BERRY Winter 2023-24
A Berry College Publication
Shipping God’s love Michael Howard (14C) spreads joy, hope with Operation Christmas Child
end of rks the arts sue ma ers dep g This is o R n fter s Karilo team a ip sh an era a er lead gazine ng back ti a d e the ma rvic . des of se in 2003 two deca ’s launch e lication th b s u a p e er h to th t know ritten ders bes o has w Our rea ller wh ding te ry o s, inclu re tu gifted st a i fe t s alumn ur grea es o tl n en e u b co It’s is issue. ue but g th ea in ll o tw her a co ishes e to call . Best w privileg a friend l so re o You wil ! n even m lo ri a ment, K in retire d. Staff be misse agazine — The M
A breathtaking sunset illuminates the Berry beauty praised by so many (see page 9).
BERRY Published since 2003 for alumni and friends of Berry College and its historic schools. Winner of numerous regional awards for writing, editorial and design excellence. Editor Rick Woodall (93C, FFS) Managing Editor and Writer Dawn Tolbert Contributing Writer and Editor Karilon L. Rogers (FFS) Graphic Design and Production Craig Hall Director of Photography Brant Sanderlin
Staff Writers Catherine Hamrick, Debbie Rasure Class Notes Allison Brown Hattaway (98C) Martha Berry Society and Deaths McKenzie Todd CONTACT INFORMATION News From You: submit at alwaysberry.com/ classnotes or email classnotes@berry.edu
BERRY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION President: Aaron Chastain (15C)
Senior Director of Advancement Marketing and Communications Jennifer Schaknowski
President Elect: Meredith Lewallen Roberts (07C)
Assistant Vice President for Alumni Engagement and Development Jean Druckenmiller
Vice Presidents: Alumni Engagement, Callie McGinnis Starnes (07C); Berry Heritage, Jason Sweatt (88C); Financial Support, Alison Lounsbury Ritter (94C, FFS); Alumni Awards, Nancy Duvall Ratcliffe (77C)
Vice President of Marketing and Communications Nancy Rewis
Change of Address: update online at alwaysberry.com/classnotes, email alumni@berry.edu or call 706-236-2256
Chaplain: Jake Bruce (17C)
Editorial: email rwoodall@berry.edu or mail to Berry magazine, c/o Dawn Tolbert, P.O. Box 490069, Mount Berry, GA 30149
Secretary: Larry Arrington (93C, FFS)
Parliamentarian: Rodney Chandler (90C)
President Stephen R. Briggs
Cover by Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS); above by Brant Sanderlin
BERRY
Vol 110, No. 1 Winter 2023-24
F E A T U R E S
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SHIPPING GOD’S LOVE
FIRED UP FOR FIREWOOD!
RANCHING, RIDING AND ROPING
Michael Howard (14C) spreads joy and hope with Operation Christmas Child, a global outreach effort of Samaritan’s Purse.
Leroy Hite (08C) ignites a spark of an idea into one of Atlanta’s fastest-growing small businesses, Cutting Edge Firewood.
Arden Foster (15C) finds her passion out west, raising horses and roping steers in Northern New Mexico.
A L S O
I N
T H I S
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10
Inside the Gate
President’s Pen
Notable news from Berry
7 2023 Alumni Awards
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News from You
23 Mountain Day 2023!
Class Notes: The original social media
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The Martha Berry Society: Berry’s top annual supporters
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Opportunity
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Impart wisdom, share gifts, improve lives
36 Thank you!
Martha Berry’s birthday party in pictures
8 Points of Pride
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Preparing tomorrow’s health care professionals
Alumni Council honors achievement, entrepreneurism, service
Students, faculty, staff and Berry: The best of the best!
I S S U E
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In the end,
it’s about the students: Drayton Matus
INSIDE THE GATE
Building for growth in the health sciences
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onstruction will begin this spring on a new home for Berry’s growing programs in the health sciences. The facility, projected to cost $33.4 million, will include 36,000 square feet of academic space supporting the college’s high-performing baccalaureate nursing program and a soon-to-launch graduatelevel physician associate program. There also will be an additional level of housing for the general student population. Fundraising has been swift, led once again by Atlanta philanthropist and longtime Berry supporter Audrey B. Morgan, who made a lead gift of $6 million in January 2023. Other alumni, board members, friends and foundations have followed suit, bringing the total amount raised to $23.5 million as of Dec. 1. Top commitments to date include $5 million gifts from the Bryson Foundation and a longtime foundation partner and $1 million each from Randy and Nancy Berry, Larry and Mary Montgomery, and two anonymous supporters (one a Berry alum). Based on this progress, college leaders have set a goal of completing all fundraising for the building before it opens. To join in this effort, you can make a gift online at alwaysberry.com/ gift. Those interested in naming opportunities associated with the project should contact Scott Breithaupt (91C, 96G) at sbreithaupt@berry.edu or 706-346-0049.
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Room to grow Groundbreaking is slated for late March, with occupancy expected in summer 2025. The site is located near the heart of campus, bordered to the west by the Moon Building and to the north by the Cage Center. National architecture firm Cooper Carry and general contractor Brasfield & Gorrie, partners on other projects including the animal science building, are working on the facility. The design features high-quality laboratories and classrooms emphasizing hands-on learning. High-fidelity simulation suites, standardized patient rooms and a mock operating room will be located alongside teaching areas, skills labs, and spaces for individual and collaborative study. The third floor will provide housing for 75 undergraduates, alleviating Berry’s need for additional residential capacity in a way that is both cost-effective and space-maximizing. Foundation for expansion The new academic spaces will prioritize opportunities in the health sciences at a time when nearly 57 million Americans live in areas without adequate access to primary care. Berry’s location near Rome – a regional health care hub for more than a century – makes this a natural fit, enabling the college to strengthen existing partnerships while equipping students in both programs with the knowledge, expertise, character and passion necessary to provide high-quality, patientcentered care.
“Success in today’s health care environment requires rigorous science-based education coupled with strong critical-thinking and problem-solving skills, dedication to meeting the needs of others through service, and commitment to hard work and leadership,” said President Steve Briggs. “These are qualities for which Berry graduates have long been recognized, and they align perfectly with Berry’s signature education of the head, heart and hands.” Growth in the health sciences will begin with the college’s nursing program, with plans in place to double the number of graduates over the next five years. Established in 2013, this program boasts formidable rates for job placement and employer satisfaction, both topping out at 100%. Berry also will expand its graduate-level offerings, adding a PA program to existing opportunities in business and education. Expected to welcome its first students for the 2025-26 academic year (pending approval through the accreditation process), this firstof-its-kind program in Northwest Georgia will produce PA graduates eligible to become boardcertified, licensed clinicians. They will have the opportunity to learn and train across the region and beyond. Read more about Berry’s expansion in the health sciences in the president’s essay on page 10.
A new academic facility to begin construction this spring will enable continued growth of Berry’s high-performing nursing program and the addition of a graduate-level physician associate program.
CALL FOR CLINICAL PRECEPTORS
Leading from experience
Dr. Victoria Galloway
Dr. Ryan Stanger
Dr. Robert King
Guiding the physician associate program’s formation is Dr. Victoria Galloway, a veteran educator identified through a national search who possesses nearly two decades of PA experience spanning diverse areas of clinical practice including emergency medicine and primary care. She previously served as director of clinical education for the PA program at Emory and Henry College and most recently at Hawaii Pacific University’s developing PA program, participating in the initial accreditation of both programs. The curriculum is being developed by a faculty team with similarly notable experience as health care professionals, including two board-certified practicing physicians: Drs. Ryan Stanger and Robert King. Stanger, the medical director, is an
anesthesiologist employed since 2011 by AdventHealth Redmond. King, the area clinical education director, is an otolaryngologist who has served at Harbin Ear, Nose & Throat since 2004. Dr. Victor Quinones, a board-certified PA who has been in clinical practice since 2008, is focusing on the first-year curriculum as director of didactic education, having served as principal faculty in the PA programs at Nova Southeastern and West Coast universities. Rounding out the team is Beth Jackson Gaines (94C), who as director of clinical education is heading the development of second-year clinical experiences and curriculum after serving as a certified PA since 1999 and as a clinical coordinator and instructor at the University of South Alabama’s PA program.
A vital element of Berry’s new physician associate program will be the hands-on clinical rotations developed and overseen by “clinical preceptors” at health care facilities locally, regionally and nationwide. If you are a licensed and board-certified physician, physician assistant/associate or nurse practitioner, there’s an opportunity for you to serve as a clinical preceptor. Core rotations are needed in the areas of pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, family medicine, internal medicine, behavioral medicine and mental health, emergency medicine, and general surgery with the possibility of elective rotations in other medical and surgical specialties. To learn more about this unique opportunity to serve future Berry PA students, please visit alwaysberry.com/preceptor and complete the online form. Questions may be directed to Beth Jackson Gaines (94C) at bgaines@berry.edu.
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INSIDE THE GATE
Partners in education
Nursing students build clinical, cultural connections while studying in Kenya A June trip to Kenya provided handson clinical hours and eye-opening cultural interactions for 27 rising seniors in Berry’s nursing program. Accompanied by three faculty members, the students did everything from building a mud house to delivering a baby to helping a woman die peacefully, reported Director of Nursing Carolyn Reilly. The future health care professionals logged 50 hours of clinical time and gained three hours of academic credit during the cross-cultural immersion experience, a requirement for Berry nurses. Working in rotations, the students served in a hospital and clinic as well as a small community where they helped build houses for widows. At the free clinic, it was all hands on deck as they cared for more than 1,300 people in just two days’ time, completing tasks ranging from taking vital signs during patient check-in to assisting as clinicians diagnosed and 4
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treated patients. They also performed finger sticks and lab tests to screen for malaria, assisted an eye clinician and a dentist, and helped distribute medications and educate patients. Complementing these experiences was a cultural showcase arranged by the group’s in-country host with the goal of fostering a deeper understanding of life in Kenya. The day began with a church service followed by a planned trip to watch a soccer match. En route, they were greeted by a tribe of warriors – in traditional dress complete with spears and drums – who escorted them into the center of town where some 2,500 people were waiting. As honored guests, the Berry students and faculty were treated to demonstrations of life in the region, including tribal housing, food and games. To show their appreciation, the students learned a Swahili song, which they sang to the elders and widows.
Each evening, faculty-led discussions encouraged group members to reflect on and learn from their experiences, which were funded in part by a gift from Berry Trustee Buster Wright (73C) and his wife, Janice. “We saw some things in health care that are very different from our system,” Reilly said. “Their approach to childbirth, for example, is very different. We were able to talk about this and the need to show respect, kindness and compassion. “The pledge our nursing students take when they enter the program echoes Martha Berry’s desire to ‘leave the world more beautiful than when I found it,’” she added. “In Kenya, that translated into asking good questions like, ‘How can we make this dying woman’s last few minutes better because we are here?’ Then, that’s what we did.”
Berry’s Charter School of Education and Human Sciences is partnering with four Georgia school systems – Rome City, Floyd County, Bartow County and Cartersville City – in a pilot program promoting the professional development of teachers by offering tuition assistance to those seeking Master of Education or Education Specialist degrees in education leadership or curriculum and instruction (with or without Tier I leadership certification embedded). “This online, first-of-its-kind program and partnership will benefit our community in a multitude of ways,” said Bartow Superintendent Phillip Page. “Through this investment and collaborative structure, we are supporting our educators as they continue their focus on learning, expand classroom content knowledge and enhance their leadership skills.” Charter School Dean Alan Hughes is excited by the potential of these partnerships to benefit teachers and students, noting that they could serve as models for similar collaborations with other systems in the future. “The Charter School has a strong record of locating, cultivating and sustaining local partnerships,” Hughes stated. “We are committed to reaching out to and supporting local agencies and programs that serve citizens in Northwest Georgia. “Over the last two decades, the Charter School has built a diverse set of community partnerships that include local service agencies, area schools, health care providers and numerous nonprofits,” he added. “Building upon that legacy of community engagement, collaborations like these create opportunities for career advancement and social mobility, in turn allowing teachers to follow new career opportunities that can directly impact the students at all grade levels in their local communities.”
Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)
Beloved community Dr. Bernice A. King, CEO of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolence and Social Change, and Story Church Atlanta Pastor Sam Collier discussed “Beloved Community in the Midst of Chaos” before more than 1,200 students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members filling the Berry College Chapel on Sept. 7 or joining in via simulcast from Spruill Ballroom in Krannert Center. In their conversation, King reflected on the principles of nonviolence rooted in the work of her parents, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Mrs. Coretta Scott King. “If we don’t learn how to have conversations, my concern is we will end up destroying ourselves,” King told the crowd. “As long as there is a separation, people can feed you all kinds of propaganda. But we can have different perspectives, come from different worlds and have tough conversations but do it in a respectful tone because of the worth and value that exists in one
another. The media is participating in building this combative tone, and that is why we need these conversations.” She encouraged participants to “learn to speak without being offensive and listen without being defensive” and to do it all from a place of love. Haley Smith, Berry’s chief diversity and belonging officer, added, “I’m grateful for the response we had, especially because when we talk about social issues, there is a lot of division. What I am grateful for is that we saw people all over our campus and community say, ‘I may have my own opinions, but it is important to me to be a good neighbor, to listen and to learn.’” The conversation and the book-signing that followed were sponsored by corporate partners GHD Foundation and Georgia Power Foundation. GHD is a global professional services company.
B E R RY P E O P L E
Three appointed to senior leadership roles Berry’s senior leadership team has welcomed new members promoted from the ranks of existing faculty and staff. Following “a remarkably strong year” of interim service, as described by President Steve Briggs, Dr. David Slade (97C) has been appointed provost, thus enabling him to continue his work as chief academic officer. Haley Smith has been tapped for the new role of chief diversity and belonging officer, while Casee Gilbert has been named chief of staff following the retirement of Debbie Heida. Slade, who earned a Ph.D. in Spanish from Emory University, joined the Berry faculty in 2007 after two years as assistant professor at Kentucky’s Centre
College. Since that time, he has served in numerous academic leadership roles, including director of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, department chair of world languages and cultures, and associate provost and dean of academic services. He also has led and/or sat on an extensive number of committees, in addition to past service as a vice president and historian for the Berry Alumni Council. Slade is the recipient of many grants and distinctions, the first of which was the Ned Peterson Award for Outstanding Student in Communication – at Berry. Smith leads efforts to support a diverse campus community committed to a culture of belonging and being “good
Dr. David Slade
Haley Smith
Casee Gilbert
neighbors.” With more than a decade of experience bringing communities together, she is responsible for working alongside other campus offices to provide a variety of educational opportunities and community events for employees and students. In tandem, she will seek to extend those efforts to surrounding communities in cooperation with local and national organizations. Already during her time at Berry, Smith has facilitated a partnership with the King
Center in Atlanta to build programs consistent with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision for communities of love, justice and inclusion. Smith came to Berry in 2020, most recently serving as director of diversity and inclusion. She holds a Master of Arts degree in transformational leadership with a concentration in peace studies and restorative justice from Eastern Mennonite University. Gilbert ascended to chief of staff after previously serving as
director of hospitality and event services, responsible for operations generating more than $1.4 million annually. As chief of staff, she plays a key role in monitoring and coordinating overall progress toward the college’s annual goals while also supervising hospitality, events, enterprises and Historic Berry. An academic mentor at New Hampshire’s New England College before coming to Berry in 2014, Gilbert has a master’s degree in social work from the University of Denver. 5
It was another fabulous fall for Berry’s student-athletes. Here are a few notable highlights. For more, visit berryvikings.com:
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Southern Athletic Association tournament championships in women’s volleyball, including the last three in a row. For the first time since 2017, the Vikings swept both their regular-season and conference tournament slates, posting a perfect 17-0 record against SAA foes. Juniors Bella Boston and Kate Whittle swept the conference’s Offensive and Defensive Player of the Year Awards, while senior Jazzy Innis was tournament MVP. The Vikings closed their season with a 27-6 overall record and a sixth straight appearance in the NCAA Division III National Tournament.
SAA Runner of the Year Awards for Bradshaw Lathbury (23C), who made history
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as the conference’s first three-time individual champion in men’s cross country. The MBA student in Berry’s Campbell School of Business clocked the second-fastest time in SAA Championship history to pace a threepeat for his team, which also placed four other runners in the top 10. Lathbury then took third in the D-III South Region and 16th at nationals, good enough for All-America recognition. Two Viking teammates joined him at nationals: graduate student Brody Wallace (23C) and senior Grady Coppock.
points per game averaged by the Berry football team, the most in
Head women’s soccer coach Kathy Insel Brown (95C), left, and predecessor Becky Burleigh (FFS) were all smiles during a September reunion honoring Berry’s championship tradition in women’s soccer. The two forever are linked by their contributions to the college’s 1993 NAIA national championship – Brown as a starting defender, Burleigh as head coach. Burleigh was guest of honor for the weekend celebration, which welcomed members of the program’s three national championship teams – 1987, 1990 and 1993 – as well as players, coaches and staff from other years who have helped to sustain Berry’s long history of success in the sport. Two of those titles came under Burleigh, who led Berry to a stellar 82-23-6 record over five seasons before starting the women’s soccer program at the University of Florida, where she won a third national championship in 1998. She maintains close ties to Berry and the players she once led to such great heights.
Student Maya Zamora
Student Maya Zamora
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program history. Boasting a prolific offense led by junior Brandon Cade, one of the top running backs in D-III, the Vikings stormed to their ninth consecutive winning season. With a 9-1 record, they trailed only nationally ranked Trinity (Texas) in the race for the SAA championship and an automatic bid to nationals. Berry closed the regular season at No. 4 in the D-III regional rankings and among the top 25 nationally, as rated by both the American Football Coaches Association and D3football.com. Tony Kunczewski was named SAA Coach of the Year for the fifth time in recognition of Berry’s success.
Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)
Success by the numbers
Student Camille Lueder
TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE
B E R RY AT H L E T I C S : P L AY I N G T O O U R S T R E N G T H S
New face in tennis
Hall of famer
Leading nationally
Doug Elly has assumed leadership of Berry’s men’s and women’s tennis programs. He succeeded Clay Hightower (86C, FFS), who was granted emeritus recognition by the Berry Board of Trustees upon his retirement as head coach. A coach or tennis pro for nearly 30 years, Elly joins the Vikings after a successful stint with William Jewell College, an NCAA Division II program. He also excelled as a player, competing at the D-I level for what is now Missouri State University and later in the professional ranks. During his career, Elly has trained with former world No. 1-ranked players and major championship winners Rod Laver, Pancho Segura and Bobby Riggs.
Head men’s basketball coach Mick Hedgepeth has been inducted into the Athletic Hall of Fame at Belmont University. As a player, Hedgepeth helped deliver 96 victories, three conference championships, two NCAA Tournament appearances and the Bruins’ first postseason win in Division I. He ranks among program leaders in numerous categories and in 2011 was named Men’s Basketball ScholarAthlete of the Year by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. Hedgepeth enjoyed immediate success upon arrival at Berry in 2022, leading the Vikings to a stellar 25-3 record en route to his selection as Southern Athletic Association Coach of the Year.
Dr. Angel Mason, Berry director of athletics, is currently serving as president of the National Association of Division III Athletic Administrators (NADIIIAA). Her appointment for the 2023-24 academic year follows recognition as 2022-23 Nike Executive of the Year for NCAA Division III Colleges by Women Leaders in College Sports. “I’m deeply honored to have been selected to lead my D-III colleagues,” Mason said. “One of my goals as president is to focus our organization’s attention on building a strong, united future for Division III and our NADIIIAA membership.” Mason, a former D-I basketball player at Butler University, has led Berry athletics since 2019. In that time, she has helped to facilitate impressive success for student-athletes at all levels of competition.
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Praiseworthy B E R R Y
A L U M N I
C O U N C I L
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Distinguished Alumni Awards Distinguished Achievement
ROBERT
CARPENTER
(87C)
Robert Carpenter’s life is a testament to the faithfulness of God and the profound impact of his experiences as a Chick-fil-A employee and inaugural WinShape Scholar. A severe stutterer from age 9, he found community at Berry where “people accepted me for who I was regardless of how I talked.” After graduating, he stepped out in faith, enrolling in a master’s program and applying for the Navy Chaplain Corps. What followed was a decorated career for the retired captain spanning 31 years as a chaplain with the Navy and Marine Corps, two Doctor of Ministry degrees and 27 years of pastoral ministry, all demonstrating “the power of what God has done.”
Entrepreneurial Spirit
ROBERT
SWARTHOUT
(04C)
From a partnership launched while a Berry student, Robert Swarthout has honed his business acumen while demonstrating time and again the ability to think creatively, take calculated risks and capitalize on unique opportunities. The seasoned technical founder boasts 18-plus years of experience creating, leading and selling multiple start-up SaaS (Software as a Service) businesses, the most recent with more than $10 million in annual recurring revenue. Today, he focuses on digital assets as CEO and portfolio manager of Teton Crypto Capital. A Berry trustee since 2020, he and wife Tessa Frye Swarthout (07C) regularly support the student entrepreneurs now seeking to follow in their footsteps.
Distinguished Service
MARK
BANTA
Atlanta Magazine regularly ranks Mark Banta among the city’s most powerful leaders, citing the Berry agriculture major’s work as president and CEO of the Piedmont Park Conservancy. After previously excelling as general manager of Centennial Olympic Park, he led an impressive resurgence at Piedmont Park, with annual attendance increasing from 4 million to more than 6 million during his tenure. When he retired in late 2023, Banta left a stable organization with such strong financial footing that it is now considered one of America’s most successful conservancies. He is married to Anita Marion Banta (81C).
(82C)
Outstanding Young Alumni
CAROLINE GETTIS
HUFFAKER (09C)
A student volunteer post at the Sexual Assault Center of Northwest Georgia ignited a passion for advocacy and launched Caroline Gettis Huffaker’s career aiding victims and survivors in their pursuit of justice. She led formation of victim services units for the Hamilton County (Tennessee) and Chattanooga police departments and today works at the National Policing Institute, supporting law enforcement through research, technical assistance and comprehensive programming to promote equitable public safety outcomes. She recently partnered with Berry staff, including fellow alumna Ashley Demonbreun-Chapman (10C), on the BRAVE Project to raise awareness about gender-based violence and promote healthy relationships.
Visit alwaysberry.com/awards for more on our winners and to submit nominations for future consideration. 7
POINTS OF PRIDE
Left to right: Jacelyn Carter, Madelen Prado (top), Denise Webb (bottom), Quinn Dankesreiter and Vanessa Rice
Impressive! Two Fulbrights and three Gilmans her summer with a host family in Turkey before heading to Switzerland in September. Quinn Dankesreiter (23C), a double major in German and creative writing with a minor in teaching English as a foreign language, accepted Berry’s first-ever placement in Germany, choosing that opportunity over another Fulbright placement in Austria (all in addition to gaining acceptance to a Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Pittsburgh!). Jacelyn Carter, who is majoring in international affairs and minoring in teaching English as a foreign language, spent her summer as a Gilman Scholar studying the
Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)
Two Berry students earned Fulbright awards to teach English in Europe after graduating last spring – the seventh and eighth to claim Fulbright grants since 1991 – and three others received Gilman Scholarships from the U.S. Department of State to support study-abroad opportunities in South Korea, Costa Rica and Spain. Vanessa Rice (23C), a double major in German and history, secured a highly competitive placement teaching English in Switzerland, one of only three available. A two-time recipient of the U.S. Department of State’s Critical Languages Scholarship (Turkish), Rice spent
Korean language at Korea University. Another Gilman, Denise Webb, studied agriculture and the environment in Monteverde, Costa Rica, while volunteering at a sustainable farm. She is a biology major concentrating in wildlife, ecology and conservation while minoring in anthropology. The third member of the Gilman trio, Madelen Prado, completed a month of intensive Spanish language study at the University of Salamanca, Spain. The double major in biochemistry and Spanish with a minor in biology then returned to Spain in the fall, this time bound for the Catholic University of Valencia.
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Peter the Great
Going to Berry pays off
Peter Friedrich, associate professor of theatre, is part of a select group chosen by the U.S. Department of State for an English Language Specialist project focusing on English language instructors in Russia. The virtual project provides in-country instructors with techniques and tools for teaching English to students through music, drama, film and literature, all while introducing “balanced perspectives on the United States and current events.” Friedrich is not new to such challenges. The 2022 Seeking Solutions to Global Challenges Fulbright Scholar has used theatre over the last 10 years in partnership with underserved communities in the U.S. and overseas, including asylum seekers from Ukraine, Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria.
Berry is one of only 736 colleges in the country – 14 in Georgia – to earn “Best College” recognition by Money magazine as a destination “where your tuition (and time) is likely to pay off.” The publication’s rating system is based on graduation rates, tuition, financial aid and alumni salaries. And then there’s U.S. News & World Report, which once again ranked Berry No. 1 for value among regional universities in the South, as well as No. 1 for best undergraduate teaching, No. 5 for most innovative and fifth overall, among other accolades. It all adds up: Berry IS a great deal!
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“What’s Happening with Enrollment and Retention at Berry College?” So asked a July 2023 headline in Forbes. The answer was quick: “Berry has seen significant success in increasing both the quality and size of its student body.” Say what? College undergraduate enrollment dropped 8% from 2019 to 2022 according to the National Student Clearinghouse, so just what is happening at Berry? Strong partnerships, that’s what! TOGETHER the marketing, technology and enrollment management teams have helped Berry double the size of its prospective-student pool over the last five years while growing applications from 3,000 to 6,500. And while Forbes didn’t mention this, the New York Times did: Berry is in the top third of the NYT’s updated College-Access Index, which includes “the 286 most-selective colleges in the country, as defined by Barron’s Profiles of American Colleges and other metrics” and ranks them in order of economic diversity by analyzing the share of students receiving Pell Grants. More interest in Berry. More applications. Continued focus on mission. Can you say, “Wow!”?
Jennifer Hernandez-Argueta
TEAMWORK WORKS!
More beautiful than when we found it
Unlocking the earth’s secrets
First the U.S.A., then the world. Next, maybe the universe? Since we’re talking about Berry’s beauty here, it just might happen. Because even if we aren’t YET ranked among the Milky Way’s most beautiful colleges, our heads still might be swollen enough to reach outer space! Let’s face it – we love the view from the top, and we’re guessing you do too. May the hits keep coming. In recent months, Berry ranked:
Associate Professor of Geology Tamie Jovanelly has traveled far and wide to study volcanic eruptions and other geologic phenomena. Most recently, she took her show on the road and into the studio for a new Weather Channel series, The Earth Unlocked. Each episode delves deep into the billions of years of history behind the mysteries of Mother Nature on our planet, unveiling the science behind them. Debuting in late summer, the series has provided Jovanelly a platform for educating viewers about how geological processes such as volcanoes, glaciers, plate tectonics and water shape landscapes over time, creating the beauty featured in on-location shoots. Not surprisingly, Jovanelly was the featured scientist for the American Geoscience Institute’s Earth Science Week in the fall and was highlighted in educational materials, including a video filmed on Berry’s campus, sent to every K-12 school in the U.S.
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National best! Athletics takes home a national win – in design! You read that right. Adele Gammill, a student member of Berry’s sports information and promotions staff, won 2022-23 Designer Portfolio of the Year – College Division from College Sports Communicators for her creativity in developing many of the graphics fans see regularly on Berry’s social media platforms.
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#8 on a list of the 10+ Most Beautiful University Campuses in the World by knowninsider.com. #8 among Veranda’s 15 Most Beautiful College Campuses Around the World. #2 on Travel+Leisure’s list of the 25 Most Beautiful College Campuses in the U.S., behind only Stanford (our media friends had a field day with this one!). #8 on The Travel’s lists of the 10 Most Beautiful (and Cozy!) College Campuses in the U.S.
What’s a “surrealist comedic filmmaker and social media innovator” supposed to do with his summer? How about score Berry’s first-ever Television Academy Foundation internship? Yes, that’s the same Television Academy that puts on the Emmy Awards. Berry’s own Mathewson Parks (23C) was one of just 37 students nationwide chosen to take advantage of the internship’s amazing hands-on learning experiences with television industry
professionals at the top of their game. And if that isn’t enough, he was among 10 to be named a Bob Bennett Future Leader, an initiative providing the interns with financial support as well as professional development and leadership training. Parks spent his internship at Elysium Media in Los Angeles. To reference a VERY old TV show about which a growing number of our readers likely have never heard … what a BONANZA! 9
Dan Steinberg
And the winner is …
PRESIDENT’S PEN
Dr. Stephen Briggs nyone who has weathered an extended stay in a hospital understands the essential role of physicians, who preside over your diagnostic and treatment plan. A key moment each day, often early in the morning, is when doctors make rounds, provide updates and answer questions. Equally apparent is the vital role that nurses play in shaping your hospital experience and the delivery of your care throughout the day and night. Nurses are at your side when you are most vulnerable. If you require critical care, they take responsibility for your lifesustaining functions. They touch the places that hurt the most. While it is humbling to be dependent on an unfamiliar person, it is hard not to adore the nurses who attend caringly to you in fragile moments. Nursing is a challenging career because it is a helping profession. Nurses take point when people are anxious, frustrated and impatient. The context can be complicated, and the standards are high. Given a mounting need in our region for more of these important caregivers, Berry chose a decade ago to invest in a nursing program. The wisdom of this decision became apparent during the pandemic when the shortage of highly qualified 10
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Brant Sanderlin
Preparing tomorrow’s health care professionals nurses emerged as a nationwide concern. Since 2015, 259 of our students have graduated with Bachelor of Science in Nursing degrees and now practice as registered nurses across the country in a diverse array of clinical specialties. As you would expect, many Berry nursing students are from Georgia (78%) and adjacent Southeastern states, and the majority have remained in this region (61% in Georgia). Of those in our state, about a quarter accepted positions in the Rome area and a third in the Atlanta area. In the last three years, 28% have been students of color and 12% men. Starting salaries for nurses are substantial, and few professions offer such an obvious alignment with an education of the head, heart and hands. Berry’s program is distinctive Fabian Cummings (21C) went to high school at Fulton Leadership Academy and was selected for Berry’s Bonner Scholars Program. As part of his scholarship commitment, Fabian served at Heyman Hospice as a member of an interdisciplinary team providing direct patient care. Observing the way that nurses cared for patients greatly influenced his decision to pursue a nursing degree. While a student, Fabian was able to work as a nurse extern at AdventHealth Redmond in the Cardiopulmonary Progressive Care Unit through Berry’s LifeWorks Program, a signature opportunity that accelerated his clinical skills. Today, Fabian is an emergency room nurse at Atrium Health Floyd Medical Center and is completing a Master of Health Administration degree. He credits his liberal arts courses with preparing him to understand the complex needs of
Berry Bonner Scholar Fabian Cummings (21C) now works as a registered nurse in the Emergency Room of Atrium Health Floyd Medical Center in Rome.
patients from different cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds, the kind he serves here in Northwest Georgia. He encourages prospective nurses to take full advantage of Berry’s partnerships and get as much clinical experience as possible. His advice is fitting, and last year, 90% of Berry’s nursing students were employed in paid clinical settings that complemented their clinical rotations. Berry’s nursing program is built on a foundation of academic rigor and evidence-based care. It incorporates challenging, real-world
medical scenarios with advanced simulation exercises. What sets Berry apart, however, is its emphasis on an education of the heart in concert with the head and the hands. Last summer, 27 nursing students travelled with faculty members to rural Kenya (see page 4) to experience firsthand the challenges of compassionate nursing in an unfamiliar context. The experience was appropriately disturbing as the team encountered a scope of illness and suffering that left them humbled and profoundly aware of how much we take for granted. As one student
“Since 2015, 259 of our students have graduated with Bachelor of Science in Nursing degrees and now practice as registered nurses across the country in a diverse array of clinical specialties.”
A graduate program for physician associates The current and projected shortage of physicians, nurses and advanced practice providers (APPs), including nurse practitioners and physician assistants/associates, is well documented, and Georgia
Berry. In recent years, the nursing program has taught half of its classes in Memorial Library. A new building has been designed (see page 2 for details) that optimizes firsthand learning experiences and skill development. Located along the west side of the road between the Cage Center and Valhalla, the facility will be named Morgan-Bailey Hall in honor of a lead gift and generous scholarship support from Audrey Morgan and the Bailey Family Foundation. Construction is scheduled to begin in March 2024. We intend to have the building fully funded before it opens for classes in summer 2025. Many generous alumni and friends are helping to make that a reality.
Alex Ruble (23C)
put it: “To make a difference in people’s lives was an incredible feeling, but the things Kenya did for us were just as valuable, if not more.” The benefactor for this trip, Berry Trustee Buster Wright (73C), noted simply, “It’s one of the best investments I’ve ever made.” The nursing program at Berry also is distinctive in allowing students to enjoy a full college experience. Nursing students are immersed in their major for their junior and senior years. The sequence of courses, simulation exercises and clinical rotations is jam-packed. Yet, somehow, students are able to do more. Top athletes, for example, balance the demands of this program with the equally daunting pressures of championship athletics. It’s a remarkable feat of focus and time management made possible only by the collaboration and goodwill of the nursing faculty and coaches. Current nursing seniors Anna Jackson and Shelby Daniel are both key players on Berry’s top-five nationally ranked softball team. Anna is a two-time All-American and the National Fastpitch Coaches Association 2022 Catcher of the Year, and Shelby is a three-time All-Region player and member of the NCAA All-Tournament Team in 2023. While their workload is challenging, Anna is resilient: “I’ve learned how to plan ahead, prioritize my schedule and communicate often with my faculty and coaches.”
Softball standouts Anna Jackson (left) and Shelby Daniel train in the simulation lab for their futures in critical care nursing.
lags national averages. There is no easy remedy for this shortage, but advanced practice providers, who are highly trained to provide medical services otherwise performed by physicians, will increasingly serve as first-line medical professionals in many general and specialized settings. It is normal today to see an APP at an urgent care or dermatology appointment, and they are involved with the delivery of anesthesia for many surgeries. At Berry, we decided to establish a Master of Medical Science – Physician Associate (PA) degree program (an updated name for physician assistant) after studying local needs, career opportunities and the number of programs in the surrounding region. PA programs are highly competitive. Prospective students can be from any major but must complete the standard premed course requirements. The Board
of Trustees approved the concept in October 2022, and our accreditation review is scheduled for late August 2024. If successful, we will accept applications in fall 2024 for an entering class in August 2025. Already, we have hired a top-notch team of faculty to lead our program (see page 3). This team, working with an advisory council of local health professionals, is focused on educating and empowering physician associates who will deliver patient-centered care that is comprehensive and compassionate. Admission preferences will include Berry alumni, veterans, and applicants from Appalachia and other medically underserved areas. Great spaces inspire great learning experiences The addition of the PA program and the continued growth of nursing calls for improved learning spaces at
“Not to be ministered unto, but to minister” A few years ago, Buster Wright spent a night in the hospital for postoperative care following a surgical procedure. His nurse tech that evening was attentive and proficient in providing the needed care. As her shift ended in the morning hours, she stopped in to say farewell. Buster thanked her and asked if she was off to get some rest after a busy night. She was masked because of COVID restrictions but chuckled and said she was headed to school for classes and then to a semi-formal dance that night. Buster laughed to himself thinking she must surely be an industrious Berry student. As it turned out, Ashlyn Ishoy (22C) was indeed, and he had the joy of thanking her again at graduation later that year. Ashlyn now works as a motherbaby nurse at Atrium Health Floyd, caring skillfully for those in need – with her head, heart and hands. Worthwhile work done well. 11
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Shipping e v o L s God BY KARILON L. ROGERS
W
Photos courtesy of Sama ritan’s P urse
hen a gift packed in a shoebox reaches a boy or girl in a faroff land, a child who
might never have received a present before, there’s an excellent chance that J. Michael Howard (14C) had something to do with it. That’s because Howard, a former logistics officer in the U.S. Marines, works in international logistics for Operation Christmas Child, an enormous outreach effort of the Samaritan’s Purse ministry that seeks to “demonstrate God’s love in a tangible way to children in need around the world” through the gesture of simple gifts.
Operating on the principle of one gift to one child once in his or her lifetime, the massive undertaking requires constant cultivation of new ministry partners so that children can be reached in previously untouched areas. It becomes especially staggering when considering the numbers. Discounting Christmas 2023, for which statistics were not available at press time, 209 million gifts have been distributed in 170 countries since OCC’s launch in 1993 by Samaritan’s Purse founder the Rev. Franklin Graham in response to a call to aid the children of war-torn Bosnia. In 2022, 10.5 million children received shoeboxes; 2023’s goal was 11 million. Howard spent his first three years with OCC coordinating the shipping of shoeboxes processed in the U.S. to destinations in Asia and the Middle East. Since his elevation to international logistics manager for affiliate offices, he now works with other packing, collecting and sending countries on exportation procedures to their destination countries as part of OCC’s global plan. These include Australia, Austria, Canada, Finland, Germany, New Zealand, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. He also handles transportation from the U.S. to countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. “Donors make Operation Christmas Child happen,” Howard emphasized. “But there is a lot of work behind the scenes that also keeps it going each year. I work with people around the world who are passionate about making Operation Christmas Child happen. Working with them is the best part of my job.”
Logistical labyrinth Each OCC shoebox begins its journey at the local level, packed with love by children, families, individuals, churches and groups of all kinds. In the U.S., it then finds its way to one of 4,500 drop-off locations scattered across all 50 states and Puerto Rico before ending up at one of eight major processing centers stateside. A mind-boggling 540,000 volunteers worldwide are involved in collecting, shipping and distributing the gifts, including national teams in each destination country who partner with local churches to distribute the shoeboxes, whether by motorbike, truck, elephant, camel, canoe or other unique method. That takes some serious logistics. Yet, Howard sometimes is asked if the bulk of his work takes place during the November collection and December shipping of shoeboxes, leaving him little to do the other 10 months of the year. That certainly is not the case. Yes, all shoeboxes – each containing a “wow” toy, personal care items and school supplies – do arrive at the processing centers the third week of November, triggering a whirlwind of activity. Logistics personnel coordinate the complex, carefully planned and artfully executed process of getting the right number of shoeboxes into sea containers bound for the correct destinations in time for shipping the first week in December. And that happens only after millions of shoeboxes have been hand-inspected by volunteers to ensure each contains only approved items – no glass, liquids, war-related toys, etc.
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“When that box shows up at customs ... it can become a delicate process. With every box packed uniquely, we can’t say exactly what’s in each box, but we can say what’s NOT due to our thorough processing.”
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places, the customs officials become almost as excited as we are about the shoeboxes’ arrival and partner with us for years to come.” These types of face-to-face meetings and negotiations are critical to OCC’s continued success, as well as to its expansion. One of OCC’s largest growth areas has been in the South Pacific, where Howard has played an integral role in John Paul Jones
But while the organization of shipping is complicated, the rest of Howard’s work can be even more so. “When a donor packs a box on the front end, that makes OCC possible,” Howard restated. “But when that box shows up at customs in another country, it can become a delicate process. With every box packed uniquely, we can’t say exactly what’s in each box, but we can say what’s NOT due to our thorough processing. We work with our volunteers in each country to translate our cause to the customs officials, explaining the gifts are for children. For context, we could never import our boxes into the United States. Our customs laws are too tight.” Each spring, the organization analyzes what went well the prior season and where improvements can be made with varying OCC destination countries. “We then target some of these countries where we can address identified complications,” Howard explained. “Tax-exemption status is our most common challenge – as a charity, we cannot pay taxes to destination countries – as well as when customs officials start to get tough about letting the shoeboxes in. I go to those countries to meet with government officials and resolve issues, working with our in-nation volunteers. In some
A newly graduated Howard was commissioned as a U.S. Marine officer at Oak Hill by Berry mentor and then Chief-of-Staff Alexander “Whit” Whitaker IV (81C, FFS).
setting up logistics operations to add 14 new countries as part of the Rev. Graham’s Pacific Island Initiative. This effort grew out of the crisis response mounted by Samaritan’s Purse after Typhoon Yutu struck Saipan in the Northern Marianas in 2018. An additional purpose of OCC is to offer children the opportunity to participate in “The Greatest Journey,” a 12-lesson Christian discipleship course from which 24.9 million have graduated, but Howard emphasized that children receive gifts without regard to faith or religious background. Howard sometimes finds it difficult to operate in what he describes as a “broken world” post-COVID in which exporters are heavily impacted by broken supply chains and limited cargo space (although OCC always manages to get the shoeboxes out). This disappointment, however, is more than assuaged by the people, especially the volunteers, with whom he works. “Coming to a country and seeing volunteers in person whom I’ve worked with over the phone or on Zoom and clicking with them immediately is like a homecoming,” he asserted. “Perhaps it’s because we have the same mission and the work we are doing is something God is accomplishing through us.”
Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)
Good preparation “I told them I’d been interested in high school It’s not as simple as it sounds. When he says Howard’s time before and at Berry certainly was a but decided to go to college,” he remembered. “equipment,” he’s talking about such things as springboard for a future in international service. “They told me I could do both and asked me if I 9,000-pound M777 howitzers, powerful guns His first eight years were spent in Brazil with his knew about officer training. I didn’t.” 35 feet in length capable of destroying targets missionary parents before the family returned to The next thing Howard knew, he was at Officer 18 miles away. [That’s why they must train the States and life in Bremen, Georgia. While Berry Candidate School in two six-week summer stints elsewhere. The noise from shooting off a few of was his first choice, he also was accepted to other before his junior and senior years. One week after those howitzers so close to Oahu’s Waikiki Beach colleges before becoming a Viking, initially as a graduating from Berry, he was commissioned likely would create quite a stir.] history major. as an officer at Oak Hill, sworn in by one of his Although he made the decision to leave the Four years later, he’d earned a degree in greatest Berry mentors, then-Chief of Staff military (and Hawaii!) in 2018, he declares leading international studies with a minor in economics, Alexander “Whit” Whitaker IV (81C, FFS), a Marines to be “the highlight of my life.” worked four years in the President’s Office, served retired Naval officer who now is president of “The Marine Corps has three purposes,” he two years as president of Habitat for Humanity, King University. That October, Howard attended explained. “First, to make Marines. Second, to participated in Model U.N., served on the Judicial the Basic Officers Course, followed by Logistic win battles. Third, to return quality citizens. The Council and as a Presidential Ambassador, gained Operations School. Before these programs, he people I got to work with were some of America’s membership in the Leadership Honor Society, and squeezed in two months over the summer as a best sons and daughters. They were people called to helped rev up the student body as a member of the Syrian refugee relief volunteer in Jordan. service – young people from various backgrounds – Viking Drum Line. all coming together with no bias as professionals He got a lot out of his activities and academics – Oorah! with respect and devotion for each other.” mentioning Dana Professor of Political Science Capt. J. Michael Howard was stationed at and International Affairs Kirsten Taylor, his Marine Corps Base Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, on Find it and run toward it academic and Model U.N. advisor; and Professor the island of Oahu, with the 1st Battalion, 12th While completing 100-mile ultra-marathons in the of Government and International Studies Marine Regiment (Artillery). He led the logistics mountains of Western North Carolina and around Emeritus Chaitram the U.S. is how Howard Singh in particular – but chooses to unwind, pointed to his work in he isn’t running from the President’s Office anything. Rather, he is as something uniquely always running to his special. passion for doing God’s “My work there was work through Operation the first time for me to Christmas Child. interact with people And he remains grateful like trustees and other for the path he feels Berry college presidents,” he made possible for him. explained. “I learned “If I went to a state communication skills, school,” he mused, “I’d professionalism, likely still be the timid, responsibility, and how to shy person I used to be. interface with people and But people at Berry saw speak in public. It broke me, invested in me and me out of the shy, timid put me in a position to shell I was in during high shine – like my job in school. It took me out of the President’s Office. It my comfort zone.” just happens. Berry has a Service with the United mysterious way of taking States Marines did the people and showing their same. potential through the “In high school, I work program, student was going to enlist,” he activities and other recounted, continuing involvements.” with a laugh and broad Oh, and he immensely Howard’s work in international logistics helps Operation Christmas Child deliver millions of gifts across the globe to different smile: “Mom said no. I enjoys how he turned children each year. said yes. Mom said NO, the tables on his mother, but after college I could join the circus if I wanted and supply departments in support of rapid Sylvia, who was so intensely focused on his going to. I went to college, and the Marines wasn’t far deployment and redeployment of the unit across to college. The man who felt he had always been from the circus!” the rim of the Pacific. known as “Sylvia’s son” as a boy recalled with a Once at Berry, Howard imagined graduate school His regular focus was on moving equipment, laugh how his mother frequently was referred to as his next step but changed course after attending personnel, ammunition, radios and so forth to and introduced as “Michael’s mother” when she a career fair with some buddies. Bored while he training locations in such places as the Mohave began working in the Berry President’s Office three talked to possible future employers –“I never was Desert; Okinawa, Japan; Darwin, Australia; and years after his graduation. interested in going into the corporate sector” – he the Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island We doubt she minded a bit. And we bet she has wandered over to the table manned by Marines. of Hawaii. packed more than a few shoeboxes. 15
BY RICK WOODALL
Fired Up For
FIREWOOD It’s taken
L
eroy Hite (08C) recalls with a laugh the many times he joked with wife Makaila about buying a truck and starting a firewood business when the car he’d been driving since high school finally gave out. His self-described “weird obsession” with “fancy firewood” – dating back to a failed entrepreneurial venture with Berry roots (more on that later) – had smoldered in the background for several years, all while he gained experience in sales, customer service and how to run a business at Chick-fil-A and, later, Enterprise Rent-A-Car. It was in early 2013 that the odometer on his well-used Geo Prizm turned the last of its 266,000 miles, and suddenly it was put-up or shut-up time for the would-be entrepreneur. After an intense weekend of prayer, Bible reading and – something totally new for him – fasting, Hite decided to make good on his long-running “joke.” He needed a vehicle anyway, and with a new corporate job in Atlanta providing financial stability, the timing seemed right to start what he envisioned as a side gig – that is, until he reported to work the following Monday.
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more than a good idea to spark one of the hottest small businesses in Atlanta, even if it does have fire in its name.
“They fired me on the spot,” Hite recalled. “I remember them telling me that it wasn’t a good fit, so they were letting me go. I didn’t hear anything else they said because I was already thinking, ‘OK. Apparently, I’m going to be doing this full time.’” More than a decade later, Hite can appreciate the turn of events that fueled creation of what is today one of Atlanta’s fastest-growing small businesses. His formerly one-man, hyper-local initiative now boasts 30 employees and five delivery trucks operating out of a 50,000-square-foot warehouse. With a strong emphasis on e-commerce, the red-hot operation has expanded well beyond its original Georgia footprint. Hite’s team regularly delivers to customers in several Southeastern cities, while other shipping services have helped the company reach a total of 48 states. The serendipity of his circumstances wasn’t so evident when Hite first was stoking the embers that became Cutting Edge Firewood in those initial days, weeks and months after he’d been fired, nor was the wisdom of the choices he made as he worked with Makaila’s support to get the barely flickering enterprise off the ground.
“Everybody thought I was crazy, and looking back, I might have been a little crazy. I didn’t necessarily have a plan, but I was doing what I thought I was supposed to do, if that makes sense.” “Everybody thought I was crazy, and looking back, I might have been a little crazy,” he conceded. “I didn’t necessarily have a plan, but I was doing what I thought I was supposed to do, if that makes sense.”
Efficient and effective Inspiration for Hite sprang from experiential learning opportunities (not always successful) that first took shape under the watchful eye of Dr. Paula Englis, Dana professor of management and entrepreneurship. Also impactful was wisdom shared by Garrett Professor of Business Administration John Grout, whose emphasis on the need to be efficient AND effective has always stuck with him. “Be both,” echoed Hite. “Don’t focus on one or the other. Maybe something is more efficient, but it’s at the cost of important things. As you become more effective, you need to stay efficient. It’s a balance, a tension, a juggling act.” The efficiency of Hite’s operation is evident in deliveries. In the early days, the laborintensive process took two hours per customer, limiting reach and severely taxing the deliveryman (in this case, the owner himself). “I would drive around with a Microsoft Surface Pro 3,” Hite described of 16-hour days defined by too few customers and far too many uneaten lunches. “You’d call me. I’d pull over on the side of the road, take your order and either deliver at that point or schedule out a few days. It was brutal, hard work.” Brant Sanderlin
Glow of opportunity At this point, you may find yourself wondering how someone builds a successful business out of a product that’s readily available at a wide variety of retail outlets (not to mention the hand-painted “for sale” signs one often sees accompanying stacks of firewood on the side of the road). In Hite’s case, it was by focusing on every aspect of an industry he saw as ripe for disruption, from the quality of the product to how it’s supplied. The result is a “lifestyle luxury brand” defined by highend, “white-glove” service, with specially trained “delivery artisans” bringing racks of hand-picked, kiln-dried firewood directly to your front door, placing it wherever you wish and even demonstrating how to build the perfect fire. Live outside the range of Hite’s delivery trucks? Not to worry. The quality and presentation of the product that’s shipped to your door is still first-rate, right down to the enclosed matches that guarantee a blazing fire on first strike. That’s not how it started – not by a long shot. There’s been a whole lot of trial and error along the way. Hite may prefer a “bullets before cannon balls” approach to moving his business forward, but he acknowledges there have been times when money
has drawn people together for centuries. “There’s nobody on earth who dislikes a fire,” Hite asserted. “A 95-year-old man from Ethiopia or a 3-year-old girl from Georgia, they both sit in front of a fire and enjoy it. It’s universal. It’s unifying. It’s primal.”
spent on new ideas might as well have been burned in his fireplace. Free samples? Nope. Mailers? Total bust. The list of steps and missteps goes on and on, from partnerships that went belly-up to acquisitions that easily could have ended in disaster. Through it all, he’s pleased to have found a path to success by emphasizing and elevating an experience that
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Photos courtesy of Cutting Edge Firewood
Upgrading to a larger truck with a powerful lift gate made things somewhat easier, but the real breakthrough came when Hite introduced easy-to-move covered racks of his own, sincepatented design that brought delivery times down to 15 minutes once on site. Effectiveness can be measured in the thousands of yard signs that have driven brand awareness in Metro Atlanta and early adoption of Google Ads and “search engine optimization,” which helps ensure that internet shoppers are directed to Cutting Edge. He’s also added cooking wood to the product line, bringing more consistency to a notoriously seasonal revenue stream. The payoff is reflected in a customer base that continues to get bigger – 30,000 total since the company’s founding, including an impressive list of celebrity clients such as NFL Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw, country music stars Walker Hayes and Thomas Rhett, and chef Kevin Gillespie – and broader: More than half of all revenue now originates from out of state. And then there’s the company’s growing media presence. “There’s some cool things,” Hite said, pointing to attention from the likes of Fox and Friends, Today and Garden & Gun. “We’ve been on a Netflix show and Hulu, so a lot of fun stuff like that.” 18
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Failing forward While grateful for his success, Hite only recently settled on an affirmative answer to a question that’s long eaten at him: “Could I advise anybody else to do what I’ve done?” There certainly have been bumps along the way, beginning with his first foray into firewood as a Berry student approached by two classmates seeking his involvement with the company they’d started. The business management major hadn’t given entrepreneurship much consideration as a career path to that point, but he accepted their offer, explaining, “It sounded like fun, so I said yes. I’ve always been a ‘Yeah, let’s go for it’ kind of guy.” Over the next two-plus years, Hite learned just how much he didn’t know about the firewood business. “I had no idea what I was getting myself into,” he lamented. “Everything was more expensive than we thought it was going to be. Everything was harder than we thought it was going to be, which is definitely a lesson I continue to master.” Though that venture was snuffed out in 2009, certain elements live on in Cutting Edge. The yard signs are one example. Another is the notion of an “elevated experience” built around firewood. When he started his own business four years later, more hard lessons followed, with Hite citing many instances when the flickering flame he’d lit could have been put out permanently.
On one occasion, he found himself with a mountain of debt and only $12 in the bank. Another time, Hite tried to take out a second mortgage on the family home only to find banks wouldn’t talk to him, so he and Makaila sold the house in order to invest everything they had in the business. “Multiple times, my wife would say, ‘Should you just stop doing this?’” Hite related. “And I was like, ‘I think that God has kept it going. If I try to get a job somewhere else, I’d probably just get fired from that one too and have to come back to this.’” Through the wilderness Faith has played a big role in Hite’s story, and more than once it has been rewarded. That weekend when he had only $12 in the bank? A restaurant called out of the blue with an order for $2,000 of decorative firewood. Similarly, when a $10,000 rent payment came due for the facility he’d taken over from a former supplier, a buyer turned up for a piece of equipment Hite recently had put up for sale. The cost? You guessed it. “He offers me $10,000 cash,” Hite stated. “I take it and walk across the street and pay my rent.” In the midst of such potentially dire circumstances, strength was drawn from the Old Testament book of Exodus, specifically a sermon he listened to over and over again about Moses leading the captive Israelites out of Egypt while God fights on their behalf. “Really, I just kind of held on to that,” Hite affirmed.
“You can’t be successful at any job without sacrificing time and effort and being uncomfortable and willing to push yourself. Being entrepreneurial is the same thing. It’s just taking it to the next level.”
Growing up Though difficulties persist, as with any business, Hite is comfortable declaring that the “child” that is Cutting Edge Firewood has grown beyond infancy, having not only survived but also thrived after the 2020 onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when its distinctive service afforded customers the opportunity to share a special experience with family members even while homebound. “Being a business owner compares very well to having a child,” said the father of four daughters. “As this business grows step by step, it becomes a little bit more independent. It’s not necessarily easier, but the stress is different and the work’s different, just like it’s different chasing a toddler around the house and then having a teenager.” Mulling further on the question of whether he would advise someone else to follow his path with all that entails, Hite emphasized the importance of having conviction for something other than money – “it’s hard to risk what’s super important to you” – and the need for sacrifice in any worthy endeavor, whether it be family, friendship or career. “You can’t be successful at any job without sacrificing time and effort and being uncomfortable and willing to push yourself,” he observed. “Being entrepreneurial is the same thing. It’s just taking it to the next level.” For Hite, that next level was, quite literally, the Cutting Edge. 19
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, g n i h c n ra nd ng a i g p o n r i d i R “Go west, young grad, go west.” That’s the mantra Arden Foster (15C) repeatedly heard in her head when she was preparing to graduate from Berry. In fact, she heard it so often and wanted to do it so badly that she began to tell people she was going to work on a “dude” ranch in Colorado for a summer even before she’d roped an opportunity to do so. But then she did. And she loved it. And out West she stayed because she found her passions: ranching, competitive team roping, breeding and training horses, and simply living in the moment. Now, nine years later, the relative newbie is partnering with a fourth-generation horse breeder, rancher and roper to do all those things.
STORY BY KARILON L. ROGERS PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRANT SANDERLIN
Continuing education “I feel like I learn something every day,” Foster declared about her chosen path, now on the 10,000-acre Johnson Ranch on the edge of the Carson National Forest in Northern New Mexico, where she and Clay Johnson (at left) live on 200 acres, sharing the rest of the land with his parents. Johnson keeps a registered herd of 125 high-altitude Limousin cattle (excellent beef production with feed efficiency) on the highprairie land at 7,700 feet. Together, Foster and Johnson’s registered quarter horses number about 75 each year. Foster’s education runs at warp speed here, where rotational grazing and planting take care of the land and cattle are moved for the summers to specified areas of the Carson National Forest on Bureau of Land Management leases. She is involved in it all – from plowing to fixing fences to herding cattle in the snow. Then there are her loves: the horses – their breeding, raising and riding.
“We currently have 18 broodmares and sell about 20 horses a year, normally from 2 to 4 years of age,” Foster said. “Our focus is on training for team roping, but we hope our horses are versatile enough for anything.” She explained that horse breeders all have their own ways of doing things; their way is to allow their mares to foal in the pasture. “We try not to interfere,” she said about the birthing process. “We monitor, we watch, and we make sure the process is going normally. We only get involved when we feel we need to. But once foals are born, we try to get hands on them quickly – it’s called imprinting – to get them comfortable with us.” Halter-breaking, a foal’s first experience learning to respect the trainer and to respond to gentle pressure exerted on the leather or rope strap around his or her head, starts at about 7 months and is one of Foster’s favorite tasks. “You are like a pre-school teacher,” she explained. “You have to be patient.” She doesn’t put a saddle on a colt or filly until 2 years of age, and their horses always get pasture breaks after all levels of training or work in the rodeo ring. “Our horses know that life is not always about work and more learning,” Foster stated. “There is always time off after. They get a vacation in the pastures. We let our horses be horses.” Out of the chute Team roping, a timed event in which two riders work together to rope a steer’s horns and feet faster than the competition, is a BIG deal in places like Arizona and New Mexico. And those are the states in which Foster has earned victories in a sport that cares not if you are a man or a woman; all compete equally. 21
A former English rider as a young girl and on Berry’s equestrian team, she got her first big win at the 2021 National Team Roping Opener held in the “Team Roping Capital of the World,” Wickenburg, Arizona. In 2023, she won a TA Rodeo Jackpot with Johnson as her partner in Cimarron, Arizona, as well as a jackpot roping event in Las Vegas, New Mexico, where she earned her first championship saddle. There’s money to be won at these events, and she has started to bring in her fair share on horses she trained for competition. When Johnson or Foster win, more attention is brought to the horses they raise, resulting in more buyers. The “dude” did it It was the Rainbow Trout Ranch, the coveted dude ranch where Foster worked that first summer after her Berry graduation (and seven more after) that set her firmly in a Western saddle. Her main job was taking guests on horse rides into the mountains, but she’s quick to point out this wasn’t a “typical nose-to-tail trail ride.” “We trotted and loped,” she explained. “I got to share horses with people and have them enjoy the horses as much as I did. Sure, sing-alongs and cookouts were part of it. I also cleaned cabins and washed cars. Everyone helps out in every facet. But the horses were what made it for me. I remember watching Jane Van Berkum, who runs the horse program, ride and rope and thinking, ‘I want to be as cool as her.’” In the winters of those early years, Foster worked on the nearby Garcia Ranch, where she received “a wonderful opportunity” to learn and to purchase her first two horses. Learning to try Even though she wasn’t sure at first about going to college, the lifelong horse enthusiast from 22
I BERRY
“Berry gave me the chance to grow up and do it safely. It prepared me for adulthood and helped me come to the revelation of who I am and what I want in life. Because I didn’t know.” McDonough, Georgia, fell hard for Berry. Looking back on those days, Foster noted four things that most helped shape her future. Academically, the marketing major pointed to an entrepreneurship class with Dana Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship Paula Englis in which she wrote a business plan and started an actual business, Hoof ’N Home, with Jessica Tabb Gugliotta (15C), who has kept it going. “The class was such a great opportunity for students to have a safe place to find out if they can be their own boss,” Foster emphasized. “It was such a cool, real-life opportunity.” Second was the equestrian team. “We worked hard for the team, the horses and the program,” she stated. “The bond we had over horses and the team has been unlike any other in my life.” Third was the work program, today called LifeWorks. She helped in the equestrian office, but, surprisingly, it was the carpentry shop that had the greatest impact on her.
“Working in college helped me learn time management and how to multi-task,” she related. “But my biggest takeaway was the work ethic I developed under the watchful eye of my mentors in the carpentry shop, Scott Simpson and Kevin Loorham [FFS]. They were so patient answering my thousands of questions; their tutorship was unmatched in my eyes. Using my hands was good for me and helped me refocus on my academics, and it was inspiring to see what I could accomplish on my own.” Last was an “exceptional summer internship opportunity” in her prospective field that offered “a great learning experience” while also opening her eyes to the fact that she wasn’t ready to do that type of work for the rest of her life … yet. And, as it turns out, maybe ever, although those skills have paid dividends, first in blog posts written for the Rainbow Trout Ranch and more recently in the web content she has created to help market the horses she raises and trains with Johnson. Family knows While she misses her family (and Georgia food), Foster has found a home out West, and she gives Berry much credit. “Berry gave me the chance to grow up and do it safely,” she said. “It prepared me for adulthood and helped me come to the revelation of who I am and what I want in life. Because I didn’t know.” Her aunt, Betty Ward, with whom she lived after losing both parents, did have a clue, however. Foster was nervous about explaining her dude ranch plans but finally worked up the courage. The response she received not only provided a great sense of relief but also hit the nail on the head. “Oh, honey!” her aunt exclaimed. “Thank God! Georgia is great, but you should go and explore and do!” And she did. And she loves it.
OCT SAVE THE DATE!
Mountain Day 2024 October 4-6
20 23 23
lumni and friends amaze us with their generosity toward Berry students. On the facing page, we showcase two examples (there are so many more!). Below, we recognize all gifts, pledges and realized planned gifts of $25,000 or more received between March 1 and Aug. 31, 2023. We are grateful to these leadership supporters, as well as to all whose gifts of any size make a difference in the lives of Berry students.
H.
Inman and Tricia Allen, $25,000 for the new health sciences facility.
Roger (79C) and Candy Caudill (82c) Lusby, $100,000 for the new health sciences facility.
Betty Anne Rouse Bell (52H, 56C), $25,000 for the Betty Anne Rouse Bell Endowed Gate of Opportunity Scholarship.
new health sciences facility.
for the Dr. Bobbie Bailey Creative Technologies Laboratory and $1 million for the Dr. Audrey B. Morgan Gate of Opportunity Scholarship Program Directorship.
Brian (97C) and Susan Wells (97C) Brodrick, $50,000, with $38,000 for the
National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, $66,000 for the new
renovated throwing area at Dickey Field and $12,000 for the maintenance of Clark Track.
health sciences facility.
Brant Sanderlin
Randy and Nancy Berry, $1 million for the
Al (61c) and Becky Browning (61C) Christopher, $155,555 for the Al and Becky Christopher Gate of Opportunity Scholarship.
Evan Crosby (60C), $51,000, with $50,000 for the new health sciences facility and $1,000 for the tennis team booster fund.
John Eadie (83C) Family Charitable Gift Fund, $500,000 for the new health sciences facility.
Ralph T. George Family, $150,049, with
OPPORTUNITY Impart wisdom, share gifts, improve lives
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Audrey B. Morgan, $2 million, with $1 million
$50,049 for the new health sciences facility, $50,000 for the Ralph T. and Kittye Lynn George Endowed Scholarship, and $50,000 for the intellectual and developmental disabilities program within Berry’s psychology department.
Georgia Independent College Association, $41,489 for the general fund.
Robert (04C) and Tessa Frye (07C) Swarthout, $84,816, with $59,816 for the cinder track fund on mountain campus and $25,000 for the new health sciences facility.
Gary (80C, 89G, FFS) and Bambi Estill (79c) Waters, $50,000 for the Bambi Estill Waters Endowed Scholarship.
Mack (62C) and Wanda Hixson (62C) Weems, $50,000 for the Mack and Wanda Weems Endowed Scholarship.
Chris and Amy Wilson, in-kind gift of a horse valued at $35,000.
WinShape Foundation, $285,593, with $75,093 for the WinShape Founder’s Scholarship, $14,500 for the WinShape Appeals Fund, and $196,000 for the WinShape Scholarship.
Jane Horton, $29,904 for the general fund.
REALIZED PLANNED GIFTS
Jon and Angie Wilkey (89C) Lewis, $25,000
Estate of Mary Shay, $91,318 bequest for the
for the new health sciences facility.
Mary T. and John W. Shay Scholarship.
Brant Sanderlin
Part of the family
Jim and Ilona (Lonnie) Timko Puhger
When Ohio State alumni Jim and Ilona (Lonnie) Timko Puhger moved into The Spires at Berry College, they didn’t realize they were joining a very big family with students whose lives they would touch. But that’s exactly what they’ve done. “Before we moved to The Spires, we only knew Berry through watching the Eagle Cam,” Lonnie said. “Then we started meeting the students who work here, and we fell in love. Each one is so unique and inspiring. They work hard and are so focused on their education.” Time and again, the couple recognized something of themselves in the Berry students they encountered: admiring their drive to get a college education and sensing their need for scholarship support. Their own beautiful life together was made possible in large part by their education: Jim graduated from the University of Notre Dame Law School and retired as a federal administrative law judge, while Lonnie earned a master’s degree in speech language pathology from Georgia State University and finished her lifelong career working with special needs students in the Cobb County School System. It wasn’t long before they decided to extend a hand up by endowing a scholarship dedicated to Lonnie and her “Timko” sisters: Isabelle, Irene and Ilene, as all acquired undergraduate degrees with the help of generous scholarships.
This MBS member has memories of Martha Berry Inclusion in the Martha Berry Society of annual leadership supporters is one way we honor those who share the same generous spirit as Berry’s founder. But the passage of time makes it increasingly rare that we get to recognize someone who attended school here prior to Miss Berry’s death in 1942. Imagine our excitement last summer when a letter and gift arrived from Emma Ruth Elder Catlett (45c), a student from January 1941 to 1944 whose love for Berry burns brightly despite the fact that she graduated elsewhere after returning home to help care for her younger brother while two older brothers served in World War II. Now 101, the retired teacher informed us in her correspondence that she still lives on her own but is no longer driving, declaring: “Aren’t you
Emma Ruth Elder Catlett stands proudly in front of a quilt made by her grandmother in the 1880s.
glad!” During a subsequent visit by a college staff member, she shared memories of Berry days as vivid as when they were made.
The Puhgers aren’t alone. Scores of Spires residents, many with no prior connection to Berry, also have given generously, supporting everything from sports teams and academic departments to renovation projects and new construction. Individually and collectively, they’re funding numerous scholarships including The Spires at Berry College Student Work Scholarship – an effort spearheaded by Sam (76C, 78G) and Nancy Duvall (77C) Ratcliffe, proud alumni who have worked hard to share their love of Berry with Spires neighbors. Also, Roger and Elaine Estill, with son-in-law Dr. Gary Waters (80C, 89G, FFS), funded the Bambi Estill Waters (79c) Endowed Scholarship. University retirement communities like The Spires have been part of the American college scene for more than a decade. Today, there are approximately 100 comparable communities nationwide. With the opening of The Spires in 2020, Berry joined the ranks of such prestigious schools as Duke University, Stanford University and Dartmouth College in recognizing the value of creating an environment in which college students and senior adults can interact. At Berry, the creation of such intergenerational bonds has significantly enriched the lives of Spires residents and students alike. And isn’t that what family is all about?
Catlett recalled working in the weaving room and the boys dining hall, as well as meals eaten in close proximity to Miss Berry herself (the seats right next to Berry’s founder were reserved for senior girls). She even had the opportunity to meet Henry and Clara Ford, though her favorite memory was serving as a student candleholder during a visit by Emily Vanderbilt Hammond and the famed Berry Pilgrims. Catlett ultimately finished her degree at the University of Tennessee, but her devotion to Berry is evident in her desire to help “needy students” as a Bronze-level supporter in the Martha Berry Society and through stories told and retold over many years. “She got her degree from UT,” noted son Larry. “But all I ever heard about was Berry, Berry, Berry.” Recognition of 2022-23 MBS members begins on page 36. Contact Jean Druckenmiller at jdruckenmiller@berry.edu or 706-238-7938 to learn how you can join Catlett (and son Larry) on next year’s list. 25
NEWS FROM YOU welcomed first grandchild Wesley James, son of Greg Hanthorn Jr. (08c) and wife Jessica.
1960s Marti Andrews Amos (67C) is
Names are followed by a number and letter indicating Berry status. Uppercase letters denote graduates; lowercase letters denote attended/ attending and anticipated year of graduation: C, c G, g A, a H, h FS FFS
College Graduate school Academy High school Faculty/Staff Former Faculty/Staff
educator living in Brooklet, Ga.
Gayle Graviett Gmyrek (67C) is sad to report the death of husband Edward on Aug. 9, 2023. He was buried with full military honors at the Georgia National Cemetery in Canton.
1970s
SEND YOUR NEWS Send your news to us online at alwaysberry.com/classnotes or email classnotes@berry.edu. Submissions are subject to editing. Photos of sufficient quality will be used at the discretion of the magazine staff. News in this issue was received April 29 to Sept. 30, 2023.
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Annette Watkins Holloway (75C) is a retired music
Southern Regional Technical College
CLASS KEY
retired and living in San Antonio, Texas. She supports the Shriners Hospital for Children in Houston and is actively involved with her local church.
Angela Dickey (75A, 79C) has been elected president of the boards of DACOR Inc. and the DACOR Bacon House Foundation in Washington, D.C. DACOR is an organization of 1,600 former and currently serving foreign affairs professionals that operates out of the historic DACOR Bacon House. Its mission, and that of its sister foundation, is to support the U.S. Foreign Service, diplomacy, public understanding of diplomacy, and preservation of the 200-year-old house.
Patricia Davenport Wilkins (75C) addressed spring and summer graduates as commencement speaker for Southern Regional Technical College in Bainbridge, Ga., on July 27, 2023. She praised their accomplishments and challenged them to further pursue educational and career goals. A medical laboratory scientist with certification from the American Society of Clinical Pathology, Patricia works as laboratory administrative director for Archbold Memorial Hospital in Thomasville.
Joe W. Dixon (76C) has relocated to South Pasadena, Fla., in the St. Petersburg/ Treasure Island area after previously living in Ellenton.
Troy White (78C), an artist and author of four books on the subject of aviation, recently served as a guest lecturer at the Island Storytellers Literary Festival in the South Moreton Bay Islands, Queensland, Australia.
1980s Chris Eberbach (82A) is living in Seabrook, Texas. He would love to hear from Berry friends, declaring, “Don’t be strangers!”
Ruth Fowler Hummel (82C, 84G) is in her third year as a special education teacher for the Gwinnett (Ga.) Online Campus. She also is working on her first children’s book as a member of Scribbler’s Press in addition to volunteering in the education department at the Southeastern Railway Museum. Ruth is pictured second from right at the December 2022 wedding of son Frank IV. Also pictured, from left, are youngest son Jon, new daughter-in-law Rose, Frank IV and, far right, husband Frank III.
Greg Hanthorn (82C) has earned “capstone” recognition in his field through election to The American Law Institute. He now has the opportunity to collaborate with other members on scholarly work meant to clarify, modernize and improve the law. Greg (seen above on a previous Berry cover) also continues his service as co-chair of the Federal Practice Task Force of the Section of Litigation of the American Bar Association, in addition to making the “Best Lawyers” list in commercial litigation for the 12th straight year for his work in the Atlanta office of Jones Day. Personally, he and wife Judy Cash Hanthorn (85C) recently
Mark “Atch” Atcheson (85c) and wife Michelle are proud owners of Camp Blood and Lowell Paintball in Carrollton, Ga. Atch reports that the 33-year-old Camp Blood, Georgia’s oldest continually running haunted attraction, is sure to send “a chill down your spine.” Lowell Paintball is in its 23rd year, offering paintball, airsoft and orbeeball. The couple invites all Berry alumni to come out and have some fun with them.
Chester Forsh (73C) has been a commanding presence at Douglas County High School for 51 years, motivating generations of students to strive for excellence through his work as a teacher and coach. Last June, the suburban Atlanta community celebrated the legacy of the Berry alumnus who made history in the 1970s as the local school system’s first black head coach post-integration by naming the street outside the high school in his honor. It was fitting recognition for an educator whose presence and example over more than half a century have benefitted students of all races. Forsh, who experienced integration firsthand as a student growing up in Cherokee County, north of Atlanta, hit his stride at Berry, earning the nickname “Chet the Jet” while competing in basketball and track and field. It was during those years that he met the woman who would become his wife, the former Frankie Jones. “I wouldn’t trade my time at Berry for anything,” he praised. “I loved the campus when I made my visit and still think we’re
No. 1 [for beauty]. I don’t care what any of these surveys say.” Fresh out of college, he accepted a job teaching physical education at Douglas County. He wasn’t hired to be a coach, but he quickly found himself in that role. “I wound up coaching three sports my first year,” he proudly shared. At a time when the color of his skin was enough to earn the ire of some, Forsh maintained a high standard for himself and his teams, ultimately earning success as a head coach in cross country, basketball, and track and field – all sports he still coaches today. He continues to emphasize doing things “the right way” while showing incredible loyalty to the school in which he’s spent his entire career. And then there’s the impact he’s made on students, including one he never taught or coached who nevertheless reached out years later to offer thanks for brief words of wisdom shared in the hallway. “That’s why we do what we do,” said the coach, speaking like a true winner.
champion and was a two-time welterweight boxing champion, among many other distinctions. “It’s a tremendous honor,” she exclaimed. “I’ve grinned more the last few months than I ever have. It’s humbling.”
Dr. Valerie Waits Holt (85C)
Severo Avila/Rome News-Tribune
has joined Kennesaw State University as assistant professor in the history and philosophy department.
1990s
she earned a doctorate in deaf education/interpreter education in 2021.
Shirsten Patterson Dreyer (91c) is a newly licensed professional counselor with her own practice in Metro Atlanta specializing in trauma, life transitions, grief, anxiety and depression. She holds a master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from the University of North Georgia.
Mary Anne McGrory (90C)
Mitzi Tyler Jeter (85C) shows off the ring she received as a new inductee in the United States Martial Arts Hall of Fame. As reported by Severo Avila of the Rome News-Tribune, Mitzi was honored as a “Distinguished Master Competitor” after winning more than 1,200 local, national and international trophies during her 30-year competition karate career, including silver medals at the 1995 and 1997 World Games. She also earned the title of U.S. amateur kickboxing
has started her 33rd year in education. She currently is president of the Pocatello (Idaho) Education Association and is a former vice president of the Idaho Education Association. Mary Anne proudly shared that her oldest daughter is a special education teacher, while her twins are exploring their own career options. She added: “I miss Georgia but not the humidity!”
Derrick Mahone/Douglas County Sentinel
SIGN OF RESPECT FOR TRAILBLAZING COACH
Kathy McNamara Nguyen (91C) is in the midst of a oneyear term as president of the Georgia Association of Water Professionals. A volunteer for the organization since 2004, she is excited to be “working with GAWP members to effectively represent our diverse membership.” Also customer service division manager for the Cobb County Water System, Kathy has made it her life’s work to support the drinking water industry in Georgia, earning recognition for her contributions to the field of water conservation.
Tracy Smith Farrington (92C) of Cumming, Ga., and husband Scott join Stan McKee (91C) of Pendergrass, Ga., and wife Beka in proudly announcing that both couples’ first grandchild, Charlotte Love McKee, was born June 14, 2023, to parents Brandon and Caroline McKee of Texas.
The Rev. Dr. Valerie Loner (91C) returned to Rome in July 2023 as senior pastor of Rome First United Methodist Church. Valerie, who most recently served in Jonesboro, Ga., holds a doctorate from Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C.
Jennifer Kobb (92C) recently
Dr. Sally Evans (92C) is now teaching at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where
celebrated 25 years at RICOH USA Inc., where she is executive administrative assistant for information security and business services.
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NEWS FROM YOU
of Science degree from the King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management in Kingsville, Texas, the only program of its kind.
Randee Walters Paraskevopoulos (92C) is the new school magazine and special projects manager at Murray Media Group, working with school districts, cities and companies to create magazines tailored to their specific audiences. In addition to publishing about 150 magazines per year for a growing list of clients, the Texasbased company also runs the annual “Best of Denton County” competition, culminating in a 132-page magazine that Randee oversees. The former Campus Carrier editor loves utilizing her Berry-honed journalism chops.
Mandy Lee Etheridge (94C)
Stephen Hammer (97C) and the
Dr. Leigh Elrod (98C) has
has published her first two children’s books, Now, It’s Spring in Georgia (featuring a shout-out to Rome and Berry on its cover) and Dragon for a Pet. The longtime teacher lives in Lincolnton, Ga., with husband Keith Etheridge (93C).
IBM sports and entertainment team have won an Emmy in technology and engineering for advancements made in curating sports highlights through artificial intelligence and machine learning. Stephen extended credit to IBM colleague Joe Mabry (91C), noting that Joe’s “excellent foundational work” on IBM’s golf and tennis scoring systems was an integral aspect of the team’s success.
been named Don Pedersen Endowed Chair in the Division of Physician Assistant Studies at the University of Utah. This endowed chair is the first of its kind in Utah and one of a select few nationally in the field, providing financial resources to advance important initiatives.
Walter Head (94C) raises Kiko goats in Taylorsville, Ky., with wife Carolina and daughters Elena and Jolina. They invite you to follow them on Facebook by searching Brashears Creek Kikos.
Nathan Clackum (98C) is
Dr. Rebecca Chandler Cooper (98C, 02G) completed a doctorate of elementary education from Brenau University in May 2022. The K-8 media specialist for the Trion (Ga.) City Schools credits experience gained as a student worker in Berry’s Memorial Library for helping prepare her for the transition from the classroom to the library, citing the influence of mentors Jane Garrison (FFS), Martha Reynolds (FFS) and Lance Foldes (FFS). Rebecca and husband Jason have two daughters, the youngest of whom now attends Berry.
nearing completion of a Master
Bridgette Stewart (98C) is chief wellness officer at the University of West Georgia. She is the only person with that title in the University System of Georgia who focuses on strategic planning of wellness initiatives
GOOD HANDS: FORMER VIKING SHINES AS SURGEON Dr. Mark Floyd (04C) was never the first player off the bench as a member of the Berry baseball team – unless it was to chase an out-of-play foul ball. But now the chairman of orthopedics at Rome’s Harbin Clinic finds himself a star “player,” serving as a team physician for Berry athletics and recently performing two knee replacements on his former coach, David Beasley (FS). “I’ve got so much trust in the kid,” praised the longtime coach. “I look at it like he’s paying me back for all the gray hairs he gave me along the way.”
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In truth, Floyd was a model athlete and student, enjoying the camaraderie of teammates who became lifelong friends while thriving in Berry’s “safe and nurturing” learning environment. The latter offered sound preparation for medical school and the opportunity to meet wife Kristen Lillie Floyd (03C), who later attended nursing school and now helps out in the Ladd Center. “Berry holds a very special place for me because it’s where I grew up and became my own person, found myself and figured out who I wanted to be
as a human being,” he said. “I want to give back because it was such a great experience and place for me.” Count Berry’s student-athletes among those who appreciate his involvement, along with pre-med students who have shadowed him and, of course, one VERY grateful baseball coach. “I’ve got eight vets who played for me, and none of them live close enough,” Beasley joked. “I’ve got a surgeon right here in Rome, so if I need surgery, he’s going to take care of me.”
for students and employees specifically related to retention, progression and graduation.
Lily and Bailey Grace in November 2022. The family of six lives in the mountains of Virginia.
Rebecca Whitehead (98C) recently set the Tennessee state age group distance record for females running a 12-hour race, covering 37.2047 miles on April 29, 2023. She also was named 2022-23 Teacher of the Year at Farragut High School in Knoxville, where she teaches Spanish.
Dr. Billy Flood (00C) earned a
of clinical director for Rogers Behavioral Health in Sandy Springs, Ga. This nationwide behavioral health organization provides services for trauma, depression and anxiety, with specialization in treating children, teenagers and adults who struggle with obsessivecompulsive disorder. Previously, Nathan worked for five years as clinical director at The Summit Counseling Center in Johns Creek.
doctorate in music education from the University of Georgia in May 2023.
Scott Dunford (04C) and wife Nathália celebrated the arrival of second daughter Heloise Jenelle in June 2023.
Megan Montgomery Elliott (05C) earned a master’s degree
husband Jonathan welcomed second child Garrett Max on Aug. 18, 2023.
in hospitality management from Auburn University in spring 2023. She currently serves as global programs coordinator for all undergraduate study-abroad programs in Auburn’s Harbert College of Business.
Doug Malcolm (04C) has been
Jessica Doyle Cloud (06C, 08G)
promoted to senior lecturer of computing in Kennesaw State University’s College of Computing and Software Engineering.
made the “Top 20 Under 40” list compiled by Chatter magazine, a publication of the Chattanooga Times Free Press, for her work in automation and innovation. She lives in Chattanooga, Tenn., with her husband and two daughters and recently joined HealthEquity as vice president of digital transformation.
Lydia Davis Foster (04C) and
Jeremy Etress (03C) and wife
Anna Fuller McBrayer (00C) is
The Rev. Dr. Jonathan Trapp (99C) graduated from Emory
the newly promoted director of marketing and communications at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colo., leading a 12-person creative staff and a team of student interns.
University in May 2023 with a Doctor of Ministry degree. He is special advisor for emergency management at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and pastor for faith formation at Lutheran Church of the Redeemer in Atlanta.
2000s
Carrie welcomed son Spencer Warren on May 13, 2023. Weighing 7 pounds, 8 ounces, the new arrival joined big sisters Delaney and Ellison in the family’s Newnan, Ga., home.
John Coleman (04C) has
Pamela Franks Hastings (02C) is director of accounting for the Georgia Department of Education. She lives in Rome.
published his fourth book and first novel, Miracles. Chronicling the experiences of a newspaper reporter covering signs and wonders occurring in Atlanta, the novel offers insight into how she and the world react when confronted with things they can’t explain.
Jennifer Williams Bronner (05C) has earned inclusion on the “5 Under 40” list published by Macon (Ga.) Magazine recognizing emerging leaders who are helping to push their community forward and in new directions. Recipients are considered to be movers and shakers who represent the best of Macon-Bibb County.
Kylee Carmin Caldwell (08C) and Adam Caldwell (09C) are pleased to announce the July 14, 2023, birth of daughter Emma Jean.
Erin Oiler Farrell (00C) joined husband Brendan and children KJ and Brendan in celebrating the adoption of sisters Eileen
Dr. Nathan Butzen (03C) recently accepted the position
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NEWS FROM YOU
Chick-fil-A) praised his Berry foundation for attributes and technical knowledge that have served him well during postgraduate study at Auburn and in his professional career.
Brittnee Howell Shipp (08C)
Dr. Kimberly Renehan (11C) and
married Cade Shipp on April 29, 2023. Bridesmaids Caitlin Bass Ryan (10C) and Brittany Nash Thomas (08C) stood by the couple, joining other alumni in attendance.
husband RJ Short celebrated the birth of daughter Riley Emerson on April 26, 2023.
Dr. Chad Rowell (10C) has earned a doctorate in ministry from Luther Rice College and Seminary in Lithonia, Ga.
Lauren Tarpley McGibboney (12C) and husband Rob welcomed daughter Evelyn Felice on March 20, 2023. The new arrival is the granddaughter of honorary alumni Tim (FFS) and Sue (FFS) Tarpley.
Kelly Hester Jimenez (09C) and husband Jarret welcomed first child Riley Ann on Jan. 11, 2023.
2010s
Randy De Kleine (11G) and wife Morgan Briggs De Kleine welcomed son Caleb John on May 22, 2023, much to the delight of brother Isaac and sister Anna. Caleb is the sixth grandchild of Berry President Steve Briggs (FS) and his wife, Brenda.
Dr. Rebecca Hogle Duden (13C),
with professional athletes and Fortune 100 companies
left, has taken a job as clinical associate at the Palmer (Alaska) Veterinary Clinic owned by Dr. Kelly Perdue Campbell (04C).
worldwide as owner of the Ergo-ology consulting firm. Together with his team of professional ergonomists, the kinesiology/exercise science alum and former Berry baseball player helps clients ranging from Chick-fil-A, Coca-Cola and NASA to US Foods, Google, Lubrizol and Universal Studios “bridge the gap” between workplace demands and worker ability. Brock (seen above right working with a client at
Rebecca previously worked in Wyoming for five years after completing a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Michigan State University in 2017, the same year Kelly (a 2009 veterinary-school graduate of the University of Tennessee) bought the Palmer Clinic. Mused Rebecca: “What are the odds that two Berry grads found each other in the same town of Palmer, Alaska? Even though our paths at Berry never
Brock Anderson (10C) works
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Emily Poolos Garcia (11C) and Henry Garcia were married on April 1, 2023, in Black Mountain, N.C., just outside Asheville. Earlier in 2023, Emily completed a master’s degree in English as a second language and bilingual education from the American College of Education.
SOARING SKYWARD Berry communication graduates proudly will tell you that the sky is the limit for someone with that degree. But space? In the case of Laura Means (09C), absolutely! OK, not literally, but Means is leveraging her skills in support of NASA’s Human Landing System, a key element of the Artemis program aiming to return American astronauts to the moon before decade’s end. HLS specifically is focused on getting them to and from the surface safely, actively coordinating with SpaceX and Blue Origin to develop the next generation of crewed lunar landers. “In November 2022, our nation watched the incredible first uncrewed test flight of Artemis,” explained Means, who is based at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. “Next, a crew of four will be launched to lunar orbit before coming home. Artemis III is where my program comes in, when we land astronauts on the moon for the first time in more than 50 years.” With contributions in such areas as strategic messaging for program leaders and internal communications, Means joins a proud tradition of Berry alumni who have lent their talents to America’s space program, dating all the way back to the historymaking grads of an earlier era who helped propel the Apollo program to unprecedented heights. Looks like we’re “go for launch” once again!
crossed, we sat in the same rooms in Westcott learning from the same professors, we both lived in Ford during our freshman year, and we both served as first-year mentors.”
Kimberly Treese Workman (13C) joined her husband in establishing the nonprofit Idlehurst Foundation on the historic Workman family farm in Upstate South Carolina. They provide equine and outdoor therapy and counseling to neurodivergent children and adults, serving special needs, individuals with trauma, foster children and more.
Ashley Harzog (13C), right, married Kelsey Curtis in an intimate beach ceremony in Hatteras, N.C., on June 10, 2023. Kelsey Taylor (13C) was Ashley’s maid of honor. Their friendship dates back to their Berry days serving as resident assistants in Morton-Lemley. Because she knew Ashley first, Taylor has requested that she be called “Kelsey #1.” “Deliberations are ongoing,” joked Ashley.
Alyssa Hollingsworth (13C) married primary school teacher Gareth Czaja at Tollard Royal, Wiltshire in England on Aug. 1, 2023.
after graduating from the U.S. State Department’s Foreign Service Institute. She later completed intensive foreign language training (Spanish) in preparation for her first assignment as consular officer for the U.S. Consulate General in Hermosillo, Mexico. Admittedly proud father and retired U.S. Navy Cmdr. Michael Tedesco (84C) remarked, “A career in the foreign service is not an unexpected stretch for Emily. She is a ‘third culture kid’ who grew up in Spain, Italy, Germany and Belgium, attending four high schools in three countries.”
Glenn Garrido (14C) has relocated to Burbank, Calif., as the newly promoted manager of content operations for the creative services team at Marvel Studios, helping to finalize and distribute business-tobusiness marketing materials for events and presentations worldwide. He also can be found in the credits of Marvel movies like Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (for which he served as digital asset manager). Glenn marveled: “I remember going to watch the first Avengers movie at the Mount Berry theater using a $5 movie voucher from KCAB, and now here I am working in the corporate offices in California!”
Emily Tedesco (14C), second
Sarah announce the birth of first child Colton Alan on March 22, 2023.
from left, was sworn in as a U.S. Foreign Service officer by Secretary of State Anthony J. Blinken in October 2022
Chelsea Risley (15C) is the new executive director for SoLit (formerly the Southern Lit Alliance), the literary arts hub for Chattanooga, Tenn., since 1952. In this role, Chelsea is responsible for leading SoLit in its mission to foster a lifelong love of reading in the Chattanooga community.
compliance manager of NuLeaf Naturals in Denver. He also serves as a referee and judge for the Abu Dhabi Combat Club.
Meaghan Hughes-Davis (16C) is pursuing a doctorate in special education with a concentration in gifted education at the University of Alabama, where she previously completed a master’s degree. Meaghan is a gifted education teacher in Huntsville, living with her husband, two dogs and two guinea pigs.
Sierra Greene Bryceson (15C) and husband Caleb welcomed first son Ezra Jax on May 26, 2023. He weighed 7 pounds, 14 ounces. Sierra exclaimed: “He’s happy, healthy and amazing!”
Bailey Merlin (15C) was
Nathan Mock (13C) and wife
recently started a new job as program manager at Harvard Medical School.
married in September 2022 and graduated from Harvard Medical School with a Master of Science degree in media, medicine and health in May 2023. That same month, she published her first novel, A Lot of People Live in This House, which affirms that life’s unexpected challenges don’t have to be navigated alone. Bailey lives in Boston and
Michael Clark (16C) is now associate asset manager with EDF Renewables, responsible for reporting and managing clean-energy wind and solar projects across California and Nevada. The Berry public relations/communication major made the leap to green energy/ renewables after three years in data analytics at GoFundMe: “I was interested in working for another mission-driven company on a larger scale.”
Cody Eden (16C) is working as quality assurance and
Alec Leeseberg (17C) has launched Velocity Explorations, which he describes as a “discovery-oriented” design and consulting firm dedicated to enhancing technology, teams and organizations through usercentered design fundamentals. After spending his years postBerry scaling startups, assisting in digital transformation efforts with the U.S. Space Force, and consulting for innovationfocused organizations within the U.S. Navy, Alec is excited to continue his work with the U.S. Department of Defense while also applying his methodologies to industries facing particular challenges in implementing user-friendly solutions (e.g. public sector, health care and finance).
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Berry extends sincere condolences to family and friends of the following alumni, faculty and former faculty/staff members. This list includes notices received March 1 to Aug. 31, 2023.
1940s
Hollis Clayton Anglin (55H) of
Jerry Braden (66c) of Summerville,
James T. Cantrell (55C) of
Patricia Neal Fanjoy (66C) of Rome,
Katherine Mullins McQueen (45H)
Janet Tate Waters (55C) of Rome,
Jim Harris (66C) of Fayetteville,
Martha O’Neal Gunnin Morris (45H)
Thomas F. Mangum (56H) of
John Wayne Lewis (66C) of Greer,
Sarah Bell Radasch (47H, 51C) of
Avys Billue (57c) of Grovetown, Ga.,
Lillian Lane Gibson (48C) of
Jerry Shelton (58C) of Cedartown,
Martha Frances Dodd McConnell (45H, 50C) of Powder Springs, Ga., May 12, 2023.
of Chattanooga, Tenn., July 1, 2023. of Pottsville, Ark., June 12, 2023. Gurnee, Ill., March 21, 2023.
Donalsonville, Ga., June 28, 2023.
Cecil Spooner (49H) of Stone Mountain, Ga., Jan. 19, 2023.
Newark, Del., Feb. 14, 2023.
Thomasville, Ga., July 25, 2023. July 28, 2023.
Fredericksburg, Va., Aug. 25, 2023. May 26, 2023.
Ga., June 12, 2023.
Beverly Huff White (58c) of
Peachtree City, Ga., Aug. 13, 2022.
Jim Justiss (59c) of Cherryville, N.C.,
1950s
July 8, 2023.
Jim Hartley (51C) of Chattanooga,
Dayton Adams (60C) of Jasper, Ga.,
Carlton Brown (52c) of Dunnellon,
Sherman Parrish (60C) of Boiling
Houston L. Payne (52H) of Marietta,
Calvin Lee Rolan (61H) of Ellijay, Ga.,
Lee Shackelford (52H) of Carrollton,
Jean Long Dadgar (62C) of Sarasota,
Earl Worthington (52C) of Hampton,
Mary Duanne Self Walton (62C) of
Mary Shurling Guthrie (53C) of
Sherwood Fender (63C) of Beaufort,
Tenn., April 11, 2023. Fla., April 18, 2023. Ga., June 17, 2022.
Ga., Aug. 10, 2023.
Ga., March 13, 2023.
Dandridge, Tenn., July 16, 2023.
Rachel Cork Hubbard (53C) of Thomasville, Ga., June 9, 2023.
Emily Anthony Mullis (53C) of
Panama City Beach, Fla., April 24, 2023.
Frankie Billue Sapp (53c) of Irwinton, Ga., Jan. 18, 2023.
Emeris “Smitty” Smitherman (53C)
1960s
April 25, 2023.
Springs, N.C., Aug. 6, 2023. June 26, 2023.
Fla., Feb. 21, 2023.
Rome, June 16, 2023. S.C., Aug. 25, 2023.
Eddie Fite (63C) of Cumming, Ga., March 24, 2023.
Roger Harris (63H) of Glen Allen, Va., March 18, 2023.
Edwin Buice (64C) of Rome, March 6, 2023.
Dennis Hodges (64C) of Dana, N.C., Nov. 7, 2022.
of St. Simons Island, Ga., April 3, 2023. Charles Lee (64C) of Richland, Ga., May 9, 2023. Tommy Eady (54c) of Sumter, S.C., June 21, 2023. Doug Carter (65C) of Marietta, Ga.,
Graemen Goodridge (54H) of Mansfield, Ga., Jan. 9, 2023.
Jean Kirksey Lee (54c) of Knoxville, Tenn., Aug. 13, 2023. 32
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Feb. 16, 2023.
James Wilson (65c) of Waverly, Ga., April 14, 2023.
Aug. 19, 2023.
N.C., April 16, 2023. S.C., June 25, 2023.
1980s
Randy Phillips (80C) of Cartersville, Ga., July 18, 2023.
Denise Murray Smith (80C) of Greer, S.C., June 1, 2023.
Allen Jones (81C) of Duluth, Ga., May 21, 2023.
Tanya Bishop Gray (86G) of Calhoun, Don Law (67C) of Rome, May 18, 2023. Ga., May 22, 2023. Edwin Moore (67C) of Rome, March Wendy Martin Jackson (87c) of 25, 2023.
Harriman, Tenn., Feb. 19, 2022.
Frank Wilson (67C) of Lafayette, Ga., April 29, 2023.
Traci Dunn Mitchell (87C) of Madison, Ga., May 12, 2023.
Vondelle Ballard Holliday (68c) of Athens, Ga., May 7, 2023.
Joseph Holloman (68C) of Marietta,
William Abb Burch (50C) of
Jonesboro, Ga., Aug. 27, 2023.
Ga., March 19, 2023.
Ga., Jan. 25, 2023.
Kay Shearin Lindley (68C) of
Roanoke Rapids, N.C., Jan. 13, 2022.
Sharon Blankenship (69C) of Rome, May 23, 2023.
James Kenneth Davis (69C) of Clinton, Ky., July 17, 2023.
James Timothy Rudeseal (69C) of Clermont, Ga., May 5, 2023.
Nelle Hester Watters (69C) of Rome, Aug. 16, 2023.
1990s
Robert James “Bobby” Pino (92c) of Boiling Springs, S.C., May 23, 2023.
Julia Leonard Watson (92C) of Ringgold, Ga., April 28, 2023.
David Cloud (95C) of Rome, April 7, 2023.
Marla Baerenwald Settle (95C) of Rome, June 2, 2023.
Lori Nobles Tuck (96C) of Vidalia, Ga., June 26, 2023.
Marianne Lewis Forsyth (98C, 03G) of Cartersville, Ga., July 2, 2023.
1970s
Diane Lanham (71C) of Rome, March 29, 2023.
Bill “Mickey” Smith (72C) of Rossville, Ga., May 11, 2023.
Pam Woods Treglown (73C, 74G) of Plainville, Ga., July 13, 2023.
2000s
Andrea Deck King (02c) of Macon, Ga., April 17, 2023.
Faculty/Staff
Hyunsung “Daniel” Kang of Duluth,
Ken Heinrich (74C) of Cartersville,
Ga., Aug. 23, 2023.
Mary Anne Schimmelmann Massey (75c) of Marietta, Ga., July 17, 2023.
Carol Bowen Hatch (76c) of Rome,
2023.
Ga., May 20, 2023.
July 31, 2023.
Cathy Folkerts Strickland (79C, 88G) of Rome, July 11, 2023.
Former Faculty/Staff
Ray Branson Gayler of Rome, June 18, Dwight Kinzer of Rome, Aug. 20, 2023. Cherrie Shaw of Armuchee, Ga., July 3, 2023.
Bob Sumners of Rome, May 10, 2023.
In memoriam
Berry is saddened by the May 9, 2023, loss of Dr. J. Paul Ferguson, retired president and CEO of Rome’s Harbin Clinic and a “visionary” community leader. The Emory-trained neurosurgeon, former Green Beret and Vietnam veteran became a Berry trustee in 1985, moving to emeritus status in 2009. He was deeply involved in service to his community, particularly in the areas of education and medicine, including helping Berry and the Rome Rotary establish the South Rome Early Learning Center as a board member for the South Rome Redevelopment Corp. Among his numerous honors were awards for work as a physician and servant leader. Survivors include two sons and five grandchildren. The family requested that memorial donations be made to Berry.
Dr. Emma Chambers (20C), seen here with guide dog Jetta, was all smiles after graduating from Samford University’s School of Health Professions with a doctorate in physical therapy last spring. Now she’s working at Birmingham (Ala.) Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine. While such success would be impressive for anyone, it is especially so for Chambers, who was born with a rare genetic condition severely limiting her sight. Unbowed, she has pursued her dreams with tenacity while also serving as an advocate and example for others. Reflecting on her latest accomplishment in an article posted on the Samford website, she emphasized, “It is so much more than a diploma; for me, it represents a hard-fought battle that proves that disabled doesn’t mean unable.” Samford obviously is proud of her, and so are we!
Dr. Nathan Thacker (17C) graduated with a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Georgia in May 2023. His dissertation, “Developing a Methodology for Investigating Student Comprehension of Organic Chemistry Using Eye Tracking Technology,” seeks to create more effective teaching strategies by better understanding how students learn. Nathan is a lecturer in the chemistry department at UGA.
Samford University
When Tom Carver passed away on Aug. 29, 2023, Berry lost a larger-than-life servant and friend who championed generations of students. Upon hearing the news, alumni and colleagues alike took to social media to share stories of his incredible influence. Dean Carver, as he was known to so many, arrived on campus in 1978 as vice president of student affairs. He spent 26 years in that role, then 14 more postretirement teaching psychology and mentoring first-year students. He also was active in the Rome community; the same famous voice that boomed through the air at Berry sporting events could be heard singing at First Presbyterian Church and entertaining audiences in Rome Little Theatre productions. He is survived by Betty, the love of his life and wife of 60 years; sons Rob (88C) and Rick; daughter Naomi Carver Williams (92c); and five beloved grandchildren. Memorial contributions can be made to the Tom and Betty Carver Scholarship at Berry.
VISION FOR A BETTER FUTURE
residency in family medicine at Atrium Health Floyd Medical Center in Rome.
Krista Zalewski Williams (17C) has earned recognition as a “Rising Star” by the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, appearing on the cover of the organization’s September 2023 magazine.
Jordan Callahan Luna (18C)
Karla Jasmin Manzanares (19C)
and Luis Luna (17C) are Berry sweethearts who celebrated their first wedding anniversary in June 2023 with their 3-weekold son. Exclaimed Jordan: “We are so blessed!”
graduated cum laude in May 2023 from American University Washington College of Law. She now lives in Charlotte, N.C., serving as an Immigrant Justice Corps fellow at the Charlotte Center for Legal Advocacy.
Josh Hines (19C) and Sarah Enger Hines (20C) have adopted a dog. Say hello to Poppy!
Khari Nickoli Harrison (18C) and husband Dean are thrilled to announce the birth of first daughter Lenora Rose on June 29, 2023. Khari shared: “She can’t wait to be a future Viking!”
Dr. Helen Jones (19C) has Dr. Trent Griner (19C) earned a doctorate in osteopathic medicine in May 2023 as a member of the inaugural class of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine’s South Georgia campus. Trent is currently completing his
started a residency in veterinary public health at The Ohio State University after graduating from the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine in May 2023.
Maddie Jordan Miller (19C, 21G, FFS) and husband Noah have added two furry family members to their household. Meet Obi and Ani, their French bulldog pups.
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2020s
associate in Huntsville, Ala., with the firm of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP.
Sarah Baker (21C, FS) earned
QUITE A HIKE! Sidney McAdams (18C) traded an ill-fitting job for the open wilderness when he decided to “thru-hike” the Appalachian Trail in 2022, challenging himself to cover the entire distance with no significant breaks. With just two months’ planning, McAdams set out May 22 of that year with 5½ pounds of gear and a supply of dry foods for his ultralight hike of one of the world’s longest footpaths stretching 2,198.4 miles across 14 states with approximately 464,500 feet of elevation changes. A “north bounder,” he began at Georgia’s Springer Mountain, the trail’s southern entryway. Each year, thousands of hikers attempt to hike the “A-T” from beginning to end in one continuous trip, with only about 25% succeeding. The average transit takes five to seven months; McAdams did it in three and a half, exiting at Maine’s Mount Katahdin on Sept. 5 after covering 21 to 25 miles for 107 consecutive days. Amid remote conditions, McAdams found connection with “trail families,” fellow hikers in neighboring campsites who would snap photos for one another and even share the rare dinner out at resupply stations. He communicated with his actual family – including proud uncle Spencer Brewer (87G), who tipped us off to his nephew’s feat – through nightly entries in the FarOut app on his smart phone. The experience was idyllic for McAdams, who found joy “being out in nature, in a beautiful environment for days at a time and having the freedom to make my own schedule.” Brushing aside the memory of difficulties faced along the way, including a three-day downpour at the outset of his trek, “constantly stubbing toes,” periodic storms and the “rockstrewn terrain” of Pennsylvania, McAdams said he longs to someday return to favorite spots such as New Hampshire’s White Mountains and the Bigelows in Maine, where soaring heights offered him spectacular views. Though proud of his mammoth accomplishment, McAdams isn’t done – not by a long shot. While working for Epic Mountain Gear in Colorado, he’s already dreaming of his next adventure, which will take him to America’s opposite shore for an attempt of the Pacific Crest Trail, spanning more than 2,650 miles of California, Oregon and Washington. Stay tuned! 34
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Chris Arnold (20C) lives
Samuel L. Harris (20C) earned a
in Chattanooga, Tenn., and works as an outside sales representative for a construction manufacturing firm. He once aspired to be a surgeon before the pandemic left him burned out and no longer passionate about a career in medicine. Now Chris gets to travel for his work and serve others, leading him to exult: “I can truly say after three years of searching and hard work, that I LOVE MY JOB!”
master’s degree in history and a certificate in public history and museum studies in May 2023 from the University of West Georgia. He works as a programs manager at the Booth Western Art Museum in Cartersville.
Zion Brown (21C) is working in
Cassie LaJeunesse (20C)
Kendall Aronson (20C) has started a new job as event coordinator for the Cobb County (Ga.) School District, working on commencements, Teacher of the Year celebrations and other special occasions.
has graduated from George Washington University with a Master of Professional Studies degree in publishing and been promoted to content manager in communications for the American Chiropractic Association.
fifth in her class from Mercer University School of Law in May 2023. While at Mercer, Emma was a published member of the Mercer Law Review and an advocate in the Mock Trial program. She is now a litigation
a high school ministry position at Perimeter Church in Johns Creek, Ga., after completing a two-year residency there.
Lewis Denver (21C) is a resident
Ben D. Walker (20C) graduated
Emma Duke (20C) graduated
a master’s degree in forensic psychology in February 2023 and now works as a therapist for children and adolescents on Medicaid in addition to serving as an adjunct professor of psychology at Berry.
with honors from the Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law in May 2023 and has accepted a position with Husser & Husser P.C. in Rome.
artist at Cub Creek Foundation in rural Appomattox, Va., researching and working exclusively with clay collected from the Appalachian Mountains. Lewis credits his success to “some of the best educators out there” [Dennis Ritter (FS), Dr. Tamie Jovanelly (FS) and Dr. Zane Cochran (FS)], as well as hours spent in Hackberry Lab and outdoors at Berry exploring ways to blend his passion for creativity and sustainability. It was while studying ceramics and geology during his last semester that he discovered “I could thrive and work in harmony with the land.”
of Georgia Bartow County Extension Office as a program assistant for agriculture and natural resources and Keep Bartow Beautiful.
EXCITED EDUCATORS Daniel Hanberry (21C) has
Charis Morgan (22C) is excited
started a yearlong appointment as a program officer for SEED (Sustainable Environment, Education and Development) Madagascar after graduating cum laude from Duke University with a Master of Science degree in global health. While at Duke, he spent the summer of 2022 at the Institut National de Reserche Biomedicale in the Democratic Republic of Congo as a participant in the University of California, Los Angeles Research and Training Program.
to be attending the University of Alabama on a “full ride” (tuition plus stipend) as she seeks a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing.
DJ Robins (21C) earned a master’s degree in athletic training in May 2023 from Arkansas State University.
Dylan Beasley (23C, FS) has
Callan McAnnally Woodard (21C) and Josh Woodard (20C) were married on Nov. 19, 2022. Callan recalled: “We met on my second day of classes during my freshman year. We sat next to each other in history!”
Anna Johnson (21C), seen here with Jude, her Great Pyrenees, graduated with distinction from the University of Georgia in May 2023, earning a master’s degree in art history. She now is doing post-baccalaureate work in the ceramic arts at the University of Montana with hopes of pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree. She praised Berry faculty member Dennis Ritter (FS) “for teaching me to follow my dreams – even if it took a while to get here!”
Gracie Jordan (21C) has started a new job at the University
returned to Berry as a full-time assistant coach on the baseball team. Dylan, who made history in 2019 as the first Viking in the NCAA Division III era to be selected in Major League Baseball’s first-year player draft, is working under the direction of his father, David Beasley (FS), Berry’s longtime head coach.
Bryson Smith (23C), far right, shared this photo of 2023 graduates who recently joined the ranks of Berry alumni teaching in the Rome City Schools. These tight-knit elementary school educators are thrilled to be starting their professional journey together after meeting as first-year students in a BCC 100 course taught by their “guru and queen,” Professor Emerita of Teacher Education Mary C. Clement (FFS). Smith noted: “We are all teaching at the schools where we student taught and are so thankful to Berry for bringing us together and leading us to our first job! Go Vikings and now go Wolves!” Pictured from left are Kara Freeman (third grade, East Central); Kate DiRuggiero (third grade, Elm Street); Hope Huetter (first grade, Elm Street); Amber Bingham (first grade, West End); Liz Duke (second grade, West End); Isabel Santiago (ESOL teacher, West Central); and Smith (second grade, West End).
Lirio Sarahi Morales Ibarra (23C) is working toward a master’s degree in education at Harvard University.
Gary Jones III (23C) is a client service associate with Arthur J. Gallagher & Co., one of the world’s largest insurance brokers.
Alex Dalton (22C) has purchased his first home in Lenoir City, Tenn., near Knoxville, and completed his first full year running his own financial practice under New York Life Investments.
Bree Estrada (23C) completed a summer internship with the Student Conservation Association in Ely, Minn. Her work included issuing permits and leading interactive educational programs for visitors focused on area wildlife. When not exploring the outdoors, Bree is pursuing a master’s degree in cybersecurity, strategy and intelligence at Johns Hopkins University.
Tomi Ibikunle (23C) completed dual bachelor’s degrees in biochemistry from Berry and biomedical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in May 2023. She now works as a medical assistant at Peachtree Orthopedics and volunteers in the emergency room at Scottish Rite Hospital while preparing to apply for medical school.
Calleigh Reber (23C) has started graduate studies at the University of Tennessee, where she is seeking a Ph.D. in microbiology on full scholarship with a teaching assistantship.
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2022-23 “When I can no longer work for Berry, alumni and friends will continue the work.” Berry was an incredible visionary who dedicated her life to M artha providing a transformational learning experience for hardworking students. Part of her genius lay in inspiring others to help, and for more than a century, alumni and friends have banded together in answering her call to “continue the work.” Their legacy of generosity continues to this day, championed by benefactors who give at a leadership level each year.
PLATINUM $25,000+
GOLD
$10,000 - $24,999
36
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On these pages, we gratefully acknowledge members of the 2022-23 Martha Berry Society, comprising those who made cash gifts or pledge payments of at least $1,000 (or equivalent for the Young Alumni Leadership Giving Circle) between July 1, 2022, and June 30, 2023. Visit alwaysberry.com/MBS for details on membership and benefits at all levels. To learn more, contact Jean Druckenmiller at 706-238-7938 or jdruckenmiller@berry.edu.
Betty Anne Rouse Bell (52H, 56C) Randy and Nancy Berry Steve and Brenda Briggs Vaughn and Nancy Bryson Steve Cage (74C) Raiford T. (66C) and Patricia Cartee Cantrell Al (61c) and Becky Browning (61C) Christopher Evan Crosby (60C) John Eadie (83C) Ed (57C) and Evelyn Quarles (57C) England Roger and Elaine Estill Joan Fulghum Lee Anne George and David Rapp Walter Gill (63C) Michele Irwin Griswell (70C) Peter (53H, 57C) and Emmaline Beard (55H, 59C) Henriksen Buford Jennings (58C) Mark (82C) and Judy Howard (82C) Keappler John (54H) and Debra Lie-Nielsen Roger (79C) and Candy Caudill (82c) Lusby Wanda and William Mack
Buzz and Barbara Mote (61C) McCoy Audrey B. Morgan Peter and Tamara Musser National Society Daughters of the American Revolution Scott and Fay Neal Mark Nizdil Jim and Lonnie Puhger Brent (88C) and Georgia Ragsdale Sam (76C, 78G) and Nancy Duvall (77C) Ratcliffe Reg (51C) and Maxine Strickland Robert (04C) and Tessa Frye (07C) Swarthout Ronald and Martha Taylor Ramon and Carol Tomé Jim (70C) and Barbara Van Meerten Joe and Marti Walstad Gary (80C, 89G) and Bambi Estill (79c) Waters Mack (62C) and Wanda Hixson (62C) Weems Oliver Welch (52H) Bob Williams (62H) and Linda Petty Claudia Moore Williams (76C) Buster (73C) and Janice Wright
Anonymous Brian and Emily Beals Jimmy (60C) and Luci Hill (60C) Bell Daniel and Patricia Blanton Brian (97C) and Susan Wells (97C) Brodrick Carlton Brown (52c) Turner and Blair Burson Brad and Kimberly Bushnell Leslie Choitz (76C) Bert (82C) and Cathy Clark Paul (88G) and Shannon Clark John (04C) and Jackie Feit (05c) Coleman Larry (69C) and Nadine NeSmith (71c) Covington Daughters of the American Revolution: Georgia State Society Jimmy Davis (69C) Tommy (78C) and Kelley Dopson Brian and Theresa Dulaney Russ Evans (56C) Robynne Schmidt Ferguson (89C) Charles Fullgraf Nathan (20C) and Mary McLane (21C) Gaby Will Gaines (93C) and Tara Ravi Bradford Gooch Todd (88C) and Amber Pruitt (89C) Grubbs Greg (82C) and Judy Cash (85C) Hanthorn
Mark and Sonia Ivey Travis (97C) and Sharon James Scott Markle (92C) Blaine and Sara Ellen Midkiff Minor Amos Montgomery Mark Moraitakis (91C) Scott and Wendy Morgan Mary Nadassy Joanne Owens Joe (65C) and Nelda Parrish (64C) Ragsdale Tom Ratchford Earnest Rodgers (60C) Bill and Kay Stokely Denise Sumner (89C) Al Terry (63C) Mandy Tidwell (93C) Charlie Underwood (53H, 57C) Art and Kelly Vanwingerden Wes Walraven Carlton and Shannon Walstad Sarah and Blaise Warren Steve (80C) and Cindy Snead (80C) Wherry Becky Moore White (82C) Mary Wooton
SILVER
$5,000 - $9,999
BRONZE
$1,000 - $4,999
Dale Ash Mark Aubel (81C) Mark Beaver (97C) Carol Buchanan Blair (56H, 58c) Rob (83C) and Amber Brock Linda Brown Charlie Burdette (68C) and Lauren Timmerman Abrams (74C) Joyce Carper Doug (83C) and Sabrina Vail (84C) Carter David (95C) and Heather Taylor (97C) Cloud Brian and Maria Connors Doug and Cyndi Court Mike (92C) and Margaret Crego Dennis (74A, 78C) and Donna Word (78C) DaSilva Angela Dickey (75A, 79C) Calvin Doss (49C) Charles P. Downey (64A) Charlie (86C) and Lori Elrod Cleone Elrod Ray Fewell Jeff (81C) and Debbie Field John (72C) and Gail Saunders (72C) Frazier Mack (59C) and Liz Gay Vince Griffith (81C) and Angela Hartley Allen Hayes Joyce Heames Jean Miller Hedden (52C) Steve (10G) and Debbie Heida Howell Hollis Jack and Karen Holley (74C) Horrell Jeff (07C) and Amber Cole (08C) Jahn Janna Johnson (81C) Dale Jones (71C) Scott and Pamela Keller Joanna and Robert Klein
Michael Klein (15C) Jon and Angie Wilkey (89C) Lewis Kenneth and Valerie Sapp (76C) Makant Owen (97C) and Tina Campbell (95C, 97G) Malcolm Phil (68C) and Charlotte Lee (71C) Malone Araya Mesfin (98C) Kennard and Joy Jones (83C) Neal Bettyann O’Neill and Ken Sicchitano Mary Outlaw Mary Page Bill (76C) and Janet Pence Mark Piecoro (90C) Dan and Kelley Poydence Jason (94C) and Kelly McElroy (94C) Richardson Frances Richey (83A, 87C) Pete and Carol Roberts Barbara Robertson (79C) Sylvia Roseen Doris Rowland Darwin Samples (50C) Lee Shealy (82C) Chad Shoultz Don Slater (77C) and Debbie Poss (78C) Daniel Spangler Margaret Steward Roger (53H) and Neomia Sundy Michael (87C) and Elizabeth Thompson Ron (61C) and Bernice Thornton Billy (62H, 66C) and Marvalee Lord (65C) Townsend Shannan Tracy Roger Tutterow (84C) Freddie (94C) and Jennifer Helton (95C) Villacci Charles Welden Sidney (60C) and Nancy Harris (61C) Wheeler Chuck (80C) and Regina Yarbrough
Anonymous Tom (85C) and Kim Evans (84C) Adams Mairo Akposé-Simpson (97C) Dan Alban (00C) Brad Alexander (95C) Bret Alexander Jon Allen (01C) Sheila Allen Katie Hughes Anthony (05C) Stephen Aultman Jr. (00C) Lynn Austin (77C) David and Laura Axelson J.B. (78C) and Diane Brett (81c) Bader Bill Bannister (56H) Richard Barley (49H) Matt Barrett (97C) Frank Barron Jr. Doris Lane Beall (47C) William (53C) and Bonnie Pierce (54c) Bell Robert and Barbara Jean (78C, 82G) Bentley Jessica Berry and Jose Avila Jim and Molly Berry Tom Berry Billy Blanchard (93C) Jane Jones Block (86C) Beth Williams Boykin (92C) Rusty (71C) and Priscilla Bradley Kirc and Jenny Breissinger Alan Bridges (79C) John (62C) and Geraldine Johnson (62C) Bridges
Ronnie Bridgman Richard and Alice Bristow Barbara Dodd Broome (72c) Dennis and Trina Buce (82C) Brown Joan Costley Brown (74C) Tim Brown (88C) Jerry (66A) and Emily Bullock Sam Bulow (06C) Beth Robinson Burgin (97C) Dakota (14C) and Melissa Kelly (14c) Burke Becky Burleigh Glen and Stephanie Bush Randy and Deborah Butler Rich and Diane Byers Michael and Elizabeth Caddell Wayne (61C) and Madeline Banks (63c) Canady John Carlton Vivian Slappy Carney (61C) Nick (17C) and Mary Grace Carr Beth Carrin Patrick Carroll Patrick Carter (91C) Tom and Betty Carver Emma Ruth Elder Catlett (45c) Rodney (90C) and Jill Duffy (90C) Chandler Kelli Chapman Aaron (15C) and Lizzie Hendrix (15C) Chastain Kelly McCafferty Christofferson (84C) Randall (67C) and Margaret Cochran (68c) Clark Bill and Martha Collins
37
BRONZE
$1,000 - $4,999
38
I BERRY
Michael and Maureen Collins Gavin Colquitt (04c) Joe (88C) and Leanne Hand (87C) Cook Kris Cook (85C) John (62C) and Sandy Midkiff (60C) Cooper Elizabeth Ashe Cope (58C) Lewis Copeland (60C) Leigh Corley Justin Courtenay Celeste Creswell (93C) Cecily Crow (94C) Douglas Crowder (93C) Wesley Crunkleton (01C) Leigh Culpepper (90C) Daughters of the American Revolution: Lady Washington Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution: LeRay de Chaumont Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution: Pulaski Chapter Michelle Edenfield Davis (90C) Steve and Augusta Davis Eddie DeLoach (74C) Tina Stancil DeNicole (85C) Gina Griffeth Dickens (93C) Jennifer Dickey (77A, 80C) George Donigian (74C) Kay Davis Dunn (57C) Warren Dunn (77C) Beth Collins Earnst (93C) Kevin Edwards (92C) Joe (63C) and Shirley Bowen (63c) Elder Leon Elder (54C) Scott (91C) and Stacy Carter (92C) Elder David Elswick (90C) Christopher and Rebecca English William (69C) and Sally Schwartz (69C) Epps Seth Faurot (01C) Ruth Fay Glenn (71C) and Pam Priest (71C) Ferguson Stephen Finn Lamar Fletcher (66A) Gary (77C) and Hermanett Pruitt (73C) Ford Sam Forte (19C) Elaine and Bret Foster Bob Frank Sammy (77C) and Holly Wood (73C) Freeman Terry Frix (86C) Bobby Walker Fulmer (56C) Stewart Fuqua (80A) George and Robina Gallagher Kay Gardner Dale (79C) and Karen Burton (79C) Garner James (62c) and Linda Garner Francy Jessup Geiger (78C) Frank George and Ruth Ference Rick (77c) and Debra Bourne (76C) Gilbert David and Kelli Gillis Ed and Gayle Graviett (67C) Gmyrek Tim (03C) and Maureen Trane (03C) Goodwin Mark Graham (93C) Terry and Molly Graham Kate and Jonathan Grant Richard and Susan Green Dottie Clark Gregg (69C) Kendra Grimes (93C) Reid Grimes (76C) Cary (80C) and Teresa Stickland (81C) Grubbs Bill and Cynthia Hale Evelyn Hamilton (69C) Randy and Nita Hardin
Susan Haritos Will (11C) and Dana Wenger (13C) Harper Jennifer Harris (93C) Brant and Tammi Hellwig Don (65c) and Hiawatha Banks (63C) Henry Deborah Hill Peter (60C) and Ernestine Davis (61C) Hoffmann Myrtle Beckworth Hogbin (65C) Todd (93C) and Brooke Hold Bill (67C) and Diane Harris (66c) Holden LeBron (60C) and Kay Davis (60C) Holden Pat Barna Holland (69C) Faye Lovinggood Hood (65C) Jeffrey Horn (87C) Paul Howard (82A) Tim Howard (82C) Jan Deen Howell (60C) Michael (02C, 23G) and Amanda Bradley (03C, 07G) Howell Nettie Howell Charlie Hudson (62C) Barbara Ballanger Hughes (71C) Sharon Bleiler Humphreys (88C) Denise Riedlinger Iglesias (95C) Carol Inman Mark and Pat Tutterow (82C) Jackson Rick (83C) and Jennifer Swinford (84C) Jackson Bob (82C) and Medina Mount (82C) Jarman Todd Jenkins (99C) Danny Jennings Jerry Jennings Russ Jennings (79C) Gene Johnson (54C) Jim (85C) and Jennifer Smith (85C) Johnson Matthew Johnson Max (70C) and Gail McGill (78C, 79G) Johnson Ronald Johnson Ty and Joy Padgett (73C) Johnson Walt Johnson (41H) David and Jennifer Johnston George (64C) and Starlet Rhodes (64C) Jones Melanie Green Jones (76G) Richard Kauffman (73C) Grady (87C) and Kimberly Winkles (88C) Keith Steve (63C) and Nancy Harkness (62C) Kelly Michael and Julia Kimple Mike and Catherine King Jenny Duda LaGrange (91C) Drew Landis (06C) David Lanier Dennis (79C) and Jane Williams (80c) Latimer Brian and Jennifer Ledford Hart Levy (82C) Robert and Cheryl Lindgren Terry (68C) and Charlene Head (67C) Lingerfelt Cliff Lipscomb (98C) Floanna Large Long (68C) Robbie Panter Luedke (63C) Scott and Andrea Macdiarmid Skip MacHarg (95C, 01G) Harikrishnan Madhavan Latha Coleman Maine (59C) Jerry and Angela Mallow Michael Maney (98C) Joe Mareno (99C) Craig and Patricia Marijanich Ernest and Amy Marquart Barbara Massa Rufus (75C) and Mary Anne Schimmelmann (75c) Massey
BRONZE
$1,000 - $4,999
Stanley and Michelle Maxey Kris Mayo (94C) Lee and Christin McDaniel Gavin McGinnis (09C) Shawn McIntire (03C) James and Lynne McIntosh Joseph McMahon Ruel and Lucy McMillian Gene (65C) and Sandra Dickerson (65C) McNease Larry (60C) and Clara Hall (60C) McRae Gail Miller Dorothy Gaines Mims (52c) Larry and Mary Montgomery Robert Moore Emily Hoppman Moothart (89C) Gregg and Angela Morgan John and Missy Morgan Jeffrey (95C) and Paula Huggins (93C) Morris Waymon Morris (54H) Charles Mosby Samantha Nazione David Nicholson (84C) Chad and Lauren Norwood Beau Nygaard (93C) Charlie (77C) and Ann Lingo (76C) O’Mahoney Larry O’Neill Larry (63C) and Kathy Osborn Hunter Owen Melton Palmer (64C) Ed (73C) and Becky Rasure (73c) Palombo Thomas Partridge (57C) Imogene Patterson (59C) Violet Paul Derrick (06C) and Lindsay Williams (06C) Perkins Jack Pigott (69A) Sean Polster Joan Pope Danny (88C) and Tammi Ridenhour (87C, 03G, 10G) Price Eric Puckett (91C) Robert and Christine Dodd (70C) Puckett Teresa Smith Puckett (75A, 92C) Jonathan (85C) and Crystal Purser Matt Ragan (98C) and Shelly Driskell-Ragan (96C) Dan Randall Luke and Ronna Rapach Lorraine Scott Ratledge (45c) Dallas (65C) and Judi Reynolds David Rhoades Jane Fisher Richard (78C) Randy and Kathy Richardson Steve (85C) and Kristen Riley Jack Riner (65C) Alison Lounsbury Ritter (94C) Fred and J’May Rivara Tony Rivers (78C) Meredith Lewallen Roberts (07C) W.C. (60C) and Sylvia Davis (60C) Rowland Charles Russell Scott and Rosie Hoagland (78C) Russell William Ryan Duncan Sahner Tracy Boswell Saless (90C) Steve Salmon (69C) Marlene Schneider (49H) Larry (55C) and Dixie Schoolar Tom Schuette (77C) James Scoggins (52C) Ron Senger (64A, 68C)
Doug and Sandra Sexton John (64A, 69C) and Jo Shahan Gary Sheffield Jean Mitchell Sheffield (54C) Jeanne Oakes Shipp (74C) George and Rosalind Simpson Tom and Barbara Slocum Beverly Philpot Smith (69C) Chad and Melissa Smith Karen Smith Mary Chambers Smith (14C) Peggy Dalton Smith (67C) Samuel and Fontaine McFerrin (71C) Souther George (84C, 87G) and Kay Hurst (85C) Spas Tom Spector (74A) Judy Sperry (79C) Ross Spinks (05C) Daniel Sprinkle (00C) M.R. Stainton (94C) Andrea Boyd Stanley (67C) Carolyn Stanton (80C) Sidney Stowers (67A) Dan (91C) and Andrea Cantrell (91C) Strain Jessica Strong Jean Stutts Keith (89C, 02G) and Amy Brock (92C, 97G) Summerlin Gayle Miller Sumner (64C) Darrell Sutton (00C) Jason (88C) and Melinda Mitchell (90C) Sweatt Steve and Michelle Tart C.L. (57C) and Doris Little (57C) Tate John and Kelly Tate Stanley (65C) and Lora Stubbs (65C) Tate Betty Jane Taylor Jacque Terrill (65C) Scot (94c) and Beth Molloy (94C) Teverino Fred Tharpe (68A) Scott and Paige Thompson Mark (05C) and Rebecca Porter (05C) Thornsberry Bill (68C) and Avis Cordle (57C) Thornton Michael Tidwell (98C) William and Mildred Campbell (61C) Tietjen Earl (52H) and Carolyn Tillman Jack Timberlake Juanita Ensley Tipton (70C) Dawn and Larry Tolbert Leila Trismen Ray (69C) and Pamela Tucker Sam Turner (66C) Seth Turner (06C) G.H. (53C) and Jean Junkins (61c) Underwood Steve Vaughn Pete (60C) and Janelle Brumbelow (56H, 60C) Vincent Mike (14C) and Chrissy Ricketts (15C) Voso Rob Voutila (09C) Christine Walker Katrina Walton Joe and Lisa Warren William Warren Tim (71C) and Joan Kisselburg (73C) Warrick Charlie (57C) and Keitha Davis (58C) Weatherford Lamar and Dorenda Weaver Jane Weise Lenard and Bernice Ogle (53H) Whaley Evelyn Wheeler (77C) Whit (81C) and Maria Crego (85c) Whitaker Courtney and Shari White Lucile Whitman
39
John and Mary Beth Whittle Sue Wilder (85C) James (95C) and Carrie Travers (99C) Willard Jim (65C) and Charlotte Ray (64C) Williams Seymour and Michelle Williams Wade (84C) and Wendy Grace (90G) Williams Terry (72C, 75G) and Betty Gordy (69c) Williamson Bill Wilson Frank Windham (57c) Kay Wingo
Jerry (56H, 60C) and Louise Conaway (57C) Winton David (68A, 72C) and Alta Breeden (70C) Wood Scott and Karen Wood Rick (93C) and Tracy Woodall Terry Worley (78C) Robin and Stephanie Wright Will Wright (01c) Koji (65C) and Reba Nichols (67C) Yoda Tad Zappa
Momo Abdellatif (19C) Madison Acton (23C) Leeanna Allen (23C) Kristian Anderson (20C) Thomas Benton (21C) Janani Bhavani (23C) Rachel Bibbey (20C) Amber Bingham (23C) Jacob Bronkema (23C) Dakota (14C) and Melissa Kelly (14c) Burke Margaret Camerieri (23C) Michael Carboni (23C) Ashlyn Carney (23C) Nick (17C) and Mary Grace Carr Ruth Carraway (23C) Aaron (15C) and Lizzie Hendrix (15C) Chastain Hayley Chiappetta (23C) Joanna Clark (23C) Benjamin Colebaugh (23c) Haikal Cooper (23C) Kyle Cossio (22C) Hailey Craig (23C) Shakarah Boswell Cummings (16C, 22G) Joshua Cutter (18C) Asa Daniels (23C) Amanda Davidson (20C) Brandon (14C) and Charlotte Collins (14C) Davis Katherine DiRuggiero (23C) Ethan Dudley (23C) Zoe Dupont (23C) Ree Palmer Easton (16C) Emily Nix Fiddler (16C) Sam Forte (19C) Nathan (20C) and Mary McLane (21C) Gaby Brent Gass (23C) Darla Gore (23C) Patrick Groh (19C) Cassie Hale (14C) Will (11C) and Dana Wenger (13C) Harper Viola Hasko (23C) Ciera Heinrich (23C) Haven Hendrix (23C) Sarah Huffman (23C) Stephen Jackson (20C) Clay Jones (21C) Sam Jones (16C) Rosalie Kahaly (23C) Jack Kelly (20C)
Mariah Kelly (20C) Michael Klein (15C) Emma Kochanowski (23C) Rachel LeRoy (15C) Madison Letts (23C) Laney Lutjens (21C) Marshall Lynch (22C) Sakura Manning (23C) Noah and Maddie Jordan (19C, 21G) Miller Lirio Morales Ibarra (23C) Cory Mullins (20C) Leighton O’Dell (23C) Julia Oliver (23C) Kelley Ozier (23C) Sunday and Funmi (18C) Peters Nate Phipps (19C) Grace Pleasant (23C) Vanessa Rice (23C) Will (19C, 23G) and Haley Edmondson (19C, 24g) Richards Alex Ruble (23C) Dasha Schaaf (23C) Katlin Seger (19C) Alexys Serrano (23C) Matthew Shupenus (20C) Trejohn Skinner (23C) Amber Slyter (14C) Ally Smith (19C) Bryson Smith (23C) Mary Chambers Smith (14C) Sarah Smyly (23C) Mamadou Soumahoro (19C) Erika Sprecher (21C) Luke Steel (21C) Emily Stone (23C) Zachary Thacker (23C) Hunter Tracy (18C) Ross Valdez Fernandez (23C) Anthony Vitale (23C) Mike (14C) and Chrissy Ricketts (15C) Voso Graham (18C) and Joanna Logan (18C) Wall Mary Warren (23C) Sydney Watson (22C) Sydney Weaver (17C, 19G) Emma Wells (23C) Emma Williams (23C) Megan Wilson (23C) Trevor Word (23C) Michael Zhu (21C)
BRONZE
$1,000 - $4,999
YOUNG ALUMNI LEADERSHIP GIVING CIRCLE This distinction honors recent graduates who already are making a difference in the lives of Berry students. There are three levels of giving, based on age and life stage, all equivalent to that of a $1,000 annual donor:
LEVELS $100 annually for alumni 1-5 years out $250 annually for alumni 6-8 years out $500 annually for alumni 9-10 years out Many young alumni choose to make smaller contributions monthly or quarterly, enabling them to support students in a budget-friendly way. Visit alwaysberry.com/mbs/ young-alumni to learn more.
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I BERRY
Heartfelt Journey All roads lead to (and back to) Rome By Catherine Hamrick
“
H
ome is where the heart is,” the adage coined by writer and naturalist Pliny the Elder of ancient Rome, also rings true for Rome, Georgia – at least in the mind of senior Drayton Matus. As a Berry sophomore, the business management major transferred to the University of Georgia in the hope of easing financial concerns without sacrificing the quality of his educational experience. But the big adventure fizzled into a onesemester detour. “It was super easy to get lost in the crowd, and it was hard to make friends as a transfer student,” Matus remembered of life at a much larger school. “I really missed playing college sports as well. A lot of my best Berry memories came from moments on the tennis court with my coach and best friends.” Quickly recognizing that Berry was the right place for him, Matus made the decision to return, his financial worries eased by a newly awarded Gate of Opportunity Scholarship. “If it wasn’t for the Gate Scholarship, I would not be at Berry right now,” he emphasized. “The scholarship is amazing for people who want to go to Berry but are worried about the price and are also looking for opportunities to get lots of work experience.” Back on campus, he developed even stronger bonds with coaches, teammates, faculty, staff and alumni while gaining knowledge, experience and skills that became stepping stones in his professional development. “No matter where you work or participate on campus, everyone plays an essential role in giving Berry that ‘home’ feeling and helping everyone grow to be great people,” Matus said. “The small campus feel was much better for me in terms of forming meaningful relationships with staff and professors and taking advantage of all the amazing opportunities Berry has to offer.” Tennis first brought Matus to Berry, and the influence of Head Tennis Coach Emeritus Clay
Photos by Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)
IN THE END, IT ’S ABOUT THE STUDE NTS
Hightower (86C, FFS) and Viking teammates instilled discipline, drive and a competitive mindset, all attributes transferable to the business world. “Coach Hightower always pushed me on the tennis court to be the best player I can be and always made himself available to assist players in any way,” Matus praised. “I love being able to compete alongside my teammates, as we’re all cheering each other on and fighting hard on the court.”
On the academic side of the house, Matus gained a practical view of business under the guidance of advisor and Assistant Professor of Management Eric Kushins. Business courses were a wake-up call, pushing him to reevaluate long-term goals. “I originally had ambitions of starting my own tennis academy, which I knew would pair well with a management major,” Matus recalled. “However, I found that there are lots of other career paths that I wanted to pursue.” Enter data analytics, an area of study recently added by Berry’s Campbell School of Business. Matus jumped in, excited to minor in this growing field.
“Data analytics involves the process of examining, cleaning, transforming and interpreting data to extract meaningful insights, inform decisionmaking and drive business strategies,” he explained. “Holding this information has the potential to give you competitive advantages against other companies and allows you to offer important work to all kinds of businesses.” He got a crack at applying this knowledge through his on-campus work position in Berry’s Center for Personal and Professional Development, where he analyzed students’ majors, careers and internships with the goal of improving reporting of graduate outcomes. This opportunity opened the door to a product development internship at Mohawk Industries, a Fortune 500 flooring company headquartered in nearby Calhoun, Georgia. There he benefited from alumni connections such as Dr. Jessica Nguyen (10C), the university relations manager for Mohawk responsible for recruiting promising talent. His primary projects focused on implementing barcode scanners for the purpose of inventory management, cutting waste in manufacturing and increasing profits by improving analytics that inform the company’s decision-making. Pleased with his performance, Mohawk extended the internship into his senior year. “Going into an internship as a young professional, you are forced to think of new creative and innovative ways to improve the business world around you,” Matus said. “This position allowed me to embrace my full creativity to solve problems and put my knowledge to the test.” Matus is excited to pursue a career in the auto industry after graduation, but he’s also mindful of the place Berry will hold in his heart, having already experienced the sensation of leaving only to come back again. “Berry College is an amazing place,” he mused. “And it will be a time in my life that I will cherish forever.” 41
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Berry College, Inc. P.O. Box 495018 Mount Berry, GA 30149-5018
Green on the green Students playing glow-in-the-dark mini golf are bathed in green light as they line up their putts during the “Rage in the Cage” event preceding the start of fall semester. Photo by Matthew McConnell (21C, FFS)