Spring 2013 Huntingdon College Magazine

Transcription

Spring 2013 Huntingdon College Magazine
Huntingdon
C o l l e g e
M a g a z i n e
Spring 2013
It’s All About
Outcomes
Message
from the President
Today’s higher education consumers demand that the outcomes achieved
by attending college surpass the amassing of academic knowledge. In a
study conducted by the Lawlor Group and published by the Council of
Independent Colleges in 2012, only 39 percent of first-year students in 2010
thought that the purpose of attending college should be personal or intellectual growth. For so many of today’s students and their parents, it’s all
about measurable outcomes ... a.k.a. graduate/professional school or a
job immediately following graduation.
At Huntingdon, we believe that the knowledge vs. jobs debate obscures
the true nature of the undergraduate college experience and its benefits.
What else could we believe if we truly live into the College’s motto: “Enter
to grow in wisdom; go forth to apply wisdom in service”? A Huntingdon
education leads both to immeasurable growth in wisdom and to the measurable result of graduate/professional school or employment upon graduation. More than 80 percent of 2012 Huntingdon graduates have found
professional employment or admission to graduate or professional school.
Contrast that figure with the national figure of approximately 50 percent.
That said, the cornerstone of a Huntingdon education is still a broad liberal
arts core curriculum that allows students to dip their toes into a variety of
rivers of knowledge. Almost 100 of our students are taking advantage of an
intensive version of that liberal arts curriculum through the College Honors
Program, which is featured on page 12. The College’s commitment to the
liberal arts takes a major step forward next academic year with the return
of the theater program. As part of the Huntingdon Tomorrow Campaign,
long-time Montgomery resident and College friend Leo Drum Jr. made a
gift of $1 million in 2011 to renovate and rename the theater space in the
Cloverdale Administrative Building’s auditorium. I invite you to read more
about this exciting project on page 8. And you can read about our 2012
graduates—and what they are doing with “life after Huntingdon”—in a
story that begins on page 4, as well as in ClassNotes.
Certainly, alumni have found that the wisdom gained during the Huntingdon years has informed not only their professional lives, but also their personal, spiritual, and intellectual lives. You’ve had those “aha!” moments
when you recalled a bit of wisdom sprinkled on a budding class of students
by a sage professor. You’ve remembered the lives who touched yours, and
the ones you touched in turn, as a result of your heightened attention to
the power of human giving through service. For these reasons, although we
focus in this edition of the magazine on the outcomes of employment and
graduate or professional school placement, the immeasurable outcome of
building better lives is always our ultimate goal.
Hawk ’em!
J. Cameron West
President West and his wife,
Elizabeth, stand in front of
Flowers Hall with their son,
William, and daughter, Grace.
Huntingdon College Magazine
Spring 2013, Volume 91, Number 1
Chair, Board of Trustees
David Hudson Jr. ’81
President
J. Cameron West
Vice President for College and Alumni Relations
Anthony Leigh
Editor, Huntingdon College Magazine
Associate Vice President for
Communications and Marketing
Suellen Sellars Ofe
Magazine Contributors
Photography: Anthony Leigh, Su Ofe, Sarah Beth
Terry, John Williams, Cathy Wolfe, the Department
of Athletics; Athletic Information: Wesley Lyle,
Sports Information Director
Magazine Design
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05
Coordinator of the Huntingdon Fund
Kyle Eller ’10
Coordinator of Donor Stewardship
Kristi McDaniel ’11
Director of Development Operations
Cathy Wolfe
Huntingdon College Magazine
is published by the Office of Communications,
Huntingdon College.
For change of address, please write the
Office of College and Alumni Relations,
Huntingdon College, 1500 East Fairview Avenue,
Montgomery, Alabama 36106.
Phone: (334) 833-4564 or 1-877-567ALUM
E-mail: [email protected].
Web: http://www.huntingdon.edu
On the Cover
Christian Vick ’12, now a student in the graduate
program in occupational therapy at the
University of Alabama-Birmingham, is one of
many graduates in the Class of 2012 who found
employment or were admitted to graduate or
professional schools. Photo by Su Ofe.
Back Cover
Photo of the Green by Dr. John Williams,
Professor of History
Contents
Features
4
It’s All about Outcomes
Members of the Class of 2012 toss their caps
into the future and shatter the national
averages in their achievement.
8
Drumroll, Please …
The curtains are about to part in a “cool”
new theater space.
10
Huntingdon: A Tapestry of Connections
Alumni and friends hold the keys to doorways
of opportunity for Huntingdon students.
12
Choosing Honor
The Honors Program grows in student
participants and in strength.
Departments
Donor Report
2
13
24
60
402011–12 Donor Report
President’s Message
Huntingdon Happenings
ClassNotes
In Memoriam
It’s All About
Outcomes
Good jobs and good
graduate schools were
waiting for members of
the Class of 2012.
The 141 traditional day members of the
Class of 2012 graduated into a career climate that was anything but encouraging.
Nationally, news anchors dropped the depressing news that only half of new graduates had hope of finding employment.
Graduate program applications were up,
but enrollments were down across the
United States, with speculators attributing
the trends to larger amounts of amassed
undergraduate loan debt beckoning to be
repaid.
Fear not. There are dozens of success stories among the trend-shattering Huntingdon Class of 2012. A review of graduates’
progress shows that 116 (83 percent) have
already found their next paths on their professional journeys, including 32 in graduate
or professional higher learning programs;
4 continuing in or entering the military; 79
employed; and at least 1 in mission service. Graduates credit personal attention
from faculty, critical thinking skills built in
Huntingdon classrooms, and leadership
Sarah Thebo, music, serves as director of
music for Cain’s Chapel UMC.
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and involvement outside the classroom
with building in them skills for success.
In a study conducted by the Lawlor Group
and published by the Council of Independent Colleges in 2012, more than 84 percent of first-year college students in 2010
said they chose to go to college because
they believed college would help them
“get a better job” after graduation, and
53.3 percent chose specific colleges with
employment outcomes in mind. Clearly,
with the combination of a challenging
economy, high college costs, and the pressure for graduate success, it’s all about
outcomes these days. To quote the study,
“The ‘new normal’ of the economic climate
has brought about the rise of the prudent
consumer who is frugal, cautious, and seeks
proof of value. With the national unemployment rate hovering at its highest level in
recent memory, students desire assurances
that they’ll be able to graduate in a timely
manner, that they’ll gain the career skills
they need, and that well-paying jobs await
them upon graduation.”
Nearly 90 percent of 2012 Huntingdon
graduates with liberal arts majors in history or English are working or studying in
higher learning programs. English graduates include Allyn Powell, a student at the
University of Alabama School of Law; Erin
Ofe, a student in the graduate program
in speech-language pathology at Auburn
University; Will Francis, hired as a youth minister at Marianna First UMC (Fla.); Savannah Barber, employed with Child Evangelism Fellowship; Kati Bryant, employed with
human resources at Hyundai; and Kristin
Perdue Kelly, a teacher at Prattville High
School. Among the 13 graduates with majors in history, five are teaching: Bryant Hall
at Prattville High School; Rusty Cowley at
Thompson High School; Mike Kilpatrick at
Russell County High School; Ashton Rodriguez with Phenix City Intermediate School;
and Matt Murphree with Blount County
Schools. Many of these new teachers—
most of whom were student-athletes—are
also coaching at least one sport. Outcomes
for others include an Americorps Vista Volunteer in Morristown, Tenn. (Chelsea Hepburn); a deputy sheriff in Cobb County, Ga.
(Dylan Pugh); an audit specialist at ServPro
Industries (Derek Williams); and a baseball
coach (John Rice—who indicated he plans
to attend graduate school to earn teacher
certification).
Chimedlkham Zorigtbaatar, business with
an endorsement in economics and finance, received the Wall Street Journal
Award, presented by Dr. Cinzia Balit Moussalli, professor of finance and economics,
last spring. Zorigtbaatar, from Mongolia, is a
graduate student at American University in
Washington, D.C.
Almost all of the Huntingdon teacher education graduates found classrooms of
students waiting for them. In addition to
those mentioned above, all six who graduated with elementary education majors are
teaching this fall: Ashley Adams, Samantha
Davis Hill, Trish Brown, Rae Diggs, Stevie Barton Hunter, and Kris McLendon. “We make
sure students have great experiences in the
schools [during student teaching internships]
so that they are prepared for anything and
everything,” says Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph
’80, chair of the Department of Teacher Education. Rudolph took the helm of the program two years ago and has built a strong
and committed faculty team, including a
finalist for Alabama Teacher of the Year in
2012 who joined Huntingdon’s faculty this
fall, Dr. Joy Harbin. “We believe teaching
is a calling. Teachers change lives, and we
want our students to have that passion and
drive to change a child’s life.” Huntingdon
faculty work with students on portfolio and
résumé development and interviewing skills
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Ron Fullove, athletic training, was admitted
to medical school at the Medical University
of the Americas, Charlestown, West Indies,
and will begin studies in January 2013; and
Mary Ford, communication studies, was
admitted to the graduate program in communication studies at Gonzaga University,
Wash.
to be sure they are well-prepared for the
competition they will face. Because of the
faculty’s commitment to success and their
own teaching excellence, the program is
growing. According to Rudolph, there are
approximately 125 prospective teachers in
Huntingdon’s elementary, secondary, and
P–12 teacher education programs.
Partnerships with churches, seminaries, and
graduate schools contributed to impressive and immediate success for nearly all
Department of Religion graduates. Department chair Dr. Frank Buckner says, “We
have always had a good record of putting
people into divinity schools, but since President West came we are much more forthright and open about our United Methodist
connection.” That connection has led to
placements not only into United Methodist
seminaries, but also into other respected
Star Lady Hawks softball pitcher Breanna
Giordana, mathematics, tutors students
for the Staton Center for Learning Enrichment and works with Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
graduate and divinity school programs,
including Duke, Emory, Asbury, Union, and
Yale in recent years. This year, four religion
graduates entered graduate or seminary
study: Colby Leonard, Allison Vuyovich, Megan Petenbrink, and Kaitlin Rozof; and Luv
Bartlett, who majored in Christian education, works for St. James UMC in Montgomery. Buckner anticipates that enrollment in
the religion major and in the department’s
Christian education and youth ministry
majors will continue to grow because the
programs meet needs among churches.
Partnerships with other Huntingdon departments also provide fertile ground from
which employable graduates may sprout—
such as the music ministry concentration
within the music major. In January, Huntingdon will host “A Conversation on Ministerial Development” to discuss with pastors
in the Alabama-West Florida Conference
how to identify and encourage high school
students who are interested in ministerial
careers.
A perennial powerhouse for placement,
100 percent of the Department of Chemistry’s graduates have been accepted to
graduate or professional schools or to employment, with the highest number of pharmacy school placements ever recorded.
B.J. Foroughian, Kellie Hilton, and Elizabeth
Perdue were admitted to South University
College of Pharmacy. Mary Elizabeth Terrell and Ashlee Walters are students at the
Harrison School of Pharmacy, Auburn University, where Dallas Thomas was accepted
Rusty Cowley, history with secondary teacher certification, was presented a departmental teaching award by Dr. Celia Smith
Rudolph ’80, chair of the Department of
Teacher Education, during Awards Day last
spring. He is teaching for his alma mater,
Thompson High School.
to study chemical engineering. A.J. Swift,
a force on the football field as well as in
the classroom, is studying radio chemistry
in a doctoral program at the University of
Nevada-Las Vegas. Ginger Tyson is a doctoral student in chemistry at the University
of Mississippi. Sam Griffin is employed while
studying full-time toward his master’s degree in nursing. Suzanne Mock is employed
with the Environmental Management Corporation of Birmingham, and Tiffany Dean
is working with Internal Medicine Associates
L–R, Will Francis, English, was hired as a youth minister with Marianna First UMC, Fla.; Colby
Leonard, religion, is a seminary student at Duke Divinity School; Matt Provow, business, is working in real estate; Karina Scott Ryan, psychology, is a graduate student in the educational
leadership program at the University of North Dakota; and accounting graduate Davis Ryan
is an accountant/payroll specialist with Altendorf Harvesting and is taking graduate classes
in North Dakota.
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L–R, Luv Bartlett, Christian education, works for St. James UMC, Montgomery; Colby Leonard
and Allison Vuyovich, religion graduates, are students at Duke University Divinity School; Megan Petenbrink, religion, is a student at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology; and
Kaitlin Rozof, religion, is a doctoral student at Union Theological Seminary, N.Y.
Mathematics graduate Garrison Johnson is
a graduate student at Auburn University.
of Dothan, Ala. “As our graduates go into
professional schools, the Huntingdon chemistry faculty’s relationship with them doesn’t
end,” says Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy
’78, professor of chemistry and chair of the
department. “They still call us. We constantly advise them throughout their grad
programs.”
LaGrange, Ga.; Megan Cox Corley, with the
Southern Development Council; Claire Owens, with Practice Logic; McDowell Pinckard, a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army;
and Davis Ryan, with Altendorf Harvesting
in North Dakota. For business majors, placement includes Matt Brink, with Wells Fargo
Bank in Franklin, Tenn.; Matt Provow, working
in real estate; Jordan Osborne, in customer
service with XPO Logistics; Chad Cotant
and Amanda Houston, residence director
for Searcy Hall and admission counselor,
respectively; Jack Montgomery, an assistant manager with Southern Bullion; and
Parker Roberts, in management with Enterprise Rent-A-Car. Chimee Zorigtbaatar, who
earned an endorsement in economics and
finance, is a graduate student at American
University in Washington, D.C.
Ginger Tyson concurs, saying, “Everything I
took away from Huntingdon (the hard work
it takes to be successful and also how to
deal with failure) has played a key role in
my personal growth at Ole Miss. HC professors keep giving even after you graduate.
I know I can call my chemistry professors
when things get a little too much to cope
with and they will still give me great advice.”
Mary Terrell says chemistry faculty made
all the difference in her career quest. “The
Huntingdon College Chemistry Department
began supporting me and my dream of
becoming a pharmacist before I even began my freshman year. Having the support
and guidance of my professors throughout
my entire college career helped me stay
motivated and focused on my goals. The
interest and concern I was shown as an individual student gave me the confidence I
needed to persevere in my rigorous courses
and make it to exactly where I wanted to
be—Auburn University’s Harrison School of
Pharmacy.”
The Department of Business, which offers
majors in accounting and in business administration and an endorsement in economics and finance, graduated 27 students
collectively, with at least 85 percent already
finding graduate success. Employment for
accounting majors includes Patty Clements,
with the Business Council of Alabama; Caleb Cofield, with Electrical Technicians in
L–R, Kris McLendon, elementary education, teaches fourth grade at Clay Elementary School,
Jefferson County, Ala.; Alyssa Eason, biology with secondary teacher certification, teaches
for Edgewood Academy, Ala.; Ashlee Walters, biochemistry, is a student in Auburn University’s Harrison School of Pharmacy; Taylor Paradowski, communication studies, teaches fourth
grade and coaches volleyball for McInnis Woods Country Day School, Ga.; Angie Smith,
communication studies, works for Regions Bank, Fla.; and Abby Carter, psychology, is serving
with the Hinton Rural Life Center, N.C.
The Department of Sport Science and Physical Education has already placed at least
23 of their 27 graduates into employment
or graduate study in their chosen fields. Jeff
Jenkins took on the role of head coach
for Troy University’s NCAA-Division I cross
country team, subsequently becoming one
of the youngest Division I coaches in the
country. He is working toward his graduate
degree simultaneously and says, “Huntingdon has given me a quality undergraduate
education that makes my master’s degree
much less challenging. I will always miss my
Huntingdon home.”
Graduates with majors in the Departments
of Biology, Communication Studies, Mathematics, Music, Political Science, and Psychology also beat the national norms and
found success—however that term is defined. “I don’t define success in a narrow
way,” says professor of biology and department chair Dr. Paul Gier. “I just want graduates to be happy. [Success is] those who
use their degrees and are satisfied.”
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Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Alex Taylor, communication
studies, represents Sigma Nu
fraternity nationally as a traveling leadership consultant.
Samantha Davis Hill, elementary education, teaches first
grade for Autauga Academy.
Beyond the classroom, character and responsibility are built
through involvement and leadership in clubs and organizations, greek life, athletic teams,
and other small groups. Involvement also provides strong fodder for résumé-building. “Being a part of Phi Mu [women’s
fraternity] and the Huntingdon
Marching Scarlet and Grey and
ensembles helped me grow as
a leader as well as academically, socially, physically, and
spiritually,” says Kris McLendon. “I truly loved every minute
at Huntingdon College and I
could not imagine not being
a HAWK!” The skills formed in
these leadership experiences
encourage independence, initiative, self-control, teamwork,
and other character attributes
that contribute to employment
and graduate school success.
“Involvement in campus activities, such as serving as a Resident Assistant and a Huntingdon Ambassador, taught me
about leadership, working with
others, and persevering through
stress. Challenging course work
through the English department
taught me time management
and the importance of knowledge, critical thinking, literacy,
and writing. Coming to graduate school was a shock, since I
left the comfort of my beloved
English department and was
thrown into a completely new
environment and new subject
in speech-language pathology, but my undergraduate
experiences prepared me well
to be where I am now. I know
that I am capable of succeeding—Huntingdon made sure I
knew that before I left—and it’s
reassuring to know that my HC
professors and others on campus are still supporting me. I’ve
received e-mails from professors sending me encouraging
“My Huntingdon education
consisted of so much more
than bookwork,” says Erin Ofe.
Caleb Floyd, political science,
was commissioned as a second
lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force
and is involved in intelligence
officer training.
words, and I couldn’t be more
thankful for their support.”
“Huntingdon prepared me for
law school in many ways,” says
Allyn Powell. “Most importantly,
Huntingdon gave me the opportunity to get involved in a
wide variety of organizations
and take on leadership roles,
which in turn helped me create a well-rounded résumé
that was not only significant to
the application process but will
also be of great importance
as I begin to seek summer employment. I also appreciate
the experiences I gained in the
classroom; class discussion and
critical thinking are such an important part of law school, and
Huntingdon helped me set the
groundwork for both.”
Christian Vick, pictured on the
cover, a cell biology graduate and student in the doctor
of physical therapy program
L–R: Allyn Powell, English, is a student in the University
of Alabama School of Law; McDowell Pinckard, accounting, was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army; Megan Petenbrink, religion, is a
student in Emory University’s Candler School of Theology; and Kristin Perdue Kelly, English with secondary certification, teaches for Prattville High School.
Through WBOI (Won by One
International), Josh Knuth (left)
is playing baseball in Germany, where he is part of a
church plant; while Kaleb
Futral is serving in the U.S. Air
Force. Both majored in business
administration.
at the University of AlabamaBirmingham,
summed
up
Huntingdon’s influence on her
professional studies in this way:
“Huntingdon College prepared
me for the doctoral program
at UAB by making me a wellrounded student. I was not only
well educated in my major of
cell biology, but I also graduated with knowledge in communications, English, history, and
business. I learned more from
Huntingdon than textbooks can
teach. I learned how to work
with others who have different
views than I do, how to think
through challenging situations,
and how to communicate
with others more effectively. I
graduated from Huntingdon
College equipped for my future
and prepared in life skills.”
For more placements in the
Class of 2012, see ClassNotes.
Sabrina Henderson, psychology, is a graduate
student in the clinical mental health counseling
program at the University of Sussex, Brighton,
England.
L–R, Ginger Tyson, chemistry, is
a doctoral student in chemistry
at the University of Mississippi;
Erin Ofe, English, is a graduate student in the speech-language pathology program at
Auburn University; and Mary
Elizabeth Terrell, chemistry, is
a doctoral student in Auburn’s
Harrison School of Pharmacy.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
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Drumroll, please...
The curtains are about
to part in a “cool”
new theater on the
Huntingdon campus.
Across from Huntingdon’s main campus
a long-awaited project proceeds almost
without notice. In fact, the construction of
what will be the Leo J. Drum Jr. Theater in
the space that used to be the Cloverdale
Auditorium metaphorically parallels the
process of funding the concept in the first
place.
A dream of many who know Huntingdon’s
long history with community and college
theater productions, the theater project
was included in the wish list-filled Huntingdon Tomorrow Campaign launched by the
Board of Trustees in 2011. Theater, as a program and a major at Huntingdon, was discontinued in 2005 because the Dungeon
Theater in the basement of Massey Hall
came down with the building and no other
space on campus could be adapted to suit
medium-sized audiences and lively college
productions without a considerable influx of
funds.
Enter Leo J. Drum Jr., a ninety-something
neighbor and a steady, significant supporter during many years of friendship with
the College. Drum graduated from Georgia
Institute of Technology as an expert in air
conditioning and heating at a time when
there were only four air conditioned buildings in the sultry-hot city of Montgomery. He
moved to town in order to create Capital
Refrigeration, and thereby began a legacy
of cooling down the city one building at a
time. In fact, it was Drum who brought air
conditioning to Flowers Hall and to many
of the other buildings on campus that had
been constructed before the luxury was
invented.
Approached about the project before
the Huntingdon Tomorrow Campaign was
announced publicly, Drum gave $1 million
to fund the construction and naming of Leo
J. Drum Jr. Theater in 2011, but wanted no
announcement about the gift made until
construction was completed or until after
his death, whichever came first. According
to Anthony Leigh, vice president for college
and alumni relations, Drum, who was preceded in death by his wife and sister and
had no children, was moved by the opportunity for the Drum name to live on. His interest grew further when he learned that the
theater would be next door to the Weil Center, a building that is named for Huntingdon trustee Dr. Laurie Jean Weil, daughter
of Drum’s best friend, the late Bucks Weil.
Finally, the civic-minded neighbor wanted
to give a lasting gift to the Cloverdale community—a space that would add to the
treasure he believed Huntingdon is.
“Leo Drum and my father were best friends;
they had a mutual admiration society,”
says Laurie Weil. “Leo was brilliant, incisive,
visionary, thoughtful, generous, modest,
and private. He was very proud of this gift
because of what it would mean to students,
to the Cloverdale community, and to Montgomery. It is touching and revealing that
Leo wanted this gift kept private until he
died, as though to say he neither wanted
A computer-generated rendering of how the venue will look, as seen from the production booth at the back of the audience.
8
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
nor expected credit nor thanks, but would
be proud knowing that his name would
be associated with something so transformative to student creativity, learning, and
experience.”
Certainly, the theater’s 246 retractable softbacked, graduated seats, state-of-theart theatrical lighting, glassed-in control
room, and sound system will bring a neverbefore-seen dimension to Huntingdon theater productions, which will resume through
the enthusiasm of a theater club that has
formed in anticipation of the venue’s completion. A beautiful lobby and ticket booth
will greet guests at the front door of the Cloverdale Administrative Building. The stage is
larger than that in Flowers Hall, and there
is room between the audience and the
stage for orchestra or acting space. And
yes, there will be heat and air conditioning
in the formerly un-HVACed expanse.
Sadly—but just as he wanted it—the show
and Leo Drum’s beat will go on without him.
He passed away in January 2012 (see In
Memoriam, page 61) at age 96. Upon his
death, he bequeathed a gift of nearly $2
million in addition to his theater gift—this
one to be used for student scholarships.
The inaugural event scheduled in Leo J.
Drum Jr. Theater is the Miss Huntingdon Pageant, February 16, 2013, at 7:00 p.m.
Retractable soft seats with backs are graduated in tiers for easier audience viewing, but
the modern seating, lighting, sound system, and stage accommodations are graced by the
preservation of beautiful century-old architectural details in the original auditorium.
Mid-construction, this view of the space from almost the same vantage point as the artist’s rendering on page 8 shows plastic still covering
the seats, which have not been lifted, to protect from sawdust and other effects of construction.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
9
Huntingdon: A tapestry of
Connections
“We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow men; and among
those fibers, as sympathetic threads, our actions
run as causes, and they come back to us as effects.”
— Herman Melville
Huntingdon connections—both the impalpable and the immediate—make all the
difference as new graduates “go forth to
apply wisdom in service.” Benefactors bond
with generations of graduates by providing
the scholarships and spaces that enable
students’ growth in wisdom and engender
lifetime memories. Just as profound are the
connections created when alumni, parents,
and friends of the College offer internships
and employment to students and graduates. Internships inform students what they
do or do not enjoy doing, what they do or
do not do well, and the career paths they
might or might not want to follow in the
future. In short, internships transform theoretical knowledge into tangible, practical,
résumé-worthy experience.
During the past few years, Enterprise RentA-Car has hired Ben Cecil ’10, Kristi McDaniel ’11, Bobby Dunlap ’11, Parker Roberts
’12, Broderick Smith ’08, and Brian Watts
’11, among others, as interns and new professionals in the company’s quest to find
talented managerial interns. The interns
have taken what they learned from these
experiences to their next professional positions, or are reaching out in other ways to
help their fellow Huntingdon alumni. Today,
Cecil teaches for Montgomery Catholic
Preparatory School, McDaniel works for
Huntingdon’s Office of College and Alumni
Relations, Smith is in pharmaceutical sales
in Atlanta, and Dunlap and Watts continue
with Enterprise. When Dunlap heard about
an upcoming job fair, he spread the news
Amanda Houston ’12, right, was hired as an intern for the American Cancer Society by
Ashley Dubuque Gorum ’03. Bailey Scott ’13 (left) and Bonnie Wade ’13 volunteered their
time to ensure that the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer annual walk in Montgomery
was a success.
Jamal Howell ’15, center, interns with the
First UMC-Montgomery choir.
to the Huntingdon Center for Career and
Vocation. Just that small bit of information
paid forward opportunities for more students to find professional paths.
“In my internship, I gained personal experience with customer relations and dealing
with diverse personalities,” says McDaniel.
“Instead of just reading about marketing
in a textbook, I got to market my company
to other businesses, which gave me confidence in talking with people. I had to make
presentations for regional managers, which
required critical thinking about how to improve the business.” McDaniel adds with a
chuckle, “I also learned from my internship
that I do not want to work in customer service.”
Many internships work into full-time jobs.
Mark Colson ’07, a business major, interned
at the Business Council of Alabama while
he was a student, then became a full-time
employee upon graduation, now serving as
chief of staff. He hired Drew Harrell ’11 and
Patty Clements ’12 as accounting interns.
Both are employed at BCA full-time since
graduating. “The Huntingdon experience
has a great way of preparing students to
enter the job market with a fundamental
understanding of how to turn real world
challenges into opportunities,” says Colson.
“You show me a Huntingdon graduate; I’ll
show you a problem solver.”
Religion, youth ministry, Christian education, communication studies, and physical education majors have interned in church ministries
by working with children and youth, church communications and
media, and church recreation programs. The connections extend
beyond graduation. Woods Lisenby ’11, who interned at St. James
UMC while he was a Huntingdon student, confirmed his gifts in youth
ministry through that experience. Now a student in Emory University’s
Candler School of Theology, he is completing a graduate internship
at First UMC-Prattville under the direction of fellow Huntingdon alumnus Nick Mielke ’01, the church’s director of youth ministry.
Mentoring is another invaluable resource alumni can provide for
students. When Kimberly Braxton Lloyd ’89 accepted her alumni
achievement award during 2012 Homecoming celebrations, she
volunteered to mentor Huntingdon students who want to enter the
pharmacy field, to provide internships and part-time jobs, and to be
a resource for Huntingdon faculty as a guest speaker. Quintarious
Perdue ’13, an Auburn pharmacy program admission candidate,
spoke with her during her visit and gathered some tips about the interview process, which he was to undergo three days later. The day
after his interview, he was notified of acceptance into the program.
Alumni who teach have welcomed Huntingdon student teaching
interns. Doctors and dentists have served as mentors for students
who wish to enter those professions. Law offices have hired clerks
and runners. Labs have hired lab assistants and researchers. Politicians have involved students in campaigns, constituency relations,
or research.
U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions ’69 hires at least one Huntingdon intern a
year in his Washington, D.C., office. Trace Zarr ’13, who is considering a career as a political lobbyist, interned with Senator Sessions
Trace Zarr ’13 (left) interned in the Washington, D.C., office of U.S.
Senator Jeff Sessions ’69 last summer.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
and with U.S. Representative Jo Bonner last summer. Other Sessions
interns have included Robert La Branche ’06, who just completed
his graduate degree in national security and strategic studies, Cole
Muzio ’11, who has continued working with political campaigns, and
Deb Garrett ’11, a law student. Clearly dazzled by the experience,
Zarr wrote:
While in Senator Sessions’ office I worked with his defense office,
researching topics and attending committee meetings on special interests. I gained incredible insight about our governmental
process. It was an honor to work alongside such distinguished individuals.
The most memorable highlight of my … experience in Washington
was the Capitol Dome tour completed by the interns in Congressman Bonner’s office. We climbed nearly 300 feet to an incredible
view of the National Mall and D.C. landscape. I was surrounded
by structures that symbolize this nation: the Library of Congress,
Supreme Court, all the Senate and House office buildings, the
Smithsonian and Washington Monument. I was gazing down on
the greatest city in the world, working in perhaps the greatest
building in the world.
To say my time in Washington, D.C., was anything but incredible
would be doing it an injustice. To anyone considering this internship, I would definitely recommend it.
These threads of connection build the fabric of success and inspire
students to move forward on their professional paths. If you would
like to serve as a mentor or to discuss hiring an intern or Huntingdon
graduate, please contact Fran Taylor in the Huntingdon College
Center for Career and Vocation, (334) 833-4556.
ProImpact Physical Therapy and Sports Performance, a clinic
located in Huntingdon’s Weil Center and run by Dr. Roxanne St.
Martin ’94, employs a number of student interns and new graduates.
11
Choosing
Honor
The Huntingdon Honors Program, in its third year, has grown from a
handful of participants to a group nearly 100-strong at all levels. The
program is overseen by Dr. Chad Eggleston, special assistant to the
provost and director of the Staton Center for Learning Enrichment
and the Honors Program, who has put his energy toward creating
the type of stature, space, and recognition for these academic
leaders as is normally extended to other cohort groups, such as
athletes, musicians, and students involved in campus ministries and
student government. In addition to the Honors-designated classes
offered, Eggleston has set up an Honors Lounge in Jackson Home,
open to all students, to provide a “get-away” for those who seek
quiet time or a comfortable study area.
“The purpose of the Honors Program is to encourage our most ambitious students,” says Eggleston. “While every student deserves and
receives our full support, this group is just as worthy of special recognition as other college leaders. The program also provides space
and time for students who share the same academic preparation
and standards of achievement to share dialog and discourse.”
To be eligible for participation in the Honors Program, students must
first complete an Honors Core: 18 hours of honors-designated core
classes in which they may choose to enroll if they have achieved
a composite score of at least 24 on the ACT as incoming freshmen or transfer students. Honors students comprise two of a number of Learning Communities into which first-year students have
been grouped this year, sharing Practicing the Art of Critical Thinking (PACT), Hebrew Scriptures, and English Composition courses
together.
and completing six hours of language study, among other requirements. Two colloquia were offered during the fall semester: a discussion with President West about his Presidential Convocation speech,
and viewing of and discussion about the third presidential debate.
To graduate with honors, a student must earn a cumulative grade
point average of at least 3.5 overall and at least 3.0 in the Honors
Core and complete the Honors Program.
Jamal Bias ’16 of Ft. Walton Beach, Fla., welcomes the challenge of
honors courses. “More is expected from an honors student, and that
level of expectation is something I strive to meet. I love the diversity
of the students in the program.”
“My father always told me to
do everything in excellence, so
joining the Honors Program was
an easy choice,” says Abby
Bellman ’16 of Montgomery. “I
like that the program challenges us and gives us room and independence to think and form
new ideas.”
“I joined the Honors Program to
get that extra challenge in the
classroom,” says Katie McLean
’16 of Paradise, Utah. “I enjoy
having class with a group of
people who are involved in different aspects of student life.
It helps me get to know more
people.”
Learning Communities have created close-knit groups of students—
perhaps nowhere more so than in the Honors Core. “I love that the
Honors Program put the honors students into Learning Communities,” says Niki Kennedy ’16 of Taylor, Ala., “because we now have a
group of people whom we can rely upon.”
Many students cite their peers as the component they enjoy most
about the Honors Program, recognizing that enthusiasm for learning is contagious and motivating. Skye Esry ’16 of Eufaula, Ala., says
she joined the program so that she could be among peers who will
“challenge my thinking and better my education as a whole.”
Dr. Chad Eggleston, also an assistant professor of religion, conducts
an honors section of the Hebrew Scriptures course.
Anna DeMedicis ’16 of Birmingham says she joined the Honors Program for the advanced academic community. “This community allows us to use critical thinking skills to go beyond the normal class
curriculum. The people are motivated and enthusiastic to learn.”
Learning Community faculty meet regularly to discuss students’
progress, subject matter, topics for class discussion, and styles of
learning—an aspect of the program appreciated by Patrick Kucera
’16 of Daphne, Ala. “My favorite thing about the program is how the
teachers work together to incorporate different styles of learning.”
After completion of the Honors Core, students may apply to be part
of the Honors Program, participating in a series of Honors Colloquia
12
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Huntingdon
Happenings
Huntingdon Continues in
Top U.S. Rankings
Community concept is intended to ease students’ transition into the
college learning environment and to improve student persistence
from the freshman to sophomore year.
Huntingdon is ranked at the #22 spot in the top tier of regional
colleges in this year’s U.S. News and World Report College Guide.
Huntingdon is listed consistently in the Princeton Review’s “The Best
Colleges: Region by Region.” In another list released early fall 2012,
Washington Monthly, which ranks colleges on the basis of their contributions to the public good, placed Huntingdon in the top 20% of
352 baccalaureate colleges.
Around the World in Seven Days
Oh, the Places They’ve Come from …
Huntingdon’s enrollment represents 28 states and four countries this
year—the largest geographic distribution in recent memory. The
states and countries represented are: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and the United States, Ireland, Germany, and the United
Kingdom.
Learning Communities Group
Students during First Year
First-year students are studying in familiar territory as they explore
freshman English, Hebrew Scriptures, and PACT (Practicing the Art of
Critical Thinking) in cohort groups called Learning Communities this
year. Teachers meet regularly to share information about class subject matter and follow students’ progress collectively. The Learning
Nine women competed for the title of Miss Huntingdon during the
annual pageant held in March. L–R: Cheyenne Young ’14 (Enterprise, Ala.), Taylor Calloway ’15 (Montgomery), Alyssa McCurry
’14 (Montgomery), Haley Dickson ’15 (Helena, Ala.), Tori Jackson
’15 (Prattville, Ala.), Second Runner-up Channing Bateman-White
’15 (Orange Beach, Ala.), First Runner-up Anne Preston Speed ’13
(Montgomery), Whitney Denney ’15 (Valparaiso, Fla.), and Miss
Huntingdon Ansley Stewart ’14 (Lake Placid, Fla.).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
All but one of the 2012–13 Huntingdon Plan travel-study experiences
are offered within regular tuition and fee costs, and each full-time
day student may choose one such experience during the junior or
senior year. Additional experiences may be selected, but the student must POP (pay out-of-pocket) for a second or more trips. This
year’s Huntingdon Plan travel includes:
• Christmas in New York, December 10–17, 2012;
• Costa Rican Ecosystems, Dr. Allen Tubbs and Dr. Jim Daniels
(both biology), May 2013;
• Paris, Dr. Vadim Serebryany (music) and Mme. Camille Elebash-Hill (Department of Language and Literature), May 2013;
• Scotland, Dr. Robin Gunther and Dr. Jennifer Fremlin (both
Department of Language and Literature), May 2013; and
• Germany, Dr. Maureen Kendrick-Murphy ’78 (chemistry) and
Dr. Jimmy Jeffcoat (religion), May 2013. Only the Germany trip
has required supplemental costs.
Huntingdon College Ambassadors are selected by the Office of College and Alumni Relations and the Office of the President to welcome the public to special events on campus and to travel with
the president and other staff, representing the College off-campus.
The 2012–13 Huntingdon Ambassadors are: (front) Wykein Dean ’14,
Uriah, Ala.; Grant Hayes ’14, Hoover, Ala.; (second row) Alyssa McCurry ’14, Montgomery; Morgan Senn ’13, Burkville, Ala.; Lauren Miller ’13, Tokyo, Japan; Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13, Lapine, Ala.; Michelle
Gonzalez ’13, Niceville, Fla.; Anne Preston Speed ’14, Montgomery;
Katie Scott ’13, Panama City, Fla.; Jade Reynolds ’14, Deatsville, Ala.;
(third row) Jack Allen ’13, Ft. Walton Beach, Fla.; Austin White ’13,
Montgomery; Cameron Lewis ’14, McDonough, Ga.; Ashley Bonner ’13, Montgomery; Bailey Scott ’13, Newnan, Ga.; Kate Garrigan
’14, Tallahassee, Fla.; Erika Keith ’13, Mobile, Ala.; Paige Latham ’13,
Daphne, Ala.; Keegan Lambeth ’13, Flomaton, Ala.; Austin Bennett
’14, Goshen, Ala.; Kayra White ’13, Rehobeth, Ala.; (back row) Zachary A. Turner ’14, Citronelle, Ala.; Parker Adams ’13, Boaz, Ala.; James
Temple ’14, Montgomery, Ala.; Joshua Johnson ’14, Montgomery;
Berrell Cobb ’13, Phenix City, Ala.; Rodes Bowers ’14, Norcross, Ga.;
Cullen Milner ’14, Spanish Fort, Ala.; Ryne Taylor ’13, Andalusia, Ala.
13
Collegiate Exchange Club
Helps New Clubs Form
Members of Huntingdon’s Collegiate Exchange Club, the only collegiate Exchange Club chapter in the U.S., and faculty advisers Dr.
Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78 and Dr. Doba Jackson (both from the
Department of Chemistry) were invited to present on the process of
club-building for the 94th National Exchange Club Convention and
Symposium held in Arizona in July. Huntingdon Exchangites are helping to build sister clubs at eight colleges and universities. The club
received a National Service Award for their work during the 2011–12
academic year.
Yearbook Wins National Award
The 2010–11 Bells & Pomegranates (Huntingdon yearbook) was
awarded the Silver Medalist Certificate by the Columbia Scholastic
Press Association based on the standards of good journalism represented in the book. The Columbia Scholastic Press Association
is a program affiliated with the Graduate School of Journalism at
Columbia University in New York City. The project adviser was Sara
Beth Terry, director of student activities; staff included Ashton Rodriguez ’12 (Elba, Ala.); Katie Wachob ’14 (Pensacola, Fla.); Winston
Wooten ’13 (Dothan, Ala.); and Sandra Pattison ’14 (Shalimar, Fla.).
Elementary Education Major Adds
Certification, Student Organizations
The Department of Teacher Education has added certification in special education and changed the
name of the elementary education
major to elementary/collaborative
special education, effective this
fall semester. The new major equips
graduates with K–6 teacher certification in elementary education and
nine areas of special education,
increasing graduates’ employability as well as their responsiveness as
teachers to special needs students
who are integrated into the regular
classroom. Students entering the program this fall began preparation for admission to the new major automatically.
Department chair Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph ’81 and faculty have reinstated the long-dormant chapter of Kappa Delta Epsilon honor society. This year, Huntingdon became the first college in the state to
offer a student chapter of the Association for School Curriculum and
Development, connecting students with current educational issues
and future employers.
Musicians Toot their Own Horns
More than 1,000 high school band
students have participated in musical events on the Huntingdon campus during the past year. A few high
schoolers joined the Pep Band to
excite the crowd during a February basketball game. In March,
70 students from 30 high schools
were part of a Symphonic Honor
14
Band experience. During the summer, a band camp attracted
regional marching musicians. A Marching Band Invitational in October brought 870 students in their high school bands to perform at
Samford Stadium, with a marching honor band the following week.
Exposure to campus eases high schoolers’ anxiety and plants the
seeds for them to consider Huntingdon for their college home.
Celebrating Title IX
Huntingdon celebrated 40
years of Title IX during Homecoming/Family Weekend 2012.
The federal law that states no
person can be excluded from
participation in, or denied the
benefits of, or be subjected
to discrimination under any
educational program or activity receiving federal financial
assistance, Title IX was a breakthrough law when it was ratified in 1972. Speakers for Huntingdon’s
40th anniversary observance included alumnae Deb Sonnenberg
’94, Tiffany Jordan ’09, and Dr. Michele Olson ’87.
ADCP Adds a Site
Huntingdon’s Adult Degree Completion Program has added a Birmingham site at Lawson State Community College. ADCP allows
adult returning learners to complete their bachelor’s degrees in
business management by attending classes one night a week in
five-week sessions. The LSCC site will offer a concentration in health
management. Other sites are in Enterprise, Brewton, Bay Minette,
Daphne, Gadsden, Center Point, Shelby, Pell City, Clanton and
Montgomery. ADCP is a program of the W. James Samford Jr.
School of Business and Professional Studies.
Huntingdon Joins USA South
Athletic Conference
Huntingdon College President J. Cameron West announced in May
that Huntingdon will join the NCAA-Division III USA South Athletic Conference beginning in the fall of 2013. Huntingdon and Covenant College (Ga.) were approved as members simultaneously. Other USA
South members are Averett University (Va.), Ferrum College (Va.),
Greensboro College (N.C.), Mary Baldwin College (Va.), Meredith
College (N.C.), Methodist University (N.C.), N.C. Wesleyan College
(N.C.), William Peace University (N.C.), and the Conference’s newest members, LaGrange College (Ga.), Piedmont College (Ga.),
and Maryville College (Tenn.). Joining an athletic conference provides student-athletes in participating sports with the opportunity to
qualify for post-season competition. Conference membership also
means there is a ready set of available opponents for regular season competition. Huntingdon fields teams in men’s baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer and tennis, and in
women’s basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball,
tennis and volleyball. The College has competed in the NCAA-Division III Great South Athletic Conference since 2002. The USA South
Athletic Conference will accommodate conference championship
competition for most of Huntingdon’s intercollegiate athletic teams,
including football. Women’s golf remains independent.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Huntingdon Introduces New Faculty
Dr. Wesley Brown, visiting assistant professor of mathematics,
earned his Bachelor of Science degree from Birmingham-Southern College, where he served as an undergraduate teaching assistant, and Master of Science and doctoral degrees
from Auburn University, where he served as a graduate teaching assistant. His area of specialization is discrete mathematics.
Dr. Clinton Curry, assistant professor of
mathematics, taught at Huntingdon
during the 2011–12 academic year as
a visiting assistant professor. He earned
Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, and doctoral degrees at the
University
of
Alabama-Birmingham.
Before joining Huntingdon, he lectured
for Stony Brook University (New York).
Curry was named Outstanding Ph.D.
Student in the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics at UAB, 2009, and was awarded First
Prize in Session, UAB Graduate Research Days, 2007 and 2009.
Dr. Joy Beggs Harbin, assistant professor of teacher education, was named
Teacher of the Year for McBride Elementary School, for Muscle Shoals City
Schools, and for District VII, State of Alabama, in 2012, making her a finalist for
Alabama Teacher of the Year. Since 2005
she has worked as an intervention specialist and taught in the Title I Targeted
Assistance Reading and Mathematics
Program at McBride Elementary School
Dr. Joy Beggs Harbin
in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, for which she
(left) with department
also served as program coordinator. A
chair Dr. Celia Smith
teacher since 1983, she has also headed
Rudolph ’80
classrooms for Webster Elementary
School and McBride Middle School in
Muscle Shoals; Moody Middle School, Moody, Ala.; Elgin Elementary
School, Anderson Jr. High School, and Central High School, Florence,
Ala.; and has lectured for Northwest Shoals Community College.
Harbin earned undergraduate credentials at Athens State College,
graduate and Education Specialist degrees from the University of
North Alabama, and a doctorate in education at Samford University.
Dr. Elizabeth Hutcheon, assistant professor of English, taught at Huntingdon as
a visiting professor during the 2011–12
academic year. She earned her doctorate degree at the University of Chicago; completed a Master of Studies
in Women’s Studies and a Master of
Studies in Research Methods in English
at the University of Oxford, St. Cross College, Oxford, England; and a bachelor’s
degree in English with honors, magna
cum laude, at Georgetown University.
She has taught for the University of Chicago and Lake Forest College (Illinois).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Dr. Kristi Jones, assistant professor of biology, earned a Bachelor of Science with
a major in marine biology from Auburn
University; a Master of Science in fisheries biology from Auburn University;
and a doctorate in biochemistry and
molecular biology from the University of
Miami. She has taught for the University
of the Incarnate Word and served as a
research technician for the University
of Miami, Michigan State University, the
University of South Alabama, and the
USDA-Dauphin Island. She was awarded
a Dauphin Island Sea Lab Fellowship. Her
research focuses on DNA damage repair and microbial genetics.
Dr. David Laughlin, assistant professor of sport science, comes to
Huntingdon from teaching and research positions at the University
of Tennessee-Knoxville, Washington University (St. Louis), and Ithaca
College, where he also served as a graduate assistant baseball
coach. He completed his undergraduate degree with a major in
communication from William Jewell College (Missouri); graduate
degree in exercise and sport sciences from Ithaca; and doctorate
in sport psychology and motor behavior from UT-K. He has written
and presented on the topic of the effects of self-controlled feedback on athletic skills and performance. After completing his undergraduate degree, he volunteered for a year as an educational aide
and reading tutor for AmeriCorps before continuing his education.
Ms. Mandy McMichael, assistant professor of religion, is completing her Ph.D.
in religion from Duke University specializing in American religious history. Her
doctoral dissertation, “Religion, Miss
America, and the Construction of Southern Womanhood,” was funded, in part,
by a Louisville Dissertation Fellowship
from the Louisville Institute, one of eight
such fellowships awarded nationally.
McMichael earned her Bachelor of Arts
summa cum laude from Judson College
and Master of Divinity and Master of
Theology degrees from Duke University. She has taught for Judson
College’s Department of Religion, Duke University’s Thompson Writing Program, and Duke Divinity School in addition to serving as a
visiting professor for Huntingdon during the 2010–11 academic year.
Ms. Anneliese Spaeth, assistant professor of mathematics, was
a summa cum laude Phi Beta Kappa graduate in mathematics,
applied physics, through the Honors Program at Xavier University
(Ohio), where she earned the Robert F. Cissel Award for Outstanding
Mathematics Majors, the Clare Boothe Luce Scholarship for Women
in Science, the St. Francis Xavier Scholarship, and the Frederick A.
Hauck Physics Research Award. She completed the graduate program and is completing her doctoral program at Vanderbilt University. Her research interests are harmonic analysis and applied harmonic analysis, frame theory, and quantization algorithms.
15
Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78, professor of chemistry, and Eric Kidwell, director of the library, led a Huntingdon Plan trip to Australia during
the spring term, 2012. The students’ task: to research a topic of their choosing from both American and Australian perspectives and prepare a
LibGuide about that topic. LibGuides are open source compilations (like bibliographies) of resources on a particular topic, including print and
electronic books, journals, Web sites, films, videos, YouTube videos, databases, blogs, art, graphics, PSAs, literature, and other information.
Dr. John Saunders, communication studies, and Dr. Ann Phillips, psychology, led a Huntingdon Plan trip to London, May 2012.
16
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Above: Alex Taylor ’12 (left) and Rusty Cowley ’12 were among the
Huntingdon Plan group traveling to Honduras in December 2011
who stayed at the Mango Creek Lodge and spent their time snorkeling, kayaking, sailing, and writing with professors Allen Tubbs (biology) and Jim Hilgartner (English).
Below: “Extreme” travelers chose Puerto Rico for their Huntingdon
Plan 2012 destination, where they participated in sea kayaking and
other adventure-travel pursuits.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Above: Huntingdon Plan travelers to Germany and Austria in May
2012 studied music and history during their journey. Pictured are
Daniel Davis ’13 and Caitlin McMahon Hagan ’12.
17
Fran Taylor, formerly the principal of Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School, joined Huntingdon to head
the Center for Career and Vocation, now part of the
Office of College and Alumni Relations, July 2. Taylor
holds Bachelor of Science and Master of Education in
Teaching degrees from the University of Montevallo and
has earned secondary teacher certification in English
and physical education and graduate-level certification in guidance counseling. She served as a teacher
and coach at Pelham High School and Elmore County
High School from 1974 until joining Montgomery Catholic
as a guidance counselor in 2001, where she moved to
the position of high school principal in 2008. “I’m thrilled
to join the Huntingdon College family and embark on
this exciting new commitment to help students realize
their dreams at such a crucial time in their lives,” said
Taylor. “Huntingdon College has become an integral
part of our family. Our son, Alex, recently graduated
from Huntingdon [Class of 2012], and we know first-hand
what a special place it is.”
Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman, chair, Department of Sport Science and Physical Education, skydived, accompanied
by the U.S. Army’s precision skydive team, the Golden
Knights, October 4. She and two others jumped as representatives of Alabama Centers of Influence (in Dorman’s
case, Huntingdon College), sponsored by the ROTC.
18
Tiffany Dean ’12 (right) was announced as the winner of the Margaret Read
Scholarship Medal, the Loyalty Award, and the Willard D. Top Award during
Commencement Exercises for the traditional day program held May 5. Jane
Williams, director of travel and event planning, who retired in August, was recognized with the Presidential Medallion honoring nearly 40 years of service to
the College. Renee Carlisle ’76 accepted the Rhoda C. Ellison Distinguished
Faculty Lifetime Service Award on behalf of her late husband, Dr. Anthony J.
Carlisle ’76 (see obituary, page 61). Dr. James Truman, assistant professor of English, was announced as the winner of the Chappell Award. The Julia Lightfoot
Sellers Award, voted upon by members of the junior and senior classes, was
presented to Dr. Roxanne St. Martin ’94, assistant professor of athletic training. Dr.
Elizabeth Kiss, president of Agnes Scott College, offered the Commencement
Address, while Christian Vick ’12 (pictured on the cover), delivered the Graduate Address. The speaker for Adult Degree Completion Program (ADCP) Commencement Exercises held later the same day was Susan Yvette Price, interim
chancellor, Alabama Community College System.
Orientation Leaders serve as mentors and guides for incoming freshman and
transfer students during three summer orientation sessions and Big Red Weekend
(the weekend before classes begin).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
The Marching Scarlet & Grey gave a surprise performance of Fleetwood Mac’s “Tusk” with the Black Jacket Symphony at the Montgomery
Performing Arts Center in October 2012. A video of the performance was filmed by Huntingdon trustee Glenda Atwell Allred ’91, who happened to be at the event, and the video is on YouTube. In December 2011 the band performed at the invitation of the Montgomery Lions
Club and the Alabama High School Athletic Association for the Alabama-Mississippi High School All-Star Football Game.
The annual Martin Luther King Jr. Convocation in January featured performances by the Lee High School choir, the Mt. Zion AME Zion Church choir, and the
Huntingdon men’s choir. The Lee and Mt. Zion choirs are directed by Brenda
Booker Shuford ’90 (at the piano). The minister of Mt. Zion is Brenda’s husband,
Huntingdon trustee Claude Shuford ’83 (seated on stage, third from right).
A faculty team organized a “Burns Supper” in honor of
the poet Robert Burns last spring in Houghton Library.
Huntingdon students and faculty jammed together to
Scottish tunes as participants enjoyed a meal that mimicked traditional Scottish fare. Huntingdon Hosts provide tours for and correspond with prospective students and families. The 2012–13 Hosts are (front row, L–R) Micah Wright
’15, Madison, Ala.; Wesley Smithart ’15, Union Springs, Ala.; Shirin Torabinejad ’15, Huntsville, Ala.; Mary Gasson ’13, Clanton, Ala.; Kate Garrigan ’14, Tallahassee, Fla.; Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13, Lapine, Ala.; Tori Jackson ’15, Prattville, Ala.; Alex Huey ’15, Leesburg, Ala.; Austin Bennett
’13, Goshen, Ala.; (second row) James Temple ’14, Montgomery, Ala.; Jagger Eastman ’15, Sulligent, Ala.; India Chaney ’15, Montgomery,
Ala.; Bailey Scott ’14, Newnan, Ga.; Lauren Lambert ’14, Repton, Ala.; Kathryn Dismuke ’15, Montgomery, Ala.; Jeani Layson ’15, Opelika,
Ala.; Jimbo Turk ’15, Montgomery, Ala.; Dexter Dean ’13, Clanton, Ala.; (third row) Jackson Horn ’15, Slidell, La.; Jayde Rasband ’15, Alabaster,
Ala.; Carlee Gardner ’15, Sylacauga, Ala.; Taylor Calloway ’14, Montgomery, Ala.; Aubrey Boyington ’15, Andalusia, Ala.; Olivia Larkin ’13,
Florence, Ala.; Morgan Senn ’13, Burkville, Ala.; Michelle Gonzalez ’14, Niceville, Fla.; Will Davis ’14, Niceville, Fla.; and Grant Hayes ’14, Birmingham, Ala. Not pictured: Wykein Dean ’14, Uriah, Ala. and Mallorie Richardson ’14, Rainbow City, Ala.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
19
Taylor King ’13 (center) of Greensboro, Ala., was crowned queen of
the College’s nine-member Homecoming Court during the Homecoming football game September 29. The members of the 2012
Homecoming Court were (L–R) Georgianna Hunt ’16, Wetumpka,
Ala.; Kathryn Dismuke ’15, Montgomery; Michelle Gonzalez ’14,
Niceville, Fla.; Mary Gasson ’13, Clanton, Ala.; Queen Taylor King;
Brianna McClure ’13, Montgomery; Bailey Scott ’14, Newnan, Ga.;
Jeani Layson ’15, Opelika, Ala.; and Carlee Nobles ’16, Prattville, Ala.
Last spring, a record 45 percent of full-time day students let their
voices be heard in the election of the student-leaders who would
carry their respective classes and the SGA forward into the 2012–
13 academic year. The SGA executive officers are (L–R): president
Jake Bechert ’13 (Union Grove, Ala.); vice president Bailey Scott ’14
(Newnan, Ga.); secretary Shirin Torabinejad ’15 (Huntsville, Ala.);
and treasurer Jagger Eastman ’15 (Sulligent, Ala.).
More than 50 students participated in the newly-formed Action
and Awareness Committee’s first big event, the Hunger Games, last
spring, raising nearly 500 canned goods and $293 for the Montgomery Food Bank. Every $2 or one canned good equaled one life as
students “fought” in friendly dodgeball or Nerf competition to win
for their disciplines. The victor was Jack Allen ’15 (Ft. Walton Beach,
Fla.), who represented the Department of Religion. The games were
created by Macon Armistead ’15 (Hartselle, Ala.) and Heather Jones
’14 (Dothan, Ala.).
Huntingdon was selected for inclusion in the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll by the Corporation for National and Community Service for the second consecutive year.
The awards program cited service done by students, faculty, and
staff with Common Ground Ministries, the Family Sunshine Center,
FocusFirst, SaveFirst, the Adapted Sport Day program, Special Olympics, the Montgomery Humane Society, Operation Christmas Child,
Montgomery Food Bank, MANE (Montgomery Area Non-traditional
Equestrians), the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Great Day of Service
(pictured), and tutoring in elementary schools, among other causes,
contributing to more than 8,000 community service hours during the
2011–12 academic year.
20
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Four acclaimed musicians united to perform for the Elizabeth
Belcher Cheek Concert Series in January 2012. Trio +, made up of renowned pianist and Huntingdon assistant professor of music Vadim
Serebryany and long-time friends and musical collaborators violinist
Yosuke Kawasaki and cellist Wolfram Koessel, was joined by University of Alabama clarinetist Osiris Molina for the concert, “A Prayer for
Mercy,” in which they performed Olivier Messiaen’s Quatuor pour la
fin du temps (A Quartet for the End of Time). Messiaen composed
the piece, a musical illustration of the Book of Revelations, while he
was confined as a prisoner of war in a Nazi prison camp with three
other musicians. The Cheek Concert Series brings a wide array of talented musicians to campus monthly during the academic year and
is sponsored by Ben F. Cheek III and family in memory of Cheek’s first
wife, who studied music at Huntingdon.
President J. Cameron West accepted a Special Community Award
on behalf of the College, presented by the Montgomery Area Business Committee on the Arts in November. The award cited contributions Huntingdon has made to the cultural life of Montgomery by
offering events, lectures, and performances that are free and open
to the public, and by accommodating arts groups or events with
instructional, practice and/or performance space. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Huntingdon hosted a Presidential Public Policy Forum in October
with John Anzalone (center), a founder of and partner in the polling, research and strategy firm Anzalone Liszt Research representing
President Barack Obama and Alabama State Senator Cam Ward
(right) representing Governor Mitt Romney. The forum was moderated by Glenn Halbrooks (left), co-anchor of WAKA CBS-8 News.
Soldier-poet Brian Turner was the
featured presenter for the Rhoda
Coleman Ellison Writers Festival
lecture and workshop in October.
Turner, the author of the poetry
collections, Here, Bullet (2005) and
Phantom Noise (2010), served seven
years in the U.S. Army, including one
year in Iraq and another deployed
to Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The 2012 Stallworth Lecture, presented by Dr. John
M. McCardell Jr., vicechancellor and president
of the University of the
South (Sewanee, Tenn.),
March 2012, addressed
the topic, “The Idea of a
Southern Nation: 150 Years
Later,” in observance of
the 150th anniversary of the
Civil War. 21
In the
Hawks Nest
Huntingdon Men’s Teams Win
First GSAC President’s Cup
The Huntingdon men’s teams earned the Hawks athletic program its
first Great South Athletic Conference President’s Cup in recognition
of their performance during the 2011–12 academic year. The Presidents’ Cup, one each for men and women, is awarded to the GSAC
school accumulating the highest points total in an academic year,
with points based on order of finish in the championships. The 2012–
13 academic year is the last for Huntingdon teams to compete in the
GSAC, as the College will be part of the NCAA-Division III USA South
Athletic Conference beginning fall 2013. (Read more on page 14.)
Baseball
The Hawks baseball team put together
one of its strongest seasons under eighthyear head coach D.J. Conville ’98. The
Hawks won 30 games in 2012, made a
third straight appearance in the GSAC
championship game, and won the
GSAC tournament for the first time since
2005. Catcher Joseph Odom was named
MVP of the GSAC tournament. Conville
picked up his 200th win as the Hawks’
head coach and was named GSAC
Coach of the Year for the second time since 2009. Pitcher Grant Lowman was named GSAC Freshman of the Year and Odom, John Rice,
Austin White, and Grant Brown were named to the All-Conference
Team. Jordan Freeman and Tyler Spivey joined Lowman on the AllFreshman Team. Evan Agnew, Cory Belyeu, Will Davis, Tate Fowler,
Jordan Green, Grant Hayes, Josh Knuth, Cameron Lewis and Hunter
Smith were named to the GSAC All-Academic Team. Lowman and
Brown earned All-Region recognition, as well.
Basketball
The Huntingdon women’s basketball team turned in one the best
seasons in program history while
the men’s basketball team was
in rebuilding mode during the
2011–12 season. A year after winning the GSAC Championship,
the Huntingdon men entered
the season with limited experience. A season highlight was an
87-74 win over Maryville, snapping a 14-game losing streak against
the Scots. Huntingdon finished the season with a 7-19 record and
lost to LaGrange in the GSAC tournament. Junior Jeremiah Thomas
and sophomore Jason Varney earned All-Conference recognition.
Senior Mike Kilpatrick and sophomore Cody Tackett were named to
the Academic All-Conference Team. Coming off a nine-win season
in 2011 and a five-win season in 2010, the Lady Hawks finished with
a 16-11 record and reached the GSAC semifinals for the first time
22
since 2009. Only two other Huntingdon women’s basketball teams
have won as many games in a season. The season ended with a
loss to Maryville in the GSAC semifinals. Junior Morgan Crawford was
named to the All-Conference Team and Patricia Pickens and Chelsea Graham were named to the All-Freshman Team. Crawford, Jessi
Andrews, Jasmine Holcey, Katie Martin, Alyssa McCurry, Sekal Ousley, and Kali Sands earned Academic All-Conference recognition.
Cross Country
The cross country program was in rebuilding
mode during its fifth season. Under first-year
head coach Ben Raphelson, Huntingdon
competed with two runners for most of the
season. Senior Brianna McClure (left) and
freshman Kristen Curtis (right) competed in
four meets this season and made progress
from start to finish. McClure finished 14th in the
Great South Athletic Conference meet and
Curtis finished 24th.
Football
The Huntingdon football team broke into
the national rankings for the first time this
fall. The Hawks’ 24-21 win over then-21stranked Hampden-Sydney propelled
Huntingdon into the D3football.com Top25. Huntingdon entered at No. 24 and
rose to No. 16 before a 31-21 loss to fifthranked Wesley College (Del.). The game
with Wesley was the first battle of Top25 teams at Samford Stadium. Huntingdon finished the season 6-3. Individually, the accomplishments were many. Second-team preseason AllAmerican Trevor Manuel (pictured scoring) entered his senior season as Huntingdon’s career rushing leader and continued to add to
his accomplishments, breaking the single-season record for rushing
touchdowns. First-team preseason All-American D.J. Chappell finished second on the Hawks’ career list for sacks and tackles for loss
and quarterback Neal Posey closed his collegiate career as the second-leading passer in Huntingdon history.
Early in the fall, Head Football Coach Mike Turk was inducted into
the Troy University Athletic Hall of Fame. As Troy’s quarterback, Turk
led the Trojans to a 40-8-1 record and two NCAA-Division II national
titles (1984 and 1987).
Golf
The Huntingdon men’s golf team qualified for the NCAA-Division III
National Championship for an eighth consecutive year and finished
tenth in the country. Counting Huntingdon’s final three seasons in
the NAIA, this was the eleventh consecutive year the Hawks have
reached a national tournament. Junior Sam Strachan and freshman
Thomas Mitchell earned second-team All-American recognition.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Strachan tied for ninth in the national
championship and Mitchell tied for
twelfth. Strachan, Mitchell, and
sophomore Jamey Lester were
GSAC All-Conference selections.
Griffin Just was named to the Academic All-Conference Team. The
Huntingdon women’s golf team
continued to make improvement
in its fourth season of competition.
Sophomore and team MVP Saem Hur (right) led Huntingdon and
finished second individually in the GSAC tournament. Junior Ali Hamil
was sixth in the GSAC tournament and senior Kaitlin Rozof (left) tied
for seventh. Hur earned All-Conference recognition. Hur and Rozof
were Academic All-Conference selections.
Lacrosse
The first-year Huntingdon men’s lacrosse
team picked up the first win in school
history during its season opener February 18, knocking off Oglethorpe 12-5 at
Samford Stadium. Brandon Sewell scored
the first goal in program history and Ryan
Rees recorded the first assist. With a team
of mostly freshmen and sophomores
and many first-time players, the Hawks
wrapped up their inaugural season with a record of 5-10. Senior
Alex Taylor was named the Most Improved Player, Steven Gernatt
was named team MVP, and Spencer Nix received the Unsung Hero
Award. The Huntingdon women’s lacrosse team begins its historic
first season in the spring of 2013, with the first match scheduled versus
Emmanuel College, February 17.
Soccer
The Huntingdon men’s and women’s soccer teams welcomed new
head coaches this fall, with former
Huntingdon player Timmy McCormack ’08 taking over the men’s program and former women’s assistant
Robert Milner leading the women’s
program. McCormack guided the
Hawks to a 5-11-2 record. In the process, Huntingdon defeated Maryville
2-1 in double overtime to pick up its
first win against the Scots since 1999.
Senior Stacy Terry (#11) scored 11
goals this season, setting Huntingdon’s NCAA-era mark for goals in a
season. In their final season of competition in the GSAC, the Huntingdon women advanced to the GSAC
semifinals before losing to Agnes Scott 1-0. The Lady Hawks finished
with a 3-14-1 record but showed progress all season. Senior Jenny
Burnash and juniors Mary Kathryn Allen and Kate Garrigan earned
All-Conference recognition and Josie Byard, Carlie Reed, and Ashlie
Fristoe were named to the GSAC All-Freshman Team.
Softball
first time since 2006, advancing to
an NCAA-Division III Regional game
for the first time in program history.
Huntingdon traveled to Tyler, Texas,
for the Regionals, where the Lady
Hawks lost to fourth-ranked Pacific
Lutheran in the first game and fell
to Birmingham-Southern in the second game of the double-elimination
tournament, finishing with a 28-15 record on the season. Aleah Payne
was named GSAC Player of the Year and Breanna Giordana was
named GSAC Pitcher of the Year for a second straight season. Head
Coach Gynger Williams was recognized as the GSAC Coach of the
Year. Joining Payne and Giordana on the All-Conference Team were
Brittany Richardson, Lauren Welch, and Holly Ostrander. Welch, Giordana, Payne, and Taylor were Academic All-Conference selections.
Tennis
The Huntingdon men’s and women’s tennis teams got to play on
brand new courts last spring as the
George S. Gibbs Tennis Center, a
Huntingdon Tomorrow project, was
completed in time for intercollegiate play. Both teams reached the
GSAC finals in 2012, with the men
winning the GSAC title in their final season in the conference and the
women finishing as runners-up. For the men, it was the fifth consecutive appearance in the GSAC finals and the third conference title in
five seasons under head coach Charlie Lane ’71. Zac Baldwin was
named GSAC Freshman of the Year and, along with Lee Howell, was
named to the All-Freshman Team. Sean Jackson, Tyler Creamer, and
Larry Pritchett earned All-Conference selections for singles play, and
Baldwin and Jackson earned All-Conference recognition in doubles.
Creamer and Pritchett were Academic All-Conference selections.
The women’s team reached the GSAC finals for a sixth consecutive
season, but fell to Agnes Scott College in their fourth straight matchup for the conference title. Freshman Taylor Clark pulled off one of
the biggest wins of the tournament when she knocked off Agnes
Scott junior and three-time GSAC Player of the Year Rachel Storz 6-4,
6-4. It was the first conference loss for Storz in three seasons. Clark was
named the GSAC Freshman of the Year and finished the season with
a 9-1 record against GSAC competition. Christian Vick, Katie Scott,
Hannah Still, and Arielle Barraca joined Clark on the All-Conference
Team. Clark and Still were also named to the All-Freshman Team and
Vick and Scott were Academic All-Conference selections.
Volleyball
Following a slow start, first-year head
coach Amy Patterson ’00 led the
Lady Hawks to win 10 of 11 matches
during the middle of the season,
entering the GSAC championship
match as the No. 1 seed with a
15-18 record. Salem College upset
Huntingdon in the GSAC championship match. Kelly Kahumoku and
Lauren Rozof were named All-Conference selections and Kali Martin
and Lexi Rangel were selected to the All-Freshman Team.
A year after losing in the GSAC tournament finals, the Lady Hawks
defeated Maryville 7-2 and won the conference tournament for the
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
23
Class Notes
Stay Connected!
When you change addresses or have news of marriages, births,
job changes, or other events of note, please keep Huntingdon
informed by updating your alumni record on the Huntingdon
Web site or sending an email to alumni @huntingdon.edu or news
@huntingdon.edu. You will always be part of the Huntingdon family, and we want to know your news!
1930s
• Dr. Ouida Fay Paul ’30 celebrated her 101st birthday Jan. 18,
2012. She lives in the North Florida Retirement Center in Gainesville. The International Biographical Center in Cambridge, England, has dedicated its 13th edition (2011) of World Who’s Who
of Women in her honor.
• Dallas Ray Hazelwood ’34 works daily sewing and doing alterations in her son’s cleaners in Camden, S.C. At age 97, she is
healthy and living independently.
• Claire Rogers Peacock ’34 lives in Tifton, Ga., where she and the
late Jim Peacock settled in 1936. Her daughter, Claire Peacock
Helms ’62, and late sister, Laura Rogers Jolly ’30, are also part of
the Huntingdon tradition. She enjoys talking about college days
with friends and alumni in Tifton.
• Louise May Pope ’38 lives near her daughter in Lexington, Va.
She is in good health and would like to hear from her peers.
1940s
• Bernice Hurst Bell ’40, 93, lives in Chatom, Ala. A cancer survivor,
she writes, “The Lord has blessed me so with good health.”
• Wilhelmina Corbin ’40 lives in Fort Myers, Fla. We were saddened to learn of the death of her husband, Oscar, May 2012.
• Melba Dunn Dickinson ’43 and her husband, Daniel, met at
Huntingdon in 1942 and celebrated 66 years of marriage
recently. They live in Arlington, Texas.
• Emmie Cardwell Bolden ’44 and her husband of 67 years, Herman, have provided a gift scholarship in the amount of full
tuition, room, board, books, and fees each year for more than
20 years to a deserving student from Evergreen or Conecuh
County in memory of Emmie’s mother. Two of Alabama’s great
humanitarians, they have contributed generously in support of
cancer research and treatment at the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham. Emmie and
Herman are members of the Huntingdon Society, the Hall of
Honor, the Order of the Countess of Huntingdon, and the John
Massey Heritage Society giving clubs at Huntingdon. In Sept.
2012, Emmie was honored by the National Alumni Association
with the Alumni Loyalty Award.
• Marilyn Cogburn McLeod ’44 lives in Evans, Ga. We were saddened to learn of the death of her older son following a battle
with cancer last year.
24
• Martha Holley Norton ’44 has been a widow for 18 years. She
writes, “At 88 years of age, [I’m] still getting about with the
good Lord’s blessings!”
• Jane Black Roberts ’45, left, and
Frances Hastings Moore ’46, right,
were present in support of good
friend Virginia McLean ’45 as Virginia was honored with the Alumni
Loyalty Award during Homecoming 2012. Virginia, a Margaret Read
Scholarship Medal honoree, served
as assistant dean of women and
alumnae secretary for seven years
at Huntingdon while completing her
graduate degree. She later joined the staff in the Social Security
Administration, retiring in 1986 but continuing to volunteer her
time in support of her church and other organizations in Birmingham. She has attended class reunions faithfully since 1945 and
is a charter and continuing member of the Huntingdon Society.
• The box office and reception area at the Varsity Center for the
Arts in Carbondale, Ill., have been named in honor of Blanche
Carlton Sloan ’45, who played a prominent role in restoration
projects at the historic downtown theater.
• Our thoughts and prayers are with Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford ’46, whose son, Dr. Glenn Stanford, and brother, Glenn Perdue, both of Montgomery, passed away earlier this year.
• Ruth Milner Morrison ’49 writes, “To all of my classmates and
friends from classes both before and after ours, thank you for
helping to make our Huntingdon years so very special. You
were, and still are, great!” Ruth says she is healthy, happy, and
enjoying seeing fascinating and wonderful places all over the
world.
1950s
• Katherine Jones Cook ’50 and her husband, Bob, celebrated
their 58th anniversary in 2012. She writes, “Huntingdon days
are wonderful memories for an 85-year-old with five sons and
daughters-in-law, nine grandchildren, and one great-grandson. Life with God, family, and friends is wonderful!”
• Caroline Poole Ryan ’50 enjoys playing the organ for her church
and spending time with three great-grandchildren.
• Glenn Perdue, husband of Betty Seymour Perdue ’51 and
brother of Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford ’46, passed away Apr.
28, 2012, in Montgomery.
• Flora Mallette Roland ’51, a retired teacher, and her husband,
Dr. W. Robert Roland, a retired dentist, live in Andalusia, Ala.
They have two daughters and five grandchildren.
• Dr. Orren L. Royal ’51, a retired psychiatrist, stays busy with projects around his home on Clayton Lake and his farm in Virginia.
• Zona Davis Baxter ’52 writes, “Morgan Senn’s ’13 letter could
have been written by me 59 years ago! I loved Huntingdon for
the same reasons she does (campus, faculty, family, and workstudy) then and now. I can hardly imagine that graduation for
me was 1952.”
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Sara Lee Insley Dunbar ’52 and her husband, Donal, celebrated
60 years of marriage in 2012.
• Ed and Anne Salyerds Francisco ’52 announce with joy the birth
of grandson Ryan Courtland, Nov. 7, 2011, in Denver.
• Mary Dean Collins Golden ’52 lives in Florida with her husband,
Bill.
• Mary Jo Reed Krauss ’52 and her husband, Karl, became greatgrandparents in 2012. She has knitted almost 200 sweaters and
300 cancer hats for Knit for Kids.
• Rose Dyer Moore ’52 and her husband, Lamar, of Trenton, Ga.,
have been married 56 years and have three children and 10
grandchildren. She is active in her life-long church, Trenton
UMC. She states, “Life is good—God is great!”
• Gwendolyn Smith Pearson ’52 lost her husband, Bill, Jan. 28,
2010. Earlier this year, she married Darwin Watkins of Hope Hull,
Ala. Her name and address remain the same. Her four children,
six grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren include three
Huntingdon graduates.
• Harriett Harley Woodard ’53, after losing her husband of 53
years, moved to North Georgia to be near her children and
grandchildren. She writes, “Huntingdon continues to be one of
the special highlights in [my] life.”
• Carolyn Tingen Philips ’57 and her husband, Abram, enjoy traveling and seeing their 10 grandchildren. Abram retired last year.
They live in Mobile, Ala.
• Perennial Huntingdon cheerleaders Elinor Warr Roberts ’57, June
Burdick Bisard ’56, Iris McGehee
’57, and Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
were present to support the latest inductees into the Huntingdon
College Athletic Hall of Fame during Homecoming weekend 2012.
• Sarah Hutchinson Heisel ’58 lives near her son in South Carolina.
• George F. Jones Sr. ’58, former Huntingdon baseball player and
Sidney Lanier High School (Montgomery) coach, is part of the
Alabama High School Athletic Association Hall of Fame Class
of 2012.
• We were saddened to learn that LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58 lost
her husband, Bill, after a brief battle with lung cancer in 2012.
1960s
• Respected Alabama historian Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley ’54
received the Alabama Historical Association’s 2012 Clinton
Jackson Coley Award for the best book published on local history for her latest book, The Works of Matthew Blue, Montgomery’s First Historian.
• W. Foster Eich ’60 has retired from general pediatrics, but works
part-time in a community mental health center doing developmental and behavioral pediatrics. “Essentially, I follow children
who are taking psychoactive medications, working with the
child psychiatrist.” Foster also serves as an Episcopal priest and
is working toward a Master of Arts in Ministry degree from Nashotah House, an Episcopal seminary. His wife, Ginger Graves Eich
’60, has retired from her counseling practice and works with
the Laubach Reading Program, training tutors to teach adults
who are illiterate to read. She also enjoys her music work in the
church choir and in a baroque recording trio. Their son, Mark
Eich ’88, works as an emergency medical physician at Huntsville Hospital. Their daughter, Donna Eich Brooks ’92, practices
law with Lehr-Middlebrooks in Birmingham.
• Sara Stembridge Perry ’54 serves as the communications coordinator for her church and works as a historian for the Bluff Park
(Ala.) Art Association.
• Dorothy Clark Speedie ’60, a retired registered nurse, has
moved from Houston, Texas, to New Braunfels. We were saddened to learn of the death of her husband in 2010.
• Joyce McCollum Robertson ’54 celebrated her 80th birthday this
year. Two of her Huntingdon classmates, Donna Jo Campbell
Thomason ’54 and Diane Ross Williams ’54, were present at the
party.
• Margaret Jacobs Bridgeman (Peggy) ’62 and her husband,
Lee, are helping to build a large carousel in Albany, Ore. Lee
carves the animals while she paints them. The carousel will have
56 animals.
• Wynell Jordan Sachs ’54 enjoys retirement and travel. Last fall
he returned to Germany to visit friends and family and this year
attended the 22nd Pakistan Reunion Fellowship in Illinois.
• The Class of 1962 observed
50 years of friendship as
they gathered in Houghton
Library for a special brunch
during Founders Day weekend in April. Present for the
photo (front to back) were:
William Hall, Charles Lee,
Emily Davis Cato, Judy Watson Kingry, Jane McGowin
Webb, Ronnie Floyd, Patti
Woodburn Richardson, Nevelle Vaughn Furse, Martha
Herring Faircloth, Sandra
Price Stephens, Maryetta
Propst Buchanan, Nancy
Pugh, Jean Maddox Garner, Lucky Brettel Esneul,
Jean Mathison Hahle, Jamie
Blake, Verna Fail Chesser, Martha Costen Abernathy, Judy Bullock Freeman, Allie Freeman, Ludie Robinson, Claire Peacock
Helms, and Thelma Braswell.
• Phyllis Tate Bryars ’54 has moved to the Oakwood, North Baldwin’s Center for Living in Bay Minette, Ala.
• Catherine Byrd Gifford ’54 of Pensacola, Fla., has taught English
for 47 years.
• Anne Prather Huber ’54 moved to Baton Rouge just a few blocks
from her daughter after Hurricane Katrina damaged her house.
• Bethany Rowell Caldwell ’55 and her husband, Reid, live near
family in Winder, Ga.
• Dr. Billy Gaither ’55 has retired for a third time after 58½ years of
service as a United Methodist Church pastor. He and his wife,
Carolyn Loftin Gaither ’54, live in Ozark, Ala., where he writes a
weekly column for the Southern Star newspaper.
• Frances Etheredge Jones ’55 of Huntsville, Ala., celebrated her
58th anniversary with her husband, Joe, this year.
• Helen Ott ’55 and her husband, Richard, are enjoying their new
home near Greensboro, N.C.
• Liz Allen Garrard ’57 of Jackson, Tenn., reports that she and
some of her ’56 and ’57 classmates get together twice a year.
• Patricia Neal Page ’57 spends most of her time in activities at
her church and enjoys drawing and painting in oils and acrylics. Since her husband, Henry’s, retirement, they enjoy their time
together “doing exactly what we want to do!” in Albany, Ga.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
25
I came to live at Lake Gaston on the border of North Carolina and Virginia, where Dennis was the pastor/developer of a
new congregation, Lakeside Lutheran Church. After 10 years of
retirement he is back in service as the vice pastor at Lakeside
Lutheran while the church seeks a new pastor.”
• Claire Peacock Helms ’62 and John
Wayne Helms ’61 have relocated to Dothan, Ala. In addition to spending time
with grandchildren, they manage the
care and property of Claire’s mother,
Claire Rogers Peacock ’34, of Tifton, Ga.
Good friends (L–R) Maryetta Propst Buchanan ’62, Emily Davis
Cato ’62, Sandra Price Stephens ’62, Nevelle Vaughn Furse ’62,
Thelma Braswell ’62, and Lucky Brettel Esneul ’62 had a great time
during their Golden Hawks 50th class reunion in April 2012.
• Verna Fail Chesser ’62 lives in Mobile, Ala. A semi-retired mental health counselor, she works part-time in the Employee Assistance Program at Providence Hospital.
• Lucky Brettel Esneul ’62 (right, with
Maryetta Propst Buchanan ’62) and
her husband of 50 years are retired
and are looking forward to travel.
She writes, “God has truly blessed us
with satisfying careers, good health,
and many precious friendships.” They
live in Atlanta.
• Charles Lee ’62 writes, “After 30-plus
years of coaching and teaching, I was given the opportunity to
become director of sports medicine at Jackson Hospital, which
allowed me to continue working with coaches and athletes. In
addition I have taken on the job of orthopedic coordinator for
the hospital working with and teaching a class on total hip and
knee replacements.”
• Jean Mathison Hahle ’62, left, with
Verna Fail Chesser ’62, writes, “At
Huntingdon I especially learned to
love the music of J.S. Bach from Dr.
Harald Rohlig. My husband, Dennis,
and I met in the Black Hills of South
Dakota during ‘A Christian Ministry in the National Parks.’ Together
we served as missionaries in the
Lutheran Church in Guyana, South
America, from 1964 to 1976. Our
three sons were born there. After
that, we served churches in Omaha, Sidney, and Grand Island,
Neb., and I served as a substitute teacher. In 1996 Dennis and
Nevelle Vaughn Furse ’62, Allie Freeman Jr. ’62, Judy Bullock
Freeman ’62, and Nancy Pugh ’62
26
• Judy Watson Kingry ’62, front, was honored with the Alumni Loyalty Award
during Homecoming 2012.
She and her husband, Gip,
of Dothan, Ala., have raised
three Huntingdon alumni, one
of whom married an alumna.
L–R: Beth Anderson Kingry ’88,
Dr. G. Mark Kingry ’88 (Beth’s
husband and an orthodontist
in Montgomery), Gip Kingry,
Judy Kingry ’62, and Bryant
Kingry ’94, a high school history
teacher in Birmingham. Not pictured is Dr. Kevin Kingry ’98, a dentist in Dothan, Ala. Judy and
Gip have nine grandchildren, are retired, love to travel, and
love their church, First UMC Dothan. They are both lay speakers
in their District. Gip was elected to serve as a delegate to General Conference this year.
• Jane McGowin Webb ’62 of Ashburn, Va., teaches piano in
her home music studio and is active in the Fairfax-Loudoun
Music Fellowship’s teachers’ group. She sings with the Loudoun
Chorale.
• Martha “Margo” Jo Knowles Williams ’62 retired as a college
professor but adjuncts for the Miami Dade College Dept. of ESL
and Foreign Languages. She is the president of volunteer association for the Zoological Society of Florida at Zoo Miami, where
she has volunteered for 33 years. Margo serves on the board
of Friends of Music of the Frost School of Music at the Univ. of
Miami.
• Jewell More Ferguson ’63 fulfilled a childhood dream by traveling to Mongolia and China in June 2011. She works in a small
rural hospital in Northern California as a clinical laboratory scientist and writes, “I find the work very satisfying as I use skills I
learned at Huntingdon!”
Kyle Eller ’10, with Roy and Patti Woodburn Richardson ’62
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Lloyd Wells ’63 and his wife, Lynne Johnsen Wells ’64, are retired
from teaching, living in St. Joe Beach near Port St. Joe, Fla. They
both have fond memories of their time at Huntingdon.
• Joan Jolly Huckaby ’64 continues, twice a year, to get together
with former classmates Billy Gay ’64, Linda Howington Guyton ’64, and Mary Elizabeth Morgan Lanier ’64—and says they
always have fun. Joan and her husband, Richard, cruised from
New York to Nova Scotia this fall.
• Erv Lischke ’64, a retired naval officer and helicopter pilot, and
his wife, Maureen, live in western Montana, where they raise
alpacas.
• Karon Sue Spendiff Reed ’65 enjoys spending time with her five
grandchildren in Huntsville, Ala.
• Penny Campbell Tate ’65 feels blessed to have her children and
eight grandchildren living nearby in Raleigh, N.C. Last spring,
she and Sara “Sally” Boyd ’65, Johanna Heythekker Parker
’64, and Susann Woodberry Turner ’67 met at Susann’s home
in Jacksonville, Fla., for fun, food, and remembrances of good
times at Huntingdon.
• Ann Ault ’66 moved from Burbank, Calif., to the Charlotte, N.C.,
area in December 2010. A member of the Screen Actors Guild/
AFTRA, her career has encompassed more than 300 commercials and several stage productions. She writes, “The Lord has
morphed me into filmmaking this past decade.” She is working
on a faith-based film, http://heartsdesirefilm.com, and a book.
• Camille Margaret Woodward Melton ’66 of Midlothian, Va., has
been married to Thomas M. Melton for 15 years. She has two
daughters.
• 1966 biology graduate and
2012 Alumni Achievement
Award honoree Dr. Stan
Self has practiced family medicine for 30 years.
He serves on the medical
staff at Fairhope’s Thomas
Hospital and on the Univ.
of South Alabama College
of Medicine faculty as a
clinical assistant professor
in the Dept. of Family Practice. Stan earned his M.S.
in human physiology at
Auburn Univ. and his M.D.
from the Univ. of Alabama
School of Medicine. After
completing his residency at the Medical Univ. of South Carolina, he became board certified in family practice in 1976 and
was awarded the degree of Fellow in 1979. He served as director of immunology in the research lab at the Univ. of AlabamaBirmingham School of Medicine under the guidance of Max D.
Cooper, M.D., a world-renowned immunologist. Stan’s practice
in Fairhope, incorporated as the Self Center, P.C., in 1991, is
dedicated to the treatment of obesity, related diseases, and
clinical research. His comprehensive program for weight loss is
recognized by his peers as one of the top weight loss centers
in the United States. During the past 15 years Stan has been
the investigator for various pharmaceutical companies in more
than 40 clinical research trials involving obesity, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus, and other subjects.
spending my free time now with my decorative and tole painting business. My experience at Huntingdon [is beyond] compare with any other institution’s educational quality, and I am
so proud to have graduated from this college.”
• Ren Alford Hinote ’68 lost her husband of 42 years, Sam, in March
2010. She lives in Mobile Bay and is writing full-time, currently on
the creative non-fiction account of the federal investigation,
indictment, and trials her husband endured in the early 1990s.
• Laura Ryba Boykin Hollingsworth ’68 married J. Neil Hollingsworth Dec. 20, 2011. They plan to move to North Augusta, S.C.
• Mary George Jester ’68, who served as the founding director
of LAMP High School (Loveless Academic Magnet Program) in
Montgomery, returned to the school June 1 in order to serve as
interim principal. She had been retired since 2006.
• Margaret Johnson ’68 enjoys retirement and her husband, W. R.
“Swampy” Johnson ’65, works as a historian at Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park in Georgia. They travel in Europe
often.
• Patricia Tanner Mingledorff ’68 and her husband, Larry, who
retired last year, moved to Palm Coast, Fla., in April 2012.
Grandparenting is her new career.
• Stephanie Mann Stokes ’68 lives in Boerne, Texas, and has a
ranch in Evant, Texas. She writes, “This gives us room to entertain 11 grandchildren with cattle, horses, cats, dogs, donkeys,
and other animals!”
• Barbara Brock Thomas ’68 spent two weeks in November 2011
driving around South Island, New Zealand. She retired May 31,
2012, and is preparing for a trip to the Bay of Fundy and Prince
Edward Island.
• Daniel Walden ’68 lives in Atlanta. Dan’s wife of 39 years died
in 2009 from breast cancer. In 2011 he married his next door
neighbor, Pennie. They are both retired and enjoy saltwater fishing trips together. Dan’s son and daughter and five grandchildren live in the Atlanta area. He is active in his church and in
volunteer activities.
• Cynthia Gebhardt White ’68 (Florence, S.C.) welcomed former
classmates Frances Cooper Bricken ’67, Eleanor Warr Barron ’67
(Knoxville, Tenn.), Carol Ann Owen Lovett ’67 (Newnan, Ga.),
and Sara Emma Riggs ’67 (Pensacola, Fla.) for a 45th reunion
gathering at her home in DeBordieu Beach, S.C.
• LaDonna Ussery Weis ’68 volunteers in the kindergarten classes
at North Wavchula Elementary School.
• Maryem Stringfellow Brewer ’69 retired as the student services
coordinator at Auburn Montgomery. Her husband, Roger, is a
retired federal employee.
• Barbara Adams Herring ’67, married to Dr. James Herring ’65,
has completed nine mission trips in Central and South American
countries.
• Linda Curry Miller ’67 writes, “My husband, William P. Miller,
is a registered pharmacist. I am retired and we are enjoying
visits from our children and grandchildren from Florida. I am
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Members of the Class of 1967 relived memories during a special
dinner at Sinclair’s East for their 45th reunion during Homecoming
2012.
27
• Donald C. France ’69 (Stuart, Fla.) has published his eighth
novel, Decline and Fall of the Oceanic Hotel: And Tales of the
Barnegat Lighthouse, and has begun his ninth book, Sand in
My Shoes.
• Ira ’69 and Anne White Mitchell ’70 spend part of the year in
Birmingham and part of the year in Salt Lake City, Utah. They
would enjoy hearing from any former classmates who might be
visiting their beautiful second state.
1970s
Jean Strawn Posey ’70, wife of Huntingdon’s first athletic director, the late Neal Posey, with son Terry Posey ’81, stand near Neal
Posey’s pictures prior to the Athletic Hall of Fame induction ceremony held during Homecoming. Terry’s son, Neal Posey ’13,
carries forward the family tradition serving as quarterback for the
Huntingdon Hawks Football Team.
• In September 2011 Dan Freehling ’72 retired as deputy consultant with the American Bar Association Section in Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar. His work with the ABA primarily
involved law school accreditation. Upon retirement, he moved
from Chicago to Pittsboro, N.C., with his wife, Hilary. He consults
with a law school part-time.
• 2012 Athletic Hall of Fame inductee
Steve Shiflett ’72 was an All-State
standout at Sidney Lanier High
School in Montgomery before joining the Huntingdon basketball team
in 1968. He was a four-year letterman, earning a starting position in
his junior and senior years. During
his senior year as a Hawk, Steve
averaged 15 points per game with
a career high 32 points in a game
against Birmingham-Southern. He
was elected to the All-Conference
Team that year. After graduating,
Steve earned a master’s degree
from Troy State Univ. in 1974 and
became athletic director and head
basketball coach at Trinity Presbyterian School in Montgomery.
Five years and one state championship later, Steve hung up his
high school whistle and moved to Birmingham to join the ranks
of the college coaching world at Southeastern Bible College,
where he led SBC to their only conference championship. Since
moving back to Montgomery in 1981, Steve has started and
sold numerous medical supply businesses and is now retired. • Linda Freeman Trotter ’72 is a realtor with Century 21 living in
Wetumpka, Ala.
• Marion Bonhomme Knox Barker ’71, a retired lieutenant colonel, spoke at the American Leadership Association at the headquarters for American Cast Iron and Pipe Co. in Birmingham on
the subject, “Leadership is Service.” She is featured in chapter
11 of the Insight Publications book, Million Dollar Conversations,
sold through Amazon.com.
• Chemistry graduate and 2012
Alumni Achievement Award winner Dr. Thomas Moore ’73 serves as
chancellor of the Univ. of South Carolina Upstate. His 2011 appointment
to that position was the culmination
of a 30-year career in higher education, during which he has served
on the chemistry faculty of Georgia Southern College, BirminghamSouthern College, and Winthrop
University. At Winthrop, he chaired
the Dept. of Chemistry and Physics,
directed the Master of Liberal Arts
Program, served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and, from
2003­to 2011, led the university’s
academic programs as vice president for academic affairs. He
is active in higher education initiatives nationally, having served
on committees for the NCAA, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, and the Association of Graduate Liberal
Studies Programs. He is married to the former Marsha Kirk ’74. • Trustee Herb Patterson ’71 has been elected to the Arlington Historical Home Board of Directors in Birmingham. (See the Donor
Report for more on Herb.)
• Bill Rice ’74 and Ansley Callaway Rice ’75 live in Rome, Ga.
They have two sons. The eldest, Will Rice ’03, is married and living in Daphne, Ala.
• Nancy Jennings Wiggins ’71 retired from teaching in June 2011.
She and Robert Wiggins ’69 live in Prattville, Ala.
• Mary Skene ’74 of Newnan, Ga., practices juvenile law and
enjoys time with her two children and their families.
• Sheryl Elizabeth Cooper ’72 substitute teaches and jokes about
her hope of retiring again at the end of the year after 42 years
in education. She plans to travel after retirement.
• Carole Johnson ’75 lives in Panama City, Fla., where she works
as a dependency specialist with the Children’s Home Society
of Florida.
• Howell Edwards ’72 is a retired vocal music educator and volunteer organist at Our Savior Lutheran Church in Grants Pass, Ore.
He has become legally blind, so he memorizes or improvises all
music.
• Dr. James Mellichamp ’75 was named president of Piedmont
College, Demorest, Ga., May 4, 2012. A comprehensive liberal
arts college with campuses in Demorest and Athens, Ga., the
• Susan White Bennett ’70 retired as senior vice president of exhibits, programs, and media relations and now serves as senior
consultant for The Newseum in Washington, D.C.
• Robert Bothfeld Jr. ’70 and his wife, Susan, are building a home
in Bluffton, S.C., and plan to live there full-time after 12 years
living in New Jersey.
• James McNees ’70 serves as director of the Office of Radiation
Control for the Alabama Dept. of Public Health.
• Martha Jeanette Epperson ’71 is a veterans’ service representative for the Dept. of Veterans Affairs, living in Montgomery.
28
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
college has an enrollment of 2,800 students in four academic
schools. James joined the faculty in 1982 as a professor of music
and has served as department chair, dean, academic vice
president, and provost. He plans to continue his performing
career as well as teaching his active studio of organists at the
college.
• Elizabeth Burnette Newsome ’75 works as a contract development coordinator in the Traffic Engineering Division of the Virginia Dept. of Transportation.
• Allana Barbara Emroe Gilbert ’76 of Alpharetta, Ga., has raised
two daughters and is the grandmother of two.
• National Alumni Board President Mary K. McGuffey ’94 (left)
presented James Anderson ’76
with the Alumni Achievement
Award during Homecoming
2012. James co-founded and
is a partner in the Montgomery law firm Beers, Anderson,
Jackson, Patty, and Fawal. A
Huntingdon history graduate
and 30-year member of the
legal community, he earned his
law degree from Cumberland
School of Law and has presented cases before state and federal courts throughout Alabama and before the U.S. Supreme
Court. He was the youngest appointee ever to serve on the
Alabama Ethics Commission at the time of his appointment
by Governor George Wallace in 1986 and has since served as
vice president of the Board of Bar Commissioners, associate
justice on the Alabama Supreme Court, and a Life Fellow of
the American Bar Association and the Alabama Bar Foundation. James serves on the boards of directors for the Southeast
YMCA and Britton YMCA, on the Metro Board of Directors for
the Montgomery YMCA, and serves as secretary for the YMCA
Blue Ridge Assembly Board of Directors in North Carolina. He
was named YMCA Man of the Year in 1994. A member of the
Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame, he has also served on the
Huntingdon National Alumni Association Board of Directors. His
daughter, Anna, is a Huntingdon student.
• William Dorsey ’77, president of Dorsey Rubber and Equipment
in Charlottesville, Va., has been married to Lesley Anne Frye
Dorsey for 32 years, with three children.
• After two research trips to Northern Ireland and Scotland, Leslie
MacDill ’77 has completed work on a novel and begun work on
his next work of fiction.
• Anthony Stallworth ’78 is the appointed associate executive
director of the Alabama High School Athletic Association.
• James Kenneth Whittle ’78, who coaches baseball for Trinity
Preparatory School in Montgomery, was elected to the Class
of 2012 of the Alabama High School Athletic Association Hall
of Fame.
• Michael Blair ’79 serves as principal at Dallas County High
School in Plantersville, Ala. He and his wife, Rebecca, have two
children.
• Andrew J. Hardin ’79 has worked in the banking industry for 26
years with BBVA Compass and has served as the market president for his bank in Auburn, Ala., for two years.
• Lyn Wilbert Keaster ’79 lives in North Arkansas with her husband,
William. She is in her 33rd year of teaching and still loves it.
• Terri Turman Pernia ’79, mother of Jacob Tuley ’12, is the 2012
recipient of the Escambia County (Florida) Golden Apple
Award for Teaching. She teaches second grade at N.B. Cook
Elementary School.
The 17th annual trip of the “Queen Bees” to Ohio and Pennsylvania took place this summer, with the usual rollicking good time
in tow. The Queen Bees are (L–R) Brenda “Bunny” Cox Suplit ’78
(Stow, Ohio), Kathy McLeod Lawrence ’79 (Cedar Key, Fla.), Judy
Bridges Michel ’80 (Birmingham), Terri Smith Francis ’80 (Dothan,
Ala.), Barbara Whatley Christenberry ’78 (Montgomery), and
Nancy Hollingsworth Wong ’79 (Concord, N.C.).
1980s
• Sarabeth Owens Snuggs ’77 will retire at the end of the year following 35 years of service to the Florida Retirement System, nine
years as director. Her husband, Andy, will also retire, and they
look forward to boating, fishing, and travel.
• William Donald ’80 lives in Grand Bay, Ala., where he is the
Advanced Placement U.S. and European history teacher at
Alma Bryant High School. He also serves as the head coach for
the ABHS girls’ basketball team and is an adjunct instructor at
the Univ. of South Alabama.
• Donna Rea VanDusen ’77 lives and teaches in Macon, Ga. She
says she has great Huntingdon memories and has recently visited with many former classmates and reconnected with others
via Facebook.
• Foster Thomas Hicks III ’80, living in Millbrook with his wife,
Rhonda, is enjoying his first grandchild, Ryan Thomas Mann. Foster works as the system safety officer and emergency preparedness coordinator for Baptist Health Systems in Montgomery.
• Dr. Dianne Petrov Burke ’78 shares that her daughter, Julianne,
is a student at the UAB School of Medicine and her son plans a
medical career as well.
• Dr. Joey Rottman ’80, an OB/GYN living in Boxford, Mass., has
suffered recently from kidney failure, but continues with community service work nonetheless. His wife, Lauren Laplante Rottman, is the fifth-ranked heavyweight amateur bodybuilder in
the nation.
• Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78, professor of chemistry, has
been named president-elect of the Montgomery Exchange
Club. She presented an invited seminar, “Atoms First—A Successful Paradigm for Student Success in General Chemistry,” at
the 2012 Biennial Conference on Chemical Education at the
Pennsylvania State University.
• Cody Sweetland ’80 and his wife, Ashley Atkins Sweetland ’82,
celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary in August 2012. They
live in Niceville, Fla.
• Dr. Margaret A. Reams ’78, living in Baton Rouge, La., is a professor at Louisiana State University.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
29
• Fred Frost ’81, honored by the National Alumni Association with
the Alumni Achievement Award last fall, is the 2012 recipient of
the Burgher Award, presented to him March 22 by The Forge
for Families. The Burgher Award recognizes Fred’s devoted service on the Board of Directors of The Forge, whose purpose
is to transform families in one of Houston’s most impoverished
communities with the hope of Christ. During his 15 years on
the board, Fred served as chairman for three years and spearheaded a corporate merger and name change, a land assimilation effort for a new campus, a $6 million capital campaign,
and the construction/development process for that new campus. Today, The Forge operates on a paid-for 2+-acre campus
in the heart of Houston’s Third Ward with 28,000 square feet of
modern facilities. Fred is a member of the Huntingdon College
Board of Trustees.
• Karen Price VanderHey ’86 works at Frazer UMC in the nursery
department. She traveled to the Dominican Republic for mission work with her two youngest daughters, Hannah and Hollan
Jayne, earlier this year. Her oldest daughter, Heather VanderHey ’10, married Tyler Perdue Nov. 17, 2012.
• The Rev. Charles A. Walker ’86 graduated from Evangelical
Theological Seminary with a Master of Divinity degree May 12,
2012. Charles is the pastor of the California Evangelical Congregational Church in Morgantown, Pa.
• Linda Jackson Willis ’86 taught at Lauilla School of the Arts for
nine years. Her son will study there this year.
• Tyler Murray ’87 coaches the Theodore High School softball
team and was named the Softball Coach of the Year by the
Mobile Press-Register.
• Hope Gaither Stockton ’87 works as director of professional and
continuing education at Auburn University. Her husband, Rick,
is a retired U.S. Army Officer.
• William Prillaman ’88 is married with two children and living in
Glen Allen, Va. He has worked in the HVAC and energy efficiency industry for 20 years.
Bill Hamilton ’82 (Pensacola, Fla.), Minnie Lamberth ’83 (center, Montgomery), and Carol Nicholson Foster ’80 (Mobile, Ala.)
feasted on barbecue during the Scarlet & Grey Tailgate Party,
Homecoming 2012. Minnie has written a new book, Min at Work:
Stories of Writing, Painting, Aunting, and Believing. In this memoir
about work, she recounts her journey to and from the publication of an award-winning first novel. She is the author of Life with
Strings Attached, a novel selected as winner of the Paraclete Fiction Award. For details, visit http://www.minnielamberth.com.
• Elizabeth Ann Chapura Griffin ’83 is an independent Mary Kay
consultant in Arlington, Texas. She and her husband are planning a move to Alabama.
• Johnny Ragan ’83 lives in LaGrange, Ga., and remembers
fondly the great times and friendships established as a member
of the Huntingdon baseball teams of the early ’80s.
• Allen Gibson Thompson ’83 lives in Danville, Ky., where he serves
as an academic adviser with the Kentucky Community and
Technical College System.
• The Rev. Townley McGiffert ’84 became a board certified
chaplain in 2009 and heads a Decatur, Ga., interfaith ministry
focusing on the spiritual needs of the aging. He also serves as a
full-time health care chaplain.
• Ann Carlisle Carmichael ’85 says “at 87 years of age, I am
actively enjoying exercise (Pilates), painting, writing, and my
three children, who are ‘old’ folks.”
• Rebecca French Mosley ’85 is in her 15th year teaching English
in Tallapoosa County. She plays piano at Robinson Memorial
Presbyterian Church.
• Angela Slate Sherbine ’85 and her family relocated to Montgomery from Michigan in October 2011.
30
After completing her degree in chemistry at Huntingdon, 2012
Alumni Achievement Award winner Kimberly Braxton Lloyd ’89
(center, with National Alumni Board President Mary K. McGuffey
’94 and President J. Cameron West), earned her B.S. in pharmacy
and Doctor of Pharmacy degrees at Auburn Univ., where she
joined the faculty in the Harrison School of Pharmacy in 1998. She
serves as assistant dean for health services and is an associate
professor in the Dept. of Pharmacy Practice. Kimberly developed
and serves as clinical director for the Auburn Univ. Pharmaceutical Care Center (AUPCC), which opened in 2000. Under her
leadership, the program has added a clinic and two retail pharmacies. The AUPCC serves as a training site for primary care and
community pharmacy practice for HSOP students and post-doctoral residents. Her teaching responsibilities include contributions
to integrated pharmacotherapy (IP) and contemporary aspects
of pharmacy practice (CAPP). She also teaches the women’s
health elective and provides early and advanced practice experience training in primary care. Her research areas include pharmaceutical care services for employee populations, pharmacoeconomics, women’s health, and pulmonary pharmacotherapy.
She serves on the Alabama Pharmacy Association’s Board of
Trustees and has served as chair of the Alabama Dept. of Public
Health’s Office of Women’s Health Advisory Board since 2004. She
is the recipient of numerous awards, including Hargreaves Faculty
Mentor of the Year, Alabama Pharmacy Association’s Innovative
Practitioner of the Year, APA Distinguished Young Pharmacist, and
APA Faculty Member of the Year.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
1990s
• Mark Coleman ’90, a history teacher at Booker T. Washington High School in Montgomery and an adjunct instructor in
teacher education at Huntingdon, is one of 50 teachers in the
U.S. invited to attend the 2012 Google Teacher Academy. Mark
traveled to Prague in 2012 on a STAR grant from the Univ. of
Alabama-Huntsville. In June he attended the International Society for Technology in Education’s annual conference in San
Diego and captured the grand prize for expressing how he uses
technology to excite students’ passions. Read about his award
and see his video here: http://www.iste.org/membership/pblcontest.aspx
• David Sawyer ’90, and his wife, Teresa, and their son, Jackson,
have moved to Lewiston, Idaho, where he is an engineer with
Clearwater Paper. In his free time he enjoys their new home on
10 acres of land full of deer, pheasants, hawks, quail, and an
occasional coyote or mountain lion.
• Will Wilson ’90 was honored with induction into the Huntingdon
Athletic Hall of Fame this fall in recognition of his support for
Huntingdon athletic programs. The son of the late Montgomery entrepreneur and benefactor Jim Wilson Jr., Will graduated
with a B.S. in business administration and serves as president of
Jim Wilson & Associates, LLC, where he is responsible for development activities and investment projects. Will, a Huntingdon
trustee, has provided valuable counsel to assist Huntingdon’s
efforts to become a member of an NCAA-Division III athletic
conference, which has led to the College’s recent invitation to
join the USA South Athletic Conference. He has also provided
support to the Huntingdon College golf program by allowing
use of the Wynlakes Golf and Country Club facilities for team
practice and tournament play. In addition to his service on the
Huntingdon Board of Trustees, Wilson is a member of the boards
of directors of The Montgomery Academy, the Wynlakes Golf
and Country Club, and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts.
He served previously on the boards of directors of the Montgomery Humane Society and the American Red Cross of Central Alabama. • Susan Rene Zeron ’91 married Jeff Finley Nov. 11, 2011, in Nashville, Tenn.
• Chris Champion ’92 became general counsel for Fruit of the
Loom, Inc., in October 2011. He has relocated with his family to
Bowling Green, Ky.
• Rob Colquett ’93 has moved from Texas to Atlanta to work in a
management position at Coca-Cola Refreshments in the Business Transformation Office. Rob and his wife, Sandy, welcomed
daughter Lillian (Lily) Grace Colquett, May 14, 2012.
• Lawrence Dutton ’93, an electrical programmer, writes, “Just
moved from Spring Hill, Tenn., to Seagrove Beach, Fla. No more
ice, snow, or 10-degree weather.”
• Dr. Carol Griggers Johnston ’93 and her husband, John Thomas
Johnston ’94, live in Monroeville, Ala. Carol completed the Doctor of Physical Therapy program at the Univ. of St. Augustine
in 2010 and opened Core Principles Physical Therapy in July of
2011. J.T. was named the director of the Monroe County, Ala.,
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management in
November 2011.
• Monica Williams-Murphy ’93, M.D., an emergency room physician, and her husband, Kristian, are the authors of It’s OK to Die,
a book filled with graphic stories from the emergency room that
illustrate how unprepared for death many Americans are. The
purpose of the book and included information about end-oflife planning is to reduce suffering, depression, and guilt among
those who are dying and their surviving family and friends. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Lt. Colonel Tyr Brenner ’94 was transferred to the Pentagon in
July 2012 and says he loves living in Washington, D.C. He is the
chief of Air Force contract policy.
• William “Skip” Davis ’94, living in Birmingham, works as a senior
sales representative with Eli Lilly, neuroscience sales.
• 2012 Athletic Hall of Fame inductee
Debbie Sonnenberg ’94 (right) was a
four-time All-American at Huntingdon
and still holds the NAIA record for most
wins and strikeouts for a season and
a career. She was a key member of
the 1996 Canadian Olympic Team,
five Canadian National Champion
teams, and two New Zealand National
Champion teams. She also competed
in the World Championships and PanAm Games as a pitcher and was a
seven-time All-Canadian performer
pitching back-to-back perfect games
in the 1993 Canadian National Championship Series. Deb has
coached for Delta State (Miss.), Auburn Univ., Kennesaw State
Univ., and Mercer University. She instructs at the Cherokee Batting Range in Woodstock, Georgia, and is the coach of the
Georgia Trouble Softball Organization. The pitcher is pictured
with her former catcher, Dr. Roxanne St. Martin ’94, assistant
professor of athletic training at Huntingdon.
• Janet Malinda Chambless ’95 writes, “After 16 years with CocaCola, I am starting a new career with L’Oreal USA.” She is the
new national sales executive for the Walgreens U.S. business,
with responsibility for the Maybelline cosmetics line.
• Amy Woodard Klugh ’96 gave birth to son Michael Craig Klugh
in July. The family lives in Fort Walton Beach, Fla.
• Jason Eubanks ’97 married Katherine Strickland July 23, 2011.
He is an attorney in Slocomb, Ala.
• William Milledge Jr. ’97 has been happily married for 10 years
to his wife, Kenisha. They have two children. He is an educator with the Montgomery Public School System and recently
earned his doctoral degree from Alabama State Univ. in the
field of educational leadership, policy, and law.
• Stacy Smith ’97 married Lan Lipscomb Dec. 23, 2011. She works
as the art director for Auburn Magazine.
• Richard D. Werner ’97 and Dr. Danilea Walker Werner ’98 happily announce the birth of their daughter, Lakyn Elizabeth, July
5, 2011.
• Elizabeth Polk Adcock ’98 earned her graduate degree in project management from Pennsylvania State Univ. in December
2011. She and her husband, Stephen, live in Minneapolis, where
she works as a technical project manager and SCRUM master
for Hallmark Business Connections, a business-to-business subsidiary of Hallmark Cards.
• Jeff ’98 and Sherri Newsome Corte ’98 doubled their family size
with twin boys July 12, 2012—Michael Rockwood and William
Asher. They live in Richmond, Texas.
• Stacey Lashan Jones ’98, right, with
Anthony Leigh, vice president for
college and alumni relations, is a
graphic designer living in the Seattle
area.
• Ryan Oakley ’98 and Susan Ogilvie Oakley ’01 welcomed child #3,
Charles Olin Oakley, May 1. Ryan is
a JAG officer with the U.S. Air Force
stationed in Montgomery.
31
• 2012 Young Alumni Achievement Award winner Zach Billingsley ’99 (pictured, right,
with his Huntingdon roommate,
Shaun Rice ’00), was a fouryear member of the Hawks
baseball team. He relocated
to Santa Rosa Beach, Fla., to
work for Coastal Bank and Trust
after graduating with a degree
in business administration. His
career progressed from the
management associate program to assistant manager,
branch manager, and then commercial banker in the bank’s
Destin, Fla., office. There, he began working as a volunteer and
mentor for the Children’s Volunteer Health Network (CVHN), a
network of doctors, dentists, optometrists, and other specialists
who volunteer their time to help uninsured and underinsured
children. Inspired by the CVHN mission and by his volunteer
experience, he joined the organization’s board of directors in
2007 and in 2010 left the banking industry to become the executive director of CVHN. The organization operates a mobile
dental clinic that travels to elementary schools providing free
dental care for CVHN’s children. With more than 60% of families
in the area having no dental insurance, the need for dental
care has grown significantly. In 2011, Zach secured a grant to
fund the re-purposing of an existing building into a state-of-theart, three-chair dental clinic, where care is provided at no cost
to uninsured and underinsured children. Zach has focused on
efficiency and production since taking the helm at CVHN. The
organization now spends 87 cents of every dollar on programs
and has facilitated more than 7,000 medical, dental, vision,
and mental health care appointments.
• Amy Whatley Holley ’99, a former employee in the Office of
Business and Finance, has returned to her alma mater working
part-time in the Office of Student Financial Services.
• Bryan Matthews ’99 and Brittany DuBose ’04 were married Feb.
4, 2012, in Opp, Ala. They married on the same date as Brittany’s grandparents 57 years earlier and in the same church as
her grandparents, parents, and other family.
• Sue Miller ’99, who has been working for CHF International and
living in Silver Spring, Md., has a new job as director of programming and training for the Peace Corps. She has moved to the
Republic of Georgia, between Russia and Turkey.
2000s
• When 2012 Athletic Hall of Fame inductee Romeo Leisher ’00
came to Huntingdon from Johannesburg, South Africa, he was
simultaneously a full-time student, full-time collegiate athlete,
and worked 25–30 hours a week in the campus mailroom and
the campus maintenance department so that he could be
the first in his family to earn a college degree. He was a 4-year
team captain for the varsity soccer squad, honored with the
Best Defensive Player team award as a freshman, received the
Most Valuable Player team award in his three final years (Best
Offensive Player as a junior), and finished 17th in the nation for
the 2000 season for goals scored and assists per game. Romeo
was an All-Region Tournament Team nominee as a sophomore,
NAIA 2nd Team All-South Region as a junior, and an NSCAA AllRegion Scholar-Athlete as a senior. He was honored with inclusion in Who’s Who Among Students in American Colleges and
Universities in 2000 and was on the dean’s list for four semesters
while attending Huntingdon. He works as a new business development manager for a healthcare staffing company in Boca
Raton, Fla.
32
• Tracie Freeman Lane ’00 and David Lane ’00 announce the
birth of David Joseph Lane Jr., Apr. 27, 2011.
• Casey Malone Maugh ’00 contributed a chapter, “The Combined Centers Approach: How Speaking and Writing Centers
Can Work Together,” to the book, Communication Centers and
Oral Communication Programs in Higher Education, edited by
Esther York.
• Amy Patterson ’00, Huntingdon’s new head women’s volleyball
coach, has led her team to its best season in years this fall.
• Angela Graham Dupree ’01 and her husband, Daniel Dupree
’00, live in Prattville with their three children. She is a world
history, government, politics, and yearbook teacher at East
Memorial Christian Academy.
• Dan Ogle ’01, a member of Huntingdon’s National Alumni
Board, has become a shareholder in the Birmingham law firm
of Boardman, Carr, Hutcheson & Bennett, PC.
• Jacqueline Robinson Turner ’01 has been named director of
physician services at AdvisorsMD in Fairhope, Ala., where she
oversees AdvisorsMD’s Physician Placement Division. Jackie has
served in multiple administrative management capacities since
earning her MBA and master’s in healthcare administration
from the Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham. Previously, she managed the heart and vascular institute for one of U.S. News and
World Report’s Top 100 Hospitals, Ochsner Health System in New
Orleans. She lives in Daphne, Ala., with her husband, Rian Turner
’00, a CPA, and their son, Robinson.
• Tara Hutchinson Wizorek ’01 and her husband, David, welcomed their second son, Robert “Rob” Holman Wizorek, July 18,
2011. Tara is the public information manager for the Alabama
Dept. of Industrial Relations.
• Congratulations to Nick Baggett ’02, a member of the Huntingdon Alumni Board, and his wife, Julie, on the birth of their first
child, Graham McIntyre Baggett, Dec. 28, 2011.
• Tamisha Collins Benson ’02 gave birth to her first child, daughter
Madison, July 14, 2012.
• Jeb Haynes ’02 completed his doctorate at the Univ. of Southern Mississippi.
• David Bryant Isbell ’02 is the director of litigation support services for Baker & McKenzie, LLP, living in Washington, D.C.
• Talia Brown Johnson ’02 and her husband, David, welcomed
their first son, Evan Macrae, Jan. 25, 2012. Talia is a teacher
in the gifted education field at two schools in Mobile County.
David recently published his first book, The Countdown.
• Kate Brown Kalnes ’02 was an All-American volleyball player
at Huntingdon and this year became the first volleyball player
inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame. A human
performance and kinesiology graduate, Kate served as the
College’s assistant director of recreation. She earned her graduate degree in exercise and health studies from Miami Univ.
of Ohio, where she interned in the strength and conditioning
program and trained athletes of all sports in Miami’s Division
I program. Kate earned professional certifications from the
National Strength and Conditioning Association and the U.S.
Weightlifting Federation. She is the co-owner of Police Kinesiology Company in Evanston, Ill., and serves as the company’s
technical director while instructing for North East Multi Regional
Training, a regional police training academy in Illinois. She has
co-authored seven police performance training courses.
• Arleshia Lane Turner ’02 lives in Prattville, Ala., and is a high
school science teacher in Autauga County Schools. She and
her husband, Dr. Noah Turner, have one son.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Amanda Whitehead Senn ’04 lives in Montgomery and serves as
associate counsel to the Alabama Securities Commission. Her
husband owns a sporting clays course in Montgomery.
• Mary Morgan Taylor ’04 works as a kindergarten teacher for
Hoover City Schools and lives with her husband, Devin, in Helena, Ala.
• Dr. Christina Frances Vranich ’04 was elected to serve as president of the West Tennessee Optometric Physician Society. She
serves as the training impact coordinator for Junior League of
Memphis.
• Dr. Shae Hicks ’05 married Scott Register in Radda, Toscana
(Italy) in September 2012. Shae is a veterinarian with North
Shelby Animal Hospital.
• Dr. Cleve Carter III ’05 lives in Montgomery and recently earned
a Doctorate of Physical Therapy at Alabama State University.
Back for their 10-year reunion with Future Hawks William (left) and
Robert in tow, Dr. Nathan ’02 and Ginny Miller Sumner ’02 live in
Ocean Springs, Miss., where Nathan is a captain and neurologist
with the U.S. Air Force.
• Catherine Elizabeth Bedsole Bosse ’03 and her family have
moved to California for one year, after which they will move to
the Philippines.
• Bellee Jones ’03 and Michael
Pierce ’05 were married in Ligon
Chapel May 27, 2012.
• Elizabeth Frank Cichostepski
’04 gave birth to identical twin
daughters, Claire and Caitlyn,
June 4. She and her husband,
Adam, live in Nashville.
• Daniel Duckett ’04 has moved
from Belfast, Ireland, to Paris.
• Lindsay Shehee Freets ’04 is a
physician assistant in Dothan,
Ala. She and her husband,
Travis, have a daughter, Lillian
Claire, born in June 2009. • Dr. Rocky ’04 and Lindsay Glaze Lyons ’04 welcomed their first
child, Liv Maxine, Oct. 17, 2012. Rocky set up his own family
practice in Wetumpka this year. (Liv’s grandma and Lindsay’s
mom is Bonnie Sibley Glaze ’75.)
• Larry McLemore ’04 has completed his Ph.D. in history from
Auburn Univ., graduating in December 2012. He teaches AP
U.S. history at his alma mater, Saint James School. Larry has
been appointed to serve as High School Dean of Student Programs at Saint James.
• First Lieutenant Matt Lyles ’04, who had been deployed with
the U.S. Army in Iraq, surprised his wife, Elizabeth, and daughter,
Alexandria Elizabeth (born January 2011), upon his return home
to El Paso, Texas. The return was filmed and aired on Lifetime’s
reality series, Coming Home, June 17. Matt is a former assistant
baseball coach at Huntingdon.
• Mary Ann Morgan ’04 is a teacher in Hoover City Schools, living
in Helena, Ala.
• Dr. James N. Robinson ’04 completed his Primary Care Sports
Medicine Fellowship at the American Sports Medicine Institute/
Andrews Sports Medicine in Birmingham, Ala., and has opened
a practice working for Anderson Family Medicine Livingston
and the Univ. of West Alabama in Livingston, Ala. He practices
general family medicine and non-surgical sports medicine for
the West Alabama community, serving as student health physician for UWA.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Candice Hughes Duffey ’05 teaches language arts at MaconEast Montgomery Academy.
• Former Huntingdon webmaster Matt Johnson ’05, a branding and design specialist at Starlight International and a freelance artist, lives in Paramus, N.J. He recently completed work
on his first two children’s book publications, to be published in
mid-2013.
• Mindy Bevan La Branche ’05 earned her MBA from Georgetown
Univ., while Robert La Branche ’06 earned his master’s degree in
national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College this year. They live in the Washington, D.C., area.
• Leanne Mallory ’05, who has been living in New York City for
several years, will enter graduate school at the Univ. of Alabama in January.
• Lacy Marschalk ’05 serves as interim director of academic services for Saint Francis University.
• Former Huntingdon webmaster and director of publications
Catherine E. Reinehr ’05 has moved to Columbus, Ga., where
she works as a marketing communications specialist for Heatcraft Worldwide Refrigeration.
• Kristi Winstead Wilson ’05 of the Douglas Judicial Circuit/district
attorney’s office, Georgia, received the Award of Achievement
for Outstanding Service to the Public, presented by the Young
Lawyers Division of the State Bar of Georgia, June 1, 2012.
• Brandon Addison ’06, now a doctor of physical therapy, and
Victoria Russo ’06, were married Mar. 10, 2012. They live in
Eufaula, Ala.
• A book written by Jay Andrews ’06, pastor of Snowdoun UMC,
Wanderings in the Wilderness, has been released by Westbow Press. The book explores the joy and awe of the Christian
journey.
• Katie Svela Crews ’06 and her husband, Thomas, live in Pike
Road, Ala., and are new parents to George Thomas Crews,
born Oct. 8, 2012.
• Robin Davis ’06 has been offered admission to the graduate program in genetic counseling at the Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham.
• Alexandrea Garrett Eubanks ’06 graduated from Birmingham
School of Law earlier this summer. She and her husband, Seth,
have adopted a baby girl, Beau Grayson, born Oct. 20, 2012.
The family lives in Centre, Ala.
• Stephanie Bruner Fielder ’06, daughter of Tech Team member
Rick Bruner, gave birth to daughter Kyleigh Noelle Pollard May
23.
• Claire Hart ’06 and Matt Gorum ’07 have announced their
engagement.
33
• Elizabeth Bryan Kimbrough ’06 is the new theater director at
Ridgeland High School.
• Callia Johnson ’07 is employed by the U.S. Army living in Wahiawa, Hawaii.
• Katherine Mallini ’06 (center)
has moved to a new job with
Hyundai in Montgomery as
a human resources staffing
specialist, while Brandon ’07
and Angela Bryant Dainas ’07
live and work in Birmingham.
Angela was recognized with
Birmingham Magazine’s “Inner
Beauty Award.” Her story of
courage and hope can be
read at: http://photos.al.com/
birmingham-news/2012/05/
beautiful_people_2012_5.html.
• Samantha Lewis ’07 (left) and Chrys
Lake ’09 graduated with Master
of Divinity and Master of Theology
degrees, respectively, from Candler
School of Theology, Emory Univ., in
2012. Sam pastors St. Luke UMC in
Montgomery. Chrys is working in
Atlanta.
• Jenny Zeigler Medley ’06 began serving as associate chaplain
at Sacred Heart Health System in Pensacola, Fla., earlier this
year.
• Conor Merritt ’06 and Lauren Carruth Merritt ’06 welcomed their
first child, Natalie Ruth, in July 2011. Conor works as the supervisor for finance and accounting with Comcast.
• Jennifer Wren Miller ’06, after three years of ministry at Huntsville
First UMC, was ordained as an elder in full connection with the
North Alabama United Methodist Conference June 1 at Canterbury UMC. She completed seminary at Yale University.
• Deborah Leigh Dodd Neff ’06 and her husband, Joe, welcomed
their son, Samuel Patrick Neff, Aug. 25, 2009. Deborah and Joe
live in Murray, Ky., where Joe is a member of the U.S. Coast
Guard. In the next year, Joe’s schooling to become an aviator
for the USCG will require several more moves. Deborah enjoys
staying at home with their son.
• Lydia Patterson ’06 has been hired as an assistant minister at the
Alabama Baptist State Board of Missions, working with the collegiate and student ministries department.
• Elizabeth Arnett Powers ’06 and her husband, Seth, welcomed
daughter Piper Isabelle (known as Pippa), Mar. 26, 2012. They
live in Nashville, where Liz is an attorney.
• Whitney Pettus ’07 has moved to the
San Diego area. She is engaged to
Andy Lundskow, a captain in the
USMC and naval aviator stationed
at Camp Pendleton. The couple is
planning a summer 2013 wedding.
• Jacob Seales ’07 married Clarissa
Coe Apr. 14, 2012. He graduated
from the Univ. of Alabama School of Medicine May 20 and has
begun his orthopedic surgery residency at the Univ. of Tennessee-Chattanooga College of Medicine.
• Farren Ancar ’08 is in her second year of medical school in
Seattle.
• Lydia Fail Brown ’08 married Zac Brown Oct. 22, 2011, then gave
birth to their first child, Olivia Katherine, Oct. 1, 2012. Lydia works
as a case manager for Housing First in Mobile.
• Paige Huff ’08 graduated with her Master of Education degree
from Alabama State Univ. in May. She is an assistant women’s
basketball coach at Huntingdon.
• Dexter Jackson ’08 is employed with New York Life Insurance in
Montgomery.
• Jacob Kendall ’08, in the second year of an interdisciplinary
Ph.D. program at Tulane Univ., is writing his doctoral dissertation
on the integration of HIV/AIDS and aging in sub-Saharan Africa,
specifically Malawi.
• Josh Robinson ’06 completed his Ph.D. in economics at Emory
Univ. in May. He is teaching for the Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham.
• Dr. Loral Ann Chenault Sayre ’06 is a veterinarian living in Monticello, Ga.
• Max Stewart ’06 is a junior IT consultant at Auburn Univ. Montgomery Center for Advanced Technologies.
• Joshua White ’06, now a doctor of chiropractic, has opened
White Chiropractic Clinic in Marietta, Ga.
• Cameron Williams ’06 and her team won the Mid-Atlantic
CrossFit Games in Maryland in 2012 and competed in California
in July. For more information go to: http://games.crossfit.com/
athlete/45124.
• Keri Till ’06 has been elected to the Board of Directors of the
Birmingham Business Alliance. The BBA is a combination of the
Regional Chamber of Commerce and the Metropolitan Economic Development Board. • R. Walker Garrett ’07, a member of the National Alumni Board,
joined the Rotary Club of Columbus and has been appointed
to serve as editor of the general practice and trial section of
Georgia Bar Magazine.
• Patti Irwin ’07 married David Johnson October 22, 2011. Patti is
a registered nurse working in the GI surgery area at a hospital
in Mobile. 34
Hawks Football’s first quarterback Mark Colson ’07 (center)
became the first football player to be inducted into the Athletic
Hall of Fame in September. After serving in the quarterback role
his first season, he became the first Hawks receiver or running
back to eclipse the 1,000-yard mark in a single season, with 75
catches and 1,028 yards receiving. While at Huntingdon, Mark
held an internship with the Business Council of Alabama (BCA)
and was hired full-time following graduation. He serves as chief
of staff and executive director of ProgressPAC and represents
Alabama’s business community at the highest levels of government in Montgomery and Washington, D.C. Mark has been the
driving force behind the creation of the Hawks Football Alumni
Association, and because of his efforts and leadership the percentage of football alumni participating in annual giving to the
College exceeds any other cohort group. Mark earned his master’s degree in business administration from Troy University. He is
pictured with his parents, Mike and Marilyn (left), his wife, Cody,
and Hawks Head Football Coach Mike Turk.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Kevin Kennedy ’08 (Prattville,
Ala.) brought his own Future
Hawks to Homecoming 2012.
• Timothy (Timmy) McCormack
’08 has returned to his alma
mater to serve as head men’s
soccer coach. His wife, Jamie
Edwards
McCormack
’07,
serves as assistant coach for
the women’s volleyball team.
• Andrew McNamara ’08 completed his graduate degree
in writing and publishing at
DePaul University. He has
returned to Montgomery.
• Justin Wayne Nelson ’08 married Pamela Kaye Stewart at
Camden Baptist Church May 26, 2012. Justin is a student in the
Master of Divinity program at New Orleans Baptist Theological
Seminary and serves as the associate and youth pastor for Taylorville Baptist Church, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• Chris Saba ’08 is an associate attorney with Vernis and Bowling
of North Florida, living in Jacksonville.
• Gillian Lisenby Walters ’08 and Charles Walters ’08 are making
their home in Livingston, Ala., where Charles serves as the Methodist Conference coordinator for tornado recovery and Gillian
is the Wesley Foundation director at the Univ. of West Alabama
and serves as the pastor at Brewersville UMC. Both completed
their graduate degrees at Duke University. • Dr. Bryan Wells ’08 graduated from Palmer College of Chiropractic in December 2011. He lives with his wife, Grace, and
their son, Jackson, in Vero Beach, Fla., where he practices for
Parris Family Chiropractic.
• Living in Cleveland, Ohio, Katie West ’08 traveled around the
world on a mission trip for a year before returning to school for
surgical assisting.
• Kristin Wilson ’08 married Eric Monroe May 12, 2012. They live in
Phenix City, Ala.
• Kristen Etheredge ’09 and Cole Armstrong ’10 have announced their
engagement. Kristen is a graduate student at the Candler School
of Theology, Emory Univ., and Cole
works for Saks Fifth Avenue in Buckhead (Atlanta). The date is May 25,
2013, at Huntingdon.
• Jenna Golson ’09 has been hired as
a physical educator and head volleyball and softball coach at Evangel Christian Academy, Montgomery. She was formerly with Hooper
Academy. • Larry Hudson ’09 teaches history at
Tallassee High School.
• Kris Ingram ’09 has accepted a position as assistant baseball
coach at Southwestern Univ. in Georgetown, Texas.
• Brenda Jones ’09, in her second year of seminary at Candler
School of Theology, Emory Univ., received a one-year $7,000
Archival Research Fellowship in the area of Black Women in
Ministry from the Interdenomination Theological Seminary.
• Hannah Lane ’09, a reporter for WSFA in Dothan, married Caleb
Hawk April 14. They live in Troy.
• Jennifer Moody ’09 released her first single, “Goin’ Home Alone
Tonight,” available on CDBaby.com. She has a touring contract, as well, having signed with Brand N Music Partnerships.
http://www.JenMoodyMusic.com
• Tera Moore ’09 married Bobby Cagle earlier this summer. Bobby’s brother and business partner in the family business is Eric
Cagle ’07. Eric is married to Tera’s best friend and former Lady
Hawks basketball teammate, Betsy Jones Cagle ’07. All of them
live in Tallassee.
• Gary Nelson ’09 has moved from a teaching/coaching position
at Hooper Academy to the Montgomery Academy and married Stefanie Holman in November.
• Caroline Baldwin-Brown ’09 was commissioned into the U.S. Air
Force as a second lieutenant assigned to the 187th Fighter Wing
as an operations officer.
• Ashley Bunt ’09 is in her second year in the occupational therapy master’s program at Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham.
• Ashley Burkett ’09, a Huntingdon business administration graduate who is nearing completion of her law degree at the Univ.
of Alabama-Birmingham, has accepted a clerkship with Judge
Ed Carnes, a federal judge on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Following her clerkship, she will join the Birmingham law firm of
Bradley Arant Boult Cummings as an associate in their general
litigation department.
• Kimberly Cauthen ’09 and Hunter Wolfe ’05 were married Mar.
10, 2012, in Montgomery at Christchurch. Hunter and Kimberly
met on the Green at Huntingdon Host Day in the spring of 2004
and were friends for many years. On Nov. 11, 2011, Hunter proposed to Kimberly on the Green. They enjoyed a trip to Italy for
their honeymoon.
• Adam Cotant ’09, a first-year student in the Univ. of AlabamaBirmingham School of Dentistry, and Dr. Brittany Gaydosh
Cotant ’08, who just completed pharmacy school, were married Aug. 11, 2012.
• Dusti Doss ’09 serves as a school and college counselor at
Macon East Academy, Montgomery.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Chelsey Hodge ’09 and Nathan Koppersmith ’10 were married
Jan. 7, 2012, in Ligon Chapel. Chelsey graduated from Troy Univ.
with her M.S. in Counseling and Psychology in December 2011.
December 2012 marks a new milestone for Chelsey and Nathan
as they move to Arkansas to work at Glenhaven Youth Ranch, a
place that provides hope and healing in a Christ-centered home
for teens. Chelsey will work at Glenhaven as a therapist while
earning her counseling license in Arkansas. Pictured L–R are Alana
Norris ’10, Ashley Bunt ’09, Terri Bumann Roberts ’08, Manci Bryars
’09, Chelsey Hodge Koppersmith ’09, Hannah Lane Hawk ’09, Sara
Beth Binford ’10, Sarah Ward ’10, Chelsey Jones ’12, Erin Ofe ’12,
and Whitney Delashaw ’13.
35
• Scott Nello Nichols ’09 married Joanna Bonds ’08 June 12, 2010.
They bought a new house and both are enjoying their jobs.
• Chanley Rainey ’09 presented her paper, “Social Movements
and Democratization,” to the panel on comparative politics
at the annual meeting of the Alabama Political Science Association at Auburn Univ., March 2012. Chanley has nearly completed her course work for the Ph.D. in comparative politics. She
recommends that program for future HC grads and reports that
the books for her doctoral course in constitutional law were the
same as those used in the B.A. course at Huntingdon.
• Glenn Rudolph ’09 (right) will
join the dental practice of Dr.
Jimmy Gardiner (center) in
Tuscumbia, Ala., in 2013 when
Glenn graduates from dental
school at the Univ. of AlabamaBirmingham. Glenn is the son
of Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph ’80,
chair of the Huntingdon Dept.
of Teacher Education, and Dr.
Gardiner is the father of J Gardiner ’15 (left). • Bart Stearns ’09, son of Glenn Stearns ’75, completed his graduate degree in cell biology at Auburn Univ. in May. Bart was
selected from an applicant pool of more than 1,000 for one of
40 seats in the physician assistant program at Methodist Univ.,
which he began this fall.
2010s
• Vinson Bradley ’10, an ADCP graduate, has assumed the role
of assistant site coordinator for the ADCP-Bay Minette campus.
• Patrick Carnathan ’10 is the youth pastor at Troy First UMC.
• Ben Cecil ’10 is the new physics, earth and space science, and
Microsoft Excel teacher at Montgomery Catholic Preparatory
School. He and Amanda Houston ’12, an admission counselor
for Huntingdon, have announced their engagement.
• Ben Cheney ’10 and Jordy Allen were married Dec. 17, 2011.
• Gale Croft ’10, an ADCP graduate who has since earned her
master’s from Spring Hill College, has been appointed site coordinator for both Baldwin County campuses. Her office is on-site
at the Daphne campus. She has been selected to participate
in Leadership Baldwin County.
• Jakob Dwyer ’10 has passed three of four parts of his CPA
exam, scoring high, and has been promoted to senior accountant and elected shareholder in the firm Eubanks and Rouse,
where he began working during his fifth year at HC. • Alex Dyer ’10 has been admitted to the master’s program in
history at Villanova University (Penn.).
• Kelly Frazier ’10 has begun taking classes in the Master of Forensic Science program at Alabama State Univ. while she works as
an optician at Primary Eye Care in Montgomery.
• A.J. Julian ’10 married Perez Freddy July 14, 2012.
• Christian Harmon ’10 is a student in the Univ. of Alabama-Birmingham School of Medicine.
• Meagan Jackson ’10 married Jordan Travis Dec. 1, 2012.
It took only a few minutes during Homecoming 2012 for (L–R) Steve
Kosan ’10, Woods Lisenby ’11, Sam Brown ’11, Kathryn Yates ’09,
Alex Taylor ’12, Will Francis ’12, Chad Cotant ’12, and McDowell
Pinckard ’12 to realize they’re always home at Huntingdon.
• Chris Knight ’10 married Melissa Plash June 1, 2012.
• Jessica Lacey ’10 is the owner and operator of All About Art in
Enterprise, Ala. She has been open for nearly 2 years with great
success. All About Art offers paint-your-own pottery, mosaic,
glass fusing, and art classes for all ages. She married Sam Goodson May 19, 2012.
• Teresa Rhodes Lavergne ’10 earned her MBA from Auburn
Montgomery in May 2012.
• Stephen Laye ’10 and Madison Jackson ’12 have announced
their engagement.
• Jenna Alise Parish ’10 serves as director of music ministries at
First UMC-Panama City, Fla.
• Josh Robertson ’10 married Valerie Lewis June 2, 2012.
• Julie Wahl ’10 is living in Kampala, Uganda, temporarily, representing the Hole in the Wall Association (supported by a foundation established by the late actor Paul Newman) and providing training for running a camp for children with HIV. She plans
more trips this year in Asia and Africa. Last year she worked in
Ireland for 9 months. She was a Hole in the Wall Camp counselor during her Huntingdon undergraduate days.
• Kat Wendt ’10 teaches chemistry at Millard West High School in
Omaha, Neb.
• Linda Diaz Almaraz ’11 and Frank Mitchell ’11 were married this
summer.
Leigh Ann Floyd ’10 (right) and friends (L–R) Angie Bradley ’11,
Amanda Houston ’12, Lauren Gilbert ’12, and Kelly Frazier ’11
gathered to celebrate Kelly’s birthday on St. Patrick’s Day 2012.
Earlier this year, LeighAnn appeared in the premiere night of episodes for Season 4 of “Say Yes to the Dress Atlanta” on the TLC
network. She met Leo DiCesaris ’10 in their first class as freshmen at
Huntingdon. They will be married Mar. 17, 2013, at Oakhurst Farms
in West Point, Ga. LeighAnn serves as the student minister for Trinity
UMC in Phenix City, Ala. She also works as a finance assistant at
Headquarter Nissan in Columbus, Ga.
36
• Ashley Blocker ’11 and Greg Clayton ’11 were married Oct. 20,
2012.
• Angie Bradley ’11 is a student in the McWhorter School of
Pharmacy, Samford University. She and Ben Marsella ’10 have
announced their engagement.
• Jackie Brill ’11 married John Francis Jan. 7, 2012.
• Jessica Wadley Bryant ’11 is the proud mom to a baby girl,
Peyton. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Abby Grace Chandler ’11 and Mike Payson ’10 were married
July 28 in Ligon Chapel. Abby Grace serves as the extended
day director at Snow Rogers Elementary School in Gardendale,
Ala.
• Hannah Correia ’11 has begun study in the M.S. in Energy Systems Technology program in the Dept. of Electrical Engineering
at Loughborough Univ., Leicestershire, England. The intensive
one-year curriculum is certified by the Institution of Engineering
and Technology, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, and
the Energy Institute.
• Logan Henderson Golden ’11 gave birth to her first child, Brooks,
July 11.
• Amy Marie Hall ’11 is employed as a retail associate and works
in hotel guest services at Wind Creek Hotel in Atmore, Ala.
• Mary Lawren Hill ’11, a math teacher, volleyball and softball
coach at Marbury High School, married Michael Hall July 28.
• Derval Hutchinson ’11 is a student at the Philadelphia College
of Osteopathic Medicine.
• Krissie Jones ’11 and Douglas Pate ’10 were married Apr. 28,
2012, and live in Chelsea, Ala. Douglas is an independent
agent with Health Spring. Krissie is a product specialist for Health
Med Inc.
• Jacob “Tank” King ’11 teaches 10th grade U.S. history and
coaches football and softball for Andalusia High School. He
and Britni Northington ’12 have announced their engagement.
Britni is employed with Montgomery Cardiovascular Associates.
• Jacques Lamour ’11 is a medical student at the Universidad
Iberoamericana School of Medicine in the Dominican Republic.
• James Heath LeVert ’11 is employed as a teacher at Bibb
County High School and is an assistant football and baseball
coach. “Huntingdon was an amazing four years of my life. From
pushing snow off of the baseball field for a weekend series to
stressing my way through Anatomy I and II, I would not have
changed a thing. Well, I would have changed Anatomy, but
oh well. Huntingdon helped shape my life and I know that without it I would not be anywhere close to where I am now. Thanks
to everyone who helped shape my path.”
U.S. who agree to work in U.S. government in some area of international affairs for three years after graduating.
• Jeremy Reid ’11, a student in the graduate communication
studies program at the Univ. of Alabama, is a teaching assistant in the public speaking labs. He also serves as an associate justice on the UA Judicial Board (he was Chief Justice at
Huntingdon). • Candice Ruston ’11 married Brandon Bunn Oct. 20, 2012, in
Birmingham. Huntingdon classmates among the bridesmaids
were Catherine Naylor ’11, Sarah Ward ’10, Rachael Gautier ’11,
Catie Malone ’11, and Angie Bradley ’11.
• Cole Smith ’11 and Jessica Tidwell ’13 have announced their
engagement. Cole is a student in the doctor of pharmacy/MBA
program at South Univ. School of Pharmacy, S.C. The wedding
is scheduled for summer 2013.
• Jes Smith ’11 teaches physical education at Pine Level Elementary School, Autauga County. He has also taken a varsity football coaching position with Prattville High School. Jes graduated with a degree in human performance but returned to HC
to earn his teaching credential, which he completed in May.
• Kendra Tatum ’11 is a graduate student studying to achieve a
master’s in counseling psychology at Alabama A&M University.
She writes, “My education and experiences at Huntingdon College have prepared me well for graduate course work. Huntingdon’s reputation as an academically challenging school gave
me the tools necessary to adapt to graduate-level courses. My
professors were absolutely amazing. Not only did they hold high
expectations for me, they were more than willing to help me
surpass their expectations and provide guidance in reaching
my own goals. I enjoyed being more than just a ‘number’ at
Huntingdon, and for that I will forever be grateful. While I miss
the ‘good old days’ at HC, including performing at football
games, I am proud to say I am a Huntingdon College alum and
I will be cheering my Hawks on from the stands!”
• Christine Whiten ’11 is a student at the Edward Via Virginia
School of Osteopathic Medicine.
• Brian Watts ’11, an accountant at Enterprise Holdings, married
Jordan Archer July 28, 2012.
• Woods Lisenby ’11 and Brianna McClure ’13 have announced
their engagement.
Class of 2012
• Katy Jo Farrill McDaniel ’11 teaches 4 grade at Lincoln Academy in Huntsville, Ala.
Read more about members of the Class of 2012 on pages 4–7.
• Will Merritt ’11 teaches 9th and 10th grade history and coaches
football for Wetumpka High School.
• Ashley Adams ’12 teaches for Lincoln Elementary School in Talladega County.
• Kristen Morrison ’11 and Jhavonn Brown ’13 have announced
their engagement.
• Raymond Bailey ’12 is employed as a lab animal technician in
the UAB Animal Resources Program.
• Terah Phillips ’11 (left, with Brandon Shrout ’08 [Dothan, Ala.]
and Sam Schjott ’07 [Bayou La
Batre, Ala.]) works for Metro
Monitor as a client advisor/business developer in Birmingham,
Ala.
• Kelly Brennan ’12 will enter graduate school at the Univ. of
Texas-San Antonio in 2013.
• Lauren Randall ’11 entered
seminary at the Candler School
of Theology, Emory Univ., this
fall, where she and Megan
Petenbrink ’12 are roommates.
• Kati Bryant ’12 is employed in the human resources department
at Hyundai.
th
• Rebekah Redden ’11 worked with the Australian Christian
Lobby in Canberra, Australia, as part of her John Jay Fellowship
last spring. She is now a Robertson Fellow at the Bush School of
Public Policy, Texas A&M University. The Robertson Fellowship is
the highest award made at the Bush School for citizens of the
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Stephen Bishop ’12 married Taylor Price ’13 in September 2012.
• Trish Brown ’12 teaches 6th grade reading for Phenix City Intermediate School, Ala., and will begin graduate study at Auburn
Univ. in 2013.
• Brittany Cahoon ’12 is studying surgical technology at Virginia
College in Pensacola, Fla.
• Patty Clements ’12 is employed as an accountant with the Business Council of Alabama. She is a graduate student at AUM
and has announced her engagement to Taylor Everett.
• Sharissa Copeland ’12 is employed as a veterinary technician
in Montgomery.
37
• Rebekah Correia ’12 is employed with Montgomery Dragonboat Races.
• Joe Corley ’12 and Megan Cox ’12 were married Dec. 17, 2011.
Joe is a team salesman at Olympia Sporting Goods, and Megan
works as a loan assistant/credit analyst for the Southern Development Council. Both plan to pursue graduate study soon.
• Ephriam Hudson ’12 received an invitation to the Rome Gladiators training camp and subsequently made the team. The Gladiators, a semi-pro basketball team, play during the summer.
• Kyle Huff ’12 works for Wired for Wellness, a fitness facility.
• Sarah Jernigan ’12 works in health care at an assisted living
facility.
• Rondarius Johnson ’12 and Jared Keene ’12 work for Motivated
Movers.
• Mike Kilpatrick ’12 teaches for Russell County High School.
• Stephanie Maguire ’12 is an exercise consultant at AllFit Gym,
Montgomery.
• Noele Mathis ’12 is a graduate student at Auburn-Montgomery.
• Kris McLendon ’12 teaches 4th grade at Clay Elementary School
in Jefferson County, Ala.
• While in Vienna on a Huntingdon Plan trip in May 2012, Caitlin
McMahon ’12 participated in the Adolph Gruber Memorial 5K
run, coming in 19th overall and second among women runners.
She and Kent Hagan ’11, a student at the UAB School of Medicine, were married in Ligon Chapel in 2012. Caitlin is a clinical
assistant with Alabama Pain Specialists.
When Rusty Cowley ’12 (center) walked across Top Stage and
collected his diploma in April, he continued a family tradition
dating back 120 years, when his great-great-grandmother, Berta
Langley, graduated from Tuskegee Female College June 8, 1892,
with a Mistress of English Literature degree. Rusty teaches 9th
grade history and coaches soccer for Thompson High School, his
alma mater. • Heath Minor ’12 is working at a hospital and racing cars in the
Kajun Mini-Stock Association.
• Zach Molin ’12 is a tennis pro at Wynlakes Country Club and an
instructor at IMG Bollettieri Tennis Academy.
• Chala Monk ’12 works as a personal trainer.
• Matt Murphree ’12 is a graduate student at Jacksonville State
University.
• Jackie Daniels ’12 has returned to her hometown in New Jersey
and works for Lifetouch Photography. She plans to apply for
international mission service.
• Scott Owenby ’12 was married May 19, 2012, and has begun
the doctoral program in physical therapy at Alabama State
University.
• Kayla Davis ’12 was admitted to an MBA/doctor of pharmacy
program at South Univ. School of Pharmacy, Columbia, S.C.
• Taylor Paradowski ’12 teaches 4th grade at McInnis Woods
Country Day School in Georgia.
• Samantha Davis ’12 married Chris Hill and is employed as a first
grade teacher at Autauga Academy.
• Ryan “Boomer” Payne ’12 works as a physical therapy technician and athletic trainer for ProImpact Physical Therapy and
Sports Performance.
• Maggie Decker ’12 is employed with Lotus.
• Caitlin DeMouy ’12 teaches 7th grade math for Montgomery
Catholic Prep School.
• Jessica Dickson ’12 works as a medical assistant at Middle Creek
Medical Clinic while applying for graduate school admission.
• Rae Diggs ’12 teaches for Ridgecrest Elementary School, Phenix
City, Ala.
• Alyssa Eason ’12 teaches at Edgewood Academy, Montgomery.
• Ray Evans ’12 works for the State of Alabama in the Unemployment Division.
• Katie Hoffmaster Gerlach ’12 and Brit Gerlach ’12 live in Montgomery, where Katie is the pianist for First Presbyterian Church
and Brit continues military service.
• Lauren Gilbert ’12 is taking courses in preparation for the CPA
exam.
• Bryant Hall ’12 teaches and coaches for Prattville Jr. High
School.
• Quinn Hambrite ’12 is employed with Best Buy in Mobile, Ala.
• Katie Holsonback ’12 studies nursing in an accelerated program at Samford University.
• Amanda Houston ’12 works in the Huntingdon Office of Admission as an admission counselor. She and Ben Cecil ’10 will be
married in Ligon Chapel July 13, 2013.
38
• Kristin Perdue ’12 married Joshua Kelly May 12, 2012. She
teaches English at Prattville High School.
• Haley Praytor ’12 is employed by Praytor Realty.
• Dylan Pugh ’12 is a deputy sheriff for Cobb County, Ga.
Help Us Find Our Lost Alumni!
Please see the list on the Huntingdon College Web site, www.
huntingdon.edu, under Alumni and Friends, and point us in
the direction of any missing Hawks you know.
• Ashton Rodriguez ’12 teaches for Phenix City Intermediate
School, Ala.
• Ashton Salter ’12 is an assistant women’s basketball coach for
Huntingdon.
• Angie Smith ’12 works as a teller for Regions Bank in Panama
City, Fla.
• Reggie Sprouse ’12 is employed with the State of Alabama.
• Lara Stubbs ’12 is a graduate student in mathematics at the
Univ. of Alabama-Huntsville, where she was awarded an
assistantship.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Dino Tampary ’12 is a graduate student at Troy University.
• Sarah Thebo ’12 and Juddson Seebrat ’10 have announced
their engagement. Sarah directs music ministries at Cain’s Chapel UMC, Ala.
• Former Huntingdon Hawks shortstop and outfielder Miles Walding ’12 got an offer he couldn’t refuse while playing in Palm
Springs in the California Winter League. He was approached by
a scout and within two days had signed a contract to join the
Arizona Diamondbacks’ organization.
• Marybeth Grace Wheatley ’12 is a telephone banking associate with Wells Fargo. She and Jake Hollingsworth ’13 have
announced their engagement.
• LaTarial Williams ’12 coaches basketball, softball, and volleyball
for Prattville Christian Academy, while her twin, LaTerial Williams
’12, is a personal trainer with AllFit Gym.
Pave the Way to the
Huntingdon of Tomorrow!
Become part of a lasting
legacy on campus.
Purchase a personalized walkway brick and help pave the way for
current and future Huntingdon students. 100 percent of your tax-deductible gift will benefit student scholarships.
• Requires a gift of $1,100 or more to the Huntingdon Fund between
June 1, 2012, and May 31, 2013
• Gives you the opportunity to dedicate a brick for the walkway in
front of Houghton Memorial Library (this academic year only)
• Qualifies you for membership in the Huntingdon Society (this fiscal
year only)
For more information about the brick program, please contact
Anthony Leigh at (334) 833-4528 or [email protected].
Scholarship Brick Order Form
Return to: Office of College and Alumni Relations, Huntingdon College, 1500 E. Fairview Ave., Montgomery, AL 36106
Donor Name Address City State Zip Phone (
)
E-mail □ I would like to make my $1,100 donation to the Huntingdon Fund with brick purchase
□ Enclosed is my check payable to Huntingdon College
□ Please charge my credit card □ Visa □ Master Card □ American Express Account # Exp. Date CCV Signature Please insert the wording for your brick in the boxes below, one character or space per box. There is a 16-character limit for each line.
□ I would like to purchase a brick in honor of the following, and wish them to be notified:
Name City Address State Zip Donor Report
Honor Roll of Donors, 2011–12
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 donors who made gifts to Huntingdon
during the fiscal year of June 1, 2011, through May 31, 2012. It includes
those who made capital gifts as well as donations to the Huntingdon
Fund. This listing does not include those who made pledges, but not
gifts, in 2011–12 or those whose gifts were received after May 31, 2012.
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 College and Alumni
Relations 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
*Mrs. Dorothy Hoag Bell
*Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr.
Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie
Cardwell Bolden
*Mr. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer Bottoms
Mrs. Lois Cowen Boykin
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. John Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Cheek III
*Mr. Leo Drum Jr.
Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves
Eich III
Mr. Ernest and Mrs. Mary Ellison
Mr. J.C. (Chris) Flowers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr.
Mr. Nimrod T. and Mrs. Lee Martin
Frazer
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mr. Renis Jones
Mrs. Elizabeth Lipscomb
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Lowder
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman
McMahon
Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh (Buzz) Phillips
Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mrs. Shirley H. Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland
Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross
Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Dr. William B. and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter
Snyder
Mrs. Aloyis Sonneborn
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Mr. and Mrs. David F. Steele
Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson
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 and Dr. Tommy
Wool
Mr. Robert S. Weil
Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith
Wendland
Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin
Williamson
Mrs. Jim Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. Malcolm Yaple
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Trustee Herb Patterson ’71, left, of
Birmingham, was inducted into the
Order of the Countess of Huntingdon
in May. He was accompanied by his
sister, Joyce Patterson Ryser ’74.
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
*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. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms
Ms. Carol Jane Boyd
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Boykin
Ms. Esther Boykin
Mrs. Lois Cowan Boykin
Mr. Donald K. Braden
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady
Cousins Brink
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe
Bill and Jackie Briscoe of Decatur, Ala., were inducted into the
Huntingdon Hall of Honor in recognition of making a gift to fully endow a
scholarship in memory of Bill’s aunt,
Lexie Ellis Williams ’28. The scholarship had been established by Ms.
Williams’ husband, J.R. Williams.
Mrs. Henry A. Brooks
Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Brown III
The Rev. Naomi Prescott Brown
Col. Preston Brown
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. and Mrs. Othon Tallet Bueno
Dr. Harrell and Mrs. Kimberly Cook
Bullard
Mr. 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
Mr. Al Cantrell
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 United Methodist
Church
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. Lide Denny
*Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
*Bishop Paul Duffey
Mr. Donal and Mrs. Sara Lee Insley
Dunbar
Mrs. Jane Cunningham Dunlap
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 S. 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
Mr. Frank and Mrs. Tricia Grier
Dr. Laurence and Mrs. Dorothy
Huffine Grossman
Mr. David and Dr. Betty Bottoms
Grundy
Mr. Leon Hadley
Ssgt. Jerad and Mrs. Jamie Deveau
Hahn
Dr. Eugenie L. Hamner
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
The Hon. Truman and Mrs. Joyce
Hobbs
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
Mrs. Laura Jinright
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
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
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
Mrs. James L. Loeb
Mrs. Ellen C. Long
Mrs. Gertha Long
Dr. James D. Lowe Jr.
Col. and Mrs. Orlando J. Manci Jr.
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman
McMahon
Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson
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. 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
Mrs. Tom Radney
*Mr. William and Mrs. LaVerne Davis
Ramsey
Mrs. Louise Thornton Reynolds
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway
Mr. Charles Edward Roberts Jr.
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Mr. Earl and Mrs. Joyce Patterson
Ryser
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Salter
Mrs. Mary Belin Salter
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
The Hon. Burt and Mrs. Elizabeth
Couey Smithart
Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter
Snyder
Mr. Earl L. 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
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
Ms. 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
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 Yancey
Mr. Malcolm Yaple
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Mr. Edward and Mrs. Margaret
Delchamps Young
Laura Chambliss Jinright ’54 was inducted into the Huntingdon Hall of
Honor in May in recognition of endowing a scholarship in memory of
her late husband, E. Foch Jinright,
who passed away in 2011. The Jinrights have supported Huntingdon
College faithfully for many years.
41
The Huntingdon Society, 2011­–12
Members of the Huntingdon Society contribute $1,000 or more during the fiscal year.
Dr. and Mrs. Roger A. Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Kirke Adams
Miss Jodi Adamson
Mr. James and Mrs. Frances Goode
Akridge
Mr. John and Mrs. Ann McLean
Albritton
Mrs. Edwina Wallace Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen
Mr. David and Mrs. Glenda Atwell
Allred
Mr. James H. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III
The Rev. Rurel R. Ausley Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ball Jr.
Mr. Albert Ban
Dr. Jason T. Banks
Mr. and Mrs. James Barganier
Mr. and Mrs. G. Carlton Barker
Col. Robert Barmettler
Ms. Barbara Lazenby Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barranco
Dr. William Barrick
Mr. Bobby and *Mrs. Marion Waters
Barrow
Mr. and Mrs. William Beaird
Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. Bechert
Mrs. Hye Jeong Y. Beckett
Mrs. Ann Bedsole
*Mrs. Dorothy Hoag 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
Mrs. Lucinda Smilie Bollinger
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bonner
Dr. and Mrs. William Richard Bonner
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden
*Mr. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms
Ms. Esther Boykin
Ms. Thelma Braswell
Miss Jo Ann Brazelton
Mr. Joel and Mrs. Laura Tyree
Brelsford
Mr. John B. and Mrs. Frances
Cooper Bricken
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady
Cousins Brink
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe
Mrs. Betty Finlay Brislin
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip F. Brown
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William B.
Brunson
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawson Bryan
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. John Bullard
Mrs. Mary King Burns
Mr. and Mrs. John Caddell
Mrs. Turner Cameron
Mr. William Canary and Mrs. Leura
Garrett Canary
Mr. Michael and Dr. Jennifer
Canfield
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased
42
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mrs. Jack Carlisle
Mrs. Renee Byrd Carlisle
Miss Janet Chambless
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Champion
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
Dr. and Mrs. C. Richard Chappell
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III
Mr. Jong Choi
The Rev. David and Mrs. Carol
Dearman Chunn
Mr. and Mrs. David Cobb
Mr. H.D. Cobb
Dr. and Mrs. Morris Cochran
The Rev. and Mrs. Dale R. Cohen
Mr. Sidney and Mrs. Ann Carol Harris
Coleman
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland
Mr. Coleman and Mrs. Emily
Webster Cosgrove
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Cotter
Mrs. Mary O’Brien Cox
Mrs. Myrtle Peters Crone
Mrs. Charles M. Crook
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Culpepper
Dr. Bert and Mrs. Lynn Blalock
Cunningham
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham
Mrs. Michelle Brian Curtis
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Daniel
Mr. Billy Ray Daniels
Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Daniels Jr.
Mrs. Reita Sample Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Day
Mr. Michael and Dr. Lynn Disbrow
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dismukes Jr.
Dr. Henry and Mrs. Joan Johnston
Diversi
Miss Marianne Donnell
Mr. Jay Dorman and Dr. Lisa Olenik
Dorman
Mr. Gregory Dotson
Mrs. Virginia Cooper Downes
Mr. John L. and Mrs. Hermine
Melton Downing
*Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
*Bishop Paul Andrews Duffey
Mr. Craig and Mrs. Laura Hinds
Duncan
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Dunivant
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry Dunn
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Michael Dunn
The Rev. and Mrs. Michael
Edmondson
Dr. Chad Eggleston and Mrs.
Mandy McMichael
Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger
Graves Eich
Mr. Kyle Eller
Mr. and Mrs. Mike 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. J.C. Flowers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr.
Mr. Paul and Mrs. Carol Perpall
Fortino
Mr. Nimrod and Mrs. Lee Martin
Frazer
Ms. Debra Freisleben
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost
Mr. Bobby and Mrs. Sarah Ann
Mowbray Fulcher
The Rev. Dr. Billy and Mrs. Carolyn
Loftin Gaither
Mrs. Zan Henslee Gammage
Mr. Ken and Mrs. Linda Lee Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. William Silas Garrett Jr.
Mr. E. Gerald and Dr. Sue Russell
Garrick
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Miss Ethel Ellis Gibson
Dr. Wayne Gibson
Dr. and Mrs. Greg Gilbert
The Revs. Edward and Alecia Curtis
Glaize
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Mrs. Jennifer Ishler Gould
Ssgt. Jerad and Mrs. Jamie Deveau
Hahn
Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Mr. P. Russell Hardin
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harper
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Harrell
Miss Martha Ray Harris
Dr. Winifred H. Harris
The Rev. Joe and Mrs. Betty
Kimbrough Hastings
Ms. Rebecca Jones Haston
Dr. Daniel and Mrs. Ellen Evans
Haulman
Lt. Col. Scott and Mrs. Angelyn
Hayes
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hicks
Dr. William Winternitz and Ms.
Madeleine M. Hill
Mrs. Jane M. Hinds
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hinds
The Hon. Truman and Mrs. Joyce
Hobbs
Ms. Nancy Hollingsworth
Mr. Walter Hollingsworth
Mr. Clay and the Rev. Nancy
Hornsby
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mr. John and Mrs. Amy Beard
Hulsey
Mr. Robert L. Hunter Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inscoe
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Jackson III
Drs. William and Judith McNease
James
Ms. Mary George Jester
*Mr. E.F. and Mrs. Laura Chambliss
Jinright
Mr. William B. Johnson
Mr. David and Mrs. Vidhu Khanna
Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Jones
Mr. Renis Jones
Mr. Tyler Jones
Mr. William C. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Karst
Mr. James Wesley and Mrs.
Samantha Clements Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kelly
Mr. Chris and Mrs. Sandy Kelser
Mr. William and Mrs. Gail Sanford
Kendrick
Mrs. Ruby Collier Key
Mrs. Saundra Bozeman Kidd
Mr. and Mrs. Joe King
Dr. Mark and Mrs. Beth Anderson
Kingry
Mrs. Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer
Mr. Stephen and Mrs. Jan Kirkemier
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Knupp II
Mr. Robert and Mrs. Mindy Bevan
La Branche
Mr. Charles and Mrs. Candi Lake
Mr. Smith and Mrs. Elizabeth Walker
Lanier
Mrs. Phebe Mason Lee
Bishop and Mrs. Paul L. Leeland
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Leigh
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Leischuck
Mr. H. Russell Lester
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Levanda
Associate athletic director Eric
Levanda and his wife, Tia, are members of the Huntingdon Society.
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mrs. Sibyl Lisenby
Mr. Jamie and Mrs. Carol Fields
Loeb
Mrs. James Loeb
Mrs. Gertha Dorman Long
Mr. Thomas David Long
Mr. and Mrs. James Lowder
Dr. and Mrs. Charles D. Lowery
Mr. Charles Mandell
Mr. and Mrs. Josh Mandell
Mrs. Diane Marston
Mr. Larry W. and Mrs. Susanne
Crockett Martin
The Rev. George and Mrs.
Monteigne Mathison
Dr. Joyce Bottoms Mathison
Mrs. Caroline Ball Matthews
Dr. and Mrs. John M. McCardell
The Rev. Neil and Mrs. Araminta
Robson McDavid
Mr. Stephan L. McDavid
Ms. Carrie E. McDonough
Ms. Melanie McGrath
Ms. Mary K. McGuffey
The Hon. Reese and Mrs. Beverly
Gordy McKinney
Miss Virginia McLean
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman
McMahon
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Mrs. Jean Broxson McMillan
Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson
Mrs. Dae Miller
Mr. Joseph and Mrs. Melissa Nichols
Miller
Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap III
Mr. George and Mrs. Sarah
McCarthy Mingledorff
Mr. Ira and Ms. Ann White Mitchell
Ms. Cheryl Monday
Mr. and Mrs. James Moses
Drs. Samir and Cinzia Moussalli
Drs. Michael and Maureen Kendrick
Murphy
Mr. RJay Murray
Ms. Nancy Brown Myrick
Mr. Aubrey and Mrs. Mary Ann
Oglesby Neeley
Mr. Jerry Newby
The Rev. and Mrs. Allen Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward O’Donnell
Mr. Steve and Mrs. Suellen Ofe
Mr. Daniel Ogle
Mr. William G. Parker
Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr.
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul
MSgt. Wil and Mrs. Terri Turman
Pernia
Mr. James and Mrs. Sara
Stembridge Perry
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Phillips
Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard
Mrs. Charlotte Gibbs Ponder
Mr. Mathew and Mrs. Evelyn Hutzler
Pope
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy J. Prescott
Mrs. Tom Radney
*Mr. William and Mrs. LaVerne Davis
Ramsey
Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkinson Rast
Mr. Joe D. and Mrs. Allyce Sikes
Read
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mr. and Mrs. James Kenneth Reid
Huntingdon Society members Jeremy Reid ’11 and his mom, Lisa
Reid, attended the Scarlet & Grey
Tailgate event for Society members
during Homecoming 2012. Jeremy is
a graduate student in communication studies at the Univ. of Alabama.
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
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland
Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross
Mr. Roy and Dr. Celia Dell Smith
Rudolph
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. W. Herbert
Sadler Jr.
Mr. John D. and Mrs. Dianne
Williams Salter
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sanders
Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Mr. James M. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Sellers
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers
The Hon. Jeff B. and Mrs. Mary
Blackshear Sessions
Mr. Ned Sheffield
Mr. John C. Short
Mr. William R. and Mrs. Celia Price
Sims
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith III
Mr. Gary Smith
Mr. James L. and Mrs. Nordis Smith
The Hon. Burt and Mrs. Elizabeth
Couey Smithart
Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter
Snyder
Ms. Aloyis Sonneborn
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie F. Sowell
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lester
Spencer Jr.
The Rev. Jeffrey and Mrs. Norma
Borland Spiller
Dr. Roxanne St. Martin
Mr. Charles and Mrs. Winifred
Lightfoot Stakely
Mr. Dennis and Ms. Dianne Owens
Stallworth Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas Staton
Mr. and Mrs. David Steele
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Karl K. Stegall
Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson
Mr. James Stinebaugh
Mr. Bill and Mrs. Ruth Stone Strange
Dr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Stubbs
Ms. Dorris Teague
The Rev. Lowell Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Thomason
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Timothy
Thompson
Mr. Buff and Mrs. Alexis Cleghorne
Tibbetts
Mrs. Helen Till
Ms. Beppy LeCroy Tiller
Mrs. John N. Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin
Mrs. Esther DeVries Top
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Turk
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III
Mr. James Van Henry
Mr. and Mrs. D. Lynoid Vaughn
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Walden
Mr. Kevin Walding
Mr. William C. and Mrs. Shirley
Parker Watkins
Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Weeks
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil III
Ms. Jan Weil
*Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Dr. Laurie Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool
Mr. Robert S. Weil
Mr. Jack L. and Mrs. Bobbie Coop
Welch
Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith
Wendland
The Rev. and Mrs. J. Cameron West
Mr. Scott and Mrs. Pat Taylor White
Mr. R. Tyler and Mrs. Nancy Prickett
Whitley
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Williams
Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin
Williamson
Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon
Dr. Robert and Mrs. Dorothy Waters
Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wilson
Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wise
Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr.
Mr. Donald and Mrs. Linda Yancey
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. Malcolm Yaple
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Lisa Sells Yates
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Ms. Lois Youngblood
Support
the Huntingdon Fund
What difference did Huntingdon make in your life?
When you make a gift to the Huntingdon Fund, 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 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.
Those who give at the level of $1,000 or more become members of the Huntingdon Society.
Will you give today?
Office of College and Alumni Relations
Huntingdon College
1500 E. Fairview Ave.
Montgomery, AL 36106
(334) 833-4564
To donate online, go to the Huntingdon Web site at www.
huntingdon.edu and click on Give to Huntingdon at the top
of the home page.
Leverta Ridgeway, left, and her
friend added their good cheer to
the Huntingdon Society Scarlet &
Grey tailgate party in September.
Mrs. Ridgeway has endowed a
scholarship in memory of her late
husband, the Rev. E.D. Ridgeway.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
43
The Cloverdale Circle
Members of the Cloverdale Circle contribute $5,000 or more during the fiscal year.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Alabama Power Foundation Inc.
Alabama-West Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church
ALFA Insurance Co.
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation
Auburn United Methodist Church
J.L. Bedsole Foundation
*Estate of Dorothy Hoag Bell
Bellingrath-Morse Foundation
Mr. Keven and Mrs. Katrina Keefer Belt
Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe
Mr. John Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Mr. William and Mrs. Leura Garrett Canary
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III
Christ United Methodist Church, Mobile, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. H. David Cobb II
Mr. H.D. Cobb
*Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry Dunn
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ellis
First United Methodist Church, Brewton, Ala.
First United Methodist Church, Montgomery, Ala.
Frazer Memorial United Methodist Church
Mr. Nimrod and Mrs. Lee Martin Frazer
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr.
General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church
Mr. P. Russell Hardin
The Hon. Truman and Mrs. Joyce Hobbs
*Estate of Charles W. Hooper and Adaline Houghton Hooper
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mrs. Laura Chambliss Jinright
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jones
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Leischuck
Mr. H. Russell Lester
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon
Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap
North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Phillips
*Estate of Robert D. Pullum
Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross
Mr. Roy and Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph
Mrs. Sue Cross Savage
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Sellers
Julia and Albert Smith Foundation
Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder
Mr. Dennis and Ms. Dianne Owens Stallworth Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland
Mrs. Thomas Staton
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III
Mr. William and Mrs. Shirley Faye Parker Watkins
Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Weeks
The Rev. and Mrs. J. Cameron West
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and Dr. Tom Wool
Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. John Wise
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. Malcolm Yaple
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Ms. Lois Youngblood
*An asterisk indicates those now deceased
44
In recognition of character such that the “spiritual standard of
the institution may be judged by the character of the person
to whom the award is made,” Trustee Howard Adams was honored with the Mary Mildred Sullivan Award in May. The award is
made possible in selected southern colleges and universities by
the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation of New York. Howard
is surrounded by family members (L–R) Shawn Macon Adams
’96, married to Howard’s son, Jason Adams ’96; Howard’s wife,
Cheryl; their daughter, Susan Adams Cooper ’99; and Susan’s
husband, Jay Cooper.
Members of the family of the late Robert Doyle Pullum ’67 joined
in celebration of his posthumous induction into the John Massey
Heritage Society in May. Mr. Pullum, of Lafayette, La., passed
away in 2011, leaving the proceeds of a life insurance policy to
the College. He was pre-deceased by his wife, Christine Sidaris
Pullum ’59. His family members (L–R), including his sister, Willie
Jean Sellers; her husband, Robert; and their son, Greg Sellers ’86,
with Greg’s wife, Christy Cole Sellers ’86, accepted the JMHS
recognition from President West. The life insurance proceeds
were used to establish a scholarship for a non-traditional student
at Huntingdon.
1997 Alumni Loyalty Award winner Dorothy Hoag Bell ’52 was inducted posthumously into the John Massey Heritage Society in
May in recognition of making provisions for Huntingdon’s Houghton Library in her will. The award was accepted by daughters
(L–R) Barbara Bell Stalzer and Elizabeth Bell Strub and granddaughter Cara Stalzer.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
The President’s Circle
Members of the President’s Circle contribute between $2,500 and $4,999 during the fiscal year.
Mr. David and Mrs. Glenda Atwell
Allred
Mrs. Hye Jeong Y. Beckett
Ms. Thelma Braswell
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Mr. Joseph Day
Mr. Jay and Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman
Mr. Clay and the Rev. Nancy Hornsby
Dr. Mark and Mrs. Beth Anderson
Kingry
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Leigh
Dr. and Mrs. Charles D. Lowery
The Hon. Reese and Mrs. Beverly
Gordy McKinney Jr.
Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson
Mr. George and Mrs. Sarah McCarthy
Mingledorff III
Mr. RJay Murray
Mr. Daniel Patton Ogle
Mr. Herbert Patterson
Mr. Mathew and Mrs. Evelyn Ann
Hutzler Pope
PowerSouth Energy Cooperative
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mrs. Alice D. Reynolds
The Hon. Jeff and Mrs. Mary
Blackshear Sessions III
Mr. Charles A. and Mrs. Winifred
Lightfoot Stakely
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Talkington
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Tomberlin
Mr. Daniel Lee Walden
Mr. and Mrs. Lyn Wheatley
Mrs. Nancy Prickett Whitley
Continue the Legacy!
Alumni can impact positively the lives of prospective students
with the awarding of the $10,000 Alumni Legacy Grant. You
may refer up to three students annually by sending the student’s name, address, phone numbers, e-mail address, and
current school information; your name, address, class year,
and contact information; and a paragraph or two about how
you know the student and why you think he or she would be
an asset to Huntingdon College. The Alumni Legacy Grant is
renewable for up to three additional years of study, requires
on-campus residency, and requires the student to maintain
satisfactory academic progress toward the completion of his
or her degree. Applications cannot be submitted after the first
day of classes of a student’s first year at Huntingdon College.
Please send your referral to Huntingdon College Office of College and Alumni Relations, 1500 East Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama, 36106; or [email protected].
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Two Scholarships Honor Alumna
Pearl Norton Jackson
Two scholarships have been established to honor Huntingdon
alumna Pearl Norton Jackson ’39 (Mrs. Alto L.) of Clio, Ala.
The scholarships were established by Mrs. Jackson’s daughter, Caroline Jackson, of Arlington, Va. The Pearl Norton Jackson Endowed Scholarship and the Pearl Norton Jackson Gift
Scholarship will be awarded to students of high achievement
who are majoring in mathematics.
Mrs. Jackson, a 1939 Huntingdon College graduate and mathematics major, won the College’s Margaret Read Scholarship
Medal for earning the highest four-year academic grade
point average (4.0) in her class. After graduation, she taught
math, science, and English for two years at Capitol Heights
Jr. High School in Montgomery and for another two years at
Clio’s Barbour County High School. For the next two decades,
she supported her four children in attaining academic excellence. In 1966 she accepted the newly-created position of Title I Supervisor for the Barbour County School System, assisting
teachers in 24 schools in teaching “new math” to students. At
age 57 she earned her Master of Science degree at night and
continued in her supervisory position until retirement at age 74.
A life-long resident of Barbour County, Mrs. Jackson taught the
youth Sunday School class at Clio United Methodist Church
and, until age 90, served as church treasurer.
Preference for the scholarship recipients will be given to those
majoring in math who are Barbour County residents and active members of United Methodist churches in the AlabamaWest Florida Conference. Incoming freshmen who have
earned grade point averages of at least 3.0 are eligible to be
considered for the Pearl Norton Jackson Endowed Scholarship. A 3.3 grade point average is required for the Pearl Norton
Jackson Gift Scholarship.
45
Parents, Friends, and Neighbors
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Abernathy
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Adams
Dr. and Mrs. Roger A. Adams ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. Agnew
Mr. and Mrs. John Albritton Jr. ◊
Mrs. Catherine Alexander
Mr. Doug Amos Jr.
Ms. Nancy Anderson
Ms. Karen Armstead
Dr. and Mrs. James Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Armstrong II
Mr. and Mrs. Ron B. Astin
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ball Jr. ◊
Mr. and Mrs. John Ballard
Mr. Albert Ban ◊
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Banks
Ms. Erika J. Barkley
Col. Robert Barmettler ◊
Ms. Brenda Bass
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Bassham
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy C. Bates
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Baxley
Mr. and Mrs. Jere Beasley
Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. Bechert ◊
Dr. Katie Bell
Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Belsterling
Ms. Pam Belsterling
Ms. Leslie Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Joe N. Benton
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Berenotto
Ms. Hanna Berger
Yoly I. Berna
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Bess
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Bice
Mr. Joe Pitts Binkley Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike W. Binkley
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Blackwell
Mrs. Lucy Cunningham Bond
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bonner ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden ◊
Mr. J. Knox Boteler III
*Mr. Robert Bothfeld ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Derick W. Bothwell
Ms. Martha E. Bottens
Ms. Esther Boykin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bradley
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bradshaw
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Brannen II
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Bray
Mr. Joe Brazell
Ms. Nan P. Brazell
Mrs. William Brewbaker
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe ◊
Mrs. Marion E. Brooks
Mrs. Mary Lynn Brooks
Ms. Nancy Brooks
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brown
Mr. Mark D. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Tony L. Brown
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William B.
Brunson ◊
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawson Bryan ◊
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Larry Bryars ◊
Ms. Janice Buffington
Ms. Jane M. Bugg
Ms. Dana R. Buice
Mr. John Bullard ◊
Ms. June E. Bulow
Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Burdette
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Busby
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon T. Butler
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Butler
Ms. Bobbye J. Byrd
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Mrs. Turner Cameron ◊
Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon ◊
Mr. James K. Cantrell
Mr. Morgan V. Cantrell
Dr. and Mrs. Louis Cardinal
Mr. Edwin P. Carey
The Carlisle Family
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth H.
Carter Jr.
Mr. W.R. Carter Jr.
Mr. David Casey
Mr. and Mrs. Kerry W. Causby
Ms. Karen Channell
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E.
Cheatwood Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III ◊
Mr. Josh Childers
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky T. Childers
Mr. Jon N. Christian
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Clark
Ms. Sharon M. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Clemons
Ms. Cynthia W. Cleveland
Mr. and Mrs. James Anthony Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. David Cobb ◊
Mr. H.D. Cobb ◊
Mr. Scott Cofield
The Rev. Dale R. Cohen ◊
Mrs. Jane G. Coleman
Mr. and Mrs. Steve C. Colflesh
Ms. Kim M. Collins
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Coon
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Cortez
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Cotney
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Cotter ◊
Mr. John C. Cox Jr.
Mr. George Crawford
Mr. Lee Crawford
Mr. Charles Creamer
Mrs. Charles M. Crook ◊
Mr. Robert A. Cross
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Cross
Ms. Judy L. Crumpton
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Culpepper ◊
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Currie
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cusimano
Ms. Sara Dake
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Outgoing trustees Dr. Katie Bell (pictured), Bishop William H. Willimon, and
Mr. John Wise were recognized for
their service to the Board of Trustees
during the board’s May 2012 meeting.
46
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dake
Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Daniels Jr. ◊
Ms. Lathia Davenport
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Donald Davis
Ms. Elizabeth Davis
Johnnie M. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Liston Dean
Ms. Hazel R. Deangelo
Ms. Sandy Marcella DeJarnett
Ms. Angie C. DeMouy
Mr. Lane L. Denard
Mr. and Mrs. Baldo Dibenedetto
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dibenedetto
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ditmore
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Dixon
Mr. Nicholas Dixon
Mr. Kevin Donaldson
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dooley
Ms. Ella D. Dowling
Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Dowling
Mr. and Mrs. David Downs
*Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr. ◊
Judge and Mrs. Joel Dubina
Ms. Amy Dudley
Mr. John Michael Dudley
Ms. Linda Dudley
Mr. Forrest F. Duncan
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Ken Dunivant ◊
Mrs. Jane C. Dunlap
Mr. and Mrs. E. Christian Dunn
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy D. Dunn
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry Dunn ◊
Ms. Joyce Duval
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gregory Dykes
Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Dykes
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Eagney
The Rev. and Mrs. Michael
Edmondson ◊
Mr. Blake Edwards
Ms. Hailey Edwards
Mrs. Tammy Edwards
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Eichhorn
Mr. Sherman Eller
Ms. Myrtle L. Elliott
Mr. and Mrs. Grear F. Ellis Jr.
Mrs. John Ellis III
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ellis
Ms. Carolyn Sue Emmett
Mr. and Mrs. Don Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby D. Ezell
Dr. Charles A. Farrow
Dr. Kyle Fedler
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fillingame
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Fincher
Dr. Gregory G. Fitch
Mr. and Mrs. Brad Fletcher
Dr. and Mrs. Walter L. Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Fowler
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foy
Mr. and Mrs. Don W. Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Freese
Ms. Janis I. Friend
Ms. J.L. Funk
Mr. and Mrs. J. Bran Futral
Dr. and Mrs. Jimmy Gardiner
Mr. and Mrs. William Silas Garrett Jr. ◊
Ms. Maud Garrick
Ms. Carla Giordana
Ms. Dolores T. Giordana
Ms. Paula Giordana
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Giordana
Mr. Ross M. Giordana
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Glass
Mr. Dwight A. Glover
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Glover
Mr. Timothy M. Goan
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Goldstein
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael A. Gomez
Drs. Juan and Evangeline Gonzalez
Ms. Jeanette S. Goodson
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kenneth Goodson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Goodyear
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas L. Graham
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Graham
Mr. Stephen Gray and Mrs. Jamie
Roddy
Ms. Barbara D. Green
Mr. Del Green
Mr. and Mrs. Steven W. Green
Mrs. Kay Greene
Mr. Jerald Groninger
Ms. Nancy Groninger
Ms. Ruth Groninger
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gross
Mrs. Meredith Gruhl
Mr. David Hagler
Mr. Jonathan Hains
Mr. and Mrs. M. Wesley Hall III
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Haltinner
Dr. William Hamm
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hankins
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hanson
Bishop and Mrs. John Hardt
Mr. and Mrs. Buck Hardy ◊
Mrs. Emily C. Hare
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Alan Harmon
Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Harrell
Dr. Wynn Harris ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Hart
Dr. Daniel and Mrs. Ellen Evans
Haulman ◊
Ms. Carole Havel
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayes
Mr. and Mrs. Max Herman
Mrs. Jane M. Hinds ◊
The Hon. Truman and Mrs. Joyce
Hobbs ◊
Mr. Bill Holland
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Y. Holland
Mr. and Mrs. Donny Holley
Ms. Nancy Hollingsworth
Ms. Rebecca Hollingsworth
Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Hollingsworth
*Estate of Mr. Charles W. Hooper and
Adaline Houghton Hooper
Mr. Clay Hornsby and the Rev.
Nancy Hornsby ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Houston
Ms. Judy P. Houston
Ms. Marianne Hussey
Mr. and Mrs. Brett C. Ilgen
Mr. and Mrs. Dale D. Ilgen
Mrs. Louise J. Ingram
Ms. Myra Ingram
Mr. Cleo Jackson
Mrs. Martha Jackson
Mr. James B. Jacoway
Mr. Russell Jacoway
Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. James III
Ms. Michele M. Jancaitis
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jancaitis
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Jean
Dr. and Mrs. James C. Johnson
Mr. James W. Johnson
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Jones
Mr. William C. Jones ◊
Mr. Julius Kelly
Ms. Sarah Kidd
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Killian
Mrs. Donna King
Mr. and Mrs. David Kistel
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Kladis
Ms. Joy Kloman
Mr. Douglas Knoll
Mr. Paul Knuth
Mr. Thomas O. Kolb
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Krowel
Mr. Jim Kuelbs
Ms. Genia Lafever
Ms. Nina Lambert
Mr. and Mrs. Steven David Lambeth
Mr. and Mrs. Billy P. Lane
Mr. J. Smith Lanier II
Ms. Karli G. LaRussa
Mr. David E. Leach
Mrs. Carole Lee
Bishop and Mrs. Paul L. Leeland ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Keith LeGrand
Mrs. Linda S. Lehe
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Leischuck ◊
Ms. Katherine Lenn
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Leslie
Mr. H. Russell Lester ◊
Mr.and Mrs. Herbert Levy
Mr. and Mrs. Sim Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Lewis
Mrs. Julie Lindsey
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Litchfield III
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas David Long ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Lowman
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Luckie
Mr. Timothy M. Lupinacci
Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Maas
Ms. Cindy Manly
Ms. Lucy Manly
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Matter
Mr. Byron Michael Matthews and
Mrs. Karen Lee Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Brett Mayhew
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Mayo
Mr. and Mrs. Randal H. McArthur
Mrs. Barbara B. McBryde
Dr. and Mrs. John M. McCardell Jr. ◊
Mr. David McCary
Ms. Annis McClure
Mr. and Mrs. William N. McDaniel
Mr. and Mrs. Milton C. McDonald
Mr. John C. McKinney
Mrs. Norman McLeod Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. David F. Meadows
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Melton
Ms. Laura C. Miles
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence I. Miller
Mrs. Dae Miller ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Melton Miller Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Temple Millsap ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Mims
Mr. Troy Mims
Ms. Heather Mock
Mr. Scotty Moffitt
Mr. Paul B. Mohr Sr.
Ms. Carole Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. James Moses ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Thurston Mosley
Ms. Cathia Lyne Moss
Ms. Amy J. Murphy
Mrs. Nina P. Murphy
Mr. RJay Murray ◊
Ms. Iris Naggy
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Neal
Ms. Janice Nelson
Ms. Sheila A. Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Newton
Ms. Sandra Nickel
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Nolan
Mr. and Mrs. Todd R. Nolan
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Nunez
Ms. Maria C. Oakley
Dr. John A. O’Brien III
Ms. Vickie Odom
Mr. Burl Oliver
Ms. Jo Anne Oliver
Ms. Mary S. Oliver
Mr. and Mrs. George Olliff
Ms. Sondra Ostrander
Mr. Mark Oswalt
Ms. Mary Frances Parker
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Parker ◊
Ms. Nelda Pate
Mr. and Mrs. Bonner Patrick
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Olie Payne
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pearcy
Mr. and Mrs. Craig F. Pearson
Ms. Wendy N. Perdue
Ms. Johanna Johnson Petty
Mr. Billy Pharis
Mr. and Mrs. Carl William Pharis
Ms. Peggy B. Phelps
Ms. Annette L. Phillips
Dr. Lawrence H. Phipps
Mr. Paul Wesley Pickard
Mr. Jeff Pierson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pilcher
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Pinkston III
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Plunkett
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Plyler
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Plyler
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Powell
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy J. Prescott ◊
The Rev. and Mrs. Jeremy Pridgeon
Ms. Janell Prince
Dr. Felix C. Pryor
Dr. and Mrs. David Pugh
Mr. Max L. Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Pugh
Mr. Tyler Pugh
Mr. Tim Pyeatt
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Quenelle
Mr. Cory G. Ranczka
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Ranczka
Mrs. Joe D. Ray
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Rearden
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reese
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Register
Mr.and Mrs. Bruce Reid ◊
Mr. and Mrs. James Kenneth Reid ◊
Mrs. Alice Reynolds ◊
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Rice
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Rigsby
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Rigsby
Mr. Charles Riley
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Rimensnyder
Mr. and Mrs. Todd S. Rivers
Dr. and Mrs. Shane Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. John Marcus Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Robinson
Ms. Marianne Rodgers
Ms. Mary D. Rodgers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rodgers
Drs. Eugene and Heidi Rodillo
Ms. Belinda R. Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Roper
Mr. and Mrs. Billy V. Rose
Mr. Donny Sanders
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Sandlin
Mr. and Mrs. John Sardin
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Schraeder
Ms. April M. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Scott Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Seabold
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Segall
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Segrest
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels ◊
Senior Class of Dorothy Rainer Sellars
School of Dance
Mr. Douglas C. Sellers ◊
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Sharp
Mrs. Coreda Shaw
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sheehan
Ms. Kathy Shirah
Ms. Martha Shirah
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shiver
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Shockley
Mrs. Martha T. Shreve
Mr. Roger M. Shultz
Mr. and Mrs. Don B. Simpson
Mr. Waldtraut T. Sink
Lt. Col. Teresa M. Skojac
Mr. and Mrs. H. Crawford Slaton III
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith III ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith Jr. ◊
Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Smith
Mr. Charles Smith
Mr. Don Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Smith
Mr. Rudolph Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Torre Smith
Mr. Scott Soldwisch
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lester
Spencer Jr. ◊
Mr. Matthew D. Spivey
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stakely ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Staley
Mrs. Rebecca Stanford
Ms. Kim Stanley
Mrs. Thomas Staton ◊
Mr. and Mrs. David Steele ◊
Ms. Helen Steineker
Mr. Thomas A. Steinmetz
Mr. and Mrs. Elton E. Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell F. Stephens
Ms. Audra Strickland
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Strickland
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Stroud
Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Sweat
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Swiger
Mr. and Mrs. Alex J. Szabo
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Talkington ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Constantine Tampary
Gen. and Mrs. Will Hill Tankersley
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Tate
Mr. B. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Taylor
Mr. James A. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Taylor
Mr. Mike Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Trent Taylor
Mr. Brandon Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Danny H. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III ◊
Ms. Margie Thompson
Mr. Robert Thompson
Mr. Thomas Thompson
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Timothy
Thompson ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Thornton
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tierney
Mr. Jeff Tiffin
Mr. Bill Tilly
Ms. Judene Tippett
Mr. William M. Top
Mr. and Mrs. William Touchton
Ms. Karen Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tuley
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Turk
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Turner Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Turney
Mr. Craig Tuttle
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Vander Ley
Mr. Richard Vaughn
Ms. Deborah C. Veteto
Mr. and Mrs. John Vick
Mr. Timothy W. Vick
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walker
Mr. Jessie Walker
Ms. Judith Walker
Ms. Laurel Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ward
Ms. Allie M. Watford
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Watkins ◊
Mr. Al Watson
Mr. Walter E. Weaver
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and Dr. Tommy
Wool ◊
Ms. Judith Weinantz
Mr. and Mrs. Lockwood Wernet
Mr. and Mrs. Lyn Wheatley ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wheaton
Ms. Cathy J. Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Glenn White
Mr. and Mrs. Michael I. White
Ms. Wanda H. Whitlow
Mr. and Mrs. Rickey Wilkerson
Ms. Christine Williams
Mr. and Mrs. James Williams
Mr. Lee B. Williams
Mr. Raymond F. Williams Jr.
Mrs. Sarah Williams
Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wills
Mr. Donald J. Windsor
Ms. Ellen Wingard
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Winters
Mr. and Mrs. John Wise ◊
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Wolfe
Ms. Carolyn Wood
Mr. and Mrs. A. Douglas Worley
Mr. and Mrs. Alan D. Worley
Ms. Melanie Worthington
Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr. ◊
Mr. R. Bradley Wyant
Ms. Lane Rodgers Wyly
Mr. and Mrs. Brian S. Yamada
Mr. Malcolm Yaple ◊
Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Young ◊
Ms. Lois Youngblood ◊
Former trustee Philip Young and his
wife, Angie, were inducted into the
Order of the Countess of Huntingdon
in recognition of their generous giving
to the College. The Youngs, whose
home backs up to Charles Lee Field,
fire a cannon at the end of home
football game victories.
47
Foundation Giving
Alabama Junior Miss Scholarship Foundation
Alabama Power Foundation
American Welding Society Foundation
Anniston Community Education Foundation
Autauga Area Community Foundation
The Baptist Foundation of Alabama
Charles Barkley Foundation
J.L. Bedsole Foundation
Bellingrath-Morse Foundation
Birmingham East Rotary Foundation
Caddell Foundation
Calvin B. Bentley Charitable Foundation
Central Alabama Community Foundation
Central Alabama Community Foundation—
James M. Scott Family Fund
Central Alabama Community Foundation—
Till Family Charitable Fund
Community Foundation of Northeast Alabama
Cut Bank Education Foundation
Donaldson Foundation
Electric Cooperative Foundation
Elks National Foundation
ExxonMobil Foundation
Florida Realtors Education Foundation
Gannett Foundation
GE Foundation
Hartselle Scholarship Foundation
Taylor Haugen Foundation
Clara Jackson Testamentary Trust
Jackson Hospital Foundation
Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies
H.U. Lee Foundation
Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation
P&G Fund of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation
Pfizer Foundation
Prudential Foundation
W. James Samford Jr. Foundation
Sentry Insurance Foundation
J. Craig and Page T. Smith Scholarship
Foundation
Julia and Albert Smith Foundation
Spanish Fort Educational Enrichment Foundation
State Farm Corporation Foundation
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation
United Methodist Foundation
United Methodist Higher Education Foundation
UPS Foundation
USTA Serves
Vermont Community Foundation
Wells Fargo Foundation Matching Gift Program
West Anniston Foundation
Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation
WMU Foundation
Corporations, Organizations, and Government
82nd Airborne Division Association
Education Fund
Accurate Auto Service
Ace Dust Control
ACT Recognition Prog. Services/NMCR
Air Con Mechanical LLC
Alabama District Key Club
Alabama Municipal Electric Authority
Alabama Society of CPAs
Alabama Society of CPAs, Montgomery
Chapter
ALFA Insurance Company
America’s Junior Miss Scholarship Foundation
Americorps
Army Emergency Relief, National Head
Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell &
Berkowitz
Barganier Davis Sims
Barry Lynch Jeweler
BBVA Compass
Bonnie Plants
Hayneville BP
Capitol Book & News Company
Central Alabama OB-GYN Associates P.A.
Central Alabama Sports Commission
Chick-Fil-A
Christine’s Feathered Nest
Citizen Potawatomi Nation
Daughters of the American Revolution, Fort
Boyer Chapter
Dawson Family of Faith
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Southwest Alabama
Alumnae Chapter
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Anniston Alumnae
Chapter
Department of Veterans Affairs
Department of the Treasury Financial
Management Service
DFAS-Cleveland
Dixie Youth Baseball
Dorcas Art & Social Club
The Douglas Stanley Taylor Scholarship Fund
Fantail Seafood Buffet
Ferguson, Sizemore & Associates
Fordyce Scholarship Association
Foster Care to Success
Frances Edwards Antiques
GKN Westland Aerospace
Glisten Tanning Salon and Spa
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
48
Graham Forestry & Appraisal Services
Gulf States Saw & Machine Corporation
Hartzell Propeller
Hartzell Engine Technologies
Havana Dreaming LLC
Hayneville Fiber Transport, DBA Camellia
Communications
The Anthony Daryl Horton Memorial Scholarship
Hughey & Neuman
Huntingdon College SGA
John Wesley Hutto Memorial Scholarship Fund
International Paper, Pine Hill
International Paper, Riverdale Mill
International Scholarship & Tuition Services
Jack Daniels Electric Company
Jackson Thornton & Co. P.C.
Jefferson County Council of PTAs
Kiwanis Club of Dothan
Kiwanis Club of Huntsville
Knights of Columbus Council 7667
Marks Furniture Co.
Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Committee
Maui Jim USA
Lena Y. Meharg Scholarship Trust
Merck Partnership for Giving
Millennium Satellite & Video
Mitchell Allen Motor Company
Moneytree ATM Services
Montgomery County Farmers Federation
Mustang Quarterback Club
National Society of Colonial Dames in
Alabama—Auburn Opelika Town Committee
National Society of the Colonial Dames of
America—Birmingham Chapter
National Society of the Colonial Dames of
America—Mobile Center
National Wild Turkey Federation, Monroe
County Chapter
Outfitters Holding Company LLC
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Zeta Mu Sigma
Chapter
Piedmont National Corporation
Poarch Creek Indians
PowerSouth Energy Cooperative
Praytor Realty Co.
Pro Impact Physical Therapy & Sports
Performance LLC
Ray’s Restaurant
Reform Medical Center P.C.
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Regions Bank
S Club Alumni Association
S.C. Johnson Wax Fund
Sand Mountain Small Animal-Equine Hospital
Scholarship America
School Superintendents of Alabama
ServisFirst Bank
Servpro of Phenix City
State Military Department
State of Alabama
Strategic Development Group
Sylacauga Parks & Recreation
The Training Room
Triple E Machine & Tool
Tucker Pecan Company
Turner & Schoel
Twentieth Century Club
Two Friends
United Way of Central Alabama
W.K. Upchurch Construction Co.
Waco Portable Storage
West Anniston Medical Clinic
President West recently thanked Arthur DuCote
and Ann Forney with Regions Bank for their support for the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships. • A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Churches, Colleges, and Schools
The support, through apportionment giving, of churches in the Alabama-West Florida Conference and the North Alabama
Conference of the United Methodist Church is gratefully acknowledged. The following list reflects gifts made beyond
apportionment giving for churches in Alabama UMC conferences.
Alabama Association of Independent Colleges
and Universities
Alabama West Florida Conference of the United
Methodist Church
Auburn United Methodist Church
Autauga County Board of Education
The Baptist Church at McAdory
Beatrice Community Church
Camden United Methodist Church
Chilton County High School Scholarship (Harris
Fund)
Christ United Methodist Church
Cornell University
Crestview High School
First United Methodist Church—Bay Minette
First United Methodist Church—Brewton
First United Methodist Church—Montgomery
First United Methodist Church—Niceville
First United Methodist Church—Pensacola, Fla.
First United Methodist Church—Prattville
First United Methodist Church—Union Springs
First United Methodist Union Springs Scholarship
Fund
Forest Hill United Methodist Church
Frazer Memorial United Methodist Church
General Board of Higher Education & Ministry of
the United Methodist Church
Grove Hill Baptist Church
Gulf Breeze United Methodist Church
Haleyville High School
Helena United Methodist Church
Jubilee Shores United Methodist Church
Liberty Hill Missionary Baptist Church
Missions-Point Washington United Methodist
Church
Mulder Memorial United Methodist Church
New Brockton High School Alumni Association
North Alabama Conference of the United
Methodist Church
Oak Grove Methodist Church
Ola High School
Opp City Schools Foundation
Red Ridge United Methodist Church
St. James United Methodist Church
Shades Valley High School and Jefferson County
I.B. School
Shalimar United Methodist Church
Texasville United Methodist Church
United Methodist Women—First United Methodist
Church Montgomery
The University of Alabama Press
Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church
Willie V. Whitfield Memorial United Methodist
Church
Winfield City High School
At the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference
of the United Methodist Church held this summer, President J. Cameron West (left) and former
trustee and North Alabama Conference Bishop
William A. Willimon (center) were present for the
consecration of the Rev. Dr. Ken Carter (right).
Bishop Carter, who serves the Florida Conference,
is the father of Abby Carter ’12. Bishop Larry Goodpaster, of the Western North Carolina Conference
and formerly of the Alabama-West Florida Conference, was present, as well; he is the father of Lucy
Goodpaster Redding ’06. Huntingdon alumni who
were part of the delegation from the AlabamaWest Florida Conference included Allen Newton
’83, Tonya Elmore ’89, and John Ed Mathison ’60.
a devoted teacher, traveler, art collector, and citizen of the
world, lived in Selma and were great friends. Both passed away
just months apart in 2012.
The McGee and Rentz families are tightly knit into the fabric
of Huntingdon history. Inell’s husband, Herb McGee ’62, was
recruited by Huntingdon’s first athletic director, Neal Posey, to
play basketball. He came from Georgia on the condition that
his best friend, John Mabry ’61, could come along and begin a
baseball program at the College. (John became the first head
baseball coach of the program.) After Inell and Herb married,
they settled in Selma, where Inell was a long-time English teacher and Herb was a teacher, coach, and principal—both for the
local high school. Herb passed away in 2006.
(L–R) Su Ofe, associate vice president for communications and
marketing, accepted on behalf of the College the gift of a
Frances Lanier ’38 painting from Dr. Monica McGee Decker (a
veterinarian in Indiana), Stan McGee (an attorney and counsel
to the Governor of Massachusetts), and Gavin McGee (not pictured, a businessman in Arizona). The McGee children donated the painting, part of a collection of paintings held by their
mother, Inell Rentz McGee ’63, in their mother’s memory. Lanier,
a Marine captain who commanded more than 200 troops during WWII and later became a prominent artist, and McGee,
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Inell’s sister, Charlene Rentz Meadows ’64, also met her husband,
Athletic Hall of Fame member Don Meadows ’63, at Huntingdon. They are the parents of Andy Meadows ’89, a teacher in
Mountain Brook, Ala., and the Rev. Tim Meadows ’91, pastor of
Asbury United Methodist Church in Pike Road, Ala.
One other tidbit of historical connection: it was the late storyteller, writer, and journalist Kathryn Tucker Windham ’39 who
convinced Lanier to return to Alabama after Lanier served in
the military and began her art career in California.
The College purchased a second Lanier painting from McGee’s collection, and both paintings are hanging in the Office
of the President’s suite in Flowers Hall.
49
Faculty & Staff
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.
Having a large number of Huntingdon alumni who
are willing to pledge a lifetime commitment to the
College speaks volumes to foundations and other
major donors who evaluate colleges and universities based on their alumni giving percentages.
Return to: Office of College and Alumni Relations, Huntingdon College,
1500 E. Fairview Ave., Montgomery, AL 36106
Signature
E-mail Phone (
City )
State Date Zip Class Year Mailing Address Name “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.”
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 College
and Alumni Relations. If you have not made a
gift to the College this academic year, you may
enclose that, as well! Join the Circle!
Dr. James M. Albritton ◊
Mr. Wes Anania
Dr. Cinzia Balit-Moussalli ◊
Mr. Michael Bamman
Mrs. Maryann Beck ’92
Mr. Pat Beck ’96
Ms. Jane Blackburn
Dr. Jason Borders
Mrs. Vivian Bricken
Ms. Meggie Bridges ’11
Ms. Christina Brown
Ms. Tracy Buchannon
Dr. Frank Buckner
Dr. Jennifer K. Canfield ◊
Mr. Andrew Carey
*Dr. Anthony Carlisle ’76 ◊
Mrs. Renee Carlisle ’76 ◊
Mr. Brandon Carney
Dr. Jeremy M. Carr
Dr. Elizabeth Casey
Mrs. Bonnie Catching
Ms. Casey Chrietzberg ’09
Mr. Christopher Clark ’07
Mr. D.J. Conville ’98
Mrs. Michelle Conway
Dr. Kristine E. Copping
Dr. Renee Culverhouse ◊
Dr. Jim Daniels
Ms. Brittany Davis
Mrs. Gene Davis
Mr. James Davis Jr.
Mr. Ryan L. Davis
Ms. Jaime Demick
Dr. Lynn M. Disbrow ◊
Mr. Thomas Dismukes Jr. ’83 ◊
Mr. Jay Dorman ◊
Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman ◊
Mr. Jordan Drumheller
Dr. Erastus Dudley
Mrs. Belinda Duett ’00
Mr. Dale Duett
Mr. John Duke
Mrs. Laura Duncan ’94 ◊
Mr. Mike Dunn ◊
Dr. Chad Eggleston ◊
Mrs. Gabrielle Ehinger
Mrs. Camille Elebash-Hill
Mr. Kyle Eller ◊
Mr. Donald Favor
Ms. Elnora Flowers
Ms. Liz Frisoli
Mrs. Adrienne Gaines ’00
Mr. Kenneth Garrett ◊
Dr. Paul Gier
Mrs. Joel Godfrey
Mr. Walter Golston
Mr. Charlie Goodyear
Mrs. Jennifer Ishler Gould ◊
Mrs. Karen Graham
Ms. Deloris Green
Dr. Steven Guthrie
Ms. Harriett Hampton
Mr. Brad Hebing
Dr. Dennis Herrick
Mr. Larry Hicks ◊
Mrs. Stephanie Hicks
Mr. Steven Hicks
Mr. James Hilgartner
Ms. Lauren Hobbs
Mr. Joey Holcomb ’06
Mr. Joe Holder
Dr. Walter Hollingsworth ◊
Mr. Johnny Huett
Mrs. Amy Hulsey ’90 ◊
Dr. Elizabeth Hutcheon
Mrs. Camilla Irvin
Dr. Doba Jackson ◊
Dr. Jimmy Jeffcoat
Ms. Rosemary Jernigan
Mr. Derry Johnson
Mr. London Johnson
Mrs. Michelle Johnson ’95 ◊
Mrs. Sandy Kelser ◊
Mrs. Brenda Kerwin
Ms. Margaret Kinney
Mr. Malcolm Knight
Mr. Nick Lackeos
Mr. Charlie Lane ’71
Mrs. Candi Lake ◊
Ms. Glea N. Larsen
Mr. Anthony Leigh ◊
Mr. Eric Levanda ◊
Dr. Jeremy Lewis
Ms. Patricia Maddox
Mr. Matthew Mahanic ’08
Dr. Donna W. Manson
Dr. Lee J. Markowitz
Ms. Rebecca Masic ’10
Ms. Elissa Mays
Ms. Bertha McClain
Mrs. Jenny McDavid
Ms. Kristi McDaniel ’11
Mr. Donnie McGough
Ms. Mandy McMichael ◊
Mr. Joseph Miller ◊
Mr. Robert Milner
Mrs. Ximena Moore
Dr. Elba Morton
Dr. Samir Moussalli ◊
Mr. Scott Mularz
Mr. Adam Murphy
Dr. Maureen Kendrick
Murphy ’78 ◊
Ms. Paula Nation
Mrs. Tina Nixon
Ms. Suellen Ofe ◊
Dr. Frank Parsons Jr.
Mr. Mark Patterson
Dr. Thomas G. Perrin
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
Mr. Douglas Rogers
Dr. Harald Rohlig
Mr. Nathan Rucker
Dr. John Saunders
Dr. Vadim Serebryany
Dr. Eva Shoop-Shafor
Ms. Cherrica Simmons
Mrs. Heather Slagle ’99
Mr. Will Sledge
The Rev. Brian Smith ’94
Mrs. Nordis Smith ◊
Ms. June Snellgrove
Dr. Roxanne St. Martin ’94 ◊
Mr. Charles Stanton
Dr. Sidney Stubbs ◊
Miss Sara Beth Terry
Ms. Mary H. Thigpen
Dr. James Truman
Dr. Allen Tubbs
Mr. Michael Turk ◊
Mr. Andrew Turner
Dr. Henry Walding
Mr. Michael Ward ’76
The Rev. J. Cameron West ◊
Dr. Barbara White ◊
Mr. Landius Wilkerson
Mr. Eddy Williams
Ms. Gynger Williams
Mrs. Jane Williams ◊
Dr. John Williams
Mrs. Catherine Wolfe
Mrs. Wendi Wood
The football field house was
renamed the “Buzz” Phillips
Field House in honor of the
athletic director and head
women’s basketball coach
who has been part of Huntingdon athletics since 1996. He is
pictured with former women’s
basketball player Betsy Jones
Cagle ’07.
During a special event for College friends held in May 2012,
President West (left) recognized Tricia and Frank Grier,
director of travel and event
planning and director of institutional technology, respectively, for making a provision
in their wills to establish an endowed scholarship in worship
leadership at Huntingdon. Tricia’s brother is Wes Sarginson
’66.
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
50
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Alumni Giving by Class Year
June 1, 2011–May 31, 2012
1930
Ouida Fay Paul ◊
1932
Agnes Wren Justice
1934
Claire Rogers Peacock
1935
Gertrude Parkman Morgan
1938
Freda Attwood Bogart
*Pauline Cain Norby
Louise May Pope
1939
Virginia Trusler Blackwood
Virginia McNeal Hughes
Jule Wilson Perry
1940
Bernice Hurst Bell
Wilhelmina Mathis Corbin
Ruby Collier Key ◊
1941
Sarah Frances Parker Bruer
Margaret Dean Pitts
Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson
1942
Edwina Wallace Alexander ◊
Dorothy McLean Perry
Jean Kirkpatrick Williams
1943
Mallieve Wicker Breeding
Melba Dunn Dickinson
Mary Cecil Edwards Dunning
Margaret H. Graham
*Frances Galloway Moody
Dorothy Tucker Smith
Ann Tyler
1944
Julia Bentley Arner
Lucille Ellison Beezley
Emmie Cardwell Bolden ◊
Virginia Hudson Crumly
Marilyn Cogburn McLeod
Martha Holley Norton
Charlotte Gibbs Ponder ◊
Marie Sinclair ◊
Ruth Cobia Summers
{
1945
Helen Domingos Bull
Gloria Huey Crawford
Helen Rittenour Geesey
Virginia 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 ◊
Ray E. Whatley
1946
Virginia Lile Beck
Ruth Brady Cousins Brink ◊
Virginia Jones Campbell
Fariss Fraser Craig
Marnita Walden Crow
Becky Sellers Doe
Sara Preer Edmunds
Monte Walker Graham
Gregg Hosselton Lofton
Sue Dowdell Lux
Frances Hastings Moore
Gwendolyn Green Noland
Elizabeth Brown Nolen
Dot Felkel Rigsby
Rose Beveridge Smith
Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford
Mary Florence Smith Wilson
1947
Jane Evans Brantley
Allyn Hamner Brown
Mary Helen Gaddis Carr
Marguerite Wise Cato
Christina Tompkins Rood Crawford
Jean Norton Gander
Catherine Cobb Helms
Harriet Holmes Herring
Martha Davis Keene
Aileen Best LeGrand
Caroline Ball Matthews ◊
Margaret Calhoun McIlwain
Mary Weathers Neighbors
Billie Smith Sims
Beth Wilford Standley
Martha O’Rear Wilkinson
Bertha Rhodes Wood
1948
Mary King Burns ◊
Montae James Cain
Betty McMahan Culpepper
Emily Reese DeShields
Sara Cody Gaskin
Katie Walls Laws
Dorothy Louise Barton Moore
Carolyn Deer Owens
LaNelle Andrews Rowe
Joy Cogdell Steele
Abbie Henderson Taylor
Evelyn Ann Thweatt
Nellie Howard Tiller
1949
Betty Finlay Brislin ◊
Anne Avriett Cameron
Janet Bullard Campbell
Effie Jones Cotton
Emily Johnson Dickens
Betty Jayne Solomon Edwards
Maurice B. Gettleman
Ethel Ellis Gibson ◊
Ernestine Spencer Hill
Mary Louise Ledbetter
Jean Stallworth Maxwell
Joy McGlynn McLemore
Sallie Wood Millsap
Joseph E. Moore
Ruth Milner Morrison
Nancy Mitchell Nilsson
Virginia Bullard Oswald
*Betty Mixon Pace
Shirley Hamill Smith
James G. Wright Jr. ◊
1950
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 J. Johnston Dismukes
Martha Dickerson Fountain
Lila Keene Franco
Helen Jeune Heatherly
Roberta Butler Holding
Willard Lee Hurley
Bettie Berman Kahn
Martha Alford Kilgore
Elizabeth D. Lipscomb ◊
Mildred Norton Loper
Janice Green Mahoney
Barbara Jones Manning
Jean Gilmore McClurkin
Ann O’Neal Ott
Myrtle Poundstone Ridolphi
James M. Rittenour
Caroline Poole Ryan
Ione Burford Sibley
Ann Blackmon Thompson
Norma J. Thornton White
Pauline Cohen Witt
1951
William Blackmon Jr.
Sara Dickert Bowden
Martha Nell Dean
Betty York Drukenmiller
Janeene Smith Gravlee
Betty Kimbrough Hastings ◊
Ann Wood Hicks
Constance Julian Hurt
Jeannine Marie Kirklin
Susan Carroll Martin
Flora Schafer McCormick
Ruth Cook McLemore
Virginia Lee Monroe
Rita Rochambeau Perham
Ethel Moist Perkins
Esther Beach Persigehl
Helen Rapp Rittenour
Orren L. Royal
Raymond Shaw
Alice Tompkins Thalheimer
Carroll Moss Wheeler
1952
Eris Dean Adams
Zona Davis Baxter
*Estate of Dorothy Hoag Bell ◊
Patricia Britton
June Reid Carter
Malinda Robertson Daniel
Sara Lee Insley Dunbar
Anne Salyerds Francisco
Rosemary Reed Freeze
Nancy Brown Garner
Mary Collins Golden
Henry Johnson Harper ◊
Mary Jo Reed Krauss
Barbara Chapman Moore
Rose Dyer Moore
Sue Austin Norwood
Miriam Pace
Wynona Lowery Pelham
Carolyn Norton Respess
Carolyn Warren Roberts
Norma Iversen Schumm
Ann Stewart Skelton
Margaret Nicholas Snellgrove
Ruth Stone Strange ◊
Edith Prine Stuart
Roy Thomas Sublette
The following classes met or exceeded their giving percentages from the previous year during 2011–12: 1930,
1932, 1934, 1935, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954,
1955, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977, 1978,
1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2006,
2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2012.
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
51
{
Huntingdon’s percentage of alumni
participating in annual giving was 25%
during 2011–12, more than double the
national average of 11%.
Betty Jean Vaughn
June Johnson Wilborn
Elsie Prine Wilson
Barbara Rice Zdanis
1953
Rae Venable Calvert
*Martha Rose Herlong Ellis
Charlotte Berry Fuller
Ann Given Hopper
George L. Houghton
Florence Furlow Hurst
Ann Harvey James
Caroline Butler Klopstock
Barbara Snider Miller
Mary Stewart Mooty
Shirley Thrash Nystrom
James M. Parker
Madie Howell Poole
David Printz
Alice Ann Rose
John C. Short ◊
Elaine Williams Smith
Van der Veer Smith
Phyllis Gunter Snyder ◊
Julia Arbuthnot Strickland
Barbara Farrington Thomas
Mary Durden Weaver
Diane Smith Wendland ◊
Harriette Harley Woodard
1954
Harriet Borland Allison
Sabra Stough Atkins
Elizabeth Cunningham Baldwin
Lorraine Freeman Barnett
Ann Webb Berry
Barbara Phelps Boyer
Phyllis Tate Bryars
Emily Tyler Burge
Betty Smilie Christiansen
Betty Betts Conner
Carolyn Jones Cook
Emily Reese Dann
Annie Carol Davis
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
Dudley W. Griffin
Jean Coley Harrison
Barbara Farmer Hingle
W.C. Holdbrooks Jr.
Anne Prather Huber
Jack T. Jackson
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
52
Laura Chambliss Jinright ◊
Mary Ruth Haselton Lieck
Farrys Rose Long
Jean Broxson McMillan ◊
Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley ◊
Sara Stembridge Perry ◊
Earl F. Pruitt
Janet Marsh Pruitt
Joyce McCollum Robertson
Wynell Jordan Sachs
Carol LeVert Sims
Charlotte Fagan Stanford
Mary Ruth Price Sullivan
Letitia Meadows Taylor
Mary Elizabeth Johnson Tolleson
Bobbie Coop Welch ◊
Martha Grimes Wood ●
Patricia Yelverton
1955
Bethany Rowell Caldwell
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 ◊
Jeanne Clements Hall
Jane Colvin Hubbard
Faye Davis Huey
Emily Barbara Cade Hunt
Rosemary Suits Jarrard
Frances Etheredge Jones
Rebecca Bloxham Jones
Marjorie Cain Masterson
Dr. Dorothy McGehee
Rudolph M. Ohme Jr.
Helen Ott
Doris Jean Peak
Joyce McClendon Robertson
Martha Harris Shannon
Isobel Lingo Tierney
1956
Minna Hayes Appleby
Janel Gray Bates
June Burdick Bisard ◊
Jane Michael Boozer
Myrtle Peters Crone ◊
Janet Miller Dapitan
Hermine Melton Downing ◊
Betty Marchman Edgar
Rachel Hutto Foreman
Barbara Clark Hill
Julia Varner Huling
Sigrid Hansen Hyman
Lenore Oglesby Kirkpatrick
Elizabeth Walker Lanier ◊
Catherine Buck Loflin
Geraldine Phillips McLain
Carolyn Lawrence Oakes
Jane Mathews Penry
Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt ◊
Shirley Faye Parker Watkins ◊
Barbara Duggan Wilson
Dorothy Waters Wilson ◊
1957
Lloyce Y. Wilborn Browder
Caroline Brock Bugg
JoAnn Davis Clark
Dorothy Jenkins Cockfield
Carolyn Glenn Cowles
Mary O’Brien Cox ◊
Joan Johnston Diversi ◊
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
Ann Manry Kenyon
Nancy Marilyn Marsh Lucas
Gatra Reid Mallard
Iris McGehee
Ann Gravely McKinnon
Merlin Owen Newton
Patricia Neal Page
Johnnie Ruth Parker
Willie D. Peak Jr.
Carolyn Tingen Philips
Annie B. Arnold Quick
Flora Grant Reese
Elinor Warr Roberts ◊
Sue Cross Savage ◊
Mary Greer Troxell
Sue Liu Wen
Carolyn McMillan West
Nancy Prickett Whitley ◊
Robert Godfrey Wilson ◊
Sarah Hutchinson Heisel
Jacquelyn Gunn Hubbard
Bettie Hussey
George F. Jones Sr.
Alberta Duckworth Mau
Yvonne Laun McGinn
Helen Cleondis Patronis
Zola Smith Powers
LaVerne Davis Ramsey ◊
Mary Harrell Riley
David T. Rogers Jr.
Aimee Coleman Scott
{
1958
Jane Brackin Johnson Adkinson
Faye Heard Beazly
Donald G. Brown
Laura Harper Copeland
Lynn Blalock Cunningham ◊
{
Huntingdon received
contributions from alumni
in 40 states and from 58 of
Alabama’s 67 counties
during 2011–12.
Bennie F. Sowell ◊
Flora McDonald Speed
Lyn Bentley Tucker
Betty McCoy Vaughan
Linda Cooper Wenner
Sue McClain White
1959
Mary Jo Barnes
Martha Vickery Bigby
Elizabeth McDonald Bowdin
Joan Thomas Castille
*Mary Faire Lowrey Congdon
Jane Solomon Davis
Lydia Blake Gillespie
Faye Byrd Hall
Kathryn Schnell Hawes
Judith McNease James ◊
Catherine Giglio Lamar
William Y. Lamar
Loette Messick Lee
Frances Plott Logan
Charles D. Lowery ◊
Gwendolyn Harris Munson
Aubrey E. Neeley ◊
Young alumni continue to show tremendous
enthusiasm for giving to Huntingdon, led by the
Class of 2010 with a 32% participation rate and
closely followed by the Class of 2007 with 29%.
Doris Finklea Durdan
Myrna Taylor Ely
Helen Reid Figh
Arthur B. Graham
Charles E. Graham
Eugenie Lambert Hamner ◊
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Peggy Springfield Pennington
Marcia Mathews Reichert
Olivia Stephens Rineheart
Martha Still Rogers
Donald G. Shannon
Ann Sutton Smith
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Gerry Campbell Wade
Alice Jane Clark Wasdin
James D. Yarbrough
1960
Catherine Fralish Burke
Gloria Ann McCurdy Collier
Walter E. Cooper
Joseph R. Day ◊
Ginger Graves Eich
W. Foster Eich III ◊
Sarah Frye Goff
Ann Smalling Graham
Ann Sanders Gray
Betty Bottoms Grundy
Janis Houston Hand
Josephine Thagard Hirsch
Mary Green Johns
Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson
John A. Kamburis
Mary Sally Kennedy
Judith Knowles
Sara Bradford Lowery ◊
John Ed Mathison
Y. Mark McElreath
Edward E. O’Donnell ◊
Laura Lucas Pittman
*Thomas G. Ragsdale
Shirley Kelly Rose
Beth Neville Roth
Dianne Williams Salter ◊
Barbara Ramey Spiers
Eugene E. Stanaland ◊
Leeta Higgins Thomas
James Worth Thurman Jr.
Charles G. Tomberlin ◊
Gaston Ray Troxell
William C. Tubb
Carolyn Hamilton Vice ●
*L. Scott Woodham
1961
Frances Goode Akridge ◊
Emily Hinson Bowdoin
Pearle King Brown
Katherine Liddon Chatowski
Shirley Orr Cochran
Carol Fields Daron
Martha Pugh Davis
Dixie Autrey Francis
Wayne Gibson ◊
Dodie Scherf Glowa
Rose Garrett Grant
Hal Hardy Green
John Wayne Helms ●
Sandra Solomon Holman
Elizabeth Wells Hunt
Ann Warren Johnson
Theresa Dodson Major
James W. Malone
Joyce Bottoms Mathison
Irene McCombs
Ellie C. McKissick
Richard L. Moses
Marilyn Beason Motley
Elaine Brock Olson
Linda Dye Pierce
Elizabeth Johnson Ragsdale
John D. Salter ◊
Thomas E. Sanders Jr.
Nancy Strange Seib
Laura Burford Sullivan
Linda Garrett Bancroft
Jamie E. Blake
Ruth Annette Mikkelsen Blaylock
Thelma Braswell ◊
Margaret Jacobs Bridgeman
Maryetta Propst Buchanan
Emily Davis Cato
Verna Fail Chesser
Lucky Brettel Esneul
Martha Herring Faircloth
Ronnie H. Floyd
Virginia Holly Fraley
Allie M. Freeman Jr.
Judy Bullock Freeman
Nevelle Vaughn Furse
Jean Maddox Garner
John M. Gorrie
Lee Block Green
Tom M. Greene
Jean Mathison Hahle
Claire Rogers Peacock Helms ●
Alfred Braden Hill
{
Betty Cottle Mooneyham
Paul Adolph Ohme
Victoria Sidaris Ornowski
Corrie Anderson Owens
Peggy Sewell Parker
Donald W. Peak
Cecil F. Ryland
James L. Sealy
Anne Henry Tidmore
Annette Kennedy Tingle
James Douglas Williams
1964
Susanna Majure Adams
Claudia Adkison
Ronald L. Anders
Carl Barranco ◊
Rodney Anthony Bell
Donna Brannon Coon
Reverend Dr. Ervin Dailey
Bonnie Cleaveland Donaldson
Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest
Linda Fitzpatrick Davis
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Ernest Gerald Garrick
Eugenia Davis Granberry
Martha Fouts Gund
Margaret Pittman Hall
Janice Woolf Hendrickson
James Martin Herring
Mary Harris Holland
W. R. Johnson
Elizabeth Bricken Jones ◊
Jan Puckett Kirkemier ◊
Claudia Sanderson Kirkwood
Kaye Wilkinson Knight
Julia Jeffords Krulic
Lynda Miller Lipscomb
Llanelle Stewart Minhinnette
Dee Wright Munger
Olivia Moore Norgard
Richard O. Payson Sr.
Judith Womack Peek
Karon Sue Spendiff Reed
For the first time ever, Huntingdon alumni and friends donated more than
$600,000 in annual giving for the Huntingdon Fund during 2011–12, far
exceeding the previous record of $549,000 set in the preceding year. In two
years, giving to the Huntingdon Fund has increased by 33%.
Judy Watson Kingry
Sue Clifton Landrum
Charles W. Lee
Lynn Livingston Marsh
Clara West Martin
Frances Parker McCrary
Nancy A. Pugh
June Killinger Ramsey
Patti Woodburn Richardson
Ludie Robinson
Ellen B. Keldorph Sanders
James L. Streetman
Mary Ann Mannich Underwood
Jane McGowin Webb
Martha Knowles Williams
Ned W. Woodard
Rex Everage
Sue Russell Garrick
Florence Cook Giles
Gail Erskine Gorrie
Mary Dendy Harp
Joan Jolly Huckaby
Gloria Tidmore Johnson
Kathryn Townsend Jones
Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer ◊
Mary Elizabeth Morgan Lanier
Eugene M. Lewis
Merry Talley Lewis
Erwin Josef Lischke
Joyce Boles McKissick
Betty Thurman McMahon ◊
Kay Kennedy Miller
Martha Jennings Mitchem
Jane Strange Roberts
Laura Gastinger Roy
W. Herbert Sadler Jr.
Emily Johnson Segers
Rebecca Bibb Segrest
Eve Smallwood Simpkins
George B. Simpkins
Annella Trobaugh Smith
Mary Waldrop Smith
Mary Ball Spear
Martha Sue Tillotson
Kay Dassinger Watkins
Frances Reid Yancey ◊
1962
Martha Costen Abernathy
Solomon Acrish
1963
Ruth Parks Andrew
R. Spencer Bach
Sandra Tiller Barton
Nancy Reynolds Benner
James R. Bozeman
Vesta Bottoms Bryan
Sarah Anne Young Clark
Leon Darby
Tonia Sizemore Darby
Mary Turberville Donald
Jewell More Ferguson
Carl Flowers Jr.
Donald Allen Harp Jr.
Christianne Ashton Henderson
Lester K. Henderson Jr.
James Larry Hinds ◊
Joy Clark Langley
Sara Ward Lee
Brenda Ward Loftus
*Frederick A. Martin
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
1965
Rosemary Kirkland Anders
Elaine Hearn Boese
Betty Burleson Carpenter
Mary Calhoun Chesney
Judy Goodwin Chipman
Glenda Goldsmith Courtney
Henry E. Roberts
Charles B. Savage
Anne Dismukes Shackelford
Gene Shelton
Sunny Harris Smith
Penny Campbell Tate
Sylvia Sellers Whitley
Darlene Woodall
1966
Laura Ann McLean Albritton ◊
Ann Ault
James Childers
Deidra VanLandingham Christie
Carol Sue Brown Coker
Julia Elise Porter Compton
Ronald Pershing Davis
Marion Earl Dowling
Michael Dowling
Cherie Pinkerton Durfee-Smith
Mildred Black Floyd
Jane Jeffords Houston
Debbie Susan Rice Johnson
J. Huntie Hall Jokinen
Camille Woodward Melton
*Malinda Epps Morris
Dianne Merrell Norwood
Robert Maxwell Owen
Linda Oates Richter
Floyd Wes Sarginson II
Neil R. Smart Jr.
Jerry M. Smith
Winifred Lightfoot Stakely ◊
Beppy LeCroy Tiller ◊
Frances Banks Tisdale
Skip Zuber
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
53
{
The following classes have met or exceeded their giving percentage for two
consecutive years: 1930, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1938, 1939, 1941, 1944,
1945, 1948, 1949, 1952, 1953, 1959, 1967, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1983,
1985, 1988, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011,
and 2012.
1967
Julia Smith Alexander
H. Wendell Barr Jr.
Eleanor Warr Barron
Elizabeth Ann Cotter Bey
Frances Cooper Bricken ◊
John B. Bricken Jr. ◊
Curtis Edward Britton
Kathryn Prestwood Bush
Sue Cleverdon Dixon
Barbara Pinson Dozier
Dana Jerkins Dunham
Robert B. Edwards
Winifred Morris Ely
Betty Seale Fields
Carol Perpall Fortino ◊
Robert Mel Freeman
Dorothy Kreis Golab ◊
Barbara Adams Herring
Ann Criswell Irvine
Richard A. James
*Rebecca Shackelford Jones
Donna McCourry King
Sandra Wimberly Makowsky
Larry W. Martin ◊
George Mathison
Linda Curry Miller
Eugene Montgomery
Robert G. Morrison
David G. Myrick
Nancy Brown Myrick ◊
Nancy Grantham Palmer
*Estate of Robert D. Pullum
Jane Horn Ramsey
Sarah Riggs
William E. Roy Jr.
Fred B. Simpson Jr.
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
Imogene Glaze Adams
Sheryl DeCoudres Barkalow
Susan Blair
Donald K. Braden
Anne Gunter Bray
Jo Ann Brazelton ◊
Edward A. Brown III
George F. Cooper III
Charles M. Croft
Kaye Bethune Cutchen
Shirley Crawford Dorrough
William E. Douthit Jr.
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
54
Shirley Chase Dowling
Lawrence R. Elliott
Clausen Ely
E. June Gay
Helene Deas Gereke
Charles N. Graham
Ruth Glover Graham
Nancy Carmack Hammett
Ann Butler Harrison
Ren Alford Hinote
Laura Ryba Boykin Hollingsworth
Martha Hatcher Hughes
Arthur Isola
William Conrad Jackson
Mary George Jester
Margaret Johnson
Marcia Vaughan Jones
Lloyd V. Julian
Betty Pickard Kaucher
Carolyn Darden Key
Saundra Bozeman Kidd ◊
Jean Livingston Knight
Judith Jefcoat Lackey
W. Russell Lackey
Nelda Lewis Lane
Charles Marion Lee
Susanne Crockett Martin ◊
Stuart T. May III
Patricia Tanner Mingledorff
George B. Partridge
J. Ben Porter
Charlene Gray Reed
Rebecca McFee Robertson
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
Elizabeth Osborne Thompson
Kathie Truett Thompson
Thomas M. Turner
Daniel Lee Walden ◊
Kim B. Wanous
LaDonna Ussery Weis
Cynthia Gebhardt White
Jennifer Decker Zidlicky
1969
Thomas Earl Anderson
Billie Ann Baker Ault
Richard L. Ault
Carol Sansbury Baird
David Earl Baker
Judith Hutchinson Bostick
Karen Darden Bowers
Maryem Stringfellow Brewer
Philip L. Browning
Sharon Kimbrough Cooper
Gail Robinson Cotton
Pamela Hulbert Dannelly
Karen Bell Deavers
Margaret Weathers Dove
Teresa Metcalf Ferrell
Donald C. France
Patricia Little Trawick Guest
Madeleine M. Hill ◊
Janice McLain James
Philip J. Johnson
Anna Hartzog Lawrence
Phebe Eloise Mason Lee ◊
Jane Monteigne Mathison
Joan Ann McClure
Mary Barnette McClurkin
R. Neil McDavid ◊
Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ◊
Ira Charles Mitchell Jr. ◊
Jean Carpenter Murray
Jane McIntyre Nichols
Evelyn Swann Ogilvie
Linda Lovett Parton
Ann McKinley Patterson
Clarence Gray Price ●
Jeff B. Sessions III ◊
Mary Blackshear Sessions ◊
W. Randall Sewell Jr.
Lee Reynolds Sewell
William Roland Sims ◊
James William Smith Jr.
Lindora Wisham Snyder
Linda McLeod Thomas ◊
Lynda Sheppard Thurman
Paul J. Vincent
Anne McLeod Warren
Robert Wiggins
{
1970
Richard T. Allen
G. Carlton Barker ◊
Winifred L. Beezley
Susan White Bennett
Judy Duncan Bilyeu
Robert Bothfeld Jr.
Billie Wingard Brown
Ann Jeffords Cole
Miriam Brown Douthit
Liza Sheehan Kaufman
Beverly Gordy McKinney ◊
James L. McNees
George E. Mingledorff III ◊
Anne White Mitchell ◊
Isabell Templeman Moore
Merritt W. Moseley Jr.
Linda Davis Muehlberger
Susan Whitaker Owen
Linda Keenan Partridge
Jean Strawn Posey
Joanne Miner Shoemaker
Gerald S. Thurman
1971
Theresa Zimmerman Arnold
Barbara Lazenby Barnett ◊
John S. Bell
Linda Mordecai Benkwith ◊
Robert Howard Bennett
Pearl Bowman Cox
Linda C. Daniel
Barbara Waters Dekle
Nancy Stallings Elliott
Martha Jeanette Epperson
Suzanne Repnicki Fickey ◊
Charles M. Gray III
Diane Parkman Hett
Karen Dee Koza ●
Charles A. Lane
Charlene Tew Lord
Margaret Ward McPherson ◊
James M. Mungenast
Herbert Patterson ◊ ●
Janet Harsha Payson
Keith Sabel
Lucy Williams Stewart
Nancy Jennings Wiggins
Mary Ann Wilkerson
Elizabeth Northcutt Williams
Hugh Williams
Maude Brannen Wise
Greek alumni giving challenges were won by
Alpha Omicron Pi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma
Nu, and Alpha Kappa Alpha. Hats off to
Alpha Omicron Pi with 107 alumni donors!
Catherine Wiginton Wilbourne
Billie Gaye Willis
Donald Luther Yancey ◊
Linda Nelson Yancey ◊
Robert F. Zidlicky Jr.
Susan Way Zuber
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
1972
Curtis Glenn Armstrong
Pamela Vaughan Baker
Sandra Campbell Balkom
Phillip Felton Brown ◊
Steven Douglas Caldwell
Nancy Johnson Coburn
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
{
The following decades were the winners of
our giving challenges: the 1950s, 1970s,
and the 2000s.
Doris Peters Coker
Opal Lovett Collier
Sheryl Elizabeth Cooper
Elizabeth Thompson Curles
Howell B. Edwards Jr.
Rose Marie Floyd
Daniel J. Freehling
Ann Veazey Fuller
Larry Hays
Diane Turner Lipscomb
Reese H. McKinney Jr. ◊
Madeline Nichols Moseley
Steven Melton Shiflett
Susan Carroll Shiflett
Stephen L. Spencer
James E. Turner Jr.
1973
Carol Lewis Allen
Alex P. Ansley
Lorna Lunde Bell
Beverly Smith Dean
Daniel W. DeVaughn
John M. Foshee Jr.
Josephine Golson Foshee
Martha Ward Hardy
James R. Lushington Jr.
Molly Dunn Martin
Thomas F. Moore
M. Stephen Morris
Mary Sheets Mungenast
W. Samuel Newell III
Bronwyn Bothfeld Nickles
Janice Ruth Pylant
Carol Sindersine Sandvi
Dorris Teague ◊
Kathryn Booth Towry-Iburg
1974
Sandra Burnett Allen
Renee Youmans Anderson
Marion Knox Barker
Rosalie Cassiday
Sally Hemstreet Crawford
Floyd Carson Enfinger Jr. ◊
Donna Weinstein Frawley
Susan Smith Goodwin
George Mathews Handey
Robert B. Hawkins
Elizabeth Cumming Hight
Audrey Gryder Kauders
William Kendrick ◊
Marsha Kirk Moore
Catherine West Redding
Amy Ruth Renfro
Herbert William Rice
Kevin Seamon
William Henry Shanks
Mary Skene
Phyllis Killion Ward
Sherryll Henderson White
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
1975
Jane Howell Allen
Daniele Funderburk Bruhn
Deborah Giglio Garrett
Sharon Sousa Grieshop
Roxanne D. Hannon-Odom
Ellen Evans Haulman ◊
Emily Preston Joseph
Roosevelt Lewis ●
Araminta Robson McDavid ◊
Katherine Miller Millican
Richard E. Mitchell
Susan Floyd Morrow
Ansley Callaway Rice
Lawrence T. Williams
1976
James H. Anderson ◊
Richard Fitzgerald Bernal
*Anthony Jack Carlisle ◊
Renee Byrd Carlisle ◊
Morris Wayne Cochran ◊
Kay Gomillion Elam
Dale Baxter Evans
Debra Ashworth Hawkins
David A. Head
LaDonna Gilbreath Herrera
Michael C. McDaniel
T. Grant Parker Sr.
Suzanne Marie Sheppard
Jeffrey R. Spiller ◊
Eva Brunson Tackett
Michael Seth Ward
1977
James L. Belin
Joseph Borowski
Linda Larson Borowski
Gary Earl Bridges
Laura Bowden Carpenter
William H. Dorsey III
Ardis Garrett Fine
W. Joseph McCorkle Jr.
Marian Perkins Milliron
Patricia Lynn Skene
Sarabeth Owens Snuggs
Norma Borland Spiller ◊
1978
Jane Jenkins Bridges
Dianne Petrov Burke
Leura Garrett Canary ◊
Nancy E. Carmichael
Barbara Whatley Christenberry ●
Carole Crampton Ellers
Judy Lee Hughes
Tony Max Hughes Sr.
Faye Teal Meadows
Maureen Kendrick Murphy ◊
H. Kathleen Patchel
Samuel Peek
John Barr Pugh
Dorothy Dunbar Rogers
J. Jeannette Siegers
Yarisa D. Smith
Anthony C. Stallworth
Brenda (Bunny ) Cox Suplit
1979
Cindy Smith Belin
Lucinda Smilie Bollinger ◊
Mary Frances Austin Bond
Debbie Doss Dahl
Karen Murphy Evans
Debra A. Freisleben ◊
Andrew J. Hardin
Renee Cheney Hardy
Gary Hinton Holt
Lyn Wilbert Keaster
Emily McNiel Levy
Mikel Bradshaw McCann
Cheryl Ellen Monday
Peter Charles Panus
Laurel Paige McCoy Peek
Michael A. Scott ◊
Nancy Hollingsworth Wong
1980
Teresa Smith Francis
Eugenia West Gabriel
Keith Olin Jones
Gail Sanford Kendrick ◊
Martha Law McWhorter
Susan LeBeau Reith
Suzanne Wendland Rhodes ◊
Celia Dell Smith Rudolph ◊
E. Alexander Stokes III
Michelle Hutchison Vanderwall
1981
Joe Dan Benson
James Daniel Cartwright
Patrick McDaniel Cross
Frederick Allen Frost ◊
George Gregory Gilbert
Janet Lenz Griffin
Leslie Callaway Henderson
James Van Henry ◊
Beverly Burnett Howard
Wanda Annett Howard
David Hudson Jr. ◊
George F. Jones Jr.
Stephanie Wise Jones
Cynthia K. Broome Lindsay
Patricia Ann Moore
Susan Scott Porch
Martha Hollingsworth Posey
Terry Neal Posey
William Cody Sweetland
JoAnn Ford Waters
1982
Linda Harper Borden
Lisa Brooks Daniel
Gordon William Hamilton III
Beth Jackson Hughes
Michael Royce Jones
Virginia Jackson Jones
Carolyn Ready Vedder Kinman
L. Curtis Powell
Thomas D. Rhodes
Terry Draughn Sullivan
Ashley Atkins Sweetland
Esther DeVries Top ◊
Lisa Lacy White
Pat Taylor White ◊ ●
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
1983
William Beaird ◊
Bowdy J. Brown
Nancy Keith Brown
Thomas G. Dismukes Jr. ◊
Christian E. Eckert
Elizabeth Chapura Griffin
William Harris
Minnie Lamberth
Patricia Henry Lee
Tammy Williams McCorkle
Priscilla Shaw Gaines McMillan
Riley Allen Newton ◊
Robert Edward Percy
Elizabeth Burgess Russell
Claude Arnold Shuford
Jacqueline Allen Trimble
1984
Molly Rice Cross
Joan Paine Cumbie
Jane Bass Geloneck
Linda Wall Killinger
Ann L. Kline
Russell Lee
Paul Joseph Mittelhammer
Lisa Paschall Wainwright
Raymond M. Wainwright
Alice Faye Zaner
1985
Ann Carlisle Carmichael
Billy Ray Daniels ◊
Lori Fishbaugh Gonzalez
Alecia Curtis Glaize ◊
Edward R. Glaize ◊
Board Chairman David Hudson Jr.
’81, his wife, Kim, and future Hawks
Trey (right) and Mark Gregory added
some scarlet to Homecoming celebrations.
Pearline Patterson Holston
Cynthia Carr Jackson
Melanie McGrath ◊
Lisa Smithson Mollitor
Leslie Vaughan Pruitt
Jan Shackelford
Karen Lynn Sweatt
Thomas E. Zaner
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
55
{
The following classes achieved the highest
percentages of giving for their decades: 1930
(100%); 1941 (43%); 1954 (64%); 1962
(43%); 1971 (27%); 1983 (28%); 1992
(17%); 2007 (29%); and 2010 (32%).
1986
James Douglas Abbott
Kelly Parker Bell
James Benjamin Craven Jr.
David Faulkenberry
Angelyn Bryant Hayes ◊
David Hicks
Tommie Hudgens Smith
Elizabeth Couey Smithart ◊
Joel Wade Thrasher
Karen Price VanderHey
Charles Allen Walker
Merry Walker
1987
Connie Maude Campbell
Ladine H. Collins
Diane Baugh Fraser
Molly Thomas Hicks
Melinda Caprara Hinds
John Nelson Horner Jr.
Julieann Hollomon Hurst
Gipson Mark Kingry ◊ ●
Sandra Brill Passmore
Joe Richard Rambo
Frances Thomason
Julie Allbritten Wood
1988
Patricia Uptagrafft Abrams
Teresa S. Wolfe Armstrong
Robert W. Birmingham
Michelle Bogue-Trost
Angela L. White Dunnam
Sara Dean Faulkenberry
Richard K. Fox Jr.
Linda Sue Cobb Gainous
Jerome Scott Hayes ◊
Beth Anderson Kingry ◊
Dana Nix Moore
Barry D. Moss
G. Mathew Pope ◊ ●
Elisa Boykin Rambo
Joe Dewitt Read ◊
Jennifer Gaston Rodopoulos
Dianne Owens Stallworth ◊
James Kevin Walding ◊
Patrick Neal Wood
1989
Michelle Brian Curtis
Gregory Douglas Dotson ◊
John Benjamin Lott
Robert Byron Ryan
Sandra Smart Thrasher
Meiko Huggins Whitfield
Sally Nash Huggins
Amy Beard Hulsey ◊
Angela Marie White Koons
Spencer Darrell Lee
Barbara Rodkey Lehman
Carol Fields Loeb ◊
Monica Sims Lott
Elizabeth Hinson Marschall
James Kevin Pettit
Evelyn Ann Hutzler Pope ◊ ●
Allyce Sikes Read ◊
Stephen Kelly Rodopoulos
Brenda Booker Shuford
William Byrne Wilson ◊
1991
Glenda Atwell Allred ◊
Craig Alan Andrews
Pamela Baker Barnhardt
Laura Langley Covington
Susan Rene Zeron Finley
Rodney Goggans
Victor Keith Jiminez
Marcus Christopher Melton
Susan Brubaker Oldham
Jon Michael Olliff
Kelly Whatley Pettit
Stacey Dale Price
Dennis F. Stallworth Jr. ◊
Mary Hardin Mitchell Thornton
Susan Elizabeth Tudor
Lane Patrick Wilson
1992
Thomas Kirke Adams ◊
David Howard Allred ◊
Maryann Mooney Beck
Kimberly Keefer Boone
Sam Chambers Jr.
Christopher Mark Champion ◊
Jennifer Kendrick Donaldson
Michelle Montgomery Goebel
William Milton Morris
William Marshall Pickard
Clarence Crenshaw Pritchett IV
Eric Koin Ross ◊ ●
Carla Golson St. Peter
Brett Allen Steele
Gary Edward Sullivan
Kelly Reinelle Bryan Sullivan
Holly Anderson Tate
David Elgin Little
Lester Mack Jr.
J. Clarke Oldham
Angela Morris Olliff
Sarah Manikas Rech ●
Andrea Irby Screws
April McCarty Shores
John Kenneth Story ●
Patsy K. Vandergrift
William Anton Woerner II
1994
April Jones Baxter
William Ira Davis
Laura Hinds Duncan ◊
Linda Lee Garrett ◊
James Cliff Huckabee
Paul Johnson
Leslie Tucker Little
Mary Kathleen McGuffey ◊ ●
Brian Lee Smith
Christina Brennan Soukhamneut
Roxanne St. Martin ◊
Mary Vann Stuedeman
Joseph John Thomason ◊
1995
Katrina Keefer Belt ◊
Carmen Christa Boone Seal
Janet Malinda Chambless ◊
Michelle Olson Johnson
Gerald Wayne Knupp II ◊
Brian Daniel Mann
Debra Denise Rainer
Andrea Lynn Teal
John Jeb Williamson
{
1999
Marian Kimberly Cook Bullard
Susan Kaye Adams Cooper
Laura Knight Engbretson
Anne Bartolucci Graham
Jason Stuart Graham
Leslie McDowell Habbard
Michael Bryan Matthews
Brandi Scott McKinnon
Heather Hampton Slagle
Eric McKenzie Stuart
Wendi June Watt
2000
Hye Jeong Yoo Beckett ◊
Shaun Wesley Carroll
Bryan Keith Collar
Christian Cvitanovich
Belinda Goris Duett
Lauren Elizabeth Dyas
Adrienne Strickland Gaines
Julian Enrique Galvis
The oldest living alumni donor in
2011–12 was Dr. Ouida Fay Paul ’30,
of Gainesville, Fla.
1996
Jason Randell Adams
Shawn Macon Adams
Janna Martin Bauskar
Patrick Beck
James E. Bedgood
Nanci Ellen Smith Berch
John Wayne Engbretson
James Fletcher Growdon
Molly Cau Growdon
Laurel Meier Jordan
Christopher Townsend Kana
Amy Woodard Klugh ●
Kerrin Hayes Ramachandran
1990
Amy Vibbart Bowman
Margery Jones Fallen
Nancy Small Halsell
1993
Matthew Alexander Boone
Joel Lance Brelsford
Susan Chason Chambers
LeAnn Holifield Cox
Catherine Mann Dewrell
Katherine Wocken Gillin
Michael William Hawthorne
Jenifer M. Lee
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
56
1998
Roderick Mark Alexander Jr.
John Kenneth Berch
Kristopher Michael Burdette
Dewey Jackson Conville
Michelle L. Garrett
Adam Addis Habbard
Ashley Ellis Hagan
Stacey Lashan Jones
James Wesley Kelly ◊
Anneclaire Vickery Khan
Ryan Ashby Shores
Gayle Shorter
1997
Jodi F. Adamson ◊
Jason Robert Eubanks
Jennifer Brittin Harper
Rebecca Robertson Haynie
David L. Johnston ◊
Khanna Johnston ◊
Kathy Regina Paschal ●
James Edward Weeks ◊
Suzanne Jones Higgs
Rona Maria Mock Hutchison ●
Samantha Clements Kelly ◊
Lydia Churchill Kerr
Casey Malone Maugh
Melissa Burkett McKie
Amy Anne Patterson
Christy Dawn Robinson
Rian Morgan Turner
Marjorie Smith Walters ●
Regina Culp Witt
2001
Katherine Hancock Abbott ●
Carrie Davis Baker
Ryan Michael Close
Shanna Spurlin Culpepper
Daniel Johnson Dean
Sarah Ann Mowbray Fulcher ◊
Ann Steiner Hamilton Gregory
Leslie Henry Hines
Chad Leland Hobbs
Kimberly Keith Jones
Eric Allen Kidwell
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Carrie Elizabeth McDonough ◊
Terry Lee Miller
Brent Randolph Murrill
Daniel Patton Ogle ◊
Bonnie Anne Boggan Peavy
Jacqueline Robinson Turner
Angela Spano Underwood
James Adam Watson
{
44% of alumni
from the classes of
the 1950s made a
gift to the College
during 2011–12.
2002
Rosalyn Glover Alford
Marguerite McClure Averett
Nicholas Newton Baggett
Curtis Forbus
Jamie Deveau Hahn
Matthew Morris Hall
Talia Brown Johnson
Melissa Nichols Miller ◊
Amy Crew Netherland
Audrey Davie Newsome
Dana Drawbaugh Raybon
Amber Louise Renauld
Katherine Davis Williams
La’Pearl Johnson Wright ●
2003
Anna Michelle Cox Brandt
Tonya Blankenship Forbus
Ashley Dubuque Gorum
Ashley Dobbs Hubbard
Joseph Lister Hubbard
Charlotte Beth Cooper Millard
Hollen Hartzog Smith ●
Emily Beth Turner
Heather Hall Wells
2004
Elizabeth Frank Cichostepski
Alton Douglas Gorum Jr.
Lindsay Marie Glaze Lyons
Martin Anthony Lyons
Brittany Deanne Dubose Matthews
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Christy Laine Smithart Nelson
James Nathan Robinson ●
Amanda Whitehead Senn
Richard Henry Sforzini
Christina Frances Vranich ●
Krista Leachman Womble
2005
Morgan Goodwin Arrington
Jason Bobo
Laura Marie Tyree Brelsford
Cleve Carter III
Laura Paddock Ingram
Mindy Bevan La Branche ◊
Leanne Mallory
Catherine E. Reinehr
Brandy Smith
Kristi Winstead Wilson
* An asterisk indicates those now deceased
2006
Brandon Addison ●
Victoria Russo Addison ●
Lindsey Nicole Alexander
Kristen McDonald Baumgartner
Jennifer Lynn Cornelius
Coleman Kidd Cosgrove ◊ ●
Katie Svela Crews
Elizabeth Ann McLain Grimes
Joey Holcomb
Emily Dueitt Kincaid
Robert Wesley La Branche ◊
Lindy J. Lunkenheimer
Anna Katherine Mallini
Jennifer Lynn Zeigler Medley
Jennifer Lynn Wren Miller
Richard Craig Miller Jr.
Jeremy Mitchell
Deborah Leigh Dodd Neff
Michael Curtis Perry
Abigail G. Pridgeon
Jack Wilson Shannon
Justin Wade Whatley
2007
Meredith Susan Aderholdt
Elizabeth Annalea Jones Cagle
Ralph Averett Chalker
Christopher William Clark
Mark McDuffee Colson
Emily Webster Cosgrove ◊ ●
Angela Bryant Dainas
Brandon Dainas
Drake Gardner Dale
Tyler Maxwell Fletcher
Avery Toreal Ford
Maegan Javon Grace Ford
Kyle Landon Futral
John Phillip Gaines
Robert Walker Garrett ◊
Jacob Miller Godwin
Amber Joy Greenwood
Joshua Matthew Harris
James Andrew Johnson
Samantha Linae Lewis
Jamie Edwards McCormack
Hodge Patterson IV
Christopher Wade Phillips
Laura Shannon Cheney Phillips
Samuel Schjott ●
Thomas Jacob Seales
Keri Elizabeth Till
John Blake Toole
2008
Anthony Arnold Jr
Robert Ross Blanton II
William Benjamin Brannon
Eric Jordan Cagle
Brittany Anne Gaydosh Cotant
Jeremy Dwain Driver
Shuandra Nicole Duff
Christopher Jason Easterly
William Robert Gillespie
Zachary Gordon Golson
Carrie Barber Groce
Clifford L. Groce
Joshua Keith Hudson
Matthew James Mahanic
Timothy James McCormack
Brandy Nicole Milstead ●
Kristin Wilson Monroe
Brent Daniel Nichols
Joanna Bonds Nichols ●
Christopher James Saba
Broderick Louis Smith
Brien Hayes Sullivan
Amanda Carol Thomley
2009
Mollie Alice Adams
Philip Bailey
Ashley Brook Burkett
Casey Marie Chrietzberg
Adam Johnson Cotant ●
Luther Charles Daniels III
Emily Hand Driver
Margaret Mary Daniell Easterly
Derrick Terrell Hurt
Chelsey Hodge Koppersmith
Chrystine Devereaux Lake
Olivia Farrell Levering
Gary Dwayne Nelson Jr.
Larry Michael Newton
Scott Nello Nichols
Jeffrey Roe Reamer
Jessica Reeves Reamer
Glenn Andrews Rudolph
Granger Barnes Shook
Mary Louise Thrower
Francis John Vorrosso II
Terry Wayne Whisenant
2010
Alex Stephen Baronich
Jeffrey Mark Barrera
Zachary Taylor Brothers
Matthew Thomas Browning ●
Adam Knapp Brummett
Benjamin Michael Cecil
Lee Hall Copeland Jr.
Jakob Zachary Dwyer
Kyle Jordan Eller ◊ ●
Mavis LeighAnn Floyd ●
Sarah Kathleen Francis ●
Kelly Lynn Frazier ●
Candace Jenae Goudy
Christian Harmon
Chad Ryan Hatfield
Anton Jamaal Jackson
Christopher Knight
Andrew Stephen Kosan ●
Teresa Rhodes Lavergne ●
Steven Brock Laye ●
Benjamin Green Marsella
Rebecca Burdon Masic ●
James Heath Miller ●
Landon Cole Mims
Allison Keck Nichols ●
Alana Kristin Norris
Jenna Alise Parish
Michael Ryan Payson
Anna Lee Perry
2011
Chelsea Elizabeth Atkinson
Joshua Glenn Bennefield
Angela Ann Bradley ●
Meghan Emily Bridges
Samuel Grey Brown ●
Maggie Elissa Casey
Gale Croft ◊
Amy Marie Hall
Andrew Tarvin Harrell ●
Christopher Ross Huckle ●
Katy Jo Farrill McDaniel ●
Kristin Faye McDaniel ●
Woods Bradshaw Lisenby ●
Domonique Marie Martin ●
Catherine Michelle Naylor ●
Andrew Parker Patterson ●
Abigail Grace Chandler Payson ●
Paul Steven Penewitt Jr.
Terah Nicole Phillips ●
Taura Jill Powell
Lauren Ashley Randall ●
Jeremy Kenneth Reid ●
Clare Aileen Shannon ●
John Lloyd Sloan ●
Christine Illene Spivey ●
Jasmine Nicole Turner
Angela Christine Whiten ●
Charles Sevard Worthy
2012
Caleb Scott Cofield ●
William Brian Francis ●
Amanda Elizabeth Houston ●
Joseph Donald Jean ●
Giles Langford
Colby Pate Leonard
Britni Leigh Northington ●
Erin Elaine Ofe
McDowell Davis Pinckard ●
Alexander Mitchell Taylor ●
Allison Faith Vuyovich ●
2013
Jhavonn Brown
Dexter Dean
Quintarious Perdue
Hawks football alumni and former teammates Brandon Dainas ’07 (Birmingham), Blake Toole ’07 (Vestavia Hills, Ala.), Eric Cagle ’08 (Tallassee, Ala.), Jacob
Seales ’07 (Chattanooga), Mark Colson ’07 (Montgomery), Tyler Fletcher ’07
(Atlanta), Broderick Smith ’08 (Atlanta), and Hodge Patterson ’08 (Prattville,
Ala.) returned to celebrate with Mark upon his induction into the Hawks Athletic Hall of Fame. A higher percentage of football alumni participate in annual
giving to Huntingdon College than any other cohort group.
◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Riley Elaine Prescott
Justin Blake Ridgeway
Richard Wilson Riley
Caleb William Schaefer
Kayla Marie Schuran
Christy Michele Jones Sloan
Jackie Edward Smith
Kathryn Grace Varnado
• A circle indicates membership in the Scarlet and Gray Circle
57
Memorials
Lawrence G. Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble ’65
Margaret Holmes Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble ’65
Lew Batchelor
J. Cameron West
Martha Flowers Bennett ’69
Laurie Jean Weil and Tommy
Wool
Marie Chapman Benson ’30
Ann Tomberlin Ray
Jack Boykin
David G. Myrick ’67
Wayne Bradshaw
Carole Lee
Mary Jane Crump Brannon ’37
Robert B. (’74) and Debra
Ashworth Hawkins ’76
Henry Albert Brooks
Michael and Terry Tuley
James W. Cameron ’52
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Emmie Pitts Cardwell
Emmie Cardwell Bolden ’44
Anthony J. Carlisle ’76
John N. Albritton Jr.
Nancy G. Anderson
Bobbye J. Byrd
Marguerite Carlisle
Renee Byrd Carlisle ’76
The Carlisle Family
Camille Elebash-Hill
Myrtle L. Elliott
Carolyn S. Emmett
Cleo Jackson
Joy Kloman
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Gerald Melton
Sheila A. Nelson
Suellen Ofe
Wendy N. Perdue
Henry Shiver
Alex J. Szabo
Joel Wade Thrasher ’86
Charles W. Turner Sr.
Laurie Jean Weil and Tommy
Wool
Jane T. Williams
Gordon and Winn Chappell
Maryetta Propst Buchanan ’62
Lucky Brettel Esneul ’62
Norman B. McLeod Jr.
Virginia Lee Monroe ’51
*Frances Galloway Moody ’43
Mr. and Mrs. George Olliff
Dorothy McLean Perry ’42
Margaret Dean Pitts ’41
W. Herbert Sadler Jr. ’64
Roy Thomas Sublette ’52
Paul and Mrs. Anna Louise Calhoun
Duffey ’42
Suellen Ofe
James M. (’50) and Helen Rapp
Rittenour ’51
Cindy Dyer ’77
Rose Dyer Moore ’52
Dean B. Elebash ’68
Carol Perpall Fortino ’67
Ben F. Ellis ’51
Dudley W. Griffin ’54
Zora Ellis ’22
Patti Woodburn Richardson ’62
Rhoda Ellison
Claire Rogers Peacock Helms ’62
Nancy A. Pugh ’62
Eulette E. Fincher Evans
Gregory G. Fitch
Paul B. Mohr Sr.
Mary Frances Parker
Timothy W. Vick
Margaret Gillis Figh
Claire Rogers Peacock Helms ’62
James Bailey Floyd
Susan Floyd Morrow ’75
Jean Sheffield Garrick
Ernest Gerald (’65) and Sue
Russell Garrick ’64
David Hill
Herbert Patterson ’71
JoAnn Roberts Hinson ’55
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
Bert and Carolee Hussey
Bettie Hussey ’58
Marianne Hussey
Sue Jackson ’62
Ludie Robinson ’62
Gene L. Jarvis ’58
Mary Sally Kennedy ’60
Mike Kelly
Carol Perpall Fortino ’67
Leo J. Drum Jr.
Crum Family Charitable
Foundation
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Suellen Ofe
Mary Kay Kostenbader
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Bishop Paul Andrews Duffey
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Louis and Clare Bowman
Cardinal ’50
Jane G. Coleman
Donald B. Davis
Joel F. Dubina
Bishop John W. Hardt
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Charles D. (’59) and Sara
Bradford Lowery ’60
Barbara B. McBryde
Iris McGehee ’57
Reese H. (’72) and Beverly Gordy
McKinney ’70
Virginia McLean ’45
Mary Sample Mabson ’52
Barbara Farmer Hingle ’54
58
Jean J. Leach
Mary Helen Gaddis Carr ’47
Ruby G. McCombs
Irene McCombs ’61
Inell Rentz McGee ’63
Hanna Berger
Emily Tyler Burge ’54
David F. Meadows
Edward Patrick McIntyre ’75
Carol Perpall Fortino ’67
Frances Smith Mendelson ’53
Alice Ann Rose ’53
Winnie Middleton
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Nancy Johnson Strickland ’48
Montae James Cain ’48
Ellen Adair Norwine ’65
Carol Perpall Fortino ’67
Lessie Mae Hall Stone
Jean Mathison Hahle ’62
Mary Pauline Hoffman Ogilvie ’41
Opal Lovett Collier
Nancy Johnson Strickland ’48
Montae James Cain ’48
Mary Pauline Hoffman Ogilvie ’41
and Dr. Walter Ogilvie
Henry and Mary H. Ogilvie
Goldstein
Livia A. Tarrants ’70
Waldtraut T. Sink
Charles H. Owens
Debra Ashworth Hawkins ’76
Robert B. Hawkins ’74
Willard Top
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Suellen Ofe
Esther DeVries Top ’82
William M. Top
Louise Panigot
Verna Fail Chesser ’62
Nadia Brooks Tuley ’66
Debbie Susan Rice Johnson ’66
Hueston Patterson
Herbert Patterson ’71
Olive Tuley
Michael T. Tuley
Glenn Perdue
Albert F. Killian
Fran Webb
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Neal N. Posey
Ronnie H. Floyd ’62
Grace West
J. Cameron West
Tom Radney
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Suellen Ofe
Laurie Jean Weil and Tommy
Wool
Ann Strickland White ’44
Baker, Donelson, Bearman,
Caldwell & Berkowitz
BBVA Compass
Nancy Brooks
Stephen Cusimano
James S. Hanson
Frank S. James
Thomas O. Kolb
Karli G. LaRussa
Linda S. Lehe
Timothy M. Lupinacci
Virginia McLean ’45
Ira Charles (’69) and Anne White
Mitchell ’70
Herbert Patterson ’71
James H. Strickland
Julia Arbuthnot Strickland ’53
Claude M. and Emily T. Reaves
Gerald Leischuck
E.D. Ridgeway
Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway
Joseph Thomas Roberts Jr.
Charles A. Farrow
Martha T. Shreve
Carolyn W. Wood
Jean Rodgers ’49
Thelma Braswell ’62
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
John Bullard
Reita Sample Davis ’55
Don W. Freeman
Debra A. Freisleben ’79
Ethel Ellis Gibson ’49
Linda Wall Killinger ’84
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Litchfield III
Virginia Lee Monroe ’51
David G. Myrick ’67
Suellen Ofe
Bonner Patrick
Dorothy McLean Perry ’42
William D. Quenelle
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
Marianne Rodgers
Mary D. Rodgers
Paul Rodgers
Jeff B. (’69) and Mary Blackshear
Sessions ’69
Shirley Hamill Smith ’49
James H. Strickland
Nellie Howard Tiller ’48
Susann Woodbery Turner ’67
Lane Rodgers Wyly
Nancy Lou Williams ’40
James L. Williams
Carrie Williams ’43
James L. Williams
Kathryn Tucker Windham ’39
Marion E. Brooks
Maud K. Garrick
Carole Lee
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson ’41
Suellen Ofe
Herbert Patterson ’71
Lynda Woodall ’70
Suellen Ofe
Herbert Patterson ’71
Verna Wool
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
William “Doc” Sellars
Senior Class of Dorothy Rainer
Sellars School of Dance
Katherine Samford Smith ’21
The Julia and Albert Smith
Foundation
Marie Stafford ’68
Dorothy Kreis Golab ’67
Herbert Patterson ’71
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Tributes
Lucy “Tay” Cunningham Bond
Lady Portis Cunningham
Jane C. Dunlap
Mary Lynn Brooks
Michael and Terry Tuley
Betty M. Collier
Ronnie H. (’62) and Mildred B.
Floyd ’66
Richard Keith Cayton ’74
Robert B. (’74) and Debra
Ashworth Hawkins ’76
The Class of 2012
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Joanne Cly
Mary Lynn Brooks
Liz Allen Garrard ’57
RJay Murray
Earnest Gerald ’65 and Sue Russell
Garrick ’64
Maud K. Garrick
Christian Harmon ’10
Bruce and Janet Harmon
James Martin Herring ’65
Martha Herring Faircloth ’62
The Huntingdon Honeys
RJay Murray
Jeremy R.T. Lewis
Lawrence U. McLemore ’04
Donna Jean Whitley Manson
Lawrence U. McLemore ’04
Joan Johnston Diversi ’57
RJay Murray
Katy Jo McDaniel ’11
Kristin Faye McDaniel ’11
Kenneth A. Dunivant
James Knox Boteler III
Herbert Patterson ’71
Theresa Zimmerman Arnold ’71
Barbara Lazenby Barnett ’71
John S. (’71) and Lorna Lunde
Bell ’73
Robert Howard Bennett ’71
Jane C. Dunlap
Lucy Cunningham Bond
Lady Portis Cunningham
June E. Bulow
Pearl Bowman Cox ’71
Barbara Waters Dekle ’71
Suzanne Repnicki Fickey ’71
Ernest Gerald (’65) and Sue
Russell Garrick ’64
Michael Gross
Jane M. Hinds
James C. Johnson
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
Jeff Pierson Jr.
Stephen K. (’90) and Jennifer
Gaston Rodopoulos ’88
Stephen L. Spencer ’72
Cathy J. Wheeler
Harald Rohlig
Verna Fail Chesser ’62
Cecil C. Vaughn
Nevelle Vaughn Furse ’62
Laurie Jean Weil
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
J. Cameron West
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Litchfield III
Jane Williams
Anthony and Wendy Leigh
John R. Williams
Lawrence U. McLemore ’04
Belinda Nichols Wilson ’93
William Harris ’83
Catherine Anne Wolfe
Emily C. Hare
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
RJay Murray
Carolyn W. Wood
Claire Tuley
Mary Lynn Brooks
Michael and Terry Tuley
Mary Lynn Brooks
Huntingdon College National Alumni Association
Board of Directors, 2012–13
• President
Mary Kathleen McGuffey ’94
• Billy Ray Daniels ’85
• Michael Scott ’79
• Vice President
Terri Smith Francis ’80
• Walker Garrett ’07
• Hank Sforzini ’04
• Nancy Small Halsell ’90
• Gayle Shorter ’98
• Bill Hamilton ’80
• Lynn Skene ’77
• Janice Woolf Hendrickson ’65
• Broderick Smith ’08
• Melinda Caprara Hinds ’87
• Brett Steele ’92
• Leslie Henry Hines ’01
• Carol McManus Tucker ’60
• Wanda Howard ’81
• Betty McCoy Vaughn ’58
• Kim Keith Jones ’01
• Wade Whatley ’06
• Stacey Jones ’98
• Katie Davis Williams ’02
• Secretary
Roosevelt Lewis ’75
• Trustee Representative
John B. Bricken ’67
• Roderick Mark Alexander ’98
• Jane Howell Allen ’75
• Nicholas Baggett ’02
• Barbara Lazenby Barnett ’71
• June Burdick Bisard ’56
• Kimberly Keefer Boone ’92
• Jane Michael Boozer ’56
• Laura Tyree Brelsford ’05
• Jane Jenkins Bridges ’78
• Betty Finley Brislin ’49
• Bowdy (Bo) Brown ’83
• Nancy Jo Keith Brown ’83
• Philip Brown ’72
• Shaun Carroll ’00
• Mark Colson ’07
• Laura Langley Covington ’91
• Molly Rice Cross ’84
• Joan Paine Cumbie ’84
• Debbie Doss Dahl ’79
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
• Lydia (Gabie) Churchill Kerr ’00
• Russell Lackey ’68
• Charles Lowery ’59
• Susie Bradford Lowery ’59
• John Ed Mathison ’60
• Brittany Dubose Matthews ’04
• Iris McGehee ’57
• Margaret Ward McPherson ’71
• Nancy Brown Myrick ’67
• Riley Allen Newton ’83
• Dan Ogle ’01
• Bonnie Anne Boggan Peavy ’01
• Thomas Pebworth ’67
• Nancy Pugh ’62
• Joe Read ’88
• Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
59
In Memoriam
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Ruth McFaden Nettles ’30, Jan. 7, 2012, Mobile, Ala.
Virginia Morris Vines ’31, July 14, 2012, Richardson, Texas
Sarah Rivers Aderholdt ’32, Nov. 11, 2012, Pensacola, Fla.
Frances Lanier ’38, May 2012, Selma, Ala. (see article in the Donor Report)
Pauline Cain Norby ’38, May 28, 2012, Orlando, Fla.
Sarah Lacy Powell ’38, Jan. 5, 2011, Montgomery, Ala.
Helen Shaw ’39, Feb. 14, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
Raymon Wilson Britt Willis ’40, Nov. 24, 2011, Webster, N.C.
Eleanor Ellison Foreman ’43, a former member of the National Alumni
Board, May 5, 2012, Alexander City, Ala.
Frances Galloway Moody ’43 of Montgomery, 91, died Oct. 23, 2012. She
was preceded in death by her husband, D.W. Moody Jr., and is survived by
her daughter, Virginia (Phil) Butler; her son, D.W. (Meri) Moody III; grandchildren, Elizabeth (John David) Nolen, Kansas City; Mary Virginia (Josh) Mandell, Birmingham; Wiley (Neil Ann) Moody IV; George Moody, Nashville; and
Philip Moody, Washington, D.C. The family designated Huntingdon College
among other entities to which memorial gifts could be made.
Margaret Louise Martin ’44, Dec. 16, 2011, Pell City, Ala.
Marjorie Burdeshaw Masters ’44, Aug. 15, 2012, Pelham, Ala.
Mary Hammond Purdy ’44, Nov. 4, 2011, Birmingham, Ala.
Martha Jordan Brown ’45, Mar. 31, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
Dorothy Holmes Colbert ’45, June 28, 2012, Columbus, Ga.
Ann Hagood Weatherly ’45, July 2011, Chapin, S.C.
Jane Kennon Caudle ’46, Sept. 4, 2011, Valdosta, Ga.
Jack Dickert, husband of Mary Kendrick Dickert ’46 and brother of Sara
Dickert Bowden ’51, Feb. 26, 2012, Brundidge, Ala.
Jane Hall Knox ’46, July 22, 2012, in Gordon, Ala.
Carolyn Murphy McGee ’46, July 7, 2011, Headland, Ala.
Wacile Williams Stallings ’46, June 9, 2012, Columbia, S.C.
Glenn Stanford, son of Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford ’46, July 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
Martha Jean Hornsby Burgess ’48, Aug. 22, 2012, Opp, Ala.
Gertrude Gibson McGehee ’49, Aug. 31, 2012, Birmingham, Ala.
Betty Mixon Pace ’49, Nov. 23, 2011, Mobile, Ala.
Hails Taylor ’49, Mar. 26, 2012, Orange Beach, Ala.
Betty Pearson Keyton ’50, a former Miss Huntingdon and president of the
student body from Dothan, Ala., died Nov. 8, 2011.
Robert Stanley McDonald ’50, June 2, 2012, Humboldt, Tenn.
Helen Garrett O’Sullivan ’50, Oct. 8, 2012, Mountain Brook, Ala.
Carl Edwin “Bud” Kohler Jr. ’51, Dec. 29, 2011, Millbrook, Ala.
Glenn Perdue, husband of Betty Seymour Perdue ’51 and brother of Mary
Virginia Perdue Stanford ’46, Apr. 28, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
William Boyd Snider ’51, Feb. 11, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
Noah Earle Gilbreath Tolbert ’51, Aug. 11, 2012, Oneonta, Ala.
Kathryn Luckie Wingard ’51, Jan. 28, 2012, Morrow, Ga.
Marion Waters Barrow ’52, a member of the Huntingdon Society, passed
away Nov. 23, 2011, in Columbus, Ga. We extend our condolences to her
husband, Bobby; her sister, Dorothy Waters Wilson ’56, and her brother-inlaw, Dr. Robert Wilson ’57.
Dorothy Hoag Bell ’52, a member of the Order of the Countess of Huntingdon and significant donor to technology enhancements in Houghton
Memorial Library, passed away in Atlanta, Apr. 12, 2011.
Carl Leon Waller ’52, July 7, 2012, Macon, Ga., husband of Helen Broach
Waller ’52
Dorothy Evelyn Curtright ’53, Jan. 1, 2012, Pensacola, Fla.
Augusta Walden Elmore ’53, June 9, 2012, Dothan, Ala.
Eloise Hall Cottrell ’54, May 4, 2012, Cary, N.C.
Sally Bice Samuels Gouge ’55, Jan. 5, 2012, Bryan, Texas
Joyce Hewston Wilkinson ’55, Nov. 15, 2012
Emmie Taber Longshore ’56, Sept. 12, 2012
Henry Knighten ’58, Dec. 16, 2011, Snellville, Ga.
Mary Faire Lowrey Congdon ’59, Nov. 13, 2012, Decatur, Ga.
Dr. John C. Mathews Jr. ’60, Sept. 28, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
Thomas G. “Tommy” Ragsdale ’60 of Albany, Ga., died Dec. 3, 2012. A
native of Montgomery, he transferred to Huntingdon from the Univ. of Georgia to play for the first intercollegiate basketball team and later became
a charter inductee into the Athletic Hall of Fame. After serving in the U.S.
Army and working in agricultural sales, he owned and managed Ragsdale
Pecans and was the sole proprietor of Thomas Ragsdale & Associates Real
Estate. He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth Johnson Ragsdale ’61, three children, and seven grandchildren. Memorials may be made to Hawks Unlimited, c/o the Huntingdon Office of College and Alumni Relations.
60
• The Rev. L. Scott Woodham ’60, Sept. 23, 2012, Easley, S.C.
• Beth Cowles McKinney ’61, May 10, 2012, Sammanish, Wash. Beth authored
an award-winning book on English Cocker Spaniels.
• Lynda Lowery Collier ’62, Nov. 11, 2011, Enterprise, Ala.
• William Martin Gray ’62, husband of Ann Sanders Gray ’60, Oct. 26, 2011,
Wetumpka, Ala.
• Jerry R. Mitchell ’62, husband of Sally Prescott Mitchell ’85, Feb. 25, 2012,
Shorter, Ala.
• Barbara Selman Stewart ’62, Oct. 5, 2011, Chickasaw, Ala.
• John Scott Clarke Jr. ’63, Dec. 26, 2011, Litchfield Park, Ariz.
• Inell Rentz McGee ’63, wife of the late William Herbert McGee ’62, Mar. 24,
2012, Selma, Ala. (see article in the Donor Report)
• Robert Jack “Bobby” Armstrong ’64, May 25, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. John Wilder ’65, Oct. 15, 2011, Halifax, Va.
• Michael Meier ’66, July 16, 2012, Fredericksburg, Va.
• Malinda Epps Morris ’66, Mar. 24, 2012, Dothan, Ala.
• The Rev. William “Butch” Earnest ’67, husband of former National Alumni
Board president Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest ’64, May 7, 2012, Deatsville, Ala.
• Rebecca Shackelford Jones ’67, Jan. 28, 2012, Autaugaville, Ala.
• Martha Flowers Bennett ’69, a dear friend of the College, died Jan. 23, 2012,
at the age of 89. Martha was the granddaughter of John Jefferson Flowers,
for whom Flowers Hall is named. A member of the Order of the Countess
of Huntingdon, the Huntingdon Hall of Honor, the John Massey Heritage
Society, and the Huntingdon Society, Martha has been a faithful supporter
of Huntingdon for many years through her contributions to the Cloverdale
Campaign, the Flowers Hall Renovation Campaign of the 1990s, and the
creation of the James Drury Flowers Sr. Endowed Scholarship in memory of
her father, who served as a Huntingdon trustee from 1951 to 1972. Martha
also served a term on the Board of Directors of the Huntingdon National
Alumni Association.
• Lynda Knight Woodall ’70 passed away Dec. 24, 2011, in Montgomery.
Lynda served as a faithful member of the National Alumni Board from 2007
to 2010 and was a member of the John Massey Heritage Society, the Hall of
Honor, and the Scarlet & Grey Circle. She had a distinguished career as an
assistant attorney general for the State of Alabama and was praised upon
retirement in 2000 for her many years of working to obtain preclearance
from the U.S. Justice Department for Alabama elections. She was an active
member of Frazer Memorial UMC. Our thoughts and prayers are with her
husband, Elmer “Sonny” Woodall.
• Jeter Starr Horsley Smith ’74, Feb. 23, 2011
• Celeste Carlton Smith ’79, Aug. 16, 2012, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• The Rev. Glenn Hugh Smith ’82, Nov. 16, 2012, Rainbow City, Ala.
• William Earl Moseley ’86, Mar. 30, 2012, Montgomery, Ala.
• Nelle Ruth Bearden Johnston ’92, Apr. 27, 2012, Sylacauga, Ala.
• Bruce David Burleson ’93, July 26, 2011, Prattville, Ala.
• Colin Bateman ’99 was tragically killed in a biking accident July 24, 2012, in
Merritt Island, Fla.
Friends
• Huntingdon friend Robert Bothfeld of Gulf Breeze, Fla., died Oct. 25, 2012.
Bob and his first wife, Helen Marsh Bothfeld ’39, were the progenitors of a
long line of Huntingdon graduates and over the years endowed a number
of scholarships in the names of family members. Their Huntingdon graduates include their son, Bob Bothfeld Jr. ’70; daughter, Bronwyn Bothfeld
Nickles ’73; and daughter, Holly Bothfeld Miller ’76; Bronwyn’s son, Robbie
Nickles ’04; and Heidi Marsh Miller ’04, daughter of Holly and her husband,
W. Terry Miller ’75. Bob was a retired mechanical and aeronautical engineer and a former lieutenant with the U.S. Navy.
• Jean Kaufman Weil, a dear College friend and the mother of Huntingdon
trustee Dr. Laurie Jean Weil (Dr. Tommy Wool), Huntingdon friend Jan Weil
(Amos Avgar) and Andy Weil (Lisa), died Aug. 20, 2012. Her memorial service was a tribute to her elegant and regal stature, her many gifts to the
Montgomery community, her brilliant wit, and her love of music and laughter. Jean Weil was preceded in death by her husband, the late trustee
Adolph “Bucks” Weil.
• Long-time friend and supporter of Huntingdon Dr. Verna Wool passed away
May 20, 2012, in Montgomery. She was the mother-in-law of Huntingdon
trustee and former board chair Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and the mother of Dr.
Weil’s husband, Dr. Tommy Wool.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Dr. Anthony Jack “Tony” Carlisle ’76,
Alumnus, Professor, and Former
Academic Vice President
Dr. Anthony Jack (Tony) Carlisle,
Huntingdon Class of 1976, died
Feb. 7, 2012, after a long battle
with cancer. A member of the
Huntingdon faculty since 1978, Carlisle invested his teaching and professional life in the life of Huntingdon College, serving as chair of the
Department of Mathematical and
Computer Sciences and vice president for academic affairs and dean
of faculty among many roles during
his long Huntingdon tenure.
Huntingdon President J. Cameron West said, “Dr. Tony Carlisle’s
character and professional excellence set a standard by which other professors and deans who followed him have been measured.
He was honest, discerning, forthright, and committed. The tributes
and testimonies posted on the College Facebook page indicate
the impact he had on the lives of Huntingdon students. Our thoughts
and prayers surround the Carlisle family, including his wife of 37 years
and Huntingdon classmate, Renee Byrd Carlisle ’76, a member of
the Huntingdon staff in the Department of Teacher Certification.”
Before graduating from Huntingdon, Carlisle began working as a
systems analyst with the State Department of Education’s Division
of Vocational Education/Vocational Management Information System, where he served until 1978, two years after completing his degree. He then began working as a senior systems analyst for Huntingdon, also serving as an instructor in computer science. His love for
teaching led him to complete master’s degrees at Auburn University
(MBA) and the University of Alabama-Birmingham (M.S.), as well as
a doctorate at Auburn University. During his nearly 30-year teaching
career, he taught computer science, mathematics, and digital imaging courses. He was appointed chair of the Department of Mathematical and Computer Sciences in 1999, associate dean of faculty
in the School of Sciences in 2005, and associate dean of faculty in
the School of Arts and Sciences in 2006. Carlisle was appointed by
President West as acting dean of faculty in 2007, moving to the role
of vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty during
the 2007–08 academic year. His health forced him to step down
from that role in February 2008.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Dr. Anthony J. Carlisle
Scholarship Fund at Huntingdon College.
Bishop Paul A. Duffey
Bishop Paul Andrews Duffey passed away Mar. 18, 2012, in Georgia
following a brief illness.
Bishop Duffey and his late wife, Louise Calhoun Duffey ’42, endeared
themselves to all who met them. A remembrance by Bishop Lindsey
Davis on the Kentucky Annual Conference Web site stated, “Bishop
Duffey was one of God’s humble servants, leading Kentucky Methodism with keen judgment and a gentle spirit. He was a man of
good humor, a quick wit and a deep affection for the pastors and
laity under his care. He watched over us in love, and we benefited
from his skilled leadership.”
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Paul Duffey began life a twin in Brownsville, Tenn. After attending
the University of Alabama, he earned his undergraduate degree
from Birmingham-Southern College and his Master of Divinity from
the Divinity School at Vanderbilt University. Before finishing his formal
education he joined the Tennessee Annual Conference, where he
was ordained a deacon and elder. He served the Chapel Hill Circuit
in the Tennessee Conference, then served six appointments in the
Alabama-West Florida Annual Conference: Abbeville; First Church,
Marion; Dexter Avenue, Montgomery; First Church, Pensacola: First
Church, Dothan; and First Church, Montgomery. In 1976 he was
named district superintendent of the Montgomery District of the
Alabama-West Florida Conference,
where he was serving at the time of
his election to the episcopacy by the
Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference. He was assigned to the Louisville
Area and served eight years. He was
also Secretary of the Council of Bishops 1984–88.
Bishop Duffey’s service was recognized with honorary doctorates from
Huntingdon College (2000), Birmingham-Southern College, Union College,
and Kentucky Wesleyan College. He
was honored with the Distinguished
Service Award by Lindsey Wilson College and the Trustees Award by Sue
Bennett College. Huntingdon President J. Cameron West named the
College’s Paul A. Duffey Institute for
Church Leadership in his honor. The
Duffeys were members of the John
Massey Heritage Society and the Hall
of Honor.
Bishop Paul Duffey tossed the
coin to open the Homecoming football game in 2010.
Former Huntingdon trustee Dr. Karl Stegall said, “One of my favorite definitions of a saint is ‘One who makes it easier for others to believe in
God.’ Bishop Duffey was that kind of individual. He made goodness
contagious.”
Memorial contributions may be made to the Huntingdon Fund for
Scholarships.
Leo J. Drum Jr., Friend of the College
Long-time College friend Leo J. Drum Jr. died
at age 96, Jan. 6, 2012, in Montgomery. During his lifetime, he contributed nearly $2 million to Huntingdon, including a million dollar
gift to the College’s Huntingdon Tomorrow
Campaign for the renovation and renaming
of the Cloverdale Theatre, which will reopen
as the Leo J. Drum Theatre next year. Drum
also endowed scholarships in his own name
and in the name of his mother, Carolyn R.
Drum, and left a generous bequest to the
College’s scholarship fund in his will. He was a
member of Huntingdon’s Order of the Countess, the Hall of Honor, the Huntingdon Society,
and the John Massey Heritage Society.
Drum graduated from the Barnes School and earned a Bachelor of
Science with highest honors in the mechanical engineering major at
Georgia Institute of Technology in 1935. He was employed by TVA
61
and later by the York Air Conditioning Company. In April 1941 he
was called to five years of active duty with the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, spending more than three years in the European Theater
of Operations (1942–45), earning the Bronze Star for meritorious service, and ended his active service as a lieutenant colonel. In 1946
he founded Capital Refrigeration Company, which he owned and
operated until the company was sold in 1991.
A lifetime member of Temple Beth-Or, he served on its Board of Trustees for many years. He served several terms on the Board of Trustees
of the Standard Club and was elected as president of the board in
1953. Georgia Tech inducted Drum into its Engineering Hall of Fame
in 2005. He was a member of the Montgomery Rotary Club for more
than 60 years and a member of the Montgomery Country Club.
Drum was a registered engineer in Alabama and Georgia and was
a member of several national engineering societies.
His wife of many years, Martha Hall Drum, preceded him in death.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Leo J. Drum Endowed
Scholarship, the Carolyn R. Drum Endowed Scholarship, the Leo J.
Drum Theatre Fund, or the Huntingdon Fund for Scholarships. (Read
more about Drum Theater, page 8.)
Alumna and Trustee Emerita
Dorothy Rainer Sellars ’48
Class of 1948 alumna and Trustee Emerita Dorothy Rainer Sellars of
Opp, Ala., died June 18, 2012.
Sellars owned and operated the Dorothy Rainer Sellars School of
Dance for more than 50 years, serving more than 1,500 dancers
since it formed in Florala, Ala., in 1953. The school moved to Opp in
1974. On the school’s 50th annual performance in 2003, Sellars was
saluted for her many years of work to provide cultural enrichment in
the Opp area. In recognition of her guidance and teaching, her students donated two chairs in Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall, at Huntingdon College, named for Dorothy and for her husband, the late William A. “Doc” Sellars.
eron West said, “She has touched so
many lives through her commitments
to the arts and to enriching the cultural
opportunities for young people in the
southern Alabama region. It would be
difficult to name a more dedicated
alumna or one who has given more
of her time and energy to Huntingdon
College. We are honored that her
name, as well as her husband’s name,
are engraved in the Chapel for all to
see and appreciate her good work.”
Sellars studied dance in residence in
New York City after graduating as the
valedictorian of the Opp High School
Class of 1944, and she returned annually during the summers to study with
Thalia Mara at the National Academy
of Ballet and with Henry LeTang, a
leading teacher of tap and a Broadway show choreographer. After
graduating from Huntingdon with a major in history and an English
minor in 1948, she attended the University of Alabama for graduate
study in history. Beginning in 1965, she directed students on study
tours to New York each year for many years.
The recipient of Huntingdon’s Alumni Loyalty Award in 1977 and
Alumni Achievement Award in 1985, Sellars became a member of
the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees in 1991. She served as a
speaker for the College’s Founders Day celebration in 1986. She has
served on the Alabama State Council on the Arts, as a judge for
Alabama State Junior Miss pageants, and as a judge for the Arts
Council of Montgomery’s ACES project; and was a member of the
Alabama Dance Council, Professional Dance Teachers Association,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Museum of Natural History, and the Opp Chamber of Commerce. She wrote nearly
two dozen articles for DANCE Magazine and authored a book, The
Dance Teacher Today, DANAD Publishing Company, New York, in
1969.
Recognizing Sellars’ years of service, Huntingdon President J. Cam-
The Sellars family has established the Dorothy Rainer Sellars Scholarship at Huntingdon, to which gifts in her memory may be made.
New trustees were treated to an orientation session prior to the October
board meeting. Pictured in the front row, L–R, are David Hudson ’81, chairman of the board; new trustees Dr. Sanders Benkwith, Wanda Howard ’81,
and Fred Frost ’81, and trusteeship committee chair Dr. Laurie Jean Weil. In
the back two rows: Huntingdon Ambassador Jack Allen ’13; Dr. Frank Parsons,
vice president for student life and dean of students; Huntingdon Ambassador
Kayra White ’13; Laura Hinds Duncan ’94, vice president for enrollment management; trustee Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70; President West; Huntingdon
Host Will Davis ’14; trustee Howard Adams; trustee John Albritton, vice chair
of the board; and Huntingdon Ambassador Jade Reynolds ’14. New to the
board but unable to attend was Bishop Deborah Wallace-Padgett of the
North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church.
62
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
Huntingdon College Board of Trustees, 2012–13
• Chairman: Mr. David Hudson Jr. ’81
President and Owner; Dixie Pulp &
Paper Inc.; Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Kenneth A. Dunivant
Senior Pastor; Tuscaloosa United
Methodist Church; Tuscaloosa, Ala.
• Vice Chairman: Mr. John N. Albritton Jr.
Retired Banker; Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Michael T. Edmondson
Senior Pastor; Helena United Methodist
Church; Helena, Ala.
• Secretary: Ms. Betty T. McMahon ’64
Civic Leader; Birmingham, Ala.
• Mr. Robert Howard Adams
President; Capital Veneer Works Inc.;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Glenda Atwell Allred ’91
Alabama Deputy State Treasurer, Office
of State Treasurer; Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. G. Carlton Barker ’70
President and Chief Executive Officer;
ServisFirst Bank; Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Carl A. Barranco ’64
Chairman Emeritus; Warren Averett,
Wilson Price Div.; Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Katrina Keefer Belt ’95
Chief Financial Officer; Baptist Health;
Montgomery, Ala. • Dr. Sanders M. Benkwith
Ophthalmologist, Montgomery Eye
Physicians; Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Dave G. Borden
Chairman; Aldridge, Borden & Co.,
P.C.; Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. John B. Bricken Jr. ’67
Retired Educator and Athletic Director;
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. William B. Brunson
Senior Pastor, Vestavia Hills United
Methodist Church; Birmingham, 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.
Trustee Emeritus
Retired Chief Executive Officer; Bullard
& Williams Inc.; Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Leura Garrett Canary ’78
Attorney, Retirement Systems of
Alabama; Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon
Real Estate Developer; Cannon
Ventures LLC; Opelika, Ala.
• Mr. H. David Cobb II
President and CEO; MMI Outdoor Inc.;
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Dale R. Cohen
Superintendent, Northeast District,
North Alabama Conference, the United
Methodist Church; Huntsville, Ala.
• Mr. Lee Copeland
Attorney; Copeland, Franco, Screws &
Gill, P.A.; Montgomery, Ala.
To view a list of coming events at Huntingdon,
visit www.huntingdon.edu/events.
• Mr. Frederick A. Frost ’81
Assistant Chief Attorney, Exxon Mobil
Corporation; Katy, Texas
• The Reverend Dr. Edward R. Glaize ’85
Pastor; First United Methodist Church of
Brewton; Brewton, Ala.
• The Rev. Nancy Hastings Hornsby
Pastor of Worship Ministries, Vestavia
Hills United Methodist Church;
Birmingham, Ala.
• Ms. Wanda A. Howard ’81
Project Manager; Atlanta, Ga.
• Dr. G. Mark Kingry Jr. ’87
Orthodontist; Kingry Orthodontics;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Bishop Paul Lee Leeland
Bishop; Alabama-West Florida
Conference of the United Methodist
Church; Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Mary Kathleen McGuffey ’94
Paralegal, Boys and Girls Club
Headquarters; Atlanta, Ga.
• Mr. W. Kendrick Upchurch III
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer;
W.K. Upchurch Construction Inc.;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Bishop Deborah Wallace-Padgett
Bishop; North Alabama Conference,
The United Methodist Church;
Birmingham, Ala. • Mr. James Edward Weeks ’97
Senior Vice President and Family
Wealth Director, Morgan Stanley Smith
Barney; Atlanta, Ga.
• Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Civic Leader and Retired Veterinarian;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Diane S. Wendland ’53
Life Member
Civic Leader; Autaugaville, Ala.
• The Rev. J. Cameron West
President of the College; Montgomery,
Ala.
• Mr. William B. Wilson ’90
President; Jim Wilson & Associates LLC;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Lois Flowers Youngblood
Civic Leader; Birmingham, Ala.
• Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70
Civic Leader; Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Herbert Albert Patterson Jr. ’71
Community Volunteer;
Birmingham, Ala.
• Ms. Alice D. Reynolds
Trustee Emerita
Retired City Council President;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Mr. Eric K. Ross ’92
Senior Vice President; CB Richard Ellis;
Atlanta, Ga.
• Mr. William B. Sellers
Partner; Balch & Bingham LLP;
Montgomery, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Claude Shuford ’83
Pastor; Mount Zion AME Zion Church;
Montgomery, Ala.
• Ms. Elizabeth Couey Smithart ’86
Attorney; Union Springs, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Lester Spencer Jr.
Senior Pastor; Gulf Breeze United
Methodist Church; Gulf Breeze, Fla.
• Dr. Eugene E. Stanaland ’60
President; Gene Stanaland Enterprises;
Auburn, Ala.
• Mr. David F. Steele
Attorney; Monroeville, Ala.
• The Rev. Dr. Timothy R. Thompson
Senior Pastor; Frazer United Methodist
Church; Montgomery, Ala.
• Dr. Charles G. Tomberlin ’60
Life Member
Radiologist; Opp, Ala.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2013)
A college is a singing stride
Toward the portals of maturity,
A way of life deep-rooted as a pine;
A candle in a quiet aisle of prayer;
A college is longing and laughter
And fear and fulfillment,
And looking forward and looking
back.
A college goes on forever,
Not in microscopes or maps,
Or ledgers or violins,
Or even tall maples that brush the sky,
But in the still reaches of the hearts
That having loved it, and afterward
understood it,
Bear its mark forever.
—Author Unknown
Contributed by Virginia McLean ’45
63
Huntingdon College
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Montgomery, AL 36106-2148
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Visit Huntingdon College on the Web at
http://www.huntingdon.edu
Information contained in this publication is current as of the date of publication, but is subject to change without notice. Please refer to the Huntingdon College Web site, www.huntingdon.edu, for updates or changes. Huntingdon College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award the Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science, and Associate of Arts degrees. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097, or call 404-679-4500 with questions about
the accreditation of Huntingdon College. Huntingdon College does not discriminate on the basis of national or ethnic origin, age, race, color, sex, religious preference, creed, or disability.