PDF - Lynchburg College Magazine
Transcription
PDF - Lynchburg College Magazine
Lynchburg Spring 2016 Lynchburg FACES OF Lynchburg C o l l e g e M a g a z i n e Read the magazine, share the stories, and experience our web exclusives at magazine.lynchburg.edu Spring 2016 Vol. 23, No. 2 ON The perfect sweet spot As the College worked over several months to develop a new web feature, Faces of Lynchburg, many images were considered. How best to tell the LC story visually and from an individual perspective? Then College photographer John McCormick produced the photo that would set the standard: Anne Gibbons with her familiar smile, sitting in a red chair on the Dell. In her contribution to Faces, Anne likens the College to a family farm “passed down one generation to the next” and our students as “hardy seeds … challenged and nurtured to grow into plants that will bear fruit. It’s all about growth, nurture, and working together. Farming is hard Summer Spicer, a graduate assistant in the MBA program, and Rebecca Irvine ’15 MEd painted this colorful portrait of John Eccles, vice president and dean for student development. Read about John’s 30 years with LC on page 22. THE COVER Mychael Ward ’18 stands with his trumpet outside a church near his home in Lynchburg. DEPARTMENTS 2 First Word 3 Around the Dell 6 Discover | Connect | Achieve 12 Hornet Highlights 36 Class Notes 48 Last Word BY MICHAEL JONES work but it’s essential to the survival of a culture and a community.” Anne’s been tending to the LC family for some 20 years now, as interim chaplain, director of First Year Programs, director of SERVE (now Office of community Service), and currently, associate chaplain and director of the Bonner Leader Program. “It’s the perfect sweet spot — pastoral care, social justice, and activism.” Spiritual life at the College is “phenomenal” she says emphatically. “The College certainly thinks it’s important. Full-and part-time staff, ministers on call, anywhere and everywhere.” Her work allows her to be with members of the LC community during some of their happiest moments, as well as their hardest. “Like so many things, in pastoral care we serve as witness and shepherd, rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.” FEATURES Of the Bonner Leaders, Anne says that students’ dedication to community service and advocacy makes her feel “hopeful for the world.” The College is one of only 67 campuses nationwide to host a Bonner program, in which student leaders work with community members on issues such as hunger, homelessness, environmental concerns, and youth development. Countless photos shared via social media are a testament to her dedication; they depict Anne surrounded by students and involved in community service in Lynchburg and around the country. A more personal testament is the collection of thank-you notes she keeps in her desk. “When I receive a note that is particularly personal, it is an affirmation that I am where I need to be … doing what I’m supposed to be doing … being who I’m supposed to be.” PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK 6 18 22 Eat your art out Tarsha Joyner ’13 mixes art and baking talents to win competitive baking show. Hope Musical talent and scholarship bring Mychael Ward ’18 to Lynchburg College. Once a Hornet, always a Hornet John Eccles is retiring after 30 years with LC. 26 28 32 Legacy of change Remembering the impact of Dr. Carey Brewer ’48. Fifteen years in focus Dr. Kenneth Garren has served as president for 15 years. The future takes shape The College needs to hear from alumni to perfect the new strategic plan. STAY CONNECTED FACEBO O K lynchburgcollege TWITTER @lynchburg FLICKR lynchburgcollege YO UTUBE lynchburgcollege PINTEREST lynchburgpins INSTAGRAM @lynchburgcollege LC BLO GS redchairblogs.com PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK First Word A bold vision for LC’s future Soon after I graduated from college in 1962, the United States launched the Mariner 2 space probe for a study of the planet Venus. A few weeks later, President John F. Kennedy asked Americans to consider what we had just accomplished and to aim for something more. They remarked that I had given them “permission” to set goals that force us to stretch our abilities. Sometimes we need someone to remind us that it is OK to reach for the stars. But it is more than OK. It is vital that we do so. Today, I invite you to reach with us. We need your involvement as we finalize a plan that will, as President Kennedy said, “organize and measure the best of our energies and skills.” There are several ways that you can help. First, reflect on what LC does well today. The stories in this magazine, as well as the “No man can fully grasp how far and how latest articles published at lynchburg.edu/ fast we have come,” he said. “...So it is not news, are a good starting point. I hope they surprising that some would have us stay remind you of the impact LC has had in where we are a little longer to rest, to wait.” your life. Delay was not an option, though. “We Second, I ask you to share feedback, comchoose to go to the moon in this decade and ments, and questions for our Strategic Plando the other things not because they are easy, ning Team to review. What can, and should, but because they are hard,” he said, “because Lynchburg College be in the future? that goal will serve to organize and measure Later, we will work together to bring Vithe best of our energies and skills.” sion 2020 to life. Faculty will design a revoPresident Kennedy’s words energized me lutionary curriculum grounded in the liberal and other NASA employees. Inspired by a arts. Staff will support that with co-curricumonumental goal, we accomplished what lar programming and the necessary facilities. previous generations had thought impossible. Alumni will assist by staying in touch to Lynchburg College faces a similar molet us know about their accomplishments, ment as we create a new strategic plan. We visiting campus, connecting with each other, can, and should, take pride in what we have telling prospective students about the Colbuilt together: a phenomenal combination lege, and investing financial support that will of academic, athletic, and student life proallow LC to extend better educational opgrams that prepare students for successful portunities to another generation of students. lives. Over the past 113 years, Lynchburg ColBut we must not stop here. We must look lege has become a great institution that forward to the dawning of a new day with provides an excellent education. By working new challenges and opportunities for private together on a bold, focused vision, we will colleges and universities. Vision 2020, our accomplish tasks that seemed impossible new strategic plan, will guide us through decades ago. We will be known as one of the that day. world’s best colleges preparing students for a When I reviewed the first draft of Vision dynamic future. 2020, its goals and initiatives were admirable but not aspirational. I asked our Strategic Planning Team members to be bold. They quickly identified new goals that would set Kenneth R. Garren, PhD Lynchburg College apart as a premiere eduPresident cational institution. 2 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Around the Dell Lynchburg C o l l e g e M a g a z i n e MAGAZINE STAFF Bryan Gentry EDITOR Michael Jones DIRECTOR OF COLLEGE COMMUNICATIONS AND MARKETING Betty McKinney DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING Katharine McCann Christopher Peterson DESIGNERS John McCormick PHOTOGRAPHER Dr. Selden officially becomes vice president and dean Pamela Carder Tracy Chase David Woody ’00 WEB TEAM Mike Carpenter CONTRIBUTING WRITER Pam Hall CLASS NOTES Natalie LeDonne ’18 Warren Wright CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Kenneth R. Garren PRESIDENT Sally Selden VICE PRESIDENT AND DEAN, ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Stephen Bright VICE PRESIDENT, BUSINESS AND FINANCE Rita Detwiler VICE PRESIDENT, ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT Denise A. McDonald VICE PRESIDENT, ADVANCEMENT John Eccles VICE PRESIDENT AND DEAN, STUDENT DEVELOPMENT Lynchburg College Magazine is published semi-annually for alumni, parents, and friends by College Communications and Marketing, 434.544.8325 or 800.621.1669. Send change of address to: Lynchburg College Magazine Lynchburg College 1501 Lakeside Drive Lynchburg, VA 24501-3113 alumni@lynchburg.edu www.lynchburg.edu Letters to the editor may be sent to mageditor@lynchburg.edu Lynchburg College does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, disability, gender, sexual orientation, or national or ethnic origin and complies with the requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. PHOTO BY WARREN WRIGHT Active learning A new style of classroom is helping Lynchburg College professors change the way they teach. In the “active learning classrooms,” students form groups around different tables, each group focused on its own flat-screen monitor on the wall. Thanks to dry-erase paint, the students can write on the walls with markers while brainstorming. With wheeled office chairs, the students are more mobile than usual. There is no one focal point in the room at any given time. “The layout of the room really prohibits me from lecturing,” said Dr. Laura Kicklighter. “I am interacting with the students much more directly than I would be in a traditional classroom.” After a brief “true/false” quiz about AIDS in one recent class, Dr. Kicklighter assigned each group to identify ethical issues in a different country’s policies regarding HIV prevention, testing, and treatment. As the students talked, they typed quickly on their laptops to edit presentations on their shared screens. Using their computers and cloud editing technology comes naturally to most of the current generation of students, Dr. Kicklighter said. “It’s been really great to allow students to use technology for learning instead of constantly trying to stop them from using their technology (for texting or social media use) in class.” Four active learning classrooms — three for student instruction and one for faculty training — were installed at LC in the past year. By fostering free discussion and movement, the rooms apply research-backed methods to improve learning, said Dr. Allison Jablonski, associate dean. “Moving and PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK AFTER SERVING ON AN interim BY BRYAN GENTRY learning is more memorable than sitting,” she said. The new classrooms were proposed by Dr. Jablonski and other faculty members who started the LC Teaching and Learning Center several years ago. The Jessie Ball DuPont Fund provided money to create an active learning classroom in the library to serve as a home for the TLC. This classroom is used to train faculty in the techniques that use the room’s technology most effectively. Another active learning classroom was created in Thompson Hall, allowing education students to work hands-on with technology that is becoming more common in the public schools where they will teach. Another serves the School of Business and Economics in Schewel Hall while the third is in the Westover Honors suite, where Dr. Kicklighter teaches most of her courses. She said the smart application of the technology, combined with even more interactive classes, seems to help her students improve their grasp of the subject matter in her medical ethics course. “Their grades are better than other times that I’ve taught the same material with the same book,” she said. “Their academic performance has gone up.” In addition to the active learning classrooms, the TLC sponsors workshops and speakers to help faculty continually improve their teaching. “This is a way for teachers and scholars to look at how learning works, and that will inform our teaching,” said Dr. Jablonski. “Our mission as Lynchburg College is to be a teaching institution. We are here to offer a liberal arts education. The best way that we can do that is through informed teaching.” basis for several months, Dr. Sally Selden became the permanent vice president and dean for academic affairs in December. The national search drew 75 applicants, and two finalists were interviewed in early December. Dr. Kenneth R. Garren, president, said that Dr. Selden emerged as the best candidate. “She has had a distinguished career at Lynchburg College and has already provided exemplary leadership to our college community,” he said. “I know that she will be a tremendous leader for Lynchburg College as we move forward with the implementation of our strategic plan for the future.” “I am honored by this vote of confidence and the opportunity to continue serving Lynchburg College in this capacity,” said Dr. Selden. “I look forward to continue working with our dynamic faculty and staff to create the best possible environment where students can become educated and prepare for lives of work and service.” Dr. Selden has served as a professor of management in the School of Business and Economics since 2001. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 3 Around the Dell ONLINE EXTR AS Read Dr. Manian's paper on Hindu influences in St. Lucia. magazine.lynchburg.edu Professional group honors Kari Hampton KARI HAMPTON, a health and physical education Hobbs Hall renamed to honor Sigler DR. JULIUS A. SIGLER JR. ’62, was honored for his 48 years of service to Lynchburg College at a rededication of the Hobbs Science Building on September 4. Previously named in honor of T. Gibson Hobbs ’04, an LC trustee from 1915 to 1942, the building was renamed the Thomas Gibson Hobbs and Julius A. Sigler Science Center to recognize the many contributions made by Dr. Sigler during his tenure. He served as a physics faculty member, assistant dean, and finally vice president and dean for academic affairs before his retirement in June. He was awarded an honorary doctor of science during Commencement exercises in May. “Dr. Sigler played an integral role in the history of Lynchburg College and in the lives of many students over the past five decades,” said LC President Dr. Kenneth R. Garren. “The College’s trustees and I thought it was fitting to honor him permanently by adding his name to our science building.” 4 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 DPT and PA students volunteer in the Caribbean Outstanding Faculty Award Dr. Sabita Manian, a Lynchburg College professor of international relations and political science, recently received the Outstanding Faculty Award from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia. As the highest honor that the Commonwealth of Virginia gives to professors at public and private colleges and universities, Outstanding Faculty Awards recognize superior accomplishments in teaching, research, and public service. “Dr. Manian’s commitment to and accomplishment in fulfilling Lynchburg College’s mission is evident through her dynamic pedagogy and outstanding preparation of students for a global society as conscientious citizens,” said LC President Dr. Kenneth R. Garren, who nominated her for the award. Dr. Manian also recently published research in the online academic journal Religions. Her co-authored paper, “Sensing Hinduism: Lucian-Indian Funeral Feast as Glocalized Ritual,” relates her observations from a funerary feast she attended while in St. Lucia for research. Dr. Manian has taught at LC since 2001. She has received two of the College’s top awards for faculty, the Shirley E. Rosser Award for Excellence in Teaching and the Thomas C. Allen Award for Excellence in Academic Advising. Two groups of Lynchburg College medical students started 2016 by teaching and serving in the Caribbean. Nine students from the Doctor of Physical Therapy program worked with special education teachers in St. Lucia while 17 Physician Assistant Medicine students performed clinical work in the Dominican Republic. The experience allowed the students to apply what they have learned Commonwealth’s secretary shares dream at LC LEVAR STONEY’S PARENTS WERE ages New major in liberal arts studies A NEW MAJOR AT Lynchburg College provides an additional offering to the institution’s liberal arts core while allowing more flexibility for students to pursue diverse interests. The Liberal Arts Studies major, which became an official part of LC’s curriculum in the fall of 2015, serves students whose interests span several disciplines. Students can design their own majors or choose from a variety of pre-defined options that combine courses from several minors with common themes. Being able to integrate a breadth and depth of cross-disciplinary perspectives across several subjects will give students an edge in graduate schools and other careers, said Dr. Sabita Manian, who serves as the program chair. “Even in the tech world, they are looking for a combination of skills — such as writing and critical thinking — that brings together more than one discipline,” Dr. Manian said. “We created this major as another venue for students to develop such skills.” PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK in classrooms, but, more importantly, it helped them develop their sense of purpose and service, said DPT professor Dr. Lori Mize. “I hope the students will gain a love not only of our profession, but of service and of people. Really that’s the most important thing that we can help them come to, or teach them,” she said. “To see that passion ignite in them was the absolute best.” professor at Lynchburg College, has been named the 2015 College/University Health Teacher of the Year by the Virginia Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance. The annual award recognizes faculty members in Virginia who demonstrate effective teaching, emphasize the importance of physical fitness, and serve as positive role models for students. “Kari is an exemplary educator and is instrumental in mentoring Lynchburg College students through the health and physical education major and into service as educators,” said Dr. Jean St. Clair, dean of the School of Health Sciences and Human Performance. “With America in a health crisis fueled by the epidemic of obesity, each of those students can have a powerful impact upon the lives of young men and women.” Hampton taught in the Henrico County Public Schools before she began teaching at LC in 2008. Her interests include improving the physical education experience for students who have disabilities, as well as finding ways to have students with disabilities learn alongside other students in the regular physical education setting. 16 and 19 when he was born. Neither of them graduated from high school. He grew up relying on free lunch in the school cafeteria. “I pinch myself every day because, usually, a person with those circumstances doesn’t become secretary of the Commonwealth,” Stoney told an audience in Hopwood Auditorium recently. He was the guest of the Black Student Association. Today, Stoney keeps his family’s past in mind as he plays a role in shaping Virginia’s direction. “Sometimes not having a lot closes a window on opportunity,” he said. “Even though public service is not easy, experience makes it worth it. What we do every day in the governor’s administration makes a difference.” The youngest member of Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s cabinet, Stoney leads the commonwealth’s efforts for “restorative justice,” which he hopes will help former inmates build better lives for themselves. One side of that involves streamlining and facilitating the process by which convicted felons in Virginia can regain their voting rights after completing their prison sentences. Stoney and McAu- PA PHOTO COURTESY OF JEREMY WELSH; LEVAR STONEY AND KARI HAMPTON PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK liffe have worked to decrease waiting periods, reduce application paperwork, remove financial barriers, and reach out to former inmates. Restorative justice also involves improving the correctional system. Stoney co-chairs the governor’s commission reviewing the Commonwealth’s policy on parole, which Virginia eliminated in 1995. Allowing convicts to start over will be better for the former inmates, their families, and society, he said. “We understand that the sands of the hourglass are flowing through by the minute, by the second,” Stoney said. “What we want to do is take every moment possible and use that moment for the betterment of Virginians.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 5 Discover Connect Achieve Left: Tarsha talks to host Jonathan Bennett, right, during the “ooey gooey, soft and chewy” second challenge round. Below: Tarsha reacts as judges declare her overall winner during the judging of the final challenge round while runnersup Megan Greulich and Jen Musky watch. Eat your art out RECENT GRADUATE WINS FOOD NETWORK COOKIE CHALLENGE BY BRYAN GENTRY o Tarsha Joyner ’13, cookies, cakes, and caramels are blank canvases waiting for her artistic touch. “It takes forever to sculpt something or paint or quilt, but it takes just a couple of hours to bake something and have someone see it,” Tarsha said of her preferred medium. “I’m able to be creative and get instant gratification.” Tarsha’s talent for wielding frosting and flavors has underpinned a growing business for four years now, and it helped her win $10,000 in the Food Network Christmas Cookie Challenge special last year. She is using that money to expand her business to a full-time venture with her own storefront in downtown Lynchburg. She plans to open Mrs. Joy’s Absolutely Fabulous Treat Shoppe this spring. 6 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 “Even though I had a small local presence, it’s grown exponentially since the show,” Tarsha said. “People everywhere want to try those cookies.” The past decade has been a flurry of activity in Tarsha’s life. She has worked as an accounting firm office manager, a tech support representative, and a freelance photographer. She earned an associate’s degree in computer programming and business administration followed by her art degree at LC. She started her baking business while still in school. All along, she was deeply involved in her family and church. All of these activities had something in common, she said. “I’ve always searched for and sought out creative outlets — I just didn’t know that’s what I was doing,” she said. “I immerse my- self in whatever I feel to be the most expressive of my creative abilities.” In the spring of 2012, LC graphic design professor Ursula Bryant told Tarsha that a class that fall would challenge the students to create a business brand. Tarsha decided to get a head start over the summer by selling homemade shortbread cookies at the Lynchburg Community Market. “I figured I could test out my packaging and my product and see if the customers responded well to it,” she said. By the time the fall semester came, Tarsha already had the beginnings of a profitable business. She also had a brand that needed improvement. “At the beginning, I had a rather tacky logo,” Tarsha said. She credits Professor Bryant with helping her perfect the logo and packaging design. Tarsha’s branding project won an Addy Award from the American Advertising Federation that year. “I knew she would go on to do more great things,” Bryant said. “She’s been quick to prove me right.” Tarsha quickly expanded beyond cookie making and added cake pops, cakes, doughnuts, and caramels to her repertoire. Her talent and creativity are easy to see, said Amy Forbes, an early and faithful customer. Forbes recalled asking for a coconut cake to celebrate a birthday. Rather than top a traditional sheet cake with coconut frosting, Tarsha sculpted a cake in the shape of a coconut cut open and with a straw placed inside. She colored the outside with toasted coconut. “It was flawless,” Forbes said. Last August, Tarsha and her husband, Ron, flew to California so she could compete in the Christmas Cookie Challenge. She hoped to win the $10,000 prize to help finance her dream of quitting her tech support job and grow her baking business. Tarsha's winning Chronicles of Narnia-inspired cookies They returned to Lynchburg with a secret — Tarsha had won, but they could tell no one, not even their three children, until after the show premiered Thanksgiving weekend. Many of Tarsha’s friends and customers filled a Lynchburg restaurant for a viewing party on November 28. They watched her compete against four professional bakers to create a variety of holiday cookies. Although she demonstrated a sense of humor and baking talent in the first two rounds, Tarsha said she got lucky as other bakers made minor mistakes that sent them home. The last round catered to Tarsha’s greatest strength. She was asked to decorate cookies for a “Winter Wonderland” theme. “I immediately thought of the Chronicles of Narnia,” Tarsha said. She spent two hours designing cookies that she hoped would make PHOTOS BY EMILE WAMSTEKER/ TELEVISION FOOD NETWORK, G.P.; COOKIE PHOTOS BY TARSHA JOYNER ’13 the judges feel like they were staring out of a wardrobe and into a forest blanketed in snow. The judges got the picture. “Your cookies really tasted like Christmas,” judge and pastry chef Duff Goldman told her on screen. “We all agree, you really brought an artist’s vision to the cookies on your platter.” When Tarsha was announced as the winner, cheers erupted throughout the restaurant hosting the viewing party. Tears flowed, too. “Being a loyal customer, it’s nice to see a piece of that success for her,” Forbes said. “There’s really nothing better than learning about the success of past students,” Bryant said. “We all have those memorable students, and for me Tarsha is one of the greats. She is an inspiration.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 7 Discover Connect Achieve “My desire to explore the world carried over into school. … I’m not stressing out trying to prepare for a test; I’m just learning.” — Alyson Black ’16 Living to learn SOMMERVILLE SCHOLAR HAS A PASSION FOR DISCOVERY BY BRYAN GENTRY If Alyson Black ’16 had time for yet another major or minor, it would be English. She has spent most of her time working on her two majors — biomedical science and chemistry — and her mathematics minor. But while math and science courses present her with problems that boil down to one correct solution, she has enjoyed classes where she can analyze literature and come to a vast array of possible answers. “I love that here at LC I can develop both of those ways of thinking,” Alyson said. Alyson’s passion for learning is one reason Lynchburg College named her the 2016 Richard Clarke Sommerville Scholar, the highest academic honor the College bestows on students. Chemistry professor Dr. William Lokar, one of Alyson’s academic advisors, noted Alyson’s interests in all subjects, in8 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 cluding science, social issues, philosophy, and politics. “Alyson is driven by what fascinates her, not by just what is required of her,” Dr. Lokar said. “Alyson has a unique way of delving beyond what is near the surface to develop insightful responses on many topics. “What sets her apart from most other students is that she embodies a liberal arts education in everything she does,” he added. Alyson’s love for learning took root as she grew up exploring the world around her in a rural area just outside Lynchburg. “I’ve always been curious,” she said. “My desire to explore the world carried over into school. I’m enjoying myself. I’m not stressing out trying to prepare for a test; I’m just learning.” When Alyson attended the Central Virginia Governor’s School for Science and Technol- ogy, some of the teachers there mentioned their bright, inquisitive student to Dr. Allison Jablonski, a biomedical sciences professor and associate dean. When Alyson came to LC, she continued to develop a positive reputation among the faculty. Dr. Jablonski finally taught Alyson in a recent cancer biology class, and decided everything she had heard from other professors was true. “She’s motivated. She’s curious. She’s extremely bright. She asks probing questions,” Dr. Jablonski said. “It’s a dream to teach a student like her.” Alyson’s two majors and her minor have a lot in common, a fact which thrills her. “The most exciting part of school is when different ideas start to converge and connect,” she said. She applied her knowledge of biology and chemistry and her mathematical skills in an independent research project about the way PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK some molecules in the immune system respond to E. coli. She plans to study pharmacology in graduate school because of the way it appeals to her interests in biology, chemistry, and medicine. Alyson also spends a lot of time reading from a bookshelf that includes biographies, popular science books, and literary fiction. Serving as a Peer Assisted Study Session leader for an “infamously difficult” organic chemistry class has helped Alyson develop one of several visions for her future. She would love to teach college herself one day. Her intelligence, combined with interpersonal skills, make her a great fit for that, said Dr. Jablonski. “She’s a natural teacher.” Before coming to LC, Alyson first enrolled in a large state university. But the first day of orientation revealed a high-pressure, competitive style of academics. She withdrew, and one of her high school teachers recommended that she take a class at Lynchburg just to test the water. It was perfect. “Everyone was so friendly and welcoming,” she said. “They encouraged discussion and curiosity. It seemed like it was more of a team effort in search of success.” Alyson said the honor of becoming the Sommerville Scholar was especially meaningful because of one facet of its history: Almost 30 years ago, the award went to Dr. Stephen Smith ’88, ’93 MEd during his senior year at LC. He went on to become the director of the Central Virginia Governor’s School; he was the teacher who first encouraged her to think about LC. Considering him one of her role models, Alyson feels she is on the right track. “It’s neat to see it come full circle,” she said. PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK Dividends FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FIRM HIRES SENIOR WESTOVER HONORS STUDENT, LACROSSE ATHLETE BY BRYAN GENTRY industry,” he said. “I became more interested in THE FACT THAT RYAN CONNORS ’16 secured making investment decisions.” a full-time job before starting his senior year at The internship allowed Ryan to work alongLynchburg surprised no one. side BlackRock analysts and learn the ups and The job offer revealed the natural progresdowns of wealth management. Then, BlackRock sion of someone with Ryan’s natural talent and offered him a full-time financial analyst job. work ethic, said Head Men’s Lacrosse Coach He knew that BlackRock likes to hire from its Steve Koudelka. internship program, and he was honored to see “Ryan came here with a very competitive that happen in his case. “For it to actually come spirit about him that was obvious from his high to fruition is something that I’m extremely proud school success in the classroom and on the of,” he said. “I can’t wait to lacrosse field,” said Koudelka. start there.” “We’ve allowed him to build “Ryan came Ryan said his experiences off of that.” here with a very at LC prepared him to sucLacrosse was the first inceed in the internship and terest that drew Ryan to LC, competitive spirit get a job offer at the end. He but the academic challenge about him that was recalled Coach Koudelka’s in the Westover Honors Proobvious from his advice to sit at the front of the gram appealed to him, too. The program required high school success classroom, participate in disand take questions Ryan to take many classes in the classroom and cussions, to professors. “I’ve always he had never planned to take on the lacrosse field. benefitted from getting to in college, but that has led to know my professors better the ability to make connecWe’ve allowed him and getting engaged in distions across disciplines, think to build off of that.” cussions with them,” Ryan critically, analyze information, — Steve Koudelka said. The small class sizes at and write well, Ryan said. LC make it easy to interact “Those things pay dividends.” with faculty, he added. The strength of that interdisciplinary back“They take incredible pride in what they do,” ground is obvious in the work he does for he said of his professors. “They definitely put economics courses, said Dr. Gerald Prante, the students first.” Ryan’s academic advisor. “He sees all sides of Ryan also has stood out as a defender on the world,” Dr. Prante said. “In the economics the lacrosse field. Last year, he played in two department, we gave him sufficient skills to be NCAA tournament games as the team fought able to do what he had to do to get the job, but to the national title game, where he won the his skill set goes beyond what we taught him.” NCAA Elite 89 Award for having the highest Ryan majored in economics and minored in GPA of any athlete competing there. Going into mathematics and political science. A year ago, his final season, he is prime for more success. his quest for work experience led him to an in“I think Ryan’s best days are still ahead of ternship with BlackRock, a well-known financial him,” said Koudelka. “His last semester, we management firm. “The process of interviewing hope, is his best semester.” and trying to get an internship really led me to learn a whole lot more about the finance Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 9 Discover Connect Achieve “… If you want to know what students thought and what students did, read The Critograph.” Tales from The Crit THE CRITOGRAPH MARKS CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY A little more than 100 years ago, nine Virginia Christian College students published their school’s first newspaper. “The Critograph,” they called it, and they printed several times that first year; a few copies of some of the earliest editions remain in the Lynchburg College archives. “The Critograph started last October without a cent, and for the year its entire running expenses range something near $450,” reads a May 1916 editorial. But in its first year, the publication had earned enough revenue to donate $25 cash to the library and $40 in free advertising to the College; adjusted for inflation, that’s like $544 and $870, respectively. “We are proud of this record,” the editorial says. Those students laid the foundation of a century of independent student journalism. Over the past 100 years, the biweekly newspaper paper has covered issues including sports, 10 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 BY BRYAN GENTRY civil rights, international politics, and student government. “Our history is in that newspaper,” said history professor Dr. Clifton Potter ’62, a former Critograph staff member who now writes a history column for the paper. “You can go back and read The Critograph at the beginning and come forward to our time, and watch people change — watch generations change. … If you want to know what students thought and what students did, read The Critograph.” Also known as “The Crit,” it has a loyal following. Paper copies start disappearing soon after the campus racks are filled. Off campus, former writers and editors “come out of the woodwork” to support The Critograph any time they hear rumors that some colleges are cutting student newspaper funding, said professor Agatha Rule, Critograph advisor. Although print publications have taken a financial beating in the past decade, The Critograph continues strong with the College’s support, Rule said. “It’s been here for 100 years because the communication studies department knows its value. I think the college administration also knows how valuable it is,” she said. “They know what a service it is.” This year, the 100-year-old newspaper is led by Editor-in-Chief Alexa Nash ’16. She and her staff strive to be the eyes, ears, and voice of the student body. “The students let us know what they want to know about, and we send our people to investigate it,” she said. Working on The Critograph cultivates skills that students can apply in careers both in and outside journalism or public relations, Rule said. Meeting deadlines, writing well, and communicating effectively are universally applicable. Journalism also develops the dogged CRITOGRAPH STAFF PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK; ALL OTHER PHOTOS COURTESY OF LYNCHBURG COLLEGE ARCHIVES determination to get to the bottom of difficult questions. “They don’t have to know the answer, but they have to be able to go find it, be confident that they can find it, and find the best answer that’s out there,” Rule said. Many former Critograph staff members say working on the paper at LC helped their careers. For example, Cyrus Krohn ’94 has worked for CNN, Slate Magazine, and the Republican Party. Now he’s the executive producer of Cheezburger.com, an internet humor website. “I feel like I owe my entire career and my success trajectory to The Critograph,” he said. After earning weak grades through most of his high school career, Cyrus found his academic passion in the Critograph office. He served as the sports editor and also wrote a recurring opinion column. “The Critograph helped me focus,” he said. The academic credit Cyrus earned by working on The Critograph was enough to help him graduate a semester early. An internship at CNN resulted in a job offer from the network, which set the stage for everything since then. PHOTO BY LINDSAY MICHIE “It’s all attributable to that phone call from my journalism professor asking if I wanted to be sports editor of The Critograph,” he said. One of Cyrus’ fondest memories about The Critograph was the freedom of expression the paper afforded to him and other writers, even when the conservative views in his personal column clashed with his professors’ opinions. “Never once did the college ever, ever, censor me or try to suppress my work,” he said. Students experienced the same kind of freedom 50 years ago, Dr. Potter said. “We were very proud that we could say what we wanted to say,” he said. Today’s staff writers said the freedom of the press remains well respected at LC. “We’re a free press in here,” Alexa said, noting that President Garren has expressed strong support to her. “He really values the student voice, and he knows that The Critograph is one place the students decide what’s important and what to say about it.” Even the advisor, Rule, has a very hands-off approach, allowing the editors to make deci- sions and take accountability for the printed product, Alexa added. That freedom is crucial to the paper’s identity. Although there are no records that indicate why The Critograph got its name, Rule believes it might stem from Plato’s “Crito,” in which Socrates explains why he will not escape from prison on the eve of his execution. He and his friend Crito discuss justice, virtue, and the worth of the crowd’s opinion. “Then, my friend, we must not regard what the many say of us, but … what the truth will say,” Socrates says. “The Critograph,” Rule and her students said, means “truthful writing.” Because the reputation of the media has been damaged by occasional scandals and accusations of bias, truthful writing is a fitting aspiration for future journalists, Alexa said. “My goal is to bring truth back to the media through what I have learned as a student journalist with The Critograph.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 11 Force on the field BY MIKE CARPENTER ONE OF THE HORNETS’ youngest field hockey athletes claimed an uncommon combination of awards last fall. Nikki Simpao ’19 was the first player ever to earn the Old Dominion Athletic Conference’s Rookie of the Year prize and the Player of the Year award in the same season. She also garnered second-team All-American honors and was named All-State Rookie of the Year. A freshman midfielder from Stafford, Virginia, Nikki led the ODAC in goals (15), assists (12) and points (42). She scored at least one point in 12 straight contests to close out the season and had five game-winning tallies. “Nikki’s work ethic is truly commendable,” said LC head coach Enza Steele. “If we start a new drill in practice and I go help another player and return back five minutes later, she is often still working on that skill because she isn’t satisfied. Nikki is intrinsically motivated and will do whatever it takes to make herself better.” Nikki, an athletic training major, takes both academics and athletics seriously. “Lynchburg College and Division III in general have helped me have a balance between the playing field and the classroom,” she said. “Athletic training is very time consuming and a lot of observation hours need to be filled.” After accomplishing so much in just one season, the sky is the limit for her next three years. “I still have a lot of individual things to work on and improve. I think we should have a very strong team next year and we should be able to advance in the NCAA Tournament.” 12 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 13 Women’s soccer nets field and classroom honors Hornets pass milestones on the court BY MIKE CARPENTER BY MIKE CARPENTER STUDENT-ATHLETES on the women’s T he Hornets enjoyed successful seasons on the basketball court as student-athletes passed personal milestones and set new records. Hilliary Scott scored his 100th career win as head coach of the men’s basketball team on December 12, when the Hornets defeated Goucher College 80-65. The men later rewrote the record book in a 160-156 win against Roanoke College on Feb. 17. They broke the conference and school records for most points in a game, as well as LC’s records for three pointers and free throws. The two teams’ total of 316 points surpassed the NCAA Division III top mark. Senior forward Alex Graves earned a spot in the 1,000 point club during an 87-83 win over LaGrange College just before Christmas. A three-time All-Old Dominion Athletic Conference selection, he finished his LC career in the top 10 all-time in scoring, field goals made, field goal percentage, free throws made, rebounds and blocked shots. “Alex has exemplified what being a true Hornet is all about,” said Scott. “He has not only improved and excelled on the court, but he has been a tremendous student. It has been Graves rewarding to have all things that we discussed during the recruiting process come true for him throughout his career. Alex has helped put this program in a position to compete for championships for many years to come.” On the women’s side, senior Sammi Goldsmith broke her own single-game assist record with 14 during a 73-60 victory over Meredith College January 2. She broke the Hornet career assist mark, formerly held by head coach Abby Pyzik Smith ’04, earlier in the campaign. “Sammi has been a tremendous contributor in leading our program to new heights,” said Coach Pyzik Smith. “Her career assist milestone this year has taken hours and hours of hard work while no one else was watching to be the best that she can be while wearing the Lynchburg jersey. Her selflessness and teamfirst mentality has taken her to the top and there is no one more deserving.” Senior Chaney Forbush went over the 1,000 point mark during a dominating 28point, 11 rebound performance against Washington & Lee University on January 6 and pushed the Hornets to an overtime victory. Koudelka Named Division III Men’s Lacrosse Head Coach of the Year LONG-TIME LYNCHBURG COLLEGE HEAD men’s lacrosse coach Steve Koudelka was named the 2015 USILA Division III Coach of 14 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Goldsmith the Year this winter. The 2015 campaign was the most successful season in program history. The Hornets finished 21-3, won the Forbush She ends her Hornet career in the top 10 for career points, field goals made, field goal percentage, free-throws made, free throw percentage, rebounds and blocked shots. “We are so proud of Chaney reaching the 1,000 career point milestone,” said Pyzik Smith. “To be one of only eight individuals to accomplish this feat shows what a special young woman she is. Her dedication, commitment, and love for Lynchburg on and off the court set the highest expectations for every individual in our program to look up to. We are so thankful for her investment and belief in Lynchburg College. “Both of these senior captains have achieved tremendous accomplishments within our program, but even more importantly they are both wonderful individuals and role models,” she added. “Nothing is more gratifying as a coach than to witness the growth of two incredibly strong women.” As this magazine went to press, both teams won their conference championships in the same afternoon. Old Dominion Athletic Conference title, and advanced all the way to the NCAA Division III championship game. LC won four tournament games en route to the title game and had a 19-game winning streak. Koudelka was also named the All-State Coach of the Year for his efforts. Lynchburg has won six conference crowns and earned nine trips to the NCAA Tournament in Koudelka’s tenure. He has been named the All-ODAC and All-State Coach of the Year four times each and has a 234-95 career record at LC. A place on this team S hannon Dodd knew for years that her oldest child, Caitlyn, might need a kidney transplant someday. When “someday” turned into “soon,” Caitlyn was being recruited to play soccer at Lynchburg College. They shared the news with Coach Todd Olsen, knowing that Caitlyn’s kidney condition could prevent her from taking the field. Coach’s reaction: Don’t worry. “She’ll always have a place on this team, no matter what,” Shannon remembers him saying. Dr. Olsen lived true to his word. When Caitlyn’s kidney disease prevented her from playing during her sophomore season, he asked her to be a goalie coach and use her experience as a striker to help the Hornet keepers sharpen their defense. “It really helped a lot to be able to still be a part of the team and still do things that mattered,” Caitlyn said. Her teammates formed a powerful support network, especially when the illness took a heavy toll on Caitlyn. “Having the whole team behind me really got me through,” she said. “So many times I just wanted to leave school, but I just looked at them and realized I can’t. I’ve got to be there for them, and they’re here for me.” PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK BY BRYAN GENTRY Seeing her team win the national championship was a highlight of Caitlyn’s sophomore year. But a few weeks later, Caitlyn’s doctor determined that it was time to pursue a kidney transplant. After extensive testing, Shannon proved to be an ideal donor. Caitlyn thought her mother would have some trepidation about giving up a kidney, but it was consistent with Shannon’s hope for the happiness of her three children. “It’s the best possible feeling a parent could have,” Shannon said. “What parent doesn’t want to save her child’s life?” On May 12, Caitlyn and her parents went to a Norfolk hospital where one of Shannon’s kidneys would be removed. Caitlyn stayed at her mother’s side until it was time for her to go to the pediatric hospital to prepare for her own surgery. About five months after the transplant, Caitlyn’s surgeon cleared her to play the game she loves. A health promotion major, Caitlyn hopes to someday practice pediatric surgery, a career she chose when she was just 4 years old out of gratitude for what doctors had done for her. “They gave me my life back,” Caitlyn said, “and I wanted to do the same for somebody else.” ON L I N E EXT R AS Watch a video interview with Caitlyn and her mother at magazine. lynchburg.edu soccer team earned several athletic and academic honors this fall. Senior midfielder Jade Woll and sophomore defender Emily Maxwell each received first-team All-American honors from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America. It was the first season in program history that LC had two members on the first team. Woll led the Old Dominion Athletic Conference with 14 assists and also scored six goals. Her speed and ability to attack defenders changed the game for LC, said head coach Dr. Todd Olsen. “She allowed us to become one of the most prolific attacking teams in the country.” Maxwell also was named the ODAC and All-State Player of the Year. This season, she helped the LC defense allow just nine goals in 25 matches, and also added two goals and two assists. “Emily is the youngest All-American in our program’s history,” said Olsen. “We are excited to see what the future holds for Emily because I feel like we have just tapped into her potential.” Maxwell also earned academic honors on the College Sports Information Directors of America All-District team. Meanwhile, junior defender Natalie Deacon earned first-team CoSIDA Academic All-American honors. These honors showcase the program’s commitment to soccer, service, and academics, said Olsen. “I get really excited when one of our players earns accolades because of their performance on the field. I get ecstatic when one of our student-athletes earns accolades in the classroom,” he said. “This is the purpose of the D3 experience — playing a sport because one loves it and excelling in the classroom because this is one’s future.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 15 Lynchburg voices LYNCHBURG VOICES is a new section devoted to the words of the Lynchburg College community. Writers are welcome to share personal experiences, commentary, and other musings of interest to the community. Send submissions to mageditor@lynchburg.edu. My mother’s final gift ‘THEY KNEW THAT IF I HAD KNOWN THE FULL DETAILS, I WOULD HAVE LEFT SCHOOL AND NOT FINISHED MY JUNIOR YEAR. AND SO I DID NOT KNOW THAT SHE WAS DYING.’ Rebuilding New Orleans BY BRADLEY JACKSON ’16 T here are phone calls that you never want to experience, calls that change your life. I received one of those calls on March 30, 2015. I didn’t answer the phone at 9:32 a.m. because I was in class, but when I saw that the phone call was from my dad, I knew that something was not right. He never called that early. His voicemail left me with a sense of panic. My mother had been transported to UNC Hospital in Chapel Hill, N.C., and I needed to get there as soon as possible. My mother and father were high school sweethearts whose romance grew into a lifelong friendship and marriage of 25 years. I 16 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 grew up in a family that instilled core values through regular involvement in church. Those values included, but are not limited to, serving others, doing what is right, giving back to younger generations, and giving everything your best. Another one of those values was to set my mind on a goal and achieve it. For the past few years, my goal has been to complete my degree in athletic training at Lynchburg College. My mother and father pushed me to reach for my educational goals because neither had graduated from college. To them, my education was everything. They knew that getting an education would help me provide a stable environment for myself and my future family. In January 2015, my mother went to the hospital because of abdominal pains. Within a week, she was diagnosed with colon cancer. During that semester, I focused heavily on school work. I also prepared to work on summer research with Dr. Tom Bowman, one of my athletic training professors. I had no idea, though, that my mother’s cancer had metastasized and spread throughout her body. My parents decided not to tell me that it was stage 4 cancer because they did not want to distract me from my goal of graduating from college on time. They knew that if I had known the full details, I would have left school and not finished my junior year. And so I did not know that she was dying. It was not until I went home for spring break that I realized my mother’s illness was taking a tremendous toll on her. When my father called me the following Monday and asked me to come back, I feared for the worse. Throughout the drive to Chapel Hill, I had no clue what kind of shape my mother would be in, or even if she would still be alive for me to speak to by the time I arrived. When I walked into her hospital room with my father and preacher and saw my mother, seemingly unconscious, all I could do was break down. Then I heard my mother say my name. I gathered myself and then spoke to her. I was able to spend one of the hardest, yet most rewarding weeks of my life — the last week of my mother’s life — in a hospital room with my parents. We shared many special moments that week, but one that stood out was my receiving an email that notified me I had received a grant that would allow me to work with Dr. Bowman on summer research. When I saw the message, I handed my phone to my mother so she could read the good news herself. Before she died, she was able to see that her sacrifices on my behalf had led to a great opportunity for me. Shelley Thomas Jackson passed away April 3, 2015 at approximately 1:43 a.m. I’m thankful that I was able to spend the last week of my mother’s life by her side. I am also thankful that my parents pushed me to be the very best I could be, especially when it came to school. Because of their dedication to my education, I am honoring them by pursuing graduate school in hopes of obtaining my master’s degree in athletic training. I plan to become an athletic trainer at a college, where I will spend my days helping people avoid, and recover from, injury so they can excel to the best of their ability. I will often think of my mother’s example of serving others and how she motivated me to get an education. Bradley Jackson is a senior at Lynchburg College. ILLUSTRATION ISTOCK.COM/MERIEL JANE WAISSMAN BY DR. JIMMY ROUX J ust over a decade ago, Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans, my hometown. The powerful winds and flooding killed thousands and drove countless others from their homes. Today, many of the homes left behind still show signs of the storm. Last year, I jumped at the chance to bring 12 Lynchburg College students, along with my wife and son, to rebuild homes in New Orleans over winter break. Two days after Christmas, we piled into two vans and made the 14 hour drive, arriving at the Youth Rebuilding New Orleans bunkhouse the night before we started our service work. YRNO is a nonprofit organization which started after Hurricane Katrina to rebuild blighted and abandoned homes in New Orleans. After the storm, New Orleans had more blighted homes than any other city in the country. Thanks to years of work by nonprofits like YRNO and their volunteers, the city now is third in the country with around 30,000 blighted or abandoned homes. Although work remains to be done, much progress has been made. YRNO has been successful largely from the volunteers who come from all over the world. Most volunteers are school groups like ours and stay in the YRNO bunkhouse. The Lynchburg College group had the entire bunkhouse to ourselves since most groups volunteer during spring break and summer. I had three goals for the trip: service, learnPHOTO COURTESY OF JIMMY ROUX ing, and fun. We scheduled three days of service and two days of fun, and learning took place throughout the trip. The Lynchburg College crew was assigned to labor on the 2700 block of St. Ann Street, where homes were drenched with several feet of water during the hurricane. After a meeting and ice breaker each morning, we were given tasks which included installing insulation, building fences, moving piles of wood and rock, taking truckloads of debris to the landfill, and organizing a tool shed. We were very lucky to be involved in paving a driveway, where we could literally leave our mark with the words “Virginia Group” in one small corner of the wet concrete. A trip to New Orleans would not be complete without sampling a wide variety of the city’s unique culinary creations. We had Po’ boys at the Park Tavern, and oysters and Boofries at ACME Oyster house. My sister had us over to her house for red beans and rice (a NOLA tradition) and kingcake (a Mardis Gras specialty), and my cousins collaborated to create a New Orleans feast of jambalaya, crawfish etouffee, gumbo, fried chicken and bread pudding. It was funny to hear a student remark, “We fish with crawfish, but you all eat them”? Yes, we New Orleanians will eat just about anything. We took three tours while we were in New Orleans. A disaster tour allowed students to see the devastation caused by Katrina, which hit land when most of them were still in el- ementary school. We visited the site where a levee broke — a rupture that contributed to flooding 80 percent of New Orleans. On a walking tour of the French Quarter, we learned about Andrew Jackson and the battle of New Orleans. In a garden district walking tour, we toured a cemetery and saw homes of the rich and famous people including Archie Manning and Sandra Bullock. We watched the fireworks and fleur-de-lis drop in Jackson Square on New Year’s Eve. Since this was our first time leading a service-learning trip, my wife, Melissa, and I were uncertain about many things. But we were both impressed by the students’ desire to be of service, get their hands dirty, and do tasks enthusiastically. As I asked the students about their reasons for coming, they almost always talked about their desires to learn about the culture of New Orleans and also to help people less fortunate than themselves. I believe the experience fulfilled those expectations. Our students not only saw the impact of a tragic natural disaster, but they witnessed the determination of one city to recover, and they helped in that recovery. That they would spend part of their break from school doing this says a lot about these Lynchburg College students. Dr. Jimmy Roux is a communication studies professor and chair of the communication studies department. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 17 Hope ‘A BEAUTIFUL THING’ BY BRYAN GENTRY M ychael Ward ’18 expected a normal first day of band camp leading up to his senior year of high school: marching, music, and fun with friends. But his band director, Russell Pawlas, had other plans. He pulled Mychael aside and said, “You’re going to college.” “I don’t know how to get there,” Mychael thought at the time. But Pawlas took Mychael to a classroom to meet someone who did know. Heidi Vande Hoef, director of the Future Center at E.C. Glass High School, started helping Mychael prepare college applications and find ways to pay for his education. Later, Beacon of Hope, the organization that operates the Future Center, gave Mychael a scholarship. Now Mychael is a Lynchburg College sophomore who gives standout trumpet performances both as a solo artist and a member of campus ensembles. He also uses his talent as a professional musician for theatre productions in the Lynchburg community. He credits Pawlas and Vande Hoef for steering him the right way. “They made me feel like someone aside from my mom wanted to see me make it in the world,” he said. “As cliche as it sounds, they did give me a feeling of hope. It was a good feeling to have.” 18 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 PHOTO BY NATALIE LEDONNE Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 19 ‘The power to change’ M ychael’s path to LC began when he and his middle school classmates picked their band instruments. At first he wanted a clarinet, but he noticed a lot of his classmates were choosing the same. So he tried the trumpet instead. “From the moment I picked up my trumpet, I fell in love with music,” Mychael said. “I played in middle school and all through high school. I was in every ensemble you could think of.” That summer, Mychael noticed diagrams of a piano keyboard above the notes in his trumpet book. He expressed curiosity, and his mom found an electric keyboard at a yardsale. Mychael taught himself the notes on the piano and soon he was playing pop songs by ear. “Music has the power to change lives,” Mychael said. “I believe that’s what music did for me.” His love for music shielded him from influences like drugs and alcohol, which overtook some of his friends’ lives in high school. “Music kept me away from that. It kept me busy. I never grew bored with it.” Mychael’s musical talent was evident to his band director. “He innately understood that there was more to music than pushing the right button and blowing the right note,” said Pawlas. “Mychael could pick up pretty much anything and play it. It became obvious that he had a future in music. It was also obvious that he wasn’t going to get to college any other way.” Mychael was the first person in his family to graduate from high school. He had never seen someone go to a four-year college, so he had no idea how to navigate that path himself. But he knew education was important. His mother enrolled at a technical school in Lynchburg to set an example for her sons. About six years ago, she completed a degree in healthcare technology. “She’s always been that inspiring person to me,” said Mychael. “First and foremost, she’s the one that I want to make proud.” ‘The best idea’ B eacon of Hope was created for students exactly like Mychael. It resulted from a series of dialogues among Lynchburg citizens concerned about racial inequality — discussions that were championed by Joan Fitzgerald Foster ’69, ’70 MAT, ’85 MEd, who was Lynchburg mayor at the time. The discussions revealed that too many children in the city believed that college was not an option, either because of family background or financial concerns. When someone suggested the idea that became Beacon of Hope, Rosel H. Schewel ’71 MEd, ’83 EdS, a member of the LC Board of Trustees and a retired faculty member, knew she Joan Foster and Rosel Schewel wanted to get involved. “I thought it was the best idea I had heard in my lifetime,” she said. She and her husband, Elliot Schewel, decided to help the idea get off the ground with significant financial gifts. Beacon of Hope staffs two Future Centers, one in each of Lynch20 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 burg’s high schools, where students can get help with any post-high school plan. Whether students are looking for a full-time job, college scholarships, technical training programs, or military service, Future Center directors help them navigate toward their goals. At E.C. Glass, Vande Hoef gives classes on SAT and ACT preparation, helps students understand application deadlines and write admission essays, and teaches both students and parents about financial aid options. The sticker price of a college education sometimes prevents students from even applying to a school in the first place, Vande Hoef said, so education about scholarships and grants is crucial. Vande Hoef’s guidance helped Mychael as he refined his application essays and searched for scholarships. Jamison Spinner ’19, another E.C. Glass graduate now at LC, also found a lot of direction at the Future Center. “I knew I had the academic ability to go to college, but I needed financial support,” said Jamison, a computer science major. “That was the big what-if. The big question.” Getting a scholarship from Beacon of Hope Jamison Spinner gave Jamison the ability to attend LC and live on campus, he said. “That makes all the difference for me.” Both Jamison and Mychael have thrived at LC. Jamison has enjoyed the welcoming attitude of other students, as well as the convenience of going to school close to home. Mychael has become an important member of the LC jazz band and other ensembles. Dr. Chris Magee, a Lynchburg College music professor and trumpet player, said Mychael has the combination of natural talent and the grit to try difficult pieces. “He definitely has a thirst for playing the trumpet,” Dr. Magee said. Mychael also has maintained a higher GPA in college than he had in high school, which he credits to professors who motivate him to do well. “I know they want to see me succeed,” he said. “Some days are harder than others; some days I just don’t want to do the work. But if they see me slacking off, they’ll pull me into their offices and give me a little pep talk, and I do better.” In the near future, Beacon of Hope’s leaders plan to expand their scholarship program to support more students who attend colleges in Virginia, especially those who attend one of the colleges in the Lynchburg area. Joan Foster, who now serves as Beacon of Hope’s director of development, is charged with raising funds to provide scholarships to even more people. Her goal is to let every Lynchburg City Schools student know that all doors are open to them. “We’re making sure all children have hope and a promise that they can get to graduation day and have a plan in place,” said Joan. Creating that expectation and helping students meet it can give them hope, said Rosel. “It often changes students’ behavior so they attend school, they participate in the class, and do all the things that make it possible for them to go to college and improve their chance for a better life,” she said. The news of Beacon of Hope’s growing program is music to Mychael’s ears. “It’s a chance for people to do things that they never thought imaginable,” he said. “It’s going to help someone, like it helped me. That’s a beautiful thing.” PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 21 Once a Hornet, always a by Bryan Gentry Lynchburg’s “Dean with a Dream” retires after 30 years 22 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 T he last time John Eccles shaved off his beard, he landed a job interview at NASA, and it went well. Perhaps his mother-in-law had been right: a clean-cut look could be his ticket to greater opportunity; a way out of low-paying student life jobs. But the tragic Challenger spacecraft explosion in 1986 forced NASA to reconsider its future plans, putting John’s potential staff development position on hold. While he waited, John decided to give higher ed one more try. Soon, Lynchburg College hired him as director of housing. A week after that, NASA finally called to invite John to one more interview. Too late. “We’ve often thought: What if those phone calls had been reversed?” John said, recalling the story in his office one rainy afternoon last fall. “Thank goodness they weren’t,” said A.J., his wife of 36 years. When John and A.J. announced they would retire from LC this June, the reactions of many students and alumni on social media included the phrase, “It’s hard to imagine.” And it’s true: 30 years after the Eccles family came to Lynchburg, it is difficult to envision the College without them. Through John’s leadership as vice president and dean and A.J.’s service as a teacher, they have helped define what people envision when they think about LC. PHOTOS BY JOHN MCCORMICK “Every college has some celebrities; usually they’re football coaches. Here we’ve got John Eccles.” — Dr. Michael Robinson John’s beard, long-since regrown after his flirtation with the NASA job, is an iconic image recognized by thousands. And many alumni owe their success in life to the forgiving attitude, professional advice, and dose of reality they could find in his office. “He’s a legend,” said Anne Gibbons, associate chaplain, director of the Bonner Leader Program, and one of John’s longtime friends. “Even if you don’t know him or have personal interaction with him, there’s this legend — a true legend — that Dean Eccles is a great guy. He’s approachable, he’s fair, he’s fun. Students will come up and take a selfie with him even if they don’t know him, just because he’s John Eccles.” Students also illustrate T-shirts and posters with his image. “The kids wouldn’t do that if they didn’t love him,” said Steve Smith ’88, ’93 MEd, one of the first resident assistants John trained. (Steve’s son now attends LC.) “As part of his job, Dean Eccles has to hold students accountable for making poor decisions. It would be very easy for students to not love someone who has the authority to do that. But you see it in generation after generation.” What would John Eccles do? John and A.J. grew up only a mile away from each other in Virginia Beach. While A.J. attended public school and developed an interest in special education, John went to Catholic schools, where the devotion demonstrated by visiting priests motivated him to attend the high school seminary in Richmond. They met at a summer party when both were rising juniors in college — A.J. at James Madison University, John at St. Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology in Indiana. They quickly forged a friendship and started exchanging letters when they returned to school. A.J. was smitten by John’s kindness, humor, and poetry. It was too bad, she thought, that he was devoted to the priesthood. “If there’s one like him, there will be another like him,” she hoped. Meanwhile, John was having second thoughts about his vocation. One day, he decided he could not fathom going through life without a family of his own. He could not give himself wholly to church service. “God gave me the pink slip,” he said. John and A.J. started dating, and soon they were contemplating marriage. He graduated from St. Meinrad one semester Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 23 John also has appreciated her willingness to help him work through challenging parts of his job. “We were fortunate enough to be in a place where I could learn from her perception of things, which helped me to be a better dean of students,” he said. “There’s this legend — a true legend — that Dean Eccles is a great guy. He’s approachable, he’s fair, he’s fun.” Always a Hornet — Anne Gibbons Left: John and A.J. pictured in the mid-1990s at the wedding of Bruce McMillan ’89 and Kim Ellis McMillan ’92 — just one of many LC alumni weddings they have attended. Right: John and A.J. in front of the Drysdale Student Center shortly after it was finished. early, proposed to A.J., and worked in steel construction until their wedding in June, 1979. Since John needed a career path outside the church, he enrolled in a graduate community counseling program at JMU, where he and A.J. worked in residence life. The rest is history. John came to LC after three years of working for a large university in a big city in Pennsylvania. He and A.J. quickly decided Lynchburg was a better place to raise children, and the culture at LC was a perfect fit for John. His students felt the same way about him. “I was really impressed by John because he was open and sincere,” said Steve Smith, who was a sophomore resident assistant when John arrived at LC. “He loved to have fun, but also worked hard and modeled what he wanted us to do.” Setting an example is an important part of John’s leadership style. He has a reputation of picking up litter alongside students or even by himself. Even after he became vice president and dean in 1994, he chose to stay in the rotation to be “dean on call” for evening needs. “Leadership is a lot about the motivation and the esprit de corps that you have to build,” John said. “You have to get in 24 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 the trenches. You have to do the things that your people are doing. After a while, you build trust.” John used Appalachian Trail hikes, James River canoe trips, challenges on the College’s high ropes course, and other activities to help RAs discover their own strengths and refine their talents. “He made us operate as a team and find the positives in each other and in the people in our halls,” said Whitney Warner ’96. Now an elementary school principal, Whitney regularly draws upon lessons she learned while working for John. “John has certainly shaped my leadership style,” she said. “I often ask myself, what would John Eccles do?” That’s a question more people should ask themselves. Second chances Tom White ’95, ’01 MEd spent a good portion of his first semester in college explaining himself to the housing director. “I wasn’t a troublemaker, but I spent some time around troublemakers,” Tom said. Unhappy with how his semester was going, Tom told John one day that he was quitting school. They had a long talk about all of Tom’s options. “I ended up dropping out, but some of the conversation stuck with me over the next few months,” Tom said. “I felt like John really cared about my future.” Before long, Tom asked for an opportunity to come back. Later, John hired him as an RA, which made Tom think differently about his potential. “I had a lot of doors open, but I didn’t realize they were open.” Since then, Tom has seen John offer good advice and second chances to many students. “He was always able to turn negatives into positives,” he said. “He holds people accountable, but he also turns mistakes into lessons.” John firmly believes in letting people learn from their failures. “It’s more what you do with your mistakes that defines who you are,” he said. John’s way of working with people made him a beloved figure on campus and helped his image find its way to coveted T-shirts, Critograph comics, and the famous “Dean with a Dream” bobblehead. “Every college has some celebrities; usually they’re football coaches,” said Dr. Michael Robinson, an LC professor who specializes in pop culture, superheroes, and fame. “Here we’ve got John PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK Eccles. How did he become that? By doing the right thing. By being a genuinely good guy.” Family matters Lynchburg College embraces family, John and A.J.’s top priority. That’s why they stayed for 30 years. Even as John’s career advancement and the College’s growth brought him more responsibility, he always made time for his family. “One of the legacies that I hope he leaves is that you can balance a career and a life and be successful at both,” said A.J. The three Eccles children spent a lot of time on campus while growing up, and the family often joined John’s student staff for hikes in the mountains or outings at Smith Mountain Lake. Students quickly saw that A.J. was John’s perfect match. “She’s the spirit and the engine behind John,” said Tom White. A.J. eventually enrolled at LC to brush up on her math skills when she was teaching fourth grade. She earned her second bachelor’s degree with a mathematics major in 2005. Today, she serves LC students as a math instructor and academic coach. A.J. teaches math with a unique twist: PHOTO ON LEFT COURTESY OF JOHN ECCLES; PHOTO ON RIGHT BY NATALIE LEDONNE ’18 her students use bingo chips, cups, blocks, and pies to help them visualize arithmetic, fractions, and other concepts. They write journal entries to reinforce what they learn, and A.J. provides video tutorials for review. This approach is perfect for many students, said Teresa Gunter, who is earning a history degree and serves as the academic and career services administrative assistant. “I thought that math was going to be my downfall,” Teresa said. But after taking A.J.’s Liberal Arts Math class, she had newfound confidence in all her subjects. “If I can overcome that class and succeed, then I can do any class and be successful.” A.J.’s dedication has inspired other students, including Will Donnelly ’16, to become teachers. “She made learning completely different from what I had ever experienced in my life,” said Will. “She is so uplifting, positive, and supportive to every student.” John loves hearing success stories about A.J.’s students. “I’ve always been very proud of her unfailing determination to help kids realize that they really can learn, they really are smart, they really can do what they don’t think they can do,” he said. About a year ago, John and A.J. started thinking about retiring. The timing made sense: John had completed his dream of building the new student center; they were still young and healthy enough to travel and enjoy retirement together; they had a growing number of grandchildren; and John thought the College’s new strategic plan could benefit from a new dean with fresh vision. None of those factors made the decision easy. “There’s so much here that I love, and it’s so connected for me,” said A.J. John and A.J. plan to continue living in Lynchburg, where they will spend a lot of time with family. They will travel as well as volunteer in the community. They also anticipate visiting campus for home games, concerts, and theatre productions. “This isn’t goodbye, it’s more like, ‘See ya’ round,’” John said. “As we like to say around here, ‘Once a Hornet, always a Hornet.’” When John told Anne Gibbons he was retiring, she had the same reaction as many other people: shock and sadness. But the feeling gave way to joy. “When we love someone as much as we all love John, selfishly we don’t want him to leave,” Anne said. “But when we think about what’s best for John, how could we do anything but want to wish him the best?” She answered that question with a challenge to herself and others: continue John’s legacy of making Lynchburg a welcoming, affirming, supportive place. “He gave so much for 30 years,” Anne said. “We owe it to him to give 110 percent for the next 30 years.” O N L I N E E X TR A S See a video from the fun photoshoot with John, A.J., and students, as well as a slideshow with photos from throughout John’s career, at magazine.lynchburg.edu. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 25 “MY DAD’S LOVE FOR THE JOB HERE AT LYNCHBURG COLLEGE WAS UNBELIEVABLE.” — ROB BREWER ’77 W LEGACY of CHANGE LC R E M E MBE R S FOR M E R PR E SIDE NT by BRYAN GENTRY 26 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 PHOTOS: LYNCHBURG COLLEGE ARCHIVES hen Lynchburg College broke ground on two residence halls in one day in 1964, the young president Dr. Carey Brewer ’49 offered a few words about change. “The College is growing, changing, improving, all with a suddenness that is astounding when compared to the past,” he said. “Whole new vistas, new experiences, new opportunities are opening to it.” Those words set the stage for the following 19 years during which Dr. Brewer served as president of his alma mater. Under his direction, Lynchburg College’s student body doubled, the size of the faculty tripled while the professors’ academic credentials increased, and the campus experienced rapid growth. Following Dr. Brewer’s death at age 88 on December 4, 2015, many members of the College community gathered to celebrate his legacy. Rob Brewer ’77 said that his father’s life was filled with the kinds of stories that, although true, would be unbelievable if they formed the plot of a novel. For example, at 17, Dr. Brewer lied about his age in order to join the Navy and volunteer for World War II. While attending college he met his sweetheart, Betty Ann Brighton Brewer ’49; both graduated magna cum laude. When he studied at Harvard, he met John F. Kennedy, who later selected Dr. Brewer to serve his administration as director of emergency preparedness. He worked closely with Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Dr. Brewer took office at LC just a few months after Kennedy’s assassination. America reeled with the loss of “Camelot,” the nickname later used to describe the Kennedy administration, but LC found optimism in its new leader, said Dr. Thomas Tiller ’56. “When Carey came from Washington with his pretty wife and their young children and his attitude of meeting every challenge, it felt as if the good of ‘Camelot’ had been preserved and brought here,” he said. “It’s almost impossible to describe the excitement of Carey’s early days in the presidency,” said Dr. Julius Sigler ’62. Dr. Brewer swiftly instituted changes such as racial integration and the easing of curfew rules. He led the Partnership for Progress campaign, which set out to raise $10.6 million in a decade but met its goal after only five years. In the first 10 years of his presidency, the endowment grew from $2 million to $7 million; it reached $11 million by the time he retired. The infusion of dollars helped construct many of the buildings that are now campus landmarks: the original Burton Student Center; Snidow Chapel; residence halls including McWane, Tate, and Montgomery; Turner Gymnasium; Wake Field House; and the Capron Library. In addition, numerous buildings were renovated. Dr. Brewer also strengthened the College’s ties to the surrounding area, making it a “more sustainable, regional institution,” said Dr. Tiller. The College began offering graduate programs designed to meet specific local needs. “The new president believed that a rising tide would lift all boats,” Dr. Tiller added. “Carey worked to make this ‘Lynchburg’s college,’” Dr. Sigler said. Expanding the size and scope of Lynchburg College was not enough for Dr. Brewer, though. He also wanted to improve the quality of education students could receive at LC. “The world needs leaders, but they cannot be satisfactorily mass-produced,” he said in his 1964 speech at the groundbreaking of two residence halls. “They must still, as always, be hand-carved, custom-made by teachers skilled in their craft and devoted to their work.” Thus, Dr. Brewer set out to grow the faculty and reduce teaching loads, even as faculty salaries increased. This helped LC retain fantastic faculty and attract new professors. “He wanted the College to be the best in every credential,” Dr. Sigler said. Speakers at Dr. Brewer’s memorial service also remarked on his spirited enthusiasm for LC athletics — which sometimes raised the ire of game officials. “He is likely the only LC president to have been thrown out of an athletic event,” Dr. Sigler said. After retiring in 1983, Dr. Brewer spent some time researching the beginnings of WWII in the Pacific. He later often helped the College with fundraising, and he served in many other community organizations. “My dad’s love for the job here at Lynchburg College was unbelievable,” said Rob. Dr. Brewer’s leadership not only transformed LC, but it set the course for the College’s future. He provided a pattern that his successors look to. “I started out following in the footsteps of Carey Brewer. He was my mentor,” said Dr. Kenneth R. Garren, president of Lynchburg College. Dr. Garren referred to one of Dr. Brewer’s most well-known statements: “A great college is always in the process of becoming rather than being.” “He laid a vision out for us,” said Dr. Garren. “And we continue to follow through.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 27 O Fifteen years in focus BY BRYAN GENTRY 28 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK ne day last fall, a Durham, N.C.-based photographer named Jeremy Lange walked across the Dell taking pictures of Dr. Kenneth Garren. It took a while; the Lynchburg College president stopped to say hello to almost everyone. Their photoshoot was interrupted when two students walked by and asked to take a picture with Dr. Garren. One pulled out a smartphone and they leaned in for a photo. Lange’s photos were destined to illustrate a frontpage story in The Wall Street Journal about the clout college presidents wield on Capitol Hill. The student’s selfie may have gone on Snapchat or Instagram. The contrast between the two provides a perfect picture of Dr. Garren’s first 15 years in office. Although his response to higher education’s modern challenges has required more of his attention and energy, he remains focused on the people who live and work at LC every day. Pressure on colleges has intensified since Dr. Garren became president. Schools must prepare students for success in a new economic environment and push back against market stress and political pressure, too. Some college presidents have dropped out amidst the challenges, but Dr. Garren remains undaunted and committed to Lynchburg and its mission. “You’re dealing with a very rare combination of talents when you’re dealing with Ken Garren,” said Jeffrey Kurzweil, a member of the Board of Trustees and parent of a current student. “Ken has a combination of high energy, high integrity, high intelligence, considerable focus, a good nature, and an open manner. That makes him a force of nature in a way.” Kurzweil added that Dr. Garren’s wife, Sheila, is with him every step of the way. “I only hope he and Sheila will want to do this for a very, very long time going forward.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 29 games, or late-night finals week meals. “We try not to say no when we’re invited,” Dr. Garren said. “We want to see them. We want to be with them.” The Garrens recently performed the Hornet Hop, a dance they introduced to LC, during halftime at a basketball game. The students went wild. “They all love him,” said Hannah Myers ’14. Hannah crossed paths with the president numerous times as an undergraduate and now as a graduate student in educational leadership. She said Dr. Garren leads people without micromanaging. He delegates tasks to the right people, trusts their judgment, and seeks consensus. “He wants to do things right, and he wants to make sure everybody’s on board,” Hannah said. CHALLENGES AHEAD D BY THE N U MBE R S ‘HIS HEART IS ON THE ENTIRE COLLEGE’ +44% B Enrollment +73% Full-time Faculty +10 Graduate Programs +142% Minority Student Population +20% Internship participation Increase from 2011 - 2015 30 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 efore coming to LC, the Garrens spent most of their lives in the Roanoke area. Dr. Garren taught mathematics and served in leadership at Roanoke College while his wife taught in an elementary school. At first Sheila was hesitant to leave the life she knew so well, but she had a quick change of heart when she came for her husband’s finalist interview at LC. “I knew that I had to come here,” she said. Dr. Garren immediately loved LC and wanted to champion the school’s potential. “I felt sometimes that people didn’t really understand how good Lynchburg College was,” Dr. Garren said. “I considered my job to be a cheerleader, internally as well as externally.” Abby Pyzik Smith ’04 said Dr. Garren’s feelings about the College were evident when he took office her sophomore year. “You would walk to lunch and he’d be eating with students. He would be in the stands of every home game,” she said. “He’s not just targeted on one area, but his heart is on the entire college.” A quick look at the record confirms that academics were among Dr. Garren’s top priorities. Under his leadership, the College has grown the ranks of full-time faculty, expanded academic facilities and programs, and started an international program in St. Lucia. “President Garren has had enormous positive impact on the academic life at Lynchburg College,” said Dr. Julius Sigler ’62, who served as a dean under Dr. Garren. “Ken has gone to great lengths to personally support students and faculty.” One of the most notable academic advancements came in the realm of graduate studies, where the College’s commitment was wavering in 2001. Dr. Garren was convinced that graduate education should play a more important role at LC. He asked Dr. Ed Polloway to lead and grow the graduate studies program. Since then, the College has doubled the number of graduate degrees offered and the graduate student population has tripled, becoming a fiscal boon to the College. Total enrollment has grown 44 percent since 2001. Meanwhile, more students have been getting experience outside the classroom through internships, especially over the past five years. Dr. Garren believes it is important to offer students an education that yields career-ready skills while staying grounded in the liberal arts, teaching them not only to work well, but to live well. “When people get a college education, they’re being empowered, but how will they use that power?” Dr. Garren said. “The moral and ethical underpinnings of their education determine that.” The College’s connection to the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) is important to ethical education, too, prompting Dr. Garren to participate actively in the church’s higher education ministries. “He makes it very clear that he’s a man of Christian faith, but he’s open to all people, open to diversity and inclusivity,” said Stephanie McLemore, chaplain of Lynchburg College. “That says a lot about him, and a lot about the roots of the founding of the College.” When he came to LC, Dr. Garren also saw great potential in LC athletics. “We had an excellent athletic program that was attracting successful, scholarly students,” he said. His enthusiasm for athletics was like an injection PHOTOS AT LEFT AND TOP BY JOHN MCCORMICK; RELAY FOR LIFE PHOTO BY NATALIE LEDONNE of adrenaline to coaches like Dr. Todd Olsen, head women’s soccer coach. “It gave me great encouragement that this was the place where we could build really great athletics programs,” he said. “What President Garren has been able to do is show how athletics and academics complement each other and raise the morale of the whole college.” Student athletes witnessed Dr. Garren’s enthusiastic support, too. Abby Pyzik Smith remembers getting a card from the president congratulating her on reaching the 1,000 point mark during her senior season. Now the head women’s basketball coach, she sees the practice continue; Dr. Garren recently sent a card to her team and hand-wrote every team member’s name on the card. Her players loved the gesture. “It was a huge motivating point to know that we are working not only for our team, but for Lynchburg College,” Abby said. PEOPLE PERSON C oach Olsen said Dr. Garren’s sincere appreciation for people fuels his leadership. “His great strength as a president is that he’s developed relationships across the board, from the people who take care of the grounds to the people who run the physics department.” Rita Detwiler, vice president for enrollment management, said Dr. Garren had a similar reputation when the two worked together at Roanoke College. “He loves people, and people know it,” she said. His presence resonates well at open houses and other events for families considering LC, Detwiler said. “Prospective students and their parents love him. … They’re tickled by the fact that he is an engineer and a colonel in the army, he has a successful career in higher education, and he’s able to talk to people no matter what their background.” Sheila magnifies her husband’s effectiveness when they work together. By forging relationships with couples, they have enticed additional giving to the College. They connect with students by hosting student groups for dinner and attending as many campus events as possible, including concerts, PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK r. Garren is infectiously optimistic about the prospects of operating a vibrant, successful college. But he also takes note of problems that need attention. “He makes us aware of the challenges in front of us, but he always speaks about the opportunities that we have to meet those challenges,” Detwiler said. “He is completely unintimidated.” Dr. Garren has stepped up his involvement in political matters that impact higher education. Most notably, he influenced congress members and Department of Education officials to oppose a proposed federal college rating system that could have backfired against students. This surprised his wife. “He has never really in the past engaged in political matters,” Sheila said. “But when he perceived that the federal policies could possibly have a negative effect on his college, he decided to try to do something about it.” The president’s action on legislative matters raises his national profile, said Pauline “Polly” B. Flint ’71, ’73 MEd, chair of the Board of Trustees. “When he sees something that should be corrected he doesn’t mind going to the very top if he needs to,” she said. “He’s a leader among leaders.” Outside LC, Dr. Garren is highly regarded by other college presidents. This May, the Council for Independent Colleges will present him with the W.L. Foreman Award in recognition of his outstanding service on behalf of independent colleges and universities. Last year, Dr. Garren’s longtime friend Dr. Phillip Stone was appointed to lead Sweet Briar College, a nearby women’s college which had nearly closed. Before long, Dr. Garren visited his friend to deliver a list of ways LC faculty and staff could help Sweet Briar. “It was a wonderful act of friendship,” Dr. Stone said. “He told me how important he thought it was that the college be saved, and that higher education needed to defend itself from these challenges we face.” Dr. Garren was 60 when he applied to be president of LC. Fifteen years later, he has no retirement date set. He plans to serve as long as he can help LC move forward. That’s the right timetable, Dr. Stone said. “When you’ve got that right combination of a leader who’s not afraid of the challenges, strong support from community, faculty, and board, it is not something to be taken for granted,” he said. “Ken is authentic, he’s genuine, and his integrity shines through,” Dr. Stone continued. “I think he’s one of the finest men I’ve ever met in higher education.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 31 LYNCHBURG COLLEGE’S NEW STRATEGIC PLAN IS DEVELOPING A CLEAR VISION OF THE DIRECTION THE COLLEGE — OR, SHALL WE SAY, THE UNIVERSITY? — WILL TAKE IN THE YEARS AHEAD. The latest draft of Vision 2020 sets high aspirations for Lynchburg College, ranging from academic innovations to increased athletic prowess. “The Strategic Plan is a bold vision to reinvent, reconceptualize, and reimagine a campus with highly networked connections among the academic, co-curricular, and residential experiences,” the draft says. “We will transform the ways in which we educate our students and change the ways in which we do business to prepare students and Lynchburg for the challenges and opportunities of our global and digital society.” “There’s an attempt to push the College outward as a more forward-looking institution,” said Dr. David Richards, chair of the faculty and a member of the LC Strategic Planning Team. “There is this desire to expand on what we are already doing … and strive to be something bigger and better than we are right now.” LC’s Strategic Planning Team chose the goals and initiatives after gathering input in on-campus meetings and through alumni feedback online. President Kenneth R. Garren encouraged the team to set high, aspirational goals. After the Board of Trustees reviewed a draft of Vision 2020 in February, the College is seeking feedback from alumni, students, faculty, and staff to inform the plan’s continued development. The document asserts that “Lynchburg College is positioned to achieve national prominence because of its student-centered culture characterized by challenging and engaging academic programs.” It envisions the College becoming “a national leader of engaged learning” with faculty who “employ the most innovative pedagogical practices.” It imagines Lynchburg leading the nation in “Liberal Arts 2.0,” the evolution of a traditional liberal arts education that meets the demands of the modern world. 32 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 O N L I N E E X TR AS Read the latest information about the strategic plan and share your feedback at www.lynchburg.edu/aboutlc/institutionaleffectiveness/strategic-plan/ Virginia private institutions that use “university” in their names, and two doctoral degrees also distinguish the College. Using “university” could help attract more international students, whose cultures use the term “college” for high schools or two-year institutions. After initial research showed that a name It sets a goal of having 100 percent of stuchange would not impair the way prospecdents complete a practicum, service learning tive students view LC, the Board asked the experience, a research project, or a study Strategic Planning Team to consider a name abroad program. change during the development of the straA faculty task force is has already started to tegic plan. Would “university” be consistent develop ideas to revise the general education with the school’s identity and support the curriculum over the next year. “The strategic goals of the LC community? plan calls upon us to try to look at general No decision regarding the name has been education … in a more integrated fashion made, and input on this topic has been sought so that we continue to provide an experience at each stage of the strategic planning process. that has a strong liberal arts foundation for Even if the name were to change, LC would our students,” said Dr. Sally Selden, vice pres- maintain the core aspects of its identity, said ident and dean for academic affairs. Dr. Selden. “We would never change our Athletically, Vision 2020 proposes developapproach for helping our colleagues and our ing one of the top 30 Division III programs in students at every stage of their development,” the nation. she said. Facility-related goals include renovations Dr. Richards said that many discussions of science and research spaces, residence halls, have focused on identifying exactly how the and athletics buildings, as well as the possible institution can expand without compromising creation of entertainment facilities and more what it does best: serve individual students. graduate student housing. Environmental “We want to acknowledge that we have sustainability would be a hallmark of the something special here and it’s something facility growth. valuable that we can offer students,” he said. The campus would be connected by a “We should be eager to let people know what cutting-edge information technology infrawe’re doing here.” structure. “Through an analysis of space and As the Strategic Planning Team prepares technological innovations, the College will another draft of the strategic plan, it is vital to transform the experiences of students, creatget feedback from as many community meming an environment to collaborate and build bers as possible, said Pauline “Polly” B. Flint relationships face to face and in the cloud,” ’71, ’73 MEd, chair of the Board. the latest draft says. “With all these different people involved, we The draft of the strategic plan also chalwill make sure that we’re not leaving anything lenges the College to continue finding out,” she said. “We will hear not only from new ways to serve the local area, becoming older sages, but also from younger people “Lynchburg’s university.” who are in the classrooms and are impacted Now, about that word — university. The most by some of the decisions we make.” strategic planning process includes an invesStephen Bright, vice president for business tigation of changing the College’s name to and finance, said that the strategic plan can claim university status, a proposal the Strategic help the College thrive in a changing market. Planning Team recommended to Dr. Garren He pointed out that the last strategic plan a year ago. laid the groundwork for two new medical The idea reflects growth in the student body graduate programs. “Those things have really and programs. LC has a larger student body helped shape the institution,” he said. “We and more degree programs than numerous certainly have high hopes for the next plan.” Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 33 Gifts DONORS INVITE LC COMMUNITY TO CONTRIBUTE TO COMMON CAUSES of inspiration SNIDOW CHAPEL Organ Renovation A friend of Betty Hawkins Arrington ’64 once dared her to take an organ class at Lynchburg College. “She said, ‘Betty you can take organ, but there is no way you can make an A in that class,’” Betty recalled. “That was just the challenge I needed.” While enrolled in the course, Betty practiced every day. She proved her friend wrong and earned an A. “I have been playing the organ at my church ever since,” she said. Betty has now made her own challenge to the rest of the LC community: She and her husband, Larry R. Arrington ’71, made an initial gift to spearhead donations to renovate the organ in Snidow Chapel. The College is now raising money to pay for the organ repairs in time for a series of recitals later this year to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Snidow Chapel’s construction. The organ improvements will create many opportunities for the LC community and future music students, said F. Johnson Scott, music professor and organist. “The organ built there was and is a great instrument, we’re just looking to extend its abilities a little further,” he said. “We also will return it to its original playing level.” Snidow Chapel was built in 1966 and named for LC benefactors Clifton L. Snidow Sr., one of the early members of 34 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Johnson Scott, a Lynchburg College music professor, said the Snidow Chapel organ renovations will allow the organ to be used more for teaching and recitals. the College’s Board of Trustees, and his wife, Sallie E. Snidow. An Opus 1548 pipe organ was installed the following year by the Reuter Organ Company of Lawrence, Kan. The organ is used for recitals, worship services, and teaching. The instrument functions remarkably well considering the age of its mechanical parts, Scott said. But about 10 years ago, he and other organists noticed several problems developing. They could hear the sound of air escaping the pipe area, and several keys and stops were not as reliable as they once were. Some of the buttons that should allows organists to quickly change the sound of the organ (rather than pause to pull several stops) do not work. The issues are not evident to listeners, though, thanks to Scott and others learning to “play around the problem,” he said. But the defects complicate matters such as teaching organ to students or hosting a guest artist for a recital. “You have to know which ones don’t work and which ones do,” Scott said. “Any time we have guests here, it presents problems. You can’t expect them to learn overnight.” The renovation that is proposed to take place this summer would repair the organ’s problems and perform maintenance. The work also would expand the instrument’s capabilities by making all stops available to all keyboards, allowing more versatile combinations of sounds. The choir loft area would be modified to make the organ console moveable so it could be positioned appropriately for different purposes. The project will cost about $225,000. The Arringtons donated $100,000 as a challenge for the College community to raise the rest. Seventh Street Christian Church Foundation of Richmond donated another $50,000, getting the project close to reality. The repairs will get the organ into prime playing condition and allow LC to host more recitals in the Chapel, which is among the city’s best buildings for organ acoustics, Scott said. Betty looks forward to hearing the organ when it is playing at its best, but she also is excited that future LC music students will have a higher quality instrument to work with. “They will only know this best quality; that will be the guideline that they have to go by,” she said. “I hope they will experience and appreciate and be completely inspired to do their best.” PHOTO BY JOHN MCCORMICK Dr. Todd Olsen and studentathletes on the women’s soccer team have made multiple trips to Africa to provide service and witness the spirit of ubuntu. SPIRIT OF UBUNTU Scholarship An anonymous donor has challenged the Lynchburg College community to endow a new scholarship inspired by the spirit of ubuntu and the LC women’s soccer team. The team adopted ubuntu, an African philosophy sometimes expressed as “I am because we are,” as its mantra during the 2014 season that led to a national championship. After the national title victory, a friend of the College offered to match up to $50,000 in donations to create the new Spirit of Ubuntu Scholarship Fund. The endowed fund would provide a scholarship each year to a rising junior or senior who exemplifies “teamwork, human kindness, and a sense of community,” according to the donor. The news was exciting to members of the team. “We are excited that someone looked beyond just the end result of a national championship and saw the unity and love that we had for one another along the way, which was even more important to us than winning it all,” said Natalie Deacon ’17, a defender on the team. “We hope that this scholarship will encourage Lynchburg College students to pursue service and value the importance of teamwork, because it is powerful beyond measure.” PHOTOS COURTESY OF TODD OLSEN Natalie said that ubuntu is “the heartbeat of our program year in and year out.” In addition to inspiring unity on the field, it motivates the teammates’ work with Woman of Worth: Against All Odds, a program through which they mentor girls at Dunbar Middle School in Lynchburg and raise money to support the education of several girls in Gulu, Uganda. Last May, Natalie traveled to Uganda and Kenya with several of her teammates and Coach Dr.Todd Olsen to meet the girls they sponsor and provide service with Sports Outreach Institute. She learned more about ubuntu by seeing how the women they worked with supported each other in difficult situations. “They truly believed that their identity rested in the group, that the group comes before the individual, and that although one of them may be weak, together they are strong,” she said. “Although we went to these countries to empower women, we found ourselves being empowered as well.” Lynchburg College President Dr. Kenneth R. Garren announced the scholarship last fall after the women’s soccer team was inducted into the LC Sports Hall of Fame. “The spirit of ubuntu — of putting community first, finding joy in serving others, and sharing — is an important characteristic of the Lynchburg College culture,” Dr. Garren said. “This is exemplified by our women’s soccer athletes, who not only unite together for victory on the soccer field, but also join each other in community service at home and abroad. Ubuntu also is evident in this offer by a friend of the College to honor this team not with a gift made in his own name, but a gift that invites all alumni, faculty, staff, students, and friends of the College to unite in a common cause.” The news of the scholarship was an honor for the team. “The women’s soccer team and I are really excited that the Lynchburg College community will continue to honor the ubuntu philosophy by a creating this scholarship,” said Dr. Olsen. “Lynchburg College lives the philosophy ‘I am because we are.’ Lynchburg College excels because we understand that it takes a community of selfless, caring people to educate our young people.” “I hope many members of our community will answer this anonymous donor’s challenge to endow this new scholarship,” said Dr. Garren. Any Lynchburg College student can be nominated for the Spirit of Ubuntu Scholarship. The winner each year will be selected by a committee of deans and faculty members involved in student life. MEET THE CHALLENGE Help renovate the Snidow Chapel Organ or endow the Spirit of Ubuntu Scholarship. ONLINE : www.connect.lynchburg.edu/organ www.connect.lynchburg.edu/ubuntu MAIL: Make checks payable to Lynchburg College with a note indicating the fund of your choice. Send to: Denise A. McDonald Vice President for Advancement Lynchburg College 1501 Lakeside Drive Lynchburg, VA 24501 Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 35 Alumni Association Board of Directors PRESIDENT Wendy Bradley ’91, Woodstock Valley, Conn. VICE PRESIDENT David A. Rosser ’90, Waxhaw, N.C. ALUMNI OUTREACH COMMITTEE CHAIR Paul E. Goldenbaum ’66, San Antonio, Texas ADVANCEMENT COMMITTEE CHAIR Sherwood N. Zimmerman ’64, Forest, Va. STUDENT ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE CHAIR Lesley Day Villarose ’02, Eden, N.C. COMMUNICATIONS AND MARKETING COMMITTEE CHAIR Emily G. Brown ’02, Washington, D.C. TRADITIONS COMMITTEE CHAIR Laura Miller Crank ’79 MEMBERS-AT-LARGE Noble Ackerson-Bonsu ’02, Alexandria, Va. David J. Capps ’77, Lynchburg, Va. R. Michael Dates ’92, Baltimore, Md. Christopher “Hunter” Fairchild ’10, Richmond, Va. Nancy L. Hammersley ’79, ’82 MBA, Raleigh, N.C. Gilbert C. Hanke ’72, Antioch, Tenn. C. Randall “Randy” Harlow ’73, Lynchburg, Va. Lauren McCloskey Hopple ’99, Catonsville, Md. David “Dave” Lang ’06, Philadelphia, Pa. Phebe Phelps Long ’84, Mechanicsville, Va. Ira D. Marshall ’00, Suitland, Md. Kathryn E. McDaniel ’10, Orange, Va. Mari K. Normyle ’97 MEd, Lynchburg, Va. Veronica Millner Soles ’98, Cary, N.C. Helen Hebb Stidham ’66, Manassas, Va., Westover Alumni Society President Jan Colleary Timmer ’77, South Riding, Va. Lee C. Verrone ’90, Mount Vernon, N.Y. LC Alumni on the Internet Reconnect with classmates, teammates, roommates, and friends Facebook Lynchburg College Alumni Association LinkedIn Lynchburg College Alumni & Friends (group) Twitter @LburgAlumni 36 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Alumni News 50’s Class of ‘56 in Reunion April 22-24, 2016 Ripple effect We are all familiar with the idea of tossing a pebble into the water. After the pebble disappears below the surface, the ripples that follow continue to spread outward, forever changing the water’s surface. The waves are larger than the small pebble, making an impact bigger than one thought possible. This image illustrates the impact that we can have on one another’s lives; how one person can truly make a difference. This spring, let us celebrate those at Lynchburg College who have made a difference in our lives. This year marks Dr. Garren’s 15th year as president of Lynchburg College, and it’s fitting to reflect on his imprint on the alumni. Partnering with our association, President Garren has been our biggest supporter. He has opened avenues for us, seeking our ideas and looking to the alumni as a valued resource for the College. As LC formulates a strategic plan for the future, the alumni are a big part of the picture, and Dr. Garren is leading the way by encouraging all alumni to participate in this process. His passion and leadership empower us to make a difference. Another person whose imprint has forever changed our landscape at LC is John Eccles. Many of us have had the opportunity to learn from and work alongside John. After 30 years at the College, John has chosen to start a new chapter in life, but he leaves behind thousands of alumni who have benefited from his leadership, wisdom and terrific sense of humor. I know you will agree that, like the waves that wash upon the shore, John’s influence will continue to resonate for many, many years to come. The alumni have always had strong connections and lasting relationships with the LC community. We will continue to share fond memories and build new friendships. Whether you choose to get involved in a big event, such as chairing your reunion, or something smaller, like mentoring a student, you have the chance to form a new connection and make a difference. The Alumni Association welcomes your ideas, your time and talent—the possibilities to become involved at Lynchburg College are endless. Like the ripples in a lake that continue to flow long after the stone is gone, those of us who call LC home will continue to be affected by the passion and service we have shared with one another. Wendy Bradley ’91 President, LC Alumni Association 60’s Classes of ’61 and ’66 in Reunion April 22-24, 2016 n Class of ’71 and ’76 in Reunion October 14-16, 2016 Marc ’69 and Vicki Lang Jordan ’70, ’73 MEd hosted LC Sigma Mu Sigma brothers and alumni in their home in North Myrtle Beach, S.C., following an annual golf outing on the Grand Strand. Charlotte Hall Rhodes ’63, professor emeritus of health and physical education at Richard Bland College in Petersburg, Va., has retired after nearly 50 years of service. During her tenure, she created one of the first online courses at the college in 1998, was instrumental in establishing a Wellness on Campus program, and sponsored several campus extracurricular activities. She plans to spend her time traveling internationally with her family and other retirees and playing on three tennis teams. Also, she will train for the Anthem Richmond Marathon 8K and a triathlon. photo gallery see more of the weekend at magazine.lynchburg.edu C. Wayne Prince ’68 has just completed a round of chemotherapy for colon cancer. He also underwent treatment in 2011 for lymphoma. Both courses of treatment have been successful. Wayne’s granddaughter, Caelyn Andrews ’19, entered LC in the fall of 2015, carrying on the LC tradition of her dad, Ryan Andrews ’90, and her grandfather. 70’s Homecoming 2015 Eddie Gunter Jr. ’64, ’74 MBA won his seventh election to the Campbell County, Va. Board of Supervisors for the Concord District. Eddie served in a management position at Babcock & Wilcox Nuclear Operations Group in Lynchburg for more than 44 years. Most of those pictured were theater majors at Lynchburg College, but all of them were involved in playmaking at LC. Back Row, Left to Right: David Roberts ’69, Albert “Lucky” Noll ’72, Carrie Curtis ’68, Jerry Wolford ’68, Joe St. Germain ’66, Chuck Tooley ’68, Ed Steele ’70. Middle Row: Carol Earnest St. Germain ’65, ’74 MEd, Karen Shafer ’68, Susan Hatfield ’70, Denise Sherman ’71, Anthony Golden ’70. Kneeling: Lorraine Mecca ’71, Frankie Knibb ’68, Jane VanBoskirk ’70 Join us for Westover Alumni Society Weekend APRIL 22–24, 2016 Sharon Roper Kneussl ’74, Eric Kneussl ‘76, Sally Dix Murray ’76, Kathy O’Hara Napier ’75, Jim Napier ‘75, and Dick Murray ‘76 enjoy a visit to Hyannis and Martha’s Vineyard in July 2015. Lynn W. Laing ’73 received the Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming 2015. She has remained involved with her alma mater and hosted a fundraiser in New Jersey to assist with the Drysdale Student Center campaign. Professionally, she has owned and operated two large preschools in New Jersey and has served on a committee that developed licensing regulations for preschools, day care centers, and licensed home care centers. She has also served as co-president of the Ocean Country Directors Club for more than 35 years. Lynn is a breast cancer survivor and a member of a local support group which helps individuals as they undergo cancer treatment. Lynn and her husband are residents of Toms River, N.J. O FFI C E O F ALUMNI R ELATI O NS 434.544.8293 • 800.621.1669 www.lynchburg.edu/alumni Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 37 Class Notes Steven McAllister ’97 MBA, treasurer and vice president for finance at Washington and Lee University, was recognized for his foresight in creating a reserve fund that helped the university endure recent economic turmoil. When the endowment took a sizeable hit from a decline in the stock market, W&L was able to borrow from the reserve fund to support operations. Steven’s many responsibilities include management of the university’s endowment, which now stands at nearly $1.5 billion. “He represents the best of management in the world of higher education and the nonprofit sector,” stated Kenneth Ruscio, president of Washington and Lee. SAVE the DATE October 14-16, 2016 The classes of 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006 and 2011 will celebrate their class reunions. William J. Bodine ’78, ’89 MAd appeared on the LC stage last spring in How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying and in the fall in You Can’t Take It with You. He is the president and CEO of the Greater Lynchburg Community Trust, a foundation committed to enhancing the lives of Central Virginians through the establishment of permanent endowments that distribute income annually to charitable organizations in Lynchburg and the surrounding counties. Bill and his wife Terry live in Lynchburg. Carolyn Morris Bondurant ’79, ’85 MEd was recently hired as a reading specialist at Brookneal Elementary School in Brookneal, Va. Prior to this position, Carolyn worked for 28 years as a reading specialist and language arts coordinator in Appomattox County, Va. and with the Lynchburg City School District. 80’s Classes of ’81 and ’86 in Reunion October 14-16, 2016 James N. Leary ’80 MAd has joined the firm of Dechert LLP as the new chief operating officer. James formerly served for more than 14 years as executive director at Akin Gump, where he was responsible for managing all business-related issues at the firm’s 19 offices. He will hold a similar role at Dechert, overseeing finance, human resources, marketing, technology, and operations. A graduate of the State University of New York at Geneseo, he currently serves as vice president of the school’s foundation board. Nancy Johnson Reaves ’82 has received the 2015 McGranaghan Stewardship Award from The Nature Generation in recognition of her 38 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Homecoming 2016 www.lynchburg.edu/alumni work teaching young people about the Chapman DeMary Trail in Purcellville,Va., as well as how to be responsible stewards of nature. The award is named in honor of Loudoun Valley High School environmental explorations teacher Liam McGranaghan, who was instrumental in establishing the nature trail. R. Scott Johnston ’84 received the Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming 2015. Scott currently serves as director within the Federal Occupational Health Organization through the Department of Health and Human Services. Previously, he held leadership positions with Healthcare Financial Management Association and Booz Allen Hamilton. He serves on the Board of Directors for Community Services for Autistic Adults and Children in Montgomery County, Md. Scott and his wife, Claudia, reside in Vienna, Va. Brenda Harvey Franklin ’88 was recently inducted into the Amherst County, Va. Sports Hall of Fame. Brenda was a basketball team captain in 1967, MVP in 1968, and a recipient of a senior athlete award at LC. 90’s Classes of ’91 and ’96 in Reunion October 14-16, 2016 Melinda “Mindy” Manolovich McCord ’93 received a special citation from LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Mindy played field hockey, women’s lacrosse, and women’s soccer. She was a four-year starter at Lynchburg College, earning Rookie of the Year and multiple other honors. Since graduation, Mindy has coached field hockey or lacrosse at three different colleges and universities and accumulated 224 wins in two sports at all levels. Her teams have earned either first-place championships or runner-up status 10 times during her 21 seasons as a head coach. Mindy and her husband operate MCC Sports Inc., which works to change children’s lives via involvement in lacrosse. They also founded Lax Maniax Elite, a national travel lacrosse club. Mindy currently serves as Jacksonville University’s head women’s lacrosse coach and resides in St. Augustine, Fla. with her husband and two children. Ernest K. Price ’94 MEd, chief of education and visitor services at the Appomattox Court House National Historical Park in Appomattox, Va., has been awarded the U.S. National Park Service’s Freeman Tilden Award, the highest honor presented to a National Park Service employee for outstanding contributions in interpretation and education. Ernie created the “Footsteps to Freedom” program that honored the life and death of Hannah Reynolds, an enslaved woman in Appomattox County. Presented during the events commemorating the 150th anniversary of the end of the Civil War, the program included a first-person eulogy for Hannah Reynolds, a choral performance by more than 100 members from several local churches, and a commemorative funeral procession along the park’s main stage road through the historic village. Hannah Howe Besanceney ’96 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Hannah ran both track and cross country, qualifying twice for nationals and earning all-ODAC honors in 1993, 1994, and 1995. Hannah and her husband, Brian, and two daughters reside in Orlando, Fla. Karen Roberts Dillon ’96 has been named editor of Laker Weekly, a newspaper that covers three counties around Smith Mountain Lake, Va. The weekly is owned by The Roanoke Times. Christopher B. Denning ’99 MEd has written an article, “Increasing Physical Activity for Young Children with an Autism Spectrum Disorder,” which was published in the Fall 2015 DADD Express, a publication of the Division on Autism and Developmental Disabilities, a unit of the Council for Exceptional Children. The article was based on Christopher’s research on practices for individuals with autism, intellectual disability, and related disabilities. 00’s Classes of ’01 and ’06 in Reunion October 14-16, 2016 Michele Vitella Mackie ’00 has begun a new role as associate dean for academic and student affairs at Georgetown University’s School of Continuing Studies, where she oversees academic affairs and compliance, career services, and student affairs. Dr. Mackie was the former associate dean for the College of Arts and Sciences at Trinity Washington University. Ira D. Marshall ’00, a licensed and ordained minister at Greater Mt. Calvary Holy Church in Washington, D.C., earned his doctor of management in organizational leadership in 2014 and was inducted into Delta Mu Delta, an international honor society that recognizes academic excellence in doctoral degree business administration programs. Ira was elected to serve on the LC Alumni Board of Directors in 2015 and currently is in the process of publishing his first book. Carrie Webster LeCrom ’02 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Carrie played women’s soccer from 1998-2001, leading the team to three consecutive ODAC championships and appearances in four consecutive NCAA tournaments. She served as team captain and earned first-team All-American honors in 2001 as well as the Marjorie Berkley Award in 2002. Carrie has completed a doctoral degree in sport management and currently serves as the executive director of the Center of Sports Leadership at Virginia Commonwealth University. Carrie and her husband live in Henrico, Va. Linda Jack Delaney ’03 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Linda was named an All-American in field hockey in 2001 and 2002, and was a three-time All-ODAC honoree in women’s lacrosse. Linda finished her field hockey career with 55 goals, 34 assists, and 144 points. She earned LC Female Athlete of the Year honors in 2002. In 2003, she was voted the Female Senior Athlete of the Year. Since graduating, she has developed a distinguished career coaching both field hockey and women’s lacrosse at Washington & Lee, field hockey at Randolph College and Gwynedd Mercy. She is currently coaching lacrosse at Elizabethtown College. She resides with her husband in Lancaster, Pa. Michelle E. Snyder ’03 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Michelle played softball for the College from 2000 to 2003. She was named Lynchburg College Women’s Athlete of the Year and ODAC Player of the Year in 2003. During the 2000 season, Michelle led the team with 38 strikeouts and gave up only 12 walks in 83 innings. Michelle has one sister, Brittany Dean ’06, who also attended Lynchburg College. Both women played on the College’s softball team for one year as a pitcher and catcher duo, a unique and very special partnership. Michelle currently lives in Huntington, Md. with her husband and two sons. Jamar Hawkins ’04 was recently promoted to senior policy coordinator at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Immediate Office of the Secretary. Jamar will manage a team of public health and science professionals charged with managing health policy matters. Since joining the department, he has helped coordinate the response to a variety of high-profile health policy issues, including the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic and the Ebola virus disease outbreak. He resides in Woodbridge, Va. Karen Vacchiano Speier ’04 MEd is on a teaching sabbatical to do research for her upcoming book on the need for developing emotional intelligence and systems thinking (critical thinking) in K-12 students to equip them for present and postsecondary success in the global economy. She has previously worked as an intellectual disabilities teacher in the Fairfax County, Va. Public Schools and as a teacher-leader/educational specialist in the Lynchburg City Schools. Lynchburg College Graduate Studies A W O RLD O F O PPO RTUNI TI E S Doctor of Physical Therapy Doctor of Education in Leadership Studies Master of Business Administration Master of Arts •History •Music Master of Education •Counselor Education •Curriculum and Instruction •Educational Leadership •Educational Studies •Reading •Science Education •Special Education Master of Criminal Justice Leadership Master of Nonprofit Leadership Studies Master of Physician Assistant Medicine Master of Public Health Master of Science in Nursing (Online Program) Scholarships and assistantships available Information sessions are held all through the year. For dates and times, check http://www.lynchburg.edu/graduate or contact Graduate Studies at gradstudies@ lynchburg.edu 434.544.8383 Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 39 Class Notes Erin Johnson ’05 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. Erin played women’s soccer for three seasons and was named All-American Goalkeeper, ODAC Player of the Year, Scholar-Athlete of the Year, and the VaSID State Player of the Year in 2004. That same year, the women’s soccer team won the ODAC title, and Erin was named the LC Female Athlete of the Year. Equally strong academically, she was also named to the 2004 CoSIDA Academic All-District Team. Erin resides in Davidsonville, Md. William “Billy” McCulloch ’05 was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. He played for the men’s lacrosse team from 20022005 and started in all 64 games during that time. In 2002, he was named ODAC Rookie of the Year as well as the Lynchburg College Rookie of the Year. In 2003 and 2004, he was named Honorable Mention All-American. In the 2005 season he earned Third Team All-American status and lead the Hornets to the NCAA quarter-finals and their second ODAC title. During his career, he amassed 225 points, 161 goals, and 64 assists. He played on three NCAA tournament teams and helped LC win its first and second ODAC championships. He currently resides in Annandale, Va. Ryan P. Cranston ’08 received the M. Carey Brewer Alumni Award at Homecoming 2015. Twice captain of the men’s lacrosse team, Ryan was a three-time All-American, a four-time AllOld Dominion Athletic Conference, and was a part of two Old Dominion Athletic Conference Championships. He is the founder and president of Care for the Cure Foundation, an organization that works to raise money and awareness for blood-related cancers. Ryan is also president of the Care for the Cure High School Lacrosse Tournament. Professionally, Ryan works as an account executive at Aurea Software. He lives in West Chester, Pa. Christopher J. Perzinski ’08, ’12 MEd has joined the University of Richmond’s lacrosse program as assistant coach for the squad’s 2015-16 season. Richmond men’s lacrosse head coach Dan Chemotti said, “Chris demonstrates all of the characteristics that I’ve learned to value in an assistant coach. He is the ultimate professional, he very much understands the definition of loyalty, and to say he is hard working is an understatement. He combines those traits with an enthusiastic personality and passion for coaching the game of lacrosse.” Kami R. Brabour ’09 MEd was recently recognized for her work with Compass Counseling Services in Staunton, Va. The goal of Compass is to work with families and children who are having difficulties either in the home or at school. She also received the 27th annual Distinguished Community Services Award given by the Shenandoah Valley Hit newspaper. 40 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Parents Family Weekend 2015 n photo gallery see more of the weekend at magazine.lynchburg.edu 10’s Class of ’11 in Reunion October 14-16, 2016 Gary D. Duverney ’10 has joined Hourigan Construction in Virginia Beach, Va., as an assistant superintendent. David W. Hill ’10 MEd was elected sheriff of Nelson County, Va. in November of 2015 and assumed his new role on January 1, 2016. David plans to initiate a feedback program to be used as “a safeguard for the community, the sheriff, and the deputies.” David has a degree in criminal justice from Ferrum College and was a deputy for the Nelson County Sheriff’s Office from 2004 until 2007. He has also served as a narcotics investigator with Amherst County, Va. from 2008 to 2010 and a school counselor at Rockfish River and Tye River elementary schools. Paula Kirkland Ledbetter ’11 MEd has been named the new head of Blessed Sacrament Huguenot Catholic School in Powhatan, Va. She previously served as the school’s director of admissions. John F. Regner ’12 has joined E. C. Glass High School in Lynchburg as the new wrestling coach. Jessica N. Crews ’13 has published eight children’s books dealing with how children and adults should treat people who are different from themselves. With the proceeds from book sales, Jessica has established “No Hill Too High,” a nonprofit that promotes her important message. When Jessica was 12 years old, she suffered a traumatic brain injury in an automobile accident, but through a great deal of hard work, constant therapy, and rehabilitation, she graduated from high school, went on to earn her bachelor’s degree from LC, and is now a graduate student at Liberty University. She also works with students with disabilities as a teacher’s aide in Gretna, Va. Tarsha M. Joyner ’13 won the Food Network’s “Christmas Cookie Challenge” in December, besting four other contestants. Tarsha was awarded $10,000, which she used to open her shop, Mrs. Joy’s Absolutely Fabulous Treat Shoppe, in downtown Lynchburg. (Read the article on Tarsha on page 6 in this magazine.) Steven M. L. Perrow ’13, ’15 MBA has written and published his first book, Lampir, a novel about vampires. Steven is working on a second book in the series and has started a third stand-alone book. Rene N. Ballowe ’14 MBA, operations coordinator at Genworth Financial in Lynchburg, Va., was recently selected as one of Central Virginia’s “Top 20 Under 40.” Named Genworth’s Lynchburg Volunteer of the Year in 2013, Rene gives her time to numerous organizations, including the Alzheimer’s Association and United Way of Central Virginia. Rene resides in Appomattox, Va., with her twoyear-old daughter, Lila. Gina M. Grundman ’14 has been named properties coordinator at Imagination Stage in Bethesda, Md. Imagination Stage provides theatre and arts education programs for young people of all abilities. Hilary B. Dobyns ’15 is a special education teacher at Brookneal Elementary School, Brookneal, Va., where she oversees special education for students in kindergarten through fifth grade. Holly D. Knupp ’15 DPT has joined Appalachian Physical Therapy in Broadway, Va., the same PT facility where she underwent rehabilitation following knee surgery when she was 13. She says her decision to become a physical therapist was definitely influenced by her experience at Appalachian. Kennan L. McVey ’15 DPT has joined the staff of Carousel Physical Therapy in Kilmarnock, Va. Her interests include orthopedics, sports medicine, and women’s health issues. Previously, she worked under the direction of orthopedic specialists at Center of Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine of Richmond and pediatric therapists at Children’s Hospital of Richmond, Va. Honorary Alumni Award Winners In 1985 the Lynchburg College Alumni Association established the Honorary Alumni Award. This distinction is given to non-alumni for their exceptional interest, dedication and/or service to the College. Denise Scruggs, director of the Beard Center on Aging, received the Honorary Alumni Award at Homecoming 2015. Denise works as a liaison between Lynchburg College and various agencies, individuals, and organizations. With the help of her students, her office averages more than 300 service contracts annually. Denise is an approved trainer for the National Council of Certified Dementia Practioners and has helped to train hundreds of professionals, social workers, counselors, and administrators. Denise also serves as a mentor to students who wish to pursue careers in gerontology. Denise and her husband are residents of Forest, Va. Head women’s soccer coach Todd Olsen received the Honorary Alumni Award at Homecoming 2015, as well as a special citation from the LC Sports Hall of Fame. Since 1994, he has led the women’s soccer team to a national championship in 2014, earning him the title of 2014 Division III National Coach of the Year. His teams also have won 15 NCAA tournament games, seven Sweet 16s, four Elite Eights, and two Final Fours. As an epidemiologist, Todd has served as a community public health consultant to Sports Outreach Institute since 2007. He has traveled to Kenya and Uganda multiple times to develop and implement community health workshops and programs on community public health issues. Todd resides with his wife and children in Lynchburg. Sports Hall of Fame Team Awards Teams are recognized as teams of distinction based on athletic performance and achievement in sports competition as evidenced by exceptional accomplishments at or above the conference level including advancement to NCAA regional or national competition, regional or national titles, school records, and undefeated seasons 2014 Women’s Soccer Team In 2014, the Women’s Soccer team won the first team national championship in Lynchburg College history. With a record-breaking season of 27-0-1, the team tied a Division III record for the most wins in one season and played 25 shutout games, which set a single-season record in the Division III category. In addition, the team set an ODAC record with 18 consecutive shutouts and set other ODAC records for points scored, goals saved, and assists made. Individual team members also received high honors. Angela Bosco ’14 was named the national, regional, and ODAC Player of the Year and First Team NSCAA All-American. Dessi Dupuy ’15 was named Second Team All-American. Dupuy and Bosco finished their careers numbers one and two, respectively, in ODAC history in both goals and points. Samantha Bagherpour ’17 won the first NCAA Elite 89 Award in College history. Dr. Todd Olsen was named national, regional, state and ODAC Coach of the Year. Individuals who contributed to the team’s success: Samantha Bagherpour ’17,Camille Bartley ’17, Mary Beier ’16, Angela Bosco ’14, Marina Clark ’17, Rachel Cooke ’18, Ashley Karen Hiltz ’16 EdD has been elected representative for the Gills Creek District of the Franklin County, Va. School Board. PHOTOS BYJOHN MCCORMICK Cox ’17, Natalie Deacon ’17, Christine Domecq ’17, Eva “Dessi” Dupuy ’15, Frances Foster ’18, Tess Frelick ’16, Jenna Hall ’18, Alexis Jensen ’16, Amani Jones ’18, Nicole Kopsidas ’16, Emily Maxwell ’18, Camille McCarthy ’17, Dana Nelsen ’15, Elizabeth Oden ’17, Hannah Olds ’18, Kara Schaffer ’15, Sarah Schrader ’16, Morgan Singer ’16, Kelley Smith ’17, Jennifer Snyder ’14, Gabriella Soares ’17, Daisy Thomas ’17, Jade Woll ’16, Dr. Todd Olsen (Head Coach) Tori Dott ’14 (Assistant Coach) Tony Dulak ’11, ’14 MEd (Assistant Coach) Jessica Gonzalez ’13 (Assistant Coach) Shelly Hoath Spanniger ’13, ’15 MEd (Assistant Coach) C.W. Ponton (Goalkeeper Coach) Caityln Dodd ’17 (Student Assistant Coach) Dr. Steve Smith ’97, ’99 MEd (Strength and Conditioning Coach) Lucas Bianco ’12 (Athletic Trainer.) Sports Hall of Fame Posthumous Award J. Walter Miller ’30 James “Walter” Miller was inducted into LC’s Sports Hall of Fame at Homecoming 2015. A four-time letterman, Walter played five sports — basketball, baseball, football, track, and tennis — and was chosen as captain of the football team. While heavily involved in athletics, Walter was president of the Varsity Club, secretary and treasurer of the student body, junior representative of the Men’s Student Council, and a member of the Athletic Association. He had a distinguished career in education in Virginia after graduating from Lynchburg College. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 41 Class Notes Marriages Beverly “Bev” Pfluger ’06, ’09 MEd to Joseph “Joe” Vari III ’07 MEd on May 23, 2015, at the Church of the Epiphany in Richmond, Va. Included in the wedding party were Glenn Pfluger Jr. ’82 and Yvonne Bobiak Pfluger ’82 (her parents); Michelle Pfluger Dulak ’12 (sister); Natalie Pfluger Ingram ’08 (sister); Caitlin Smith Candler ’05; Corri Pfister Sullivan ’05, ’07 MEd; Anthony “Tony” Dulak ’11, ’14 MEd; Jeremy Ingram ’08; and James “Jimmy” Tharpe Jr. ’07, ’09 MEd. Joe is an assistant athletic director and women’s soccer coach at Rhodes College, and Bev is an assistant director of career services at Rhodes College, Memphis, Tenn. The couple honeymooned in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, and they currently reside in Memphis. Beverly “Bev” Pfluger ’06, ’09 MEd to Joseph “Joe” Vari III ’07 MEd Emily Gannon ’07 to Chris Behm Nicole Page ’11, ’15 MSN to Robert Kirby Emily Gannon ’07 to Chris Behm on September 12, 2014, in Bensalem, Pa. Celebrating with the happy couple were Emily Yost Godenschwager ’07, Morgan Crandall ’07, Catherine “Katie” Moran Costanzo ’07, Leah Carney Ginter ’07, Kristine Carney Keeney ’07, Stephanie Gannon ’94, Kathleen “Tara” Gannon-Lavin ’96, Andrew Keeney ’07, Brian Flynn ’05, Denver Davis ’05, Phil Larrabee ’91, and Marc Rosson ’04. The couple honeymooned in Maui, Hawaii, and they reside in Perkasie, Pa. Joshua “Josh” L. Highlander ’07 to Whitney Lynn Fifer on October 24, 2015, at the Westover Plantation in Charles City, Va. Charles White ’07 was a member of the wedding party. Whitney graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University. Josh is a real estate agent with Hometown Realty in Ashland, Va. The couple honeymooned in Charleston, S.C. James David Pask ’07 to Megan Elizabeth Johnson on June 29, 2012, in Manhattan, Kan. Attending the wedding were Mickey Orrell ’07, William Green, Jr. ’09, Charles Shaw ’07, and Garrett Johnson ’06. The couple honeymooned at Walt Disney World, and they currently reside in Nashville, Tenn. Jim earned a PhD in microbiology and immunology at Vanderbilt University. He is the honors program director and an assistant professor of biology at Bethel University in Nashville, Tenn. Sascha Barrow ’10, ’15 MA to Jason M. Gill on October 24, 2015, at Paradise Lake Campground in Spout Spring, Va. Courtney I. Clements ’11 was a member of the wedding party. Sascha is employed with First National Bank in Rustburg, Va. The couple resides in Spout Spring, Va. Nicole Page ’11, ’15 MSN to Robert Kirby on April 11, 2015, at First Baptist Church of Monroe in Monroe, Va. The honeymoon consisted of a cross-country trip to the Grand Canyon, Las Vegas, and Santa Monica, Calif. The couple resides in Lynchburg. Bethany Leeson ’07 to Edward Verrills on August 1, 2015. The wedding party included many alumni from Bethany’s family, including Lyn McEnany Somerville ’75, Anne Goundie Rhodes ’75, Bobbie Little Mason ’73, Don Mason ’73, Janet Mason Leeson ’75, Peter Leeson ’75, Linda Tedford Taylor ’75, Caitlin Camiel Zorn ’07, Rachel Cooke ’07, and Olga Ozarslan ’07. Angela Roxanne Summit ’11 to Zachary Scott Reeves on September 26, 2015, at Chatmoss Country Club, in Martinsville, Va. Jamie Armstrong ’11 was a member of the wedding party. Roxanne is a 2014 graduate of Charlotte School of Law and is employed by Gardner, Barrow, and Sharpe, P.C. Zachary is a 2015 graduate of Averett University. The couple honeymooned in Charleston, S. C. and now live in Martinsville. John Jeffrey “Jeff” Koestner Jr. ’14 MBA to Greylyn Crie ’15 MEd on July 18, 2015, at Bernard’s Landing Waterfront Resort at Smith Mountain Lake, Va. Included in the wedding party were Bobbi Anna Crie ’16 MEd (sister) and Aaron Goodbar ’14 MBA. The reception was held at Bernard’s Landing Clubhouse. The couple honeymooned in Playa Mujeres, Mexico. Greylyn is employed as a teacher at Sugar Hill Christian Academy, and Jeff is an engineer at Power Engineers. The couple resides in the Atlanta, Ga. area. New Arrivals To Sarah Phillips Martin ’02 and husband, Kelly, a son, Graham Joseph, born Aug. 6, 2015. The family lives in Richmond, Va. To Amy Boyles Wellborn ’05 and husband, Brian, a son, Fawkes Adam, born Nov. 13, 2015. The family lives in Dillon, Mont. To Melissa Palmer Feldman ’11 and husband, Brandon, a daughter, Lynette Jean, born Jan. 16, 2015. The family lives in Salem, Va. To Rev. Mark D. Furlow ’13 MBA and wife, Siobhan Byrns, a daughter, Aoife Aurelia, born July 29, 2015. The family lives in Lynchburg. Protect yourself from the sun W I TH TH ES E O U TD O O R H A TS Wide brim Boonie hat, black with embroidered Hornet, adjustable draw string, lightweight polyester $24.95 (Item #1090) Wide brim Boonie hat, grey with red accent (not pictured), embroidered Hornet, adjustable draw string, lightweight polyester $24.95 (Item #34529) Angela Roxanne Summit ’11 to Zachary Scott Reeves 42 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Bethany Leeson ’07 to Edward Verrills Wide brim cotton Boonie hat, camouflage with embroidered Hornet, snap up sides, adjustable chin strap $22.95 (L/XL Item #3569) (M/SM Item#35691) Wide brim cotton Boonie hat kaki with embroidered Hornet, snap up sides, adjustable chin strap $22.95 (L/XL Item #378) (M/SM Item#35690) Relaxed fitted Bucket hat, white with red/white stripe band, embroidered Hornet on brim $16.95 (L/XL Item #368) (S/MD Item#35693) Relaxed fitted bucket hat, kaki with red/white stripe band, embroidered Hornet on brim $16.95 (L/XL Item #35695) (S/MD #35696) LC Campus Store Hours of operation: Weekdays 10 a.m.-5 p.m. lynchburg.edu/student-life/campus-store Call 434.544.8241 for mail orders Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 43 Alumni Profile The Man and the Mold by Betty McKinney Globe-trotting research makes Steve Stephenson ’68 a recognized expert on slime mold Dr. Steve Stephenson ’68 has traveled to all seven continents in in search of slime molds. “Slime molds can affect the entire planet,” said Dr. Stephenson, a research professor at the University of Arkansas. “Their life cycle is mostly in the amoeba stage where they feed on bacteria and release essential nutrients back into the ecosystem. If it weren’t for slime molds, the bacteria would hold onto the nutrients and unbalance the entire world’s ecosystem.” Slime molds (or myxomycetes, as they are known to biologists), are single-celled organisms that can function alone or combine to reproduce. They are not plant, animal, or fungus, although they often resemble a fungus. During their life cycle, slime molds produce fruiting bodies that are surprisingly intricate and colorful. “They come in every color of the rainbow, except a true green 44 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 “One lab on slime molds opened my eyes… There was a real void; I fell into it and never looked back.” (because of a lack of chlorophyll), and they often resemble honeycomb lattices or blackberries,” Dr. Stephenson explained. The fruiting bodies contain millions of spores, which are transported by the wind, a passing insect, or an animal. In their amoeba or “blob” state, slime molds spread like highway networks at a very fast rate. Scientists say they were likely the inspiration for “The Blob,” a 1958 science fiction movie. Dr. Stephenson became interested in slime molds while he was working on his PhD in botany at Virginia Tech. “One lab on slime molds opened my eyes,” he recalled. “I discovered that people didn’t understand them and their ecology. There was a real void; I fell into it and never looked back.” Although he found his passion at Virginia Tech, Dr. Stephenson said it was his time at Lynchburg College that set him on the right track. “Dr. Gwynn Ramsey really made an impact on my life and made a botanist of me,” he said. “He was a very dedicated teacher and botanist and really shaped my career. We still stay in touch and keep tabs on what the other is doing.” Now, Dr. Stephenson teaches plant ecology, forest ecology, and plant biology, the same course he studied at Lynchburg College. Dr. Stephenson has the enviable distinction of receiving almost continual funding support from the National Science Foundation PHOTOS COURTESY OF STEVE STEPHENSON Above: In one life stage, slime molds are intricate and colorful, often resembling honeycomb lattices or blackberries. Far left: Dr. Steve Stephenson on an expedition to subantarctic Auckland Island, south of New Zealand. Right: Dr. Stephenson in northern Thailand with a colleague from Myanmar. (NSF) throughout his 35-year career. In 2003, he received a $2 million grant to direct a worldwide study of slime molds as part of the NSF’s Planetary Biodiversity Inventory. “It was very exciting,” he said. “We were able to study slime molds in the southern hemisphere and discover global distribution patterns. I really regretted the end of the project.” He is also the recipient of two Fulbright awards and numerous grants from the National Geographic Society, the National Forest Service, and the National Park Service. One of his most challenging expeditions was a four-month stay on Macquarie Island, an elevated plateau in the Southern Ocean approximately halfway between Australia and Antarctica. The island’s steep hillsides and rocky beaches are home to penguins, seals, sea lions, and albatrosses. The 30-person expedition conducted research on the island during the summer field season but was battered by sub-Antarctic conditions with sleet, snow, and winds at 60 to 80 knots. Even so, Dr. Stephenson said it was an incredible time. “To find slime molds and fungi that far south was such a rewarding scientific experience that I would gladly do it again!” His research expeditions have often been a family affair with his wife Barbara and daughter Becky. “They have been my number one and two field assistants on numerous occasions,” he said. They too have visited all seven continents, collecting specimens and helping with any number of tasks. Dr. Stephenson describes himself as intense and a workaholic. He progressed from college freshman to PhD in only seven years, earning his BS in botany from LC and his MS and PhD in botany from Virginia Tech. He has written 300 papers and seven books and is now at work on five additional books. One of his books, Myxomycetes: A Handbook of Slime Molds, is in more libraries around the globe than any other book on the subject. “Steve is one of the most prolific researchers and writers I know,” said Dr. Gwynn Ramsey, professor emeritus of biology. “I can’t keep up with him.” In 2014, Dr. Stephenson studied slime molds in Vietnam on a Fulbright award and went to Namibia on a National Geographic grant to work in the Namib Desert, believed to be the oldest desert in the world. He plans to conduct research in the Philippines, and he wants to go to a number of other places such as Myanmar and some of the isolated Pacific Islands. “There are things to study all over the world,” he said. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 45 Class Notes Alumni Profile In Memoriam Reva Hoppenstein Kobre ’30, Nov. 16, 2015 Bernadette Kulp Kyle ’40, July 14, 2015 Virginia Croy Decker ’46, Nov. 20, 2015 Vyola Hunter Jennings ’48, Sept. 11, 2015 J. Wallace “Wally” LaPrade ’48, July 31, 2015 M. Carey Brewer ’49, ’85 LLD, Dec. 4, 2015 Frances Thornton Finch ’49, Oct. 22, 2015 Marvin Tweedy ’49, Nov. 10, 2015 M. “Spotswood” Andes Davis ‘50, July 21, 2015 Virginia Hudnall Dalton ’51, Jan. 31, 2015 Rosemary Shufflebarger Lemon ’51, Oct. 13, 2015 Marjorie Sumida Matsumoto ’51, Nov. 5, 2015 Richard Wright Sr. ’51, Jan. 12, 2015 Charles “Charlie” Walker ’52, July 14, 2015 Stephen Caldwell ’53, Oct. 30, 2015 James Holloman ’56, Nov. 17, 2015 Mildred Walton Arnold ’57, Oct. 23, 2015 William “W.P.” Ellis Jr. ’59, ’71 MEd, Aug. 1, 2015 Ann Jenkins Guthrie ’59, Aug. 24, 2015 Thomas Simpson Jr. ’59, June 23, 2015 Robert “Bob” Whitmore ’59, Sept. 29, 2015 Earl “Tom” Wright ’59, Oct. 15, 2014 Carolyn “Tommi” St. Thomas Kerns ’60, Jan. 23, 2015 E. “Jeannette” Smith Strobel ’60, Nov. 22, 2015 Gene Tomlin ’60, Dec. 4, 2015 Shelby Law McCarthy ’61, July 24, 2015 Russell “Pete” Gowin Sr. ’62, Nov. 13, 2015 Frederick Pitman ’62, Sept. 25, 2015 Edward “Ed” Vaughn ’62, Aug. 20, 2015 Jessie White Rusinko ’63, July 18, 2015 Ray Warnock ’63, July 2, 2015 Melvena Drinkard Wright ’63, Dec. 8, 2015 Richard Lyon ’66, Sept. 1, 2015 Nancy Oglesby Packard ’66, Oct. 18, 2015 Donald Beuerle ’67 MS, Jan. 25, 2015 Everette Wood ’67 MEd, June 24, 2015 David “Dave” Hennigan ’68, July 21, 2015 Bruce McCormick ’68, Aug. 5, 2015 In Sympathy Susan “Susie” Schnebly Smith ’68, Sept. 28, 2015 Richard Williams II ’69, July 5, 2015 Louise C. Womack ’69, ’70 MAT, Dec. 13, 2015 Stanley Shaw ’70, Dec. 2, 2015 Betty Ann Wilson-Powers ’71 MS, Aug. 3, 2015 Eveline Johnson Wood ’72, Aug. 18, 2015 Gerald “Jerry” Branscome ’73, Nov. 6, 2015 Elizabeth Willis Moseley ’73, Aug. 26, 2015 Sherry Cable Morris ’74, Nov. 1, 2015 A. Morris Dawson Jr. ’75, Dec. 13, 2015 Darla Dietz Coyne ’76, Oct. 14, 2015 David Lyles ’76, Nov. 3, 2015 Lucy Smith Stewart ’76 MEd, Oct. 24, 2015 Nancy Butt Angstman ’77, Nov. 26, 2015 Gerald “Jerry” Robinson ’77 MEd, Sept. 4, 2015 Wilson “Ragan” Rodgers ’78 MBA, June 26, 2015 Alex “Sandor” Bognar ’79 MEd, Sept. 19, 2015 Mark Miller ’81, Nov. 6, 2015 Catherine Booth Crowley ’83, Nov. 25, 2015 Marianne Skinner Galloway ’83, Aug. 31, 2015 Alice Roberts Donaldson ’84 MEd, Nov. 28, 2015 Debra Tuggle Patterson ’84, ’90 MBA, Sept. 5, 2015 Jon York ’84, Aug. 17, 2015 Rosemarie “Rose” Kellam Martyn ’85 MAd, Aug. 20, 2015 Sandra Sutherland Haag ’86, Nov. 8, 2015 Cindy Knorr ’86, March 15, 2015 William “Bill” Young ’86 MBA, Nov. 15, 2015 John Zavisza ’89, Nov. 6, 2015 Gary Davis ’92 MBA, Nov. 23, 2015 Ellen Ravis ’93 MEd, July 8, 2015 Anthony Haberman ’97, July 10, 2015 Jane Crews Owen ’97, Dec. 3, 2015 Thalia Harvey ’01 MEd, July 28, 2015 Karen Merricko Bishoff ’08 MEd, Sept. 26, 2015 Gabriel Wise ’08, Oct. 29, 2015 ATTENTION LC GOLFERS! 25TH ANNUAL SHELLENBERGER GOLF TOURNAMENT SATURDAY, MAY 28, 2016 LONDON DOWNS GOLF COURSE FOREST, Va • 1 P.M. SHOTGUN START For more information • 434.544.8497 or grzenda@lynchburg.edu 46 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 Betty Brighton Brewer ’49, husband, Dec. 4, 2015 Joyce Roberson Goforth ’49, brother, July 12, 2015 Charles Thaxton ’50, brother, June 18, 2015 Ann Brewer Elswick ’51, brother, Dec. 4, 2015 Janet “Jan” Knight Tunstall ’53, husband, July 16, 2015 Estherina Shems ’54, ’09 DSc, husband, Aug. 13, 2015 Betty Cooper McKinney ’62, mother, Nov. 15, 2015 Dorie Luck Simpson ’62, husband, June 23, 2015 Shirley Snead Pitman ’63, husband, Sept. 25, 2015 Donald “Don” Cable ’64, sister, Nov. 1, 2015 Joyce “Joy” Rice Warnock ’64, husband, July 2, 2015 Louis Cable ’66, sister, Nov. 1, 2015 Shirley Miller Louthan ’66, husband, Feb. 9, 2015 Elizabeth “Betsy” Moseley Garrard ’69 MEd, mother, Aug. 26, 2015 Gladys Tweedy Martin ’70, brother, Nov. 10, 2015 Gertrude “Trudy” Waugh Carr ’74, grandson, July 31, 2015 James “Mike” Coyne ‘74, wife, Oct. 14, 2015 Mary “Beth” Brewer Huggins ’74, ’87, father, Dec. 4, 2015 Allen Carr Jr. ’75, grandson, July 31, 2015, and mother, Aug. 15, 2015 Robert “Bob” Perkins ’75, father, Sept. 24, 2015 Robert “Rob” Brewer ’77, father, Dec. 4, 2015 Wendy Morris Wood ’78, mother, Aug. 18, 2015 Ann Tweedy Tucker ’79 MEd, father, Nov. 10, 2015 Roberta “Bobbie” Watson ’79, sister, Oct. 17, 2015 Ellen Whelan Harrington ’80, son, Nov. 14, 2015 Ruth Ann Brewer Cassell ’82, ’97 MEd, father, Dec. 4, 2015 Cheryle Bocknek Deacon ’83, mother, Dec. 8, 2015 Arlene Domaleski ’83 MEd, husband, Sept. 14, 2015 Catherine “Cathie” Brewer Daniel ’85, father, Dec. 4, 2015 Teofil “Ted” Grochowski Jr ’85, mother, June 27, 2015 Kathryn “Kitty” Oliver Mauch ’85, father, Nov. 9, 2015 Emily DeJarnette Nash ’85, mother, July 15, 2015 Carol Denham Bertrand ’87, father, Oct. 11, 2015 Howard Harvey ’88, father, Oct. 7, 2015 Thomas “Tom” Martyn ’88 MBA, wife, Aug. 20, 2015 Ann Jennings ’91 MEd, mother, Sept. 11, 2015 Andre Grochowski ’91, mother June 27, 2015 Jonathan Witt ’92, mother, Sept. 21, 2015 William “Bill” Douglass ’94, father, Aug. 18, 2015 Donna Robertson Riordan ’94, ’95 MEd, mother, Dec. 13, 2014 Virginia “Ginny” Brooks Ogden ’98, mother, Dec. 5, 2015 Kasey Purcell Forehand ’00, mother, Aug. 30, 2015 Terri Hancock Linn ’01, mother, Nov. 4, 2015 Melissa Lee Shank ’01, mother, Nov. 12, 2015 Julie Austin-Witcher ’04, mother, July 27, 2015 Amanda Barbara Anthony ’05, father, Sept. 12, 2015 Stephen Brooks ’06, mother, Dec. 5, 2015 Kimberly “Kim” Morris Hieber ’08, mother, Nov. 1, 2015 Eren Harrington ’15, brother, Nov. 14, 2015 Larry D. Tucker Jr. 16, father, Dec. 11, 2015 Graduate keeps downtown Altavista ‘on track’ by Bryan Gentry Every small business owner has a mission that makes her get up each day and put heart and soul into a business. Emelyn Gwynn’s mission is to see them succeed. Just after her graduation in May 2015, Emelyn took the helm of business development in downtown Altavista, a town not far from Lynchburg. As director of the nonprofit Altavista On Track, Emelyn plans events that bring foot traffic downtown, cultivates new opportunities for businesses, helps business owners take advantage of economic development incentives, and leads efforts to use grant money to improve the economic environment. “The thing that I find the most enjoyable about my job is helping and seeing small businesses flourish,” Emelyn said. Emelyn brought fresh ideas to the town, and the rest of the community is catching her vision. “Her youth and her exuberance are infectious,” said Dennis Jarvis, Altavista’s director “The thing that I find the most enjoyable about my job is helping and seeing small businesses flourish.” of economic development. “You clearly see that in the way her ideas are accepted in the community and move forward.” Last spring, Jarvis contacted the career services offices at several local colleges to let them know of a job opening. For Emelyn, a communication studies major, it seemed like the perfect next step. At the time, she was completing an internship in Lynchburg’s Office of Economic Development. Her work in Lynchburg City Hall had demonstrated Emelyn’s creative thinking and quick learning, said Anna Bentson, Lynchburg’s assistant director of economic development. “There is no one-size-fits-all economic development strategy. The field requires people who can explore ideas, communicate well, and adapt quickly to changing business and community needs,” Bentson said. “She showed great capacity for listening well and understanding the needs of a community.” After hearing Bentson’s recommendation, Jarvis hired Emelyn during finals week. In Altavista, Emelyn has undertaken projects like helping a farmer-entrepreneur start a community-supported agriculture venture and leading community meetings to help determine the best way to spend money from a broadband development grant. She has been developing the town’s first tourism brochure and a 10-year comprehensive plan for Altavista On Track. She led the effort to secure grant money that will pay for a study that could result in new life for a downtown building that has been vacant for seven years. Jarvis said Emelyn’s work is an important part of the town’s future. “What you do at the street level with business owners on Main Street is traditional economic development. It’s community development, and it’s entrepreneurship,” said Jarvis. “Having someone like Emelyn be able to manage that on a daily basis is crucial.” Emelyn has enjoyed the chance to continue living in Lynchburg and working nearby. “I’m never bored here,” she said. In her spare time, she visits the Lynchburg Community Market, hikes or rides her bike along nearby trails, and spending time with new friends. She also has enjoyed keeping in contact with her friends who are still studying at LC, as well as professors and staff members she sees around in the community. “It’s been great to have such a strong support system from LC, and it’s really helped me with professional connections as well,” she said. We Remember Louise C. Womack ’69, ’70 MAT, retired associate professor of education, died December 13, 2015, at the age of 85. Born in Bruceton, Tenn., she came to Lynchburg in 1963 with her husband Bob who was employed with Babcock and Wilcox at Mt. Athos. She joined the faculty of Lynchburg College in 1970 and taught here for 22 years. Louise and Bob loved music and sang with the PHOTO BYJOHN MCCORMICK Fine Arts Center Chorus, the choir of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Forest, Va., and Westminster Presbyterian Church in Lynchburg. “Music is good for the soul,” Louise often commented. For the past five years, Louise lived at The Summit where she played piano and helped with church services. She was preceded in death by her husband of nearly 57 years. She is survived by her two children, Vicki Womack Stamp of Casper, Wyo., and Thomas Lee Womack of Goode, Va.; three grandchildren, Dave Stamp of Anchorage, Alaska, Jeff Stamp of Minneapolis, Minn., and Laura Stamp, who is attending college in Willilamstown, Mass. Louise will be remembered for her love of music and her dedication to her students. Spring 2016 LC MAGAZINE 47 Last Word Mothers, fathers, alma maters MA I L LC Magazine Lynchburg College College Communications and Marketing 1501 Lakeside Drive Lynchburg, VA 245013113 PHON E 434.544.8609 E-MA IL Sever al stories in this magazine made me think about the gifts that parents give their children. The gift of life is only the beginning. As told in these pages, Mychael Ward’s mother gave her sons an example by going back to school. Caitlyn Dodd’s mother donated a kidney to give her oldest daughter a new lease on life. Bradley Jackson’s mom chose to help him focus on college, even though it meant giving up the chance to have her son nearby while she battled cancer. One of my mother’s meaningful gifts was $100 in January 2004. It was not a large sum, but it made my down payment on tuition at a time when I had planned to postpone college. A few weeks later, my student status opened the door to my first newspaper job. My mom’s gift set me on the course for the rest of my life. In a recent speech at LC, Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth Levar Stoney explained how his father, a high school dropout, set him on the right course with bedtime stories about a kid getting an education. “He told me that if I went off to college and got good grades, I would be able to change the trajectory of my family,” Stoney said. My father told me similar stories about when, not if, I would go to college. He nurtured my interest in every endeavor, especially writing. His gift was a belief in my talents and an appreciation for learning. “Alma mater” comes from the Latin for “nourishing mother” or “bounteous mother.” Like our parents, the colleges that nurture our minds endow us with priceless gifts. For example, your relationship with Lynchburg College probably started with an acceptance letter and financial aid. Later, your association with the College probably yielded friendships, career skills, knowledge of complex issues, the mentorship of faculty and staff members who changed the direction of your life, or extracurricular opportunities that enhanced your résumé. Gratitude for these gifts prompts us to share them when we can — to “pay it forward.” One way I try to do that is to spend time showing my children how I feel about them and teaching them what my parents taught me. I recently brought my 3-year-old son to watch an ethics bowl match at LC when I didn’t have time to drop him off at home beforehand. He was excited to go to something at the College, but he was ecstatic that there was pizza. He wore a serious look as he devoured pizza and watched the students discuss the ethical intersections of immigration, healthcare, and rule of law. I whispered a simplified explanation of the arguments to him. When we left, I asked Paul if he wanted to do ethics bowl when he goes to college. “No,” he said. He might never change his mind about that, and he might forget that night’s ethics bowl match. But over the years I hope he remembers that he is worth my time, and so are thinking deeply and learning. I hope he will see that memory as the gift it is. The Annual Fund With your support, students can discover, connect, and achieve great things here at Lynchburg and beyond. Bryan Gentry Editor IT BEGINS WITH YOU • GIVE TODAY www.lynchburg.edu/annualfund | annualfund@lynchburg.edu | 800.621.1699 or 434.544.8297 1 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2016 PHOTO BYJOHN MCCORMICK 1501 Lakeside Drive Lynchburg, Virginia 24501-3113 CHANGE SERVICES REQUESTED NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAI D LYNCHBURG, VA PERMIT NO. 27