Huntingdon chaplain and director of community service.
• One of Huntingdon’s largest living legacy families lost one of
its members with the death of David Eric Brubaker ’96, age
37, who passed away unexpectedly at his home this summer. David’s sister, Susan Brubaker Oldham ’91, her husband,
Clarke Oldham ’93, Clarke’s brothers, Daniel Oldham ’00, and
Bo Oldham ’93, and Daniel’s wife, Tiffany Fike Oldham ’99, are
all Huntingdon alumni. At the time of his death, David, who was
a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity at Huntingdon, worked as
a territory manager for Wyeth Pharmaceuticals in Birmingham.
David has supported the College’s Annual Fund nearly every
year since his graduation. The family has asked that memorials
be made to Huntingdon College.
32
• Roderick Mark Alexander Jr. ’98 and
his wife, Allison, are living in Gulfport, Miss., where Mark works as an
attorney.
• Patricia Ryan Dennis ’98 joined the
Renewable Water Resources (ReWa)
of Greenville, S.C., as controller.
• 2009 Young Alumni Achievement
Award winner Cindy Barnes Hayden
’98 of Washington, D.C., continued
her education at the University of
Alabama School of Law, and then
joined the staff of U.S. Senator Jeff
Sessions ’69. She now works as the
director of federal government relations for Altria Client Services.
• Dr. Daniel Nevin ’98 sent this statement to one of his favorite professors, Dr. John Williams, who has built
a legacy of his own as a faculty
member in the Department of History for 30 years: “As a physician, I
am continually grateful for the kind
of education that I received at Huntingdon College as a history major. The practice of medicine
is not limited to the memorization and application of scientific
knowledge. More important, I believe, is the ability to examine
and synthesize relevant information from a variety of sources.
The careful, objective, and sometimes creative interpretation
of this information, say when making a diagnosis, then leads
to the best possible care for the patient. Being a history major
gave me a firm foundation in these skills. On a more personal
note, my undergraduate study of history has prepared me for
a lifetime of further reading and learning by introducing me to
essentially every aspect of human knowledge.”
• Major Ryan Oakley ’98, USAF, and his wife, Susan Ogilvie Oakley ’01, are back in Montgomery after living in England for three
years. Ryan completed law school after graduating from Huntingdon and then entered the Air Force JAG program. He now
instructs in that program at Maxwell AFB. Susan is completing a
master’s degree in special education. They have two sons.
• Kevin Heath Brown ’99, and his wife, Elaine Taylor Brown ’97, live
in Enterprise, Ala., where Kevin is the youth minister at Heritage
United Methodist Church.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Kelli Klene Bryant ’99, a physical education teacher, lives in
Elberta, Ala.
• Kelli Parrotte Floyd ’99 and her husband, Charles, live in Decatur, Mich.
• Shaindel Beers ’99 has published her
first book of poetry, A Brief History
of Time, and it is already #3 on her
publisher’s bestseller list. The book
was published in 2009 by Salt Publishing, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Shaindel is an instructor of English at
Blue Mountain Community College
in Pendleton, Oregon, and is poetry
editor of Contrary (www.contrarymagazine.com). She hosts the talk
radio show “Translated By,” at www.
blogtalkradio.com/onword.
• Shellie Skelton Fossick ’99 and her
husband, Lance Fossick ’99, happily
announce the birth of their twins,
Mary Kathryn and Tyler Murphree,
born September 2, 2008.
• Air Force Staff Sergeant Matt Garrett ’99 was deployed to Iraq
as part of the 187th Air National Guard unit from Montgomery’s
Maxwell/Gunter Air Force Bases. Matt is the son of Tech Team
member (phone guy) Ken Garrett and his wife, Linda Garrett
’94, and the brother of Michelle Garrett ’98.
• Brandi Scott McKinnon ’99, and her husband, Mark, live in Clanton, Ala.
• Jasen J. Smith ’99 has moved to Akron, Ohio, where he works as
the costume designer for Weathervane Playhouse and teaches
costume design at Case Western Reserve University.
• Heather Merritt Stiff ’99 and Stephen Jarrod Stiff ’98 welcomed
Samuel Flynn Stiff to the family April 10, 2008. Proud big brother
is Ethan Charles Stiff, age 4.
2000s
• Devin Nicole Booth ’00 has been hired as the girls’ basketball
coach for Opelika High School. Devin served as an assistant
coach at Huntingdon before moving on to coach five years at
Macon-East Academy in Cecil, then heading to Samson, Ala.
• Elizabeth “Betty” Floy Braswell ’00 teaches first grade for Huntsville City Schools, Ala.
• Kirsten Coombs ’00 is a member of the USAF living in San Antonio, Texas.
• Geneviave Horton Duckett ’00 and her husband, Jason,
announce the birth of their first child, Josiah Timothy Duckett,
July 3, 2008.
• Hope Richard ’00 graduated from the University of South Alabama College of Medicine May 9. At the Honors Convocation,
Hope received the William A. Gardner Award for achievement
in pathology. She has entered a residency program in pathology at the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System,
Richmond, Va. She has also earned her Ph.D. in microbiology.
• Shannon Delavan Todd ’00 followed an aunt, Vivian Gail Delavan ’80, and two uncles, Nelson Brennan Delavan ’84, a founding brother of the Kappa Sigma fraternity, and Joseph Delavan
’79. Shannon and her husband are stationed in Searcy, Alaska,
with the U.S. Army.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Laurie Howell Hester ’01 and her husband, Chris, are living
in LaGrange, Ga., and have two children: Madison, 4, and
Jackson, 2. Laurie teaches 4th grade at Callaway Elementary
School.
• Kimberly Keith Jones ’01 and her husband, Rex, live in Orange
Beach, Ala., where she enjoys being a stay-at-home-mom.
• Jessica Margaret Kennington ’01 married Philip Denis Olivier Jr. in
October. She completed her master’s degree at Tulane University and is employed with Catholic Charities of New Orleans.
• Dr. Mary Ussery Ousley ’01 lives in Prattville, Ala., where she is a
veterinarian for Cobbs Ford Pet Health Center.
• Bonnie Anne Boggan Peavy ’01, an attorney, lives in Oneonta,
Ala., with her husband, Justin.
• Jacqueline Robinson Turner ’01 and her husband, Rian Morgan
Turner ’00, live in Daphne, Ala., where Rian works as a CPA.
They are pleased to announce the birth of their son, Robinson.
Another legacy family, Jackie’s siblings, James Nathan Robinson
’04 and Joshua James Robinson ’06, and Josh’s wife, Rachelle
Ann Robinson ’07, graduated from Huntingdon.
• Lee Ann Mathews Williams ’01 serves as the senior pastor for
Wesley United Methodist Church in Ludlow, Ky.
• Kristen Jeanne Draganic Boyd ’02 was married June 21, 2008, to
James C. Boyd. Katie Harmon ’06 was her maid of honor and
Jamie Deveau Hahn ’02 and Georgana Harmon ’02 served as
bridesmaids.
• Stephanie Walker Brown ’02 lives in Millbrook, Ala., and works as
a third grade teacher at Wetumpka Elementary School.
• Robert Frederick-Karl Nishibun ’02 is a staff accountant in Franklin, Ky. The Nishibun legacies include brothers Alex Nishibun ’09
and Shane Nishibun ’01, and Shane’s wife, Tiffany McGuire
Nishibun ’04.
• Nick Richard ’02, executive director of the National Alliance on
Mental Illness-St. Tammany (Louisiana) and the brother of Hope
Richard ’00 (see above), married Lindsey Michele Trocquet in
October.
• Stephanie Mattke Sickler ’02 and her husband, William Robert
Sickler ’03, welcomed their first child, Olivia Grace, November
12, 2008. The proud parents both completed graduate school
at Florida State University in May: Stephanie, in interior design,
and Rob, in law.
• Albert Benjamin Sousa ’02 and his wife, Angela Smith Sousa ’01,
welcomed Mackenzie Leigh Sousa, October 1, 2008.
• La’Pearl Johnson Wright ’02 announces her marriage to Jeffrey
Wright—they live in Waverly, Ala.
• Former Huntingdon Chaplain Dave Barkalow ’03 graduated
from Duke Divinity School this fall. He was commissioned at
North Alabama Annual Conference as a provisional elder and
appointed to an associate position at First United Methodist
Church, Marianna, Fla.
• Lane Edward Davis ’03 graduated from Harvard Divinity School
this summer. He is married to Mary Claunch Davis ’02.
• Belinda Goris Duett ’03, director of student financial services at
Huntingdon, was elected secretary of the Alabama Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators for the 2009–10 academic year. She completed her Master of Public Administration
degree at Troy University with a concentration in public management this summer.
33
• Tonya Blankenship Forbus ’03 graduated with her doctorate
degree in May 2008 and is working in Prattville, Ala., as a physical therapist.
policy and legislative associate for the National Council of State
Housing Agencies. Her husband, Robert Wesley La Branche ’06,
continues on the staff of U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions ’69.
• Heather Embry Glarrow ’03 and her husband, Matthew Franklin
Glarrow ’07, live in Montgomery. Heather works as a personnel
analyst for the State of Alabama.
• Robin Steele Thornhill ’05 and her family were featured in an
article in Southern Living magazine (August 2009) for their work
and service to revive a historic theater in Ashland, Ala.
• Elizabeth Anne Hooks ’03 graduated from Asbury Seminary
in 2007. She serves as a missionary with the United Methodist
Church. After serving a year and a half in Hong Kong, she is living in Seattle, Wash.
• Anna Burton Wilson ’05 lives in Jacksonville, Ariz.
• Jamie Leigh Jordan ’03 was married May 10, 2008, and has
moved to Newport News, Va., to work for BAE Systems.
• Kara Gonzalez Murrow ’03 graduated with a master’s degree
in elementary education from Arizona State University last year.
This spring, she married Kai Murrow. They are living in Chandler,
Ariz. She teaches fifth grade in Phoenix.
• Jennifer Pratt Sumner ’03 and her husband, David, have started
a new gym downtown. “The Boneyard” opened October 31, at
41 East Railroad Street. Their Web site is www.41Fitness.com.
• Heather Hall Wells ’03 is the new director of the physical therapy assistant (PTA) program at Wallace Community College in
Dothan, Ala.
• Daniel Clark Duckett ’04 works as the administrative director for
Red Lemon Productions in Belfast, Ireland.
• Krista Leachman Hoover ’04 lives in Alabaster, Ala., and works
for AT&T Advertising Solutions as an area sales manager.
• Jarret Layson ’04 married Jenna Louise Sumlin August 15, 2009,
in Opelika, Ala. Jarret is an attorney with Ingrum, Rice & Parr.
• Rocky Lyons ’04 graduated from medical school at the University of Alabama-Birmingham last summer. He will complete
his three-year residency in Alabama. Rocky’s story became
famous in the first edition of Chicken Soup for the Soul. At age 5,
he rescued his mother from a horrific truck accident in a deep
ravine near his native Demopolis, Ala. The experience not only
made him appreciate the need for good rural doctors, but also
made him want to be one.
• Tiffany Nicole Tolbert ’04 lives in Portage, Ind., and works as the
director of the Calumet Region Office of the Historic Landmarks
Foundation of Indiana.
• Dr. Christina Frances Vranich ’04, an optometrist, lives in Collierville, Tenn.
• Shae Hicks ’05 graduated from Auburn University veterinary
school this summer. She is working in Birmingham.
• Mary Hodo ’05 completed her master’s degree in social work at
Tulane University and has moved to Eagle River, Alaska, where
she is serving as an assistant director of summer camps and
director of the after-school program for Focus Outreach Inc., a
non-profit outreach agency for special needs children.
• Stephanie Gayle Jimenez ’05 was married in December 2007.
• Elizabeth Keeble ’05 is a student at the University of South Alabama School of Medicine.
• Carolyn Kinney ’05 is working as a PR/media liaison at Auburn
Montgomery. Carolyn and Suzanna Wasserman ’05, who works
for the Montgomery Chamber of Commerce, were selected
as members of the inaugural EMERGE Montgomery Torchbearers Leadership Class for 2009–10. Modeled after the successful
Leadership Montgomery program, this class of 40 young professionals will focus on developing the skills and tools needed for
personal and professional leadership growth.
• Mindy Bevan La Branche ’05 has begun her MBA program at
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. She serves as the
34
• Erin Leslie Baier ’06 lives in Birmingham, Ala., where she serves as
an administrative associate for Ronald McDonald House Charities of Alabama.
• Coleman Cosgrove ’06 and Emily
Webster ’07 were married in Mobile
June 13. Both completed their graduate degrees at Appalachian State
University this summer—Coleman, in
marriage and family therapy, and
Emily, in English—and then rejoined
the Huntingdon community as director of residence life and director of
the Center for Career and Vocation,
respectively. They live in an apartment in Searcy Hall.
• Emily Rebecca Dueitt ’06 has moved
to Wetumpka, Ala., where she serves
as the director of children’s ministries
for First United Methodist Church, Wetumpka. She completed
her Master of Divinity degree at Duke University this spring.
• Andrea Garrett-Eubanks ’06 and her husband, Seth, are living in
Rainbow City, Ala., where Andrea teaches at Westbrook Christian School while attending Birmingham School of Law.
• Sisters (L-R) Bethany (’06) and Brittany
(’08) Gaydosh are continuing their
education together at Samford University’s School of Pharmacy. They are
part of Huntingdon’s 14-year legacy
of 100% placement into pharmacy
schools among chemistry majors.
The national acceptance rate into
Pharm.D. programs is only 17%.
• DeJuan Bryan Jackson ’06 lives in
Daphne, where he serves as a police officer.
• Jenna Delynn Holman Mead ’06 graduated from Faulkner University with her master’s degree in secondary language arts
education. She teaches tenth grade English at Stanhope-Elmore High School, where she also serves as head softball coach
and assistant volleyball coach.
• Nick Hessman ’06 completed his
Master of Divinity degree at Vanderbilt University in May. In his three-year
field experience, he served in homeless ministries for Humphries UMC,
older adult ministries for West End
UMC, and moral leadership in the
professions through the Cal Turner
Program. In the latter experience,
he found his niche: leadership with
a focus on executive coaching and
consultation skills. An experienced
personal trainer now living in Miami,
he is opening 7 Waters Energy Therapies (7 WET), a network of organizations that helps people discover well-being through the physical body.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Jenny Miller ’06 graduated with a Master of Divinity degree from
Yale University this summer and has returned to Alabama as an
associate pastor at First United Methodist Church, Huntsville.
• Katherine Mallini ’06 lives in Montgomery
and works as an account manager for
HospiScript. She shared stories and smiles
with those attending a Hawks Unwind
young alumni event in the spring.
• Jenny Zeigler ’06 graduated with a Master of Divinity degree from Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston,
Ill., this summer. She is living in Gainesville,
Fla., and working for the Gator Wesley
Foundation.
• Shay Wylie Berryhill ’07 has moved to a
new home in Seattle, Wash., where she
serves as the administrative specialist for the VPMA/COO at the
University of Washington School of Medicine.
• Chris Clark ’07 is working
as a learning support specialist in the Staton Center
for Learning Enrichment at
Huntingdon. He has taken
the lead with an initiative
related to the integration
of students’ commitments
to academics and athletics
and assists with the Grade
Advocacy Program (GAP)
and academic counseling.
He was married in Ligon
Chapel this summer.
• Patrick Dean ’07 was married in Ligon Chapel August 1.
• Scott Givens ’07 has been named director of human resources
at Flowers Hospital, Dothan, Ala. He and his wife, Amanda,
have two sons.
• Huntingdon Hawks football’s
first quarterback, Mark Colson
’07, returned to campus for the
Chamber of Commerce Business Breakfast event in October,
where he relived a few Hawks
moments with Athletic Director
Buzz Phillips. Mark, who works as
executive assistant to the president of the Business Council of
Alabama, has begun a blog for
football alumni at http://hfaa.blogspot.com.
• Kyle Landon Futral ’07 teaches seventh grade science at Eclectic Middle School and coaches football and baseball.
• Jacob Miller Godwin ’07 and his wife, Erin, are enjoying their
time with their son, Palmer. Jacob is employed with New York
Life Insurance.
• Amber Joy Greenwood ’07 has been working with Artesian City
Marketing in Prattville since November 2007.
• We sadly report the death of Michael Harmon, a student at
AUM who attended Huntingdon from 2003 to 2006. He died this
summer in Montgomery.
• Brandon Harris ’07 completed his graduate study in athletic
training at Florida State University, where his internship included
work with Bobby Bowden’s football team. This summer, he completed an internship with the Atlanta Braves.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Joshua Matthew Harris ’07 married Ellen Elizabeth Cresswell,
April 17, 2009, in Vicksburg, Miss.
• Jamaal Rahmaan Jemison ’07 works as a technician for Rehab
Associates in Montgomery.
• Tyler McLain Jones ’07 lives in Atlanta and works for Northwestern Mutual Financial Network.
• Samantha Lewis ’07 received the Sherman Scholarship to attend
Candler School of Theology at Emory University this fall.
• Sam Schjott ’07 completed his master’s degree in international
business from Hough Graduate School of Management at the
University of Florida.
• Naomi Michelle Steimle ’07 married Jonathan Russell Holifield
March 14, 2009, in Nauvoo, Ill. Naomi completed 18 months of
mission service in Las Vegas with the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints following graduation from Huntingdon. She
works as a veterinary technician in Mobile, Ala.
• David Waters ’07, a law student and an editor of the University of Alabama School of Law’s Journal of the Legal Profession
(the ethics journal), has been named ethics opinion editor for
2009–10. The journal will publish Waters’ article on ethics in corporate law in the fall or spring edition.
• Farren Ancar ’08 departed the U.S. September 23 for a year of
teaching English in Madrid, Spain. Farren knows no one in Spain
and doesn’t speak Spanish, but she is ready for and excited
about this adventure as she goes forth to apply wisdom in
service.
• Carrie Michelle Barber ’08 and Clifford L. Groce ’08 were married during Memorial Day weekend, 2009, in Birmingham. Carrie
works as a paralegal with a law firm, and Cliff is a healthcare
recruiter. They live in Hoover, Ala.
• Brad Barton ’08 married Dorothy Elizabeth Camp June 27 in
Montgomery. He is a math teacher and assistant football and
baseball coach at Zion Chapel School.
• Eric Cagle ’08 returned safely
in September after a six-month
deployment to the Iraqi border
with the Air National Guard. He
is pictured with Betsy Jones ’07.
• Nicole Duff ’08 serves as the
head coach for Huntingdon’s
Dazzlin’ Dance Team.
• Jessica Dunkling ’08 and Fred
Shelby ’07 were married June
13 in Ligon Chapel.
• Zach Golson ’08, who served
one year as head football coach at Hooper Academy, resigned
this summer to become a graduate assistant on the University
of South Alabama’s staff. A quarterback for the Hawks, Zach is
coaching the cornerbacks for USA.
• Chasi Fowler ’08 and Dr. Maureen
Kendrick Murphy ’78, professor of
chemistry, shared memories during a Hawks Unwind mixer/business
card swap event in the spring. Hawks
Unwind brings young alumni together
in order to reconnect for both personal and professional reasons.
• Michael Lee Lackey ’08 is living in Birmingham and working in sales for Light Bulb Depot.
• Timothy James McCormack ’08 and his wife, Jamie Edwards
McCormack ’07, are living in Atlanta. Timmy is an assistant
women’s soccer coach in Demorest, Ga.
35
• Matthew James Mahanic ’08
and his wife, Candace, welcomed their first child, Madeleine Augusta, February 12,
2008. Matt is the head men’s
golf coach at Huntingdon and
was named NCAA-III Coach of
the Year for 2008–09.
• Lee Nalley ’08 successfully
passed all parts of the CPA exam
and is a CPA. He has begun
work with the national firm Ernst
and Young in Atlanta.
• David Needham ’08 is a student
in the ocean sciences doctoral
program at the University of
Southern California in Los Angeles. His doctoral fellowship covers tuition and a yearly stipend for up to five years.
• Ashley Parkins ’08 and Tyler Pruitt ’07 were married May 30,
2009, in Locust Fork, Alabama.
• Brandy Nicole Milstead ’08, pictured at
a Hawks Unwind event last spring, is a
student at the University of AlabamaBirmingham School of Medicine.
• Helen Renee Robinson Nguyen ’08
moved to a new home in Gonzales, La.,
and is teaching at St. Amant Primary
School. She married her high school
sweetheart, Anthony Nguyen, April 18,
2009, in Mobile, Ala.
• Broderick Louis Smith ’08 is working in sales.
• Amanda Carol Thomley ’08 graduated in May 2009 from the
University of Alabama with a master’s degree in marketing.
• Jessica Veseskis ’08 and Frankie Vorosso ’09 were married June
13. They are living in Lynn Haven, Florida, while Frankie finishes
one more course requirement for his CPA preparation.
• Bryan Wells ’08 is a student at Palmer College of Chiropractic
Medicine in Port Orange, Fla., and will graduate in 2011.
• Katie West ’08 has embarked on an 11-month tour of the world
as part of the World Race 2009, beginning this August. Along
with six other women in Team Benkadi, she will teach English,
lead sports camps, plant churches, and spread the love of
Christianity in Ireland, Romania, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Kenya,
Uganda, Viet Nam, Cambodia, and Thailand.
• Mollie Adams ’09 is a graduate music student at New England
Conservatory.
• Todd Adams ’09 has entered graduate school at the University
of West Florida, where he is working toward an M.A. in political
science with a specialization in diplomacy and security.
• Philip Bailey ’09 is working on his master’s degree in sports management at Georgia Southern University, where he assists with
the coaching of the Georgia Southern Eagles football team.
• Brandi Bolling ’09 teaches second grade in Fayetteville, N.C.
• Jamie Brazell ’09 has returned to Huntingdon as a learning support specialist in the Staton Center for Learning Enrichment.
• Elizabeth Brogden ’09 works as a technical support agent/customer service representative with Sitel.
• Kim Cauthen ’09 serves as the director of fund raising and collaborative agreements with the Alabama Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.
36
• 2008 Homecoming Queen Destree
Brown ’09 (right) returned to crown
her successor, 2009 Homecoming
Queen Kelly Frazier ’10 (Cell Biology; Dothan, Ala.) during the Homecoming football game October 24.
Destree’s brother, Sam Brown ’10
(Youth Ministry; Lynn Haven, Fla.) is
also a legacy.
• Kristina Bruner ’09 married Jeremy
Fielder in a seaside ceremony in Gulf
Shores May 16. About two weeks
later, their home burned, destroying
their belongings (including their wedding presents), but the
couple is rebuilding their lives. The Bruner family tree includes
Kristina’s dad, Rick Bruner, who directs the Tech Team at the
College; her mom, Lujuana Bruner ’02; her sister, Stephanie
Bruner Fielder, a student in the Adult Degree Completion Program; her brother-in-law, Grant Fielder, a member of the Tech
Team; and Grant’s wife, Courtney Fielder ’13 (Accounting;
Montgomery, Ala.).
• Manci Bryars ’09 (right) and
her cousin, Will Stephens ’09
(left) continued a line of Huntingdon legacies that began
with their grandmother (center), Lorena Manci Bryars ’41
(who passed away September 8, 2009); including Manci’s mother, Carolyn Rodgers
Bryars ’82; Carolyn’s sister,
Anita Rodgers Glaze ’86;
Will’s mother, Amelia Bryars
Stephens ’80; a great-aunt,
Phyllis Tate Bryars ’54; an
uncle, Clay Bryars ’86 (who
passed away in 2007); and
a second cousin, Julia Webb
Bowden ’81.
• Ashley Burkett ’09 has moved
on to the University of Alabama School of Law with a
full-tuition scholarship.
• James Capps Corby ’09 is a graduate student in public administration at Jacksonville State University, where he plays rugby
for their club team.
• Adam Cotant ’09 has joined the Office of Student Life as coordinator of the College’s recreational sports/intramural programs
for 2009–10.
• Casey Marie Chrietzberg ’09 has rejoined Huntingdon as assistant coach for the Lady Hawks Softball Team.
• Rishard Davis ’09 teaches math at Edge High School, a charter
school in Tucson, Ariz.
• Dusti Doss ’09 is a graduate student in the substance abuse
counseling program at the College of William and Mary.
• Jesi Dunaway ’09 is a graduate student in the Friedman School
of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University in Boston.
• Doug Fontaine ’09 teaches math at Newpoint Bay High School
in Panama City, Fla.
• Gary Frazier ’09 is a student in the Pharm.D. program at
McWhorter School of Pharmacy, Samford University.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Felecia “Fe” Gulledge ’09 is a student in the pharmacy doctorate program at the University of Louisiana-Monroe School of
Pharmacy. Fe worked in the pharmacy at Publix in Montgomery and was the first biochemistry major to apply to pharmacy
doctorate programs.
• Emily Hand ’09 and Jeremy
Driver ’08 were married in
Ligon Chapel July 11. They
are living in Auburn, where
Emily teaches math and
Jeremy is a student in the
graduate engineering program at Auburn University.
• Derrick Terrell Hurt ’09
teaches first grade in Union
Springs, Ala.
• Hannah Lane ’09 produces
Fox News at Nine at WSFA
in Montgomery.
• Megan Long ’09 is a
Pharm.D. student at Florida A & M College of Pharmacy and
Pharmaceutical Sciences.
• Kimberly Ann Matthews ’09 is a student at the West Virginia
School of Osteopathic Medicine.
Alumni Giving Awards
June 1, 2008–May 31, 2009
Golden Club Class Giving
(Classes up to 1958)
Top Golden Club Classes in Donations
Class of 1944 with $31,185.00
Class of 1953 with $27,825.00
Top Golden Club Classes in Percentage of Participation
Class of 1954 with 63%
Gift Agent: Martha Grimes Wood
Class Agents: Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley and Sara
Stembridge Perry
Class of 1955 with 53%
Gift Agent: Joyce Payne French
Class of 1957 with 53%
Class Agent: Elinor Warr Roberts
• Ashley Neely ’09 and Brent
Blackwell ’09 were married September 26 in Gulf Shores, Ala.
Class Giving
(Classes 1959–98)
• Alex Nishibun ’09 is a graduate
student at Eastman School of
Music in Boston.
Top Classes in Donations
Class of 1990 with $53,110.00
Gift Agent: Allyce Sikes Read
Class of 1964 with $48,575.00
Class Agent: Joan Jolley Huckaby
Class of 1981 with $26,827.15
Class Agent: Leslie Callaway Henderson
• Chanley Rainey ’09 has moved
on to the political science doctoral program at the University
of Alabama, where her departmental assistantship carries a
stipend and full tuition.
• Tinsley Ray ’09 captured a coveted teaching position at Bear
Exploration Magnet School.
• Glenn Rudolph ’09, the son
of Trustee Celia Dell Smith
Rudolph ’80, is a student at
the University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Dentistry.
• Tiffany Sh’ree Shiflett ’09 is
a student at Tuskegee University School of Veterinary
Medicine.
• Joseph Sewell ’09 and Sean Sinclair ’09 are students at USA College of Medicine.
• Autumn Trimback ’09 is a student in the physician’s assistant
program at South College in Knoxville, Tenn.
• Mike Watts ’09 has entered the graduate civil engineering program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham.
• Kathryn Yates ’09 serves as the resident director in Ligon Hall.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Top Classes in Percentage of Participation
Class of 1959 with 54%
Class Agents: Judith McNease James and Judith Wilson Nunn
Class of 1961 with 50%
Gift Agent: Wayne Helms
Class of 1962 with 41%
Gift Agent: Claire Peacock Helms
Class of 1968 with 40%
Class Agent: Mary George Jester
Top Young Alumni Class Giving
(Classes 1999–2009)
Top Class in Donations
Class of 2001 with $1,304.17
Gift Agent: Carrie McDonough
Top Class in Percentage of Participation
Class of 2003 with 16%
Gift Agent: Kelly Lynn Clarke
37
Huntingdon College National Alumni Association
2009–10 Board of Directors
• President
Amy Woodard Klugh ’96
Ft. Walton Beach, Fla.
• Secretary
Kathy Paschal ’97
Tallassee, Ala.
• Vice President
Mary Kathleen McGuffey ’94
Atlanta, Ga.
• Trustee Representative
Wanda Annett Howard ’81
Atlanta, Ga.
• Katie Hancock Abbott ’01
Prattville, Ala.
• Katrina Keefer Belt ’95
Montgomery, Ala.
• John Berch ’98
Athens, Tenn.
• Sonya Dalrymple Berryman ’83
Montgomery, Ala.
• Lisa Baughn Bond ’84
Pensacola, Fla.
• Bill Bond ’83
Pensacola, Fla.
• John Bricken ’67
Montgomery, Ala.
• Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ed Brown ’68
Clyde, N.C.
• Sam Chambers ’92
Montgomery, Ala.
• Barbara Whatley Christenberry ’78
Montgomery, Ala.
• David Chunn ’65
Auburn, Ala.
• Susan Adams Cooper ’99
Montgomery, Ala.
• Anna Michelle Cox ’03
Gainesville, Fla.
• Linda Fitzpatrick Davis ’65
Wetumpka, Ala.
38
• Ron Davis ’66
Wetumpka, Ala.
• Carrie Elizabeth McDonough ’01
Gulf Shores, Ala.
• Chris Eckert ’83
Ozark, Ala.
• George Mingledorff ’70
Montgomery, Ala.
• Teresa Smith Francis ’80
Dothan, Ala.
• Rick Morrison ’88
Montgomery, Ala.
• Dorothy Kreis Golab ’67
Pike Road, Ala.
• Bruce Parsons ’84
Birmingham, Ala.
• Martha Ward Hardy ’73
Wetumpka, Ala.
• Herbert Patterson ’71
Birmingham, Ala.
• Claire Peacock Helms ’62
Cedartown, Ga.
• Terri Turman Pernia ’79
Navarre, Fla.
• Wayne Helms ’61
Cedartown, Ga.
• Evelyn Hutzler Pope ’90
Pike Road, Ala.
• Suzanne Jones Higgs ’00
Knoxville, Tenn.
• Matt Pope ’88
Pike Road, Ala.
• Chad Hobbs ’01
Northport, Ala.
• Gray Price ’69
Prattville, Ala.
• Roselyn Butts Holloway ’62
Lubbock, Texas
• LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58
Indian Springs, Ala.
• Beverly Burnett Howard ’81
Alexander City, Ala.
• Anne Dismukes Shackelford ’65
Autaugaville, Ala.
• Rona Mock Hutchison ’00
Birmingham, Ala.
• Jarrod Stiff ’98
Cumming, Ga.
• Taylor Jernigan ’88
Montgomery, Ala.
• John Story ’93
Prattville, Ala.
• Mary George Jester ’68
Montgomery, Ala.
• Rian Turner ’00
Daphne, Ala.
• Karen Dee Koza ’71
Dothan, Ala.
• Carolyn Hamilton Vice ’60
Montgomery, Ala.
• Patricia Henry Lee ’83
Dothan, Ala.
• Margie Smith Walters ’00
Dothan, Ala.
• Russell Lee ’84
Dothan, Ala.
• Martha Grimes Wood ’54
Mobile, Ala.
• Roosevelt Lewis ’75
Montgomery, Ala.
• Lynda Knight Woodall ’70
Montgomery, Ala.
• Brian Mann ’95
Wetumpka, Ala.
• Lisa Sells Yates ’83
Lilburn, Ga.
• Barbara Jones Manning ’50
Montgomery, Ala.
• Casey Malone Maugh ’00
Ocean Springs, Miss.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Huntingdon College Board of Trustees, 2009–10
• Mr. Howard Adams
President
Capital Veneer Works Inc.
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. John N. Albritton Jr.
Retired Banker
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. G. Carlton Barker ’70
President &
Chief Executive Officer
Servisfirst Bank
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Carl A. Barranco ’64
President
Wilson, Price, Barranco,
Blankenship & Billingsley
Montgomery, Ala.
• Dr. Katie R. Bell
Retired Higher Education
Administrator
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Dave Borden
Chairman
Aldridge, Borden & Co.
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. R. Lawson
Bryan
Senior Pastor
First United Methodist
Church
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. P. Lawrence
Bryars
Senior Pastor
Shalimar United Methodist
Church
Shalimar, Fla.
• Mr. John C. Bullard Sr.
Retired Chief Executive
Officer
Bullard & Williams Inc.
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Honorable Leura
Garrett Canary ’78
U.S. Attorney for the
Middle District of Alabama
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Lucinda Samford
Cannon
Property Developer
Cannon Ventures
Opelika, Ala.
• The Rev. Kelly Clem
Pastor
Holmes Street United
Methodist Church
Huntsville, Ala.
• Mr. H. David Cobb II
President &
Chief Executive Officer
MMI Outdoor
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Glenn D.
Conner
Senior Pastor
Huntsville First United
Methodist Church
Huntsville, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Kenneth A.
Dunivant
Senior Pastor
Tuscaloosa United
Methodist Church
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• Ms. Wanda A. Howard ’81
Senior Project Manager
McKesson Corporation
Atlanta, Ga.
• Mr. David Hudson Jr. ’81
President & Owner
Dixie Pulp and Paper Inc.
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• Mr. Philip C. Jackson III
Owner, Founder, &
President
Coosa Composites
Pelham, Ala.
• Dr. G. Mark Kingry Jr. ’87
Orthodontist
Kingry Orthodontics
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Amy Woodard
Klugh ’96
Educator
Fort Walton Beach, Fla.
• Bishop Paul Lee Leeland
Bishop
Alabama-West Florida
Conference of the United
Methodist Church
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. James L. Loeb
Retired Chief Executive
Officer
Loeb & Co.
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. R. Neil
McDavid ’69
Director of Connectional
Ministries
Alabama-West Florida
Conference of the United
Methodist Church
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Beverly Gordy
McKinney ’70
Civic Leader
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Betty Thurman
McMahon ’64
Civic Leader
Birmingham, Ala.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
• Mr. E. Temple Millsap III
Vice President
Morgan Keegan & Co.
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Herbert Albert
Patterson Jr. ’71
Community Volunteer
Birmingham, Ala.
• Mr. Thomas J. Prescott
Executive Vice President &
Chief Financial Officer
Synovus Bank
Columbus, Ga.
• Mr. Tom Radney
Attorney
Radney, Radney &
Jackson
Alexander City, Ala.
• Ms. Alice D. Reynolds
Civic Leader & Retired
City Council President
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Eric K. Ross ’92
Senior Vice President
CB Richard Ellis
Atlanta, Ga.
• Dr. Celia S. Rudolph ’80
Assistant Superintendent
Muscle Shoals City Schools
Muscle Shoals, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. W. Herbert
Sadler Jr.
Senior Pastor
Gulf Breeze United
Methodist Church
Gulf Breeze, Fla.
• Ms. Dorothy Rainer
Sellars ’48
Trustee Emerita
Dance Instructor
The Dorothy Rainer Sellars
School of Dance
Opp, Ala.
• Mr. William B. Sellers
Attorney
Balch & Bingham
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Honorable Jeff B.
Sessions ’69
U.S. Senator, Alabama
Mobile, Ala.
• The Rev. Claude A.
Shuford ’83
Pastor
Mt. Zion AME Zion/Mt.
Pleasant AME Zion Church
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Jeffery R.
Spiller ’76
Senior Pastor
Christ United Methodist
Church
Mobile, Ala.
• Dr. Eugene E.
Stanaland ’60
President
Gene Stanaland
Enterprises
Auburn, Ala.
• Mr. David F. Steele
Attorney
Monroeville, Ala.
• Dr. Charles G.
Tomberlin ’60
Life Member
Physician
Covington Radiology
Associates
Andalusia, Ala.
• Mr. W. Kendrick
Upchurch III
Chairman &
Chief Executive Officer
W.K. Upchurch
Construction
Montgomery, Ala.
• Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Civic Leader &
Retired Veterinarian
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Diane S. Wendland ’53
Life Member
Civic Leader
Autaugaville, Ala.
• Bishop William H. Willimon
Bishop
North Alabama
Conference of the United
Methodist Church
Birmingham, Ala.
• Mr. William B. Wilson ’90
President
Jim Wilson & Associates
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. John M. Wise Sr.
Chairman &
Chief Executive Officer
Hicks Inc.
Luverne, Ala.
Officers
Mr. Hudson, Chairman
Mr. Albritton, Vice Chairman
Mrs. McMahon, Secretary
• Ms. Elizabeth Couey
Smithart ’86
Attorney
Union Springs, Ala.
39
AlumniGrant
Legacy
Application
Huntingdon College’s Alumni Legacy Grant is a
way for alumni to impact positively the lives of
prospective students. Based upon your recommendation, Huntingdon College will award a
$10,000 Alumni Legacy Grant to any accepted
student of your choice. The Alumni Legacy Grant
is renewable for up to three additional years
of study, requires on-campus residency, and
requires a student to maintain satisfactory academic progress toward the completion of his or
her degree. Alumni may complete one referral
per academic year. Applications are due by
the first day of classes of a student’s first year at
Huntingdon College. (Available to incoming fall
2010 freshman and transfer students.)
The Student
Name Address Phone Number Current High School Year of Graduation Current College (if transferring) Alumni Information
Name Address Phone Number E-mail Address Signature Year of HC Graduation Please discuss your relationship to the student and why you feel he/she would be an asset to Huntingdon College:
Please return application to Huntingdon College Alumni Office
1500 East Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, AL 36106
1-800-763-0313 (Admissions) • www.huntingdon.edu
Building the College for the Next Generation
David Hudson Jr. ’81 steps in as chair of
the Board of Trustees
Huntingdon College’s Board of Trustees has its first alumni chair
in more than a decade, as David Hudson Jr. ’81 of Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, stepped into the role this fall.
Hudson, co-owner and president of Dixie Pulp and Paper Inc. of
Tuscaloosa, has, in some ways, been associated with Huntingdon
all his life. He has seen the college evolve through the memories
of his father, and then lived it through his own experience. “My
father attended Huntingdon to prepare for a career in the ministry, but then he was called into the service,” says Hudson. “He
eventually completed his degree at the University of Alabama,
but he always had fabulous stories about his Huntingdon experience. Later, my parents sent me to a couple of Neal Posey’s basketball camps. I didn’t realize it, but they were politicking for me
to go to Huntingdon. They knew it would be the right environment
to help me grow—a smaller school where I would be known, and
two hours from home. They were exactly right.”
As a student, Hudson was a founding father of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and then served as its president during his senior
year. He believes that leadership experience and the confidence
it gave him, coupled with faculty who took the time to build on
his strengths and to strengthen his weaknesses, contributed to his
success. “I’m sincere in my belief that Huntingdon is one of the
primary reasons I am who I am today,” he says. “I know that’s the
case with others, too.” Hudson joined the Huntingdon board in
2002.
After graduating from Huntingdon, Hudson went on to build, with
the help of his uncle, a jewelry store business in Tuscaloosa. He
was then persuaded to join his father in the business his father had
founded, Dixie Pulp and Paper. Dixie Pulp and Paper services a
niche market in the paper industry in two ways: first, by purchasing
rolls of off-grade paperboard from paper mills and selling them
to converting plants, where they are made into products—such
as cake boxes and air filter frames; second, by purchasing scrap
paper and board trimmed away in the converting process of a
product, such as envelopes and folding boxes. The scrap is sorted
and sent to mills, where it can be repulped and reused—ensuring
that there is no waste, and saving trees in the process.
David Hudson ’81 assumed the role of chairman of the Board
of Trustees this fall. He is the first alumnus to chair the board in a
decade. He is pictured speaking at the Presidential Convocation
in August.
As Hudson brings his entrepreneurial spirit to the Huntingdon Board
of Trustees, it is clear that forward-thinking will be the first order
of business. He says he doesn’t wish to relive his college days or
make Huntingdon the college of yesteryear, but instead to embrace the future generations to come, including that of his godson, Tyler Barton, a member of the Class of 2012.
“My father came to Huntingdon when men weren’t allowed to
live on campus,” he says. “Fast forward a generation later, and I
am a founding father of a fraternity on campus, then served as its
president. Still another generation later, as I join the Board of Trustees, the College initiates a football team and a marching band.
Huntingdon is about opportunity—for the students of this region,
and for young people who, like me, could really blossom in an
environment that is based on relationships.”
Tyler Barton ’12 is a legacy and the godson of David Hudson ’81.
“My business is about relationships,” says Hudson, another strength
he believes he developed at Huntingdon. “The campus atmosphere at Huntingdon nurtured my ability to develop relationships
not just with students, but also with faculty and others. At Dixie,
we bring in teams to our customers and suppliers and train them
on ways to better manage and market their scrap paper and offgrade board. “
Since Hudson joined Dixie in 1988, the company has grown from
four employees to 75 and from a single office to a 225,000-squarefoot facility in Tuscaloosa and operations in Georgia, Maryland,
and Oklahoma. Together, they contribute to the re-use and resale of more than 300,000 tons of scrap paper and off-grade paper annually.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
41
Donor Report
Honor Roll of Donors, 2008–09
Huntingdon College gratefully acknowledges the contributions of
countless men and women who have given unselfishly of their time, talent, and financial resources to advance this institution. To the alumni,
parents, friends, businesses, foundations, organizations, students, faculty, and staff whose generosity during the past year supported a
myriad of programs, scholarships and special projects, the College
extends its sincere thanks.
This report contains the names of all donors who made gifts to Huntingdon during the fiscal year of June 1, 2008, through May 31, 2009.
It includes those who made capital gifts as well as donations to the
Annual Fund. This listing does not include those who made pledges,
but not gifts, in 2008–09 or those whose gifts were received after May
31, 2009. An asterisk denotes those now deceased.
We strive to make this honor roll error-free; however, if we have inadvertently omitted your name or listed it incorrectly, please accept our
apologies and notify us by calling the Office of External Affairs at (334)
833-4563, so that we can correct our records.
Order of the Countess of Huntingdon
The Order of the Countess of Huntingdon recognizes individuals who have made
major contributions toward the advancement of the College. Cumulative lifetime gifts total $75,000 or more. *An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Mr. John N. and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III
Dr. *H.V. and Mrs. Dorothy Hoag Bell
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr.
Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie
Cardwell Bolden
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer Bottoms
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boykin
Mr. J. Mahlon and Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. John and *Mrs. Mary Ellen Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Ruth Miller Carl
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Cheek III
Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich III
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. (Chris) Flowers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr.
Mr. Nimrod T. and Mrs. Lee Martin Frazer
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loper
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Lowder
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh (Buzz) Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mrs. Shirley H. Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland
Mr. *Jerry L. and Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Dr. William B. and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder
Ms. Aloyis Sonneborn
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson
Mr. George R. Teague
Mrs. John N. Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charlie Tomberlin
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kendrick Upchurch III
Mr. William C. and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins
Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Mr. Robert S. Weil
Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland
Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson
Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Trustee Howard Adams and his wife, Cheryl,
were inducted into the Order of the Countess of Huntingdon giving society last spring
for their generous lifetime contributions to the
College. Their daughter, Susan Adams Cooper
’99, is a music alumna who directs the youth
choir at First United Methodist Church, Montgomery; and son, Jason Randell Adams ’96,
works with his father at Capital Veneer Works.
Jason’s wife, Shawn Macon Adams ’96, is also
a Huntingdon alum.
The John Massey Heritage Society
The John Massey Heritage Society recognizes individuals who have created endowment funds or who
have included Huntingdon College in their estate plans. *An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
Mr. John N. and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Ambrose
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Arnold
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III
Ms. Mary Nell Atherton
Mrs. Sarah Wedekind Bailey
Mr. Mike and Mrs. Sandra Campbell Balkom
Dr. *H.V. and Mrs. Dorothy Hoag Bell
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Miss Mary S. Bernhard
Mrs. Joe Neal Blair
Ms. Georgianna Bland
Mrs. Elaine Hearn Boese
Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden
Mrs. Lucy Cunningham Bond
Mrs. Jane Michael Boozer
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms
Ms. Carol Jane Boyd
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Boykin
Ms. Esther Boykin
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boykin
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady Cousins Brink
Mrs. Henry A. Brooks
Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Brown III
The Rev. Naomi Prescott Brown
Colonel Preston Brown
Mrs. Lorena Manci Bryars
Mr. J. Mahlon and Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. and Mrs. Othon Tallet Bueno
Dr. Harrell and Mrs. Kimberly Cook Bullard
Mr. and *Mrs. John Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bullard Jr.
Mr. William Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Dr. Connie Campbell
Mr. Ralph B. and Mrs. Georgia Rogers Campbell
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. Al Cantrell
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Ruth Miller Carl
Mrs. Ann Carlisle Carmichael
Mrs. Myrtice Ann Carr
Mr. Sam Carroll Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
The Rev. David and Mrs. Carol Dearman Chunn
Hazel Collins Sunday School Class, St. James UMC
Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Coomes
Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Cooper
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham
Mrs. Leslie Burson Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Marion D. Davis
Miss Martha Nell Dean
Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
Bishop Paul and Mrs. Louise Calhoun Duffey
Mr. Donal and Mrs. Sara Lee Insley Dunbar
Mrs. Jane Cunningham Dunlap
Mrs. Frank Earle
Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich III
Mr. Frank Eleazer
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. J. Walter Ellisor
Dr. Raymond Estep
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Lucile Delchamps Fleming
Mrs. T.M. Francis
Mr. Jack P. Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Garner
Mr. Ken and Mrs. Linda Allen Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. William Silas Garrett Jr.
Mr. E. Gerald and Dr. Sue Russell Garrick
Mrs. Lois Bedsole Gholston
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Mrs. Ethel Ellis Gibson
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Mr. Henry and Mrs. Mary Goldstein
Dr. Laurence and Mrs. Dorothy Huffine Grossman
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Mr. David and Dr. Betty Bottoms Grundy
Mr. Leon Hadley
Ssgt. Jerad and Mrs. Jamie Deveau Hahn
Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Mr. *Ernest and *Mrs. Theresa Hillhouse Harris
Miss Martha Ray Harris
The Rev. Joe Ed and Mrs. Betty Kimbrough Hastings
Mrs. Ruth Bowen Haughton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Helms
Mrs. Mollie A. Hendrix
Judge and Mrs. Truman M. Hobbs Sr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hoefflin
Ms. Wanda A. Howard
Mr. Hilson Y. Hudson Jr.
Mrs. Virginia McNeal Hughes
Mr. Harold L. and Mrs. Barbara Cade Hunt
Dr. and Mrs. Allen K. Jackson
Dr. and Mrs. Louis L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Jolly Jr.
Mrs. Mack H. Jolly
Mr. L.B. Jones Jr.
Mr. William Jones
Mrs. Joan Chapman Jones
Mr. Renis Jones
Mr. Edwin and Mrs. Margaret Warren Jordan
Miss Lillian Kamphuis
Mr. David and Mrs. Jean Kassouf
Mrs. Ruby Collier Key
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Pearson Keyton
Mr. Ray Elwood King
Mr. Tom Law
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald S. Leischuck
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mr. Wayne F. Lloyd
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Loeb
Mrs. Ellen C. Long
Dr. James D. Lowe Jr.
Colonel and Mrs. Orlando J. Manci Jr.
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon
Mr. Ira and Mrs. Anne White Mitchell
Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore
Dr. David K. Morris
Ms. Ann Mosely
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moseley
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Moses
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Murray
Ms. Nancy Alice Brown Myrick
Mr. and Mrs. Ed O’Donnell
Mr. Mark and Mrs. Jacque Ogilvie
Mr. Raymond and Mrs. Catharine Ogilvie
Mr. Douglas and Mrs. Virginia Bullard Oswald
Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr.
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul
Mr. Donald W. Peak
Mr. Glenn and Mrs. Betty Seymour Perdue
Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard
Mr. and Mrs. John Peyton Powell
Mr. Henry L. and Dr. Gaylen Schrieber Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. William and Mrs. LaVerne Davis Ramsey
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway
Mrs. Louise Thornton Reynolds
Mr. Charles Edward Roberts Jr.
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Miss Jean Rodgers
Mr. Earl and Mrs. Joyce Patterson Ryser
Mr. John and Mrs. Dianne Williams Salter
Mrs. Mary Belin Salter
Mr. *Jerry L. and Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Judge and Mrs. Philip Dale Segrest
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Sellers
Miss Helen Shaw
Mr. Barrett Shelton Jr.
Mr. Leslie E. Shelton Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shirley
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Dr. Robert Sittason
Mr. and Mrs. Gaines Slade
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie
Mr. L. Bernard and Mrs. Elizabeth Couey Smithart
Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder
Mr. Earl L. and Mrs. Ann Richards Sommer
Ms. Aloyis Lee Sonneborn
The Rev. and Mrs. Lamar Spencer
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Dr. Marilyn E. Stone
Mr. James H. and Mrs. Rebecca Killingsworth Strickland
Mr. Jose E. and Mrs. Rosaland Mathison Tallet
Mrs. Fannie Alston Taylor
Mr. George R. Teague
Ms. Vivian Thomas
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Timothy Thompson
Miss Martha S. Tillotson
Mrs. John N. Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin
Mrs. Betty Gensert Towey
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Tuley
Miss Anna Rebecca Turner
Maxine Turner
Mrs. George T. Turnipseed
Dr. Betty Vaughn
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lee Walden
Mr. Johnny and Mrs. Colleen Garrick Walker
Mrs. J.L. Warren Jr.
Mr. William C. (Wick) and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins
Mr. Horace L. Webb
Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Mr. Robert S. Weil
Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland
The Rev. and Mrs. Ray E. Whatley
Mrs. Ann Strickland White
Mr. Andra and Mrs. Deborah Mims Williams
Miss Jane S. Williams
Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson Jr.
Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon
Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Wise Sr.
Mr. Elmer and Mrs. Lynda Knight Woodall
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. Malcolm and Mrs. Ruth Barnes Yaple
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Mr. Edward and Mrs. Margaret Delchamps Young
(L-R) Alumni trustee representative Wanda Howard ’81,
her mother, Lelia Howard, trustee Diane Smith Wendland ’53, and her daughter, Susan Wendland Rhodes
’80, gathered for a photo at Founders Day last spring.
Diane’s daughter Margaret Wendland Miller ’95 is
another legacy.
43
The Huntingdon Society
Members of the Huntingdon Society contribute $1,000 or more during the fiscal year.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Kirke Adams
Ms. Sharon Adams
Miss Jodi Adamson
Mr. James and Mrs. Frances Goode
Akridge
Dr. and Mrs. James Albritton
Mr. John and Mrs. Ann McLean
Albritton
Mrs. Edwina Wallace Alexander
Mrs. Harriet Borland Allison
Mr. David and Mrs. Glenda Atwell
Allred
Mr. James H. Anderson
Ms. Kristin Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III
Dr. Jason Banks
Mr. and Mrs. James Barganier
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Barganier
Mr. and Mrs. G. Carlton Barker
Colonel Robert Barmettler
Ms. Barbara Lazenby Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barranco
Mr. and Mrs. B. Scott Barton
Mrs. Lila Waldrop Baxter
Mrs. Ann Bedsole
Mr. *H.V. and Mrs. Dorothy Hoag Bell
Dr. Katie R. Bell
Mr. Keven and Mrs. Katrina Keefer
Belt
Dr. Sanders and Mrs. Linda Mordecai
Benkwith
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Mr. James and Mrs. June Burdick
Bisard
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr.
Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie
Cardwell Bolden
Mr. David and Mrs. Lucinda Smilie
Bollinger
Mr. Matthew and Mrs. Kimberly
Keefer Boone
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden
Mrs. Marilyn M. Boswell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boykin
Ms. Thelma Braswell
Miss Jo Ann Brazelton
Mr. John B. and Mrs. Frances Cooper
Bricken Jr.
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady
Cousins Brink
Mrs. Betty Finlay Brislin
Mr. Richard Brockman
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. R. Lawson
Bryan
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Bryars
Mr. J. Mahlon and Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. and *Mrs. John Bullard
Dr. Dianne Petrov Burke
Mr. and Mrs. John Caddell
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Camp
Mr. Spencer and Mrs. Libba Crowell
Campbell
Mr. William and Mrs. Leura Garrett
Canary
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. Albert R. Cantrell
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
44
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Ruth Miller Carl
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Barry Carpenter
Mr. and Mrs. J. Marvin Carroll
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Chambers Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Champion
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III
Mr. and Mrs. John Cheney
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cheney
The Rev. David and Mrs. Carol
Dearman Chunn
Mr. Dale and the Rev. Kelly Clem
Mr. Sidney and Mrs. Ann Carol Harris
Coleman
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Colson
Mr. and Mrs. Loui P. Cone III
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cooper
Mr. Jay and Mrs. Susan Adams
Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Cotter
Mrs. Mary O’Brien Cox
Mrs. Joanna Breedlove Crane
Mrs. Myrtle Peters Crone
Mrs. Edith Johnston Crook
Dr. Bert and Mrs. Lynn Blalock
Cunningham
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham
Mrs. Michelle Brian Curtis
Dr. Robert R. Daniel
Mr. Billy Ray Daniels
Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Daniels
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Davis
Mr. *Richard and Mrs. Reita Sample
Davis
Mrs. Robin Speight Davy
Mr. Joseph Day
Miss Martha Dean
Dr. Henry and Mrs. Joan Johnston
Diversi
Miss Marianne Donnell
Mr. Jay and Dr. Lisa Olenik-Dorman
Mrs. Virginia Cooper Downes
Mr. John and Mrs. Hermine Melton
Downing
Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
Mr. Ben Hatfield and the Hon. Kristi
K. DuBose
Bishop Paul and Mrs. Louise Calhoun
Duffey
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Dunivant
Mr. Arthur and Mrs. Betty Marchman
Edgar
Mrs. Sara Preer Edmunds
Mr. Zerrell and Mrs. Doris Sanford
Edwards
Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves
Eich III
Mrs. Cheryl Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison
Mr. Floyd Enfinger Jr.
Mr. Elton and Mrs. Sally Hudson
Engstrom
Dr. Kyle Fedler
Ms. Suzanne Repnicki Fickey
Mrs. Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald
Mr. and Mrs. Tranum Fitzpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Flowers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr.
Mr. Nimrod and Mrs. Lee Martin
Frazer
Ms. Debra Freisleben
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost
Dr. and Mrs. Billy D. Gaither
Mrs. Zan Henslee Gammage
Mr. and Mrs. William Silas Garrett Jr.
Mr. E. Gerald and Dr. Sue Russell
Garrick
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Dr. Wayne Gibson
Dr. and Mrs. Greg Gilbert
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Bishop and Mrs. Larry Goodpaster
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gray
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Green
Mrs. Eileene D. Griffith
SSgt. Jerad and Mrs. Jamie Deveau
Hahn
Mr. and Mrs. George Hammer
Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harper
Miss Martha Ray Harris
* Mrs. Theresa Hillhouse Harris
Dr. Winifred H. Harris
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe Hastings
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Hatfield
Dr. Daniel and Mrs. Ellen Evans
Haulman
Mr. Robert B. Helms
Mr. James Van Henry
Dr. William Winternitz and Ms.
Madeleine M. Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hinds
The Hon. and Mrs. Truman Hobbs
The Hon. and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Jr.
Mr. *John D. and Mrs. LaFaye A.
Holley
Ms. Wanda A. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Hufham
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Hufham
Mr. Robert Hunter
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inscoe
Jackson Thornton and Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Jackson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Jackson III
Drs. William and Judith McNease
James
Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Jenkins
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jenkins
Ms. Mary George Jester
Mr. E.F. and Mrs. Laura Chambliss
Jinright
Mr. David and Mrs. Vidhu Khanna
Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Bricken Jones
Mrs. Mary Louise Howard Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Jones
Mr. Renis Jones
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Jones
Mr. David and Mrs. Jean Ogilvie
Kassouf
Ms. Lily Kelley
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kelly
Mr. Wes and Mrs. Samantha
Clements Kelly
Mr. William and Mrs. Gail Sanford
Kendrick
Mrs. Ruby Collier Key
Mrs. Saundra Bozeman Kidd
Mrs. Mary Wilson King
Dr. Mark and Mrs. Beth Anderson
Kingry
Mr. Gipson and Mrs. Judy Watson
Kingry
Mrs. Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Knupp II
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Mark La
Branche
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Mindy Bevan La
Branche
Ms. Cheryl Lange
Mr. Jerry and Mrs. Kathy McLeod
Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Lee
Mrs. Phebe Mason Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Leigh
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mrs. Sibyl S. Lisenby
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Loeb
Mr. Jamie and Mrs. Carol Fields Loeb
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loper
Mr. and Mrs. James Lowder
Mr. Charles D. Mandell
Mr. and Mrs. Josh Mandell
Mrs. Billie Claire Watson Mangum
Mrs. Catherine Hoffman Marett
* The Hon. Alex Marks
Mr. and Mrs. Horace H. Marrs
Mrs. Diane Marston
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Martin
Mr. Larry W. and Mrs. Susanne
Crockett Martin
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. John Ed
Mathison
Dr. Joyce Mathison
Mrs. Caroline Ball Matthews
Mrs. Mary Barnette McClurkin
The Rev. R. Neil and Mrs. Araminta
Robson McDavid
Ms. Melanie McGrath
Ms. Mary Kathleen McGuffey
The Hon. Reese H. and Mrs. Beverly
Gordy McKinney
Miss Virginia McLean
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman
McMahon
Mrs. Jean Broxson McMillan
Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson
Mrs. Dae Miller
Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap III
Mr. George and Mrs. Sarah
McCarthy Mingledorff
Mr. Ira C. and Mrs. Anne White
Mitchell
Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. James Moses
Drs. Samir and Cinzia Moussalli
Ms. Nancy Brown Myrick
Mr. Aubrey and Mrs. Mary Ann
Oglesby Neeley
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Nelson
Mr. Shane and Dr. Audrey Davy
Newsome
Mr. Haven and Mrs. Jeanne Foote
North
Mr. and Mrs. Ed O’Donnell
Mr. Daniel Ogle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Mr. Douglas and Mrs. Virginia Bullard
Oswald
Ms. Katherine Blount Pace
Mrs. Anne Durr Palmer
Mr. Alex Papalas
Ms. Carolyn H. Parker
Mr. George B. and Mrs. Linda
Keenan Partridge
Mr. Herbert Patterson Jr.
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul
TSgt. Wil and Mrs. Terri Turman Pernia
Mr. James and Mrs. Sara Stembridge
Perry
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Phillips
Mrs. Charlotte Gibbs Ponder
Mr. G. Mathew and Mrs. Evelyn
Hutzler Pope
Dr. and Mrs. C. McGavock Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy J. Prescott
Mr. Henry and Dr. Gaylen Schreiber
Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. William and Mrs. LaVerne Davis
Ramsey
Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkinson Rast
Mr. Joe and Mrs. Allyce Sikes Read
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mr. and Mrs. James Kenneth Reid
Mrs. Shirley H. Reid
Mrs. Alice Reynolds
Mr. Fred and Mrs. Barbara Gilliland
Rhinehardt
Mr. Charles and Mrs. Suzanne
Wendland Rhodes
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway
Mr. and Mrs. Bellaire Riley
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Miss Jean Rodgers
Mrs. Mary D. Rodgers
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland
Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross
Mr. Roy and Dr. Celia Dell Smith
Rudolph
Mrs. Kathy Dancy Ryan
Dr. and Mrs. Patrick Ryan
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Sabel
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. W. Herbert
Sadler Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Sahlie
Mr. John D. and Mrs. Dianne Williams
Salter
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sanders
Mr. *Jerry and Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Mr. Frederick Schultz
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Seals
The Hon. P. Dale and Mrs. Betty
Menefee Segrest
Mr. Wade and Mrs. Rebecca Bibb
Segrest
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Sellers
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers
Senator Jeff B. and Mrs Mary
Blackshear Sessions
Mr. *Wyatt and Mrs. Gayle Shorter
The Rev. and Mrs. Claude Shuford
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Sims
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie
Mr. *Maury and Mrs. Lucile Martin
Smith
Dr. Wilburn Smith
Mr. Burt and Mrs. Elizabeth Couey
Smithart
Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter
Snyder
Ms. Aloyis Sonneborn
Mr. and Mrs. David Reamer
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Sowell
* Mrs. Frances Lott Sowers
The Rev. and Mrs. Lamar Spencer
The Rev. Jeffrey R. and Mrs. Norma
Borland Spiller
Mr. Charles and Mrs. Winifred
Lightfoot Stakely
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas Staton
Mr. and Mrs. David Steele
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Karl Stegall
Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson
The Hon. and Mrs. William Stone
Mrs. Ruth Stone Strange
Mr. W. Lloyd Strickland
Mr. George Teague
Mr. Raymond and Mrs. Linda
McLeod Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III
Mrs. Beppy LeCroy Tiller
Mrs. John N. Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Turk
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Upchurch Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III
Mrs. Betty McCoy Vaughan
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Walden
Mr. Kevin Walding
Mr. Johnny and Mrs. Colleen
Garrick Walker
Mr. William C. Walker
Mrs. Linda Gorman Ward
Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd Warr
Mr. William and Mrs. Anne
McLeod Warren
Mr. William and Mrs. Shirley Parker
Watkins
Mr. James E. Weeks
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil III
Ms. Jan Weil
Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and Dr.
Tommy Wool
Mr. and *Mrs. Robert S. Weil
Mr. Jack L. and Dr. Bobbie Coop
Welch
Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith
Wendland
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. J. Cameron
West
Mrs. Ann Strickland White
Mr. R. Tyler and Mrs. Nancy
Prickett Whitley
The Rev. John and Mrs. Sylvia
Sellers Whitley
Mr. Hershel and Mrs. Sara Yates
Wiley
Mr. Robert J. and Mrs. Jacquline
Williams
Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin
Williamson
Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Dr. Robert and Mrs. Dorothy
Waters Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wilson
Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wise
Dr. Verna Wool
Dr. James G. Wright
Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr.
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. Malcolm and *Mrs. Ruth Barnes
Yaple
Dr. and Mrs. James Yarbrough
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Support
the Huntingdon Fund
for Scholarships
What difference did Huntingdon make in your life?
When you make a gift to the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships,
you make a difference in the life of Huntingdon College and
in the lives of those who are educated here—students who
are primarily from the Southeast and who might not otherwise
be able to afford a private college education; students who
are just like you were when Huntingdon changed your life.
Gifts to the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships are Huntingdon’s
most critical need at this time. Gifts of any amount are welcome and necessary to ensure the sustained success of this
great college. Please consider making a gift of $1,000 or more
and becoming a member of the Huntingdon Society.
Will you give today?
Office of External Affairs
Huntingdon College
1500 E. Fairview Ave.
Montgomery, AL 36106
(334) 833-4564
http://www.huntingdon.edu/online_giving/donation
45
Parents, Friends, and Neighbors
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Aaron
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Robbie Addison
Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Akers Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Albritton Jr.
Ms. Christina Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Archer
Mr. Cole Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Ron B. Astin
Ms. Katherine Avant
Mr. and Mrs. Keith D. Bailey
Dr. Gregory Balog
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Barganier
Ms. Blanchard Barkers
Colonel Robert S. Barmettler
Mr. Barry Barnwell
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Baronich
Mr. and Mrs. B. Scott Barton
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Baxley
Mr. Charles A. Bell
Dr. Katie R. Bell
Mr. and Mrs. K.C. Belt
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Benton
Mrs. Marcia Flowers Berry
Mr. and Mrs. Larry H. Berryhill
Dr. and Mrs. Bob Beshear
Mr. Donald Claude Bezwiechin
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Mike Bice
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Billingsley
Mr. Michael Black
Ms. Misty Blill
Mrs. Lucy Cunningham Bond
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden
Mr. and Mrs. Emil M. Borders
Mr. Randy Bozeman
The Honorable and Mrs. Bobby Bright
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brigman
Ms. Linda Layton Brook
Ms. Patricia Butts Brooks
Ms. Bertha Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brown
Ms. Mary Ann Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Browning
Mr. Greg Brudnicki
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawson Bryan
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Larry Bryars
Mr. Larry Buchanan
Mr. and Mrs. J. Mahlon Buck
Mr. and Mrs.* John Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bunch
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Butler
Mr. and Mrs. David Byrd
Mr. and Mrs. Rennie Byrd
Ms. Carrie Cabaniss
Mr. and Mrs. Wyman Cabaniss
Mr. and Mrs. John Caddell
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carlton
Mr. Christopher Carr
Mr. W.R. Carter Jr.
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Carter Jr.
Ms. Racile Casey
Ms. Barbara Cassler
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cave
Dr. and Mrs. C. Richard Chappell
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Chappell
Ms. Kimberly N. Charles
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Charles
Mr. Russell Chastain
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
46
Dr. Elizabeth Cheshire
Ms. Anne Childers
Ms. Joan Clayton
The Rev. Kelly Ann Clem
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Clement
General Charles Cleveland
Miss Josephine H. Cleveland
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Cody
Ms. Wendy A. Cody
Mr. Scott Cofield
Mr. and Mrs. William Cole
Mr. and Mrs. Loui P. Cone III
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Conversino
Ms. Amy B. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny M. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cooper Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland
Mr. James Corby
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Calvin Corley
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Correia
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Cotney
Ms. Princess Crittendon
Mrs. Charles M. Crook
Mr. and Mrs. DeWitte Cross Jr.
Ms. Michaela Culpepper
Mr. Jeff Cummings
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham
Ms. Elizabeth F. Dahlene
Ms. Pam Dalquist
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dalquist
Mr. and Mrs. John Daniels
The Rev. and Mrs. Donald Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Davis
Ms. Laura Davis
Ms. Meleah Davis
Ms. Martha Demere
Mrs. Louise Dismukes
Mr. James Dixon
Ms. Mary T. Dowdy
Ms. Kimberly Lynn Drinkard
Ms. Julie Duenas
Bishop and Mrs. Paul Duffey
Mr. and Mrs. William Dunaway
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Dunivant
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dunn
Ms. Krysten Durham
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Durham
Mr. David Dwyer
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin H. Eason
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Eby
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Edwards Jr.
Mr. Sherman Eller
Dr. Robert L. Elliott
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Mikey Ellison
Ms. Eulette E. Evans
Mr. Hugh R. Evans III
Ms. Merium Everett
Ms. Angie Fells
Mr. Alex Farrington
Mr. Aaron Fields
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ford Fitts
Mr. William Flores
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Ford
Ms. Marian B. Ford
Mr. and Mrs. David Forrest
Mrs. Pam Forrest
Ms. Kathryn W. Frasier
Mr. Gary Frazier
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Frederick
Ms. Cassandra Fuller
Mr. and Mrs. J. Bran Futral
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Gage
Ms. Katherine Gannon
Mr. and Mrs. Max Gantt
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Garner
Mr. and Mrs. William Garrett Jr.
Ms. Ellen Gauntt
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Stanley Gill
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Gillespie
Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Glasgow
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Glover
Mr. Boyd Goddard
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Goff
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Goldston
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Golson
Bishop and Mrs. Larry Goodpaster
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kenneth Goodson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Gorum
Mr. Horace Graham
Ms. Willodean T. Gray
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Green
Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Greer
Ms. Jacqueline Gresham
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hurd Griffin
Mrs. Eileene Griffith
Mrs. Walter Grissette Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Groce
Mrs. Dora Haas
Mr. and Mrs. Austin K. Hagan
Mr. and Mrs. Stancel Hallman
Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Hamby
Mr. and Mrs. George Hammer
Mr. John J. Hand
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Joe Hargrove
Mrs. Janet S. Harmon
Ms. Cynthia P. Harper
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrell
Mrs. Carolyn Harrell
Ms. Kristen Harrell
Ms. Sandy Harrell
Ms. Kim Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris
Ms. Sabrina Harris
Dr. Wynn Harris
Ms. Delphine Hartin
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe Hastings
Ms. Jamie Hatfield
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy R. Hatfield
Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Haulman
Mr. and Mrs. William Hause Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Murrey E. Hicks
Mr. and Mrs. Al Hildreth
Dr. Henry Hill
Mr. Larry Hinds
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs
Mr. Kyle Hock
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Hodsdon
Mr. Scott Holloway
Colonel Capers Holmes
Mr. Kevin Horne
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Horner
Mr. Dave Hosley
Ms. Elizabeth Ann Houston
Justice and Mrs. J. Gorman
Houston Jr.
Mr. Kevin Howze
Mr. and Mrs. Reid S. Huckle
Mr. and Mrs. Adams Hudson
Mr. Bryant Hughes
Mr. and Mrs. Joey Roger Hundley
Ms. Marianne Hussey
Dr. Charles Fletcher Hyde
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Ingle
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Israel
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Jackson III
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Jean
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jenkins
Ms. Edith Jobe
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Johnson
Ms. Anna Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Johnson
Mr. Jeff Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson
Ms. Regina Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly
Mr. and Mrs. Len Jones
Mr. Mike Jones
Mr. William C. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Patricia Kelly
Mr. Willie Kendrick
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Kennedy
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lee King
Mr. John G. Kircher
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kircher
Mr. Christopher Knight
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Knox
Ms. Jessica Lacey
Mr. and Mrs. Lance Lachney
Mr. Art Lamberth
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Land
Ms. Kathryn Lane
Ms. Kathy F. Lane
Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Langford
Mr. Mickey P. Laye
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Leef
Bishop and Mrs. Paul L. Leeland
Mr. and Mrs. Sam S. Legvold
Ms. Ellen Leonard
Mr. Jim Leonard
Ms. Maureen Leonard
Ms. Merle Leonard
Mrs. Julia LeRoy
Mrs. Katherine J. Leslie
Mr. and Mrs. James Franklin LeVert Jr.
Ms. Kim Lewis
Ms. Wanda Lewis
Mrs. Sibyl Lisenby
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Litchfield III
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Little
Mr. John C. Lockwood
Mr. and Mrs. James Loeb
Mr. and Mrs. James Long III
Mr. and Mrs. James Lowder
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Mahanic
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Malone
Mr. and Mrs. E. Philip Mangum
Mr. Clint Maroney
Mrs. Horace Marrs
Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Marsella
Mrs. Diane Marston
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus W. Martin
Ms. Zora McAnnally
Ms. Cathy McCall
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDonald
Mr. and Mrs. R. Martin McGirt
Mr. and Mrs. Terry McGowen
Mr. and Mrs. William H. McLain
Mrs. Norman McLeod Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Monte McNew
Mr. James McSween
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Meginniss
Ms. Henrietta Merriweather
Mrs. Dae Miller
Mr. Dave Miller
Ms. Donna Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Miller
Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap III
Mr. Emmett Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Mitchell
Dr. and Mrs. William Molin
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Moore
Mr. Rob Moorehead
Mr. Edward W. Morris
Mr. Ray Morrison
Mrs. Susan Morrow
Mr. and Mrs. James Moses
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Murdock
Mr. Aaron Murphree
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman M. Murphree
Dr. and Mrs. Erskine Murray
Mr. and Mrs. J. Lynn Murray
Mr. and Mrs. Rayburn Nall
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Nelson
Ms. Betty Nesmith
Ms. Kay Newman
Ms. Lorri B Noble
Mrs. William C. Norman Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Norris
Mrs. Roger C. Norris
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Northcutt
Ms. Sarah Oldham
Mr. and Mrs. James Oliver
Mr. Kyle R. Oswalt
Mr. Mark Oswalt
Mr. John Otterson
Mr. Hugh Owen III
Ms. Beronica Owens
Mr. Alex S. Papalas
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Homer Pate III
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Patterson
Dr. and Mrs. John H. Payne III
Mr. and Mrs. Ric Payson
Mr. Robert Phaturos
Mrs. Harold L. Piper
Ms. Patty Poe
Mr. Bryan Poole
Dr. and Mrs. C. McGavock Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pringle
Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Pruitt
Dr. and Mrs. David Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. and Mrs. William Rainey
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reese
Mr. and Mrs. Derek Lynn Reeves
Mr. Marlin Reeves
Mr. Tyler Reeves
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Reid
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Reid
Mrs. Alice Reynolds
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Rice
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny R. Ridgeway
Mr. and Mrs. Bellaire K. Riley
Ms. Patricia Lynn G. Ritchie
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Robbins
Ms. Barbara Roberson
Mr. Mark D. Roberts
Ms. Catherine Robertson
Mr. Andrew Rockwell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rockwell
Mrs. Mary D. Rodgers
Dr. Dean Rogers
Mr. Mark Rogers
Ms. Rita Rogers
Mr. Tony Ronco
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosa
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Rowell
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rucker
Ms. Kenna Runge
Ms. Virginia Rybos
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Sahlie
The Rev. David Saliba
Sgt. and Mrs. David Sampleton
Mr. and Mrs. Terry S. Sanders
Mr. Ken Sasser
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Satterfield
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Saunders
The Rev. and Mrs. Ben Sawada
Mr. Robert F. Schremser
Mr. Frederick Schultz
Estate of Isabel Scriba
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Seals
Ms. Anne Searcy
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Seiffert
Ms. Cathy Self
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers
Mrs. Ceci L. Shannon
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shannon
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Mr. Chris Smith
Mr. Patrick Smith and Mrs. Angie Welch
Mrs. Virginia Sorrell
Ms. Christine Spivey
Ms. Lorriane L. Spivey
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stakely
Mary Virginia Stanford
Mr. Dan Stankoski
Mrs. Thomas Staton
Ms. Linda Steela
Mr. and Mrs. David Steele
Dr. and Mrs. Karl Stegall
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stepko
Mrs. Marjorie Stillwagen
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Stone
Ms. Sadie Stotts
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Strickland
Ms. Emmie Strickland
Estate of Agnes Goodman Stricklin
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sullivan
Dr. and Mrs. John Sumners
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew William Swift
Mr. and Mrs. W.F. Swinson
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Tampary
Mr. and Mrs. Constantine Tampary
Mr. Mark Tampary
Mr. Theodore Tampary
Mr. and Mrs. Will Tankersley
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Tate
Mr. and Mrs. Brett Taylor
Mr. Essex Taylor
Mr. J. Atwood Taylor III
Ms. Karen H. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson Jr.
Ms. Hannah D. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Todd
Ms. Kathy Toole
Ms. Audrey Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Townsend
Mr. John Trotman
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tuley
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Turk
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Lamar Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Robbie Unis
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kendrick Upchurch III
Ms. Bridgette Van Camp
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Van Lone
Mr. Dane Vansant Jr.
Mr. Richard Vaughn
Dr. Richard Vest
Mrs. Dee Voelkel
Ms. Julie Wahl
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Mr. and Mrs. John Walding
Mr. Josef Wallace
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy W. Wallace
Ms. Sharon Wallis
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Warren
Mr. and Mrs. Ty Warren
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Watkins
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watts
Mr. and Mrs. John Watts
Ms. Jackie Waver
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weber
Mr. and Mrs. Derek Webster
Adolph Weil Jr. Family
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool
Mr. Robert S. Weil
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Westbrook Jr.
Ms. Nell Westbrook
Mrs. Kristina Wheat
Mr. and Mrs. Tim D. Wheat
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Paul White
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Whiten
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Wideman
Mrs. Barbara Wilkerson
Ms. Edna Williams
Mr. and Mrs. James Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Williams
Mrs. Sarah Williams
Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon
Mr. Harold D. Willis
Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Wise Sr.
Mr. Elvin G. Witt
Ms. Iva Charlene Witt
Mr. Keith Womack
Ms. Carolyn Wood
Ms. Julie Wood
Ms. Sieu Tang Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Woodall
Dr. Verna Wool
Mr. Cameron Wright
Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr.
Ms. Elizabeth Yarbrough
Mr. Michael Yarchak
Mr. Jason Yates
2009 Stallworth Lecturer Dr. Ron White, author of A. Lincoln: A Biography (center), discussed elements of the Gettysburg Address
with President J. Cameron West (left) and
Dr. Jeremy Lewis, professor of political science, during a luncheon with a small group
of faculty, staff, and students.
Athletic Director Buzz Phillips may be the
most generous employee on campus, with
lifetime giving to the College at the level of
the Order of the Countess of Huntingdon,
the giving society into which he was inducted last year. He has served as athletic
director since 2004, but had been a part of
the Huntingdon staff in prior years, serving
as head men’s basketball coach and in
other capacities.
New Trustee David Cobb (center), with his
father, Henry Cobb, visited with Anthony
Leigh, vice president for external affairs, at
the reception following the Stallworth Lecture by Dr. Ron White in September.
47
Foundation Giving
Accenture Foundation Inc.
Aetna Foundation Inc.
Alabama Junior Miss Scholarship Foundation
Alabama Power Foundation Inc.
Alabama-West Florida United Methodist
Foundation
AT&T Foundation Matching Gifts Program
The Baptist Foundation of Alabama
Bellingrath-Morse Foundation
Calvin B. Bentley Charitable Foundation
Bessemer Kiwanis Foundation Fund Inc.
Boy Scouts of America
Chi Omega Foundation
The Community Foundation of South Alabama
Crum Family Charitable Foundation
The Daniel Foundation
Adrian and Marie Downing Educational Trust
East Tallapoosa Medical Foundation Inc.
Elks National Foundation
Elmore County Community Foundation
Zelia S. Evans Educational Trust
ExxonMobil Foundation
Flowing Well Foundation
Foundation for the Carolinas
GE Foundation
Gannett Foundation Inc.
E.L. Gibson Foundation
Goldring Family Foundation Scholarship Fund
Gordy-Mead-Britton Foundation
Laura Calfee Higdon Charitable Foundation
IBM International Foundation
Merrill Lynch and Co. Foundation Inc.
W.T. Neal Trust
The Northrop Grumman Foundation
P&G Fund of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation
Jack B. Parker Foundation
Pell City Kiwanis Club Foundation
Pharmacia Foundation
The Prudential Foundation
W. James Samford Jr. Foundation
The Samuel L. Schloss Family Foundation
Sentry Insurance Foundation Inc.
The J. Craig and Page T. Smith Scholarship
Foundation
The Julia and Albert Smith Foundation
The Sybil H. Smith Charitable Trust
South Baldwin Education Foundation Inc.
N.J. Stallworth Foundation
State Farm Co. Foundation
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation
Tractor and Equipment Co. Foundation
United Methodist Higher Education Foundation
Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation
Corporations & Organizations
81st U.S. Army Reserve RRC
88th U.S. Army Reserve RRC
90th U.S. Army Reserve RRC
Abbott Laboratories
ACT Recognition Program Services
Alabama Court Specialists’ Association
Alabama Diesel Service
Alabama Gas Corporation
Alabama Municipal Electric Authority
Alabama National Guard Joint Force HQ
Alabama Society of CPAs
Alabama USBC Assoc. Inc.
Alabama Wireless 911 Board
Alfa Realty
All County Real Estate Services
Allen and Associates LLC
Allianz Life Insurance Co. of North America
Altrusa Club of Fort Payne/Dekalb
Army Aviation Center Federal Credit
Army Emergency Relief, National Head
Army ROTC
Arrow Pest Control
Athenian Club
Aviagen Inc.
Baldwin County TB Assoc.
Berry Animal Clinic
Bessemer Chamber of Commerce
Bessemer Rotary Club
Bibb County Junior Miss Inc.
Boise Cascade
BR &G Services Inc.
Brewton Sportsman Club
Brookwood Endodontics
Calera Chamber of Commerce Inc.
Capitol Book & News Co.
Capitol Chevrolet Inc.
Central Alabama USBC Bowling Assoc.
Chemical Lime Co.
Cherokee County Commission
Chick-Fil-A
Community Action Committee Inc. of
Chambers Tallapoosa Coosa
Concord Enterprises Inc.
Counter Tops Plus LLC
Covent Gardens
Crumpton and Assoc.
D.W. McMillan Memorial Hospital
Department of the Air Force
Department of the Treasury/Financial
Management Services
Dothan District UMW
East Alabama Durable Medical Equipment Inc.
Ed’s Frame Gallery
El Paso Corp.
Energen Corp.
48
Escambia County Bank
Fairhope Youth Baseball
Fordyce Scholarship Assoc.
GSC Enterprises Inc.
Hicks Unlimited Inc.
Hunter Realty Associates Inc.
International Scholarship and Tuition Services
JM Electric Supply Co. Inc.
Jackson Thornton & Co. PC
John A. Papalas & Co.
Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies
Larry Johnson Jr. Collegiate Scholarship Fund
S.C. Johnson Wax Fund
Mike Jones Insurance
JQ Cigar Hut
Kennedy Space Center Federal Credit Union
Klein and Son Fine Jewelers
Miss Elizabeth D. Leckie Scholarship Fund
Limestone County Sports Hall of Fame
The Locker Room
McGuirk Boring Solutions
Merck Partnership for Giving
Microsoft Matching Gift Program
Mid-South Chapter ITPA
Mims Marine Inc.
Money Mailer of Montgomery Inc.
Montgomery Area Family Violence Program
Montgomery County Farmers Federation
Montgomery Supper Club
National Society of the Colonial Dames of
America in the State of Alabama,
Montgomery Chapter
No Name Club
NSCDA—Birmingham
NSCDA—State of Alabama
NSCDA—Selma
NSCDA—Opelika
Normandy
Oak Park Independent Living Facility
OBGYN Assoc. of Montgomery PC
Old Cloverdale Assoc.
One Party Place
Order of Eastern Star
Ozark Area Ministerial Association
Robin Parham Park Scholarship Fund
Pediatric Research of Charlottesville
Pink Pig Enterprises
Poarch Creek Indians
Pop Warner Little Scholars Inc.
PowerSouth Energy Cooperative
Precision Construction and Electrical Services
Pro Color Paint Supply Inc.
Rayco Industrial Inc.
Raytheon Charitable Gift Fund
Regions Bank
Regions Financial Corporation
Rehab Assoc.
Reliable Air Conditioning Systems Inc.
Reneau Contracting and Consulting Inc.
Richardson Cloverdale Pharmacy
River Parishes Advisors Group LLC
Scholarship Program Administrators
Society of American Military Engineers
Space Coast Post
Southern Nuclear Operating Co.
Southern Site Works Inc.
State of Alabama Department of Finance
Stonehenge Gallery
Superior Cranes Inc.
TCU Consulting Services LLC
Tintagil Club
Twentieth Century Club
United Negro College Fund Inc.
U.S. Bowling Congress
USA Payroll Inc.
Wilmore Properties
Vice chairman of the Board of Trustees
John Albritton and Adam Cotant ’09 were
honored with the Mary Mildred Sullivan and
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards, respectively, during the Honors and Awards Convocation last May. Cotant was selected for
the award in light of his extensive work with
United Methodist youth. He is now the director of campus recreation. Albritton was
recognized for his many years of service to
the College and to the Christian community
through his work with Faith Radio.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Churches, Colleges, & Schools
Alabama Association of Independent Colleges
and Universities
Alabama West-Florida Conference of the UMC
Billingsley School
Bluff Park UMC
Calera High School
Childersburg High School
Cleveland High School
Dothan District United Methodist Women
Fairhope UMC
First Baptist Church, Athens, Ala.
First Baptist Church of Talladega
First UMC, Marianna, Fla.
First UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Forest Park UMC, Panama City, Fla.
Frazer Memorial UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
General Board of Higher Education & Ministry
Grace Fellowship PCA, Gulf Shores, Ala.
Gwinnett Football League
Heritage Baptist Church, Montgomery, Ala.
The Heritage Club of First UMC
Jericho AME Zion Church, Montgomery, Ala.
Kingswood UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Lake Elam Missionary Baptist Church, Millbrook, Ala.
New Testament Holiness Church of Alabama Inc.
Ninth Street UMC, Decatur, Ala.
North Alabama Conference of the UMC
Ocean City High School
Ola High School, McDonough, Ga.
Providence UMC, Charlotte, N.C.
Thompson High School Fund, Alabaster, Ala.
First UMC/ Montgomery—United Methodist
Women
The University of Alabama Press
The Wilson School, Florence, Ala.
The Cross & Flame Society
Churches of the Alabama-West Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church
which paid 100% of their Huntingdon apportionments during 2008
Adams Chapel UMC, Clayton, Ala.
Alaqua UMC, DeFuniak Springs, Fla.
Aldersgate UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Alexandria UMC, Ft. Mitchell, Ala.
Annie Jones UMC, Cantonment, Fla.
Antioch UMC, Notasulga, Ala.
Aquilla UMC, Silas, Ala.
Arlington UMC, Ala.
Armstrong UMC, Tallassee, Ala.
Asbury UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
Ashland Place UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Auburn UMC, Ala.
Autaugaville UMC, Ala.
Bagdad UMC, Fla.
Baggetts Chapel UMC, Repton, Ala.
Banks UMC, Ala.
Barlow UMC, Millry, Ala.
Barrett Road UMC, Selma, Ala.
Bascom UMC, Fla.
Belleville UMC, Atmore, Ala.
Benson-Bethel UMC, Alexander City, Ala.
Benton UMC, Selma, Ala.
Bethel UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
Bethel UMC, Ozark, Ala.
Bethel UMC, Wagerville, Ala.
Bethlehem UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
Bethlehem UMC, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Beulah UMC, Valley, Ala.
Blountstown UMC, Fla.
Booth UMC, Ala.
Bowen UMC, Tuskegee, Ala.
Bradford’s Chapel UMC, Tuskegee, Ala.
Brantley UMC, Ala.
Brewersville UMC, Livingston, Ala.
Brightwater UMC, Melvin, Ala.
Browns UMC, Abbeville, Ala.
Bruce UMC, Fla.
Brundidge UMC, Ala.
Brunson’s Chapel UMC, Brantley, Ala.
Burkville Memorial UMC, Hope Hull, Ala.
Byrneville UMC, Century, Fla.
Cain’s Chapel UMC, Deatsville, Ala.
Cameron Chapel UMC, Opp, Ala.
Campbellton UMC, Fla.
Campground UMC, Sweet Water, Ala.
Canton Bend UMC, Camden, Ala.
Castleberry UMC, Brewton, Ala.
Cedar Grove UMC, Tallassee, Ala.
Centenary UMC, Uriah. Ala.
Center Ridge UMC, DeFuniak Springs, Fla.
Central UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Centreville UMC, Ala.
Century UMC, Fla.
Chalker Memorial UMC, Tibbie, Ala.
Chapel UMC, Eclectic, Ala.
Chickasaw UMC, Ala.
China Grove UMC, Moundville, Ala.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Chipley UMC, Fla.
Choctaw Beach UMC, Freeport, Fla.
Christ UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Christian Home UMC, Laurel Hill, Fla.
Chunchula UMC, Ala.
Church Street UMC, Selma, Ala.
Clayton UMC, Ala.
Clear Springs UMC, Robertsdale, Ala.
Clio UMC, Skipperville, Ala.
Clopton UMC, Ala.
Coden UMC, Ala.
Cokes Chapel UMC, York, Ala.
Columbia UMC, Ala.
Comer UMC, Midway, Ala.
Compass Lake UMC, Marianna, Fla.
Corner Creek UMC, Samson, Ala.
Covenant UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Cox Chapel UMC, Maplesville, Ala.
Crawford UMC, Phenix City, Ala.
Cypress UMC, Graceville, Fla.
Daleville UMC, Ala.
Dalraida UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Darlington UMC, Westville, Fla.
Dauphin Island UMC, Ala.
Dexter Avenue UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Douglas Chapel UMC, East Brewton, Ala.
Dozier UMC, Andalusia, Ala.
East Brewton UMC, Ala.
East Mt. Zion UMC, Graceville, Fla.
Ebenezer UMC, Wagarville, Ala.
Echo UMC, Ozark, Ala.
Eclectic UMC, Ala.
Elizabeth Chapel UMC, Pace, Fla.
Elmore UMC, Ala.
Emmaus UMC, Panama City, Fla.
Ensley UMC, Pensacola, Fla.
Epworth UMC, Eufaula, Ala.
Epworth UMC, Phenix City, Ala.
Excel UMC, Ala.
Fairview UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Farmersville UMC, Deatsville, Ala.
First UMC, Abbeville, Ala.
First UMC, Andalusia, Ala.
First UMC, Baker, Fla.
First UMC, Brewton, Ala.
First UMC, Clanton, Ala.
First UMC, Crestview, Fla.
First UMC, Demopolis, Ala.
First UMC, Dothan, Ala.
First UMC, Elba, Ala.
First UMC, Enterprise, Ala.
First UMC, Eufaula, Ala.
First UMC, Evergreen, Ala.
First UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
First UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
First UMC, Greenville, Ala.
First UMC, Hartford, Ala.
First UMC, Millbrook, Ala.
First UMC, Milton, Fla.
First UMC, Monroeville, Ala.
First UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
First UMC, Niceville, Fla.
First UMC, Opelika, Ala.
First UMC, Ozark, Ala.
First UMC, Phenix City, Ala.
First UMC, Prattville, Ala.
First UMC, Samson, Ala.
First UMC, Slocomb, Ala.
First UMC, Tallassee, Ala.
First UMC, Tuskegee, Ala.
First UMC, Wetumpka, Ala.
Fitzpatrick UMC, Ala.
Forest Home UMC, Ala.
Forkland UMC, Eutaw, Ala.
Fort Davis UMC, Ala.
Frazer Memorial UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Fruitdale UMC, Ala.
Gastonburg UMC, Ala.
Georgetown UMC, Chunchula, Ala.
Gilbertown UMC, Ala.
Glenwood UMC, Ala.
Gosport UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Grace UMC, Auburn, Ala.
Grand Ridge UMC, Fla.
Greenwood UMC, Fla.
Greystone UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Grimes UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Grove Hill UMC, Ala.
Gulf Breeze UMC, Fla.
Gulfview UMC, Panama City Beach, Fla.
Guy’s Chapel UMC, Bay Minette, Ala.
Ham Chapel UMC, Elba, Ala.
Harmony UMC, Titus, Ala.
Harvest Church UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Hatchechubbee UMC, Ala.
Havana UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Hayneville UMC, Selma, Ala.
Headland UMC, Ala.
Henderson UMC, Goshen, Ala.
Highland Park UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Hiland Park UMC, Panama City, Fla.
Hills Chapel UMC, Ramer, Ala.
Hillside UMC, Phenix City, Ala.
Hobson Bethel UMC, Demopolis, Ala.
Hope Hull UMC, Ala.
Hopewell UMC, Deatsville, Ala.
Hopewell UMC, Fitzpatrick, Ala.
Hopewell UMC, Laurel Hill, Fla.
Hopewell UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Hurricane UMC, Slocomb, Ala.
Hurtsboro UMC, Ala.
Isabella UMC, Maplesville, Ala.
Ivy Creek UMC, Autaugaville, Ala.
Jackson Chapel UMC, Sawyerville, Ala.
49
The Cross & Flame Society (cont.)
Jackson First UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Jackson McCann’s UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Jefferson UMC, Linden, Ala.
Jenkins Chapel UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
Kimbrough UMC, Pine Hill, Ala.
Kingswood UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Kinsey UMC, Ala.
Kinston UMC, Ala.
Korean UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Lakeview UMC, Bonifay, Fla.
Latham UMC, Stockton, Ala.
Lathram Chapel UMC, Cantonment, Fla.
Liberty UMC, Abbeville, Ala.
Liberty UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Liberty UMC, Greenville, Ala.
Liberty UMC, Notasulga, Ala.
Lime Springs UMC, Clanton, Ala.
Lime Springs UMC, Samson, Ala.
Live Oak UMC, Rutledge, Ala.
Livingston UMC, Livingston, Ala.
Locust Bluff UMC, Prattville, Ala.
Lottie UMC, Perdido, Ala.
Louisville UMC, Ala.
Lowndesboro UMC, Selma, Ala.
Loxley UMC, Ala.
Luverne UMC, Ala.
Mabson UMC, Ozark, Ala.
Macedonia UMC, Opp, Ala.
Mae Edwards UMC, Milton, Fla.
Magnolia UMC, Selma, Ala.
Marianna UMC, Fla.
Marion Junction UMC, Selma, Ala.
Marion UMC, Ala.
Marlow UMC, Summerdale, Ala.
May Creek UMC, Castleberry, Ala.
McDaniel Memorial UMC, Brent, Ala.
McIntosh UMC, Calvert, Ala.
McKenzie UMC, Ala.
McRae Street UMC, Atmore, Ala.
Melvin UMC, Ala.
Memorial UMC, Andalusia, Ala.
Memorial UMC, Selma, Ala.
Metropolitan UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Midland City UMC, Ala.
Midway UMC, Ala.
Midway UMC, Westville, Fla.
Minerva Memorial UMC, Chatom, Ala.
Morgan’s Chapel UMC, Bon Secour, Ala.
Morris Chapel UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Moundville UMC, Ala.
Mount Carmel UMC, Letohatchee, Ala.
Mt. Carmel UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Mt. Carmel UMC, Jay, Fl.
Mt. Carmel UMC, Ozark, Ala.
Mt. Carmel UMC, Silas, Ala.
Mt. Hermon UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Mt. Hilliard UMC, Union Springs, Ala.
Mt. Nebo UMC, Clanton, Ala.
Mt. Nebo UMC, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Mt. Pleasant UMC, Finchburg, Ala.
Mt. Sinai UMC, Grove Hill, Ala.
Mt. Vernon UMC, Ala.
Mt. Zion East UMC, Andalusia, Ala.
Mt. Zion UMC, Prattville, Ala.
Mt. Zion West UMC, Evergreen, Ala.
Mulder Memorial UMC, Wetumpka, Ala.
Murphy’s Chapel UMC, Troy, Ala.
Myrtlewood UMC, Thomaston, Ala.
Napier Field UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Neal’s Chapel UMC, Tuskegee, Ala.
New Bethel UMC, Pace, Fla.
New Brockton UMC, New Brockton, Ala.
New Hope UMC, Robertsdale, Ala.
New Hope UMC, Vernon, Fla.
New Prospect UMC, Dadeville, Ala.
New Vision UMC, Chipley, Fla.
Newton UMC, Ala.
Noah’s Ark UMC, Panama City Beach, Fla.
Oak Grove UMC, Black, Ala.
50
Oak Grove UMC, Fort Deposit, Ala.
Oak Grove UMC, Georgiana, Ala.
Oak Grove UMC, Greenville, Ala.
Oak Grove UMC, Troy, Ala.
Oak Valley Station UMC, Wetumpka, Ala.
Old Tabernacle UMC, New Brockton, Ala.
Orange Beach UMC, Ala.
Orrville UMC, Selma, Ala.
Otter Creek UMC, Ponce de Leon, Fla.
Owens Chapel UMC, Finchburg, Ala.
Pepperell UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Perdido Bay UMC, Pensacola, Fla.
Perdido UMC, Ala.
Perry Hill UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Perry’s Chapel UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Pierce Chapel UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Pine Grove UMC, Leroy, Ala.
Pine Hill UMC, Pine Hill, Ala.
Pine Level UMC, Pine Level, Ala.
Pine Orchard UMC, Uriah, Ala.
Pine Apple UMC, Ala.
Piney Grove UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Piney Grove UMC, Hartford, Ala.
Pintlala UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Pitts Chapel UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Pittsview UMC, Hatchechubbee, Ala.
Plantersville UMC, Ala.
Pleasant Grove UMC, Clanton, Ala.
Pleasant Grove UMC, Slocomb, Ala.
Pleasant Ridge UMC, Enterprise, Ala.
Pleasant Ridge UMC, Geneva, Ala.
Pleasant Valley UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Pleasant Valley UMC, Plantersville, Ala.
Pollard UMC, Ala.
Ponce de Leon UMC, Fla.
Pondtown UMC, Hartford, Ala.
Pondville UMC, Brent, Ala.
Poplar Head UMC, Westville, Fla.
Port St. Joe UMC, Fla.
Portland UMC, Freeport, Fla.
Post Oak UMC, Ariton, Ala.
Providence UMC, Silas, Ala.
Providence UMC, Spanish Fort, Ala.
Providence UMC, Wetumpka, Ala.
Ramer UMC, Ala.
Ramey’s Chapel UMC, Greensboro, Ala.
Red Bay UMC, Fla.
Red Hill UMC, Bonifay, Fla.
Red Level UMC, Opp, Ala.
Rhodes Chapel UMC, Valley Grande, Ala.
Rocky Mount UMC, Eufaula, Ala.
Rosinton UMC, Robertsdale, Ala.
Roxana UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Rutledge UMC, Ala.
Salem UMC, Ala.
Salem UMC, Eutaw, Ala.
Salem UMC, Graceville, Fla.
San Pedro Mission UMC, Summerdale, Ala.
Sandy Chapel UMC, Centreville, Ala.
Saraland UMC, Ala.
Sardis UMC, Dadeville, Ala.
Sardis UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Sardis UMC, Hartford, Ala.
Seale UMC, Ala.
Shady Grove UMC, Grand Ridge, Fla.
Shiloh UMC, Beatrice, Ala.
Simpson Chapel UMC, Marion, Ala.
Sims Chapel UMC, Tibbie, Ala.
Skipperville UMC, Ala.
Society Hill UMC, Pittsview, Ala.
Sparta Hill UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Springfield UMC, Eutaw, Ala.
Springhill UMC, Greenville, Ala.
Springhill UMC, Midway, Ala.
St. James UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
St. Luke UMC, Enterprise, Ala.
St. Luke UMC, Pensacola, Fla.
St. Paul UMC, Eutaw, Ala.
St. Paul UMC, Hartford, Ala.
St. Paul UMC, Prattville, Ala.
St. Paul UMC, Union Springs, Ala.
St. Paul UMC, Valley Grande, Ala.
St. Stephens UMC, Ala.
Stapleton UMC, Stapleton, Ala.
Stewart UMC, Moundville, Ala.
Street Memorial UMC, Clayton, Ala.
Sunflower UMC, Wagarville, Ala.
Sweet Water UMC, Ala.
Sylvan Grove UMC, Midland City, Ala.
Tabernacle UMC, Lawley, Ala.
Tanner Williams UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Taylor UMC, Dothan, Ala.
Tennille UMC, Brundidge, Ala.
Texasville UMC, Clayton, Ala.
The Grace Place UMC, Semmes, Ala.
The Grove UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Thomaston UMC, Ala.
Thomasville UMC, Ala.
Thorsby UMC, Clanton, Ala.
Toxey UMC, Melvin, Ala.
Trinity UMC, Gilbertown, Ala.
Trinity UMC, Prattville, Ala.
Trinity, Weoka UMC, Equality, Ala.
Union Grove UMC, Midland, Ga.
Union Hill UMC, Troy, Ala.
Union Springs UMC, Union Springs, Ala.
Union UMC, Dadeville, Ala.
Union UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Union UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
Uniontown UMC, Demopolis, Ala.
Uriah UMC, Uriah, Ala.
Verbena UMC, Ala.
Walker Springs UMC, Jackson, Ala.
Wallace UMC, Evergreen, Ala.
Wallsboro UMC, Wetumpka, Ala.
Warren Street UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Washington Street UMC, Eufaula, Ala.
Watoola UMC, Opelika, Ala.
Webb UMC, Kinsey, Ala.
Wesley Memorial UMC, DeFuniak Springs, Fla.
Wesley Memorial UMC, Pace, Fla.
West End UMC, Opp, Ala.
West Highland UMC, Montgomery, Ala.
West Side UMC, Mobile, Ala.
Westview Heights UMC, Ozark, Ala.
Wewahitchka UMC, Fla.
Williams Chapel UMC, Brundidge, Ala.
Williams Chapel UMC, Pittsview, Ala.
Williams Memorial UMC, Blountstown, Fla.
Wilmer UMC, Ala.
Winslette Chapel UMC, Newton, Ala.
Woodbine UMC, Pace, Fla.
Woodland UMC, Pike Road, Ala.
Woodlawn UMC, Castleberry, Ala.
Woodlawn UMC, Panama City, Fla.
York UMC, Ala.
At least 14 members of the Lipscomb and Rush families were
associated with the College, either as students or as administrators, beginning with Tuskegee Female College’s first president, Andrew Adgate Lipscomb, and John Wesley Rush, one
of the College’s earliest trustees and faculty members. But it
wasn’t until Elizabeth “Libba” Denson Rush ’50, Rush’s great
granddaughter, married McAdory Lipscomb, Lipscomb’s
great grandson, that the two families united. Libba Lipscomb
is a generous and faithful donor to the College and a member of the Huntingdon Society, the John Massey Heritage Society, and the Order of the Countess of Huntingdon.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Faculty & Staff
Dr. Maureen Murphy
Mrs. Tina Nixon
Ms. Suellen Ofe
Ms. Tara Osborne
Dr. Frank Parsons Jr.
Mrs. Jamie Payne
Mr. Lamar Petty
Mr. Buzz Phillips
Mr. Patrick Phillips
Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard
Mr. Jeff Pinkerton
Mr. Solomon Porter Jr.
Mr. Mike Pugh
Mr. Mike Rader
Mr. Harry Ray
Mr. Kevin Ray
Dr. James A. Reid
Ms. Catherine E. Reinehr
Dr. Ann Reitzammer
Ms. Crystal Rhodes
Ms. Debbie Rhodes
Mr. Douglas Rogers
Mr. Nathan Rucker
Ms. Alison Rutledge
Mr. Gregg Ryan
Ms. Adrienne Schlereth
Dr. Vadim Serebryany
Ms. Kristy Sharpe
Mrs. Heather Slagle
Mrs. Nordis Smith
Mr. Charles Stanton
Mr. Lawrence Stoudemire
Dr. Sidney Stubbs
Dr. Ed Trimmer
Mr. Michael Turk
Mr. Steve Voltz
Mr. John Walters
Mr. Michael Ward
Ms. Gwen Watson
Dr. Joyce Weiss
Mr. Martin Wesson
The Rev. Dr. J. Cameron
West
Mrs. Barbara White
Ms. Gynger Williams
Mrs. Jane Williams
Ms. Yvonne Williams
Mrs. Catherine Wolfe
Mrs. Wendi Wood
Mr. Chuch Yarbrough
Mrs. Lesa Youngblood
Mrs. Saundra Zasadil
Mrs. Karen Ziglar
Join the Scarlet
and Grey Circle!
The Scarlet and Grey Circle was created for loyal
Huntingdon students and alumni who want to preserve the Huntingdon experience for future generations of students. By joining the Circle, students
and alumni pledge to do three things:
• be a life-long ambassador for the College
• encourage future students to attend
Huntingdon; and
• make an annual gift to the College.
There is no dollar requirement for the annual gift;
rather, the Scarlet and Grey Circle celebrates the
act of giving back to the College each and every
year.
The first 15 members to sign the pledge were the
students who are serving as Huntingdon Ambassadors this year! Having a large number of Huntingdon alumni who are willing to pledge a lifetime
commitment to the College will speak volumes to
foundations and other major donors who evaluate colleges and universities based on their alumni
giving percentages.
Signature
E-mail Return to: Office of External Affairs, Huntingdon College,
1500 E. Fairview Ave., Montgomery, AL 36106
Date Zip State )
Phone (
51
City Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Mailing Address The Office of External Affairs includes L-R, back row, EmilyBeth Dickinson ’07, coordinator of donor stewardship and
young alumni advancement; Marilyn Boswell, director of the Huntingdon Society; Cathy Wolfe, director of development operations; Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86, director of alumni advancement and the Huntingdon Fund for
Scholarships; and Catherine E. Reinehr ’05, webmaster and director of publications; front row: Anthony Leigh, vice
president for external affairs, and Su Ofe, associate vice president for communications and marketing.
Class Year Your loyalty to Huntingdon matters to the College. We truly hope membership in the Scarlet
and Grey Circle will give you and other alumni
a vehicle by which to demonstrate your unending commitment to Huntingdon, and provide the
College with opportunities to honor you. Please
show your support by detaching the pledge form
below, signing it, and returning it to the Office of
External Affairs. If you have not made a gift to the
College this academic year, you may enclose
that, as well! Join the Circle!
Name Mrs. Maureen Hallman
Mrs. Harriett Hampton
Ms. Joanna Hampton
Ms. Donna Hartley
Dr. Dennis Herrick
Mr. Larry Hicks
Mrs. Stephanie Hicks
Mr. Steven Hicks
Mr. Joey Holcomb
Mr. Joe Holder
Ms. Monica Hudson
Mrs. Karen Hyman
Mrs. Camilla Irvin
Ms. Rosemary Jernigan
Mr. Derry Johnson
Mr. London Johnson
Mr. Clarence Jones
Mrs. Sandy Kelser
Ms. Brenda Kerwin
Mr. Eric Kidwell
Mrs. Donna King
Mrs. Margaret Kinney
The Rev. Dr. Mark La
Branche
Mr. Nick Lackeos
Mr. Justin Lamberti
Mr. Charlie Lane
Ms. Cheryl Lange
Mrs. Maria Lange
Ms. Glea Larsen
Mr. Anthony Leigh
Mr. Eric Levanda
Dr. Jeremy Lewis
Dr. Mark Liatti
Mr. Tim Lutz
Mr. Jesse Madden
Ms. Patricia Maddox
Mr. Matt Mahanic
Dr. Donna W. Manson
Ms. Elissa Mays
Ms. Bertha McClain
Mrs. Martie McEnerney
Mr. Donnie McGough
Mr. Eddie McKinney
Mr. Larry McLemore
Mr. Joseph Miller
Mr. Chris Mills
Ms. Kaci Mize
Mrs. Ximena Moore
Mrs. Elba Morton
Dr. Cinzia Balit-Moussalli
Dr. Samir Moussalli
Mr. Scott Mularz
“Huntingdon College will forever be a part of me. I want future generations
of Huntingdon students to have the same opportunities to grow in wisdom,
so that they, too, can go forth to apply wisdom in service. I pledge to be an
ambassador of Huntingdon College for life, to encourage future students to
attend Huntingdon, and to make an annual gift to the College.”
Mrs. Melissa Bond Adams
Mrs. Rebecca Adams
Ms. Megan Aiello
Dr. James A. Albritton
Mr. Derrick Ansley
Dr. Carbestha Barker
Mrs. Maryann Beck
Mr. Harold Blankenship
Dr. Jason Borders
Mrs. Marilyn Boswell
Ms. Nataliya Boyko
Mrs. Vivian Bricken
Ms. Bertha Brown
Ms. Mary Ann Brown
Mr. Rick Bruner
Dr. Frank Buckner
Dr. Christopher Carr
Mrs. Bonnie Catching
* Mr. Bernard Chambliss
Dr. Sally Clark
Ms. Donna Clements
Mr. D.J. Conville
Mrs. Angela Cook
Mr. Justin Dailey
Mrs. Gene Davis
Mr. Ryan L. Davis
Mr. Sean Dawkins
Ms. Jaime Demick
Ms. EmilyBeth Dickinson
Ms. Vaughn Dickson
Mr. Thomas Dismukes Jr.
Mr. Jay Dorman
Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman
Dr. Erastus Dudley
Mrs. Belinda Goris Duett
Mr. Dale Duett
Mr. John Duke
Mrs. Laura Hinds Duncan
Mr. Mike Dunn
Mr. Donald Favor
Dr. Kyle Fedler
Mr. Grant Fielder
Ms. Elnora Flowers
Mr. Evan Furr
Mr. Craig Garner
Mr. Kenneth Garrett
Dr. Paul Gier
Ms. Joel Godfrey
Mr. Walter Golston
Mr. Charlie Goodyear
Mrs. Jennifer Ishler Gould
Mrs. Karen Graham
Ms. Lois Green
Alumni Giving by Class Year
June 1 2008–May 31, 2009
1924
Number in Class:
Number Who Gave:
Percentage:
Total Given:
* Margaret Garrett Bynum
1930
Number in Class: 4
Number Who Gave: 2
Percentage: 50%
Total Given: $1,100
Ruth McFaden Nettles
Ouida Fay Paul ♦
1933
Number in Class:
Number Who Gave:
Percentage:
Total Given:
* Julia Lee Stubbs Slaughter
1934
Number in Class: 10
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 10%
Total Given: $100
Claire Rogers Peacock
1935
Number in Class: 11
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 9%
Total Given: $25
Lillie Pitts Lloyd
1936
Number in Class: 11
Number Who Gave: 2
Percentage: 18%
Total Given: $550
Isaac E. Cohen
Nannie Robertson
1938
Number in Class: 19
Number Who Gave: 4
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $1,400
Mary Wilson King ♦
Frances Marshall Lanier
Pauline Cain Norby
Louise May Pope
1939
Number in Class: 19
Number Who Gave: 4
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $475
Virginia Trusler Blackwood
Jule Wilson Perry
Frances Milner Seifert
Kathryn Tucker Windham
1940
Number in Class: 19
Number Who Gave: 3
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $375
Bernice Hurst Bell
Lorraine Roberts Corley
Ruby Collier Key ♦
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
52
1941
Number in Class: 19
Number Who Gave: 4
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $425
Sarah Frances Parker Bruer
Isabel Leatherwood Doswell
Margaret Dean Pitts
Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson
1942
Number in Class: 27
Number Who Gave: 6
Percentage: 22%
Total Given: $7,250
Edwina Wallace Alexander ♦
Anna Louise Calhoun Duffey ♦
Dorothy McLean Perry
Elizabeth Thompson Saus
Lamar Spencer ♦
Jean Kirkpatrick Williams
1943
Number in Class: 30
Number Who Gave: 10
Percentage: 33%
Total Given: $1,690
Mallieve Wicker Breeding
Ruth Miller Carl ♦
Melba Dunn Dickinson
Mary Cecil Edwards Dunning
Mary Baker Duval
Margaret H. Graham
Martha Sumner Harkins
Dorothy Tucker Smith
Ann Tyler
Elizabeth Rudder Whittington
1944
Number in Class: 46
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 32%
Total Given: $31,185
Julia Bentley Arner
Lucille Ellison Beezley
Emmie Cardwell Bolden ♦
Virginia Hudson Crumly
Josie Parker Greene
Wanda Hester Jones
Margaret Louise Martin
Marilyn Cogburn McLeod
Martha Holley Norton
Charlotte Gibbs Ponder ♦
Nancy Greer Robinson
Marie Baker Sinclair ♦
Mary N. Finklea Skinner
Genevieve Welch Spill
Ruth Cobia Summers
1945
Number in Class: 51
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 35%
Total Given: $9,315
Martha Sprague Best
Helen Domingos Bull
Frances Carter Conover
Gloria Huey Crawford
Helen Rittenour Geesey
* Theresa Hillhouse Harris ♦
Virginia Elizabeth Tate Herod
Winnie Webb Howard
Elizabeth May Kyle
Virginia McLean
Mary Martha Howard Phillips
Blanche Carlton Sloan
Betty Gensert Towey
Grace King Tribble
Margaret Ennis Tucker ♦
Ruth Lambert Viering
* Rosalind Davison Washington
Ray E. Whatley
1946
Number in Class: 62
Number Who Gave: 26
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $4,264
Emily Hasson Anthony
Virginia Lile Beck
Ruth Brady Cousins Brink ♦
Mary Alice Garner Bush
Virginia Jones Campbell
Mary Cox Canterbury
Anne Thomas Cantrell
Fariss Fraser Craig
Becky Sellers Doe
Sara Preer Edmunds ♦
Mary Douglass Foreman
Monte Walker Graham
Zuma Williams Harris
Jane Hall Knox
Gregg Hosselton Lofton
Sue Dowdell Lux
Lucile Holmes Martin
Susan Carmichael McIntosh
Frances Hastings Moore ♦
Martha Kimbrough Musgrove
Gwendolyn Green Noland
Elizabeth Brown Nolen
* Sara Tingle Parnell
Dot Felkel Rigsby
Doris Cooper Riley
Olga Lee Ryan
Mary Florence Smith Wilson
1947
Number in Class: 68
Number Who Gave: 27
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $3,657.50
Sarah Wedekind Bailey
Jane Evans Brantley
Allyn Hamner Brown
Marguerite Wise Cato
Christina Tompkins Rood Crawford
Sara McCall Curry
Jean Norton Gander
Margaret Roling Griffin
Catherine Cobb Helms
Harriet Holmes Herring
Rose Schafer Johnson
Martha Davis Keene
Aileen Best LeGrand
Marianne Skemp Lovell
Caroline Ball Matthews ♦
Margaret Calhoun McIlwain
Ann Bates McQueen
Caroline Haigler Jackson Moseley
Mary Weathers Neighbors
William M. Pearson
Dorothy Dillard Pettey
Elizabeth Wilkinson Rast ♦
Merriel Hoover Reed
Billie Smith Sims
Ann Richards Sommer
Doris Chisolm Tucker
Bertha Rhodes Wood
1948
Number in Class: 50
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 36%
Total Given: $2,310
Mary King Burns ♦
Montae James Cain
Martha Ann Cranford Christopher
Emily Reese DeShields
Sara Cody Gaskin
Katie Walls Laws
Doris Brett McCurdy
Jean Webb Melton
Dorothy Louise Barton Moore
Carolyn Deer Owens
Ruth Burroughs Dabbs Regen
LaNelle Andrews Rowe
Dorothy Rainer Sellars
Joy Cogdell Steele
Nancy Johnson Strickland
Abbie Henderson Taylor
Evelyn Ann Thweatt
Nellie Howard Tiller
1949
Number in Class: 70
Number Who Gave: 29
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $4,984
Kenneth D. Adcock
Jeanne Jones Bateman
Juanita Feemster Black
Betty Finlay Brislin ♦
Anne Avriett Cameron
Janet Bullard Campbell
Janet Kelly Collins
Martha Cobb Crawford
Betty Jayne Solomon Edwards
William Carroll Finlay
Maurice B. Gettleman
Ethel Ellis Gibson
Ernestine Spencer Hill
Elizabeth Reed Hopkins
Louise Yeager Howell
Betty Bennett Janney
Mary Louise Ledbetter
Jean Stallworth Maxwell
Joy McGlynn McLemore
Sallie Wood Millsap
Joseph E. Moore
Ruth Milner Morrison
Annelle Kitchen Murray
Nancy Mitchell Nilsson
Virginia Bullard Oswald ♦
Shirley Hamill Smith
Virginia Suddith Vines
Anne Roberds Wood
James G. Wright Jr.
1950
Number in Class: 86
Number Who Gave: 41
Percentage: 47%
Total Given: $10,662.50
* Sally Brook Bethea
Nelle Beck Beverly
Betty Wright Bolt
Lucy Sunshine Jones Bricken
Elia Durr Buck ♦
Rosemary Oliver Cameron
Clare Bowman Cardinal
Katherine Jones Cook
Dorothy D. Dillard
Barbara Johnston Dismukes
Martha Dickerson Fountain
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Lila Keene Franco
Zan Henslee Gammage ♦
Martha Ray Harris ♦
Helen Jeune Heatherly
Bruce F. Holding Jr.
Roberta Butler Holding
Willard Lee Hurley
Jane Jackson
Lucy Spain Jackson
Gretchen Van Valzah Johnson
Kenneth E. Johnson
Bettie Berman Kahn
Betty Pearson Keyton
Martha Alford Kilgore
Elizabeth D. Lipscomb ♦
Janice Green Mahoney
Barbara Jones Manning
Ann O’Neal Ott
John G. Price
Mary Gaston Price
Myrtle Poundstone Ridolphi
James M. Rittenour
Caroline Poole Ryan
Mary Bibee Rutherford Searle
Ione Burford Sibley
Joseph Simon
Ann Blackmon Thompson
Jim T. Upchurch Jr. ♦
Barbara Brown White
Norma J. Thornton White
Pauline Cohen Witt
1951
Number in Class: 82
Number Who Gave: 36
Percentage: 44%
Total Given: $14,875
Betty Persons Ballard
Betty Brunson Barrett
William Blackmon Jr.
Sara Dickert Bowden
JoAn Cox Cooper
Martha Nell Dean ♦
Marjorie Little Doe
Julia Hawthorne Dubberley
Rom H. Duncan Jr.
Betty Edgar Gerdel
Betty Payne Hammond
Betty Kimbrough Hastings ♦
Ann Wood Hicks
Everett Hutcheson
Jean McGinty Jones
* Martha Bozeman Jungwirth
Jeannine Marie Kirklin
William Hugh Knight
Susan Carroll Martin
Flora Schafer McCormick
Ruth Cook McLemore
Virginia Lee Monroe
Rita Rochambeau Perham
Ethel Moist Perkins
Esther Beach Persigehl
Virginia Greer Pitts
Jean Davis Pracht
Helen Rapp Rittenour
Orren L. Royal
Raymond Shaw
Miriam Kirkwood Syler
Harriet Emerson Thomas
Carroll Moss Wheeler
Jere T. Williams
Betty Greene Wright
* Ruth Barnes Yaple ♦
1952
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 36
Percentage: 45%
Total Given: $3,770
Eris Dean Adams
Marion Waters Barrow ♦
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
Zona Davis Baxter
Dorothy Hoag Bell ♦
Patricia Britton
June Reid Carter
Nancy Morgan Christie
Malinda Robertson Daniel
Sara Lee Insley Dunbar
James L. Farrow Jr.
Ann Harrell Fitzpatrick
Anne Salyerds Francisco
Rosemary Reed Freeze
Dorothy Cannon Fuller
Nancy Brown Garner
Mary Collins Golden
Henry Johnson Harper
Mary Jo Reed Krauss
Barbara Chapman Moore
Rose Dyer Moore
Rual W. Morris
Sue Austin Norwood
Miriam Pace
Gwendolyn Smith Pearson
Wynona Lowery Pelham
Carolyn Norton Respess
Carolyn Warren Roberts
Norma Iversen Schumm
Virginia Dumas Skillman
Lucile Martin Smith
Margaret Nicholas Snellgrove
Ruth Stone Strange ♦
Roy Thomas Sublette
Betty Jean Vaughn
June Johnson Wilborn
Barbara Rice Zdanis
1953
Number in Class: 65
Number Who Gave: 25
Percentage: 39%
Total Given: $27,825
Carolyn Griffin Atwater
Jane Windham Chesnutt
Betty Rawlins Cox
Robert R. Daniel
Martha Rose Herlong Ellis
Charlotte Berry Fuller
Ann Given Hopper
Florence Furlow Hurst
Ann Harvey James
Carolyn Butler Klopstock
Barbara Snider Miller
Shirley Thrash Nystrom
Elizabeth A. Palmer
James M. Parker
Madie Howell Poole
David Printz
Catherine Rollins
Elaine Williams Smith
Van der Veer Smith
Phyllis Gunter Snyder ♦
Julia Arbuthnot Strickland
Barbara Farrington Thomas
Barbara Rosselle Todd
Diane Smith Wendland ♦
Betty Jenkins Witherspoon
Betty Betts Conner
Eloise Hall Cottrell
Emily Reese Dann
Annie Carol Davis
Betty Killian Day
Barbara Robertson Drury
George H. Fitzgerald
Jane Johnson Fowler
Nimrod Thompson Frazer ♦
Carolyn Loftin Gaither
Ann Kolb Garner
Betty Perry Gibson
Catherine Byrd Gifford
Betty Robertson Gilmore
Gwendolyn Prater Glass
Jean Coley Harrison
Barbara Farmer Hingle
Anne Prather Huber
David O. Hughes
Jack T. Jackson
Laura Chambliss Jinright ♦
Mary Ruth Haselton Lieck
Farrys Rose Long
Jean Broxson McMillan ♦
Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley ♦
Sara Stembridge Perry ♦
Joyce McCollum Robertson
Wynell Jordan Sachs
Carol LeVert Sims
Charlotte Fagan Stanford
Mary Ruth Price Sullivan
Letitia Meadows Taylor
Mary Elizabeth Johnson Tolleson
Betty Bolling Vinson
Richard G. Vinson
Bobbie Coop Welch ♦
Martha Grimes Wood
Martha Holman Wright
Patricia Yelverton
1955
Number in Class: 66
Number Who Gave: 35
Percentage: 53%
Total Given: $8,315
Bethany Rowell Caldwell
Helen Langley Calhoun
Martha Ford Ceriani
Ann Harris Coleman ♦
Reita Sample Davis ♦
Edna Spencer Dickinson
Marianne Donnell ♦
Virginia Cooper Downes ♦
J. Walter Ellisor
Joyce Payne French
Nelda Scott Funkhouser
Billy D. Gaither ♦
Julia M. Goins
Jeanne Clements Hall
JoAnne Roberts Hinson
Sara Terry Hosey
Mary Vail Hostetter
Jane Colvin Hubbard
Faye Davis Huey
Emily Barbara Cade Hunt
Rosemary Suits Jarrard
Frances Etheredge Jones
Rebecca Bloxham Jones
James Van Jordan III
Marjorie Cain Masterson
Dorothy J. Cowart McGehee
Rudolph M. Ohme Jr.
Helen Schliecker Ott
* Judith Harris Parker
Gail Golson Phillips
Joyce McClendon Robertson
Jule Bland Sellers
Martha Harris Shannon
JoAnn Blake Shierling
Edward W. Young
1956
Number in Class: 70
Number Who Gave: 29
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $7,950
Janel Gray Bates
June Burdick Bisard ♦
Jane Michael Boozer ♦
Barbara Veazey Brasell
Curtis D. Coleman
Myrtle Peters Crone ♦
Eldridge L. Crowe
Janet Miller Dapitan
Hermine Melton Downing ♦
Betty Marchman Edgar
Rachel Hutto Foreman
Julia Varner Huling
Sigrid Hansen Hyman
Veda Fiffis Johnson
Lenore Oglesby Kirkpatrick
Catherine Buck Loflin
Joyce Ponton Martin
Geraldine Phillips McLain
Patsy Woodham Morgan
Jane Mathews Penry
Sibyl Middleton Plumly
Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt ♦
Lois Blackburn Stokley
Gloria Stuart Walker
John Gary Waller
Shirley Faye Parker Watkins ♦
Barbara Duggan Wilson
Dorothy Waters Wilson
Margaret Delchamps Young
Doc Severinsen, who conducted the NBC Orchestra for 30 years in his association with host
Johnny Carson, stopped by the College in October as he searched for a place to practice
while he was in town for an art show. He took time out from his practice schedule to lend
advice to faculty and music students, (L-R) music faculty Dr. Dennis Herrick, Curtis Hollinger,
Severinsen, Department Chair Gene Davis, Dr. Jennifer Canfield, and Dr. Harald Rohlig.
1954
Number in Class: 77
Number Who Gave: 49
Percentage: 63%
Total Given: $14,269.92
Sabra Stough Atkins
Elizabeth Cunningham Baldwin
Lorraine Freeman Barnett
Lila Waldrop Baxter ♦
Ann Webb Berry
Barbara Phelps Boyer
Jacqueline Bridges
Phyllis Tate Bryars
Emily Tyler Burge
Betty Smilie Christiansen
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
53
1957
Number in Class: 77
Number Who Gave: 42
Percentage: 54%
Total Given: $12,059.17
Lloyce Y. Wilborn Browder
Caroline Brock Bugg
Carolyn Glenn Cowles
Mary O’Brien Cox ♦
Ann Mays Davis
Joan Johnston Diversi ♦
Sandra Stokes Edwards
Sally Hudson Engstrom ♦
Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald ♦
Lucile Delchamps Fleming
Eva Atkinson Fountain
Jack Fowler
Lee Martin Frazer
Liz Allen Garrard
Jacquelyn Draughon Guthrie
Patty Colvin Hall
Ruby Wilson Huntley
Frank T. Hyles Jr.
Dale Wilson Kennington
Ann Manry Kenyon
Nancy Marsh Lucas
Gatra Reid Mallard
Iris McGehee
Ann Gravely McKinnon
Merlin Owen Newton
Dona Robison Noland
Johnnie Ruth Parker
Carolyn Tingen Philips
Annie B. Arnold Quick
Flora Grant Reese
Elinor Warr Roberts ♦
Sue Cross Savage ♦
Mary Greer Troxell
Jordan D. Walker
Elaine Warnock Walls
Alice Stokes Ward
Linda Bergman Webb
Sue Liu Wen
Carolyn McMillan West
Nancy Prickett Whitley ♦
Marjorie Searcy Williams
Robert Godfrey Wilson ♦
1958
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 33%
Total Given: $5,612
Jane Brackin Johnson Adkinson
Charlotte Jones Boyd
Donald G. Brown
Laura Harper Copeland
Joan Watkins Culbreth
Gail Burdick Derbin
Jane Boyles Eidson
Myrna Taylor Ely
Helen Reid Figh
Charles E. Graham
Eugenie Lambert Hamner ♦
Sarah Hutchinson Heisel
Jacquelyn Gunn Hubbard
Jane Thornton Hudson
Bettie Hussey
George F. Jones Sr.
Henry B. Knighten
Charlene Sheffield Mallard
Yvonne Laun McGinn
LaVerne Davis Ramsey ♦
Mary Harrell Riley
David T. Rogers Jr.
Bennie F. Sowell ♦
Flora McDonald Speed
Patricia Hines Steele
Lyn Bentley Tucker
Betty McCoy Vaughan
Linda Cooper Wenner
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
54
Sue McClain White
Patricia Yarbrough
Robert D. Watson
L. Scott Woodham
1959
Number in Class: 65
Number Who Gave: 35
Percentage: 54%
Total Given: $8,237
Mary Jo Barnes
Martha Vickery Bigby
Roy J. Boyd
Mary Faire Lowrey Congdon
Jane Solomon Davis
David W. Davis Jr.
Judith Burt Denton
Tommy E. Denton
Laura Clenney Foard
Doris Bolton Gaines
Lydia Blake Gillespie
Faye Byrd Hall
Myrtle Gibson Harris
Judith McNease James ♦
Catherine Giglio Lamar
William Y. Lamar
Barbara Taylor Landwehr
Loette Messick Lee
Frances Plott Logan
Charles D. Lowery
Gwendolyn Harris Munson
Aubrey E. Neeley ♦
Judith Wilson Nunn
Peggy Springfield Pennington
Marcia Mathews Reichert
Olivia Stephens Rineheart
Martha Still Rogers
Donald G. Shannon
Ann Sutton Smith
Rhona Howell Summerford
Charles E. Tucker
Richard L. Warren
Alice Jane Clark Wasdin
Lois Mothershead Windham
James D. Yarbrough ♦
1961
Number in Class: 84
Number Who Gave: 42
Percentage: 50%
Total Given: $6,333
Frances Goode Akridge ♦
Pearle King Brown
Richard M. Burr
Katherine Liddon Chatowski
Patricia Powell Cobb
Richard D. Cobb
Shirley Orr Cochran
Helen Patricia Cox
Carol Fields Daron
Martha Pugh Davis
Michelle Butte Davis
* Ray Elwood King
Dixie Autry Francis
Wayne Gibson ♦
Dodie Scherf Glowa
Rose Garrett Grant
Hal Hardy Green
John Wayne Helms
Sandra Solomon Holman
Elizabeth Wells Hunt
Ann Warren Johnson
Elizabeth Crawford Jones
Ernest Killingsworth Jr.
Theresa Dodson Major
Joyce Bottoms Mathison ♦
Irene McCombs
Beth Cowles McKinney
Ellie C. McKissick
William Thomas Melton
Richard L. Moses
Marilyn Beason Motley
Elaine Brock Olson
Annette Pittman Perdue
Charles R. Phillips
Linda Dye Pierce
John D. Salter ♦
Thomas E. Sanders Jr.
Jeannette Stanton Schorr
Nancy Strange Seib
Laura Burford Sullivan
Joan Hester West
Christine Mozley Woolley
1960
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 34
Percentage: 38%
Total Given: $21,957
Margaret Whitsett Abrames
Elizabeth Vaughan Arnold
Lawrence A. Britt
Catherine Fralish Burke
Kemmla Viego Cernuda
Ann McCurdy Collier
Joseph R. Day ♦
Ginger Graves Eich ♦
W. Foster Eich III
Sarah Frye Goff
Ann Sanders Gray
Betty Bottoms Grundy
Janis Houston Hand
Josephine Thagard Hirsch
Mary Green Johns
Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson
John A. Kamburis
Lennie T. Lankford
Sara Bradford Lowery
John Ed Mathison ♦
Y. Mark McElreath
Edward E. O’Donnell ♦
Beth Neville Roth
Dianne Williams Salter
Barbara Ramey Spiers
Eugene E. Stanaland ♦
Hugh J. Stewart Jr.
Leeta Higgins Thomas
James Worth Thurman Jr.
Charles G. Tomberlin ♦
Gaston Ray Troxell
Carol McManus Tucker
Carolyn Hamilton Vice
Board Chairman W. Kendrick Upchurch
III stepped down at the completion of his
second term as chairman this spring after
serving the College well for four years. He
continues as chair of the board’s Finance
Committee.
Patricia Woodburn Richardson
Barbara Vinson Robinson
Ludie Robinson
Ellen B. Keldorph Sanders
Robert Darby Sellers
Frances Blair Steele
James L. Streetman
Mary Ann Mannich Underwood
Joseph C. Walls
Jane McGowin Webb
Ann Butler Wilkinson
Martha (Margo) Knowles Williams
Ned W. Woodard
1962
Number in Class: 95
Number Who Gave: 39
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $4,133
Martha Costen Abernathy
Solomon Acrish
Rochelle Prescott Anderson
Linda Garrett Bancroft
Ruth Annette Mikkelsen Blaylock
Thelma Braswell ♦
Margaret Jacobs Bridgeman
Emily Davis Cato
Verna Fail Chesser
Lucky Brettel Esneul
Virginia Holly Fraley
Allie M. Freeman Jr.
Judy Bullock Freeman
Jean Maddox Garner
William Martin Gray
Lee Block Green
Tom M. Greene
Claire Rogers Peacock Helms
Roselyn Butts Holloway
Judy Watson Kingry ♦
Sue Clifton Landrum
Clara West Martin
Frances Parker McCrary
Robert William Pickett Jr.
Nancy A. Pugh
June Killinger Ramsey
1963
Number in Class: 95
Number Who Gave: 38
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: 3,764
R. Spencer Bach
Sandra Tiller Barton
Nancy Reynolds Benner
James R. Bozeman
Judith Sanford Broadway
Vesta Bottoms Bryan
Sarah Anne Young Clark
John Scott Clarke
Lucy Bates Collier
Lynn Nichols Deas
Jewell More Ferguson
Carl Flowers Jr.
Mary Oliver Frazer
Nell Dancy Green
Joseph Glen Grimes
Camille Landrum Harris
Christianne Ashton Henderson
Lester K. Henderson Jr.
James Larry Hinds ♦
Diana Baird James
Helen Harris Kitchens
Joy Clark Langley
Sara Ward Lee
Ellen Green Loeb
Brenda Ward Loftus
Mary Adams Long
Inell Rentz McGee
Don Edward Meadows
Joseph Alan Nolin
Victoria Sidaris Ornowski
Corrie Anderson Owens
Peggy Sewell Parker
Donald W. Peak
Frederick L. Pryor
James L. Sealy
Mary McKinley Stephens
Stroby Ashley Stewart
James Douglas Williams
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
1964
Number in Class: 120
Number Who Gave: 44
Percentage: 37%
Total Given: $48,575
Susanna Majure Adams
Claudia Adkison
Geraldine Ramke Ard
Carl A. Barranco ♦
Rodney Anthony Bell
Harold L. Coomes
Donna Brannon Coon
Ervin Dailey
Bonnie Cleaveland Donaldson
Sandra Hurst Dunaway
Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest
Rex Everage
* Linda Roberts Frankowski
Sue Russell Garrick ♦
Florence Cook Giles
Joanne Levi Grove
Jane Majors Hauth
Joan Jolly Huckaby
Joan Graff Johnson
Kathryn Townsend Jones
Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer ♦
Mary Elizabeth Morgan Lanier
Eugene M. Lewis
Merry Talley Lewis
Erwin Josef Lischke
Anne Bailey Matthes
Joyce Boles McKissick
Betty Thurman McMahon ♦
Charlene Rentz Meadows
Kay Kennedy Miller
Martha Jennings Mitchem
Betty Merrill Phillips
Ray Owen Powell Jr.
Jane Strange Roberts
W. Herbert Sadler Jr. ♦
Sarah E. Scott
Betty Menefee Segrest
Philip Dale Segrest ♦
Rebecca Bibb Segrest ♦
Judith Strickland Sims
Annella Trobaugh Smith
Martha Sue Tillotson
Gwendolyn Boles Warr
Frances Reid Yancey ♦
1965
Number in Class: 135
Number Who Gave: 51
Percentage: 37%
Total Given: $5,170
Marlin Houston Anderson
Ann Mullins Haughton Asadourian
Elaine Hearn Boese
James Christopher Britton
Sarah Gary Buechler
Anne Bennett Carpenter
Betty Burleson Carpenter
Sharon Mosier Casper
Mary Calhoun Chesney
Judy Goodwin Chipman
Carol Dearman Chunn ♦
David Henry Chunn ♦
Margaret Horn Cone
Gerald Paul Corgill
Linda Fitzpatrick Davis
Robin Speight Davy ♦
Noel Russell Dudley
Sara Fields Ferguson
Betty Powell Fisher
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Ernest Gerald Garrick ♦
Eugenia Davis Granberry
Martha Fouts Gund
Carol Henry Hardy
Rebecca Jones Haston
Janice Woolf Hendrickson
James Martin Herring
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
Mary Harris Holland
Frances Guyton Kelley
Claudia Sanderson Kirkwood
Kaye Wilkinson Knight
Julia Jeffords Krulic
Rosalie Dunlap Lloyd
Llanelle Stewart Minhinnette
Jeanne Hester Mitchell
Diane Bottoms Muller
Frances Wright Munger
Olivia Moore Norgard
Richard O. Payson Sr.
Judith Womack Peek
William S. Richardson III
Henry E. Roberts
Charles B. Savage
Anne Dismukes Shackelford
Gene Shelton
William C. Simpson Jr.
Sunny Harris Smith
Marlene Vogel Walker Jr.
John W. Wilder
Joanne Bell Woodall
Glenda Benefield Woodham
1966
Number in Class: 108
Number Who Gave: 39
Percentage: 36%
Total Given: $4,580
Laura McLean Albritton ♦
Carol Willis Ballard
Lois Cowan Boykin
Deidra VanLandingham Christie
Gloria Battle Coker
Robert Anderson Collins Jr.
Julia Elise Porter Compton
Ann Andrews Corgill
Rachel Rawls Davis
Ronald Pershing Davis
Marion Earl Dowling
Michael Dowling
Marquerite Whitehead Edwards
Marie Dorsey Farrior
Frances Memory Fine
Linda Caldwell Fuller
Jane Jeffords Houston
Debbie Susan Rice Johnson
J. Huntie Hall Jokinen
Stanley Lanzo
Irl R. Long Jr.
Michael Arthur Meier
Camille Margaret Woodward Melton
Malinda Epps Morris
Dianne Merrell Norwood
Robert Maxwell Owen
Linda Oates Richter
Floyd Wes Sarginson III
Neil R. Smart Jr.
Jerry M. Smith
Susan Quinn Smith
Winifred Lightfoot Stakely ♦
Beppy LeCroy Tiller ♦
Frances Banks Tisdale
Clare Cleere Ward
Freida Little Warren
M. Lee Warren III
Lorraine Andrews Withers
Ann Zelinka Wrenn
1967
Number in Class: 157
Number Who Gave: 51
Percentage: 32%
Total Given: $9,880
Sharon B. Adams ♦
Julia Smith Alexander
Ruth Laney Anderson
Eleanor Warr Barron
Frances Cooper Bricken ♦
John B. Bricken Jr. ♦
Kathryn Prestwood Bush
Gloria Bland Byrd
Janis Cottrell Caldwell
Diana Brewer Cecil
Sue Cleverdon Dixon
Barbara Pinson Dozier
Dana Jerkins Dunham
William A. Earnest
Robert B. Edwards
Betty Seale Fields
Robert Mel Freeman
Dorothy Kreis Golab ♦
Mary Sue Doler Grooms
Barbara Adams Herring
Hugh G. Jackson
Richard A. James
Rebecca Shackleford Jones
Donna McCourry King
Florence Austin Lembeck
Charles R. Liddell
Sandra Wimberly Makowsky
Larry W. Martin ♦
Jewel D. Mason
Eugene Montgomery
Barbara McBrayer Montoya
Robert G. Morrison
David G. Myrick ♦
Nancy Brown Myrick ♦
Bobbie Garner O’Connor
Thomas F. Pebworth Jr.
Alice Aman Ramsey
Sharon Green Roberts
Fred B. Simpson Jr.
Peggy Davidson Smith
Nadya Sharpe Starr
Robert E. Sternenberg
Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth
Cheryl Lagowicz Thompson
Barbara Parker Turner
Susann Woodbery Turner
Charlotte Dobbins Van Erman
Nancy Carter Watson
Patrick W. Wilbanks
Suzanne Mitchell Wilbanks
Patricia Shadoin Williamson ♦
1968
Number in Class: 159
Number Who Gave: 65
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $12,375
Imogene Glaze Adams
Bernard B. Arant Jr.
Kathleen Howard Arant
Sheryl DeCoudres Barkalow
Celia Farrar Bass
Susan Blair
Laura Ryba Boykin
Donald K. Braden
Anne Gunter Bray
Jo Ann Brazelton ♦
Edward A. Brown III
Charles M. Croft
Judith Pierce Croxton
Kaye Bethune Cutchen
Julia Ann Deas
Shirley Crawford Dorrough
William E. Douthit Jr.
Shirley Chase Dowling
Frances Woodbery Edwards
Clausen Ely
E. June Gay
Nancy Carmack Hammett
Arlene Turnipseed Harding
Ann Butler Harrison
Mary Osmer Howell
Arthur Isola
William David Jackson Jr.
William Conrad Jackson
Mary George Jester ♦
Marcia Vaughan Jones
Lloyd V. Julian
Betty Pickard Kaucher
Carolyn Darden Key
Saundra Bozeman Kidd ♦
Jean Livingston Knight
Judith Jefcoat Lackey
W. Russell Lackey
Charles Marion Lee
Martha Fultz Long
Susanne Crockett Martin
Patricia Tanner Mingledorff
Candace Brannon Ozerden
George B. Partridge
J. Ben Porter
Charlene Gray Reed
Sara Milburn Reid
Melba Bolton Richardson
Rebecca McFee Robertson
Linda Sweatt Sanders
Victor A. Sanders ♦
Celia Price Sims
Nan Turner Smart
Jeffrey W. Smith
Laura Gholson Smith
Marie W. Stafford
Rebecca Acuff Sternenberg
Stephanie Mann Stokes
Carol Morse Tew
Barbara Brock Thomas
Kathie Truett Thompson
Daniel Lee Walden ♦
Kim B. Wanous
LaDonna Ussery Weis
Cynthia Gebhardt White
Jennifer Decker Zidlicky
1969
Number in Class: 152
Number Who Gave: 60
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $21,077
Thomas Earl Anderson
Billie Ann Baker Ault
Richard L. Ault
Carol Sansbury Baird
David Earl Baker
Mary Ringwald Barnes
Martha Flowers Bennett ♦
Karen Darden Bowers
Thomas F. Bracewell OSL
Maryem Stringfellow Brewer
Margie Britnell
Philip L. Browning
Thomas A. Charette
Karen Bell Deavers
Margaret Weathers Dove
Stanley D. Edwards
Madeline Kay Evans
Teresa Metcalf Ferrell
Carol Bryan Fife
Donald C. France
Patricia Little Trawick Guest
Madeleine M. Hill ♦
Terri Smith Jackson
Janice McLain James
Nelda Helton Jernigan
Philip J. Johnson
Doris Fain Keene
Anna Hartzog Lawrence
Phebe Eloise Mason Lee ♦
Joan Ann McClure
Mary Barnette McClurkin
R. Neil McDavid ♦
Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ♦
Jean Carpenter Murray
Jane McIntyre Nichols
Evelyn Swann Ogilvie
Leslie Jinks Parham
Linda Lovett Parton
Ann McKinley Patterson
C. Gray Price
Nancy Patterson Rudd
Jeff B. Sessions III ♦
Mary Blackshear Sessions ♦
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
55
W. Randall Sewell Jr.
Lee Reynolds Sewell
William Roland Sims ♦
Lyn Warren Slattery
James William Smith Jr.
Warren C. Smith
Lindora Wisham Snyder
Linda McLeod Thomas
Lynda Sheppard Thurman
Paul J. Vincent
Robert Wiggins
Catherine Wiginton Wilbourne
Billie Gaye Willis
Timothy Enfield Woodward
Donald Luther Yancey
Linda Nelson Yancey
Robert F. Zidlicky Jr.
1970
Number in Class: 118
Number Who Gave: 32
Percentage: 27%
Total Given: $2,673
Rush Emmett Akin
Lynda McCary Bannister
Winifred L. Beezley
Susan White Bennett
Judy Duncan Bilyeu
Robert Bothfeld Jr.
Billie Wingard Brown
Ann Jeffords Cole
Peggy Parsons Crum
S. Stacy Schrefer Daniel
Ronald Gregg Davenport
Miriam Brown Douthit
Keitha Carmichael Duncan
Howard Lee Fitzsimons
Teresa Rains Fitzsimons
Susan Grace
Liza Sheehan Kaufman
Beverly Gordy McKinney ♦
George E. Mingledorff III ♦
Merritt W. Moseley Jr.
Linda Davis Muehlberger
Susan Whitaker Owen
Linda Keenan Partridge
Jean Strawn Posey
Kathleen Allen Powell
Carol Coffman Robison
Gina Markham Shelton
Joanne Miner Shoemaker
Gerald S. Thurman
Barbara Provost Veronese
Barbara Geddert Wiggins
Lynda K. Woodall
1971
Number in Class: 103
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 29%
Total Given: $10,148
Theresa Zimmerman Arnold
Barbara Lazenby Barnett ♦
John S. Bell
Linda Mordecai Benkwith ♦
Robert Howard Bennett
Marion Freeman Bonhomme-Knox
Walter J. Corbitt
Pearl Bowman Cox
Linda C. Daniel
Barbara Waters Dekle
Martha Jeanette Epperson
Suzanne Repnicki Fickey ♦
Charles M. Gray III
Karen Dee Koza
Charles A. Lane
Carolyn June Lee
Charlene Tew Lord
Margaret Ward McPherson ♦
James M. Mungenast
Edward H. Munson Jr.
Dana Lewis Palmer
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
56
Herbert Patterson ♦
James D. Roberts
Judy Ray Russell
Keith Sabel ♦
Diane Parkman Sinkule
Lucy Williams Stewart
Nancy Jennings Wiggins
Mary Ann Wilkerson
Maude Brannen Wise
1972
Number in Class: 95
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 31%
Total Given: $2,798
Carole Cartwright Arbush
Curtis Glenn Armstrong
Sandra Campbell Balkom
Gwen Self Broughton
Phillip Felton Brown
Steven Douglas Caldwell
Nancy Johnson Coburn
Opal Lovett Collier
Sheryl Elizabeth Cooper
Mary Cleveland Corbitt
Elizabeth Thompson Curles
Howell B. Edwards Jr.
Daniel J. Freehling
Ann Veazey Fuller
Diane Turner Lipscomb
Jerald T. Lipscomb
Sheila Langford Martin
Reese H. McKinney Jr. ♦
Kathryn Love McMaken
Madeline Nichols Moseley
Betty McCall Moser
Jesse Charles Perkins
Steven Melton Shiflett
Susan Carroll Shiflett
Stephen L. Spencer
Linda Jane Strube
Byron Glenn Thompson
Marsha Hallford Thurston
Linda Lee Freeman Trotter
James E. Turner Jr.
1973
Number in Class: 77
Number Who Gave: 21
Percentage: 27%
Total Given: $2,900
Alex P. Ansley
Lorna Lunde Bell
Elizabeth Dyson Britton
Nancy Plunkett Byers
Richard Byrd
Libba Crowell Campbell ♦
Beverly Smith Dean
Carol Bressler Dudley
Frances Shank Durr
Josephine Golson Foshee
John M. Foshee Jr.
Martha Ward Hardy
W. Stan Martin Jr.
Molly Dunn Martin
Martha L. Killebrew McKim
Thomas F. Moore
Mary Sheets Mungenast
Windell W. Neal
Janice Ruth Pylant
Carol Sindersine Sandvi
Kathryn Booth Towry-Iburg
1974
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 23
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $1,558
Renee Youmans Anderson
Marion Knox Barker
Martha F. Higgins Byrd
Rosalie Cassiday
Jane Jenkins Bridges
Dianne Petrov Burke ♦
Barbara W. Whatley Christenberry
Carole Crampton Ellers
Kimberly Basler Glass
Judy Lee Hughes
Faye Teal Meadows
Maureen Kendrick Murphy ♦
H. Kathleen Patchel
Samuel Peek
Dorothy Dunbar Rogers
Anthony C. Stallworth
Brenda (Bunny ) Cox Suplit
Sally Hemstreet Crawford
Donna Weinstein Frawley
Susan Smith Goodwin
George Mathews Handey
Gertrude Mitchell Horne
Audrey Gryder Kauders
Ruth Renfroe May
Marsha Kirk Moore
Walter Mark Ogilvie
Susan Mundell Petrey
Thomas P. Petrey
Catherine West Redding
Herbert William Rice
Patrick H. Schott
Kevin Seamon
William Henry Shanks
Alexis Clegorne Tibbetts
Phyllis Killion Ward
Sherryll Henderson White
1975
Number in Class: 92
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $1,413
Jane Howell Allen
James Thomas Bridges
Roxanne D. Hannon-Odom
Ellen Evans Haulman ♦
Tonsiaweda Yvonne Gilmore Hayes
Leigh Dennis Hybart
Emily Preston Joseph
Araminta Robson McDavid ♦
Katherine Miller Millican
Richard E. Mitchell
Ansley Callaway Rice
Vicky Vaughn Robinson
Glenn E. Stearns
Lawrence T. Williams
1976
Number in Class: 68
Number Who Gave: 16
Percentage: 23%
Total Given: $5,420
James H. Anderson ♦
Phillip C. Arnett
Richard Fitzgerald Bernal
Cynthia Fairchild Birden
Anthony Jack Carlisle
Renee Byrd Carlisle
Kay Gomillion Elam
Dale Baxter Evans
David A. Head
LaDonna Gilbreath Herrera
T. Grant Parker Sr.
Suzanne Marie Sheppard
Jeffrey R. Spiller ♦
Eva Brunson Tackett
Michael Seth Ward
Charlotte Voak Zubowicz
1977
Number in Class: 54
Number Who Gave: 9
Percentage: 17%
Total Given: $1,088
James L. Belin
Joseph Borowski
Linda Larson Borowski
Gary Earl Bridges
William H. Dorsey III
Marian Perkins Milliron
Lynn Skene
Sarabeth Owens Snuggs
Norma Borland Spiller ♦
1978
Number in Class: 74
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 17%
Total Given: $1,848
1979
Number in Class: 103
Number Who Gave: 27
Percentage: 26%
Total Given: $5,043
Charles C. Anderson III
Cindy Smith Belin
Lucinda Smilie Bollinger ♦
Mary Frances Austin Bond
Angelia C. Cale
Debbie Doss Dahl
Sandra Lee Knecht Della Rosa
Karen Murphy Evans
Debra A. Freisleben ♦
Renee Cheney Hardy
Joan Marie Pitts Herig
Gary Hinton Holt
Lyn Wilbert Keaster
Elizabeth Land
Kathy McLeod Lawrence ♦
Judy Immler Martinez
Mikel Bradshaw McCann
Hayes McKay Jr.
Cheryl Ellen Monday
Peter Charles Panus
Laurel Paige McCoy Peek
Terri Turman Pernia ♦
Johnny F. Rogers
Daniel Lee Sloan
Barbara Lynn Smith
Wilma Anderson Tucker
Randal M. Woodham
1980
Number in Class: 81
Number Who Gave: 19
Percentage: 23%
Total Given: $6,415
Penny Black Bonds
Julia Webb Bowden
Reuben Lawrence Bowden
Sara Lee Brown
Martha Rebecca Daniel
Evangeline Emma Freeman Drissel
Teresa Smith Francis
Foster Thomas Hicks III
Keith Olin Jones
Gail Sanford Kendrick
Larry J. Landress
Martha Law McWhorter
Rockland Osgood
Susan LeBeau Reith
Suzanne Wendland Rhodes ♦
Joey Scott Rottman
Celia Dell Smith Rudolph ♦
Amelia Bryars Stephens
Michelle Hutchison Vanderwall
1981
Number in Class: 85
Number Who Gave: 19
Percentage: 22%
Total Given: $26,827
Joe Dan Benson
Frederick Allen Frost ♦
George Gregory Gilbert ♦
Leslie Callaway Henderson
James Van Henry ♦
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Beverly Burnett Howard
Wanda Annett Howard ♦
David Hudson Jr. ♦
George F. Jones Jr.
Stephanie Wise Jones
Joseph S. Lay Jr.
Cynthia K. Broome Lindsay
Susan Scott Porch
Martha Hollingsworth Posey
Terry Neal Posey
E. Alexander Stokes III
William Cody Sweetland
Horace Wayne Trawick
JoAnn Ford Waters
1982
Number in Class: 71
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 11%
Total Given: $663
Linda Harper Borden
Richard M. Greenlee Jr.
Virginia Jackson Jones
Carolyn Ready Vedder Kinman
L. Curtis Powell
Terry Draughn Sullivan
Ashley Atkins Sweetland
Richard A. Yates
Jan Shackelford
Angela Slate Sherbine
Anita Owens Siegers
Joy Bloemsma Skelton
J. Drewry Trobaugh
Thomas David Wachs
1986
Number in Class: 91
Number Who Gave: 23
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $4,945
James Douglas Abbott
Iris Bickford Brown
Beverly Missildine Craft
James Benjamin Craven Jr.
Kristi DuBose ♦
1987
Number in Class: 86
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 17%
Total Given: $4,705
Diane Baugh Frasier
Mark Richard Frissell
Melinda Caprara Hinds
John Nelson Horner Jr.
Julieann Hollomon Hurst
Nancy McLeod Jackson
Gipson Mark Kingry ♦
Meriloyd Logan Papp
Sandra Brill Passmore
John David Prunkl
Joe Richard Rambo
Donna Jo McGrady Smith
1983
Number in Class: 62
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $1,669
William Beaird
Bruce B. Bergstresser
Thomas G. Dismukes Jr. ♦
Christian E. Eckert
Malcolm W. Fulcher II
Gregory Todd Holston
Minnie Lamberth
Patricia Henry Lee
William P. Lee
Priscilla Shaw Gaines McMillan
Robert Edward Percy
Marrianne Trobaugh Sloan
Lisa Sells Yates
1984
Number in Class: 81
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 18%
Total Given: $1,505
Lisa Free Beasley
Terri Hester Cribb
Regina Margaret Buckley Crump
Joan Paine Cumbie
Jane Bass Geloneck
Christina Tsikerdanos Kiernan
Linda Wall Killinger
Linda Laye
Russell Lee
Bruce Allen Parsons
Johnny H. Ragan
Gina Scoville Seton
Rolf Siegers
Carol Faulkner Smyser
Amy Henderson Zimlich
1985
Number in Class: 88
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $2,285
Ann Carlisle Carmichael
Billy Ray Daniels ♦
Lori Fishbaugh Gonzalez
JoAnn Martin Holston
Pearline Patterson Holston
Cynthia Carr Jackson
Melanie McGrath ♦
Leslie Vaughan Pruitt
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
Jennifer Oliver Gardner
Jerome Scott Hayes
Taylor A. Jernigan
Barry D. Moss
G. Mathew Pope ♦
Elisa Boykin Rambo
Joe Dewitt Read ♦
Lynett Garrett Smith
* Ann McCombs Tillman
Colleen Garrick Walker
Scott Edward Warzecha
1989
Number in Class: 87
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $3,100
Felicia Jatko Arnold
Suzanne Meeks Barr
Laurie Lynn Calligaris
David Boling Cothran
Michelle Brian Curtis ♦
Gregory Douglas Dotson
John Wesley Hunt
John Benjamin Lott
Thomas Floyd MacMillan
Kimberly Tatum McPherson
Kimberly Lewis Pace
Misty Edwards Roberts
Robert Byron Ryan
Matthew Peasley Shorter
1990
Number in Class: 101
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 19%
Total Given: $53,110
Amy Vibbart Bowman
Theodore R. Bowser
Karen Elaine Pinegar Bragg
Nancy Small Halsell
Georgia Beth Howell
Sally Nash Huggins
Amy Beard Hulsey ♦
Mark William Knockemus
Spencer Darrell Lee
Barbara A. Rodkey Lehman
Carol Fields Loeb ♦
Monica Sims Lott
Debra Kirkman McLaughlin
Hayden Meade Olds
James Kevin Pettit
Evelyn Ann Hutzler Pope ♦
Allyce Sikes Read
Susan Kirsch Sickinger
Marc Alan Starrett
William Byrne Wilson ♦
Huntingdon students decorate the victory tree after each home game win.
Heidi James Fisher
Carol Giermanski Haag
Jeffrey Allen Hall
Angelyn Bryant Hayes
Gregory Johnson
Linn Boykin McAuliffe
Martie Bailey McEnerney
Mary Clare Furman Rose
Melinda Wainwright Singleton
Merry Walker Smith
Patricia Stevens Smith
Tommie Hudgens Smith
Elizabeth Couey Smithart ♦
W. Lloyd Strickland ♦
Karen Price VanderHey
Charles Allen Walker
Monica Kneiley Ward
W. Timothy Ward
Kay Cowen Stutes
Frances Thomason
Kay Noble Warzecha
1988
Number in Class: 104
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 19%
Total Given: $1,799
Teresa S. Wolfe Armstrong
Robert W. Birmingham
Michelle Bogue-Trost
Diana Pate Chance
Mark David Chance
Linda Stephani Deal
Jeffery Lamar Dean
Mark Samuel Eich
Richard K. Fox Jr.
1991
Number in Class: 126
Number Who Gave: 16
Percentage: 12%
Total Given: $3,375
Glenda Atwell Allred ♦
Craig Alan Andrews
Pamela Baker Barnhardt
Robert Ludwig Brothers
Elizabeth Odette Doucet
Rodney Goggans
Karen Pettit Materna
Amy Hubbard Mullen
Susan Brubaker Oldham
Jon Michael Olliff
Kelly Whatley Pettit
Russell E.B. Phillips
Stacey Dale Price
Mary Hardin Mitchell Thornton
Susan Elizabeth Tudor
Susan Rene Zeron
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
57
1994
Number in Class: 109
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 11%
Total Given: $2,722
Jackie C. Alker
Jason Thomas Banks ♦
Alison Pratt Boswell
Laura Hinds Duncan
Linda Lee Garrett
Bryant Excell Kingry
Donna Jean Kieffer Krauss
Leslie Tucker Little
Cynthia Farrow Martin
Mary Kathleen McGuffey ♦
Angie Penuel Pfeuffer
Jason Randolph Smith
Joseph John Thomason
1998
Number in Class: 76
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 19%
Total Given: $2,267
Roderick Mark Alexander Jr.
John Kenneth Berch
Allison Walden Combs
Dewey Jackson Conville
Marcus O’Brien Fussell
Michelle L. Garrett
Emily Bowers Jackson
James Edward Jones III
James Wesley Kelly ♦
Anneclaire Vickery Khan
Christopher Scott Lawrence
Gayle Shorter ♦
Stephen Jarrod Stiff
Michael Warren
Danilea Walker Werner
1995
Number in Class: 88
Number Who Gave: 11
Percentage: 12%
Total Given: $1,728
Katrina Keefer Belt ♦
Janet Malinda Chambless
Lisa Ellison Hamn
Betty Jackson
Tracy Bob King
Brian Daniel Mann
Tammie Sparks Olivet
Angela Walker Shook
Trevor Michael Shook
Andrea Lynn Teal
John Jeb Williamson
The internationally known rock group Sister Hazel performed for CloverJam 2009, part
of Reunion Weekend in April.
1992
Number in Class: 103
Number Who Gave: 23
Percentage: 22%
Total Given: $18,615
Thomas Kirke Adams ♦
David Howard Allred ♦
John William Bass Jr.
Maryann Mooney Beck
Kimberly Keefer Boone
Ashley Aikin Cassity
Sam Chambers Jr. ♦
Christopher Mark Champion ♦
Kelly McCollum Crosby
Meloney Wyatt Daniels
Jennifer Kendrick Donaldson
Michelle Montgomery Goebel
Stacey Carr Ingram
Nelle Bearden Johnston
William Milton Morris
William Marshall Pickard
Eric Koin Ross ♦
Brett Allen Steele
Cindy Smith Stoffregen
Edward Simpson Stoffregen
Gary Edward Sullivan
Kelly Reinelle Bryan Sullivan
Holly Anderson Tate
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
58
1993
Number in Class: 132
Number Who Gave: 21
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $2,920
Charles Jason Anderson
Alice Christine Chaney Ashley
Matthew Alexander Boone
Traci Lynn Claunch Bowser
Bruce David Burleson
Susan Chason Chambers
David Gregory Deverteuil
Katherine Wocken Gillin
John Reese Hamn
Michael William Hawthorne
David Elgin Little
Lester Mack Jr.
J. Clarke Oldham
Angela Morris Olliff
Sarah Manikas Rech
Sheron Rundall
Andrea Irby Screws
Lauren Anne Olvey-Stastny
Carolyn L. Stillings
John Kenneth Story
Carolyn Turner Young
1999
Number in Class: 97
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 8%
Total Given: $443
Laura Knight Engbretson
Anne Bartolucci Graham
Jason Stuart Graham
Michele Dodson King
Albert Laing
Heather Hampton Slagle
Heather Merritt Stiff
Wendi June Watt
1996
Number in Class: 88
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $2,075
Jason Randell Adams ♦
Shawn Macon Adams ♦
James E. Bedgood
Nanci Ellen Smith Berch
* David Eric Brubaker
John Wayne Engbretson
James Fletcher Growdon
Molly Cau Growdon
Laurel Meier Jordan
Amy Woodard Klugh
Kerrin Hayes Ramachandran
Karl Stanley Self Jr.
Charles Christopher Shorter
David Patrick Sickinger
1997
Number in Class: 76
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 18%
Total Given: $3,195
Debra Gandy Adams
Jodi F. Adamson ♦
Jason Robert Eubanks
Bernodine Thomas Green
Kari Collin Jarnot
David L. Johnston ♦
Khanna Johnston ♦
Georgia Banks Martin
Kathy Regina Paschal
Kathy Dancy Ryan
Donna Marie Skinner
Dawn Arant Terrell
Margaret B. Heinzer Wadham
Richard David Werner
2000
Number in Class: 104
Number Who Gave: 11
Percentage: 10%
Total Given: $843
Melissa Ann Beck
Bryan Keith Collar
Geneviave Horton Duckett
Robyn Elizabeth Yancey Focke
Adrienne Strickland Gaines
Suzanne Jones Higgs
Rona Maria Mock Hutchison
Samantha Clements Kelly ♦
Lydia Churchill Kerr
Bernard A. Martin
Rian Morgan Turner
2001
Number in Class: 118
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 11%
Total Given: $1,304
Carrie Davis Baker
John Kenneth Focke II
Sarah Ann Mowbray Fulcher
Ann Steiner Hamilton Gregory
Chad Leland Hobbs
Denis Michael Huber
Heather McKinley Jones
Kimberly Keith Jones
Eric Allen Kidwell
Carrie Elizabeth McDonough
Robert Holmes McGaughey III
Daniel Patton Ogle ♦
Bonnie Anne Boggan Peavy
Jacqueline Robinson Turner
2002
Number in Class: 114
Number Who Gave: 17
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $927.50
Marguerite Wallace McClure Averett
Kimberly Baker Cochrane
Christy Thomas Coole
Mary Claunch Davis
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Abbey Nicole Flynn
Curtis Forbus
Jamie Deveau Hahn ♦
Matthew Morris Hall
Talia Brown Johnson
Michael Todd Kelser
Robert Moore
Audrey Davie Newsome ♦
Dana Drawbaugh Raybon
Amber Louise Renauld
Mary Virginia Miller Sumner
Nathan Shane Sumner
Hollie Elisabeth Worley
2003
Number in Class: 75
Number Who Gave: 12
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $362.50
Kelly Lynn Clarke
Angela R. Cook
Lane Edward Davis
Belinda Goris Duett
Tonya Blankenship Forbus
Elizabeth Anne Hooks
Ashley Dobbs Hubbard
Joseph Lister Hubbard
Jamie Leigh Jordan-Nunes
Charlotte Beth Cooper Millard
Emilia Anna Moore
Hollen Hartzog Smith
2004
Number in Class: 82
Number Who Gave: 10
Percentage: 12%
Total Given: $534
Stacie Lynn Abney
Jamie Lynn Allen
Carla Michelle Avery
Tranum Barker Blackwell
Elizabeth Frank Cichostepski
Brittany Deanne Dubose
Crystal Bedwell Langford
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
James Nathan Robinson
Jennifer Pratt Sumner
2005
Number in Class: 73
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 10%
Total Given: $1,005
Melanie Smith Bolling
Stephanie Gayle Jimenez
Leah Claire Nesbitt Kottyan
Mindy Bevan La Branche ♦
Amanda Ousley
Mary Pridgen
Catherine Reinehr
Brandy Smith
2006
Number in Class: 119
Number Who Gave: 9
Percentage: 8%
Total Given: $1,100
Emily Rebecca Dueitt
Robert Wesley La Branche ♦
Anna Katherine Mallini
Kristen Marie McDonald
Richard Craig Miller Jr.
Michael Curtis Perry
Abigail G. Pridgeon
Holly Anne Schwamb
Jennifer Lynn Zeigler
2007
Number in Class: 153
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 8%
Total Given: $350
Laura Shannon Cheney
Mark McDuffee Colson
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Taber Mack Ellis
Tyler Maxwell Fletcher
Kyle Landon Futral
Jacob Miller Godwin
Amber Joy Greenwood
Hodge Patterson IV
Christopher Wade Phillips
Thomas Jacob Seales
Samuel Dana Schjott
John Blake Toole
2008
Number in Class: 189
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 6%
Total Given: $570.40
Eric Jordan Cagle
Zachary Gordon Golson
Clifford L. Groce
Aaron Timothy Houchin
Gillian Dean Lisenby
Matthew James Mahanic
Brandy Nicole Milstead
Michele Denise Murphy
Lee Michael Nalley
Camille Anderson Peebles
Amanda Carol Thomley
Matthew Allen Thompson
John Craig Womack
2009
Todd Louis Adams
Alexander Gregory Balog
Stuart H. Frazer III
Joanna Leigh Hampton
Ashley Jordan Neely
Dylan Lee Ruppel
Judson Gregory Sullivan
Terry Wayne Whisenant
2008 Donor Report Corrections
The Office of External Affairs recognizes John Blake Toole ’07 for his contribution to Huntingdon College during the 2007–08 fiscal year. Unfortunately, his
gift was not listed in the Alumni Giving by Class Year section of the Fall/Winter
2008 Donor Report Issue of Huntingdon College Magazine. We apologize for
this oversight and again extend our appreciation for his contribution.
In the 2008 Donor Report, giving by the Classes of 1956, 1957, and 1958 was
either partially or completely omitted because of an error that occurred in
the design process. We apologize for this error and oversight. Listed below
are those who gave by class year for these three classes from June 1, 2007,
to May 31, 2008.
1956
Class Agent: June Burdick Bisard
Number in Class: 74
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 41
Total Given: $19,289.90
Janel Gray Bates
June Burdick Bisard ♦
Jane Michael Boozer ♦
Barbara Veazey Brasell
Myrtle Peters Crone ♦
Eldridge L. Crowe
Hermine Melton Downing ♦
Betty Marchman Edgar ♦
Rachel Hutto Foreman
Charlotte Bragg Hall
Barbara Clark Hill
Julia Varner Huling
Sigrid Hansen Hyman
Lenore Oglesby Kirkpatrick
Elizabeth Walker Lanier
Catherine Buck Loflin
Alfred R. Lozano
Joyce Ponton Martin
Carol Pettie McElvy
Geraldine Phillips McLain
Jayne Harper Mills
Patsy Woodham Morgan
Jane Mathews Penry
Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt ♦
Nia Katechis Terezakis
Claire Varnedoe Thomas
John Gary Waller
Shirley Faye Parker Watkins ♦
Barbara Duggan Wilson
Dorothy Waters Wilson ♦
1957
Class Agent: Elinor Warr Roberts
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 44
Percentage: 55
Total Given: $15,610.00
Ernest M. Andress
Carolyn Lawley Bowman
Lloyce Y. Wilborn Browder
Caroline Brock Bugg
JoAnn Davis Clark
Dorothy Jenkins Cockfield
Carolyn Glenn Cowles
Mary O’Brien Cox ♦
Ann Mays Davis
Joan Johnston Diversi
Shirley Powell Duer
Sandra Stokes Edwards
Sally Hudson Engstrom ♦
Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald ♦
Lucile Delchamps Fleming
Eva Atkinson Fountain
Liz Allen Garrard
Jacquelyn Draughon Guthrie
Patty Colvin Hall
Jane Knox Huff
Ruby Wilson Huntley
Frank T. Hyles Jr.
Dale Wilson Kennington
Ann Manry Kenyon
Nancy Marsh Lucas
Gatra Reid Mallard
Katherine Butler Massey
Iris McGehee
Ann Gravely McKinnon
Merlin Owen Newton
Dona Robison Noland
Patricia Neal Page
Johnnie Ruth Parker
Carolyn Tingen Philips
Annie B. Arnold Quick
Elinor Warr Roberts ♦
Sue Cross Savage ♦
Elaine Warnock Walls
Alice Stokes Ward
Sue Liu Wen
Nancy Prickett Whitley ♦
Sarahann Seymour Wilkinson
Marjorie Searcy Williams
Robert Godfrey Wilson ♦
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased.
♦ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society during 2008–09.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
1958
Class Agent: Donald G. Brown
Gift Agent: Bennie Sowell
Number in Class: 91
Number Who Gave: 49
Percentage: 54
Total Given: $12,295.00
Faye Heard Beazly
Charlotte Cannon Blount
Charlotte Jones Boyd
Donald G. Brown
Laura Harper Copeland
Philip W. Crowder
Joan Watkins Culbreth
Lynn Blalock Cunningham ♦
Gail Burdick Derbin
Doris Finklea Durdan
Jane Boyles Eidson
Myrna Taylor Ely
Helen Reid Figh
Dorane Lowman Fredland
Gethryn Steverson Giles
Charles E. Graham
Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Sarah Hutchinson Heisel
Jacquelyn Gunn Hubbard
Jane Thornton Hudson
Bettie Hussey
George F. Jones Sr.
Lewis J. Larson
Loretta Ribbik Martin
Alberta Duckworth Mau
Yvonne Laun McGinn
Betty Brake McGriff
Paul K. Nakane
Lucy McKinney Parsons
Helen Cleondis Patronis
Zola Smith Powers
LaVerne Davis Ramsey ♦
Mary Harrell Riley
David T. Rogers Jr.
Mary Rodgers Roten
Betty Bowden Rutherford
William B. Sansom Jr.
Aimee Coleman Scott
Allie Williams Smitherman
Bennie F. Sowell ♦
Flora McDonald Speed
Patricia Hines Steele
Helen Howell Sterbutzel
Lyn Bentley Tucker
Betty McCoy Vaughan ♦
D. Lynoid Vaughn
Linda Gorman Ward ♦
Linda Cooper Wenner
Sue McClain White
59
In Memoriam
• Nova Sue Burns Barnett ’60, April 20,
2009, Decatur, Ala.
• Theodore Lawrence Bear III ’69,
September 29, 2008, Montgomery
• Wadynne Bolton Bishop ’47, March
16, 2009, Alexander City, Ala.
• Hope Robertson Bosarge ’48, August
2008, Mobile, Ala.
• Franklin P. Bowden ’62, May 20, 2008,
Virginia Beach, Va.
• Margaret Clement Bowman ’33,
September 24, 2008, Montgomery
• Lorena Manci Bryars ’41, September
8, 2009, Bay Minette, Ala.
• Floyd Bunn, who established the
College’s Department of Security,
September 12, Phenix City, Ala.
• Jimmie C. Connor ’53, July 30, 2008,
Mobile, Ala.
• Janice Jacobs Cumming ’68, August
22, 2008, Amarillo, Texas
• George Spigener Dickinson ’56,
October 16, 2008, Montgomery
• Miriam Donaldson ’60, October 15,
2008, Opp, Ala.
• Shirley Powell Duer ’57, November 9,
2008, Crossville, Tenn.
• James Paul Easterling ’58, June 7,
2009, Prattville, Ala.
• William Gary Ellis ’75, November 3,
2008, Cary, N.C.
• Lois Bedsole Gholston ’39, April 4,
2009, Letohatchee, Ala., served
as a member of the Huntingdon
education faculty, 1962–83, and
left a portion of her estate to the
College
• Julia Margaret Goins ’55, March 20,
2009, Montgomery
• Margaret Jones Henry ’42,
December 6, 2008
• John Dowling Holley ’51, Huntingdon
Society Member, November 23,
2008, Montgomery
• Anne Elizabeth Hollis ’44, November
24, 2008, Houston, Texas
• Mary Louise King ’23, March, 2009,
Tuscumbia, Ala.
• Jacqueline Coe Kingry ’56, June 8,
2009, Dothan, Ala.
• Martha Duncan Langan ’43,
September 30, 2008, Louisville, Ky.
• Eleanor Vance Long ’61, September
27, 2008, Montgomery
• Gayle Whatley Lurie ’59, November
2, 2008, Branford, Fla.
• Betty Clenney Morris Mims ’52,
November 19, 2008, Dothan, Ala.
• Louise Brooks Nolen ’50, May 10,
2009, Fayette, Ala.
• Thelma Clyde Bailey Pace ’26 and
’53, July 12, Vestavia, Ala.
• Judith Harris Parker ’55, August 14,
2008, Orange Beach, Ala.
• Carol Scott Phaturos ’62, October 23,
2008, Montgomery
• Betty Ann Page Rainer ’46, former
trustee and member of Alumni
Board, July 30, 2008, Auburn, Ala.
• Annie Ruth Austin Reed ’32, August 7,
2008, Marietta, Ga.
• Fred Sloan, June 3, 2008,
Carbondale, Ill.
• Frances Lott Sowers ’43, Atlanta
• Hugh Jefferson Stewart Jr. ’60, March
3, 2009, Scottsboro, Ala.
• Edith Tolson Upchurch ’61, October
2, 2009, Montgomery
• Missouri Gipson Talley ’37, August 5,
2008, Waycross, Ga.
• Ann McCombs Tillman ’88,
November 24, 2008, Hot Springs, Ark.
• Richard A. Weisman ’72, May 6, 2008,
Redondo Beach, Calif.
• Anne Collins Williams ’51, June 10,
2009, Cary, N.C.
Huntingdon benefactor and former staff member Mary Ellen Harrell Bullard, age
83, passed away March 6. Mrs. Bullard was a champion for the United Methodist Church and for Huntingdon. She served selflessly at every level of the church:
local, state, national, and international. Simultaneously, she supported nearly every
Huntingdon cause and giving campaign during her four-decade affiliation with
the College. In the 1970s, she co-chaired a campaign that raised $2 million for the
College and later served as the director of educational ministries with the church,
a program of the Alabama-West Florida Conference housed at Huntingdon. Mrs.
Bullard was the wife of Huntingdon College Trustee John Bullard. Together, they
were the recipients of the United Methodist Higher Education Foundation’s highest
award for service, the Stanley S. Kresge Award, last year. The award established a
$20,000 endowment for scholarships in their name at Huntingdon. The Bullards are
members of the John Massey Heritage Society, the Hall of Honor, the Huntingdon
Society, and the Countess of Huntingdon giving societies.
John (left) and Mary Ellen Bullard (center) received the Kresge Award from the
General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of The United Methodist Church
after being nominated by Huntingdon President J. Cameron West (right) last year.
Habitat for Humanity and Fuller Center
for Housing co-founder Millard Fuller, the
husband of Linda Fuller ’64, died in February at age 74. Linda Fuller often says she
carried the Huntingdon motto with her
after graduating, and that, along with her
deep faith, led her to ask her husband to
sell their belongings in order to live a life
of Christian service, beginning at Koinonia
Farm in Americus, Ga., where the idea for
Habitat for Humanity was born. Now a legacy and on-going tribute to their founding
work, Habitat has built more than 300,000
60
houses, sheltering more than 1.5 million
people in more than 3,000 communities
worldwide since its founding in 1976. In
1996, President Bill Clinton awarded Fuller
the Presidential Medal of Freedom, calling
Habitat “…the most successful continuous
community service project in the history of
the United States.” He was awarded an
honorary doctorate at Huntingdon and
delivered the Commencement Address
in 2002.
Bernard Chambliss, age 79, a member of
the Huntingdon housekeeping staff since
1980, passed away in his sleep May 19.
A small and wiry man with energy and
strength beyond his frame, Bernard served
the College community well for nearly 30
years. He was remembered during a special Chapel service held in his honor in
September, at which his wife, Hula, and
daughters, Jocelyn and Sandra, were
present.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Jerry Savage, age 74, the husband
of alumna Sue Cross Savage ’57 and,
with her, a member of the Countess
of Huntingdon, the Hall of Honor, the
Huntingdon Society, and the John
Massey Heritage giving societies,
passed away March 4. Mr. Savage,
a retired banker and civic leader
named Man of the Year for Griffin,
Ga., accompanied his wife at numerous college events.
Long-time Huntingdon trustee
Wyatt Shorter, age 76, of Camden, Ala., passed away March
30 after a 17-year battle with
brain cancer. A true legacy
family, alums in the Shorter family
include his wife, Gayle ’98, and
sons Matt ’89 and Charles ’96.
Mr. Shorter, the retired president
of MacMillan Bloedel, dearly
loved Huntingdon. He is pictured
speaking as a trustee at the 1992
Presidential Convocation.
Memorials
June 1, 2008–May 31, 2009
Boone Atkinson
Charles & Sara Bradford Lowery
Edith Ellison Cameron
Elinor Warr Roberts
Dr. A. B. Davidson
Rhona Howell Summerford
Neal Posey
Irene McCombs
Lawrence G. Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Patsy Lazenby Carter
W.R. Carter Jr.
Eldon C. Davis Michelle Butte Davis
Pam Reeves
Doris Bolton Gaines
Margaret Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Gordon Chappell
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
William Y. & Catherine Giglio Lamar
Rhona Howell Summerford
Thomas L. Evans
Eulette E. Evans
Kyle Renfroe
Crum Family Charitable Foundation
Linda Frith
Herbert Patterson
Adelyn Richardson
No Name Club
William Silas Garrett
Ellen Gauntt
Louise Westcott Samford
Lucinda Samford Cannon
Virginia deGraffenreid
Nancy Greer Robinson
Arthur & Roberta Sample
Reita Sample Davis
Jean Mathews Hall
Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson
Katherine Johnston Sasser
Alabama Wireless 911 Board
Charles A. Bell
Adams F. Hudson
Katherine J. Leslie
Patricia Lynn Ritchie
Thomas Satterfield Jr.
Anna Lee Moore Barnett
Lucinda Samford Cannon
James Barrow
Larry & Vicki Bryars
David T. & Martha Still Rogers
Charles E. & Carol McManus Tucker
Winn Chappell
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Elizabeth Belcher Cheek
Ben F. Cheek III
Cecil M. Bateman
Jeanne Jones Bateman
Claire Clements
Sheron Rundall
Voncile W. Bethea
Betty Finlay Brislin
Sam Collins
J.R. Akers Jr.
Cole Armstrong
Katherine Avant
Jeffery Benton
David Lee & Pam Childress Forrest
Jerry Groce
Larry Hinds
David & Kim Hudson
Willie Kendrick
Mark & Mona La Branche
Robert & Mindy Bevan La Branche
Mark Liatti
James & Patricia Mahanic
Iris McGehee
Henrietta Merriweather
Ray Morrison
Suellen Ofe
Frank R. Parsons
Ric & Cheryl Payson
Bellaire K. Riley
Celia Dell Smith Rudolph
Ceci L. Shannon
The Heritage Club of First United
Methodist
The Old Cloverdale Association
Anderson Todd
John W. Turk
Richard T. Vaughn
Laurie Weil & Tommy Wool
Edna Williams
Felix Bigby
Martha Vickery Bigby
William Bigby
Martha Vickery Bigby
Wadynne Bishop
Elinor Warr Roberts
Dr. Henry L. Bonner
Aubrey E. Neeley
Mary Jane Brannon
Judith McNease James
David T. & Martha Still Rogers
Henry Albert Brooks
Michael T. Tuley
Eva Epps Brown Jane Solomon Davis
David Eric Brubaker Bob & Lila Eby
Cynthia P. Harper
Paul & Susan Johnson
Jim & Patricia Kelly
Kathy F. Lane
R. Martin & Julia McGirt
William H. & Tina R. McLain
Frank Bruer
Betty Finlay Brislin
Mary Ellen Bullard
Betty Finlay Brislin
Norman B. McLeod Jr.
Jule Wilson Perry
Laurie Jean Weil & Tommy Wool
Margaret Bynum
Oak Park Independent Living
Facility
Peggy Seay Compton
Annelle Kitchen Murray
Reverend H. Joseph Curtis
AT&T Foundation Matching Gifts
Program
Michelle Brian Curtis
Anne Salyerds Francisco
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Bubba Hampton
Joanna Leigh Hampton
John Holley
Betty Kimbrough Hastings
Margaret Howard
Betty Finlay Brislin
Burt & Carolee Hussey
Bettie Hussey
Marianne Hussey
Noble Seay Jones
Annelle Kitchen Murray
James Thomas Kemp
Elinor Warr Roberts
John M. Kreis
Ed & Flora Grant Reese
Mary Sample Mabson
Reita Sample Davis
Bill Mason
Robert F. Schremser
Ruby McComb
Irene McCombs
Betty McCorquodale
Betty Finlay Brislin
Irma Moore
Calvin B. Bentley Charitable
Foundation
Ellen Adair Norwine Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Carol Phaturos
Robert Phaturos
Pam Reeves Pitkers
Judith Wilson Nunn
Jerry L. Savage
Liz Allen Garrard
Elinor Warr Roberts
Samuel Schloss
Samuel L. Schloss Family Foundation
Wyatt Shorter
Tony Ronco
Laurie Jean Weil & Tommy Wool
Katherine Samford Smith
The Julia & Albert Smith Foundation
Mary E. Springfield
Peggy Springfield Pennington
Hugh J. Stewart Jr.
Stroby Ashley Stewart
Jean Sullivan
Reita Sample Davis
Elaine Crabtree Urquhart
Lydia Blake Gillespie
Richard Weisman
AT&T Foundation Matching Gifts
Program
Carrie Williams
James L. Williams
Nancy Williams
James L. Williams
Frances Moore deWilton
Frances Hastings Moore
61
Tributes
John N. Albritton Jr.
The James A. Albritton Family
Barbara L. Barnett
Lucy Williams Stewart
John & Mary Ellen Bullard
Lynn Beshear
Lady Portis Cunningham
Lucy Cunningham Bond
Lisa Olenik Dorman
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Julia Dubberley
Katherine Gannon
Paul A. & Anna Calhoun Duffey
Donald B. Davis
Elinor Warr Roberts
Carolyn W. Wood
Ekaterina Gill
Reese H. & Beverly Gordy McKinney
Ellen & Evan Haulman
Eulette E. Evans
Jean Rodgers
Abbott Laboratories
Sharon B. Adams
Lynda McCary Bannister
John S. & Lorna Lunde Bell
Jean Belt
Sanders & Linda Mordecai Benkwith
Robert Howard Bennett
Lynn Beshear
Lucy Cunningham Bond
Jane Michael Boozer
Linda Harper Borden
Emil & Mary Borders
B. Ike & Lynn Bright
Ruth Brady Cousins Brink
Betty Finlay Brislin
Donald & Maureen Brown
Mary Ann Brown
John & Mary Ellen Bullard*
Catherine Fralish Burke
Philip & Virginia Butler
David Byrd
C. Richard & Brenda Chappell
Henry & Diane Chappell
Elizabeth S. Cheshire
Tom & Fran Clement
Josephine H. Cleveland
William & Doris Cole
Amy B. Cook
Lesley P. Cooper
DeWitt & Margaret Cross
Elizabeth F. Dahlene
Jeff & Mary Davis
Martha Demere
Louise Dismukes
Henry & Joan Johnston Diversi
Mary T. Dowdy
Kristi K. DuBose & Ben Hatfield
Julia Hawthorne Dubberley
Paul A. & Anna Louise Calhoun Duffey
William & Helen Dunaway
Harold E. & Martha Dunn
Frances Shank Durr
Allen & Ann Edwards
First United Methodist Church,
Montgomery, Ala.
Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald
Eva Atkinson Fountain
Kathryn Frasier
Liz Allen Garrard
Helen Rittenour Geesey
Ethel Ellis Gibson
Robert & Marilyn Gillespie
62
Boyd Goddard
Willodean T. Gray
Eileene D. Griffith
Josephine L. Grissette
Winifred H. Harris
Joe Ed & Betty Kimbrough Hastings
Al & Helen Hildreth
Jack & Gayle Horner
Richard & Joan Jolly Huckaby
Everett & Jane Hutcheson
Charles Fletcher Hyde
Allen K. & Barbara Jackson
Robert E. & Gray Johnson
Ann Manry Kenyon
Mark & Mona La Branche
Lance & Tait Lachney
Peter A. & Liz Land
Marvin & Sondra Leef
Ellen Leonard
Frank & Sharon Litchfield
Richard & Mildred Little
Bill & Gatra Reid Mallard
Philip & Kathryn Mangum
Charles & Elaine McDonald
Mark & Martie Bailey McEnerney
Iris McGehee
Hays McKay Jr.
Virginia McLean
Temple & Susu Millsap
George E. & Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff
Erskine S. & Betty Murray
J. Lynn & Sidney Murray
David G. & Dianne Myrick
Kay Newman
Hazel Norman
Pat Norris
Robert & Karen Northcutt
Douglas & Virginia Bullard Oswald
William & Lyl Parker
John & Anne Payne
Betty Merrill Phillips
Charles R. & Betty Merrill Phillips
Mary Ann Pickard
Bryan Poole
Jeremy & Abigail Pridgeon
William S. & Melba Bolton Richardson
Edward & Chrys Robbins
Elinor Warr Roberts
Mary D. Rodgers
Virginia Rybos
Clark & Cindy Sahlie
David Saliba
Phillip & Betty Saunders
Jerry* & Sue Cross Savage
Ben & Lily Sawada
Anne G. Searcy
Jeff B. & Mary Blackshear Sessions
Kreg & Angela Sherbine
J.T. & Peggy Davidson Smith
Shirley Hamill Smith
Virginia Sorrell
Lorraine L. Spivey
Karl & Brenda Stegall
Robert & Rebecca Acuff Sternenberg
Allen & Mae Stone
Sadie Stotts
Emmie W. Strickland
William & Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth
Laura Burford Sullivan
John & Helen Sumners
George & Anne Thompson
George & Paulette Thompson
Hannah D. Thompson
Nellie Howard Tiller
James & Sara Ann Turner
Paul & Susann Turner
Jordan & Gloria Walker
Neal & Gwen Westbrook
Nell Westbrook
Barbara Searcy Wilkerson
Sam & Joan Wilson
Randal & Kathy Woodham
Elizabeth Yarbrough
Dee Koza
Elinor Warr Roberts
Barbara Taylor Landwehr
Judith Wilson Nunn
Jeremy R.T. Lewis
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Gatra Reid Mallard Marcia Mathews Reichert
Donna Jean Whitley Manson
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Jacob C. Martinson
Barbara Farmer Hingle
Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley
Elinor Warr Roberts
Mary Lynn Brooks
Michael T. Tuley
Franklin Merritt
Brandy Nicole Milstead
Maureen Kendrick Murphy
Michele Denise Murphy
Sara Stembridge Perry
Barbara Farmer Hingle
Tom Radney
Elinor Warr Roberts
Marcia Mathews Reichert
Jane Solomon Davis
Jeff B. Sessions III
Jane Brackin Johnson Adkinson
Madeline Kay Evans
Hugh G. Jackson
Terri Smith Jackson
Elinor Warr Roberts
State Military Department
Jerry E. Sisson
Frances Hastings Moore
Scott Staiger
Aaron Timothy Houchin
Allen Tubbs
Camille Anderson Peebles
Lee & Freida Warren
Ty Warren
Barbara White
Lee Michael Nalley
John R. Williams
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Elizabeth B. Williamson
Elinor Warr Roberts
Kathryn Tucker Windham
Elinor Warr Roberts
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2009)
Huntingdon College Community Events, Spring 2010
HARALD ROHLIG ORGAN
RECITAL SERIES presents
GENE MONTGOMERY on the
Bellingrath Memorial Organ,
featuring organ works by
Franck, Tournemire, Sowerby, and Bach; Tuesday,
January 19, 7:30 p.m., Ligon
Chapel, Flowers Hall, free
and open to the public. Mr.
Montgomery is a Class of
1967 alumnus of Huntingdon
College.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. CONVOCATION, Wednesday, January
20, 11:45 a.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall; free and open to the
public
ELIZABETH BELCHER CHEEK CONCERT
SERIES presents: TRUMPET, ET AL, featuring performances by Huntingdon
faculty Dennis Herrick and Vadim
Serebryany, with other guest artists,
including trumpets and other instruments; Sunday, February 7, 3:00 p.m.,
Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall, free and
open to the public
PSALMFEST, Huntingdon College Concert Choir spring concert, directed by Gene Davis,
chair, Department of Music,
and featuring choral works
based on Psalm texts; Thursday, April 15, 7:30 p.m., Ligon
Chapel, Flowers Hall; free and
open to the public
ELIZABETH BELCHER CHEEK
CONCERT SERIES presents
13th VAN CLIBURN finalist
Evgeni Bozhanov, Tuesday,
April 20, 7:30 p.m., Ligon
Chapel, Flowers Hall, free
and open to the public.
Mr. Bozhanov is described
as “a vibrant, energetic pianist; well received during
the recital rounds of the Van Cliburn Competition.”
HARALD ROHLIG ORGAN RECITAL SERIES presents ELAINE HARPER
GROVER on the Bellingrath Memorial Organ, Thursday, February
25, 7:30 p.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall, free and open to the
public. Ms. Grover, a Class of 1965 alumna, will perform organ
works by Bach, Buxtehude, Brahms, Ernst, Pepping, and Rohlig.
HOST DAY, Saturday, March 6, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m., sponsored
by the Office of Admission, Host Days provide time for prospective students and families to tour the campus, talk with students,
eat in the dining hall, meet the faculty and staff, and learn about
financial aid and scholarships. Free for prospective students and
their families. For reservations, contact the Office of Admission at
(334) 833-4497 or [email protected].
ELIZABETH BELCHER CHEEK
CONCERT SERIES presents
“Music and Memory: Works
by Beethoven and Schumann,” featuring Vadim
Serebryany, piano, and
Tiffany McGuire Nishibun,
soprano; Sunday, March
14, 3:00 p.m., Ligon Chapel,
Flowers Hall, free and open
to the public. Dr. Serebryany
is an assistant professor of
music at Huntingdon; Ms.
Nishibun is a Class of 2004
alumna.
FOUNDERS DAY/REUNION CELEBRATION, Friday–Saturday, April
9–10; including Founders Day Convocation, Friday, April 9, 4:00
p.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall, and a celebration of the 50th
Reunion Class. Contact the Office of External Affairs for more
information: [email protected].
HUNTINGDON WINDS CONCERT, Saturday, April 10, 2:00 p.m.,
Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall; free and open to the public
BACCALAUREATE, Friday, May 7, 5:00 p.m., Ligon Chapel,
Flowers Hall
2010 COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES, Saturday, May 8, The Green
TRADITIONAL DAY PROGRAM: 9:00 a.m.
ADULT DEGREE COMPLETION PROGRAM: 6:00 p.m.
This list is current as of December 7, 2009, but is subject to
change. To verify an event or to be placed on an e-mail mailing
list for Cultural Events, contact Su Ofe in the Office of Community
Relations at (334) 833-4515 or [email protected].
Huntingdon College
1500 East Fairview Avenue
Montgomery, AL 36106-2148
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
Visit Huntingdon College on the Web at
http://www.huntingdon.edu
All information contained in this publication is current as of the date of publication but is subject to change. Huntingdon College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, GA 30033-4097; telephone number 404-679-4501). Huntingdon’s Athletic Training program is accredited by the
Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP). The Teacher Certification programs are approved by the Alabama State Department of Education. The Music
program is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. Huntingdon College does not discriminate on the basis of national or ethnic origin, age, race, color, sex, religious
preference, creed or disability.