Coeducation - Baylor School
Transcription
Coeducation - Baylor School
Winter 2005 for alumni and friends of Baylor School Coeducation & Student Leadership Serving as leaders in student activities is a powerful part of a Baylor education. Such experiences are loaded with life lessons, especially in a coeducational environment. Jack Parker From the Headmaster The First 100 Days Thank you for the wonderful welcome to Baylor. Sue and I have really appreciated the cordiality and helpfulness from every element of the Baylor family. Students, families, the Board of Trustees, faculty, staff, alumni, and friends of Baylor have gone out of their way to make us feel welcome – and to teach us the essence of Baylor. You have given me much to observe over my first 100 days. First, it is abundantly clear that Baylor provides very strong academic, physical, emotional, ethical, and competitive preparation for leadership. Our students embrace the mission of the school to make a positive difference in the world. That takes leadership. The Baylor family, whether on campus daily or engaged periodically, knows our students must prepare not just to go along with the drift of things but to lead from intellectual and ethical insights. Leaders require physical, emotional, and competitive stamina to give their ideas a chance to make a positive difference. With a bit of caution urged by a recent business bestseller in which Jim Collins warned that “good” is sometimes the enemy of “great,” it has been easy to find what all of you knew. Baylor is a good school. In very many ways, Baylor is a great school. Our first challenge may well be to make sure we know what is good about Baylor and be sure we do not let it slip. The better challenge, however, is to find what is already great or could be great. I have noticed Baylor fares very well in several categories benchmarked against other excellent prep schools. Baylor ranks well academically in such areas as the number of Advanced Placement courses offered, sufficient student body enrollment, extracurricular opportunities, square feet of academic space, campus size, and facilities. I have noticed the dedication of a faculty and student body and, even more importantly, a willingness to extend from good to great where planning and resources lead. During the spring, continued evaluation, planning, and resource allocation might focus on such topics as faculty development and graduate degrees, a Leadership Baylor student initiative, the campus landscape, student-faculty ratio, national test proficiency, college choices and successful matriculation, and program reviews. It is our intention to seek continuous quality improvement and improved access to each program and service at Baylor. I join our trustees in a commitment to improve our endowment to enable our top 10 expectations across the school. For example, we need to offer the outstanding boarding school opportunity at Baylor to more students, with a probable target of 180 students next year. Faculty, alumni, students, and others have made me curious about the opportunity to consider learning styles and learning center programs. What might happen as Baylor continues its migration from a teaching organization to a learning organization? What is one aspect of Baylor that we might do better than anyone in the country? During the spring, we will be asking those who love Baylor best – and assessing critiques and national benchmarks – to assist in defining a new level of greatness for Baylor. I am delighted to have the chance to work with you toward that end. Fortunately, Board Chair Jon Kinsey ’72 has asked Chattem CEO Zan Guerry ’67 to bring his business acumen to the task of chairing a new trustee Committee on Strategic Planning and Action to assist in this effort. Working together, I am excited about the opportunities Baylor can continue to offer. by Dr. Bill W. Stacy, President and Headmaster for alumni and friends of Baylor School Jack Parker volume fifteen • number two 2 Around Campus News and perspectives from Baylor School and beyond. 5 Coeducation and Student Leadership Student activities and the leadership opportunities they present introduce Baylor students early and effectively to valuable life lessons, even more so due to the real-world setting that a coeducational environment affords. Meet some remarkable students who bear this out. by Julie J. Van Valkenburg 9 Alumni Profiles Paul Winkel, Jr. ’50, Rob Healy ’69, Rob Headrick ’82, Ashley Randolph McMahon ’88, and Rachael Miller ’98 have gone in very different directions since their Baylor days. While it may appear that a surgeon who flies planes in his spare time and a graduate student in theater don’t have much in common, what they took away from Baylor is remarkably similar. by Rachel Schulson 15 Raider Report A roundup of class notes, kudos, athletics, and more. 25 Final Thoughts There is nothing that can renew one’s faith in humanity more quickly or more completely than witnessing students from all walks of life and all corners of the globe coming together over a common issue. Destination: the International Round Square Conference. by Emma Williams Cover Photo Baylor’s coeducational environment provides ample opportunity and life lessons for student leaders. (Cover photo by Jack Parker) Editor Julie J. Van Valkenburg Designer Angela Rich Writers & Contributors Eddie Davis Barbara Kennedy Rachel Schulson Dr. Bill W. Stacy Julie J. Van Valkenburg Emma Williams Photography Eddie Davis Barbara Kennedy Jack Parker Julie J. Van Valkenburg Acknowledgements Susan Collins Bill Cushman ’59 Susan Miller Velda Price President and Headmaster Dr. Bill W. Stacy Associate Head/Vice President for Advancement & External Affairs Kathleen Hanson Vice President of Finance and Operations Dallas Joseph Associate Head for Academic Affairs Jim Stover Associate Head for Student Affairs Michael McBrien Chairman, Board of Trustees Jon Kinsey ’72 President, Alumni Association Greg Wright ’64 Jack Parker Chairman, Parent Alliance Ken Conner Baylor School admits students of any race, sex, color, religion, national or ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. Baylor does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, religion or national origin in the administration of its educational policies, admission policies, financial aid programs, athletic programs, and other school administered programs. The mission of Baylor School, a coeducational day and boarding college preparatory school, is to instill in its students both the desire and the ability to make a positive difference in the world. Baylor School P.O. Box 1337; Chattanooga, TN 37401 Phone: (423) 267-8505 | Fax: (423) 757-2878 www.baylorschool.org | [email protected] Around Campus News & Perspectives from Baylor School Baylor Dedicates New Aquatic Center and Wrestling Arena top boarding schools such as Baylor have recognized that quality athletic facilities and aquatic centers also matter to student preparation. These new facilities round out six years of overall campus improvements that include the Weeks Science and Technology Building, Ireland Arts Studio, Roddy Performing Arts Center, and Riverfront Dorm. Together they will help us attract those top students who are interested in developing the full range of their talents,” he said. De Verona agreed. “If I were a young person looking for a great facility and a wonderful program that would maybe help me get into the college of my choice – I’d be looking at this institution,” she said. For more photos and information visit the Baylor School website at www.baylorschool.org Michael Locke Two former Olympic swimmers and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame were on campus for the formal dedication of Baylor’s new athletic facilities in December. The $9 million project was completed in just nine months and has put the school’s aquatic center on the map as the area’s only indoor 50-meter pool. Additional improvements include an expanded wrestling facility with a new lobby and entrance named in honor of legendary coach Major Luke Worsham. Donna de Verona, a 1964 Olympic gold medalist, addressed a student assembly and participated in the ribbon cutting ceremony for the new aquatic center. She was joined by Olympic gold medalist Geoff Gaberino ’80, who said the pool brought back “some good memories.” Gaberino also praised school leaders for their vision. “Building this pool is not about one person. Certainly, you have to recognize the board of directors because they had a lot to do with it. But this building is about a team, it’s about the community of Baylor, and it’s about the vision of Baylor.” A large group of former and current wrestlers gathered for an emotional dedication of the Luke Worsham Memorial Wrestling Arena. “When people discuss accomplishments I can trace all of mine to Major Luke Worsham,” said John Hannah ’69. “He decided to turn me into something.” Hannah wrestled for Baylor and later played football for the University of Alabama. He was a first-round draft choice by the New England Patriots in 1973 and was the first Patriot inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Baylor Headmaster Dr. Bill Stacy said the facilities will energize the school’s efforts to increase boarding enrollment. “One of our strategic objectives is to invite more students to our boarding program. While quality academics and a diverse mix of extracurricular and service activities are first priorities, Artist Cessna Decosimo created a bronze bust of Major Luke Worsham that will remain in the new wrestling lobby as a reminder of his legacy to countless students. Pictured above from left are: Dotty Worsham Lowe, Bob Bullard ’81 (trustee), Betty Flo Worsham, Cessna Decosimo, and Myra Worsham Martin. Baylor Almanac Significant events in the history of Baylor School 1914.15.16.1917.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30.31.32.33.34.35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.45.46.47.48.49.50.51.52.53.1954.55.56.57.58.59.60.61.62 90 years ago 87 years ago 50 years ago Planning gets under way to purchase a 35-acre site at Williams Island Station, where the school will relocate from its Palmetto Street home. The school would later expand to include 670 acres. Ground is broken for the Academic Building, which will house classrooms, a laboratory, the study hall, and dormitory housing. A new wing is later added, and the building is renamed Hunter Hall in memory of alumnus and trustee George T. Hunter ’07. Portions of the Walt Disney movie “Davy Crockett” are shot on campus, with Baylor students included in the footage. The popular film was released in 1955. Go Big Red Oak! Science Students Attempt to Clone Historic Tree Barbara Kennedy Students hope that a cloning project that is now under way will help preserve the heritage of Baylor’s oldest landmark – a giant Southern red oak that has stood well over a century on the banks of the Tennessee River. The exact age of the tree is unknown, but according to Baylor science teacher Bill Tatum, a recent measurement of the tree indicates that it is 18 feet, 4 inches in circumference and 107 feet tall, with an average crown spread of 20 feet. These measurements were applied to a champion tree formula provided by the Tennessee Forestry Department, and the tree earns the distinction of being the largest red oak in Hamilton Faculty member Bill Tatum looks on as senior Maggie Horn gives careful attention to the cloning project. County and the second largest in the state. Located between the Roddy Performing Arts Center and the Studio Arts Center, the tree has been infected with crown gall for several years and is slowly dying. Thanks to Bill and his students, however, cloned copies will be produced containing an exact replica of the tree’s genome. Using a process called micropropagation, students in Bill’s genetics class this fall placed terminal and lateral buds from the tree in a special medium that stimulates growth. “The cloning has to be done under precise and sterile conditions,” said Bill, who consulted with scientists from Texas A&M and the University of Edinburgh in preparing for the project. Baylor officials have speculated that the tree was already large at the time of the Civil War. Archeological records provided by Alexander Archeological Consultants in Chattanooga note that the Federal Calvary Brigade was camped in the vicinity of the tree in October 1863 after the Battle of Chickamauga. A regiment was also camped at the site to defend a potential Confederate advance across Williams Island. The records state that “… the location of the William’s Island Ferry crossing has not been specified in the Civil War documents. However, we can reasonably conclude that it was located on the Baylor campus near the Big Oak.” Further evidence came in 1991 and 1992, when Bill and a group of students conducted a two-year archaeological dig beneath the tree. A variety of Civil War era artifacts were unearthed, including shell casings, glass bottles, a bridle ring, and a soapstone die. Bill concludes that the tree must have very advantageous genes because it has outlived almost every Southern red oak in the state. “We hope to plant the cloned offspring at various places around campus so that the tree’s genes can be perpetuated in other red oak trees by the natural reproductive process,” he said. 63.64.65.66.67.68.69.70.71.72.73.74.75.76.77.78.79.80.81.82.83.84.85.86.87.88.1989.90.91.92.93.1994.95.96.97.98.99.00.01.02.03.04.05 50 years ago 15 years ago 10 years ago Baylor is the only school in the South invited to participate in the national experiment known as the “School and College Study of Admissions with Advanced Standing,” now known as the Advanced Placement program. Baylor now offers more than 20 AP courses. Following the admission of the first female day students four years before, the first female boarding students are admitted and a new girls’ dormitory, Lowrance Hall, opens to accommodate them. Baylor becomes the first secondary school to undertake a complete building project, from raising the funds to providing the labor, for a Habitat for Humanity house. Source: Jim Hitt’s It Never Rains After Three O’Clock, John Longwith’s Castle on a Cliff, and Baylor’s Office of Communications. ENJOYING BAYLOR’S GREAT OUTDOORS Baylor is opening its doors – and its outdoors – to Chattanooga with broader thinking about its popular summer camps. Recognizing the many benefits of making its 670-acre campus available to the community, the school’s newly formed Outreach and Auxiliary Programs initiative is reshaping the summer camp experience and adding year-round programs as well. Outreach and Auxiliary Programs director Thad Lepcio says the school has underutilized the campus and its state-ofthe-art facilities. Now, Baylor will be offering numerous enrichment opportunities throughout the year. “We have the best facilities, the best teachers, and the best coaches, and we need to show more people that,” Thad said. Programs in the works include a “legacy” weekend of activities for children of Baylor alumni and a package of morning athletic clinics and afternoon art camps. The school will also host the middle school portion of UTC’s popular basketball camp, bringing some 300 middle schoolers from throughout the region to campus next summer. In December, a half-day “summer preview” camp appealing to families with young children on holiday break from school debuted at full capacity. “It’s all about getting kids and their families on campus,” says Thad, who came to Baylor last year as a sixth grade teacher after serving as the associate athletic director at Wofford College in Spartanburg, S.C. “We want to give people a chance to experience Baylor before they start considering sixth grade admission for their children. “We’ve had some kids who have had a good time at our summer camps and want to be considered for admission as a result. We need to create more of those opportunities. We want to provide enough programming to whet people’s appetites about Baylor.” Meanwhile, Baylor’s long-standing summer programs will take a new approach as well. The popular day camps for youngsters ages 5-13 have been renamed “Raider Days” and, as outgrowths of those successful camps, two new camps have been established. Team Baylor, an all-sports camp, will be open to first through seventh graders. Summer Prep, a threeweek academic enrichment camp, will be offered to seventh through ninth graders as a day or boarding camp. Raider Days and Team Baylor: June 13 – 24 and June 27 – July 8 Summer Prep: July 3-23 423.757.2616 ! www.baylorschool.org EXPERIENCE!BAYLOR Maximum fun By the Numbers The National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) and the Higher Education Research Institute recently released the annual Freshmen Survey Trends Report, a study that charts characteristics of students attending colleges and universities as first-time, full-time freshmen. From their high educational aspirations to their level of engagement in civic life, the findings noted key differences between independent school graduates (“NAIS students”) and their larger peer group (“all students”). These findings offer insights into the ways independent schools like Baylor help their students succeed. 86 Percentage of NAIS students who planned to pursue a master’s or other postgraduate degree. (All students: 74%) 85 Percentage of NAIS students who went on to attend “very high” or “highly selective” colleges and universities. 85 Percentage of NAIS students who had visited an art gallery or museum in the last year. (All students: 60%) 46 Percentage of NAIS students who had asked a teacher for advice after class within the previous year. (All students: 25%) 46 Percentage of NAIS students who consider keeping up to date with political affairs essential. (All students: 31%) 41 Percentage of NAIS students who said they expect to participate in volunteer or community activities in college. (All students: 24%) Coeducation & Student Leadership Serving as leaders in an array of student activities is a powerful part of a Baylor education. Such experiences are loaded with life lessons, even more so due to the real-world setting that a coeducational environment affords. Kate Enzenauer and Carl Schow are president and vice president, respectively, of the Round Table literary discussion group. text and photos by Julie J. Van Valkenburg “In order to become good leaders, both males and females need to become comfortable with behaving in ways that may not come easily to them, that run counter to gender stereotypes.” M embers of the Round Table, Baylor School’s prestigious literary discussion group, are gathered on a November evening in the Alumni Chapel board room, debating the leadership merits of Henry V as exemplified in Shakespeare’s epic play. He’s courageous, they agree. Charismatic. Eloquent and inspirational. Yet the conflict in Shakespeare’s Henry V – the topic of this latest gathering of one of the school’s oldest organizations – comes from the ambiguity of a powerful leader who heroically rallies his “band of brothers” on the battlefield but whose ruthlessness leaves him a less than perfect man. There’s no ambiguity, however, in the ideal of leadership that these students emulate at Baylor. To be selected to participate in the Round Table is among the school’s highest honors. By virtue of their achievements in the classroom, in the athletic arena, and through extracurricular activities such as this, the dozen students debating King Henry’s attributes embody qualities of good leadership themselves. Six girls and six boys, they also represent the strengths of a coeducational school, with their literary discussions enriched by the diversity of their points of view. The Round Table, which since its founding in 1942 has emphasized independent thought and lively debate, is a prime example of how Baylor boys and girls learn, grow, and thrive in one another’s presence. “These students commit to reading and to engaging in conversation outside the boundaries of their regular course work, demonstrating their dedication to learning and to the life of the mind,” says faculty sponsor Heather Ott, a Baylor English teacher. The students, all seniors chosen through an application process, are joined by select faculty members, including Bill Cushman ’59. Bill, who saw the Round Table – and the school – function as an all-male entity as a one-time student member of the group, says the female presence has been strong among the membership since the school went coed in 1985 and the first girls became eligible for membership as seniors in 1988. Artificial stereotypes of girls who fall silent in the company of boys certainly prove inaccurate in Round Table discussions. “Girls who are serious readers maybe by definition are confident women, so if anyone is not going to speak up, it’s not going to be them,” Bill says. “I’ve never been aware of any disinclination of girls to speak up. You’ve got reticent girls and reticent boys, and you’ve got talkative boys and talkative girls.” Two students selected by their peers to lead the group – president Kate Enzenauer and vice president Carl Schow – feel a responsibility to keep the discussion moving at Round Table gatherings. “The biggest thing is to come prepared, and to come prepared to speak but also to listen,” Carl says. “If I’m listening to myself talk a lot, I’m not going to learn very much from the others in the group. That’s the beauty of literature; everybody gets something different out of it.” Carl, whose extensive list of activities includes serving as co-editor-in-chief of The Baylor Notes student newspaper, as a member of the Honor Council, as a Community Service site leader, and as a member of the jazz, concert, and pep bands, feels that coeducation brings valuable diversity to the classroom and school activities. “Certainly, girls come from a different perspective than guys. That’s how we are,” he says. “If we were all alike, it would be boring.” Kate, whose activities include serving as a Peer Tutor, a Tower yearbook editor, and as a member of the National Honor Society and the varsity crew team, appreciates the balance that the presence of boys and girls brings to conversations such as those of the Round Table. “Guys are generally very straightforward,” she says. “Girls are less direct. I think there needs to be that balance.” T here is certainly a balance at Baylor, where boys represent 55 percent and girls 45 percent of the student body of more than 1,000. Studies show that such a balance, in the form of coeducation, advances the development of student leadership. “Successful leaders are those who have the flexibility to adapt their style to the demands of the situation and the knowhow to identify what style best fits the situation therein,” writes Anne Chapman in her book A Great Balancing Act: Equitable Education for Girls and Boys, a publication of the National Association of Independent Schools. “In order to become good leaders, both males and females need to become comfortable with behaving in ways that may not come easily to them, that run counter to gender stereotypes.” The author considers extracurricular activities part of a school’s “informal curriculum,” that is, educational tools in themselves. And by working side by side in activities, students gain important lessons in group dynamics, team building, leadership styles, and more that develop their emerging leadership skills. Exposure to new skills and ideas through extracurricular activities is a valued part of the Baylor program, and there is ample opportunity through 50 clubs, organizations, and publications. And in a coeducational setting, students experience these activities in a real-world environment in which both genders are represented, in which no one gender dominates the leadership positions. S even boys and eight girls share the elected positions of the Student Council, with David Marks in the top spot as president. “A balanced Student Council is a better Student Council,” David says. “It’s what you’re going to get in the real world. David Marks is president of the Student Council. You’re not going to be with all girls or all guys your whole life; you’re going to be with a diversity of people.” And whether addressing a school dance or the dress code, the diversity of the Student Council invites a variety of perspectives to the deliberations, better allowing the officers to represent the student body’s wishes. “We all have pretty much the same focus, although not the same viewpoints,” David says. Although he is also a captain of the varsity football team and a member of Red Circle, the group of student ambassadors who serve the Admissions Office, David says his Student Council participation has given him an incomparable opportunity to get deeply involved in the school community. And, he adds, it has provided a valuable learning opportunity. “I’ve gotten better at public speaking and working with a group to get things done,” he says. “I know I’ll be able to look back at this and see that I learned something.” volunteer,” says Albernie, whose numerous activities include serving as a Student Council representative, a Peer Tutor, a Writing Center tutor, a Tower editor, a Baylor Notes contributor, and a member of Red Circle, the Healthy Communities/Healthy Youth initiative, and the Committee to Promote an Inclusive Community. But her most prominent leadership role is as president of Harambee, an organization that works to promote appreciation of diversity in the Baylor community. “I like to be in leadership positions,” Albernie says. “I like being in charge. I don’t like not knowing what’s going on.” She is well acquainted with what’s going on with Harambee due to the extent of her previous involvement in the organization, which has helped her take a critical look at the group in order to identify how she wanted to make an impact as president. “I saw issues that needed to be developed, and I knew I could do it,” she says. Among her actions has been to restore “issues meetings” to the ongoing agenda, in which one of the two monthly meetings is dedicated to discussion of a relevant, sometimes provocative topic. A vocal group turns out for these meetings, and having both genders voicing their opinions clearly contributes to the liveliness of the dialogue. “A girl’s perspective can be very different from a guy’s,” says Albernie. “That’s what Harambee is all about, embracing our differences.” Jesse Bertke and Porter Durham are chair and vice chair, respectively, of the Honor Council. S Albernie Ferguson is president of Harambee, a cultural understanding organization. A lbernie Ferguson developed her community ethic at a tender age, working pledge drives at public television station WTCI-Channel 45 since the age of 11. “My mom has always encouraged me to be involved and tudents elected to the Honor Council embrace a different challenge, and that is the difficult task of passing judgment on their peers. Founded in 1916 to uphold the Honor Code and to support honesty and integrity among the student body, the council is called upon to seek just solutions in the event of violations. “You have to be judicious,” says vice chairman Porter Durham. “You have to ignore who is in front of you and focus on what’s in front of you and deal with the circumstances of the case.” Porter serves alongside chairperson Jesse Bertke, a boarding student from Anchorage, Alaska, who acknowledges the intense nature of the council’s work. “We’ve had six-hour trials where “Our mission is to instill the desire and the ability to make a positive difference in the world. That’s accomplished through leadership. You make a difference through leadership.” we’re making decisions that affect people’s lives,” she says. “The toughest thing about Honor Council is when you have to look someone in the eye and talk about something they already feel guilty about. Most people are very honest with us.” Jesse and Porter are among the most active leaders in the student body. Jesse is vice president of the Dorm Council, a Walkabout instructor, a Tower editor, captain of the varsity crew team, and head prefect in Lowrance Hall. Porter is a member of Round Table, Red Circle, the Chapel Advisory Committee, and the varsity football team, and he serves as a Peer Tutor and as a National Honor Society officer. The two have seniority in terms of their years of service on the 14-member Honor Council, which factored into Jesse’s desire to hold a leadership position. “I enjoy being in charge,” she says. “Even though it’s hard work, that’s how I feel involved and feel I’m making a difference.” Although both appreciate the balanced perspectives that come with girls and boys working together, Jesse says that’s not in the forefront of her mind when she immerses herself in activities. “I don’t generally make that connection,” she says. “I don’t walk into a room and think, ‘Whoa! I need to get another girl in here!’” But, she maintains, being in a coed setting is important as she looks ahead to the world of work. “I don’t think there’s going to be any environment in my life that’s all women,” she says. “I don’t think that would be good, either. I don’t see how you’d learn to compete with men.” Porter also appreciates what’s gained from the experience. “Girls give you a fresh perspective,” he says. “It doesn’t work well in a learning environment when everyone thinks the same.” Steve Margio ’91, Dean of Student Life S tudent activities and the leadership opportunities they present introduce Baylor students early and effectively to valuable life lessons in social interaction and achievement. And they’re gaining these experiences in a real-world setting: where both the fun and responsibility that such opportunities afford are carried out in balance with classroom and other responsi- Michael McBrien, Associate Head of Student Affairs bilities; where goals are pursued within groups of common interests; where a coeducational environment provides the authentic setting that students will experience beyond Baylor. “The value is they’re seeing their actions and their decisions affecting a group of people,” says Steve Margio ’91, whose newly appointed role as Dean of Student Life underscores the foundation the school is committing to these important activities. “That lesson alone is such an important part of life. When you’re in a leadership position, it can affect a lot of people, and you get those opportunities through athletic teams, clubs, and organizations.” Grounded in positive youth development values, these leadership experiences uphold the principle that gender equity supports a quality education. “A coed school lets men appreciate the leadership style of women and women appreciate the leadership style of men,” says Michael McBrien, Associate Head for Student Affairs. “There are some subtle differences between us, but I don’t mean any of the unfortunate media stereotypes. A coed school breaks those stereotypes down.” And that permits students to focus on what really matters. “Our mission is to instill the desire and the ability to make a positive difference in the world,” Michael says. “That’s accomplished through leadership. You make a difference through leadership. Our students are working with a wide variety of people, which coeducation supports, in a community where they feel supported. Any students who have held leadership positions walk away knowing they’ve brought the mission to life.” Philosophy A Common is ion s s mi ’s l oo ch to ins til l t Ba yl or The alumni profiled here — Paul Winkel, Jr. ’50, Rob Healy ’69, Rob Headrick ’82, Ashley Randolph McMahon ’88, and Rachael Miller ’98 — have gone in very different directions since their Baylor days. While at first glance it may appear that they do not have much in common, what they took away from Baylor is remarkably similar. To a person, they fondly remember Baylor teachers, recall experiences that have shaped who they are today, and talk about how they strive to make a difference in the world. It would be impossible to isolate all the factors that made the Baylor experience so meaningful in their lives, but the school’s diverse resources and nurturing environment inspired them to try things they wouldn’t have otherwise. The philosophy that we are here to enrich our community helped channel their innate desire to give back. and the ab i l ity to create a positive rld. e wo h t in ce n e r ffe di bo th e sir de he S By Rachel Schulson Rachel Schulson is Communications Director of the Jewish Federation and author of the children’s book, Guns: What You Should Know. She and her husband, Henry, are the parents of two Baylor students, Michael ’08 and Leah ’10. Possibilities A Boost to “Baylor provided me with guidance, along with the fortitude and drive that I needed, [it] also gave me the academic boost, a chance to study, and the good solid fellowship from guys of good character that I needed to win.” By the time Paul Winkel, Jr. ’50 arrived at Baylor School from Vienna, Austria, in 1949, he had lived in five U.S. states and had attended 12 schools. His father was in the Army and, from the time he was in fifth grade, Paul was determined to attend the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. Although Paul had graduated from Vienna’s U.S. Dependents High School, attending so many schools had taken its toll and he wanted to improve his academics before applying to West Point. Paul heard about Baylor through a friend of his father and entered as a “post-graduate” to boost his academics. Paul found what he was looking for at Baylor. Among his memories of the school are the guidance of then-Headmaster Herbert Barks, Sr., on seeking a West Point appointment, and Mr. Barks’ prediction in his 1950 commencement address that America would be at war within 30 days. “Sure enough, on June 30, the war in Korea broke out,” Paul remembers. Following Luke Worsham’s “sound counsel to never quit on a matter of importance,” Paul worked tirelessly after graduation, petitioning members of Congress to take examinations that would permit him to join the Army and become eligible to attend the Army’s West Point Preparatory School. When he became an Army Private in January 1951, Paul began in earnest to compete for an appointment to the military academy. In July 1952, with a principal appointment from Senator Everett Dirksen of Illinois, he realized his dream and entered West Point. “Baylor provided me with guid- Paul Winkel, Jr. ’50 ance, along with the fortitude and drive that I needed – even sitting on the bench in football and in basketball when quitting would have been so easy,” says Paul. “Baylor also gave me the academic boost, a chance to study, and the good solid fellowship from guys of good character that I needed to win.” Paul entered West Point right in the middle of the Korean War, “so I had incentive to study and not fail,” he observes. Paul graduated as a Second Lieutenant in 1956. During his 31-year Army career, Paul served in Korea, two tours in Vietnam, in Germany, and with NATO. He was a member of the 82nd Airborne Division and also the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile). He served in the Pentagon on four Army staffs and with the Organization of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. During his last year of service, Paul wrote a study on command, control, communications, and information warfare as a force multiplier. Some parts of the study were put into operation in 1991 during Desert Storm and in 2003 during the Iraqi war. Paul also found the time to earn two master’s degrees, the first in personnel administration from George Washington University in 1967 and the second in international studies from American University in 1973. After retiring from the Army as a Colonel in 1986, Paul worked as a consultant. He now lives near Leesburg, Va., where he devotes his time to his two children, two stepchildren, and four grandchildren as well as to volleyball, travel, and writing. He met his wife, Rita, on the volleyball court in 1989 and both compete at the national championship level. Between them, since 1997, they have amassed nine bronze, three silver, and three gold medals in their respective age brackets. Paul is writing a book about the helicopter crews of the 1965 Battle of Landing Zone X-ray where he was a flight leader of four helicopters, losing two to enemy fire. This battle — one of the most vicious of the Vietnam War — was depicted in the 1992 book We Were Soldiers Once, and Young; and in Mel Gibson’s 2003 movie We Were Soldiers. In May 2004, based on information that had recently surfaced, Senator John Warner of Virginia endorsed Paul for the Medal of Honor. Paul should know by 2006 whether his is the one out of every 75 endorsements that is successful. Outdoors The Great Rob credits Baylor, along with church, family, and business, for giving him the desire to give back to his community. “To have people look outside themselves and see how they can make a contribution to the world is very important.” Rob Healy’s professional career has been an unusual blend of non-profit leadership and success in the for-profit sector. His interest in both should serve him well in his role as director of Chattanooga’s new outdoor initiative to promote outdoor activity and to market the city as a healthy place to work, live, and play. “The outdoor initiative came out of a series of meetings with people in the community who were interested in the outdoors, recreation, conservation, and all aspects of outdoor living,” explains Rob, a member of Baylor’s graduating class of 1969. “After attending the meetings, I felt energy and enthusiasm for the initiative. I wanted to be part of something where I can make a difference in this community.” Rob will actually be striving to make more of a difference, already having produced miracles at the Makea-Wish Foundation. Before Rob became its first executive director in 1999, the Chattanooga chapter had little presence in the area. A struggling entity, they granted about 15 wishes a year and had a budget of $75,000. “With the help of a great board and staff,” Rob says, Make-a-Wish granted 60 wishes annually and grew its budget to $500,000 under Rob’s leadership. “Non-profit is an interesting challenge,” notes Rob. “People try to separate them, but I think the non-profit world should operate like a for-profit business where the business happens to be granting wishes to sick children or encouraging people to get outdoors.” Rob personally doesn’t need any encouragement to get outdoors — he is a skilled tennis player, fly fisherman, Rob Healy ’69 and jogger — and he has made it his goal to try every activity the outdoor initiative promotes. He enjoyed a Biketo-Work Day, has already started rowing lessons, and has hang gliding next on his list. Rob will have plenty do on the ground with an ambitious agenda for the outdoor initiative. He plans to focus on three main goals, the first of which is to encourage people who aren’t already active to get out and walk. The organization is working with county representatives, healthcare professionals, and corporations to plan activities that engage the community and will be active in promoting use of the city’s completed riverwalk. The second objective is to develop events and programs that enhance the experience of an activity for those who are already involved. Those who already take advantage of outdoor opportunities will also be encouraged to involve others through special events such as “bring-your-buddy” and family activity days. “I was drawn to the outdoor initiative because I love Chattanooga and the outdoors,” Rob says. “When children and adults learn about the environment, they become more sensitive to it and want to take care of it.” Outdoor education will, therefore, be an important component of the initiative. As a business person, Rob appreciates that a city which respects its environment and encourages an active lifestyle can better attract economic and business development. “I’d like Chattanooga to be a city where people want to live and work because of the healthy lifestyle,” he says. “I want the outdoor initiative to be one of the two or three reasons companies hold conventions here or tourists want to visit.” Rob credits Baylor, along with church, family, and business, for giving him the desire to give back to his community. He calls Baylor’s mission statement “wonderful” and adds, “To have people look outside themselves and see how they can make a contribution to the world is very important.” Rob has made his contribution through his service on the boards of Manker Patten Tennis Club, United Way, Fairyland Club, and Lookout Mountain recreation and schools. He also served on the vestry of Church of the Good Shepherd , was a founding member of St. Francis of Assisi Episcopal Church, and was a member of the steering committee of the Anglican Fellowship of Chattanooga. He and his wife, Betsy, have three sons. Medicine Destined for “Vanderbilt helped me get into medical school, but what I did in medical school was based on what I learned at Baylor.” Rob Headrick’s father was a cardiothoracic surgeon living in Chattanooga, and growing up, Rob was determined to choose a different path from his father’s on both counts. As set as he was on avoiding a medical career, the 1982 Baylor graduate studied biomedical engineering — an ideal major for a pre-med student — as an undergraduate at Vanderbilt University. Still fighting his innate love of medicine, Rob took a year off after graduation to explore his options. A licensed pilot, he considered a career in aviation but quickly realized that, while it was a great hobby, it just wasn’t for him. After a year, Rob succumbed and enrolled in the University of Tennessee’s medical school, but, he says, “I promised myself I wouldn’t choose the same area of medicine as my father.” Rob wanted a specialty with set hours. But Rob discovered that he was a natural for surgery and, after six years of general surgery, he gave up his stubborn battle and decided to specialize in heart surgery. He was accepted to the Mayo Clinic, and he and his Mississippi-born wife, Anita, moved to Rochester, Minnesota. “We spent three years there, and I convinced myself that’s where I would stay and practice,” he says. When Rob ended up matching for a general surgery spot in Chattanooga, he had to make a tough decision. “My Dad didn’t push me but let me flounder,” Rob says. “We finally did choose Chattanooga, and he and I got to work together before his retirement. He ended up dying shortly afterwards, and it was neat that he got to see that after all my stubborn- Rob Headrick ’82 ness I ended up in his field.” One of the first places Rob took Anita on her first visit to Chattanooga was Baylor School. “If it weren’t for Baylor, I know I wouldn’t have made it through medical school,” says Rob. “I almost flunked out my first year at Baylor. I didn’t know how to study, take notes, or do homework. The Lower School dean assured my parents that I would be okay and convinced them just to give it some time.” Rob proved the dean right and learned the discipline necessary to experience much of what Baylor offered while still maintaining A’s in class. “When I started college, I was so well prepared,” he says. “Vanderbilt helped me get into medical school, but what I did in medical school was based on what I learned at Baylor.” Rob has fond memories of his Baylor teachers. Football coach and social studies teacher Fred Hubbs evolved from a teacher to friend. Science teacher George Taylor ’54 taught Rob the importance of applying what he already knew when approaching problems. Schaack Van Deusen ’61 directed him in a memorable play. In spite of his love for Baylor, the decision to return to Chattanooga was not an easy one for Rob. In his work at the Mayo Clinic, Rob had treated princes and foreign dignitaries. He counted former Beatles member George Harrison among his patients. “But it is so much harder to take care of people you see every day or who know your family,” says Rob. ”A fair number of people will die in the business I am in. It is an incredible honor that people who knew me as a little kid now put their life in my hands.” Rob says he received the ultimate compliment when Baylor legend Luke Worsham requested that he perform his surgical biopsy. “The role reversal helped me see that the residents I teach now will be the ones who take care of me later,” Rob says. Back in Chattanooga for four years, Rob is now in a six-person practice of cardiac, thoracic, and vascular surgeons. He still enjoys flying and calls it an ideal way to relieve the stress of his work. He does not have children yet, but Rob feels that Chattanooga would be a great place to raise them. He cites the sense of involvement and pride in the city as the biggest change since he lived here. He concludes, “It is exciting that I am comfortable enough in my practice that I can now look at how I can make a difference in the community.” Challenge Rising to the “Baylor’s athletics and academics speak for themselves, but the nurturing environment is so incredible. My teachers pushed me to do things I wouldn’t have if they hadn’t given me a pep talk. Because of them, I learned life lessons and gained confidence in myself.” Ashley Randolph McMahon ’88 majored in international business. entered Baylor in 1985 as one “I was so well prepared of the “Fabulous Forty” — the for college, particularly in the first 40 girls, all freshman and area of writing,” she says. sophomores, to attend the “Most of the other students school when it returned to its were accustomed to multiplecoeducational roots. Ironically, choice examinations and, for when she was 5 years old and them, writing papers was a Baylor was an all-boys school, struggle. I had written so Ashley had told Bruce High, many papers at Baylor in so her brother’s adviser, that she many subjects, and most of planned to attend Baylor. my exams were open-ended, “He laughed when I said opinion type questions. Colit, but at my interview, he said lege term papers were just an I must have known something extension of what I had alnobody else did,” says Ashley. ready learned.” Ashley transferred to BayAfter college, Ashley relor from a large public high turned to Baylor and worked school in Cleveland and imfor three years in the school’s mediately took to its small Admissions Office. She felt class sizes and teaching style. that she could really speak to “We were able to do so the Baylor experience and much more in our classes and, Ashley Randolph McMahon ’88 shared with prospective stubecause the teachers became so dents’ families what she felt was involved in our lives, I felt I could in her voice. “Baylor’s athletics and the school’s main selling point — that communicate openly with them,” Ashacademics speak for themselves, but students are challenged in classrooms ley says. She was surprised to find that the nurturing environment is so incred- and in their personal lives. She also she enjoyed eating lunch with her ible. My teachers pushed me to do loved having advisees as part of her teachers and looked forward to being things I wouldn’t have if they hadn’t job, and some of her advisees were with them during extra help time. given me a pep talk. Because of them, involved in her wedding when she Although girls were in the minority I learned life lessons and gained con- married Joel McMahon in 1995. — there were 16 girls and 100 boys fidence in myself.” Now living in Birmingham, Ashley in her grade — Ashley never felt outAshley’s memories of Baylor are is taking her first year off from teachnumbered. The school went out of its very much about its teachers. She ing pre-school French since 1995 to way to include the girls, immediately didn’t care for history but took AP be home with her 3- and 6-year-old creating a spot for a female on the European History just to be taught by sons. She is active in the Birmingham Honor Council. After more girls enJon Chew, whom she called “a fantas- Red Raider Club and joined Baylor’s tered the following year, Baylor quicktic role model.” She minored in French Board of Trustees a few months ago. ly formed girls’ soccer, track, and at the University of Alabama because On a recent visit to campus for Dr. dance teams. “We had all the opporMadame Scheni got her so excited Bill Stacy’s installation as headmaster, tunities the boys had and, in spite of about the language. “Whenever I Ashley was reminded of what she had our numbers, still had a strong voice,” write, the words of Schaack Van Deus- loved most about being a Baylor stusays Ashley. en and the grammar lessons from Jim dent. “I kept wishing I could drop in Shy as a child, Ashley credits Baylor Stover’s homemade textbook come to on one of Dr. Dan Kennedy’s classes,” with having helped her to push herself mind,” she says. she says. “The way he taught math, socially and physically. “I can’t believe Ashley attended Lynchburg College he just pushed us to our limits.” I’ve rock climbed or rafted,” she says in Lynchburg, Virginia, for a year before with the pride of accomplishment still transferring to Alabama, where she Interests Combining “I am healthy now because of Baylor’s emphasis on the importance of physical activity. It made me try things like Walkabout. And, like so much of what I learned at Baylor, it has stayed with me for life.” Anyone who knows Rachael Miller ’98 would not be surprised that she is pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree in drama and theatre for youth. Finding a field that combines two of her defining interests and then doing what was necessary to be accepted into one of the finest programs in the country is consistent with Rachael’s approach to life. Rachael is in her first year of a three-year program at the University of Texas, Austin. In addition to her MFA, she will receive certification to teach kindergarten through 12th grade. She began studying theatre and education as an undergraduate at Brown University. “I was interested in the arts, but I wasn’t sure about theatre education until my senior year, when it all came together,” she says. Rachael spent the summer at a professional theatre festival in Williamstown, Massachusetts. “I decided that summer that I couldn’t be all that useful to the world as an actor,” she says. ”I wanted to find a way to combine my interest in the arts with a way to give back, and that’s when I came to teaching.” Rachael traces to Baylor her desire to make a contribution because of the school’s emphasis on giving back to society. She also credits Baylor’s teachers and its “really solid” college counseling program with helping her to get into Brown, a school that accepts only 16 percent of its applicants. One of four Baylor students accepted in 1998, Rachael’s concentration at Brown was religious studies. “Joe Gawrys was just one of many excellent teachers I had at Baylor,” she says. “Taking religious studies with him in high school sustained my interest into Rachael Miller ’98 college and throughout my time there.” Rachael also cites her involvement in the Round Table, Baylor’s literary group, as excellent preparation for college. “It really is like a college seminar, with a high level of critical analysis,” she says. At Brown, Rachael got involved in “a good bit of everything.” In addition to “doing a ton of theater,” she sang in an a cappella ensemble that performed at parties and had a memorable Christmas tour of Nantucket. “I just delved into what I loved,” she says. “I studied Spanish and then tried Hebrew and Japanese.” Rachael’s interest in Japan grew out of her exposure to Japanese culture in the religious studies class that had made such an impression at Baylor. After graduating from Brown, Rachael went to Japan with the Japan Exchange and Teaching program (JET). Paired with a Japanese teacher of En- glish, she taught English as a Foreign Language to middle school students. When she returned from Japan, Rachael taught for another year, in Princeton, N.J., at the regional McCarter Theater Center for the Performing Arts. As an education teaching artist intern, she taught after-school classes, in-school residencies, and workshops. “The education department at this theatre was an excellent place to learn,” she says. “I went there to find out whether I was truly interested in my career choice and also to get some experience.” The internship helped Rachael get into the MFA program at Texas, where she was one of only five students accepted of the 30 who applied. Rachael’s love of drama started with her first Baylor Lower School play. She was then tapped for a role in an Upper School play in eighth grade and was permanently hooked. She was in a play every semester after, was active in the Chattanooga Theatre Centre, and took all the performance classes that Baylor offered. One aspect of Baylor that Rachael still appreciates is having had to engage in physical activity. “I am not a very athletic person, and having to take sports taught me that exercise and health are important,” she says. To fulfill the physical activity requirement, Rachael took dance, which she says has helped her as a performer. “I am healthy now because of Baylor’s emphasis on the importance of physical activity,” she concludes. “It made me try things like Walkabout. And, like so much of what I learned at Baylor, it has stayed with me for life.” Final Thoughts Our Mission in Action Bombarded daily by images of fighting in Iraq, strife in Afghanistan, unrest in Palestine, hunger in the Third World (and, more to the point, in our own back yard), it is all too easy these days to become disillusioned, to become disenchanted with what I at least used to envision as a world capable of far better. You can imagine then, that attending the annual International Round Square Conference, hosted in September by Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts, was an event I approached both with excitement and more than a little apprehension. After all, the United States’ participation in recent world affairs has made it the target of some international controversy. Fortunately, I forgot one essential thing: that uniting students from around the world is nothing short of magic: there is nothing – and I mean nothing – that can renew one’s faith in humanity more quickly or more completely than witnessing students from all walks of life and all corners of the globe coming together over a common issue. Sitting in on the student “rikka” discussion groups at the conference, I experienced this magic first hand, as Baylor’s own conference delegates – John Pollock ’04, Leah Hartman ’05, and Tiffany Williams ’06 – joined with students from as far away as India, Peru, Thailand, New Zealand, Japan, and Australia to discuss potential solutions for problems as farreaching (and as close to home) as water supplies, hunger, the ethics of genetic engineering, and approaches to deterring terrorism. I also witnessed the beginnings of friendships that will, I hope, transcend distance, time, and politics in the way that no text book ever could. I’m sure Oprah would have referred to it as an “ah-ha” moment, but as a result of watching those discussions I suddenly realized that we cannot tell or even really teach students how to make a difference, but we can certainly show them how, and we can provide the tools necessary for them to discover this for themselves and, hopefully, teach each other along the way. That’s where Round Square comes in. The ideals upon which Round Square is based – internationalism, democracy, environmentalism, adventure, leadership, and service – align perfectly with the ideals that Baylor set forth in our mission statement, and our active involvement in the organization has already opened up an entirely new – and global – realm of possibility for each of our students. From Children in Thailand photographed by senior Sam Singer. the five exchange students we have already hosted to the students from Baylor attending conferences, taking part in exchanges, and venturing out on international service trips, the potential for us to “test” and experience these ideals firsthand is all but limitless. The annual conference daily reminded me of these possibilities. It’s hard to articulate just how it felt to see our delegates flow into the crowd, making friends, learning a traditional Indian dance, sharing a joke with a couple of Australians, or discussing community service practices with Peruvian and South African students. Suffice to say that it seemed to me the very essence of our mission statement at work: students discovering the myriad ways they can make a positive difference in the world. What better way to renew one’s faith in human potential. by Emma Williams Emma joined the Baylor faculty in 2001 and teaches English and serves as the school’s International Student Support Coordinator.