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Agents of Change
Provosts Unusual Fundraising Efforts Enable Afghani Students to Seek a Better Homeland & a More International GC
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InsIghts
GEORGETOWN COLLEGE ALUMNI MAGAZINE
COVER STORY
PUBLISHER Jim Allison NEWS EDITOR Jim Durham DESIGNER Laura Hatton 01 CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jim Durham, Jenny Elder, Dr. Rosemary Allen, Laura Owsley, Caitlin Knox, Jim Allison PHOTOS Paul Atkinson, Lauren Meister, Richard Davis, Wesley Folsom FOR COMMENTS, qUESTIONS AND INFORMATION, CONTACT: Office of College Relations & Marketing 400 East College Street Georgetown, KY 40324-1696 insights@georgetowncollege.edu 502.863.8174 Insights is published by the Georgetown College Office of College Relations & Marketing. Copyright Georgetown College, 2012 POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Office of College Relations & Marketing Georgetown College 400 East College Street Georgetown, KY 40324 FAX: 502.868.8887 E-MAIL: alumni@georgetowncollege.edu
Georgetown College admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
PAGES 5-6
Agents of Change
First-year Afghani students Nilofar Haidary and Sabera Daqiq are already making many on campus think with more global responsibility. They hope to leave GC with a great education in four years and return to Afghanistan to effect positive change.
science Boon!
A 2nd HHMI grant creates meaningful research opportunities for GC students.
sense of Community
Hambrick Village roomies first bonded over a memorable Knight Hall experience.
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and full of vision and hope for how this institution could move forward in preparing students for the frontier. The trustees challenged me to protect the academic freedom of this institution, while finding ways to strengthen the traditional method of learning at Georgetown: small classrooms, overhead projectors, landline connections, and textbooks purchased in the bookstore. Texting, social media, wireless Internet, and even cell phones were not a part of our vocabulary at that time. Now, two decades later, we look to a future where technology will continue its rapid evolution, and in turn, advance the methods of learning we currently apply. For leaders in higher education, it is a very challenging, yet exciting time period. I have great hope for the future of this fine college: We have a remarkable story with many chapters. Telling this story would include conversations about Rhodes and Fulbright scholars, the Oxford program, student accomplishments, decades of athletic success, nationallyrecognized faculty who have always built personal relationships with students, new dorms, a focus on civic and community engagementand many more. We have a strong and dedicated board of trustees. They are well aware of our financial and residential housing challenges and are working to create strategies for the future. They have sought expert outside advice, are prepared to listen internally to ideas, and then will make the decisions they feel necessary to move forward. These trustees are men and women who are culturally and ethnically diverse. They are ministers, educators, financial experts, and entrepreneurs. They are alumni and parents of alumni, and are all Christians. Earl Goode, class of 62, is their chairman. His day job is to serve as the chief of staff for the governor of Indiana, and prior to that, he was the CEO of GTE Informational Services. The vice chair is Bill Houston, CEO of Houston Consulting and the father of two GC alumni. His company advises small businesses in determining strategies for success. Our trustees are fiscally responsible for Georgetown College and will guide the institution forward.
We are restructuring our enrollment recruiting efforts and have already experienced early success. Michelle Lynch is our new V.P. for Enrollment. She brings experience and excitement to our recruiting efforts. What we need from our alumni and friends is a loud and enthusiastic voice about the value of this place. We all need to be positive ambassadors and helpers in the recruitment of a new generation of Georgetown College alumni. Because of the many challenges ahead and the need for new energy and vision, I have recently announced my retirement: A college presidents job is never ending, seven days a week. I do have high energy, but 21 years at this pace is long enough. The realization that most of our students were born after I became President has gotten my attention. We now have six grandchildren who are six years of age and younger. The closest ones live over seven hours away. Jan and I need and want to be with them more. We feel now is the time. As the college begins a new chapter, we will do the same. We will continue to invest our lives in young people as we seek Gods guidance in the best way to serve. One of the most important strategies right now for Georgetown College is to focus attention on how great this institution is, the pride we feel as Tigers, and how blessed we are to live, learn and believe in this place. A Presidential Search Committee has been appointed by Chairman Goode. I urge you to pray for Gods leadership in the committees work. I will be president until June 30, 2013. And until that day, I will work as hard as I have in the past. I love Georgetown College and am grateful to have served here for the past 21 years. GO TIGERs! Sincerely,
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Biology majors Ashley Fox and Dennis Propp with Dr. Tim Griffith, who teaches the Science Careers Seminar (part of the GCPALS program funded by HHMI) and helps our students in the Seminar find summer research internships.
according to that theme. Interested in Pediatric Oncology for some time, Ashley is now considering other aspects of medicine. She said, I have recently been thinking about plastic surgery so that I can help children with cleft lips and burn victims. Well known for her extracurricular activities Dance Marathon (PR chair), the Student Abolitionist Movement (treasurer) and Habitat for Humanity (president), this Parks Scholar is in the Honors Program and tutors in several subjects. She always makes time to volunteer off campus with some career-related organization; this semester shes interning with Mission Frankfort Clinic in the state capital. A Chemistry and Psychology double minor, shell study the latter this spring at GCs Oxford University partner, Regents Park College.
COVER STORY
Nilofar Haidary and Sabera Daqiq
Agents of Change
Afghani Students Seek A Better Homeland & More International GC
I knew from the moment I read the application essays by Sabera and Nilofar that I had to do whatever I could to help them realize their dream of study in America. The first lines of Saberas essay were haunting: I am Sabera Daqiq Daqiq in Dari means very precise and to the point. Yes. This is how life has taught me to be..As an Afghan girl whose lifes merciless, unfavorable and unusual circumstances have gone through several ups and downs, atrocities and miseries, insults and deprivations, violations and discriminations, I am what my name says. Her story of determination is inspiringso much accomplished, and shes only 17. I was equally struck by Nilofars essay: I am confident that my dedication and passion toward studying and working for womHow You en will lead me to reach my destination.Throughout Can Help my life, I have always known that helping others and A Message from being an effective person to others would be an imporRosemary Allen tant part of my career. My parents raised me with the belief that we must constantly struggle to touch the lives of the people around us, and I believe it with my full heart. Both of these women are committed to making life better in a country that is at a tipping point. Even before the tragic news of 14-year-old Malala Yousufzais shooting by the Taliban in Pakistan, Sabera and Nilofar had the bravery to risk their lives to pursue an ideal. How could I fail to support that courage? I have pledged to raise $20,000 per year to help offset the colleges costs in providing these extraordinary women with an education. Fundraising is a task outside my comfort zoneIm an academicbut I could not pass up this opportunity to make a difference in their lives. They have a missionand my mission is to make their mission possible. Thanks to gifts from faculty, alumni, and the Lillian Goldman Trust, we are partway to this years goal, but more help is needed. If you would like to help, please go to the Georgetown College website and make a gift directed to the Afghani Student Fund.
Nilofar Haidary and Sabera Daqiq are women with a mission - a mission of change for Afghanistan. Both grew up in war-torn Afghanistan, fearful for their lives. Both spent time in refugee camps. But both also came from families that value and support education, and their mission is to expand the access to education in Afghanistan, particularly for women. The two women learned about us through our partner, the Foundation for Afghanistan. Georgetown College has supported this mission by promising scholarship support for all four years of their college education. Theyve earned this support through a lifetime of hard work and dedication. Sabera was selling plastic bags in a refugee camp when she was four years old and has worked for most of her 17 years to support herself and help her family. Nilofar has worked to support herself and her family while seeking educational opportunity, including a year at the American University of Central Asia.
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Both ardent supporters of rights and protection for women, Sabera and Nilofar acknowledge We have always been different in a society that has a tradition of limited expectations for women. The difference was increased when both spent a year of high school in America on scholarship. Sabera attended school in Frederick, Maryland (where she won a National History Day competition), and Nilofar studied in Euless, Texas (and raised money for the homeless as part of a project where she gave 100 hours of community service). Upon their return to their home town of Kabul in Afghanistan, both found ways to use their education and fresh perspectives to serve their country. Nilofar became an activist in the organization Young Women for Change and took a stand in a public protest of the mistreatment of women. Her words in defense of the rights of women were quoted in press publications around the world. Sabera started an Englishlanguage library in Kabul, and a restaurant for women only (who can feel uncomfortable dining alone in public), and a website where Afghani women can sell handicrafts. These two may be the same age as the typical American high school graduate, but they have already seen and done more than most American teens can imagine. And yet, in spite of everything, they are still simply young women heading off to college, learning time management skills and how to be prepared for the next test. The biggest adjustment for both young women (ages 17 and 18) is that they are so far from their families. Nilofar talks of the more than 200 people in her extended family who will come together to support each other, part of a family that is more like a single unit than a collection of individuals. Everyone helps, and no one expects thanks, said Sabera; It is like we are all one person. You dont thank your hand for picking up a glass. Sabera credits much of her dedication to education to the support of her family. Her father used to go without medicines in the refugee camp in order to purchase the oil that fueled the lamp that allowed her to continue her studies. Nilofars family risked the disapproval of their community to send their daughter to America for an education. American life is like a train, said Saberayou can plan to get on at the first stop, proceed peacefully to your destination, and take the trip for granted. In Afghanistan, life ON THE COVER: Dr. Rosemary Allen, Provost of the College, left, with Sabera Daqiq and Nilofar Haidary. Nilofar, right, quickly got involved by writing for The Georgetonian, while Sabera has been elected to student government and serves as a senator. Both are also active in United Nations of Georgetown.
Photos by Lauren Meister 13
AfghAnistAn
is a roller coaster. We dont know what comes next. The uncertainties can be terrifyingbut there is hope for a more stable future. Daily life has changed in Kabul over the last several years, as refugees have returned home and brought with them their experiences from abroad. The only thing that can make you stronger is your experiences, said Sabera. Experience teaches you to understand the hearts and cultures of other people. Both Sabera and Nilofar note that opportunities for women have increased in KabulGirls can go to work and to school. Returning refugees have brought a range of experiences and perspectives, and the culture in the city is more diverse. If the changes we have witnessed continue for 20 more years, it will be a very different country, said Sabera. Both agreed that the biggest obstacle to progress is the lack of access to educationnot only for women, but for youth in general. A limited number of university slots are available, and 30,000 applicants a year are turned away30,000 losing their hope every year because they miss educational opportunity. The danger, Sabera suggests, is that these uneducated young people are more susceptible to the control of authoritarian leadership. Thats how we get more Talibs. Both women decry government corruption and are concerned that too many government leaders remain the same, even when regimes change. They agree, We need educated youth to replace that old leadership. These women see themselves as the leaders of the future. We have to help too. Thats why we are here, said Sabera. I have to change the world for my children. I cannot wait and hope my children will change it for their children. They are grateful for their communities of supporttheir families in Afghanistan, their host families in the United States, the churches that have welcomed them, and the big community of Georgetown College that supports us to do what we are doing.
INSIGHTS 6
Knight Hall Community Experience Turns Three Musketeers into Stronger BFFs
BY CAITLIN KNOX 14
ABOVE: Two thumbs up for their new digs, Hambrick Village! Lauren Von Ohlen, left, Kelsey Friedrich, and Keira Lopez are three of many young women who first bonded at Knight Hall over the years.
Photos by Wesley Folsom 15
Georgetown College sophomores Keira Lopez, Lauren Von Ohlen and Kelsey Friedrich wouldnt be the close friends and roommates they are today in popular, new Hambrick Village were it not for surviving Knight Hall together. Looking back, Lauren remembers the sense of community more than any of the legendary inconveniences of the 52-year-old freshman womens dormitory. Everyone is in the same boat and you just pull togetherthat makes you closer. One of Laurens favorite memories from freshman year was the last night before summer break. We literally had mattresses all over our floor for other girls who were already packed-up to leave the next day, she recalled. In fact, Lauren and Kelsey always had an extra mattress in their room for anyone with roommate issues or drama in their lives, Lauren said. It was also available to any girl whose roommate was going home for the weekend and didnt want to sleep alone. Taking on the challenges of Knight Hall together and turning them into fun adventures certainly made this trio tight. People call us the Three Amigos or The Three Musketeers, the three roommates said in unison. They have each other on speed dial. Everything we do together is an event, said Lauren. If they see Kelsey and me, they ask wheres Keira? and vice versa. Randomly-picked roomies Lauren and Kelsey were in room 151 of Knight. Keira, who met Lauren during freshman orientation, was at the opposite end of the hall in 123. The three knew going in that Knights lack of air conditioning would be the biggest challenge, but were undaunted. We knew to come prepared with lots of fans, said Keira. Originally from Denver, Kelsey had the hardest time with the Kentucky heat and
INSIGHTS 7
humidity. I was struggling, because in Colorado its a very dry heat. The three became closer when Lauren and Kelsey soon moved right across the hall from Keira. I dont think the three of us would be as good of friends if that hadnt happened, Lauren said. The trio started doing everything together. We bonded over our skin frying (Sun Tan Citys Free Tanning Week), taking turns driving, and we all shared the addiction of Starbucks, Kelsey said. They got involved in Ashley Fritsch, top left, a fourth roommate, and Haley Ingram, far right, a senior from Owensboro campus activities like SHMAC (Student Catholic High on a campus visit, joined Kelsey, left, Keira and Lauren in their Hambrick kitchenette. Healthy Mentality Awareness Club) and GSI (Georgetown Sustainability I actually have the option to take a bath, Keira added. Initiative). They were orientation leaders for this years They plan to start cooking soon. We are going to bake in the freshman class, and Lauren and Kelsey co-host a radio show, commons because they have brand new ovens, Kelsey said. The Fuzz, Wednesday nights on the campus station (WRVG). Much like Knight Hall, there is a community aspect that They also found that pranking helped laugh away the they all love. Everyones doors are always open to anyone, struggles of Knight Hall. I used to prank everyone in the and there is a good group of people that live here, Keira said. hallway, Keira admitted. My roommates and I went up and They havent tried the doormat prank in Hambrick, but down each floor and warned it may happen soon. The games will begin...It will be switched everyones all-out war, Kelsey promised. doormats. That was the first of many pranks that went on in - Kelsey Friedrich, on why a Colorado their hall. Months girl would choose GC for college of planning went into giant pyramids of cups so a neighbor couldnt open her door, covering an entire wall in Post-It notes and enveloping an entire car with newspapers, with Post-Its blocking the windows. All three friends are involved in athletics in some form: Keira, an Exercise Science and Psychology double minor (Communications major) from Louisville, is on the varsity tennis team and is an intramurals supervisor; Lauren, an Athletic Training major and Global Scholar from Louisville, is a member of the varsity golf team; Kelsey, a Communications/ Business double major, works in the Athletics Department. After making the most of their shared Knight Hall experiences, the trio decided to live together in Hambrick Village, or The Brick of Ham, as they fondly call the recently dedicated townhouses on Military Street. So far, Kelsey said its good! We lucked out. When asked what they liked best about their new living quarters so far, the responses varied. I can walk around barefoot, its the best feeling in the world, Kelsey said with a sigh. I can shower without shower shoes! Lauren exclaimed.
INSIGHTS 8 INSIGHTS 8
why
GC
Why a student chooses georgetown College is often answered with because it just fit me or everyone was so welcoming and smiling. Once out in the world, gC alumni generally point to academic excellence, study abroad, involvement in campus and/or greek life, faculty members who reached out and changed their direction, and the lifelong friendships. What follows are a bakers dozen mini-profiles of devoted georgetown alumni whove recently been in the news, or going in new, interesting directions. Theyll tell you Why GC!
Melanie and Jason Ladd, who didnt really know each other until after graduating in 94, at the Young Alumni Tent at Homecoming 2012. Jason, a Lambda Chi who graduated summa cum laude in Marketing & Finance, is now a CPA and Controller for Exceptional Living Centers.
be the Federal Reserve Bank and she credits the PA experience for preparing her to sit down with its board. Before Melanie went into the business world full-time, President Crouch recruited her to be his administrative assistant for two years. Working with Dr. Crouch, I really got to see how a college operates, said Melanie, whose knowledge should be invaluable during the upcoming presidential search. Also, as a member of the Alumni Advisory Board, she knows how important their role is in the critical area of recruiting students as well as representing alums who are passionate about Georgetown. We realize now that if each one of us recruits one student a year that brings in a lot of
why GC?
Paul Archey, who oversees the World Baseball Classic, spoke at the opening of the MLB Academy in Wuxi, China.
INSIGHTS 11
auditor now, saw a future star employee during a second summer internship and signed her to a contract two years ago! Not one to waste any time during her college career, Anita did an internship in nonprofit accounting her first summer, then expanded her world by working for Teach for America the summer after graduation. African American leaders in her hometown recognized her star quality in the fall of her junior year. Anita was invited to be one of three speakers
at the Whos Who in Black Louisville Celebration. Bishop Scholar Stella Brown 10 and successful businessman and former U of L basketball star Junior Bridgeman were the others. While excelling in the classroom, Anita was quietly active in Ambassadors for Diversity and at the Writing Center. She was also invited to join the honorary society Phi Kappa Phi. Dr. Crouch noticed Anitas potential, selecting her for his Presidents Honor Award at Commencement 2011. I was so shocked, she said. That was extremely meaningful. It was really nice to know that hard work pays off and that people recognize what you do publicly and privately. The president also steered her to his alma mater, which has the No. 1 CPA pass rate in the nation. Wake Forest University climbed aboard her starship and awarded her a full tuition scholarship. A year later, naturally she passed the CPA exam and graduated with distinction.
Georgetown experience with great appreciation. Many of my professors went out of their way in giving ideas about what I could do post-graduation that would be meaningful. Doug is using his education and second chance at life to work with the brain injury community and be a strong advocate for legislation in support of post-acute cognitive rehabilitation.
Laura 06 had a great Georgetown campus life experience, playing all intramural sports and running with leadership opportunities such as being president of Sigma Kappa in 2005. Laura said, I was fortunate to receive a great education in the classroom, but am most thankful for an out-ofclassroom experience my junior year. Laura became hooked on eventplanning after she and best friend Emily (Collins) Green planned a luncheon and scramble to raise funds for GCs golf team and First Tee Scholars. Small wonder shes already director of marketing and training for Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing. Laura even taught event-planning as a Georgetown adjunct before receiving her MS in Integrated Marketing Communications from West Virginia University in May. In November, she started Impressions Marketing and Events.
INSIGHTS 12
why GC?
career, but has benefited my students, she said the week after winning the Ashland award. As a result, I think of everything in an interdisciplinary manner. She also loved that a small liberal arts college allowed her to be so active. In the two-plus years it took for Allison to graduate (!), she managed a successful Investment Team, was Speaker Pro Tempore with AGS (forerunner to SGA), competed on the Speech and Debate team, and was a member of Phi Mu.
She loved her first job out of college as an investment representative, experiencing success as a beginning broker; but she did not enjoy the sales aspect. She said, When I sat down and really thought about what I enjoyed and what I felt like I was meant to do I kept coming back to the same thing - teaching. Fortunately, the same company enabled her to assist another investment representative so she could get her MA in Teaching at the University of Louisville.
Allison with first-graders Sasha (7), left, and Losha (6) whom she and Toney Hunt adopted from Russia 2 years ago. Her husband is a senior director of finance for a Louisville engineering firm.
and Christianity until his professors of Religion and Philosophy (his double major) convinced him to read the Scriptures again. Joshua, who was on a Pastors Christian Leadership scholarship, rediscovered that love was big enough to change the world. He added, Georgetown College gave me the freedom to explore these questions without providing answers. Jessica, a Parks Scholar, was a member of Phi Mu, the Academic Team, the Deans Ambassadors and Phi Kappa Phi. In part because they both
were in Chorale and Chamber Singers, the couple started dating when he was a sophomore. As a senior, Joshua agreed to serve as Chorale president a second time if they agreed to call me Caesar, he laughed. The GC Chorale again proved to be important to the couple last spring. Director John Campbell was uncertain about the groups annual spring tour itinerary until he heard from Joshua. You need to come here, he implored; his prayer was answered. Joshua must support himself through fundraising as he does Gods work with Grace & Main. Jessica, who was an Art major (with teacher certification) and History minor, teaches third grade. A volunteer missionary, Jessica said, This gives us an opportunity to minister to some of the most marginalized people in this part of Virginia. She added, Thats what we are passionate about building relationships with people indiscriminately.
Last December, Dave Huffman and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice posed with one of the refugee families at Pleasant Hill Presbyterian near Atlanta. He thought it especially appropriate since these relocated Burmese people came to the U.S. through the auspices of the State Department. Rice, a close cousin of one of Huffmans team members, visits the church every year around Christmas.
that primarily produced pilots cockpit displays for all types of military aircraft. He was responsible for research and development of new products and technologies. As an engineer with L-3 Communications Display Systems, he knows the excitement of developing futuristic devices like roll-up computer
screens that fit in your pocket. When his wife, Laura, took on a new career as an intellectual property attorney with a major international law firm, Dave decided on early retirement (at age 53) and being a stay-at-homedad for their 15-year-old son, Matthew. Then, while searching for meaningful ways to volunteer, Dave had a real God moment his pastor in Duluth, GA, showed him he could be truly vital to refugee families relocating to the area from the Chin State of Burma. (The refugees) trust me completely, he said with reverent appreciation of his rare situation. He takes great pleasure in driving the Burmese parents to such appointments as teacher conferences or the dentist, while also trying to help them become independent. Im seeing everything through new eyes, and its fun to explain things that most Americans
ContInuED on PAGE 17
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why GC?
Professor Emeritus of History Lindsey Apple, left, caught up with his former student, Tim Furnish, in October.
During her post-graduate internship at NBC during the Olympics, Hillary Thornton worked with full-timers on the Today Show, Dateline, MSNBC, Rock Center, and Nightly News. Her boss while there, Kaare Numme, is a producer for Sunday Night Football.
jumped at the chance to be a student greeter at a March 2011 reception for Tom Hammond, guest of one of Billy Reeds Conversations with Champions, and she let the famed NBC sports commentator recommend her for a post-graduate internship at the networks New York headquarters. She won a coveted spot to work 10-12-hour days during NBCs round-the-clock
coverage of the London Olympics! As a young journalist, getting to work in what I see as the Mecca for broadcast news...30 Rock was a once in a lifetime opportunity, she said. And I certainly owe the opportunity to Tom Hammond and the networking I was able to do at GC. Hillary only got one day off during the Olympiad, but loved every minute. Even before the Games started, she logged all the scenic shots from London and created graphics. During the Games, she worked in the main feed room and made sure all the correct events were coming in on the right channel; then she clipped the event or interview to send to whichever show was airing it. She also got to edit some highlight packages that were shown. The crazy hours, fast pace, and competitiveness are a few of the things that made me fall more in love with the career and realize it is perfect for me, Hillary said.
Starting Gate director Mandy Otis, right, looked in on GC intern Allie White, a sophomore Education major from Lawrenceburg, as she worked with Bourbon County Middle sixth-graders Hailey and Thomas.
Commerce, then jobs with state Congressman Ben Chandler and later the Kentucky Office of Homeland Security. Because it was small, Georgetown prepared me to wear a lot of hats, said Mandy, who was an orientation leader, a VP of Standards for Kappa Delta, and a Presidents Ambassador. Being a P.A. was real exposure to leadership. Dr. Crouch took me to talk to the board of Johnson & Johnson (NJ) about the programand that broke
down my insecurities, said the native of Catlettsburg, who moved to Hazard at 15 and graduated from high school there. One of her years, the Ambassadors went to Italy my first time in Europe and that gave me the travel bug. She claims that Dr. Keon Chi influenced her applying later to the Patterson School. Mandy and her husband, Jason (owner of Catbird Printing), have been married six years. They have two sons Isaac, 4, and Landon, 1.
INSIGHTS 16
why GC?
Andrea Heflin 05, sporting her beloved Orange & Black colors, helped close friend Ashley Moore Anderson 05 coordinate a reception last December for New York area alumni at NFL headquarters in midtown Manhattan.
Making the Right Moves, nFLs heflin shows shes got game
take as commonplace. Try explaining Halloween to a refugee from Burma! For Dave, who has taught elementary Sunday School for years, these humanitarian efforts are likely ingrained. He was raised Southern Baptist by Clark and June Huffman, both GC Class of 56. And, the Christian atmosphere at Georgetown College is instilled. It may lay dormant a while, but you dont ever
INSIGHTS 17
Andrea Heflin 05 didnt merely dream of working in football at the highest level, she put herself in great positions from manager of the GC football team to summer internships with the Cincinnati Bengals. She also did post-graduate internships with the Mid-South Conference headquarters and the NFL Indianapolis Colts. The latter led to another internship and eventual job with the National Football League. Today, Heflin is a coordinator in the NFLs football operations department working primarily with their free High School Player Development program which hosts camps all over the country. Sponsored by the National Guard, HSPD is part character development, part football fundamentals. Shes currently involved with the planning of a national 7-on-7 tournament for high school players who will be on squads representing all 32 NFL teams in July. Heflin loved football so much when she came to GC that she acted upon some players suggestion that she do the water for Coach Bill Cronins squad. She attended as a fan the 2001 NAIA national title game won by the Tigers, then went as team manager in 02 when they were runners-up. I did everything the football team did except put on the pads, recalled Heflin, who worked her way up to filming for the offense. However, she worked most closely with defensive coach Bruce Owens. She so immersed herself in campus life such as Phi Mu and sports editor of The Georgetonian that she was named Ms. Georgetown as a senior. She graduated Phi Kappa Phi and summa cum laude with majors in Communications and Psychology. Heflin said she originally wanted to be a foreign ambassador, but after a few classes realized her passion was Psychology, not Political Science. Dr. (Karyn) McKenzie helped shape my desire to incorporate psychology into what I do with the NFL, said Heflin, whos considering getting a doctorate in the field. I ask myself: How can I present material to the underserved thats effective, but not offensive?
lose that, said Dave, who was sports editor of The Georgetonian back then. Being a member of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity, he said, helped me learn how to get along with people. As a participant in Georgetowns dual degree program, he received a B.S. in Physics from GC and a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering degree from Georgia Tech. Tech taught me engineering, but Georgetown gave me
so much of who I am, said Dave, who reveres the relationships he had with influencing professors like Steve Dyer and Bart Dickinson. Ive had no contact with Georgia Tech professors since college, but 30 years later there are Georgetown teachers who remember me, said Dave, a proud member of the Presidents Club. You may reach him at davehuffman@comcast.net.
Noel Caldwell, left, with Dr. Susan Campbell and Matt Dudgeon after her Chemistry & Cancer Class
inspiring everyone to be checked for cancer for he realizes hes lucky to have survived testicular cancer that had spread to his liver. Hes passionate about serving on the University of Kentuckys Markey Cancer Center Advisory Board. Cancer-free for seven years, Noel has talked to schools in Fayette County and never misses a chance to speak to Dr. Susan Campbells Chemistry and Cancer Class at GC. As a student, Noel took classes from Dr. Keon Chi and vividly remembers 9/11, when the popular Political Science professor was crying as he
explained the dynamics of terrorism and what was going on that day. He appreciated Jon Dalager, also an attorney, for making a Civil Rights class as close to a law school class as he could. But, it was GC Football Coach Bill Cronin whose words and lessons gave him the courage to go to law school and perhaps fight cancer as well. I cant say enough about Cronin, said Noel, who played wide receiver for those Tiger national championship teams of 2000 and 01, and 02 NAIA runners-up. He taught me to be a manno short-cuts. GCs baseball Tigers, but he really wanted to act and wasnt sure he could. He took all of McGees classes; and, one day his life changed. Id just delivered a monologue from Hamlet in class and George came up and said: You should consider doing Shakespeare in the Park. That was the first validation Id ever gotten, recalled Fredrick. One comment like that (from your professor) can mean the world! Hes in a short film he wrote and directed Love in Our Time costarring Kristen Renton (of TVs Sons of Anarchy). Hes also written his first feature film, a noir thriller, Bleeding Man. And, hes seeking a producer. The movie is about a mysterious man who emerges from the desert with a bullet in his gut and whispers of stashed drug money, prompting a single father to risk his life for a better future.
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Jonathan Fredrick, left, movie veteran Tom Berenger, and Boyd Holbrook in a scene from Hatfields & McCoys
BY BRYAN LANGLANDS
Samantha Whitlock of the Common Ground Leadership Team got a hug from one of the children at Mission Arlington during one of GCs alternative spring break trips last March. Shes a junior Education major from Louisville.
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that baked cookies and took them to firemen. Others went to a local apartment complex and had a block party with Hispanic residents there. Michelle Ballard, a senior Psychology major who aspires to a vocation in pastoral counseling, said, I chose Georgetown because it is a Christian school, not just because of its academics. Ive always felt a call to ministry but I didnt really know what that looked like until I got here. A junior from Means, KY, Michelle added, Ive learned more about that call through the service-learning project I did with Central Church of God, through serving on the Common Ground Leadership Team and through an internship at the Interfaith Counseling Center. And Ive learned what it truly means to love God and to love people. Unlike his peers, Shawn Marcum did not come to Georgetown College because it is Christian. My choice was not based on religion. I felt like my relationship with God was strong enough that it didnt matter to me what the schools affiliation was. But the ironic thing is that when I got involved in some Religion classes I became aware of how my whole religious background was changing. The junior from Louisa, KY, continued, I started to study the Bible more on my own. I went from taking the spoonfed approach to really digging in deep myself. The Colleges affiliation is significant because it has allowed me to take what was given to me and to make it my own, learning how to flesh out my own beliefs rather than just repeating what Ive heard others teach.
INSIGHTS 19
Jessica Casebolt
Fittingly, the 511 Jessica Casebolt will sing Superstar at Miss America.
The moment in July rising GC sophomore Jessica Casebolt heard her named called as Miss Kentucky 2012, she wondered what shed be missing about campus life and her Sigma Kappa sorority sisters the next year. It took a minute for her to realize shed be representing her beloved state and Georgetown in the Miss America Scholarship Pageant in Las Vegas come January. And, no one could show more pride in her College and her Commonwealth than Jessica. When ABC (which will broadcast the pageant live Jan. 12) chose Miss Kentucky to likely be one of a handful of candidates featured in a documentary the hour before, she convinced them to film her at a Sigma meeting and a roundtable discussion with professors Barbara Burch (English), Heather Hunnicutt (Music), George McGee (Theatre), and Director of Alumni Relations Laura Owsley. Jessica is so appreciative and genuine, people bend over backwards to be there for her. The Blue-hot Kentucky Wildcats basketball coach even worked her into his schedule and let her wear his NCAA title ring for filming. That little coup landed her in a recent Wall Street Journal sports feature (Its John Caliparis World) pictured along with such luminaries as Barrack Obama, Bill Clinton, Jay-Z, Billy Crystal, and others. And, when ABCs filming schedule changed, Keeneland had Jessica out to sing the National Anthem a second time in ONE week! The Political Science major from Pikeville had such a great freshman year, shes already looking forward to coming back in Fall 2013 and applying for a term at GCs Oxford University partner, Regents Park College. An aspiring broadcast journalist, Jessica was also the intern for (now former) Executive Scholarin-Residence Billy Reed, a renowned sports columnist. Every chance she gets, Jessica is still all about GC. She was honored that Reed and Georgetown All-American and 1972 USA Olympic basketball captain Kenny Davis asked her to close out the Courage in Munich banquet in August with The Star-Spangled Banner. And, she was thrilled to speak at the Sigmas Purple-Tie Affair banquet this fall.
INSIGHTS 20
Dr. Christel Broady, right, was an emotional winner of the John Walker Manning Distinguished Mentor and Teacher Award. Provost Rosemary Allen, left, considers the recognition very special because students have a major voice in the selection.
daughter, Leni, is a pianist attending Lexingtons School for Performing and Creative Arts; shes bilingual and has dual citizenship (U.S./German).
alumni relations Continued from page 9
Your alma mater needs you to be engaged for its future now more than ever. Youve probably seen our theme for the past year or so Every Tiger, Every Year. Truly it does take every student, faculty and staff member, alumnus and friend to make sure that we continue to call this great place our home. With change comes uncertainty; however, one thing remains the same: Georgetown College needs you to be involved somehow, some way. This could include (but not necessarily be limited to): financial support, mentoring a current student, speaking to a class, praying for the school, or just coming to campus for activities especially Homecoming. You DO make a difference and together we will make a difference in the lives of future generations of Georgetonians. Remember, EVERY Tiger, Every Year! And, please let me know how I can assist you. It could be as simple as trying to locate a former roommate or helping you secure a transcript. And any time you want to come home for a campus visit, l would love to help organize your trip. I would also be honored to coordinate an official visit with one of the friendly folks in our Office of Admissions to show your son/daughter/grandson/granddaughter around campus. Call me at 502-863-8007 or email laura_owsley@ georgetowncollege.edu.
Bill Cronin
Coach Bill Cronin, right, with Communication and Media Studies professor Kenny Sibal 04, honorary coach for a GC game this fall. Sibal played on the Tigers 2000 and 2001 NAIA championship teams.
Gatorade baths are usually postseason moments, which might have been why Sept. 29s sideline dousing caught Georgetown College football coach Bill Cronin off guard. I usually have better footwork than that, Cronin joked about being able to get out of the way. I was sort of caught by surprise. It was definitely cold. The then-No. 3 Tigers defeated Bethel University, 63-21, at Toyota Stadium on iHigh Field, for 150 wins for Cronin and several of his staff. GC football has been one of the most consistent programs over the past 15 years under Cronins leadership. Assistants Bruce Owens 86, Craig Mullins 91 and Steve Hill 94 have been here all 15-plus seasons, while Marty Park 99 started as a player then became a coach for the past 12. A lot of people are involved in this, Cronin said. The coaches have been terrific and stood by me. We dont have this record without all the players that have come through this program; too many for me to even attempt to name. This mark has him averaging just more than nine wins a season - higher than coaching greats such as Steve Spurrier, 194 wins in 22 seasons; Bobby Bowden, 377 wins in 44; Bear Bryant, 323 in 38; and Lou Holtz, 249 in 33. The first three averaged just more than eight a season while Holtz finished with an average of 7.5. Even NAIA legend Kevin Donley, who hired Cronin as an assistant for the Tigers in the 80s, averages just more than seven wins a year for 257 victories in 33 years. Georgetown has been great for me and
BY THE NUMBERs Cronin, among active coaches, is 5th on the win list. Donley is 1st, followed by two coaches with 30+ years on the sidelines: Hank Biesiot (256 in 36) and Larry Wilcox (232 in 33). Carroll Colleges Mike Van Diest has 160 wins in 13 seasons and may be the only coach to win 150 faster than Cronin. On the all-time coaching win list, Cronin is 32nd. At GC, the veteran coach was 88-15 at home, 63-19 on the road and 4-2 at neutral sites.
my family, Cronin said. We have enjoyed living and working in a community where people genuinely care about one another; being able to win, as much as we have, is just a bonus. The formation of a powerhouse is a strong foundation, a concept not lost on Cronin. In 1997, he hired Mullins, Hill and Owens. All have been honored in the coaching realm but have chosen to stay right where they are. Being here, being a part of this, means more than being a head coach, Mullins said. Georgetown is in my blood. Dedication, trust and cohesion are what drive this program. Mullins, Hill and Owens all played for Georgetown. Cronin continued looking for assistants among his players, hiring Marty Park and Clyde McConnaughhay. Brian Landis and Shan Housekeeper also returned to the Orange & Black, where as players they helped to win national championships. We have a lot of pride in the program, Housekeeper said. Only a handful of us didnt play here before coaching here. We have been on the other side of being players. We have high standards and so hold our players to those standards as well.
INSIGHTS 22
VOLLEYBALL
Bursting back on the national scene, Tigers finished the regular season No. 11 with a 31-3 and 15-0 record. Nick Griffin earned MSC Coach of the Year. Rachel Eubanks was MSC Player of the Year. Eubanks, Ally Wilbourn and Caraline Maher earned First-Team All-Conference. Rebekah Moore, Corri Muha and Lindsey Martindale were honorable mentions. Moore, Eubanks, Wilbourn, Stephanie Gurren and Mariah Tesarz were Academic All-Conference. The Tigers defeated Xavier in the Opening Round of the National Tournament to punch their ticket to Sioux City, IA for the completion of the tournament. Poolplay is Nov. 27-29. Top two teams from each of the six pools move to a single elimination tournament Nov. 30-Dec. 1.
FOOTBALL
Football won a third-straight MSC East championship (18th overall) and had a second-straight undefeated season (9th overall). The Tigers claimed the No. 1 spot for the first time since 2002. GC lost the opening round of playoffs in a heartbreaking 45-44 game to MSC West champion Bethel University. MSC All-Conference honorees are: Gabe Patten, Wes Smith, Chris Gohman, Randy Doss, Neal Pawsat, Melvin Posey, Doug Key, Josh Downing and DaVon Pitts. Honorable mentions were Rob Madon, Logan Osborne, Patrick Dougherty, Alex Kreimer, D.J. Lemons, Brock Messina, Winston Hines and Brandon Lawson. Coach Cronin was named MSC East Coach of the Year. Adam Campbell, Alex Connelly, Jacob Conner, Jack Coorts, Cory Cronin, Dougherty, Gohman, Hines, Kreimer, Madon, Pawsat, Joe Peak, David Robason, Michael Sherrard, Zach Sowder and Aaron Wilson were MSC Academic All-Conference.
BAsEBALL TENNIs
Tennis hosted an ITA regional meet, which brought multiple teams to the Georgetown area for the three-day event. Rain caused some scheduling changes, but the event went well and teams requested the Tigers host again.
INSIGHTS 23
Baseball had two players receive preseason All-American status. Pitchers Tyler Arthur and Chad Richie, who finished the 2012 season as second-team AllAmericans, are tabbed as top hurlers this year. The Tigers open in February in Daytona, FL.
CROss COUNTRY
Mens and womens teams had an up and down season. The women started off slow but exploded late, finishing 3rd in the conference meet. Tayler Godar led the way, helping the Tigers to a perfect score and victory at the Kentucky State University meet. The men also won that meet, but had injuries and illnesses slow them down this season. Still, two Tigers finished with times inside the Top 5 alltime finishes for Georgetown. Cole Cisneros 26:45.8 and Brandon Pulliams 26:09 have them at 5th and 2nd respectively. Godar and Cisneros were named Second-Team AllConference. Finnja Ramcke, Mary Kate Dowdy, Marissa Hale, Rachel Ditto, Peyton Anderson, Kyle Wiedemer, Sam Heaton, Chris Bartlett, Brad Cundiff and Jimmy Lacy were named to the Academic All-Conference team.
MENs BAsKETBALL
Mens basketball is preseason No. 3. The annual Central Bank Jim Reid Classic was Nov. 23-24 with No. 22 Martin Methodist, and highly regarded Life and UC Clermont. Vic Moses has returned from a redshirt season, averaging 22 points (hitting at about 74 percent!) with eight rebounds per game. Garel Craig, Allan Thomas and Russ Middleton round out the returners, while Monty Wilson, Mychal Parker and DJ Townsend highlight some of the newcomers.
WOMENs sOCCER
Anna Ayers, Caitlin Williams, Sam Amend, Bea Cameron, Alex Harbowy and Alessandra Jansen made the womens soccer all-conference honorable mention team. Tigers finished 4th in a loaded league and advanced to semifinals before losing to Lindsey Wilson. Williams, Megan Melanson, Lauren Brooks, Lucy Davis and Morgan Zimmer made Academic All-Conference.
WOMENs BAsKETBALL
Womens basketball is preseason No. 6, putting them just outside of the teams most recent highest ranking of No. 5 in January of 2005. The Tigers finished the 2011-12 season No. 11 and in the Fab Four at the NAIA tournament. They kicked the season off with the 19th Annual Habitat Classic, bringing in No. 2 Shawnee State and future Great Midwest Athletic Conference foe Trevecca Nazarene.
MENs sOCCER
Mens soccer battled youth and injuries yet again and a bounce here or there could have changed the seasons overall outlook. The team never let up against several national powerhouses, but came up short in the campaign to make the playoffs. Kiefer Chafin was named to the Academic All-Conference team.
INSIGHTS 24
300 Wins Will Be Nice, But Thorntons All About The Players
Frustrating, said Georgetown College alum and softball coach Thomas Thornton with a hearty laugh about sitting on win number 299. The native Scott Countian needed just one victory in the Mid-South Conference tournament this past spring to notch 300 in 10 seasons. Not that 299 wins is not just as impressive, but its not 300. As a coach, Id like to think I dont sit around and think about the wins, but I do keep track, Thornton said. However, 299 or two wins, its always been about the players and the talent we have. Without my players, the number means nothing. Thornton enters his 13th season in the dugout with the Tigers, 11th as head coach this spring, and looking for that elusive 300th win. Some memorable wins have come along the way, including the unofficial first one in the fall of 2000. The Tigers traveled to Evansville, IN, and played Middle Tennessee State (an NCAA Division I program). GC won, and after the game, Thorntons senior centerfielder asked how he liked his first win. Of course, the 2008 Mid-South Conference Tournament championship run is a day he will never forget. GC needed three wins back-to-back-to-back in order to win the title and clinch the schools first appearance in the national tournament. Thornton, who earned undergraduate and graduate degrees from Georgetown College, was born to coach; he just never thought it would be softball. The football gridiron is where he planned to be. Early on, that is what he did, but in the
offseasons he coached softball. After a stint as assistant softball coach at Scott County High School, the veteran coach ran into his longtime friend Mark Montgomery, GCs head coach at the time. Mark and I got to talking and just thought it was a good fit for both of us, Thornton said. At the time Thornton was finishing up his graduate work from GC, and it meant a lot to him to be able to come back and give to the school that had given him and his family so much. Two of his aunts taught classes here, and his sister, mother and numerous cousins attended Georgetown. Growing up, Georgetown College was all I knew, Thornton said. I love this school and always have. It has been an honor to be able to come back and work here. Ever humble, he also knows his program would not be where it is without the help of his assistants. Almost from the get-go, Bryan Johnson and Jamie Cunliffe have been by his side, volunteering their time. In 2010, former player Britni Buchignani also returned to volunteer. Bryan and Jamie have been so dedicated and I cant describe how much they mean to me and this program, Thornton said. Obviously none of them do it for the pay, because there is none, but they do it because they love the team, the players and this program. Then, Britni is just another reminder that we are doing things right here. To see my players want to continue to be around softball and give back to the sport, that means more to me than anything.
INSIGHTS 25
GC classnotes
Dr. Betty Jean Chatham retired after nearly 60 years as pianist and organist at Shelbyville (KY) First Baptist Church on Oct. 28, 2012. Her distinguished career began as organist at First Baptist in 1953. She created and conducted childrens and youth choirs and started both a nondenominational and interracial choir (Life Savers) of high school students in Shelby County.
As a student at Georgetown College, she founded and conducted the BSU Choir. During her professional career, she taught at both Georgetown and Kentucky Southern, and was artist-in-residence at both Georgetown and St. Catharine Colleges. She has performed across the USA and in 18 countries for the Foreign Mission Board, the Southern Baptist Convention, and the U.S. Air Force chaplaincy. All members of the Chatham family are distinguished alumni of Georgetown College. Besides Dr. Betty Jean, they include late husband Dr. Don Chatham 48; son Dr. Donn Chatham 71; and daughters Sarah Chatham Farabee 73 and Martha Chatham Pryor 79.
www.georgetowncollege.edu/alumni
1947
1982
1992
1969
dana (reichard) and tommy martin are proud to announce the birth of a boy, Logan Thomas Martin, born April 16, 2012, in Cincinnati, OH.
2001
2008
1976
2009
Donor
Honor roll
expressing our gratitude for all those who have given to georgetown College
$10,000 OR MORE
AIKCU Allen Architectural Metals Brookhollow Baptist Church Calvary Baptist Church Charles E. Schell Foundation Community Foundation of Greater Memphis Community Foundation of Louisville Depository Eula Mae & John Baugh Foundation Harshaw Trane Howard Hughes Medical Institute Jenzabar, Inc. Kentucky Baptist Foundation Lillian Goldman Charitable Trust Margaret Voorhies Haggin Trust National Christian Foundation Kentucky Neace Lukens Holding Company Pheasant Hill Foundation Toyota Motor Mfg. KY, Inc. V. V. Cooke Foundation Virginia Baptist Foundation Inc. Dr. & Mrs. James W. Anderson Mr. John M. Ballbach Mr. & Mrs. James L. Barlow Mr. & Mrs. Larry M. Carlton Mr. & Mrs. Norman T. Daniels, Jr. Dr. Robert L. Doty Mr. & Mrs. Franklin Ensor, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Randy D. Fields Mr. & Mrs. Earl A. Goode Mr. Michael T. Haas Mr. Frank Harshaw Mr. Carl A. Henlein Mr. Robert L. Hook Allan E. Inglis, MD Mr. & Mrs. R. C. Johnson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David A. Jones, Sr. Mr. Ben D. Mallin, Jr. Mr. Russell C. McCandless Dr. & Mrs. Wally O. Montgomery Mr. William M. Rosson Marilyn Nell Sparks* Mr. Joseph E. Sparks Dr. Don A. Stevens Mrs. Sheila J. Wells Mrs. Carlos Wells Mr. John A. Williams Mr. Robert N. Wilson
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Citizens Community Foundation Inc. Fifth Third Bank FLW Outdoors Harrodsburg Baptist Church Healthcare Performance Partners Journey A Community of Grace, Inc. Kentucky Baptist Convention Ruth H. Million Estate The Dallas Foundation Dr. & Mrs. Alan Akridge Mr. William E. Blackburn Mrs. Pearl Chiu Mrs. J. Nicole Bivens Collinson Dr. & Mrs. Lanny R. Copeland Dr. & Mrs. William H. Crouch, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Bartlett G. Dickinson Mr. & Mrs. Bill Dixon, Jr. Dr. John M. Farmer Mr. & Mrs. Randall L. Fox Mr. & Mrs. Rollie D. Graves Drs. James L. & Ruth B. Heizer Mrs. Anna M. Hensley Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Hieb Mr. & Mrs. David R. Jacobs Dr. & Mrs. David C. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Jim Moak Mr. & Mrs. A. Irvin Overall Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Penn, Jr. Mrs. Maedell Remington Mrs. Linda Schneider Rhea Mr. W. Todd Skaggs Dr. Larry R. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Stump Mrs. Carolyn N. Sweazy Mr. & Mrs. David Travis Mr. & Mrs. Kristofer D. Vanzant Mr. Cy Waddle Dr. & Mrs. Ron Waldridge Mr. & Mrs. John R. Ward
$2,500-$4,999
American Baptist Home Mission Society Anchor Baptist Church Broadway Baptist Church Dallas Baptist University Foundation for the Advancement of Christianity Georgetown Baptist Church Georgetown Tennis Association, Ltd. James Motor Company Mercer University Missouri Baptist University Toyota Tsusho of America Mr. James E. Acra INSIGHTS 27 Mr. & Mrs. J. William Barnett Mr. & Mrs. Nolan M. Bean Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Blakeman Mr. & Mrs. Alfred R. Blevins Ms. Candace Brunk Mrs. Betty Jean Chatham Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Cohen Governor Martha L. Collins & Dr. Bill L. Collins Dr. & Mrs. Paul R. Corts Mr. Clay Parker Davis Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Dowling, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Michael W. Eden Dr. & Mrs. Gene Enlow Dr. Jerry W. Fields Dr. & Mrs. Horace T. Hambrick Dr. Peter J. LaRue Miss Linda J. Long Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Rardin Mr. James W. Shepherd, Jr. Dr. Robert W. Thompson II Mr. & Mrs. Laurel W. True Mr. Guthrie L. Zaring
$1,000-$2,499
American Inst. For Foreign Study AYERBALL INC. Baird Government Solutions Baptist Foundation of Illinois Consolidated Baptist Church Eagle Construction Elkhorn Association WMU Enterprise Rent-A-Car Equestrian Events, Inc. Estate of Mary C. Johnson Faith Baptist Church Farmers National Bank Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Florida Lakes Surgical PLLC Greens Toyota Highland Baptist Church Living Faith Baptist Fellowship National Diversity Solutions Nicklies Foundation, Inc. Omni Custom Meats Pharmacy Class of 2007 PNC Foundation Matching Gift Program Sivells Baptist Camp St. Matthews Baptist Church The National Sales Group, LLC United Bank Mr. & Mrs. David C. Adkisson Dr. & Mrs. Barry Allen Mr. Jim Allison Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Anderson Dr. Glenn D. Armstrong Mr. & Mrs. Michael W. Ayers Mr. & Mrs. Jason A. Baird Mr. Tucker Ballinger Mr. James R. Bannister Mr. John K. Barnett Dr. & Mrs. Gregory S. Barr M. Brian Bauer, MD Dr. Jack Birdwhistell Mrs. Kay Blevins Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Boren Mr. Kent A. Boswell Dr. & Mrs. David Bowman Mr. Norman L. Brown Drs. John & Luannette Butler Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Calhoun Mr. Darryl R. Callahan Mr. & Mrs. Mike Cappock Mr. & Mrs. Jack Carrington II Mrs. Susan A. Carrington Ms. Melody Chaney Mr. & Mrs. James L. Cloar, Jr. Dr. John T. Coke & Dr. Rosemary A. Allen Dr. & Mrs. Raymond L. Cravens Dr. Jessica D. Cunningham & Mr. Michael Cunningham Dr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis Mrs. Julia A. Dean Dr. & Mrs. John R. Deen Dr. Jonathan W. Dickinson & Dr. Jenna Ross Dr. John E. Downing Mrs. Darlene Drake Mrs. Erin Lynn Druen Mrs. Connie Eggert Mrs. Charlotte Ann Elder Mr. & Mrs. John D. Elliott Mr. & Mrs. David Fannin Mr. & Mrs. Randy D. Fields Mr. & Mrs. Scott B. Fitzpatrick Ms. Virginia Fox Mrs. Lynn P. Freeman Mr. Douglas Freeman Rev. Richard Gaines Drs. Sidney T. & Jeannie Gambill Mr. & Mrs. Hoot Gibson Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Gibson Dr. Susan Goodin Mrs. Ann Greene Mr. Tom Grissom Dr. Gordon P. Guthrie Mr. & Mrs. Henry N. Hall Mr. & Mrs. James E. Hargrove Mr. & Mrs. Weldon Harris Dr. & Mrs. William H. Harvey Mr. & Mrs. Reza Hashampour Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Hays Ms. Leigh Anne Hiatt Mr. & Mrs. Grover C. Hibberd, Jr. Samuel S. Hill, Jr., Ph.D. Mr. Jesse Reid Hodgson Mr. & Mrs. William V. Holden Rev. & Mrs. Kenneth D. Holden Mr. David C. Huffman Ms. Phyllis J. Hughes Mr. Eric M. Jaegers Mr. & Mrs. I. Grundy Janes, Jr. Mr. John O. Jeffries Mrs. Mary L. Jenkins Mr. Billy W. Johnson Mrs. Jeanne Kaenzig Evans Mr. & Mrs. Jason R. Keller Mrs. Marilyn A. Kenley Mr. & Mrs. Dale A. Kenley Mrs. Laura G. Knapp Mr. & Mrs. David L. Knox Mr. James S. Koeppe & Dr. Gretchen Lohman Mr. & Mrs. Jason R. Ladd Mrs. Frances W. Lester Dr. & Mrs. James B. Lewis Dr. & Mrs. Dwight E. Lindsay Mr. Roy K. Lowdenback & Dr. Rachel S. Lowdenback Mrs. Charlene Lucas Helen Betsy Lusby* Mr. George Lusby Mrs. Vicky L. Mann Mr. Thomas A. McAllister Mr. & Mrs. C. James McCormick Dr. David C. McMurtry Dr. & Mrs. Charles W. Midkiff Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Miller Mr. & Mrs. John Milward Mr. Steve Monroe Mr. & Mrs. Doug Morrow, Jr. Mr. John C. Moss Mr. Jeffrey W. Nally, SPHR & Mr. Robert W. Johnson Ms. Virginia Neely Mr. & Mrs. James H. Newberry, Jr. David O. Oladele-Bankole, MD Ms. Ruby E. Orr Dr. & Mrs. William H. Owens Ms. Laura L. Owsley Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Palmer Vada Dixon Phillips* Mr. G. Kent Price Mr. Mitch Price Mr. & Mrs. James Ratcliffe Dr. Rogers W. Redding Rev. & Mrs. Alan B. Redditt Mr. & Mrs. William J. Roby Paul Robert Rowe* Mr. & Mrs. Erik P. Sandefer Mrs. Leigh N. Schroeder Mr. William A. Scott Ms. Kay E Scott Mr. & Mrs. Mike Shelton Ms. Carolyn L. Spears Mr. & Mrs. Lance E. Springs Mr. Dustin L. Stacy & Dr. Christina L. Stacy Carroll D. Stevens & Libby F. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Fred Stickle Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. Suffoletta Mrs. Rhoda E. Tallant Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Terrell Mr. & Mrs. William P. Thurman, Jr. Dr. Ernest M. Tucker Mrs. Ann Colbert Wade Mr. Dudley Webb Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Wechman, Jr. David M. Wheeler, MD Dr. & Mrs. Wallace A. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Justin L. Willingham Mrs. Jill R. Wilson Ms. Anne Wright Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Judge Wilson Mr. Edward M. Wimmer Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Winstead Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Yates
$500-$999
Aggie Sale Sport Shop E A Partners, PLC Elkhorn Baptist Association First Baptist Church Hunter Douglas Metals Jones Grimes Long Snider, Inc. Kentucky Eagle, Inc. Lakes Funeral Home Network For Good Palmer Engineering RUMPKE Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC Scott Archery Manufacturing Service First Logistics Inc. State Farm Insurance Todd Tiller Insurance, Inc. Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Mr. Mike Ashley Mr. & Mrs. Gregory D. Back Mr. Stephen R. Banks Dr. & Mrs. R. Jake Bell Mr. David D. Bibb, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Barry Birdwhistell Dr. Jack E. Brown Dr. & Mrs. Lloyd M. L. Browning Mr. Robert C. Campbell III Dr. Neville W. Carmical Mrs. Judith M. Carson Dr. Michael Clark & Mrs. Tracey D. Clark Mr. & Mrs. John C. Cochenour Dr. Thomas E. Cooper Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Cornett Mrs. Elizabeth A. Davidson Dr. Bridger Anne DeName Dr. Molly W. Dunkum Mr. & Mrs. Ronald R. Dunn Dr. William E. Ellis Mr. & Mrs. Larry J. Ensor Mr. & Mrs. Jeff Ficke Mr. Thomas G. Folsom II Mr. & Mrs. Randall q. Francis Mr. & Mrs. C. Richard Fuller Mr. Michael T. Gabhart Mr. David W. Gaddie Mr. & Mrs. Chris J. Gohman Mr. Lucas M. Gravitt Ms. Trinna S. Graziani Mr. & Mrs. Chester Greynolds Mr. John M. Harris Mr. & Mrs. Chester B. Hawkins Ms. Janet S. Heiden Dr. Angela L. Hogan Drs. Steve M. & June Hyndman Ms. Kathy L. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Kelley Ms. Karen K. King Dr. Sheila D. Klopfer Mr. James T. Knapp Mr. Larry Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lewis Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lunceford Mr. Jordon A. Maloni Mr. & Mrs. J. Terry Maurer Mrs. Robin Carol McClure Mr. & Mrs. Greg Meyer Dr. Lori Beth Miller Dr. Dixie L. Mills Miss Robin L. Murphey Dr. & Mrs. Warren O. Nash Mr. Royce W. Neubauer Mr. Garry Olson Mr. Duke Owens Rose Adelia Owens* Mr. & Mrs. E. Gerald Parker, Jr. Dr. Allan M. Parrent Bill D. Parsons* Dr. Joseph H. Patterson Mr. Paul D. Pelphrey Mr. Eldon F. Phillips Mr. Blake A. Reichenbach Ms. Marcia M. Ridings Mr. & Mrs. John Shine Mr. Howard Smalley Mr. C. Donald Smith Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Smith Mr. Adam N. Speaks Mr. Edward J. Stanko & Dr. Shelley B. Stanko Dr. & Mrs. William P. Stevens Mr. H. K. Thames Ms. Lisa A. Thornton Mr. & Mrs. J. Guthrie True Dr. Robert J. Wasson Charles Britton Wells* Dr. Robert T. Wesley Rev. & Mrs. Henry M. White Mr. John A. Wilson
* Deceased
INSIGHTS 28
To learn more about how you can contribute to either the Hambrick Society or the Blackburn General Chemistry Lab renovation, or honor other professors who have impacted your life and career, please contact: Roy Lowdenback 05 Associate Vice President and Chief Development Officer Phone 502-863-8044 Email roy_lowdenback@georgetowncollege.edu
toP LEFt: President Bill Crouch, right, at the Homecoming dedication of the new 84-bed, townhouse-style, residence complex on Military Street with the beloved members of the GC family for whom it is named Horace and Maribeth Hambrick. Dr. Hambrick was a member of the faculty for 46 years, 26 of them as History department chair. He also was elected first chairman of the college faculty. Maribeth served as a trustee, president of the Womens Association and the Alumni Association. ABoVE: Friend of the College Larry Carlton, left, who donated the money to have the name of his parents Dick and Mary Carlton, right on the Hambrick community room, got to share this special moment with his wife, Wendy, and their daughter, Destyn. LEFt: Randy 60 and Virginia (Isbell) Fox 58, posed by the Hambrick apartment named for them along with grand-daughter Natalie Hymer, a senior Economics and Spanish double major from Louisville. A Presidents Ambassador, Natalie spoke at the dedication. Randy, a current trustee, was first elected in 73 and has served as board chair several times.
Thanks for your continued support. To make a secure online gift anytime using your credit card, go to www.georgetowncollege.edu/giving
INSIGHTS 29
I naM emoriam
1934
Chester A. Insko 6/28/12 Chapel Hill, NC Bryant A. Bloss 9/30/12 Newburgh, IN M. G. Howell 10/31/12 Henderson, KY Harold G. Hurst 5/20/12 Lexington, KY Shirley Jeffares ne Clifton 8/24/12 Lexington, KY Helen S. Kirtley 6/4/12 Johnson City, TN Adelaide McManus 5/22/12 Fort Thomas, KY R. E. Pittman 5/19/12 Lexington, KY Dwayne A. Ruth 10/17/12 Georgetown, KY Raymond O. Sommers 8/23/12 Louisville, KY Ruthe B. Sphar 7/24/12 Winchester, KY Linda F. Williamson 7/17/12 Sadieville, KY
1938
Leland Bland 8/21/12 Bagdad, KY James A. Stevens 7/9/12 Sarasota, FL
1955
Jo A. McCaslin ne Robertson 8/26/12 Princeton, KY
1961
David W. Mullen 5/26/12 Moneta, VA
1939
Dorothy F. Rudy ne Green 9/18/12 Noblesville, IN
1962
Ronald C. Burkhart 7/12/12 Daphne, AL
note: The word ne after a married womans name is followed by her maiden name.
1946
James M. Collier 9/3/12 Elizabethtown, KY
1963
Barbara L. Jacobs ne Dugan 6/6/12 Lexington, KY Thomas W. Westerfield 9/11/12 Crofton, KY
1947
Yvonne Shipman ne Hubbard 6/27/12 Clarksville, IN
1948
Joseph Benedict 6/3/12 Atlanta, GA James W. Ray 6/19/12 Louisville, KY
1966
Phyllis T. Cooksey ne Tandy 7/31/12 Louisville, KY
1968
George A. Luttrell 7/3/12 Liberty, KY
1949
Edna M. Knight ne Marks 9/10/12 Harrodsburg, KY Walter R. Shettler 9/28/12 Erlanger, KY
1969
Jullienne G. Keightley ne Gist 9/11/12 Louisville, KY
1972
David M. McMurtry 5/18/12 Lexington, KY
1950
Carroll P. Callender 7/5/12 Owensboro, KY Robert D. Thompson 5/23/12 Burgin, KY
1974
Richard D. Edwards 6/24/12 Brooklyn, NY
1951
Hannible E. Foley 5/31/12 Mount Washington, KY
1979
Gregg M. Macmann 6/8/12 New Lebanon, OH
1953
Rolfe W. Dorsey 5/21/12 Louisville, KY Doris C. Kemper ne Smith 7/12/12 Owenton, KY John T. Thompson 6/7/12 Nicholasville, KY
1981
William C. Hanshaw 10/29/12 Olive Hill, KY
2009
Allen L. McCowan 6/7/12 Lavington, NSW
1954
C. F. Dykins 7/24/12 Plainfield, IN
Friends of GC
Virginia W. Cotton 7/1/12 Cincinnati, OH
INSIGHTS 30
FPO
Homecoming 2012?
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http://gogc.me/hc2012