UMHB Life | Winter 2013
-
Upload
university-of-mary-hardin-baylor -
Category
Documents
-
view
229 -
download
2
description
Transcript of UMHB Life | Winter 2013
PLUS: Momentum nursing challenge grant met | The Blue House Posse | Homecoming 2012 recap
A NEW HOME FOR THE
VISUAL ARTSArtists move from the
basement of Presser Hall into the new Baugh Center
for the Visual Arts
a2 UMHB LIFE
UMHBLIFEWINTER 2013 | VOLUME 32, NUMBER 2
PRESIDENTRandy O’Rear, Ed.D.
EDITOR- IN -CHIEFPaula Price Tanner, Ed.D.
EDITORJennifer Meers Jones ’08
CONTRIBUTING WRITERSNicole Johnson ‘13Jessa Grassi McClure ’08James Stafford
PHOTOGR APHERSJennifer Meers Jones ’08Randy Yandell ’99
UMHB LIFE IS PUBLISHED THREE TIMES A YEAR BY THE DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIONS AND SPECIAL PROJECTS.
UMHB Box 8431900 College StreetBelton, Texas 765131-800-727-UMHBlife.umhb.edu
ALUMNI LIFE IS COMPILED BY THE OFFICE OF ALUMNI RELATIONS.
Please send any information for publishing or change of personal information to:
Alumni RelationsUMHB Box 8427900 College StreetBelton, Texas 76513
Letters and comments can be sent to:[email protected]
Or update online:[email protected]
BIG PICTURE | ‘Sader Belle Ricole Lowe perfoms during the halftime show at Homecoming in October. For more pictures from this year’s Homecoming, please see page 20.
UMHBLIFEW I N T E R 2 0 13 | VOLUME 32, NUMBER 2
20
D E P A R T M E N T S
5| CAMPUS LIFEMomentum campaign secures
full funding for the new nursing
education center, Christian recording
artist Michael Gungor visits campus,
and more
10| ATHLETIC LIFE Two former Cru football players
make their mark in the NFL, Cummins
Field House is dedicated, and more
13| PHIL ANTHROPY Dedication ceremony for
Baugh Center for the Visual Arts
honors philanthropists Eula Mae
and John Baugh.
22| ALUMNI LIFECheck out what’s happening in the
lives of alumni and their families—
plus profiles on Charles Jenkins ’08,
Tanya Taylor ’02, and John ’70 and
Shirley Stephenson ’70.
F E A T U R E S
INTO THE LIGHT |12
The state-of-the-art new Baugh Center for
the Visual Arts opened this fall, inspiring
creativity and interest in the arts. THE BLUE HOUSE LEGACY |16
The brotherhood resulting from of a group
of men who lived in a house on the edge of
campus in the late 1990s inspired a tradition
that influences student life to this day.
THERE’S NO PL ACE LIKE HOMECOMING |20Alumni return to campus October 19-20
for a weekend of family-friendly events and
catching up with old friends.
ON THE COVER | Senior studio art
major Maddie Phillip paints in her own
studio space in the new Baugh Center
for the Visual Arts.
PHOTO BY JENNIFER MEERS JONES ’08
5 12UMHB LIFE | F A L L 2 0 1 2 1
RAN
DY
YAN
DEL
L
Friday, APRIL 191-5 p.m.: Registration Musick Alumni Center and Museum at the Parker House
3 p.m.: Campus Tours (sign up tour times at registration) Musick Alumni Center and Museum at the Parker House
6 p.m.: Alumni Dinner Lord Conference Center
8 p.m.: Senior Ring and Robing Ceremony W.W. Walton Chapel
9 p.m.: Dessert Party and Circle of Songs Shelton Theater
10:30 p.m.: Senior Party
12 a.m.: Midnight March Quad
SCHEDULE
REGISTRATIONReturn registration form and payment to Charter Celebration Reservations / UMHB Box 8427 / 900 College Street / Belton, Texas 76513. Please make checks payable to UMHB. Reservations must be received by Thursday, April 4.
Name ____________________________________________
Address __________________________________________
City _____________________ State ______ Zip _________
Email Address _____________________________________
Phone ___________________________ Class Year _______
Name(s) of Guest(s) ________________________________
_________________________________________________
Event # of Tickets CostAlumni Dinner x $13 ea =
Child (12 & under) x $7 ea =
Ring and Robing FREE
Dessert Party FREE
Senior Party FREE
Midnight March FREE
Alumni Chapel FREE
Alumni Lunch x $12 ea =
Child (12 &under) x $6 ea =
Event T-shirts x $10 ea =
Quantity: S M L XL XXL
Amount due =
(First, Maiden Name, Last)
Saturday, April 2010 a.m.: Alumni Chapel (Class of ’63 Golden Diplomas presentation) Manning Chapel
12 p.m.: Alumni Lunch (including Parker Award presentation) Lord Conference Center
2 p.m.: Social Gatherings Historical Phila: Musick Alumni Center and Museum at the Parker House Royal Academia: Shelton Theater
Classes celebrating significant reunions include the Class of ’53 and the Class of ’63. Mailers with more specific information will be sent to these classes.
register online:ALUMNI.UMHB.EDU
CAMPUS L I F E 5
In December, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor officials announced that the university has successfully met the terms of two challenge grants, securing the $20 million needed for construction of the Isabelle Rutherford Meyer Nursing Education Center. With the awarding of the two multi-million-dollar grants, the new facility will be debt free when it opens its doors for classes in January.
Challenge grants issued by two different donors last fall provided the impe-tus needed to raise the funds for the project in one year’s time. In October, the J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation of Tulsa, Okla., offered a $2 million grant if the university could raise the remaining balance needed for the project from alumni, foundations, and other friends of the university. A second donor, who asked to remain anonymous, stepped forward soon thereafter, offering a leadership-level gift of an undisclosed amount if the school could secure all funds for the proj-ect by the end of 2012 and complete the facility without exceeding its original budget of $20 million.
First among the numerous gifts which enabled the university to fund the proj-ect was a lead gift of $5 million from Mrs. Jane Meyer of the Paul and Jane Meyer Family Foundation in Waco. Faculty and staff members were also enthusiastic in their support, with pledges and gifts totaling $607,060 for the nursing center and other new facilities called for in the Campus Master Plan.
“When we accepted the challenges issued by the Mabee Foundation and our anonymous benefactor, we were not certain we could meet their terms in such a short time frame,” said Dr. Randy O’Rear, UMHB president. “But as we began telling people about our wonderful nursing program and how the shortage of well-trained nurses affects all of us, our alumni and friends stepped forward in unprecedented numbers to help us fund this new center. Through their gener-osity, we have been able to create a state-of-the-art training facility with the laboratories and classrooms needed for our nursing program to continue to flour-ish and grow.”
The three-story Isabelle Rutherford Meyer Nursing Education Center offers 76,100 square feet in clinical laboratories, practice exam rooms, classrooms, faculty offices, and support spaces for the UMHB nursing program. The center includes a hospital simulation area with the latest in high-tech care devices so students can prepare to utilize cutting-edge technology in a variety of situations, such as an emergency room, a critical care unit, and labor and delivery. The facil-ity will be ready for the start of classes in January, and a dedication ceremony will officially open the center to the public on Feb. 8, 2013.
Funding secured for nursing center
RAN
DY
YAN
DEL
L
“When we first began this
project, we never dreamed
that we could complete
construction of it debt free
in such a short span of
time. We believe that, by
stressing Christian values
as well as the highest
professional standards,
we are producing the
finest nurses to be found
anywhere. And this
strong show of support
tells me that many others
recognize the effectiveness
of this approach and want
to be a part of it.”
— DR. SHARON SOUTER, Scott and White College of Nursing dean
Construction crews put the finishing touches on the Isabelle Rutherford Meyer Nursing Education Center, including installing stained glass windows in the building’s chapel.
Assistant Provost Dr. Tammi Cooper was
named interim dean of
the College of Business in
June. Cooper holds a Ph.D. in Organi-
zation and Management and, prior to
becoming assistant provost in 2010,
she was a full-time faculty member in
the College of Business and the assis-
tant dean of the Student Learning and
Success program.
Nicholas Jones was
promoted to assistant
director of admissions in
August. In his new role,
he will supervise the department’s
support staff, coordinate campus visit
schedules, and manage the applica-
tion and recruiting systems. He will
also serve as a key leader for campus
preview events. Jones graduated
from UMHB in 2007 with a degree
in finance and economics. He joined
UMHB in February 2008 as an admis-
sions counselor, then was promoted
to admissions and electronic commu-
nications counselor in August 2009.
Nicholas and his wife, Jennifer, live in
Belton with their daughter, Kate.
JEN
NIF
ER J
ON
ES
C3: Conversations about Christianity + Culture is a new series designed
to bring influential Christian thinkers and artists to campus and engage in
meaningful dialogue with them about how their ideas and artistry reflects
their faith and responds to culture. The first official event was held Friday,
Nov. 9, featuring Michael Gungor, the frontman of the Christian record-
ing group Gungor. After a short performance, Gungor answered questions
about how he responds to doubts and challenges to his faith. Future C3
guests include painter Makoto Fujimura, writer Donald Miller, filmmaker
Steve Taylor, and musician Shara Worden.
C3: Christian artist Gungor on campus
AROUNDCAMPUS B Y T H E N U M B E R S :
Missions Emphasis Week 2012
REPRESENT ING MORE THAN
25COUNTR IESINCLUDING
BRAZIL, CHINA, GERMANY, SPAIN, ASIA, ROMANIA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC,
UKRAINE, KAZAKHSTAN, MILAWI, HAITI, UGANDA
SCH EDU LED EV EN TS DU R I NG M EW, I N LCU DI NG: SEMINARS ABOUT MISSIONS AND MARRIAGE, REACHING
PEOPLE THROUGH SOCIAL NETWORKING AND TECHNOLOGY, AND MINISTRY AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS.
NUMBER OF MISSIONARIES WHO PARTICIPATED IN THIS YEAR’S MISSIONS EMPHASIS WEEK, WHICH WAS HELD OCT. 22-26 ON THE UMHB CAMPUS.
I see. I hear. I come. I send.THE THEME OF MISSIONS EMPHASIS WEEK 2012, BASED ON EXODUS 3:7-10.
NUMBER OF CLASSES THE MISSIONARIES WERE INVITED TO SPEAK IN OVER THE COURSE OF THE WEEK.
39NUMBER OF UMHB GRADS ON THIS YEAR’S MEW MISSIONARY TEAM
OVER 40 STUDENTS PARTICIPATED IN A 24-HOUR
POVERTY SIMULATION, WHICH INCLUDED SLEEPING OUTSIDE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT.
38 YEARS: NUMBER OF YEARS CHARLES AND VIVIAN STONER
SERVED IN BRAZIL (THE LONGEST APPOINTMENT AMONG THE
MISSIONARY TEAMS THIS YEAR).
6 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
CAMPUS L I F E 7
Jared McClure was
named simulation lab
technology coordinator in
the College of Nursing in
August. He began his career at UMHB
in May 2009 as Media Support Tech-
nologist. He earned his undergraduate
degree from UMHB in 2008, and his
M.Ed from UMHB in 2011. Jared and
his wife, Jessa, live in Belton with their
children, Ady and Asa.
David Plumlee was
named media support
technologist in August.
David will manage the
audio/visual equipment for all UMHB
venues, including classrooms. David
and his wife, Amie, live in Killeen.
Larry Reeves was
named director of event
services/facility opera-
tions (SUB/Stadium) in
October. Reeves has worked at UMHB
since 1982, serving as director of area
development, director of student activi-
ties and, most recently, director of the
Mayborn Center and event services.
Stephen Morton was
promoted to director of
the Mayborn Campus
Center in October.
Morton had served as manager and
assistant director of Mayborn Campus
Center since August 2009. Stephen
graduated from UMHB in 2006 and
holds a master’s degree in Exercise
and Sport Science. Stephen and his
wife, Kelly, live in Temple with their
son Cason.
Parents of children with special needs received helpful tips and had the
opportunity to network with other parents at the Children’s Special Needs
Network’s annual conference, held Oct. 13 on the UMHB campus.
The conference welcomed approximately 200 parents, caregivers,
teachers, and people in the community. Classes ranged from how to
navigate through the school system to accessing service when a special
needs child becomes an adult.
As the parents participated in classes, the children spent quality
time with UMHB students. Before helping with the conference, about
70 students participated in the training necessary to prepare them to
care for children with special needs. Assistant Professor of Education
and conference coordinator Dr. Kris Ward said the experience benefited
students majoring in many different disciplines.
“Our education majors had hands-on experience with the kids, while
nursing students had opportunities to care for people with special needs.
The students learned that people with special needs are not that different
from others in our community. You experience people with unique abilities
and disabilities everywhere you go,” Ward said.
The children were entertained with face painting, arts and crafts, sports,
a Home Depot workshop, and other engaging activities.
Ward was humbled by the stories she heard about how the conference
brought people together. She recalled one family with two blind parents
and a child with multiple disabilities. The family, who had just moved to
Killeen from out of state, had spent nearly a month trying to coordinate a
way to get to the conference. A stranger
volunteered his time to bring the family
to campus, and a student offered to
guide the parents around campus
while another student took care
of their child.
“That’s what the conference
is all about—serving families,”
Ward said. “Whatever their
needs are, we’re going to do
everything we can to meet those
needs. That is true community.”
Children’s Special Needs Conference inspires familiesB Y N I C O L E J O H N S O N ’ 13
How important is the Baptist
vote in shaping American
politics? This question and
many others were addressed
Oct. 12 and 13 at the
conference “Baptists and the
Shaping of American Culture,”
sponsored by the UMHB Center
for Baptist Studies and College
of Christian Studies.
Keynote speaker for the
event was Dr. Wayne Flynt,
emeritus professor of history at Auburn University. Speaking on “Baptists
and the Shaping of Modern American Politics,” Flynt recalled that Baptists
joined with other evangelicals to form the Moral Majority and the American
Christian Coalition in reaction to the secularization of American culture in the
1960s. The influence of those groups has declined over time, he said, because
evangelical groups are not unilateral in their beliefs. “Baptists don’t even
share a common political identity within their own denomination,” Flynt said,
adding that we may join together to oppose a common threat, but over time
our differences lead us to vote our conscience in different ways.
Flynt hypothesized that the 2012 elections could prove to be “the last
gasp of the religious right” as a unified force in U.S. politics. He said political
strategists are slowly learning that “Southern evangelicals are not dumb,
uneducated, or unsophisticated; neither do they always agree with each other
or vote in the same way.”
Christmas Holidays (campus closed)
Offices open
University housing opens
Spring Advising and Registration
Classes begin (day and evening)
Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday (campus closed)
EVENTSCALENDAR
janu
ary
febr
uary
Quoted“We really want to talk
in pretty broad terms
about the two candidates,
laying out some of their
points of view, where
there are similarities
and differences. There’s
so much very heated
rhetoric, and sometimes
it’s not all factual, so we
thought we’d help to
detangle and really have a
conversation.”
—DR. JANET ADAMSKI, referring to a political lecture and election
watch party she and Dr. David Holcomb organized in the days leading up to
the 2012 presidental election. The two professors hoped the events would help
inform student’s decisions.
Charter Day
Summer Camps Job Fair, Lord Conference
Center, 9:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Writers’ Festival, Lord Conference Center
Hillman Visiting Artists Series: Le Voci,
Hughes Recital Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Cru Knights, W.W. Walton Chapel, 7 p.m.
Nursing Job Fair, Lord, 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
One Voice Concert, Hughes, 7:30 p.m.
15
7-912
15-162628
122
3-4 7
21
Dr. Wayne Flynt visits campus as keynote speaker for conference
8 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Dr. Wayne Flynt visits with professor Dr. Carol Holcomb during the conference.
CAMPUS L I F E 9
HEA R D@UMHB // We asked on Facebook: What UMHB faculty or staff member has been the most influential in your life?
Ed Mercer in the 60s. He lost all copies
of his doctoral thesis when Alma Reeves
chapel burned to the ground. His faith
and knowledge gave so many of us the
desire to persevere professionally.
—DIANE GRYSEELS ‘66
mar
ch
apri
lTeacher Job Fair, Lord, 2 – 3:30 p.m.
Instrumental Showcase Tour Home Concert,
W. W. Walton Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Spring Break (campus closed)
Easter Pageant, Luther Memorial,
12:30 p.m., 3 p.m., 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday Holiday (campus closed)
511
18-2227
29
Spring Revival, Quad, 7 p.m.
Health Quest, Mayborn Campus
Center Arena, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spring Opera, Temple CAC, 7:30 p.m.
Spring Opera, Temple CAC, 2:30 p.m.
Charter Celebration Weekend
Robing and Ring Ceremony, Walton, 8 p.m.
Midnight March
Song & Jazz 6, Hughes, 7:30 p.m.
1-35
12, 1314
19-20191923
Dr. Edna Bridges! She believed in me
when others might not have. She talked
the talk and walked the walk.
—DONNA PAVOGGI TALBERT ’78
Dr. George Loutherback: he taught me
to lead. Dr. Shawn Shannon: she taught
me how to have a spiritual life. Dr. Larry
Woodward: he taught me to take pride in
my work. Dr. Peterson: he taught me how
to write. Dr. Kemp: he taught me God’s
Word.—DAVID GRIFFIN ’06
Dr. Bill Tanner, for giving me a “B”
that still annoys me! That “B” taught
me MANY lessons! —JENNIFER EVANS HAMMONDS ’99
University welcomes a diverse group of speakers this fall
PAUL STEKLER: “REEL ELECTIONS: POLITICS ON FILM”THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2012
UMHB and the Institute for the Humanities at Salado cohosted
a lecture by the award-winning documentary filmmaker and
political scholar. More than 200 people were in attendance for the presentation,
which highlighted the the behind-the-scenes life of American politicians.
DR. AMY BLACK: “HONORING GOD IN RED OR BLUE”TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2012
The Honors Program hosted a lecture based on Black’s book
Honoring God in Red or Blue: Approaching Politics with Humility,
Grace, and Reason. Dr. Black holds a Ph.D. from M.I.T. and serves as chair of the
Department of Political Science and International Relations at Wheaton College.
WILLIAM PAUL YOUNG, AUTHOR OF THE SHACKWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2012
William Paul Young spoke in chapel about the inspiration
behind his New York Times best-selling book, The Shack. The
Christian novel was self-published by the Canadian author in 2007 and has
sold over 18 million copies, making it the third largest selling book in history.
KIM SPRADLIN, SURVIVOR SEASON 24 WINNERWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Survivor: One World champion and fan favorite Kim Spradlin
participated in a question-and-answer session during chapel.
Spradlin is the daughter of Temple High School’s head football coach and
athletic director, Mike Spradlin. She attended UMHB in 2001.
This December, the football team played in the Division III National Semi-
finals for the first time since 2008 and for the fourth time overall. The team
won 13 games for just the second time in school history, matching the mark
set in 2004 by the national runner-up team.
The team traded punches with the #1 team in the country, but in the end
the Mount Union Purple Raiders hit the knockout blow in a 48-35 victory over
the Cru Saturday, Dec. 8, in Alliance, Ohio. The loss ended UMHB’s season
at 13-1. Mount Union improved to 14-0 on the season and advanced to the
Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl for the eighth straight season.
The week before, the Cru earned national media coverage when senior
quarterback LiDarral Bailey acted on what he called “instinct,” narrowly
avoiding a sack and flipping the football to wide receiver Caleb Moore in the
end zone during the Cru’s quarterfinal playoff game against Wesley College.
The play, which gave UMHB a 25-17 lead with 1:16 left in the third quarter,
earned the Cru the D3football.com Play of the Week and was featured on
ESPN, Yahoo! Sports, and Sports Illustrated. The Cru went on to win the game
32-20, securing a spot in the NCAA DIII Semifinals.
“All glory to God,” Bailey said after the game. “I rolled out, and I knew I
only had one option to throw to; that was Caleb, and he was covered. It was
just instinct, and I just played off of it.”
Excitement around the play grew so much that current student Jonathan
Kendall started a social media craze when he reenacted the play and posted it
using social media with the hashtag #LiDarralling. Countless individuals added
to the fun including President O’Rear and former UMHB football players and
current NFL players Nate Menkin (Philadelphia Eagles) and Jerrell Freeman
(Indianapolis Colts).
#LiDarralling sweeps campus during football postseason play
N EWSBRIEFS // Volleyball team advances
to ASC semi-finalsThis fall, the volleyball team set a new school single-season record for victo-ries in the Division III era, topping last year’s mark of 21. The team advanced
to the semifinals of the American Southwest Conference Championship
Tournament in Abilene this November, where the Cru fell short in a 3-1 loss to U.T.-Dallas. The loss closes out the
best Division III season in the history of the Cru volleyball program, ending the
season at 22-8.
Women’s tennis player takes third place at ITA
National Championships Women’s tennis player Brittni Fausett
fought through a long second set tiebreaker to post a straight set victory
and win third place at the ITA Small College National Championships in
Mobile, Ala., this October. Fausett, a senior from Cameron, is the first UMHB
female and first Cru singles player to qualify for the ITA National Champi-
onship. Her third place finish is the second-best UMHB finish in ITA history.
10 A T H L E T I C S
UMHB held a special ceremony Sept. 7 dedicating the new Cummins
Field House. Following the ceremony visitors enjoyed guided tours of the
facility. The Cummins Field House was named in honor of Chris and Cindy
Cummins of College Station, Texas, who were present at the ceremony and
cut the ribbon to mark the facility’s opening. As a token of appreciation for
their steadfast support of the Crusader football program, Head Coach Pete
Fredenburg presented the Cummins with two Crusader jerseys bearing the
numbers 20 and 12. “When you wear these jerseys and sit next to each
other at a football game, you will remind everyone around you of the year
2012, when this wonderful field house was dedicated,” Fredenburg said.
Cummins Field House dedicatedR
AND
Y YA
ND
ELL
On Friday, Oct. 19, the university held a special dedication ceremony for its
newest facility, the Baugh Center for the Visual Arts. Over 200 people were in
attendance for the event, which marked a major leap in the development of the
university’s fine arts programs.
During the ceremony, President Randy O’Rear traced the influence of art on
the university back to its early days. In the 1860s the university was located in
Independence, Texas, and known as Baylor Female College. At the time, Harry
McArdle, a draftsman for the Confederate Navy, instructed students in the
basics of music, art, and “expression” as electives. It was not until the school
moved to Belton in 1886 that the fine arts department became a separate divi-
sion that awarded art diplomas.
“Just as art was an important cornerstone of a Mary Hardin-Baylor education
from the beginning, we are blessed with a thriving visual art department today,”
O’Rear said during the ceremony.
The UMHB College of Visual and Performing Arts currently has 88 declared
art majors and 58 students with a minor in art.
Following the ceremony, guests enjoyed tours of the two-story, 27,000-square-
foot facility, which includes a beautiful art gallery and classrooms designed with
specific art mediums such as ceramics, screenprinting, and computer design in mind.
The Baugh Center for the Visual Arts is named in memory of Eula Mae and
John Baugh, Houston philanthropists who were steadfast supporters of higher
education and Texas Baptist causes. John Baugh was the founder of Sysco
Corporation and served as chairman and CEO of the company, which became
the world’s largest food distribution service with 170 locations and over 47,500
employees. John’s business acumen was matched by his commitment to numer-
ous charitable causes, and UMHB was just one of the many organizations that
benefitted from John and Eula Mae’s generous gifts.
The Baughs established the Eula Mae and John Baugh Foundation in 1995 to
continue their philanthropic efforts beyond their own lifetimes. In 2009, under
the direction of their daughter, Barbara Baugh, the foundation stepped forward
to make the lead gift for construction of a new visual arts center, and in doing
so inspired other donors to support the project.
Baugh Center for the Visual Arts dedicated in October
“Just as art was
an important
cornerstone of a
Mary Hardin-Baylor
education from
the beginning, we
are blessed with a
thriving visual art
department today.”— DR. RANDY O’REAR
President
Top left: John Jarrett and Babs Baugh of the Baugh Foundation assist Dr. Randy O’Rear with the ribbon cutting at the ceremonial grand opening of the new Baugh Center for the Visual Arts (pictured above).
P H I L A N T H R O P Y 11
JEN
NIF
ER J
ON
ES
For more on the Baugh Center for the Visual Arts, please see pages 12-15.
doors to students this semester. But
despite its downfalls, the students
lovingly referred to the old space as
“The Dungeon,” and found ways to
flourish in their surroundings.
From the depths of ‘The Dungeon’
to the light of day
“Being down in the basement,
we found a sense of community and
home,” Phillip said. “But this building
is a breath of fresh air. Being a senior
and having my own studio to work in
has been the coolest thing.”
Each senior gets a space to store art
supplies, set up canvases, and display
his or her work. Students assigned to
these rooms are allowed 24/7 access
to the building with a swipe of their
Cru Card and a key to a specific studio
space.
And once the students have
completed their senior work, their
art will now be displayed in the new
gallery located near the building’s
main entrance.
“Having the gallery move from
the library to the new building has
been great,” Phillip said. “A couple of
days into class, my professor took the
whole class in there. To be able to look
at art as a class is really cool.”
And the gallery isn’t only open to
students. Art department chairman
Hershall Seals hopes that others in the
community will also take advantage of
the gallery.
“We hope that residents of Central
into the lightInto the Light
IN A QUIET CORNER OF A ROOM IN
the new Baugh Center for the Visual
Arts, senior studio art major Maddie
Phillip stares at the strokes she’s made
on her once blank canvas. She dabs
at the blues and greens of her color
palette and slides her brush across her
painting-in-progress. No one disturbs
her. No one interrupts this moment of
inspiration. It’s just her and her art.
Phillip’s moment of tranquility just
between her and the canvas would
never have been possible in the art
department’s old home—the cramped
and often damp basement of Presser
Hall. Only four, dark classrooms and
a small metal building held the entire
art department before the new Baugh
Center for the Visual Arts opened its
12 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Texas will keep us on their radar for
coming to look at art,” Seals said.
Having this new space to display
student and faculty art—Dean of
the College of Visual and Perform-
ing Arts Ted Barnes and his wife,
Debra Smith Barnes, were the first to
have their works displayed in the new
gallery—not only benefits the greater
community but is also a great recruit-
ing tool.
“If we want to be the university of
choice for Christian higher education
in the Southwest, then we need to
have an exhibition space that proves
that we are,” Barnes said. “And now
we do.”
Another feature of the building that
is quite a change from the depart-
ment’s previous home is the natural
light that seems to pour in from every
angle. From the large floor-to-ceiling
windows in the foyer of the building
to the sky lights that bathe the top
floor with sunshine, the Baugh Center
has brought the department out of
depths of “The Dungeon” and into the
light of day.
“The change of lighting is huge,”
Phillip said. “Natural light is so much
better for creating good art than fluo-
rescent lighting or anything else that
we’ve had in the past.”
Dean Barnes said he believes that all
of the building’s impressive features offer
students a unique college experience.
“We’ve gone from an old base-
ment to a nice, open, contemporary
into the lightInto the LightBY JESSA GR ASSI McCLURE ’08
Artists move from the basement of Presser Hall into the new
Baugh Center for the Visual Arts, a state-of-the-art facility designed
to inspire creativity and generate interest in the arts
space designed to teach the visual
arts,” he said. “Now students will have
the opportunity to learn in a facility
that feels more like a big-time art and
design school.”
Calling all freshman interested in art
The faculty of the art department
hopes that an expansion and improve-
ment of the art facilities will translate
into more incoming freshman being
excited about the prospect of taking
art classes.
“The art department has done very
well in recruiting transfer students or
people changing their majors after
they’ve taken an art class. And that
will continue,” Barnes said. “But I think
now it will be easier to recruit that
JEN
NIF
ER J
ON
ES
F E A T U R E S 13
18-year-old freshman who is looking
for a place to study art in a state-of-
the-art facility.”
Phillip, who changed her major
after taking an art class, said she
can see the already strong visual arts
program growing after new students
visit the Baugh Center.
“If I came here as a freshman, I
don’t think I would want anything
else,” she said. “I already have friends
that come in the Baugh Center and say,
‘oh man, I want to change my major.’”
All you need is love
But the senior studio art major also
admits that while the building may
entice potential art students, the love
and support of the faculty is what will
keep them there.
“When I got to UMHB, I took a
couple of art classes and absolutely
fell in love with the professors—not
only how they taught but also how
they care for their students and want
what’s best for them.”
The budding artist saw how much
time and effort they invested in her
even before she switched her major
and decided she would devote her
college career to art.
“The professors understand the
difficulties and the struggles that go
along with being an artist, and they
push you through it,” she said.
Phillip believes that potential
recruits will be impressed by the new
facilities and captivated by the facul-
ty’s investment in each student.
“I think students who are inter-
ested in art are going to absolutely fall
in love with this building and these
people,” she said.
But when these new students come
to call the Baugh Center for the Visual
Arts home, Phillip said she hopes they
will remember to be grateful for the
facilities available to them.
“I think it would be easy for a
freshman to come here and not real-
ize how far we’ve come from the
basement of Presser to now being in
such a beautiful and inspiring facility,”
she said. “I would tell them to really
be grateful for it—every room and
every space.”
1 / Phillip runs into art professor Helen Kwiatkowski in the lobby before class. Kwiatkowski remembers two books she wanted to loan Phillip, Wassily Kandinsky’s Concerning the Spiritual in Art and Lois B. Robbins’ Waking Up in the Age of Creativity. 2 / Phillip ducks
into her senior studio to work on a painting that kept her busy into the wee hours the night before. 3 / Phillip grabs her artwork and supplies and heads to her advanced painting class. 4 / Art professor Barbara Fontaine-White looks over the progress Phillip has made on her painting and offers some practical suggestions. 5 / The class takes a quick break from painting to visit the new art gallery for inspiration. 6 / As she passes the display case on the first floor, Phillip is surprised to see the altered book she completed in class last
semester has been added to the display. 7 / Phillip stops by the sculpture studio to work on a piece of jewelry. 8 / On her way to printmaking class, Phillip pops into Kwiatkowski’s design class to see what they are working on and to ask Ms. K a quick question. The
art department’s relaxed, open door policy helps students feel comfortable and encourages creative collaboration among peers. 9 / Phillip watches as senior studio art major Kate Winchell demonstrates a printmaking process.
1
7
14 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
F E A T U R E S 15
UMHB Life follows senior studio art major Maddie Phillip through her day at the Baugh Center for the Visual Arts.
23
4
68 9
5
PHOTOS BY JENNIFER JONES
16 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
a legacy that continues to influence
student life at UMHB today.
This is the story of the Blue House
and the men who lived there.
IF WALLS COULD TALKIt was the spring of 1999, and Chad
Widmer ’01 was a sophomore ministry
major living on campus in the Tryon
Apartments. He was approached by
Dean of Students Ray Martin, who
asked him if he would select nine
upstanding, Christian men in good
academic standing to move with him
into the Blue House. Widmer and his
brother, Kevin, who was a freshman
living in McLane Hall, immediately
began asking mutual friends. The
following fall, the first ten men moved
into the Blue House.
“We were a mixed and varied
group, with some preferring music
and a keyboard and others Play-
stations and Golden Eye, yet the
brotherhood only grew in depth and
love,” one of the original housemates,
Brian Rayburn ’02, said.
Soon the group of men had formed
a unique identity, known throughout
campus as the Blue House Posse. As
members graduated or moved out,
the roommates decided amongst
themselves who they would ask to
move in, based on a self-created set of
guidelines.
“In the summer of 2000, Brian
approached me and asked if I would
be interested in living in the Blue
House,” Jeremy Hill ’03 remembers. “I
accepted and my life changed forever.
or decades, visitors driving
onto campus from Main Street
were greeted by a quaint, two-
story Victorian home with blue siding.
Originally owned by MHB business
manager and education professor Dr.
Tom Dannelley and his wife, Ruth ’40,
the property was purchased by the
university in 1998.
In the late 1990s, the student
population was growing so quickly
that there was not enough room in the
dorms to accommodate the demand
for on-campus housing. The decision
was made to allow students to live in
a number of university-owned houses
near campus, including the Blue
House. Born out of that decision was
a group of young men who forged
a bond closer than brothers and left
F E A T U R E S 17
Little did I know that I had just been
‘inducted’ into an unofficial frater-
nity—a brotherhood that would be
like none other. The guys that would
live in the house were only a small
part of the larger Blue House Posse
that would impact my worldview and
create a bond that would be as strong
as blood. I became as close to those
roommates as brothers and still call
them as such today.”
The Blue House Posse evolved to
include more than just the handful of
young men who lived in the house.
“Other students were welcome to
join us in all that we were involved in.
I can’t remember ever turning anyone
away for any reason; we were pretty
welcoming. The more the merrier,”
Hill said.
The BHP was involved in all aspects
of campus life, including Student
Government Association, Welcome
Week, Easter Pageant, and playing
intramural sports. When they weren’t
participating in university-sponsored
events, they were making their own
fun—camping in the quad, taking the
furniture out of the house to throw
impromptu dance parties, even toilet
papering the president’s house. The
group’s mischief was always executed
with such a good-natured spirit
that Hill remembers first lady Vicky
Bawcom offering the group cookies to
snack on as they cleaned up the mess
in the president’s front yard the next
morning.
But what the group most cherishes
were the times spent together in the
Blue House—starting each semester
with a time of prayer and praise in the
living room; family-style ‘Thanksgiv-
ing’ meals together every fall; and,
of course, the mess that accumu-
lated from a dozen college guys living
together in close proximity.
“I would tell the guys I would cook
for them if they would clean up the
kitchen enough for me to be able
to get to the sink and stove,” Chad
Widmer laughs.
BARREL RUNS, SMELLY COUCHES, AND GOOD TIMES
The spring before the group moved
into the Blue House, Kevin Widmer
’02 and another future BHP member
Robert Forrest ’02 decided on a whim
to carry Kevin’s green plaid loveseat
When ten men moved into a house on the edge of campus in the late 1990s, little did they know the brotherhood that resulted would inspire a tradition that influences student life to this day.
BY JENNIFER MEERS JONES ’08
18 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
from his McLane dorm room out to
the softball field. They sat the couch
right behind home plate and cheered
on the softball team (specifically
Michele Thomas ’02, who later
married Robert).
The tradition continued after the
guys moved into the Blue House.
“One of our original house
members, Jonathan Wright, was on
the Cru soccer team,” Rayburn said.
“He often remarked about how few
fans came out to their games. So the
house responded! That next week
we took two beat-up couches from
our living room, a small black grill,
and handmade signs and headed
out to the soccer game. We did not
know it at the time, but that water-
shed moment of yelling from couches
would become a movement that
became the Couch Cru.”
When the group realized how
much their display of support meant
to the soccer team, they knew it could
mean even more for the university’s
burgeoning football program.
“A couple of us made an appoint-
ment with the athletic director and told
him our idea,” Rayburn said. “He gave
us a few vague parameters and told us
to meet him at the football game early
the next week with our couches. The
entire house set out to recruit all the
friends we could to join us.”
The idea was an instant hit with
the student body. The group began
developing cheers and game-day
rituals, including doing one push-
up for each point the team scored.
During the week, they would dump-
ster dive to acquire barrels, pots, and
pans that they spray painted purple
and gold and brought to the games
as noisemakers. Each gameday, the
group—dressed in school colors,
overalls, cowboy hats, and painted
faces—would load into the back of
their trucks with their couches and
supplies. On their way to the stadium,
they would detour around campus,
honking their horns and cheering, a
precursor to the Campus Run tradition
that continues to this day.
Soon, the Blue House Posse name
became synonymous with their
elaborate displays of school spirit at
sporting events—and for the couches
they toted with them to each game.
“I remember coming home from
church one Sunday in the fall,” BHP
member Jonathan Leftwich ’02 said.
“Joining a few of my Blue House
brothers, I plopped down on a couch
in the living room—it felt like I went
all the way to the floor! Then I remem-
ber the smell of dirty feet hitting me.
It was a reminder of the game the day
before. These couches had been used
in the rain, trampled on by countless
people, then returned to our living
room. We all laughed about the condi-
tion of our couches, and we always
found room for one more couch in the
living room!”
Hill said he believes the BHP’s
success at getting the student body
involved was directly related to the
charisma and leadership that was
embodied in each of the guys who
lived in the house.
“As others joined us, they brought
their friends and invited others
as well,” Hill said. “As our group
changed, new ideas and cheers were
brought to the table. Upperclassmen
made an effort to let go and allow
the younger classes to take over the
responsibilities of organizing, cheer-
ing, supplies, and recruiting. That
translated to a sense of ownership and
made for a seamless transition.”
And with each passing year, the
torch was passed on to the next
generation of Crusader sports fans.
“All those years ago, I never would
have thought that Kevin’s harebrained
idea to take a couch to a softball game
and my eagerness to join him to cheer
F E A T U R E S 19
on my future bride would turn into a
great UMHB tradition,” Forrest said.
“Kevin and I are not trying to take
credit for starting the Couch Cru. We
were just two fat guys sitting on a
couch at softball games. And we were
never actually members of the Couch
Cru because we were part of the foot-
ball team. I like to remember it like this:
my sophomore year, my roommates
were so supportive that they started
something that began a movement
and initiated a college tradition that
still exists today, more than ten years
since my last game as a Crusader.”
Hill said that it is exciting to return
to Cru football games each year and
see first-hand how the Couch Cru has
evolved and adapted.
“The Couch Cru has changed from
what we
began, but
when I look
at them, it
still takes
me back
to a place
where I can
see myself
shoulder-
to-shoulder
with my friends, enjoying life. It
reminds me of the love for those
brothers that will last years beyond
UMHB. Today’s students don’t know
it yet, but that’s what they are creat-
ing—relationships that they will
treasure for the rest of their lives.”
THEN AND NOW. Left: The Blue House Posse during their college days. (Top row, from left) Charlie Turner, Ricky White, Jess Barber, Chad Toppass, (seated on couch) Matthew Culli, Brady Johnston, Robert Forrest, Chad Peterson, Kevin Widmer, Chauncey Gearhart, (on floor) Chad Widmer, Jimmy Wright, Jeremy Hill, Jonathan Wright, and Blake Gearhart. Right: The BHP reunites at Homecoming in October. (From Left) Katy McNab Peterson, Emma Peterson, Chad Peterson, Clark Peterson, Georgia Peterson, Chauncey Gearhart, Nathan Allen, Amanda Day Hill, Jeremy Hill, Megan Leftwich, Elisabeth Bennett Leftwich, Jonathan Leftwich, Ellie Leftwich, Kara Leftwich, Ethan Leftwich, Matthew Culli, Brady Johnston, Annie Johnston, (kneeling in front) Jenny Lindquist Worsham, Noah Worsham, and Trent Worsham.
A BAND OF BROTHERSBHP members agree the group’s
real legacy is the impression they
left on one another during the years
they experienced together in the Blue
House.
“Whenever I describe it to others
along the way, I get the response,
‘So, was it a fraternity? What was the
difference?’,” BHP member Jimmy
Wright ’03 said. “The difference is
that not only did everyone love the
Lord, but we tried to exemplify what
brotherhood truly was meant to be.
The bond that we had in common
was that we were there together, no
matter who it was, cheering on each
other in everything we did.”
Leftwich agrees.
“What made the Blue House and
the Couch Cru so special to me was
our bond in the Lord,” he said. “We
could scream our lungs out at a foot-
ball game, then pray for each other
that evening. We could argue a referee
call at noon, and then argue about
predestination at night. We would put
as much energy into worshiping the
Lord on Sunday as we would scream-
ing at the game on Saturday. We
could be really mad at each other over
a girl, over drinking someone else’s
milk, or over not taking out the trash,
but there was always forgiveness and
brotherly love in Christ.”
A decade later, members of the
Blue House Posse are spread out all
over the world. Some are teachers.
Some are coaches. Many are pastors.
One worked with the U.S. Congress
and one is a Wycliff missionary in the
Far East.
“I wonder how many lives have
been changed for Christ because of
the men of the Blue House?,” Leftwich
asked. “Ten years later, we have been
all over the world, in all different walks
of life, living out a life for Christ which
was shaped and formed in so many
different ways by our time together in
the Blue House.”
Do you have a story of an enduring UMHB friendship? We’d love to hear it! Please submit it to [email protected].
OCTOBER 19-20, 2012HomecomingTHERE'S NO PLACE LIKE
FLAT RANDYStudent Megan Redmond poses with a cardboard cutout of
President Randy O’Rear in Hardy’s dining hall. The Flat Randy Project
was a Resident Hall Association-sponsored photo contest inspired by
the children’s book Flat Stanley. During Homecoming week, students
competed to find the most creative way of displaying photos of O’Rear.
COUR
TESY
PH
OTO
20 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
CARNIVALBelow: The carnival in the quad included many activities for the
young and the young at heart, including bounce houses and bungee
jumping. Bottom right: Anna & Trayse Ryker take a ride down the
big slide set up on Moore Street during the carnival Friday night.
OCTOBER 19-20, 2012HomecomingTHERE'S NO PLACE LIKE
Alumni return to campus for a weekend of family-friendly events and catching up with old friendsPHOTOS BY JENNIFER MEERS JONES ’08AND R ANDY YANDELL ’99
CRU CHEFAbove: The winning team from the student
Cru Chef competition competed in the champi-onship round against the winning teams from
Cru Chef alumni events held throughout the summer. Above right: Katie McKee ’07 and
Allison Powell Glapa ’07 put the finishing touch-es on their team’s food. Right: Student Body President Kassidy Harris and Chad Hammonds
’01 served as two of the Cru Chef judges.
22 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Stunt NIghtAbove: Gregory Applegate performs a dance
routine as part of the freshman class skit. Top right: The Class of 2007 (including Allison DeBusk ’07 and Courtney Morrical Moore ’07)
returned to campus for their five-year reunion and to reprise their senior year skit. The Class of 2007
won stunt night every year they were students. Right: The sophomore class won Judge’s Choice
and the coveted Stunt Night blanket during the time-honored tradition Friday night.
FOOTBALL GAMEAbove: Seniors Jayelyn Johnson and Jonathan Davis were crowned Homecoming King and Queen at the half time show during Saturday’s football game. Left: A future Crusader watches the game. The Cru beat Hardin Simmons University, 45-32.
F E A T U R E S 23
PEP RALLY AND DESSERT PARTYFollowing a pep rally and fireworks display at Luther Memorial Friday night (pictured at left), guests walked over to Millenium Oaks Park for dessert and a time of fellowship. Above right: Jeremy ’03 and Amanda Day Hill ’04 visit with Alumni Board President Trish Stewart Woods ’03. piritual in Art and Lois B. Robbins’ Waking Up in the Age of Creativity.
CAMPUS RUN AND TAILGATEAbove: Student Conner Fuchs throws up the ‘C’ during the campus run, as the cars make their way to Tiger Field for the football game Saturday afternoon. Above right: Students including Jennifer Ander, Rebekah Bogaard, and Lindsay Parker enjoy the catered tailgate lunch from Clem Mikeska’s Barbeque before the football game.
CRU 5kParticipants begin the first stretch of the Cru 5K Fun Run Saturday morning in front of Mayborn Campus Center.
ALUMNILIFE
Tradition merges with technology as a new generation of students were dubbed “Crusaders for life” at the conclusion of Welcome Week in August.
’53 Members of the class of 1953 met in Fort Worth at the Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship annual meeting in June with Lynelle Sweat Mason ’53 during her book signing.
Jency McMurrey Runnels ’53 turned 100 in August. In July, she was featured on the WOAI program San Antonio Living, and her family gave her a birthday party which was attended by approximately 100 guests. Jency was born in Sweethome, Texas, and her family moved to South San Antonio when she was twelve. Jency graduated from South San Antonio ISD and then attended college at Mary Hardin-Baylor. She then began teaching in the same three-story building where she attended school. In that same building, she also met her future husband, Frank C. Runnels. Jency taught third grade for 41 years, most of those years in South San Antonio. Frank and Jency had two children, Franklin and Martha; four grand-children; eleven great grandchildren; and two step-great grandchildren.
’62 Sandra Eckeberger Click and her husband, Porter, celebrated their golden
wedding anniversary on June 23, in Big
Sandy. They renewed their wedding vows in a short ceremony led by Pastor David Thornton at New Hope Baptist Church followed by a reception in the church’s Memo-rial Building. The couple married on June 22, 1962, in Garland after Sandra graduated from college. They moved to Austin for three years where Sandra taught elementary school, and Porter obtained a BS degree in Physics from the University of Texas. Then moved back to their hometown, Garland, to raise their family and work in their chosen fields. After retiring in 1999, Sandra and Porter purchased 12 acres in Pritchett and moved to the country and named their farm Jubilee.
’64 Velva Schrader Riddle and Kenneth Riddle ex celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary with a reception at
24 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Left to right: Joan Marlowe Myrah ’53, Lynelle Sweat Mason ’53, Glenna Morgan Stamps ’53, June Reagan Caldwell ’52, Pat Lockridge Shannon ’53, Shirley Morin Cockerham ex, and Betty Payne Huber ’52.
Alumni Life reports news received June 15, 2012, through Oct. 15, 2012. If you have news to share, send it to: Alumni Relations, UMHB Box 8427, 900 College Street, Belton, Texas 76513 or [email protected].
To make a memorial gift, please contact: Development, UMHB Box 8433, 900 College Street, Belton, Texas 76513.
Got news?
Waco with Randa Sudbury Ibsen ’65 and Wanda Sudbury ’65. Eula may be reached at [email protected], and Julia may be reached at [email protected].
’79 Karen Riley Scott has started a business in Lubbock running errands.
The name of the business is Rainbow Delivery Service. She is president of the local chapter of DAPW and is serving her second year as senior vice commander of the local DAVA unit.
’83 Criss Pearson Bartley teaches physics at Gilmer High School in east Texas.
For the past 12 years she has been involved with the Solar Car Challenge in Dallas. The project guides students in the design and construction of road-worthy solar race cars. She has been a team adviser of three teams in three states and serves as a race judge when she does not have a team.
’91 Mayra Velez earned her M.Ed. in educational tech-nology from
Texas State University May 12, and was accepted as a Ph.D. candidate. She will begin her doctorate program this fall. Mayra is a third grade bilingual teacher for Belton ISD.
’95 Trey ’95 and Kimberly Alford Lancaster ’97 were appointed as missionaries
with the International Mission Board. They, along with their two daughters, will be serving in South Asia.
’96 Jason Fossett is the head boys basketball coach at Flower Mound High
School. He and his wife, Nikki, have two children, 12-year-old Quinton and 8-year-old Ashlyn. They live in Ponder.
’97 Shawn Hanks was promoted to president of Premiere
Speakers Bureau. Located in Franklin, Tenn., PSB represents many of the world’s leading speakers and authors.
’01 Jennifer Ramirez-Guajardo
received her Master of Education Administration degree from Concordia University in Austin Aug. 4.
’03 Stephanie Dickens Branham is working at Allumed, Inc. in human resources as an
accounts receivable manager. She has two children, Seth and Hannah.
’04 Ryan Musser is associate pastor and co-student minis-ter at Sugar Land Baptist
Church in Sugar Land. He had previously served as interim pastor at Canaan Baptist Church in Crawford.
ALUMNI L I F E 25
JEN
NIF
ER J
ON
ES
First United Methodist Church in Gatesville on Aug. 25. Velva taught for 30 years at Gatesville High School and Windham School District, and Kenneth taught school for 40 years at Gatesville State School for Boys and Gatesville Junior High School. They are both retired.
’65 Eula Woodyard McKown and Julia Woodyard Nation were honored by
their families with a celebration on June 24 in Steamboat Springs, Colo., for their 70th birthday. Eula’s son, Patrick, and Julia’s children, Allen and Robert, and their families, including granddaughter Dawn Nation ’99, were all in attendance. After the celebration, the families spent a week sightseeing in Steamboat Springs. Eula and Julia continued their trip the following week, taking road trips along two scenic routes. They stopped in Eagle, Colo., visited Great Sand Dunes National Park, and made a stop in Santa Fe, N.M., to visit a friend. The end of the trip was dinner in
’08 Julie Barr is the resident director of
Johnson Hall at UMHB.
’09 Ruby Blancett Bowen ’09,
MBA ’11 is a training and development coordinator for the City of Killeen.
’11 Travis Early is the youth pastor at First Baptist Church, Elgin.
Cassie Michels ’11 is the outdoor educa-tion and adventure guide coordinator and summer camp director for the Girl Scouts of Central Texas at Camp Texlake in Spicewood.
WEDDINGSAmy Shantele Beason ’95 to Eduardo Enrique Mills Castillo, June 21, in Arraiján, Panama.
Laura Gilbert ’04 to Jason Voss, June 30, in Marion. Laura is a pharmaceutical sales representative for Warner Chilcott Pharma-ceuticals, and Jason is a field engineer for Baker
Hughes. They live in Corpus Christi.
Natalie Paige Ervin ’09 to Tyler Douglas Jones, Aug. 4, in Georgetown.
Courtney Nelson ’10 and Rob Neuenschwander ’10, June 16, in Burleson. Courtney teaches first grade at Peaster Elemen-tary School, and Rob is an insurance sales repre-
sentative at Mader-Bagley State Farm in Weatherford.
Alyssa Atteberry ’10 to Brett Berryhill, July 28, in Oglesby.
Erik Wilbur ’10 to Renee Huffman, July 28, in Colonial Heights, Va.
Melanie Dian Daniell ’11 to Matthew David Bowling, June 23, in Belton. Melanie teaches elementary school at Florence ISD, and Matthew manages his family’s auto-motive business in Killeen.
Kristin Elaine Urban’11 to Cody Allan Collins, Jan. 21, in Taylor.
Cara Scott ’12 and Khang Duong ’09, June 9, in Houston. Cara is a social worker for Early Childhood Intervention in Harker Heights, and Khang is admissions and
electronic communications counselor at UMHB.
BIRTHSJosh ’00 and Angela Stan-ley Estes ’02 announce the birth of their son, Grady James, Aug. 10.
Sarah Epperson Sanford ’02 and her husband, Eric, current UMHB student, announce the birth of their son, Noah Matthew, Jan. 10. He joins four-year-old big sisters Alexis
and Lilly. The family lives in Harker Heights.
Wesley ’02 and Susan Muske Craig ’03 announce the birth of their daughter, Meadow Lucy, May 12. The family lives in San Antonio.
Tiffany Russell DeLuze MBA ’03 and her husband, Michael, announce the birth of their daughter, Kayla Marie, Sept. 12. Tiffany is an assistant professor
in the College of Business at UMHB, and Michael works at Wilsonart International as a product quality associate.
Kesi Perkins Prescott ’03 and her husband, Kenny, announce the birth of their daughter, Kenli Ryanne, Aug. 21. They live in Moody where they both teach math, and
Kenny is the head girls basketball coach at Moody High School.
Abby Waeltz Jensen ’04 and her husband, Chad, announce the birth of their son, Jack Samuel, in February. He joins three-year-old big brother Will.
Kenny ‘04 and Natalie Morton DeWeese ‘07 announce the birth of their daughter, Emery Elizabeth, June 15. Emery is the granddaughter of UMHB Men’s Basketball
head coach Ken DeWeese.
Michael ’06 and Andrea Cullman Crosswhite ’05 announce the birth of their son, Grayson Michael, June 6. Michael is a minister at First Baptist Church Rockwall,
and Andrea owns her own photography business, Crosswhite Photography.
Christi Virgil Priddy ’06 and her husband, Toby, announce the birth of their son, Logan Brycen, Aug. 4. He joins big brother Todd.
Nathan ’06 and Colette Chadwell Loudin ’06 announce the birth of their son, Sidney “Judah,” May
13. He joins big sister Jaya (born Nov. 22, 2008) and big brother Jonah (born May 18, 2010). The Loudins spent four years in Hong Kong serving the International Baptist Church. In November 2010, they moved back to the United States, and Nathan attended Dallas Theological Semi-nary. In February 2011, Nathan was named lead pastor at Milwood Baptist Church in Austin, Texas.
(continued on page 28)26 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
ALUMNI L I F E 27
Lights. Camera. Action!Charles Jenkins ’08 brings attention to local outreach efforts as host of Christian-based talk show, Attention Central Texas
Charles ‘Skeeta” Jenkins ’08 settles
in his chair under the KPLE-TV studio
lights. He looks into the camera, waits
for the cameraman’s countdown,
and begins to greet the thousands of
people in his viewing audience.
“Hello and welcome to Attention
Central Texas. I’m your host, Charles
Jenkins,” he introduces himself then
welcomes the first guest of the day.
Attention Central Texas is a Chris-
tian-based talk show that extends over
multiple counties. Each week an orga-
nization is invited to speak about the
work they are doing for others.
“There are great people in Central
Texas doing outstanding things for
the greater good of their community
and reaching out to those who are in
need. They come on the show to tell
people what they are doing,” Jenkins
said. “I’m there to enhance Christ’s
reputation through the community.”
Jenkins has hosted the show for
three years. A chance encounter
started his journey in television. As
he spoke at a meeting, he caught the
attention of KPLE-TV owner Catherine
Mason. She asked the former UMHB
football player turned motivational
speaker and children’s book author to
come on the show as a guest. After
his appearance, Mason asked him to
come back and host the show.
“At first I was surprised because I
didn’t have any experience. So I just
observed and learned from other
people. Each week I watched play-
backs to determine what I could do
differently—it was trial and error. And
now I’m a little better at it.”
As Jenkins engages in conversation
with each guest, he connects their
charitable work with scripture.
“I think when you do that, it helps
people feel like we have a common
connection. And when you feel
connected to somebody you’re more
prone to open up. It makes people feel
at ease.”
Off-screen, Jenkins continues his
efforts to make a difference as the
author of a collection of children’s
books. The books, including Believe
In Youself, Bruce and Never Give
Up, Mary Lou are aimed to boost a
child’s self-confidence, self-worth, and
self-respect.
“I like to rhyme,” he said. “I’m not
a rapper, but I do like writing poetry.
So I just take the books and turn them
into inspirational stories that motivate
kids to do their best, because some-
body did it for me. I found that this is
an avenue for me to encourage kids
through literature and writing.”
Jenkins is in the process of writing
his fourth book, with a message that
although someone may look different,
act different, and talk different from
us, we still can become friends.
He hopes to someday have a talk
show that is centered on encouraging
family.
“I want to call it A Family’s Niche.
I’ll invite different people in the
community to come on and have a
conversation about family.”
B Y N I C O L E J O H N S O N ’ 13
PHOTOS BY JENNIFER JONES
Jenkins is briefed by the sound technician in between sets of Attention Central Texas.
Charles Jenkins ’08
Lindsey Van Dusen Edwards ’07 and her husband, Travis, announce the birth of their daughter, Madelaine Brooke, June 20. The family lives in Athens.
Patrick Oliver ’08 and his wife, Felicia, announce the birth of their daughter Mya Ann, April 3. The family lives in Rosenberg, where Patrick teaches and coaches at Cinco Ranch
High School.
Justin ’08 and Candace Teich Schwartz ’09 announce the birth of their daughter, Laney Faith, May 11.
Matt Brown ’09 and his wife, Jenna, announce the birth of their son, Mason David, April 6. He joins big brother, Jack Cooper.
Patrick ’10 and Chelsea Glenn Munoz ’09 announce the birth of their daughter, Penelope, Sept. 12. Chelsea is an RN at Scott and White, and Patrick is an admissions
counselor at UMHB. They live in Belton and may be reached at [email protected].
DEATHSMary Alice Andrews Cline ’36-’37, Aug. 26, in Amarillo. She worked as a secretary for Soil Conservation Bureau of Reclamation, Amarillo Air Force Base, and Tascosa High School for 25 years. She was inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame in 1990. She was a member of Covenant Fellowship Church, formerly San Jacinto United Methodist Church, for 82 years, where she taught children’s Sunday School. She was a member of The Heritage Class, for which she was the teacher for many years.
Helen Anderson Howell ex ’36, Sept. 22, in Temple. She co-owned Family Video in Temple with her husband and extended family from 1984-1989. She created unique and individual “cancer angel” ornaments for the gift shop at the Vasicek Cancer Treatment Center at Scott & White Memorial Hospital in Temple, raising thousands of dollars for the Scott & White H.O.P.E. fund.
Peggy Wilkinson Dockery ex ’46, Aug. 20, in San Antonio. She taught in the public school system in Texas for over 35 years.
Fayly Hardcastle Cothern ’47, Sept. 30, in Sun City, Ariz. She served in a multitude of capacities in Southern Baptist work in Texas and Arizona. She was a member of First Baptist Church, Sun City, where she taught “The Joy Class” for many years. She lived an adventure of faith, sharing the love of God and serving others through writing, public speaking, leading conferences, directing travel tours, photography, bible teaching and as a pastor’s wife to her husband, Gaylon Cothern, for fifty years. Fayly received the UMHB Outstanding Alumni award in 1982. She was the sister of Bonny Hardcastle Brewer ’51.
JoBeth Storey Donaldson ’48, June 11, in San Angelo. She was a professional dietitian, beginning her career at Scott & White Memorial Hospital in Temple. She held senior positions in many hospitals thereafter. She was a member of the American Dietetic Association and Southland Baptist church.
Rosemary Blackwell Sheppard ’48, July 26, in Cuero. She taught in the Cuero Public School System until her retirement in 1985. After retirement she actively managed her farm and ranch properties until her death. In 2003 her farm was recognized by the Texas Department of Agriculture. Rosemary served as organist for the First Baptist Church of Cuero for many years. She was an active member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, The Daughters of the Republic of Texas, and the DeWitt County Historical Commission. She served as co-chairperson of the History of DeWitt County Project Committee which published an 800-page volume entitled DeWitt County History in 1981.
Eugenia Fegette ’50, July 21, in Albuquer-que, N.M. She lived in Dallas until 1961, holding positions with Hydrotex Industries, Chance Vought Aircraft, and Electronic Equipment Engineering. She moved to Albuquerque in 1963 and held drafting positions with the City of Albuquerque for 25 years, retiring in 1988. Eugenia was an ordained minister in the Universal Church of the Holy Spirit where she also served as the choir director until 1986.
Mary Woodward Rode ’50, July 29, in San Antonio.
David Whyburn, July 31, in Guthrie, Okla. He was the son of Jack and Minnie Sharp Whyburn ’50.
Ernestine Owens Goldston ’51, Aug. 10, in Hereford. She was a member of First Baptist Church of Hereford where she was a Sunday School superintendent volunteer. She volunteered at the Hereford Senior Citizens Center and the Pioneer Frontier Museum in Canyon.
Ernestine Wiese London ’52, June 26, in Moody. She married James London in 1953, and they were the first couple to be married in the newly built First Baptist Church in Moody. They moved to Odessa in 1983, both pursuing careers in education, and returned to Bell County in 1987 to the property that had belonged to Ernestine’s grandparents since 1895. There they enjoyed their retirement years, raising cattle in the beautiful central Texas countryside. She volunteered at King’s Daughters Hospital, was a member of the Bell County Chapter of the Republican Women of Texas, the Alpha Delta Kappa teacher sorority, and the BSU. She was a member of Immanuel Lutheran Church, where she volunteered with the food pantry, and she also attended Moody-Leon Methodist Church.
Charlotte Boyd Young ’54, June 28, in Hartselle, Ala. She taught in public schools in Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. She was a member of Southwest Baptist Church in Hartselle, where she taught adult Sunday School and Vacation Bible School.
Billy Stephens, Aug. 4, in Overland Park, Kan. He was the husband of Delia Lucky Stephens ’61.
(continued on page 30)28 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Marathoner Tanya Taylor ’02, runs to raise money for the two-year-old daughter of her college friends Dean ’02 and Heather Arnold Holman ’02
Most people can’t imagine running
one marathon, let alone two in one
weekend. But that is exactly what
Tanya Taylor ’02 will be doing when
she runs the Goofy’s Race and Half
Challenge in Walt Disney world on
Jan. 12 and 13.
The 39.3-mile race takes place
over two days and encompasses a
half marathon on Saturday and a full
marathon on Sunday.
But these races aren’t for fun.
Taylor is running to raise money
for two-year-old Ella Holman, who
is undergoing treatment for Acute
Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Ella is
the daughter of Heather and Dean
Holman, both 2002 graduates of
UMHB and Taylor’s long-time friends.
“When Ella was diagnosed with
leukemia, I asked myself, ‘how can I
support Heather and Dean?’ I knew
medical costs were going to start
adding up,” Taylor said.
The UMHB alumna began research-
ing how she could help the Holmans,
contacting the Team in Training
running program that allows runners
and other athletes to raise money for
blood cancers.
“But when you’re a part of Team in
Training your fundraising goes directly
to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
instead of an individual family,” Taylor
said.
But that didn’t stop Taylor. She was
determined to find a way to help her
friends. She did some more research
and found out that Walt Disney World
is not only a supporter of the Leuke-
mia & Lymphoma Society, but also
hosts marathons every year to allow
runners like Taylor to raise money on
their own.
“I also developed a website where
I could put information about Ella,
about the race, what we’re doing, and
why we’re doing it,” she said.
The team’s website is at
youcaring.com under “Team Ella.”
Taylor also found four other people
to join her in running and raising
money for Ella.
“We put a goal out there of
$5,000,” she said. “But we hope that
we can also gain some attention and
more funding by running these races.”
Taylor wants to make sure her close
friends, who are living on a single
teacher’s income, don’t have to worry
about financial burdens while they are
focusing on getting their daughter
well. And the Holman’s appreciate all
of Taylor’s hard work.
“It means everything to Dean and
me,” Heather Holman said. “We don’t
have a lot of family support, so our
friends are basically our family.”
Heather said she is touched by all
of Taylor’s help in trying to make this
difficult time easier for her family.
“Not many people would go to
Disney World to run a race for your
daughter,” she said.
Right now Taylor and her team-
mates are in training, while Ella is in
treatment to maintain her remission
status. Taylor hopes that Ella’s illness
and the family’s financial burdens will
soon be over.
“I hope that Ella is soon is in full
remission and does not have to strug-
gle with this
disease any
longer. And
I hope that
running
these
marathons
encourages
others to
support the
Holmans.”
Tanya Taylor ’02 (left) goes on a training run with friends Casey Gottschalk and Tiffany Krueger, who will be running with Taylor in the half marathon in support of Ella in January.
B Y J E S S A G R A S S I M c C L U R E ’ 0 8
Dean ‘02 and Heather Holman ‘02 with their children, four-year-old Nathaniel and two-year-old Ella.
EllaRunning for
COURTESY PHOTOS
Jan Jones ’63, Sept. 6, in Tyler. She began her teaching career at A&M Consolidated High School in College Station but soon moved to Tyler where she taught theater for 33 years at Robert E. Lee High School, retiring in 2000. She taught at All Saints Episcopal School for two years and East Texas Christian Academy for two years. Jan also worked at the Tyler Civic Theater and was an adjunct professor of theater and speech at Tyler Junior College. She taught at the University of Texas at Tyler and Trinity Valley Community College.
Janet Maedgen Klement ’65, June 27, in Troy. She taught kindergarten for Troy ISD for 26 years and was a member of Troy United Methodist Church.
Virginia Rea McIntosh ’71, June 13, in Corpus Christi. She taught at St. Mary’s School for 40 years. She was a member of Crossroads Church where she was active in Ladies Birthday Girls, supported Maypearl Orphanage, and helped with Operation Christmas Child.
Ronald Poston ’72, Sept. 27, in Waco. He owned and operated a farming and ranching operation and was a real estate investor. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Gatesville.
Sue Taylor Scibek ’73, June 17, in Graham. She retired from Graham Regional Clinic as a Nurse Practitioner, and was a member of Oak Street Baptist Church.
Ron Raymond, Sept. 15, in Spring Branch. He was the husband of Merle Lucko Raymond ’74.
David Wayne Pruitt, July 24, in Temple. He was the husband of Carolyn Owens Pruitt ’75.
Garrett Hill ’77, July 27, in Belton. He retired as director of industrial operations at Fort Hood from the U.S. Army after 30 years, having served in World War II and the Korean War. He later built a foundry, spin casting in Temple, and was a licensed real estate broker. He was a city council-man for 12 years, a 32nd degree Mason, a long-time member of the Temple Lions Club, a member of P.O.S.T. of Morgan’s Point Resort. Garrett was a member of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, Belton. He was the husband of Muriel Klippel Hill ’77.
Frances Rosales Calooy ’78, July 1, in Killeen. She was den mother for the Cub Scouts and a Girl Scout Troop Leader for more than six years. In the early 1990s, she worked for the Family Advocacy Program at the Reynolds House at Fort Hood, where she taught parenting classes to young couples. She then worked for the Army Community Service at Fort Hood, where she donated 5,000 hours of her time to help counsel young military fami-lies during Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm. She later taught accounting courses and served as a curriculum counselor at Central Texas College in Killeen. She was the wife of Rudy Calooy ’77.
Pedro Paredes ’78, July 26, in Browns-ville. He served eight years in the U.S. Army and was a sergeant in the Military Police Division at Fort Hood. He worked at Brownsville Independent School District for 30 years.
David S. Hobbs ’80, July 22, in Troy. He worked as a disc jockey at KTEM-Temple and KVET-Austin. Then he worked for the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission as an auditor in Dallas and the Texas Panhan-dle. He returned to Temple to join and manage his family business, Temple Color Company, until July 1, 2012. David was a member of First Baptist Church of Temple and previously served on the Temple Inde-pendent School Board. He was a member of the Knob Creek Masonic Lodge #401, King Solomon Lodge #1427, Temple York Rite Bodies, and an endowed member of Waco Scottish Rite Bodies.
Margie Cargill Johnson ’81, July 13, in Temple. She was a member of East High-way Baptist Church. She taught computer science at Temple Jr. College for 21 years. She was the wife of Jesse Johnson ’80.
30 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Independence Day JOIN THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION FOR A SPECIAL TRIP TO UMHB’S BIRTHPLACE
SUNDAY, MARCH 3
4 p.m.: Reception at Old Baylor
5:30 p.m.: Concert at Independence Baptist Church
and Texas Baptist Museum
TO RSVP: [email protected] • (254) 295-4599 • alumni.umhb.edu (There is no charge for the reception or the concert.)
(continued on page 32)
For the love of educationIn 1970, John and Shirley Stephenson became the first married couple to graduate together at UMHB
For every student, graduation repre-
sents the fruition of many long hours.
For John ’70 and Shirley Stephenson
’70, the first married couple to ever
pick up their diplomas in the same
UMHB ceremony, it was the celebration
of an especially long journey.
When they met, John and Shirley
were both already enlisted in the Army.
From the very beginning, they knew
their life together would be dictated, in
large part, by whatever shipping orders
they received.
“I promised her when we first
got married that she could go to
college whenever we got stationed
somewhere with a good school,” John
said.
Shirley held him to that pledge, and
when the couple found themselves
stationed at Fort Hood, she hit the
ground running.
“I started in the first class at Central
Texas College (CTC) and went straight
through until they didn’t have any more
courses for me,” she said, “so I trans-
ferred to Mary Hardin-Baylor.”
Sure that her family might get moving
orders at any moment, she pushed
herself to graduate within three years.
“I went year-round, all the
minimesters, any kind of ‘mester’ they
had,” Shirley said.
At the same time, John was work-
ing to get his own degree. He applied
for and was accepted into the Army’s
degree completion program, Opera-
tion Bootstrap. After a second tour
in Vietnam, he was able to attend
Mary Hardin-Baylor, but the clock was
ticking.
“Bootstrap was competitive. The less
time it would take you to finish, the
better the chance you had of accep-
tance,” John said, “so I said I could
finish in six months.”
To accelerate his path to a degree,
John would read books for courses
and then test out of them. He received
credit for half a dozen courses this way.
While he was at Mary Hardin-Baylor,
John also took correspondence courses
from the United States Armed Forces
Institute. He even registered for a
computer class at CTC when
one would not fit
into his
schedule. Between these three institu-
tions, John was able to carry 23 hours
in a single spring semester.
“He was a good student,” Shirley
said. “He made very good grades, too.”
For Shirley, balancing the roles of
wife, mother, and full-time student
meant having to be creative with time
management. Each day after class, she
would pick her two daughters up from
daycare, make dinner, and get everyone
to bed by eight. She would then wake
up at four in the morning to study and
do her homework before getting every-
one up, fed, and off to school.
“It was fun to do it together because
it was for a common cause,” Shirley
said of attending school alongside
John. “We had goals, and we were
going to reach those goals no matter
what.”
Shirley remembers their graduation
as a celebration of much more than
academic success.
“He had been in Vietnam for two
year-long tours, and at that time I
didn’t know if he would even be back,”
she said. “To finish school together… It
was a blessing that we never expected
would happen.”
B Y J A M E S S T A F F O R D
On graduation day, John and Shirley Stephenson pause for a photo with Shirley’s father, Don Hughes, and their daughters Kimberly and Brandy.
31
Verlene Crippen Edwards ’84, June 10, in Fort Worth. She enjoyed a 22-year teach-ing career at five Christian schools, the most recent being Trinity Christian School in Cedar Hill. Her husband, David Edwards, may be reached at 1709 Cancun Dr., Mansfield, Texas 76063.
John Nicolet ’79, MEd ’84, May 2, in Twain Harte, Calif.
Margie Kittrell ’86-’87, Aug. 16, in McGregor. She taught private kindergar-ten in her home and later in the McGregor Public School System from 1960 until her retirement in 1996. She was also employed by the McGregor Police Department as a dispatcher, a clerk at Evers Corner Drug, and a receptionist at Cole Funeral Home. Margie also assisted her husband as a bookkeeper with Kittrell & Associate Land Surveyors. She was a member of Harris Creek Baptist Church and later moved her letter and became an active member of College Avenue Baptist Church, where she was a member of the Ruth Class, taught Sunday School for more than 25 years, and assisted with Vacation Bible School. She was active in the McGregor community as a past president of the PTA, past Matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, and was a member of the Brazos Valley Cloggers.
Brett Mullins ’94, Sept. 23, in Temple. He began his teaching and coaching career after graduation. For the last five years he worked at Bartlett ISD as a biology teacher and was an assistant football coach on his father’s coaching staff.
Crisi Vermaelen ’05, Aug. 27, in Axtel. She was a homemaker and a member of the First Baptist Church where she sang in the choir. She was a member of the praise team, Central Texas Master Singers, Believe In Me dance group, and the Austin Ballet.
Elizabeth James Harris ’91, June 21, in Killeen. She was a medical technologist but was employed at Darnall Army Medical Center as an assistant chemistry supervisor at the time of her death.
Donald Smith, Oct. 1, in Austin. He was the husband of Montie Milligan Smith ’93.
Zula Berry ex, June 8, in Amarillo.
Lucy Hassell Davis ex, Sept. 11, in Hickory, N.C. She was a charter member of North-minster Presbyterian Church where she
and her husband taught the Bible Discov-ery Class for many years. She was recently honored by the women of the church as Woman of the Year. Called the “Poet Laureate of Hickory,” she published two books of poetry, as well as numerous individual poems in various publications and several hymns. She donated all the proceeds from the sale of the second book, Rocking Chair Rhymes, to Hospice of Catawba County.
Polly Ray Donnell ex, Sept. 18, in Graham. She entered nursing school in 1968 at the age of 55 and retired from private duty nursing in 1980. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church and in 2008 was presented an Honorary Life Membership in Presbyterian Women. She was also a long time member of the Spinner Domino Group.
Eva Jean Rule Gallup ex, July 14, in Memphis, Tenn.
Martha Crawford Hamilton ex, Sept. 19, in Bryan. She was a member of First Baptist Church in Corpus Christi where she sang in the church choir and ministered in the church music program from her youth. As recently as 2007, she led singing for Bible studies in Corpus Christi nursing homes.
Patsy Price Melton ex, Sept. 3, in Char-lotte, N.C. She was a pastor’s wife in churches in Texas and in North and South Carolina.
Myra Nichols ex, July 19, in Dallas. She was a member and devoted employee of Park Cities Baptist Church for more than 45 years.
Janis Bevers Petru ex, Sept. 5, in Bran-don. She was a legal assistant and retired in 2010.
Josephine White Walke ex, June 16, in Georgetown.
Jay Larimore Weaver ex, Aug. 4, in Hubbard. She worked as manager for several finance companies, and in past years she managed the senior center in Hubbard and the local Meals on Wheels program. She was a member of First United Methodist Church.
Alberta Wieland ex, July 22, in Austin. She was a teacher for 27 years. She taught math at Crain Intermediate School in
Victoria from 1964-1982. She was a life member of Texas Retired Teachers Associa-tion and of Victoria County RTA. She was an active member of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, Cuero. She was a member of Sons of Hermann Lodge 82, AARP Chapter 3168, a charter member of the Thomaston Volunteer Fire Department and a member of the Heirloom Stitchers Guild in Cuero.
Herb Zimmerman CB, March 6, in Hous-ton. On his 21st birthday he was ordained as a Baptist minister at Prairie Point Baptist Church, Grosbeck. He served as pastor to Baptist churches in Texas for over 50 years. Herb taught school for 37 years, 31 years in Goose Creek CISD. He taught at Lamar Elementary and Horace Mann Junior High School. He was principal of San Jacinto Elementary, the Old De Zavala Elementary, Bowie Elementary, and Alamo Elementary. He retired from teaching in 1988. Herb was a World War II veteran who served in the U.S. Air Force Chaplains Corps.
Donald Ray McCauley, former faculty, Oct. 8, in West. He taught business at UMHB from 1964-1972.
Helene Rodgers Melgaard, June 24, in Kansas City, Mo. She was a former teacher at UMHB.
MEMORIALSDale Anderson Amy Bawcom Dr. & Mrs. Jerry G. Bawcom Marietta Parker
R. K. & Josephine Barner Pat Barner White
Rose Marion Walker Barren Barbara Lewis Rosina Hailey Sattawhite
Bill Berry Denise Karimkhani Kerry & Kathy Owens Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Muriel Vann Burress Judy Crow Raymond
Bob Caldwell Joan Marlowe Myrah
Lee Roy Calhoun Virginia Jones Calhoun
32 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Barbara Chaney Patricia Pickering Roberson
Mary Clarke Jack & Minnie Mae Sharp Whyburn
Ila Faye “Fayly” Hardcastle Cothern Kay Anderson Betty Sue Craven Beebe Betty Donnelly Bell Mary Roberts Bull Janell Huey Hobbs Dillard & Karolyn Norwine Whitis
Frances Dalton Dr. & Mrs. J. A. Reynolds
Beatriz De Leon Fernando De Leon, M.D.
Agnes Mulcahy Denson Nina Mae Wilson Elliott
Ruth Dugger Dianne Rowton
Elaine Battles Easterling Ruby Wyche Thomas
Calvin Eckermann Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Troy Estes Denise Karimkhani
J. D. Fagan Denise Karimkhani Mary Long & Bob, Daryl & Linda Dr. Linda Hood Pehl UMHB Faculty Assembly
Tara Coet Felmly Ed & Eve Coet
Sarah Sims Furey Lou Provence Laine
Dorothy Goodnight Dr. & Mrs. E. Leroy Kemp Kerry & Kathy Owens Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Juanda Hancock Dr. & Mrs. E. Leroy Kemp
Laura Harris Dr. & Mrs. E. Leroy Kemp
David S. Hobbs Mark & Betty O’Hair Anderson
Edward Ellis Hogwood, Jr. Pam & Keith Wilson
Maxine Tims Howell Elizabeth J. Mallory Polly McQueen Family Shirley Cowan Sommer Mike & Suzanne Stanfield Winnie Stanfield Ray & Jean Young
William F. Jergens Pamela K. Jergens Bonstead
Tomi Kennedy Sue Olson George
Dr. Rex Kirkley Christan K. Hammonds
Mrs. Ilo Labit Elizabeth Terry
Ernestine Weise London Chris Weathers Westbrook
Dorothy Jean Massie Dr. & Mrs. E. Leroy Kemp
Carol Mercado Viola Mercado
Brett Mullins Barbara Conder Agee
Bobbie Thorn Murray Dillard & Karolyn Norwine Whitis
David Pruitt Mr. & Mrs. Bobby Bridges
Steven W. Sandefur Catherine Burkett Cornelio
Jay Frank Schultz The Andrew Smith Family
Frances Strait Louise Duke Cross
Lt. Col. Stephan Strauss Billie W. Strauss
Anna Elizabeth Haynes Taylor Janell Huey Hobbs
Joyce Tomlin Kent Owens Kerry & Kathy Owens Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Gene C. Vittetoe Cara Moody Self
Ken Ward Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Ralph Watson Dr. Stan & Susan Cash Casto Kerry & Kathy Owens Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Gladys West Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
Mary Helen White Kent Owens Kerry & Kathy Owens Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
David Whyburn Theresa Allen Anita Baxley Sherry L. Beaman Kent A. Beaty James C. & Louise Black Ruth Blanton Mr. & Mrs. Ray Bronk Louise Bumpass Virginia Burroughs Joseph, Gail & Gabriella Cioffi Mary, Carol, & Barbara Clarke Devon Energy – PRA Mid Con Revenue Jo Ann Donnelly Gilbert & Rhonda Duerksen Jack, Kim, Addie & Lyndi Duerksen Chris & Colleen Ellis J. Russell & Susan Hartsfield Dan & Louise Leslie Ada Tidwell Pogue Erma Polk & Family Billy & Miriam Redwine James & Marcia Remore Jim & Kay Whyburn Rhodes Sandy Mountain Fellowship Ginger Sharp Mary & Jim Sharp The StarTek Family Evelyn L. Turner Jack & Minnie Mae Sharp Whyburn Jay & Jeanette Wright
John Zeigler Riley & Carolyn Allison Owens
34 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
HONORARIADr. & Mrs. Jerry G. Bawcom Mary H. Winn
Betty Sue Craven Beebe Mary H. Winn
Dr. Edna Penny Bridges Betty Herrera Martinez
Glenda Barton Bush Dr. Aida Smith Sapp
Class of 1943 Jean Long Corley
Class of 1945 Ruth Zerr Bailey-Reagan Class of 1953 Chris Weathers Westbrook
Class of 1964 Betsy Dabbs Polgue
Regina Gregson Cox Don & Joan Burton Cox
Patsy L. Derr Mr. & Mrs. James Wilson
Dr. Brent Gibson Joe & Janelle Baisden
Jessica Karimkhani Gilliam Denise Karimkhani
Ruth Jones Haigood Eula Woodyard McKown
Dr. Helen Wilson Harris Janice A. Andrews
Dorothy Jean “DJ” Reinhard Hogwood Cindy L. Taylor Pamela H. Wilson & Family
Donna Walker Hubbard Dr. Aida Smith Sapp
Frank Lynn & Evelyn Voitas Jez Mr. & Mrs. Bobby Bridges
Jeanette Symm Jost Dr. Aida Smith Sapp
Michael Karimkhani Denise Karimkhani
Dr. Gene Kimes Mary H. Winn
Dr. Gene & Kathie Kimes Bob & Sharon Swindler
Dr. Mickey Little Mary Margaret Johnson Lemley
Dr. Teena M. McGuinness Dr. Aida Smith Sapp
Tom & Deanna Mueller Erica Mueller
Larry & Velma Putman Mark & Betty O’Hair Anderson
Dr. David Roland Vance Self
Dr. Darrell G. Watson James & Kathleen Petersen Spraggins
Jack & Minnie Mae Sharp Whyburn David, Billy & Lynn
Dr. Marlene Mixon Zipperlen David & Barbara Warren Birkes
36 UMHB LIFE | W I N T E R 2 0 1 2
Be a part of the momentum.
Our development team is available to explore how you can make a meaningful gift through the Momentum
campaign. Naming opportunities are available to recognize those who are special in your life.
Office of Development
University of Mary Hardin-BaylorUMHB Box 8409
900 College StreetBelton, Texas 76513
254 295 4601
To make a gift online, go to www.umhb.edu/momentum
Non-Profit Org.U.S. Postage
PAIDWaco, TX
Permit No. 1519
Electronic Service Requested900 College Street • Belton, Texas 76513
The new home for Crusader football will raise the game-day experience to a new level of excitement with chair-back seating, concourse-level concessions, a 40-by-26-foot video scoreboard, and more!
University Drive entrances to the stadium will feature engraved pavers which fans can purchase to commemorate their support of Crusader football. Pavers are available in two sizes: 4” x 8” ($125 each) and 8” x 8” ($250 each).
To order or learn more, contact Lindsay Fredenburg at the UMHB Development Office (e-mail [email protected]; phone 254-295-5533).
PERSONALIZE YOUR BRICK TODAY. UMHB.EDU/BRICK