Spring 2014 Huntingdon College Magazine
Transcription
Spring 2014 Huntingdon College Magazine
Huntingdon C o l l e g e M a g a z i n e Spring 2014 A Whale of a Decade What’s with the On the Cover: Whales swam into W. James Samford Jr. Stadium during the first home football game of 2013, a nearly start-to-finish rain-fest, when Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity brought along two inflated orcas that had been purchased for a fraternity waterslide swap earlier in the week. By the next home game, a virtual school of blown-up belugas bobbed in the end zone. By the last home game, students had purchased all of the plastic leviathans in Montgomery and road-tripped to neighboring states or commanded care packages from home to add to the collection. That’s the spirit of game days at Huntingdon, when red and white balloons line Fairview Avenue and signs warn traffic that the Hawks are in town. Fans mark their stadium seats with scarlet cushions. Children chase tiny red footballs behind the visitors’ stands. Greek organizations rally in their row of end zone tents, grills puffing the aroma of tailgate food into the almost-alwayswarm Alabama breeze. A buzz emanates from the campers parked on the front lawn of the Cloverdale Campus, where families cook, laugh, catch up with their college students and share stories with each other. The stadium speakers pulse crowd- and player-revving music … until the band begins the Hawk Walk from Flowers Hall to the field. Brass, woodwind and percussion instruments rumble, blast, crack, and crash, then turn to face the gathered crowds, who stop—mid-chip-and-dip and hot dogs—to explode with the Fight Song, loud cheers, “Hawk ’em” signs. The Hawks, waiting on the field, clack, clap, and clatter as they ready for their prey of the day. This is Hawks football, capping off a week filled with events like the arrival of the C-SPAN bus on campus, a classical music concert, or the launch of the Disability Sport Network; meetings of myriad campus organizations, clubs and groups; service projects on- and off-campus; Greek charity fundraisers and social swaps; residence hall and commuter programs; Chapel, Emerge and bible study gatherings; and, especially, papers, research, tests, classes, study groups and readings. Whales, of course, have nothing to do with Hawks, but neither do Tigers and War Eagles or Crimson Tides and elephants. They’re just another way of celebrating the new spirit at Huntingdon. Besides, sometimes things that don’t make sense become legend. Whales? Contents Huntingdon College Magazine Spring 2014, Volume 92, Number 1 Chair, Board of Trustees David Hudson Jr. ’81 Features 4 A Decade of Growth President J. Cameron West—pictured with his wife, Elizabeth; daughter, Grace (left); and son, William (right)—reflects on his first 10 years at Huntingdon’s helm. President J. Cameron West Vice President for College and Alumni Relations Anthony Leigh Editor, Huntingdon College Magazine Associate Vice President for Communications and Marketing Suellen Sellars Ofe Magazine Contributors Photography: Anthony Leigh, Su Ofe, Sara Beth Terry, John Williams, Cathy Wolfe, Wesley Lyle Magazine Design Catherine E. Reinehr ’05 Coordinator of the Huntingdon Fund Kyle Eller ’10 Coordinator of Donor Stewardship Kristi McDaniel ’11 Director of Development Operations Cathy Wolfe 7 Preserving Huntingdon’s Beauty Facility additions and improvements have accommodated dramatic growth during the past decade. 8 Applying Wisdom in Service Huntingdon’s Disability Sport Network is the latest commitment in a long tradition of College service. 10 Around the World in 10 Years There is no better way for Hawks to learn about the world than to lift their wings and fly into it (pictured: Austin Worley ’13 in Costa Rica, May 2013). Huntingdon College Magazine is published by the Office of Communications, Huntingdon College. For change of address, please write the Office of College and Alumni Relations, Huntingdon College, 1500 East Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36106. Phone: (334) 833-4564 or 1-877-567ALUM E-mail: alumni@hawks.huntingdon.edu Web: http://www.huntingdon.edu Departments Donor Report 2 12 23 62 41 On the Cover Huntingdon Happenings ClassNotes In Memoriam Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 2012–13 Donor Report Stay Connected with HC Facebook: HuntingdonCollege Twitter: @HuntingdonColl Instagram: @huntingdoncollege 3 A Decade of Growth President J. Cameron West reflects on Huntingdon and the first 10 years of his presidency. Q:President West, it’s no secret that the first 10 years of your presidency have been marked by an impressive growth in enrollment at Huntingdon. Let’s start by talking about the parallel growth in academic programs at the College. A: A key contributor to Huntingdon’s growth has been a re-introduction of previously popular majors that had been discontinued because student populations couldn’t sustain them. Upon taking office, I asked for a return of a major in religion, which later led to majors in Christian education and youth ministry. Majors in music, music education, accounting, elementary education, and physical education, teacher certification in biology, and a music program concentration in worship leadership have been introduced, reintroduced, or redesigned. Last year the elementary education major Since 2002, full-time day enrollment has grown by 61 percent and the faculty has grown by more than one-third. More than 27 percent of day students are majoring in programs that have been reinstated or redesigned in the past 10 years. transformed to elementary/collaborative special education, improving graduates’ ability to adapt to teaching special needs students who have been integrated into the regular classroom as well as equipping graduates to teach in some special education classrooms. We have also created programs to stimulate intellectual inquiry and critical thinking, such as the Joyce and Truman Hobbs Honors Program, the Jimmy Loeb Literary Series, and the Huntingdon College Public Affairs Forum. Q:You have placed a great emphasis on student vocation during your presidency. What steps has the College taken to help students find what they are called to do and to prepare them to follow that calling? A: The Center for Career and Vocation, formed in 2008, works with students during every phase of finding and following their vocational paths. We have uniquely integrated the career services function of the College into the Office of College and Alumni Relations to better leverage our friends and alumni to assist students in internship creation and job placement. Fran Taylor is providing tremendous leadership in the CCV, helping each student discern a vocational calling and prepare for his or her next step beyond Huntingdon. We have the resources in place to help our students in applying for jobs and graduate school opportunities. Q:You mentioned the reintroduction of the music and music education majors earlier. How has the Huntingdon music program changed during the last 10 years? A: The formation of the marching band, the Marching Scarlet and Grey, attracted students who love music and who simultaneously filled the classrooms in a variety of majors. In fact, the major in music was redesigned and the major in music education was reintroduced because of these student-musicians. The volume of interest in music also led to dramatic growth in the Concert Choir and helped establish other music groups, such as Huntingdon Harmony jazz/show choir, Huntingdon Winds symphonic band, Huntingdon Jazz, Huntingdon Pops ensemble, BallHawks Pep Band, 4 President J. Cameron West discusses leadership lessons from his favorite president, Abraham Lincoln, with students (clockwise) Ryne Taylor ’14, Kate Garrigan ’14, and Trey Smith ’14 in his office. a men’s a cappella vocal ensemble, and various instrumental ensembles. Q:In 2012, Huntingdon was recognized by the Montgomery Area Business Committee on the Arts with a special community award for the advancement of the arts in the River Region. How is Huntingdon continuing to support the arts community? A: For many years, Huntingdon College has been a major contributor to the River Region music and arts community through our strategic and intentional emphasis on providing music and other cultural programs for the benefit of our students, the Cloverdale neighborhood, and the entire City of Montgomery. In addition to hosting individual student recitals and concerts by the Huntingdon Winds concert band, the Concert Choir, and other Huntingdon Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Mary Gasson ’14 will be the first student to graduate with teacher certification in both vocal/choral and instrumental music. ensembles, we are pleased to host events such as the Blount-Slawson Young Artists Competition and the Vann Vocal Institute. Huntingdon also provides enriching music and cultural programs through the Elizabeth Belcher Cheek Concert Series, the Faculty Recital Series, the Harald Rohlig Organ Concert Series, the Stallworth Lecture Series, the Rhoda Coleman Ellison Writers Festival, and the Jimmy Loeb Literary Series. All of these events are free and open to the public, thanks to generous support from donors and friends. Baptist Health, for example, stepped forward to sponsor our Community and Cultural Events series for the past two years. Q:Facility renewal has been a hallmark of the first 10 years of your presidency. Tell us about the transformation of Huntingdon’s Cloverdale Campus. A: The purchase of the Cloverdale School property in 2000, spearheaded by trustees Emilie Hobbs Reid and the late Jim Wilson, was a transformational moment for Huntingdon College. We quickly moved to renovate a portion of the property to establish the Dr. Laurie Jean Weil Center for Teacher Education and Human Performance. The W. James Samford Jr. Foundation helped us build a stadium, which originally hosted football exclusively and now is the playing field for football, men’s and women’s lacrosse, some soccer matches, and intramural sports. Leo Drum made a $1 million gift to transform the Cloverdale School auditorium into the gorgeous 246-seat Leo J. Drum Jr. Theater, a tremendous asset for both the College and the community. We added a paved sidewalk behind Blount Hall this past summer to accommodate all of the foot traffic heading to the Cloverdale Campus. generosity of a number of donors and friends of the College who have helped us begin the process of restoring the College’s physical plant. Huntingdon trustee John Albritton and his sisters provided an enormous gift to the College early in my presidency to renovate Bellingrath Hall, which continues to house our widely-recognized science program. Charles Roland provided more than $1 million for the complete refurbishment of the basketball arena, named in memory of his mother, Huntingdon trustee Catherine Dixon Roland ’58. Twenty-two trustees of the College collectively gave $1.1 million to restore Ligon Hall, which now houses freshmen women. Montgomery architect Renis Jones gave us a wonderful gift to renovate the art gallery on the Green. George Gibbs made a very significant gift to rebuild the tennis court complex and to add a beautiful arched gate at the Narrow Lane Road entrance. Most recently, Bill and Phyllis Gunter Snyder ’53 of Dallas, Texas, made a very generous gift to restore Jackson Home at the center of campus. There have been many others who have made gifts toward various projects around campus— far too numerous to mention—whose generosity will be appreciated for generations to come. Q:The relationship between the president and the chair of the Board of Trustees is crucial to the advancement of a College. How would you define the board leadership during your presidency? A: I could not have been more blessed to have worked with three outstanding Board chairs—Laurie Weil, Ken Upchurch, and David Hudson ’81. All of them have lent unique Trustee Chairman David Hudson Jr. ’81 (right) honored President West during a gala event for Huntingdon friends in May 2013, citing the comprehensive advancements the College has made under his decade of leadership. perspective, gifts, and skills to the College at a time when they were most needed. John Albritton and Betty Thurman McMahon ’64 have been a generous, steady presence during my entire tenure, serving respectively as vice chairman and secretary of the Board of Trustees. Each of these trustees has a deep love for Huntingdon College, and each continues to serve the College with great distinction. Q:You have often said that Huntingdon is “intentional” in claiming its historic mission as a church-related liberal arts college. What do you believe are Huntingdon’s responsibilities as a church-related liberal arts college? Football, men’s and women’s lacrosse, men’s tennis, women’s golf, and wrestling (new in the fall of 2014) have added new faces to the line-up of Hawks and Lady Hawks student-athletes. Q:Much has been done to revitalize other existing facilities on campus. What are some of the other facility enhancements? A: We have truly been blessed by the Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 5 Huntingdon’s Service of Lessons and Carols has become a favorite fall semester event since its beginning 10 years ago. A: I would submit that Huntingdon’s responsibility is to bear both (1) the perspective of the Judeo-Christian narrative and (2) the wisdom of other religious narratives and of secular narratives, in order that students explore with each other and with their teachers what we might call the Big Questions. And not as an intellectual exercise for its own sake, but as an intellectual exercise with an end, a purpose: that of inviting each new generation to embrace for itself, freely, wisdom leading to an ethic of servant-hood in which we love our neighbors as God loves us. Q:How has Huntingdon’s affiliation in NCAA-Division III led to College growth? A: In Division III, participants in intercollegiate athletics are true student-athletes because we do not offer athletic scholarships. The ability to participate in one of our 15 athletic teams is one of the reasons half of entering students choose to attend Huntingdon each year. There is great camaraderie among our student-athletes, and it is special to see how they support each other. This year we have joined the USA South Athletic Conference, made up of like-minded institutions in Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia. Q:What do you say to prospective students to encourage them to consider Huntingdon as their college home? 6 A: Huntingdon offers excellent academic programs that prepare graduates for life beyond college. Our alumni—thousands of good citizens who contribute to their communities as physicians, attorneys, educators, ministers, coaches, accountants, authors, businessmen and women, pharmacists, physical therapists, and myriad other professions—are evidence of the success of our academic programs. Just as important, however, is that students have many opportunities to gain leadership experience, to build skills, and to enrich their resumes because of vibrant student life programs. Participation in NCAA-III intercollegiate athletics, Greek life, music and arts programs, clubs and organizations, Campus Ministries, and community service not only enriches each student’s college experience, but also builds vital skills for life after college. Huntingdon’s core values of Faith, Wisdom, and Service provide added value to our students. Students tell me all the time that they chose Huntingdon because of the family atmosphere and because of the impressive faculty, staff and students they met during a campus visit. There is a tremendous spirit at Huntingdon, and I invite prospective students to come see it for themselves. it is so important for Huntingdon alumni and friends to continue to give and to give generously to Huntingdon. We have experienced three consecutive years of record giving to the Huntingdon Fund and growth in the percentage of alumni who are contributing. Alumni gifts enable Huntingdon to continue to provide an affordable, quality liberal arts experience for today’s generation of students. Q:Looking back on your first 10 years as president, what is your favorite Huntingdon memory? A: I will always treasure the privilege of living on campus in our beautiful President’s Home. I walk my Shetland sheep dog, Colin, many nights around campus, and I often have both profound and light-hearted conversations with students. I enjoy standing on my front lawn during soccer games having conversations with parents about the impact Huntingdon is making in their children’s lives. My family enjoys the interaction with students in the dining hall and at other gatherings around campus. Huntingdon is truly our home. Q:What are some of your favorite campus traditions? A: I really enjoy the formal academic traditions of the College, such as convocations, the Service of Lessons and Carols, and the ability for the president to have the first word to freshmen at the Presidential Convocation and the last word to the graduating seniors at Baccalaureate. I have great respect for the time-honored traditions such as the Oracle Hunt and the Red Lady Run. I am especially excited about some of the new traditions that our students have initiated—the presidential lawn party during Welcome Back Week, the highly spirited Roland Rowdies student section at basketball games, and the presence of hundreds of students tailgating in the end zone before and during football games. Grant Hayes ’14 was one of many students served by the CCV in internship placement last year. Q:How can alumni and friends of the College be most helpful in continuing to move Huntingdon forward? A: First, recruit students. So many students come to Huntingdon because of referrals from alumni or friends. If there are high school students in your sphere of influence, please tell them about Huntingdon or contact our Office of Admission with their names and we’ll follow up with them. Second, alumni can secure internships for students and identify entry-level job opportunities for upcoming graduates. Third, The Julia Walker Russell Dining Hall renovation was the major project of 2013, with some finishing touches still in progress. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Preserving Huntingdon’s Beauty Fiscal improvements and renovations have averaged more than one major project each year during the last decade. Charles Lee Field was completed in 2004, with W. James Samford Jr. Stadium following a year later. In 2012 the field was resurfaced with modern turf and visitor stands were added on the former practice field. In fall 2013 lights returned to the field after a 10-year absence. Jean Rodgers Chapel was created in the second floor of Flowers Hall and dedicated in 2010, named for the Class of 1949 alumna and long-time registrar known as “Dean Jean.” The renovation and expansion of Bellingrath Hall, the College’s science building, was completed in 2008. Massey Beach was created in the footprint of the former Massey hall, which came down in 2009. The 2011–12 Gibbs Tennis Center project included complete reconstruction of Huntingdon’s tennis courts and the addition of an arched entryway off of Narrow Lane Road and this championship tennis court. Leo J. Drum Jr. Theater opened in January 2013, funded by and named for the long-time neighbor and college friend who died before the project’s completion. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Catherine Dixon Roland Student Center and Roland Arena received new names after an extensive renovation of the former gym and improvements to the building in 2007. Seay Twins Art Gallery hosted its first show in the renovated and renamed space in 2009. The project was funded by Montgomery architect Renis Jones in honor of his wife, Noble Seay Jones ’49, and her twin sister, Peggy Seay Compton ’49. Ligon Hall received an extensive renovation in 2009 and reopened as the residence hall for freshman women. The Dr. Laurie Jean Weil Center, named for the Huntingdon friend and trustee, was dedicated in 2004 and houses Huntingdon’s Sport Science and Physical Education programs. The Will and Kelly Wilson Community and Athletic Center houses the James W. Wilson Jr. Gymnasium, home of Lady Hawks Volleyball and the Disability Sport Network. Improvements to Miriam Jackson Home began in 2013, the first phase of a two-part renovation that will be completed during the summer of 2014. Jackson Home houses the Staton Center for Learning Enrichment and faculty offices for Religion programs, and will be the home of the Phyllis Gunter Snyder Center for Campus Ministries. 7 Applying Wisdom in In Service Huntingdon was notified of its third consecutive year of selection to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll in March 2013. Led by the College motto, “Enter to Grow in Wisdom; Go Forth to Apply Wisdom in Service,” students have served churches, schools, causes, and community organizations in ways too far-reaching to document. If the Butterfly Effect is true, the good done by Huntingdon people makes the world a better place every day, all over the world. Here are just a few snapshots from 2013. Students and Student Life staff volunteered for MLK: The MANE Event in January, working on landscaping and cleaning the horse stalls for the Montgomery Area Non-traditional Equestrians. Huntingdon has sent dozens of volunteers to work with MANE in an ongoing relationship with that organization. Students who are part of Huntingdon’s Adapted Physical Education course work with special education students from a local school—this year, Wilson Elementary School—whose students visit campus several times each semester. Huntingdon has hosted the state Division B (middle school) Alabama Science Olympiad tournament finals for the last 13 years and the Division C (high school) finals for the past 3 years. The annual commitment requires dozens of student, faculty, and staff volunteers. The Montgomery Zoo, along with the Montgomery Food Bank , Family Sunshine Center, Common Ground Ministries, Resurrection Catholic Missions, Adullam House, Faith Rescue Mission, the Friendship Mission, Nellie Burge Community Center, and Rebuilding Together Alabama were among the community organizations served in 2013. 8 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) For a number of years Huntingdon volunteers have worked with SaveFirst, a project of Impact Alabama that trains and certifies volunteers to prepare tax returns for low-income families. HC’s 2013 SaveFirst volunteers prepared 937 returns for working families who received $2 million in refunds. By filing through SaveFirst, these families saved more than $281,100 in commercial tax preparation fees. Habitat for Humanity, The American Cancer Society, Muscular Dystrophy Association, the March of Dimes, the Arthritis Foundation, Make-A-Wish Foundation, Children’s Hospital, and the Red Cross are just a few of the national charities for which students walked, ran, raised funds, played dodgeball, and volunteered during 2013. During the traditional Big Red Day of Service 2013, 301 students, faculty, and staff contributed a combined 602 hours of community service in the Montgomery area. Participants painted, built, planted, cleaned, and performed a variety of other services in 12 locations, including MANE, River City Church, Montgomery Zoo, Habitat Re-Store, Family Sunshine Center, the Montgomery Dragonboat Festival, and three public schools. The Disability Sport Network rolls forward (ACHE) for the purpose of developing afterschool adapted sports in which youth who have physical impairments may participate—specifically, wheelchair basketball, wheelchair tennis, and wheelchair track and field; and to train and equip educators across the state to work with this underserved population. The after-school programs are open to students, ages 6–21, whose physical impairments preclude them from participation in organized schoolsponsored sports, but whose cognitive abilities allow them to master the necessary skills. Youth may enroll at any time—the program is free. The wheelchair basketball team is already preparing for a January tournament. Huntingdon’s DSPN teams will be known as the Red Wings. The wheels are turning in Wilson Gymnasium on the Cloverdale Campus—the virtual and the physical ones. In November 2013, Huntingdon launched the Disability Sport Network (HC-DSPN), whose purpose is two-fold: creating adapted sport opportunities that allow young adults and children who have physical impairments to realize their potential through sport participation; and training physical educators, coaches, teachers, and others to work with individuals who have physical impairments in sport programs. HC-DSPN was given a grant from the Alabama Commission on Higher Education Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman, chair of the Huntingdon Sport Science and Physical Education programs, developed the program and has worked to see it come to fruition. With regard to sport participation, the program’s goal is to teach prerequisite sport skills that will allow the youth to continue lifelong participation in organized sport or physical activities. The intent is that, through participation in activities such as wheelchair basketball and wheelchair tennis, participants will develop the confidence, work ethic, and leadership skills learned through team sports. Huntingdon alumni, students, and student-athletes are volunteering as coaches for the DSPN teams. To prepare for the program’s launch, BlazeSports America offered a two-day training workshop for professionals who serve individuals who have special needs. Participants, after completing follow-up testing online, are eligible to earn Certified Disability Sport Specialist (CDSS) credentials, the first such certification to be awarded in the state of Alabama. “Our HC students and DSPN athletes will tell you that disability often takes place in the environment when someone with an impairment is required to participate in an activity that requires ‘normal body movement,’” said Dr. Dorman. “What is ‘normal’ in wheelchair basketball is that students with often disabling conditions such as cerebral palsy, spina bifida, Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis, or amputation, are no longer disabled. In addition to sport skill development, through this participation they are developing those positive institutionalized values attributed to sport, such as teamwork, sportsmanship, playing fairly and treating your opponent in the same way you would wish to be treated.” Dr. Dorman said the HC-DSPN will also develop a parent education curriculum, “allowing parents to access some of the educational, spiritual, and community resources related to living well with an impairment in a world seemingly created for the able-bodied.” 9 Around the World In 10 Years Through the Huntingdon Plan, students may travel and study internationally during the junior or senior year with most costs covered by regular tuition and fees. During the past 10 years, students have traveled in groups with faculty to Costa Rica, France, the Netherlands, the Caribbean islands, Scotland, Germany, England, Ireland, Puerto Rico, Italy, Panama, Greece and Turkey, Australia, Austria, Mexico, Hawaii, Alaska, Ecuador, and Canada. Each trip requires completion of a topic-centered semesterlong course as preparation. For some students, their international travel experience is also their first time on an airplane, let alone their first time out of the country. Without fail, students return to say that international travel-study was a life-changing experience. Here are a few scenes from 10 years of Hawk flights around the world. 2013 was the first year the Hawk flag appeared in Scotland. The trip to Greece and Turkey in 2011 followed the footsteps of St. Paul through the Holy Land. 10 Members of the science faculty have taken groups to Costa Rica in 2009, 2011, and 2013. Ziplining through the rainforest is always on the agenda. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Coming up during 2013–14, students will travel and study in separate groups the Victorian era through music and literature in London; international business in Lille, France; philosophers and scientists of Germany; conservation in Trinidad; and historical movements and monuments in Paris. Honduras in 2011 and Puerto Rico in 2010 and 2012 (pictured) were adventure destinations. Students who traveled to Ecuador in 2010 and Panama in 2009 combined service with travel/study. Students have visited destinations in Great Britain nearly every year. A visit to Stonehenge is almost always on the itinerary. Students who traveled to Australia with Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78, chemistry, and Professor Eric Kidwell, director of the library, in 2012 created Lib Guides on various topics, comparing the U.S. with Australian perspectives. The assignment has been hailed at national teaching conferences as innovative and trend-setting. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Germany, visited by this group in 2007, was a 2013 destination and will receive more Hawks in 2014, as well. 11 Huntingdon Happenings A few snapshots of 2013 Huntingdon news and events Huntingdon’s 2014 Rankings: • Washington Monthly: among the top 75 U.S. baccalaureate colleges based on the colleges’ contributions to the public good • U.S. News and World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges”: among the top 25 regional colleges • The Princeton Review: among the “Best in the Southeast” • The College Database: among the top colleges in Alabama for students who are interested in military service Acclaimed short story author Nancy Huddleston Packer was on campus in April 2013 to read from her work and speak for the Jimmy Loeb Literary Series. The C-SPAN bus visited campus in November 2013, bringing with it windows to internships and to educational resources. Dr. John Williams was honored with the Rhoda C. Ellison Distinguished Faculty Lifetime Service Award upon his retirement from fulltime teaching in May 2013. A member of the Huntingdon family for 34 years, he continues teaching history part-time and contributing his beautiful photographs of college life to Huntingdon publications. He is pictured with his wife, Alice, and the Chappell Mace he carried during convocations as senior faculty member and faculty marshal. 12 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) The English program and Houghton Memorial Library hosted the 2nd Annual Burns Supper in memory of the poet Robert Burns in January. The event, the brainchild of Dr. Tom Perrin, assistant professor of English, included dinner, bagpipes, poetry, Scottish music, an Old Time session, and haggis. The new Huntingdon Drama Club presented its first play, the comedy “Months on End” in March (pictured), and followed with a dramatic production, “The Vampyre,” in October 2013. The annual Vann Vocal Institute, a project co-sponsored by the Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, brought selected high school and college singers to campus for private instruction with stars of the opera world, including David Cangelosi, right. Josh Johnson ’14 (center), of Montgomery, was selected to sing during the Master Class. HC Student ASCD president Abby Brown ’14 greeted visiting educators and prospective teachers attending the Yes! You Can Teach! seminar. The Huntingdon College Teacher Education program and Huntingdon’s student chapter of the Association of School Curriculum and Development hosted Yes! You Can Teach! in January 2013. The seminar was designed for high school students who plan to become educators and for educators who want to encourage students to enter the teaching profession. More than 200 Alabama high school students and educators attended the event, which was hosted in partnership with the State Department of Education and Alabama ASCD. Dr. Dennis Herrick, professor of music, retired at the close of the 2012–13 academic year but returns to campus often to perform with music faculty. He is pictured on trumpet with organist and adjunct professor Dr. James Conely. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) “We wanted to offer this seminar for prospective teachers because we believe completely that teachers change lives,” said Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph ’80, who heads the Huntingdon Teacher Education program and serves on the executive board for the AASCD. “The more we can do to encourage students to follow their calling into this profession, the more lives we can change in the future.” Huntingdon’s student ASCD chapter is the only collegiate chapter in the state of Alabama. 13 L–R: Installed in March as Student Government officers for 2013 were Will Davis ’14, Niceville, Fla., secretary; Zachary A. Turner ’14, Citronelle, Ala., president; Wesley Smithart ’15, Union Springs, Ala., vice president; and J Gardiner ’15, Tuscumbia, Ala., treasurer. A record 52.8 percent of students voted in the election. Not pictured: Diane Humphreys ’15, College Park, Ga., was selected to serve as community relations chair. The Concert Choir offered “The Pirates of Penzance” for their spring 2013 concert. Members of Huntingdon’s Student Affiliate Chapter of the American Chemical Society attended the National ACS meeting in New Orleans in April 2013. The chapter received the prestigious Green Chemistry Award in recognition of outreach activities conducted during the 2011–12 academic year, a designation given to only 56 chapters among the 362 chapter reports received. Student organizers met with acclaimed recording artist Grace Potter before she headlined CloverJam 2013 in March. The Stooges Brass Band warmed up the crowd during the annual event. Leading the Freshman Forum during 2013–14 are, L–R, vice president Morgan Baines ’17, Luverne, Ala.; president Buck Robinson ’17, Washington, Ga.; secretary Lexie Ofe ’17, Montgomery; community service chair Jeffery Postell ’17, Montgomery; and treasurer Tori Money ’17, Dothan, Ala. 14 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Dozens of students, joined by President and Mrs. West (right) and their dog, Colin, raised money for and awareness about the fight against human trafficking during Voice of Justice’s Stand4Freedom event in March. The students stood for 27 hours, one hour for every million humans estimated to be enslaved through human trafficking around the world. The group exceeded their $2,700 fundraising goal, with funds donated to the International Justice Mission. The Office of Student Life’s annual spring Mystery Trip transported students back to their childhoods with a surprise destination (revealed a few hours into the trip) in the Magic Kingdom of Walt Disney World, Orlando, Fla. Lambda Chi Alpha became the College’s third active national fraternity for men in March 2013, joining Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Nu. Lambda Chi Alpha’s co-curricular programs focus on the improvement of skills in leadership, socialization, and scholarship. Founded in 1909 at Boston University, Lambda Chi Alpha has 200 active chapters at colleges and universities across the country. The first group of men pledged this fall. Nine Huntingdon women competed for the title of Miss Huntingdon during the annual pageant in February 2013, the first-ever event held in the Leo J. Drum Jr. Theater. L–R, contestants were Alyssa McCurry ’14, Montgomery, Ala.; Georgianna Hunt ’16, Wetumpka, Ala.; Bailee Ikner ’14, Semmes, Ala., voted “Most Photogenic” by the student body in a contest that preceded the pageant; Stephanie Yasechko ’16, Niles, Ohio, First Runner-Up; Victoria Luchner ’15, Enterprise, Ala., Miss Huntingdon; Katy Rebekah Hall ’15, Prattville, Ala., Second Runner-Up; Jamie Reschke ’16, Las Vegas, Nev., Miss Congeniality; Brooke Meadows ’14, Tallassee, Ala.; and Kaison Darden ’15, Wetumpka, Ala. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 15 Orientation Leaders set the stage for fun and integration into campus life for prospective students during three Summer Orientation sessions. Seventy United Methodist ministers from the Alabama-West Florida Conference, staff, faculty, and others met in January 2013 for “A Conversation on Ministerial Formation.” Lectures and discussions were presented by Bishop Ken Carter of the Florida Conference UMC (father of Abby Carter ’12); Dr. Kim Cape, general secretary of the General Board for Higher Education and Ministry (UMC); Dr. Chad Eggleston, assistant professor of religion; Dr. Frank Buckner, professor of religion; and Chaplain Brian Smith ’94. The seminar was developed by President J. Cameron West and members of the Religion program faculty to initiate discussion about encouraging youth who are interested in entering religious vocations, and was co-hosted by Huntingdon trustee Bishop Paul Leeland of the Alabama-West Florida Conference, UMC. (Pictured, L–R, are Bishop Carter, Dr. Cape, President West, and Bishop Leeland.) Sixty-six Huntingdon women were among the 2013 Panhellenic Pledge Class, with 22 entering each of the three national sororities, Alpha Omicron Pi, Chi Omega, and Phi Mu. 16 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) A microburst storm hit campus and took down a number of trees and large branches in July 2013, just before the second Summer Orientation session for new students. Huntingdon students and staff pitched in to get the campus back in shape just in time to greet the newest members of the family. Who needs toothpicks? Students and faculty can prop their eyelids open with Starbucks coffee, now served in The Coffee House (formerly known as Java City). President West, left, cut the ribbon to symbolize the new flavor of late night study sessions, with Valerie Prewitt and Kedric Barnette of ARAMARK dining services. The Huntingdon women elected by their peers to the 2013 Homecoming Court were, L–R, SueEllen Chandler ’17, Florence, Ala.; Alicia Gauker ’16, Sylacauga, Ala.; Kathryn Dismuke ’15, Montgomery; Rebecca Chavers ’14, Montgomery; Queen Michelle Gonzalez ’14, Niceville, Fla.; Cheyenne Young ’14, Enterprise, Ala.; Diane Humphreys ’15, College Park, Ga.; Hallie Grace Muncher ’16, Jasper, Ala.; and Madison Laney ’17, Ariton, Ala. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) During the Greek Awards presentations in March, Chi Omega won the Outstanding Service Award; Alpha Omicron Pi won the Outstanding Membership Development Award and the Outstanding Alumni Relations Award; and Phi Mu won the Campus Involvement Award and the Outstanding Chapter Adviser Award (for Megan German). Dr. James Albritton, assistant professor of history, was recognized as Faculty Member of the Year, and Ms. Fran Taylor, director of the Center for Career and Vocation, was awarded Outstanding Staff Member of the Year. Jeremiah Stone ’16, Northport, Ala., (Sigma Nu) was named Future Fraternity Leader of the Year and Skye Esry ’16, Eufaula, Ala., (Chi Omega) was named Future Sorority Leader of the Year. The Greek Man of the Year was Sig Ep’s Dexter Dean ’13, Clanton, Ala.; Greek Woman of the Year was Phi Mu’s Erica Keith ’14, Mobile, Ala., pictured, right, with assistant dean of students and coordinator of Greek Life Lauren Hobbs. The award for Overall Greek Excellence was given to Huntingdon’s newest sorority, Phi Mu. 17 Huntingdon Hosts are selected by the Office of Admission to provide hospitality to prospective students and families by offering campus tours and answering questions. The 2013–14 Huntingdon Hosts are: (front row L–R): Kalyn Spatol ’14 (Endicott, N.Y.); Kate Garrigan ’14 (Tallahassee, Fla.); Robbie Farquhar ’15 (Montgomery); Jimbo Turk ’15 (Montgomery); Oliver Saywah ’16 (Lithia Springs, Ga.); Anna DeMedicis ’16 (Trussville, Ala.); Carlee Nobles ’16 (Prattville, Ala.); (second row): Katy Hall ’15 (Prattville, Ala.); Emily Minor ’15 (Montgomery); Shay Roberson ’16 (Sylacauga, Ala.); Micah Wright ’15 (Madison, Ala.); Jeremy Wolfe ’16 (Montgomery); Kristen Curtis ’16 (Silverhill, Ala.); Carlee Gardner ’15 (Sylacauga, Ala.); (third row): Anna Raley ’16 (Fairhope, Ala.); Shirin Torabinejad ’15 (Huntsville, Ala.); Alicia Gauker ’16 (Sylacauga, Ala.); Jagger Eastman ’15 (Sulligent, Ala.); Jeremiah Stone ’16 (Northport, Ala.); Grant Hayes ’14 (Hoover, Ala.); Kayla Causby ’15 (Prattville, Ala.); India Chaney ’15 (Montgomery); Sjohna Pierce ’15 (Billingsley, Ala.); (fourth row): Blake Bosch ’14 (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); James Temple ’14 (Montgomery); Will Dake ’14 (Auburn, Ala.); Taylor Calloway ’15 (Montgomery); not pictured: Alex Huey ’15 (Leesburg, Ala.); Jayde Rasband ’15 (Maylene, Ala.). Huntingdon Ambassadors, the most elite organization on campus, work with the Office of the President and with the Office of College and Alumni Relations to represent the student body at functions on- and off-campus. The 2013–14 Ambassadors are: (front row L–R): Wesley Smithart ’15 (Union Springs, Ala.); Saem Hur ’14 (Montgomery); J Gardiner ’15 (Tuscumbia, Ala.); Spencer Brown ’15 (Greensboro, N.C.); Tyler Robinson ’14 (Oxford, Ala.); Alex Huey ’15 (Centre, Ala.), Marks Abernathy ’15 (Birmingham, Ala.); Kathryn Dismuke ’15 (Montgomery); Brandon Sewell ’15 (Elkton, Md.); Micaela White ’15 (McKinney, Texas); Tori Jackson ’15 (Prattville, Ala.), Storm McWhorter ’15 (Prattville, Ala.); Elizabeth Thrower ’14 (Montgomery); (second row): Shirin Torabinejad ’15 (Madison, Ala.); Jeani Layson ’15 (Opelika, Ala.); Taylor Claire Bean ’14 (Hartselle, Ala.); Jayde Rasband ’15 (Helena, Ala.); Jake Kistel ’15 (Fort Myers, Fla.); Austin Armstrong ’15 (York, Ala.); Chelsea Taylor ’15 (Alabaster, Ala.); Harden Spencer ’15 (Montgomery, Ala.); Jagger Eastman ’15 (Sulligent, Ala.); Cheyenne Young ’14 (Enterprise, Ala.); Trey Smith ’14 (Montgomery, Ala.); (third row): Amanda Wineman ’15 (Cut Bank, Mont.); Jarred Billups ’15 (Fayette, Ala.); Blake Bosch ’14 (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); Lauren Lambert ’14 (Repton, Ala.); Heather Kelly Allen ’14 (Deatsville, Ala.); Will Davis ’14 (Niceville, Fla.); Tyler Chaffee ’15 (Greenville, S.C.); Brantley Carr ’15 (Sylacauga, Ala.); Philip Neal ’14 (Birmingham, Ala.); Kaela Grady ’14 (Columbia, S.C.); Robbie Eichhorn ’14 (LaPlace, La.); and Mitchell Clemmons ’14 (Montgomery, Ala.). Read more about each ambassador on the Huntingdon College Facebook page. 18 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Huntingdon’s Collegiate Exchange Club is the only college chapter of the organization in the U.S., but club members are working to change that. Four members of the HC club attended the annual meeting of the National Exchange Club in Greensboro, N.C., in July. Blake Bosch ’14, Tuscaloosa, Ala., right; Zachary A. Turner ’14, Citronelle, Ala., center; Russ Barnwell ’13 of Jacksonville, Ala., left (2012–13 club president); and professor of chemistry Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78 (not pictured) presented “Collegiate Exchange Club Building Perspective” to encourage conference goers to foster and grow collegiate chapters in their areas. Dr. Murphy, who was installed as the 92nd president of the Montgomery Exchange Club in June, also serves as adviser for the Huntingdon group. The club received the Exchange Club’s National Service Award for their work during 2012–13. Huntingdon bands hosted hundreds of high school musicians during 2013 through a summer band camp, a Marching Invitational, a Marching Honor Band (pictured), and a Symphonic Honor Band. The Marching Scarlet and Grey is one of only a few marching bands at NCAA-Division III schools. A whitewater rafting trip down the Ocoee River in Tennessee was just one of the events offered by Campus Recreation during fall 2013. As new students arrived for fall 2013 classes, they were met in the parking lots by Huntingdon volunteers who unloaded their vehicles, moving the students into their residence hall rooms within an average of 90 seconds per student. “Clue” was the theme of this year’s Countess of Huntingdon Ball, an event that has become one of the most popular of the fall semester. Planners included, L–R, Kathryn Dismuke ’15, Montgomery, Ala.; Taylor King ’13, assistant director of student activities; Sara Beth Terry, director of student activities; and Wesley Smithart ’15, Union Springs, Ala. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 19 Seay Twins Art Gallery hosted a show of student artwork in April 2013. Wanda Howard ’81 was the guest preacher for the College’s Martin Luther King Jr. Convocation and Gospel Celebration in January. College Democrats hosted a forum on the Second Amendment in February. The Adult Degree Completion Program added sites in Opelika and Rainsville in 2013, as well as a major in criminal justice. The program, part of the W. James Samford Jr. School of Business and Professional Studies, offers adult returning learners a one-night-a-week class schedule in five-week terms. Members of the Montgomery Symphony Orchestra performed with music professors Vadim Serebryany, on piano, and Dennis Herrick, on trumpet, for one of several Elizabeth Belcher Cheek Concert Series offerings during the year. Huntingdon’s cultural events are free and open to the public and are sponsored by Baptist Health. 20 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) In the Hawks Nest Wrestling Huntingdon announced in September that the College will become the only four-year college in the state to offer intercollegiate wrestling in 2014. At a press conference in Roland Student Center, Huntingdon President J. Cameron West and wrestling legend Dan Gable introduced Tom Storey as the Hawks’ head coach. Storey, a collegiate wrestler for the U.S. Naval Academy and a 20year Navy veteran, has already begun laying the groundwork for Huntingdon’s 15th athletic program. Pictured, L–R, are athletic director Mike Turk; Mike Moyer, executive director, National Wrestling Coaches Association; Olympic gold medalist and coach Dan Gable; President J. Cameron West; Head Wrestling Coach Tom Storey; and Jeff Waters, president, U.S. Wrestling Foundation. Football The Huntingdon Hawks football team turned in another strong season, its first in the USA South Athletic Conference. The Hawks were in contention for the conference title but finished tied for third with a 5-2 conference record. Huntingdon won its first conference game in convincing fashion, beating Ferrum 56-35 at Samford Stadium. The Hawks rolled up the second most yards in school history with 774 yards of offense. Huntingdon featured one of the top offenses in Division III, leading all Division III teams with 586.3 yards of offense per game. The team set school records with 436 points scored, 5,863 yards of offense and 3,447 passing yards and turned in the second most rushing yards in a season with 2,416. Offensive linemen Joey Peacock and Chael Pridgen and defensive back Anthony White earned first-team AllConference honors and linebacker John-David Swiger, running back Garrett Fletcher and H-Back Darius Dawsey were named second-team All-Conference. With an overall record of 7-3, Huntingdon posted its sixth straight winning season and the eighth winning record in 10 seasons under head coach Mike Turk. Basketball The Huntingdon women’s basketball team put together the most successful season in the 15-year history of the program in 2013, setting the program record for wins in a season with a 19-10 record, winning the Great South Athletic ConHuntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) ference title, and advancing to the NCAA-Division III tournament for the first time. Huntingdon defeated then-24th-ranked Ferrum 84-67 in the first round before falling to Emory in the second round. Senior Morgan Crawford and sophomore Pat Pickens were named to the GSAC All-Conference team. Pickens, Crawford, Katie Martin and Tan Munford were selected to the GSAC All-Academic team. The Huntingdon men’s basketball team, transitioning from the GSAC to the USA South Athletic Conference, competed as an Independent and finished with a 7-18 record. The Hawks closed the season with a 72-65 win over Bob Jones University. Baseball The Huntingdon baseball team reached its first NCAADivision III Regional play-off and finished with a 32-11 record in 2013, one win shy of the Hawks’ NCAA-era record. Huntingdon won 27 of its final 34 games, including 14 straight games at one point, and won two games during the Regional. Junior catcher Joseph Odom (pictured) earned second-team All-American and thirdteam All-American honors and was drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the 13th round of the MLB Draft. Odom was the highest draft pick in Huntingdon history and was the Hawks’ first draft pick since James Moody was taken by the New York Yankees in 1989. Odom was also named to first-team All-Region by D3baseball.com and the American Baseball Coaches Association. Pitcher Neil Lawler was named second-team All-Region by the ABCA and pitcher Craig Brown was a third-team All-Region selection. Pitcher Cory Belyeu was a thirdteam All-Region pick by D3baseball.com. Softball The Huntingdon softball team earned a return trip to the Great South Athletic Conference championship game but just missed out on a return trip to the NCAA-Division III Regional. The Lady Hawks recorded a 25-11 overall record and won the regular-season conference title with a 16-0 conference record. The Lady Hawks swept the top three conference awards for a second straight year as senior Director of athletics and head women’s basketball coach Buzz Phillips stepped down as director of athletics in January 2013 in order to concentrate on coaching the women’s basketball team more completely. Coach Phillips, who remains at the College as head women’s basketball coach and director of athletics emeritus, then led the team to the program’s first regional NCAA-III tournament appearances—and wins. 21 Melissa McClure was named GSAC Pitcher of the Year, catcher Brittany Richardson was named Player of the Year and Gynger Williams earned her second straight Coach of the Year honor. Joining McClure and Richardson on the All-Conference team were Lauren Welch, Ashlee Zachmeyer and Jenna Rimensnyder. Zachmeyer and Halleigh DiNicholas were named to the All-Freshman team. McClure, Richardson, Rimensnyder, Gabby Alcantar, Katelyn Atkins, Kaetlen Brown, Holly Ostrander, Kari Ranczka, Jade Reynolds and Anna Stephens were All-Academic selections. Tennis The Hawks, competing as an Independent for one season before joining the USA South Athletic Conference, finished with a 13-5 record, including four 9-0 victories and six 8-1 victories. Freshman Bobby Foroughian, a co-winner of the Huntingdon Male Newcomer of the Year award, earned 25 singles and doubles wins, finishing 12-5 in singles and 13-5 in doubles. Senior Larry Pritchett was named Huntingdon’s Male ScholarAthlete of the Year. In their final season in the GSAC, the Lady Hawks posted an 18-4 record and reached the GSAC finals for a seventh straight season. Head coach Ximena Moore was named GSAC Coach of the Year for the fourth time since 2005 and Britni Thibodeau was named GSAC Freshman of the Year. Thibodeau, who was also named Huntingdon’s Female Newcomer of the Year, was joined on the All-Conference team by Taylor Clark, Katie Scott, Hannah Still and Micaela White. Thibodeau, Farrah Mahan, Rory Wilson and Deidre Corbin were each selected to the GSAC All-Freshman team and Clark, Scott, White and Barraca were named Academic All-Conference players. Senior Katie Scott (pictured) became Huntingdon’s NCAA-era leader in singles and doubles victories and closed her collegiate career with 117 total wins. Scott was selected as Huntingdon’s Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year and joined Barraca, Corbin, Mahan and Thibodeau as ITA Scholar-Athletes. This was the tenth straight year the Lady Hawks were named an ITA All-Academic team. saps, and a 3-0 win over LaGrange to close the season. The Lady Hawks were competitive all season and finished with a 4-11-3 record, recording seven shutouts and holding opponents to a goal or less in 12 games. The Lady Hawks played in seven overtime games, including six double-overtime games. Huntingdon gave up a total of three goals in the seven overtime games. Lacrosse The first-year Huntingdon women’s lacrosse team set the bar high with a winning inaugural season (8-6). The Lady Hawks opened the season with a 20-11 win over the University of Dallas on Feb. 23 and closed the season with an 18-16 win over Transylvania University. Freshman Lonnitria Keenan scored the first goal in program history and recorded the first assist for the Lady Hawks. The Huntingdon men’s lacrosse team built off its first-season success with seven wins in its second season. The Hawks (7-8) just missed out on their first winning season, but showed dramatic improvement. Three of the Hawks’ losses were by one goal and three others were by eight goals or less. Freshman Jakob Works was the co-winner of the 2013 Huntingdon Male Newcomer of the Year award. In his first season, Works set program records for goals in a game (seven) and goals in a season (44). Volleyball The Huntingdon volleyball team completed its first season as a member of the USA South Athletic Conference this fall. With 11 freshmen and four sophomores on a team of 18 players, the Lady Hawks worked to gain experience this season. The Lady Hawks finished with a 5-27 record, but made progress throughout the season. With a strong nucleus of players returning, Huntingdon will look for continued improvement next season. Golf Former Huntingdon and professional golfer Dave Schreyer returned to his alma mater to lead the Hawks’ golf program in 2013 (see ClassNotes). The men’s program made steady progress throughout the spring season and closed the year with a pair of third-place finishes. The fifth-year women’s program had one of its best seasons yet, with third-place and fourth-place finishes in the final two tournaments of the season. Four golfers were named Academic All-Americans. On the men’s side, Rodes Bowers, Jamey Lester and Tyler Schmutz were each named to the Golf Coaches Association of America’s Cleveland/Srixon All-America Scholar team. Saem Hur was selected to the Women’s Golf Coaches Association All-American Scholar team. Soccer The Huntingdon men’s and women’s soccer teams got their first taste of the USA South Athletic Conference this fall. Under first-year head coach Matt Williams the men’s team posted five shutouts and finished with a 4-11-2 record. Among the highlights for the Hawks was a season-opening 4-0 win over Warren Wilson, a 2-2 tie with Mill22 In March 2013, President West announced that Mike Turk would add director of athletics to his title and would remain in the post of head football coach. Coach Turk joined the Huntingdon staff as the Hawks’ second head football coach in the spring of 2004. Under his leadership, the program has achieved its first win (2004), first winning season (2005), first playoff appearance (2009) and first regularseason national ranking (2012). Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Class Notes Stay Connected! When you change addresses or have news of marriages, births, job changes, or other events of note, please keep Huntingdon informed by updating your alumni record on the Huntingdon Web site or sending an email to alumni@hawks.huntingdon.edu or news@hawks.huntingdon.edu. You will always be part of the Huntingdon family, and we want to know your news! Future Hawks Campbell Spivey, right, daughter of Steven (’04) and Mary Tyler Head Spivey ’05, and Ella Coole, daughter of Christy Thomas Coole ’02 and Clarke Coole of Atlanta, got a taste of Greek life in the Chi Omega chapter room during Homecoming 2013. 1930s • Gertrude Parkman Morgan ’35 celebrated birthday number 96 in Bethesda, Md. 1940s • Before her death in July 2013, Martha Holley Norton ’44 wrote, “What has stayed with me through life from my years at Huntingdon is its high standard for living: through Christian teaching, guidance, and even its rules and regulations that held students and faculty accountable.” • Blanche Carlton Sloan ’45 of Carbondale, Ill., stays active in arts, theater, and other cultural activities. married in 1946. Their family includes 8 grandchildren and 7 great-grandchildren. • Lucile Holmes Martin ’46 and her husband, Charles, celebrated 65 years of marriage in September 2013 in Baton Rouge, La. Lucile has cruised on the Queen Mary II for the last several years for trips to South Africa, Norway, the Middle East, and Mediterranean countries. • 2013 Alumni Achievement Award recipient Frances Hastings Moore ’46, pictured, left, with good friend Jane Black Roberts ’45, completed her bachelor’s degree and teaching certification in English. After earning a master’s degree in religious education at Candler School of Theology, Emory University, in 1950, she served as director of Christian education for United Methodist churches in Montgomery, Tallahassee, Fla., and Tuscaloosa, Ala. She joined the faculty at Fayette County High School, where she taught for more than 27 years, after which she served as director of special services at Bevill State Junior College in Fayette. With a heart for service and for the United Methodist Church, she taught Sunday school, counseled junior and senior high youth, and directed youth choirs for 13 years at Fayette First UMC. After retiring from teaching she dedicated much of her time in service to the church and was appointed District Lay Leader of the Tuscaloosa District of the North Alabama Conference from 1984 to 1992, followed by six years of service as Conference Lay Leader for the North Alabama Conference, the first woman to serve in that capacity in that conference. Birmingham-Southern College recognized her church service with an honorary Doctor of Laws degree in 2001. Frances has served several terms on the Huntingdon National Alumni Board and has served as co-class agent for the Class of 1946 for more than 35 years, promoting alumni giving among members of her class. Frances is also a new member of the Huntingdon Board of Trustees. • Christina Tompkins Rood Crawford ’47 writes from Bradenton, Fla., “My scrapbook of memories is filled with the happy days I had at Huntingdon.” She and college roommate Jean Norton Gander ’47 visited each other in the early summer. At 88, Christina writes that she considers herself blessed. • Billie Smith Sims ’47 is a retired dairy farmer in Valdosta, Ga. • Montae James Cain ’48 writes that his days are filled with reading, traveling, volunteer work, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren in Jasper, Ala. • Mary Carolyn Deer Owens ’48, Evergreen, Ala., retired after 34 years of teaching. Since then, she and her husband of 68 years have traveled and enjoyed time with family, visiting 49 states, 7 countries in Europe, and 7 provinces in Canada. They have 5 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. • Katherine G. Whatley, wife of the Rev. Ray Whatley ’45, passed away September 26, 2012. They were married February 4, 1945, while Ray was at Huntingdon. • LaNelle Andrews Rowe ’48 and her husband of 64 years, Samuel, have 4 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren. LaNelle retired from playing the organ and teaching piano at First Baptist Panama City in July 2012. • Sue Dowdell Lux ’46 and her husband, Paul, live in a retirement village in Southbury, Conn. After meeting at Huntingdon, they • Joseph Ed Moore ’49 and his wife of 64 years, Dorothy Barton ’48, both age 86, are retired and living in Oxford, Ala. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 23 Doris plays bridge, does church work, and studies genealogy. • Joyce Payne French ’55 enjoys tutoring French and painting in watercolors in Anniston, Ala. She serves as lay leader at First UMC-Anniston, Ala. She has 3 grandchildren. Present for nearly every Huntingdon alumni event, Betty Finlay Brislin ’49, Jane Michael Boozer ’56, June Burdick Bisard ’56, and Iris McGehee ’57 enjoyed Dreamland BBQ during Homecoming 2013. • Virginia Bullard Oswald ’49 writes, “[I’m] enjoying life each day and am thankful for Huntingdon’s influence on my life.” She lives in Ocala, Fla. 1950s • Katherine Jones Cook ’50 writes that her husband, Bob, has been under Hospice care with terminal cancer. “I loved Huntingdon when I arrived there in 1946 and I still love Huntingdon in 2013.” Katherine and Bob have 5 sons, 9 grandchildren, and 3 great-grandchildren and live in Tavares, Fla. • Mildred Norton Loper ’50 celebrated 62 years of marriage with her husband, Ollie, in February 2013. They have lived in Danville, Calif., for 43 years and have 2 children and 5 grandchildren. She writes, “Life is good even in old age.” • Ira Dave McClurkin Jr., husband of Jean Gilmore McClurkin ’50, passed away in 2010. Their sons are continuing their beef cattle business in Pike Road, Ala. • Caroline Poole Ryan ’50 continues playing the organ for her church in Greenville, Ala. She has 6 great-grandchildren and 6 step-great-grandchildren. • Mary Jo Reed Krauss ’52 stays busy with Knit for Kids and knits caps for cancer patients in Littleton, Colo. • Miriam M. Pace ’52 volunteers for the Elon University library in archives and for the local public library in reference. She chairs the Friends of the Library (May Memorial), Book Sale Committee. The committee’s two sales a year make about $60,000, which they use for literacy in Alamance County, N.C. She also swims a mile three times a week. • Gwendolyn Smith Pearson ’52 married Darwin Watkins March 18, 2012. They live in Montgomery. • Roy T. Sublette ’52 retired for a second time May 31, 2012. He originally retired after 43 years of service in the Alabama-West Florida Conference in June 1993. He then served on the staff at Frazer Memorial UMC, Montgomery, for 19 years. • Harriette Harley Woodard ’53 lives in Suwanee, Ga., and enjoys spending time with her 5 grandchildren. • Lorraine Freeman Barnett ’54 earned her Huntingdon degree thanks to the G.I. Bill. Lorraine, age 92, is a World War II veteran. • Anne Prather Huber ’54 has lived near her daughter in Baton Rouge, La., since her husband’s death 8 years ago. • Mary Johnson Tolleson ’54 has retired from teaching but volunteers in schools telling stories about the peacocks she raises in Tallapoosa, Ga. She invites school groups to visit her peacock gardens yearly. • Doris Sanford Edwards ’55 and her husband, Ben, are both retired in Tullahoma, Tenn. They have 2 sons and 5 grandchildren. 24 • Minna Hayes Appleby ’56 writes that three generations of her family have attended Huntingdon, including her sons, Greg Gilbert ’81 of Auburn, Ala., and Kyle Gilbert ’84 of Dothan, Ala., granddaughter Lauren Gilbert ’12 of Metairie, La., and Lauren’s younger sister, Jenni Gilbert, a sophomore. Minna splits time between Lake Junaluska, N.C., and Dothan, Ala. Her husband of 26 years, Dr. William F. Appleby, passed away November 6, 2012, in N.C. • Janet Miller Dapitan ’56 is 78 years old in Wailuku, Hawaii, and works with the affiliates of Keep the Hawaiian Islands Beautiful. • Elinor “Chee” Warr Roberts ’57 (seated, left) brought her granddaughter, Abby Blankenship, of Alexander City, Ala. (seated next to Elinor), to visit campus for Host Day, part of Homecoming and Family Weekend. They were joined by the Schrampfer family: Jackson Schrampfer ’17, seated, a member of the men’s lacrosse team and the grandson of one of Elinor’s best friends, 1957 May Queen Kathryn “Kitty” Glass Ledbetter ’57, who died before Jackson was born; and Jackson’s parents (standing), Don and Lura Schrampfer of Marietta, Ga. • Larry McGinn, husband of Yvonne Laun McGinn ’58, died June 30, 2012, in Montgomery. Larry and Yvonne were married 53 years. • LaVerne Davis Ramsey ’58 traveled as a Friendship Force ambassador in Vladivostok and Ulan Ude, Russia, and Ulan Bataar, Mongolia, in 2013. Since her husband died in February 2012, LaVerne has traveled extensively. She says the Friendship Force exchanges are adventures, not vacations, and are unique opportunities to make friends around the globe. Her first trip each year is to Nicaragua on a medical mission with Nicaraguan Health, a nonprofit for which she serves as treasurer. She also spent a month in Australia and New Zealand in 2013. • Elizabeth McDonald Bowdin ’59 lives with her son in Samson, Ala., due to health problems she has faced in the past three years. Elizabeth is on the Southeastern Jurisdiction Leadership team as a member of the Southeastern Jurisdiction UM Women Nominations Committee. • Joan Thomas Castille ’59 and her husband, Lloyd, live in Breaux Bridge, La. Their family includes 4 grandchildren and twin greatgrandchildren. • Jane Solomon Davis ’59 of Tuscaloosa, Ala., writes that, although she graduated more than 50 years ago, “Huntingdon is still very dear to my heart. I have treasured the education that I received.” • Dr. James Yarbrough ’59 was among three alumni honored by the National Alumni Association with the 2013 Alumni Achievement Award. Jim served as department chair and professor of zoology for 19 years at Mississippi State University, subsequently serving as head of the Division of Structural and Systems Biology at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. His long-standing research interests focus on the effects of toxic synthetic compounds on vertebrates, a topic upon which he has published more than 70 scientific papers that were consistently backed by the National Institutes of Health from 1969 to 1993. From 1989 to 2000, Jim served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Alabama, where he developed the College’s first mentoring program and established a system Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) to identify and track students’ progress among at-risk students and high academic achievers. He has overseen the doctoral theses of more than 25 students who work today as professors and researchers at centers such as Cornell, UCLA, and the NIH. He was not able to be present for the awards ceremony. 1960s her books are on Amazon. Anne and Perry live in Clanton, Ala., and have approximately 100 in their immediate family. • Warren “Buddy” Allen ’63 retired after 45 years in the pulp and paper industry in Texarkana, Ark., where he lives with his second wife, Carolyn. He has 3 children, 2 of whom are Huntingdon graduates. Buddy and Carolyn attended the 50th reunion of the Class of 1963 during Homecoming 2013. • Sara Ann Sansom DuBose ’63 of Montgomery writes and speaks to inspire others. She is an award-winning author of five novels and one work of nonfiction. Her work is included in eight anthologies. The Class of 1963 and their spouses celebrated their 50th reunion during Homecoming 2013. Present for a special luncheon were, front row, L–R: Mary McKinley Stephens ’63, Susan Gulledge, Christianne Ashton Henderson ’63, Frances Babington, Harriett Hinds, John Hill ’63, Peggy Sewell Parker ’63, Sara Sansome DuBose ’63, Melanie Scarbrough Stokley ’63; middle row: Mary Cecil Lawter Easterly ’63, Anne Chancey Dalton ’64, Tonia Sizemore Darby ’63, Judith Sanford Broadway ’63, Phillip Crunk ’63, Hazel Hall Brennan ’63, Jewell More Ferguson ’63, Louise Ramseur Nicol ’63; back two rows: Leon Darby ’63, Perry Dalton ’63, George Gulledge ’63, Tom Babington ’63, Larry Hinds ’63, Jon Broadway, Paul Ohme ’63, Jack Brennan, Buddy (’63) and Carolyn Allen. • Foster Eich ’60 has retired completely after 48 years practicing medicine. He recently completed the requirements for a Master of Arts in Ministry degree and serves as an Episcopal priest. • NewSouth Books has published a work of non-fiction by Denny Abbott ’61. They Had No Voice chronicles his civil rights work in the 1960s and 1970s in Montgomery. The book’s foreword is written by John Walsh (“America’s Most Wanted”). Learn more: http://www.theyhadnovoice.com/. • Dr. Richard Burr ’61 has served as a professor of business administration at Trinity University-San Antonio, Texas, for 41 years. Richard has developed, organized, and led a number of study abroad programs to Europe and Vietnam. He also developed Trinity’s 6-week internship summer program in Madrid. • Rose Garrett Grant ’61 and her husband, Jimmy, have a real estate business in Dothan, Ala., in which all three of their children are involved. • In a quest to experience culture different from her own, Emily Davis Cato ’62 traveled to Bhutan in 2013. • Perry Dalton ’63 and Anne Chancey Dalton ’64 are caregivers for Perry’s 93-year-old mother. Perry works online and restores old boats. Anne is writing her fifth children’s book. She began writing her first book when she was 12 and finished it 50 years later. That’s why she often tells audiences, “Look beyond what you see to what can be.” A classroom teacher for 26 years, Anne’s first published work was an award-winning article for The Saturday Evening Post Teacher Contest published in Teacher magazine in 1978. Then she wrote church school curriculum for the United Methodist Publishing House, Bible Quest, and David C. Cook for more than a decade. Massacre Island was a 2004/2005 Alabama Emphasis on Reading book. A biography, Jeremiah A. Denton, Jr.: Vietnam War Hero (Seacoast Publishing, Inc.) came out in 2012 and won first place and a gold medal (Children 9–12 category) in the Stars and Flags Book Awards during the 2012 Branson Veterans Week in Branson, Mo. All of Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Phillip Crunk ’63, center, retired as professor emeritus after 36 years with the University of Alabama. In retirement he and his wife, Karen, have traveled extensively. A running and hiking enthusiast, Phillip has completed the Appalachian Trail and hiked in Nepal and Mongolia. He is pictured with John Hill ’63, right, and Perry Dalton ’63, left, at the Class of 1963’s 50th reunion gathering. • Jewell More Ferguson ’63 lives in a retirement community near Sacramento, Calif. She works part-time at a community hospital as a laboratory assistant using skills she learned in “my biology/ math major at Huntingdon.” • Larry Hinds ’63, a native of Carbon Hill, Ala., and resident of Acworth, Ga., was inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame during 2013 Homecoming festivities. Larry transferred to Huntingdon from BirminghamSouthern College in order to play baseball and basketball. The president of his Huntingdon senior class, he graduated in 1963 prepared to teach at the secondary level, then earned a master’s degree from the University of Alabama. He began his teaching and coaching career in Alabama and Georgia, joining the Cobb County School System in Marietta, Ga., in 1969 as a high school assistant principal. Larry progressed in administration to principal and then served as assistant superintendent for 7 years. In 1980 he left the field of education and began a career in finance and retirement planning, from which he retired in 1997. Always loyal to his alma mater, Larry says, “… The most important part of my [Huntingdon] experience was the people I came to know, love, and respect. The faculty and staff were caring and wanted us to experience success. … The induction into the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame makes me very proud and ties me even closer to my alma mater.” His award was presented by Huntingdon President J. Cameron West, right. • Margaret McCall Humburg ’63 and her husband, Jay, have lived in Grenada for 13 years, where he taught veterinary medicine at St. George University. They plan to return to Alabama soon, and just celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. • Mary Allen Weaver Meadows ’63 is helping with research and compiling a book on the history of Lowndesboro, Ala., and enjoying her 6 grandchildren. • Mary McKinley Stephens ’63 of Montgomery enjoys reading, traveling, and camping in her retirement. She has 2 children and 6 grandchildren. • Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest ’64 has retired for a second time but tutors English Language Learner students. She also serves as organist at Cain’s Chapel UMC, Ala. 25 • Erwin Josef Lischke ’64 and his wife, Maureen, continue raising alpacas on their ranch in western Montana. Erwin has been named the executive director of the International Anglican Fellowship, the missionary arm of the Anglican Church. • Marilyn Kay Dassinger Watkins ’64 has retired after 36 years of teaching. She and her husband, Charlie, have been married 48 years. They live in Benton, Ky., and have 2 sons and 3 grandchildren. • Margaret (Peggy) Pittman Hall ’65 and her husband are retired educators who live in Naples, Fla., half of the year and the other half in Blue Ridge, Ga. Their daughter, Diana Hall Horsley ’93, lives in Birmingham. • Sue Spendiff Reed ’65 and her husband, Byron, came home to Huntingdon for Homecoming 2013. They live in Huntsville, Ala. • Henry Roberts ’65 of Pensacola, Fla., retired February 1, 2013, from his position as president of the Sacred Heart HealthCare System’s foundation. • Ann Ault ’66 continues work on a Christian film, “Heart's Desire.” (http:// heartsdesirefilm.com/html.home) Ann has published a book through Xulon Press: Hi From the Sky: On the Road to Happily Ever After (The Kingdom of God is the Kingdom of Believe, Not Make-Believe.) Her book is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Xulon Press Bookstore, and by contacting her directly in Huntersville, N.C. • The Rev. William Crutchfield ’66 and wife Ann Ragan Crutchfield ’66 have relocated to Auburn, Ala. • Camille Woodward Melton ’66 keeps busy by taking her therapy dog, Gershwin, a shih tzu, to nursing homes. • Bob Owen ’66, right, was inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame during Homecoming 2013. Bob came to Huntingdon from Pompano Beach High School in Florida on a basketball scholarship. While a student, Bob was active in the Business Club and the H-Club and was a member of the only Hawks basketball team to qualify for and travel to the NAIA national tournament in Kansas City. Following graduation from Huntingdon with a degree in business administration, Bob worked for Sears in their management training program in Montgomery. After five years he started a successful Allstate Insurance agency in the Atlanta area, where he remained for 31 years. When he sold his agency, it was one of the largest in the state of Georgia. Bob has been active in the Georgia Chapter of Safari Club International. He is a member of the Scottish Rite, the Yaarab Shrine, the Snellville Lodge #99 F&AM, the Big Canoe Chapel, and a former member of the board of Prevent Child Abuse of Pickens County. He has served Huntingdon as a loyal supporter and member of the Alumni Board. “Huntingdon College had a tremendous influence on me,” Bob says. “The school was a great builder of character and integrity. My years at Huntingdon College were special and that is the reason why I return regularly for a reunion with the school and the wonderful friends I met there.” Bob’s award was presented by his former Huntingdon teammate, John Bricken ’67, left. • A novel co-written by two New York Times bestselling authors, former Atlanta newscaster Wes Sarginson ’66 and Diane Love, is available through your local bookseller or Amazon.com. Justifiable is part of a series of novels based around the characters Riley Walker and Biddy Bidowski. Wes is the brother of Tricia Grier, HC director of event planning and travel, and brother-in-law of Frank Grier, director of institutional technology at Huntingdon. 26 • Sandra Wimberly Makowsky ’67 and her husband, Ben, welcomed their first grandson April 22, 2013. Sandra and Ben are retired and live in Montgomery. • William E. Roy Jr. ’67 and his wife, Laura Gastinger Roy ’64, have moved to LaBelle, Fla., where he volunteers at Florida Conference Camp and at Henderson Settlement in the Red Bird Missionary Conference. • Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth ’67, a North Carolina basket artist whose works are in the permanent collections of museums and galleries throughout the United States, is enjoying her 8 grandchildren. • Dr. Edward Brown III ’68 and his wife, Jean, are retired and living in the mountains in Clyde, N.C. They enjoy seeing classmates who are traveling in the area. • Judith Pierce Croxton ’68 of Kershaw, S.C., has retired after more than 30 years of service in the U.S. Air Force. Upon retirement she was presented the Merition Civilian Service Award, June 29, 2012. • Marty Lee ’68 and his wife, Billi, moved to Missouri in June 2013 to be near their daughter. • Kim Wanous ’68, after a 35-year career in television news, works as the communications director and legislative liaison for the Alabama Department of Rehabilitation Services in Montgomery. In addition, Kim and his wife, Amy, are enjoying their favorite—and more important—roles as grandparents. • Patricia Carol Snyder Eiland ’69 retired as information systems programming manager at the Alabama Department of Education in January 2013. She volunteers with the United Methodist Church. • A second mystery novel written by Ellen Edwards Kennedy ’69, Death Dangles a Participle, was published by Sheaf House in 2013. The book is the sequel to her first mystery, Irregardless of Murder. The chief protagonist of each work is a high school English teacher. Ellen is working on Murder in the Past Tense, the third in the series, which is scheduled to be released in the spring of 2014. • Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ’69 and George Mingledorff ’70 serve together leading the missions program at their home church, Aldersgate UMC in Montgomery. They also enjoy traveling and playing with their 4 grandsons. George serves in a number of leadership roles beyond the local church and also on several boards, including Mary Ellen’s Hearth at Nellie Burge Community Center. Mary Ellen’s Hearth’s mission is to “offer hope, help and healing to homeless women and children throughout the River Region.” • U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions ’69, right, delivered the Commencement Address for the 2013 graduates of the University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Dentistry, June 2013, after which he met Dr. Glenn Rudolph ’09, left, a member of that graduating class. Earlier in the year Senator Sessions was honored with the Naval Distinguished Public Service Award in Washington, D.C. 1970s • 2013 Alumni Achievement Award honoree Carl Barker ’70, president and CEO of ServisFirst Bank, Montgomery, earned 40 years of banking experience working with Alabama Bancorporation, First Dallas County Bank, SouthTrust Bank, and Regions Bank. A native of Selma, Ala., he Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) completed his B.S. degree at Huntingdon with majors in business and economics and earned his graduate degree at the Stonier Graduate School of Banking, Rutgers University. Carl, a Huntingdon trustee, served as chair of the Selma City School Board and serves on the boards of Montgomery Area Business Committee for the Arts and the Jackson Hospital Foundation. • Judy Duncan Bilyeu ’70 retired in 2008 after a career as a school counselor. She teaches Sunday school, volunteers at an emergency assistance agency that is run by 60 local churches in Aiken, S.C., and travels with her husband, Jay. • Jo Ann Robinson Marler ’70 has gone from mother of 4 to grandmother of 9. She has had custody of 3 grandsons for more than 8 years; the oldest is a senior in high school and the youngest is in eighth grade in Phenix City, Ala. Jo Ann likes to use her “almost worn-out computer” to find old friends from high school and college. • Known for her bright spirit and civic engagement, 2013 Alumni Loyalty Award winner and Huntingdon Trustee Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 (pictured, center, with National Alumni Board President Terri Smith Francis ’80, left, and President J. Cameron West) has served on the boards for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, the Alabama Cancer Society, and the Landmarks Foundation. She is a committee member for the YMCA Jimmy Hitchcock Memorial Award Committee and the Cloverdale Playhouse. She is the past president of Women in the Church, past director of the Mission Conference, a member of the Mission Committee, and teaches Sunday School and volunteers for Bible School at Trinity Presbyterian Church. Beverly and her husband, the Honorable Reese H. McKinney Jr. ’72, have long supported Huntingdon College, each serving on the Inauguration Committee in 2004. Beverly McKinney’s support of the Campaign for Cloverdale was instrumental in the expansion of the College across Fairview Avenue. The McKinneys are members of the Huntingdon Society and support the Huntingdon Fund and the Huntingdon Tomorrow Campaign. • James H. Morse ’70 is enjoying retirement after 37 years as a clinical social worker. His wife, Mary Louise, is also a clinical social worker in the mental health field in Hendersonville, N.C. • Huntingdon trustee and alumnus Herb Patterson ’71 has been selected to participate in the Huntsville Artist League’s Artist Mentorship Program. The program combines several resources and services provided by the League in support of emerging artists, including education scholarship, the opportunity to exhibit work in the Emerging Artists Gallery, peer critique, Standards Committee feedback, and consultation sessions with successful artists. • Nancy Jennings Wiggins ’71 and her husband, Robert Wiggins ’69, are mostly retired and enjoying their 2 grandchildren, who live in Atlanta. • Howell B. Edwards Jr. ’72 is a retired music educator. He is the organist at Our Savior Evangelical Lutheran Church, Grants Pass, Ore. • Dr. Thomas Moore ’73, chancellor of the University of South Carolina-Upstate, delivered the Commencement Address for the Huntingdon traditional day program during 2013 Commencement Exercises. He was recognized with the Alumni Achievement Award during Homecoming 2012. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Michael Stephen Morris ’73 retired in 2009 from ALFA Insurance Companies after 37 years of service. • Deborah Giglio Garrett ’74 writes that her son, Walker Garrett ’07, is an attorney at the Finley Firm in Columbus, Ga., and was named to the “Five Under 40” achievers by Columbus and The Valley Magazine. • Georgianne Morgan Hughes ’74 and her husband, Col. William D. Hughes, have moved to Murphy, N.C. • Elizabeth Burnette Newsome ’75 and her husband, Bob Amos, of Bruington, Va., have 9 children and 7 grandchildren. • Debbie Montford Pittman ’76 and Thomas Pittman ’75 have 3 sons and 2 grandchildren. Debbie has retired from teaching; Thomas works as director of grocery for Buy for Less Foods in Edmond, Ok. • Ardis Garrett Fine ’77 lives in Daphne, Ala., with her husband of 30 years, Rick. They work in the electronic recycling industry. • Sarabeth Owens Snuggs ’77, Crawfordville, Fla., has retired after serving as director for more than 35 years with the Florida Retirement System. She and her husband, Andy, look forward to traveling. • David DuBois ’78 retired 5 years ago and moved from Manhattan to the small college town of Alfred, N.Y. He serves on the boards of the Comfort House of Allegany County (inpatient hospice), the Blind Association of Allegany and the Senior Citizen Council of Allegany County, and on the planning board of the Village of Alfred. He also serves as a deacon for Union University Church. • Living in Spring Lake, N.C., Lisa Dixon Hamilton ’78 describes herself as a medical lab technician, a homemaker, and an Army wife. • A presentation by Dr. Maureen Kendrick Murphy ’78 and her daughter, Kelly, during the National American Chemical Society Conference, spring 2013, “The Many Faces of CHAL: Where Chemistry Meets the Law,” has been selected for videotaping for the ACS’s “Presentations On Demand” feature. • Anthony C. “Tony” Stallworth ’78 was inducted into the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame during Homecoming 2013. His award was presented by Huntingdon President J. Cameron West, left, and Athletic Director Emeritus Buzz Phillips, right. Tony, a Monroe County, Ala., native, graduated from J.F. Shields High School in Beatrice, where he played on the 1972 J.F. Shields state basketball championship team. He attended LomaxHannon Junior College in Greenville for two years on a basketball scholarship before completing his undergraduate degree at Huntingdon in 1978. He was a member of the Huntingdon basketball teams in 1976–77 and 1977–78. As a junior, Tony averaged 13 points and 4 assists per game. While he had many memorable moments in key conference games, he was best known for his leadership and his ability to adapt. After an injury prevented him from playing his senior year, he remained a team leader from the bench and was praised by former athletic director and head basketball coach Neal Posey and his teammates for his attitude and spirit. He earned his master’s degree in physical education at Alabama State University, a Certificate of Administration from Auburn University-Montgomery, and his Class AA degree in educational administration from ASU. Tony began his coaching career as an assistant basketball coach at Lomax-Hannon from 1978 to 1983 while working as supervisor of parks and recreation for the Dunbar Center in Greenville. He moved to Monroe Senior High School in 1983, where he served as assistant basketball and head track coach 27 for five years. In 1988, Tony began his career at Brantley High School, where he compiled a 48-0 record as head junior high coach and assistant boys’ varsity basketball coach. He served as Brantley’s head boys’ basketball coach from 1990 to 2005, compiling a 298-47 record with three state championships: the Class 1A crown in 1993 and 1994, and the 2A state title in 1995. He was named Class 1A Coach of the Year in 1993 and 1994 and Class 2A Coach of the Year in 1995. Tony also served as assistant principal from 1997 to 2005, then as principal from 2006 to 2008, and moved to the Crenshaw County Board of Education in 2008. He serves as the associate executive director of the Alabama High School Athletic Association. “Since graduating, the notoriety from Huntingdon has allowed me to enhance my career to the highest level,” he says. “To be recognized along with a list of well-deserving candidates is truly special. … As always, I will continue to be a model of encouragement for those who are interested in being part of such a great educational family.” March 2013 after 31 years as church secretary at Eastwood Presbyterian Church in Montgomery. • Susan LeBeau Reith ’80 and her husband, Herbert, will celebrate their tenth anniversary December 24, 2013, in Asheville, N.C. • Ivan Roman-Ocasio ’81 worked as a teacher in Puerto Rico from 1981 to 2000, then served as a missionary in Bolivia for 10 years. He has returned to the United States working for Servants in Faith and Technology (SIFAT) as their Latin America project manager, and lives in Wedowee, Ala. • Tommy Dismukes ’83 serves as director of student financial services and NCAA compliance officer for Huntingdon. • L–R: Kerri Clemons Morrison ’85, Frances Thomason ’87, Carolyn Covington Byrd ’89, and Christopher Rief ’89 reunited at the Huntingdon Alumni Gathering in Atlanta, March 2013. • Research on the Tabata method of exercise by Dr. Michele Scharff Olson ’86, a professor of exercise science at Auburn-Montgomery, indicates that the intensive four-minute workout routine is as effective as five times the amount of traditional cardio exercise, and that it doubles metabolic rates. Olson shared her research results at the American College of Sports Medicine’s 60th annual conference in 2013. She is the first to determine how the Tabata exercise methodology affects heart and metabolic rates. • Morgan Trotter ’86 has produced a new album: “New Wineskins for Old Wine: A Hymns EP,” in which he sets four well-known hymns to fresh music. The album is available through reverbnation.com. His latest single, “You Are My Delight,” is available on iTunes. The Rev. Tony Max Hughes ’78, standing, center, and his wife, Beth Jackson Hughes ’82, had three purposes for being at the Homecoming football game. As parents of Hawks quarterback Taylor Hughes ’15, they had a great time watching him play (older son Thomas Hughes ’13 teaches in Clanton, Ala.); as grandparents of two future Hawks (pictured, standing), they had a vested interest in recruiting more Hugheses to the Hawk family; and as a member of the Class of 1978, Tony celebrated his 25th reunion. Seated are friends Phyllis Minor Tubbs ’79 and Bill Tubbs ’80. • Elaine Andrews Boyer ’79, a second-grade teacher at Coosada Elementary School in Alabama, has been teaching for 20 years. She has been married to her husband, Randy, for 35 years. They have 2 children and 3 grandchildren. • Margaret Holland Ellmer ’79, who graduated with degrees in elementary and special education and works as assistant special education director and special educator for Rankin County Schools, has completed her Ph.D. in education administration and supervision at Jackson State University. 1980s • Gregory Clark ’80 serves as executive director of the Central Alabama Regional Planning and Development Commission. His wife, Virginia Coyner Clark ’73, has retired after 39 years of teaching history, French, and English. They live in Eufaula, Ala. • June Pavelec Cutchins ’80 married Dr. Malcolm A. Cutchins in March 2012 and has moved to Auburn, Ala. June retired in 28 Pictured L–R: Phyllis Minor Tubbs ’79; Debra Freisleben ’79; Emily McNiel Levy ’79; Carol Nicholson Foster ’80; Gail Thielen Lolley ’78; Liz Cutright Wolffbauer ’78; Sarabeth Owens Snuggs ’77; Dorothy Dunbar Rogers ’78; Debbie Doss Dahl ’79; Jane Jenkins Bridges ’78; and Terri Smith Francis ’80 reunited during Homecoming 2013. • Jim Meeks ’87, right, a native of Florence and resident of Huntsville, Ala., was inducted into the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame in September 2013. Jim was a member of Huntingdon’s 1986 and 1987 NAIA national championship golf teams. Individually, he was a First-Team All-American during his senior year and missed AllAmerican honors by one shot as a junior. Jim is remembered by his teammates as the spiritual leader of the team. After graduating with a major in marketing, he spent most of his career in the medical field before a brief stint as a banker. In 1999 he answered the call into full-time ministry, beginning a Master of Divinity degree at Southern Seminary before being hired as the minister of education and leadership at a Baptist church in Kentucky. He finished his M.Div. in 2007. He serves as associate pastor for Capshaw Baptist Church in HuntsHuntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) writes songs inspired by mythology, literature, and role-playing games. Her Web site is http://magnusretail.com. She has a new solo album, Acolytes of the Machine & Other Gaming Stories (2012, Bandcamp.com or CDBaby.com). Two of the bands with whom she performs produced albums in 2012: Play It with Moxie released Play It with Moxie Live! (Bandcamp.com and CDBaby.com); Three Weird Sisters released Third Thyme’s the Charm (Amazon, Bandcamp.com, and CDBaby.com). • Ty Prewitt ’91 founded and runs BellaTEX Inc., which manufactures stage curtains. His wife, Carrie Pennel Prewitt ’92, has her own fine art children’s photography business, Carrie Prewitt Photography. They live in Jackson, Tenn. L–R: Dusti Doss ’09, a full-time trainer with CrossFit 2L2Q gym in Montgomery; Paige Huff ’08, assistant women’s basketball coach at Huntingdon; Tiffany Jordan ’09, a mathematics teacher and assistant basketball coach for Smiths Station High School; and Wanda Howard ’81, a consultant, gathered at the 2013 Martin Luther King Convocation and Gospel Celebration, for which Wanda served as speaker. ville. Jim says,“This is a very humbling honor for me as I was never the ‘star golfer’ on the teams by any means, but the guy on the team who was the primary leader or ‘glue’ who helped get us all focused and united on the one objective—playing as a team to win golf tournaments! Huntingdon College offered me a wonderful college experience in every conceivable way.” Jim’s award was presented by his Huntingdon golf teammate and current director of Huntingdon golf, Dave Schreyer ’89, left. • Dwight Myers ’87 has served in the field of social work since earning his Master of Social Work degree from Florida State University. He serves as an Imago relationship therapist in Ithaca, N.Y, and is married to Craig Evans. 1990s A few AOPi sisters from the 1980s and 1990s gathered for a reunion at Loeb Lake Lodge in June 2013. In this photo are Wendy Dawson Wilson ’92, Dana Nix Moore ’88, LeAnn Holifield Cox ’93, Sara Dean Faulkenberry ’88, Laurie Simmons Shelly ’91, Evelyn Hutzler Pope ’90, Mary K. McGuffey ’94, Mary Hardin Thornton ’91, Glenda Atwell Allred ’91, Amy Stafford Cohen ’91, Misty Edwards Roberts ’89, Sarah Manikas Rech ’93, Carol Fields Loeb ’90, Elizabeth Couey Smithart ’86, and Amy Beard Hulsey ’90. • Lynda McMullen-Boyce ’90 lives in Green Cove Springs, Fla., with her husband, Keith, her daughter, Hana, and her stepdaughter, Ashley. She works in health and wellness marketing. • Dr. Mary Carolyn Phillips Crowell ’90 earned her Doctor of Musical Arts degree in music composition from the University of Alabama. After her husband finished residency, they moved to Athens, Ala., where she teaches piano and composition and Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Kevin (’90) and Kelly Whatley Pettit ’91 of Auburn, Ala., brought their future Hawks to enjoy the day and the 2013 Homecoming football game. Kevin works as a golf pro and Kelly works with the Alabama Reading Initiative. • 2013 Alumni Loyalty Award honorees David (’92) and Glenda Atwell Allred ’91 (center, with President J. Cameron West, left, and National Alumni Board President Terri Smith Francis ’80, right) graduated with degrees in finance and business administration, respectively, and were deeply involved in Greek life at Huntingdon. David interned with LWT Communications and with a regional brokerage firm while he was at Huntingdon. He joined LWT after graduating in 1992 and became a managing partner just two years later. When LWT merged with Reid-O’Donahue Advertising in 2013, forming the Stamp Idea Group, David became a partner in the new firm. He has remained involved with his undergraduate fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon, helping them build two chapter rooms on campus and serving as president of the alumni board. Glenda, a member of Alpha Omicron Pi women’s fraternity, joined Colonial Mortgage Company and Colonial Bank, where she worked for 15 years after graduating from Huntingdon. In 2007 she began working part-time for LWT Communications and devoted the rest of her time to volunteer work, which led her to accept a role on the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees and to run the campaign for Alabama’s State Treasurer, Young Boozer. After Boozer’s election, Glenda was appointed deputy state treasurer. The Allreds have remained loyal supporters of Huntingdon College, becoming charter members of the Huntingdon Society in 2003 and funding guidance counselor luncheons around the state to help with recruitment for the College. Both have served on the College’s National Alumni Board. • Lorraine “Les” Stuedeman ’93, pictured right, joined her sister, Vann Stuedeman ’94, left, in the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame during Homecoming 2013. Les lettered for three seasons as a catcher for the Huntingdon softball team. She earned All-District honors in 1990, 1991, and 1992 and All-America honors in 1992. After graduating, she earned a master’s degree in education from the University of West Alabama while serving as an assistant softball coach. In 1995, following a successful one-year stint as the head coach at Hewitt-Trussville High School, Les became the first softball coach at the University of Alabama-Huntsville (UAH). Surpassing 1,000 games coached 29 • Dr. Roxanne St. Martin ’94, assistant professor of athletic training at Huntingdon, presented “Athletic Injuries in the Female Population” at the Alabama State Association for Physical Education, Recreation and Dance in October 2012. • Nanci Smith Berch ’96 and John Berch ’98 welcomed Isabelle Paige Berch, their third child and first daughter, June 26, 2013. Nanci is a personal trainer and John is a chemistry professor at Tennessee Wesleyan College. Huntingdon golf great and 17-year professional golf veteran David Schreyer ’89 returned to Huntingdon in January 2013 to serve as director of golf. “Huntingdon has always been close to my heart,” David said. “I left Huntingdon right for the PGA Tour my first year. That doesn’t happen too often. I enjoyed my collegiate experience and I want to help our golfers do the same. I want to help them play great golf, have a great college experience, get a great education, and leave here with the same love for Huntingdon that I have.” David earned first-team All-American honors in 1986, 1987, 1988, and 1989. He was the NAIA individual national champion in 1988 and was part of Huntingdon’s NAIA national championship teams in 1986, 1987, and 1988. After college, he played 17 years of tour golf. From 1990 to 2007 he competed on several tours, including the PGA Tour, the Nationwide Tour, the South African PGA Tour and the NGA Pro Golf Tour. His 10 wins on the NGA Pro Tour rank second all-time. David was inducted into the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2001. He is pictured, third from left, with members of the 2012–13 golf team. during the 2012 campaign, she has guided the Chargers to an impressive 803-249-1 (.763) record. Under her leadership, the Chargers have averaged more than 47 wins per season and her teams have never had a losing season. Les is the second winningest active coach in Division II and became just the nineteenth coach in Division II history to win 800 games. She ranks fourteenth all-time across all divisions in winning percentage— a number that ranks second among active Division II coaches and fifth all-time in Division II. Her teams have earned berths to the NCAA tournament 16 times—including a stretch of 11 in a row with the team’s 2013 berth—and the Chargers have captured four South Region titles. In 2009 and 2011 Les guided the Chargers to the brink of a national championship, finishing as the Division II Softball World Series runner-up both seasons. Les and her staff have been named South Region Coaching Staff of the Year six times (1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2009 and 2011). During her extraordinarily successful collegiate coaching career, Les has earned seven Gulf South Conference Coach of the Year titles. The program’s success in the Conference was highlighted in 2010 when she was named GSC East Division Coach of the Decade and the Chargers were picked as the decade’s top softball program. In addition to her responsibilities at the helm of the softball program, Les was named the senior women’s administrator for the UAH Department of Athletics in 2010. Along with coaching on the college and high school levels, she has been instrumental in the growth of fast pitch softball in North Alabama—coaching and assisting with the organization of the first 12-and-under softball travel team in Huntsville. Her sister, Vann Stuedeman ’94, was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2012. “It is a huge honor to be a part of the Huntingdon Athletic Hall of Fame,” says Les. “I am a very proud member of the Huntingdon Softball alumni. Coach Tina Kyler Deese ’94 was a huge and lasting influence on me as a coach and a teacher. She built the program around discipline, fundamentals, and hard work. I carry all of those lessons with me still today.” 30 • A poem written by Dr. Jodi Adamson ’97, “Steampunk Alchemy,” is included in the anthology, Dreams of Steam III Gadgets, published by Kerlak Enterprises. It is available online at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Books-A-Million. • Jennifer Hart VanDeWoestyne ’97 serves as an academic adviser at Temple University in Pennsylvania. • Emily Bowers Jackson ’98 has been named principal of Eufaula Primary School after serving as assistant principal for the past five years. • Wes ’98 and Samantha Clements Kelly ’00 welcomed future Hawk Mary Kathryn Kelly May 20, 2013. • Michael A. Warren ’98 married Sarah Lynn Taylor August 10, 2012, in Allenspark, Colo. They live in Denver, where Sarah is employed as a speech language pathologist and Michael works as an account executive with Netsuite. • Shaindel Beers ’99, a poet who has published two collections to date, was invited to write a cover endorsement for the 2014 issue of Poet’s Market. • Holly Van Fleet Dede ’99 and her husband, Bernard, welcomed twins, Jean “Rocco” and George Leone, January 25, 2012. Holly left her job at Bank of America and says she has enjoyed every minute with her boys. She is working on her real estate license for North and South Carolina. In June of 2012, Holly and Bernard opened a restaurant, Mr. Geero, that has received strong reviews in Charlotte, N.C. • Robert Shane McCord ’99 is a grade 4 wastewater treatment plant operator in Alexander City, Ala. 2000s • Dr. Robyn Yancey Focke ’00 and her husband, Jack ’01, welcomed a son, John William Focke III, April 30, 2012. He joins his sister, Hannah Maddox Focke, born May 21, 2010. • Adrienne Strickland Gaines ’00 has assumed the role of executive assistant to the Office of the Provost at Huntingdon. She and husband John Gaines ’07 have two daughters. • Heather Fuller-Khassian ’00, a registered patent/intellectual property attorney, has joined the law firm Bracewell & Giuliani in Houston, Texas. She is an associate in the technology practice division. • 2013 Outstanding Young Alumni Award winner Dr. Hope Theresa Richard ’00 (pictured, left, with Dr. Erastus C. Dudley, professor of biology, center, and Hope’s brother, Nick Richard ’02) came to Huntingdon from her native New Orleans on an athletic scholarship to play for and manage the women’s soccer team. She entered as an undeclared major but soon learned, under the tutelage of Dr. Dudley, that she had an avid interest in cell biology. After graduating in 2000 she was accepted into the medical science graduate program at the University of South Alabama, where she became engrossed in the study of molecular biology and pure hypothesis-based science. Hope earned her Ph.D. from the Department of MicroHuntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) biology and Immunology at the University of South Alabama in 2005, having completed her dissertation on the physiology of acid resistance in Escherichia coli. Her research led to her decision to attend medical school, which she entered at USA in 2005. Her career objectives were further specialized during her second-year pathology course and during her fourth-year electives in surgery and neuropathology, where she came to appreciate the neurosurgeon-pathologist interaction and fostered her interest in neuropathology. Research examining various teratomas for the presence of neuronal precursor cells as well as a case report on pediatric gliomatosis cerebri led to her acceptance into the pathology residency program at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Va. During her research at VCU she has evaluated molecular markers in the development of carcinoma and is involved in an ongoing multi-center research project investigating the role of Astrocyte Elevated Gene-1 (AEG-1) gene copy numbers as a potential mediator of malignancy in brain tumors. Awarded the Lyman Research Fellowship at Virginia Commonwealth in 2012, she was accepted into the neuropathology fellowship in the Department of Pathology at VCU in July 2013. • David W. Abbott ’01 works as associate and managing editor at Hatton Brown Publishers. He has moved to Pell City, Ala., with sons Nathan and Logan. • James “Joey” Calder ’01 lives in Lexington, Ky., with his wife and two children: Eva (age 5), and Morgan (1). • Daniel Dean ’01 is a Certified Financial Planner and works as vice president for UBS Wealth Management in Montgomery. Daniel and his wife, Lindsey, have two daughters: Madeleine (6) and Katherine (4). • Ann Steiner Hamilton Gregory ’01 gave birth to Magoo Price Hamilton, December 30, 2012, in Greenville, Ala. • Trina Aytona Hille ’01 teaches in the New Orleans-area charter school system. • Dr. Marquell Johnson ’01, assistant professor of kinesiology at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, was recognized by the Wisconsin Health and Physical Education organization for his outstanding contributions to teaching adapted physical education to individuals with disabilities, receiving the 2012 Teaching Honor Award for Adapted Physical Education. He started the Physical activity and Recreation for Individuals with Disabilities in the Eau Claire area (PRIDE) program in 2008, shortly after he joined the UW-Eau Claire faculty. • Kristen Draganic Boyd ’02 and her husband, James, welcomed their first child in May 2011, Marjorie (Maggie) Jeanne Boyd. Kristen is a Title I teacher for Constellation Schools at Collinwood Village Academy in Cleveland, Ohio. • Elizabeth Gowan ’02 has been admitted to the graduate program in higher education administration at Auburn University. • Tamara Lawson ’02 completed a degree in nursing and serves as a school nurse. She volunteers her time as a nurse with the new HC-Disability Sport Network. As a student, Tamara served with the Wheelin’ Hawks program, where she learned she has a strong desire to work with special needs children. • Emily Slaughter Schuttenberg ’02 teaches full-time at Mitchell Community College and lives in Salisbury, N.C. • With deep sadness, we share the news of the death of Brandon Wallace ’02 following a brief illness in January 2013. Brandon completed a master’s degree in American studies at Purdue University in 2005 and worked for the Committees for Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. A poet, his first book, Shadows and Light, was published in 2012 by Llumina Press. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Clay Walls ’02 manages the Science and Technology Honors Program for undergraduate students at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, a position he has held for three years and says he truly loves. • The Rev. Dave Barkalow ’03, pastor at First UMC-Tallassee, Ala., and the Rev. Emily Dueitt Kincaid ’06, director of children’s ministries at Aldersgate UMC, Montgomery, attended the Conversation on Ministerial Formation held in Houghton Library in January 2013, planned by President West and members of the faculty in the Religion program. • Daniel Duckett ’03 has moved to Paris, France, where he is a pastry chef at Angelina. • Kelly Long Gaiotti ’03 and Rob Gaiotti ’04 welcomed son Eli Jeffrey Gaiotti February 18, 2013, in Dorset, Vt. Eli is the younger brother to Ryan, born February 3, 2011. • Charlotte Cooper Millard ’03 welcomed a son, Gregory Thor Millard, April 20, 2012, in Rome, Ga. • Kara Gonzalez Murrow ’03 welcomed her second child, Cole Bradley Murrow, February 28, 2013, in Chandler, Ariz. • Shelby Wills ’03 married David Brunner October 4, 2013, in North Carolina. She earned her commercial real estate license in 2012. • Jamie Allen ’04 has moved to Mobile, Ala., where she works for OnMedia in the sales division of Mediacom as an administrative assistant. She has announced her engagement to George Piper. • Lauren Fabrizi Colangelo ’04 and her husband, Preston, live in Jacksonville, Fla., with their 3-year-old daughter, Mia. Lauren has taught kindergarten for 9 years. • Crystal Bedwell Langford ’04 will represent Shelby County in the 2014 Mrs. Alabama Pageant. The pageant, to be held in March, will mark the 10-year anniversary of Crystal competing as Miss Shelby County in the Miss Alabama America Pageant. Crystal was Miss Huntingdon 2003–04. • Lauren Carr Lewey ’04 is a Baptiste-style yoga teacher in Dothan and Enterprise. She teaches regular hot yoga and has been led to teach in alternative schools and drug rehabilitation centers. She traveled to Africa with Africa Yoga Project and shared yoga with people in the slums of Kibera. She also lived with a tribe in Amboseli while building a school for their children. She lives with her husband, Jim Lewey ’04, and their twin boys, William and Maximus, in Enterprise, Ala. • Larry McLemore ’04 completed the defense of his doctoral dissertation and graduated with his Ph.D. in history from Auburn University. He serves as high school dean of student programs at The St. James School. Larry and his wife, Josie, welcomed their first child, William Wilder McLemore, January 8, 2013. • Amanda Leigh Pickard ’04 writes, “I am a professional actress here in Hollywood. I will be presenting my one-woman cabaret, Ingenue, at the Hollywood Fringe Festival in summer 2013. I started this cabaret as my musical theater capstone at Huntingdon College for my musical theater degree with [professor] Fiona Macleod. All I know as a professional actress I learned in the Dungeon Theater.” • Hank Sforzini ’04 married Sarah Catherine White, December 8, 2012. • Matt Johnson ’05 published his book, Captain Trouvier’s Chronicles of Forgotten Histories and Bewildering Events, which tells of an accidental time traveler from the 1400s and the adventures he experiences while trying to preserve and protect the past. Matt illustrated the book, as well. 31 • Dr. Elizabeth Brantley Keeble ’05, who completed her medical degree at the University of South Alabama in May 2013, has begun a transitional year with the Baptist Health Care System in Birmingham. In 2014 she will join an ophthalmology residency at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. At USA she was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and was the recipient of the Glasgow-Rubin Achievement Citation, given to female graduates who are in the top 10 percent of their medical school class. gist at Florida Hospital in cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation. She also works as an exercise specialist at the National Training Center in Clermont, Fla. • Andrea Garrett ’06 celebrates every day of motherhood with adopted daughter Beau Grayson Elizabeth Eubanks, born October 20, 2012. They live in Centre, Ala. • Claire Hart ’06 and Matt Gorum ’07 were married May 11, 2013. They live in Birmingham. • Steve Spivey ’04 and Mary Tyler Head Spivey ’04 welcomed Sydney Catherine Spivey to their family June 28, 2013, joining big sister Campbell. They live in Wetumpka, Ala., where Steve is a cabinet contractor. Mary Tyler is the communications coordinator, social media director and youth tour director for the Alabama Rural Electric Association. She also serves as the food editor for Alabama Living. • Lauren Hudson Hatcher ’06 lives in Rome, Ga., where she has worked as a physician’s assistant for 3 years. Lauren married Levi Hatcher in October 2012. • Negin Ahmadi ’05 married Matthew Miller October 27, 2012. She completed her graduate degree at Liverpool University. They live in Sweden. • Jennifer Wren Miller ’06 married Ethan Clanton May 25, 2013. They live in Huntsville, where Jenny serves as assistant pastor for First United Methodist Church. • Mindy Bevan La Branche ’05 earned her MBA from Georgetown University and works as legislative and policy coordinator for the National Council of State Housing Agencies. Her husband, Robert La Branche ’06, is a senior legislative assistant in the U.S. Congress. They live in Alexandria, Va. Robert earned his master’s degree in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College. • Future Hawk Annah Camille Lott is the daughter of Mary Hodo ’05 and granddaughter of Martha Jones Hodo ’72. • Leanne Mallory ’05, who has been living in New York City for several years, entered graduate school at the University of Alabama in January 2012 to pursue her master’s degree in higher education administration. Leanne is employed at the university as an assistant community director in the Department of Housing and Residential Communities. • Kristi Winstead Wilson ’05 and her husband, Chris, welcomed their daughter, Madison Elizabeth, December 30, 2012. • Kevin ’06 and Christina Marquart Akins ’06 welcomed 10 lb. 12 oz. Graham Douglas Akins October 10, 2013, in Yulee, Fla. • Bethany Gaydosh Davis ’06 and Gary Frazier ’09 graduated with Doctor of Pharmacy degrees from Samford University’s McWhorter School of Pharmacy May 17. Bethany will work for Dunkin’s Pharmacy, Tuscaloosa, where her sister and fellow pharmacist, Brittany Gaydosh Cotant ’08, is employed. Gary will work with Rite Aid. • Kendall Falkner ’06 works for the Department of Veteran’s Affairs in Montgomery. • Ashleigh Thompson Funk ’06 and her husband, Shaun, live in Winter Garden, Fla., where she works as an exercise physiolo32 • Katherine Mallini ’06 (left) works in human resources for Hyundai, and Suzanna Wasserman ’05 (right) just started a new job as director of marketing for Eastdale Mall. • Will Merritt ’06 has returned to his alma mater, North Jackson High School, where he teaches ninth grade history, coaches ninth grade boys’ basketball, and assists with varsity football. • Melissa Taylor Moore ’06 works as an auditor with the U.S. Property and Fiscal Law Office for the Alabama National Guard. • Wendy Nulph ’06 completed a Master of Liberal Studies degree with a focus in behavioral and social sciences at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. She has moved to Wantage, England. • John ’06 and Robin Steele Thornhill ’05 (right) brought their future Hawk, Willow, to the Drum Theater open house in February 2013. They were joined by John’s mother, Cindy Rose Thornhill ’90, left. John is a chiropractor and Robin restored and runs the historic Ashland Theater in Ashland, Ala. • Robyn Bailey ’07 married Paul Paradine June 29, 2013. Robyn lives in Ithaca, N.Y., and works for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. • Taber Ellis ’07 married Grace Smith in April 2013. They live in Hope Hull, Ala. Taber works for Information Transport Solutions. • Cole Hairston ’07 has been living in Poland and working as a strength and conditioning coach for two professional basketball teams for four years. He says, “I never expected to be in Europe, but I really found my passion at Huntingdon to coach and work with athletes!” • Matt Kelser ’07 has moved to Atlanta, where he is an accountant for Rock-Tenn Company. • Patti M. Lee ’07 graduated from Auburn-Montgomery with a master’s degree in education in December 2012. She is teaching high school history in Atlanta. • Samantha Mosier ’07, a doctoral candidate in the Political Science Department at Colorado State University, was one of seven U.S. graduate students selected by the American Society for Public Administration (ASPA) as 2013 Founders Forum Fellows. The prestigious fellowships are awarded to students who show great promise in the field of public administration. Selection is competitive and is based upon a student’s public service and research record, faculty nomination, and a short original research brief on an assigned topic. This year’s Fellows attended Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) ASPA’s 2013 annual conference in New Orleans, participated in special discussion circles, and presented on their research interests. Sam presented her paper, “Soft-Tech Solutions Improving Local Sustainability in the U.S.: Lessons Learned from a P3 in Cookeville, Tennessee.” The 2013 Founders Forum Fellowship winners will serve as mentees in ASPA’s Mentoring Program and have their research published in PA Times. • Whitney Pettus ’07 married Andy Lundskow July 5, 2013, at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, S.C. • Tony Arnold ’08 serves as a youth pastor at First United Methodist Church, Enterprise, Ala. • Lydia Fail Brown ’08 gave birth to her first child, Olivia Katherine, October 1, 2012. The family lives in Mobile. • Carrie Edwards Carboni ’08 and Anthony Carboni ‘08 extended their family October 23, 2012, with the birth of their first child, Lillian Mae Carboni. • Nicole Duff ’08 teaches and coaches for Booker T. Washington Magnet High School in Montgomery. • Eric ’08 and Betsy Jones Cagle ’08 live in Tallassee, Ala., where Eric runs a family business. Betsy works as the community grants coordinator for the Alabama Department of Public Health. • Larry Clifton Fischer ’08 works as a telecom manager in Trussville, Ala. • Matt Johnson ’08 teaches mathematics and coaches football and baseball for Andalusia High School. • Jacob Kendall ’08, in the second year of an interdisciplinary Ph.D. program at Tulane University, is writing his doctoral dissertation on the integration of HIV/AIDS and aging in sub-Saharan Africa, specifically Malawi. • Cliff Groce ’08 works as a client relations manager with Clear Channel. Carrie Barber Groce ’08 works as an executive assistant at Porter Capital Corporation. They live in Birmingham. • Chasi Fowler Skinner ’08 has completed core rotations at Spartanburg Regional Hospital in Spartanburg, S.C., and has begun her fourth year of medical school at the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine at Virginia Tech. She plans to specialize in emergency medicine. Her husband, Wade, attends Sherman College of Chiropractic in Spartanburg. • Catherine Steineker ’08 married Jake Ray February 16, 2013. She works with Alabama Municipal Insurance Corporation. • Brett Taylor ’08 married Holly Halstead June 15, 2013. • Jack Vibbert ’08 is a student at the Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine in Dothan, Ala. He and Ashley Bunt ’09 have announced their engagement. • Gillian Lisenby Walters ’08 and Charles Walters ’08 have moved back to Montgomery. In her new role as an associate pastor at First UMC-Montgomery, Gillian works with small groups, including Sunday School, young adults, and the church’s prayer ministry. She preached her first FUMC sermon July 14, 2013. Charles pastors St. Paul’s UMC and Rhodes Chapel UMC near Greenville. Both graduated from Duke Divinity School. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Katie West ’08 has a new job with Cleveland Eye and Laser Surgery Center. • Tyler Jones ’08, center, of Decatur, Alabama, was inducted into the Athletic Hall of Fame in September 2013. Tyler was an NCAA First-Team All-American third baseman for the Huntingdon Hawks baseball team during his senior season. During that season, he finished ranked at number 26 in the nation in runs batted in (1.32 per game); 27 in the toughest to strike out (27.3 at bats per strike out); and 46 nationally with a .427 batting average. He was named an NCAA South Region First-Team All-American his junior season. During Tyler’s Huntingdon baseball career, he was a 13-time Great South Athletic Conference Player of the Week, 3-time GSAC First-Team All-Conference selection, 3-time GSAC Player of the Year Runner-Up, First-Team GSAC All-Freshman Team, and GSAC Freshman Player of the Year runner-up. In 472 at-bats, Tyler finished his Huntingdon career with 196 hits, a .415 career batting average, 151 RBIs, 13 homeruns, 112 runs scored, and a .640 slugging percentage. He also accumulated 39 career stolen bases. Tyler lives in Decatur and works with his father, Mike Jones, at Jones Financial. A talented musician, he also plays with The Wheelers Band and with Landers and Friends. “Huntingdon has always meant a lot to me, as well as to my family,” says Tyler. “Coming to Huntingdon was the beginning of a lifelong bond with the many people I grew to love once I attended.” His award was presented by Huntingdon head baseball coach and associate athletic director D.J. Conville ’98, left, and Huntingdon President J. Cameron West. • Dr. Brandy Milstead ’08 was inducted into the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame during Homecoming 2013. A native of Ozark, Ala., Brandy came to Huntingdon to prepare for medical school and to play for the women’s tennis team. Named to the All-Freshman Team in 2005, she was a member of Huntingdon’s Great South Athletic Conference championship teams in 2007 and 2008. In 2007 Brandy was named GSAC Women’s Tennis Player of the Year and tournament MVP, as well as to the All-Academic Team in both 2007 and 2008. She was named Singles and Doubles Player of the Week (with her doubles partner, Amanda Thomley ’08) multiple times during her playing career, and was also named an ITA Scholar-Athlete from 2006 to 2008. The Huntingdon Department of Athletics recognized her as the College’s Female Student-Athlete of the Year in 2007. An injury forced her to miss most of her senior season, but she accumulated 73 career wins (35 in singles play and 38 in doubles). Brandy served as a Huntingdon Ambassador, a Huntingdon Host, and as a member of the Student Government Association, Chi Omega women’s fraternity, the Concert Choir, and numerous honor societies. She was a member of the Huntingdon Homecoming court and was named Miss Huntingdon 2006. In June 2013 Brandy graduated from the University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Medicine. While at UAB she was part of medical mission teams to the Dominican Republic and Haiti. She has been involved in Equal Access Birmingham and the Summit Scholars Program of Birmingham. Now a resident of Roanoke, Va., she began her first year of residency in emergency medicine at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine during the summer of 2013. “Playing a college sport is something many students can only dream of, and I was a similar student until Coach Ximena Moore came into my life,” says Brandy. “Had she not recruited me at a high school tennis tournament … my dream of playing NCAA tennis would have never been realized. My four years playing for the Lady Hawks 33 and real estate litigation and automobile and premises liability. “It is difficult for me to put into a few short words what an honor this induction is to me,” says Chris. “During my four years here, I gave everything I had to Huntingdon, both on the field and in the classroom. In return, and while I didn’t know it at the time, the Huntingdon family was shaping me into the adult I have become. It is an honor to be … forever etched into Huntingdon history alongside so many others.” Chris, right, was joined onstage by his long-time best friend, current Huntingdon head men’s soccer coach Matt Williams. Serennah Harding ’08 Heath Harding ’11 Serennah Harding ’08 completed medical school in May 2013 and has begun her residency at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland. Her brother, Heath Harding ’11, completed his Master of Science degree and works in Montgomery. Their younger brother, Seth Harding ’16, is a history major at Huntingdon. Recently People magazine was on campus to cover the family story. All three Hardings were among the youngest students ever to enroll at Huntingdon. Heath entered at age 11 and graduated at 15; Serennah graduated at age 16. Seth, at 12, transferred to Huntingdon from Faulkner University. The 10 Harding siblings are home-schooled and their parents have created a guidebook, The Brainy Bunch: The Harding Family's Method to College by Age Twelve, for other home-schooling parents. brought me so much joy and taught me how to push my limits and achieve things that I never thought possible.” Brandy, center, and President J. Cameron West were joined onstage by Huntingdon head women’s tennis coach Ximena Moore. • Chris Saba ’08 was inducted into the Huntingdon College Athletic Hall of Fame in September 2013. A native of Pensacola, Florida, Chris was the valedictorian of Woodham High School in 2004, where he lettered in five sports. A four-year letterman for the Huntingdon soccer team, Chris started 74 out of 76 games played and totaled more than 6,800 minutes on the field. He finished his career with 32 goals and 25 assists and served as the team captain his junior and senior seasons. Chris was a four-year selection to the All-Conference Team and All-Academic Team for the Great South Athletic Conference. He was also a member of the GSAC All-Freshman Team and received the NSCAA College Men’s Team Academic Award. He graduated magna cum laude and was also awarded the Irene Brinson Munro Award for the highest grade point average among graduating history majors. Chris earned his juris doctorate from Florida Coastal School of Law, where he was involved in various student organizations, including the Student Bar Association and Honor Court, and served as a teaching assistant and research assistant. Chris served on the executive council for the nationally ranked Moot Court Honor Board. He was awarded Best Advocate and Best Brief awards at the 2011 National Appellate Advocacy Competition, a Best Advocate award at the 2010 National Appellate Advocacy Competition, and a Best Brief award at the 2010 Zehmer Workers’ Compensation Competition. He interned as a judicial law clerk for the Honorable Thomas E. Morris of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida before graduating cum laude in 2011. He was hired as a law clerk with Vernis & Bowling of North Florida shortly after taking the Florida Bar Exam. Upon passing the Florida Bar Exam, Chris became an associate attorney with the firm. He practices in the areas of civil rights, employment, 34 L–R: Tyler Jones ’08; Kyle Futral ’07, a science teacher and coach in Elmore County, Ala.; Brad Vest ’09, a contractor in Huntsville, Ala.; Brent Nichols ’08, a software engineer for SAIC; and Allison Keck Nichols ’10, who works as an administrative assistant with Raytheon Pikewerks in Madison, Ala., seldom miss a chance to renew their friendship and relive college memories. • Mollie Adams ’09 married Armando (Andy) Palileo July 6, 2014, in Mobile, Ala. Mollie made her professional opera debut with the Mobile Opera in the fall of 2013 and is a member of the music faculty at the University of Mobile. • Philip Bailey ’09 married Molly Patterson December 8, 2012. • Brent Blackwell ’09 has been admitted to the physician’s assistant program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. • Elizabeth Brogden ’09 graduated from Valparaiso University School of Law May 25, 2013. She has announced her engagement to Tyler Mackey. • Joanna Hampton Collier ’09 has joined the Huntingdon Office of Business and Finance as payroll coordinator. • Kristen Etheredge ’09 graduated from Candler School of Theology with a Master of Divinity degree May 13, 2013. Kristen and Cole Armstrong ’10 were married May 25, 2013, in Ligon Chapel. • Evan Haulman ’09 has completed his MBA at Samford University and has begun a job in Birmingham. • Brittney Herndon ’09 has published two books, Spellbound and Spellseeker, and is finishing up a third publication in her “Spell Series.” The books are available through Amazon Kindle. • Chelsey Hodge Koppersmith ’09 graduated from Troy University in December 2011 with a master’s degree in counseling. She and her husband, Nathan, have moved to Arkansas, where she works as a therapist at Glenhaven Youth Ranch. • Bobby Miller ’09 and Kylie Piercy ’11 were married June 1, 2013. • Gary Nelson ’09 married Stefanie Holman November 17, 2012. • Alex Nishibun ’09 and Jesi Dunaway ’09 were married at the Episcopal Church of the Ascension in Montgomery, Saturday, October 19, 2013. They live in Allston, Mass. Alex earned a graduate degree in vocal performance at the New England Conservatory and Jesi earned a graduate degree in agriculture, food, and the environment at Tufts University. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Jakob Dwyer ’10 married Carmen Terrell November 24, 2012. He is a CPA with Brown Thornton Pacenta & Co., Pensacola, Fla. They welcomed their first baby Hawk, Jack, November 19, 2013. A cast of Hawks is cheering for Jessica Dunkling Shelby ’08, her husband, Fred Shelby ’07, and their future Hawk, O’Ryan. September 4, 2013, Jessica had surgery on her brain for the removal of a tumor, her second surgery of this type within six months. She is in the midst of treatments. Fred’s former teammates on the football team and their wives are selling Team Shelby T-shirts, with profits benefiting the family. Jessica is a teacher but is unable to teach during her treatments; Fred works as the director of fitness for the Bell Road YMCA in Montgomery. Wearing their Team Shelby shirts in support of the family are, back row, L–R: Matt Johnson ’07, Michael Payson ’09, Brandon Dainas ’07, Dylan Pugh ’13, Hodge Patterson ’07, Chas Worthy ’11, Cliff Groce ’08, A.J. Swift ’12, C.J. Easterly ’08, Will Brannon ’08, Eric Cagle ’08, Betsy Jones Cagle ’07, Natalie Fletcher, Tyler Fletcher ’07, Jessica Reeves Reamer ’09, Abby Grace Chandler Payson ’11, Lauren Evans, Broderick Smith ’08; middle row: Chasity Ward ’13, Hannah Johnson, Angela Bryant Dainas ’07, Kelly Patterson, Carrie Barber Groce ’08, Maggie Daniell Easterly ’09, Cody Colson; front row: Erin Baker Godwin, Kaylee Godwin, Palmer Godwin, Jacob Godwin ’07, Bryan Wells ’08, Jackson Wells, Mark Colson ’07, Jeff Reamer ’09, and Eric Stroud ’13. • Dr. Glenn Rudolph ’09, son of Dr. Celia Smith Rudolph ’80 (associate professor, teacher education), graduated from dental school at the University of Alabama-Birmingham and has joined the Tuscumbia, Alabama, practice of Dr. Jimmy Gardiner, father of J Gardiner ’15. Glenn passed all of his boards with perfect scores. • Our prayers and sympathy are extended to David Sampleton ’09 in the death of his wife, Candice, April 11, 2013. David and Candice have a young child. • Dr. Joseph Sewell III ’09 graduated from the University of South Alabama School of Medicine and has joined the University of South Alabama Hospital System in internal medicine. • Dr. R. Sean Sinclair ’09 graduated from the University of South Alabama School of Medicine and has joined the University of South Alabama Hospital System in psychiatry. • Daniel Cooper Vanek ’09 graduated with a Master of Divinity degree from Columbia Theological Seminary in May 2013. He hopes to be ordained as a teaching elder (Minister of Word and Sacrament) with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and to serve in a chaplain ministry. • Evelyn Hanning Burttram ’10 got married in 2011, moved to Birmingham and is a doctoral student in health education and health promotion at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She is working as the graduate assistant of fitness and wellness at the Campus Recreation and Fitness Center on UAB’s campus, and also works as a research assistant in UAB’s Department of Human Studies. • Kyle Eller ’10 served with a mission team from FUMC-Wetumpka in West Palm Beach, Fla., during summer 2013. He continues as coordinator of the Huntingdon Fund for the Office of College and Alumni Relations. • LeighAnn Floyd ’10 married Leo DiCesaris March 17, 2013. LeighAnn is the youth director at Oakmont Presbyterian Church in Hoover, Ala. • Meagan Jackson ’10 married Jordan Travis December 1, 2012. • Brenda Jones ’10 was recognized with the Candler School of Theology Black Church Studies’ Daisy Bates Award for Sacrificial Care and Concern for All God’s Children in April 2013. • Rebecca Masic ’10 (ADCP), former admission counselor and executive assistant to the provost, serves as associate director of the Adult Degree Completion Program and as site coordinator for the program’s new site in Opelika, Ala. She graduated in December 2012 with a Master of Education in higher education administration and is continuing her studies at Auburn University toward a Ph.D. while she serves in her new role. • Julie Neussl Harrison ’10 and her husband, Chad, welcomed their Future Hawk, daughter Ellie Jane Harrison, August 18, 2012, in Birmingham, Ala. • Maegan McCollum ’10 graduated from Cumberland School of Law (Samford University) in May 2013 and has passed the Alabama Bar Exam. • Anna Perry ’10 married Nathan Marion May 25, 2013. • Alex Sanford ’10 teaches for Wilson Elementary School in the River Region. He has announced his engagement to Jessica Champlin. 2010s • Kayla Schuran ’10 married Kevin Haefner June 1, 2013. Huntingdon classmates among the wedding party were Clare Shannon ’11 and J.P. Kircher ’11. • Kayla Bratcher ’10, left, a student in the Doctor of Pharmacy program at McWhorter School of Pharmacy, Samford University, surprised good friend Brandy Milstead ’08, right, as she was inducted into the Hawks Hall of Fame during Homecoming 2013 (see Brandy’s story above). • David Seals ’10 married Lindsey Bell May 18, 2013. David completed his master’s degree in biology in 2013 at Jacksonville State University. He owns and operates Foothills Tractor and Equipment, in which he sells Mahindra tractors and Toro lawn care equipment among other products, while Lindsey works for Regions Bank. They live in Centre, Ala. • Alex Dyer ’10 has been admitted to the graduate program in history at Villanova University. • Heather VanderHey ’10 married Tyler Perdue November 17, 2012. Huntingdon classmates among her bridesmaids were Kristi McDaniel ’11, Katy Jo Farrill McDaniel ’11, Lynley Godwin Corley ’11, Kayla Bratcher ’10, and Destree Brown ’09. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 35 Angie Bradley ’11 and Ben Marsella ’10 were married May 25, 2013. Pictured are (L–R) Kate Garrigan ’14, Kelly Frazier ’10, Erika Keith ’14, Diane Humphreys ’14, Rachael Gautier ’11, Alyssa Eason ’12, Grant Hayes ’14, Catie Malone ’11, Kayla Bratcher ’10, Al Zachos ’07, Ben, Angie, Christian Harmon ’10, Mack McDaniel, Taylor Yeargan ’13, Davis Patterson, and Brett Taylor ’08. Angie is a student in the McWhorter School of Pharmacy, Samford University. Ben works as a medical scribe and in a graduate program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. • Sarah Ward ’10 graduated at the top of her class with a master’s degree in social work with a concentration in children, adolescents, and families from the University of Alabama in May 2013, earning Phi Alpha National Honor Society recognition. During the spring semester, she interned with UAB/Children’s Hospital’s International Adoption Clinic. She has passed the licensure exam. She is the daughter of Chief of Security Mike Ward ’76 and his wife, Phyllis Killion Ward ’74. • Jeremy White ’10 completed the nursing program at the University of South Alabama in May 2013. He plans to become a nurse practitioner. • Courtney Bunce ’11 married William Walker Carroll October 5, 2013. They have moved to Irmo, S.C. • Maggie Casey ’11 married Bradley Adams October 12, 2013. • ADCP Daphne site coordinator Gale Croft ’11, who completed Leadership Baldwin County, serves on the steering committee for the LBC program this year. • Mary Dawson ’11 completed her master’s degree in English at Auburn University and is teaching for Auburn-Montgomery. • Leigh Ann Everette ’11 married Cody Parker July 20, 2013. She is a third grade teacher at Lee Scott Academy in Auburn, Ala., and Cody works at Auburn Armory. • Kristine Fontaine ’11 has announced her engagement to Tyler Coots. She works as an athletic trainer at The Orthopaedic Clinic in Auburn. • Olivia Foster ’11 serves as the relocation coordinator for Southern Company in Birmingham, Ala. • Jackie Brill Francis ’11, a social worker, serves in the therapeutic foster care program at Gateway, a social services program in Birmingham. • Deborah Garrett ’11, a student at Jones School of Law, completed an externship with the law offices at Maxwell Air Force Base. 36 Steven Laye ’10 married Madison Jackson ’12 August 3, 2013. Steven completed the physician’s assistant program at the University of South Alabama during the summer of 2013. Pictured are the bride and groom surrounded by Huntingdon friends: (front row, L–R) Al Zachos ’07, Taylor Yeargan ’13, Kristi McDaniel ’11, Abby Grace Chandler Payson ’11, Madison Laye ’12, Steven Laye ’10, Christian Vick ’12, Drew Harrell ’11, Alex Baronich ’10, Zach Sealy ’10, and Zach Brothers ’10; (back row) Derik Wolfe ’13, Kayla Butts Wolfe, Philip Neal ’14, Jackie Crossman ’12, Jakob Dwyer ’10, Chas Worthy ’11, Michael Payson ’10, Justin Ridgeway ’10, and Michael Glasgow ’10. Michael Payson ’10 called on some of his former football teammates to help him achieve a winning wedding: L–R Michael Hicks, Steven Laye ’10, Zach Sealy ’10, Zach Brothers ’10, Justin Ridgeway ’10, Trey Payson, Michael Payson ’10, Slade Pirtle, Jakob Dwyer ’10, Chas Worthy ’11, Alex Baronich ’10, and Jake Anderson, when he and Abby Grace Chandler ’11 were married August 21, 2012. • Lynley Godwin ’11 and Shane Corley ’10 were married December 15, 2012. Huntingdon classmates among their bridal party included Katy Jo Farrill McDaniel ’11 (matron of honor), Lyndsey Weber ’11, and Joshua Robertson ’10 (best man). Lynley completed her graduate occupational therapy course work at the University of Alabama-Birmingham and continues in a clinical internship/field work. Shane teaches and coaches for Dauphin Jr. High School in Enterprise, Ala. • Charlie Hearn ’11 married Sarah Catherine Black May 25, 2013. • Heath LeVert ’11 married Christina Whatley June 27, 2013. Heath teaches for Buckthorn Middle School in Madison, Ala. • Seminarians Woods Lisenby ’11, left, and Heath Miller ’10 reconnected at Homecoming 2013. • Kelsey Loftin ’11 completed her master’s degree in English at Auburn University and has moved to Austin, Texas. • Catie Malone ’11 completed her master’s degree in communication studies at the University of Alabama in May 2013. • Ashanti Muhammad ’11, a graduate student studying rehabilitation counseling at Alabama A&M University, is continuing graduate research about body type preferences she began during her Senior Capstone project at Huntingdon. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Kristen Morrison ’11 and Jhavonn Brown ’14 have already taught future Hawk Oliver how to do the touchdown sign. • Amanda Jo Napier ’11 completed a degree in nursing. • Nichole Peacock ’11 was voted the Most Outstanding Graduate Student in English at the University of Montevallo, where she is an information literacy mentor and a graduate teaching assistant. • Lauren Randall ’11 has joined Eclectic UMC as youth pastor. • Rebekah Redden ’11 lives in Germany, where she interns in public affairs with the U.S. Embassy in Berlin and serves as a research analyst for the Australian Christian Lobby. She is completing her graduate degree through the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University. • Jeremy Reid ’11 completed his master’s degree in communication studies at the University of Alabama in May 2013 and works for the Office of University Advancement at UA. • Olivia Wilson ’11 welcomed a daughter, Kaylynn Nicole, September 7, 2013. • Lyndsey Weber ’11 and Chad Baxley ’13 were married August 3, 2013. Lyndsey completed her graduate occupational therapy course work at the University of Alabama-Birmingham and continues in field work for the program. Chad is employed with Alabama Power. • Matt Brink ’12 has moved to Franklin, Tenn., where he works for Wells Fargo bank. • Kendra Bolden ’12 (left) is in graduate school in biology at Alabama State University, and Berrell Cobb ’13 is in a graduate program in clinical mental health counseling at Troy University-Montgomery. • Chad Cotant ’12 is a student at Thomas Goode Jones School of Law at Faulkner University. • Jackie Daniels ’12, who has returned home to New Jersey, will begin studying to take the CPA exam soon. • Maggie Decker ’12 gave birth to Harlan Benjamin Decker Davis October 16, 2013. • Jessica Dickson ’12 is in the Doctor of Pharmacy program at McWhorter School of Pharmacy, Samford University. • B.J. Foroughian ’12 is a student in the doctoral program in pharmacy at South College School of Pharmacy in Knoxville, Tenn. • Lauren Gilbert ’12 works as a staff accountant with the firm Pedalahore & Co. in New Orleans. • Samuel Hurd Griffin ’12 is a forensic investigator with the Montgomery Police Department. • Huntingdon history/teacher education graduate Bryant Hall ’12 was named a WSFA Class Act in just his first semester of teaching at Prattville Junior High School. • Kellie Hilton ’12 practiced in Alabama for her pharmacy extern/ internship this past summer. She is a student at South University School of Pharmacy, Columbia, S.C. • Kyle Huff ’12 passed his boards and is an Athletic Trainer Certified. He works as an assistant athletic trainer at Huntingdon. • Kati Bryant ’12 studies TESOL certification at the University of Southern Mississippi. • Abby Carter ’12 is a graduate student at Duke Divinity School. • Patty Clements ’12, daughter of Houghton Library staff member Donna DeCoste Clements ’90, married Taylor Justin Everett, January 5, 2013. Best friends surrounded bride Candice Ruston ’11 on the occasion of her wedding to Brandon Bunn in the summer of 2013. L–R: Catherine Naylor ’11, Catie Malone ’11, Rachael Gautier ’11, Candice Ruston Bunn ’11, Sarah Ward ’10, and Angela Bradley Marsella ’11. Candice is a student in the McWhorter School of Pharmacy, Samford University. The wedding party of Jacob “Tank” King ’11 and Britni Northington King ’12 (right) included (L–R) Hayley Praytor ’12, Jordan Osborne ’12, Lauren Gilbert ’12, Ben Cecil ’10, Amanda Houston Cecil ’12, Abby Grace Chandler Payson ’11, Domonique Martin ’11, Michael Payson ’10, and Brandon Womack ’11. The Kings were married in Ligon Chapel. • Alan Clemons ’12 married Jessica Wilkinson, June 15, 2013. • Rebekah Correia ’12 works full-time as festival and intern coordinator with the Montgomery Dragon Boat Race and Festival, a non-profit organization that benefits Bridge Builders Alabama and Rebuilding Together Central Alabama. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Alexis Johnson ’12 and Terry Moorer ’14 were married June 2, 2013. • Maeghan Jordan ’12 has announced her engagement to Brandon McCardle. • Rebecca Jordan ’12 married John Shippen February 16, 2012, in a ceremony performed by the Rev. Dr. Jimmy Jeffcoat, associate professor of religion. The Shippens live in Montgomery. • Kris McLendon ’12 teaches third grade at Gresham Elementary School and works at Mountain Brook Country Club. She has announced her engagement to Taylor Phillips. 37 • Sisters Lexie Ofe ’17 (left) and Erin Ofe ’12 grew up on the Huntingdon campus, the daughters of Su Ofe, associate vice president for communications and marketing and editor of Huntingdon College Magazine. Erin has been awarded an assistantship for her graduate study in speech/language pathology at Auburn University. Lexie is a Huntingdon freshman. • Ryan “Boomer” Payne ’12 married Michelle Tillman September 15, 2013. Ryan works as a certified athletic trainer and physical therapy tech at ProImpact Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine. • Rachael Phillips ’12 is a graduate student at the St. Louis University School of Public Health. • Matt Provow ’12 works as a realtor with Coldwell Banker. • Kaitlin Rozof ’12 has announced her engagement to Rix Thorsell. She is a graduate student at Union Theological Seminary. • Mary Elizabeth Terrell ’12 is a student in the Harrison School of Pharmacy, Auburn University. Huntingdon’s 2013 summa cum laude graduates and Margaret Read Prize medal winners were, L–R, Amanda Paige Lathem ’13, who is studying in a doctoral program in chemistry at Washington State University; Russ Barnwell ’13, who is applying to law schools for further study; and Jake Bechert ’13; a student in the Master of Accounting program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. • Jack Allen ’13 and Heather Kelly ’14 were married June 8, 2013, at First UMC, Montgomery. • Evan Agnew ’13 works as a chemist with BASF in the Mercedes Benz plant in Tuscaloosa. • Jessica Andrews ’13 works full-time assisting Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman in the Huntingdon Department of Sport Science and Physical Education and running the new Disability Sport Network (DSPN) programs. • Wes Anderson ’13 married Charsy Martratt June 29, 2013. They live in Spanish Fort, Ala. • Nadia Arellano ’13 entered military service with the U.S. Army. • Gabriell Hall Terry ’12 has moved to Jacksonville, Ark. • Jacob Bailey ’13 received an Honorable Mention award in the McMillan Undergraduate Writing Competition, presented by the Association of College English Teachers of Alabama, for his essay, “Romeo and Juliet: A Tragic Reversal.” • Stephen Barebo ’13 interns in worship arts with First UMC-Montgomery. He and Sandra Pattison ’14 have announced their engagement. • After summer 2013 mission service in Ghana, Africa, Melissa Baswell ’13 teaches for Jefferson County Schools. • T.J. Betts ’13 serves as the pastor of Williams Chapel AME Zion Church and has been accepted for seminary study at Hood Theological Seminary. He is serving with Alabama-West Florida Young Adults Christian Ministry. Amanda Houston ’12 and Ben Cecil ’10 were married in Ligon Chapel July 13, 2013. Amanda works as an admission counselor at Huntingdon and Ben teaches chemistry and physics for Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School. They are pictured in the second row, center, surrounded by (in no particular order): Michael Payson ’10, Abby Grace Chandler Payson ’11, Taylor Claire Bean ’14, Jordan Osborne ’12, Taylor Calloway ’15, Kristi McDaniel ’11, Caitlyn DeMouy ’12, Carlee Nobles ’16, Kristen Curtis ’16, Mary Louise Thrower ’09, Megan Salter, Cole Armstrong ’09, Kristen Etheredge Armstrong ’09, Sara Pittman’14, Paige Huff ’08, Jessica Reeves Reamer ’09, Jeff Reamer ’09, Kaison Darden ’15, Britni Northington King ’12, Jacob “Tank” King ’11, Dusti Doss ’09, Hayley Praytor ’12, Chris Blight ’13, Elizabeth Thrower ’14, Nick Sheppard ’13, Alicia Gauker ’16, Mary Gasson ’14, Anna DeMedicis ’16, Will Wright ’14, Taylor King ’13, Dino Tampary ’12, Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13, Tyler Blackwell ’14, Kayla Causby ’15, Lanning Williams ’13, Jeremy Wolfe ’16, Allison Keck Nichols ’10, Brent Nichols ’08, Courtney Currenton ’16, Victoria Luchner ’14, Jimmy Rich ’13, Jessica Dickson ’12, Will Dake ’14, Katy Hall ’15, Sarah Francis ’10, Lauren Gilbert ’12, Douglas Pate ’10, Krissie Jones Pate ’11, Catherine Naylor ’11, Shirin Torabinejad ’15, J.D. Jean ’13, Lauren Lugen ’16, Samantha Lewis ’07, Amy Beard Hulsey ’90, Laura Marie Tyree Brelsford ’05, Kathleen Penney ’15, Michelle Gonzalez ’14, Carlee Gardner ’15, Elizabeth Daly ’13, and Ashley Dubuque Gorum ’03. 38 • Andreas Borschel ’13 is a graduate student in international economics at the University of Frankfurt. • Kandace Browder ’13, who began her undergraduate degree quest in the traditional day program several years ago, completed her dream through the Adult Degree Completion Program this year. Kandace is a new mom to Jayden Luke Browder. • L–R: Craig Brown ’13 is employed with Regions Bank, Pensacola, Fla.; Grant Brown ’13 is employed with Evonik Industries, Mobile, Ala.; and Parker Adams ’13 oversees operations at Sand Mountain Small Animal/Equine Hospital as he prepares to begin a doctoral program in veterinary medicine at St. George’s University in Grenada, the West Indies, in January 2014. • Justin Brown ’13 is employed with Enterprise Rent-A-Car. • Rhett Butler ’13 is studying in the Master of Divinity program at Duke Divinity School. • Daniel Davis ’13 is a graduate student at Yale Divinity School. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • Dexter Dean ’13 (left) is a doctoral student in chemistry and a teaching assistant at the University of Southern Mississippi. Louis Hines ’13 received a graduate teaching assistantship with Louisiana State University, where he is working toward his Master of Science in kinesiology with a focus on pedagogy and psychological sciences. • Cody Dykes ’13 is employed with Superior Roofing in Phenix City, Ala. • Brandy Freeman ’13 works for Keepers Staffing in Alexandria, Va. • Tyler Hall ’13 coaches football for Randolph County High School after completing an internship as a strength and conditioning coach in the Department of Athletics at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. • Courtney Hart ’13 works as a public relations and marketing intern with Blackwell King Recruiting in Dothan, Ala. • Thomas Hughes ’13 teaches sixth grade at Clanton Middle School in Alabama. • J.D. Jean ’13 works as a financial services professional with MassMutual in Montgomery. • Kirk Johnson ’13 teaches and coaches for Sylacauga High School, Ala. • L–R: Andy Huffman ’13 studies genetic counseling in a graduate program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham; Quintarious Perdue ’13 is a student in the Doctor of Pharmacy program at Auburn University; and D.J. Watkins ’13 is employed with Montgomery Biscuits Baseball. • Katie Jones ’13 works with the Family Sunshine Center, Montgomery. • Heather King ’13 (right) completed her degree in English in 2013, picking up her diploma at the traditional day program ceremony in the morning; and her mom, Debra King ’13, completed her degree through and received her diploma during the Adult Degree Completion Program ceremony that evening. • Taylor King ’13, right, and Sara Beth Terry, director of student activities, were among those who continued the 83-year tradition of the Oracle Hunt just before graduation. Taylor serves as the resident director for Ligon Hall and assistant director of student activities for Huntingdon. • Haley Leach ’13 lives in Birmingham and works as a pharmacy technician for CVS. • Brianna McClure ’13 and Woods Lisenby ’11 were married June 29, 2013, at First UMC-Montgomery. Woods, a seminary student at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology, serves as worship leader for Prattville First UMC. Brianna, who works for Scribe America as a medical scribe in local hospital emergency rooms, plans to apply for admission to a phyHuntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) sician’s assistant program when Woods’ graduate studies are complete. • Melissa McClure ’13 spent the summer of 2013 in South Africa, working in a school and in a hospital in Tarkastad. • Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13, left, is a graduate student in the education counseling program at Auburn University; Lanning Williams ’13, center, teaches for Phenix City Intermediate School; and Katie Jones ’13 is employed with the Family Sunshine Center, a Montgomery facility that provides shelter for those affected by domestic abuse. • Lauren Miller ’13 is a student in Samford University’s School of Law. • Haley Norris ’13 works as a pharmacy technician for CVS in Prattville, Ala. • Kayla Northington ’13 is a physical education, health, and outdoor education teacher at her alma mater, Sulligent High School. • Keith Paulk ’13 is employed as a staff auditor with Taylor Chandler in Montgomery. • Aleah Payne ’13 has rejoined the softball team as assistant softball coach under Head Coach Gynger Williams. • Bethany Martin ’13, left, is a graduate student studying applied behavior analysis at Auburn University. Dominik Platen ’13 studies in the Master of Science program in digital visual effects at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England. During the summer of 2013, he worked with a company in Frankfurt, Germany, as a modeler/animator for the 3D animated film, Seven Dwarves, or The Seventh Dwarf (working titles), a comedy version of a prequel to the original Brothers Grimm fairytale, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” The movie will be released in U.S. theaters in January 2014. View a clip of the film at https://www. globalscreen.de/cinema.family/content/show/71108. • Larry Pritchett ’13 is a student in the graduate accounting program at the University of Mississippi. • Callie Renahan ’13 works with Montgomery Pediatric Associates. • Brittany Richardson ’13 is studying at Mississippi College. • Ariel Rocker ’13 serves as a museum historian with Alabama Constitution Village, Huntsville. • Garrett Roland ’13 is employed with Roland Farms, Andalusia, Ala. • Katie Scott ’13 works with Fuge Camps in Panama City, Fla. • Morgan Senn ’13 teaches for Phenix City Schools. • Nick Sheppard ’13 serves as resident director for Searcy Hall and coordinator of campus recreation at Huntingdon. • Stacy Terry ’13 plays soccer for Bridges FC, a pro academy that pits players against various U.S. and international professional teams and helps to sign players to higher professional teams throughout the world. With the team, he will travel to Holland, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland to play other professional teams. 39 L–R: Jess Skaggs ’13 lives in Gulf Shores, Ala., and works as the constituent services director for the Baldwin County Legislative Delegation; Chris Blight ’13 teaches and coaches soccer for Auburn City Schools; Xavier Singleton ’14 works with Huntingdon’s new Disability Sport Network; Dino Tampary ’12 works as an assistant football coach for Alabama State University; and Kaleb Futral ’13, who serves with the U.S. Air Force, flew from Korea to be home for Huntingdon Homecoming 2013. D.J. Chappell ’14, right, was named an All-American defensive player in January 2013. He was recognized during a Hawks lacrosse game by Head Football Coach and Athletic Director Mike Turk. • Josh Thomas ’13 and Kayce Estes ’14 were married June 29, 2013. Josh serves as a docent with Prattville Museum and as a maintenance technician with Statewide Management. Kayce teaches preschool for St. Bede Child Development Center in addition to her studies in elementary education at Huntingdon. • Jessica Tidwell ’13 and Cole Smith ’12 were married August 25, 2013. Cole is a student at South College School of Pharmacy, and Jessica is employed with Publix. • Whitney Toole ’13 is a teacher and coach at Evangel Christian Academy in Montgomery. • Barry Watford ’13 is a senior accounting technician with Horne, LLP, in Baton Rouge, La. • Chasity Ward ’13 (left) studies in a doctoral program in organic chemistry at Auburn University, and Dylan Pugh ’13 is a deputy sheriff in Cobb County, Ga. • Marybeth Wheatley ’13 is employed with Wells Fargo Bank in Homewood, Ala. • Austin White ’13 has joined the staff of the Huntingdon College Office of Business and Finance, working in accounts payable. He married Macy Cate Hopson December 14, 2013, in Ligon Chapel. Hawks Baseball catcher Joseph Odom ’14 was drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the 13th round of the Major League Baseball draft June 8, 2013, becoming the first Huntingdon baseball draft pick since 1989 and the highest in the program’s history. Joe helped lead Huntingdon to a 32-11 record during the 2013 season, the Hawks’ first NCAA-III Regional competition and the program’s first two NCAA-III Regional victories. Joe earned second-team AllAmerican honors and first-team All-South Region recognition as he was among the national leaders with 60 RBIs and a .706 slugging percentage. He finished with a .369 batting average, 45 runs and 10 doubles. In three seasons with the Hawks, Odom collected 28 home runs, 145 RBIs and 110 runs on 160 hits. He signed a contract with the Braves June 10, 2013. • Kayra White ’13 studies in the Master of Occupational Therapy program at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. • Derik Wolfe ’13 and Kayla Butts were married October 5, 2013, on the beach in Pensacola, Florida. • Austin Worley ’13 is a student at the Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine. Help Us Find Our Lost Alumni! Please see the list on the Huntingdon College Web site, www. huntingdon.edu, under Alumni and Friends, and point us in the direction of any missing Hawks you know. 40 Alumni Board members offered advice to students entering their fields of expertise during an Alumni/Student Mentoring Luncheon held in April 2013. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Donor Report Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Honor Roll of Donors, 2012–13 Huntingdon College gratefully acknowledges the contributions of countless men and women who have given unselfishly of their time, talent, and financial resources to advance this institution. To the alumni, parents, friends, businesses, foundations, organizations, students, faculty, and staff whose generosity during the past year supported a myriad of programs, scholarships, and special projects, the College extends its sincere thanks. This report contains the names of donors who made gifts to Huntingdon during the fiscal year of June 1, 2012, through May 31, 2013. It includes those who made capital gifts as well as donations to the Huntingdon Fund. This listing does not include those who made pledges, but not gifts, in 2012–13, or those whose gifts were received after May 31, 2013. An asterisk denotes those now deceased. We strive to make this honor roll error-free; however, if we have inadvertently omitted your name or listed it incorrectly, please accept our apologies and notify us by calling the Office of College and Alumni Relations at (334) 833-4563 so that we can correct our records. Order of the Countess of Huntingdon The Order of the Countess of Huntingdon recognizes individuals who have made major contributions toward the advancement of the College. Cumulative lifetime gifts total $75,000 or more. *An asterisk indicates those now deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams Mr. John N. and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr. Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden Mrs. Wilmer Bottoms Mrs. Lois Cowen Boykin Mrs. Elia Durr Buck Mr. John Bullard Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Cheek III Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich III Mr. Ernest and Mrs. Mary Ellison Mr. and Mrs. J.C. (Chris) Flowers Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr. Mr. Nimrod T. and Mrs. Lee Martin Frazer Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab Judge and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Sr. Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr. Mr. Renis Jones Mrs. Elizabeth Lipscomb Mrs. James Loeb Mr. and Mrs. James K. Lowder Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh (Buzz) Phillips Mrs. Tom Radney Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid Mrs. Shirley H. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross Mrs. Sue Cross Savage Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson Dr. William B. and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder Mrs. Aloyis Sonneborn Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland Mr. and Mrs. David F. Steele Mrs. Thomas F. Staton Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson Mrs. John N. Todd III Dr. and Mrs. Charlie Tomberlin Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker Mr. and Mrs. W. Kendrick Upchurch III Mr. William C. and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins Dr. Laurie Jean Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool Mr. Robert S. Weil Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson Mrs. Jim Wilson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey Mr. Malcolm Yaple Mrs. Gerry Yeoman Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young Huntingdon Lifetime Trustee Diane Smith Wendland ’53, left, her daughter, Suzanne Wendland Rhodes ’80, center, and good College friend and neighbor Elmore Inscoe were among those who attended a special donor recognition event at Wynlakes Country Club in May 2013. 41 The John Massey Heritage Society The John Massey Heritage Society recognizes individuals who have created endowment funds or who have included Huntingdon College in their estate plans. *An asterisk indicates those now deceased. Mr. John N. and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Ambrose Mr. and Mrs. Henry Arnold Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III Ms. Mary Nell Atherton Mrs. Sarah Wedekind Bailey Mr. Mike and Mrs. Sandra Campbell Balkom Miss Mary S. Bernhard Mrs. Joe Neal Blair Ms. Georgianna Bland Mrs. Elaine Hearn Boese Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden Mrs. Lucy Cunningham Bond Mrs. Jane Michael Boozer Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms Ms. Carol Jane Boyd Mr. and Mrs. David W. Boykin Ms. Esther Boykin Mrs. Lois Cowan Boykin Mr. Donald K. Braden Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady Cousins Brink Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe Mrs. Henry A. Brooks Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Brown III The Rev. Naomi Prescott Brown Colonel Preston Brown Mrs. Elia Durr Buck Mr. and Mrs. Othon Tallet Bueno Dr. Harrell and Mrs. Kimberly Cook Bullard Mr. John Bullard Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bullard Jr. Mr. William Bullard Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell Dr. Connie Campbell Mr. Ralph B. and Mrs. Georgia Rogers Campbell Mr. Al Cantrell Mrs. Ann Carlisle Carmichael Mrs. Myrtice Ann Carr Mr. Sam Carroll Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman The Rev. David and Mrs. Carol Dearman Chunn Hazel Collins Sunday School Class at St. James UMC Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Coomes Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Cooper Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham Mrs. Leslie Burson Davis Mr. and Mrs. Marion D. Davis Miss Martha Nell Dean Mr. Lide Denny Mr. Donal and Mrs. Sara Lee Insley Dunbar Mrs. Jane Cunningham Dunlap Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich III Mr. Frank Eleazer Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. J. Walter Ellisor Dr. Raymond Estep Mr. Robert and Mrs. Lucile Delchamps Fleming Mrs. T.M. Francis Mr. Jack P. Friday Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Garner 42 Mr. Ken and Mrs. Linda Allen Garrett Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr. Mr. E. Gerald and Dr. Sue Russell Garrick Mrs. Lois Bedsole Gholston Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs Mrs. Ethel Ellis Gibson Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab Mr. Henry and Mrs. Mary Goldstein Mr. Frank and Mrs. Tricia Grier Dr. Laurence and Mrs. Dorothy Huffine Grossman Mr. David and Dr. Betty Bottoms Grundy Mr. Leon Hadley Ssgt. Jerad and Mrs. Jamie Deveau Hahn Dr. Eugenie L. Hamner Miss Martha Ray Harris The Rev. Joe Ed and Mrs. Betty Kimbrough Hastings Mrs. Ruth Bowen Haughton Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Helms Mrs. Mollie A. Hendrix Judge and Mrs. Truman M. Hobbs Sr. Mrs. Elizabeth Hoefflin Ms. Wanda A. Howard Mr. Hilson Y. Hudson Jr. Mrs. Virginia McNeal Hughes Mr. Harold L. and Mrs. Barbara Cade Hunt Dr. and Mrs. Allen K. Jackson Mrs. Laura Jinright Dr. and Mrs. Louis L. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Jolly Jr. Mrs. Mack H. Jolly Mr. L.B. Jones Jr. Mr. William Jones Mrs. Joan Chapman Jones Mr. Renis Jones Mr. Edwin and Mrs. Margaret Warren Jordan Miss Lillian Kamphuis Mr. David and Mrs. Jean Kassouf Mrs. Ruby Collier Key Mr. John and *Mrs. Betty Pearson Keyton Mr. Ray Elwood King Mr. Tom Law Dr. and *Mrs. Gerald S. Leischuck Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb Mr. Wayne F. Lloyd Mrs. James L. Loeb Mrs. Ellen C. Long Mrs. Gertha Long Dr. James D. Lowe Jr. Colonel and Mrs. Orlando J. Manci Jr. Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson Mr. Ira and Mrs. Anne White Mitchell Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore Dr. David K. Morris Ms. Ann Mosely Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moseley Mr. and Mrs. James L. Moses Mr. and Mrs. James T. Murray Ms. Nancy Alice Brown Myrick Mr. Ed O’Donnell Mr. Mark and Mrs. Jacque Ogilvie Mr. Raymond and Mrs. Catharine Ogilvie Mr. Douglas and Mrs. Virginia Bullard Oswald Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr. Dr. Ouida Fay Paul Mr. Donald W. Peak Mrs. Betty Seymour Perdue Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard Mr. and Mrs. John Peyton Powell Mr. Henry L. and Dr. Gaylen Schrieber Pugh Mrs. Tom Radney Mrs. LaVerne Davis Ramsey Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway Mrs. Louise Thornton Reynolds Mr. Charles Edward Roberts Jr. Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts Mr. Earl and Mrs. Joyce Patterson Ryser Mr. and Mrs. John D. Salter Mrs. Mary Belin Salter Mrs. Sue Cross Savage Judge and Mrs. Philip Dale Segrest Mr. and Mrs. William H. Sellers Miss Helen Shaw Mr. Barrett Shelton Jr. Mr. Leslie E. Shelton Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shirley Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair Dr. Robert Sittason Mr. and Mrs. Gaines Slade Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie Mr. L. Bernard and Mrs. Elizabeth Couey Smithart Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder Mr. Earl L. Sommer Ms. Aloyis Lee Sonneborn *The Rev. and Mrs. Lamar Spencer Dr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanaland Mrs. Thomas F. Staton Dr. Marilyn E. Stone Mr. James H. and Mrs. Rebecca Killingsworth Strickland Mr. Jose E. and Mrs. Rosaland Mathison Tallet Mrs. Fannie Alston Taylor Ms. Vivian Thomas The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Timothy Thompson Miss Martha S. Tillotson Mrs. John N. Todd III Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin Mrs. Betty Gensert Towey Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Tuley Miss Anna Rebecca Turner Maxine Turner Mrs. George T. Turnipseed Dr. Betty Vaughn Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lee Walden Mr. Johnny and Mrs. Colleen Garrick Walker Mrs. J.L. Warren Jr. Mr. William C. (Wick) and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins Mr. Horace L. Webb Mr. Robert S. Weil Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland The Rev. Ray E. Whatley Mr. Andra and Mrs. Deborah Mims Williams Miss Jane S. Williams Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson Jr. Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Wise Sr. Mr. Elmer Woodall Mrs. Frances Yancey Mr. Malcolm Yaple Mrs. Gerry Yeoman Mr. Edward and Mrs. Margaret Delchamps Young George and Betty Gibbs, left, were on campus for the dedication of the Gibbs Tennis Center in May 2013, and were joined by (L–R) head women’s tennis coach Ximena Moore, head men’s tennis coach Charlie Lane ’71, and former director of tennis Coach John McWilliams. Mr. Gibbs, a former Huntingdon neighbor who makes his home in Louisville, Ky., has long been a generous contributor to Huntingdon’s tennis program. His contribution was the lead gift for the Huntingdon Tomorrow Campaign and led to the demolition and reconstruction of the former 7 courts and the addition of an eighth court and a gated entrance off of Narrow Lane Road. Construction took place during 2011–12 and the courts opened for the spring 2012 tennis season. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) The Huntingdon Society, 2012–13 Members of the Huntingdon Society contribute $1,000 or more during the fiscal year. Mr. and Mrs. HowardAdams Mr. and Mrs. Kirke Adams Dr. and Mrs. Roger A. Adams Miss Jodi Adamson Mr. James and Mrs. Frances Goode Akridge Dr. and Mrs. James M. Albritton Mr. John and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton Mrs. Edwina Wallace Alexander Mr. Greg and Mrs. Jane Allen Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen Mr. David and Mrs. Glenda Atwell Allred Mr. and Mrs. James H. Anderson Mr. Thomas Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III The Rev. and Mrs. Rurel R. Ausley Jr. Mr. Harold and Mrs. Loretta Bacon Mrs. Carol Baird Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ball Jr. Mr. Albert Ban Dr. Jason Banks Mr. and Mrs. James Barganier Mr. G. Carlton Barker Ms. Barbara Lazenby Barnett Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barranco Dr. and Mrs. William Barrick Mr. Bruce and Mrs. Ethel Bauer Mr. and Mrs. William Beaird Mr. William and Mrs. Joanne Gordon Beard Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. Bechert Mrs. Hye Jeong Y. Beckett Mrs. Ann Bedsole Mr. Keven and Mrs. Katrina Keefer Belt Dr. Sanders and Mrs. Linda Mordecai Benkwith Mr. James and Mrs. June Burdick Bisard Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bishop Sr. Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bonner Mr. Matthew and Mrs. Kimberly Keefer Boone Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden Mrs. Wilmer R. Bottoms Ms. Esther Boykin Mr. Vinson Bradley The Rev. Dr. John Brannon Ms. Thelma Braswell Miss Jo Ann Brazelton Mr. John B. and Mrs. Frances Cooper Bricken Jr. Mr. Richard and Mrs. Ruth Brady Cousins Brink Mr. and Mrs. Bill Briscoe Mrs. Betty Finlay Brislin Mr. and Mrs. Phillip F. Brown The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William B. Brunson The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawson Bryan The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Larry Bryars Mrs. Elia Durr Buck Mr. John Bullard Mrs. Mary King Burns Mr. and Mrs. John Caddell Mrs. Turner Cameron *An asterisk indicates those now deceased Mr. William Canary and The Hon. Leura Garrett Canary Mr. Michael and Dr. Jennifer Canfield Mrs. Lucinda Samford Cannon Mrs. Jack Carlisle Mrs. Renee Carlisle The Rev. Jim and Dr. Laura Bowden Carpenter Miss Janet Chambless Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Champion Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chapman Dr. and Mrs. C. Richard Chappell Mrs. Lucinda Smilie Chappelle Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III Mr. David and Mrs. Barbara Christenberry Mr. and Mrs. David Cobb Mr. H.D. Cobb Dr. and Mrs. Morris Cochran The Rev. and Mrs. Dale R. Cohen Mr. Sidney* and Mrs. Ann Carol Harris Coleman Mr. and Mrs. Loui P. Cone III Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland Mr. Coleman and Mrs. Emily Webster Cosgrove Mr. Chad Cotant Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Cotter Dr. and Mrs. Rob Couch Mrs. Mary O’Brien Cox Ms. Gale Croft Mrs. Myrtle Peters Crone Mrs. Charles M. Crook Mr. and Mrs. Jim Culpepper Dr. Renee Culverhouse Dr. Bert and Mrs. Lynn Blalock Cunningham Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Bill Daniel Mrs. Linda C. Daniel Mr. Billy Ray Daniels Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Daniels Jr. Mrs. Reita Sample Davis Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Day Ms. Martha N. Dean Mr. Patrick Dicks Mr. Michael and Dr. Lynn Disbrow Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dismukes Jr. Dr. Henry and Mrs. Joan Johnston Diversi Miss Marianne Donnell Mr. Jay Dorman and Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman Mr. Gregory Dotson Mrs. Virginia Cooper Downes Mr. John L. and Mrs. Hermine Melton Downing Mr. Craig and Mrs. Laura Hinds Duncan The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dunivant Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry Dunn Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Michael Dunn The Rev. and Mrs. Michael Edmondson Dr. Chad Eggleston and Mrs. Mandy McMichael Dr. W. Foster and Mrs. Ginger Graves Eich Mrs. Kay Elam Mr. Kyle J. Eller Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison Mr. Floyd Enfinger Jr. Mr. Elton and Mrs. Sally Hudson Engstrom Ms. Suzanne Repnicki Fickey Mrs. Glenda Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. Tranum Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Brad Fletcher Mr. Robert R. Fletcher Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Flowers Mr. and Mrs. Paul Flowers Jr. Mr. Paul and Mrs. Carol Perpall Fortino Mr. Nimrod and Mrs. Lee Frazer Mr. Daniel Freehling Ms. Debra Freisleben Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost Mr. Bobby and Mrs. Sarah Ann Mowbray Fulcher The Rev. Dr. Billy and Mrs. Carolyn Loftin Gaither Mr. Ken and Mrs. Linda Lee Garrett Mr. and Mrs. Walker Garrett Mr. and Mrs. William Silas Garrett Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbs Miss Ethel Ellis Gibson Dr. Wayne Gibson Mr. and Mrs. RichardGill The Revs. Edward and Alecia Curtis Glaize Mrs. Dorothy Kreis Golab Mr. and Mrs. Frank Grier Mrs. Eileene Griffith Dr. Eugenie Lambert Hamner Dr. Joy B. Harbin-House Mr. P. Russell Hardin Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harper Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Harrell Dr. Winifred H. Harris The Rev. Joe and Mrs. Betty Kimbrough Hastings Dr. Daniel and Mrs. Ellen Evans Haulman Col. Scott and Mrs. Angelyn Hayes Mr. James Henry Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hicks Dr. William Winternitz and Ms. Madeleine M. Hill Mrs. Jane M. Hinds Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hinds Mr. Louis G. Hines The Hon. Truman and Mrs. Joyce Hobbs Mr. Walter Hollingsworth Mr. Clay and the Rev. Nancy Hornsby Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr. Mr. John and Mrs. Amy Beard Hulsey Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inscoe Dr. Jennifer Ishler Dr. and Mrs. Doba Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Jackson III Drs. William* and Judith McNease James Mrs. Lester Jenkins Ms. Laura Chambliss Jinright Mrs. Blair C. Johnson Mr. William B. Johnson Mr. David and Mrs. Vidhu Khanna Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly Mrs. Elizabeth B. Jones Mr. and Mrs. MichaelJones Mr. Renis Jones Mr. William C. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Keith Karst Mr. James Wesley and Mrs. Samantha Clements Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Jerry M.Kelly Mr. Chris and Mrs. Sandy Kelser Mr. William and Mrs. Gail Sanford Kendrick Mrs. Ruby Collier Key Mrs. Saundra Bozeman Kidd Dr. Mark and Mrs. Beth Anderson Kingry Mrs. Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer Mr. Stephen and Mrs. Jan Kirkemier Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Knupp II Mr. Robert and Mrs. Mindy Bevan La Branche Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Lake Mr. Smith and Mrs. Elizabeth Walker Lanier Mrs. Phebe Mason Lee Bishop and Mrs. Paul L. Leeland Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Leigh Dr. and *Mrs. Gerald Leischuck Mr. H. Russell Lester Mr. and Mrs. Les Letlow Mr. and Mrs. Eric Levanda Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb Mr. Jamie and Mrs. Carol Fields Loeb Mrs. James Loeb Dr. Nelson and Mrs. Brenda Loftus Mrs. Gertha Dorman Long Mr. and Mrs. Thomas David Long Mr. and Mrs. James Lowder Dr. and Mrs. Charles D. Lowery Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mandell Mr. and Mrs. Josh Mandell Mr. Stewart and Dr. Donna Whitley Manson Mr. Larry W. and Mrs. Suzanne Crockett Martin Ms. Rebecca BurdonMasic The Rev. George and Mrs. Monteigne Mathison Mrs. Caroline Ball Matthews Mr. Michael Bryan and Mrs. Brittany Dubose Matthews Dr. and Mrs. John M. McCardell Jr. The Rev. Neil and Mrs. Araminta Robson McDavid Mr. Stephan L. McDavid Ms. Carrie E. McDonough Mrs. Melanie McGrath Ms. Mary K. McGuffey The Hon. Reese and Mrs. Beverly Gordy McKinney Miss Virginia McLean Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon Mrs. Jean Broxson McMillan Mrs. Margaret Ward McPherson Mrs. Dae Miller Mr. Joseph and Mrs. Melissa Nichols Miller Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap III Mr. George and Mrs. Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff III 43 Mr. Ira and Ms. Ann White Mitchell Dr. Thomas and Mrs. Marsha Kirk Moore Dr. Bill Morgan Mr. and Mrs. James Moses Dr. Samir Moussalli and Dr. Cinzia Balit-Moussalli Drs. Michael and Maureen Kendrick Murphy Mr. RJay Murray Ms. Nancy Brown Myrick Mr. Aubrey and Mrs. Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley The Rev. and Mrs. Allen Newton Mr. and Mrs. EdwardO’Donnell Mr. Steve and Mrs. Suellen Ofe Mr. Daniel Ogle Mr. and Mrs. Robert Owen Mr. and Mrs. William G. Parker Mr. Herbert A. Patterson Jr. Dr. Ouida Fay Paul Mr. Hal and Mrs. Peggy Pennington MSgt. Wil and Mrs. Terri Turman Pernia Mr. James and Mrs. Sara Stembridge Perry Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Phillips Mr. Lyman and Mrs. Gail Golson Phillips Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard Mrs. Charlotte Gibbs Ponder Mr. Mathew and Mrs. Evelyn Hutzler Pope Dr. and Mrs. C. McGavock Porter Mrs. Jean Pracht Mr. and Mrs. Tommy J. Prescott Mr. and Mrs. R. John Ragsdale Ms. LaVerne Davis Ramsey Mr. Joe D. and Mrs. Allyce Sikes Read Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid Mr. and Mrs. James Kenneth Reid Mrs. Alice Reynolds Mr. Fred and Mrs. Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt Mr. Charles and Mrs. Suzanne Wendland Rhodes Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway Mrs. Elinor Warr Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roland Mr. and Mrs. Eric K. Ross Mr. Roy and Dr. Celia Dell Smith Rudolph Mr. John D. and Mrs. Dianne Williams Salter Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sanders Mrs. Sue Cross Savage Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Scott Mr. and Mrs. William David Seals Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Sellers Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers The Hon. Jeff B. and Mrs. Mary Blackshear Sessions Mr. and Mrs. Ned Sheffield Mr. John C. Short Mr. William R. and Mrs. Celia Price Sims Dr. Marie Baker Sinclair Mr. and Mrs. Guice Slawson Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie Mr. and Mrs. Albert J.Smith III Mr. and Mrs. Albert J.Smith Jr. Mr. Gary Smith Mr. James L. and Mrs. Nordis Smith The Hon. Burt and Mrs. Elizabeth Couey Smithart 44 Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder Ms. Aloyis Sonneborn Mr. and Mrs. Bennie F. Sowell Dr. and Mrs. David L. Spencer Mrs. Elizabeth K. Spencer The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lester Spencer Jr. The Rev. Jeffrey and Mrs. Norma Borland Spiller Dr. Roxanne St. Martin Mr. Charles and Mrs. Winifred Lightfoot Stakely Mr. Dennis and Mrs. Dianne Owens Stallworth Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland Mrs. Thomas Staton Mr. and Mrs. David Steele The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Karl K. Stegall Mr. and Mrs. Young Stevenson Mr. Bill and Mrs. Ruth Stone S trange Dr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Stubbs Mr. A.J. Taft Mr. and Mrs. Scott Talkington Mr. and Mrs. Tony Taylor Ms. Dorris Teague Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Thomason Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Timothy Thompson Mrs. Helen Till Ms. Beppy LeCroy Tiller Mrs. John N. Todd III Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Tomberlin Mrs. Esther DeVries Top Dr. and Mrs. Lee Tucker Mrs. Margaret Tucker Mr. and Mrs. Michael Turk Mr. and Mrs. Russ Tyner Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Walden Mr. Kevin Walding Mr. Michael and Mrs. Phyllis Killion Ward Mr. William C. and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Weeks Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil III Ms. Jan Weil Dr. Laurie Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool Mr. Robert S. Weil Mrs. LaDonna Weis Mr. Jack L. and Mrs. Bobbie Coop Welch Mr. Buzz and Mrs. Diane Smith Wendland The Rev. and Mrs. J. Cameron West Dr. Wade Whatley Mr. and Mrs. Lyn Wheatley Mrs. Cynthia Gebhardt White Mr. Scott and Mrs. Pat Taylor White Mr. R. Tyler and Mrs. Nancy Prickett Whitley Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Williams Mr. W.A. and Mrs. Patricia Shadoin Williamson Bishop and Mrs. William Willimon Mrs. James W. Wilson Jr. Dr. Robert and Mrs. Dorothy Waters Wilson Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. John Wise Mr. and Mrs. StephenWolfe Dr. James Wright Jr. Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr. Mr. Donald and Mrs. Linda Yancey Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey The Rev. Malcolm Yaple Mrs. Gerry Yeoman Mr. and Mrs. Philip Young Ms. Lois Youngblood Pillars of Montgomery society whose generosity toward Huntingdon has been boundless, Joan Loeb (left) and Joyce Hobbs were present (with President J. Cameron West, right) for the Drum Theater open house held in February 2013. Support the Huntingdon Fund What difference did Huntingdon make in your life? When you make a gift to the Huntingdon Fund, you make a difference in the life of Huntingdon College and in the lives of those who are educated here—students who are primarily from the Southeast and who might not otherwise be able to afford a private college education; students who are just like you were when Huntingdon changed your life. Gifts to the Huntingdon Fund are Huntingdon’s most critical need at this time. Gifts of any amount are welcome and necessary to ensure the sustained success of this great college. Those who give at the level of $1,000 or more become members of the Huntingdon Society. Will you give today? Office of College and Alumni Relations Huntingdon College 1500 E. Fairview Ave. Montgomery, AL 36106 (334) 833-4564 To donate online, go to the Huntingdon Web site at www. huntingdon.edu and click on Give to Huntingdon at the top of the home page. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) The Cloverdale Circle Members of the Cloverdale Circle contribute $5,000 or more during the fiscal year. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams The Alabama-West Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church Mr. John N. and Mrs. Ann McLean Albritton Baptist Health The Estate of Betty A. Barker Mrs. Ann Bedsole J.L. Bedsole Foundation Bellingrath-Morse Foundation Dr. Sanders and Mrs. Linda Mordecai Benkwith Mr. Herman and Mrs. Emmie Cardwell Bolden Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden Mr. John Bullard Mr. and Mrs. John A. Caddell Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III Mr. and Mrs. David Cobb Mr. H.D. Cobb Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland The Daniel Foundation The Estate of Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ellison ExxonMobil Foundation First United Methodist Church of Montgomery Mr. Nimrod and Mrs. Lee Martin Frazer Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Frost Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr. The Estate of Theresa Hillhouse Harris The Honorable and Mrs. Truman Hobbs Mr. Clay Hornsby and the Rev. Nancy Hornsby Mr. and Mrs. David Hudson Jr. Ms. Caroline Jackson Mrs. Laura C. Jinright Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones Dr. and *Mrs. Gerald Leischuck Mr. H. Russell Lester Mrs. Elizabeth Denson Lipscomb The Honorable Reese and Mrs. Beverly Gordy McKinney Mr. John and Mrs. Betty Thurman McMahon Mr. and Mrs. E. Temple Millsap III North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church Mr. Lyman and Mrs. Gail Golson Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Phillips PowerSouth Energy Cooperative Regions Financial Corporation Mr. and Mrs. Eric Koin Ross Mrs. Sue Cross Savage Dr. William and Mrs. Phyllis Gunter Snyder Dr. and Mrs. David L. Spencer Mrs. Elizabeth K. Spencer Mr. Dennis and Mrs. Dianne Owens Stallworth Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Stanaland Mrs. Thomas Staton The Julia and Albert Smith Foundation Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Mrs. Esther DeVries Top Mrs. Margaret Ennis Tucker Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III W. James Samford Jr. Foundation Mr. William C. and Mrs. Shirley Parker Watkins Dr. Laurie Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool The Rev. and Mrs. J. Cameron West Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation Mr. and Mrs. W.A. Williamson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson Mr. and Mrs. John Wise Sr. Mrs. Frances Reid Yancey The Rev. Malcolm Yaple During 2012–13, Huntingdon experienced increases from alumni donors representing every decade of living alumni. What struck us the most, though, was the surge in donations from young alumni. Throughout this year’s Donor Report, please enjoy the statements from some of those young alumni about why they give to Huntingdon College. Louis Hines ’13, left, is the youngest alum to join the Huntingdon Society. He and Danielle Turk, wife of athletic director and head football coach Mike Turk, were present for a special donor event held in May 2013. In March 2013, Huntingdon President J. Cameron West and Vice President for College and Alumni Relations Anthony Leigh hosted the monthly meeting of the Alabama Legislative Spouses Club. The ladies heard a presentation about Huntingdon’s adapted physical education program and the Hawks on the Hill internship experience for Huntingdon students interested in state government. Joan Loeb enjoyed talking with students during the reception for speaker Nancy Huddleston Packer following the 2013 Jimmy Loeb Literary Series, named in memory of her late husband. Pictured L–R are Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13, Taylor King ’13, Katie Jones ’13, Joan Loeb, Kaela Grady ’14, and Katie Scott ’13. “I give to Huntingdon because Huntingdon gave so much to me in the short time I was there. I cannot put a price on the friendships and memories that I have made thanks to HC!” —Angie Smith ’12 *An asterisk indicates those now deceased Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 45 The President’s Circle Members of the President’s Circle contribute between $2,500 and $4,999 during the fiscal year. Alabama Association of Independent Colleges and Universities Mr. David and Mrs. Glenda Atwell Allred Mr. Bruce and Mrs. Ethel Heinecke Bauer Mr. Keven and Mrs. Katrina Keefer Belt Mrs. Elia Durr Buck Mr. William Canary and the Honorable Leura Garrett Canary Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Day Ms. Martha Nell Dean Mr. Jay Dorman and Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman First United Methodist Church of Tuscaloosa First United Methodist Church of Union Springs Mr. Ken and Mrs. Linda Lee Garrett Dr. William Winternitz and Ms. Madeleine Hill Dr. Judith McNease James Mrs. Lester Jenkins Dr. Mark and Mrs. Beth Anderson Kingry Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Leigh Mrs. Brenda Ward Loftus Mr. and Mrs. Thomas David Long Mr. RJay Murray Mr. Bruce and Mrs. Emilie H. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels ServisFirst Bank Mr. A.J. Taft Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Walden Members of the Office of College and Alumni Relations include, L–R, Kyle Eller ’10, coordinator of the Huntingdon Fund; Ruth Brewbaker, director of community and family outreach; Fran Taylor, director of the Center for Career and Vocation; Kristi McDaniel ’11, coordinator of donor relations; Anthony Leigh, vice president for college and alumni relations; Su Ofe, associate vice president for communications and marketing; Cathy Wolfe, director of development operations; and Sandy Kelser, executive assistant to the president. Continue the Legacy! Alumni can impact positively the lives of prospective students with the awarding of the $10,000 Alumni Legacy Grant. You may refer one student annually by sending the student’s name, address, phone numbers, e-mail address, and current school information; your name, address, class year, and contact information; and a paragraph or two about how you know the student and why you think he or she would be an asset to Huntingdon College. The Alumni Legacy Grant is renewable for up to three additional years of study, requires on-campus residency, and requires the student to maintain satisfactory academic progress toward the completion of his or her degree. Applications cannot be submitted after the first day of classes of a student’s first year at Huntingdon College. A family of Hawks in the Hawk family—pictured from left to right are cousins, siblings, and friends: Future Hawk Taylor Messick, a senior at Straughn High School; HC junior Katy Messick; junior Tiffany Taylor; senior Ryne Taylor; Future Hawk Paige Taylor, a junior at Straughn High School; Future Hawk Alayna Cook, a sophomore at LBW Junior College; Amy Caroline Riley, incoming student in January 2014; freshman Will Pharis; and freshman Matt Gatewood. Please send your referral to Huntingdon College Office of College and Alumni Relations, 1500 East Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama, 36106; or alumni@hawks.huntingdon.edu. L–R: Bethany Anderson ’16, Mary Lormand ’17, Margaret Virginia Murphy ’17, Allison Barger ’17, Jennifer Keith ’15, Lexie Ofe ’17, Valerie Varden ’17, and Skye Esry ’16 were part of the student cheering section during the 2013 Homecoming football game. “I give back to Huntingdon because I am grateful for the wisdom, knowledge, and experience I gained, which will serve me in my current and future endeavors. I was challenged to explore my faith, given opportunities to lead, and encouraged to serve my community. I want other students to have the same opportunity to have a Huntingdon experience.”—Chelsey Hodge Koppersmith ’09 46 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Parents, Friends, and Neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Abernathy Mr. and Mrs. Howard Adams ◊ Dr. and Mrs. Roger A. Adams ◊ Mr. Willie J. Adams Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. Agnew Mr. and Mrs. John Albritton Jr. ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Allen Mr. Leo Allen Mrs. Mary Buchner Allen Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Andres Mr. and Mrs. William F. Andres Jr. Ms. Kim Anthony Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Shapard Ashley Mr. and Mrs. Ron B. Astin Mr. and Mrs. Glen Atwell Mr. and Mrs. Michael Autrey Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bach Ms. Andrea L. Bagley Mr. and Mrs. Andy Bagley Ms. Veta F. Bagley Mr. and Mrs. A. Whitelaw Bailey Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Doyle Bailey Mr. Robert K. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Baker Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Baldwin Mr. and Mrs. John Ballard Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Banks The Estate of Betty A. Barker Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Barranco Mr. and Mrs. Allen Barrentine Ms. Lee P. Barrios Mr. and Mrs. Randy Bassham Ms. Leslie R. Batts Ms. Mary C. Bauer Mrs. Martha Ebert Baum Ms. Marcia Y. Baumhauer Mrs. Ann Bedsole ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Brian Belsterling Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Belsterling Mr. and Mrs. Randall Bess Mr. and Mrs. Dewey E. Best Mr. Ron Bettencourt Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Bice Ms. Michelle D. Black Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Blackwell Mrs. Lucy Cunningham Bond Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bonner ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Dave Borden ◊ *Mr. Robert Bothfeld ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Bowes Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bowles Ms. Esther Boykin ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bradshaw Mr. and Mrs. George H. Brannen II Mr. and Mrs. David W. Breaden Mr. Reese Bricken Mr. and Mrs. Jerre Bridges Mr. and Mrs. K. Monroe Bridges Mrs. Mary Lynn Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Lester Brown Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown Mr. and Mrs. Conrad T. Brumbach Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Brunson Ms. Sydney Treadwell Brunson Mr. and Mrs. William L. Brunson Jr. The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawson Bryan ◊ The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bryars ◊ Mr. John Bullard ◊ Mr. James Burleson Sr. Ms. Mary Loyd Bush Mrs. Turner Cameron ◊ Ms. Joanne Campbell Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Capps Mr. David Carey Mr. Edwin P. Carey Mr. Bruce C. Carr Mrs. Myrtice Carr Ms. Sara N. Carroll Bishop and Mrs. Kenneth H. Carter Jr. Mr. W.R. Carter Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kerry W. Causby Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Cave Ms. Ruth A. Champagne Ms. Karen Channell Dr. and Mrs. C. Richard Chappell ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Chavers Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek III ◊ Mrs. Deborah Cheney Mr. John Cheney Mr. Josh Childers Mr. and Mrs. Ricky T. Childers Ms. Jacqueline Chrispen Dr. R.M. Christopher Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cimburek Ms. Deborah H. Clark Mr. Dewayne Clark Ms. Indiana Clark Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Clark Mr. Ethan Club Mr. and Mrs. H. David Cobb II ◊ Mr. H.D. Cobb ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Cobb The Rev. Dale R. Cohen ◊ * An asterisk indicates those now deceased ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society “I give to Huntingdon because Huntingdon is the reason I am where I am today. I believe in supporting the school that supported me—and the faculty and staff at Huntingdon College have undoubtedly supported me.”—Andy Patterson ’11 Mrs. Jean Daniel Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Daniels Jr. ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Dart Sr. Mrs. Johnnie M. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Victor M. Davis Mr. and Mrs. James S. Day Mr. Jeffrey A. Dean Ms. Octavia Dean Ms. Hazel R. Deangelo Mr. and Mrs. Jack Deeds Ms. Sandy Marcella DeJarnett Ms. Mary T. Destefano Ms. Maria DeVoe Ms. Carol Ditmore Mr. and Mrs. William L. Dowling Mr. and Mrs. Barry Dreaden Mr. and Mrs. Alan T. Drennen III *Mr. Leo J. Drum Jr. ◊ The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Dunivant ◊ Mrs. Jane C. Dunlap Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gregory Dykes Ms. Jane T. Eads Mr. Gerald Wayne Earnest The Rev. and Mrs. Michael Edmondson Mr. and Mrs. Kirk A. Edmunds Grant Hayes ’14, Kate Garrigan ’14, Huntingdon trustee Dr. Laurie Jean Weil, and President J. Cameron West at the Loeb Literary Series reception Mr. and Mrs. Charles Compton Mr. Loui P. Cone III ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Wink Conner Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Coon Mr. and Mrs. Lee Copeland ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Cortez Mr. and Mrs. Bill Craddock Mr. George Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Lee Crawford Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Criswell Mr. and Mrs. Keith Criswell Mr. Robert A. Cross Mr. and Mrs. William D. Cross Ms. Mary Cruce Mr. and Mrs. R. Kevin Cruce Ms. Lady Portis Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Currie Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dake Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Dale Mr. Douglas Dalrymple Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Mr. and Mrs. George Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Jerry C. Edwards Jr. Mr. James W. Elliott Jr. Ms. Myrtle L. Elliott Mr. Steven J. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Gray Ellison Mrs. Mary Ellison ◊ Mr. Joe R. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Mark Fincher Mr. Joseph L. Fine Mr. and Mrs. Gregory L. Fissell Jr. Mr. Edward J. Fitts Mr. and Mrs. Tranum Fitzpatrick ◊ Dr. and Mrs. Walter L. Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Ricky K. Follin Mr. and Mrs. Tony Freeman Mr. and Mrs. William S. Garrett Jr. ◊ Ms. Maud Garrick Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gill ◊ Mr. and Mrs. William Gilson Ms. Amanda M. Girtman Mr. and Mrs. Henry Goldstein Ms. Ruby Goodman Mr. and Mrs. W. Kenneth Goodson Jr. Mr. Paul Goolsby Ms. Maureen A. Grady Mr. and Mrs. Douglas L. Graham Mr. and Mrs. Billy C. Green Mr. and Mrs. Billy R. Green Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David G. Green Mr. and Mrs. Steven W. Green Mrs. Kay Greene Ms. Kimberly L. Greene Ms. Jessica Grey Mrs. Eileene Griffith ◊ Mr. Joel B. Griswold Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joel B. Griswold Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Grobe Mr. and Mrs. Gordan L. Gruhl Ms. Kim Gyuricsky Mr. and Mrs. Simmie Hale Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Hall Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Haltinner Dr. William Hamm Ms. Hilda D. Hancock Ms. Rilla Claire Hancock Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Hanich Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hankins Mr. and Mrs. William Hansford Mr. and Mrs. Joey Harbarger Ms. Adrienne N. Harkins Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Alan Harmon Ms. Tina Harper Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Harrell ◊ Mr. Robert S. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Hart Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayes Ms. Betty W. Healey Mr. Ren Heartsill Mr. and Mrs. James H. Heidelberg Mr. and Mrs. Grant R. Heinrichs Ms. Jean S. Helms Ms. Bernice W. Hendricks Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Henson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Heredia Mr. Joseph C. Hill Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Charles Hines Mr. and Mrs. John E. Hixon The Hon. and Mrs. Truman Hobbs ◊ Mrs. Carol Hodges Mr. and Mrs. Elam P. Holley Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wood Holley Mr. David M. Hollis Mr. and Mrs. William J. Holmes Mr. Lynn D. Hooper Mr. Clay Hornsby and the Rev. Nancy H. Hornsby ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Steven B. Houston Ms. Pamela Houze Ms. Amie Howard Mr. and Mrs. Jerry L. Hughes Ms. Vivian Hughes Mr. and Mrs. Edgar W. Hull Ms. Marianne Hussey Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inscoe ◊ Miss Ingra Jackson 47 Mrs. Martha Jackson Mr. Larry L. Jacobson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jancaitis Mrs. Lester Jenkins ◊ Mrs. Blair C. Johnson ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jolly ◊ Mr. Billy Jones Mr. Jo Elliott Jones Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Jones Mr. and Mrs. M.L. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones ◊ Mr. Renis Jones ◊ Mr. William C. Jones ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Kaiser Mr. and Mrs. Duane E. Kasmarik Mr. and Mrs. Benain S. Keeble Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. Jerry M. Kelly ◊ Mr. and Mrs. John Kelly Ms. Christina I. King Mr. and Mrs. John E. Kladis Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Kucera Dr. and Mrs. Matthew F. Kuluz Ms. Nina Lambert Mr. and Mrs. Steven David Lambeth Mr. and Mrs. Billy P. Lane Mr. and Mrs. Timmy R. Laney Mr. Neil Lawler Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Lee Bishop and Mrs. Paul L. Leeland ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Tim Leigh Dr. and *Mrs. Gerald Leischuck ◊ Mr. H. Russell Lester ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Les Letlow Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Levy Ms. Evelyn Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Sim Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Troy Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Frank Litchfield Ms. Eve Loeb Mr. and Mrs. Tim Loggins Mr. John A. Lonergan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas David Long ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Van G. Long Ms. Peggy J. Lowery Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lowery Mr. and Mrs. Joe Luckie Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Lynch Ms. Judith C. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. Kevin C. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Maas Mr. and Mrs. Andre C. Mackey Mrs. Karen Mardis Mr. and Mrs. Danny Markstein Ms. Cindy Marsh Ms. Beatrice Matthews Ms. Mary Anna McClendon Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd McClure Ms. Peggy W. McCoy Mr. Mark C. McDonald Mr. and Mrs. Lauren McGill The Rev. and Mrs. David McHaffey Mr. and Mrs. Greg P. Melton Mrs. Dae Miller ◊ Ms. Dorothy H. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Eric C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Melton Miller Jr Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Milner Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Mims Mr. Troy Mims Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Minar Mr. and Mrs. Gary J. Minor Mr. and Mrs. Greg E. Moates Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Moore Dr. and Mrs. Hal Moore Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morehead 48 Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Moseley Mr. and Mrs. James Moses ◊ Ms. Cathia Lyne Moss Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Muncie Ms. Amy J. Murphy Mr. RJay Murray ◊ Ms. Iris Naggy Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Neal Mr. and Mrs. J. Neeley Ms. Janice Nelson Mr. John D. Nilsson Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Nummy Mr. and Mrs. J. Dale Odom Ms. Vickie Odom Ms. Pat O’Hair Mr. and Mrs. John C. O’Leary Mr. and Mrs. Tim H. Orton Ms. Sondra Ostrander Mr. Gary Palese and Mrs. Theresa Czarnik Ms. Mary K. Pallerino Mr. and Mrs. Reginald D. Parker Mr. and Mrs. William G. Parker ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parquette Mr. and Mrs. Clinton F. Peoples Ms. Katherine L. Perkins and Family Mr. and Mrs. Earl Perry Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Perry Ms. Johanna Johnson Petty Mr. and Mrs. Carl William Pharis Mr. and Mrs. Carl William Pharis Jr. Ms. Guinevere Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wesley Pickard Mr. Thomas B. Pinkston Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John S. Pittman Mr. and Mrs. James R. Plyler Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Polomski Mr. Arthur L. Poole Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Potteiger Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Powell Mr. and Mrs. Brian Prescott Mr. and Mrs. Tommy J. Prescott ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Preston Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Pridgeon Mr. and Mrs. Bartholomew I. Prince Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery E. Pritchett Ms. Mary Przyborski Mr. and Mrs. R. John Ragsdale ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Ranczka Mr. Carl W. Reed Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David G. Reed Jr. Ms. Kathryn Reed Mrs. Jean Reeves Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reid ◊ Mr. Christopher Reid Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Renfroe Mr. and Mrs. James C. Reschke Mrs. Alice Reynolds ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Reynolds Ms. Diane Rhodes ◊ Mr. Mark Rhodes Mr. and Mrs. Heath Ricks Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Rimensnyder Dr. and Mrs. Shane Roberts Mr. and Mrs. V.O. Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Richard Robertson Mr. and Mrs. John Marcus Robinson Mrs. Elizabeth Robison Mr. and Mrs. James R. Rockett Mr. James L. Rouse Mr. John C. Rovetto Mr. and Mrs. James T. Russell Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Sailors Mr. and Mrs. William R. Sanders Mr. and Mrs. Joel Sandlin Mr. and Mrs. James U. Sands Mr. and Mrs. John B. Scott Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Segall Mr. and Mrs. Wade Segrest Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seibels ◊ Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sellers ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Mark Sessions Mr. Richard J. Shea Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sheehan Mr. and Mrs. Steve Sherbert Mr. and Mrs. Danny Shirah Ms. Martha Shirah Mrs. Martha T. Shreve Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Silavent Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Skier Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Smilie ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith III ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Smith Jr. ◊ Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Smith Mr. Don Smith Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Smith The Hon. and Mrs. Larry G. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Smith Mr. and Mrs. Scott Smith Mr. Steven W. Snyder Mr. and Mrs. James B. Solomon Mr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Solomon Dr. and Mrs. David L. Spencer ◊ Mrs. Elizabeth K. Spencer ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Scott A. Spencer Mr. Matthew D. Spivey Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stakely ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Stallings Mr. and Mrs. Lee Stamps Mr. Len Stanford Ms. Kim Stanley Mrs. Thomas Staton ◊ Mr. and Mrs. David Steele ◊ The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Karl Stegall ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Karl R. Steinberger Mr. and Mrs. Wendell F. Stephens Ms. Joann S. Stewart Ms. Mary Ellen Stratford Mr. and Mrs. Greg Sweat Dr. Johnny W. Swiger Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Swiger Ms. Debbie Tackett Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Tate Mr. James A. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Mark Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Shane A. Teter Ms. Bobbie Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Danny H. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson III ◊ Mr. and Mrs. James W. Tidmore III Ms. Lauren R. Tidmore Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tierney Ms. Judene Tippett Dr. and Mrs. Edgar C. Torbert III Ms. Trudie Traft Dr. and Mrs. Lee Tucker ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tuley Mr. and Mrs. John W. Turk Mr. and Mrs. Keith Turney Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Upchurch ◊ Mr. and Mrs. W. Ken Upchurch III ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Vandervort Mr. Vincent Vassallo Mr. and Mrs. Richard Vaughn Ms. Wendy Vinson Mr. John Walding Mr. and Mrs. Anthony T. Walker Ms. Judith A. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Steven E. Walker Ms. Jane Walters Mr. and Mrs. Freeman F. Walton Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ward Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Ward Mr. and Mrs. Johnny W. Watkins Mr. and Mrs. William C. Watkins ◊ Ms. Ann B. Watlington Mr. and Mrs. Walter Allen Watson Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. Webster Ms. Jan Weil ◊ Dr. Laurie Weil and Dr. Tommy Wool ◊ Mr. and Mrs. D. Brian Welch Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Westbrook Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel G. White The Rev. and Mrs. John Whitley Mr. and Mrs. Rickey Wilkerson Ms. Christine Williams Mr. and Mrs. James Williams Mr. and Mrs. Norman G. Williams Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Williams Mrs. Sarah Williams Ms. Virginia C. Williams Dr. Julius A. Willis Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Dan E. Wilson Ms. Ramona Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilson Mr. Donald J. Windsor Mr. and Mrs. John Wise ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wofford Mr. and Mrs. John D. Wood Mr. Kenneth Wooley Ms. Della M. Works Mr. and Mrs. James E. Worthington Dr. John W. Wright Mr. Melvin A. Wright Mr. Edward Z. Wronsky Jr. ◊ Ms. Kay S. Wylie The Rev. Malcolm Yaple ◊ Mr. and Mrs. Jon Ziegler Huntingdon Trustee Lucinda Samford Cannon gave the Commencement Address during the 2013 Adult Degree Completion Program ceremony. ADCP is a program of the W. James Samford Jr. School of Business and Professional Studies. “As a proud alumnus of Huntingdon College, I always look forward to giving back in recognition of the wonderful opportunity Huntingdon gave me. Huntingdon prepared me with exceptional knowledge and skills for success as an elementary school teacher.” —Derrick Hurt ’09 Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Foundation Giving Aetna Foundation Alabama Grocers Education Foundation Alabama Junior Miss Sch. Foundation Alabama-West Florida United Methodist Foundation American Welding Society Foundation Lillian P. Andrews Foundation Anniston Community Education Foundation The Baptist Foundation of Alabama Charles Barkley Foundation J.L. Bedsole Foundation The Bellingrath-Morse Foundation Calvin B. Bentley Charitable Foundation The Bryant-Jordan Scholarship Program The Caddell Foundation Central Alabama Community Foundation - Edith Johnston Crook Fund Chi Omega Foundation Liz Claiborne Foundation Community Foundation of Northeast Alabama Crum Family Charitable Foundation Cut Bank Education Foundation The Daniel Foundation Thelma Dixon Foundation The Donaldson Foundation Educational Foundation of the Alabama Society of CPAs Elks National Foundation ExxonMobil Foundation Foundation for the Carolinas Hartselle Scholarship Foundation Clara Jackson Testamentary Trust Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation The Northrop Grumman Foundation The Prudential Foundation Benjamin & Roberta Russell Foundation W. James Samford Jr. Foundation The Samuel L. Schloss Family Foundation Sentry Insurance Foundation The Simpson Foundation The J. Craig and Page T. Smith Scholarship Foundation The Julia and Albert Smith Foundation South Baldwin Education Foundation N.J. Stallworth Foundation Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation United Methodist Higher Education Foundation The UPS Foundation USTA Serves Allyrae P. Wallace Educational Trust The Walt Disney Company Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation Marian Gaynor Yanamura Educational Foundation Corporations, Organizations, and Government 20th Century Club 82nd Airborne Division Association Education Fund ABS Business Systems of Montgomery Ace Dust Control ACT Scholarship and Recognition Services Alabama Association of Independent Colleges Alabama District Key Club Alabama Indian Affairs Commission Alabama Onsite Wastewater Association Alabama Power The Montgomery Chapter of the Alabama Society of CPAs Albany Suburban Woman’s Club Allyson Supply America’s Junior Miss Scholarship APCO Employees Credit Union National Headquarters Army Emergency Relief Army/ROTC Atlantic Pewter and Trophies Automatic Gas & Appliance Company Baldwin County TB Association Bank Trust Baptist Health Career Opportunities Through Education Clanton Kiwanis Club Coosa County Board of Education D.D. and J. Trucking Company Bret Dalrymple Farms Department of Veterans Affairs Dizzy Dean Baseball Dogwood Services Dothan Elks Lodge #1887 BPOE Earlyne’s Flowers Roy Lee Farish and Wilda W. Farish Education Trust Fayetteville All-Sports Booster Club Ferguson, Sizemore, and Associates Florida Association of State and Federal Education Program Administrators Flowers Hospital Foamseal Insulation Systems Frit Industries James T. Gardiner Family Dentistry P.C. Graham Forestry and Appraisal Services Greenville Area Chamber of Commerce Griffin Lodge Temple Builder Inc. #413 Griffin Spalding County Chapter GSFSA Hammett Drilling Company * An asterisk indicates those now deceased Hartzell Propeller Hispanic Scholarship Fund Holmes Healthcare Huntingdon College SGA The Huntington National Bank International Paper, Pine Hill Luverne Kiwanis Club Jackson Thornton & Company P.C. The Jackson Woman’s Club Oscar Johnson Memorial Library S.C. Johnson Wax Fund Kidney Disease and Hypertension Centers P.A. Kiwanis Club of Huntsville The Kiwanis Club of Montgomery Foundation Letlow Company LLC Lion’s Club of Orange Beach Maycomb Mall Merck Partnership for Giving Moneytree ATM Services Montgomery County Farmers Federation Montgomery Family Medicine Motivated Movers Mustang Quarterback Club National Society of Colonial Dames in Alabama—Auburn Opelika Town Committee National Society of the Colonial Dames of America—Montgomery Chapter National Society of Colonial Dames of Alabama—Selma Center Nemak Alabama NSCDA—Selma Nucor Steel Birmingham Steve Odom Construction Ohio Jr. Miss Scholarship Fund Olympia Sporting Goods The Pandora Club Pelham Athletic Association Pensacola Interstate Fair of Escambia County Phillips Animal Clinic Poarch Band of Creek Indians PowerSouth Energy Cooperative Raytheon Charitable Gift Fund Regions Financial Corporation River Parishes Advisors Group LLC Robbins Electric Motor Service Sand Mountain Small Animal-Equine Santa Rosa County Navy League Scholarship America Scholarship Program Administrators Senior Class of Dorothy Rainer Sellars School of Dance ServisFirst Bank Servpro of Fort Walton Beach Singing River Hospital Auxiliary Singing River Radiology Group P.A. Southern Forestry Services LLC State Military Department State of Alabama Strategic Development Group Studio 92 Sumter Podiatry Services P.A. TAFT Raiders Athletic Booster Club Topps Company Trumbull County Educational Service Center James D. Truss Lodge United Way of Central Alabama U.S. Army Cadet Command USW Local Vantage Sourcing LLC The West Anniston Medical Clinic Women in Touch Woods Broadcasting Company Les and Linda Letlow, parents of Grayson Letlow ’16, own the Letlow Company of Auburn, Ala. ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 49 Churches, Colleges, and Schools The support, through apportionment giving, of churches in the Alabama-West Florida Conference and the North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church is gratefully acknowledged. The following list reflects gifts made beyond apportionment giving by churches in Alabama UMC conferences. The Alabama West Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church Beatrice Community Church Betta View Hills Church of Christ Canterbury Methodist Church Choctawhatchee High School Christ United Methodist Church The Crusaders Sunday School Class of First United Methodist Church—Gautier, Miss. Fayetteville School First Presbyterian Church of Montrose First United Methodist Church-Montgomery, Ala. First United Methodist Church-Pascagoula, Miss. First United Methodist Church-Pensacola, Fla. First United Methodist Church-Tallassee, Ala. First United Methodist Church-Tuscaloosa, Ala. First United Methodist Church-Union Springs, Ala. Frazer Memorial United Methodist Church Friendship Baptist Church General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church The Greater Works Baptist Church Enhancing Futures Helena United Methodist Church Huntington University Longview School District #122 Mulder Memorial United Methodist Church The North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church Ola High School Ragland High School Red Ridge United Methodist Church St. Frances Missionary Baptist Church Saint Mark United Methodist Church United Methodist Women—First United Methodist Church-Montgomery, Ala. The University of Alabama Press Walnut Creek United Methodist Church Walnut Grove High School The Rev. Dr. Lawson Bryan, right, Huntingdon College trustee and senior pastor of First UMC-Montgomery, presented President J. Cameron West with a check on behalf of the church in recognition of the growth the College has experienced during his 10-year presidency. Mr. John Duke Mrs. Laura Hinds Duncan ’94 ◊ Mr. Mike Dunn ◊ Dr. Chad Eggleston ◊ Mrs. Gabrielle Ehinger Mrs. Camille Elebash-Hill Mr. Kyle J. Eller ’10 ◊ Mrs. Alice Farricker Mr. Donald Favor Ms. Elnora Flowers Ms. Liz Frisoli Mrs. Adrienne Gaines ’00 Mr. Kenneth Garrett ◊ Dr. Paul Gier Ms. Frances Godfrey Mr. Walter Golston Mr. Charles T. Goodyear Mrs. Karen Graham Ms. Deloris Green Mr. Frank Grier ◊ Mrs. Tricia Grier ◊ Mr. John Griggs Ms. Sandra B. Hall Ms. Harriett Hampton Dr. Joy B. Harbin-House ◊ Dr. Dennis Herrick Mr. Larry Hicks ◊ Mrs. Stephanie Hicks Mr. Steven Hicks Mr. James Hilgartner Ms. Lauren Hobbs Mr. Joe Holder Mr. Walter Hollingsworth Ms. Paige Huff ’08 Mr. Fred Hughes Dr. Elizabeth Hutcheon Mrs. Camilla Irvin Dr. Jennifer Ishler ◊ Dr. Doba Jackson ◊ Mr. Ree James Dr. Jimmy Jeffcoat Ms. Rosemary Jernigan Mr. Derry Johnson Mr. London Johnson Mrs. Michelle Johnson ’95 Mrs. Sandy Kelser ◊ Mrs. Brenda Kerwin Mr. Eric Kidwell ’01 Mrs. Haley Kilcrease Miss Taylor King ’13 Ms. Margaret Kinney Mr. Malcolm Knight Mrs. Candi Lake ◊ Mr. Charlie Lane ’71 Ms. Glea N. Larsen Mr. Anthony Leigh ◊ Mr. Eric Levanda ◊ Dr. Jeremy Lewis Ms. Patricia Maddox Mr. Matthew Mahanic ’08 Dr. Donna W. Manson ◊ Ms. Bertha McClain Miss Kristin F. McDaniel ’11 Mrs. Jenny McDavid Mr. Terry D. McGough Mrs. Mandy McMichael ◊ Mr. Robert Milner Mrs. Ximena Moore Dr. Elba Morton Dr. Samir Moussalli ◊ Mr. Scott Mularz Mr. Adam Murphy Dr. Maureen Murphy ’78 ◊ Mr. Virgil Norrell Ms. Suellen Ofe ◊ Dr. Frank Parsons Jr. Mr. Mark Patterson Ms. Aleah Payne ’12 Mr. Christopher Payne Dr. Thomas G. Perrin Mr. Lamar Petty Mr. Buzz Phillips ◊ Mr. Patrick Phillips Mrs. Mary Ann Pickard 50 Mr. Jeff Pinkerton Mr. Solomon Porter Jr. Mr. Mike Pugh Mr. Benjamin Raphelson Mr. Harry Ray Mrs. Flora Reese ’57 Mr. Doug Rogers Dr. Celia Rudolph ’80 ◊ Ms. Ashton Salter ’12 Dr. John Saunders Mr. William D. Schreyer ’89 Dr. Vadim Serebryany Ms. Kristy Sharpe Mr. Nicholas Sheppard ’13 Ms. Cherrica Simmons Mrs. Heather Slagle ’99 Mr. Lee Slagle The Rev. Brian Smith ’94 Mrs. Nordis Smith ◊ Mrs. Tabitha Smith Dr. Anneliese Spaeth Dr. Roxanne St. Martin ’94 ◊ Mr. Charles Stanton Dr. Sidney Stubbs ◊ Mrs. Fran H. Taylor ◊ Mr. Justin Tereshko Ms. Sara Beth Terry Dr. James Truman Dr. Allen Tubbs Ms. Sharon Tucker Mr. Mike Turk ◊ Mr. Michael Ward ’76 ◊ Mr. Austin White ’13 Dr. Barbara White Mr. Christopher Williams Mr. Eddy Williams Ms. Gynger Williams Mrs. Jane Williams ◊ Dr. John Williams Mrs. Catherine Wolfe ◊ Mrs. Wendi Wood * An asterisk indicates those now deceased Dr. James M. Albritton ◊ Dr. Cinzia Balit-Moussalli ◊ Mr. Michael Bamman Mrs. Maryann Beck ’92 Mr. Patrick Beck ’96 Mr. Joshua G. Bennefield ’11 Dr. Jason Borders Mr. Tommy Bracknell Dr. John Brannon ’85 ◊ Ms. Jamie Brazell ’09 Mrs. Vivian Bricken Ms. Meggie Bridges ’11 Ms. Christina Brown Dr. Frank Buckner Mrs. Dawn Butler Mr. Anthony Cain Mr. Andrew Carey Mrs. Renee Carlisle ’76 ◊ Dr. Elizabeth Casey Mrs. Bonnie Catching Mrs. Amanda H. Cecil ’12 Ms. Casey Chrietzberg ’09 Mr. Christopher Clark ’07 Dr. Lisa S. Clark Mr. D.J. Conville ’98 Mrs. Michelle Conway Ms. Kristine E. Copping Mr. Chad Cotant ’12 ◊ Ms. Morgan Cross Dr. Renee Culverhouse ◊ Dr. James Daniels Ms. Brittany Davis Mrs. Gene Davis Mr. James Davis Jr. Mr. Ryan L. Davis Ms. Jaime Demick Dr. Lynn M. Disbrow ◊ Mr. Thomas Dismukes Jr. ’83 ◊ Mr. Jay Dorman ◊ Dr. Lisa Olenik Dorman ◊ Mrs. Belinda Goris Duett ’00 Mr. Dale Duett ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Faculty & Staff Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Huntingdon Adds an Honorable Name to the Honors Program During a special gala event held in May 2013, Judge Truman Hobbs Sr., Article III federal judge for the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, retired, and his wife, Joyce, were celebrated as the namesakes for the College’s newly christened Joyce and Truman Hobbs Honors Program. Judge and Mrs. Hobbs, who are long-time friends and neighbors of the College, were presented with Presidential Medallions by Huntingdon President J. Cameron West. In his remarks, President West described the Hobbs Honors Program and Huntingdon’s liberal arts academic programs as built around educational success with the goal of fostering in students a manifestation of responsible citizenship. “We want students to learn how to place the well-being of their communities at the center of their beliefs, their decisions, their actions,” he said. “We want Huntingdon students to learn how to think critically and ethically, and to communicate with clarity and civility, so that they can extend themselves in service far beyond what they have ever experienced before coming to campus. ... Huntingdon, like all colleges and universities with honors programs, recruits outstanding students to take challenging courses and to be rewarded for their academic diligence with appropriate scholarship assistance. Uniquely, however, we are seeking in the Joyce and Truman Hobbs Honors Program to create a community of students who live out the meaning of ‘honor’ both in their individual lives and as a body of scholar-citizens.” After completing his bachelor’s degree at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill in 1942, Truman Hobbs, a native of Alabama, served four years of active duty in the U.S. Navy, achieving the rank of lieutenant, then completed his juris doctorate degree at Yale School of Law in 1948. He served as a law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black from 1948 to 1949, then became a private practice attorney in Alabama. He was nominated to the federal judgeship for the Middle District of Alabama by President Jimmy Carter in 1980. He served as chief judge of the court from 1984 until 1991, when he assumed senior status. Joyce Hobbs graduated from Vassar College. President West said that it is fitting for the program to be named for Joyce and Truman Hobbs as they have both lived lives of honor and service to the community and for the greater good. “... Joyce and Truman Hobbs would tell you that all the degrees and honors from Vassar, Chapel Hill and Yale; all the Phi Beta Kappa and military and Supreme Court clerkship accolades; all the prestige of serving in the federal judiciary; all the recognition that has justly come from the Tocqueville Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Society; all of this and more would mean nothing were it not undergirded by a way of living that is honorable,” he said. He added, addressing Judge and Mrs. Hobbs, that Huntingdon’s Joyce and Truman Hobbs Honors Program is so named “in the hope and trust that we will be inspired to teach outstanding young men and women to live as you have lived.” Dr. Chad Eggleston, assistant provost and director of the Hobbs Honors Program, articulated what makes the program different from those at other colleges. “Two specific features of our honors program set it apart: a sense of the social nature of knowledge and the sense of civic responsibility that comes with it,” said Eggleston. “... We teach students in the Honors Program that they are responsible not only for their own success, but for that of their peers as well. [Our honors students] are responsible not only to one another at Huntingdon, but also to others in the community, and toward that end we encourage students to ... recognize that their intellectual and academic achievements ought to be used in service. This is something more than the simple acknowledgement that our peers need our help, but the recognition that the body politic needs deep, serious engagement.” Huntingdon honors students are required to complete 18 hours of honors core courses, and then to complete a minor or to participate in interdisciplinary courses. Students are asked to serve as tutors for their peers and to be involved in one or more of the College’s many community service-oriented outreach initiatives. Dr. Chad Eggleston, director of the Joyce and Truman Hobbs Honors Program, assistant professor of religion, and assistant to the provost for learning enrichment, left; Mandy McMichael, assistant professor of religion, center; and Dr. Lynn Disbrow, professor of communication studies, were present for a special dinner honoring Joyce and Truman Hobbs as the Hobbses lent their name to the College’s honors program. Dr. Frank Buckner, professor of religion (left, with President J. Cameron West), was honored with the Mary Mildred Sullivan Award in May 2013. The award, made possible by the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation, is bestowed by select colleges and universities in the Southeast upon a member of the College community in recognition of character such that “the spiritual standard of the institution may be judged by the character of the person to whom the award is made.” Dr. Donna Whitley Manson, professor of history and faculty marshal, and her husband, Stewart, are members of the Huntingdon Society. 51 Alumni Giving by Class Year June 1, 2012–May 31, 2013 1934 Claire Rogers Peacock 1935 Gertrude Parkman Morgan 1938 Freda Attwood Bogart Louise May Pope Emmie Cardwell Bolden ◊ Virginia Hudson Crumly Marilyn Cogburn McLeod *Martha Holley Norton Lorraine Pritchard Oshins Charlotte Gibbs Ponder ◊ Marie Sinclair ◊ Ruth Cobia Summers 1939 Pearl Norton Jackson Jule Wilson Perry Alice Thomason Walkup 1940 Bernice Hurst Bell Ruby Collier Key ◊ *Lynda Greer Schneppershoff 1941 Sarah Frances Parker Bruer Alice Jewel Townsend Tyson 1942 Edwina Wallace Alexander ◊ Dorothy McLean Perry Jean Kirkpatrick Williams Mallieve Wicker Breeding ’43 was on campus to celebrate her 70th class reunion during Homecoming 2013. 1943 Mallieve Wicker Breeding Melba Dunn Dickinson Mary Cecil Edwards Dunning Margaret H. Graham *Frances Galloway Moody Dorothy Tucker Smith Ann Tyler 1944 Julia Bentley Arner Lucille Ellison Beezley { Marie Baker Sinclair ’44 has supported Huntingdon for many years with gifts of financial support, leadership, encouragement, and time. 1945 Helen Domingos Bull Helen Rittenour Geesey Estate of Theresa Hillhouse Harris Virginia Tate Herod Winnie Webb Howard Virginia McLean ◊ Mary Martha Howard Phillips Blanche Carlton Sloan Betty Gensert Towey Grace King Tribble Margaret Ennis Tucker ◊ Ray E. Whatley 1946 Virginia Lile Beck Ruth Brady Cousins Brink ◊ Virginia Jones Campbell Fariss Fraser Craig Becky Sellers Doe Gregg Hosselton Lofton Sue Dowdell Lux Lucile Holmes Martin Frances Hastings Moore Elizabeth Brown Nolen Dot Felkel Rigsby Rose Beveridge Smith Mary Virginia Perdue Stanford Mary Florence Smith Wilson 1947 Jane Evans Brantley *Marguerite Wise Cato Christina Tompkins Rood Crawford Jean Norton Gander Catherine Cobb Helms 42% of those who graduated in the 1940s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 34% during 2011–12. * An asterisk indicates those now deceased 52 Harriet Holmes Herring Martha Davis Keene Aileen Best LeGrand Caroline Ball Matthews ◊ Margaret Calhoun McIlwain Caroline Haigler Jackson Moseley Mary Weathers Neighbors Billie Smith Sims Beth Wilford Standley Martha O’Rear Wilkinson Bertha Rhodes Wood 1948 Mary King Burns ◊ Montae James Cain Emily Reese Deshields Sara Cody Gaskin Katie Walls Laws Dorothy Louise Barton Moore Margaret Luten Murphy Carolyn Deer Owens LaNelle Andrews Rowe Joy Cogdell Steele Abbie Henderson Taylor 1949 Betty Finlay Brislin ◊ Anne Avriett Cameron Janet Bullard Campbell Emily Johnson Dickens Betty Jayne Solomon Edwards Maurice B. Gettleman Ethel Ellis Gibson ◊ Ernestine Spencer Hill Frances Engle Litzel Jean Stallworth Maxwell Sallie Wood Millsap * Nancy Mitchell Nilsson Joseph E. Moore Ruth Milner Morrison Virginia Bullard Oswald 1950 Nelle Beck Beverly Betty Wright Bolt Lucy “Sunshine” Jones Bricken Elia Durr Buck ◊ Rosemary Oliver Cameron { Patricia Sellers Korth Elizabeth D. Lipscomb ◊ Mildred Norton Loper Janice Green Mahoney Barbara Jones Manning Ann O’Neal Ott Myrtle Poundstone Ridolphi James M. Rittenour Caroline Poole Ryan Ione Burford Sibley Joseph Simon Ann Blackmon Thompson Norma J. Thornton White Pauline Cohen Witt Huntingdon trustee the Rev. Nancy Hastings Hornsby, left, accompanied her mother, Betty Kimbrough Hastings ’51, at a reunion gathering during Homecoming 2013. 1951 William Blackmon Jr. Sara Dickert Bowden Martha Nell Dean ◊ Betty York Drukenmiller Joseph E. Harris Betty Kimbrough Hastings ◊ Ann Wood Hicks Constance Julian Hurt *Jean McGinty Jones Ann Bush Kennedy Susan Carroll Martin Flora Schafer McCormick 55% of those who graduated in the 1950s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 44% during 2011–12. Clare Bowman Cardinal Katherine Jones Cook Dorothy D. Dillard Barbara Johnston Dismukes Martha Dickerson Fountain Lila Keene Franco *Helen Jeune Heatherly Willard Lee Hurley Lucy Spain Jackson Martha Alford Kilgore Ruth Cook McLemore Frances Daily McPherson Virginia Lee Monroe Betty Seymour Perdue Rita Rochambeau Perham Ethel Moist Perkins *Esther Beach Persigehl Jean Davis Pracht ◊ Helen Rapp Rittenour Raymond Shaw Carroll Moss Wheeler Betty Greene Wright ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) { 28.52% of alumni made gifts during 2012–13, up from 24.10% during 2011–12. 1952 Zona Davis Baxter Betty Collins Booth Patricia Britton June Reid Carter Malinda Robertson Daniel Sara Lee Insley Dunbar Anne Salyerds Francisco Rosemary Reed Freeze Nancy Brown Garner Henry Johnson Harper ◊ Mary Jo Reed Krauss Barbara Chapman Moore Rose Dyer Moore Legene Brown Mullis Sue Austin Norwood Miriam Pace Gwendolyn Smith Pearson Carolyn Norton Respess Norma Iversen Schumm Margaret Nicholas Snellgrove Ruth Stone Strange ◊ Edith Prine Stuart Roy Thomas Sublette Betty Jean Vaughn Helen Broach Waller June Johnson Wilborn Elsie Prine Wilson Barbara Rice Zdanis 1953 Rae Venable Calvert Jane Windham Chesnutt Charlotte Berry Fuller Sue Wood Harris Ann Given Hopper George L. Houghton Florence Furlow Hurst Ann Harvey James Caroline Butler Klopstock Barbara Snider Miller James M. Parker Madie Howell Poole David Printz John C. Short ◊ Van der Veer Smith Phyllis Gunter Snyder ◊ Julia Arbuthnot Strickland Barbara Farrington Thomas Mary Durden Weaver Diane Smith Wendland ◊ Harriette Harley Woodard 1954 The Class of ’54 once again set the gold standard for class giving with 73% of the class making gifts to the College during 2012–13. Harriet Borland Allison Sabra Stough Atkins Elizabeth Cunningham Baldwin Lorraine Freeman Barnett Ann Webb Berry Barbara Phelps Boyer * An asterisk indicates those now deceased *Phyllis Tate Bryars Emily Tyler Burge Betty Smilie Christiansen Betty Betts Conner Emily Reese Dann Annie Carol Davis George H. Fitzgerald Jane Johnson Fowler Nimrod Thompson Frazer ◊ Carolyn Loftin Gaither ◊ Ann Kolb Garner Betty Perry Gibson Catherine Byrd Gifford *Betty Robertson Gilmore Dorothy Coe Ginn Gwendolyn Prater Glass Barbara Farmer Hingle W.C. Holdbrooks Jr. Anne Prather Huber Jack T. Jackson Laura Chambliss Jinright ◊ June (Marye) Bishop Lands Mary Ruth Haselton Lieck Farrys Rose Long Jean Broxson McMillan ◊ Mary Ann Oglesby Neeley ◊ Sara Stembridge Perry ◊ Earl F. Pruitt Janet Marsh Pruitt Joyce McCollum Robertson Wynell Jordan Sachs Charlotte Fagan Stanford Mary Ruth Price Sullivan Letitia Meadows Taylor Mary Elizabeth Johnson Tolleson Bobbie Coop Welch ◊ Martha Grimes Wood Martha Holman Wright Patricia Yelverton 1955 Bethany Rowell Caldwell Martha Ford Ceriani Reita Sample Davis ◊ Edna Spencer Dickinson Marianne Donnell ◊ Virginia Cooper Downes ◊ Doris Sanford Edwards J. Walter Ellisor Joyce Payne French Nelda Scott Funkhouser Billy D. Gaither ◊ Jeanne Clements Hall Mary Ragland Hoxie Jane Colvin Hubbard Faye Davis Huey Emily Barbara Cade Hunt Rosemary Suits Jarrard Frances Etheredge Jones James Van Jordan III Marjorie Cain Masterson Dr. Dorothy McGehee Rudolph M. Ohme Jr. Helen Ott Gail Golson Phillips ◊ Joyce McClendon Robertson Martha Harris Shannon Isobel Lingo Tierney Edward W. Young Huntingdon Trustee Lois “Bitsy” Flowers Youngblood, left, and Laura Chambliss Jinright ’54 are members of The Huntingdon Society. Wynell Jordan Sachs ’54 and her husband, Werner, were among those who gathered in Houghton Library for a reunion of the Classes of the 1940s and 1950s during Homecoming 2013. 1956 Minna Hayes Appleby Janel Gray Bates June Burdick Bisard ◊ Jane Michael Boozer Myrtle Peters Crone ◊ Janet Miller Dapitan Hermine Melton Downing ◊ Betty Marchman Edgar Rachel Hutto Foreman Charlotte Bragg Hall Barbara Clark Hill Julia Varner Huling Sigrid Hansen Hyman Lenore Oglesby Kirkpatrick Elizabeth Walker Lanier ◊ Catherine Buck Loflin Geraldine Phillips McLain Carolyn Lawrence Oakes Jane Mathews Penry Barbara Gilliland Rhinehardt ◊ Shirley Faye Parker Watkins ◊ Barbara Duggan Wilson Dorothy Waters Wilson ◊ Margaret Delchamps Young 1957 Lloyce Y. Wilborn Browder Caroline Brock Bugg Dorothy Jenkins Cockfield Carolyn Glenn Cowles Mary O’Brien Cox ◊ Ann Mays Davis Joan Johnston Diversi ◊ Sally Hudson Engstrom ◊ Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald ◊ Lucile Delchamps Fleming ◊ Eva Atkinson Fountain Jack Fowler Lee Frazer ◊ Liz Allen Garrard Jacquelyn Draughon Guthrie Patty Colvin Hall Ruby Wilson Huntley Ann Manry Kenyon Gatra Reid Mallard Katherine Butler Massey Iris McGehee Merlin Owen Newton Patricia Neal Page Johnnie Ruth Parker Carolyn Tingen Philips Annie B. Arnold Quick Diane McCranie Redkevitch ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Flora Grant Reese Elinor Warr Roberts ◊ Sue Cross Savage ◊ Aimee Coleman Scott Peggy Rushin Terry Linda Bergman Webb Sue Liu Wen Carolyn McMillan West Nancy Prickett Whitley ◊ Robert Godfrey Wilson ◊ Elinor Warr Roberts ’57 (center) perfects her “Hawk ’em” salute under the tutelage of Sherry Leigh Lacey ’13 (left) and Bailey Scott ’14. 1958 Jane Brackin Johnson Adkinson Donald G. Brown Laura Harper Copeland Lynn Blalock Cunningham ◊ Helen Reid Figh Eugenie Lambert Hamner ◊ Sarah Hutchinson Heisel Jacquelyn Gunn Hubbard Bettie Hussey George F. Jones Sr. Lewis J. Larson Loretta Ribbik Martin Yvonne Laun McGinn Betty Brake McGriff Lucy McKinney Parsons Helen Cleondis Patronis Zola Smith Powers LaVerne Davis Ramsey ◊ Mary Harrell Riley David T. Rogers Jr. William B. Sansom Jr. Bennie F. Sowell ◊ Flora McDonald Speed Patricia Hines Steele Lyn Bentley Tucker Betty McCoy Vaughan Linda Cooper Wenner Sue McClain White 1959 Mary Jo Barnes Elizabeth McDonald Bowdin Jane Solomon Davis Judith Burt Denton Tommy E. Denton Lydia Blake Gillespie 53 Faye Byrd Hall Judith McNease James ◊ Catherine Giglio Lamar William Y. Lamar Loette Messick Lee Frances Plott Logan Charles D. Lowery ◊ Gwendolyn Harris Munson Aubrey E. Neeley ◊ Judith Wilson Nunn Peggy Springfield Pennington ◊ Marcia Mathews Reichert Olivia Stephens Rineheart Martha Still Rogers Donald G. Shannon Ann Sutton Smith Charles E. Tucker Alice Jane Clark Wasdin Lois Mothershead Windham James D. Yarbrough The April 2013 meeting of the National Alumni Board was held in the new Leo J. Drum Jr. Theater. Pictured (L–R) are alumni board members Iris McGehee ’57, June Burdick Bisard ’56, Betty McCoy Vaughn ’58, Nancy Pugh ’62, and Charles ’59 and Susie Bradford Lowery ’59. 1960 Margaret Whitsett Abrames Elizabeth Vaughan Arnold Ethel Heinecke Bauer ◊ Lawrence A. Britt Catherine Fralish Burke Gloria Ann McCurdy Collier Joseph R. Day ◊ Ginger Graves Eich ◊ W. Foster Eich III ◊ Sarah Frye Goff Ann Sanders Gray Betty Bottoms Grundy Sandra Nuss Hamilton Janis Houston Hand Peggy Shellman Headley Josephine Thagard Hirsch Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson John A. Kamburis Judith Knowles Sara Bradford Lowery ◊ John Ed Mathison Y. Mark McElreath Edward E. O’Donnell ◊ Laura Lucas Pittman Shirley Kelly Rose Beth Neville Roth Dianne Williams Salter ◊ Katherine Panhorst Smith Barbara Ramey Spiers Eugene E. Stanaland ◊ Lady Claire Davidson Studstill James Worth Thurman Jr. Charles G. Tomberlin ◊ Carol McManus Tucker Carolyn Hamilton Vice * An asterisk indicates those now deceased 54 1961 Frances Goode Akridge ◊ Emily Hinson Bowdoin Pearle King Brown Richard M. Burr Katherine Liddon Chatowski Shirley Orr Cochran Carol Fields Daron Martha Pugh Davis Dixie Autry Francis Wayne Gibson ◊ Dodie Scherf Glowa Rose Garrett Grant Hal Hardy Green John Wayne Helms Sandra Solomon Holman Elizabeth Wells Hunt James W. Malone Ellie C. McKissick William Thomas Melton Ann Warren Johnson Ernest Killingsworth Jr. Theresa Dodson Major Joyce Bottoms Mathison Irene McCombs William Thomas Melton Richard L. Moses Marilyn Beason Motley Linda Dye Pierce John D. Salter ◊ Thomas E. Sanders Jr. Nancy Strange Seib Laura Burford Sullivan 1962 Martha Costen Abernathy Solomon Acrish Linda Garrett Bancroft Thelma Braswell ◊ Margaret Jacobs Bridgeman Maryetta Propst Buchanan Emily Davis Cato { Ellen B. Keldorph Sanders Frances Blair Steele Virginia C. Tucker Mary Ann Mannich Underwood Jane McGowin Webb (Margo) Knowles Williams Ned W. Woodard 1963 May Queen Peggy Sewell Parker ’63, right, and Christianne Ashton Henderson ’63, left, relived good memories during the Class of 1963’s 50th reunion in 2013. They are pictured with Anthony Leigh, vice president for college and alumni relations. 1963 Ruth Parks Andrew R. Spencer Bach Sandra Tiller Barton Nancy Reynolds Benner James R. Bozeman Judith Sanford Broadway Vesta Bottoms Bryan Sarah Anne Young Clark Perry M. Dalton Leon Darby Tonia Sizemore Darby Mary Turberville Donald Jewell More Ferguson Carl Flowers Jr. Donald Allen Harp Jr. Christianne Ashton Henderson 41% of those who graduated in the 1960s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 35% during 2011–12. Verna Fail Chesser Martha Herring Faircloth Virginia Holly Fraley Allie M. Freeman Jr. Judy Bullock Freeman Jean Maddox Garner Lee Block Green Tom M. Greene Jean Mathison Hahle Claire Rogers Peacock Helms Alfred Braden Hill Judy Watson Kingry Sue Clifton Landrum Charles W. Lee Lynn Livingston Marsh Clara West Martin Frances Parker McCrary Nancy A. Pugh June Killinger Ramsey Patti Woodburn Richardson Barbara Vinson Robinson Ludie Robinson Lester K. Henderson Jr. James Larry Hinds ◊ Keeta Kendall Joy Clark Langley Brenda Ward Loftus ◊ Mary Weaver Meadows Paul Adolph Ohme Victoria Sidaris Ornowski Corrie Anderson Owens Peggy Sewell Parker Donald W. Peak Frederick L. Pryor Cecil F. Ryland James L. Sealy George B. Simpkins Mary McKinley Stephens Melanie Scarbrough Stokley Anne Henry Tidmore Annette Kennedy Tingle 1964 Susanna Majure Adams Claudia Adkison ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Ronald L. Anders Carl A. Barranco ◊ William L. Beard ◊ Rodney Anthony Bell Donna Brannon Coon Anne Chancey Dalton Bonnie Cleaveland Donaldson Jacquelyn Hodges Earnest Rex Everage Sue Russell Garrick Joanne Levi Grove Mary Dendy Harp Toni Garratt Hayden Joan Jolly Huckaby Caroline Jackson ◊ Gloria Tidmore Johnson Kathryn Townsend Jones Jacqueline Desaulniers Kinzer ◊ Mary Elizabeth Morgan Lanier Eugene M. Lewis Merry Talley Lewis Erwin Josef Lischke Anne Bailey Matthes Joyce Boles McKissick Betty Thurman McMahon ◊ Kay Kennedy Miller Martha Jennings Mitchem Jane Strange Roberts Emily Johnson Segers Betty Menefee Segrest Philip Dale Segrest Rebecca Bibb Segrest Eve Smallwood Simpkins Judith Strickland Sims Mary Ball Spear Martha Sue Tillotson Marilyn Kay Dassinger Watkins Frances Reid Yancey ◊ L–R: Charles Lee ’62, head men’s tennis coach Charlie Lane ’71, John Ed Mathison ’60, Goose Tatum ’66, and Glenn Rudolph ’09 stopped for some Hawk talk at the Athletic Hall of Fame reception in September. 1965 Rosemary Kirkland Anders Elaine Hearn Boese Sara P. Boyd Betty Burleson Carpenter Mary Calhoun Chesney Judy Goodwin Chipman Gerald Paul Corgill Glenda Goldsmith Courtney Linda Fitzpatrick Davis Jeanne Bailey Gamble Ernest Gerald Garrick Eugenia Davis Granberry Martha Fouts Gund Margaret Pittman Hall Carol Henry Hardy Rebecca Jones Haston Janice Woolf Hendrickson James Martin Herring Mary Harris Holland W.R. Johnson Elizabeth Bricken Jones ◊ Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Jan Puckett Kirkemier ◊ Claudia Sanderson Kirkwood Kaye Wilkinson Knight Julia Jeffords Krulic Lynda Miller Lipscomb Llanelle Stewart Minhinnette Diane Bottoms Muller Dee Wright Munger Olivia Moore Norgard Richard O. Payson Sr. Judith Womack Peek Karon Sue Spendiff Reed Henry E. Roberts Robert W. Salter Charles B. Savage Anne Dismukes Shackelford William C. Simpson Jr. Jimmy Wayne Skelton Sunny Harris Smith Penny Campbell Tate Sylvia Sellers Whitley Darlene Woodall Joanne Bell Woodall L–R: Joanne Gordon Beard ’66, Bill Beard ’64, Joyce Boles McKissick ’64 and Ellie C. McKissick ’61 joined in the celebration at the induction of the Athletic Hall of Fame members during Homecoming 2013. 1966 Laura Ann McLean Albritton ◊ Ann Ault Joanne Gordon Beard ◊ James Childers Deidra VanLandingham Christie Carol Sue Brown Coker Gloria Battle Coker Julia Elise Porter Compton Ann Andrews Corgill Ronald Pershing Davis Marion Earl Dowling Michael Dowling Marie Dorsey Farrior Jane Jeffords Houston Debbie Susan Rice Johnson Kenneth W. Jordan Gail Larsen Irl R. Long Jr. Linda Mason McEwan Camille Woodward Melton Dianne Merrell Norwood Robert Maxwell Owen ◊ Floyd Wes Sarginson II Neil R. Smart Jr. Jerry M. Smith Susan Quinn Smith Winifred Lightfoot Stakely ◊ Beppy LeCroy Tiller ◊ Frances Banks Tisdale Clare Cleere Ward Freida Little Warren M. Lee Warren III Skip Zuber 1967 Julia Smith Alexander H. Wendell Barr Jr. * An asterisk indicates those now deceased Eleanor Warr Barron William C. Bozeman Frances Cooper Bricken ◊ John B. Bricken Jr. ◊ Curtis Edward Britton Kathryn Prestwood Bush Janis Cottrell Caldwell Sue Cleverdon Dixon Barbara Pinson Dozier Dana Jerkins Dunham Robert B. Edwards Winifred Morris Ely Robert Mel Freeman Barbara Adams Herring Ann Criswell Irvine Richard A. James Donna McCourry King Charles R. Liddell Sandra Wimberly Makowsky Larry W. Martin ◊ Jewel D. Mason Eugene Montgomery Barbara McBrayer Montoya Robert G. Morrison David G. Myrick Nancy Brown Myrick ◊ Bobbie Garner O’Connor Nancy Grantham Palmer Martha Brown Salter William Parvin Sawyer Fred B. Simpson Jr. Marion Brantley Stabler Nadya Sharpe Starr Robert E. Sternenberg Billie Ruth Stewart Sudduth Cheryl Lagowicz Thompson Barbara Parker Turner Susann Woodbery Turner Charlotte Dobbins Van Erman Lawrence S. Vinson Nancy Carter Watson Patricia Shadoin Williamson ◊ 1968 Bernard B. Arant Jr. Kathleen Howard Arant Sheryl DeCoudres Barkalow Celia Farrar Bass Susan Blair Donald K. Braden Anne Gunter Bray Jo Ann Brazelton ◊ Edward A. Brown III George F. Cooper III Charles M. Croft Judith Pierce Croxton Kaye Bethune Cutchen Julia Ann Deas Shirley Crawford Dorrough William E. Douthit Jr. Shirley Chase Dowling Lawrence R. Elliott Clausen Ely E. June Gay Helene Deas Gereke Charles N. Graham Ruth Glover Graham Ann Butler Harrison H. Clayton Harshbarger Jr. Mary Osmer Howell Martha Hatcher Hughes Arthur Isola William Conrad Jackson William David Jackson Jr. Mary George Jester Margaret Johnson Orson L. Johnson Marcia Vaughan Jones Lloyd V. Julian Betty Pickard Kaucher William E. Kennedy Saundra Bozeman Kidd ◊ Judith Jefcoat Lackey W. Russell Lackey Nelda Lewis Lane Charles Marion Lee Martha Fultz Long Susanne Crockett Martin ◊ Stuart T. May III Candace Brannon Ozerden J. Ben Porter Charlene Gray Reed Rebecca McFee Robertson Victor A. Sanders ◊ Celia Price Sims ◊ Nan Turner Smart Collier F. Smith Jeffrey W. Smith Laura Gholson Smith Rebecca Acuff Sternenberg Stephanie Mann Stokes Carol Morse Tew Barbara Brock Thomas Elizabeth Osborne Thompson Thomas M. Turner Daniel Lee Walden ◊ Kim B. Wanous LaDonna Ussery Weis ◊ Cynthia Gebhardt White ◊ Jennifer Decker Zidlicky 1969 Thomas Earl Anderson ◊ Billie Ann Baker Ault Richard L. Ault Carol Sansbury Baird ◊ David Earl Baker John H. Bonner Judith Hutchinson Bostick Dee Evans Bozeman Maryem Stringfellow Brewer Philip L. Browning Thomas A. Charette Sharon Kimbrough Cooper Gail Robinson Cotton Pamela Hulbert Dannelly Karen Bell Deavers Margaret Weathers Dove Patricia Snyder Eiland Madeline Kay Evans Donald C. France Patricia Little Trawick Guest Marcia Nichols Harshbarger Madeleine M. Hill ◊ Gayle Aker Hogelin Janice McLain James Philip J. Johnson Doris Fain Keene Anna Hartzog Lawrence Phebe Eloise Mason Lee ◊ Joan Ann McClure Mary Barnette McClurkin R. Neil McDavid ◊ Tim McQueen Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ◊ Ira Charles Mitchell Jr. ◊ Jean Carpenter Murray Jane McIntyre Nichols Evelyn Swann Ogilvie Linda Lovett Parton Ann McKinley Patterson Clarence Gray Price ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) L–R: Phebe Mason Lee ’69 celebrated at Homecoming 2013 with Sarah McCarthy Mingledorff ’69 and George Mingledorff ’70. Jeff B. Sessions III ◊ Mary Blackshear Sessions ◊ W. Randall Sewell Jr. Lee Reynolds Sewell William Roland Sims ◊ Lyn Warren Slattery Suzanne Beckham Smith Lindora Wisham Snyder Linda McLeod Thomas ◊ Lynda Sheppard Thurman Paul J. Vincent Anne McLeod Warren Robert Wiggins Catherine Wiginton Wilbourne Billie Gaye Willis Donald Luther Yancey ◊ Linda Nelson Yancey ◊ Robert F. Zidlicky Jr. Susan Way Zuber 1970 Rush Emmett Akin G. Carlton Barker ◊ Susan White Bennett Judy Duncan Bilyeu Paula Trimm Bonner Robert Bothfeld Jr. Billie Wingard Brown Ann Jeffords Cole Peggy Parsons Crum Miriam Brown Douthit Beverly Gordy McKinney ◊ James L. McNees Betty Farrar McQueen George E. Mingledorff III ◊ Anne White Mitchell ◊ Isabell Templeman Moore James H. Morse Merritt W. Moseley Jr. Linda Davis Muehlberger Susan Whitaker Owen Joanne Miner Shoemaker Craig Erwin Thompson Gerald S. Thurman 1971 Theresa Zimmerman Arnold Barbara Lazenby Barnett ◊ John William Bass Sr. Linda Mordecai Benkwith ◊ Robert Howard Bennett Marion Bonhomme-Knox Margaret Parks Carlson Walter J. Corbitt Linda C. Daniel ◊ Nancy Stallings Elliott Suzanne Repnicki Fickey ◊ Jacqueline Ambrose Garrett Diane Parkman Hett Karen Dee Koza Charles A. Lane Charlene Tew Lord Margaret Ward McPherson ◊ 55 James M. Mungenast Edward H. Munson Jr. Herbert Patterson ◊ Janet Harsha Payson Judy Ray Russell Keith Sabel Lucy Williams Stewart Nancy Jennings Wiggins Mary Ann Wilkerson Elizabeth Northcutt Williams Hugh R. Williams { 1972 Curtis Glenn Armstrong Pamela Vaughan Baker Phillip Felton Brown ◊ Steven Douglas Caldwell Nancy Johnson Coburn Doris Peters Coker Opal Lovett Collier Sheryl Elizabeth Cooper Mary Cleveland Corbitt Howell B. Edwards Jr. Rose Marie Floyd Daniel J. Freehling ◊ Ann Veazey Fuller Larry Hays Paul H. Kositzka Diane Turner Lipscomb Reese H. McKinney Jr. ◊ Madeline Nichols Moseley Bill Robertson John Daniel Sanders Steven Melton Shiflett Susan Carroll Shiflett Stephen L. Spencer Linda Jane Strube Linda Lee Freeman Trotter James E. Turner Jr. 1973 Alex P. Ansley Beverly Smith Dean Daniel W. DeVaughn Josephine Golson Foshee John M. Foshee Jr. Paul H. Hiebel Beverly Waters Kruger Molly Dunn Martin Martha L. Killebrew McKim Thomas F. Moore ◊ M. Stephen Morris Mary Sheets Mungenast Bronwyn Bothfeld Nickles Janice Ruth Pylant Carol Sindersine Sandvi Dorris Teague ◊ Kathryn Booth Towry-Iburg 1974 Sandra Burnett Allen Renee Youmans Anderson Marion Knox Barker Sally Hemstreet Crawford Emily E. Dawson Donna Weinstein Frawley Curtis E. Garrett George Mathews Handey Elizabeth Cumming Hight Audrey Gryder Kauders William Kendrick ◊ James I. Lucas Marsha Kirk Moore ◊ Susan Mundell Petrey Thomas P. Petrey Catherine West Redding * An asterisk indicates those now deceased 56 25% of those who graduated in the 1970s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 22% during 2011–12. Amy Ruth Renfro Herbert William Rice Kevin Seamon William Henry Shanks Paul Allen Sloan Jr. Ann Livingston Thompson Alexis Cleghorne Tibbetts Phyllis Killion Ward ◊ Sherryll Henderson White Chris A. Williams 1975 Jane Howell Allen ◊ Daniele Funderburk Bruhn Hisae Nishime Demoruelle Deborah Giglio Garrett Sharon Sousa Grieshop Roxanne D. Hannon-Odom Ellen Evans Haulman ◊ Tonsiaweda Gilmore Hayes Deborah Head Hutto Emily Preston Joseph Roosevelt Lewis Araminta Robson McDavid ◊ Katherine Miller Millican Susan Floyd Morrow Ansley Callaway Rice Lawrence T. Williams 1976 James H. Anderson ◊ Donald A. Brewer Jr. Renee Byrd Carlisle ◊ W. Kirk Davenport Kay Gomillion Elam ◊ Dale Baxter Evans Shirley Hales David A. Head LaDonna Gilbreath Herrera Michael C. McDaniel Cecelia Crowder Parker T. Grant Parker Sr. Jeffrey R. Spiller ◊ Eva Brunson Tackett Michael Seth Ward ◊ Rebecca Hughes Williams Charlotte Voak Zubowicz 1977 Joseph Borowski Linda Larson Borowski Gary Earl Bridges Laura Bowden Carpenter ◊ Rebecca Stephenson DeBow William H. Dorsey III Ardis Garrett Fine W. Joseph McCorkle Jr. Patricia Lynn Skene Sarabeth Owens Snuggs Norma Borland Spiller ◊ 1978 Jane Jenkins Bridges Dianne Petrov Burke Leura Garrett Canary ◊ Nancy E. Carmichael Barbara Whatley Christenberry ◊ Ralph Edward Cobb Jr. Judy Lee Hughes Tony Max Hughes Sr. Faye Teal Meadows Judy Williams Moulton Maureen Kendrick Murphy ◊ H. Kathleen Patchel Samuel Peek Dorothy Dunbar Rogers J. Jeannette Siegers Jean Woodruff Smith Yarisa D. Smith Brenda (Bunny) Cox Suplit Cheryl L. Makowski Ward 1979 Charles C. Anderson III Mary Frances Austin Bond Angelia C. Cale Lucinda Smilie Chappelle ◊ Cathryn Coker Debbie Doss Dahl Karen Murphy Evans Debra A. Freisleben ◊ Renee Cheney Hardy Gary Hinton Holt Lyn Wilbert Keaster Emily McNiel Levy Mikel Bradshaw McCann Cheryl Ellen Monday Peter Charles Panus Laurel Paige McCoy Peek Terri Turman Pernia ◊ Michael A. Scott ◊ Barbara Lynn Smith 1980 Loretta Keresey Bacon ◊ Evangeline Freeman Drissel Teresa Smith Francis Foster Thomas Hicks III Keith Olin Jones Gail Sanford Kendrick ◊ Sarah Small Lowman Martha Law McWhorter Rockland Osgood Susan LeBeau Reith Suzanne Wendland Rhodes ◊ Celia Dell Smith Rudolph ◊ Amelia Bryars Stephens Michelle Hutchison Vanderwall 1981 Emily Jones Anderson Jolene Renee Brubaker Baxter Joe Dan Benson Patrick McDaniel Cross Frederick Allen Frost ◊ { George Gregory Gilbert Janet Lenz Griffin Leslie Callaway Henderson James Van Henry ◊ Beverly Burnett Howard Wanda A. Howard David Hudson Jr. ◊ George F. Jones Jr. Stephanie Wise Jones Cynthia K. Broome Lindsay William Cody Sweetland Billie Gentry Taylor Jody Zarr Williams 1982 Lynis M. Baugher Linda Harper Borden Gordon William Hamilton III Beth Jackson Hughes Amy Vernam Johnson Virginia Jackson Jones Carolyn Ready Vedder Kinman L. Curtis Powell Michael Rich Karen King Scanlan Terry Draughn Sullivan Ashley Atkins Sweetland Esther DeVries Top ◊ Michael K. Trawick Lisa Lacy White Pat Taylor White ◊ Aaron Thomas Woodall Richard A. Yates 1983 Cinderesa Brown Armstrong William Beaird ◊ Bruce B. Bergstresser Bowdy J. Brown Nancy Keith Brown Thomas G. Dismukes Jr. ◊ Elizabeth Chapura Griffin William Harris Minnie Lamberth Patricia Henry Lee William P. Lee Tammy Williams McCorkle Riley Allen Newton ◊ Robert Edward Percy Jeffery Scott Pope Claude Shuford Donald Ward Lisa Sells Yates 1984 Lisa Free Beasley Richard J. Brockman Molly Rice Cross Regina Margaret Buckley Crump Joan Paine Cumbie Jane Bass Geloneck Linda Wall Killinger Ann L. Kline Russell Lee Christopher L. Miller Sarah Melissa Provost Carol Faulkner Smyser 19% of those who graduated in the 1980s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 16% during 2011–12. ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 1985 Tammy Hardin Berry John Michael Brannon ◊ Ann Carlisle Carmichael Billy Ray Daniels ◊ Lori Fishbaugh Gonzalez Cynthia Carr Jackson Melanie McGrath ◊ Rebecca French Mosley Leslie Vaughan Pruitt Jan Shackelford John Paul Shank Angela Slate Sherbine Joy Bloemsma Skelton 1986 Bonnie Smith Collar James Benjamin Craven Jr. Kristi DuBose David Faulkenberry Heidi James Fisher Tammy Henderson Foley Angelyn Bryant Hayes ◊ Melinda Wainwright Singleton Robyn Luker Smith Tommie Hudgens Smith Elizabeth Couey Smithart ◊ Valerie Link Snoderly Karen Price VanderHey Charles Allen Walker Merry Walker 1987 Lee Ann Hundley Boykin Connie Maude Campbell Ladine H. Collins Diane Baugh Fraser Melinda Caprara Hinds Julieann Hollomon Hurst G. Mark Kingry Jr. ◊ Sandra Brill Passmore John David Prunkl Joe Richard Rambo Donna Yates Reynolds Kay Cowen Stutes Frances Thomason Julie Albritten Wood National Alumni Board member Joe Read ’88, center, a senior sales rep with Merck, lent his expertise to fellow Sigma Phi Epsilon brothers Riley Manasco ’16, left, and Spencer Brown ’15 during an alumni/student mentoring luncheon held in April 2013. 1988 Robert W. Birmingham Michelle Bogue-Trost Jeffery Lamar Dean Mark Samuel Eich Sara Dean Faulkenberry Richard K. Fox Jr. Jennifer Oliver Gardner Jimmy Ray Garnett Colleen Garrick-Bisacca * An asterisk indicates those now deceased Jerome Scott Hayes ◊ Judith Ann Hissong Beth Anderson Kingry ◊ Dana Nix Moore Phillip Allen Morgan Barry D. Moss G. Mathew Pope ◊ Elisa Boykin Rambo Joe Dewitt Read ◊ Lynett Garrett Smith Patrick Neal Wood 1989 Carolyn Covington Byrd Michelle Brian Curtis Gregory Douglas Dotson ◊ Mary Anne Silva Kelley John Benjamin Lott Desiree Weems Murray Kimberly Lewis Pace Christopher John Rief Misty Edwards Roberts William David Schreyer Sandra Smart Thrasher Meiko Huggins Whitfield Amy Vibbart Bowman ’90, a member of the 1987 Homecoming Court, stands with her stepdaughter, Claire Peyton Bowman, a member of the 2012 Homecoming Court at Clemson University. 1990 Amy Vibbart Bowman Ramona Schreiber Butchko Patrick Liam Dicks ◊ Margery Jones Fallen Nancy Small Halsell Amy Beard Hulsey ◊ Mark William Knockemus Angela Marie White Koons Spencer Darrell Lee Carol Fields Loeb ◊ Monica Sims Lott Elizabeth Hinson Marschall Debra Kirkman McLaughlin James Kevin Pettit Evelyn Ann Hutzler Pope ◊ Allyce Sikes Read ◊ William B. Wilson ◊ 1991 Glenda Atwell Allred ◊ Craig Alan Andrews Robert Ludwig Brothers Amy Stafford Cohen Elizabeth Odette Doucet Susan Rene Zeron Finley Victor Keith Jiminez Wade Lee Latham Marcus Christopher Melton Susan Brubaker Oldham Jon Michael Olliff Kelly Whatley Pettit Stacey Dale Price Steven Paul Savage Mary Hardin Mitchell Thornton Lane Patrick Wilson 1992 Thomas Kirke Adams ◊ David Howard Allred ◊ Maryann Mooney Beck Kimberly Keefer Boone ◊ Donna Eich Brooks Faye Granthum Brooks Kelly McCollum Crosby Meloney Wyatt Daniels Jennifer Kendrick Donaldson Michelle Montgomery Goebel William Milton Morris Clarence Crenshaw Pritchett IV Eric K. Ross ◊ Brett Allen Steele William Jefferson Stevenson Gary Edward Sullivan Kelly Reinelle Bryan Sullivan Sean Ray Warren Julie Bolton Williams 1993 Robert Keith Alden Charles Jason Anderson Matthew Alexander Boone ◊ John Reese Hamn Anita Talley Kelley Melissa Beth Kendrick Jenifer M. Lee David Elgin Little Lester Mack Jr. J. Clarke Oldham Angela Morris Olliff Courtney Coker Patton Sarah Manikas Rech Andrea Irby Screws April McCarty Shores Kathleen McAllister Sternenberg John Kenneth Story Lorraine Elizabeth Stuedeman Patsy K. Vandergrift Belinda Nichols Wilson William Anton Woerner II 1994 Jason Thomas Banks ◊ Jerry Edgar Clark Jr. Gilbert Reed Collar Jr. William Ira Davis Laura Hinds Duncan ◊ Linda Lee Garrett ◊ James Cliff Huckabee Paul Johnson Bryant Excell Kingry Leslie Tucker Little Mary Kathleen McGuffey ◊ K. Helen Henderson Plath Brian Lee Smith Christina Brennan Soukhamneut Roxanne St. Martin ◊ Joseph John Thomason ◊ 1995 Heather Whitfield Barry Katrina Keefer Belt ◊ Janet Malinda Chambless ◊ Lisa Ellison Hamn Michelle Olson Johnson Gerald Wayne Knupp II ◊ Brian Daniel Mann Tammie Sparks Olivet Carmen Christa Boone Seal Lauren McDowell Sharpe ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) AOPi sisterhood members showed their love to alumna and long-time chapter adviser Glenda Atwell Allred ’91 as she was honored with the 2013 Alumni Loyalty Award in September. Pictured L–R: Mary Gasson ’14, Kristen Curtis ’16, Shirin Torabinejad ’15, Glenda Atwell Allred ’91, Elizabeth Thrower ’14, Taylor Claire Bean ’14, Laura Marie Tyree Brelsford ’05, and Cheyenne Young ’14. 1996 Jason Randell Adams Shawn Macon Adams Patrick Beck James E. Bedgood Nanci Smith Berch Garrett Hixon Chase John Wayne Engbretson James Fletcher Growdon Molly Cau Growdon Amy Woodard Klugh Kerrin Hayes Ramachandran Wendy Decamp Shireman Sara Yates Wiley L–R: David Allred ’92, Glenda Atwell Allred ’91, Wanda Howard ’81, and Mary K. McGuffey ’94 cheered on the Lady Hawks basketball team during their first-ever appearance in the second round of the NCAA-III national tournament. 1997 Jodi F. Adamson ◊ Luke Blanchard Barwick Judkins D. Blount Jason Robert Eubanks David L. Johnston ◊ Khanna Johnston ◊ Kathy Regina Paschal Dawn Arant Terrell 1998 Roderick Mark Alexander Jr. John Kenneth Berch Kristopher Michael Burdette Dewey Jackson Conville Sudie Laney Hector Emily Bowers Jackson James Wesley Kelly ◊ Michael Scott Kinne Jennifer Biggy Schmidt Ryan Ashby Shores Gayle Shorter Stephanie Clements Thompson Michael Warren 57 { 15% of those who graduated in the 1990s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 14% during 2011–12. 1999 Marian Kimberly Cook Bullard Kenneth Thomson Chastain Susan Kaye Adams Cooper Laura Knight Engbretson Anne Bartolucci Graham Jason Stuart Graham Jonathan Albert Hand Michael Bryan Matthews ◊ Heather Hampton Slagle Eric McKenzie Stuart Wendi June Watt 2000 Melissa Ann Beck Hye Jeong Yoo Beckett ◊ Shaun Wesley Carroll Ragan Brackin Chastain Christian Cvitanovich Belinda Goris Duett Lauren Elizabeth Dyas Adrienne Strickland Gaines Shannon Morgan Herald Suzanne Jones Higgs Rona Mock Hutchison Samantha Clements Kelly ◊ Lydia Churchill Kerr LaFayette Thomas Lanier Casey Malone Maugh Melissa Burkett McKie Amy Anne Patterson Charlene H. Schieferstein Carolyn Rebecca Simmons Rian Morgan Turner Marjorie Smith Walters Regina Culp Witt 2001 David William Abbott Katherine Hancock Abbott Carrie Davis Baker Courtney Cook Blake James Otto Joseph Calder Ryan Michael Close Adrienne Nelson Combs Jayme Mengel Creamer Shanna Spurlin Culpepper Daniel Johnson Dean Leann Bowdoin Edwards Melissa Cascone Enfinger Sarah Ann Mowbray Fulcher ◊ Courtney Pierce Gattis Ann Steiner Hamilton Gregory Trina Aytona Hille Leslie Henry Hines Chad Leland Hobbs Marquell J. Johnson Kimberly Keith Jones Stacey Lynn Jones Eric Allen Kidwell Carrie Elizabeth McDonough ◊ Anne Scuffham Nelson Daniel Patton Ogle ◊ Bonnie Anne Boggan Peavy Tammy Grubbs Rauch Jacqueline Robinson Turner Angela Spano Underwood * An asterisk indicates those now deceased 58 2002 Michelle Lyons Adams Rosalyn Glover Alford Marguerite McClure Averett Nicholas Newton Baggett Mary Claunch Davis Curtis Forbus Matthew Morris Hall William Kennerd Herald Michael Todd Kelser Amy Crew Netherland Dana Drawbaugh Raybon Amber Louise Renauld Emily Slaughter Schuttenberg Hollie Elisabeth Worley La’Pearl Johnson Wright 2003 Thomas Joseph Brecciaroli Lane Edward Davis Tonya Blankenship Forbus Ashley Dubuque Gorum Ashley Dobbs Hubbard Joseph Lister Hubbard Charlotte Beth Cooper Millard Lenora Bellee Jones Pierce Laura Andrea Sanders Hollen Hartzog Smith Emily Beth Turner Heather Hall Wells 2004 Jessie Clare Burris Elizabeth Frank Cichostepski Margaret Leigh Enfinger Lindsay Brooke Shehee Fretts Alton Douglas Gorum Jr. Jarret Allen Layson James Weinman Lewey Lauren Carr Lewey Brittany Dubose Matthews ◊ Lawrence U. McLemore Christy Smithart Nelson James Nathan Robinson Amanda Whitehead Senn Richard Henry Sforzini Christina Frances Vranich Tanasha Terrell Womack Krista Leachman Womble 2005 Jason Bobo Laura Marie Tyree Brelsford David Hill Laura Paddock Ingram Leah Claire Nesbitt Kottyan Mindy Bevan La Branche ◊ Leanne Mallory Elizabeth Glaven Munoz Michael E. Pierce Mary Ida Pridgen Brandy Smith Robin Steele Thornhill 2006 Robbie Brandon Addison Victoria Russo Addison Kristen McDonald Baumgartner Jennifer Lynn Wren Miller Clanton June Alicia Clora Jennifer Lynn Cornelius Coleman Kidd Cosgrove ◊ Elizabeth Ann McLain Grimes Lauren Hudson Hatcher Emily Dueitt Kincaid Robert Wesley La Branche ◊ Lindy J. Lunkenheimer Anna Katherine Mallini Jennifer Lynn Zeigler Medley Richard Craig Miller Jr. Julie Denise Nightengale Michael Curtis Perry Abigail G. Pridgeon John Taylor Thornhill Justin Wade Whatley ◊ 2007 Emma Evelyn Butler Christopher William Clark Mark McDuffee Colson Emily Webster Cosgrove ◊ Angela Marie Bryant Dainas Brandon Ross Dainas Leah Cuthriell Dawkins James Bradley Ellis Taber Mack Ellis Tyler Maxwell Fletcher Kyle Landon Futral John Phillip Gaines Robert Walker Garrett ◊ Jacob Miller Godwin Suzanne Golson Amber Joy Greenwood Joshua Matthew Harris Patricia Charlene Irwin Johnson Matthew Phillip Kelser Samantha Linae Lewis Gordon Lee Lively Jamie Edwards McCormack Hodge Patterson IV Christopher Wade Phillips Laura Shannon Cheney Phillips Samuel Schjott Thomas Jacob Seales John Blake Toole 2008 Anthony Arnold Jr. Carrie Edwards Carboni Mark Anthony Carboni Brittany Gaydosh Cotant Jeremy Dwain Driver Shuandra Nicole Duff Christopher Jason Easterly Carrie Barber Groce Clifford L. Groce Joshua Keith Hudson Paige Adair Huff Cecil Matthew Johnson Michael Lee Lackey Patti Murphy Lee Matthew James Mahanic Timothy James McCormack Brandy Nicole Milstead { Brent Daniel Nichols Joanna Bonds Nichols Chasi Fowler Skinner Broderick Louis Smith Brien Hayes Sullivan Matthew Allen Thompson Charles Uriah Walters Gillian Lisenby Walters Nicole Lee Weldon Bryan Wells 2009 Jamie Ashley Brazell Ashley Brook Burkett Casey Marie Chrietzberg Luther Charles Daniels III Emily Hand Driver Margaret Mary Daniell Easterly Susan Laura Frank Caleb Allen Hartin Derrick Terrell Hurt Adam Johnson Cotant Desmond Lionel Knight Chelsey Hodge Koppersmith Vanessa Schmidt Lackey Olivia Farrell Levering Jennifer Nicole Moody Gary Dwayne Nelson Jr. Scott Nello Nichols Jeffrey Roe Reamer Jessica Reeves Reamer Glenn Andrews Rudolph Granger Barnes Shook Mary Louise Thrower Victor Dewayne Wyatt II Kathryn Elyse Yates 2010 Alex Stephen Baronich Jeffrey Mark Barrera Vinson Joel Bradley ◊ Kayla Elizabeth Bratcher Zachary Taylor Brothers Matthew Thomas Browning Adam Knapp Brummett Patrick Obed Carnathan Benjamin Michael Cecil Lee Hall Copeland Jr. George Shane Corley Mavis LeighAnn Floyd DiCesaris Timothy Kent Dilts Jakob Zachary Dwyer Kyle Jordan Eller ◊ Sarah Kathleen Francis Kelly Lynn Frazier Michael Kristopher Glasgow Christian Harmon Chad Ryan Hatfield James Scott Holloway Anton Jamaal Jackson Christopher Knight Nathan Koppersmith Andrew Stephen Kosan Steven Brock Laye Benjamin Green Marsella Rebecca Burdon Masic ◊ 21% of those who graduated in the 2000s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 18% during 2011–12. ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Mark Allen McLemore James Heath Miller Ryan Michael Murray Allison Keck Nichols Alana Kristin Norris Jenna Alise Parish Michael Ryan Payson Riley Elaine Prescott Justin Blake Ridgeway Richard Wilson Riley Joshua Aaron Robertson Christopher York Rogers Caleb William Schaefer William David Seals ◊ Christy Jones Sloan Jackie Edwards Smith Meagan Jackson Travis Jeremy Rhea White 2011 Ashleigh Karis Anderson Doris Annette Arrington Teera Denise Baine Lyndsey Weber Baxley Joshua Glenn Bennefield Meghan Emily Bridges Samuel Grey Brown { Alyssa Kate Eason Hugh Raymond Evans IV William Brian Francis Johnny Kaleb Futral Bryant Lee Hall Joseph Donald Jean Jeffery Shawn Jenkins Kimberly Suzanne Jenkins Sarah Beth Jernigan Garrison Robert Johnson Kirktavious Johnson Michael Raymond Kilpatrick Britni Northington King Joshua Knuth Colby Pate Leonard Stephanie Machael Maguire Kristy Lynn McLendon Suzanne Michelle Mock Erin Elaine Ofe Jordan Tyler Osborne Taylor Leigh Paradowski Aleah Brianne Payne McDowell Davis Pinckard Allyn Catherine Powell Scott Matthew Provow John Hobson Rice Jonathan Ashton Rodriguez 31% of those who graduated in the 2010s made gifts to Huntingdon during 2012–13, up from 20% during 2011–12. Kayla Erin Burkette Ashley Rowe Campbell Courtney Bunce Carroll Lynley Godwin Corley Gale Croft ◊ Kristine Elizabeth Fontaine Andrew Tarvin Harrell Christopher Ross Huckle Jacob Logan King John Paul Kircher Woods Bradshaw Lisenby Chad Alan Lovelady Angela Bradley Marsella Domonique Marie Martin Katy Jo Farrill McDaniel Kristin Faye McDaniel Andrew Parker Patterson Abigail Grace Chandler Payson Tyler Christian Reeves Jeremy Kenneth Reid Clare Aileen Shannon Jessica Ruth Sharker John Lloyd Sloan Christine Ilene Spivey Laura Ashton Salter Mildred Angeline Smith Eric Richard Stroud Andrew Jonathan Swift Alexander Mitchell Taylor Virginia Elizabeth Tyson Christian Elizabeth Vick Allison Faith Vuyovich Ashlee Denese Walters Katilyn Massey Scott Nicholas Troy Sheppard Jess Stevens Skaggs Anne Preston Speed Joshua Keith Thomas Austin Glenn White Kayra Michelle White Austin Douglas Worley Robert Duane Zarr III 2014 Heather Kelly Allen William Blake Bosch David Rodes Bowers Jhavonn Brown Garrett Shannon Bullock Rebecca Paige Chavers Hillary Paige Crumbley William Fields Davis Wykein Rondell Dean Robert Thomas Eichhorn Alicia Renee Frazier Mary Katherine Garrigan Mary Gasson Michelle Marays Gonzalez Alan Grant Hayes Rebecca Elizabeth Hunter Han Saem Hur Bailee Christine Ikner Brendan Joshua Johnson Erika Justiniano Lauren Rada Lambert Keegan Lambeth Ian Hunter Layne Cameron Bentley Lewis Megan Rhea Lewis Victoria Alexandra Luchner Alyssa Miche McCurry Gabrielle Necole McKinney Brooke Meadows Erika L. Mebius Cullen Benjamin Milner Philip Eugene Neal Hunter Michael Pattison Kassandra Lynn Pattison Hayden Riley Pugh Amber Jadelyn Reynolds Justin Tyler Robinson Meredith Bailey Scott Trey Rudolph Smith Ryne Tyme Taylor Kayce Estes Thomas Prentice DeVaughn Thomas Elizabeth Riddle Thrower Zachary Allen Turner Katherine Deborah Wachob Arlyn Leigh Williams Cheyenne Creede Young 2012 Kendra Elaine Bolden Matthew Alan Brink Meredith Claire Brogden Kati Christine Bryant Michael Ray Campbell Amanda Houston Cecil Joseph Harland Corley Megan Cox Corley Chadwick Aulden Cotant ◊ Caitlyn Elizabeth DeMouy Jessica Michelle Dickson 2013 Matthew Parker Adams Jack Oakley Allen Macon Bradley Armistead Stephen Michael Barebo Chad Grady Baxley Jacob Edward Bechert Christopher Blight Ashley Anne Bonner Craig Alan Brown Grant Lester Brown Robert Mitchell Clemmons Berrell Lance Cobb Seth Calvin Currie Dexter Nathanael Dean Jeremy Tyler Hall Louis G. Hines ◊ Thomas Martin Hughes Katherine Ashton Jones Taylor Louise King Sherry Leigh Lacey Giles R. Langford Amanda Paige Lathem Brianna McClure Lisenby Cody Pearcy Quintarious Marquez Perdue John Francis Phillips * An asterisk indicates those now deceased ◊ A diamond indicates membership in the Huntingdon Society Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 2015 Stephen Marks Abernathy Robert Austin Armstrong Nicole Bachant Spencer VanDement Brown Hillary Taylor Calloway Tyler Matthew Chaffee India Chaney Eric Lee Clark Mary Kathryn Dismuke Joshua Oliver Dunn Jagger Todd Eastman Robert Alston Farquhar James Thomas Gardiner Kaela Tierra Grady Katy Rebekah Hall Jackson Craig Horn Diane Elizabeth Humphreys Tori Jackson Jacob David Kistel Storm McWhorter Ethan George Miller Jayde Lauren Rasband Brandon Tyler Sewell Wesley Smithart Harden Spencer Shirin Nell Torabinejad Micaela Ivanna White Ryan Anthony Williams Amanda Wineman 2016 Andy Ackerman Anna C. Boyd Barbi Brewer William Jacob Brooks Walton Thomas Cobb Jordan Keith Criswell Jackson Brett Cruce Kristen R. Curtis Davis L. Dalton Anna M. DeMedicis Halleigh DiNicholas Skye R. Esry Behrang Kian Foroughian Alicia Nicole Gauker Christopher Joshua Glennon Nicholas Gaetano Howell Georgianna Elaine Hunt John Riley Manasco Phillip Seth McClendon Hayden Maddox McDonald Ian Campbell Meadows Jonathan Perry Moore Hallie Grace Muncher Jennifer Lee Price Anna Corinne Raley Oliver Gabriel Saywah Jeremiah C. Stone Brennan Dean Vanmeter Rhett Joseph Williams Jeremy Stephen Wolfe Student Alumni Association Formed The Huntingdon Student Alumni Association was formed in 2012 by a group of students who wanted to demonstrate their loyalty to Huntingdon and to assist the Office of College and Alumni Relations by making gifts of $10 or more to the Huntingdon Fund. These students’ names are included among the classes of 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016. We celebrate these students for their foresight; for their understanding that each private college’s strength is built by the support of private gifts; and for their enthusiastic support. 59 Memorials Errol Allan Herbert Patterson ’71 Emily Leischuck Anthony and Wendy Leigh Lawrence G. Bailey Jeanne Bailey Gamble ’65 James L. Loeb Eve Loeb Elinor Warr Roberts ’57 Margaret H. Bailey Jeanne Bailey Gamble ’65 Robert Barmettler Herbert Patterson ’71 Walter and Mary Bricker Linda Lee Garrett ’94 Albert and Mary Lynn Brooks Michael T. Tuley Margaret Thorington McCall The Pandora Club Ruby G. McCombs Irene McCombs ’61 Inell Rentz McGee ’63 Earl Perry Anthony Carlisle ’76 Renee Byrd Carlisle ’76 James W. Elliott Jr. Myrtle L. Elliott Steven J. Elliott Frances Moody ’43 Shapard D. Ashley Margaret Craddock Becky Sellers Doe ’46 Rosalind W. Markstein Molly Dunn Martin ’73 Mary Anna McClendon Robert A. Renfroe Elizabeth N. Robison James L. Rouse Robert D. Segall Jan K. Weil Laurie Jean Weil Tommy Wool Martha Ann Cranford Christopher ’48 R.M. Christopher William Albert Myrick David G. Myrick ’67 Patricia Clark Ann Mays Davis ’57 Dot Neuhauser Betty Finlay Brislin ’49 Peggy Seay Compton ’49 Renis Jones Mary Pauline Hoffman Ogilvie ’41 Opal Lovett Collier ’72 Mary-Faire Congdon ’59 Blair C. Johnson Mary Pauline Hoffman Ogilvie ’41 and Dr. Walter Ogilvie Henry Goldstein and Mary Ogilvie-Goldstein Mary Ellen Bullard Eileene D. Griffith Stella Wicker Burleson James L. Burleson Sr. Emmie Pitts Cardwell Emmie Cardwell Bolden ’44 Lauda Eleanor Leak Corwin The Pandora Club Roy Andrews Cox ’56 Mary O’Brien Cox ’57 Bishop and Mrs. Paul Duffey ’42 Ruby Goodman Frank Litchfield III Paul Andrews Duffey Minna Hayes Appleby ’56 Judith Wilson Nunn ’59 Frank Parquette William “Butch” Earnest ’67 David G. Myrick ’67 Rhoda Ellison Virginia Cooper Downes ’55 Thomas Gilkeson Betty Finlay Brislin ’49 Arlyne Hampton Betty Finlay Brislin ’49 Joyce Gaston Heslip Herbert Patterson ’71 Bert and Carolee Hussey Bettie Hussey ’58 Marianne Hussey Kathleen Johnson ’31 Mary Kathleen McGuffey ’94 Catherine Cannon Jones ’50 William C. Jones Noble Seay Jones ’49 Renis Jones Martha Davis Keene ’47 The Estate of Martha D. Keene 60 Mary Collier Oglesby ’30 Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson ’60 William Pickard Paul Wesley Pickard Tommy Ragsdale ’60 Albany Suburban Woman’s Club Thomas L. Baker Wink Conner James W. Malone ’61 Jo Elliott Jones Anthony and Wendy Leigh David G. Myrick ’67 Katherine L. Perkins R. John Ragsdale Kay S. Wylie Claude M. and Emily T. Reaves Mr. and *Mrs. Gerald Leischuck E.D. Ridgeway Mrs. E.D. Ridgeway Edwin Hebson Roberts Joan Johnston Diversi ’57 Glenda Hendrix Fitzgerald ’57 Eva Atkinson Fountain ’57 Liz Allen Garrard ’57 Gatra Reid Mallard ’57 Sue Cross Savage ’57 Martha T. Shreve Dorothy Rainer Sellars ’48 Bowdy J. ’83 and Nancy Keith Brown ’83 William L. Brunson Jr. Jack E. Brunson Kay Gomillion Elam ’76 Joe R. Evans Gerrie F. Hansford Tim Loggins Robert N. Moseley Suellen Ofe Senior Class of Dorothy Rainer Sellars School of Dance Kay Cowen Stutes ’87 Cynthia H. Taylor Laurie Jean Weil Margaret Hicks Shadoin Patricia Shadoin Williamson ’67 Celeste Carleton Smith ’79 Debra A. Freisleben ’79 Katherine Samford Smith ’21 The Julia and Albert Smith Foundation The Rev. Lamar Spencer ’42 A. Whitelaw Bailey Jr. Marcia Y. Baumhauer Myrtice A. Carr The Crusaders Sunday School Class of First United Methodist Church Victor M. Davis Jeffrey A. Dean First United Methodist Church-Pascagoula, Miss. James H. Heidelberg Elam P. Holley Jr. Edgar W. Hull Kidney Disease and Hypertension Centers P.A. Paul Hal Moore Dr. John S. Pittman Singing River Hospital Auxiliary David L. Spencer Elizabeth K. Spencer Karl Roy Steinberger Edgar C. Torbert Freeman Ferrell Walton Virginia C. Williams Julius A. Willis Jr. Fitzgerald Steele Lucinda Samford Cannon Virginia Hicks Sutter Patricia Shadoin Williamson ’67 Livia A. Tarrants ’70 Janice McLain James ’69 Richard A. James ’67 Leeta Higgins Thomas ’60 Elizabeth Oglesby Johnson ’60 The Rev. James Tiller Betty Finlay Brislin ’49 Noah Earle Gilbreath Tolbert ’51 Frances Gustavia Daily McPherson ’51 Olive Tuley Michael T. Tuley Karen Christian Turner ’77 Faye Teal Meadows ’78 Jacob Walker Myrtice A. Carr Jean Kaufman Weil Betty Thurman McMahon ’64 Frances Galloway Moody ’43 Kathryn Tucker Windham ’39 Jule Wilson Perry ’39 Ann Strickland White ’44 Philip J. Johnson ’69 Carrie Williams ’43 James L. Williams Nancy Williams ’40 James L. Williams Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Tributes John Albritton and Ann McLean Albritton ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arrington III Joanne Cly Mary Lynn Brooks Allison Adams Hutcherson ’74 Jane Howell Allen ’75 Jerry Murl Smith ’66 Cynthia Gebhardt White ’68 David and Sandy Cobb Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 Reese H. McKinney Jr. ’72 Stephanie W. Jones John M. Wise Sr. Brenda Bethea Stegall Karl Stegall Lydia Saez Buntin Crow ’74 Jane Howell Allen ’75 Anthony and Wendy Leigh Tim and Bobbie Lou Leigh Sara Stembridge Perry ’54 Horace Howard Sullivan Celia Dell Smith Rudolph ’80 Jim Drummond Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 Carol F. Loeb ’90 Jamie L. Loeb Jr. Raine Bedsole Ann Bedsole Jane C. Dunlap Lucy Cunningham Bond Lady Portis Cunningham John H. Martin III Ann Bedsole Lucinda Bollinger and Chip Chappelle Mary Loyd Bush Martha and Tranum Fitzpatrick Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 Reese H. McKinney Jr. ’72 Lucy “Tay” Cunningham Bond Lady Portis Cunningham Jane C. Dunlap Liz Allen Garrard ’57 RJay Murray Jane Allen ’75 Barbara Whatley Christenberry ’78 David ’92 and Glenda Allred ’91 Glen Atwell Ethel Heinecke Bauer ’60 Bruce Bauer Virginia McLean ’45 Ethel Ellis Gibson ’49 Dorothy McLean Perry ’42 Herbert Patterson ’71 Karen Dee Koza ’71 Hugh H. Phillips Anthony and Wendy Leigh Sara Dickert Bowden ’51 Laura Bowden Carpenter ’77 Dennis Herrick Anthony and Wendy Leigh Suellen Ofe Mary Lynn Brooks Michael T. Tuley The Huntingdon Honeys RJay Murray G. Mathew ’88 and Evelyn Hutzler Pope ’90 David Howard Allred ’92 Glenda Atwell Allred ’91 John Bullard Eileene D. Griffith Mrs. Damaris Howell Jane Howell Allen ’75 Mary M. Riser Ann Bedsole The Class of 2013 Anthony and Wendy Leigh Suellen Ofe Georgianne Morgan Hughes ’74 Jane Howell Allen ’75 Elinor Warr Roberts ’57 RJay Murray Sheila Gann Thomas ’74 Jane Howell Allen ’75 Michael, Teri, and Claire Tuley Mary Lynn Brooks Laurie Weil Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 Reese H. McKinney Jr. ’72 J. Cameron West First United Methodist Church Montgomery John R. Williams Anthony and Wendy Leigh Christy Laine Smithart Nelson ’04 Suellen Ofe Jeremy S. Wolfe ’16 Alabama Association of Independent Colleges and Universities Sigma Phi Epsilon brothers congratulated alumnus and chapter adviser David Allred ’92 as he received the 2013 Alumni Loyalty Award in September. Pictured, L–R: Riley Manasco ’16, Justin Nolen ’16, Tyler Chaffee ’15, David Allred ’92, Nick Howell ’16, Jeremy Wolfe ’16, Jake Kistel ’15, Rhett Williams ’16, and Mat Pope ’88. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) 61 In Memoriam • Ruth McFaden Nettles ’30, 1.7.12, Mobile, Ala. • Agnes Wren Justice ’32, 2.26.13, Charlottesville, Va. • Isaac E. Cohen ’36, one of the first men to attend Huntingdon, 1.31.13, Montgomery • Mary Louise Coker Brown ’37, 12.20.11, Talladega, Ala. • Sarah Flewellen Carter ’37, 7.24.12, Auburn, Ala. • Margaret Carter Conover ’37, 3.12.13, Gulf Breeze, Fla. • Lora Oglesby Quinn ’37, 6.27.13, Prattville, Ala. • Wynene Colquett ’38, 2.13.13, Opp, Ala. • Louise Liversage Sandoz ’38, 12.13.11, Mobile, Ala. • Lorraine Roberts Corley ’40, 8.23.13, Troy, Ala. • Eugenia Thompson Magoon ’40, 6.14.13, Sarasota, Fla. • Lynda Greer Schneppershoff ’40, 9.20.13, Los Angeles, Calif. We extend our condolences to her sister, Nancy Greer Robinson ’44. • Lucile Weaver Baldwin ’41, 11.19.12, Lake City, Fla. • Marie Cook ’42, 12.28.12, Crestview, Fla. • Mary Walker Montgomery ’42, 2.8.13, Memphis, Tenn. She was preceded in death by her sister, Jeanne Walker Craddock ’41. • Dorothy R. Grossman ’43, 1.2.13, Nashville, Tenn. • Murriel Youngblood Johnson ’43, 2.28.13, Ocala, Fla. • Claire Wall Seith ’43, 8.16.13, Pensacola, Fla. • Martha Holley Norton ’44, 7.17.13, Burlington, N.C. • Lillian Wilcox Spight ’44, 1.2.13, Nashville, Tenn. Lillian was the 1944 May Queen. • Nell Calhoun Edwards ’45, 8.9.13, Selma, Ala. • Emma Russell Helms Green ’45, 1.22.13, Troy, Ala. • Sara Wall Herndon ’45, 5.27.12, Gainesville, Fla. • Elizabeth May Kyle ’45, 12.7.12, Montgomery • Ruth Lambeth Viering ’45, 12.12.12, Columbus, Ohio • Tommie Lee Tennent McCormick ’46, 11.29.12, Gautier, Miss. • Rose Weston Modling ’46, 10.25.13, Sandy Springs, Ga. • Ethelyn Barnett Nelson ’46, 6.15.11, Spotsylvania, Va. • Anne Rutherford Woody ’46, 2.17.13, Webster Groves, Mo. • Kathryn “Kitty” Riddle Brooks ’47, 4.24.13, Gainesville, Ga. • Marguerite Wise Cato ’47, 6.19.13, Nashville, Tenn. • Rose Schafer Johnson ’47, 1.22.13, Redding, Calif. • Daughtry Daniel Macon ’47, 4.22.13, Gainesville, Fla. • Mary Elizabeth Dominick Smith Mason ’47, 8.27.13, Atlanta • Betty Ann Seay Moore ’47, 2.17.13, Montgomery; Betty Ann was the older sister to twins Margaret Seay Compton ’49 and Noble Seay Jones ’49, who preceded her in death and for whom Huntingdon’s Seay Twins Art Gallery is named. • Merriel Hoover Reed ’47, 2.10.13, Winchester, Tenn. • Nancy Mitchell Nilsson ’49, 6.17.12, Huntsville, Ala. • Edith Sumerlin ’49, 4.8.13, Montgomery • Jean K. Dillon ’50, 2.3.13, Montgomery • Howard E. Harris ’50, 11.23.12, Montgomery; Howard was preceded in death by his wife, Martha Reeves Harris ’50. • Jean McGinty Jones ’51, 10.26.13, Columbus, Ga. • Esther Beach Persigehl ’51, 2.6.13, Alexandria, Va. • The Reverend James Ian Walter ’51, 3.6.13, Auburn, Ala. • Jere T. Williams Sr. ’51, 4.24.12, Framingham, Mass. • Martha Rose Herlong Ellis ’53, 10.1.12, Ft. Deposit, Ala. • Barbara Snider Miller ’53, 4.1.13, Birmingham, Ala. • David Printz ’53, 12.9.12, Roswell, Ga. • Elaine Williams Smith ’53, 5.22.13, Tallahassee, Fla. • Phyllis Tate Bryars ’54, 5.31.13, Spanish Fort, Ala. • Carolyn Jones Cook ’54, 12.12.12, Valley, Ala. • Jane Head Cowart ’54, 9.10.12, Evergreen, Ala. • Betty Robertson Gilmore ’54, 10.22.13, Birmingham, Ala. • John C. Hughes Jr. ’54, 5.6.13, Montgomery • Beverlee Ann Hubbart Tague ’56, 7.19.13, Upper Arlington, Ohio • Dr. Frank T. Hyles ’57, 1.14.13, Marianna, Fla.; Frank pastored Altha United Methodist Church and was a faithful supporter of Huntingdon College. • Elaine Warnock Walls ’57, 5.16.12, Mobile, Ala. We extend our condolences to her husband, Joseph C. Walls ’62. • Myrna Taylor Ely ’58, 10.17.12, Mobile, Ala. 62 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Col. Thomas E. Lee ’60, 11.17.12, Vienna, Va. JoAnn Chamberlin Kierce ’60, 8.21.13, Auburn, Ala. Leeta Higgins Thomas ’60, 2.3.13, LaFayett, Ala. Barbara Kay Lee ’61, 6.7.13, Vienna, Va. Barbara was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas E. Lee ’60. William Melton ’61, 9.2.13, Issaquah, Wash. Martha Atkins Shepherd ’61, 11.14.12, North Palm Beach, Fla. Lois Stephens Burton ’63, 5.9.11, Prattville, Ala. Frederick A. Martin ’63, 9.27.12, Tallahassee, Fla. Sandra Ruth Hart ’64, 12.1.12, Palm Bay, Fla. James M. Ledbetter ’65, 10.30.13, Birmingham, Ala. Marie Dorsey Farrior ’66, 12.7.12, Asheville, N.C. Judge Walter Brown Chandler III ’67, 2.27.13, Gulf Shores, Ala. Claiborne Guy Johnson ’68, 1.3.13, Mandeville, La. Charles Niemann ’68, 1.26.13, Milton, Fla. Constance Knott Robbins ’68, 4.2.12, Annandale, Va. James William Smith Jr. ’69, 12.4.12, Birmingham, Ala. Elsie Glover Crum ’70, 2.25.13, Fleming Island, Fla. Windell W. Neal ’73, 1.24.12, Prattville, Ala. Janice Pickett McLane ’75, 12.10.12, Montgomery Sheila Kittrell Hunt ’78, 6.28.12, Wetumpka, Ala. Our condolences are extended to her husband, the Rev. Albert R. Hunt ’77. Sandra Mixson Poundstone ’80, 7.20.13, Pike Road, Ala. Warren Richardson ’80, 3.15.13, Rutledge, Ala. Randy Kerlin ’84, 1.23.13, Ocala, Fla. Kenneth William Maudsley ’92, 6.20.13, Atlanta Brandon Wallace ’02, 1.10.13, Prattville, Ala. (See ClassNotes.) Friends • The Rev. Robert Lambuth Archibald Jr., a former member of the Huntingdon College Board of Trustees and a retired pastor of the North Alabama Conference, passed away June 15, 2013, in Decatur, Ala. We extend our sympathies to his wife, Mary Holland Archibald. • We remember with gratitude the life of Colonel Robert Barmettler, who directed theatre productions and taught English for 18 years at Huntingdon during the 1970s and ’80s. Colonel Barmettler, a retired Army (WWII) and Air Force veteran who earned Bronze and Silver Stars for valor, retired in 1970 as a lieutenant colonel after teaching at Maxwell AFB in Montgomery and began a second career as a teacher of English and drama at Huntingdon and later at Alabama State University. Colonel Barmettler built the Dungeon Theatre in Massey Hall and was a keen supporter of Huntingdon and Montgomery community arts productions until his death, December 16, 2012, at age 88. He was preceded in death by his second wife, with whom he collaborated on writing a number of musical stage plays, retired Huntingdon music professor Dr. Jeanne Shaffer. • Emily Mitchell Reaves Leischuck, a benefactor of the Claude M. and Emily T. Reaves Endowed Scholarship, passed away April 19, 2013, in Auburn, Ala. We extend our deepest sympathy to her husband, Dr. Gerald Leischuck, and give thanks for the lasting impression she made on many lives. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) Huntingdon College Board of Trustees, 2013–14 • Chairman: Mr. David Hudson Jr. ’81 President and Owner; Dixie Pulp & Paper Inc.; Tuscaloosa, Ala. • Mr. Lee Copeland Attorney; Copeland, Franco, Screws, & Gill, PA; Montgomery, Ala. • Vice Chairman: Mr. John N. Albritton Jr. Retired Banker; Montgomery, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. Kenneth A. Dunivant Senior Pastor; Tuscaloosa United Methodist Church; Tuscaloosa, Ala. • Secretary: Ms. Betty T. McMahon ’64 Civic Leader; Birmingham, Ala. • Mr. Robert Howard Adams Vice President; Capital Veneer Works Inc.; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Glenda A. Allred ’91 Alabama Deputy State Treasurer, Office of State Treasurer; Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. James Anderson ’76 Attorney, Jackson Anderson Patty; Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. G. Carlton Barker ’70 President and Chief Executive Officer; ServisFirst Bank; Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. Carl A. Barranco ’64 Chairman Emeritus; Warren Averett, Wilson Price Division; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Katrina Keefer Belt ’95 Chief Financial Officer; Baptist Health; Montgomery, Ala. • Dr. Sanders M. Benkwith Ophthalmologist, Montgomery Eye Physicians; Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. Dave G. Borden Chairman; Aldridge, Borden, & Co., P.C.; Montgomery, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. R. Lawson Bryan Senior Pastor; First United Methodist Church; Montgomery, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. P. Lawrence Bryars Senior Pastor; Shalimar United Methodist Church; Shalimar, Fla. • Mr. John C. Bullard Sr. Trustee Emeritus Retired Chief Executive Officer; Bullard & Williams Inc.; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Leura Garrett Canary ’78 Attorney, Retirement Systems of Alabama; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Lucinda Samford Cannon Real Estate Developer; Cannon Ventures LLC; Opelika, Ala. • The Rev. Sherill Clontz Cheaha District Superintendent, North Alabama District, The United Methodist Church Birmingham, Ala. • Mr. H. David Cobb II President and CEO; MMI Outdoor Inc.; Montgomery, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. Dale R. Cohen Superintendent, Northeast District, North Alabama Conference, The United Methodist Church; Huntsville, Ala. Huntingdon College Magazine (Spring 2014) • The Rev. Michael T. Edmondson Senior Pastor; Madison United Methodist Church; Madison, Ala. • Mrs. Teresa Smith Francis ’80 Care Transitions Coach; So. Ala. Regional Council on Aging; Dothan, Ala. • Mr. Frederick A. Frost ’81 Chief Attorney, ExxonMobil Chemical Co.; Katy, Texas • The Rev. Dr. Edward R. Glaize ’85 Pastor; First United Methodist Church of Brewton; Brewton, Ala. • The Rev. Nancy Hastings Hornsby Civic Leader; Birmingham, Ala. • Ms. Wanda A. Howard ’81 Project Manager; Atlanta, Ga. • Dr. G. Mark Kingry Jr. ’87 Orthodontist; Kingry Orthodontics; Montgomery, Ala. • Bishop Paul Lee Leeland Bishop; Alabama-West Florida Conference of The United Methodist Church; Montgomery, Ala. • Beverly Gordy McKinney ’70 Civic Leader; Montgomery, Ala. • Mrs. Frances Hastings Moore ’46 Retired Lay Leader, The United Methodist Church; Vestavia Hills, Ala. • Mr. David F. Steele Attorney; Monroeville, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. Timothy R. Thompson Senior Pastor; Frazer United Methodist Church; Montgomery, Ala. • Dr. Charles G. Tomberlin ’60 Life Member Radiologist; Opp, Ala. • Mr. Jeff Underwood President, Lakeshore Foundation; Homewood, Ala. • Mr. W. Kendrick Upchurch III Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; W.K. Upchurch Construction Inc.; Montgomery, Ala. • Bishop Debbie Wallace-Padgett Bishop; North Alabama Conference, The United Methodist Church; Birmingham, Ala. • Dr. Laurie Jean Weil Civic Leader and Retired Veterinarian; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Diane S. Wendland ’53 Life Member Civic Leader; Autaugaville, Ala. • The Rev. J. Cameron West President of the College, Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. William B. Wilson ’90 President; Jim Wilson & Associates LLC; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Lois Flowers Youngblood Civic Leader; Birmingham, Ala. • Mr. Herbert Albert Patterson Jr. ’71 Community Volunteer; Birmingham, Ala. • Ms. Alice D. Reynolds Trustee Emerita Retired City Council President; Montgomery, Ala. • Mr. William B. Sellers Partner; Balch & Bingham LLP; Montgomery, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. Claude Shuford ’83 Pastor; Mount Zion AME Zion Church; Montgomery, Ala. • Ms. Elizabeth Couey Smithart ’86 Attorney; Union Springs, Ala. • The Rev. Dr. Lester Spencer Jr. Senior Pastor; Gulf Breeze United Methodist Church; Gulf Breeze, Fla. • Mr. Charles Stakely Attorney, Rushton Stakely Garrett; Montgomery, Ala. • Dr. Eugene E. Stanaland ’60 President; Gene Stanaland Enterprises; Auburn, Ala. To view a list of coming events at Huntingdon, visit www.huntingdon.edu/events. 63 Huntingdon College 1500 East Fairview Avenue Montgomery, AL 36106-2148 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED Visit Huntingdon College on the Web at http://www.huntingdon.edu Information contained in this publication is current as of the date of publication, but is subject to change without notice. Please refer to the Huntingdon College Web site, www.huntingdon. edu, for updates or changes. Huntingdon College is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, and the Associate of Arts. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of Huntingdon College. Huntingdon College does not discriminate on the basis of national or ethnic origin, age, race, color, sex, religious preference, creed, or disability.