Winter 2007 - Westminster College
Transcription
Winter 2007 - Westminster College
TABLEOFCONTENTS 2 PRESIDENT’SCOLUMN 3 CAMPUSNEWS PRESIDENT’SDINNER 12 Students Learn About Middle East at First Symposium 14 22 A New Innovative Westminster Experience Leadership Lives Large at Westminster 26 A Story of Touching Lives… 28 32 CLASSNOTES PRESIDENT’SCOLUMN One of the major hallmarks of Westminster College is the rich and varied educational experiences we offer our students. Our recently completed fall semester certainly attests to that environment. Just reflecting on the luminaries our students encountered the last few months and the educational opportunities they received is overwhelming. Our two-day Symposium on Democracy, a first-time event on our campus, brought some of the brightest and most informed minds on the Iraqi War to Westminster to share their insights through lectures and panel discussions with students, faculty and staff. As a visiting Woodrow Wilson Scholar, Tanya Melich, one of the pioneers of the American women’s political movement, spent an entire week on campus, teaching three to four classes a day, presenting a lecture and book reading, and interacting with a multitude of student organizations. Hugh Grant, CEO of Monsanto, one of the largest corporations in America, delivered an IBM lecture on campus and visited with many of our students. Hugh Lunghi, wartime translator for Churchill and one of the only living survivors of major events such as the Potsdam Conference, paid a visit to the Churchill Memorial. Eight of our students came back to us this fall with eye-opening experiences to share, thanks to our innovative new pilot program–The Take-A-Friend Home program. This issue of Leadership captures all of these major events and many more–such as the spectacular President’s Dinner. All of us who enjoyed the sights, sounds and tastes that night of the global community we have nurtured at Westminster as well as the remarkable talents of so many of our students can confirm this was the best President’s Dinner in the history of this annual event. From just this small sampling of the diverse learning experiences our students are receiving, it should be no surprise that the world class education offered at Westminster continues to draw state and national attention and recognition. For the fourth year in a row, U.S.News & World Report named Westminster one of the top liberal arts colleges in the nation and The Princeton Review cited us as one of the Best Midwestern Colleges. We are one of only eight Missouri colleges and universities to be named to the Presidential Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll. Our admissions web site is one of the most highly rated in the country by the National Research Center for College and University Admissions. The Council of Independent Colleges featured us as one of only six Missouri colleges and universities on its new national Historic Campus Architecture web site. Our Emerson Center for Leadership and Service received the Innovative Program Award for outstanding student affairs programs from the Missouri College Personnel Association. To have so many prestigious citations in one semester is a tribute to the talents of our faculty, staff and students and one of the many reasons we are so justifiably proud of Westminster College. At our family weekend this fall, all the staff and student ambassadors were wearing t-shirts emblazoned with the slogan “Small Campus, Big Experience.” That succinct but catchy phrase certainly summarizes what is occurring here at Westminster because we have the best of both worlds. Our students receive the individual attention and support that only is possible in a small college environment. Yet they also gain a wealth of new and fascinating educational experiences that few colleges and universities can match. We are able offer such a rich learning environment because of the strong support of people like you. Thank you for your significant role in ensuring Westminster maintains the highest of academic standards. Because of you, we do have truth in advertising. Westminster is a “Small Campus, Big Experience.” President Fletcher M. Lamkin 2 Leadership Westminster College CAMPUSNEWS Westminster Students Make Difference with Community Service Approximately 125 students at Westminster College spent their Saturday, Oct. 21, making a difference in the Fulton community through community service project work in their annual “Into The Streets” campaign, sponsored by the Emerson Center for Leadership and Service and the Service Corps. This is the fifth year Westminster College students have participated in this project. This year’s Into The Streets projects included painting at the Fulton Baptist Church, Haven House, CARDV and Central Missouri Community Action; cleaning the Senior Center; decorating Jefferson Lodge for Halloween; helping with activities at Presbyterian Manor; sorting donations at the Clothes Cupboard; re-roofing the storage shed at the campus garden; walking dogs for the Garret Animal Shelter; assisting with YMCA youth soccer games; and raking and winterizing nine homes for people who live on 7th and 8th streets. Churchill’s Wartime Translator Visits Westminster Hugh Lunghi, wartime translator for Sir Winston Churchill, paid a visit to Westminster College Nov. 10. During his visit, Lunghi, a British diplomat, historian and journalist as well as a translator, toured the Winston Churchill Memorial and Library in the United States and other campus buildings, met with history students over lunch and talked to members of the media. His visit was sponsored by the Westminster History Department, History Club and the Churchill Memorial. Lunghi served as one of the interpreters for the British side at the Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam Conferences held by Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt and later Truman during and after World War II. Having learned Russian from his Anglo-Russian mother, he was pulled from his job as an artillery officer in the Army during World War II and sent to Russia as aide-decamp to the head of the military mission, who ordered him to travel to the Tehran Conference. Left to right: Jayme Palmgren, Elena Khramova, Annabelle Rector, Shauna Klein and Jahnvi Pananchikal Former Westminster Professor Publishes Novel Leaving the Home Front, a coming-of-age novel by former Westminster English Professor Jay Karr, has been published by Kingdom House Books in Fulton, MO. The book tells the story of Miles Morgan, an All-American football player at the University of Iowa, who joins the military during World War II and becomes one of the paratroopers who landed on the Island of Corregidor. According to Karr, he started the book in 2001 with the intention of writing his memoirs and then in the middle of his work realized the material would be better as a work of fiction. “I got twothirds of the way through and said: ‘This has got to be a novel, because it’s not going to be my story… it’s going to be the protagonist’s story.’” As a young Army paratrooper, Karr actually sailed past the Island of Corregidor days after the Japanese surrendered and was always haunted by the images he saw there of parachute shreds hanging from charred trees–a reminder of the paratroopers who had jumped out of cargo planes to land on the seaside crags and retake the island from the Japanese. To deepen the story line, Karr advertised in military newspapers to obtain the personal accounts of paratroopers who actually made the wartime leap and received 25 responses. Hugh Lunghi Karr served as chair of the English Department at Westminster and taught creative writing at the College for thirty years. In collaboration with Professor Felix Morrison of William Woods, he established Janus, a student literary magazine, and is well known for his research into the life and work of Fulton author Henry Bellamann, who wrote King’s Row. His novel may be purchased at the Kingdom of Callaway Historical Society in Fulton. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 3 CAMPUSNEWS Cameron Day Chair at Work According to Dr. Mike Amspoker, Cameron Day Chair and Biology Professor, this fully endowed chair is now at the center of efforts to elevate the Westminster science program. Westminster’s New Dining Experience on the Way Those traveling by the construction site of the new Westminster dining hall facility, the Mueller Leadership Hall, can now see a skeletal frame taking shape as framing and trusses of the main structure go up every day. This new gem at Westminster will open in August 2007–just in time for the new academic year. One of the highlights of this state-of-the-art food center will be the use of four of the beautiful stained glass panels from Swope Chapel, which was vacated in 1966. The stained glass will be showcased in the corridor connecting the Mueller Leadership Hall to the Mueller Student Center. The two buildings will be connected so both buildings can be used for meal and catering functions. While the maximum capacity for the current dining facility, Robertson Dining Hall, is only 230 students, the Mueller Leadership Hall will seat 380 in the main dining hall, which features a vaulted wood beam ceiling and large windows overlooking Stinson Creek. In addition, three private dining rooms will be available for private functions and meetings with a collapsible wall between two of the private rooms to make it possible to expand for medium sized groups. A large patio, featuring umbrella tables, will also be available so students can dine al fresco. Memorial paving stones on the patio are still available for a $500 donation. Please contact Mary Rundus, Director of Advancement Services and Grants, at (573) 592-5391 if you are interested in making a contribution so that your name or the name of a loved one can be memorialized. The department is in discussion with the MU Callaway Physicians Clinic about establishing student internships and shadowing experiences for Westminster students. Two physicians at the Clinic, Drs. Jim Stevermer and Kevin Kane, are recommending medical papers for Westminster students to discuss in their Biology Journal Club, a new course similar to those at medical schools and graduate programs where students discuss primary journal articles on cutting edge research. Professor Amspoker is also in discussion with the MU Health Education Center about Westminster becoming an official partner in the Bryant Scholars program to offer support to students in medical school that commit to practice medicine in underserved areas of rural Missouri. Dr. Erik Hewlett ’68 is in the process of establishing a competitive research fellowship for a Westminster student to work at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Westminster continues to work in close partnership with Saint Louis University Medical School thanks to the endowment. Dr. Rich Samson, Director of Core Graduate programs in the Biomedical Sciences, came on campus to speak about summer research opportunities available to Westminster students. Dr. Randy Sprague, Professor of Pharmacological and Physiological Science and Internal Medicine also presented a lecture on campus. In addition, Westminster alumnus and student at Pikesville College School of Osteopathic Medicine Michael Hawley ’01 and Dr. Michael Murphy, Associate Dean for Clinical Sciences at PCSOM, came to campus this fall to talk to students about opportunities in osteopathic medicine and Judy Nolke, Admissions Coordinator for the MU School of Medicine, spoke on how to seek admission to medical school. Resources of the Day Chair have also supported the research of Professor April Potterfield and three students on breast cancer cells, the research of Professor Jeff Mayne and two students on how viruses attach to cell surfaces, and the research of Professor Amspoker on a new diatom genus, Hyaloneis. Dr. Mike Amspopker, Cameron Day Chair and Biolgy Professor Dr. Drew Makes House Call to Westminster Dr. Drew Pinsky, famous radio and television expert on teen-age sex, addiction and relationship problems, gave Westminster students his views on these issues and took questions from the audience August 31 in Champ Auditorium at this special event sponsored by the Student Government Association. Dr. Drew’s experience with addicts and teens spans over 20 years. He began as a radio host in 1982, answering medical questions on his show, Loveline, which originates from local California station KROQ. Today Loveline is syndicated five nights a week on over 100 radio stations, answering young people’s tough questions on sex, drugs and relationships all across the country. In 1996, Loveline began an unheard of fiveyear run on MTV with Dr. Drew and co-host Adam Corolla. Dr. Drew appears regularly on countless television programs including The Oprah Winfrey Show, Today, Good Morning America, The CBS Early Show and Dateline. Byron Thomas, Dr. Drew and Rance Hairston 4 Leadership Westminster College Fall Sports Shorts Senior Josh Moore was named Upper Midwest Athletic Conference Football Lineman of the Year, UMAC South Division Lineman of the Year and a Second Team CoSIDA Academic All-District Pick. A three-time first team South Division All-Conference selection, Moore leaves Westminster with individual career records for tackles for loss (42.5) and sacks (22.5). CAMPUSNEWS Two Westminster Psychogy Teams Take First at Competition Junior Matt Mercer was named first-team all-conference by vote of the St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference men’s soccer coaches. Mercer led the team in goals (10), assists (5), points (25) and game-winning goals (3). Junior Danielle Shannon has been named to the SLIAC women’s soccer first team for the third consecutive year. Shannon played in 12 matches and led the team with seven goals before being sidelined with minor injuries. Shannon is the Westminster career leader with 41 goals scored. The Westminster volleyball squad snapped a 28-match losing streak and won its first conference match in three years. The Blue Jays finished the season 5-21 with a squad composed of nine underclassmen. Follow the Blue Jays on the World Wide Web at www.westminster-mo.edu All-Conference Selections Football (UMAC South Division) Josh Moore, DL, First Team Zach Thompson, LB, First Team Aaron Browne, DL, First Team Nick Diefenbach, DB, First Team Chad Lane, WR/PR, First Team Mark Garber, RB, First Team Michael Harris, TE, First Team Jacob Evans, OL, First Team Andrew Malson, OL, Second Team Chad Shank, WR, Second Team Josh Pierce, DL, Second Team Ben Woolf, LB, Second Team Kyle Wagner, DB, Second Team Ryan Evers, QB, Honorable Mention Neil McCutcheon, LB, Honorable Mention Men’s Soccer (SLIAC) Matt Mercer, First Team Zach Gorla, Honorable Mention Dennis Patterson, Honorable Mention Jack Rubenstein, Honorable Mention Women’s Soccer (SLIAC) Danielle Shannon, First Team Sara Cook, Second Team Meaghan Jones, Honorable Mention Tara Olendorff, Honorable Mention Two teams of Westminster psychology students took first place with their projects at the Missouri Undergraduate Psychology Conference Nov. 10 at Avila University in Kansas City, MO. In the paper presentation competition, junior Candice Crawford from Mokane, MO, junior Grant Henderson from Houston, MO and senior Brad Dowling from Montgomery City, MO won first place for their project “Household Crowding and Aggression,” developed in the Personality Lab course of Dr. David Jones. Sophomore Stephen Long from Fulton, MO, junior Jessica Lang from Fulton, MO and junior Stephanie Schwartz from Saint Peters, MO won first place in the poster competition for their project “Effects of Transgressor Attractiveness and Transgressor Gender on Females’ Ability To Forgive,’ which was developed in the Methods in Experimental Psychology” course of Dr. Ted Jaeger. Other Westminster students who presented at the four state regional conference were seniors Bridget Johnston from Collinsville, OK, Alisha Toti from Eureka, MO, Emily Henry from Overland Park, KS, and Jamie Winters from Jefferson City, MO; juniors Missy Kopp from O’Fallon, MO, Erin Green from Eureka, MO and Crystal Blanchard from N. Little Rock, AR; and sophomore Jordan Imhoff from Jefferson City, MO. Monsanto CEO Delivers IBM Lecture Hugh Grant, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Monsanto Company in St. Louis, delivered the IBM Lecture Nov. 1, in the Wallace H. Coulter Science Center. Before the lecture, Grant interacted with students in the International Business class and dined with Westminster students, faculty and staff. Hugh Grant, Chairman, President and CEO of the Monsanto Company in St. Louis Grant’s lecture, “Introducing New Technologies in Developing Countries,” explored how new kinds of public/private partnerships offer the hope for farmers in developing nations to gain access to agricultural technologies available to farmers in more developed countries. He explained the need for everyone, and specifically our major American corporations, to step up to the plate to assume responsible stewardship of our world resources through partnerships with other organizations Established by the International Business Machines Corporation in 1980, the IBM Lecture in Business and Finance is designed to bring campus leaders in the world of business and finance or professors of economics and business administration to the Westminster campus. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 5 CAMPUSNEWS Fresh Ideas and Westminster College: A Continuing Partnership Fresh Ideas is proud to have served on the construction planning committee for the new dining hall. The design features of the future Mueller Leadership Hall will make it one of the best college dining facilities we have seen. After one final year in Robertson Dining Hall, Fresh Ideas is looking forward to Fall 2007 and the grand opening of something truly special. Congratulations! Fresh Ideas provides food management, consulting and design for academic institutions and business and industry. For more information contact us at (573) 445-4321 or visit our website at www.freshideasllc.com. Lecture at Westminster by Fulbright Robertson Professor Dr. Richard C. Allen, visiting Fulbright Robertson professor from the University of Sunderland in North East England, presented a public lecture Oct. 3 on “Historical Reflections on Wales, the Welsh, and the World.” The Fulbright Robertson Visiting Professor in British History award is given to a British historian who agrees to teach and conduct research specifically at Westminster College. The candidate also is expected to establish a collaborative relationship and conduct personal research at the Winston Churchill Memorial and Library in the United States and neighboring presidential libraries as well as accepting speaking engagements and participating in academic conferences in the United States and Canada. “Junk Rock” Band a Hit at Westminster Hard-rock drumming and hip-hop funk filled Champ Auditorium when the national tour of the award-winning “junk rock” band Recycled Percussion came to Westminster Oct. 25. Over 350 members of the Westminster community and local music fans attended the concert. Sponsored by the Westminster Student Government Association, Recycled Percussion is a band of three drummers and a DJ who play everything from plastic buckets, huge ladders, mortar casings and giant 50-gallon containers to a massive traditional drum kit. This fall leg of the group’s tour is their largest tour to date, with performances at over 200 college campuses nationwide and numerous NFL and NBA half time shows. Recycled Percussion 6 Leadership Westminster College CAMPUSNEWS Westminster Leadership Program Wins State Innovation Award The Emerson Center for Leadership and Service at Westminster College has been awarded the 2006 Innovative Program Award for outstanding student affairs programs in Missouri higher education. Created in 2002 in honor of the late Missouri Congressman and Westminster alumnus William Emerson ’59, the Emerson Center for Leadership and Service is a four-point program, which includes leadership development, a servant-leader partnership between the College and the local community, the integration of leadership into designated curricula and a leadership awards program. Westminster staff members John Comerford, Vice President and Dean of Student Life; Bob Hansen, Director of Counseling and Health Services; Meg Langland, Director of Career Services; Jackie Weber, Director of Student Activities; and Bryan Carrier, Director of Residential and Greek Life; attended the ceremony to receive the award from the Missouri College Personnel Association (MOCPA) Sept. 25 at the Lodge of the Four Seasons in the Lake of the Ozarks. Westminster Students Join Statewide Festival of Sharing collection effort to assemble various care packages or kits for individuals and families in need. The Westminster Chapel Leadership Council assembled personal health kits, comprised of ten items. The Council recruited 10 student organizations to participate in the project, and each participating organization collected one item to be included in the kits. Once collected and assembled, the personal health kits were taken to the Festival of Sharing office in Columbia for distribution. This is the first year Westminster students and staff have participated in this project. Student members of the Westminster Chapel Leadership Council assembled care packages for needy families Oct. 18, at the Hunter Activity Center as a part of statewide Festival of Sharing activities. The Festival of Sharing is an annual, statewide event that promotes peace, caring and sharing among different people, races, cultures and families in need. Every year the Festival includes a Irish Folklore Tour Westminster College President’s Trip Tour of the West of Ireland and Dublin July 28 – August 4, 2007 Estimated Cost $2199 + airfare per person (based on double occupancy) RSVP Deadline is April 15, 2007! For More Information Contact: Mary Rundus, (573) 592-5391 rundusm@westminster-mo.edu Carol Rone, (888) 684-8687 Carol@allinclusivesonly.com w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 7 CAMPUSNEWS FOX News Features Westminster Student Westminster College Featured on New National Historic Website People wanting to view the historic campus of Westminster College and learn more about it can now do so on-line with the launching of the new Historic Campus Architecture Project web site www.cic.edu/hcap by The Council of Independent Colleges. Westminster College is one of only six Missouri colleges and universities to be featured as a part of this first nationwide architecture and landscape database of independent college and university campus. The Westminster area of the site contains a color campus map and profiles and pictures of the Churchill Memorial and Library, Westminster Gymnasium and the Westminster College Historic District, which includes The Columns, Newnham Hall, Westminster Hall, Westminster Gymnasium, Swope Chapel Memorial, Washington West House and Reeves Library. This new national website documents nearly 2,000 campus sites of historic significance at 370 different higher education institutions and includes more than 4,300 images. Westminster sophomore Ian Mackey from Urbana, MO received the experience of a lifetime when FOX News Channel contacted him to appear on the show “Studio B With Shepard Smith” on Nov. 2 in O’Fallon, MO. As President of the Young Democrats of Missouri, Mackey was invited on the program to debate the President of the Missouri Federation of Young Republicans on key issues of the midterm election in battleground states. “It was a unique, thrilling learning experience as well as a tremendous responsibility to speak on behalf of so many people on national television,” says Mackey. “It seemed as if I had barely begun answering the first question before I realized I was already answering the last. I had an hour-long conversation in ten minutes that felt like ten seconds.” Some of the issues Mackey discussed on the program were the U.S. Senate race in Missouri between U.S. Senator Jim Talent and Missouri State Auditor Claire McCaskill, Constitutional Amendment 2 on behalf of stem cell research in Missouri, Constitutional Amendment 3 to increase state tobacco taxes to cover health care costs and the Get-Out-The Vote effort of the Democratic Party in Missouri. Mackey was elected President of the Young Democrats of Missouri his freshman year at Westminster during the Young Democrats State Convention held in Springfield, MO. He has also worked as an intern for Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan and managed to political campaigns. He has served as the President of Young Democrats at Westminster and plans to attend law school after finishing his major in elementary education and political psychology. Alumni/Sibling Scholarship Awards Westminster Admission Website Ranked Top in the Country Westminster College has been notified that its college admissions website is among the most highly rated in the country by the National Research Center for College & University Admissions (NRCCUA). Westminster College was one of only 157 institutions to receive an “A” grade. Tyler Hunter ’10, son of Frank ’77 and brother of Emily ’08 recently joined the 132 year old Hunter family tradition of attending Westminster College. His great-great grandfather, Frank Allen Hunter graduated in 1874, and NRCCUA used its 8th Annual Enrollment Power Index to analyze the admissions websites of more than 3,000 post-secondary institutions. The research based study rates how well the functionality and design of college and university admissions websites provide information to potential students and move them from prospect to applicant. Websites at higher education institutions were graded on a 100-point scale. his great-great-uncle, Frank O. Hunter, was a member of the Class of 1904. Alumni/Sibling Scholarship Awards are available to the sons, daughters, grandsons, granddaughters, brothers or sisters of Westminster alumni. For more information about this unique scholarship, please call our Enrollment Services Frank ’77, Emily ’08 and Tyler Hunter ’10 share a priceless moment of family tradition on Move In Day 2006. 8 Leadership Westminster College Office at (800) 465-3361. CAMPUSNEWS Every Gift Makes a Difference Political Leader Spends Week with Westminster Students Tanya Melich, one of the founders of the modern women’s political caucus, spent Oct. 22–27 teaching 3-4 political science classes daily and giving a public lecture and public reading at Westminster as part of the Woodrow Wilson Visiting Scholar Program. She also shared meals with members of various student organizations and faculty members and attended campus activities. Her visit was sponsored by the Student Government Association. Melich’s lecture in the Coulter Science Center Oct. 24 was entitled “What We’ve Become, What We Could Be,” and focused on the impact of today’s U.S. foreign policy on America’s reputation and ability to defend itself. On Oct. 23, at West Wood Coffeeshop, she read from her critically acclaimed book, The Republican War Against Women, which traces her personal struggle to fight for women’s rights as a part of the GOP’s national platform. Formerly a Republican on the political staffs of Nelson Rockefeller, Jacob Javits, Charles Goodell and John Lindsey, Melich now considers herself a Jeffords Independent. She ran a political consulting firm for 20 years and served as public policy analyst for CBS corporate management and national elections director for ABC News. She played a key role in the election of Rudy Giuliani as Mayor of New York City and was senior advisor on centrist voters for the 2004 Kerry for President campaign. Spencer Daniels Class of 2008 Major: Business Administration Student Foundation Fees* Equipment for Blue Jay Basketball Team* Funding of Alumni/Sibling Scholarship Fund* Every gift to the Westminster Fund makes a real difference in the quality of daily life of our students. Your $10 or $25, added to those of your fellow alumni, makes it possible for Spencer to be involved in many activities where he can further develop his leadership skills. Your support of the Westminster Fund has an immediate impact on the day-to-day life and academic experience of today’s students. Every gift, from $10 to $10,000, has an impact. Prospective students also look at alumni giving as a sign of confidence and a show of commitment in the mission of Westminster College. Help us to prepare our students, and future students, for lives of success, significance and service by making your Westminster Fund gift today. Give online at www.westminster-mo.edu/giving or return your gift via the postage paid envelope enclosed in this issue of Leadership. *provided by YOU through your gifts WESTMINSTER FUND w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 9 CAMPUSNEWS Students Implement Voter Registration Project Westminster Community Raises Funds for Injured Player Members of the Westminster community have taken steps to help the family of injured Westminster sophomore football player Teron Sutherlin of St. Louis to pay medical bills incurred from a recent car accident. The students in the “Political Parties, Voting, and Campaign Strategies” class of Professor Amy Carter were given the assignment of writing a grant proposal to implement a voter registration drive on campus. Those who submitted the best proposals, Seniors Henry Klaus of Columbia, MO and Kimberly Allyn of Saint Peters, MO, were each awarded a $50 prize and given a $100 to implement their project. The result was a very successful campus wide voter registration drive Sept. 20. Students from Carter’s political science class had tables set up in the Hunter Activity Center and in the main entrance of the Wallace H. Coulter Science Center where students could register. Information was provided to out-of-state students on how they could register in their home states and other states’ registration deadlines. By the end of the day, 78 new voters had registered for the November election. The Westminster Men’s Basketball team has sold “WC 4 TERON” t-shirts around campus and at athletic events with all profits going to Sutherlin’s family. That effort has generated over $2,000. The Student Government Association has been selling royal blue bracelets with the slogan “WC 4 Teron–Buckle Up!” appearing on them to raise additional funds. The Westminster Athletic Department has also established a special account at Regions Bank in Sutherlin’s name. Those interested in donating money can go to any branch of Regions Bank to contribute to the Teron Sutherlin Fund. Sutherlin and fellow St. Louis freshman teammate Joseppi Wallace were traveling to St. Louis to attend a high school football game Oct. 6 when their vehicle was involved in an accident on I-70 near St. Charles. While Wallace escaped with bruises, Sutherlin suffered extensive serious injuries. Originally in critical condition in the Intensive Care Unit of St. John’s Mercy Hospital in St. Louis, Sutherlin has now returned home but faces a long recovery. Westminster Ranked High in Latest U.S. News Best Colleges List For the fourth straight year in a row Westminster College has been ranked one of the top liberal arts colleges in the nation, according to the recently published findings of U.S.News & World Report’s America’s Best Colleges 2007. U.S.News & World Report, a national magazine, evaluates America’s colleges and universities for their academic excellence annually and publishes their findings in the newsstand book, “America’s Best Colleges.” Westminster is one of only three Missouri higher education institutions to be selected for inclusion among 212 liberal arts institutions across the country that focus on undergraduate education. The report found Westminster to be particularly strong in alumni giving, graduation rate performance and retention and academic reputation. Teron Sutherlin 10 Leadership Westminster College CAMPUSNEWS In Memory of Dr. Tammy Stiller The Westminster College community lost Dr. Tammy Stiller, Associate Professor of Biology, Nov. 3 after a courageous battle with cancer. A memorial service for family and friends was held Nov. 4 in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury on campus. Donations can be made in her memory to the Westminster College Professor Endowment for Student Research. Students Treat Local Children for Halloween During her fifteen year tenure at Westminster, Dr. Stiller was Chair of the Biology Department (1999-2001) and Director of the Westminster Seminar program (1998-2001). Since 2003, she had served as Director of the Health Professions program. She was also the Marshal of the College, leading the Skulls of Seven during commencement and lecture ceremonies. Dedication Ceremony Held for Professor Endowment Program A dedication ceremony was held Sept. 29 in the atrium of the Wallace H. Coulter Science Center to launch the new Science Professor Endowment Program at Westminster. Earnings from the endowment will provide grant money for students and faculty to conduct significant research projects. The program was the brainchild of Dr. Doug Fickess, Professor of Biology; Dr. John Shultz, Professor of Chemistry; and the late Dr. Warry Williams, Professor of Biology. A plaque honoring the three professors and recognizing contributors to the endowment was also unveiled adjacent to the atrium on the north wall. Speakers at the event included President Lamkin, Dr. Fickess, and Dr. Barney Forsythe, Westminster Senior Vice President and Dean of Faculty. Schultz and Williams’ wife Joyce were in attendance as well as Dr. David Stubbs ’68, Dr. Rick Omohondro ’74 and Dr. Michael Duff ’67, who were instrumental in the establishment of the endowment. Anyone interested in helping to perpetuate the work of another favorite Westminster professor may contact Mary Rundus, Director of Advancement Services and Grants, at (573) 592-5391 for how an endowment program can be established. Over 200 local Fulton children received a very special Halloween treat thanks to the highly successful Student Government Association Trick or Treat event. Sixteen Westminster organizations participated by decorating the outside of their living group, dressing in costume and handing out candy to children. Two $150 prizes were awarded by faculty judges for the living group with the best decorations, participation and costumes. Wetterau Hall won the residential category and Sigma Chi won the Greek category. Other participating living groups included Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Alpha, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, five other residential halls (Gage, Marquess, Rice, Scott and Emerson) and two other organizations (Education Association and a Residential House). “This event provided Westminster students with a way to give back to the Fulton community and display a positive atmosphere of college life to the children and their parents,” says Kelly Dye, SGA Community Relations Chair. Registered children for the event also received a Westminster bracelet, a frosty coupon for Wendy’s Restaurant and a fake tattoo. Dr. Doug Fickess, Dr. John Shultz and Mrs. Joyce Williams w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 11 PRESIDENT’SDINNER Destination WEstminster Guests for the sixth annual President’s Dinner Oct. 20 were treated to a spectacular global experience at “Destination Westminster” that they will not soon forget as they explored the diverse worlds that have converged at Westminster thanks to a student population that now represents 55 different countries. Each of the 169 guests were given a passport for the evening’s journey and seated in one of four distinct areas of the Mueller Student Center decorated to represent the continents of Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. Before dinner, guests circulated throughout the room, enjoying delicious hors d’oeuvres from each continent. The appetizers ranged from South African meal loaf and Peruvian marinated shrimp to poached salmon and sushi. Following a three course dinner, the guests were entertained by the men’s choir Sublime Harmony, an international fashion show, the Blue Diamond Dance Team, an African drum duet and an exciting performance of the South African gumboot dance by a group of international and domestic students. During the recognition segment of the dinner, President Lamkin inducted Dr. Robert Volz ’54 into the Leadership Society honoring those whose lifetime giving to the College meets or exceeds one million dollars, inducted Ron Kostich ’63 into the Robertson Founders Circle honoring those whose lifetime donations to the College meet or exceed $250,000 and inducted Peter Childs ’59 and Bob Muehlhauser ’68 into the Sentinels of the Columns honoring those benefactors whose lifetime giving falls between $249,000–$100,000. Ron Winney ’64, Chair of The President’s Club, told the group about the first President’s trip, an Alaskan cruise last July, and announced that this year’s President’s trip would be to Ireland. Members of The President’s Club who give a minimum of $1,000 annually to the College has reached a record 382 members this year. 12 Leadership Westminster College w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 13 Students Learn About Middle 14 Leadership Westminster College East at First Symposium Students at Westminster learned about the Middle East and prospects for democracy in the region from a wide range of viewpoints during the first Symposium on Democracy held on campus Sept. 20-21. One of the most popular sessions, which drew standing room only crowds, was a panel of Westminster students from Middle Eastern countries who explained what it is to live in this region. Panelists included Aluat Hamoudi (Algeria), Akin Aytekin (Turkey), Rita Udisho (Iraq), Mustafa Bdraldeen (Iraq), Bahaa Al-Dahoudi (Palestine) and Hasan Adwan (Palestine). The dramatic impact hostilities have on the citizens in the region was brought home when students heard Adwan’s story about the difficulties of getting from his home to the United States so he could attend college at Westminster. He had just arrived in Fulton the night before the panel after days of travel, which included making his way through a battle zone. Two keynote speakers for the Symposium with very contrasting viewpoints on Iraq were U.S. Army Lieutenant General David Petraeus and documentary filmmaker Jehane Noujaim. Petraeus was the first commander of the Multi-National Security Transition Command responsible for training, equipping and mentoring Iraqi security force in Iraq. Noujaim directed the controversial documentary Control Room which focuses on the Arabic language cable news station Al Jazeera, a station that questions the prevailing images and positions offered on the war by the U.S. news media and has been condemned by some American and Arab government officials for its reporting. Other speakers for the two-day event, which included panels on Iraqi culture, the insurgency movement and media coverage of the war, included U.S. Army Major Daniel Barnard, a faculty member of the U.S. Military Academy history department; Dr. Najib Ghadbian, Asst. Professor of Political Science and Middle Eastern studies at the University of Arkansas; Roger Gafke, a University of Missouri journalism professor; and Saleem Al-Habash and Fred Vultee, two doctoral students in journalism at the University of Missouri. Because the Symposium was such a huge success, a faculty and staff committee is already making plans for a second Symposium to be held on September 26-27, 2007. The following interviews on pages 16 – 21 were conducted by students in Dr. David Collins’ class in Magazine Writing and Editing. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 15 An Interview with Lieutenant General David H. Petraeus Interview conducted by Patrick Clark, Shawn Manning, Ashley Nelson, Rachel Nichols and Mike Willis Lieutenant General David H. Petraeus, one of the most decorated soldiers in the United States Army, commanded the elite 101st Airborne, the fabled “Band of Brothers,” on the drive to Baghdad in the Second Iraq War. A graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point (top five-percent of his class), General Petraeus went on to earn a Ph.D. at Princeton University. He thrives on competition. A former superior officer jokes that while most men in their fifties are slowing down, Petraeus is “driving young officers half his age into the ground like tent pegs.” He can do seventy-five push-ups a minute when challenged and can outrun anyone in a ten-mile race. He has recently been named the Top U.S. and Coalition Commander in Iraq. General Petraeus was the keynote speaker at the first Symposium on Democracy at Westminster College. WC: General Petraeus, we’d like to thank you very much for agreeing to talk with us today. We hope to learn a great deal from what you have to say and have many, many questions. To begin, you graduated in the top five percent of your class at West Point. You earned both an M.A. and a Ph.D. from Princeton and had a fellowship at Georgetown University. Education is obviously very important to you. How did your education prepare you for the battlefield? Gen. Petraeus: Don’t get me wrong, a huge part of the global on terror has to be to kill or capture those who are absolutely, unalterably opposed to our way of life, our values. But there’s a wonderful quotation from a little known British political scientist named Martin White: “The truth is not to be found in any school of thought but debate among them.” I have jokingly said that when we are going hard at it with some other country what we ought to do – immediately – is to triple the number of full ride scholarships given to their students so even more of them can come over here and appreciate what is possible in a country where there’s a degree of tolerance for views that are completely different from one’s own. Regrettably, military action has its place, but even more important is what you’re doing in this Symposium on Democracy, exposing people from different cultures to American culture, American values: the concept of democracy, free market economics, the host of opportunities available to ordinary people. I’m not implying that we’re a perfect nation, but ours is a country whose basic structures – economic, political, and social – have provided a unparallel degree of upward mobilityfor people. That’s what makes the American dream, and it is that American dream that attracts so many people from other countries here. People often ask me, “What prepared you most for the early days in Iraq, after the fight to Baghdad, after Saddam was gone?” Interestingly, what prepared me most for that period was having gone to a civilian graduate school. We try very hard to generate new insights in the Army. Commissioned officers actually spend a lot of time in school in the course of their careers. We have provocative speakers, thought provoking readings and lectures. But you do that with fellow officers, and at the end of the day, even if you have the most provocative speaker in the world, you end up at the coffee pot with people who generally think the same way that you do. An old boss of mine used to describe our existence as a “grindstone cloister.” I think it’s very important for leaders to be taken out of their intellectual comfort zone. In the mid-1980s I went from the Staff College at Fort Leavenworth to graduate school. At Ft. Leavenworth the big debate at that time was about nuclear weapons, whether we needed 100 of these very powerful, land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, each with 10 warheads, or if we needed 200. I went to off to a civilian graduate school and, lo and behold, found out that there were some folks – extremely bright, quite thoughtful – who argued that perhaps you needed none of these types of missiles because they might be destabilizing. That was a great educational experience. A little intellectual humility goes a long way – and I think graduate school will do that for you. 16 Leadership Westminster College WC: You have been called by people close to you the most competitive man on the planet. Where does that competitiveness come from? Gen. Petraeus: True, I’m competitive. I think you get it from your upbringing, through your parents. I had a very competitive father. He was a crusty old sea captain and he was not big on excuses. His inevitable response was, “Results boy!” Life is a competitive endeavor. No matter what you are doing, you should be creating and setting goals to make you compete with yourself. I told someone that I would go through a Ph.D. program, and I regretted it a thousand times after that. But the fact that I made that pledge made me stick with it. I knew it would be very difficult, but when you lay down a marker like that for yourself it forces you to produce. I think a competitive spirit is a good thing. At the end of the day, combat is the ultimate competition. The other guy is not just out there to pass you in the final lap, or to make it into the end zone – that guy is out to kill you. And so I say to my soldiers, “I love you too much, Ranger, not to make you do ten more push-ups!” Of course, you need to be to be a team player a lot of time. You want to engage in healthy competition with your buddies and with your fellow commanders and their units, but at the end of the day, you’re going to go to war together to do a tough mission. Together. WC: Brigadier General Frankly said that when you led the 101st your competitiveness on occasion pinned you against the wall. Does your level of competitiveness ever hinder you? Gen. Petraeus: Undoubtedly, it does. But it’s a question of dynamics. When you are in combat, you can’t give mixed messages to your soldiers. When I led the 101st in the fight to Bagdad, we had every condition set so when that first soldier was shot at we could respond with everything that is appropriate – we call that “setting the condition.” We did that, and it was very effective. We soundly defeated and destroyed some big threats. People sometimes want to have more dialogue, but you know, the boss has to sit down and ask to whom do I want to listen to right now? At some point you have to listen to your own counsel and make a decision. WC: Another of your critics, David Hackwood, has called you a “Perfumed Prince.” How would you respond? Gen. Petraeus: That was a strange one. I have spent more time deployed than any other officer in the army. If you go back fifteen years, I don’t think there’s been anyone who’s spent more time in the units and in the field. I’d invite any- one who feels that way to join me for a run, or have a little contest on the pull-up bars. Then we’ll both be sweaty princes, if they can hang. WC: In order to make enlistment quotas, the Army has lowered standards for enlistees. The maximum age has been raised from thirty-five to forty-two. Mental standards have been lowered as well. Would you want to lead these less qualified soldiers into combat? Gen. Petraeus: When you make such changes, you have to do it intelligently. Our army has lots of different skill sets. You can’t take the oldest enlistee and say “Welcome to the infantry!” Physical ability is very important to those who are going to ruck up and strap on Kevlar, but we have all kinds of different jobs, a lot of people who work behind the scenes: drivers, electricians, journalists, medical people, doctors, lawyers. True, we have taken a number of what are called “Cat 4’s,” those who scored at the lower levels on the general IQ test. There is a place for those folks; you just have to do it intelligently. Read the full interview with General Petraeus at www.westminster-mo.edu w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 17 An Interview with Jehane Noujaim Interview conducted by Amy Barclay, Ashley Creek, Erin Houlihan, Justin Pilarski and Nike Stinger Jehane Noujaim is a rising star in the world of documentary film, working on a dream to unite the world through the power of film. Her recent appearance at the Westminster College Symposium on Democracy focused on her experience as a filmmaker with a unique blend of Middle Eastern and American cultural influences – a diversity of perspectives she explored in her film Control Room. Contrasting the reporting of Western newspeople whose information came from Central Command in Qatar with that of reporters working for the Middle Eastern news network Al Jazeera, Noujaim reveals the difficulties of reporting “the truth,” a problem that lies at the heart of all journalism. Her work in several documentary films focuses on the universal nature of subjective experience: Mokattam, about an Egyptian garbage-collecting village, startup.com, a depiction of the online business world, and Unfiltered, a documentary series for MTV. This point of view has earned her several awards including one from the Director’s Guild of American and the IDA Award for “best film.” As a recipient of the TED prize (Technology, Entertainment, Design), Noujaim is currently working on her wish to unite the world through film for one day each year. WC: We would like to begin by congratulating you on receiving the TED Prize. What motivated you to choose as your wish “to bring the world together through the power of film.” Jehane Noujaim: Thank you. The reasons are many. I grew up traveling between the Middle East and the United States. I have an American mother and an Egyptian/Lebanese/Syrian father, and that kind of background forces you always to be putting yourself in another person’s shoes. The negative side of that is that you can never really make a decision because you’re constantly seeing the other side of the situation. I started with film and photography because it was a way for me to bring my Egyptian life to the States and my American life to Egypt. It was a great way to help people in both places understand. When I showed Control Room both in the States and in Egypt, the reactions showed me the real power film has to create understanding between people. That reaction made me feel that this was the way to lead people to a better understanding – the second best option to having people meet in person. I felt that by having a day of screenings across the world, and projecting on places like the Great Pyramid and the Reuters screen in Times Square, and broadcasing on Fox and Jazeera and a number of other stations, it will really get out to a wide population. The content will be from well-known filmmakers from around the world because the content has to be fantastic the first year; the focus will be on film highlighting our common humanity while at the same time appreciating that we are a diverse world. 18 Leadership Westminster College WC: Have you faced any obstacles in establishing sites across the globe and making the dream a reality? Jehane Noujaim: The biggest obstacle for me was “What is going to be the content?” With Control Room we were talking about the media specifically, and it’s been a popular film around the world because everybody has questions about the media and its objectivity, about whether we’re seeing what everybody else is seeing. Trying to think about films that are going to appeal to somebody in the United Sates and somebody in China and somebody in the Middle East is very challenging. I want people to be truly inspired and affected by the films. To make sure that we hold people’s attention, I think that we’re going to be doing ten minutes films interspersed with speeches and music. The logistics were actually less of a concern because we’re partnering with the people that put on Live 8, and there are a lot of companies that want to be involved – companies like Nokia and HSBC – because they want to be part of this new awareness. WC: Will the images you show be able to transcend not only language barriers but cultural barriers as well? Jehane Noujaim: We’re still working on the directive we’ll give the filmmakers in order to give the films a certain cohesiveness, a certain connection. We’re hoping to create a “global tapestry.” There will be dialogue, a challenge we’re going to have to work with in terms of translation, but there will not be a huge emphasis on dialogue because when you’re talking about these huge screening events you want to concentrate on the emotions each film portrays. I do think it’s very difficult to cross cultural barriers; you have to keep the stories very personal, there are some things such as father-son stories, mother-daughter stories, and love stories that are universal across the globe. It will have to be about really personal stories. One of our ideas is to go to emotions – joy, fear, guilt, and so on – and so on. Each filmmaker will have to choose an emotion and that will be the title of his or her film. So, for example, Errol Morris might choose “Joy” and create a film about somebody experiencing joy that will translate to Asia, Africa, the Middle East. WC: In addition to this media experience, we understand that you are trying to initiate an online component as well. Jehane Noujaim: This is very important because if you make a film and put it out there people are all affected in their own ways, but I really want there to be something concrete carrying this day forward throughout the year. How do you do that? I’ll give you an example. There are two organizations working within Israel/Palestine right now; one is called “One Voice” which is working with Israelis and Palestinians who are working together for peace, the other is called “Just Vision” and it has been working with a place called “The Bereaved Family forum.” “The Bereaved Family Forum” brings together Israelis and Palestinians who have lost family to the conflict and who are now working together through peaceful means. “Just vision” has just made a film called Encounter Point which is about these families working together. The concept of these families working together is so powerful because they have great standing in their communities; they have lost family to the crisis. Nobody can say, “You don’t understand what it’s like.” Many of them are heroes in their communities; they’re standing up and saying “We will not let our leaders use our names to justify any more violence against each other.” That’s a very powerful statement because right now the news is consumed by extremist voices on either side – and it’s very hard to fight those extremist voices. “One Voice” is working in Israel and Palestine doing a group survey; they’ve sent out ballots to thousands asking them to rate issues in terms of their importance. It’s the first time a real grassroots decision making from the people has been organized in that part of the world. “One Voice” has an amazing web site that connects Israelis and Palestinians. If an Israeli says, “In order to accomplish this I need a Palestinian working with me,” the web site that helps in finding that person. If we are able to project Pangea on the wall in the West Bank, we can show clips from these different organizations and lure people to watch these two websites. People inspired by the speeches, the music, the visuals, the films will then be able to go someplace after the day. They’ll be able to go to the website and say, “OK, this is happening in my community.” Read the full interview with Jehane Noujaim at www.westminster-mo.edu w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 19 An Interview with Major Daniel Barnard Interview conducted by Laura Smith and Amy Elliott Major Daniel Barnard, born and raised in Columbia, Missouri, descends from a military family that has served the United States since the Revolutionary War. Though his military career began as a practical measure, a means to pay for college, following his experience as a peacekeeper in Bosnia, it has became his passion and life-long vocation. In addition to Bosnia he has been deployed several times in the Middle East and currently serves as an instructor of history at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Major Barnard holds a Master’s Degree in Middle Eastern History and is working on a Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, scheduled for completion in 2007. WC: In college you joined the Reserve Officer’s Training Corps and, upon graduation, signed on in the regular Army as a second lieutenant. Recently promoted to Major, you’ve risen rapidly in the Officer Corps. Were you to write your own press release, how would you describe yourself? Five words. Maj. Barnard: Five words, a tough job! I’d go with local boy does well, you know, something like that. I’m proud of being from Missouri. I believe the education I received in Missouri public schools prepared me to compete at the highest levels. I try to count Columbia in my background as I travel around the United States. That’s what I’d put down. WC: As a military historian can you draw parallels between the reconstructions of the South following the Civil War and reconstruction in Iraq that might help Americans understand the situation there? Maj. Barnard: There’s a great deal of interesting scholarship on that. I think that the reconstruction of the South is very illustrative for Americans, not only because it shows how significantly changed the region was, but because it directly parallels the situation in Iraq. During reconstruction tens of thousands of Union troops were stationed in the South for a long period of time. Their presence was required to maintain law and order, a task seriously challenged by an insurgency motivated by hatred of African Americans and supported by the pillars of society. While Union troops remained in the South this movement was suppressed; when they left, it succeeded. The Ku Klux Klan flourished; the Jim Crow Laws were passed. A hundred years of rolling back civil rights was the direct result of removing the Union Troops. Currently, there is a powerful impulse to pull our troops out of Iraq. I understand the domestic and military pressures that support this. Nearly every soldier has been in Iraq, some several times, and we’re exhausted. Families of military personnel feel this too. We see in Iraq the same prejudices that existed in post Civil War America; extreme elements move quickly to violence and sectarian passions. But if we pull out now we will see a rise in those sentiments in Iraq. Pulling our troops out of Iraq now would result a loss of liberty for the Iraqi people – the direct opposite of our goal. Read the full interview with Major Barnard at www.westminster-mo.edu 20 Leadership Westminster College An Interview with Dr. Najib Ghadbian Interview conducted by Elizabeth Blood, Marshall Chambers, Dustin Davis, Robert Davis, and Joey Falkaoff An Assistant Professor of Political Science and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Arkansas, Syrian born Dr. Najib Ghadbian has come to be recognized as one of our country’s foremost experts on events in the Arab world. Educated at the University of the United Arab Emirates (B.A.), Rutgers University (M.A.), and City University of New York (Ph.D.), Professor Ghadbian has published widely in scholarly journals in both English and Arabic. His book-length study of conditions in the Middle East, Democratization and the Islamists Challenge in the Arab World, was published in 1997. His expert commentary has been sought out by numerous television stations in the United States, by the BBC, and by Al-Jazeera. Prior to accepting a position at the University of Arkansas, Dr. Ghadbian worked as a research analyst at the Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research in Abu Shabi, where he headed the media unit and served on the administrative board. WC: Let’s begin with a question about the general level of knowledge people in the United States – college students and the general public – have of the Middle East and its problems. How would you assess the situation? Dr. Ghadbian: I think that when it comes to the Middle East there is a lot of – I don’t want to say ignorance, but maybe lack of knowledge. That became apparent to me after 9/11 when people began asking all kinds of questions and I because very involved. I realized how little the average American knows about it. What I see from my perspective is a lack of communication. I see certain stereotypes, resentment, and sometimes even opposition, and in the Shiites case hatred of the U.S.A. Sometimes, listening to the news media, reading newspaper articles, I see actual mistakes. “Wow!” I think to myself. To give you an example: Not long ago I was reading The Washington Post and somebody said there that Yemen is a tiny Persian Gulf country. Everything is wrong with that. This is the beginning of an article in a prestigious, national newspaper! Yemen is not a tiny country, nor is it a Persian gulf country. I feel that there is a serious problem with understanding or misunderstanding in America, and I believe the way to understanding in this country is through education. WC: You have on several occasions commented that the American news media seldom tells the full story of the Middle East in general, or the Iraq war in particular. Do media outlets in the Arab world also spin their coverage? Dr. Ghadbian: I don’t want to sound simplistic in saying that coverage here is insufficient, but I will say we’re not getting the full story by watching just American news. In my Introduction to Comparative Politics class I asked if they had been watching the news in the last three years – and then asked them to give me the population of Iraq. I didn’t get an answer. They had no clue. When we watch the mainstream media – CNN, Fox News, or other twenty-four hour channels – there is a lot of coverage, but all you get is sound bites. There is no competent background and there is a tendency to cover the sensational elements only. Fox News obviously leans to the right and has succeeded in attracting more viewers; as a result the other channels have shifted to the right as well. Competition: that is the disadvantage of privately owned media. You’re after profit, and by so doing you’re really not giving the other side much attention. You can say the same thing for Al-Jazeera. I’ve written about Al-Jazeera, I’ve contributed commentary to Al-Jazeera, and I think it is a great contribution to the freedom of expression in the Arab world. But Al-Jazeera is biased too. They cover a part of the other side as well. You really have to watch all these news stations to get a full picture of what’s going on. I tell my students – many are fans of Fox News – to continue watching Fox, but to try to watch a little bit of CNN, and then to watch some of the BBC coverage. Read the Independent, read the KOPN Perspective, and then read something from the Arab world in English, available online now. You need to get all of these perspectives to fully understand this story. Read the full interview with Dr. Ghadbian at www.westminster-mo.edu w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 21 A New Innovative Westminster Experience With over ten percent of its student population from 55 different countries, Westminster College certainly offers a global community where young people from diverse backgrounds can live and learn together. Presenting different cultural backgrounds and outlooks, expanding an understanding of today’s world, and developing an appreciation for differences are all part of the Westminster experience. Yet Westminster officials have chosen to take this experience to a new level this year with an exciting pilot project called the Take-A-Friend Home Program. Under this program, four domestic students spent three weeks of their summer break visiting the homes of four internationals students and in return, the international students will spend academic year breaks in the homes of the domestic students. This cross-cultural learning experience has been made possible thanks to the generous contributions of members of the Westminster College Board of Trustees. The wide range of experiences enjoyed by the eight students who completed the international segment of this remarkable journey are profiled below. Elena (Lena) Khramova from Kaliningrad, Russia and Kelly Pittman from Kansas City, Missouri Lena and Kelly spent most of their time at Lena’s home in Kaliningrad, a portion of Russia enclosed by Poland and Lithuania. Lena and her family were nervous about the language barrier prior to Kelly’s visit. Lena’s father could only communicate through gestures, her third grade brother was only starting to learn English, and her mother, who could speak a little English, was afraid of making mistakes. The family was also apprehensive about what Kelly would think of their standard of living in comparison to America. They made repairs and replaced wallpaper to make her feel comfortable. They need not have worried. “Kelly was accepting of everything that I am telling her and showing her,” says Lena. “I do not think she was judging anything as bad or good, according to her own standards.” Kelly was also so positive and confident about the experience that Lena’s family soon relaxed about communication barriers and with Lena as an interpreter, communication went smoothly. One of the largest adaptations for Kelly was adjusting to life in a crowded Russian city. She was amazed at how close people came to her and felt awkward having her personal space invaded. However, the warm hospitality of Lena’s family and the friendliness of the people in the stores and shops put her at ease. She also learned the benefits of living in a city where all shopping needs were within walking distance. A trip to the Amber Museum was a high point of Kelly’s visit, and Lena had really wanted her to see it because she felt this circular building that was once a fortress and now contained beautiful artifacts was a symbol of her region. Taking Kelly through the museum, Lena gained a deeper understanding of her own history and culture. While serving as a guide for Kelly’s visit, Lena learned new information about the Russian people and their behavior and even her own family. Kelly’s assessment was: “The trip made me more open to new experiences and made me think about other cultures and realize they are just as fascinating as our own.” She loved Lena’s family and found Russian food to be excellent–even better than American food in some aspects. Above: Kelly and Lena (far right) with Lena’s parents Alexander and Ludmila. Left: Königsberg Cathedral was the main church of old Königsberg and today it remains a landmark of modern Kaliningrad. The cathedral stands on Kneiphof island. A number of Grand Masters of the Teutonic Order and Prussian princes are interred in the vaults of Königsberg Cathedral. Adjoining the cathedral, on the north side of the choir, is the grave of the famed philosopher Immanuel Kant, the “sage of Königsberg.” Along with Kant, many of the professors of Königsberg University were buried there. 22 Leadership Westminster College Nikolay Domashev from Kirovo-Chepetsk, Russia and Dustin Davis from Independence, Missouri Dustin’s visit to Russia was quite different from that of Kelly. Nikolay and his mother Tatiana had arranged a whirlwind visit of a wide range of venues that included schools, mines, cathedrals, government buildings, restaurants, the cinema and even a graduation ceremony. They visited the cities of Murmansk, a city on the Arctic Ocean; Kirovsk, an industrial town in the middle of the Kola Peninsula; and Saint Petersburg, Russia’s second capital on the Baltic Sea. In Murmansk, they stayed in a hostel at the train station. In Kirovsk, they lived with a friend of Nikolay’s mother, Irina. In Saint Petersburg, they stayed in an apartment of Nikolay’s friend Antonina, an English language teacher at Petrozavodsk State University. Nikolay’s mother is the chairperson of the Interregional Association for the Support of the UN of Russia so she led presentations on critical thinking at the school visits, while Nikolay and Dustin gave their opinions and shared personal examples. The biggest difficulty for Dustin was adjusting to hot tea, the non-alcoholic beverage of choice for Russians. Because tap water is not safe to drink, Russians boil their water and flavor it with tea. One of the most fascinating experiences was experiencing a “polar day” in Kirovsk. During the summer months, it is never dark in this part of the Russian North but during the long winter, the sun is rarely seen. “It was amazing to see how eager Russian young people were to meet Dustin and share their personal hobbies with him,” says Nikolay. “People would recognize from 500 meters that Dustin wasn’t a Russian because he has an expression of freedom and a relaxed attitude.” Food was a mixed experience for Dustin. He liked the pancakes they served for breakfast which were similar to French crepes, but not being a fish lover, he found it rather unappealing to see people walking around selling whole fish on a string. He was quite surprised by their square pies and Russian style pizza, which contained mayonnaise. “I was very surprised to find that even in a place as remote as Kirovsk, people still live meaningful lives, welcome foreigners, know the English language, and are excited for change,” says Dustin. Above: Dustin and Nikolay at the Aurora, one of the most famous ships in Russia. In October 1917 the ship’s crew was commanded to fire into the Winter Palace, the place of the Provisional Government of Russia at that time. Ironically, the shot was a fake one (it had no gun powder charge). However, it served as a signal for communists to attack, overtake public offices and ultimately ignited the October Revolution. This historic battleship is now a museum and stationed in SaintPetersburg. Left (from left to right): Antonina Schukina, a Senior Dean of the Foreign Languages Department at Petrozavodsk State University (Kola branch), Antonina Sidorovich, Head of the Parents’ Committee of YMCA-Kirovsk Chapter, Dustin and Nikolay. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 23 Shauna Aminath from Malé, the Maldives and Kim Siess from St. Clair, Missouri Kim and Shauna certainly had the most exciting adventure of any of the participants in the program. The night before Kim arrived, people in Malé demonstrated on the streets against the government, demanding the release of political detainees. Several of Shauna’s friends were arrested by the government for participating in this nonviolent demonstration. So one of the first events in Kim’s visit was joining Shauna in a meeting with the opposition party members petitioning to negotiate the release of the demonstrators. “It was difficult for Kim to comprehend the reasoning behind the arrest of that many people for participating in a non-violent demonstration in a ‘democratic’ country,” says Shauna. “The meeting and the distribution of our petition around the island gave an insight to the Maldivian political system for Kim and comprehending the issues that are important to the youth.” Even Kim’s arrival was eventful when Shauna was two hours late to meet her because she couldn’t get past an immigration officer at the airport. Kim also had many other interesting and enlightening experiences. Malé, the capital city of the Maldives, has 100,000 people living in a 1.5 square mile area so one of the first culture shocks for Kim was the overcrowded conditions. Then she had the opportunity to travel to the island Addu where Shauna had lived until the age of six. This peaceful environment with its unindustrialized, subsistence-based society was a total contrast to Malé. Kim learned about the environmental problems of the Maldives and the unequal distribution of wealth among the classes. “Some public areas were used as garbage dumps because people were not accessible to the area the government has designated for garbage disposal,” says Kim. “The island did not have proper garbage disposal methods; thus, beautiful beaches were polluted with garbage.” After their trip to Addu, Kim did get to experience the paradise side of the Maldives. Shauna’s father arranged for them to stay at his work place, Cocopalm Resort and Spa, where they saw dolphins, participated in a snorkeling safari with a marine biologist and enjoyed the resort amenities. Kim also had the opportunity to visit the island of Thulhaadhoo one afternoon and Hulhamalé, an artificially reclaimed island annex of Malé. Overall, Kim had a great time and wants to fulfill Shauna’s dream of learning how to milk a cow when Shauna visits her home. 24 Leadership Westminster College Below: A small part of the Maldives from the air. Below left: Shauna and Kim after their snorkeling safari on the way to Cocopalm Resort and Spa Above: Ajit with his sister Ashwini, his cousin Jyoti and his mother Usha Balkawade Right: Jamie the snake charmer. Ajit Balkawade from Daravali, India and Jamie Brown from St. Clair, Missouri Jamie was immediately immersed in Indian culture when Ajit took her on a guided tour of his hometown during her first day. “He drove me around the city in one of his Dad’s cars, and at first I was a little scared because the traffic of the city was chaotic,” Jamie recalls. “It was a bit of a shock to hear nothing but horns and Ajit singing along with the radio. The masses of people walking along the street and the occasional cow relaxing in the road didn’t help in calming me down either. Then the highlight of the day was when I was informed that Ajit didn’t have a driver’s license after he bumped into a rickshaw.” One of the more interesting experiences for Jamie was helping Ajit’s sister prepare for an interview with the family of a potential husband for her as a part of the arranged marriage process that takes place in India. Jamie helped her dress in “the most amazing sari,” the traditional fashion of India, and straightened her hair with a flat iron so she was able to wear her hair down. In Delhi, Jamie visited the India gate built by the British during the colonial period and a temple that was in the shape of a lotus flower as well going a few hours outside Delhi to the most breathtaking sight of her entire trip–the Taj Mahal. On the day of Jamie’s departure, Ajit’s family gave her a spectacular send-off. They had invited a snake expert to their home to put on a show. Everything was going well with the snakes until Jamie decided to take a flash picture of the king cobra. The cobra didn’t like this attention at all and quickly focused on Jamie, but the snake expert acted quickly to bring the cobra back under control. Ajit’s family also prepared a traditional going away ceremony for Jamie to ensure her safe travel back to America. “I hoped to show Jamie a lot of my day-to-day activities and some of the main attractions that ‘outsiders’ have about India,” says Ajit. “I tried to prepare my family better to interact with her so she didn’t feel left out since she didn’t speak Hindi or Marathi. We both were continuously interacting about what she would like to see and how I could organize it. My family liked her positive attitude toward India a lot, and now, we hope she will be able to visit India sometime again.” During her adventures, Jamie fell in love with India and her biggest regret of the trip is that she doesn’t know if she will ever be able to return. In all four cases, the Take-A-Friend Home Program proved to be a transformational experience for the students involved. Hosting a friend in one’s home invites hospitality and builds good will. Bonds of friendship have been formed that will last a lifetime. Both the guests and the hosts gained valuable insights about their own countries and cultures as well as acquiring a new appreciation for the countries and cultures different from their own. They learned how to adjust to being outside their comfort zones and gained the confidence necessary to be open to new opportunities and experiences in the future. The domestic students were truly sensitized to the challenges faced by international students when they enter the Westminster campus, and they now see the importance of having a friend to help make the transition to a foreign land. Certainly, from the results, Westminster is enthusiastic about continuing this valuable learning experience. In fact, administrators would like to expand the program this summer and eventually be able to offer Take-A-Friend Home to 10-15 pairs of students. If you are interested in participating in the endowment for Take-A-Friend Home, please contact the Office of Development at (573) 592-5370. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 25 Leadership Lives Large at College life in the movie worlds of “Van Wilder” and “Animal House” may be filled with the “party down, sleep in” mentality, but the small and select liberal arts school of Westminster College demonstrates that this student stereotype is reel world, not real world. Certainly, Westminster has a healthy, active social life, and sleeping in does happen when the schedule allows. However, the prevailing atmosphere at Westminster is student involvement–on campus and within the local community. On any given day, students can be found hosting blood drives, visiting senior centers, partnering with Missouri’s Division of Youth Services, and volunteering at the local soup kitchen, schools, the YMCA and Little Brothers/Little Sisters. Last year alone, Westminster students performed more than 6,500 hours of service. For Make a Difference Day the end of October, over 150 students gave up their Saturday to complete local community service projects, ranging from raking leaves and winterization at the homes of senior citizens to cleaning up a Head Start facility. Why? “Because developing leaders of character prepared to contribute in a global community is what we are about at Westminster,” says President Dr. Fletcher M. Lamkin. “We don’t just give lip service to this focus. Our students live it and breathe it every single day.” The heart and soul of that commitment on campus is the Emerson Center for Leadership & Service, created in 2002 in honor of the late Missouri Congressman and Westminster alumnus William Emerson ’59. The Emerson Center for Leadership & Service is a four-point program, which includes leadership development, a servant-leader partnership between the College and the local community, the integration of leadership into designated curricula and a leadership awards program. The leadership program itself is a series of academic credit-bearing classes and lab experiences that result in a Leadership Minor or Leadership Certification for participating students. This program provides a model for integration of academic and student affairs and is taught by a combination of student affairs staff and tenure-track faculty under a jointly created curriculum. “Students today are demanding skills beyond basic academics that will set them apart from others when they enter the work force,” says President Lamkin. “They are searching for a total developmental experience that will help them in all aspects of their lives to include family, career and community interaction. Our Leadership Center fulfills those needs.” 26 Leadership Westminster College Westminster The Center also integrates academic and student affairs through its support of service-learning. Stipends and operational funds are provided for faculty who wish to incorporate service-learning into their courses. Center staff works with the faculty members to ensure particular service projects meet a community need and incorporate learning through reflection. For example, last year during tax season, Center staff worked with accounting professors on a program where students prepared tax returns for low-income families and helped them receive tax credits. “The Emerson Center for Leadership & Service is based on the servant-leadership model,” says Dr. David Humphrey, Center Director. “Our goal is to instill values in leadership development and teach our students that to lead, you must reach out and serve those who you wish to influence.” The results are receiving prestigious recognition. The Center recently received the 2006 Innovative Program Award presented by the Missouri College Personnel Association for outstanding student affairs programs in Missouri higher education. Westminster was also notified that the College is one of only eight colleges and universities in Missouri to be named to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll because of its record of student community service. Reaching out in partnership with the community since its inception, the Center has involved hundreds of students in programs and opportunities that address human needs such as literacy, nutrition, health promotion, youth development and housing. Clothing and blood drives, bone marrow drives, campus recycling, Habitat for Humanity house construction and alternative spring break trips to help Katrina victims rebuild from the devastation are just a short list of some of the projects Westminster students have undertaken through the Leadership Center. Westminster’s most famous visitor, Sir Winston Churchill, who delivered his “Iron Curtain” address on campus in 1946, once said: “We make a living by what we get, but we make a life with what we give.” Students at Westminster College are making a life for themselves through their involvement in the Emerson Center for Leadership & Service. One of the more unique projects initiated last year is the campus organic garden project to raise awareness about sustainability and environmentally sound agricultural practices. The produce raised was given to local senior citizens and to Westminster international students who live in Fulton during the summer while the College dining hall is closed. The ultimate goal of the garden project is to produce enough vegetables and herbs for use at the local soup kitchen and food pantry. Another project that will be greatly expanded this year is mentoring and tutoring with the Little Brothers/Little Sisters organization. Under this program, Westminster students take a youth mentoring leadership lab to study child development and learn best practices. Then they are matched up with young people who have been identified in need of after school support through the state STARS (Students and Teachers as Research Scientists) after school program. Approximately 25 students are participating in the program compared to 15 last year. “Learning about values and the importance of giving back to the community, state and nation are an integral part of our educational process,” says Lamkin. “We believe that character counts.” w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 27 A Story of Touching Lives… Now and For Generations To Come John McFarland ’62 is a happy man. Tonight, he is sitting with his wife Karen and “thier” students…; Ashton Ellett, class of 2008 and Amber Martin, class of 2007. The event is the annual President’s Dinner. Ashton excitedly talks about his goal of joining the United States Foreign Services. His love of politics and service is evident as he animatedly discusses his desire to travel the world and help bring diverse cultures together. Amber talks about the challenges and rewards of being a resident student advisor, a role which will help her prepare for her graduate studies and career as a teacher. John sits back and smiles… John and Karen McFarland with scholarship recipients Amber Martin and Ashton Ellett 28 Leadership Westminster College In Ashton and Amber, John sees the future of this country and he is pleased. Through the McFarland Family Endowed Scholarship Fund, which John and Karen established in 2002, they know that they have touched the lives of Ashton and Amber… and, the two students realize the impact of this scholarship will benefit them for years to come. Each year, the story of John, Karen, Ashton and Amber is repeated 100 times at Westminster. That’s the number of named endowed scholarships that are currently making it possible for deserving students to experience Westminster. “The beauty of establishing an endowed scholarship is that you can chose the criteria the students must meet in order to receive the award,” said McFarland. With the McFarland Family Scholarship, John and Karen wanted to reward demonstrated excellence and impact the retention rate at Westminster by targeting juniors and seniors. Good grades are a must and the students have to demonstrate leadership skills and good character. For the students, the “carrot” of continuing the scholarship is a powerful incentive. Both Ashton and Amber have enviable grade point averages, both belong to at least two honor societies and they love to participate in campus activities. Like so many dedicated alumni, John wanted to “give back” to the College that gave him so much. A successful businessman, John realizes the impact Westminster has made in his life… and he wants that impact to be felt by future generations of students. “My desire is that those students who receive this scholarship will realize that hard work and good character pay off.” McFarland adds. Hard work and good character has been paying off for Westminster students for more than 155 years, in no small part due to the insightful generosity of people like John and Karen McFarland. Young Rev. B.Y. George, one of the first 50 students to attend, then Fulton College, in 1851 could never comprehend the Westminster of today. Yet, even at the College’s inception, our founders were looking to the future. In Bill Parrish’s book, Westminster College: An Informal History, 18511999, he notes that trustees of the College established a “scholarship plan” permitting, “a purchaser to secure to himself and his sons for a period of twenty years the complete prepatory and college course for $150.” Parrish adds that an endowed scholarship could be established for $500. In 1892, a successful businessman from Hannibal, Missouri, William Sausser passed away leaving the College his entire estate valued at $125,000. This amount more than doubled the College’s endowment. Sausser was not an alumnus but he valued the College’s commitment to values and character. Though the amount of these scholarships and bequest seem small by today’s comparison, they allowed the College to survive many turbulent years to include the Civil War and Great Depression. Today, Westminster enrolls more than 900 students, employees nationally respected faculty and provides a nurturing living and learning environment. The success of recently completed Campaign for Westminster provided for the state-of-the-art Wallace H. Coulter Science Center, the renovation of the Winston Churchill Memorial and Library, new technology and the Mueller Leadership Hall dining facility which will open in the fall of 2007. The Campaign for Westminster has greatly helped the College of today. The question is; what will become of the Westminster of the future? “Growing the College’s endowment isn’t about monetary goals and national rankings,” said Westminster College President Fletcher Lamkin. “Securing the College’s endowment is all about ensuring that deserving students like Ashton and Amber will be able to benefit from the Westminster experience for the next 155 years and beyond.” For the one who establishes the endowed scholarship, however, it is even more personal. “I’m genuinely interested in being a part of these student’s lives,” said McFarland. “I would sincerely hope to keep in touch with students like Aston and Amber after graduation.” For the student, the scholarship is nothing less than making a dream come true. Ashton, a Rhodes Scholar candidate, plans to follow in his parent’s footsteps after his duty in the Foreign Services is complete. “Teaching history, literature and foreign relations at a small private college or university like Westminster would be the opportunity of a lifetime and a dream come true. Thank you.” If you are interested in touching the lives of students and helping to make their dreams come true, please consider establishing an endowed scholarship at Westminster. Please contact Dan Diedriech, Vice President for Institutional Advancement at (573) 592-5370 to help begin building relationships that will last a lifetime. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 29 westminster at a glance See for yourself what’s happening at Westminster College Alumni Weekend April 20–22, 2007 w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 31 CLASSNOTES Martha Kochheim, former Beta housemother in the 1980s, celebrated her 98th birthday in 2006. She is doing well living in Seminole, FL, and enjoys her health and family. 40’s Bill Backer ’43 married Jean Lincoln on December 14, 2006. The couple resides in Fulton, MO. Backer is the Owner of the Auto World Museum. 50’s Dean Macris ’53 retired from a career as the San Francisco Planning Director after working for mayors Joe Alioto, Dianne Feinstein, Art Agnos and Gavin Newsom. Macris is known as the architect of the San Francisco skyline. Reverend Otis Young ’53 retired in September 2006 from the First-Plymouth Congregational Church in Lincoln, NE after serving as the Senior Minister for 35 years. Young plans to continue his popular “All About Books” book review program on NET Radio and has begun working as a church consultant, sharing his expertise in church planning and management with other congregations in Nebraska and elsewhere. He also will do part-time community relations for Sampson Construction Co. Dr. Bill Cross ’55 was featured in the September 7, 2006 issue of the Kansas City Press Dispatch in “A lesson in what teaching is all about,” and the November 9, 2006 issue of the Sun Tribune in “Stopping not an option for Gladstone mayor.” Dick Schwieder ’57 and wife Jonne (Thompson WWU ’55) celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on August 18 2006. 60’s Col. Linn Schofield ’60 retired from the Department of Defense and moved to Hawaii. Schofield’s daughter Valerie is a junior at Westminster and plans to attend medical school. Tom Kleinschmidt ’62 is an Attorney with Schneider & Onofry in Phoenix, AZ. Carl Tegtmeier ’66 received the Distinguished Service Award from the Missouri Military Academy in Mexico, MO during the 2006 Homecoming Alumni Convocation. Jim Morton ’67 is the Vice Chairman of Nissan North America, Inc. in Nashville, TN. 70’s Dan Harris ’70 is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Operations in the US Commercial Service in Washington, DC. Dan Grubb ’71 works in Sales for the Targeted Publications and Catalog Group of Quebecor World. Bob Edwards ’76 is a Social Security Representative with Allsup, Inc. in Belleville, IL. Jim Kiburz ’76 is a Senior Vice President, Enterprise Risk Management with UMB Financial CorpCredit Alliance, Inc. in Kansas City, MO. Al Minor ’76 is the Vice President of Sales for OnSite Network. Kerry Kimble ’78 completed the Federal Emergency Management Agency Emergency Management Certification Program in September 2006. Kimble works for the State of Colorado Division of Emergency Management in Centennial, CO. Rene Smeraglia ’78 is an Information Security Officer with the United States Mint in Washington, DC. Ted Wilson ’78 is President of the Bank of Weston in Weston, MO. of the clinic and it was renamed the Community Health Center. Steve Spitsnogle ’79 retired and moved to Florida. Spitsnogle is recently engaged to his high school sweetheart. 80’s Nathan Carrington ’80 is a Quality Assurance Specialist for the Claim Division of American Family Insurance. His primary responsibilities are to review the effectiveness and accuracy of processes, performance and standards of the Claim Division. Carrington resides with his family in St. Joseph, MO. Bill Esry ’80 was elected President of the Missouri Independent Bankers Association. Esry will guide the MIBA as it serves Missouri’s community banks by providing legislative representation, hosting education and seminar programs, as well as other services designed exclusively for community banks. Esry is the President and CEO of Blue Ridge Bank and Trust in Independence, MO. John Weidner ’71 is a Founding Partner of Cornell Global LLC in Wilton, CT. Scott Mulford ’74 is the Press Secretary for Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan in Springfield, IL. Dr. Craig Roth ’74 was recognized with the Minnesota Laureate Award from the American College of Physicians in November 2006. Roth is an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Minnesota. Johnson Ho ’75 is the President of Pantheon Wine Society, a world class showcase store in Northbrook, IL. Visit the website at pantheonwinesociety.com. Jim Rosen ’75 is a Vice President and Director of Leasing with Pace Properties in St. Louis, MO. 32 Bob Baker ’76 is a Portfolio Manager with Morgan Stanley Investment Management in Houston, TX. Leadership Westminster College Barrett and Brooke, age 10, children of Les ’79 and Nina Baledge Bill Esry ’80 David Nicholson ’79 was elected Circuit Court Clerk of Jefferson County in November 2006. Nicholson and wife Debra celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in August 2006 and have 2 children, Sara, age 18 and Sam, age 15. Dr. Jeff Sanders ’79 founded the volunteer-based Jefferson City Free Medical Clinic in 1996, providing free health services to community members. Sanders recently turned over management Randy Sparks ’80 and wife Laura recently celebrated their 16th wedding anniversary. They reside in Charlotte, NC with their two boys, Matthew, age 9, and William, age 6. Sparks is the Chief Counsel to Bank of America’s Global Treasury Services Division and was recently appointed to the additional role of Chief AntiMoney Laundering Counsel for the Bank’s Global Corporate and Investment Bank. Howard ’83 and Jocelyn Hubbell were married on April 22, 2006 in Charleston, SC. The couple resides in Johns Island, SC. Hubbell is a CT Technologist at Roper Hospital in Charleston. William and Matthew Sparks, sons of Randy ’80 and Laura Sparks Scott Schenck ’82 is a Coach at Conscious Choices in Hendersonville, NC. General Larry Kay ’83 is the Deputy Director for the Missouri Veterans Commission in Jefferson City, MO. Dennis Meyer ’83 is a Staff Underwriter and Product Specialist with Allied/Nationwide Insurance in Des Moines, IA. J.T. Nangle ’85 is the Director of Resort Operations with Summerwinds Resort Services, LLC in Branson, MO. Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, TN. Rusty Smith ’85 is a Managing Partner of Third Coast International Group, LLC in Chicago, IL. Dr. Jim Williams ’86 will be teaching “Winston Churchill: War Leader, Politician, Author, Artist” through the Cooperative Center for Study Abroad London Summer Program 2007. Williams is a Professor of History at Middle Matthew Kim, age 3, son of Michael ’87 and Marleen Kim w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 33 CLASSNOTES John Rollins ’87 is a Partner with Kenner and Kavanaugh in Kansas City, MO. Drew Erwin ’88 and wife Stephanie (WWU ’89) are proud to annouce the birth of their 4th son, Alden Templeton Erwin, on August 16, 2006. Alden joins big brothers Adlai, age 10, Ashtyn, age 5, and Aubrey, age 4. The family resides in Quincy, IL where Erwin practices law. Dr. Mark Taylor ’89 is an Assistant Professor of Mathematics Education at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. 90’s Brea, age 1, daughter of Brian and Kim (Boswell) ’90 Daniel Ashtyn, Aubrey and Adlai Erwin welcome new baby brother, Alden Gayle (Leone) Gilley ’88 is a Senior Accountant with Intergraph Service Company in Huntsville, AL. Greg Richard ’88 is the Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing with Synarc, Inc. Richard is responsible for leading Synarc’s global commercial sales and marketing strategy. Angela Pangelinan-Reed ’92 and husband John welcomed John Charles Reed, VI on December 12, 2006. The couple was married on May 9, 2005 in Las Vegas, NV. John joins older siblings Kieran, age 11, and Kody, age 9. The family resides in San Antonio, TX where Pangelinan-Reed is a Product Director with USAA. Lisa (Gebken) Thibault ’92 and husband Michael welcomed Lucille “Lucy” Elizabeth Thibault on July 25, 2006. Lucy joins older sisters Genevieve, age 7, and Sophie, age 6. The family resides in Indianapolis, IN. David Phillips ’90 is a Vice President and Branch Manager with Stephens, Inc. in Conway, AR. The Theroff Family - Ken ’88 and Susie, Emmi, Anna and Grace Jack Talbot ’93 is an Attorney with Bridges, Young, Matthews & Drake PLC in Pine Bluff, AR. Jonathan Wade ’93 is the CEO of Covenant Hospital Plainview in Plainview, TX. Wade and wife Kimberly are expecting twins in April. Emily (Richardson) ’94 and Jeff ’94 Blake Gary Bonsall ’94 is the Guidance Counselor at South Callaway High School in Mokane, MO. Kimberly Clarke-McCarty ’94 works in Training and Productivity with Keller Williams Realty in Texas. Dr. David Jacobson ’90 prepares an experimental fuel cell for real-time imaging at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Center for Neutron Research in Gaithersburg, MD. ©Robert Rathe Tom Gorman ’92 was named the October 2006 Bartlesville (OK) Area Chamber Board Member of the Month. Gorman has been a Chamber member since 2001 and is the President of Gorman Management Company, which manages residential apartments throughout the state of Oklahoma. Tom ’89 and Tiffany (Thomas) ’96 Holman welcomed Nathan James Holman on July 9, 2006. Nate joins older brother Nicholas, age 3. The family resides in Columbia, MO where Tom is the Chief Appraiser with District 2 MoDOT and Tiffany is a 1st Grade Teacher at Fairview Elementary. George Mahn ’92 is working on licensing and scoring opportunities with major film and television projects. Mahn scored the independent film The Promise in 2004 and finished a collection of new instrumental pieces in 2005. Sophie and Genevieve Thibault welcome their new baby sister Lucy James Barrington ’93 is an Attorney with Bremer Whyte Brown & O’Meara in Las Vegas, NV. Barrington and wife Jennifer have two sons, Jack, age 4, and Hank, age 1. Kelly (Ferguson) Cravens ’93 was admitted as Partner in the firm Mauldin & Jenkins Certified Public Accountants, LLC in Birmingham, AL in September 2006. Julie (Dabney) Devoti ’94 and children Joseph, age 7, Sophia, age 6, and Nicholas, age 2, cheer on the Blue Jays during the Fall 2006 Football Season. Ehren Earleywine ’94 is the Head Softball Coach at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Earleywine and wife Lisa have two children, a son Connor, age 3, and a daughter Duran, age 1. Lila Ohler ’93 is an Acquisitions Librarian at the University of Oklahoma in Norman. Jenny Otting ’93 is an English Language Teacher at Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey. Nate Holman Ehren Earleywine ’94 34 Leadership Westminster College CLASSNOTES Cary Justice ’94 and wife Ginny announce the birth of Samuel Bullitt Ward Justice on August 1, 2006. The family resides in Washington, DC. Justice is the Deputy Associate Director for Legislative Affairs in the Office of National Drug Control Policy at The White House. Samuel Justice Damon Sacra ’94 is an Assistant District Attorney with the Tulsa County District Attorney's Office. Meredith Wampler ’94 graduated with a Doctorate in Physical Therapy through a joint program from San Francisco State University and the University of California San Francisco in August 2005. Wampler is a Faculty Member at San Francisco State University. Lance Baker ’95 was promoted to Branch Manager and Associate Vice President of the A.G. Edwards Oklahoma City office in March 2006. Baker and wife Laura have two children, Elizabeth, age 6, and Harrison, age 4, and are in the process of adopting a little girl from China. Sam Harper ’95 received a PhD in Public Health from the University of Michigan. Harper resides in Montreal, QC. Wendy Humphrey ’95 is an Attorney with Lovell, Lovell & Newsom, LLP in Amarillo, TX. Christine and Ryan ’95 Hunter with children Lola, 6 months, and Mason, age 2 Audra Miller ’95 is a Managing Partner with Full Sail Properties LLC in Kansas City, MO. Donna (Gorbet) Redmond ’95 is an Internet Development Manager with Herff-Jones, Inc. in Indianapolis, IN. Jessica Spanglehour ’95 is the Director of Development at the Central Missouri Food Bank in Columbia. Amy (Collier) Swanson ’95 and husband Jeramie welcomed Andrew Carter Swanson on March 10, 2006. Andrew joins big brothers Jacob, age 7, and David, age 4. The family resides in Lincoln, NE where Swanson is the Vice President of Operations with DEC Capital Inc. 2006. The couple was married on June 25, 2005 in Little Rock, AR. The wedding party included Bethany Moran ’97. The family resides in Houston, TX where Kirby is now a stay at home mom after a 10 year career with HealthSCOPE Benefits as Director of Account Management. Jill (Schnurbusch) Sanderson ’97 and husband Joshua announce the birth of Quinn Taylor Sanderson on August 19, 2005. Quinn joins older sibling, Kergan, age 3. The family resides in Lake Saint Louis, MO. Brandon Beshears ’98 is the Coalitions Director and Ag & Sportsmen Outreach Coordinator for Missouri Victory ’06. Rick Erwin ’98 and Kaly Harkins ’98 were married on October 14, 2006 in Fort Morgan, AL. The wedding party included Chaney (Harkins) Hagemann ’97, Justin Gage ’98, and Jeremy Salmons ’98. Also in attendance were Kerrie Knoll ’98, Kristen Kennedy ’98, Dan Hagemann ’99, Christopher Monroe ’01 and Robyn Erwin ’04. The couple resides in St. Louis, MO where Erwin is Director of Operations for the City Museum and Harkins is a Environmental Project Manager with Williams & Co. Consulting. Abbey Marie Kirby Todd Marler ’96 is an Attorney with Borengasser & Marler Attorneys and Counselors at Law, LLC in Lake Saint Louis, MO. Andrew Carter Swanson Angie Bono-Severy ’96 is a Patient Care Manager and Counselor at the Carle Addiction Recovery Center with the Carle Clinic Association in Urbana, IL. Brad Buckner ’96 was selected as the McGinnis Woods Country Day School 2006 Teacher of the Year, where he has taught kindergarten for the last 6 years. Buckner resides in Cumming, GA with his wife Aime, a 4th Grade Teacher at the same school. Andrea (Wiley) ’96 and Dennis Sagely with twins Aubyn and Ashtyn Jason White ’96 and wife Tessa announce the birth of Jevin James White on October 11, 2006. Jevin joins older siblings Miranda, age 11, and Jace, age 6. The family resides in Eldon, MO. White is a Business Teacher and Basketball Coach at Eugene High School. Karen (Griffin) Butcher '96 and husband David welcomed Audrey Marie Butcher on October 9, 2006. Audrey joins older brother Anthony, age 3. The family resides in Columbia, MO where Butcher is a Human Resources Specialist with Salton, Inc. Jennifer (Janson) Kirby ’96 and husband Charles welcomed Abbey Marie Kirby on July 20, Rick ’98 and Kaly (Harkins) ’98 Erwin and wedding party Jevin James White Audrey Marie Butcher Rob Fasoldt ’98 is the Director of Ticket Sales for the St. Louis Blues. w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 35 Aaron Fray ’98 is President of ION-E Network, Inc. in Newark, DE. David Mayor ’98 is a Commercial Manager, Latin America with Nokia in Irving, TX. Amy (Schaeperkoetter) Herman ’98 and husband Dale welcomed Ivie Schae Herman on April 13, 2006. The family resides in Durham, NC. Herman is the Assistant Athletic Director for Compliance at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Tyler Schaper ’98 and wife Christy welcomed Blake Alexander Schaper on September 11, 2006. Blake joins older brother Jacob, age 1 1/2. The family resides in Godfrey, IL where Schaper is a Senior Financial Consultant for three branches at US Bancorp. Schaper is a President’s Club Producer who recently earned a 2006 Pinnacle Award for his 3rd quarter performance and production. Dean Pat Kirby catches up with Amy (Schaeperkoetter) ’98 and Dale Herman and baby Ivie during a recent campus visit Jim Hoodenpyle ’98 is a Region Team Leader in the Finance Department with Frito Lay in Springfield, MO. 36 Jacob and Blake Schaper Leadership Westminster College Jill (Swank) ’98 and Barret ’99 Seymour welcomed Cori Stockton Seymour on June 9, 2006. The family resides in Oklahoma City, OK. Engineering Group in Crested Butte, CO. Harper earned a degree in Civil Engineering from Colorado State University. Trey ’99 and Audra (Meyers) ’99 Jackson welcomed Carter Elizabeth Jackson on September 28, 2006. Carter joins older brother Lucas, age 2. The family resides in Fort Smith, AR. Dr. Dan Neller ’99 is a Forensic Psychologist at Georgia Regional Hospital at Augusta. Cori Stockton Seymour Rebecca Dillender ’99 is a Health Insurance Specialist with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Kansas City Region. Dillender was recognized in September 2006 with the Administrator’s Achievement Award for identifying an error in the 2006 Medicare Ambulance Fee Schedule that saved the Medicare program more than $65 million in overpayments for ambulance services. Dodson Harper ’99 is a Structural Engineer with Resource Nancy Picht ’99 is a Lab Assistant II with Northwest Regional Laboratory in Bellingham, WA. Rebecca Dillender ’99 with Dr. Mark McClellan, CMS Administrator, and Tom Lenz, CMS Kansas City Region Administrator, at the CMS Awards Ceremony in Baltimore in Septemeber 2006 CLASSNOTES 2000’s Gregg Klinginsmith ’00 is the Assistant Principal at South Middle School in Joplin, MO. Gregg Klinginsmith ’00 Michelle Miller ’00 married Thomas Fassler on May 6, 2006 at Lake Ozark, MO. The wedding party included Candice (Criswell) Chastain ’00. The couple resides in Imperial, MO. Miller is currently completing a Master’s in School Counseling at Lindenwood University. Donald Wood ’00 is the Associate Director of Development with the Sigma Chi Foundation in Evanston, IL. Marcus Dixon ’01 graduated from the University of Phoenix with an MBA in 2004. Dixon is a Vehicle Remarketing Manager of the Southern Auto Auction of DaimlerChrysler Services North America LLC in East Windsor, CT. Alisia Eckert ’01 graduated with an MBA from the Yale School of Management in May 2005. Eckert is a Development Coordinator with Children’s Memorial in Chicago, IL. Matt ’01 and Katie (Rader) ’03 Haverstick welcomed Daniel R. Haverstick on April 1, 2006. Daniel joins older brothers Steven, age 5, and Wyatt, age 2. The family resides in Fenton, MO. Matt is a Family Advocate with the YWCA Head Start and Katie is a Senior Accountant with Code Consultants, Inc. in St. Louis. Mike W. Hawley ’01 a third year student at the Pikeville College School of Osteopathic Medicine. Jocelyn Schaefer, age 4 months, daughter of Jennifer (Whitaker) Schaefer ’00 Cecil Skaggs ‘00 is a Computer Technician with Columbia Integrated Technologies in Columbia, MO. Beth (Howard) Stubbs ’00 is a Pharmacist and Part Owner of Kilgore’s Medical Pharmacy in Columbia, MO. James Turner ’00 is a Deputy Sheriff in the K9 Unit with the Tulare County Sheriff’s Department in Visalia, CA. Joe Winters ’00 married Mary Gilmore on September 9, 2006 in Columbia, MO. The couple resides in Columbia, MO. Winters is a Recreation Supervisor at the Missouri Department of Corrections in Moberly. 38 Elizabeth Malm ’01 is a Resident in Urology at the University of Missouri-Columbia Hospital. Christopher Beale ’02 is in his final year as a Youth and Community Development Volunteer in the Eastern Caribbean serving on the island nation of Antigua and Barbuda. As a PCV, Beale works with government agencies and local organizations to help strengthen their capacity with a focus on program design and management. Beale also works with schools and youth groups in the context of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Erica Darmstaedter ’02 is an Agent Assistant and Customer Service Representative with American Family Insurance, Bill Voss Agency in Ellisville, MO. Amber Thompson ’01 married Luke Shafer on August 26, 2006 in Troy, MO. The couple resides in Clarksville, MO. Thompson is the President of the Bank of Louisianna. Leadership Westminster College Nick Cacciabando ’03 is a Senior Associate with Senior Living Investment Brokerage in St. Louis, MO. Hillary (Haas) Clark ’03 is an Environmental Specialist with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources in Jefferson City, MO. Brandon Heath ’03 is a Branch Manager with Regions Bank in Collierville, TN. Prity Vanmali ’02 married Curt Stubinger on August 4, 2006 in Ocho Rios, Jamaica. The couple resides in Jefferson City, MO where Vanmali is a Realtor with Century 21. Sarah (Idel) Watts ’02 and husband Nathan welcomed son Cameron Lee Watts on August 23, 2006. Cameron joins older brothers Dawson, age 6, and Gabriel, age 1 1/2. Watts is a Senior Account Executive with Pitney Bowes, Inc out of the St Louis district. The family resides in Columbia, MO. Tyson Ross ’01 married Melissa Meli on November 11, 2006. Ross works for Promotion Incorporated in St. Louis, MO. Lauren (Burdolski) Taylor ’01 is the Assistant to the President of uclick.com and gocomics, a Division of Andrews McMeel Universal, in Kansas City, MO. Taylor is responsible for contracts such as Garfield, Ziggy, Tokyo Pop and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine and will graduate in June 2007. Gabriel, Dawson and Cameron, sons of Sarah (Idel) ’02 and Nathan Watts Josh and Rhonda (Herndon) ’03 Kottemann Whitney Locke ’03 married Michael Holliday on June 3, 2006 in Hannibal, MO. The wedding party included Christine (McCaul) Howard ’03, Whitney (Kinnard) Backsen ’03, Maggie O’Donnell ’03, Lauren Humphrey ’03, Brett Ellis ’03 and Lauren Christmann ’03. The couple resides in Hannibal, MO where Locke is a 10th Grade History Teacher. She received a Masters in Education from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2004 and a Specialist Degree in Educational Administration from Willliam Woods in 2006. Amanda (Knight) Black ’03 is a Pampered Chef Consultant in Fayetteville, AR. Amanda Brondel ’03 married Jacob Rodemann on June 3, 2006 in Jefferson City, MO. The wedding party included Aspen Burrow ’03 and Katie Farris ’03. The couple resides in South Bend, IN. Brondel is a Medical Student at Whitney (Locke) ’03 and Michael Holliday CLASSNOTES Amanda Masiel ’03 and Joshua Jacob were married on September 2, 2006 in Cape Girardeau, MO. The wedding party included Julie (Binggeli) Hicklin ’03. The couple resides in Nashville, TN where Masiel is a Project Consultant with Vanderbilt University. Dr. Amanda Signaigo, DC ’03 is the Owner and Chiropractor of Tiger Family Chiropractic & Wellness Center in Columbia, MO. Julie Slisz ’03 married Robert Gastler ’05 on July 22, 2006 at Rock Bridge Memorial State Park in Columbia, MO. The wedding party included Kristy Halverson ’02 and Trisha Peplinski ’06. The couple resides in Columbia, MO. Slisz is a High School Science Teacher at Fulton Public Schools and Gastler is studying Applied Mathematics at the University of MissouriColumbia. Amanda (Masiel) ’03 and Joshua Jacob Brian Naslund ’03 married Jessica Landsbury ’05 on October 28, 2006 in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury. The couple resides in Nixa, MO. Nasland is a veterinarian technician with Gentle Care Animal Hospital and Landsbury is a Youth Care Worker in a residential facility for Burrell Behavioral Health. Julie (Slisz) ’03 and Robert ’05 Gastler Elizabeth (Moore) Stickley ’03 is a First Grade Teacher at North Glendale Elementary in Kirkwood, MO. Jessica (Landsbury ’05) and Brian ’03 Naslund Tiffany Norris ’03 and Gregory Schwartz were married on July 8, 2006 in Fulton, MO. The wedding party included Brad Harrigan ’03, Brandi Schubert ’03, Kate McClain ’03 and Elisa Donnelly ’03. The couple resides in St. Louis, MO where Norris is a Law Clerk with Thompson Coburn LLP. Valerie Stuart ’03 graduated in August 2006 from Webster University with a Master’s Degree in Secondary Mathematics. Stuart is a Mathematics Teacher at Seckman High School in Imperial, MO. Lindsey Brondel ’04 married Phil Pitts on July 22, 2006 in Jefferson City, MO. The couple resides in Jefferson City. Brondel is an Office Support Staff III in the Accounting Department at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Ben Young ’04, Scott Rigg ’04, Matt House ’06, Kali Wright ’04 and Joanna Carpenter ’06. The couple resides in Columbia, MO where Jackson is a third year medical student at the University of Missouri-Columbia and Leone is the Assistant Store Manager at Eddie Bauer. Mira Doneva ’04 is a Senior Consultant in Enterprise Risk Services with Deloitte & Touche LLP in St. Louis, MO. Mira Doneva ’04 and Forrest Ashley Driggers ’04 graduated from the Accelerated Option at Research College of Nursing with a Bachelor’s of Science in Nursing in August 2006. Driggers is a Registered Nurse in the Newborn Nursery at Research Medical Center in Kansas City, MO. Kristen (Leone) ’06 and Danny ’04 Jackson Lindsay Knight ’04 married Denver Reigel on September 30, 2006. Knight is pursuing graduate studies at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Hope Eaton ’04 is an Employment and Training Counselor with Workforce Oklahoma in Norman. Eaton serves students in various nursing programs. Kasey Hames ’04 graduated with a Master of Science (Reseach) degree in Biology from St. Louis University in May 2006. Hames received the Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award from both the Biology Department and from the Graduate School Association. She is currently attending the University of Missouri-Columbia on a Life Sciences Fellowship to pursue a PhD in Plant Sciences. Brooke Jackson ’04 married Whitney Mahar on September 16, 2006 in St. Lucia. The couple resides in St. Louis, MO. Jackson is an Interpretive Resource Technician at Mastadon State Historic Site in Imperial, MO. Danny Jackson ’04 and Kristen Leone ’06 were married on October 13, 2006 at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury in Fulton, MO. The wedding party included David Jackson ’10, Pete Miranti ’04, Dan O’Hearn ’04, Gina Rackers ’03 is the Director of Marketing Events with Graves Menu Maker Foods in Jefferson City, MO. Katie Kramer ’04 is a Sales Representative with PARS International Corp. in New York, NY. Brooke (Jackson) ’04 and Whitney Mahar Blaire Leible ’04 married Ryan Garwitz on June 24, 2006 in Columbia, MO. The wedding party included Sarah Muenks ’04, Kali Wright ’04 and Brooke Jackson ’04. The couple resides in Columbia, MO. Leible graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia in May 2006 with a Master’s in Journalism and is an Information Specialist at the State Historical Society of Missouri. Lindsey (Brondel) ’04 and Phil Pitts w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 39 CLASSNOTES Montgomery County R-II Middle School in Montgomery City, MO. Adam Froidl ’05 is a Retail Supervisor with Central Bank in Jefferson City, MO. Cameron Highsmith ’05 is serving in the Peace Corps in Ukraine. Blaire (Leible) ’04 and Ryan Garwitz Casey Maloney ’04 graduated from nursing school in May 2006 and is a Registered Nurse in the Emergency Room at Lake Regional Hospital in Osage Beach, MO. Eoghan Miller ’04 is pursuing a Master’s Degree in US History at the University of MissouriColumbia. Jennifer (Jones) Walker ’04 is a Lab Technician at St. Mary’s Health Center in Jefferson City, MO. Sara Weir ’04 is a Public Policy Specialist with B&D Consulting, LLP in Washington, DC. Brian White ’04 is attending the University of South Dakota Law School in Vermillion. Jenny Wilkins ’04 is an Equipment Consultant with Gray Automotive Products Co. in St. Joseph, MO. Wilkins is pursuing an MBA at Baker University in Overland Park, KS. Josh Wright ’04 is an Accountant with Cerner in Kansas City, MO. Sara Bagley ’05 is a Study Coordinator in the Psychiatry Research Lab at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, MO. Jeanette Bell ’05 is an Assistant Coach for Women’s Basketball and Soccer at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, MO. Patricia Catrow ’05 is a Care Partner with Tenet Healthcare working at St. Louis University Hospital in St. Louis, MO. Jessica Howe ’05 is pursuing graduate studies in Anthropology with an Archaeology focus at Southern Illinios University Carbondale. Howe is a Research Assistant. Valentin Leppert ’05 married Jennifer Kerr on August 7, 2006 in Playa Del Carmen, Mexico. The couple resides in Atlanta, GA with their son Carmine. Leppert is an Investment Representative with Edward Jones in Alpharetta, GA. Amy Mengel ’05 is a Teacher at St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church Parent’s Day Out Program. Mengel is pursuing a BSN at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock. John Miller ’05 is pursuing a Master’s in Education and Teaching Credentials in History at Chapman University in Orange, CA. Sergey Morozov ’05 is a Web Developer with Opus Communications in Mission, KS. Chris Nicholas ’05 has joined the family grocery business at Dave’s Country Market in Boonville, MO. Dorin Ciobanu ’06 is the Deputy Director of Operations and HUD and Tax Credit Compliance Consultant with US Housing Consultants in New London, CT. Ryan Dillon ’06 is a Personal Aide to 4th District US Representative Ike Skelton, Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, in Washington, DC. Brian Dye ’06 married Kelly Shepard ’08 on May 13, 2006 in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury on the Westminster campus. The wedding party included Derek Duncan ’07, Josh Beck ’06 and Stephanie Gordon ’08. Honorary bridesmaids included the Women of Kappa Kappa Gamma and honorary groomsmen included the Men of Delta Tau Delta. The couple resides in Fulton, MO where Dye is pursuing a Masters in Educational Leadership Policy Anaylsis at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Shepard is completing her undergraduate degree in Biology at Westminster College and is a Reserved Admissions Candiate at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Dental School. Vanya Petkova ’05 works at the Bulgarian Embassy in Washington, DC. Brad Taylor ’05 is a General Manager with PRG Management in St. Louis, MO. Cassie Tritthart ’05 is the Women’s Soccer Coach at Ozark Christian College in Joplin, MO. Leadership Westminster College Adam Hans ’06 married Michelle Latty on August 5, 2006 at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury. The couple resides in Fulton, MO. Hans is a Salesman with Fastenal in Columbia. Jenna Manning ’06 is a Federal Tax Associate with KPMG, LLP in McLean, VA. Lisa Moore ’06 married Mitchell Jenkins on May 21, 2005 in Eureka, MO. The couple resides in Fulton, MO. Moore is an 8th Grade Science Teacher with Southern Boone County School District in Ashland. Patrick Morris ’06 is the Director of Junior Development in Arkanasas for the United States Tennis Association. Morris is in charge of working with all 18 and under players, and trying to improve the state of US tennis. Luda Nazaria ’06 is a Marketing Project Manager with CPI Corporation in St. Louis, MO. Emily Herzog ’09 was accepted into the American University, Washington Semester Program and is spending the Spring 2007 in Washington, DC. In Loving Memory They were our classmates, our friends, brothers and sisters. Together we remember those who shared their lives with us and left behind hearts full of precious memories. Kathryn “Kay” M. Lawrence of Fulton, MO on December 6, 2006. Lawrence was a former director of the men’s choir, “Men of Song,” at Westminster College from 1953-62. Lawrence’s sons Gary ’66, Greg ’68 and Kenny ’75 attended Westminster. Susan Sullivan ’05 is pursuing a Doctor of Medicine degree at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine. Mark Clements ’05 is a 6th Grade Social Studies Teacher at 40 Colby Beal ’06 is a Marketing Representative with the Zimmer Radio Group in Jefferson City, MO and the surrounding areas. Kelly (Shepard) ’08 and Brian ’06 Dye Jared Genenbacher ’06 is Special Education Teacher at Saeger Middle School in the Francis Howell School District in St. Charles, MO. Jim McGee of Fulton, MO on November 27, 2006. McGee was the husband of Barb McGee, Executive Assistant to the Dean of Enrollment Services. Reverend Walter D. Langtry ’31 of Metairie, LA on September Endowment Will… Provide Support A perpetual flow of annual gifts from endowment will assist Westminster College long after we are gone. Promote Stability Every endowment strengthens Westminster’s financial base, helping Westminster to meet current and future obligations and to attract new donors. Produce a Legacy Dr. Richard Nierenberg ’77 delivers a six-figure check to President Lamkin. Westminster College was a beneficiary of the Nierenberg Charitable Remainder Unitrust. Endowment will outlive us. It will be a timeless record for future generations of our values and our affection for Westminster College. For free information on creating your own endowment with Westminster College contact: Rebecca (Becky) Zimmer, CFRE Director of Planned Giving (636) 448-1419 • (573) 592-5374 ZimmerR@westminster-mo.edu www.westminster-mo.edu All inquiries are treated in complete confidence. Anyone considering a life income gift should consult their legal or financial advisor. A Bequest of… Provides a perpetual annual* gift of… $2,000 $100 $5,000 $250 $10,000 $500 $25,000 $1,250 $50,000 $2,500 $100,000 $5,000 $500,000 $25,000 $1,000,000 $50,000 *Based on a 5% payment w w w. w e s tm i n s t e r - m o . e d u 41 CLASSNOTES 29, 2006. Langtry was a member of Delta Tau Delta. He was the Stated Clerk and Moderator of North Mississippi Presbytery and the New Orleans Presbytery and Secretary of the Board of Publications of Louisiana Synod. Langtry was the organizing pastor of Church of the Covenant. He also served the Prytania Street Church, the Sardis and Batesville Churches in MS, as Student Pastor at the University of Virginia, and the St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in St. Louis, MO. He also helped organize the Greater New Orleans Federation of Churches. Langtry was a Board Member and President of the Children’s Bureau and the Seamen’s Bethel and was a member of Kiwanis, the Round Table of New Orleans and the High 12 Club and held the highest Masonic Offices. After he retired in 1975, he served as Interim Pastor in New Orleans and other areas. Reverend John A. Lampe ’33 of Delray Beach, FL and West Dover, VT on September 17, 2006. Lampe was a member of Delta Tau Delta. He received an honorary Doctorate of Divinity from Westminster in 1955. In a 70 year career as an ordained minister Lampe served The First Presbyterian Church of Jerseyville, IL, The Rogers Park Presbyterian Church in Chicago, IL, The Front Street Presbyterian Church of Hamilton, OH and Carmel Presbyterian Church of Glenside, PA. Following his retirement in 1977 he served many churches in Pennsylvania and Florida as interim pastor. Lampe was also very active in the Presbyterian Church on the local, synod and national level. Lampe was active in local issues, such as building community centers, promoting the growth of public schools, and building life care communities for the elderly. Lampe authored numerous short-stories and wrote several books of commentary on American life and faith. 42 R. K. Barton Jr. ’35 of St. Louis, MO on October 20, 2006. Barton was a member of Kappa Alpha Order and the Skulls of Seven, and served on the Alumni Council. Barton was a second lieutenant in the Army Reserve and was called into active duty in the Army shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. He commanded the 170th Engineering Battalion of the Corps of Engineers and took part in the invasion of the Philippine Islands and Okinawa, earning the rank of colonel by the end of the war. Barton joined his father’s business, Barton Manufacturing Co. in St. Louis, which produced DyanShine Shoe Polish, serving as president of the company until it was sold in the mid-1960s. Barton served as president of The Players Theatrical Group, chairman of the Ladue Zoning and Planning Committee, was active in the Landmarks Association of St. Louis, historical preservation projects in Jefferson County and the Boy Scouts of America. Dr. D. T. Knight ’41 of Joplin, MO on November 18, 2006. Knight was a member of Delta Tau Delta. He served as a B-25 Bomber Pilot in the US Army Air Corps and retired as Lt. Col. with over 20 years service with the US Air Force Reserves. He saw active duty in both World War II and Korea and obtained several awards and citations including the Silver Star, Distinguished Flying Cross, Distinguished Unit Badge, Air Medal with Oak Leaf Clusters, and the World War II Victory Medal. Knight retired from his career in broadcasting as General Manager at KODE-TV in 1975. Knight was past president of the Joplin area Chamber of Commerce and was Outstanding Chamber Citizen in 1974. He served on the Board of Directors for Freeman Health Systems, Twin Hills Golf and Country Club, United Missouri Bank and the Joplin Family Y. Dwane S. Icenogle ’47 of Kansas City, MO. on August 8, Leadership Westminster College 2006. Icenogle was a member of Delta Tau Delta and the Skulls of Seven. He was a veteran of WWII, serving in the US Marine Corps, later joining the Naval Reserve, from which he retired as Lt. Commander. He was a 39-year employee of Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and was a lifelong member of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Leonard V. Luna ’50 of Springfield, MO on June 25, 2005. Carl E. Pitts ’50 of Three Rivers, CA on October 26, 2006. Pitts was a member of Kappa Alpha. He was Chair of the Social/Behavioral Department at Webster College in St. Louis, MO during the early sixties. Other teaching positions included United States International University, Dept. of Psychology (San Diego) and California School for Professional Psychology, Section Head (San Diego). Later, he became a business consultant, developing training programs for clients ranging from General Electric’s aerospace division to Citibank in Asia Pacific. Pitts founded Maestro for An Evening, a group of eight fellow aficionados who met once a month to share favorite music selections. Pitts helped form a Three Rivers political group working for a change in US leadership. Pitts loved the ocean and the Sierra foothills, and he enjoyed playing golf and woodworking. Hoyt A. Shotwell ’51 of Keokuk, IA on September 22, 2006. He played baseball at Westminster and and received a master’s in education from the University of Missouri. Shotwell began teaching at Keokuk Junior High School in 1953, where he taught 7th grade geography until his retirement in 1985. He served in the Navy from 1942-45, aboard the mine sweeper Scirmish in the South Pacific. He was a lifetime member of the National Education Association and Iowa State Education Association. He was a member Trinity United Methodist Church, where he tended the rose garden for many years. Shotwell took up carpentry after retirement and enjoyed building furniture and repairing and refinishing antiques in his workshop. Dr. Charles C. Abel ’52 of St. Louis, MO on October 23, 2006. Abel was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Abel was an Internist at Barnes Hospital for 41 years. William A. Tedrick ’54 of Vandalia, IL on March 24, 2006. Tedrick was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He was a retired Manager at Vandalia Citizens Savings and Loans. Wilfred E. Botterbush ’61 of Rolla, MO on October 4, 2006. Botterbush was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He served in the US Army in Vietnam and the Panama Canal. Botterbush was a member of the Rolla Masonic Lodge and the Order of the Eastern Star. He enjoyed fishing, hunting, gardening and providing a dynamic fireworks display each 4th of July for his neighbors. Otto J. Miller II ’62 of Godrey, IL on August 6, 2006. Miller was a member of Sigma Chi. Miller was the Owner of Money Concepts Financial Planning Center in Alton, IL for 25 years. He was a former Army reservist and a member of the First Presbyterian Church, Eagles Alton Aerie 254, Piasa Masonic Lodge 27, Shrine and was a Tennessee Squire. James A. Reinke ’62 of St. Louis, MO on July 30, 2006. Reinke was a member of Beta Theta Pi. Reinke had a long dance career with Arthur Murray in Boston, later managing studios in San Antonio and Beaumont. He also worked with the disabled and taught high school equivalency courses. Reinke retired in 2001 and enjoyed his extensive library, his cats and many pen-pals around the country. David G. Schumacher Jr. ’77 of Trophy Club, TX on August 28, 2006. Schumacher was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Schumacher was a member of Hope Lodge 251, Washington, Scottish Rite and Shriners. He graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia, with an MBA and a master’s of hospital administration. Dave J. Wiethop ’84 of Orlando, FL on October 18, 2006. Wiethop was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. Wiethop distinguished himself throughout a 22year writing career as a reporter, columnist and award-winning editor. He worked as a reporter in Flat River, MO, Galesburg, IL, Kokomo, IN, Elgin, IL and Winter Haven, FL. He was editor of the Fulton Sun and won numerous awards. He also served as writer and editor of several trade magazines in Chicago and Orlando. At the time of his death he was editor of The Watermark in Orlando. Wiethop was a member of Orlando Metropolitan Church. Alumni Update Form Name: Maiden Name: Class Year: Living Group: Spouse Name: Home Address: Home Phone: Preferred E-Mail: Work Name: Title: Work Address: Work Phone and Fax: News: All alumni class notes received after 12/13/06 will appear in the next Westminster College • Office of Alumni and College Relations edition of Leadership. alumni@westminster-mo.edu • www.westminster-mo.edu 501 Westminster Avenue • Fulton, MO 65251-1299 Westminster Honors Retiring Professors Ben Budde, Peter Haigh, Ann Lael, Hank Ottinger and Mike Williams Alumni Weekend - April 20, 2007 3pm – 5pm, Wallace H. Coulter Science Center Lecture Hall If you would like to include a card, memory or memento in their scrapbooks, please send by April 1 to: Westminster College • Office of Alumni and College Relations 501 Westminster Avenue • Fulton, MO 65251