Dr. Harald Rohlig: A Story of Triumph and Love

Transcription

Dr. Harald Rohlig: A Story of Triumph and Love
Message
F r o m t h e P re s i d e n t
wo of my favorite books are, An Apple for My Teacher: Twelve Writers Tell about Teachers Who Made All the Difference, edited
by the renowned professor of English at Hollins and Chapel Hill, Louis D. Rubin, and Take and Read: Spiritual
Reading: An Annotated List, by theologian Eugene H. Peterson, translator of The Message. I enjoy re-reading these essays,
which tell the stories of teachers and books that have made a difference in other people’s lives. Invariably, each re-reading leads
me to remember an important teacher in my life whom I had virtually forgotten; or I remember a book that helped shape my
mind and spirit.
T
Tucked away in Louis Rubin’s book, written on the bottom margin of page 13, is a list I began making in 1990, entitled,
“Teachers Who ‘Looked Out’ at Me and Taught Me to Do the Same.” Here are names of classroom instructors, authors, friends,
preachers, doctors, who — each in their own unique manner and setting — taught me to re-direct my thinking from an inward
focus to an outward focus, from an absorption with things as they are to critical reflection and action on things as they might
and should be.
Likewise, tucked away in Eugene Peterson’s book is a four-page list I made many years ago, entitled, “Formative Books and
Stories in My Life,” ranging from Eudora Welty’s, The Optimist’s Daughter, to Wallace Stegner’s, Crossing to Safety, to Anthony
Trollope’s, The Warden, to Willa Cather’s, Death Comes for the Archbishop, to Leo Tolstoy’s, “How Much Land Does a Man
Need?” Just as one historian has said of Abraham Lincoln, “Books became his academy, his college,” so can many of us say that
books have been among our best teachers. Books have led our minds and hearts to be part of a community of learning far
deeper and wider than we would have otherwise known.
This magazine celebrates the enormous power of education, as well as the teachers who deliver this gift to our communities
every day. You will read about one of Huntingdon’s most beloved senior faculty members, Dr. Harald Rohlig, who, 50 years
after arriving on campus, still teaches one of the College’s most popular courses, “Music and the Christian Faith.” You will read
about Huntingdon alumni who have “gone forth to apply wisdom in service,” as a kindergarten teacher, an elementary school
teacher, a secondary school teacher and principal, an assistant superintendent of schools, two award-winning college professors,
and a university president. Reading their stories, you will remember the great teachers who influenced you at every turn in
your life.
Living on the Huntingdon campus gives me the opportunity, every day, to interact with young women and men who are
being challenged by their teachers to “look out,” to integrate the knowledge and experiences they brought from home with the
wisdom of the ages they are taught here. What we desire for our students, of course, is that they will become educated persons
in the tradition of the liberal arts. As teachers, we on the faculty and in the administration of this college have as our task the
formation of critical thinkers who have a sense of their calling in life; who are able to apprehend and comprehend the interrelatedness of all things through an appreciation of intellectual, spiritual, cultural and aesthetic traditions; who have learned to
communicate effectively; and who have resolved to contribute to the development of community through cooperative work
and charitable behavior. In other words, we desire for our students an education that is not an end unto itself but that is, rather,
a means to the end of gracious, generous living.
“Tolle ... lege.” (“Take ... read.” - Augustine, The Confessions III/32)
For the College,
J. Cameron West
CONTENTS
ON THE COVER:
For more than 50 years,
Dr. Harald Rohlig has viewed
the Chapel from this corner, where
his elegant music and passionate
playing have graced many of
Huntingdon’s convocations
and special events.
Story, Page 8
Huntingdon College Magazine
Fall, 2005, Volume 84, Number 1
Chair, Board of Trustees
W. Ken Upchurch III
President
J. Cameron West
Vice President for Institutional Advancement
and Church Relations
Mark La Branche
Editor, Huntingdon College Magazine
Assistant to the President for
Communications and Community Relations
Suellen Sellars Ofe
Director of Alumni Advancement
Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86
Director of the Annual Fund
Margie Benson
Director of Development Operations
Cathy Wolfe
Coordinator of Gift Processing
and Donor Stewardship
Marilyn Boswell
Huntingdon College Magazine is published
by the Office of Community Relations,
Huntingdon College. For change of address,
please write Alumni Office,
Huntingdon College,
1500 East Fairview Avenue,
Montgomery, Alabama 36106,
call (334) 833-4564 or 1-877-567-ALUM;
email: [email protected]
Web site: www.huntingdon.edu
Magazine Design
Reid/O’Donahue Advertising, Inc.
Printing
Davis Printing, Inc.
Photography and writing
Su Ofe
(unless otherwise noted)
Donor Report
Office of Institutional Advancement
features
The Gift of Education: Wisdom in Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Homecoming 2004-2005: “Go Forth” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Dr. Harald Rohlig: A Story of Triumph and Love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Commencement 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Homecoming 2005-2006: “Old Traditions, New Beginnings” . . . . 35
departments
President’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Huntingdon News Clips
Wisdom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Faith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
In The Hawks’ Nest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Class Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Marriages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Future Hawks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Class Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
A Huntingdon Love Story . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Travel with Huntingdon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Coming Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
2004-2005 donor report
Donor Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Donor Spotlight: Herb Patterson ’71 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Tributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42
Memorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Alumni Giving by Class Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Alumni Giving Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
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THE GIFT OF
EDUCATION:
W I S D O M
It is stated so often it has almost become a
cliché: teachers touch the future. There is,
perhaps, no other paid profession that has a
more profound impact on the development of
future citizens than teaching. In Huntingdon’s
long legacy of preparing future leaders, one
of its deepest and brightest traditions is that
of preparing teachers. Huntingdon offers a
Bachelor of Arts degree in Elementary
Education, as well as teaching certification
(P-12) in Art, Music, and Physical Education,
and secondary certification (grades 7-12) in
Chemistry, English/Language Arts, History,
and Mathematics.
We asked a few Huntingdon alumni who
are educators what calls them to teach, what
makes a teacher a “great” teacher, and what
role Huntingdon played in shaping their
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I N
S E R V I C E
careers. Here are their stories.
Mary George Jester ’68, a retired
secondary teacher and principal and
the founder of Lanier Academic
Motivational Program at Lanier High
School, Montgomery, says “Kicking and
screaming” might describe the posture
with which she entered the teaching
field. Her parents leveraged the completion of a teaching certificate and an
English major with her desire to get a
degree in drama. But within her first
hour in the classroom at Floyd Jr. High
School as a new English teacher, she
says, “I knew I was home!”
Jester says a number of Huntingdon
professors shaped her teaching style
through their love of subject matter and
THERE IS,
PERHAPS, NO
OTHER PAID
PROFESSION THAT
HAS A MORE
PROFOUND IMPACT
ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF FUTURE
CITIZENS THAN
TEACHING.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Opposite: Dr. Jake Martinson ’54, who
has served as president for Andrew
College, Brevard College, and High Point
University, is serving as interim president
for Garrett-Evangelical Theological
Seminary through
May of 2006.
Right: Always introducing innovative
concepts to engage students in learning,
Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78,
associate professor and program coordinator of chemistry, lectures on Bond
Lengths, Bond Strengths, and Blue Grass
as part of her chemistry course.
their deep interest in her personal wellbeing. “They taught me that caring
about one’s students is critical to successful teaching. All in all, I credit
much of the person I have become to
those years spent at Huntingdon, a
place where young people were
encouraged to think, to expand their
horizons, and to take that leap of faith
to reach toward the unknown.”
Now a consultant, grant writer, and a
member of the Huntingdon College
Board of Trustees, Jester says her experience as a teacher has confirmed what
she knew as a student. “A teacher does
not become great until her students
know that they are number one in her
life. …The teachers who can give that
much are the ones who really matter to
their students. The others are merely
blips on the radar.”
Lauren Fabrizi ’04, a kindergarten
teacher at Carter G. Woodson
Elementary School, Duval County,
Jacksonville, Florida, has known her
calling since the second grade, thanks
to her teacher, Mrs. LaFerney. Fabrizi
says she still remembers her second
grade classroom because her teacher
made everyone feel important, and
treated everyone equally. She tries to
visit Mrs. LaFerney every time she
makes a trip home to Garland, Texas.
“A great teacher is a teacher who sees
every child as a capable student,” says
Fabrizi. The teacher believes in every
child and believes every child can
achieve great things. She goes to work
every day believing she can make a difference, and she makes a difference.”
Fabrizi believes the rewards for serving in the education field are great.
“The greatest reward is seeing the light
bulb turn on when a student understands a concept they have been struggling with. Seeing a child reach his/her
potential – seeing the learning occur is
an amazing feeling.”
Celia Rudolph ’80, assistant superintendent of schools, Muscle Shoals,
Alabama, has 22 years experience in
Alabama public schools at various levels of teaching and administration. She
maintains that the public school teachers of America “are really the unsung
heroes and the ‘giants’ of our society.”
Rudolph says it is not uncommon for
her to see teachers spending many
extra hours at work to help students
and prepare for classes, and for them to
spend their own money for necessary
classroom supplies.
“They teach
because they love to teach, and they
know that even the poorest of children
in our country deserve a great education.”
Asked what makes a teacher great,
Rudolph says, “There is a quote by
William Arthur Ward, ‘The mediocre
teacher tells. The good teacher
explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires.’ But
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
one must not forget the value of relationship between teacher and student.
Anatole France, a Nobel Prize-winning
author, once said, ‘Nine-tenths of education is encouragement.’ One can
hardly encourage or inspire without
having first established a relationship
between teacher and student.”
Merritt W. Moseley Jr. ’72 is the
2001 winner of the Board of Governors
Award for Excellence in Teaching in the
State of North Carolina, and a professor
of English at the University of North
Carolina at Asheville, where he has
taught since 1978. “I always wanted to
be a college professor and teach
English, from about the seventh grade
on. I was influenced, though, by Mrs.
Bailey in history and Mrs. Helen Norris
Bell in English, two learned, wise, and
humane teachers I had at Huntingdon,”
says Moseley.
Moseley says his career choice has
provided, “Constant renewal … an
ever-new cohort of students, new
things to teach, new books to read, new
ideas about them. Rejuvenation. The
satisfaction of hearing from former students that they remember something I
said or did and that it has affected their
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Jennifer Gaston Rodopoulos ’88 passes on the gift of education to two members of the Huntingdon community who are
also members of her fifth grade class at Forest Avenue Academic Magnet School (Montgomery) this year, Christopher Dudley,
son of Dr. Erastus C. Dudley, associate professor of chemistry, and Alexis “Lexie” Ofe, daughter of Su Ofe,
assistant to the president for communications and community relations.
lives for the better in some way.”
Jennifer Gaston Rodopoulos ’88
has taught fifth grade language arts at
Forest Avenue Academic Magnet
Elementary School in Montgomery for
17 years. “I learn from my students
every day!” says Ms. Rodo, as her students refer to her. “Sometimes I wonder, ‘Who is the teacher and who is the
student?’ I am also rewarded through
the long-term friendships that are
formed with students and parents. A
huge reward comes from watching a
child gain understanding through my
instruction.”
Huntingdon’s motto, “Enter to grow
in wisdom, go forth to apply wisdom in
service,” influences Huntingdon associate professor of chemistry Dr. Maureen
Kendrick Murphy ’78 every day, she
says. “Ever since I read that motto
above the entrance to Flowers Hall
back in 1975, I have tried to take the
wisdom I gained here out into local and
Alabama schools. Last year, I put more
than 3,000 miles on my van visiting
schools, doing workshops, and helping
teachers. I am known to some as ‘Dr.
Palm.’ Just last month, I gave professional development seminars, Science
in the Palm of Your Hand and Spooky
Science for Elementary Classrooms, for
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teachers in Midfield City and Trussville,
Alabama. I love to visit schools, share
teaching ideas with teachers, and show
students how to do laboratory experiments with Palm handhelds and technology we loan out to Alabama schools
and teachers via the Huntingdon
Technology Initiative (HTI) program. I
Retired educator Mary George Jester
’68 continues to work in the field as a
consultant and grant writer
also believe in training our students
here to do service-related science activities outside the classroom; many of our
majors helped teach in the Saturday
Children’s Science Workshops held on
campus in 2004.”
Dr. Jacob E. Martinson Jr. ’54, has
served as a college/university president
for more than 32 years at Andrew
College, Brevard College, and High
Point University, where he recently
stepped aside as president and became
the first chancellor of the university.
“What makes a great teacher, coach,
administrator? First of all, a great soul!”
says Martinson. “More than intellectual
prowess, one must have empathy,
understanding, kindness, civility, the
ability to perceive ability, and yes, love.
Those attributes must be a part of our
makeup. … A teacher sees the student
as being more important than the subject matter; that is not to minimize the
importance of the subject matter, but to
emphasize the one for whom the subject matter exists – the person, the
whole person.”
For Martinson and the other
Huntingdon-educated educators above,
teaching is a labor of love. “I love young
people,” says Martinson. “I think our
young people today are as fine as any I
have seen in 32 years as a college/university president. I am proud of our
youth, and believe me, I have no fear
about our future under their expert
leadership.”
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
HOMECOMING
2004-2005
“Go Forth…”
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Jamie Martin
Jamie Martin
Jamie Martin
Cherished moments between old friends filled hearts with love and laughter
during Homecoming in April. Under the theme “Go Forth,” participants
celebrated their college years all over again.
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4
Jamie Martin
Jamie Martin
3
5
Jamie Martin
Jamie Martin
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8
9
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1. L-R Doris Sanford Edwards ’55, Nelda Scott Funkhouser ’55, and Frances
Etheredge Jones ’55 relive memories in front of their college “home.”
2. Members of the Homecoming Court have a little bit of fun before the Court presentation.
3. The Class of 1955 celebrates their 50th reunion year.
4. Huntingdon women prepare for competition with their alumni mentors.
5. Rebecca Bloxham Jones ’55 points to a photo of herself taken during her Huntingdon years.
6. L-R President J. Cameron West, Mike Keeble (father of the Queen), 2004-05 Homecoming Queen Elizabeth Keeble ’05, 2003-04
Homecoming Queen April Leclerc ’04, and 2005 Mr. Huntingdon Andrew McNamara ’06. The child in front is Elizabeth’s niece.
7. Current student-athletes and soccer alums faced-off in their annual rivalry.
8. A future Hawk naps on The Green with his dad.
9. The Elizabeth Belcher Cheek Piano Concert Series topped off the weekend’s events with a stunning performance
by 2001 Van Cliburn Gold Medalist Stanislav Ioudenitch in Ligon Chapel.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
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HARALD
ROHLIG
ASTORY OF
TRIUMPH AND LOVE
Dr. Harald Rohlig, professor of
music, celebrates his 50th year at
Huntingdon College in 2005. A worldrenowned composer, organ designer,
and organist, his work has touched
countless lives, many of whom may be
surprised to learn the stories that have
made Dr. Rohlig the man he is today.
These are stories of triumph and love –
triumph over all odds, and love beyond
all measures of hate.
There was never any question about
what Harald Rohlig was called to do –
he knew the first time he heard a performance of Bach’s St. Matthew
Passion in his native Germany. Even
though he was a small child, he
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believed the concert was a message
from God that he should devote his
life to music. He listened to that message.
He also listened to his father, a
United Methodist minister, who told
him to soak up all the knowledge he
could. As a boy, he read the works of
famous philosophers and religious
leaders. Some of these books were
given to him by his piano teacher, just
before she was plucked away, a Jew
and a victim of the Nazi stronghold.
His violin teacher suffered the same
fate.
Harald remembers listening to
Adolph Hitler’s broadcasts over the
radio – his mesmerizing voice, his
urgent approach – and watching as
more and more people who were his
friends and their families began to
support the Hitler regime.
At the age of ten, Harald was old
enough to be inducted into the Hitler
Youth, but his father refused to let
him join. The family soon found that
grocers would not sell them food,
neighbors shunned them, and their
water, heat, and electricity were cut
off. Truckloads of cow dung were
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Opposite top: Now in his 50th year
at the College, Dr. Harald Rohlig
has encouraged countless students in
their love of knowledge, their passion
for music, and their wisdom to
make a difference.
Opposite bottom: Dr. Rohlig in 1960
Right: Harald and his bride, the former
Jeanette Lynn, who took classes at
Huntingdon in the 1960’s
dumped on their front sidewalks –
sometimes several times in a day –
and Harald’s mother had to scrub the
walks clean so the German inspectors
would not arrest her for the mess.
Under unceasing threats, the family
relented. Harald joined the Hitler
Youth.
At first, he says, it was great fun to
build small airplanes, and eventually,
a full-sized glider plane, in which he
soloed at age 13. He could have begun
to enjoy these opportunities, if not for
the ominous overtones of hatred that
grew more and more threatening. To
his horror, he was forced to stand at
attention as a synagogue was burned
to the ground while its rabbi stood on
the roof and burned to death. When
Harald refused to join as Hitler’s forces
smashed the windows of Jewish businesses (November, 1938) and stole
the goods that spilled onto the streets,
he was beaten up.
Harassment continued for Harald’s
father, as well. When the elder Rohlig
preached a sermon on obeying God
above man, rocks smashed through
the stained glass windows of his
church. In subsequent weeks, German
browncoats made noise with drums
and cymbals to prevent the congregation from hearing the Reverend
Rohlig’s sermons. One night, German
soldiers crashed through the family’s
front door and took the minister prisoner. He was held in a concentration
camp for many years, and though
finally released after the war, Harald
says his father’s zest for life never
returned.
“AS LONG AS
YOU PLAY FOR
THE GLORY OF
GOD, YOU
DON’T HAVE
TO WORRY
ABOUT THE
RESPONSES OF
THE AUDIENCE.”
When World War II began, Harald
was a gunner in the German Air
Force, the Luftwaffe. He recounts one
incident when he and an enemy
American soldier literally bumped
into each other in the woods while on
patrol. Eventually, they sat down to
talk about the war and their families,
and when it was time to get back to
war, they agreed not to shoot each
other in the back as they walked away.
“Very frightening that was!” says
Harald.
One night, as Harald slept in a foxhole, he was awakened from his sleep
by an American voice asking him to
surrender. He and fellow German soldiers, now prisoners of war, spent the
evening trading liverwurst for chew-
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
ing gum and chocolate bars. He recalls
one of the Americans saying, “Why
are we shooting at each other?”
Another soldier said, “It’s a bunch of
mixed up old men in Berlin and
Washington who make us do this.”
Harald says, “And you know, they
were right. With my capture, I began
my love affair with Americans and
America.”
But there were more hard times
ahead, as the German prisoners were
traded to the French in exchange for
coal. Although captured just weeks
before the end of the war, Harald
spent the next three years in a camp.
The Germans had laid great numbers
of land mines along the coast, and the
German prisoners of war were made
to find them using a sharp instrument
called a pique. “If you were careless
enough to faint or fall on a mine, you
had what was called a cigar-box funeral. I came close to having one myself,”
says Harald.
Harald’s musical gifts allowed him
brief respites from the camp when he
played for Sunday services at the
church in town. But he remembers
that for most prisoners, there was no
end to the misery they faced in the
camp. A few starving prisoners dug a
tunnel outside the camp so they could
find food, and were able to steal a few
potatoes from the storage cellar.
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Dr. Rohlig designed the original Bellingrath Memorial Organ in the College’s
Ligon Chapel, and then redesigned and expanded it in 1998.
Although they could have escaped,
they returned to give the food to others who were too weak to leave. One
day, the prisoners were confronted by
angry guards demanding to know
who had stolen the potatoes. The
guards lined the prisoners in a row
and pointed their machine guns at
them. “Who stole the potatoes?” they
yelled. But the prisoners didn’t
answer. “Who stole the potatoes?” the
furious guards repeated, to no answer.
Finally, the guards said, “I will ask you
one more time, and if you don’t tell
me, you will all die. Who stole the
potatoes?” Harald was among the
prisoners who began singing at that
moment, “What God ordains is
always good,” walking straight at the
guns. Astonished, the guards left the
guns and filed back inside the fort,
and the potatoes were never mentioned again.
Harald was liberated in 1948 at a
mere 98 pounds and with a shattered
right hand, injured when a bomb he
had tried to detonate exploded. After
medical treatment, he returned to his
music studies, attending the
Osnabruck Conservatory, where he
fell in love with the woman who
would become his wife, Inge, a violinist. He and Inge were married in 1953,
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and left for America a week later.
Settling into rural Alabama, where
he would serve as organmaster for a
small United Methodist church, the
Rohligs were the toast of the town,
with mounds of pies, cakes, and
casseroles awaiting them on their
front porch when they moved in.
The Rohligs came to Montgomery
and to Huntingdon in 1955. In his 50
years at Huntingdon, Harald’s course,
Music in the Christian Faith, has
become an institution. Students still
stay up all night in order to be the first
to sign up before the class limit is
reached. He has trained countless
young musicians in the same way he
was trained by a professor whose
teaching lineage stretches all the way
back to Bach. He has published more
than 1500 musical compositions and
performed at the world’s greatest
churches, including Canterbury,
Washington National, Cologne, Notre
Dame de Paris, and Westminster
Abbey. He has won at least five awards
from the American Society of
Composers, Authors, and Publishers,
as well as every honor available at
Huntingdon, including an honorary
doctorate. He has designed dozens of
glorious instruments, including the
College’s Bellingrath Memorial Organ.
In 2000, he was honored as Educator
of the Year among all United
Methodist colleges and universities by
the United Methodist Foundation for
Christian Higher Education.
His admirers include violinist/violist Andy Simionescu, a rising star in
American chamber music. “Harald is
for sure, absolutely, one of the world’s
greatest organists,” says Simionescu.
“He is a supreme instrumentalist,
steeped in German tradition, and a
skilled, moving composer.”
As an organist and choirmaster,
Harald Rohlig seems to cast a spell,
but no one is more caught up in it
than he. “When I play, I play like a
child, and let the chips fall where they
may,” he told the Birmingham News in
1985. “As long as you play for the
glory of God, you don’t have to worry
about the responses of the audience.
Musicians should direct their music to
God, then God gives it to the people,
and the people share it with each
other. It is a gift, from musicians to
God, and from God to us.” Dr. Rohlig
has served as organist and choirmaster for St. John’s Episcopal Church in
downtown Montgomery for 43 years.
Perhaps his most moving performance was the one filled with Inge’s
favorite music for her funeral in 1999.
She died on his birthday.
But as always in Harald Rohlig’s life,
there is triumph after tragedy. Just this
summer, he married the former
Jeanette Lynn, whom he had met at
Huntingdon when she was his student
decades ago. They were married during a visit to Germany last July.
Although internationally known for
his music, Dr. Rohlig is known at
Huntingdon for his work as a teacher,
for his gentle spirit, for his genius,
and for his humanity. He has made a
profound impact on the minds and
lives of thousands of students at
Huntingdon College, most of whom
have never heard the stories of love
and triumph that have been the cornerstone of his life.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
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COMMENCEMENT 2005
1. The Class of 2005
2. Tami Olds (right), instructor of communication studies, was presented the 2005 Julia Lightfoot Sellers Award by President J.
Cameron West during the Commencement ceremony. The award, selected by graduating seniors, honors “that member of the
teaching faculty who, in their judgment, has done much this year toward inspiring them to nobility of purpose and integrity of
character, and rekindling within them a deeper desire for learning.”
3. Dr. Frank Buckner (left), Chapman Benson Professor of Christian Faith and Philosophy, was honored with the Winn and
Gordon Chappell Academic Enrichment Award during the Baccalaureate service. The Chappells’ son, Dr. Rick Chappell (right) was
present to celebrate with Dr. Buckner.
4. The Reverend Jeffery R. Spiller ’76, senior pastor of Christ United Methodist Church, Mobile, gave the sermon during the 2005
Baccalaureate service, speaking on the topic, “What the World Needs Now.” Spiller has joined the Board of Trustees this fall.
5. Union Springs attorney Elizabeth Couey Smithart ’86 gave the address during the ceremony. Smithart is a new member of the
Board of Trustees this fall.
2
3
4
5
6. Robin Steele ’05 was selected
to give the Senior Address to her
peers and their guests.
7. Anna Whitman ’05 was the
summa cum laude graduate.
8. Daniel Thompson ’05 was
elected by his peers as the recipient of the Class Spirit Award.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
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HUNTINGDON
NEWS CLIPS
HUNTINGDON AMBASSADORS
MAKING THE ROUNDS
Huntingdon College Campus Ambassadors could be coming to a town near you, along with the president and other members
of the administration. This elite group of students is selected to represent the College at public appearances throughout the
academic year. The 2005-2006 Campus Ambassadors are (L-R): Emily Webster ’07 (English; Daphne); Wade Whatley ’06,
co-captain (Biology; Skipperville); EmilyBeth Dickinson ’07 (Communication Studies; Sylacauga); Jason Cooper ’06
(Biochemistry; Henagar); Gillian Lisenby ’08 (Religion; Dothan); Mary Beth Perry ’06 (Biology; Montgomery); Liz Arnett ’06
(Global Leadership; Murfreesboro, TN); Ashleigh Thompson ’06, co-captain (Human Performance; Ozark); and
Nicole Duff ’08 (Musical Theatre; Hueytown). The Ambassadors are also in charge of the annual Alumni Phon-a-thon.
WISDOM
ENROLLMENT CONTINUES RECORD GROWTH
The College’s official enrollment for the
fall, 2005, semester rose to 790 students,
the largest number at the College in more
than 15 years. The student body includes
646 full-time day students (a 3.9% increase
over fall, 2004) and 131 students in
Huntingdon’s School for Professional
12
Studies Accelerated Bachelor’s Degree
Completion program (a 79.4% increase
over fall, 2004). Tommy Dismukes ’83,
vice provost for enrollment management,
said the College had its largest incoming
class enrollment in 15 years, with 184 new
freshmen, 53 new transfers, 15 exchange
students, and 9 readmits in the day program. Dismukes said the freshman profile
has increased slightly for each of the last
three years, as well. This year’s average ACT
composite score is 23, and high school
grade point average is 3.3.
STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS TO BEGIN
The Huntingdon College Board of
Trustees has authorized a new strategic
planning process to begin February, 2006,
and conclude in February, 2007; followed
by a facility usage planning process to begin
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
WISDOM
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
February, 2007, and conclude February,
2008. President J. Cameron West said that
the planning processes will include a
detailed assessment of the College’s academic and student life programs and will capture the College’s opportunities for growth
in programming, enrollment, and institutional advancement. Facility planning will
assess current facility usage, as well as
opportunities for accommodating the
College’s growing enrollment and needs
with regard to its vision of service to
Alabama, Northwest Florida, and beyond.
CARLOS EIRE TO OFFER STALLWORTH LECTURE
Carlos Eire will speak on the theme,
“Citizenship,” and discuss his book,
Waiting for Snow in Havana: Confessions of a
Cuban Boy, winner of the 2003 National
Book Award for nonfiction, for the 20052006 Stallworth Lecture Series to be held
Tuesday, February 28, at 7:30 p.m. in
Ligon Chapel. The book is a memoir of
Eire’s boyhood in Cuba and of the changes
he witnessed when Castro took power. Eire
is the T. Lawrason Riggs Professor of
History and Religious Studies at Yale
University, where he has been a faculty
member since 1996. An authority on religious reformation, faith, and spiritualism in
modern Europe, he lectures widely and is
the author of From Madrid to Purgatory: The
Art and Craft of Dying in Sixteenth Century
Spain and War Against the Idols: The
Reformation of Worship From Erasmus to
Calvin, and co-author of Jews, Christians,
Muslims: A Comparative Introduction to
Monotheistic Religions.
Mississippi novelist Tom Franklin
ELLISON WRITERS’ FESTIVAL
FEATURES MISSISSIPPI AUTHOR
Novelist Tom Franklin was the featured
speaker for the Rhoda Coleman Ellison
Writers’ Festival in November, and
offered writing workshops for students
during his time on campus. Franklin is the
author of Poachers, a short story collection,
and of the novel Hell at the Breech, based on
the real-life Hell-at-the-Breech gang that
terrorized Southern Alabama in the late
1800’s, just 12 miles from where Franklin
was raised. As the recipient of the 2002
Guggenheim Fellowship, Franklin lives
and teaches in Oxford, Mississippi.
BISHOP AND MRS. WILLIMON
ENDOW LECTURESHIP
William Willimon, Bishop of the North
Alabama Conference of the United
Methodist Church and a member of the
Huntingdon College Board of Trustees, and
his wife, Patsy, have endowed the Bishop’s
Lectureship in Christian Higher Education,
to be held annually for the Founders Day
Convocation in February. The first Bishop’s
Lecturer is Dr. Frances Lucas, president of
Millsaps College, speaking on the topic of
“Wisdom in Service,” for Founders Day
2006, Friday, February 10, at 11:00 a.m.
in Ligon Chapel. Dr. Lucas will also speak
as part of the President’s Colloquy Series.
Her Colloquy topic is “Women and Higher
Education.”
Ken Williams
Naomi Harris Rosenblatt visited
campus in September, speaking for the
Rothschild-Blachschleger Lecture Series
and for the President’s Colloquy Series,
“Women and...”
COLLEGE OFFERS NEW LECTURE SERIES
Temple Beth Or and Huntingdon
College have partnered to offer the
Rothschild-Blachschleger Lecture Series.
The series is funded by members of the
Temple Beth Or congregation with the purpose of bringing inspirational, informative,
and uplifting speakers to Montgomery. The
first lecture in the series was offered by
Naomi Harris Rosenblatt, “After the Apple:
Women in the Bible,” in September. Wellknown author Bruce Feiler spoke on his
latest book, a current New York Times nonfiction bestseller, Where God Was Born, in
November. Sidney Pike, retired cofounder
of CNN International, will speak on his
book, We Changed the World, for the third
lecture in the series on Tuesday, January
24, 2006 at 7:30 p.m. in Ligon Chapel.
The lectures in this series are free and open
to the public.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Huntingdon students L-R, Bethany
Gaydosh ’06, Lydia Patterson ’06,
Angela Dahlke ’06, Carolyn Kinney ’05,
Emily Dueitt ’06, and Adam O’Brien ’05
learn about British history and architecture
at Chartres Cathedral.
MAY TERM STUDENTS STUDY THE WORLD
During the College’s first-ever May term
this year, nearly 100 students traveled the
world with professors from a variety of disciplines. Seventeen students and several
members of the faculty from the sciences
explored Costa Rica. Another 77 students
and a number of faculty and staff headed to
Paris, where they studied art and music.
HUNTINGDON ATHLETIC TRAINING PROGRAM
RECEIVES NATIONAL ACCREDITATION
Huntingdon’s
Athletic
Training
Education Program (ATEP) has achieved
accreditation through the Commission on
Accreditation of Allied Health Education
Programs (CAAHEP). “I am relieved that
the process of accreditation is complete,
and excited for the opportunities this provides our students and graduates,” said
Shelby Searcy, who served as program
coordinator throughout the accreditation
process. Searcy and College officials have
13
WISDOM
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
been working toward CAAHEP accreditation since the program was added in 2001.
National standards changed in 2004,
requiring students who sit for the mandatory national certification examination in
athletic training to have graduated from a
CAAHEP-accredited program.
Huntingdon’s program is one of only six
accredited programs in the state of
Alabama.
NEW ACADEMIC STRUCTURE IN PLACE
Huntingdon’s academic structure was
reorganized this fall into three schools
headed by associate deans, each of whom
reports to Dr. Frank Montecalvo, provost
and dean of faculty. Dr.Tony Carlisle, professor of computer science, leads the
School of Sciences, which includes programs in biology, cell biology, chemistry,
biochemistry, psychology, computer science, and mathematics; Dr. Samir
Moussalli, professor of business administration, leads the School of Business and
Applied Sciences, including business
administration, accounting, global leadership, exercise science, athletic training,
communication studies, education, and
teacher certification programs; and Rabbi
David Baylinson came out of retirement
for a one-year appointment as associate
dean for humanities and fine arts, including
programs in English, creative writing, religion, history, political science, theater,
music, art, and languages.
NEW STAFF MEMBERS
JOIN THE HUNTINGDON COMMUNITY
Sena Bird, director of the College’s new
Pep Band
Melissa Bond, admissions counselor
T.J. Brecciaroli ’03, completed his master’s degree in higher education and student
affairs administration at Indiana University
and rejoined Huntingdon as director of residential life this fall
Venise Marie Brown, Registrar’s Office
Houston Kennedy, head women’s bas-
HUNTINGDON WELCOMES
NEW FACULTY MEMBERS
Dr. Michael Bush
Dr. Wanda Swiger
Ms. Barbara White
Michael Bush, education, School of
Business, Applied Sciences, and
Education; Ph.D. Auburn University; previously taught at public elementary
schools and served as an instructor and
curriculum developer at the Academic
Instructor School, the instructor’s college
of the Air Force;
Robert Forbus, communication studies, School of Business, Applied Sciences,
and Education; Master of Arts, mass communications, University of Montevallo;
former communications consultant for
Forbus Communications in Washington,
D.C., director of the Business and
Technology Center at Alabama State
University; founding partner in Provato
Consulting, Montgomery;
Mark Liatti, mathematics, School of
Sciences; Master of Mathematics and
Ph.D., Auburn University; research interest in discrete mathematics with primary
emphasis on graph theory;
John Northcott ’93, chemistry, School
of Sciences; Ph.D., Auburn University,
Bachelor of Arts, chemistry and computer
science, Huntingdon College; previously
taught at Alabama State University, Georgia
Southwestern University, Huntingdon
College, and Auburn University;
Wanda Swiger, program coordinator
and a member of the faculty, athletic
training, School of Business, Applied
Sciences, and Education; M.Ed.,
Shippensburg University, Pennsylvania;
Ed.D., West Virginia University; formerly
worked as a certified athletic trainer for
Rebound Oklahoma Physical Therapy,
Chugach Physical Therapy (Anchorage,
Alaska), and HealthSouth Corporation
(Montgomery); taught at Huntingdon in
2000 and since 2001 has been a member
of the faculty at West Virginia Wesleyan
College; and
Barbara White, accounting, School of
Business, Applied Sciences, and
Education; M.B.A., Auburn University
Montgomery, B.B.A., Millsaps College;
has taught at Huntingdon part-time for a
number of years; served as a corporate
financial analyst, accounting manager
and audit manager for Colonial
Companies
(formerly
Colonial
Bancgroup) since 1986.
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Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
WISDOM
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
ketball coach; coach and teacher for more
than 40 years, including a national championship Junior Pro team that is featured in
the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield,
Massachusetts, and numerous junior high
and high school squads, NIKE basketball,
and NBA camps
Kathleen Madaris ’03, assistant
women’s basketball coach
Alaea Martin, assistant to Dr. Samir
Moussalli, associate dean for business,
applied sciences, and education
Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86, director
of alumni advancement (see story, page 28)
David Milford, director of career services, M.S. in college student personnel services, Arkansas State University
Robert Nishibun ’02, assistant to Dean
of Students Richard Jones
Glea Norris ’08, assistant to the associate dean for humanities and fine arts
Cate Payne ’01, cashier / student
accounts manager, Business Office
Kevin Ray, head men’s soccer coach;
former boys’ soccer trainer for the Eclipse
Soccer Club, Strattford, Texas; native of
Britain; played college soccer at the
University of Montevallo; earned master’s
degree and coached women’s soccer at Troy
University
Christy Stanley, admissions counselor
Robin Steele ’05, admissions counselor
Seth Woodard, athletic trainer
Karen Ziglar, receptionist, Office of
Admissions
TITLE CHANGES AND PROMOTIONS
Marilyn Boswell, Office of Institutional
Advancement, from administrative assistant to coordinator of gift processing and
donor stewardship
Brenda Kerwin (systems, periodicals
and non-print resources librarian), promoted to the faculty rank of Librarian III (associate professor)
Dr. Jeremy R. T. Lewis, promoted to
professor of political science
Christy Mehaffey, formerly director of
admissions, to director of enrollment management and Montgomery site coordinator,
School for Professional Studies
Joseph Miller, formerly assistant director of admissions, to director of admissions,
Office of Admissions and Financial Aid
Sandy Montgomery, formerly assistant
to the vice provost for academic affairs, to
assistant for the associate dean of college
services and registrar
Su Ofe, formerly director of communications, to assistant to the president for
communications and community relations,
Office of the President
Tom Roberts ’81, director of sports
information, adds responsibility as head
men’s tennis coach
Glenn Stearns ’76, formerly director of
alumni advancement, to faculty, School for
Professional Studies Accelerated Bachelor’s
Degree Completion Program
and secretary, respectively. Dr. Laurie Jean
Weil, who has served the College as chair
of the Board of Trustees for three two-year
terms, remains on the Board as a member
of the Executive and the Educational Affairs
Committees.
This fall, the College community
celebrated Rosie Rice Day and Eric
Baldwin Day in honor of two staff
members who have served on the
College’s food service staff for 30
years and 31 years, respectively.
L-R New Chair of the Board
of Trustees W. Ken Upchurch III
and President J. Cameron West
congratulate out-going Board Chair
Laurie Jean Weil (seated), presenting
her with a College chair.
UPCHURCH ELECTED BOARD CHAIR
W. Ken Upchurch III has been elected
chair of the College’s Board of Trustees for a
two-year term. A former Montgomery
Advertiser Person of the Year and the president and CEO of W. K. Upchurch
Construction in Montgomery, Upchurch
has served as an advisory member to the
Board for several years and is one of
Montgomery’s leading citizens. He serves as
chair of the Montgomery City Planning
Commission and has served on the
Strategic Planning Committee for
Montgomery County Schools. He and his
family are active members of First United
Methodist Church, where he has taught the
tenth grade Sunday school class for years.
John Albritton and Betty Thurman
McMahon ’64 continue as Board vice chair
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Rabbi David Baylinson
FACULTY AND STAFF NEWS
Rabbi David A. Baylinson, associate
dean for humanities and fine arts, was honored by Temple Beth El of Anniston,
Alabama, celebrating the 50th anniversary
of his first service at the temple in 1955. He
serves Temple Beth El as part-time rabbi
once a month.
Dr. Terry Conkle, assistant professor of
physical education, participated in a panel
discussion at the National Coaching
Education Conference this summer. He has
15
WISDOM
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
Contributed
been elected for a second three-year term as
member-at-large representative in the leadership of the National Council for
Accreditation of Coaching Education.
Mike Dunn, director of maintenance
and a reservist in the Air National
Guard, was presented awards for his
service in the war in Iraq and for his
help with Hurricane Katrina relief efforts.
He is a communications specialist in
the Guard. Pictured here are (L-R)
President J. Cameron West, Mike
Dunn, Jay Dorman, vice president
for business and finance, and
Colonel George R. McCurdy III.
Jamie Martin
Creating Community: Life and Learning at
Montgomery’s Black University, a book by
Jennifer A. Fremlin, assistant professor of
English, and co-authors Karl E. Westhauser
and Elaine M. Smith, was published by the
University of Alabama Press in July.
fessor of English, participated in the Glen
Workshop for Christian writers and
painters, sponsored by Image Magazine, at
St. John’s College, Santa Fe, NM. Andrew
Hudgins ’73 (Pulitzer-nominated poet)
and his wife, Erin McGraw, were among
the workshop’s faculty. Dr. Gray was awarded tenure this academic year.
Dr. Dennis Herrick, professor of music,
attended the annual conference for the
International Trumpet Guild in Bangkok,
Thailand, during the summer. He lectured
at Chulalongkorn University as part of the
trip.
Eric Kidwell, director of the library, has
been appointed to serve on the Intellectual
Freedom Committee for the Alabama
Library Association. He attended the annual American Library Association national
meeting in Chicago this summer, where he
concluded his term as secretary of the Arts
Section of the Association of College and
Research Libraries, the academic arm of the
ALA.
Dr. Jeremy R. T. Lewis, professor of
political science, presented a lecture and
held seminars on British politics as part of
the American Heritage Lecture Series at
Buena Vista University, Iowa, in September.
Dr. Lewis participated in a residential faculty seminar, “Interpreting recent and controversial history,” with Professor Ernest May, at
the Kennedy School of Government,
Harvard University, this summer. By invitation of the Secretary of the Air Force, Dr.
Lewis participated in the Air War College’s
week-long National Security Forum in
May. He taught a summer graduate seminar,
Area Studies of Western Europe, to officers
and civilians at Maxwell Air Force Base.
Dr. Cecile Gay Gray ’72, associate pro-
16
Dr. Samir Moussalli, associate dean for
business, applied sciences, and education
and Frank Plummer Professor of
Management, attended and presented a
paper at the annual Global Business and
Technology Conference in Lisbon,
Portugal, June, 2005. More than 300 international business and management scholars from around the world attended the
conference. Dr. Moussalli, who served as
one of a handful of co-chairs at the conference, received the Global Excellence Award
for his work. He was also selected to serve
on the board of reviewers of the Journal of
Global Business and Technology. Last year,
Professor Moussalli received the Best Paper
Award for a paper he co-authored with
Sharon Oswald of Auburn University,
which he presented at the Global Business
and Technology conference in Cape Town,
South Africa.
Dr. Ron Shinn, professor of music, conducted another successful series of camps
for young piano players this summer and
taught for two weeks at the International
Institute for Young Musicians.
Nordis Smith, reference, interlibrary
loan, and instruction librarian, has been
appointed to the Library Instruction Round
Table of the Alabama Library Association.
Dr. Jacqueline Allen Trimble ’83, associate professor of English and coordinator
of the English program, was awarded
tenure this fall.
Dr. James Glass has been a part of
the Huntingdon community since 1989.
Dr. James Glass, professor of music and
conductor of choral programs since 1989,
has announced his retirement from
Huntingdon College at the close of the
2005-2006 academic year. He will continue to teach part-time in the program.
Dr. Donna Whitley Manson, professor
of history, completed her Master of Arts in
Biblical Studies from the Birmingham
Theological Seminary in May. The
Seminary is sponsored by the Presbyterian
Church in America and is operated
through Briarwood Presbyterian in
Birmingham. She was asked to serve as one
of four student speakers at the graduation
reception. Dr. Manson met her husband,
Stuart, while both took classes in the same
program for the same reasons – knowledge
and growth.
STUDENT NEWS
Dr. Donna Whitley Manson, with her
husband Stuart, shows off her
Huntingdon Hawk “tattoo.”
Last spring, Huntingdon College’s
Creative Writing program released the first
in a series of chapbooks that Dr. Cecile
Gray ’72, program coordinator, hopes will
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
Huntingdon College students Ashley
Clark ’06 (Chemistry; Dothan), Amanda
Gilbert ’05 (Chemistry; Hartselle), and
Amanda Ousley ’05 (Chemistry/Cell
Biology; Mobile), presented two research
projects, “DNA as a Wire: Using the
Electron-in-a-Box Formalism to Calculate
Potential Damage to the Base Pairs in
DNA,” and “Unraveling the Molecular
Choreography of Memory, Smell, and
Chemical Structure” at the 230th annual
meeting of the American Chemical Society
in Washington, D.C., in August. Both
papers were co-authored by Dr. Maureen
Kendrick Murphy ’78, associate professor
of chemistry.
Keri Till ’07 (Business Administration;
Andalusia) is serving as an intern on the
SMART project team for Alabama
Governor Bob Riley this fall. Next spring
she will study at the University of Ulster in
Jordanstown, Northern Ireland, as an IrishAmerican Scholar.
Kirk Zauderer ’07 (Business
Administration; Roswell, GA) served as an
intern for Representative Tom DeLay in
Washington, D.C., during the summer.
SERVICE
John Williams
become a tradition at the College. Gray
launched a writing contest to determine the
first publication in the chapbook series.
The winning selection was “Possession,” by
Janel Carpenter ’06 (English/Creative
Writing; Wetumpka). “Possession” was
edited by Gray and Lacy Marschalk ’05
(English/Creative Writing; Andalusia) and
was published in May.
John Williams
SERVICE
Dozens of Huntingdon students, parents,
alumni, faculty, and staff contributed
items for or helped to make health kits
for hurricane relief.
Ashley Clark ’06 (Chemistry; Dothan)
has been granted early admission to the
Auburn University School of Pharmacy.
Emily Dueitt ’06 (Cultural & Religious
Studies/Spanish; Monroeville) served as a
residential advisor with the Duke Youth
Academy, a summer program of Duke
Divinity School for high school juniors and
seniors.
Rory Pruitt ’06 (Chemistry/Cell Biology;
Deatsville) is attending Queens University
this fall as part of the Irish-American
Scholar Program, sponsored by the General
Board of Higher Education and Ministry of
the United Methodist Church. During the
summer, he was one of 24 students selected to participate in a nuclear and radiochemistry program at the University of
California-San Jose.
Josh Robinson ’06 (Business
Administration/Mathematics;
Gulf
Shores) was honored with the
Montgomery Chamber of Commerce’s
Council of Small Business Enterprises
(COSBE) Certificate of Accomplishment
during their annual banquet in the spring.
The award recognized Josh’s academic
achievement.
Jenny Zeigler ’06 was among those
who contributed to relief efforts in
hurricane-stricken southern Alabama
during fall break.
STUDENTS UNITE FOR HURRICANE RELIEF
A dozen Huntingdon College students
spent their fall break in October cleaning out
homes in hard-hit Bayou La Batre, Alabama,
helping residents recover from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. The students
cleaned out the mud and sludge from affected homes and helped to recover residents’
belongings.
Huntingdon students, parents, and alumni combined to provide the materials and
“sweat equity” to make more than 350
health kits for hurricane relief efforts in
September. The health kits were delivered to
the United Methodist Committee on Relief
for distribution. Approximately 60
Huntingdon students are from Katrina-hit
areas. Some students lost their homes and/or
possessions in the storm, but all reported
that immediate family members were safe.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
HUNTINGDON HOSTS
MISSION IN MONTGOMERY
Mission in Montgomery, a decade-long
annual tradition in the city that had formerly been hosted by First United
Methodist Church, became a joint project
between the Church and Huntingdon
College this summer. Dave Barkalow ’03,
director of campus ministries, assumed
leadership of the program for the first time.
Sixty high school students from Fort
Payne United Methodist Church, First
United Methodist Church-Montgomery,
First United Methodist ChurchMillbrook, Spanish Fort United
Methodist Church, and Vestavia Hills
United Methodist Church worked on service projects in the capital city. Several
Huntingdon students helped with the program, including First United Methodist
Church interns Sam Lewis ’07 (Chemistry
/ English; Oak Ridge, TN), and Jacob
Kendall ’08 (Biology / Religion; Pelham),
and Huntingdon Praise Band members
Matt Gorum ’07 (Cultural and Religious
Studies; Gulfport, MS [formerly of
Enterprise]), and Josh White ’06 (Human
Performance; Prattville). “This is a tremendous opportunity for young people to learn
ways they can reach out to help others in
service for our community. We are teaching
them what Jesus taught us – to love without condition, and to serve,” said Barkalow.
17
FAITH
HUNTINGDON NEWS CLIPS (Continued)
HUNTINGDON’S MANE TEAM
NAMED MONTGOMERY’S COLLEGE
VOLUNTEERS OF THE YEAR
During the annual Montgomery Volunteer of the Year Awards presented by the Volunteer and Information Center in the spring, members of
Huntingdon College’s MANE Connection Team were recognized as Volunteers of the Year in the College Group category. Pictured,
left to right, Susie Wilson (MANE), Mary Hodo ’05, Bettie Borton (MANE), Meagan LeMacks ’06, Starla Raiborn (MANE), Lacy
Marschalk ’05, Kim Wallace (MANE), Anna Whitman ’05, Felix Parker ’07, and Leann Spears ’08. The students are specially trained to
provide assistance to individuals who have multiple highly-involved handicaps at the Montgomery Area Non-Traditional Equestrian Center.
FAITH
cookout on the porch of The Hut, followed
by Bible study in several different small
groups. The weekly Prayer and Praise service is held Friday mornings at 7:00 a.m.,
and Fellowship of Christian Athletes,
Dance 2 Glorify, and a new Christian
Women’s Group offer additional worship
and discussion opportunities.
FIRST MATHISON AND STEGALL
FELLOWSHIPS AWARDED
FIRST CROSS AND FLAME
GRANT RECIPIENTS ENROLL
Dave Barkalow ’03, director
of campus ministries
Chapel @ 8, Campus Fellowship, Prayer
and Praise, and Super Service Saturdays are
a few of the new features of the Campus
Ministries program under the direction of
Dave Barkalow ’03. This year, the College
Chapel Hour has moved from 11:00 a.m.
on Wednesday to 8:00 p.m. on Monday.
Barkalow says attendance at Chapel is up,
and the evening timeframe allows more
time for creative Chapel services.
Every Tuesday night, Campus
Fellowship brings students together for a
18
The College’s first Cross and Flame Grant
recipients enrolled this fall. These half-tuition
grants are awarded to students who are
members of the United Methodist Church.
This fall, the percentage of first-time freshmen who are United Methodists grew from
last year’s 19 percent to 38 percent.
L-R Mathison Fellow Kristen Etheredge
’09 (Religion; Brewton), and Stegall Fellows
John Martin ’09 (Religion; Marianna, FL)
and Wesley McCormick ’09 (Religion;
New Brockton) were awarded two-thirds
tuition scholarships to Huntingdon College
this year. The fellowships were made
possible by generous gifts in honor of the
Reverend Dr. Karl K. Stegall, senior pastor
of First United Methodist Church,
Montgomery, and an advisory member of
the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees;
and the Reverend Dr. John Ed Mathison
’60, senior pastor of Frazer Memorial United
Methodist Church. The fellowships are
awarded to talented students who are
majoring in religion and who have plans to
make church ministry their vocation.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
in the
nest
For information on team rosters, team schedules, coaches, and more, go to www.huntingdon.edu and click on Athletics.
Listen to Hawks’ football and basketball games on the Web at: hearitlive.huntingdon.edu. The Huntingdon Hawks are
members of the Great South Athletic Conference (GSAC) and are the only NCAA-Division III teams in the State of Alabama.
BASEBALL
The Huntingdon Hawks men’s baseball team clinched the Great South
Athletic Conference championship by defeating number one seed LaGrange
College last spring. Robby Preston ’06 (Human Performance; Gadsden) was
named Tournament MVP. Tyler Jones ’06 (Human Performance; Decatur) was
named Conference “Player of the Year.” Huntingdon finished the season 26-15
and 12-3 in GSAC competition.
BASKETBALL
The 2004-2005 men’s basketball team went to the GSAC Final Four after
earning a 17-10 record for the season. Allen White ’06 (Business
Administration; Detroit, MI) was named runner-up Player of the Year.
Among the women’s basketball team’s GSAC honors, Tiffany Jordan ’08
(Mathematics; Franklin, TN) was named GSAC Freshman of the Year.
Men’s and women’s basketball began their 2005-2006 seasons on November
18 in Delchamps Student Center.
VOLLEYBALL
The women’s volleyball team was honored with the 2004-2005 Game
Plan/American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Team Academic
Award. The award “honors teams who have matched their dedication to the
sport of volleyball with excellence in the classroom.”
PEP BAND LETS STUDENTS
TOOT THEIR OWN HORNS
Contributed
GOLF
The Hawks golf team finished second at the Greensboro Invitational, second
at the Gordin Collegiate Classic, third at the Tom O’Briant Memorial, and fifth
at the Jack Shadwick Invitational this fall, earning a top-ten ranking as the
Hawks prepare for the spring golf season. Bobby Gillespie ’08 (Undeclared;
Prattville) was the individual leader for the Shadwick tournament and Jacob
Collinsworth ’07 (Biology; Fairhope) was the individual leader at the Gordin
Classic.
SOCCER
Both men’s and women’s soccer teams advanced into the second round of GSAC tournament
play, where they were eliminated. Robert Spain ’08
(Mathematics; Alexander City)
earned Great South Athletic
Conference Player of the Week
honors after making seven saves
in the regular-season game
against Maryville on October 2.
TENNIS
The men’s tennis team returned last year under new head coach Tom
Roberts ’81, who also serves as sports information director. The women’s team
finished the 2005 spring season as runners-up to Piedmont College, both in regular season and GSAC tournament play. Amanda Thomley ’08 (Business
Administration; Dothan) was named GSAC Freshman of the Year last season,
and Head Coach Ximena Moore was named GSAC Coach of the Year for tennis.
Mark Owen
FOOTBALL
With a final record of 7-2, the Hawks
football team enjoyed a great season this
fall – only its third in history. The team’s
only losses this year were to nationallyranked Trinity University in Texas, and to
arch-rival Maryville College in the final seconds of the season finale. The Hawks held
a number of national rankings in individual stats, and finished the year ranked
number two in the Division III national
standings among Independents. Home
game attendance at Charles Lee Field this
year averaged more than 2,000 fans, with
three capacity crowds of 2,500.
SOFTBALL
The women’s softball team finished the 2004-2005 season with a strong
record last spring, and is building for a winning season in the spring of 2006.
Lauren Hobart ’05 (Athletic Training; Birmingham) was named GSAC CoPlayer of the Year last season.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
The College’s new Pep Band
adds a harmonious note to Hawks football games
Students who have a passion for music and a passion for sport can now cheer
on the Hawks in a musical way, as part of the College’s new Pep Band. More
than a dozen students regularly give of their time and offer their talents to participate in the band. The band peppers football games with the Alma Mater and
the Hawks’ new fight song, among other tunes. If you have like-new instruments you would like to donate to the College’s Pep Band, please contact
Tommy Dismukes ’83, vice provost for enrollment management, at [email protected].
STUDENTS SETTLE INTO THE HAWKS’ NEST
Huntingdon students have a new place to exercise, play games, study,
watch TV, or socialize. The Hawks’ Nest, located in the basement of
Delchamps Student Center, was renovated this summer to serve that purpose.
The Nest is comprised of two rooms; one for cardio-vascular and exercise
equipment, and one for games and socializing. The Nest was equipped and
furnished through donations from generous alumni and friends of the
College, and is open every day.
19
CLASS NOTES...........
BELLSAND
POMEGRANATES
The Huntingdon College Archives needs two copies of the 1911
yearbook, Bells and Pomegranates. If you have a copy, please contact
the archivist, Mary Ann Pickard, via phone at (334) 833-4413, email at [email protected], or postal mail at Huntingdon
College Library, 1500 East Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, AL,
36106. For more information, please visit the Web site of the
Methodist Archives Center (<http://archives.huntingdon.edu>),
which houses the College archives and special collections. If you
have any records related to the College, especially its alumni, please
consider donating them to the depository.
Stay Connected!
We regret the following errors:
“150 Points of Light,” pp. 12-14:
• In addition to those listed as “Points of Light” nominees for the
College’s 150th anniversary celebration, Coach Neal Posey, the
Reverend Donald R. Brill ’60, and State Representative Mary
Sue Barnette McClurkin ’69 were nominated.
• Catherine Cannon Jones ’50 is not deceased; she lives in
Camden, Alabama.
• Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ’69 was misidentified as a state
representative; she is a gift agent for her class and is retired from
the Alabama Medicaid Agency.
In Memoriam, p. 30:
• Sarah Estelle Bradford Lowery ’60 is not deceased; she lives
in Starkville, Mississippi.
The Donor Report, 2003-2004:
• In August, 2003, contributions were made to Huntingdon
College in honor of Betty K. and Joseph E. Hastings by their
daughters, their son, and their daughter- and sons-in-law. These
contributions were not fully recognized in the fall, 2004, Donor
Report. The contributions were from:
W. Dean and Julia H. Azar
Joe and Cindy Hastings
Clay and Nancy H. Hornsby
Oliver L. Yarbrough and Amy Hastings
Mark La Branche
You are important to us! Help us keep up with your news by
completing the alumni update form available on the Web site at:
http://www.huntingdon.edu.alumni_and_friends/staying_connected.
You may also send an email to: [email protected] or a regular
post note to the Office of Alumni Advancement at the College’s address.
We look forward to hearing from you!
Corrections to the Fall, 2004 edition of
Huntingdon College Magazine
In October, President West and Mark La Branche, vice president for institutional advancement and church relations, visited
with a number of Huntingdon alumni who live and/or work in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. Pictured L-R are David L.
Johnston ’97, art director for the State Department; Vidhu Khanna Johnston ’97, Environmental Protection Agency; April McCarty
Shores ’93; Ryan Shores ’98, attorney, former clerk for Chief Justice William Rehnquist at the United States Supreme Court; Sarah West
(President West’s sister); Robin Speight Davy ’65, consultant; Doug Davy; Pat Sanders; Victor “Spud” Sanders ’68, senior vice president/owner Rust Insurance Agency; Snaevar Hreinsson ’94; United States Senator Jeff Sessions ’69; Mary Blackshear Sessions ’69;
President J. Cameron West; Richard Cato; Emily Davis Cato ’62, Department of Defense; Susan White Bennett ’70, director of
international exhibits, the Newseum; and John Bennett.
20
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
MARRIAGES
• Mary Tyler Head ’05 and Steven Howard Spivey ’04,
March 19, 2005, in Montgomery
• Robert Lon Hurst ’02 and Catherine Elizabeth Hall,
May 28, 2005, in Woodbury, Georgia
• Tara Elizabeth Hutchison ’01 and David Joseph Wizorek Jr.,
August 14, 2004, in Alexander City
• Laura Kathleen Johnson ’06 and Michael Ryan Upchurch ’05,
June 4, 2005, in Evergreen
• Charlie Thompson Jones IV ’94 and Jennifer Jean Lell,
September 25, 2004, in Birmingham
• Courtney Elise Martin ’99 and Frank Goodwin Whitfield Jr., May
1, 2004, in Montgomery
• Mary Virginia (Ginny) Miller ’02 and Nathan Shane Sumner
’02, December 18, 2004, in Montgomery; living in Mobile
• Dr. Hunter Nathaniel Moseley ’92 and Emily Annetta Diehl, June
3, 2005, in Highland Park, New Jersey
• Rebecca Allison Robertson ’97 and Eric L. Haynie,
December 11, 2004, in Jacksonville
• April Amy Shaw ’04 and Matthew Damato, January 15, 2005;
residing in Montgomery
• Lindsay Brooke Shehee ’03 and Travis W. Fretts,
October 23, 2004, in Dothan
• Teresa Wolfe ’88 and David Armstrong, December 4, 2004, in
Bloomington, Indiana
Contributed
• Amber Kelley Allen ’02 and Robert Allan Underwood, September
25, 2004, in Panama City Beach; residing in Birmingham
• Zell Jason Barnett ’98 and Allison Michelle Popwell ’00, June
19, 2004, in Montgomery
• Anne Dominique Bartolucci ’99 and Jason Stuart Graham ’99,
October 23, 2004, in Birmingham
• Catherine Elizabeth Bedsole ’02 and Steven Greene ’02, May
14, 2005, in Montgomery; living in Lafayette, Louisiana
• Bonnie Anne Boggan ’01 and Justin Elliott Peavy,
January 1, 2005, in Homewood
• Mary Brandau ’99 and Matt Head, November 27, 2004, in Mobile
• Ryan Cabarrao ’01 and Althea Goodyear, August 20, 2005
• Brad Campbell ’04 and Brandi Hughes, October 30, 2004, in Geneva
• Katherine Reneé Davis ’02 and Jared Blake Williams,
October 22, 2005, in Gardendale
• Daniel Johnson Dean ’01 and Lindsey Jolley Falcon,
April 9, 2005, in Montgomery
• Abigail Garrison ’06 and Jeremy Kimble Pridgeon,
July 10, 2004, in Montgomery
• Kristin Goodrich ’03 married Mark Hill prior to his deployment
as a police officer in Kuwait this spring; the two followed with a
formal ceremony April 30 in Montgomery
• Doris Ruth Penton Hayes ’97 and William Milton Smith, April
24, 2004, in Birmingham
The wedding of Ginny Miller ’02 and Nathan Sumner ’02 (center) in December, 2004, was a Huntingdon-wide celebration.
Pictured in the front row are (L-R): Robert Nishibun ’02, Dr. Ronald Shinn, professor of music, Barbara Shinn, adjunct assistant
professor of music, Ginny and Nathan, Meredith Bernal ’02, Rebecca McNair ’03, Sarah Cheatham ’04, Erin Smith ’02,
and Renee Byrd Carlisle ’76; back row, L-R: Beau Toskich ’02, Daniel Thompson ’05, Dr. Erastus C. Dudley,
associate professor of chemistry, Lindsey Chappell Durie ’03, and Daniel Durie ’02.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
21
FUTURE HAWKS
John Hinds Duncan (pictured here
with his mom, Laura Hinds Duncan
’94, director of conference services
and event planning), is one of the
newest additions to the Huntingdon
College family.
Thomas and Kassie Dismukes, children of Tommy
Dismukes ’83, vice provost for enrollment management,
and his wife, Cathy, filled Santa in on their Christmas plans
during the annual Tree Lighting Ceremony preceding
the Service of Lessons and Carols last year.
22
• Joseph Miller, director of admissions, and his wife, Melissa
Nichols Miller ’02, a son, Jonah Ceborn, September 16, 2005
• Fred Mullen ’98, and his wife, Jeni, a daughter, Mackenzie
Catherine, July 27, 2004
• Logan and Courtney Coker Patton ’93, a son, Samuel Harris,
October, 2003
• Stuart and Dee Ann Ritter ’88, a son, Ethan du Val, November
24, 2004
• Meredith Trammel Roop ’91, a daughter, Ava-Kay Cecelia,
January 14, 2005
• Steve and Lauren Olney Stastny ’93, a son, Ross, April 6, 2005
• Brian and Patty Bravo Tardiff ’04, a daughter, Alexis Kailani,
December 23, 2004; residing in Reston, Virginia
• David and Tara Hutchison Wizorek ’01, a son, Joseph Carter,
February 10, 2005; residing in Montgomery
Heather Merritt Stiff ’99 and Jarrod
Stiff ’98 enjoyed Homecoming on The
Green last spring with their son.
Melissa Beck
• Robert and Michaela Mitchell Benjamin ’02, a son, Aidan
Mitchell, July 20, 2005, in Crestview, Florida
• Wes and Samantha Clements (’00) Kelly ’98, a son, William
Reese, November 5, 2004; residing in Montgomery
• Allison and William Ira (Skip) Davis ’94, a son, William Ian,
March 10, 2005
• Craig and Laura Hinds Duncan ’94, a son, John Hinds,
September 13, 2005, in Montgomery
• Sgt. Aaron H. and Shannon Delavan Dyer ’00, a son, Sean
Larry Brennan Dyer, January 24, 2004, in Fort Bragg, North
Carolina
• Laurie Howell Hester ’01, a daughter, Madison Childs, May 20,
2005
• Taylor and Mary-Aileen Jernigan ’88, a son, Taylor Elijah (Eli)
Ware, May 22, 2005, in Montgomery
Madelyn Grace Woodard (left), with Danielle Turk (center),
wife of Huntingdon Head Football Coach Mike Turk, and
Madelyn’s mom, Cassie Woodard, wife of Seth Woodard,
athletic trainer for the Huntingdon Hawks, enjoyed a rousing
victory at a Hawks football game in October.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
IN MEMORIAM
• Richard “Dick” Ahlgren ’73, February 24, 2005, Panama
City, Florida
• Elizabeth Davenport Askins ’33, February 19, 2005,
Birmingham
• Jessie Sue Bynum ’39, March 17, 2005, Scottsboro
• James Black Cogdell ’54, June, 2005, Luverne
• Hulda Coleman ’40, December 18, 2004, Hayneville
• Annette Lee Cooper ’41, April, 2005, Birmingham
• Winifred Ellison Corbitt ’31, November 18, 2004,
Montgomery
• Alan S. Craig Sr. ’54, April 24, 2005, Montgomery
• Margaret Patterson DeGray ’24, March 27, 2004, Litchfield,
Connecticut
• Caroline Marshall Draughon ’31, January 7, 2005, Opelika
• Allen B. Edwards ’52, December 4, 2005, Montgomery
• John T. Ellis ’59, April 10, 2005, Athens, Georgia
• Patricia Harper Furber ’47, January, 2005, Columbus, Ohio
• Marion Huey Garrett ’48, March 28, 2005, Lake Junaluska,
North Carolina
• Edgar Givhan, a long-time member of the Patrons of the
Library, November, 2004
• Julia Gay Hasson ’35, October 22, 2005, Montgomery
• Hattye Duggan Holland ’81, March 26, 2003, Elrod
• Margaret Ruth Kimbrough Keller ’35, November 13, 2004,
Albertville
• Mary Will Whetstone Knabe ’31, November 26, 2004,
Montgomery
• Ruth Crutchfield Lane, wife of the Reverend John H. Lane,
former superintendent for the Montgomery District of the
Alabama-West Florida Conference of the United Methodist
Church; March 24, 2005
• Greg Larson ’71, December 31, 2004, San Diego, California
• Annie Gibson McCowan ’36, Sneads, Florida
• Patricia Holloway McDonald ’54, October, 31, 2004,
Jacksonville, Florida
• Edward Patrick McIntyre ’75, November 23, 2004,
Montgomery
• Jean Louise McManus ’52, December 23, 2004
• Annie Laura Roberts Morris ’40, May 5, 2004, Tampa,
Florida
• Mary Morris, the wife of former Alabama-West Florida
Conference Bishop William W. Morris, January, 2005,
Gallatin, Tennessee
• Doris Smith Morrissette ’24, December 8, 2004, Mobile
• Virginia Stiles Olliver, former piano professor, September
19, 2004, Starkville, Mississippi
• Margaret McCarn Palmer ’31, 2004, Birmingham
• Dixie Collier Porter ’31, December 28, 2004, Birmingham
• Nell Rankin, former teacher of swimming, New York City,
New York
• Catherine Dixon Roland ’58, November 23, 2004, Atlanta,
Georgia (also a resident of Andalusia)
• Margaret Carter Sadler ’59, July, 2004, Pensacola, Florida
(also a resident of Brewton)
• Frances Beard Sprinkle ’40
• Charlotte Fowler Stokes ’56, October 30, 2004, Talladega
(resident of Decatur, Georgia)
• Emogene Norton Taylor ’58, and her husband, Tommy, in
an accident while evacuating their home in St. Charles,
Louisiana, in advance of Hurricane Rita
• Dorothy Higgins Thompson ’45, January 7, 2005,
Montgomery
• Eric Fontelle Thompson Jr. ’54, March 26, 2005, Lugoff,
South Carolina
• Rose Tatum Lassiter ’38, March 12, 2004, Birmingham
• Faye Eason Buttram Lawrence ’45, June 9, 2005, Auburn
• Susann B. Little ’70, May 31, 2005, Montgomery
• Herman Loeb Jr., friend of the College, October 20, 2005,
Montgomery
• Mary Eckford Mann ’31, October 31, 2003
• James W. Martin ’59, May, 2005, Birmingham
• Frances Ramsey Tisdale ’35, June 22, 2005
• Vonetta Bridges Turner, former secretary and bookkeeper,
March 2, 2004, Eclectic
• Frances Duss Litchfield Walker ’41, July 17, 2005, Shorter
• Conrad Jackson Ward ’52, May 13, 2005, Titus
• Fred Webb ’62, July, 2004, Lawrenceville, Georgia
• Elizabeth Taylor Worley ’26, June 21, 2004, Cook Springs
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
23
continued
Archives
• Carolyn Self Blount ’68 died January 25, 2005, at her North Carolina
home. The wife of Montgomery industrialist and philanthropist Winton
“Red” Blount, Mrs. Blount joined the Board of Trustees in 1987 and
served as its secretary for a number of years. The Blounts were among
the most generous benefactors in the history of Huntingdon College,
contributing nearly $6 million toward a number of projects, including
Winton and Carolyn Blount Residence Hall and the Blount Scholarship
program. “There are certain benefactors whose gifts exceed their monetary contributions,” said Huntingdon President J. Cameron West. “Mrs.
Blount was one such woman. Her legacy is the spirit with which she
touched the life of this College and all who serve it. She is remembered
with such affection — as a woman of enduring kindness and grace.”
• Dr. Rhoda Coleman Ellison, professor emerita of English, died in
September, 2005, at the age of
101. Dr. Ellison served the College
for 41 years, from 1930 to 1971,
and is remembered as one of the
most loved and respected members of faculty of all time. She was
the author of the definitive book
on Huntingdon College’s first 100
years, and is the guiding light for
whom Huntingdon’s Rhoda
Coleman Ellison Writers’ Festival
is named. Her involvement with
and love for the College were integral to building Huntingdon’s his- Dr. Rhoda Coleman Ellison
tory. Dr. Ellison’s excellence in
in 1954
teaching and concern for her students set a benchmark for other professors and inspired thousands of
students. She touched many lives through her service to Huntingdon
College, and continues to do so in perpetuity through a trust she set up
for the College prior to her death.
• Kate Durr Elmore, age 78, died in September, 2005, in
Birmingham. Ms. Elmore was the daughter of the late Stanhope Elmore
Sr. and Kate Durr Elmore. She earned degrees from Agnes Scott College,
Radcliffe College, and Oxford University, pursued post-graduate studies
at the University of North Carolina, and served on the faculties at
Adelphi College, Rutgers University, Berlitz Foreign Language School,
the University of Maryland, and Auburn University. Ms. Elmore was a
member of the Countess of Huntingdon, Huntingdon’s most elite giving
club, and the John Massey Heritage Society. She was a great supporter of
the arts and of the renovation of Flowers Hall. Ms. Durr’s family generously named Huntingdon College among the charities to which donations in her memory may be made.
• Father Michael Labadie ’95 died June 28, 2005, in the living quarters
of his church. After graduating from Huntingdon, he attended and/or
earned degrees from St. Joseph Seminary College in Louisiana, North
American College in Rome, and Pontifical Gregorian University in
Rome. He was ordained a priest in 2002 and served Our Lady Queen of
Mercy Church in Montgomery at the time of his death. He was described
by a member of his church as “an amazing teacher, a wonderful man,
and an inspiring priest.”
• Elizabeth (Betsy) Clements Massengale, wife of the late Huntingdon
24
faculty member Dr. Robert Glenn Massengale, died in September,
2005. Dr. and Mrs. Massengale were members of the Patrons of the
Library and established the Dr. R. Glenn and Mrs. Elizabeth C.
Massengale Endowed Ministerial Scholarships at Huntingdon
College. Dr. Massengale served as a professor in the religion department,
as Dean of Men, and as library director during his years at the
College. The Massengales’ scholarship is a designated charity for gifts in
her memory.
• Virginia Stiles Olliver, a faculty member in the music department from
1948 to 1961 intermittently, died in 2004. She was described as “ …an
exceptional pianist with a large playing repertory. She is an excellent
teacher with much experience.” Ms. Olliver studied under Katherine
Bacon at Juilliard during the summer while teaching at Huntingdon
and wrote, “If I had the money, I’d
be a perpetual piano student.”
• Catherine Dixon Roland ’58
died November 23, 2004, in
Atlanta, Georgia. Mrs. Roland was
a generous donor to Huntingdon
College as well as a devoted alumna, recognized with the Alumni
Loyalty Award in 1988. She and
her mother gave the naming gift
for the Charles and Thelma Dixon
Wing of Houghton Memorial
Library, completed in 1989, and
were honorary life-long members Ms. Virginia Stiles Olliver
of the Patrons of the Library. She
in 1960
served as a member of
Huntingdon’s Board of Trustees for many years.
• Former Huntingdon College Trustee Philip Allen Sellers passed away
October 1, 2005, at the age of 84. Mr. Sellers was the son of William
Leon and Julia Lightfoot Sellers (1907), for whom Huntingdon’s most
coveted teaching award is named. A member of the Countess of
Huntingdon and the Patrons of the Library, Mr. Sellers was one of
Huntingdon’s most generous contributors. The family has designated the
Julia Lightfoot Sellers Scholarship Fund at Huntingdon College among
the charities to which memorial contributions may be made.
• The Reverend Johnnie Doyle Trobaugh ’55 died October 16, 2005, in
Montgomery. He served the United Methodist ministry for 58 years, with
47 of those years devoted to ministry in the Alabama-West Florida
Conference. He was a former district superintendent for the Conference
and served Huntingdon as dean of students. His wife, Annella Rowell
Trobaugh ’64, is a Huntingdon alumna.
• Frederick W. Wilkerson ’52, of Montgomery, died October 15, 2005,
in Destin, Florida. A World War II veteran, after retirement from
Appleton Wire Works/Albany International he served Huntingdon
College as vice president for development. In the community, he was the
president of the board of the Landmarks Foundation, and was a friend
of Brantwood Children’s Home and a member of Huntingdon’s Patrons
of the Library. He was a member of the board of the Montgomery
Symphony, a fundraiser for the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, a
Paul Harris Fellow, and was recognized as a “Senior of Achievement.”
Archives
IN MEMORIAM
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
CLASS NOTES
1930’s
1940’s
1950’s
1960’s
continued
• Kathryn: The Story of a Teller
is the name of the enchanting
documentary produced by the
Documentary Depot that
focuses on the living legacy
of
Huntingdon
alumna
Kathryn Tucker Windham
’39. Huntingdon presented a
public showing of the documentary at the Capri Theatre
during Homecoming weekend
Good friends (front row, L-R)
in April.
Betty Gensert Towey ’45,
• Mildred Dyer Searcy ’48
Janie Black Roberts ’45;
was honored on the occasion
(back row, L-R): Virginia
th
of her 80 birthday in
McLean
’45, Margaret Ennis
Abbeville. She was widowed at
the age of 24 with a newborn Tucker ’45, Virginia Tate Herod
’45, and Marie Sinclair ’44
daughter to raise, and subseshared memories during
quently earned her degrees
Homecoming in April.
and teaching certification at
Huntingdon. She served for
many years as a mathematics teacher at Abbeville High School.
• James Y. Wright Jr. ’49 of Sylacauga, is employed at the VA
Regional Medical Center and is also a supporter of missionaries traveling to Africa.
• Doris Sanford Edwards
’55 of Tullahoma, Tennessee,
has retired from teaching and
is now traveling with the
Friendship
Force
and
Elderhostel.
• Maxine Turner ’57 of
Atlanta, Georgia, is working
on a book for the Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce and
traveling to Istanbul to
June Burdick Bisard ’56 (left)
research articles on Troy,
accepted the 2005 Alumni
Gallipoli, and Nightengale
Loyalty Award from Committee
Museums.
Chair Mary George Jester ’68.
• Ernie Killingsworth ’61 is
now president of Killingsworth
Aircraft.
• Theresa Dodson Major
’61, of Watkinsville, Georgia,
retired from the Oconee Co.
School System. She and her
husband, Roy, went on a mission trip to India in 2004.
• Warren L. “Buddy” Allen
’63 was named Mill Manager
of the Year for 2005 by the
Paper Industry Management
Thelma “Footie” Braswell ’62 Association. He is the general
spoke of her college memories
manager for Domtar Industries’
after receiving the Huntingdon
Ashdown, Arkansas, facility. He
Alumni Loyalty Award last April. lives in Texarkana, Arkansas.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
• Dr. Helen Harris Kitchens
’63 has been promoted to the
position of associate dean for
the College of Education at
Troy University, Montgomery
Campus, where she has taught
since 1989.
• James C. Britton III ’65 of
Galax, Virginia, has worked as
a pathologist for Pathology
Associates, and is now chief of Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth
staff at Twin County Regional
’67, world-famous basketHospital in Galax.
maker, was awarded the
• Grace Manon Grills Harris
President’s Medallion during a
’65 spoke at the state-wide
special dinner at the home of
Missouri Universal Design
Huntingdon Trustee Laurie
Housing Conference and served
Jean Weil last spring.
as the keynote speaker at the
Sudduth’s baskets are in the
City Center Neighborhood
permanent collection of the
Alliance of Kansas City. Grace
Smithsonian Museum.
has moved to Kansas City after
earning her real estate license
in Alabama and a BS in Family, Children, and Consumer Sciences
from The Florida State University. She has combined her study of
the building world with an undergraduate Certificate of Aging
Studies from the Claude Pepper Institute on Aging and Public
Policy, and works in designing living spaces for universal audiences,
including aging populations and others who have special needs.
Members of the classes of the 1960’s joined together for a picture
on the front steps of Houghton Library. Front row, L-R: Melba
Bolton Richardson ’68, Bill Richardson ’65, Judy Johnson
Bailey ’65, Mary Ann Harris Holland ’65, Sylvia Sellers
Whitley ’65, Suzanne Drinkard Plemmons ’66, Dianne
Merrell Norwood ’66, Twinkle Terry Tindall ’67, Jamie Blake
’62; middle row, L-R: Willie R. “Swampy” Johnson ’65,
Margaret Johnson ’68, Jan Purkett Kirkemier ’65, Elaine
Hearn Boese ’65, Janice Woolf Hendrickson ’65, Mary
Calhoun Chesney ’65, Edgar Wyatt Stephens ’65, Elizabeth
Oglesby Johnson ’60; back row, L-R: Gene Shelton ’65,
Penny Campbell Tate ’65, Marlin Anderson ’65, John Tindall
’65, Dan Bailey ’64, Anne Dismukes Shackelford ’65, Alice
Godbold ’65, Martha Brown Salter ’67, Bob Salter ’65
25
1960’s
• The Extra Mile Points of Light Volunteer Pathway, a new national monument, honors, among others, Linda Caldwell Fuller ’66
and her husband Millard, co-founders of Habitat for Humanity. The
monument tells the stories of great Americans who, through their
caring and personal sacrifice, built their dreams into great movements that have created enduring change in America. The Fullers
are two of twenty honorees whose commemorative medallions were
unveiled Friday, October 14, 2005, at a ceremony hosted by Former
President George Bush, political commentator Cokie Roberts, and
Washington, D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams. The Extra Mile
Monument is an initiative of the Points of Light Foundation and is
located along well-trafficked sidewalks near the White House.
• Paul Allen ’67, who heads the creative writing program at the
College of Charleston, performed a one-man show of his songs and
poems at the Kennedy Center this summer.
• Frances Woodbery Edwards ’68 and her husband, Stan ’69,
live in Montgomery, where Frances is the owner/operator of Frances
Edwards Antiques, located just a few blocks from campus on East
Fairview Avenue. In her spare time, Frances buys and sells real
estate in Florida. Stan is a retired teacher and coach.
• Charles Martin Lee ’68 of Colorado Springs, Colorado, has been
named president of TelecomPioneers. For 32 years he was employed
with the Junior Achievement organization, where he most recently
served as senior executive.
• Stephanie Mann Stokes ’68 is retired after teaching for 37 years
at a middle school in San Antonio, Texas. She plans to move to a
ranch in north Texas.
• Cynthia M. Davis ’69, R.N., serves as an associate professor of
nursing and wellness at Bainbridge College in Bainbridge, Georgia.
Dr. George H. Mathison ’67 received the 2005 Alumni
Achievement Award from Alumni Board Committee Chair Mary
George Jester ’68. Mathison completed his Master of Divinity
degree at Emory University and his doctoral studies through
Sewanee-Vanderbilt Joint Doctor of Ministry Coalition.
He served as a research fellow in biblical homiletics at Yale
University and has served as senior minister of Auburn United
Methodist Church since 1990. Prior to this appointment,
he served for 12 years at Saraland United Methodist Church,
and for 8 years at Kingswood United Methodist Church.
In 2004, he was honored as the Auburn Citizen of the Year.
An avid tennis enthusiast, he is currently ranked number
one in his age division in the United States Tennis Association.
Mathison is the author of six books of inspiration.
26
• Rebecca Fender Giles ’69, of Daphne, has been honored by the
Alabama State Department of Education as Regional Teacher of the
Year. She will move into competition for State Teacher of the Year.
Rebecca earned a psychology degree and started her career working
with delinquent youth. She later worked in educating people in jail
before earning a special education degree. She teaches in the Grove
Hill area.
• Ann Varnum (NCY available), of Dothan, was honored with the
Advertising Pioneer Award by the Southeast Alabama Advertising
Federation this spring. Varnum, 65, is recognized as the longest-running talk show host in Alabama. She is the host of The Ann Varnum
Show, a daily early morning show on WTVY (CBS), Dothan.
1970’s
A few of those who graduated in the 1970’s joined for a
“decade” picture during Homecoming in April. Front row, L-R:
Bill Rice ’74, Ansley Calloway Rice ’75, Patty Johnson
Wolf ’71, Gaylen Schrieber Pugh ’70, Diane Turner
Lipscomb ’72, Renee Byrd Carlisle ’76; middle row, L-R:
Bronwyn Bothfeld Nickles ’73, Ann Jeffords Cole ’70,
Phebe Mason Lee ’69, Peggy Parsons Crum ’70, Jerry
Lipscomb ’72, Doris Reeder Holmes ’75; back row, L-R:
Ellen Evans Haulman ’75, John Schloffman ’75, Terry
Miller ’75, Holly Bothfeld Miller ’76
Four Huntingdon alumni relived memories as they waited for
more than two hours to have their Pat Conroy novels signed by
the author in Delchamps gymnasium last spring. Conroy spoke
at Huntingdon with his wife, novelist Cassandra King. When the
happy alumni finally reached the table, they stopped to pose for
a picture with Mr. Conroy (seated): (L-R) Susan Cooper
Bernstein ’69, Linda Pearson Jackson ’72, Muffin Hand
Bateman ’72, and Jeannette Siegers ’78.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Contributed
1970’s
Judge Bill Stone ’78 (center) speaks at a Huntingdon alumni
and prospective student event in Fort Walton Beach, Florida,
at the home of Alexis Clegorne Tibbetts ’74 (not pictured).
1980’s
• Carl Barker ’70 is serving as chairman of the Montgomery Area
Chamber of Commerce. He is also the president and CEO of
Regions Bank in Montgomery.
• Dr. Cecile Gay Gray ’72 received word that her review of a collection of poetry by Kelle Groom has been accepted for publication
by the Southern Humanities Review.
• Twenty-three years ago the curtain closed at Town and Gown
Theatre on what was to be the last performance for Candy Colley
Wood ’73 – until now. Two months after that performance, she was
diagnosed with grade three bone cancer in what was thought to be
an inoperable area of her head. She was sent to a craniofacial surgeon at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. After eight surgeries, she was cancer-free. This fall, Candy performed once again
with the Summerfest Performing Ensemble during the gala fundraiser for the Craniofacial Center at Children’s Hospital, Birmingham,
held at Virginia Samford Theatre.
• Renee Youmans Anderson ’74 and her husband, Larry, have
been working for the family business, HB Paulk Co., Inc., established in 1929, for the past twenty years. Their son, Matthew ’02,
and daughter, Carrie ’00, are also working for the company.
• Michael Seth Ward ’76, chief of security at Huntingdon, has
completed 80 hours of training in the Certified Law Enforcement
Executive Program, and was presented his Certificate in Police
Management at the Chief’s Conference in Auburn this fall.
• Janice Hawthorne Timm ’77 has been named a recipient of the
“Excellence in Teaching Award” from the United Church of Christ.
The award was presented to five outstanding educators at the 2005
UCC General Synod in Atlanta, Georgia, in July, 2005. Janice is the
first music educator to receive this award. She is the minister of
music at United Church of Cloverdale in California.
• Patty Dukes Williams ’79 completed her master’s degree in elementary education at Troy State University Montgomery in 2000.
She is working on her education specialist degree in educational
leadership in elementary education at Auburn University
Montgomery, and will graduate in May. She plans to earn her doctorate in instructional technology at the University of Alabama.
Patty, who is a third grade teacher at Eclectic Elementary, lives in
Wetumpka with her husband, Don, and two daughters.
• Celia Dell Smith Rudolph ’80 completed her doctorate in educational leadership in 2004 and serves as the assistant superintendent, Muscle Shoals City Schools, Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Her son,
Glenn ’09, is a freshman at Huntingdon.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Kristi DuBose ’86 accepted the Alumni Achievement
Award during Homecoming 2005 in April. After graduating
with honors from Huntingdon and from Emory University
School of Law, she completed a federal judge clerkship,
and served as an assistant United States attorney in the
Southern District of Alabama, as an assistant district attorney
in Covington County, Alabama, as Deputy Attorney General
for the State of Alabama, and as Chief Counsel on the
Judiciary Committee to United States Senator Jeff Sessions
’69 before being appointed as a magistrate judge. Earlier this
fall, DuBose was nominated by President George W. Bush for
a United States District Judgeship, Southern District of
Alabama.
Members of the Classes of the 1980’s who posed for a picture during Homecoming in April included (front row, L-R):
Deborah Tuck Clark ’80, Arthur (Danny) Gissendanner
’80, Joe Jackson (JJ) Frazer ’82, Robert Caldwell ’85;
(back row, L-R): Karen Curry Sindel ’80, Sally Brown ’80;
Suzie Wendland Rhodes ’80 and Cheryl Price ’81.
• Ralph Stacy ’80, president and CEO of the Chamber of
Commerce Association of Alabama, has earned the Certified
Association Executive (CAE) credential and designation from the
American Society of Association Executives.
• Mike Stanton-Rich ’82 has published his second book, At Home
on Carpenter’s Knob. He lives in North Carolina.
• Richard Yates ’82 is working as the global portfolio director for
The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta.
27
• Life with Strings Attached, the first novel written by Minnie
Lamberth ’83, was published by Paraclete Press in March. The
novel won the Paraclete Prize last year for the best formerly unpublished novel with Christian themes.
• Cathi Floyd Alford ’84 has joined the legal department at Bayer
Properties.
• Lorilynn Fellows Howe ’84 of Los Lunas, New Mexico, is pursuing a Master of Social Work degree from New Mexico State
University, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
• Frank Kyzer ’85 has been promoted to vice president for corporate banking at Colonial Bank, based in Montgomery. He will graduate in 2005 from the Graduate School of Banking at Louisiana State
University. He is active with the Montgomery Area Chamber of
Commerce, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and the United
Way.
• Kathy Salter Porter ’85 has been named manager of communications at ACIPCO in Birmingham.
HUNTINGDON ANNOUNCES
NEW ALUMNI DIRECTOR
• Martie Bailey McEnerney ’86
stepped in as the College’s director of
alumni advancement November 1.
McEnerney comes to Huntingdon
after serving as the director of family
activities and the director of nurseries at First United Methodist
Church. She has served as a member
Martie Bailey
of Huntingdon’s National Alumni
McEnerney ’86
Board and as Class Agent for her
class. In the community, she serves as the local coordinator
for Montgomery-United States Tennis Association (USTA)
League Tennis, and is an active tennis player. “I am so excited to return to my alma mater as director of alumni advancement,” said McEnerney. “I look forward to working with the
Office of Institutional Advancement to connect with
Huntingdon alumni and further the College’s recruitment and
fundraising efforts.” McEnerney and her husband, Mark, a
senior operations engineer at STERIS, live in Montgomery
with their two daughters, Carter and Laura, both students at
The St. James School.
“Martie McEnerney is the perfect choice to lead our alumni program at this critical time, as we build our fundraising
and recruitment efforts within our alumni group,” said Mark
La Branche, vice president for institutional advancement and
church relations. “As an alumna and a lifelong Montgomery
resident, she knows the College and the community well, and
will work to increase alumni and community awareness of
the great things happening at Huntingdon College.”
McEnerney replaces Glenn Stearns ’76 in the alumni
advancement role. Stearns will assume a faculty position with
the College’s School for Professional Studies and will begin
working on his doctorate soon.
28
• Charles Morgan Trotter ’86 lives in Knoxville, Tennessee. After
serving as a Presbyterian pastor for nine years, he is now an assistant manager for SAFECO, Inc.
• Charles Allen Walker ’86 and his wife, Kathy, live in Barnesville,
Georgia, where he is the director of program ministries at First
United Methodist Church in Barnesville.
• Sharon S. Hust Belew ’87 and her husband, Ray, live in North
Little Rock, Arkansas, where she is the director of professional staff
at Learning Rx in Little Rock.
• Frances Thomason ’87 completed her Master of Science in
Counseling and Human Development and works for the Hall
County Department of Family and Children Services as a case manager. She lives in Gainesville, Georgia.
• Teresa Wolfe Armstrong ’88 is working as a medical writer with
Eli Lilly and Company in Indianapolis, Indiana. She and her new
husband (see Marriages) live in Bloomington.
• Jennifer Oliver Gardner ’88, of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida,
has earned National Board Certification, the highest credential in
the teaching profession. She is a language arts teacher at Roosevelt
Middle School in West Palm Beach, Florida.
• United States Air Force Reserves Major Scott Hayes ’88 (357th
Airlift Squadron, 908th Airlift Wing, Maxwell AFB, AL) has been
deployed to Qatar, where he is a C-130 pilot flying troops and cargo
to the forward operating bases in Iraq and Afghanistan (and, he
says, proudly wears his Huntingdon hat and sweatshirt). He and his
wife, Angelyn Bryant Hayes ’86, just welcomed their third child.
• Dana Nix Moore ’88 is the portfolio manager for the Southern
Development Council, a certified development company making
small business loans in Alabama, Mississippi, and the Florida
Panhandle. She is also an active member of the National Association
of Development Companies (NADCO) and serves as a speaker for
topics related to small business lending.
Members of the Classes of the 1990’s who enjoyed
Homecoming in April included (front row, L-R): Cammy Love
Fulmer ’95, Amy Woodard Klugh ’96, Stephanie Baker
Yeager ’95, Andretta Lindsey Albright ’94; (middle, L-R):
Carey Head ’94, Heather Mann Head ’95, Deborah Lowe
Varner ’95, Heather Whitfield Barry ’95; and (back row,
L-R): Jenny Matthews ’95, Emily Sweezey ’95, Brian
Mann ’95, and Michelle Olson-Johnson ’95.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
• Andy Meadows ’90 missed the excitement of Homecoming this
year as an episode of HGTV’s “If Walls Could Talk” was filmed in his
home in Montgomery that weekend. The episode will air sometime
in the fall.
• Michelle Call Phillips ’90, and husband, Jeff, have moved to
Merritt Island, Florida, where she is a homemaker and Jeff is an
architect for BRPH Companies, Inc.
• Stephanie Pullis Young ’91, who worked as a social worker for
the State of Alabama for nearly nine years, suffered a stroke following the birth of her daughter in 2004 and is not able to work at this
time. She and her husband, Christopher, live in Montgomery.
• Sheryl B. Hayes ’92 serves as the director of development for the
Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.
• Dr. Hunter Moseley ’92 (see Marriages) is a scientist at the
Center for Advanced BioTechnology and Medicine at Rutgers
University.
• Captain Tyr Brenner ’94 is the director of small business for the
Pacific region of the United States Air Force in Honolulu, Hawaii.
• Skip Davis ’94 has been promoted to senior territory representative with Sanofi-Aventis in Birmingham. He and his wife have a new
addition to the family (see Future Hawks).
• James Franklin (Trey) Gibbons III ’96 is performing in the
Barefoot Theatre Company’s production of Lanford Wilson’s Balm in
Gilead, running October 27-November 20 at the American Theatre
of Actors, 314 W. 54th Street, New York, New York. The play stars
Anna Chlumsky, known for her work in the “My Girl” movies.
• Steven A. Miller ’96 and his wife, Ivy Shelly Hines Miller ’97,
celebrated his completion of law school at Widener University –
Harrisburg in December, 2004. He passed the Georgia bar exam and
is practicing law in Summerville, Georgia, in the Public Defender’s
office in Chattooga County.
• Kathy Regina Paschal ’97 completed her master’s degree in secondary social science education in May.
• At the Honors and Awards Convocation at Tennessee Wesleyan
College in April, Dr. John K. Berch Jr. ’98 was honored as the New
Faculty Member of the Year. He received a monetary award and a
letter commending performance beyond expectations during his
first year of service as an assistant professor of chemistry in the
Department of Natural Sciences at TWC.
• Arryn Hablitzel ’98 has completed her master’s degree in occupational therapy at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. She was
among the first class of graduate students in the country to earn a
certificate in Low Vision Rehabilitation.
• Amy Huber ’98 completed her Master of Public Health degree in
epidemiology in May, 2002, and worked for the University of
Alabama at Birmingham doing pediatric research for two years. She
moved to Durham, North Carolina, in October, 2004, for a position
in SAS programming/data analysis with a pharmaceutical company
in Research Triangle Park, NC.
• Wes Kelly ’98 and Samantha Clements Kelly ’00, have a new
addition to their family (see Future Hawks). Wes is the manager of
the PricewaterhouseCoopers, L.L.C., accounting firm in
Montgomery. Samantha is a HIPAA compliance coordinator
for MediSYS for Physicians, Inc.
• Shaindel Beers ’99 completed her Master of Arts at the
University of Chicago in 2000 and her Master of Fine Arts in creative writing (poetry) at Vermont College in 2005. Her poem, “A
Brief History of Time,” which appeared in Poetry Miscellany, has
been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and she appeared as the featured poet on the Orlando area NPR station’s “Poetic Logic” segment
of Arts Connection. She is teaching English at Seminole Community
College in Sanford, Florida, and is the poetry editor of Contrary
magazine.
• Mary Brandau Head ’99 (see Marriages) is working as the marketing and public relations director at Sloss Furnaces in
Birmingham.
• Todd Jeffries ’99 is working for the Georgia Shakespeare Festival
and continues to draw, as well. Todd’s portraits of famous country/western singers have raised $28,000 for charities in the last two
years.
Amy Woodard Klugh ’96, Emily Sweezey ’95, and Nanci
Smith Berch ’96 enjoy the sun on The Green.
2005 Outstanding Young Alumnus of the Year Eric Koin
Ross ’92 (second from left), celebrated his award with his
wife, Erica (left) and parents, Joe and Betty Ross.
Ross, who serves as president of the National Alumni
Association for the 2005-2006 academic year, is a senior
vice president for corporate advisory services for
Trammel Crow Company in Atlanta.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Contributed
1990’s
The Oldham family,
including Clarke Oldham
’93 and his wife, Susan
Brubaker Oldham ’91,
Daniel Oldham ’99 and
his wife, Tiffany Fike
Oldham ’98, and Bo
Oldham ’00, stopped by
the College to reminisce
and take photos during a
recent trip to Montgomery.
29
L-R Brittany Dubose ’04, Hollen Hartzog Smith ’03,
Melissa Beck ’00, Madison Clayton ’01, Jackie
Robinson ’01, Elisa Lowry Haley ’99, Carrie
McDonough ’01, Suzanne Jones Higgs ’00, and
LeAnn Bowdoin ’01 will be lifelong friends.
2000’s
• Brandi Scott ’99 has a new position as senior strategic planning
analyst with Southern Natural Gas, Birmingham.
• Michael Boyd, formerly an exchange student at Huntingdon
through the Belfast Education Initiative, is working for the Irish
Football Association as director of community relations, where he
says he is “using sport to heal sectarian and racist divides in
Northern Ireland.”
• Melissa Beck ’00 and Aimee Rials ’00 are living their dream in
New York City — dancing under the lights! Aimee and two dance
friends she met through her graduate work at Tisch School of Dance
have formed This That Dance Connective and have obtained notfor-profit status through Dance Theater Workshop. Their first project was a March performance of the show, “Abstract Sense,” which
they choreographed. Melissa, who has also completed her graduate
work in dance at Tisch, danced in the show. Melissa’s other job is
that of a professional organizer with Cross It Off Your List.
• Gabie Churchill Kerr ’00 and her husband are living in
Mountain Home, Idaho, where she works as the director of the
Mountain Home Park University campus. She also serves as an
adjunct faculty member teaching business and communication
classes.
• Casey Malone Maugh ’00 completed her master’s degree in
speech communications at Colorado State University and her doctoral studies in the same subject at the Pennsylvania State University,
where she is ABD. She is a Peace Corps volunteer serving in the
Cape Verde Islands, an archipelago about 375 miles off the coast of
West Africa. She is learning Creole and Portuguese in order to fulfill
her mission, which is to work for the Institute for Superior
Education. Casey is teaching English at ISE and working on a grant
to implement an “in-service” training program for high school
teachers on all of the islands. Very few teachers in Cape Verde currently have college-level training. She says Cape Verde “is one of the
most beautiful places on earth.”
• Dr. Carey McInnis ’00 completed her doctor of veterinary medicine degree at Auburn University this spring.
• Forrest Smith ’00 stepped down as Huntingdon’s head women’s
basketball coach as he and his wife, Kelly Armstrong Smith ’00,
30
moved to Florida. Forrest came to Huntingdon as a transfer in 1997
to be part of the renewed men’s basketball program. He made the
College’s first-ever 3-point shot and set a number of scoring records
under Head Coach Buzz Phillips. Following graduation, he served
as a graduate assistant for the men’s program and later as assistant
coach for the women’s program, taking the helm in 2002. The
Smiths relocated to Chipley, Florida, where Kelly, who has just completed optometry school, has accepted a position with the Eye
Center of North Florida.
• Ryan Cabarrao ’01, former head men’s soccer coach, resigned
his position this fall. He and his new wife (see Marriages) have
moved to Orlando, Florida, where her job has been relocated.
Before moving, Ryan completed his master’s degree at Auburn
University Montgomery.
• Laurie Hester ’01 received her master’s degree in elementary
education in May, 2005, from Troy University in Phenix City.
• Dan Ogle ’01 graduated from the University of Alabama School
of Law last May and passed the Alabama Bar in July. He is in practice with Boardman, Carr, Weed & Hutcheson, a firm in the
Birmingham area.
• Bonnie Boggan Peavy ’01 (see Marriages) graduated from the
University of Alabama School of Law in May, where she has been on
the Law/Psychology Review with Melissa Burkett ’00.
• Leigh N. Waite ’01 will graduate in December, 2005, from the
University of South Alabama with a master’s degree in elementary
education.
• Tara Hutchison Wizorek ’01 and her family (see Future Hawks)
live in Montgomery, where she is a reporter and producer for the
Alabama Public Television nightly statewide news program, For the
Record, and her husband, David, is a detective for the Montgomery
Police Department.
• Walter Lee Coleman ’02 graduated in April from the University
of West Florida with a Master of Science in computer science.
• Tamisha Collins ’02 will graduate in December from the Nuclear
Medicine Technology Program at the University of AlabamaBirmingham, where she has studied on a License to Learn Scholarship,
a Lettie Pate Whitehead Scholarship, and a Royce Osborne Minority
Scholarship. Tamisha received Presidential Honors for maintaining a
4.0 average for both the fall and spring semesters. You can see her in the
May, 2005, issue of Birmingham Magazine.
• Jamie Deveau Hahn ’02 is teaching English in Okinawa, Japan,
where her military husband is stationed.
• David Bryant Isbell ’02 was working as a trial paralegal with the
law firm Guste Barnett and Shushan in New Orleans until Hurricane
Katrina forced him to leave. His firm has opened a temporary office
in Baton Rouge, where he is working until the firm’s main office,
which sustained no damage, reopens.
• Reggie McNeal ’02 is about to complete her master’s degree in
special education, with an emphasis on transition studies, from
Auburn University, for which she received a Transition Grant. She
has served as a student worker and graduate assistant, and as the
student coordinator for the National Transition Conference. She
interned in Alexander City at Benjamin Russell High School.
• Robert Nishibun ’02 completed his MBA at Sullivan University
in Kentucky, then worked in loss prevention for Monsanto Chemical
Plant in Lulling, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina forced him to leave
the area. He has chosen not to return, and is working at Huntingdon
as an assistant to Dean of Students Richard Jones.
• Erin M. Smith ’02 received her master’s degree in music history
from Temple University in May, 2005. She is a resident director in
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Blount and Ligon Halls at Huntingdon, an adjunct professor of
music history and voice at Alabama State University, and an adjunct
professor of voice at Faulkner University. She will also be teaching
at Auburn University Montgomery in the spring.
• Ginny Miller Sumner ’02 and Nathan Sumner ’02 were married
at First United Methodist Church, Montgomery, in December, 2004
(see Marriages). They are living in Mobile, where Nathan is a thirdyear medical student at the University of South Alabama School of
Medicine. Ginny was awarded the Master of Music degree in music
therapy from Florida State University in August.
• Beau Toskich ’02 received the Florida State University College of
Medicine Academic Achievement Award, determined by class rank.
He also received first place honors at the American Medical Student
Association Skit Night for a stand-up comedy act in which he
impersonated ten of his medical school professors for faculty and
the student body. Beau is finishing his second year of medical school
at FSU and will begin his clinical rotations at FSU’s remote campus
in Sarasota.
• Megan Vann ’02 graduated with her Master of Science in exercise science from the University of Mississippi and has begun the
Doctor of Physical Therapy program at the University of AlabamaBirmingham.
• Brandon Wallace ’02 has completed his master’s degree in
American studies at Purdue University and is working as a visiting
lecturer at the university this fall. He plans to enter a doctoral program soon.
• Katie Davis Williams ’02 will complete her Master of Library
Science and Information Studies degree at the University of
Alabama in December.
• T.J. Brecciaroli ’03 completed his master’s degree in higher education and student affairs administration at Indiana University and
returned to Huntingdon this summer as the director of residential
life.
• Anna Michelle Cox ’03 has graduated from the University of
Alabama-Birmingham with a master’s degree in hospital administration and an MBA. She has accepted a residency at Shands Hospital
in Gainesville, Florida.
• Lindsey Chappell Durie ’03 is working as a media buyer with
Style Advertising, Birmingham.
• Amanda Ellison ’03 is working as a marketing representative
with Alacare Home Health and Hospice.
• Jessica Fails ’03 is working as the director of the Central
Alabama OIC Early Childhood Development Center and plans to
complete a graduate degree in education.
• Marrilee Ann Foukal ’03 completed a Master of Business
Administration at Troy University last summer and works as the
purchaser for Capitol’s Rosemont Gardens in Montgomery.
• Kara Gonzalez ’03, who works at the Wildlife World Zoo in
Phoenix, Arizona, had the privilege of assisting animal expert Jack
Hanna during the zoo’s 20th anniversary celebration earlier this
spring.
• Elizabeth Bedsole Greene ’03 graduated from the University of
Alabama with a Master of Social Work degree. She and her husband,
Steven Greene ’02, are living in Lafayette, Louisiana, where he is a
sales manager for IT.
• Amy Halpin ’03 wrote a brief essay about the Red Lady Run that
was accepted for publication by the new magazine Weird Alabama.
Amy was selected to attend an all-expenses-paid communications/publishing conference in New York City this summer. She was
also selected to attend the NYU Summer Publishing Institute.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
• Kristin Goodrich Hill ’03 (see Marriages), a second lieutenant, is
based at McChord Air Force Base in Tacoma, Washington. Kristi is the
unit deployment manager for the 62 Mission Support Squadron.
• Joseph Hubbard ’03 has joined the staff of the American Journal
of Trial Advocacy, a publication of Cumberland Law School, where
he is a law student. His article on the case New Jersey v. Frankel was
published in Volume 28 of the Journal.
• Jamie Jordan ’03 has completed the first year of law school at
Florida State University. During the summer, she studied at St.
Edmund’s Hall, Oxford University, and traveled to Florence,
Barcelona, and Paris.
• Monica Lynn Knight ’03 is living in New York City and pursuing her dream of life as an actress and vocalist.
• Audrey Jean Krumbach ’03 has been offered a fellowship to
Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois, and
will begin the Master of Divinity Studies program in Fall, 2005, with
an aim toward eventual ordination in the Methodist Church.
• Kelly Raye Long ’03 is in physical therapy school in Pittsburgh.
Her family home in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, was destroyed in
Hurricane Katrina, but all family members are fine.
• Anna Martin ’03, the first graduate of the Huntingdon College
athletic training education program, is now only the second female
in the history of Ole Miss football to be named the graduate assistant athletic trainer for football, a position she began in August.
Upon completing her degree at HC (human performance with a
concentration in athletic training), Anna successfully passed the
National Athletic Trainers’ Association Board of Certification
Examination on her first attempt. She then accepted a position as a
staff certified athletic trainer with Rehab Associates. In May, 2004,
Anna accepted a graduate assistant athletic training position at the
University of Mississippi, and has worked with the softball program
for the past year. This fall, she follows the only other female in history to serve as graduate assistant for the high profile NCAA-I Ole
Miss football team.
• Vance McBrayer ’03 entered Cumberland Law School last fall on
a full-ride scholarship.
• Katherine M. Moon ’03 is working at CAS, Inc., a major
Department of Defense contractor, in Huntsville, Alabama, as part
of the Tactical Systems Group.
• Megan Simons ’03 has been accepted into the Montgomery
School of Bodywork and Massage, where she is pursuing national
certification in therapeutic massage and Eastern technique, and
expects to graduate in April, 2006.
• Crystal Bedwell ’04 is working as a marketing assistant for Meta
Press, a division of EBSCO Industries.
• Lauren Fabrizi ’04 is a kindergarten teacher at Carter Woodson
Elementary School in Duval County, Jacksonville, Florida (see feature story: “The Gift of Education: Wisdom in Service,” for more on
Lauren).
• Elizabeth Frank ’04 has moved to New York City, where she is
working for Showtime Networks as the Time Warner key account
team affiliate coordinator for the Northeast sales region.
• Alton Gorum ’04 is working as the group sales representative for
Montgomery Biscuits Baseball.
• Mary Elizabeth Henderson ’04 has purchased a home in
Memphis, where she is a member of the management team in the
Leadership and Universal Skills program for the Peabody Hotel.
• Joey Hollis ’04 is pursuing a master’s degree in public administration at AUM while working full-time for the Business Council of
Alabama. He has been accepted to Cumberland Law School.
31
• Jarett Layson ’04 is in his second year of law school at the
University of Alabama. During the summer, he clerked for the
lawfirm, Beasley/Allen.
• Jim and Lauren Carr Lewey (both ’04) are living in Fort Bragg,
North Carolina, where he has been selected for Special Forces training for the Army Reserves. Lauren graduated from Skinactics School
of Esthetics in June. Jim and Lauren plan to return to Enterprise in
January, 2006, where he will be managing Carr Farms and Lauren
will open a spa with her mother.
• Larry McLemore ’04 has accepted a Dean’s Tuition Scholarship
to complete his master’s degree at Vanderbilt University’s Peabody
College. Larry began at Vanderbilt this summer, and was accepted
into a program in which he will teach full-time while doing graduate course work. He plans to teach history and government and
coach football after completing the Vanderbilt program in spring,
2006.
• Amanda Pickard ’04 has been performing, directing, and teaching professionally since graduation, at places including the Central
City Opera House in Colorado, the Springer Opera House in
Georgia, and Starlight Over Georgia Productions. She is teaching
theater and voice with the Cobb County Playhouse, where she
directed and performed in Quilters: The Musical.
• James Robinson ’04 completed his first year at the University of
Alabama School of Medicine in June. He was chosen as one of 20
students to participate in the NIH’s Summer Research program,
where he conducted research with Dr. Gregory Davis in the
Jefferson County Medical Examiner’s Office/Department of
Pathology at UAB. James also served as a counselor at Camp SmileA-Mile, a camp for children who have cancer and their families, this
summer.
• Christina Vranich ’04, former coordinator of student leadership
programs at Huntingdon, was honored as second alternate in the
Miss Alabama Agriculture pageant held December 6, 2004. The
pageant is sponsored by the Alabama Farmers Federation. Christina
is attending the Southern College of Optometry in Memphis this
fall.
• Cleve Carter III ’05, a December, 2004, English graduate, is now
teaching English at Georgia Washington Junior High School.
• Jennifer Foret ’05 is teaching secondary science at Lighthouse
Christian Academy in Montgomery.
• Mary Tyler Head ’05 and Steve Spivey ’04 were married March
19, 2005, at First United Methodist Church, Montgomery. Steve is
on the Hooters Professional Golf Tour and Mary Tyler is pursuing a
civil service career at Maxwell Air Force Base.
• Mary Hodo ’05 was to begin a Master of Social Work program at
Tulane University (New Orleans) this fall, but the university is
closed for the semester because of the hurricanes. While she waits
for school to begin, she is working in her field.
• Amanda Ousley ’05 is enrolled in the Ph.D. program in the
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the Georgia Institute of
Technology. The position includes a waiver of tuition, institutional
payment of health benefits, and a monetary stipend.
• Tara Reynolds ’05 is enrolled in the doctoral program in
psychology at Argosy University.
• Melanie Smith ’05 is working as the community education coordinator for Wiregrass Hospice of Alabama.
• Robin Steele ’05 is an admissions counselor with the
Huntingdon Office of Admissions.
• Render Thomas ’05 is attending Candler School of Theology at
Emory University.
32
• Daniel Thompson ’05 is teaching English in Mexico. He auditioned for the State Choir of Jalisco, Mexico, and was offered a position as a tenor in the group. This is a full-time job with the state government of Jalisco. As part of this new full-time job, he will be
singing with the State Opera Theater in Guadalajara and performing
in concerts.
• Laura Marie Tyree ’05 is working as the community education
coordinator for the Montgomery Chapter of the American Red
Cross.
• Rachel Wallace ’05 is enrolled in the Physician’s Assistant
Program at the University of South Alabama.
• Kristi Winstead ’05 is attending Cumberland Law School where
she received a full scholarship and a teaching assistantship at the
university. She is also a fitness coordinator and teacher.
A HUNTINGDON
LOVE STORY
In the fall of 1956, I came to Huntingdon not realizing the
changes that would soon take place in my life.
One morning as I was walking from class in Flowers Hall,
a car pulled up with three guys in it and one of them asked
me what my name was and where I was from. The only one I
noticed was a darling guy in the middle of the front seat wearing a red and white checked shirt.
The “Hut” was a popular place located at the triangle
between the library and the back of Flowers Hall where students gathered to check their mail, eat snacks, and listen to
the jukebox. Several weeks later I happened to be at the Hut
when the same darling guy I had noticed when I was walking
home from class asked me for a date! His name was Clyde
Pittman and he was from Montgomery.
As it turned out, Clyde and I dated the entire year I attended Huntingdon. In May of 1957, I went back home to
Birmingham, and Clyde went to Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey,
for 6 months of army basic training. We were married in
September, 1958, and lived in Montgomery where Clyde was
the advertising manager for Winn-Dixie stores. In 1961 and
1963, we had two wonderful sons, Les and Greg.
Unfortunately, my “darling guy” died in June, 1974, with
cancer at the age of 36, but I am thankful for the 18 years that
we knew each other! My sons were 11 and 13 when their
father died, but they both turned out well, even if I do say so
myself. Their dad would be proud of them.
I am very blessed! And by the way, I still have the red-andwhite-checked shirt.
- Laura Lucas Pittman
Class of 1960
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 2005-2006 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President: Eric Ross ’92
Atlanta, GA
Holly Anderson ’92
Atlanta, GA
Barbara Lazenby Barnett ’71
Atlanta, GA
Jamie E. Blake ’62
Mobile, AL
Tommy Blake ’86
Birmingham, AL
Linda Harper Borden ’82
Birmingham, AL
Lee Ann Hundley Boykin ’87
Dothan, AL
Betty Finlay Brislin ’49
Montgomery, AL
Deborah Davis Caleb ’74
Mobile, AL
Phillip E. Crunk ’63
Tuscaloosa, AL
William (Skip) Davis ’94
Birmingham, AL
Julie Johnson Dougherty ’86
Nashville, TN
Kristi DuBose ’86
Daphne, AL
Jackie Hodges Earnest ’64
Deatsville, AL
Martha J. Epperson ’71
Montgomery, AL
Allie M. Freeman ’62
Dothan, AL
Judy Bullock Freeman ’62
Dothan, AL
Debra Freisleben ’79
Montgomery, AL
Gerry Garrick ’65
Indian Springs, AL
Sue Russell Garrick ’64
Indian Springs, AL
Dorothy Kreis Golab ’67
Montgomery, AL
Terri Peoples Gray ’78
Mobile, AL
Carol Giermanski Haag ’86
Sugarhill, GA
James M. Herring ’65
Dadeville, AL
Ren Alford Hinote ’68
Montrose, AL
Wanda A. Howard ’81
Atlanta, GA
Lori Lynch Hughes ’87
Columbus, GA
William Conrad Jackson ’68
Montgomery, AL
Amy Woodard Klugh ’96
Fort Walton Beach, FL
Minnie Lamberth ’83
Montgomery, AL
Brian Daniel Mann ’95
Wetumpka, AL
Carrie Elizabeth McDonough ’01
Gulf Shores, AL
Mary Kathleen McGuffey ’94
Smyrna, GA
Charlene Rentz Meadows ’64
Montgomery, AL
Richard Morrison ’88
Montgomery, AL
Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78
Prattville, AL
Nancy Brown Myrick ’67
Fairhope, AL
George Partridge ’68
Montgomery, AL
Linda Keenan Partridge ’70
Montgomery, AL
Herb Patterson ’71
Birmingham, AL
Coretta Askew Pearson ’01
Anniston, AL
C. Gray Price ’69
Prattville, AL
Gaylen Schrieber Pugh ’70
Madison, AL
LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’68
Indian Springs, AL
Allyce Sikes Read ’90
Dothan, AL
Misty Edwards Roberts ’89
Montgomery, AL
Jean Rodgers ’49
Montgomery, AL
Christy Cole Sellers ’86
Montgomery, AL
Greg Sellers ’86
Montgomery, AL
Lucie Underwood McLemore
Smith ’73
Montgomery, AL
Lawrence Ralph Stacy ’80
Greenville, AL
Heather Merritt Stiff ’99
Montgomery, AL
Jarrod Stiff ’99
Montgomery, AL
William F. Stone ’78
Fort Walton Beach, FL
Lloyd Strickland ’86
Montgomery, AL
Terri Turman Tuley ’79
Pensacola, FL
Shirley Parker Watkins ’56
Auburn, AL
Jody Zarr Williams ’81
Montgomery, AL
Randy Woodham ’79
Prattville, AL
BASEBALL TEAM ACCEPTS RINGS
Members of the Huntingdon Hawks
baseball team were presented with
their 2005 Great South Athletic
Conference championship rings
during half-time of the November 12
football game. In turn, the team's
assistant coach, Matt Lyles '04
(left, holding sign) and Head Coach
D.J. Conville '98 (right) presented
a poster signed by the players to
President J. Cameron West
(center) in appreciation for his
support of the team's efforts. The
team also presented an honorary
championship ring to Athletic
Director Buzz Phillips (inset).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
33
Board of Directors
HUNTINGDON COLLEGE
TRAVELWITH
HUNTINGDON
Experience Majestic
English Castles and Relive
the History of America’s Settlers
Contributed
By Margie Benson
Huntingdon College alumni and members of the United
Methodist Church are invited to join two exciting travel
programs in 2006!
Spend eight nights and nine days living like royalty! The
first week of May (approximate dates May 9-16), we will
tour London, England ~ home of Oxford Street (the busiest
shopping street in Europe), double-decker buses, William
Shakespeare, fish and chips, and afternoon tea! Your trip
cost of $1850 will include ~ among many other exciting
adventures ~ airfare and hotel accommodations (double
occupancy), two day trips, a sight-seeing tour of Windsor
Castle, some meals, and two theater tickets. Please call for a
brochure and full itinerary.
Come experience The American
Heartland aboard The American
Queen, October 2 – 7, 2006. The
steamboat traverses the Mississippi
from St. Louis to Minneapolis/St. Paul with exciting ports of
call in between! Experience Mark Twain’s boyhood home in
Hannibal, Missouri. Visit the National Mississippi River
Museum and Aquarium in Dubuque, Iowa. Visit historic St.
Louis ~ “The Gateway to the West,” and other exciting ports
of call! The approximate trip cost of $2,067 includes your
room aboard the American Queen (double occupancy),
roundtrip airfare to Minneapolis/St.Paul from Birmingham,
and all meals on the trip. Please call today for a brochure
and full itinerary!
If you are interested in either of these “Don’t Miss” trips,
please call Margie Benson, director of the Annual Fund, at
(334) 833-4566 or e-mail [email protected] by
January 13, 2006.
SAVE THESE DATES!
REUNION ’06, April 21-23
HOMECOMING ’06, October 7
• Alumni Awards Banquet
• 50th Reunion Breakfast
• Reunion meetings for classes ending in '1 or '6
• Athletic team reunions
• The Miss Huntingdon Pageant
• CloverJam 2006
• Reunion Chapel Service
• Homecoming Court presentation
• Hawks Homecoming football game
• Special events for every segment of the
Huntingdon Community!
Contact your class agent or the Office of Alumni Advancement at (334) 833-4564
or [email protected] for more information.
34
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
HOMECOMING
2005-2006
“Old Traditions, New Beginnings”
The title of this new celebration says it all. Traditions carried on with fresh faces
and fresh outlooks this fall with a first-time-ever fall semester Homecoming!
1
2
3
5
6
7
4
1. The Hawk Walk is a new tradition that precedes every home football game, beginning from Flowers Hall and ending at
Charles Lee Field, and led by Hank the Hawk, the College’s new Pep Band, the cheerleaders, and legions of eager fans.
2. Three senior women were elected by their peers as finalists for the title of Homecoming Queen; L-R Elizabeth Euna Bryan ’06 (Music;
Andalusia); Elizabeth “Liz” Arnett ’06 (Global Leadership; Murfreesboro, TN); Alexandrea “Andrea” Faye Garrett ’06 (English; Centre).
3. The Reverend Dr. John Ed Mathison ’60, senior pastor, Frazer Memorial United Methodist Church,
and a basketball star during his Huntingdon years, offered the pre-game prayer.
4. Celebrating her 50th reunion year at the College, 1956 Queen Shirley Parker Watkins, of Auburn,
was on hand for a pre-game presentation and for the crowning of the 2005-2006 queen.
5. Huntingdon crowned its first-ever fall-semester Homecoming Queen and presented
the court at half-time of the football game; L-R Donald Garrett Sr., father of the 2005-2006 queen;
2005-2006 Queen Andrea Garrett ’06; President J. Cameron West; and Shirley Parker Watkins ’56, 1956 Queen.
The identity of the queen was kept secret until she was crowned on the field.
6. The 2005-2006 Homecoming Court, presented at half-time of the game, included (front row, L-R): Emily Dueitt ’06 (Cultural and
Religious Studies; Monroeville); Keri Till ’07 (Business Administration; Andalusia); Katherine Mallini ’06 (Communication Studies; Coden);
Hannah Lane ’09 (Communication Studies; Cleveland, TN); Destree Brown ’09 (Elementary Education; Lynn Haven, FL); Kathryn Yates ’09
(Religion; Lilburn, GA); and Lindsay Dennis ’09 (Elementary Education; Foley); (back row, L-R): Angela Bryant ’07 (Music; Montgomery);
Wendy Nulph ’06 (Communication Studies; Montgomery); Honor Maid Liz Arnett ’06 (Global Leadership; Murfreesboro, TN);
Queen Andrea Garrett ’06 (English; Centre); Honor Maid Elizabeth Bryan ’06 (Vocal Performance; Andalusia); Jenny Miller ’06
(Psychology; Talladega); Emily Webster ’07 (English; Daphne); Julie Womble ’08 (Psychology/Business Administration; Evergreen);
Nicole Weldon ’08 (Business Administration; Enterprise); Chasi Fowler ’08 (Biochemistry; Dothan);
Brandi Milstead ’08 (Biochemistry; Ozark). Not pictured: Patti Irwin ’07 (Biology/Art; Dothan)
7. The Hawks trounced the Colorado College Tigers 56-21, including this touchdown run
by Milton Strother ’09 (Communication Studies/Political Science; Daphne).
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
35
HUNTINGDON
COLLEGE
HONOR ROLL
OF DONORS
2004-2005
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, faculty, and staff whose generosity
during the past year supported a myriad
of programs, scholarships and special projects,
the College extends its sincere thanks.
This report contains the names of all donors who made gifts to Huntingdon during the fiscal year of June 1, 2004,
through May 31, 2005. It includes those who made capital gifts as well as donations to the Annual Fund.
This listing does not include those who made pledges, but not gifts, in 2004-2005 or those whose gifts were
received after May 31, 2005. 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 Institutional Advancement
at 334-833-4563, so that we can correct our records.
36
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
THE ORDER OF THE
COUNTESS OF HUNTINGDON
The Order of the Countess of Huntingdon recognizes individuals who have made major contributions
towards the advancement of the College. Cumulative lifetime gifts total $75,000 or more.
Mr. and Mrs. John Albritton
Dr. and Mrs. H. V. Bell
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Mrs. Marie Chapman Benson
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr.
Mrs. Winton M. Blount Jr.*
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bolden
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. Wilmer Bottoms
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boykin
Mrs. Margaret Garrett Bynum
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carl
Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Cheek III
Mrs. Ann Delchamps*
Dr. and Mrs. W. Foster Eich III
Miss Connie Tullis Ellison*
Ernest and Mary Ellison
Dr. Rhoda Coleman Ellison*
Miss Kate Durr Elmore*
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Nimrod T. Frazer
Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs
Mr. George H. Jones Jr.*
Mr. and Mrs. Leon* Ligon
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loper
Mrs. E. L. Lowder
Margaret and Jimmy Lowder
Mr. and Mrs. John McMahon
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid
Mrs. Catherine Dixon Roland*
Sue Cross and Jerry L. Savage
Mr. Philip A. Sellers*
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Phyllis Gunter and William B. Snyder
Mrs. Aloyis Sonneborn
Mrs. Frances Lott Sowers
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson
Mr. George R. Teague
Dr. and Mrs. John N. Todd III
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Shirley Parker and William C. Watkins
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Weil
Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Williamson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wilson Jr.
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
An asterisk denotes those who are now deceased.
Left: Patrons of the Library were treated
to an evening with mystery writer Julia SpencerFleming at the annual Patrons’
dinner last spring.
Right: The Reverend Dr. Karl K. Stegall,
senior minister of First United Methodist
Church, Montgomery, was honored last spring
with the President’s Medallion by President
J. Cameron West, in recognition of the
support he and his congregation have provided
to the College. Dr. Stegall serves as an advisory
member of the Board of Trustees.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
37
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.
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Albritton
Mrs. Clifford Alston*
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III
Ms. Mary Nell Atherton
Mr. and Mrs. John Bailey
Dr. and Mrs. H. V. Bell Jr.
Mrs. Willard D. Bennett
Mrs. Marie Chapman Benson
Miss Mary S. Bernhard
The Reverend and Mrs. Joe Neal Blair
Ms. Georgianna Bland
Mrs. Carolyn Self Blount*
Mrs. Elaine Hearn Boese
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bolden
Dr. and Mrs. Asa Boozer
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bothfeld
Mrs. W. R. Bottoms
Ms. Carol Jane Boyd
David W. and Ellen P. Boykin
Ms. Esther Boykin
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boykin
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brink
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Brooks
Dr. Edward A. Brown III
The Reverend Naomi Prescott Brown
Colonel Preston Brown
Mrs. Lorena Manci Bryars
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck
Othon Tallet and Teresa Bueno
Mr. and Mrs. John Bullard
Ms. Jessie Sue Bynum
Mrs. Margaret Garrett Bynum
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell
Mr. Al Cantrell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carl
Mrs. Ann Carlisle Carmichael
Mrs. Myrtice Ann Carr
Mr. Sam Carroll Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Rowland B. Cook
Mr. Harold L. Coomes
Mrs. Laurel L. Davis Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion D. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Dawson
Miss Martha Nell Dean
Mrs. Fred Delchamps*
Mrs. Lucia Andrews Doby*
Mr. Leo Drum
Bishop Paul and Louise Duffey
Mrs. Sara Lee Insley Dunbar
Mrs. Frank Earle
Dr. and Mrs. W. Foster Eich III
Mr. Frank Eleazer
Miss Connie T. Ellison*
Mrs. Mary Lane Ellison
Dr. Rhoda C. Ellison*
Dr. and Mrs. Walter Ellisor
Miss Kate Durr Elmore*
Dr. Raymond Estep
Mrs. Lucile Delchamps Fleming
Mrs. T. M. Francis
Mr. Jack P. Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Garner
Miss Emily Jeannette Garrett
Mrs. Linda Allen Garrett
Mrs. Marion H. Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett
Sue Russell and E. Gerald Garrick
Mrs. Lois Bedsole Gholston
Mrs. Ethel Ellis Gibson
Dorothy Kreis Golab
Dr. and Mrs. Laurence Grossman
Dr. Betty Bottoms Grundy
Mr. Leon Hadley
Dr. Eugenie L. Hamner
Mrs. Theresa Hillhouse Harris
Miss Martha Ray Harris
Miss Julia Hasson
The Reverend and Mrs. Joe Ed Hastings
Mrs. Ruth Bowen Haughton
Mrs. Mollie A. Hendrix
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs
Mrs. John A. Hoefflin
Mr. John Holder
Ms. Wanda A. Howard
Mr. Hilson Hudson
Mrs. Barbara Cade Hunt
Dr. and Mrs. Allen K. Jackson
Dr. and Mrs. Louis L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Jolly Jr.
Mrs. Mack H. Jolly
Mr. George H. Jones Jr.*
Mr. L. B. Jones Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Jones
Mrs. Margaret W. Jordan
Miss Lillian Kamphuis
Mr. Ray E. King
Mrs. Mary Whetstone Knabe*
Mrs. L’Vela Lee Lane*
Mr. Tom Law
Emily Reaves and Gerald S. Leischuck
Mr. and Mrs. Leon* Ligon
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mrs. Harriet Owens Livingston*
Mr. Wayne F. Lloyd
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Loeb
Mrs. Ellen C. Long
Mr. James D. Lowe Jr.
Colonel and Mrs. Orlando J. Manci Jr.
The Reverend Marion C. Mathison
Ms. Deborah C. Mims
Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore
Dr. David K. Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moseley
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Murray
Ms. Nancy Alice Brown Myrick
Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr.
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul
Mr. Donald W. Peak
Dr. and Mrs. Henry L. Pugh Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Ms. LaVerne Davis Ramsey
Mr. Charles Edward Roberts
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Miss Jean Rodgers
Mrs. Catherine Dixon Roland*
Mrs. Joyce Patterson Ryser
Mrs. Mary Belin Salter
Sue Cross and Jerry L. Savage
Ms. Isabel Scriba
Judge and Mrs. Philip Dale Segrest
Mr. and Mrs. William Sellars
Mr. Philip A. Sellers*
Miss Helen Shaw
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. L. Bernard Smithart
Dr. Ruth Sneed
Dr. and Mrs. William B. Snyder
Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Sommer
Mrs. Aloyis Lee Sonneborn
The Reverend and Mrs. Lamar Spencer
Dr. Eugene E. Stanaland
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Dr. Marilyn E. Stone
Mr. and Mrs. James Strickland
Jose E. and Rosaland M. Tallet
Mrs. Fannie Alston Taylor
Mrs. Randall Thomas
Ms. Vivian Thomas
Mr. Joseph Thomson Jr.
Ms. Martha S. Tillotson
Dr. and Mrs. John N. Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Tomberlin
Mrs. Betty Gensert Towey
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tuley
Dr. Maxine Turner
Miss Anna Rebecca Turner
Eeron W. and George T. Turnipseed
Mr. Jack S. Vann
Mr. Dan W. Waite Jr.
Mr. Daniel Lee Walden
Mrs. Colleen Garrick Walker
Mrs. J. L. Warren Jr.
William C. and Shirley Parker Watkins
Mrs. Florence Manci Webb
Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Weil
Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland
The Reverend and Mrs. Ray E. Whatley
Miss Jane S. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Williamson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Wise
Miss Martha A. Wood*
Mrs. Lynda Knight Woodall
Mrs. Ruth Barnes Yaple
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Young
An asterisk denotes those who are now deceased.
Left: Ethel Ellis Gibson ’49 was inducted into
the John Massey Heritage Society during the
Founders Day Luncheon in February. Ms.
Gibson has included Huntingdon in her estate
plans.
Right: Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb ’50 is a
member of the John Massey Heritage Society
and the Huntingdon Society.
38
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
DonorSpotlight:
HERB PATTERSON ’71
Herb Patterson ’71 is the epitome of a dedi-
Campaign 150, and provides ongoing support for
cated alumnus in every way – a giver of time, tal-
the Mathematics program, the Theatre and Music
ent, and financial support.
programs, and for alumni giving campaigns.
A graduate with double majors in mathematics
Several years ago, he raised enough money from
and physics, Herb attended the University of
fellow Huntingdon alumni at BellSouth to support
Tennessee at Knoxville for his graduate course
two $2500 scholarships for incoming students. He
work in applied mathematics, then joined the staff
leverages his contributions with matching contri-
of South Central Bell, where
butions from BellSouth and
he remained for 25 years,
Accenture, compounding his
when he was outsourced for
giving.
special projects to Accenture.
Patterson’s enthusiasm for
He retired in 2003, but
Huntingdon sparkles in his
Patterson may be the busiest
eyes and sparks him into
retired person in Alabama.
action whenever called upon.
He serves as a member of the
“I give to Huntingdon for a
Board
of
Trustees
at
very selfish reason: it makes
Huntingdon College, vice
me feel good,” he says.
president of the Board of
“When I give my time to
Trustees for Opera Birmingham, a member of the
meetings on the campus, I leave energized. When
River Region Advisory Board for Kid 1 Transport,
I give my time to projects like fundraising or
chairman of the Board of Trustees for Bluff Park Art
recruitment to the Huntingdon Society, one suc-
Association, and a member of the Huntingdon
cess can make me happy for days. When I give
College National Alumni Board since 1975. He has
funds, I think of the benefits. The endowed schol-
also served as a Huntingdon gift agent and class
arships may ultimately help a pre-med student
agent.
find cures for diseases that caused the deaths of my
Patterson matches his gifts of time with mone-
mother, father and stepmother. The Campaign 150
tary support. He is a member of the Huntingdon
scholarships can help ‘my students’ to be extreme-
Society and the John Massey Heritage Society, and
ly successful in life. My challenge gifts have
has endowed scholarships in memory of his moth-
encouraged the Alumni Board to reach 100%
er, father, and stepmother. He provides the funding
participation in annual giving for 3 years. To top it
for the art awards given at Huntingdon’s Honors
all off, students send thank you notes that make
and Awards Convocation each year, supports
me smile out loud.”
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
39
THE HUNTINGDON SOCIETY 2004/2005
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kirke Adams
Miss Jodi Adamson
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Albritton Jr.
(Ann McLean)
Mr. and Mrs.Thomas R. Allison
(Harriet Borland )
Mr. and Mrs. David Allred
(Glenda Atwell)
Mr. Benjamin D. Ambrose
Mr. James H. Anderson
Ms. Jennifer Lynn Anderson
Mr. Jake Aronov
Ms. Marjorie Aronov
Mr. Owen Aronov
Ms. Teri Aronov
Mr. and Mrs. William Ed Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. Clark W. Bailey
(Sarah Wedekind)
Dr. Jason Banks
Mr. and Mrs. George Bagwell
Mr. and Mrs. James Barganier
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Barganier
Mr. G. Carlton Barker
Ms. Barbara Lazenby Barnett
Mr. Carl Barranco
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Barrow
(Marion Waters)
Mrs. Lila Waldrop Baxter
Mrs. Ann Bedsole
Mr. and Mrs. Beck Becknell
Dr. and Mrs. Sanders Benkwith
(Linda Mordecai)
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett
Mrs. Martha Vickery Bigby
Dr. Ronald Bird
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Blackmon
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bolden
(Emmie Cardwell)
Dr. and Mrs. Asa Boozer
(Jane Michael)
Mr. Dave Borden
Ms. Thelma Braswell
Miss Jo Ann Brazelton
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brink
(Ruth Cousins)
Mrs. Betty Finlay Brislin
Mr. Richard Brockman
Mr. and Mrs. J. Mahlon Buck
(Elia Durr)
Dr. and Mrs. Harrell Bullard
(Kim Cook)
Mr. and Mrs. John Bullard
Mr. William M. Bullard
Mrs. Margaret Garrett Bynum
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Byrne Jr.
Dr. John M. Cameron
Dr. Connie Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. W. Spencer Campbell
(Libba Crowell)
Ralph B. and Georgia Rodgers Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. William Canary
(Leura Garrett)
Ms. Lucinda Cannon
Mr. Albert Reaves Cantrell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carl
(Ruth Miller)
Mr. and Mrs. J. Marvin Carroll
Mr. Sam J. Carroll Jr.
Mr. James R. Chalker
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Chambers
(Susan Chason)
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Champion
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III
Dr. and Mrs. Morris Cochran
Mrs. Joanna Breedlove Crane
Dr. Wynne Crawford
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Crumpton
Dr. and Mrs. Philip E. Crunk
Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham
Dr. Robert R. Daniel
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff W. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Davis
(Reita Sample)
Mr. and Mrs. William Skip Davis
Mr. and Mrs. M. Taylor Dawson
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Dill
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Diversi
(Joan Johnston)
Miss Marianne Donnell
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Dorman
Mr. Leo Drum
Bishop and Mrs. Paul Andrews Duffey
(Anna Louise Calhoun)
Ms. Doris Edwards
Mr. Thomas Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison
Dr. Rhoda Coleman Ellison*
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Emmet
Mr. Floyd Carson Enfinger Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Elton Engstrom
(Sally Hudson)
Mrs. Suzanne Repnicki Fickey
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fleming
(Lucille Delchamps)
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Fletcher
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Flowers
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fortino
(Carol Perpall)
Mr. and Mrs. Nimrod Frazer
(Patricia Martin)
Ms. Debra Freisleben
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost
Dr. and Mrs. Billy D. Gaither
(Carolyn Loftin)
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. S. Garrett Jr.
Ms. Cecile Gray
Miss Ethel Ellis Gibson
Dr. Wayne Gibson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Gill
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Bishop and Mrs. Larry Goodpaster
Mr. and Mrs. George Goodwyn
Mrs. Eileene L. Griffith*
Dr. and Mrs. Terry Haines
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hall
(Jeanne Clements)
Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Mr. and Mrs. Barrie H. Harmon III
Ms. Martha Ray Harris
Mrs. Theresa Hillhouse Harris
Dr. Wynn Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ed Hastings
(Betty Kimbrough)
Mr. James Van Henry
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Henry
Dr. and Mrs. David Herrick
Mrs. Bernice Hill
Mr. Inge Hill and Mrs. Camille Elebash-Hill
Ms. Madeleine Hill
Mr. and Mrs. William Hill II
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs
Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Holding Jr.
(Roberta Butler)
Mr. and Mrs. John Dowling Holley
(LaFaye A.)
Judge and Mrs. Gorman Houston Jr.
Ms. Wanda Annett Howard
Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Hufham
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inscoe
Mr. James and Dr. Judith McNease James
Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Jenkins
Ms. Mary George Jester
Mr. and Mrs. E.F. Jinright
(Laura Chambliss)
Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson
(Gloria Tidmore)
Mr. Lewis Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson
David and Khanna Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly
Mr. and Mrs. William Jones
(Catherine Cannon)
Mrs. Mary Louise Howard Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Renis Jones
(Noble Seay)
Dr. and Mrs. William M. Jordan
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Kendrick
(Gail Sanford)
Mrs. Ann Manry Kenyon
Mr. and Mrs. John A. King Sr.
Mrs. Mary Wilson King
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Kinzer
(Jacqueline Desaulniers)
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Kirkemier
(Jan Puckett)
Mr. Kenneth Klinger
Mr. Gerald Knupp II
The Reverend Dr. and Mrs. Mark La Branche
Left: Kirke Adams ’92
and his wife, Angela,
are new members of
The Huntingdon
Society.
Right: Huntingdon
Trustee Howard
Adams and
his family lit the
Christmas trees during
the annual tree-lighting
ceremony preceding
the Service of Lessons
and Carols last year.
40
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Members of the Huntingdon Society contribute $1,000 or more during the fiscal year and provide
90% of all dollars contributed to the College each year. Asterisks denote those who are deceased.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lawrence
(Kathy McLeod)
Mrs. Phebe Mason Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Lester
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Levy
Mrs. Gerry Yeoman Ligon
Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Loeb
Mrs. Catherine Lowder
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Lowder
Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Luckett
(Laura Cates)
Mr. Charles Mandell
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Mandell
Mrs. Billie Claire Watson Mangum
Mr. Gordon G. Martin
Larry W. and Susanne Crocket Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Masingill
Reverend and Mrs. R. Neil McDavid
(Araminta Robson)
Ms. Mary Kathleen McGuffey
Mr. P.L. (Mac) McLeod
Judge and Mrs. Reese McKinney
(Beverly Gordy)
Mr. and Mrs. John McMahon
(Betty Thurman)
Mr. and Mrs. Allen G. McMillan
(Jean Broxson)
Mr. and Mrs. Michael McMillen
(Elaine Tribble)
Mr. and Mrs. George Mingledorff
(Sarah McCarthy)
Ms. Katherine Blount Miles
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Mark Millard
Mrs. Irene Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Mitchell Jr.
(Anne White)
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Montecalvo Jr.
Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Moore
(Mary Frances)
Larry and Beverly Morris
Mr. Richard Duane Morrison
Mrs. Ruth Milner Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Moses
Drs. Michael and Maureen Kendrick Murphy
Dr. and Mrs. Erskine Murray
Ms. Martha Kimbrough Musgrove
Ms. Nancy Brown Myrick
Mr. and Mrs. Roland M. Nachman Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Neeley
(Mary Ann Oglesby)
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Norris
Mrs. Anne Durr Palmer
Ms. Barbara Hasson Parks
Mr. and Mrs. George Partridge
(Linda Keenan)
Mr. Herbert Patterson
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Perry
(Sara Stembridge)
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Phillips
(Gail Golson)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ponder
(Charlotte Gibbs)
Mr. and Mrs. G. Matthew Pope
(Evelyn Hutzler)
Mr. Henry and Dr. Gaylen Schrieber Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Radney
Mr. and Mrs. William Ramsey
(LaVerne Davis)
Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkinson Rast
Lt. Col. James E. Ray
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rhinehardt
(Barbara Gilliland)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rhodes
(Suzanne Wendland)
The Rev. and Mrs. E. D. Ridgeway
Mr. Stephen Riggs III
Miss Jean Rodgers
Mrs. Catherine Dixon Roland*
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Koin Ross
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts
Mr. William H. Rue
Mrs. Kathy Dancy Ryan
Dr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Ryan
Mr. Keith Sabel
Jerry and Sue Cross Savage
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Schloss
Mr. Frederick J. Schultz
John B. and Bette Scott
Judge and Mrs. P. Dale Segrest
(Betty Menefee)
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Segrest
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Sellers
(Christy Cole)
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers
Senator and Mrs. Jeff B. Sessions III
(Mary Blackshear)
Mr. and Mrs. Walt Sheffield
(Jane Searcy)
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Melton Shiflett
(Susan Carroll Shiflett)
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Shorter
Mr. and Mrs. Griffin Sikes Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Sims
(Celia Price)
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie
(Mary Emma)
Miss Laura E. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Burt Smithart
(Elizabeth Couey)
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Smyth III
Mr. and Mrs. William Snyder
(Phyllis Gunter)
Mr. Paul Soanes
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Sowell
Mrs. Frances Lott Sowers
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Staton
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Stearns
Mr. and Mrs. David Steele
Dr. and Mrs. Karl K. Stegall
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Sternenberg
(Rebecca Acuff)
Judge and Mrs. William F. Stone
Mrs. John W. Stowers
Mrs. Ruth Stone Strange
Mr. and Mrs. Jose E. Tallet
(Rosaland Mathison)
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Tarver
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Teague
Mrs. Claudia Paden Thomas
Mrs. Linda McLeod Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson Jr.
Mr. Joseph R. Thompson Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Keith A. Thompson
The Rev. Dr. Timothy Thompson
Dr. and Mrs. Davis Thornbury
Mr. and Mrs. Buff Tibbetts
(Alexis Clegorne)
Dr. and Mrs. John Todd III
Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Tuley
(Terri Turman)
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Upchurch Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch
Mr. George Wakefield
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lee Walden
Mr. James Kevin Walding
Mr. and Mrs. Wick Watkins
(Shirley Parker)
Mr. Allen Weaver
Mrs. Adolph Weil Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil III
Ms. Jan K. Weil
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Dr. Tom Wool
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Weil
Mr. Jack and Dr. Bobbie Coop Welch
Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland
The Rev. and Mrs. J. Cameron West
Mrs. Ann Strickland White
Mr. and Mrs. R. Tyler Whitley
(Nancy Prickett)
The Rev. and Mrs. John Whitley
(Sylvia Sellers)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Williams
Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson
Mrs. Billie Gaye Willis
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr.
Drs. Jack* and Verna Wool
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey
Mrs. Ruth Barnes Yaple
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Yarbrough
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Mrs. Norma Villareal Zambrano
Left: Members of The
Huntingdon Society
enjoyed lunch on the
lawn of the President’s
Home during Homecoming 2005-2006,
October 15.
Right: Huntingdon Society
members were treated
to stories from alumna
and world-famous
storyteller Kathryn Tucker
Windham ’39 during the
Huntingdon Society
reception in April.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
41
TRIBUTES
J U N E 1 , 2 0 0 4 - M AY 3 1 , 2 0 0 5
Rabbi David Baylinson
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kaufman
Martha Bennett
Marsha Flowers Berry
Henry and Mary Lynn Brooks
Terry and Michael T. Tuley
Class of 1956
Shirley Parker Watkins
Lady Portis Cunningham
Edwina Wallace Alexander
Lucy Cunningham Bond
Cheryl Brown
Janie, Bill and Wallace Campbell
Jane Cunningham Dunlap
Joe Khare Jr.
Joan Johnston Diversi
RJay "Spud" Murray
Liz Allen Garrard
RJay "Spud" Murray
Dr. Bruce and Roberta Holding
Dr. and Mrs. Mervel Parker
Janice McClain James
Lillian T. James
Richard Alvin James
Lillian T. James
Professor Paul Jones
Martha F. Higgins Byrd
Kenneth Francis Klinger
Frank M. Klinger
Charles W. Lee
Bobby Armstrong
David R. Belcher
Margaret and William Blackmon Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Kennith Blankenship
B. P. Dilworth
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Farha
Randy and Janelle Faulkner
Rose S. Fyffe
First United Methodist Church
Connie and Sandy Frederick
Martha H. Given
Tommy and Nell Head
Michael D. Henig
Jackson Hospital Clinic, Inc.
Victoria and William R. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Knighton
Elaine and James A. Lee
Mary P. Lee
Robert J. Lee
Wanda S. Love
Elizabeth and Albert F. Mahan
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Mantel
Joan and Harold Morgan
William A. and Charlotte Deal
Newman
Olympia Sporting Goods
A. E. Robertson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. Scott
Anne G. Searcy
Frank E. and Leslie Hall Sharker
Zack and Lady Claire Davidson
Studstill
Dan L. and Shirlene Washburn
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Julie Allbritten Wood
Patrick Neal Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young
Joyce Lee
Frank E. and Leslie Hall Sharker
Dr. Jeremy R.T. Lewis
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Dr. Donna Jean Whitley Manson
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
Frances Hastings Moore
Joe and Betty Kimbrough Hastings
Beverly Morris
Rebecca and Ben Morris
Leah Claire Nesbitt
Loyd & Mary Emma Smilie
Duanne Reed
Charles W. Hooper Jr.
Jean Rodgers
Mary D. Rodgers
Marianne Rodgers
Mary D. Rodgers
Jean Rodgers
Eric Koin Ross
Charles J. Niemeyer
Rufus and Jewel Stagner
Jewel Stagner
Grace Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil James
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Howard and Cheryl Adams
Jim and Jane Barganier
Lucinda Samford Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Caponetto
Paul and Louise Calhoun Duffey
Mary Lynne and Jim Levy
Eve Loeb and Jim McDonald
Charles Mandell
Josh Mandell
Betty Thurman McMahon
Frances Galloway Moody
Beverly T. Morris
Alice D. Reynolds
Jimmie L. Sabel
Charles and Winifred Stakely
Dr. Charles G. Tomberlin
Robert Uhlmann
Drs. Jack* and Verna Wool
John Williams
Lawrence Underwood McLemore
John Yelverton Jr.
John Yelverton III
Noble Yelverton
John Yelverton III
John Yelverton Jr.
Noble Yelverton
John Yelverton Jr.
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil, who
chaired the Board of Trustees for
three two-year terms, stepped
down this year as a new chair was
elected. She remains a dedicated
and active member of the Board.
Chris Flowers (left), and his
daughter, Lizzie, both of New York City,
stand in front of the portrait of
John Jefferson Flowers, Chris's
great grandfather, on a recent
visit with President J. Cameron West.
IN-KIND
CONTRIBUTIONS
Alfa Insurance has pledged to
sponsor Huntingdon athletics programs
with a $75,000 contribution over three
years. Carol Golson, vice president for
communications at Alfa, signs an agreement with Huntingdon President J.
Cameron West (center) and Athletic
Director Buzz Phillips.
42
Al’s Flowers
Capitol Book & News
Capitol’s Rosemont Gardens
Davis Printing
First United Methodist Church,
Montgomery
The Coca-Cola Company
Mr. J. Michael Jenkins
Jim Massey Cleaners
Montgomery Country Club
Dr. Carey M. Phillips
Mr. Hugh H. Phillips
Reid O’Donahue Advertising
Sodexho Campus Services
The St. James School
Mr. Glenn Stearns
Dr. Stephen Weinrib
Mr. Philip B. Young
Novelists and spouses Pat Conroy
(The Prince of Tides, The Water is Wide,
The Great Santini, The Lords of Discipline,
among other works) and Cassandra King
(The Sunday Wife, The Same Sweet Girls)
presented a lecture and book-signing at
the College this spring. The event was
co-sponsored by Capitol Book & News.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
MEMORIALS
J U N E 1 , 2 0 0 4 - M AY 3 1 , 2 0 0 5
Lorraine Andrews
Nell M. Dozier
Carolyn D. Halstrom
Louise D. Pippin
Emma Ausfeld
Nell T. Payne
Lawrence G. Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Margaret Bailey
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Wendy Chappell Tarver
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Garland Barnes
Malcolm and Ruth Barnes Yaple
Jamie Hamilton Barrow
Marion Waters Barrow
Carolyn Self Blount
Bill and Susan Cole Davis
Ruth Howe Liddell
Betty Thurman McMahon
Suellen Ofe
Herbert Patterson
Jean Rodgers
Dr. Eugene Stanaland
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Wilson, Price, Barranco, Blankenship
& Billingsley, P.C.
Jean and Tom Yancey
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Yarbrough
Evelyn Carter Brady
Theresa Tate Cook
Mary Jane Brannon
Suzanne Repnicki Fickey
Peggy Sewell Parker
Gwendolyn Boles Warr
Stella Wicker Burleson
James L. Burleson Sr.
Mabel McCulloh Byrd
RJay "Spud" Murray
Lorraine Strickland Casey
James H. Strickland
Eva Brown Cate
Suzanne Chalker Meador
Gordon Chappell
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Wendy Chappell Tarver
Winn Chappell
Richard Byrd
Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Wendy Chappell Tarver
Phoebe Boyd Cliatt
William P. Cliatt
Shirley Parker Watkins
Robert Collins
Martha Rose Herlong Ellis
James E. Colquitt
Dianne Grissette Colquitt
Winifred Ellison Corbitt
John S. and Lorna Lunde Bell
Louise Dismukes
Darryl and Martha Rouse Gates
Emilie and Tom Lamar
Jean Rodgers
Jennie Dickson Cross
Sue Cross Savage
Peyton Dunsford
Betty Finlay Brislin
John T. Ellis III
Michelle Butte Davis
Mary Solomon Epps
Evelyn Mixson Parker
William J. Frazer Jr.
Henry C. and Margaret Hewlett
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Marie T. Gamble
Joe Mack and Adline Rodgers
William Edward Grant
Thomas F. Bracewell
Tiney Greene
Nell M. Dozier
Dorothy Helen Evans Hill
Henry W. Hill
David Hudson Sr.
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Burt and Carolee Hussey
Bettie Hussey
Marianne Hussey
Bettye Jean Johnson
Betty Finlay Brislin
Paul Bentley Jones
Miriam C. Jones
Joseph Kern
Mr. and Mrs. John Howard
Mary Whetstone Knabe
Capell & Howard, P. C.
Will Hill Tankersley
Ruth Lane
Minna Hayes Appleby
Betty Kimbrough Hastings
Sarah Clayton Lawson
The Pandora Club
Leon Ligon
Douglas Edgar
Michael and Madeline Edgar
M. Alice Edgar
Dorothy Houze Loard
Henry Wm. Loard Jr.
Mary Sample Mabson
Dick and Reita Sample Davis
Suzanne Chalker Meador
Mary Scott Thomas Martin
Jean Rodgers
John R. Matthews Jr.
Emilie and Bruce Reid
Mrs. R. A. Wood
Ruby G. McCombs
Irene McCombs
Annie Laura Roberts Morris
Edward W. Morris
Irene Munro
Judith Jones Moore
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Virginia Stiles Olliver
Dorothy Waters Wilson
George S. Peters
Wilson, Price, Barranco, Blankenship
& Billingsley, P.C.
Madeleine Petznick
Betty Finlay Brislin
William Pickard
Samuel D. Pickard and family
Martha Frazer Rankin
Citrus Lands of Louisana, L.L.C.
James and Katherine Conely
Copperwing Design, L.L.C.
Rae M. and Carol Crowe
Elizabeth Burford Crump
Hermine Melton Downing
M. Alice Edgar
Robert D. Edmundson
Tracy and Judith Faust Farmer
Virginia and Edmond L. Faust Jr.
Give and Take Class First United
Methodist Church Montgomery
Dr. and Mrs. William Hamilton Jr.
Hand Arendall L.L.C.
Marcia and Adams F. Hudson
Mary George Jester
Mary Will Knabe*
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Lugenbuhl
Douglas and Radcliff Maumenee
Douglas L. McCoy
Gary H. and Ellen Miller
Merlin Owen Newton
Gail Golson Phillips
Jean Rodgers
Sue Cross Savage
Beth Childress Sheridan
Andrew J. Sinor Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac J. Smith
Iain Stewart
Eva Thompson
Ms. Sue Thompson
McLeod Turner
Kathie and Hamp Uzzelle
Scott R. Wheaton
Patsy and Richard E. Wright
Ellie R. Redmon
Flora Grant Reese
Duanne Reed
Charles W. Hooper
Catherine Dixon Roland
Suellen Ofe
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Frances Rutherford
Rebecca R. Fehrenbach
Mary Troy Schaum
Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson
Mary P. Schultz
Frederick J. Schultz Jr.
Christine Searcy
Jane Searcy Sheffield
Caroline Rudulph Sellers
Capers A. Holmes
Syble Simon
Louise D. Pippin
Wyn Gray Sittason
Jean Rodgers
Alfred N. Skelton Jr.
Jesusa J. Barron
Harry and Peggy Hill
Louise Fite Still
Betty Finlay Brislin
Charlotte Stokes
Maxine Turnen
Harold E. Streetman
Betty Finlay Brislin
Grace Thomas
Nell M. Dozier
Cecil I. James
Dorothy Higgins Thompson
Tom and Harriett Borland Allison
Dick and Ruth Cousins Brink
Mr. and Mrs. Allen L. Brislin Jr.
Betty Finlay Brislin
John and Mary Ellen Bullard
Lucinda Samford Cannon
Dwight L. Carlisle
Richard L. Chambers
Donald and Sharon Conant
IBM Fidelity Investments
Jim and Helen Rittenour Geesey
Catherine Burns Gray
Mary and Vic Grimes Sr.
William and Gail Sanford Kendrick
Elizabeth M. Kyle
Robert and Charlotte Lowder
Foundation
Virginia McLean
R. Scott Miller
Frances Hastings Moore
Larry and Judi Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald D. Morgan
Col. and Mrs. Albert L. Neuhauser
Chip and Tricia Norris
Julia Norris
Roger and Pat Norris
Rhyne and Son Insurance
Jim and Helen Rittenour
Jean Rodgers
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Shaver
Mary Virginia Stanford
Joseph R. Thompson
Robert and Lorna Lee Thompson
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Tim
Thompson
Betty Gensert Towey
Alice Townsend Tyson
Dan and Maude Brannen Wise
Olive Tuley
Michael T. Tuley
43
ALUMNI GIVING BY CLASS YEAR
Alumni Giving By Class Year
J U N E 1 , 2 0 0 4 - M AY 3 1 , 2 0 0 5
1924
Number in Class: 2
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 50%
Total Given: $11,000
Mrs. Margaret Garrett Bynum 1926
Number in Class: 4
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $100
Mrs. Thelma Bailey Pace
1928
Number in Class: 11
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 12%
Total Given: $5
Dr. Ruth Sneed
1929
Number in Class: 7
Number Who Gave: 1
Percentage: 14%
Total Given: $100
Mrs. Emma Lee Sellers
1930
Number in Class: 6
Number Who Gave: 2
Percentage: 33%
Total Given: $1,025
Mrs. Ruth McFaden Nettles
Dr. Ouida Fay Paul 1931
Number in Class: 10
Number Who Gave: 2
Percentage: 20%
Total Given: $125
Mrs. Louella Masterson Kelley
Mrs. Mary Whetstone Knabe*
1932
Number in Class: 14
Number Who Gave: 3
Percentage: 7%
Total Given: $165
Mrs. Lois Williams Browder
Mrs. Miriam Crist Cox
Mrs. Frances Bates Grigsby
1933
Number in Class: 11
Number Who Gave: 2
Percentage: 19%
Total Given: $350
Mrs. Julia Lee Slaughter Stubbs
Mrs. Annie Ruth Hagood Whitten
1934
Number in Class: 15
Number Who Gave: 5
Percentage: 33%
Total Given: $330
Mrs. Lucille Craddock Herndon
Mrs. Catherine Radney Mann
Mrs. Claire Rogers Peacock
Miss Bess Sharp
Mrs. Edwina Davis Walker
1935
Class Agent: Lorena Guy Thompson
Number in Class: 20
Number Who Gave: 5
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $175
Miss Virginia deGraffenried
Mrs. Elizabeth Herlong Fagan
Mrs. Lillie Pitts Lloyd
Mrs. Gertrude Parkman Morgan
Mrs. Lorena Guy Thompson
Miss Laura Elizabeth Smith Mrs. Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson
1936
Number in Class: 16
Number Who Gave: 5
Percentage: 31%
Total Given: $375
Mrs. Doris Jolley Brenizer
Mr. Isaac E. Cohen
Mrs. Mary Reid Johnson
Miss Lillian Kamphuis
Miss Nannie Robertson
1942
Number in Class: 31
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 49%
Total Given: $1,920
Mrs. Edwina Wallace Alexander
Mrs. Louise Reynolds Bolling
Mrs. Jean Boyd Burford
Mrs. Dorothy Williams Clark
Mrs. Louise Calhoun Duffey
Mrs. Evelyn Mixson Parker
Mrs. Dorothy McLean Perry
Mrs. Elinor Dunlap Perry
Mrs. Marie Espy Robertson
Miss Elizabeth Thompson Saus
Miss Marjorie Hall Self
Reverend Lamar Spencer
Mrs. Madeline Davis Swift
Miss Jane Stroud Williams
Mrs. Jean Kirkpatrick Williams
1937
Number in Class: 12
Number Who Gave: 3
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $225
Mrs. Alice Condon Albertson
Mrs. Margaret Jones Garrett
Mrs. Martha Tiller Hudgens
1938
Number in Class: 23
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 35%
Total Given: $2,725
Mrs. Rose Murphy Ford
Mrs. Mary Pelham Ivey
Mrs. Mary Wilson King Miss Frances Marshall Lanier
Mrs. Sara Evans McDowell
Mrs. Pauline Cain Norby
Mrs. Claire Drinkard Phillips
Mrs. Louise May Pope
1939
Number in Class: 26
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 31%
Total Given: $1,250
Mrs. Virginia Trusler Blackwood
Mrs. Theresa Tate Cook
Mrs. Pearl Norton Jackson
Mrs. Doris Turner Osten
Mrs. Jule Wilson Perry
Mrs. Frances Milner Seifert
Ms. Helen Shaw
Mrs. Kathryn Tucker Windham
1940
Number in Class: 27
Number Who Gave: 9
Percentage: 34%
Total Given: $465
Mrs. Bernice Hurst Bell
Mrs. Lorraine Roberts Corley
Mrs. Irene Sheehan Howe
Mrs. Ruby Collier Key
Mrs. Virginia Carpenter Livingston
Mrs. Louise Thornton Reynolds
Mrs. Margaret M. Malloy Taber
Mrs. Kate Baldwin Weese
Miss Nancy Lou Williams
1941
Class Agents: Lorena Manci Byars,
Margaret Dean Pitts
Number in Class: 25
Number Who Gave: 10
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $6,932
Mrs. Mamie Mitchell Atkinson
Mrs. Sarah Parker Bruer
Mrs. Lorena Manci Bryars
Mrs. Isabel Leatherwood Doswell
Mrs. Margaret Gauntt Gibson
Mrs. Eleanor Upchurch Kennedy
Mrs. Barbara Hasson Parks Mrs. Margaret Dean Pitts
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
44
1943
Number in Class: 36
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 39%
Total Given: $3,815
Mrs. Mallieve Wicker Breeding
Mrs. Ruth Miller Carl Mrs. Melba Dunn Dickinson
Mrs. Mary Cecil Edwards Dunning
Mrs. Mary Baker Duval
Mrs. Mary English Furlong
Ms. Margaret H. Graham
Mrs. Martha Sumner Harkins
Mrs. Marion Hurst Hill
Mrs. Grace Calhoun Horton
Mrs. Norma Williams May
Mrs. Frances Moody Mrs. Dorothy Tucker Smith
Mrs. Frances Lott Sowers 1944
Class Agent: Marie Baker Sinclair
Gift Agent: Ann Strickland White,
Nancy Robinson
Number in Class: 56
Number Who Gave: 26
Percentage: 47%
Total Given: $49,635
Mrs. Julia Bentley Arner
Mrs. Jean Letson Ash
Mrs. Lucille Ellison Beezley
Mrs. Anne Bryars Black
Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden Mrs. Shirley Beebe Calkins
Mrs. Margie Corley Cloaninger
Mrs. Virginia Hudson Crumly
Miss Anne Elizabeth Hollis
Mrs. Dorothy Cobb Jones
Ms. Margaret Louise Martin
Mrs. Ann Johnston McCroskey
Mrs. Marilyn Cogburn McLeod
Mrs. Martha Holley Norton
Mrs. Nona Rust Peebles
Mrs. Charlotte Gibbs Ponder Mrs. Mary Hammond Purdy
Mrs. Nancy Greer Robinson
Mrs. Clarice Pearson Scarborough
Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair Mrs. Mary N. Finklea Skinner
Mrs. Lillian Wilcox Spight
Mrs. Martha V. Stars
Mrs. Ruth Cobia Summers
Mrs. Mary Rogers Wheeler
Mrs. Ann Strickland White 1945
Class Agents: Betty Gensert Towey,
Jane Black Roberts
Number in Class: 55
Number Who Gave: 33
Percentage: 60%
Total Given: $152,976.23
Mrs. Mary Jo Mason Andress
Mrs. Martha Sprague Best
Mrs. Helen Domingos Bull
Mrs. Frances Carter Conover
Mrs. Gloria Huey Crawford
Mrs. Lucia Andrews Doby* Mrs. Ann Logue Fortner
Mrs. Helen Rittenour Geesey
Mrs. Catherine Burns Gray
Mrs. Theresa Hillhouse Harris Mrs. Virginia Tate Herod
Dr. Virginia Draper Horns-Marsh
Mrs. Winnie Webb Howard
Mrs. Mary Louise Howard Jones Mrs. Elizabeth May Kyle
Mrs. Faye Eason Buttram Lawrence
Miss Virginia McLean
Mrs. Mary Martha Howard Phillips
Mrs. Nell Jones Poyner
Mrs. Emily Cooner Rabren
Mrs. Jane Black Roberts
Mrs. Frances White Rutherford*
Dr. Blanche Carlton Sloan
Mrs. Mayme Dublin Smith
Mrs. Dorothy Higgins Thompson*
Mrs. Betty Gensert Towey
Mrs. Grace King Tribble
Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker Mrs. Ruth Lambert Viering
Mrs. Rosalind Davison Washington
Mrs. Inez Hinson Watts
Reverend Ray E. Whatley
Mrs. Norma Villareal Zambrano 1946
Class Agent: Ruth Brady Cousins
Brink
Gift Agent: Frances Hastings Moore
Number in Class: 71
Number Who Gave: 33
Percentage: 47%
Total Given: $7,135.50
Mrs. Emily Hasson Anthony
Mrs. Virginia Lile Beck
Mrs. Ruth Brady Cousins Brink Mrs. Mary Alice Garner Bush
Mrs. Virginia Jones Campbell
Mrs. Anne Thomas Cantrell
Mrs. Fariss Fraser Craig
Mrs. Marnita Walden Crow
Mrs. Mary Douglass Foreman
Mrs. Margaret Weed Foster
Mrs. Monte Walker Graham
Mrs. Zuma Williams Harris
Mrs. Reideth Wheeler Horner
Mrs. Jane Hall Knox
Mrs. Gregg Hosselton Lofton
Mrs. Sue Dowdell Lux
Mrs. Lucile Holmes Martin
Mrs. Susan Carmichael McIntosh
Mrs. Rose Weston Modling
Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore Mrs. Martha Kimbrough Musgrove Mrs. Elizabeth Brown Nolen
Mrs. Jeanne Foote North
Mrs. Bettye Abele Poe
Mrs. Betty Ann Page Rainer
Mrs. Dot Felkel Rigsby
Mrs. Doris Cooper Riley
Mrs. Betty Helburn Rimalover
Mrs. Olga Lee Ryan
Mrs. Marian Greene Smith
Mrs. Rose Beveridge Smith
Mrs. Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford
Mrs. Mary Florence Smith Wilson
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
1948
Class Agent: Nellie Howard Tiller
Number in Class: 55
Number Who Gave: 26
Percentage: 48%
Total Given: $2,270
Mrs. Mary King Burns
Ms. Hattie Bush Chapman
Mrs. Martha Ann Cranford
Christopher
Mrs. Montae James Christopher
Mrs. Mary Scott Corlew
Mrs. Jean Williams Cummins
Mrs. Emily Reese DeShields
Mrs. Marion Huey Garrett
Mrs. Sara Cody Gaskin
Mrs. Ollie Adams Hutchison
Mrs. Katie Walls Laws
Mrs. Doris Brett McCurdy
Mrs. Clara Wise McInish
Mrs. Jean Webb Melton
Mrs. Dorothy Barton Moore
Mrs. Carolyn Deer Owens
Mrs. Ruth Burroughs Dabbs Regen
Mrs. Dionysia Mantas Rogers
Mrs. LaNelle Andrews Rowe
Mrs. Allison McLelland Scruggs
Mrs. Dorothy Rainer Sellars
Mrs. Joy Cogdell Steele
Mrs. Nancy Johnson Strickland
Mrs. Abbie Henderson Taylor
Miss Evelyn Ann Thweatt
Mrs. Nellie Howard Tiller
1949
Class Agents: Betty Finlay Brislin,
Ethel Gibson
Gift Agents: Billie Claire Mangum,
Betty Finlay Brislin
Number in Class: 87
Number Who Gave: 42
Percentage: 48%
Total Given: $35,846
Mr. Kenneth D. Adcock
Mr. James I. Black Jr.
Mrs. Juanita Feemster Black
Mrs. Betty Finlay Brislin Mrs. Jane Drake Brown
Mrs. Anne Avriett Cameron
Mrs. Janet Bullard Campbell
Miss Betsy Cowan
Mrs. Martha Cobb Crawford
Mrs. Martha Housel Crocker
Mrs. Betty Solomon Edwards
Dr. William Carroll Finlay
Mr. Maurice B. Gettleman
Miss Ethel Ellis Gibson Mrs. Ernestine Spencer Hill
Mrs. Jean Roberds Holley
Mrs. Elizabeth Reed Hopkins
Mrs. Louise Yeager Howell
Mrs. Betty Bennett Janney
Mrs. Noble Seay Jones Mrs. Edna Segrest King
Ms. Mary Louise Ledbetter
Mrs. Billie Claire Watson Mangum Reverend Marion C. Mathison
Mrs. Jean Stallworth Maxwell
Mrs. Joy McGlynn McLemore
Mrs. Joyce Harrod Miller
Mrs. Sallie Wood Millsap
Lt. Col. Joseph E. Moore
Mrs. Ruth Milner Morrison Mrs. Virginia Bullard Oswald Mrs. Bennye Raffield Pippin
Mrs. Sarah Stewart Rhyne
Miss Jean Rodgers Mrs. Celia Reaves Satterwhite
Mrs. Margaret Gothard Shaw
Mrs. Shirley Hamill Smith
Mrs. Ann Swift Thompson
Mrs. Virginia Suddith Vines
Mrs. Jewell McLain Weldon
Mrs. Anne Roberds Wood
Dr. James G. Wright Jr.
1950
Class Agents: Barbara Johnston
Dismukes,
Bebe Cannon Jones
Gift Agent: Elizabeth Denson
Lipscomb
Number in Class: 99
Number Who Gave: 52
Percentage: 53%
Total Given: $36,325
Mr. Thomas R. Allison Mrs. Betty Wright Bolt
Mrs. Lucy Sunshine Bricken
Mrs. Clare Bowman Cardinal
Mrs. Patsy Lazenby Carter
Mrs. Margaret Cheney Collier
Mrs. Katherine Jones Cook
Mr. Calvin C. Crow
Mr. Lawrence E. Crowder
Miss Dorothy D. Dillard
Mrs. Barbara J. Dismukes
Mrs. Margaret Moorer Donaldson
Mrs. Claudia Thompson Duncan
Mrs. Elia Durr Buck Mrs. Martha Dickerson Fountain
Mrs. Sarah Hundley Gould
Miss Martha Ray Harris Mrs. Helen Jeune Heatherly
Dr. Bruce F. Holding Jr.
Mrs. Roberta Butler Holding
Mr. Willard Lee Hurley
Miss Jane Jackson
Mrs. Lucy Spain Jackson
Mrs. Gretchen V. Johnson
Mr. Kenneth E. Johnson
Mrs. Catherine Cannon Jones Mrs. Nelle Beck Jones
Mrs. Bettie Berman Kahn
Mrs. Martha Alford Kilgore
Mrs. Jean Hay Land
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Lipscomb *An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
Mrs. Mildred Norton Loper
Mrs. Janice Green Mahoney
Dr. Barbara Jones Manning
Mrs. Jean Gilmore McClurkin
Mrs. Doris Morrissette McGowan
Mrs. Mary DeBardeleben Moore
Mrs. Mary Gaston Price
Lt. Col. James E. Ray Mrs. Myrtle Poundstone Ridolphi
Mr. James M. Rittenour
Mrs. Caroline Poole Ryan
Mrs. Katherine Johnston Sasser
Mrs. Mary Bibee Rutherford Searle
Mr. Joseph Simon
Mrs. Ione Burford Sibley
Mrs. Gloria Moore Stabler
Dr. John N. Todd III Mr. James T. Upchurch Jr. Ms. Carolyn Vines
Mrs. Barbara Brown White
Mrs. Norma J. Thornton White
1951
Class Agents: Betty Kimbrough
Hastings,
Martha Bozeman Jungwith
Gift Agent: Arthur Masingill
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 36
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $16,245
Mrs. Betty Brunson Barrett
Mrs. Mary Lawrence Beall
Dr. William Blackmon Jr.
Mrs. Sara Dickert Bowden
Mrs. Martha Jean Terry Carlson
Miss Martha Nell Dean
Mrs. Marjorie Little Doe
Mrs. Julia Hawthorne Dubberley
Mr. Rom H. Duncan Jr.
Mrs. Betty Edgar Gerdel
Mrs. Betty Payne Hammond
Mrs. Betty Kimbrough Hastings Mrs. Ann Wood Hicks
Mr. John D. Holley
Mrs. Constance Julian Hurt
Mr. Carl E. Kohler Jr.
Mrs. Dorothy Slade Lockwood
Mrs. Susan Carroll Martin
Mr. Arthur C. Masingill Jr. Mrs. Ruth Cook McLemore
Mrs. Rita Rochambeau Perham
Mrs. Ethel Moist Perkins
Mrs. Esther Beach Persigehl
Mrs. Jean Davis Pracht
Mrs. Helen Rapp Rittenour
Mr. Raymond Shaw
Mr. Clyde Somerset Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Largen Spivey
Mrs. Miriam Kirkwood Syler
Mrs. Alice Tompkins Thalheimer
Mr. Robert Augustus Thompson
Reverend James Ian Walter
Mrs. Carroll Moss Wheeler
Mr. Jere T. Williams
Martha Garrett Wills
Mrs. Ruth Barnes Yaple 1952
Class Agent: Barbara Rice Zdanis
Gift Agent: Joanna Breedlove Crane
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 44
Percentage: 55%
Total Given: $6,102.50
Mrs. Marion Waters Barrow Mrs. Zona Davis Baxter
Mrs. Dorothy Hoag Bell
Miss Carol Jane Boyd
Miss Patricia Britton
Mrs. Joanna Breedlove Crane Mrs. Malinda Robertson Daniel
Mrs. Sara Lee Insley Dunbar
Mrs. Inez Robinson Farrow
Reverend James L. Farrow Jr.
Mrs. Anne Salyerds Francisco
Mrs. Rosemary Reed Freeze
Mrs. Dorothy Cannon Fuller
Mrs. Nancy Brown Garner
Mr. Henry Johnson Harper
Mrs. Barbara Whiddon Harrell
Mrs. Annette Rodgers Huddleston
Mr. Wallace L. Jackson
Mrs. Nanette E. Cleveland Johnston
Reverend Robert E. Johnston
Mrs. Mary Jo Reed Krauss
Mr. Harold Lynn
Mrs. Helen Caldwell Marshall
Mrs. Joan Burdick McLemore
Mrs. Suzanne Chalker Meador
Mrs. Mary Sue Calhoun Montague
Mrs. Barbara Chapman Moore
Mrs. Rose Dyer Moore
Mrs. Patsy Blake Moseley
Mrs. Legene Brown Mullis
Miss Miriam Pace
Dr. Gwendolyn Smith Pearson
Mrs. Carolyn Norton Respess
Mrs. Norma Iversen Schumm
Mrs. Rebecca Moore Sherrill
Mrs. Virginia Dumas Skillman
Mrs. Margaret Nicholas Snellgrove
Mrs. Betty Nighbert Somerset
Mrs. Ruth Stone Strange Dr. Roy Sublette
Dr. Betty Vaughn
Mrs. June Johnson Wilborn
Mr. Fred W. Wilkerson*
Mrs. Barbara Rice Zdanis
1953
Class Agent: Elaine Williams Smith
Gift Agent: Phyllis Gunter Snyder
Number in Class: 70
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 43%
Total Given: $6,005
Mrs. Carolyn Griffin Atwater
Mrs. Rae Venable Calvert
Mrs. Jane Windham Chesnutt
Reverend Jimmie C. Connor
Mrs. Lila Pope Crittenden
Dr. Robert R. Daniel Mrs. Martha Rose Herlong Ellis
Mrs. Charlotte Berry Fuller
Mrs. Louise Murphy Spring Gearin
Mr. Arthur F. Harman
Mrs. Ann Given Hopper
Mrs. Florence Furlow Hurst
Mrs. Sadie Lou Gibson Jackson
Mrs. Ann Harvey James
Mrs. Carolyn Butler Klopstock
Mrs. Wilma Barnes Meads
Mrs. Barbara Snider Miller
Mrs. Shirley Burch Mills
Miss Elizabeth A. Palmer
Mrs. Madie Howell Poole
Mr. David Printz
Mrs. Catherine Rollins
Mrs. Elaine Williams Smith
Mr. Van der Veer Smith
Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder Mrs. Julia Barron Arbuthnot
Strickland
Mrs. Barbara Farrington Thomas
Mrs. Mary Durden Weaver
Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland Mrs. Harriette Harley Woodard
1954
Class Agents: Sara Stembridge Perry,
Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley
Gift Agents: Betty Betts Connor,
Mary Ann Neeley and Sara Perry
Number in Class: 87
Number Who Gave: 53
Percentage: 61%
Total Given: $14,748
Mrs. Harriet Borland Allison Mrs. Sabra Stough Atkins
Mrs. Elizabeth Cunningham Baldwin
Mrs. Lorraine Jacqueline Barnett
Mrs. Lila Waldrop Baxter Mrs. Ann Webb Berry
Mrs. Barbara Phelps Boyer
Miss Jacqueline Bridges
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
45
Alumni Giving By Class Year
1947
Class Agents: Aileen Best LeGrand,
Anne Durr Palmer
Gift Agent: Sarah Wedekind Bailey
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 40
Percentage: 50%
Total Given: $5,890
Mrs. Sarah Wedekind Bailey Mrs. Wadynne Bolton Bishop
Mrs. Jane Evans Brantley
Mrs. Allyn Hamner Brown
Mrs. Ouida Webb Byington
Mrs. Mary Helen Gaddis Carr
Mrs. Marguerite Wise Cato
Mrs. Jacqueline Gill Downing
Mrs. Dorothy Vickers Faircloth
Mrs. Edna Hill Farmer
Mrs. Jean Norton Gander
Mrs. Frances Wilcox Grant
Mrs. Catherine Cobb Helms
Mrs. Harriet Holmes Herring
Mrs. Martha Gregg Hughes
Mrs. Marilyn Davis Jackson
Mrs. Rose Schafer Johnson
Mrs. Martha Davis Keene
Mrs. Aileen Best LeGrand
Mrs. Marianne Skemp Lovell
Mrs. Addie Ellis Martin
Mrs. Caroline Ball Matthews
Mrs. Margaret Calhoun McIlwain
Mrs. Ann Bates McQueen
Mrs. Alice Wilcox Monroe
Mrs. Mary Weathers Neighbors
Mrs. Anne Durr Palmer Mrs. Alla Maye Springer Parker
Mrs. Kay Murphy Paulsen
Mr. William M. Pearson
Mrs. Dorothy Dillard Pettey
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Wilkinson Rast Mrs. Merriel Hoover Reed
Mrs. Christina Tompkins Rood
Mrs. Margaret Meriwether Rush
Mrs. Billie Smith Sims
Mrs. Ann Richards Sommer
Mrs. Beth Wilford Standley
Mrs. Doris Chisolm Tucker
Mrs. Bertha Rhodes Wood
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Mrs. Phyllis Tate Bryars
Mrs. Emily Tyler Burge
Mrs. Betty Smilie Christiansen
Mr. James Black Cogdell
Mrs. Betty Betts Conner
Mrs. Carolyn Jones Cook
Mrs. Eloise Hall Cottrell
Mrs. Betty Mobley Cox
Dr. Emily Reese Dann
Miss Annie Carol Davis
Mrs. Elizabeth Hilliard Davis
Mrs. Barbara Robertson Drury
Reverend George H. Fitzgerald
Mrs. Jane Johnson Fowler
Mr. Nimrod Thompson Frazer Mrs. Carolyn Loftin Gaither
Mrs. Ann Kolb Garner
Mrs. Betty Perry Gibson
Mrs. Betty Robertson Gilmore
Mrs. Gwendolyn Prater Glass
Dr. Jean Coley Harrison
Mr. Henry C. Hewlett
Mrs. Barbara Farmer Hingle
Mr. W.C. Holdbrooks Jr.
Mrs. Anne Prather Huber
Mr. Jack T. Jackson
Mrs. Laura Chambliss Jinright Mrs. June (Marye) Bishop Lands
Mrs. Mary Ruth Lieck
Miss Farrys Rose Long
Mrs. Jean Broxson McMillan Mrs. Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley Mrs. Sara Stembridge Perry Mr. Earl F. Pruitt
Mrs. Janet Marsh Pruitt
Mrs. Wynell Jordan Sachs
Miss Carol L. Sims
Mrs. Charlotte Fagan Stanford
Mrs. Mary Ruth Price Sullivan
Mrs. Letitia Meadows Taylor
Dr. Eric Fontelle Thompson Jr.
Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Johnson
Tolleson
Mrs. Betty Bolling Vinson
Dr. Richard G. Vinson
Dr. Bobbie Coop Welch Ms. Patricia Yelverton
1955
Gift Agent: Joyce Payne French
Number in Class: 68
Number Who Gave: 34
Percentage: 50%
Total Given: $10,000
Mrs. Bethany Rowell Caldwell
Mrs. Martha Ford Ceriani
Mrs. Elizabeth Mulkey Cleary
Mrs. Reita Sample Davis Mrs. Edna Spencer Dickinson
Miss Marianne Donnell Mrs. Virginia Cooper Downes
Mrs. Doris Sanford Edwards Reverend J. Walter Ellisor
Mrs. Joyce Payne French
Mrs. Nelda Scott Funkhouser
Elinor Warr Roberts ’57
is a generous Huntingdon
friend and alumna.
Dr. Billy D. Gaither
Dr. Mae Belle Gay
Miss Julia M. Goins
Mrs. Jeanne Clements Hall Mrs. JoAnne Roberts Hinson
Mrs. Sara Terry Hosey
Mrs. Mary Vail Hostetter
Mrs. Jane Colvin Hubbard
Mrs. Faye Davis Huey
Mrs. Barbara Cade Hunt
Mrs. Willanne Meadows Ingram
Ms. Rosemary Suits Jarrard
Mrs. Rebecca Bloxham Jones
Ms. Marjorie Cain Masterson
Dr. Dorothy J. Cowart McGehee
Mrs. Lovelace Stewart McNelley
Mrs. Margaret R. Ryan Nelson
Mrs. Helen Schliecker Ott
Mrs. Gail Golson Phillips Mrs. Paula Grossner Riley
Mrs. Joyce McClendon Robertson
Mrs. Martha Harris Shannon
Reverend John Doyle Trobaugh
1956
Class Agent: June Burdick Bisard
Gift Agent: Shirley Parker Watkins
Number in Class: 70
Number Who Gave: 32
Percentage: 46%
Total Given: $17,568.24
Mrs. Minna Appleby
Mrs. Janel Gray Bates
Mrs. June Burdick Bisard
Dr. Asa Boozer Mrs. Jane Michael Boozer Mrs. Barbara Veazey Brasell
Mrs. Sigrid Hansen Childers
Dr. Curtis D. Coleman
Mr. Roy Andrews Cox
Mrs. Myrtle Peters Crone
Mr. Eldridge L. Crowe
Mrs. Janet Miller Dapitan
Mrs. Hermine Melton Downing
Mrs. Rachel Hutto Foreman
Mrs. Julia Varner Huling
Mrs. Lenore Oglesby Kirkpatrick
Mrs. Martha Sue Pierson Kurts
Mrs. Elizabeth Walker Lanier
Mrs. Catherine Buck Loflin
Mrs. Joyce Ponton Martin
Mrs. Geraldine Phillips McLain
Mrs. Jayne Harper Mills
Mrs. Jane Mathews Penry
Mrs. Sarah Wyatt Quinn
Mrs. Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt Mrs. Charlotte Stokes
Mrs. Lois Blackburn Stokley
Mrs. Claire Varnedoe Thomas
Mrs. Lorna Lee Thompson
Mrs. Shirley Faye Parker Watkins Mrs. Barbara Duggan Wilson
Mrs. Dorothy Waters Wilson
1957
Class Agent: Elinor Warr Roberts
Gift Agent: Iris McGehee
Number in Class: 83
Number Who Gave: 48
Percentage: 58%
Total Given: $27,972.50
Reverend Ernest M. Andress
Mrs. Pauline Williams Barikmo
Mrs. Lloyce Y. Wilborn Browder
Mrs. Carolyn Glenn Cowles
Mrs. Mary O'Brien Cox
Mrs. Joan Johnston Diversi Mrs. Shirley Powell Duer
Mrs. Anne Williams Dunn
Mrs. Emmie Brooks Ellisor
Mrs. Sally Hudson Engstrom Mrs. Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald
Mrs. Lucile Delchamps Fleming Mrs. Eva Atkinson Fountain
Mr. Jack Fowler
Mrs. Lee Martin Frazer
Mrs. Liz Allen Garrard
Mrs. Jacquelyn Draughon Guthrie
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
46
Mrs. Patty Colvin Hall
Mrs. Barbara Clark Hill
Mrs. Jane Knox Huff
Mrs. Ruby Wilson Huntley
Dr. Frank T. Hyles Jr.
Mrs. Dale Wilson Kennington
Mrs. Ann Manry Kenyon Mrs. Nancy Marsh Lucas
Mrs. Gatra Reid Mallard
Mrs. Katherine Butler Massey
Ms. Iris McGehee
Mrs. Ann Gravely McKinnon
Dr. Merlin Owen Newton
Mrs. Dona Robison Noland
Miss Johnnie Ruth Parker
Mrs. Carolyn Tingen Philips
Mrs. Annie B. Arnold Quick
Mrs. Flora Grant Reese
Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts Mrs. Sue Cross Savage Mrs. Rosaland Mathison Tallet Mrs. Peggy Rushin Terry
Mrs. Mary Greer Troxell
Ms. Maxine Turner
Mrs. Carol Upchurch Walker
Dr. Alice Stokes Ward
Mrs. Linda Bergman Webb
Mrs. Sue Liu Wen
Ms. Carolyn McMillan West
Mrs. Nancy Prickett Whitley Dr. Robert Godfrey Wilson
1958
Class Agent: Donald Brown
Gift Agent: Bennie Sowell
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 37
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $5,778.05
Mrs. Faye Heard Beazly
Mrs. Charlotte Cannon Blount
Mrs. Charlotte Jones Boyd
Dr. Donald G. Brown
Mrs. Laura Harper Copeland
Mrs. Lynn Blalock Cunningham
Mrs. Jane Boyles Eidson
Mrs. Myrna Taylor Ely
Mrs. Helen Reid Figh
Dr. Charles E. Graham
Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner Ms. Sarah H. Hutchinson Heisel
Mrs. Jacquelyn Gunn Hubbard
Mrs. Jane Thornton Hudson
Miss Bettie Hussey
Mr. George F. Jones Sr.
Mr. Henry B. Knighten
Mrs. Alberta Duckworth Mau
Mrs. Yvonne Laun McGinn
Mrs. Thadis Wiggins North
Mrs. Lucy McKinney Parsons
Mrs. Zola Smith Powers
Mrs. LaVerne Davis Ramsey Mrs. Mary Harrell Riley
Mrs. Ruth Brill Rogers
Mrs. Catherine Dixon Roland* Mrs. Betty Bowden Rutherford
Mr. William B. Sansom Jr.
Mr. Bennie F. Sowell Mrs. Flora McDonald Speed
Mrs. Helen Howell Sterbutzel
Mrs. Emogene Norton Taylor
Mrs. Lyn Tucker
Mrs. Betty McCoy Vaughan
Mrs. Linda Gorman Ward
Mrs. Linda Cooper Wenner
Mrs. Sue McClain White
1959
Class Agent: Judith Wilson Nunn
Gift Agent: Peggy Springfield
Pennington
Number in Class: 67
Number Who Gave: 27
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $4,045
Mrs. Martha Vickery Bigby Mr. Roy J. Boyd
Mrs. Anne Dailey Brown
Mrs. Norma Page Crowder
Mrs. Jane Solomon Davis
Dr. Thomas E. Duke
Mrs. Doris Bolton Gaines
Mrs. Lydia Blake Gillespie
Mrs. Faye Byrd Hall
Mrs. Myrtle Gibson Harris
Dr. Judith McNease James Mrs. Catherine Giglio Lamar
Mr. William Y. Lamar
Dr. Charles D. Lowery
Mrs. Gayle Whatley Lurie
Mrs. Margaret Dunbar Martin
Mrs. Gwendolyn Harris Munson
Mr. Aubrey E. Neeley Mrs. Judith Wilson Nunn
Mrs. Peggy Springfield Pennington
Mrs. Marcia Mathews Reichert
Mrs. Olivia Stephens Rineheart
Mrs. Martha Still Rogers
Mr. Donald G. Shannon
Mr. Richard L. Warren
Mrs. Alice Jane Clark Wasdin
Mrs. Lois Mothershead Windham
1960
Class Agent: Elizabeth Oglesby
Johnson
Number in Class: 92
Number Who Gave: 38
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $14,619
Margaret Whitsett Abrames
Mr. Joseph C. Ard
Ms. Elizabeth Vaughan Arnold
Mrs. Ethel Heinecke Bauer
Reverend Lawrence A. Britt
Mrs. Catherine Fralish Burke
Mr. Phillip B. Burwell
Mrs. Kemmla Viego Cernuda
Mrs. Ann McCurdy Collier
Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich Dr. W. Foster Eich III Mrs. Ann Sanders Gray
Dr. Betty Bottoms Grundy
Mrs. Laurie Hamiter Hall
Mrs. Janis Houston Hand
Mrs. Josephine Thagard Hirsch
Mrs. Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson
Mr. John A. Kamburis
Mrs. Sara Estelle Bradford Lowery
Mr. Edward E. O'Donnell
Mrs. Laura Lucas Pittman
Mrs. Shirley Kelly Rose
Mrs. Beth Neville Roth
Mrs. Dianne Williams Salter
Mrs. Glory Yarbrough Sanders
Mrs. Katherine Panhorst Smith
Mrs. Barbara Ramey Spiers
Dr. Eugene E. Stanaland Mr. Hugh J. Stewart Jr.
Mr. James H. Strickland
Mrs. Lady Claire Studstill
Mrs. Leeta Higgins Thomas
Dr. James Worth Thurman Jr.
Dr. Charles G. Tomberlin Mr. Gaston Ray Troxell
Mrs. Carolyn Hamilton Vice
Mrs. Judith Gooden Woodard
Dr. James D. Yarbrough 1961
Number in Class: 89
Number Who Gave: 30
Percentage: 34%
Total Given: $3,282.50
Mrs. Frances Goode Akridge
Dr. Pearle King Brown
Dr. Richard M. Burr
Mrs. Katherine Liddon Chatowski
Mrs. Shirley Orr Cochran
Ms. Yvonne Crye
Dr. Carol Fields Daron
Mrs. Martha Pugh Davis
Mrs. Michelle Butte Davis
Dr. Wayne Gibson Mrs. Rose Garrett Grant
Mr. Hal Hardy Green
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
1962
Class Agent: Claire Peacock Helms
Gift Agent: Roselyn Butts Holloway
Number in Class: 92
Number Who Gave: 48
Percentage: 52%
Total Given: $28,415
Mrs. Martha Costen Abernathy
Ms. Rochelle Prescott Anderson
Reverend Turpin C. Ashurst
Mrs. Linda Garrett Bancroft
Mr. Jim Bishop Sr. Miss Jamie E. Blake
Mrs. Ruth Mikkelsen Blaylock
Ms. Thelma Braswell Mrs. Margaret Jacobs Bridgeman
Mrs. Emily Davis Cato
Mrs. Verna Fail Chesser
Mrs. Lucky Brettel Esneul
Mrs. Martha Herring Faircloth
Mrs. Virginia Holly Fraley
Mr. Allie M. Freeman Jr.
Mrs. Judy Bullock Freeman
Mrs. Jean Maddox Garner
Mr. John M. Gorrie
Mr. William Martin Gray
Mr. Lee Block Green
Mr. Tom M. Greene
Mr. Robert Louis Hansen
Mrs. Claire Peacock Helms
Mrs. Elaine Wilkinson Helms
Mr. Alfred Braden Hill
Ms. Mildred Brown Holman
Mrs. Judy Watson Kingry
Mrs. Sue Clifton Landrum
Mrs. Helen Powell Maier
Mrs. Lynn Livingston Marsh
Ms. Clara West Martin
Mrs. Frances McCrary
Mr. W. Herbert McGee
Mr. Joe Paul Moore
Mrs. Carol Scott Phaturos
Mr. Robert William Pickett Jr.
Mrs. Nancy A. Pugh
Dr. June Killinger Ramsey
Mrs. Patricia Woodburn Richardson
Ms. Ludie Robinson
Mrs. Ellen Keldorph Sanders
Mr. R. Darby Sellers
Mrs. Frances Blair Minter Steele
Miss Virginia C. Tucker
Mrs. Mary Ann Mannich Underwood
Mrs. Jane McGowin Webb
Mrs. Ann Butler Wilkinson
Mr. Ned W. Woodard
1963
Number in Class: 101
Number Who Gave: 35
Percentage: 35%
Total Given: $2,895
Mrs. Judith Sanford AbecassisMeadows
Mr. R. Spencer Bach
Mr. James R. Bozeman
Mrs. Vesta Bottoms Bryan
Mrs. Anne Young Clark
Mrs. Lucy Bates Collier
Dr. Phillip E. Crunk Mrs. Sister McDuffie Curry
Reverend Perry M. Dalton
Mr. Carl Flowers Jr.
Mr. Edwin H. Francis Jr.
Mrs. Mary Oliver Frazer
Mrs. Nell Dancey Green
Mrs. Camille Landrum Harris
Mr. James Larry Hinds
Miss Keeta Kendall
Mrs. Helen Harris Kitchens
Mrs. Joy Clark Langley
Mrs. Sara Ward Lee
Mrs. Brenda Ward Loftus
Mr. Frederick A. Martin
Mrs. Helen Cosper Martin
Mrs. Inell Rentz McGee
Mr. Don Edward Meadows
Mrs. Dina Mason Moore
Mrs. Victoria Sidaris Ornowski
Mrs. Corrie Anderson Owens
Mrs. Peggy Sewell Parker
Mr. Frederick L. Pryor
Mr. James L. Sealy
Mrs. Mary McKinley Stephens
Mrs. Stroby Ashley Stewart
Mrs. Ramona Kennedy Tingle
Mrs. Nancy Vallance
Dr. James Douglas Williams
1964
Class Agent: Joan Jolly Huckaby
Gift Agent: Betty Thurman McMahon
Number in Class: 113
Number Who Gave: 51
Percentage: 45%
Total Given: $73,345
Mrs. Susanna Majure Adams
Dr. Claudia Adkison
Mr. Ronald L. Anders
Mrs. Geraldine Ramke Ard
Mr. Dan L. Bailey
Mr. Carl A. Barranco Mrs. Dianne Grissette Colquitt
Mr. Harold L. Coomes
Mrs. Donna Brannon Coon
Mrs. Sherrie Maginess Crooke
Mrs. Anne Chancey Dalton
Mrs. Bonnie Cleaveland Donaldson
Mrs. Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest
Mr. Rex Everage
Mrs. Linda Roberts Frankowski
Dr. Sue Russell Garrick
Mrs. Florence Cook Giles
Mrs. Gail Erskine Gorrie
Mrs. Joanne Levi Grove
Mrs. Linda Howington Guyton
Ms. Jane Majors Hauth
Mrs. Toni Garratt Hayden
Mrs. Joan Jolly Huckaby
Mrs. Gloria Tidmore Johnson Mrs. Joan Graff Johnson
Mrs. Kathryn Townsend Jones
Mrs. Jacqueline Desaulniers
Kinzer Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Morgan Lanier
Mr. Eugene M. Lewis
Mrs. Merry Talley Lewis
Mrs. Anne Bailey Matthes
Mrs. Helen Bagley-McGough
Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon Mrs. Charlene Rentz Meadows
Mrs. Arthurine Morgan Meier
Mrs. Kay Kennedy Miller
Mrs. Martha Jennings Mitchem
Mrs. Johanna Heythekker Parker
Mr. Ray Owen Powell Jr.
Miss Sarah E. Scott
Judge Phillip Dale Segrest Mrs. Betty Menefee Segrest Mrs. Rebecca Bibb Segrest
Mr. George B. Simpkins
Dr. Judith Strickland Sims
Mrs. Mary Waldrop Smith
Mrs. Linda McMillan Steele
Miss Martha Sue Tillotson
Dr. Annella Rowell Trobaugh
Mr. William C. Walker Jr.
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
Mrs. Gwendolyn Boles Warr
Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey 1965
Class Agent: Jan Puckett Kirkemier
Gift Agent: Gerry Garrick
Number in Class: 132
Number Who Gave: 52
Percentage: 40%
Total Given: $6,464.64
Mrs. Rosemary Kirkland Anders
Dr. Marlin Anderson
Mrs. Judith Johnson Bailey
Mr. David A. Bethea
Mrs. Elaine Hearn Boese
Mrs. Elaine Boyer
Dr. James Christopher Britton
Mrs. Sarah Gary Buechler
Dr. Hazel Patricia Byrd
Mrs. Betty Burleson Carpenter
Mrs. Mary Calhoun Chesney
Mrs. Judy Goodwin Chipman
Mrs. Margaret Horn Cone
Mr. Gerald Paul Corgill
Mrs. Glenda Goldsmith Courtney
Mr. Phillip E. Crouch
Mrs. Robin Speight Davy
Mrs. Noel Russell Dudley
Mrs. Sara Fields Ferguson
Mrs. Jeanne Bailey Gamble
Mr. E. Gerald Garrick
Mrs. Eugenia Davis Granberry
Mrs. Martha Fouts Gund
Mrs. Margaret Pittman Hall
Mrs. Rebecca Jones Haston
Mrs. Janice Woolf Hendrickson
Dr. James Martin Herring
Mrs. Mary Harris Holland
Miss Mary E. Hollaway
Mrs. LaFaye A. Holley
Mrs. Elizabeth Bricken Jones
Mrs. Frances Guyton Kelley
Mrs. Jan Puckett Kirkemier
Mrs. Kaye Wilkinson Knight
Mrs. Julia Jeffords Krulic
Mrs. Rosalie Dunlap Lloyd
Mrs. Ellen Adair Norwine
Mrs. Judith Womack Peek
Mrs. Darlene Woodall Riggan
Dr. Henry E. Roberts
Mr. Robert W. Salter
Mr. Charles B. Savage
Mrs. Anne Dismukes Shackelford
Dr. Gene Shelton
Mrs. Sunny Harris Smith
Mrs. Penny Campbell Tate
Mr. John Albert Tindall
Mrs. Sarah Helen McInnis Walters
Mrs. Sylvia Sellers Whitley Mrs. Camilla Sessions Wible
Mr. John W. Wilder
Mrs. Joanne Bell Woodall
1966
Class Agent: Clare Cleere Ward
Number in Class: 105
Number Who Gave: 31
Percentage: 29%
Total Given: $2,960
Ms. Carol Willis Ballard
Mrs. Carolyn DeVaughn Breakfield
Ms. Deidra VanLandingham Christie
Mrs. Ann Andrews Corgill
Mrs. Rachel Rawls Davis
Mr. Ronald Pershing Davis
Mr. Michael Dowling
Mrs. Cherie Pinkerton Durfee
Mrs. Marie Dorsey Farrior
Mrs. Linda Caldwell Fuller
Ms. Jane Jeffords Houston
Mr. Hilson Y. Hudson Jr.
Mr. George E. Hutchinson
Mrs. Debbie Susan Rice Johnson
Mrs. Huntie Hall Jokinen
Mr. Kenneth W. Jordan
Mr. Stanley Lanzo
Reverend Sheila McCurdy
Mr. Michael Arthur Meier
Mrs. Camille Woodward Melton
Mrs. Malinda Epps Morris
Mr. William A. Newman Jr.
Ms. Dianne Norwood
Mr. Robert Maxwell Owen
Mrs. Suzanne Drinkard Plemmons
Mrs. Janie Roberts
Mr. Neil R. Smart Jr.
Ms. Beppy LeCroy Tiller
Miss Frances Banks Tisdale
Mrs. Freida Little Warren
LTC, Ret. M. Lee Warren III
1967
Class Agent: Alice Aman Ramsey
Number in Class: 151
Number Who Gave: 62
Percentage: 41%
Total Given: $8,687.50
Mrs. Julia Smith Alexander
Mrs. Eleanor Warr Barron
Mr. Alfred M. Beazley
Mrs. Frances Cooper Bricken
Mr. John B. Bricken Jr.
Mrs. Farrell Sylvest Burroughs
Mrs. Kathryn Prestwood Bush
Mrs. Sue Cleverdon Dixon
Mrs. Barbara Pinson Dozier
Mrs. Dana Jerkins Dunham
Reverend William A. Earnest
Mr. Robert B. Edwards
Mrs. Betty Seale Fields
Mr. Dan R. Fitzgerald
Mrs. Lynn Broadway Fitzgerald
Mrs. Carol Perpall Fortino Mr. Robert Mel Freeman
Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab
Mrs. Elizabeth Rich Griffith
Mrs. Mary Sue Doler Grooms
Mrs. Betty Kimbrough Hendricks
Mrs. Barbara Adams Herring
Mrs. Fe' V. Higginbotham
Mr. Michael M. Holt
Mr. Richard A. James
Mrs. Rebecca Shackelford Jones
Mr. Russell A. Keldorph
Mrs. Donna McCourry King
Mrs. Florence Austin Lembeck
Mr. Charles R. Liddell
Mrs. Sandra Wimberly Makowsky
Mr. Ronald T. Manning
Dr. Weyman E. Meehan Jr.
Mrs. Linda Curry Miller
Mrs. Barbara McBrayer Montoya
Mr. Robert G. Morrison
Mr. David G. Myrick
Ms. Nancy Brown Myrick Mrs. Charlotte Deal Newman
Mrs. Bobbie Garner O'Connor
The Huntingdon Hawks’ Scarlet
and Grey Club (season ticket
holders) and Gridiron Club are
new giving opportunities in
Hawks athletics. Scarlet and
Grey Club members may attend
any Huntingdon home game in
any sport at no cost.
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
47
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Reverend John Wayne Helms
Mrs. Elizabeth Wells Hunt
Mrs. Ann Warren Johnson
Mrs. Elizabeth Crawford Jones
Mrs. Theresa Dodson Major
Ms. Irene McCombs
Mrs. Beth Cowles McKinney
Mr. William Thomas Melton
Mr. Richard L. Moses
Mrs. Marilyn Beason Motley
Mr. James C. Patrick
Mr. John D. Salter
Dr. Thomas E. Sanders Jr.
Mrs. Nancy Strange Seib
Mrs. Rebecca Barfoot Shifflett
Mrs. Jean Harris Warren
Mrs. Joan Hester West
Mrs. Christine Mozley Woolley
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Mrs. Nancy Grantham Palmer
Mrs. Alice Aman Ramsey
Mrs. Jane Horn Ramsey
Mrs. Loretta Lynn Golson Ray
Mrs. Sharon Green Roberts
Mrs. Marie McClendon Root
Mrs. Martha Brown Salter
Mrs. Jewel Mason Schremser
Mr. Fred B. Simpson Jr.
Mrs. Nadya Sharpe Starr
Mr. Robert E. Sternenberg Mrs. Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth
Mrs. Cheryl Lagowicz Thompson
Mrs. Julie Terry Tindall
Mrs. Barbara Parker Turner
Mrs. Susann Woodbery Turner
Mrs. Charlotte Dobbins Van Erman
Mr. William Walter Vaughn
Mr. Lawrence S. Vinson
Mr. Patrick W. Wilbanks
Mrs. Suzanne Mitchell Wilbanks
Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson 1968
Class Agent: Mary George Jester
Gift Agents: Ren Alford Hinote,
Wm. Conrad Jackson
Number in Class: 156
Number Who Gave: 67
Percentage: 43%
Total Given: $11,132.50
Mrs. Imogene Glaze Adams
Mr. Bernard B. Arant Jr.
Mrs. Kathleen Howard Arant
Mrs. Sheryl DeCoudres Barkalow
Mrs. Celia Farrar Bass
Mr. Michael C. Bass
Ms. Susan Blair
Mrs. Laura Ryba Boykin
Mr. Donald K. Braden
Mr. Marcus Lamar Bradley
Mr. William Tappan Brannon III
Mrs. Anne Gunter Bray
Miss Jo Ann Brazelton Dr. Edward A. Brown III
Mr. Charles M. Croft
Mrs. Judith Pierce Croxton
Mrs. Janice Jacobs Cumming
Ms. Kaye Bethune Cutchen
Miss Julia Ann Deas
Mrs. Lillian Simmons Dickson
Mrs. Shirley Crawford Dorrough
Mrs. Frances Woodbery Edwards
Mr. Lawrence R. Elliott
Mr. Clausen Ely
Mrs. Sue Jackson Gregg
Mrs. Nancy Carmack Hammett
Mrs. Arlene Turnipseed Harding
Mrs. Ann Butler Harrison
Lt. Col. H. Clayton Harshbarger Jr.
Mrs. Ren Alford Hinote
Mrs. Mary Osmer Howell
Mr. Arthur Isola
Mr. Wm. Conrad Jackson
Ms. Mary George Jester Mrs. Marcia Vaughan Jones
Mr. Lloyd V. Julian
Mrs. Betty Pickard Kaucher
Mr. William E. Kennedy
Mrs. Carolyn Darden Key
Mrs. Saundra Bozeman Kidd
Mrs. Jean Livingston Knight
Mrs. Nelda Lewis Lane
Mr. Marty Lee
Mrs. Ruth Howe Liddell
Ms. Jane A. Marks
Mr. Larry W. Martin
Mrs. Susanne Crockett Martin
Mrs. Patricia Tanner Mingledorff
Mr. William West Moore
Mr. George B. Partridge Mr. J. Ben Porter
Mrs. Sara Milburn Reid
Mrs. Rebecca McFee Robertson
Dr. Linda Ruth Sweatt Sanders
Mr. Victor A. Sanders Mrs. Celia Price Sims
Mrs. Nan Turner Smart
Mrs. Marie W. Stafford
Mrs. Rebecca Acuff Sternenberg
Mrs. Stephanie Mann Stokes
Mrs. Carol Morse Tew
Mrs. Barbara Brock Thomas
Dr. Thomas M. Turner
Mr. Daniel Lee Walden Mrs. Cynthia Gebhardt White
Mr. Ronald Wise
Ms. Jennifer Decker Zidlicky
1969
Class Agent: Gray Price
Gift Agent: Sarah McCarthy
Mingledorff
Number in Class: 161
Number Who Gave: 68
Percentage: 43%
Total Given: $22,115
Mr. Thomas E. Anderson
Mrs. Carol Sansbury Baird
Mrs. Mary Ringwald Barnes
Mrs. Martha Flowers Bennett Mrs. Carolyn Glenn Blackstock
Mrs. Judith Hutchinson Bostick
Mrs. Karen Darden Bowers
Reverend Thomas F. Bracewell
Ms. Margie Britnell
Mr. Philip L. Browning
Miss R. Dawn Campbell
Mrs. Ceil R. Mills Champion
Mr. Henry Collier
Mrs. Gail Robinson Cotton
Mrs. Pamela Hulbert Dannelly
Mrs. Karen Bell Deavers
Mrs. Margaret Weathers Dove
Mrs. Sara Jane Dozier
Mr. Stanley D. Edwards
Miss Madeline Kay Evans
Mrs. Carol Bryan Fife
Mr. J. Frederick Fife
Mr. Donald C. France
Mrs. Charlotte DuBose Gaston
Mrs. Marcia Nichols Harshbarger
Ms. Madeleine M. Hill Mrs. Gayle Aker Hogelin
Mrs. Janice McLain James
Mrs. Nelda Helton Jernigan
Mr. Philip J. Johnson
Mrs. Ellen Edwards Kennedy
Mrs. Anna Hartzog Lawrence
Mrs. Phebe Eloise Mason Lee Miss Joan Ann McClure
Mrs. Mary Barnette McClurkin
Reverend R. Neil McDavid Mrs. G. Elaine Tribble McMillen Mr. Tim McQueen
Dr. Nancy Hall McSwain
Mrs. Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff Mr. Ira Charles Mitchell Jr. Mrs. Judith Jones Moore
Mrs. Jean Carpenter Murray
Mrs. Evelyn Swann Ogilvie
Mrs. Leslie Jinks Parham
Mrs. Linda Lovett Parton
Mrs. Ann McKinley Patterson
Mr. C. Gray Price
Mrs. Linda Prather Roberts
Mr. Henry C. Seckar
Senator Jeff B. Sessions Jr. Mrs. Mary Blackshear Sessions Mr. W. Randall Sewell Jr.
Mrs. Lee Reynolds Sewell
Mrs. Celia Price Sims Mr. William Roland Sims Mrs. Lindora Wisham Snyder
Mrs. Linda McLeod Thomas Mrs. Lynda Sheppard Thurman
Mr. Paul J. Vincent
Reverend Elizabeth Till Wade
Mrs. Anne McLeod Warren
Mr. Robert Wiggins
Mrs. Billie Gaye Willis Mr. Timothy E. Woodward
Mr. Donald Luther Yancey
Mrs. Linda Nelson Yancey
Mr. Robert F. Zidlicky Jr.
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
48
1970
Class Agent: Peggy Adamson Crum
Gift Agent: Gaylen Schrieber Pugh
Number in Class: 122
Number Who Gave: 33
Percentage: 27%
Total Given: $6,520
Mr. Richard T. Allen
Mr. G. Carlton Barker Ms. Susan White Bennett
Mrs. Margaret Edythe Shepard
Benson
Mrs. Judy Duncan Bilyeu
Dr. Ronald E. Bird Mr. Robert Bothfeld Jr.
Mr. Dan Jordan Brooks
Mrs. Billie Wingard Brown
Mrs. Ann Jeffords Cole
Mrs. Peggy Parsons Crum
Mr. Ronald Lewis George
Mrs. Deborah Davis Henry
Mrs. Liza Sheehan Kaufman
Mrs. Beverly Gordy McKinney
Mr. James L. McNees
Mrs. Betty Farrar McQueen
Mr. Angelo T. Mellos
Mr. George E. Mingledorff III Mrs. Anne White Mitchell Ms. Isabell Templeman Moore
Dr. Merritt W. Moseley Jr.
Mrs. Linda D. Davis Muehlberger
Mrs. Linda Keenan Partridge Mrs. Kathleen Allen Powell
Dr. Gaylen Schrieber Pugh Mrs. Carol Coffman Robison
Mr. John Joseph Schremser
Mrs. Joanne Miner Shoemaker
Dr. Gerald S. Thurman
Mr. Mrs. Robert B. Waters
Barbara Geddert Wiggins
Mrs. Lynda K. Woodall
1971
Class Agent: Suzanne Repnicki
Fickey
Gift Agent: Herb Patterson
Number in Class: 114
Number Who Gave: 35
Percentage: 31%
Total Given: $17,724.50
Mrs. Theresa Zimmerman Arnold
Ms. Barbara Lazenby Barnett Mr. John William Bass Sr.
Mrs. Angela Cooke Batterman
Mr. John S. Bell
Lt. Col. Marion F. F. BonhommeKnox
Mr. Walter J. Corbitt
Mrs. Pearl Bowman Cox
Mrs. Linda C Collins Daniel
Mrs. Barbara Waters Dekle
Mr. Lyman Edward Dowling
Mrs. Nancy Stallings Elliott
Ms. Martha J. Epperson
Ms. Suzanne Repnicki Fickey Mr. Charles M. Gray III
Ms. Ally W. Howell
Mrs. Margaret McGlynn Hunt
Ms. Karen Dee Koza
Mrs. Carolyn June Lee
Mrs. Laura Cates Luckett Mr. Michael C. McMillen Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson
Mr. Edward H. Munson Jr.
Mrs. Mary Conover Neese
Mr. Herbert Patterson Mr. James D. Roberts
Mr. Keith Sabel Mrs. Melanie Beard Sedberry
Ms. Diane Parkman Sinkule
Mrs. Lucy Williams Stewart
Mrs. Nancy Jennings Wiggins
Mrs. Elizabeth Northcutt Williams
Mr. Hugh R. Williams
Mrs. Judy Bressler Williams
Mrs. Maude Brannen Wise
1972
Class Agents: Ann Veazey Fuller,
Sandy Campbell Balkom
Number in Class: 99
Number Who Gave: 36
Percentage: 36%
Total Given: $7,697.78
Mrs. Carole Cartwright Arbush
Dr. Curtis Glenn Armstrong
Mrs. Pamela Vaughan Baker
Mrs. Sandra Campbell Balkom Mr. Phillip Felton Brown
Mr. Steven Douglas Caldwell
Ms. Anne D. Castellina
Mrs. Nancy Johnson Coburn
Mrs. Doris Peters Coker
Mrs. Opal Collier
Ms. Sheryl Elizabeth Cooper
Mrs. Mary Cleveland Corbitt
Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson Curles
Mr. Howell B. Edwards Jr.
Mr. Daniel J. Freehling
Mrs. Ann Veazey Fuller
Mr. Forrest K. Geno
Mr. Aubrey Graves
Mrs. Janice Graves
Dr. Cecile Gray Reverend Larry Hays
Ms. Martha Jones Hodo
Mr. Paul H. Kositzka
Mrs. Diane Lipscomb
Mrs. Sheila Langford Martin
Judge Reese H. McKinney Jr.
Mrs. Madeline Nichols Moseley
Mr. James William Pearson
Mr. John Daniel Sanders
Mrs. Deborah Haney Schremser
Mr. Steven Melton Shiflett Mrs. Susan Carroll Shiflett Mr. Stephen L. Spencer
Mr. James E. Turner Jr.
Mrs. Susan Webb
Mr. Richard A. Weisman
1973
Class Agent: James Bost
Number in Class: 83
Number Who Gave: 29
Percentage: 35%
Total Given: $2,667.50
Mr. Richard Ahlgren
Mrs. Karen Screws Alford
Mrs. Carol Lewis Allen
Mr. Alex P. Ansley
Mrs. Lorna Lunde Bell
Ms. Elizabeth Dyson Britton
Mr. Richard Byrd
Mrs. Libba Crowell Campbell Mrs. Beverly Smith Dean
Mrs. Carol Bressler Dudley
Mrs. Josephine Golson Foshee
Mr. John M. Foshee Jr.
Mrs. Allison Ruggles Gore
Mrs. Martha Ward Hardy
Ms. Harriett E. Jones
Miss Martha L. Killebrew
Mrs. Beverly Waters Kruger
Mrs. Molly Dunn Martin
Dr. Thomas F. Moore
Mr. M. Stephen Morris
Mrs. Retha Childers Murphy
Mr. Windell W. Neal
Mrs. Bronwyn Bothfeld Nickles
Mr. Lary Perkins
Ms. Jan R. Pylant
Mrs. Virginia Preacher Reardon
Mrs. Carol Sindersine Sandvi
Ms. Kathryn Booth Towry-Iburg
Judge Lucie Underwood McLemore
Smith
1974
Class Agent: Phyllis Killion Ward
Number in Class: 87
Number Who Gave: 24
Percentage: 27%
Total Given: $3,720
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
1975
Class Agent: Joseph Schenk
Number in Class: 90
Number Who Gave: 26
Percentage: 29%
Total Given: $6,932.11
Mrs. Jane Howell Allen
Mr. James Thomas Bridges
Mrs. Daniele Funderburk Bruhn
Mrs. Georgia Rogers Campbell Mr. Ralph B. Campbell Mrs. Hisae Nishime Demoruella
Mrs. Sheila Coker Elmore
Mrs. Carolyn Adkison Embry
Mrs. Deborah Giglio Garrett
Ms. Bridget C. Glidewell
Mrs. Roxanne D. Hannon-Odom
Mrs. Ellen Thompson Harbin
Mrs. Ellen Evans Haulman
Mrs. Tonsiaweda Gilmore Hayes
Mrs. Doris Reeder Holmes
Mrs. Deborah Head Hutto
Mrs. Emily Preston Joseph
Mr. Roosevelt Lewis
Mr. William Terry Miller
Mrs. Katherine Miller Millican
Mr. Richard E. Mitchell
Ms. Ansley Callaway Rice
Reverend Dottie Lovelady Rogers
Mrs. Jacqueline Van Lierop Schenk
Mr. Joseph B. Schenk
Dr. W. Phillip Smith
Mr. Glenn E. Stearns 1976
Class Agent: Renee Byrd Carlisle
Number in Class: 65
Number Who Gave: 16
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $3,595
Mr. James H. Anderson Mr. Phillip C. Arnett
Mr. Richard Fitzgerald Bernal
Mrs. Cynthia Fairchild Birden
Dr. Morris Wayne Cochran Mr. W. Kirk Davenport
Mrs. Kay Gomillion Elam
Mrs. Dale Baxter Evans
Dr. David A. Head
Mrs. LaDonna Gilbreath Herrera
Mrs. Holly Bothfeld Miller
Mrs. Cecelia Crowder Parker
Reverend T. Grant Parker Sr.
Reverend George M. Sedberry
Mrs. Eva Brunson Tackett
Mrs. Charlotte Voak Zubowicz
1977
Class Agent: Marian Perkins Milliron
Number in Class: 55
Number Who Gave: 17
Percentage: 30%
Total Given: $1,227.50
Mr. David G. Atkinson
Mr. James L. Belin
Mr. Joseph Borowski
Mrs. Linda Larson Borowski
Mr. Gary Earl Bridges
Dr. James Benjamin Burke
Mrs. Rebecca Stephenson DeBow
Mrs. Ardis Garrett Fine
Mr. W. Joseph McCorkle Jr.
Mrs. Pamela Austin Parker
Ms. Lee Riley
Mr. Frank E. Sharker
Mrs. Leslie Hall Sharker
Ms. Lynn Skene
Mrs. Sarabeth Owens Snuggs
Mr. Alan Reid Terry
Mrs. Janice Hawthorne Timm
1978
Class Agent: Barbara Whatley
Christenberry
Gift Agent: Maureen Kendrick Murphy
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 17
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $9,246
Mrs. Jane Jenkins Bridges
Dr. Dianne Petrov Burke
Mrs. Leura Garrett Canary Ms. Nancy E. Carmichael
Mrs. Leslie Dowe Combellick
Mr. Paul M. Combellick
Mrs. Carole Crampton Ellers
Dr. Ralph R. Hendricks
Mrs. Judy Lee Hughes
Mrs. Janet Wilborn Hummel
Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy Professor H. Kathleen Patchel
Dr. John Barr Pugh
Ms. Yarisa D. Smith
Mr. Anthony C. Stallworth
Dr. Jeffrey A. Stephens
Judge William F. Stone 1979
Class Agent: Debra Freisleben
Gift Agent: Lucinda Smilie Bollinger
Number in Class: 96
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $3,777.50
Mrs. Cindy Smith Belin
Mrs. Lucinda Smilie Bollinger
Mrs. Mary Frances Austin Bond
Mr. Herbert Isaac Burson
Mrs. Denise Vickers Cook
Mr. George Ronald Elmore
Mrs. Sharon Cowart Foxwell
Ms. Debra A. Freisleben Mrs. Renee Cheney Hardy
Mr. Gary Hinton Holt
Mrs. Lyn Wilbert Keaster
Mrs. Kathy McLeod Lawrence Ms. Emily McNiel Levy
Mr. Mikel Bradshaw McCann
Dr. Hays McKay Jr.
Ms. Cheryl Ellen Monday
Mr. Peter Charles Panus
Mrs. Wilma Anderson Tucker
Mrs. Terri Turman Tuley Mrs. Nancy Hollingsworth Wong
1980
Class Agent: Joseph Curtis
Gift Agent: Wanda Howard
Number in Class: 78
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 23%
Total Given: $3,023
Mrs. Loretta Keresey Bacon
Mrs. Julia Webb Bowden
Mr. Barry Owen Branum
Ms. Sarah Lee Brown
Ms. Martha Rebecca Daniel
Mrs. Evangeline Freeman Drissel
Mrs. Teresa Smith Francis
Mrs. Carol Slay Garnett
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
Mr. Authur D. Gissendanner
Mr. Keith Olin Jones
Mrs. Gail Sanford Kendrick Ms. Martha Law McWhorter
Mrs. Susan LeBeau Reith
Mrs. Suzanne Wendland Rhodes Dr. Celia Dell Smith Rudolph
Mrs. Amelia Bryars Stephens
Mrs. Michelle Hutchison Vanderwall
Ms. Ann Thompson Waller
1981
Class Agent: David Hudson
Gift Agent: Wanda Howard
Number in Class: 80
Number Who Gave: 21
Percentage: 26%
Total Given: $14,530.72
Mrs. Jolene Renee Brubaker Baxter
Mr. Robert Bailey Coats III
Mr. Frederick Allen Frost Mrs. Heidi Bock Gaillard
Dr. George Gregory Gilbert
Ms. Audrey Patricia Gore
Mrs. Janet Lenz Griffin
Mrs. Angela Warren Harrington
Mrs. Leslie Callaway Henderson
Mr. James Van Henry Mrs. Beverly Burnett Howard
Ms. Wanda Annett Howard Mr. David Hudson Jr. Mr. George F. Jones Jr.
Mrs. Cynthia K. Broome Lindsay
Mrs. Susan Scott Porch
Mrs. Martha Hollingsworth Posey
Mr. Terry Neal Posey
Mr. E. Alexander Stokes III
Mr. William Cody Sweetland
Mr. Horace Wayne Trawick
1982
Class Agent: Joe Frazier
Gift Agent: Lisa Lacy White
Number In Class: 75
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 24%
Total Given: $1,077.50
Mrs. Linda Harper Borden
Reverend Beverly Catherine Butler
Dr. Jennifer Sexton Cooper
Ms. Naomi Goodson Cyrus
Mr. Richard M. Greenlee Jr.
Mrs. Amy Vernam Johnson
Mrs. Virginia Jackson Jones
Mr. Steven Brian Klein
Mrs. Sandra Doyle Moon
Mrs. Leila Owens Morris
Mrs. Claire Burson Poage
Mr. Emmett S. Ray
Mr. Thomas D. Rhodes
Mrs. G. Kay Cook Rogers
Ms. Terry Draughn Sullivan
Mrs. Ashley Atkins Sweetland
Miss Cynthia Leigh Turnipseed
Mrs. Lisa Lacy White
1983
Class Agent: Elizabeth Burgess
Russell
Gift Agent: Bill Bond
Number In Class: 60
Number Who Gave: 15
Percentage: 25%
Total Given: $1,066
Mr. William Beaird
Mr. Bruce B. Bergstresser
Mr. William A. Bond
Mrs. Angelia Hunt Bush
Mrs. Thomas G. Dismukes Jr.
Mrs. Wanda Jackson Holbrook
Mrs. Melinda Sheppard Jackson
Ms. Minnie Lamberth
Mr. Dennis William Lawrence
Mrs. Patricia Henry Lee
Mrs. Tammy Williams McCorkle
Mrs. Shirley Bowman Muhammad
Dr. Robert Edward Percy
Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Burgess Russell
Mr. Allen Gerald Woodard
1984
Class Agent: Joan Aurelia Paine
Gift Agent: Wanda Howard
Number In Class: 76
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 23%
Total Given: $1,792.50
Mrs. Sharon Daniels Akbar
Mrs. Lisa Baughn Bond
Mr. Richard J. Brockman Mr. John Sidney Dove
Mrs. Denise Swords Geier
Mrs. Jane Bass Geloneck
Mrs. Christina Tsikerdanos Kiernan
Mrs. Ann L. Kline
Miss Linda Laye
Mr. Russell Lee
Ms. Joan Aurelia Paine
Miss Sarah Melissa Provost
Mr. Johnny H. Ragan
Ms. Gina Scoville Seton
Mr. Rolf Siegers
Mrs. Carol Faulkner Smyser
Mr. Everette J. Strong
Mrs. Lexie Pound Turnipseed
1985
Class Agent: Rebecca French
Moseley
Number In Class: 86
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $5,942.50
Reverend William Dean Allerheiligen
Mr. Albert Reaves Cantrell Mrs. Ann Carlisle Carmichael
Mr. B. Clark Dunn Jr.
Mr. Homer Arthur Gaouette IV
Mrs. Pearline Patterson Holston
Mrs. Cynthia Carr Jackson
Mrs. Melanie McGrath
Mrs. Rebecca French Mosley
Mr. Daniel A. Penny
Mrs. Leslie Vaughan Pruitt
Mrs. Angela Slate Sherbine
Mrs. Anita Owens Siegers
Mrs. Joy Bloemsma Skelton
1986
Class Agents: Kimberlee Ferguson
Blake,
Monica Kneiley Ward
Number In Class: 97
Number Who Gave: 28
Percentage: 29%
Total Given: $3,602.50
Mrs. Jennie Faulkner Camp
Mrs. Beverly Missildine Craft
Dr. James Benjamin Craven Jr.
Ms. Carol Ann Giermanski Haag
Mr. Jeffrey Allen Hall
The Honorable William F.
Stone ’78, Circuit Judge for
the State of Florida, is a new
member of the Board of
Trustees, a member of The
Huntingdon Society, and the
father of Kelsey Stone ’09.
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2004-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
49
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Mrs. Renee Youmans Anderson
Mrs. Elizabeth Byrd Andress
Mr. Bradley Baggett
Mrs. Marion Knox Barker
Mrs. Martha F. Higgins Byrd
Mrs. Deborah Davis Caleb
Mrs. Sally Hemstreet Crawford
Mr. Floyd Carson Enfinger Jr. Mrs. Donna Weinstein Frawley
Ms. India Fuller
Mrs. Susan Smith Goodwin
Dr. George Mathews Handey
Mrs. Audrey Gryder Kauders
Mrs. Stephanie Louise Adams
Lankford
Mrs. Ruth Renfroe May
Mrs. Marsha Kirk Moore
Mrs. Catherine West Redding
Mrs. Dorothy Averill Ritchie
Mr. William Henry Shanks
Mrs. Ann Livingston Thompson
Mrs. Alexis Clegorne Tibbetts Mrs. Jan McGill Tomberlin
Dr. John C. Tomberlin
Mrs. Sherryll Henderson White
The Reverend Claude A. Shuford ’83 (right),
pictured with Tommy Dismukes ’83, vice provost
for enrollment management, is a new member of
the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees.
He is the senior minister of Mount Zion
AME Church in Montgomery.
Mrs. Angelyn Bryant Hayes
Ms. Kristi DuBose
Mrs. Linn Boykin McAuliffe
Mrs. Martie Bailey McEnerney
Mrs. Susan Sweatt Moon
Mrs. Tyler Horton Murray
Mr. Tim David Myers
Mrs. Leslie Holets Percy
Miss Rebertha Lynn Perkins
Mrs. Christy Cole Sellers Mr. Gregory E. Sellers Mrs. Melinda Wainwright Singleton
Mrs. Robyn Luker Smith
Mrs. Tommie Hudgens Smith
Mrs. Elizabeth Couey Smithart Mrs. Valerie Link Snoderly
Miss Patricia Leigh Stevens
Mr. W. Lloyd Strickland
Mr. Charles Morgan Trotter
Mr. Charles Allen Walker
Mrs. Monica Kneiley Ward
Mr. W. Timothy Ward
Mrs. Linda Jackson Willis
1987
Class Agents: Lee Ann Hundley
Boykin,
Linda Olsen Eichas
Gift Agent: Dr. Mark Kingry
Number In Class: 86
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 21%
Total Given: $6,553.06
Mrs. Lee Ann Hundley Boykin
Dr. Connie Maude Campbell Ms. Angela L. Channell
Mr. Dale Dalbey
Mr. Jeffrey L. DeBardelaben
Mr. David Faulkenberry
Mr. Mark Richard Frissell
Mr. Stephen Edward Haag
Mrs. Julieann Hollomon Hurst
Dr. Gipson Mark Kingry
Mrs. Deborah Moncrief
Mrs. Sandra Brill Passmore
Mr. John David Prunkl
Mrs. Donna Yates Reynolds
Jamie Martin
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Mrs. Catherine Aichele Rogers
Mrs. Hope Gaither Stockton
Miss Frances Thomason
Mrs. Julie Allbritten Wood
W. Lloyd Strickland ’86 and his wife, Amy Leigh, brought their
children to join in the fun during Homecoming in the spring and were
present again during the College’s "Old Traditions, New Beginnings"
Homecoming celebration this fall. A full-time CPA, Strickland volunteers as the Hawks football announcer during home games.
The Stricklands are new members of The Huntingdon Society.
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
50
1988
Class Agent: Jennifer Gaston
Rodopoulos
Gift Agent: Colleen Garrick Walker
Number In Class: 113
Number Who Gave: 25
Percentage: 22%
Total Given: $4,102.50
Mr. James M. Bigbie
Mr. Robert W. Birmingham
Mrs. Diana Pate Chance
Dr. Mark David Chance
Mr. Jeffery Lamar Dean
Dr. Mark Samuel Eich
Mrs. Sara Dean Faulkenberry
Mrs. Jennifer Oliver Gardner
Major Jerome Scott Hayes
Reverend Jeffrey Bernard Heath
Miss Judith Ann Hissong
Mrs. Rebecca Ross Segrest
Hollingsworth
Mrs. Beth Anderson Kingry
Mrs. Dana Nix Moore
Mr. Richard Duane Morrison Mr. Barry D. Moss
Mrs. Linda Bingham Mulligan
Mr. Gene Matthew Pope Mr. Joe Dewitt Read
Reverend Michelle Bogue Ruller
Mrs. Ann McCombs Tillman
Mr. Kenneth R. Tyler Jr.
Mr. James Kevin Walding Mrs. Colleen Garrick Walker
Mr. Patrick Neal Wood
1989
Class Agent: Misty Edwards Roberts
Number In Class: 91
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $1,150
Mr. Gregory Douglas Dotson
Mr. John Wesley Hunt
Mrs. Mary Anne Silva Kelley
Ms. Kimberly Ann Lewis
Mr. Thomas Floyd MacMillan
Mrs. Jill Wimbish Martin
Dr. Desiree Weems Murray
Mr. Christopher John Rief
Mrs. Jennifer Martin Rief
Reverend Robert Byron Ryan
Mrs. Kelly Marie Dasinger Sitkin
Mrs. Laurie Samp Washburn
Mrs. Meiko Huggins Whitfield
Dr. Christine Robertson Whitlock
1990
Class Agent: Nancy Small Halsell
Gift Agent: Allyce Sikes Read
Number In Class: 103
Number Who Gave: 28
Percentage: 27%
Total Given: $4,527.50
Ms. Jennifer Lynn Anderson Mr. Gilbert Ward Beeson III
Mrs. Stephanie Morgan Bowen
Mrs. Amy Vibbart Bowman
Mr. Theodore R. Bowser
Mrs. Karen Elaine Pinegar Bragg
Mrs. Ramona Schreiber Butchko
Miss Tracey Shelree Gauntt
Mrs. Nancy Small Halsell
Mrs. Sally Nash Huggins
Ms. Elizabeth Hinson Hughes
Mrs. Amy Beard Hulsey
Mrs. Cheri Jordan
Miss Virginia Wooten Kellogg
Mr. Mark William Knockemus
Mr. Spencer Darrell Lee
Mrs. Barbara A. Rodkey Lehman
Mrs. Carol Fields Loeb
Mr. Charles Andrew Meadows
Mr. Hayden Meade Olds
Mrs. Julie Stuber Pepper
Mr. Michael Gregor Percy
Mrs. Michelle Phillips
Mrs. Janet Wright Pippin
Mrs. Evelyn Ann Hutzler Pope Mrs. Allyce Sikes Read
Mrs. Mary Dismukes Thaggard
Mr. William Byrne Wilson
1991
Class Agent: Kelly Whatley Pettit
Gift Agent: Wade Lee Latham
Number In Class: 144
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 14%
Total Given: $2,902.50
Mrs. Glenda Atwell Allred Mr. Craig Alan Andrews
Reverend Pamela Baker Barnhardt
Mrs. Diane Haupt Beeson
Mrs. Laura Langley Covington
Miss Carla Crowder
Miss Emily Elizabeth Dawson
Miss Elizabeth Odette Doucet
Mr. David Earle Hoover II
Dr. Victor Keith Jiminez
Mrs. Susan Brubaker Oldham
Mr. Jon Michael Olliff
Mrs. Kelly Whatley Pettit
Mr. Russell E.B. Phillips
Mrs. Jamesia Shealey Rabb
Mrs. Mary Hardin Thornton
Miss Susan Elizabeth Tudor
Mrs. Leslie Hinds Tyler
Mr. Lane Patrick Wilson
Miss Susan Rene Zeron
1992
Class Agents: Maryann Mooney Beck,
Eric Ross
Gift Agent: Holly Anderson
Number In Class: 106
Number Who Gave: 21
Percentage: 20%
Total Given: $18,761.50
Mr. Thomas Kirke Adams Mr. David Howard Allred Miss Holly Lenore Anderson
Mrs. Maryann Mooney Beck
Miss Georgianna Bland
Mrs. Dara Frady Campbell
Mr. Sam Chambers Jr. Mr. Christopher Mark Champion Mrs. Kelly McCollum Crosby
Mrs. Michelle Montgomery Goebel
Mrs. Tracey Grimes Johnson
Mrs. Nelle Bearden Johnston
Ms. Jennifer Brooke Kendrick
Mr. Jason Lee Manasco
Mr. Clarence Crenshaw Pritchett IV
Mr. Eric Koin Ross Mr. Justin William Sandal
Mr. Brett Allen Steele
Mrs. Cindy Smith Stoffregen
Mr. Edward Simpson Stoffregen
Mrs. Julie Bolton Williams
1993
Class Agent: April McCarty Shores
Gift Agent: Charles Jason Anderson
Number In Class: 135
Number Who Gave: 23
Percentage: 17%
Total Given: $1,270.00
Mr. Charles Jason Anderson
Mr. Traci Lynn Bowser III
Mr. Bruce David Burleson
Mrs. Susan Chambers Mrs. LeAnn Holifield Cox
Mr. Lawrence E. Dutton
Mrs. Katherine Wocken Gillin
Mr. Donald C. Griffin
Dr. Bartum A. Kulah
Mr. Lester Mack Jr.
Mr. Tim Mowrey Jr.
Mr. J. Clarke Oldham
Mrs. Angela Morris Olliff
Mrs. Courtney Coker Patton
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society during 2005-05.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
1994
Class Agent: William (Skip) Davis
Gift Agent: Mary K. McGuffey
Number In Class: 111
Number Who Gave: 16
Percentage: 14%
Total Given: $2,905.00
Mrs. Jackie C. Alker
Dr. Jason Thomas Banks Mrs. Elizabeth Strange Burt
Mr. William Ira Davis Mrs. Laura Hinds Duncan
Mr. Carey Stephen Head
Mrs. Kelly Callen Heath
Mrs. Susanna Merritt Hodges
Mr. James Cliff Huckabee
Mr. Bryant Excell Kingry
Mrs. Linda Lee Garrett
Ms. Mary Kathleen McGuffey Mr. William Francis Redder
Mrs. Amy Cleveland Shoaf
Mr. Jason Randolph Smith
Mrs. Erica Jackson Tanner
1995
Class Agent: Michelle Olson Johnson
Number In Class: 100
Number Who Gave: 14
Percentage: 14%
Total Given: $1,400.00
Dr. Heather Whitfield Barry
Mrs. Katrina Keefer Belt
Mr. Shannon Reed Hartsfield
Mrs. Heather Mann Head
Mrs. Stephanie Calvert Holmes
Mrs. Carolyn Breuer Huey
Mr. Gerald Wayne Knupp II Miss Shawna Christine Mahony
Mr. Brian Daniel Mann
Mr. Perry Wayne Rhodes
Mrs. Angela Walker Shook
Mr. Trevor Michael Shook
Miss Emily Kaye Sweezey
Mr. John Jeb Williamson
1996
Class Agent: Garrett Hixon Chase
Number In Class: 99
Number Who Gave: 18
Percentage: 18%
Total Given: $1,680.00
Mr. Patrick Beck
Mr. James E. Bedgood
Mr. David Eric Brubaker
Mrs. Elizabeth Jackson Bryan
Mr. John Lide Denny Jr.
Mr. James Fletcher Growdon
Mrs. Molly Cau Growdon
Mrs. Alisa Carol Johnson
Mrs. Laurel Meier Jordan
Mrs. Amy Woodard Klugh
Mr. Andrew Mark Millard Mr. Steven Alexander Miller
Ms. Kerrin Hayes Ramachandran
Mrs. Leslie Pace Richardson
Mr. Karl Stanley Self Jr.
Mr. David Partick Sickinger
Miss Keelar Elise D. Vaughns
Mrs. Sara Yates Wiley
1997
Class Agent: Berodine Thomas Green
Number In Class: 79
Number Who Gave: 12
Percentage: 15%
Total Given: $3,290.00
Miss Jodi F. Adamson Ms. Lenn Ganelle Arrington
Miss Autumn Adair Bonsall
Mrs. Bernodine Thomas Green
Mrs. Jennifer Brittin Harper
Miss Margaret B. Heinzer
Mr. David L. Johnston Mrs. Vidhu Khanna Johnston Mrs. Sheliah J. Jones
Mrs. Michel Menard Little
Ms. Kathy Regina Paschal
Ms. Kathy Dancy Ryan John and Mary
Ellen Bullard are
generous supporters
of Huntingdon College.
They have included
Huntingdon in
their estate plans,
established endowed
scholarships, and
are members of
The Huntingdon Society.
1998
Class Agent: John Cantrell
Gift Agent: Kevin Kingry
Number In Class: 78
Number Who Gave: 13
Percentage: 17%
Total Given: $555.00
Mr. Roderick Mark Alexander
Mrs. Michelle McGauthiar Allan
Mr. Benjamin Joseph Freeman
Miss Michelle L. Garrett
Mr. Adam A. Habbard
Mrs. Sudie Laney Hector
Mr. James Edward Jones III
Mr. Christopher Scott Lawrence
Mr. John Timothy Mitchell
Miss Elizabeth Jo Polk
Mrs. Gayle Shorter
Mr. Stephen Jarrod Stiff
Mrs. Danilea Walker Werner
Mrs. Sarah Mowbray Fulcher
Mrs. Kathryn Elizabeth Hawarah
Goss
Mrs. Leslie Henry Hines
Mr. Chad Leland Hobbs
Mrs. Heather McKinley Jones
Mr. Eric Allen Kidwell
Mrs. Mary Ussery Malinowski
Miss Lee Ann Mathews
Miss Carrie Elizabeth McDonough
Mr. Daniel Patton Ogle
Mrs. Coretta Askew Pearson
Miss Christy Lynn Warren Rich
Miss Jacqueline Jean Robinson
1999
Class Agent: Elisa Lowry Haley
Number In Class: 96
Number Who Gave: 8
Percentage: 7%
Total Given: $5,890.56
Mrs. Marian Kimberly Cook
Bullard Mr. Rob Joshua Eaker
Mrs. Leslie McDowell Habbard
Mrs. Sarah Gardner Hubbard
Mr. Albert Laing
Miss Michelle L. Lewis
Ms. Meredith Caroline Arant Nooney
Mrs. Heather Merritt Stiff
2000
Class Agent: Melissa Burkette
Gift Agent: Casey Maugh
Number In Class: 118
Number Who Gave: 17
Percentage: 14%
Total Given: $1,140.00
Mr. Craig Nicklaus Allan
Ms. Melissa Ann Beck
Mrs. Teresa Perry Bigbie
Ms. Kelly Brooke Boggus
Mrs. Adrienne Strickland Gaines
Mr. Julian Enrique Galvis
Ms. Shannon Morgan Herald
Mrs. Suzanne Jones Higgs
Mrs. Lydia Churchill Kerr
Mr. Kenneth Francis Klinger Ms. Casey Malone Maugh
Mrs. Brenda Tillery Powers
Ms. Stephanie Michelle Robinson
Mrs. Charlene H. Schieferstein
Mr. Daniel Trenton Tyson
Ms. Stephanie Clayton Upton
Ms. Tracy Hall Urech
2001
Class Agent: LeAnn Bowdoin
Number In Class: 130
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 16%
Total Given: $1,330.00
Mrs. Katherine Hancock Abbott
Miss Kim Lea Allman
Mrs. Carrie Elaine Davis Baker
Ms. LeAnn Bowdoin
Mrs. Shanna Spurlin Culpepper
Mr. Daniel Johnson Dean
Mrs. Katheryn Rambo Eaker
*An asterisk after the name denotes those now deceased.
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Mrs. Andrea Irby Screws
Ms. Lisa Kaye Sexton
Mr. J. Clark Stankoski
Mrs. Lauren Anne Olvey Stastny
Mrs. Kathleen McAllister
Sternenberg
Mr. John Kenneth Story
Mrs. Patsy K. Vandergrift
Mr. William Anton Woerner II
Mrs. Carolyn Turner Young
2002
Number In Class: 122
Number Who Gave: 27
Percentage: 22%
Total Given: $925.00
Miss Elise Anderson
Mr. Nicholas Newton Baggett
Mr. Joshua David Behm
Miss Kathryn Christine Brown
Ms. Talia Phoenicia Brown
Mrs. Lujuana Hood Bruner
Mrs. Kimberly Baker Cochrane
Mrs. Mary Claunch Davis
Mr. Daniel Lee Durie
Miss Abbey Nicole Flynn
Mr. Curtis Forbus
Mrs. Veronica Burns Golden
Mr. Steven Ryan Greene
Mr. William Kennerd Herald
Mr. Robert Lon Hurst
Miss La'Pearl Johnson
Miss Venus Lucy Kalakauskis
Miss Mary Margaret Kinney
Miss Michelle Lyons
Mrs. Dana Drawbaugh Raybon
Mrs. Barbara Harris Sawyer
Ms. Emily Slaughter Schuttenberg
Mr. Nathan Shane Sumner
Ms. Christy Marie Thomas
Mrs. Katelin McDermott Tyson
Mr. Paul Christopher Weidman
Miss Chandra M. Williams
2003
Class Agent: Ashley Dubuque
Gift Agent: Meghan Frost
Number In Class: 85
Number Who Gave: 20
Percentage: 23%
Total Given: $372.50
Ms. Catherine Elizabeth Bedsole
Mr. Thomas Joseph Brecciaroli
Miss Charlotte Beth Cooper
Miss Anna Michelle Cox
Mr. Lane Edward Davis
Mrs. Lindsey Chappell Durie
Miss Kendra K. Farley
Mrs. Tonya Blankenship Forbus
Ms. Marrilee Anne Foukal
Mr. John Phillip Gaines
Mr. Christopher Scott Griseck
Miss Heather Brianne Hall
Ms. Barbe Lynne Hawkins
Mr. Matthew Hardin Haynes
Ms. Jamie Leigh Jordan
Miss Monica Lynn Knight
Miss Ashley Carolyn Mixon
Miss Molly Virginia Parris
Miss Laura Andrea Sanders
Mrs. Jennifer Shehane Vaughan
2004
Number In Class: 96
Number Who Gave: 85
Percentage: 89%
Total Given: $475.50
Ms. Stacie Lynn Abney
Miss Lori Marie Adamson
Miss Jamie Lynn Allen
A scholarship trust established by the late Neal and Elizabeth Logue,
of Eufala, will provide annual support for preministerial students. The
Reverend Dr. Al Harbour, left, pastor of Eufala First UMC, and Bill
Neville Jr., right, the family’s attorney, delivered the first installment of
the $250,000 fund to President West earlier this year.
A star after the name denotes a member of the Huntingdon Society.
51
Alumni Giving By Class Year
Miss Jennifer Anne Ament
Miss Jaime Jernigan Andress
Mr. McMillan Lane Arrington
Miss Carla Michelle Avery
Mrs. Tabitha Chenault Barber
Ms. Jami Catherine Barlow
Miss Crystal Casie Bedwell
Mrs. Tranum Barker Blackwell
Miss Crystal Matildie Burgans
Miss Jessie Clare Burris
Mr. Ethan Benjamin Butler
Ms. Sarah Kaye Cheatham
Ms. April Amy Shaw Damato
Miss Brittany Deanne Dubose
Miss Whitney Grace Dubose
Mr. Ryan Fain Easterling
Miss Margaret Leigh Enfinger
Miss Lauren Jennifer Fabrizi
Mr. Scott David Feazell
Ms. Elizabeth Benson Frank
Ms. Lindsay Brooke Shehee
Fretts
Miss Dessiarae Michelle Gaddy
Mr. Robert Thomas Gaiotti
Miss Lindsay Marie Glaze
Mr. Alton Douglas Gorum Jr.
Ms. Diana Shirese Gray
Miss Ashley Morgan Griseck
Miss Jennifer Josephine
Harrison
Mr. Darren Matthew Hayes
Miss Mary Elizabeth Henderson
Miss Tiffany Hope Holley
Mrs. Melba J. Hollinghead
Mr. Joseph Carlton Hollis
Miss Rebecca Louise Ivey
Miss Radhika Iyer
Miss Jennifer Raynell Jordan
Mr. Krayton Ray Keith
Ms. Honorata Kaczmarek
Mr. Matthew Brian Lero
Mr. James Weinman Lewey
Mrs. Lauren Elizabeth Carr
Lewey
Mr. Martin Anthony Lyons
Miss Tiffany Ann McGuire
Mr. Lawrence Underwood
McLemore
Ms. Sandra Lynn Meyer
Ms. Heidi Marsh Miller
Miss Sharla Ann Mitchell
Miss Michelle Kim Neese
Miss LaSheta Giovannti Newton
Mr. Robert Brannon Nickles
Mr. Christopher Neal Obert
Miss Rachel Danita Palmer
Miss Amanda Leigh Pickard
Mr. James Reuben Reynolds
Mr. Herbert William Rice
Miss Stella Katharine Richter
Mr. James Nathan Robinson
Mr. Grant Nolan Saltz
Mr. Eric Christopher Sanford
Miss Elizabeth Leigh Seiffert
Miss Amber Nicole Simmons
Mr. Charles Davis Simpson II
Miss Angela Denise Smith
Ms. Summer Leigh Smith
Miss Christy Laine Smithart
Mr. Steven Howard Spivey
Mrs. Jennifer Pratt Sumner
Mrs. Patty Bravo Tardiff
Miss Casey Lynn Thomas
Miss Meghan Rae Thomas
Miss Tiffany Nicole Tolbert
Mrs. Katina Shunte TorreyBonner
Miss Christina Frances Vranich
Mr. Kyle Whitney Walding
Mr. David Paul Walta
Mr. Michael David Walters
Miss Shelby Lauren Walworth
Mr. Geoffrey John Warren
Miss Amanda Lea Whitehead
Miss Marie Elizabeth Wilkerson
Miss Alissa Dee Williams
Miss Kayla Lena Williams
Mr. Richard Moore Wingard III
Miss Tanasha Terrell Womack
Ms. Lyman Randall Woodfin
Miss Emily Adele Zieman
ALUMNI GIVING
AWARDS
J U N E 1 , 2 0 0 4 - M AY 3 1 , 2 0 0 5
GOLDEN CLUB CLASS GIVING
CLASSES UP TO 1954
TOP THREE GOLDEN CLUB
CLASSES IN DONATIONS
Class of 1945 with $152,966.23
Class Agents: Betty Gensert Towey,
Jane Black Roberts
Class of 1944 with $49,635.00
Class Agents: Marie Baker Sinclair
Gift Agents: Ann Strickland White,
Nancy Robinson
Class of 1950 with $36,325.00
Class Agents: Barbara Johnston Dismukes,
Bebe Cannon Jones
Gift Agent: Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb
TOP THREE GOLDEN CLUB CLASSES
IN PERCENTAGE OF PARTICIPATION
Class of 1954 with 61%
Class Agents: Mary Ann Neeley
Sara Stembridge Perry
Gift Agents: Betty Betts Connor
Mary Ann Neeley,
Sara Stembridge Perry
Class of 1945 with 60%
Class Agents: Betty Gensert Towey,
Jane Black Roberts
Class of 1952 with 55%
Class Agent: Barbara Rice Zdanis
Gift Agent: Joanna Breedlove Crane
CLASS GIVING
CLASSES UP TO 1994
TOP THREE CLASSES IN DONATIONS:
Class of 1964 with $73,345.00
Class Agent: Jean Jolly Huckaby
Gift Agent: Betty Thurman McMahon
Class of 1962 with $28,415.00
Class Agent: Claire Peacock Helms
Gift Agent: Roselyn Butts Holloway
NEIGHBORHOOD
FEEDBACK
“My family and several of our friends live in the neighborhoods
surrounding Huntingdon College. We have really enjoyed taking
our kids to the Huntingdon Hawks football games this year. They
have been having a blast. We certainly appreciate the value
Huntingdon adds to our community. We thought the college
might enjoy seeing a couple of photos of some of the younger
Hawks fans from Homecoming!”
- Alison Strickler
Class of 1957 with $27,972.50
Class Agent: Elinor Warr Roberts
Gift Agent: Iris McGehee
TOP THREE CLASSES IN
PERCENTAGE OF PARTICIPATION:
Class of 1957 with 58%
Class Agent: Elinor Warr Roberts
Gift Agent: Iris McGehee
Class of 1962 with 52%
Class Agent: Claire Peacock Helms
Gift Agent: Roselyn Butts Holloway
Class of 1955 with 50%
Gift Agent: Joyce Payne French
TOP YOUNG ALUMNI CLASS
(BETWEEN 1995-2003)
TOP CLASS IN DONATIONS:
Class of 1999 with $5,890.00
TOP CLASS IN PERCENTAGE
OF PARTICIPATION:
Class of 2003 with 23%
52
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Give your college a gift that keeps on giving,
and
at the same time:
change someone’s life
Refer a student to Huntingdon!
HUNTINGDON COLLEGE ALUMNI REFERRAL SCHOLARSHIP
Huntingdon’s Alumni Referral Scholarship is a way for alumni to positively impact the lives of
prospective students. Based upon your recommendation, Huntingdon may be able to award any
accepted student $1,000 toward tuition. The Alumni Referral Scholarship does require on-campus
residency if the student will receive an additional scholarship award from Huntingdon College
at a level of one-half tuition or higher.
The Student
Name ________________________________________________________________________________________________
Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________
City ____________________________________________________________ State __________ Zip __________________
Phone number ( ____ ) __________________________________________________________________________________
Current High School ________________________________Year of High School Graduation ________________________
Current College (if transferring) ____________________________________________________________________________
Alumni Information
Name ________________________________________________________________________________________________
Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________
City ____________________________________________________________ State __________ Zip __________________
Phone Number ( ____ ) __________________________ E-mail ________________________________________________
Signature ______________________________________________Year of HC Graduation____________________________
Please discuss your relationship to the student and why you feel he/she would be an asset to Huntingdon College:
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Please return to: Huntingdon College Alumni Office, 1500 E. Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, AL 36106.
(334) 833-4564 • 1-877-567-ALUM (2586); www.huntingdon.edu; [email protected]
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
53
HUNTINGDON COLLEGE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
2005-2006
Mr. Howard Adams
President, Capital Veneer Works, Inc.,
Montgomery, AL
Mr. Jerry M. Kelly
President, Bank of Brewton,
Brewton, AL
Mr. John N. Albritton
Vice Chairman
Retired Banker, Montgomery, AL
The Reverend Dr. Mark S. Lacey ’78
Senior Pastor,
Asbury United Methodist Church,
Birmingham, AL
Mr. G. Carlton Barker ’70
President and Chief Executive Officer,
Regions Bank, Montgomery, AL
Mr. Carl A. Barranco ’64
President, Wilson, Price, Barranco,
Blankenship and Billingsley, P.C.,
Montgomery, AL
Dr. Katie R. Bell
Retired Higher Education,
Montgomery, AL
Mr. Dave Borden
Chairman, Aldridge, Borden & Company,
P.C., Montgomery, AL
The Reverend Dr. R. Lawson Bryan
Senior Pastor,
First United Methodist Church,
Dothan, AL
Ms. Lucinda S. Cannon
Realtor for Commercial Sales,
First Realty, Auburn, AL
The Reverend Kelly Ann Clem
Senior Pastor,
Hope Springs United Methodist Church,
Decatur, AL
Mr. James L. Loeb (Advisory)
Chief Executive Officer,
Loeb and Company, Montgomery, AL
Mr. Gordon G. Martin
Vice President, Southern Division,
Alabama Power Company,
Montgomery, AL
The Reverend
Robert Neil McDavid ’69
Senior Pastor,
Gulf Shores United Methodist Church,
Mobile, AL
Mrs. Betty T. McMahon ’64
Civic Leader, Birmingham, AL
Mr. Herb Patterson ’71
Civic Leader, Birmingham, AL
Mrs. Catherine Y. Pitts
Civic Leader, Huntsville, AL
Mr. Tom Radney
Attorney, Radney, Radney & Brown, P.A.,
Alexander City, AL
Mrs. Emilie H. Reid
Civic Leader, Montgomery, AL
Mr. W. Wyatt Shorter
Retired Executive, Camden, AL
The Reverend Claude A. Shuford ’83
Pastor, Mount Zion AME Church,
Montgomery, AL
Mrs. Elizabeth Couey Smithart ’86
Attorney, Union Springs, AL
The Reverend Jeffery R. Spiller ’76
Senior Pastor,
Christ United Methodist Church, Mobile, AL
Dr. Eugene E. Stanaland ’60
President, Gene Stanaland Enterprises,
Auburn, AL
Mr. David F. Steele
Attorney, Monroeville, AL
The Reverend Dr. Karl Stegall (Advisory)
Senior Pastor,
First United Methodist Church,
Montgomery, AL
The Honorable William Stone ’78
Circuit Judge, Crestview, FL
The Reverend Dr. Timothy Thompson
Superintendent, Montgomery/
Opelika District, Alabama/
West Florida Conference
The United Methodist Church,
Montgomery, AL
Dr. Charles G. Tomberlin ’60
Life Member
Physician, Covington Radiology Associates,
Andalusia, AL
Dr. Stephen F. Dill
Director, The J.L. Bedsole Scholars
Program, Mobile, AL
Ms. Alice Reynolds
Civic Leader, Montgomery, AL
The Reverend Dr. Kenneth Dunivant
Senior Pastor,
First United Methodist Church,
Tuscaloosa, AL
The Reverend James Robertson
Senior Pastor,
First United Methodist Church,
Jacksonville, AL
The Reverend Gary D. Formby
Pastor, Florence First United
Methodist Church, Florence, AL
Eric K. Ross ’92
Senior Vice President,
Corporate Advisory Services,
Trammell Crow Company, Atlanta, GA
President, Huntingdon College
National Alumni Board
Mrs. Diane S. Wendland ’53
Life Member
Civic Leader, Autaugaville, AL
The Reverend Dr. W. Herbert Sadler Jr.
District Superintendent,
The United Methodist Church,
Dothan, AL
Bishop William H. Willimon
Bishop, North Alabama Conference,
The United Methodist Church,
Birmingham, AL
Mr. David Hudson Jr. ’81
President, Dixie Pulp and Paper,
Tuscaloosa, AL
The Honorable P. Dale Segrest ’64
Attorney, The Philip Dale Segrest
Law & Mediation Office,
Tuskegee, AL
Mr. James W. Wilson Jr.
Trustee Emeritus
President and Chief Executive Officer,
Jim Wilson & Associates, Inc.,
Montgomery, AL
Mr. J. Michael Jenkins
Chief Executive Officer,
Jenkins Brick Company,
Montgomery, AL
Mrs. Dorothy R. Sellars ’48
Trustee Emerita
The Dorothy Rainer Sellars School of
Dance, Opp, AL
Ms. Mary George Jester ’68
Educational Consultant,
Montgomery, AL
Alumni Representative
The Honorable Jeff Sessions ’69
U.S. Senator, United States Senate,
Washington, DC
Bishop Larry M. Goodpaster
Bishop, Alabama/West Florida Conference,
The United Methodist Church,
Montgomery, AL
Mr. William Hamilton ’82 (Advisory)
Athletic Director/Head Coach,
Pensacola Junior College, Pensacola, FL
54
Mr. W. Ken Upchurch III
Chairman
President and Chief Executive Officer,
W. K. Upchurch Construction, Inc.,
Montgomery, AL
Dr. Laurie Jean Weil
Retired Veterinarian,
Montgomery, AL
Mr. Philip B. Young
Vice President,
UBS/Financial Services,
Montgomery, AL
Huntingdon College Magazine (Fall 2005)
Huntingdon College 2005-2006
COMMUNITY EVENTS
Cathy Wolfe
Office of Community Relations, (334) 833-4515
The College’s annual Service of Lessons and Carols
and Tree Lighting Ceremony will be held December 1.
FALL TERM 2005
CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION:
The arrival of Saint Nicholas (6:30 p.m., front entrance of the College);
Annual Tree-Lighting Ceremony (7:00 p.m., at the Flowers Hall
entrance); and A SERVICE OF LESSONS AND CAROLS (7:30 p.m.,
Ligon Chapel), Thursday, December 1; free and open to the public.
SPRING TERM 2006
MARTIN LUTHER KING CONVOCATION:
Wednesday, January 18, 2006, 4:00 p.m.
LECTURE:
Sidney Pike, “We Changed the World,” the co-creator of CNN
International tells how the first global news network changed news reporting forever; Tuesday, January 24, 7:30 p.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall;
co-sponsored by Temple Beth Or as part of the Rothschild-Blachschleger
Lecture Series; Mr. Pike will have his book, We Changed the World, available
for sale and will sign books following the lecture
HUNTINGDON THEATRE:
The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, February 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 7:30 p.m.,
in Huntingdon’s new Lunchroom Theatre; call (334) 833-4292 for ticket
information
FOUNDERS DAY CONVOCATION:
Friday, February 10, 11:00 a.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall, featuring
guest speaker Dr. Frances Lucas, president of Millsaps College, as part of
the Bishop’s Lectureship in Christian Higher Education; Topic: “Wisdom
in Service;” free and open to the public
LECTURE:
Stallworth Lecture Series presents Carlos Eire, “Citizenship;” Dr. Eire is
the author of the 2003 National Book Award-winning Waiting for Snow in
Havana, his memoir of growing up in Castro’s Cuba; Tuesday, February
28, 7:30 p.m., Ligon Chapel, Flowers Hall; free and open to the public;
book-signing in the Office of the President following the lecture; Eire is the
Riggs Professor of History and Religious Studies at Yale University, and is
Come to Huntingdon to see friends from the past
and enjoy the festivities at Reunion 2006, April 21-22.
also the author of War Against the Idols: The Reformation of Worship from
Erasmus to Calvin (1986); From Madrid to Purgatory: The Art and Craft of
Dying in Sixteenth Century Spain (1995); and co-author of Jews, Christians,
Muslims: An Introduction to Monotheistic Religions (1997).
HUNTINGDON THEATRE:
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat, April times and dates
TBA, The Lunchroom Theatre, Cloverdale Campus; call (334) 833-4292
for ticket information
REUNION:
Friday-Sunday, April 21-23; call the Office of Alumni Advancement for
more information
EVENT SERIES
ADMISSIONS/RECRUITMENT EVENTS:
Huntingdon Host Days are offered at no cost to prospective students and
families. Most events begin at 8:00 a.m. and end by 2:00 p.m., and
include tours of the campus, opportunities to meet with faculty, staff, and
current students, admissions and financial aid information, and scholarship application information. To register for a Huntingdon Host Day, contact the Office of Admissions at (334) 833-4497 or 1-800-763-0313.
Host Day - Saturday, March 4, 2006
ATHLETIC EVENTS:
See the College Web site at www.huntingdon.edu and click on Athletics,
then on the team schedule.
SCHOOL FOR PROFESSIONAL STUDIES INFORMATION SESSIONS:
Information on the College’s Accelerated Bachelor’s Degree Completion
Program in Business Administration for working professionals; offered at
site locations on the Huntingdon College campus in Montgomery, at
Enterprise Ozark Community College in Enterprise, and at Jefferson State
Community College in Birmingham; call (334) 833-4518 or 888-4625067 for more information
This list is current as of November 15, 2005, but is subject to change.
To verify an event, or for more information, contact Su Ofe in the Office
of Community Relations at [email protected] or (334) 833-4515.
Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
Montgomery, AL
Permit #268
Huntingdon College
1500 East Fairview Ave.
Montgomery, AL 36106-2148
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
Su Ofe
Visit Huntingdon College on the web at
www.huntingdon.edu.
BACCALAUREATE 2005
Huntingdon College admits students of any race, color, sex, age, religion, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made
available to students at the College. The College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, age, religion, disability that does not prohibit performance of essential educational
functions, and national or ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other College-administered
programs. Huntingdon College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia, 30033-4097,
404-679-4501) to award the Bachelor of Arts degree and the Associate of Arts degree. The Music Program is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music.
Information contained in this magazine is current as of the date of publication, but is subject to change.