Spring 2024
Fayette’s New Hub for Life and Business
Spring 2024
Fayette’s New Hub for Life and Business
Many years ago, one of Central Methodist College’s unofficial slogans was “62 acres of Christian atmosphere.” There was great pride in being a compact, tucked away campus within a small, rural community, with strong Methodist roots.
We’re still proud of those roots today, as well as the inviting, community atmosphere on our Fayette campus. Students say all the time that they keep choosing Central because of how well the faculty is able to know them, how they’re not just a number and a name on a class roster.
part of the Fayette community. Small towns all across America are fighting to stay commercially relevant while so much business moves to suburban areas, and our town has not been immune to this struggle.
But as we finish another academic year, I can’t help but think about how much more this University is now. What started on those 62 acres is now a known entity throughout the state of Missouri and beyond, and this is only the beginning.
This summer, we are wrapping up construction on our downtown project on the square. Eagle Plaza has been a great source of excitement for our students this semester, with 64 of them being the lucky few to land a wonderful new apartment for the coming year.
Beyond the many advantages for our students, though, the new building is a testament to our commitment to being
As the largest employer, investor, and customer in Fayette, Central feels a unique responsibility to help make the town as attractive as possible to businesses and residents. Building this beautiful new structure on the square and opening it up to tenants ready to help the community grow is certainly a big step in meeting that responsibility.
As far as our research has shown, this is an unprecedented level of investment by a college of our size into its community. I’m so proud of the courage and initiative shown by our Board of Trustees to take on a project of this magnitude. We hope it will be transformational for our town.
Central is reaching even further into the state as well, offering our excellent academic programs at our many CGES locations and continuing to partner with every community college in Missouri to ensure seamless transitions to our university.
In the tradition of John Wesley and the Methodist movement, we’ve reached beyond our 62 acres to try to change as many lives
as we can. Our Second Chance Pell program is further evidence of this. With the help of the United Methodist Foundation, we’re offering degree programs in prisons across the state, giving incarcerated individuals a new opportunity to expand their education.
All of these examples show just how much Central has been outkicking its coverage in recent years, doing more than one would expect of a college like us. There has been a great display of entrepreneurial spirit to keep us growing and thriving even when the landscape of higher education has been challenging.
As we’ve continued to expand our reach, I’ve thought often about the 2016 commencement speech given by our great alumnus Donn Harrison ’89, who joked about that old slogan.
“When I came to Central, they touted it as ‘62 acres of Christian atmosphere,’” Donn said, “but by September, I’d figured out that it was 62 Christians and acres of atmosphere.”
I’m sure Donn would agree that even as our numbers grow and our reach spreads far beyond those original acres, Central will always stay true to its Christian mission and always provide the welcoming atmosphere that has made it a home to so many.
CMU Senior Staff
Dr. Roger D. Drake, President
Dr. Rita Gulstad, Provost
Brad Dixon ’07, Vice President for Student Life
Chad Gaines, Vice President for Technology and Planning
Dr. Melissa Mace, Vice President for Enrollment Management
Dr. Bill Sheehan Jr. ’84, Executive Vice President
Julee Sherman, Vice President for Finance and Administration
Talon Staff
Joe Waner
Director of Marketing and Communications 660-248-6629 | jwaner@centralmethodist.edu
Emily Kesel, Editor Assistant Director for Marketing and Communications 660-248-6684 | ekesel@centralmethodist.edu
Katie Bedsaul Media Content Coordinator 660-248-6391 | kbedsaul@centralmethodist.edu
Rachel Moore
Assistant Athletic Director / Director of Athletic Communication 660-248-6358 | rmoore@centralmethodist.edu
Deanna Cooper ’15 Director of Development 660-248-6397 | dcooper@centralmethodist.edu
Stasia Sherman
Director of Alumni Engagement 660-248-6239 | ssherman@centralmethodist.edu
Alissa Watkins
Director of Annual Giving 660-248-6683 | awatkins@centralmethodist.edu
Contributing Writer:
Zy’Shonne Cowans ’24
On May 11, Central Methodist University celebrated more than 200 graduates at its spring commencement in Puckett Fieldhouse. Surrounded by their friends, family, faculty, staff, and other guests, members of the CMU Class of 2024 were recognized for all their many achievements, including earning their master’s, bachelor’s, and associate’s degrees.
This year’s commencement speaker was 1967 graduate and 2022 Distinguished Alumni Award winner Dr. David Kerr. An ordained elder in the United Methodist Church, Kerr has traveled across five continents and all 50 states giving sermons. His address stressed the importance of heeding the “voices of yesteryear” when it comes to making moral decisions.
“What did they know that we need to know?” Kerr wondered, before telling stories illustrating times someone had followed their moral compass and denied self. “Why do
some behave in such selfless ways? It’s just a question, but how you answer that question may be indicative of how you plow into your future years.”
Following Kerr’s address and the conferring of degrees, several students were recognized for winning this year’s achievement awards. Based on nominations by the CMU faculty and students, Brad Dixon, vice present for student life, handed out the top three awards to Timothy “Cole” Nowlin, Exavier Coburn, and Kelena Oots.
Nowlin was this year’s Victoria Award winner. Given annually to a graduating student, the Victoria Award recognizes someone who, in the opinion of the faculty and fellow students, has best demonstrated dedication and the principles of Central Methodist University.
A staple in the Little Theatre show cast lists since his freshman year, Nowlin graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in theatre arts.
This year’s Human Relations Award was given to Exavier Coburn, who was determined to be the student showing the most promise in human relations and human adjustment. The award is
given annually to the student who sets an example of leadership and excellence and develops an ability to work well with others.
Coburn met all these requirements and more in his role as the president of the Student Government Association and other organizations. He graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Accountancy.
The most prestigious award this year was given to Kelena Oots. Established in 1957 by former Central student Bishop Charles Selecman, the Selecman Award is presented to the student who has displayed the following characteristics to an extraordinary degree: good citizenship on campus, scholarship, religious leadership, moral and spiritual qualities, and outstanding achievement.
Oots was a leader and high-achiever both on and off the softball field while an Eagle, earning Academic All-American honors and Heart of America Player of the Year, as well as participating in multiple student organizations on campus. She graduated summa cum laude, earning a Bachelor of Science with a major in business.
These and all the graduates have made Central proud and will continue to do so as valued alumni.
Opposite page —
Top left: Nyles Pokipala-Waiohu
Bottom left: Emily Myler leads the crowd in song.
Top right: Award winners Cole Nowlin, Kelena Oots, and Exavier Coburn
Bottom right: Provost Rita Gulstad recognizes mathematics professor Pam Gordy as Professor Emeritus upon her retirement from Central Methodist. Gipson was one of three retiring professors to earn the title, along with education professor Melva Gipson and political science professor John Carter.
This page —
Top left: Karli Wolfe
Top right: Dr. Dori Waggoner ’92 leads the band.
Middle left: Felixhy Dominguez and Joya Azzi Center: Zy’Shonne Cowans
Middle right: Dr. David Kerr ’67 gives the commencement address.
Bottom right: Among those to walk across the stage at the spring commencement was Nadine Turner Mordt, originally of the class of 1954. Nadine was not able to participate in the commencement ceremonies 70 years ago, but two days after her 92nd birthday in May, her wish to walk across the stage and accept her diploma was fulfilled.
Accounting Excellence Award — Evan Workman
Outstanding Senior in Accounting Award — Exavier Coburn
ACDA National Student Choral Musician Award — Dalton Myler
Alpha Epsilon Delta Anatomy Award — Joely Crider
Alpha Epsilon Delta Harold L. Momberg Award for the Outstanding Pre-Med Student — Kaylee Kapeller
Alpha Epsilon Delta Physiology Award Carter Hawkins Ethan Arroyo
American Nurses Association Award — Juliette Mead
Banking and Finance Excellence Award — Devan Elliott
Dr. Robert Barker Award for Excellence in Sociology — Holly Barney
Noble Emmett Baskett Scholarship in Business Award — Virginia Alexander
Dr. John Bellefeulle Excellence in Organic Chemistry — Renee Finke
Beta Beta Beta Outstanding General Biology Students
Matthew Jonas Alyssa Beaumont
Clyde and Hazel Blattner Mathematics Award — Dillan Kessing
Dr. Richard T. Bond Mathematics Award — Kylie Avery
General Business Award (Business Administration) — Kaede Yamaguchi
International Eagle in Business — Guilherme Pereira
Outstanding Senior in Business Award — Jayklin Smith
Herman C. Byrd Award — Andrew Adams
CMU Biology Alumni Award — Samantha Doisy
Communication Department Student Media Award — Kailey Johnson
Criminal Justice Excellence Award
Bryce Daugherty Benjamin Miller
DECA Award — Stephanie Rodriguez
R. Paul Drummond Memorial Award — Mariah Nichols
Estill Entrepreneurship Award — Bryann Magers
Gentry Estill Award for Total Business Excellence — Grant Engel
Susan Estill Award for Total Business Excellence — Shaynlin Smith
Gamma Sigma Epsilon Excellence Award in General Chemistry — Ethan Arroyo
Dr. Joseph E. Geist Prize in Performing Arts — Cole Nowlin
Lisa Powell Goessling Merit Scholarship — Mikenna Collins
David Goodwin Award — Caleb Raley
Chester E. Hanson Outstanding Computer Science Award — Max De Armas
Judge Andrew Jackson Higgins Award for Excellence in Pre-Law Studies — Carly Edwards
Martin C. Harral Memorial Music Award — Wesley Miner
Outstanding Senior in Healthcare Administration — Sofia Burks
Hickman Award for Music — Josh Derendinger
The Keith House Band Fellow — Matt Hamilton
Inscape Poetry Award — Shaynlin Smith
Inscape Fiction Award — Carly Edwards
Inscape Creative Nonfiction Award — Daniel Ard
Inscape Art Award — Sydney Jones
Inscape Cover Art Award — Sydney Jones
Nancy Thompson Jones Gem Award — Paul Reinert
Dr. Glenn R. Joyce Memorial Award — Lydia Elder
Kappa Mu Epsilon Mathematics Award — Lydia Elder
Martin E. Kooi Excellence in Communication — Tynesha Parnell
Martin E. Kooi Excellence in Theatre Arts — Poppy Garner
Outstanding Leadership — Karli Wolfe
Mike Magyar Fine Arts Leadership Award — Casey Brooks
Excellence in Management Award — Cesar Chaparro
Future Marketing and Advertiser Award — Emily Collins
Marketing and Advertising Excellence Award — Madison White
General Lewis M. Means Award for Excellence in the Study of Political Science — Darby Reynolds
The Missouri Federation of Music Clubs — Matthew Simons
Professor Paul A. Montemurro Award — Matt Hamilton
MTNA Student Achievement Award — Anna Pendergrass
Dane Nelson Memorial Award — Emily Myler
Dr. Niels C. Nielsen Outstanding Chemistry Student Award —
Carter Hawkins
Outstanding Nurse Clinician Award — Kacie Callahan
Outstanding Nursing Scholar Award — Tierra Wood
Pannier, Cavanaugh, and Robb Excellence in Education Award
Trenton Blankenship Chase Rankin
Reese Dodson
Dr. Larry J. Peery Award for Excellence in Physics — Lydia Elder
Pinnacle Award — Kelena Oots
Dr. Jerry Priddy Mathematics Award — Abigail Michaels
Phi Mu Alpha Honor Award — Cole Nowlin
Phi Mu Alpha Scholastic Award — Cole Nowlin
Pi Gamma Mu Award for Scholastic Excellence — Gregory Adams
Excellence in Psychology Award — Kala Davis
Glenn C. Riegel Student Science Award — William DeLaughter
Sarah Rutherford Prize — Abigail Michael
W. D. Settle Memorial Music Education Award — Johnny Brownell
Seward Award for Excellence in Band — Josh Derendinger
Ken and Nancy Seward Band Fellow — Casey Brooks
Shallenburger Accounting Principles Excellence Award — Zachary Tilman
Sigma Alpha Iota Collegiate Honor Award — Emily Myler
Sigma Alpha Iota Scholastic Award — Bailey Caldwell
Sigma Epsilon Pi
Gregory Thomas Adams Amanda Marie Kolbe
Gavin Michael Bishop Kaylee Ann Kapeller
Kylie Anne Avery Elizabeth Rae Lafrentz
Krystal Ann Brauner Danae Kathryn Lammers
Bailey Jeanelle Caldwell Genet Mebratu
Max De Armas Madelyn Marie Mehl
Reese Jeffrey Dodson Timothy Cole Nowlin
Jason Alan Grossenburg Kelena Faith Oots
Devan Joseph Elliott Jayklin Nevach Smith
Evan Canton Hall Shaynlin Traeh Smith
Natalie Veyonae Guerrero Celine Witt
Sarah Anne Johnson Tierra Renee Wood
Kailey Nicole Johnson
SNA Community Award
Sarah Halsell Abigail Hicks
Luther T. Spayde Award — Danny Eckhoff
Sports Management Award — Brayden Hudson
Swinney Conservatory Outstanding Freshman Award — Elizabeth Berry
Swinney Conservatory Outstanding Musician Award
Jason Grossenbury Xaden Lockett
Swinney Conservatory Super Hero Award
Richelle Wilburn Tambria Wilson
Helen Puckett Thogmorton Award for Excellence in Music — Madisyn Conway
Erwin and Hazel Wiedle Outstanding Nursing Graduate — Eric Moore
Dr. Ferris H. & Leona Woods Award — Addison Massey
Jeff Wilcox Raising the Bar Award — Jayklin Smith
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Master of Business Administration
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Master of Health Professions Education
Master of Music Education
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Master of Science in Nursing: Clinical Nurse Leader or Nurse Educator
Visit our website or call us today at 660-248-6651 to learn more and embark on an exciting educational journey that will transform your future.
centralmethodist.edu/admissions/applications.html
By Emily Kesel
The new building on the west side of the downtown square in Fayette might not reach as far into the sky as the clock tower of Linn Memorial United Methodist Church or the iconic top of T. Berry-Smith Hall, but Central Methodist University’s hopes for its impact on the historic town are just as high.
Nearly three years after the announcement of a multi-million project to replace the existing structures on the west side of Church Street with a brand-new building, Central is just about ready to open the doors to Eagle Plaza, a three-story structure with two levels of student housing above a ground floor dedicated to retail space.
“We just can’t find another example of a small college like us taking on something like this,” said Dr. Roger Drake, president of the university. “The cooperation and synergy between the college and the town has been outstanding, and the excitement from the students has been great to see.”
From the beginning, the project has been a great testament to the partnership between CMU and the Fayette community. Fayette businessman and Central alumnus J.B. Waggoner ’91 led the effort to acquire the property when a report showed that the existing buildings were in need of immediate demolition. The buildings were purchased in August of 2021, and the plans to rebuild with a new design to blend in with the other historic downtown properties began to take shape.
Fast-forward to 2024, and now a beautiful new building sits on the square, with five spaces on the ground floor for businesses and 16 suite-style apartments on the upper floors ready to house 64 Central students.
“This project has been huge for the community,” said Derry Wiswall, director of plant operations at CMU. “I got to go through the whole demolition process for the building that was here before, and it was in such bad shape. To see something like this here now in the downtown square, that [Central is] involved with, is great for both entities because it’s a wonderful building now.”
Wiswall and CMU Vice President for Finance and Administration Julee Sherman both agreed that the project has been “very smooth” since construction began. They commended Little Dixie Construction for being an excellent partner and manager of the project.
Throughout the summer of 2023, Sherman’s office collected submissions of possible names for the downtown project from CMU students and employees. More than 250 submissions came in – Central Corner, Eagles Crossing, The Eagle’s Landing, Downtown Nest, Main Street Village, and Central Nest were among more than 20 finalists – but only one could be chosen as the winner.
Ultimately the submission made by Dawson Wiswall and Shelley Monnig was the one chosen, and Eagle Plaza became the name of the next iconic Central building. Since that time, excitement has only grown among the CMU students hoping to be the first to inhabit the new apartments.
“I’m so excited to live in these amazing apartments for my senior year. I can’t wait to study and relax in my new home away from home. I have been looking forward to movein day since I found out I was going to be one of the first to get to live in these beautiful apartments!” said Madison Thompson, a senior who will be moving into Eagle Plaza this fall.
“The anticipation surrounding Eagle Plaza was palpable, adding a spark of excitement to student life,” said Brad Dixon ’07, vice president for student life. “Our team dedicated time to meticulously planning every aspect, from implementing the lottery system, picking the furniture, to spreading the word. It has truly been a great learning experience for our staff in residential life.”
With 64 beds to fill in 16 apartments,
Dixon’s team extensively researched how best to choose the students for the residence. They settled on a lottery, with students submitting applications in groups of two intended suitemates and then earning entries in the drawing based on their cumulative time at CMU and GPA.
“It was truly amazing to watch the excitement when a name was drawn in the lottery. Some reactions were heard all over the Student Center, as we did the drawing in the Eyrie Café,” said Dixon. “As a staff member and alumnus, it makes me proud to have been a part of this.
“Our board [of trustees] listened to the calls for another housing option, an option that provided flexibility and private accommodations. And this project is a beautiful addition to an already historic town square,” he said.
While the students begin to move into the upstairs apartments over the summer, Central will be finalizing plans for several different businesses to occupy the first floor. A few are already near-fully committed, with spaces saved for a chiropractic practice, a 24-hour access workout center, and a boutique-style shop that will feature plenty of Central gear.
Sherman and the rest of the administration are still searching for an anchor tenant that “enhances the square,” however, and they’ve looked to the community for help in finding the perfect tenant.
“We’re working with the Moberly Area Economic Development Corporation to help us identify tenants for the anchor spot,” said Sherman, citing the organization established in 1988 which brought Howard County into the fold in 2013.
The MAEDC has helped analyze traffic patterns and data to identify the types of businesses that could not only thrive on the square but add to the overall experience offered by downtown Fayette.
“An assortment of different businesses is ultimately what we’re looking for. Things that the students would also use that would enhance the downtown area,” Sherman emphasized. “We’re not just looking for four business offices. We want door swings.”
As the project nears its completion, Drake has emphasized his gratitude to everyone involved in making it all happen for CMU and for the town of Fayette.
“I’m really proud of our board of trustees for having the courage to take this project on, and very happy to see such fine results for Central and for the community,” he said. “It’s been a true labor of love.”
At the time of the April session of the Central Methodist University board of trustees, board chairman Nancy Peacock ’82 sat down in the Ashby-Hodge Gallery of American Art with Dr. Bill Sheehan ’84, executive vice president, to discuss her role with the board and the state of the university. Dr. Peacock shared her insights on the landscape of higher education and how CMU is positioned within it.
The following interview has been edited for clarity and length.
Dr. Bill Sheehan: Nancy, we’re here talking to you about your role as chair of the board of trustees. Tell us a little bit about yourself and your background with Central, if you would.
Dr. Nancy Peacock: I’m Nancy Walker Peacock, I graduated from Central in 1982 and went to medical school at the University of Missouri. I live in Nashville, TN with my husband of 35 years, Mark. We have spent our careers there, raised our children there and made a great life in Music City. I am currently the chairman of the board of trustees of Central Methodist University.
Dr. Sheehan: As chair of the board, what does that really mean? What does the chairman do on a day-to-day or even year-to-year kind of basis?
Dr. Peacock: I view my job as the organizational facilitator of the board. There are a lot of moving parts to the board of trustees and to an institution of higher education, so I am constantly thinking about filling board memberships, understanding the skills and talents of our board members, and how to engage these talented and busy people for the advancement of the University.
I have the opportunity to speak with the president regularly to make sure that he and I are communicating on any issues that may be developing. Higher education is a tough, tough business right now. There is so much pressure on institutions that provide college and graduate degrees. Critics currently view a college education as elitist, as too expensive, as not worth the investment. So the goal is to preserve CMU as a great place for our students to learn, to express themselves, and to lead great lives after they graduate. We think about that all the time.
Dr. Sheehan: We’ll talk about a lot of those issues that you brought up, but talk about your role specifically with Dr. Drake and how you can help, advise, and guide. How does that work?
Dr. Peacock: Obviously, Dr. Drake is an exceptional president. He has a great fund of knowledge, he knows how to run a university, he knows how to run a business. He is extraordinarily personable, and I know he can foresee both problems and opportunities on the horizon. He understands trends in higher education and has guided the University to
make decisions that take advantage of those trends and provide better educational opportunities for our students.
My relationship with him is as a sounding board. He will check in with me once a week and tell me what’s been happening on campus. We talk about personnel issues, student issues, institutional campus issues. Our conversations are directed so that he can discuss what’s been most important on campus that week. I rarely add any problem-solving solutions to his thoughts, but talking through all of those issues is really important.
Dr. Sheehan: You mentioned earlier the rest of the trustees and what they bring. Talk a little bit about what the incredibly talented group of trustees bring and how then to get 35-38 people all on the same page.
Dr. Peacock: We are able to converse well with one another in a civil fashion when issues are presented to us. Our board meetings are conversational – everyone offers their opinions and each of those opinions are respected. We have people from all generations, from their 40s to their 80s. I think that perspective and range of views is so important.
We all love this beautiful campus. We love coming to Fayette because it’s such a pretty town. But we don’t live here, so we don’t see all the dayto-day issues, but we’re trying to understand them. Having conversations about what’s important, what’s the true heart of the school and how we protect that for the betterment of all involved is under constant consideration.
Dr. Sheehan: When we were in school, Central was financially not in very good shape. We were really struggling. We’re not there today. Talk about where we are and how we got here, because it seems to me a lot of the credit should go to board leadership over the last 30 or 40 years.
Dr. Peacock: As part of the board and administrative leadership, I think that we recognize what the most important needs are. We would love to wave a magic wand and drop hundreds of millions of dollars on the campus in order to make everything perfect, to raise salaries and to hire more people, and to attract more students. The reality is that we have limited financial resources, and our responsibility is to be good stewards of those monies, using our finances where they will have the biggest and best impact.
Here are some things I’m really proud of. Our endowment is good. It is solid. We can’t readily spend it. We use it to help generate revenue for the operations of the university. We have no debt, which is unheard of for other institutions our size. No debt. That’s largely because our donors have been so generous in support of our University.
I’ve been on the board quite a while, and we’ve done some great things. I started when the Inman Student and Community Center was being finished and that was transformational for the campus. Since that time, we’ve refurbished Classic Hall, which has allowed for the development of this beautiful Ashby-Hodge Gallery that we’re sitting in now. We have updated Stedman Hall of Science, built the Thogmorton Center for Allied Health, renovated and repurposed Assembly Hall, which is now a wonderful meeting space. We’re still working on residence halls and about to finish a transformational project for the city of Fayette, Eagle Plaza, which is the new apartment-style dorm space on the square. And, we have updated our baseball and softball fields.
Dr. Sheehan: You were on the board at the time when we implemented Digital U, and you were part of that team that made the decisions. Tell us about how that positioned Central differently than everybody else in our space.
Dr. Peacock: We started Digital U because of the leadership of former board chair Bob Courtney. It was necessary for Central to become internet accessible and we needed to make sure our students had technical skills to prepare them for the workforce. We decided to put iPads in the hands of our freshmen, but also had to help our faculty teach with new technology and then how to engage students with that same technology.
Soon enough, our faculty and students mastered the technology, new ways to communicate were developed, and then we had the pandemic a few years later. And so, when we had to close campus to our students they were able to continue their education because of Digital U. We found ourselves in a much better situation for online learning than we might have been without that investment a few years earlier.
Dr. Sheehan: One of the things that I know you’re working on right now with the board and with the senior leadership is strategic planning. Lots of people talk about strategic planning like you’ve got to do it, then you set it on the bookshelf so that 10 years from now you can go back and look at it and start all over again. Talk about what Central is doing with strategic planning and why what we’re doing is different.
Dr. Peacock: This is a board-led initiative. I asked every board committee to look at the strategic plan to think about what they envisioned over the next five to ten years as being most critical. And as a result of that, they each undertook their own learning initiatives. They engaged the VPs, the administration, online resources, thought leaders in other areas of higher education and asked a lot of questions.
There’s been a lot of interaction. We have a special committee that oversees all of the committees’ work on the strategic plan. Once we have identified the key goals and objectives, we will turn it over to the administrative staff to figure out what is the most important for our University and how to implement it.
You have to understand that the old model for the board was for us to show up, have wonderful conversations, be presented with one aspect of higher education that we needed to hear, and then, we were expected to make good decisions. And that worked, for a while, but technology and education are moving so rapidly right now. There are multiple projects on campus, multiple issues to deal with, related to the educational process. The board senses that as well, because in their local communities, they’re sensing new social and economic pressures. Everybody’s engaged, we have all 40 members on our board fully engaged in the success of the University and that has been a wonderful process to watch.
Dr. Sheehan: Nancy, talk a little bit about where you see the landscape in higher ed. Where do you see the industry, but also where do you think the trustees see the position of Central, let’s say 10 years out? Where do we want to be?
Dr. Peacock: Well, I think that as we’ve worked through our strategic plan, we see ourselves with a healthy number of students on campus, but we’re also looking into alternative methods of education. Specifically, how do we educate nontraditional students, people over the age of 22, who want to either go back and finish their degree or even start a degree, because they’ve realized that they can get good jobs in their communities if they have a nursing degree or if they have a counseling degree or if they finish their master’s in education?
I think we’ll use virtual and online education more robustly and we will partner with other institutions in higher education as we do that. I think we will always try to support our Fayette campus because it’s a beautiful campus in a beautiful town. It’s a safe place to send young people to go to college. We will see a blending of educational outreach that will be customer (student) driven.
As we continue to grow and sustain our Fayette campus and our online educational efforts, we’ll continue to use the best methods available to us related to best outcomes known to the science of education,
Dr. Sheehan: As an alumna, as somebody who’s served on the board for years and now as chair of the board, take a moment and just be prideful, boastful about why Central matters, why you are so excited about the future of Central.
Dr. Peacock: I think it matters because we put our graduates into the communities to take care of those communities. The students and graduates who leave Central are going to go back into their hometowns or into other areas with a heart for service, a heart for education and learning, and a heart to say, “I was in this really special place for a short amount of time.” You don’t realize it while you’re here, but I think once you leave, you go, “Wow, that was an experience that my friends and my colleagues who I work with now didn’t get.”
As Marianne Inman, the president before Roger Drake, was always fond of saying, there’s always a Central connection. And that’s true. I think you can go into a community and all of a sudden you hear of somebody who also went to Central. It may have been 10 years before you, it may have been 10 years after you, but it’s always fun to connect with those people and talk about your experience.
Dr. Sheehan: Nancy, thanks for doing this. This was so much fun, to relive part of your career but also understand where the trustees are and how your leadership has moved us forward. Thank you for your leadership as the chair and the 20-plus years as a board member. It’s been great. We appreciate it.
by Emily Kesel
but the traditions and quality that have made the institution so beloved for decades aren’t going anywhere.
Starting this summer, the bands and choirs will both begin working with new directors, while Dr. Melissa Simons will take over as the new dean of the Conservatory. Dr. Dori Waggoner ’92 will be moving from her role as the dean of the Conservatory to a new position as associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
With Simons stepping up from her previous role as a professor of music in piano and theory, and Kara Metzger and Tom Clark coming in to lead the bands and choirs, respectively, music at CMU is entering an exciting new era.
Waggoner, but the support system already in place with the other faculty and staff of the Conservatory will help make the transition much easier as she continues gaining institutional knowledge and building connections.
“We are a very well-oiled machine that runs quite smoothly,” she said. “We work very well together and we communicate very well with each other.”
The communication and cohesion are not the only things that will remain as the Conservatory moves forward, either. Simons and Waggoner proudly state that the traditions of collaboration, a strong work ethic, pride in the community, and excellence in music will always stay the same.
“The band will still play Barnum at concerts. The choir’s still going to sing Beautiful Savior,” said Simons. “The alumni will still feel those connections. They’re still going to have those ways to connect to Central.”
For Wisconsin native Kara Metzger, landing the job as Central’s new director of bands is a childhood dream come true.
“I knew I wanted to be a band director from the time I was in seventh grade, so I’m living my dream right now,” said Metzger, who will be filling the role most recently held on a non-interim basis by Prof. Roy “Skip” Vandelicht ’77 before his retirement.
Since Vandelicht’s retirement last year, the position has been filled on an interim basis by Waggoner, but the outgoing dean is delighted for the opportunity to hand over the baton to an energetic new director.
“Prof. Metzger has a passion for teaching and performing concert, marching, and jazz music, and her detail-oriented approach to planning festivals and tours will serve CMU students well,” said Waggoner. “We look forward to having her join our community of musician-scholars.”
Metzger says her journey in music began all the way back in her childhood, when she asked her parents if she could play marching band with her friends at her fourth birthday party. As she grew older, she liked to follow around a marching band that rehearsed over the summer in her hometown of Waukesha, Wis., and the passion only grew from there.
“I always knew it was something I wanted to do, to be involved in music, and my first opportunity to do that in the school setting was in fourth grade, when I joined orchestra,” she said. “The rest is history. Almost all my free time has been dedicated to band.”
Grinnell College and the University of Iowa and as a teacher at the middle and high school levels. She also has extensive involvement with Drum Corps International (DCI), as a musician, drum major, and instructor.
Metzger says DCI has “been described as ‘marching band on steroids,’” and her involvement in the engaging and entertaining shows put on by DCI’s Colts and Colt Cadets gives her a unique history to bring to an already historic marching band at Central Methodist.
“I really enjoy being energetic in what I do and being passionate about what I do,” she said. “Hopefully I will be able to bring a bit of modern flair into the marching band.”
While she hopes to bring her own spin to the bands, Metzger says she is excited by the school’s reputation and the quality of the musicians already making up the Sound of Central.
“The band has a really good quality of sound; it has really good musicians already in it,” she said. “Just keeping that level and pushing onto whatever the next level may be is really exciting for a new collegiate educator.”
Metzger says DCI has “been described as ‘marching band on steroids,’” and her involvement in the engaging and entertaining shows put on by DCI’s Colts and Colt Cadets gives her a unique history to bring to an already historic marching band at Central Methodist.
Metzger continued her musical education throughout school, eventually earning a Bachelor of Music Education from the University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire and a Master of Music in Music Education from the University of Minnesota - Duluth. She completed her Doctor of Musical Arts in Wind Conducting from the University of Iowa in May.
On her path to becoming Central’s director of bands, Metzger has been gaining experience as a director and instructor at
Metzger added that she is also looking forward to joining a faculty that is “familyoriented and very collaborative,” and that it is both exciting and “a little bit” intimidating to come into a role that has such a storied history.
“There’s always a little bit of intimidation when a school has loved its past directors, and I don’t want to be something that the ensembles or the institution doesn’t want me to be,” said Metzger, who now follows in the footsteps of celebrated Central directors like K.K. Anderson, Ken and Nancy Seward, Paul Montemurro, Keith House, and Skip Vandelicht. “But we also know that I’m a different person, and I will always be a different person than those people. So hopefully I will keep that legacy going while also adding my own twist. That’s the goal.”
Also bringing a wealth of passion, energy, and experience to the Conservatory in the coming year is Buffalo, N.Y. native Tom Clark, who will begin work as the new director of choral activities in July.
Coming from a family of band directors and instrumentalists, Clark has always been at home in the music community, but he says his passion for vocal music didn’t begin blossoming until he was in college at Mansfield University in Pennsylvania.
“It wasn’t until college that I ever sang a note,” he said. “But with that experience of being in my first college choir, I quickly decided this is what I wanted to teach, and I began my journey into directing choral music.”
And what a journey it’s been. Since earning his bachelor’s degree in 1989, Clark has taught music at every level from middle school up to community college and university level. He’s taught in four different states already – Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Michigan, and Illinois –and is now excited to be “across the Mississippi” adding Missouri to the list.
“An exciting prospect here at CMU is the pride and tradition that the choral program has on campus, and I’m looking forward to carrying on those traditions and making some new traditions,” said Clark. “I’ve heard the choir, and they are wonderful. I feel very blessed to be able to work with them.”
Like Metzger, Clark is expected to bring a high level of passion and energy to his job, an expectation backed up by his reputation among his previous students.
“My past students would describe my teaching style as ‘passionate,’ and I’m proud of that,” he said. “I am very much in love with what I do, and I hope that that transmits
to my students.”
Another unique aspect of Clark’s teaching and directing style is to amplify underrepresented voices. He strives to choose pieces for his choirs that reflect the importance of looking at all aspects of choral music, bringing multicultural voices and voices of different genders to the table.
He is currently finishing his doctoral thesis on vocal pedagogy for the 21st century music educator, specializing in transgender and non-binary voices. He believes it essential to helping each of his students find their own authentic voice.
“My philosophy of teaching is that every voice is unique, and I would like to help students find their authentic voice, whatever that may be,” said Clark. “And through the journey together, we can help each other grow.”
With so many different voices adding to the choirs, Clark will be able to maintain a broad and varied repertoire for performance pieces. He has experience teaching many different styles as well, from the traditional bel canto style to non-classical styles, “adding jazz, Broadway, pop, and other influences.”
For the longtime teacher – whose wife is also a professor of music and concert pianist – the most important part of the job is helping every singer find their path and their authentic voice. And the way to get there is by being passionate as a teacher, something the new dean of the Conservatory is happy to know that Central will get from both new directors.
“Kara and Tom are both ready to hit the ground running. They both have incredible energy and passion for what they do,” said Simons. “To bring that into our community is going to be very healthy and very exciting.”
A 2020 recipient of the Carolyn and Tad Perry Fellow Award and 1992 graduate of Central Methodist University, Dr. Dori Waggoner is stepping into a new role for the coming year, becoming the associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Waggoner will be providing leadership for the Fayette campus, working under Provost Rita Gulstad with a task force to create a vision for where the faculty would like CMU to be in the next 10 years.
“We’ll be looking at the types of changes that we might need to make, the things we want to keep the same, and what we need to do to be ready for our future,” she said. “I’m looking forward to working with Dr. Gulstad and learning more about how the University works and how we can make education as effective and enjoyable as possible.”
Central Methodist graduate Lexi Molnar ’22 is joining the Conservatory team this summer as the new admissions representative for fine and performing arts. Molnar, who began working for her alma mater in the admissions office in September 2023, was heavily involved in the arts while a student, participating in band, choir, color guard, theatre, and Alpha Gamma Psi.
“I am excited to be able to help expand the fine arts programs that I loved so much as not only a college student but also as a middle and high school student,” she said. “Saying Central is a great place is an understatement, and I am excited for the future generations that join the Eagle family.”
by Emily Kesel
Scholarship competitions at Central Methodist University brought dozens of the brightest and most talented students in the region to Fayette this spring – and all of them went home with scholarship offers for furthering their education at CMU.
Taking place on February 24, the inaugural Central Scholars Competition brought the best and brightest future Eagles to campus to compete for the prestigious Eagle Select and Pre-Med Scholars awards.
“Our first Central Scholars Day was a wonderful event, with so many outstanding students and families coming to Fayette for the competition,” said Dr. Melissa Mace, vice president for enrollment management. “We’re so proud to have such bright and talented students eager to make their mark as Eagles. We can’t wait to have them all on campus in the fall.”
This year’s Eagle Select scholarship winners were Joseph Burks and Caleb Smith. Burks, a senior at Macon High School, intends to major in English while at Central, as well as participate in praise band. An active member of his school, church, and community, he also fills his time with his podcast entitled “Podcast by Committee.” Smith is an all-around student from Jonesboro, Ark. who intends to major in sports management at CMU. A talented singer who earned a spot in the final round of February’s Central’s Got Talent competition, he will also be a member of the Eagle football team in the fall as a linebacker.
The Pre-Med Scholars full-tuition
scholarship for 2024 was awarded to Abigail Erickson of Harrisburg. After attending boarding school in Canada, Erickson intends to major in biology. She is active in ministry and mission work and is looking forward to a career that helps her fulfill her dream of helping people.
Earlier in the week, Central once again played host to more than 20 outstanding and talented high school students ready to take their music and theatre skills to the next level, with both the Central’s Got Talent and Center Stage scholarship competitions taking place on February 22. After a day of intense competition, full-tuition scholarships were awarded to Elizabeth Boyd of Affton for theatre, Cecilia Rancatore of Independence for voice, and Luan Nguyen of Sullivan for band.
“I can’t tell you what a great day it was,” said Dr. Mark Kelty, professor of theatre, just before handing out the inaugural Terri Rohlfing Theatre Arts Scholarship. “The level of talent here is so incredible. It was so impossible to make a decision on who our top scholarship [winner] was going to be.”
The new name for the theatre scholarship was announced this year at the opera workshop performance of The Marriage of Figaro. A dedicated member of the creative team at CMU’s Little Theatre, costume designer Terri Rohlfing was honored to have her work recognized in this way.
“Over the past 50 years as an educator, I have worked toward the goal of empowering students to reach their potential and see the
possibilities for their futures,” said Rohlfing. “It is such an honor to know that my name will now be linked to amazing individuals who will be pursuing their passions through their education at CMU to make a real impact on the world for years to come. I cannot think of anything that could bring me more real joy and pride. I am overwhelmed to be recognized for the privilege of working with such talented students and colleagues.”
Members of the CMU bands and choirs, as well as friends of the Swinney Conservatory, were on the move this semester, with the annual Band Tour and later a trip to the Kansas City Symphony.
This year’s band tour began on March 7 with a stop at Harper Chapel United Methodist Church in Osage Beach and continued throughout the weekend, culminating at First United Methodist Church of Jefferson City.
While playing at the Jefferson City UMC, the band was watched by alumnus Don Lee ’45. Lee, now 99 years old, was a member of K.K. Anderson’s Central Band in 1941-42, playing the sousaphone.
In addition to the traditional band tour trip, many musicians, singers, and actors took a trip to Kansas City on March 22 to witness the opening of the season for the Kansas City Symphony.
Each year, students have the unique opportunity to go on this trip to the Kauffman Center to experience a symphony or opera, thanks to generous donations from Earl ’61 and Sunny Bates. The Bates family covers the cost for the group’s transportation, meal at one of Kansas City’s fine restaurants, and tickets to the show.
This year 43 students attended the trip, along with Dr. Dori Waggoner ’92 and Vanessa Miner ’92. The group enjoyed a three-course meal at Lidia’s Italian restaurant, where they recorded a rendition of their “thank you song” for the Bates family, then witnessed a lively show at the symphony.
The unique and “elevated experience,” as Waggoner described it, offered by the Bates family’s generosity did not go unnoticed by the students, including music major Paul Reinert.
“I’ve seen three different operas since I’ve been here, and now a symphony,” said Reinert, a junior who participates in Central’s choirs and theatre productions. “And without that I wouldn’t understand what it is to get to the next step after college, to be a professional actor or performer, so that is very meaningful for me.
“CMU has really helped me be able to branch out and experience these new things,” he said.
Reinert says he hopes to have the opportunity to continue performing as a professional after he graduates.
While on the road for the band tour, band members Nathan Jester, Jaxson Grossenburg, Matt Hamilton, and Wesley Miner recreated the iconic cover art for the Beatles album Abbey Road.
Kansas City Symphony in March. The symphony was conducted by Matthias Pintscher, with a featured solo by Philippe Quint on violin.
The show included symphonic dances by Leonard Bernstein and Sergei Rachmaninoff, as well as music by Errollyn Wallen and Charles Ives.
Central Methodist University and the Swinney Conservatory of Music celebrated two days of events this spring with the Band Legacy Weekend on March 2-3. More than 70 alumni and friends attended various events over the weekend, uniting with old friends, sharing memories, and paying tribute to the late Professor Keith House ’49.
A banquet in House’s memory was held on Saturday, featuring dinner and a program in the Inman Student and Community Center. On Sunday, festivities picked up again with tours of campus and visits between alumni and students currently part of Phi Mu Alpha and Sigma Alpha Iota.
The weekend was headlined by the Seward Award Concert on Saturday afternoon, where senior Josh Derendinger was presented with the Seward Band Award for Excellence. A reception and songfest followed, ending the weekend with even more celebration, camaraderie, and beautiful music.
View more photos at: https://flic.kr/s/ aHBqjBgeL5
Central Methodist University brought back more than 50 alumni from eight decades for the 49th Annual Alumni Band on Saturday, June 8. The turnout for the event was great, with 1995 graduate Scott Kuhlman leading as director. Former director of bands Skip Vandelicht ’77 was also on-hand to conduct a piece, and the next director, Kara Metzger, joined the trombone section and conducted a Barnum performance. Read more on Metzger and the new era of music at Central on pages 18-20.
View more photos at: https://flic.kr/s/ aHBqjBuvQk
by Emily Kesel
Central Methodist University alumna Rev. Beth Elders ’98 has one of the most important jobs in the state during times of crisis. She might not have thought that would ever be the case when she was majoring in music education at Central.
Elders serves as the executive director of the greater St. Louis area chapter of the American Red Cross, and this February she returned to her alma mater to speak to students in the emergency response training class led by Rev. Bill O’Neal.
In her role as a Red Cross executive director, Elders works with teams across all types of service to help alleviate human suffering in the face of emergencies, a career she sees as perfectly in-line with her United Methodist faith. An ordained deacon with a master’s degree from Garrett Seminary at Northwestern University, she was first drawn to relief work while on staff at Manchester United Methodist Church.
“My call has always been not to be the pastor in charge, not to be the one leading and organizing the worship life of the congregation, but instead to connect the church and the world,” Elders said.
After graduating from Central, Elders was teaching middle school band and elementary music in Troy, Mo. when she began volunteering at the local UMC to fill her spare time. She started a children’s choir and a praise and worship band, volunteering more and more as time went on. A few different jobs later, she realized it was “time to stop running from this call to do more,” and went on to earn her degree from seminary.
Elders continued volunteering, helping out after the Joplin tornado in 2012 and other disasters, but it was a disaster much closer to home that made her look at the Red Cross differently. After a large flood in West St. Louis County, her church’s fellowship hall was turned into a shelter for those who needed to evacuate.
of anything – regardless of who you love, how you love, where you live, money you have or don’t, end of story.”
Elders joined the Red Cross in 2017 and took on the interim role of executive director for the Central and Northern Missouri chapter two years later. She’s been involved in everything from fundraising to volunteer engagement, recruitment to community outreach, ever since.
My call has always been not to be the pastor in charge, not to be the one leading and organizing the worship life of the congregation, but instead to connect the church and the world.
“That was when I first started seeing the mission of the American Red Cross at work,” said Elders. “They serve everyone regardless
As she spoke to the class about the Red Cross’s history, mission, and responsibilities in various parts of the world, one thing was clear: she’s right at home in her community of helpers, even if it’s not where she expected to find herself.
“If you would have told me when I was sitting where you are that I’d be doing this now, I’d have laughed my head off,” she said. “But I’ve continued to be nimble in my faith tradition, to listen to where God is calling me to be and what He’s calling me to do.”
by Emily Kesel
The first half of 2024 at the AshbyHodge Gallery of American Art on the campus of Central Methodist University has been a time of highlighting local talent.
From the spring semester show featuring curator Tyler Pierson and a collection of locally-made Afro-American quilts, to the summer show headlined by Moberly-area artist Jared Van Cleve, artists in the region have provided entertainment and education with their pieces throughout the year.
Pierson’s thought-provoking “Journey Through Dante’s Inferno” was on display in the Yancey Gallery from January 28 through May 2. With his charcoal and watercolor on paper works of art, Pierson joined artists like William Blake and Gustave Doré in illustrating the first book of Dante’s Divine Comedy
“Tyler Pierson follows a tradition of famous artists who have illustrated this story,” said Dr. Joe Geist, registrar of the Gallery. “Our beloved curator has followed in the footsteps of other great artists doing the entire Inferno.”
Pierson’s illustrations, which he began making in August, depicted Dante and Virgil as ethereal white figures, contrasting the highly detailed souls suffering in Hell. He said the distinction was to underscore their sense of displacement along their travels.
In contrast to Pierson’s dark and haunting work, the spring show also featured a collection of quilts celebrating Afro-American culture and history. Hand-made by a number of quilters, including Vydella Chapman, these colorful works of art told stories of AfricanAmerican life.
“I’ve never been actually [featured] in a museum, but I’ve taken them to a lot of quilt shows,” Chapman said of her quilts. “I’ve gone all over, from Fulton to Jefferson City, Boonville up to Brookfield – wherever somebody calls me. But this is the first time in a gallery.”
In a new recurring event for the Gallery, Pierson and Chapman each gave additional artist talks for interested visitors during the show’s run.
More recently, the Gallery has hosted paintings by a Moberly High School teacher and coach, Jared Van Cleve. Van Cleve’s unique take on an emerging style known as open impressionism has made for a colorful exhibit showcasing Missouri landscapes.
His work, like all open impressionism, uses loose and expressive brush strokes to convey a sense of movement and light. He says he usually begins with a first coat of a single color, either subtle or vivid, depending on the direction of the painting. Then brush strokes are laid side-by-side to create texture, movement, and light.
“The idea is that you’re trying to accomplish your painting in one take,” Van Cleve said of the style. “So you’re not blending [the colors], you’re just letting the viewer really put it together with their eyes.”
Van Cleve’s show, along with an exhibit of portraits from the Gallery’s permanent collection, will be on display through July 25. In the fall, the Gallery plans to put on a show of alumni art, with special events around Homecoming weekend. See the CMU website for hours and tour opportunities: https://bit. ly/3xiL5dZ
Members of the Central Methodist University faculty and student body had the opportunity to attend and present at this year’s annual meeting of the Missouri Academy of Science on April 12 and 13. Held at Missouri Western State University in St. Joseph, the meeting hosts around 150 presentations from students and faculty from across the state.
“This meeting is an excellent opportunity for undergraduate students to make a presentation at what is, for many, their first professional meeting,” said Dr. James ‘Tiger’ Gordon, professor of chemistry. “It is an opportunity for them to talk about the excellent work they are doing in a supportive atmosphere in which peers, professors, and other professionals from across our state encourage them in their work. It’s a chance for them to grow and learn as young professional scientists.”
Presenting on the day on behalf of Central were Amara Reichert, Amanda Mantel, and Madison Shields, as well as the group of Dr.
Christopher Arnold, Audra Zeff, and Alexis Dillon. Reichert and Mantel presented orally on the topics of “High Throughput Phenotyping Analysis of Soybean Photosynthetic Capacity via Leaf Hyperspectral Data and Machine Learning” and “Utilizing Known Shark Species to Test the Precision of Environmental DNA,” respectively. Shields presented a poster on “the Enterococcus Faecalis Two-Component Response Regulator EtaR Contributes to Salt Tolerance,” while the group gave a poster presentation entitled “Examining Differences in Burnout Among College Students.”
This meeting is an excellent opportunity for undergraduate students to make a presentation at what is, for many, their first professional meeting.
Other faculty attending the meeting included Gordon, Dr. Andrew McCrady, Dr. Tyler Kenefake, Dr. Ashley
Lough, Dr. Shayna Burchett ’13, and Professor Greg Thurmon ’77. Several CMU faculty members serve leadership roles within the Missouri Academy of Science, including McCrady and Kenefake as the chair and vice-chair, respectively, of the Computer Science and Math Section. In their roles, they oversee the presentations given at the meeting.
Gordon and Burchett also serve as co-directors for the Senior Division of the Missouri Academy of Science. They are tasked with overseeing the organization of the meeting each year and putting together the overall meeting schedule, with the help of the chairs of the various sections.
by Emily Kesel
Black History Month at Central Methodist University was celebrated with some big events in 2024, including the “Appreciating Black Minds” series which brought St. Louis Cardinals legend Ozzie Smith to campus.
The African American Student Union (AASU) hosted the Hall of Fame shortstop on February 5 to speak about his experiences in Major League Baseball. The event was open to the public, drawing a large crowd of students, staff, and community members to the Inman Student and Community Center. After Smith’s address, a raffle of several signed items was held, with proceeds going directly to AASU.
The lecture series also welcomed two Central alumni to speak at their alma mater, Lue Lockridge-Lane ’79 and Tim Jackman ’81.
Lockridge-Lane spoke on the topic of “Let’s Talk Faith” in front of a crowd at Assembly Hall on February 12, less than a month after being named the Lea Tindall Memorial Award winner. An ordained minister and member of Second Baptist Church, she remains active in the Fayette community following her retirement, serving as an election supervisor and a board member for Fayette Together, the Howard County Historical Museum, Fayette Juneteenth Committee, the Howard County Health and Wellness Council, and the Central Missouri Clergy Coalition, among others.
The final lecture in the series was on February 19, with Jackman speaking on “Let’s Talk Business.” A member of the CMU board of trustees and previous winner of the Tindall Award, Jackman is the president and CEO of Previsor Insurance Company. He is an active member of St. Paul United Methodist Church, serving in various capacities, including formerly as the administrative council chair.
In addition to the “Appreciating Black Minds” series, Central and AASU held several other events throughout the month, including an artist talk by Vydella Chapman, whose quilt work was on display at the Ashby-Hodge Gallery of American Art.
Other programming included guest speakers at Tuesday morning Chapel – Rev. Dr. Emmanuel Cleaver III, Rev. Charity Goodwin, Lyna Williams-Whitehead, and trustee Ivan James III – as well as a movie night, Black history Kahoot night, and a book signing by Quincy Moore.
AASU and the Office of Student Development hope to add even more entertaining and informative programming next year.
by Zy’Shonne
Three longtime faculty members at Central Methodist University retired from teaching at the end of the 2023-24 academic year, earning professor emeritus status from the university –Professor Melva Gipson, Professor Pam Gordy, and Dr. John Carter.
In 2013, Gipson started her career at CMU as an adjunct professor in the education department. Over more than a decade at CMU, she has taught many elementary education courses, but she has also consistently taught Education as a Profession and the Student Teaching Seminar over the past ten years.
Prior to her arrival at Central, Gipson was an elementary teacher for seven years and an elementary school principal for twenty years. She also served as a district curriculum director, Title I coordinator, and was an administrator for gifted and atrisk programs. Gipson was recognized as a Distinguished Principal for the Northeast Region of the Missouri Association of Elementary School Principals in 2012.
Over the past ten years, Gipson has loved CMU’s campus, teaching students, and the friendliness of CMU’s faculty and staff.
“One of my favorite aspects is teaching upcoming teachers what good instruction should look like, as well as good strategies to work with both students and families,” said Gipson. “I enjoy the friendliness of the CMU staff, their commitment to quality education for their students, the beautiful campus, but most of all the students who are motivated to do their best.”
Mathematics professor Pam Gordy also retired after 15 years at Central. During her time as a member of the faculty, Gordy has taught many math and freshmen leadership classes, such as College Algebra, College Algebra Intensive, Elements of Geometry, Trigonometry, and CMU 101 and 102.
Prior to her arrival at CMU, Gordy taught mathematics at the high school level for 30 years. She also coached softball and basketball for many years, and she taught for Central’s College of Graduate and Extended Studies (CGES) for a number of years before working full-time at CMU.
Gordy has received much recognition during her time at CMU, being voted a recipient of the Momberg Gold Chalk Award three times. The award is given each year by Omicron Delta Kappa Central Methodist Circle, CMU’s chapter of the national leadership society.
“I was blessed to receive the Momberg Gold Chalk Award three times during my time here at CMU,” said Gordy. “The award means a lot to me as it is voted on by the students, given to the faculty member who has made a difference in their lives.”
After her retirement, Gordy plans to attend some athletic events and spend time with her former colleagues.
One of Central’s longest serving professors, Dr. John Carter, also retired from his role as a teacher this spring after 44 years.
A Perry Fellow Award winner in 2013, Carter has served on the faculty as a professor of political science since 1980. He was the
senior faculty member in the division of social science and served as chairman of the division from 1988 to 1997, and again from 2003 to 2006. In that role, he oversaw the addition of the majors in sociology, criminal justice, and communications. Starting in 1990, he directed the pre-law program, which provides co-curricular support services for students interested in qualifying for admission to law schools. For the last 15 years, Carter served as the university’s director of graduate programs, while teaching advanced political science seminars.
He is the author of several books on the history of American intelligence policy, including Covert Operations as a Tool of Presidential Foreign Policy in American History From 1800 to 1920 (2000); Covert Operations and the Emergence of the Modern Presidency, 1920-1960 (2002); Covert Action as a Tool of Presidential Foreign Policy: From the Bay of Pigs to Iran-Contra (2006); American Intelligence’s Nazi Connections: A Revisionist Perspective on the Early Cold War (2009), American Covert Aerial Operations during the Early Cold War (2013), and The Rise of the American Surveillance State (2016).
Dr. Carter and his wife, Jerri, have resided in Howard County for more than 35 years. Jerri taught for 31 years in the Fayette public schools and now serves Central Methodist University as curriculum coordinator for graduate programs.
Four of Central Methodist University’s academic lecture series held their 2024 editions this spring, bringing an array of bright, talented experts to Fayette to speak on their chosen fields. Find out about each lecturer, check out videos of each of their talks with the QR code, then look out for information on next year’s lectures at www.centralmethodist.edu/alumni/lectures.
On February 1, Central welcomed Samara Hakim, JD to present the Dr. Harold W. Sunoo World Peace Lecture. Her talk was titled, “Embody Your Meaning: From Mindset to Movement.”
Hakim is the President and Founder of CulturGrit, LLC. She is an international culture and inclusion thought leader, data strategist, keynote speaker, writer, coach, and facilitator. She is a member of Forbes Coaches Council, the Fowler Global Social
Innovation Challenge Committee at the University of San Diego Kroc School for Peace and Justice, and the National DEIB Committee of the National Association of Women Business Owners (NAWBO), and she serves the DEIB Director for its San Diego chapter. Hakim has also been a member of the World Peace Through Law section of the Washington State Bar Association for more than 10 years.
The second annual Geist-Yancey Lecture on the Arts was held on March 6, with filmmaker Nathan Truesdell as the featured speaker. Truesdell, an Academy Award nominated producer, spoke on “How I Learned to Make Movies.”
A graduate of Moberly High School and the University of Missouri, Truesdell produced and was co-director of photography for the Tribeca winner and Oscar nominee Ascension (2021) and produced
The 2024 Gil and Ruth Fleer Lecture was presented on March 27 by Dr. Tao Jiang, professor of religion and philosophy at Rutgers University. Jiang’s lecture was entitled “Zhuangzi and the Tragedy of Personal Freedom in Chinese History.”
Jiang specializes in classical Chinese philosophy and Mahayāna Buddhist Philosophy. His 2021 book,
documentaries such as We Always Lie to Strangers, Caucus, Convention, and Peace in the Valley and coproduced The Gospel of Eureka. His directorial work includes the award-winning Balloonfest, The Water Slide, The Art of Making Money, It’s Coming!, and When the LAPD Blows Up Your Neighborhood. He was the camera department head for the HBO series How To with John Wilson
Origins of Moral-Political Philosophy in Early China, received the 2023 Joseph Levenson Prize honorable mention from the Association for Asian Studies. He is the director of Rutgers Center for Chinese Studies and co-chair of the Neo-Confucian Studies Seminar at Columbia University.
On April 24, Dr. Michael Behe gave this year’s Dr. Thomas A. Perry Faith and Science Lecture. A professor of biochemistry at Lehigh University, Behe spoke on the topic of “Chance or Purpose? The Argument for Intelligent Design in Biology.”
In his career, Behe has authored 40 technical papers and three books, Darwin’s Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution (1996), The Edge
of Evolution: The Search for the Limits of Darwinism (2007), and Darwin Devolves: The New Science of DNA That Challenges Evolution (2019), all of which argue that living systems at the molecular level are best explained as being the result of deliberate intelligent design. The books have been reviewed by the New York Times, Nature, Philosophy of Science, Christianity Today, and many other periodicals.
by Rachel Moore
The Central Methodist University Department of Athletics inducted seven individuals and three teams into the 2023-24 Hairston Hall of Fame Class. The inductions took place on Saturday, January 27 with a ceremony in the Inman Student and Community Center.
The Hairston Hall of Fame was established in 1983 through a gift from William L. Hairston, a 1933 graduate of Central College. The Hall of Fame honors the outstanding accomplishments of CMU athletes, coaches, administrators, and teams and recognizes significant contributions to the University’s athletic programs.
This year’s individual Hall of Fame class inductees included George Derrieux ‘62 (men’s basketball), John Kurtz ’76 (baseball/ football), Bill Lankford ’76 (football/baseball/ basketball), Lucas Manring ’12 (track & field), Holly Wade McMahon ’08 (women’s basketball), Rael Rotich ’10 (volleyball), and David Stoll ‘75 (baseball/football).
Three men’s basketball teams from the years 1942-45 were also inducted.
George Derrieux ‘62 was a four-year starter on the men’s basketball team from 1958-62. A two-time team captain and team
MVP for the Eagles, Derrieux averaged 11 points per game during his career. He saved his best season for last, as he averaged 17.2 points per game while providing stingy defense against centers that towered over him. Derrieux led the Eagles in rebounding during two different seasons and recorded 20-plus rebound games numerous times. He was named a unanimous MCAU AllConference player in his final season in 1961-62. Derrieux was also a scholar, as evidenced by his standing on the Dean’s List. He graduated from Central with a Bachelor of Science in education. Upon completing his degree, he embarked on a career spanning 30 years in public education.
John Kurtz ‘76 was a two-sport Eagle athlete in football and baseball during the mid-70s. A four-year starter under Coach Bill Holmes, Kurtz played four seasons as a wide receiver for CMC football. He was part of the 1975 Heart championship team and was named team MVP. That same season, Kurtz was recognized as an All-District, Heart All-Conference, and NAIA Division II All-American. He finished the year with 743 receiving yards and averaged more than 100 yards receiving per game while playing in
just seven games due to injury. Additionally, Kurtz served as the starting catcher for the baseball team all four seasons under Coach Steve Phipps. As a baseball player, he was named First Team All-District and Heart All-Conference. He finished his CMC career batting .370, and administratively he was president of the Letterman Club in 1975 and 1976. Kurtz graduated from CMC with a degree in physical education/health and elementary education. In 2023, he was recognized as a member of the 1970s baseball all-decade team.
Bill Lankford ‘76 was a three-sport competitor in football, basketball, and baseball during his time as an Eagle athlete in the mid-70s. A native of New London, Mo., Lankford attended Mark Twain High School. He was a letterman on the hardwood under Coach Larry Holley and played baseball under Coach Steve Phipps. His presence was most felt on the football gridiron. While leading the Eagles to a 6-3-1 overall and a 5-2 mark in the Heart of America Conference in 1973, Lankford earned Heart All-Star honors as a running back, kicker, and return specialist. He was named to the NAIA First Team AllDistrict 16 Offense after leading CMC in
scoring with a school record of 107 points, which was good for sixth-best nationally. His 107 points included 10 touchdowns, 27 extra points, and seven field goals, highlighted by a school record 47-yard field goal. As a running back, Lankford carried the ball 132 times for 730 yards, good for 5.5 yards per carry. He also caught 17 passes for 278 yards. Aggregately, he generated 1,008 yards of total offense in his sophomore campaign. If that wasn’t enough, he also kicked the gamewinning field goal against No. 8 Ottawa with 10 seconds left to secure a 17-14 victory. His versatility was cemented when he registered an NAIA District 16 record nine field goals. Lankford was a big part of the 1975 CMC Football Heart Championship campaign, where he led the NAIA in punt returns. His 15 returns garnered 495 yards and four touchdowns. He graduated from CMC in 1976.
Lucas Manring ‘12 competed for Eagle track & field from 2008-12. The native of Stockton, Mo. excelled as a middledistance runner, winning seven conference championships. Nationally, he was a sixtime NAIA All-American. Manring was the national runner-up in the 800m run at the indoor national championships in both 2011 and 2012. Altogether, Manring finished in the top five at Nationals on five different occasions. As of his induction, Lucas continued to hold school records in the indoor 600m run (1:21.7), indoor 800m run (1:50.2), indoor medley distance relay (10:15.1), and the outdoor 800m run (1:49.8). Manring’s athletic prowess mirrored his classroom achievement, when in 2012 he was named to the Capital One Academic AllAmerica Second Team by CoSIDA during his senior year.
Holly Wade McMahon ‘08 played four seasons on the women’s basketball team. A 5-foot-10 forward from Springfield, Mo., Wade appeared in 111 games during a career spanning the years 2004-08. During her senior campaign, she scored 20 or more points on eight different occasions. This included a career-high 26 points against Missouri Baptist on Nov. 13, 2007. Named team captain both her junior and senior seasons, Wade finished her CMU time with 1,275 career points, ranking No. 7 all-time in program history. She averaged 11.5 points and 4.3 rebounds/game and shot over 70 percent from the free throw line in her four seasons leading the Eagles. The two-time
Heart All-Conference selection also earned multiple honors in the classroom. She was named to the Dean’s List three times and was a Heart Scholar-Athlete in 2008.
Rael Rotich ‘10 was a two-year starter for CMU volleyball in 2007 and 2008. An outside hitter from Nairobi, Kenya, Rotich made an immediate impact when she stepped onto the floor as a junior transfer in the fall of 2007. She led the team in kills (384) and was second in total blocks (75). Rael saved her best for last, as in her senior campaign she was named both a 2008 AVCA and NAIA Honorable Mention All-American. Additionally, Rotich was selected to the Midwest Region First Team by the American Volleyball Coaches’ Association and earned Heart First Team AllConference honors. During her senior year alone, she tallied 521 kills and 48 solo blocks, both landing in the top 10 of single-season CMU records. She finished her time at Central with 905 kills, 96 solo blocks, 76 service aces, and a .304 hitting percentage. At the time of her induction, Rotich’s name can still be found in the top 10 of seven individual and career statistical categories.
David Stoll ‘75 was a two-sport athlete for Central Methodist in the mid-70s. On the football gridiron, the St. Louis native was a four-year starting linebacker, earning Heart All-Conference and Honorable Mention AllDistrict honors in 1974. He was also named team captain during his senior year. On the baseball diamond, Stoll was a two-time Heart First Team All-Conference selection in 1974 and 1975. He led the team in batting average as a junior, batting .333 with four doubles, a triple, and four home runs. As a senior, Stoll batted .347 and recorded five doubles, five home runs, and a triple, while driving in 27 runs. He was a member of the first conference championship team in 1975, which would later be inducted into the Hairston Hall of Fame in 2009. In a remarkable moment, three of his siblings were also inducted with their respective teams that same year, including his sister Kim, (1979 volleyball), and brothers John (1975 baseball and 1975 football) and Andy (1975 football). A career highlight for Stoll was hitting a walk-off grand slam against William Jewell, which clinched the Eagles’ championship, 7-6. In the spring of 2023, he was named to the CMU Baseball All-70s Decade team. He graduated from Central Methodist with a degree in business administration in 1975. Stoll passed away in 2010 of cancer. His daughter, Tricia Stoll
Justus, accepted the induction award on his behalf.
The 1942-43 Central men’s basketball team won the first of three consecutive MCAU Conference Championships. Led by Hall of Fame head coach Bob Vanatta, the Eagles also participated in the Intercollegiate Tournament, finishing the year with an 11-4 overall record. The team featured two players who earned MCAU All-Star recognition, George Walley (First Team) and team captain Warren Pettigrew (Second Team).
Team members include Coach Bob Vanatta, Melvin L. Block, Louis C. Graue, Warren A. Pettigrew, Bob Morrow, George E. Walley, John B. Hyatt, Bob Holmes, Jim Walley, Carlos D. McCullough, Robert W. Leech, John L. Cannon, Jerry W. Rhodes, Charles B. Baskett, George E. Pilcher, Dick Symmonds, Jessie W. Mothershead, Joe F. Scott, and Charles L. Smith.
The 1943-44 Central men’s basketball team won the Eagles’ second consecutive MCAU Conference Championship, clinching the title with a 49-30 win over rival Westminster College in Fulton. Central finished the year with a 10-0 record.
Team members include Coach Charles Mills, team captains Tom Phelps and Arnie Saul, Bill Allison, Milt Iverson, Rudy Schilder, Jack Carson, Don Corbitt, Dick McBride, Bill Wasson, Harvey Peterson, Larry Stewart, Bill Vines, and Athletic Director/Professor Keith Anderson.
The 1944-45 Central men’s basketball team posted an undefeated regular season with an 11-0 record, winning a third-straight MCAU Conference Championship. A team represented by players from 14 different states, the Eagles were comprised of V-12 Navy members who attended the college. Central secured two big wins over the Sedalia Army Air Force. The Eagles ended their season with a quarterfinal appearance at the national tournament in Kansas City, posting a 1-1 record at the final site.
Team members include Coach Chief T.H. Moar, Edward J. Hemsworth, Loren M. McCormick, Richard P. Culberson, Donald O. Corbitt, Henry E. Hatch, Harvey A. Peterson, Wilmer J. Harvey, Charles N. Cooley, Charles E. O’Neal, Frank M. Jacobs, Leo D. Nicholson, Richard E. Johnson, and Martin L. Eddlemon.
This spring, Central Methodist University celebrated one of its most special anniversaries, as generations of alumni, coaches, and friends returned to campus to honor 50 years of women’s athletics.
The two-day event brought the past and present together to celebrate the half-century of Eagle women, with an afternoon social on Friday, March 22 and a banquet on the evening of March 23. At both events, current athletes had the unique experience of meeting some of the trailblazing women who came before them and paved the way for their current successes.
From the humble beginnings of a few small programs in the ‘70s, led by Hairston Hall of Famers like Sue Feldkamp and the late Phyllis Richardson, to the recent highs of numerous conference championships and even national championships in cheer and dance, all five decades of women’s athletics at Central were celebrated by dozens of proud alumni and friends throughout the weekend.
At the Saturday evening banquet, a number of speakers addressed the crowd to talk about what makes Eagle women’s athletics such a special tradition. On the following spread are some of their thoughts, in their own words.
Chris Drummond Wheeler ’88 was CMC's first female soccer player in 1984, when she tried out and made the men's team. She was the only women's player on the men's team for two years before captaining the women's team her final two seasons.
Vicki Rees ’81 is the only Central athlete in history to have received All-Conference and All-District honors in three sports – volleyball, basketball, and softball. Rees lettered in all three in each of her four years, earning the Estes Award as the outstanding athlete at Central in 1981.
“In my experience here as a student [and athlete], we were like one big ‘green bean’ family. . . People are competitive here at Central, but they have fun. They love each other. They’ve got each other’s back. And it’s just an all-around special place.”
-Vicki Rees – volleyball, basketball, softball, class of 1981
“I will always be thankful to have worn an Eagle jersey and to see banners hanging up that our team put in the work for. Although I received the National Player of the Year banner, at any time I would trade that for a national championship banner.”
-DaJonee Hale – basketball, class of 2018
“I wouldn’t be where I am today if it wasn’t for the previous women who set the foundation for [CMU women’s athletics]. You are our role models, and we look up to you and strive to be just as good in everything we do. We strive to have that competitive edge, to go out there and compete and do our absolute best.”
-Annabelle Maassen - volleyball, class of 2024
On Friday, June 7, Randy Hubbard hosted a group for fellow alumni (mostly former players of Dr. James Luetjen) for a dinner at his home. In attendence were Larry Anderson ’67, Don Brashiers ’69, Walt Bauer ’70, George Derrieux ’62, Bill Dierks ’71, Mike Dowdy ’71, Ray Forrest ’71, Jason Holmes ’69, Dennis Humphrey ’71, Ken Laune ’70, Jim Liner ’69, Don Malson ’69, Dale Marksberry ’71, Joe
The 33rd Annual Dr. Luetjen Golf Tournament took place on June 8 at Hail Ridge Golf Course in Boonville. A longstanding fundraising tradition for the Central Methodist Department of Athletics, the tournament brought 25 teams to the course for several different contests, including Longest Drive, Longest Putt, and Closest to the Pin.
Named after former athletic director and Hairston Hall of Famer Dr. James Leutjen, the event provides an opportunity for alumni and supporters to come together in support of CMU Athletics. Proceeds from the tournament go directly to supporting the department, its programs, and CMU studentathletes.
Right: David Smith ’78, Mark Harbison ’76, Dave Huntsman, Tony Williams, David Holtwick, Geoff Moorehead ’83, Matthew Vandelicht ’07, and Garth Menees ’09
by Rachel Moore
The Central Methodist Department of Athletics held the fifth annual Nestys Student Athlete Awards Banquet Monday, April 29 inside Puckett Fieldhouse. The awards, nominated and voted on by the coaches and the athletic administration team, honor the outstanding accomplishments of student-athletes for the 2023-24 year, both academically and athletically.
In addition, the department recognized staff members who have given great support to CMU Athletics and the student-athletes.
Heart of Central AD Recognition Award
Kenny Blakely
Tracy Nowlin
Coach Moz Champions of Character
Kenny Anderson - Track & field
Eddie and Ellie Spirit Award Winners
Danielle Johnson – Cheer
Emma Pettigrew – Dance
Newcomers of the Year
Kirstine Lykke - Women’s soccer
Roman Garcia - Men’s wrestling
Iron Eagle Award Winners
Bailey Proctor - Football
Judit Gonzalez-Oliveras – Women’s soccer
Jose Barbosa – Athletic training (men’s wrestling)
Christian Knighton – Men’s wrestling
Vukasin Garic – Men’s basketball
Abigail Rosa – Cheer
Kaycee Messener – Cheer
Tyrone Harris – Cheer
Trey Rassenfoss – Baseball
Abbie Marshall – Softball
Alex Blase – Men’s golf
Performance of the Year - Individual Sport
Renee Finke - Women’s track and fieldNational runner-up in the pentathlon
Chris Adekoya - Men’s track and field - Third-place finish in 60m dash at indoor nationals
Performance of the Year - Team Sport
Haile Farris - Softball - Perfect game vs. Park
TreVon Smith - Men’s basketballCareer-high 39 points vs. William Penn
Most Outstanding Athletes
Renee Finke - Women’s track and field
Roman Garcia - Men’s wrestling
Mark Robb Award Winners
Nyles Pokipala-Waiohu – Football
Aaron Chinavare – Men’s soccer
Natalie Snell– Women’s soccer
Karli Wolfe – Volleyball
Baileigh Morris – Women’s track & field
Adam Trachsel – Men’s track & field
Cameron Cornman – Men’s wrestling
McKenna Deckelman – Women’s wrestling
Cameron Mejean– Men’s basketball
Bryann Magers - Women’s basketball
Grant Engel – Men’s cross country
Isabella Ross - Women’s cross country
Rachel Haskell – Cheer
Jasmine Stewart– Stunt
Takudswa Mukonzamariro– Men’s bowling
Lauren Williams - Women’s bowling
David Alvarado - Esports
Austin Ennis – Baseball
Madison Gorrell – Softball
Dalton Eckhoff - Dance
Garrett Rikel– Men’s golf
Kali Brown – Women’s golf
James M. Luetjen Endowed Scholar Athlete Award
Renee Finke - Women’s track and field
President’s Award For Academic Success
Kelena Oots - Softball
Pannier Female Athlete of the Year
Callie Henson - Volleyball
Estes Male Athlete of the Year
Don Griffin - Men’s wrestling
by Rachel Moore and Emily Kesel
The 2024 season ended with a historic week for the Central Methodist University women’s outdoor track and field program. The week began with 10 athletes competing in 13 different events at the NAIA Outdoor National Championships in Marion, Ind., and it ended with five AllAmericans and one national champion.
Central junior Renee Finke became the program’s first national champion in 20 years, earning the gold medal in the high jump after clearing 1.77 meters. Being the first to claim a national title since 2004, she’s also the first to earn the honor under coaches Kenny Anderson and Tevin Riddle.
“Renee’s performance at nationals was amazing. We knew she had it in her, because that’s how she trains,” said Anderson. “[Coaching] the national champion feels great. It’s just a testament to the work that our staff has put in to get us to this point. We have been growing and building the program to be competitive on the national stage, and to finally get national recognition is very rewarding.”
“I knew I was capable of doing it, but I never had foreseen actually being a national champion. The fact that I am the first for both Coach Riddle and Coach Kenny, it feels amazing,” said Finke after her title-winning jump. “I couldn’t ask for any more. The support has been amazing. The coaches
continued to push me and continued to help me through my adversities.”
The road to becoming a national championship wasn’t a simple one, Finke admitted. Since coming into the program as a freshman, the Montgomery City, Mo. native had to battle through injuries and performances that weren’t up to her own standards. But under the leadership of jumps coach Riddle and head coach Anderson, she was able to thrive, literally reaching a new height for her career.
“My first jump [at nationals] was not too great, and then Coach Riddle told me to focus on leaning and driving my knee, and that’s exactly what I focused on,” Finke said of her final jump, which was a new personal record. “I felt so much adrenaline going into the jump because I knew that was going to be the one. And it was.”
Prior to earning the national title in the high jump, Finke opened her nationals by earning All-American honors in the heptathlon, finishing in fifth place after two days of competing in seven different events.
Finke’s points haul contributed to Central’s 10th place finish at the national championship, but she was not alone in earning All-American honors. Also on the podium for the high jump was Delaney Miller, who finished third with a jump of 1.71 meters. Miller became a three-time All-
American to close out her CMU career.
Thrower Karli Wolfe also earned AllAmerican status in the discus, throwing a school record 47.94 meters for fifth place. Rounding out the All-Americans was senior Dayana Montenegro, who ran personal bests in both the prelims and finals of the 400m dash. She finished eighth with a final time of 54.35 seconds.
Other competitors for Central at nationals included Baileigh Morris in the 5000m racewalk (ninth place), Baylee Beard in the shot put (13th place) and hammer throw (15th place), Haley Bellamy in the heptathlon (16th place), Claireece Cross in the triple jump (25th place), and Kailey Johnson in the 100m hurdles (28th place).
The 10th place overall finish at nationals followed a third-place showing at the Heart Outdoor Conference Championships in Baldwin City, Kan., where Finke was recognized as the South Central Region Women’s Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year.
“This outdoor season surprised me, honestly. We didn’t have the depth this year that we’ve had in recent years, so there were no big expectations,” said Anderson. “All the credit goes to the young ladies in our program. They have laid the foundation, and I am excited to see how we continue to grow.”
The Central Methodist softball team had another magical season in 2024, as the Eagles swept the Heart regular season and conference tournament championships for the third consecutive year with a perfect 24-0 record in conference play. Central won 28 consecutive games from March 13 to May 3, matching the team’s longest win streak in the last 15 seasons. Additionally, Head Coach Pat Reardon ’90 secured his 950th career win in CMU’s first game against Saint Mary on Sunday, March 10. He is currently the fourth winningest active coach in the NAIA. Kelena Oots broke the career program record in both stolen bases and runs scored. Central secured 10 Heart All-Conference selections, highlighted by Player of the Year Elizabeth Palumbo, Pitcher of the Year Jordyn Ball, and Coach of the Year Pat Reardon. Jordyn Ball, Lauren Hill, Elizabeth Palumbo, Madison Roberts, Madison White, Kelena Oots, Joely Crider, Haile Farris, and Kaysie Jolley were all named to the first team. Junior infielder Daly Garland earned an Honorable Mention nod, while Haile Farris, Madison Roberts and Kelena Oots all earned a spot on the Heart Gold Glove team. Central was ranked as high as No. 3 in the NAIA Softball Coaches’ Top 25 Coaches’ Poll this year and solidified a spot as a host in the opening round of the national tournament. The Eagles won the bracket and punched their ticket to the NAIA World Series for the second year in a row. At the final site, they fell in back-toback games to end the season. Three players - Ball, Hill, and Palumbo - were named NAIA Second Team All-Americans.
The Central Methodist women’s track and field program had a strong showing during the indoor season under fourth-year head coach Kenny Anderson. CMU was ranked as high as No. 4 in the USTFCCCA NAIA Indoor Ratings Index. Senior Dayana Montenegro made a splash during indoor, as she broke two program records at the Bearcat Invite at Northwest Missouri State, including the 600-yard run and the 400-meter dash. The previous record in the 400 was held for more than 20 years by Hairston Hall of Famer Daniela Georgieva. For her efforts, Montenegro was named both the Heart of America and NAIA National Track Athlete of the Week. Central posted a third-place finish at the Heart Indoor Championships, with junior Renee Finke being named Field Athlete of the Meet. Finke tallied 28 total points after winning both the pentathlon and the high jump, while also
earning a runner-up finish in the 60-meter hurdles. Additionally, she was named the USTFCCCA South Central Region Indoor Field Athlete of the Year. Coach Anderson was tabbed as the South Central Region Women’s Indoor Coach of the Year for the third straight season. At the NAIA National Championships in Brookings, S.D., the Eagles brought home seven All-Americans, including a pair of national runner-up finishes. Delaney Miller tied the school record in the high jump, clearing a height of 1.74 meters to place second, while Renee Finke finished sixth. Finke earned a second-place finish in the pentathlon with 3,701 total points, a new school record. Fellow junior Haley Bellamy placed seventh in the pentathlon to join in on the All-American honors. Baileigh Morris (5th – 5,000m racewalk), Karli Wolfe (7th – weight throw), and Dayana Montenegro (3rd –600m run) also earned All-America honors. At the conclusion of the meet, the Eagles posted a fifth-place finish in the team standings with 32.5 points. It is the highest known finish of any women’s indoor program in school history.
The Central Methodist baseball team won its second consecutive Heart of America regular season championship in 2024, a third title in the last four seasons. Central finished conference play with a 28-4 overall record to claim the regular season crown. Altogether, twelve Eagles earned Heart All-Conference honors, led by Heart Player of the Year Bobby Nichols. Head Coach Nate Breland ’06 was also named Coach of the Year for the fourth time in his career. Carlos Negron, Clayton Burke, Marcus Pritchard, and Tanner Sears joined Nichols as First Team All-Conference selections. Sebastian Escobar, Foster Seitz, Joseph Weatherford, David Soriano, and Jeremy Conforti were named to the second team, while Zeb Wede and Valentin Cerna Jr. earned an honorable mention nod. A highlight of the season was when senior Bobby Nichols became the all-time program record holder for career stolen bases, swiping his 112th career base against Benedictine College in mid-April. Nichols finished his CMU career with 115 stolen bases, a record that hadn’t been broken in more than 30 years. The Eagles earned the No. 2 seed in the Fayette bracket of the NAIA National Championship Opening Round. Their season came to an end with a 15-4 loss to Tabor on May 15, finishing the year with a 44-11 record.
The Central Methodist Men’s track and field program had a phenomenal spring showing in 2024. Central was consistently ranked in the South-Central Regional rankings and was ranked as high as No. 6 in the USTFCCCA National Rating Index. Central made a splash in postseason competition, as the Eagles won the Heart Men’s Outdoor Conference Championship in Baldwin City, Kan. on May 4. It marked the first conference championship for the men since 2011, when they won the indoor conference championship. Altogether the program produced five conference champions. Additionally, junior thrower Colder Evans was named the Heart Field Athlete of the Meet after winning the discus and placing fourth in the shot put and sixth in the hammer throw. Kenny Anderson was tabbed as the Heart Men’s Outdoor Conference Coach of the Year for the first time in his career. It marks his sixth Coach of the Year honor, as he has been recognized as the women’s indoor coach of the year (2021-23) and the women’s outdoor coach of the year in both 2021 and 2023. Central was represented by 11 athletes in 10 different events at the NAIA Outdoor National Championships in Marion, Ind. The Eagles produced three All-Americans at the national championship, led by Leroy Williams IV, who finished fourth in the 110m hurdles. Hunter Cary tallied 6353 total points in the decathlon to finish seventh, and Evans placed eighth in the discus with a throw of 49.96 meters.
The Central Methodist men’s track and field program finished fourth at the Heart of America Indoor Conference Championships the weekend of February 16-17. As a team, the Eagles tallied 106.5 total points, just 3.5 points shy of earning a podium spot. Central garnered four individual conference champions in Chris Adekoya (60-meter dash), Ethan Smith (heptathlon), Jaxon Hiser (pole vault), and Leroy Williams IV (60-meter hurdles). Highlighting the meet for the Eagles was Adekoya’s time of 6.71 seconds in the 60-meter dash, setting a new conference championship record in the event. The Eagles sent seven athletes to the Indoor National Championships in Brookings, S.D. on February 29 - March 2. Those national qualifiers included Adekoya (60-meter dash), Caleb Cody-Jackson (400-meter dash), Williams (60-meter hurdles), Exavier Coburn (3000-meter racewalk), Brayton Stephenson (shot put), Hunter Mont Cary (heptathlon), and Ethan Smith (heptathlon). Adekoya finished third in the finals of the 60m dash, clocking a time of 6.70 seconds to match his own school record. He earned All-America honors for the first time in his Eagle career with his performance.
The 2023-24 season saw several firsts for the men’s bowling team, as the Eagles participated in both Heart of America and NAIA competition for the first time. Senior Eric Moore highlighted the Eagles’ success, winning the program’s first ever individual championship at the NAIA Midwest Region Tournament on February 4 in Lawrence, Kan. For his efforts, Moore garnered the program’s first ever Heart Men’s Bowler of the Week award. Central concluded its season at the Heart of America Conference Championships February 24-25 in Topeka, Kan. Prior to competition, Moore was named the Heart Men’s Bowling Player and Newcomer of the Year after leading the conference in high average at 200.05 pins/game. He was also named a Heart First Team All-Conference selection. The men earned a seventh-place seeding entering match play, and would pull off a huge upset against No. 2 seeded Baker by scores of 220-199, 154-214, 180-141, and 161-137. CMU would ultimately fall to CulverStockton College and William Penn in the ensuing rounds to finish the tournament in fifth place.
CMU women’s wrestling had as many as six wrestlers ranked in their individual weight classes of the NAIA Coaches’ Top 20 poll throughout the ’23-’24 season. During postseason, the Eagles finished fifth in the Heart of America Conference Championships on February 24 in Oskaloosa, Iowa, including a pair of individual podium finishes. Junior Nonnie Justice finished as the conference runner-up at 130 pounds, while fellow junior Lillian Gough placed third at 136 pounds. The program sent three Eagles to the secondever NAIA National Championships in
The Central Methodist Eagle Envy Dance team posted a pair of top three finishes at the NDA National Championships the weekend of April 11-12 in Daytona Beach, Fla. Central placed second in the NAIA Jazz Division with a finals score of 84.28. In addition, CMU earned a third-place finish in the Spirit Rally Open division, posting a finals score of 85.9. Central also competed in the prelims of NAIA Hip Hop, finishing fifth.
The Central Methodist men’s wrestling team began its fifth season of competition at CMU under first-year head coach Graham Karwath in 2023-24. Central finished the year with a 9-8 dual record, their first winning dual record in program history. The Eagles were consistently receiving votes in the top 25 poll and had a number of individuals ranked in their respective weight classes. Central posted a sixth-place finish at the Heart of America Conference Championships in Oskaloosa, Iowa, highlighted by a second-place finish from senior James Griffin in the 157-pound weight class. The program sent four qualifiers to the national tournament in Park City, Kan. Freshman Roman Garcia and junior Cameron Cornman both earned All-America honors with fifthand eighth-place finishes, respectively. Garcia was also awarded the Manuel Gorriaran Memorial Award, given to the wrestler who has the most pins in the least amount of time for the tournament (three pins in 7:25).
The Central Methodist University co-ed competitive cheer team competed at the 2024 NCA National Championships April 12-13 in Daytona Beach, Fla. The Eagles competed in the Advanced Small Coed NAIA Division, which featured 11 different NAIA programs from around the country. After having the competition postponed that Thursday due to high winds at the Band Shell, Central got its opportunity to compete on Friday morning. CMU posted a preliminary score of 81.2, securing a fifth-place standing heading into the finals Saturday. The Eagles concluded the weekend with a finals score of 82.46 to finish sixth.
The Central Methodist STUNT team welcomed two other teams to Puckett Fieldhouse for the first-ever STUNT tournament at Central Methodist on March 9-10. The Eagles finished the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record against Southwest Baptist and Buena Vista University. Competing in three total tournaments during the spring season, the program finished 2023-24 with a 6-4 overall record and were ranked as No. 6 in the NAIA National rankings.
Tyler Molnar ’21
Cody Imbierowicz
The Central Methodist Esports season for 2023-24, under the leadership of Coach Tyler Molnar ’21, was highlighted by a conference championship for the Valorant team, which then went on to place eighth at the National Esports Collegiate Conferences championships. The Rocket League team also did well, placing fourth at the Heart of America Conference Championship Tournament. Individually, Elijah Korhammer earned Player of the Week honors in Rocket League following a 3-0 win over Missouri Valley College. Rocket League captain Gabriel Anderson was named second team All-Conference, while fellow Rocket League competitor Gregory Adams made the first team.
The Central Methodist women’s basketball team finished 2023-24 with a 13-16 overall record, including a 10-14 mark in the Heart of America Conference. Central clinched a spot in the Heart postseason tournament, where they saw their season come to an end against defending NAIA national champion Clarke University, 8067, in Dubuque, Iowa on February 28. The Eagles landed two members on Heart of America All-Conference teams, led by first team selection and Defensive Player of the Year Zutorya Cook. Cook was named the Defensive Player of the Year for the second straight season, in addition to landing a spot on the All-Defensive team. Senior forward B’Aunce Carter earned an Honorable Mention nod after averaging 14 points and 6.1 rebounds/game for the Eagles.
The Central Methodist men’s basketball team finished the year with a 19-10 overall record and a 15-9 mark in the Heart of America. Central opened the year with a perfect 14-0 record inside Puckett Fieldhouse, highlighted by a comeback win over rival Columbia College, 77-70, on November 10. CMU earned the No. 4 seed in the conference tournament and hosted No. 5 Peru State College in the quarterfinals. Peru would ultimately upset the Eagles en route to the tournament championship by a final score of 76-72. For their efforts in the regular season, five members of the team earned Heart All-Conference honors. TreVon Smith was named the Heart Newcomer of the Year and a first team selection. The trio of Everett Stubblefield, Trey Sinegal, and Peter Turay earned second team honors, while Isaiah May earned an honorable mention nod. In addition, May landed on the All-Defensive team.
Mechelle Vermillion
The Central Methodist men’s golf team competed under first year head coach Shannon Jeffrey ’95 in 2023-24. The men posted a pair of top-four finishes at the Culver-Stockton Fall Classic on October 16 and the William Woods Invitational at Railwood on April 9. In postseason play, the Eagles finished their season at the Heart of America Conference Championships in Moravia, Iowa on April 30. The men finished in 11th place, with Garrett Rikel leading the way as an individual with a 28th place finish.
Robert Hopper
During the 2023-24 season, the Central Methodist women’s golf team, under the guidance of first-year head coach Shannon Jeffrey ‘95, saw sophomore Mechelle Vermillion named Heart Women’s Golfer of the Week on October 23 following her second-place finish at the Culver-Stockton Fall Classic in Canton, Mo. In the spring, the Eagles secured a firstplace victory at the Missouri Valley Spring Invitational on April 15-16 in Marshall. Vermillion achieved a second-place individual finish, with teammates Karington Harrell, Kali Brown, and Lauren Williams also placing in the top 10. The team’s season concluded with a sixth-place finish at the Heart of America Conference Championships in Moravia, Iowa, where Vermillion was Central’s highest finisher, placing 15th with a three-round score of 247.
Beverly Bales Dometrorch ’72 was named the S&W District Supervisor of the Year 2023.
Terry Greiner Bentley ’ 72 received the Distinguished Citizen of the Year award from the Fayette Board of Education in May 2024.
Rebecca (DeWeese) Harbison ’77 was presented with the Distinguished Retiree award for Region 5 at the Missouri Retired Teachers Association convention in September 2023.
Kenny Wyatt ’84 was named the Boys Basketball Coach of the Year by KRES, the Lewis and Clark Conference, and Central Media. It was the sixth KRES Coach of the Year honor for Wyatt in his career, giving him the most all-time.
Allison Ross Brower ’85 was named the Education Supervisor of the Division of Youth Services, Northeast Region.
Kim Eaton ’90 retired from Daly
Elementary School after working for the Fayette School District for 24 years.
Roxana Porter Eckhoff ’91 retired from teaching at Warsaw South Elementary School in May.
Dr. Allicia (Young) Baum ’98 recently began working as the Director of the Counseling Center at Missouri State University in Springfield. The center provides mental health support and services to MSU students. Dr. Baum has been working as a licensed clinical psychologist in the Springfield area for more than 20 years and is excited about this new role and opportunity to serve on a university campus. She and her husband, Paul Baum ’98, reside in Ozark with their family.
Ryan Robertston ’01 was named the Central Media All-District Class 3 Boys Basketball Coach of the Year.
Stephanie Harman ’02 is the science department chair at Rock Bridge High School in Columbia.
Kyle J. Schroer ’02 is a social studies teacher, assistant football coach, and head middle school boys basketball coach with Montgomery County R-2 School District. He is starting his 23rd year in education.
Tony Vestal ’03 was named the Northeast Media All-District Class 4 and 5 Girls Basketball Coach of the Year. He was also announced as the new activities director for the Moberly School District.
Angela Robinson Williams ’06 is the minister with Willow Street Christian Church in Hannibal.
Billy Daleske ’08 is the Superintendent at South Shelby School District.
Sean Pridgeon ’08 received the Alumni Achievement Award from the University of Missouri Sinclair School of Nursing. He was recognized for his work creating and implementing the vision of the professional nurse at MU Health Care.
Nancy Sikobe ’08 is the head volleyball coach with Florida Memorial University.
Rebecca “Becki” Kempf ’09 received the Central Region Assistant Principal Award for her work as the assistant principal of Morgan County R-II School District.
Michael Brooks, Jr. ’09 is the girls basketball coach with Kennedy Catholic High School.
Moses Harper ’10 is the head football coach for the Blue Tigers at Lincoln University.
Chris Sander ’10 will be the new athletic director and assistant principal for the Westran School District.
Ross Dobson ’10 is the middle and high school principal for the New Franklin School District.
Aaron O’Laughlin ’11 will be the K-12 principal for the Marion County School District.
Charles “Chad” Hult ’11 has been named the varsity football coach at Versailles High School.
Luke O’Laughlin ’12 was named the Northeast Media All-District Class 3 Girls Basketball Coach of the Year.
CMU Esports Inspires Ashland UMC Program
An experience at last year’s UNITE Youth Conference has inspired a new program at Ashland United Methodist Church in St. Joseph. Under the leadership of youth ministries director Tom Keller, the church has begun an Esports program, growing from eight to 40 players in less than a year. Keller and other Ashland members “fell in love” with Esports while visiting Central Methodist University for the UNITE event, where alumnus and Esports coach Tyler Molnar ’21 gave tours of the CMU Esports facility on the Fayette square. The Ashland program plans to begin its first season in the fall and host a tournament next spring.
Stokes Pens Original Opera
Matthew Scott ’13 will be making his third trip to “Hutch,” as an assistant coach with Trinity Valley Community College men’s basketball team.
Paul Stevens ’15 is the new head coach for the Hallsville High School football team.
Mindy Raetz Vesperman ’16 is a nurse practitioner with Bothwell Employee Wellness Clinic.
DaSean Stokes ’17 gave a fundraising preview concert of his opera, “The Saturday Sorrow,” at Florida State University on May 8, after years of writing and composing and months of rehearsing. Stokes is currently pursuing a Master of Arts from FSU.
Crystal Wood ’17 is the founder of A Hand of Hope, which looks out for the needs of the unhoused in five counties. She founded the organization in May 2023.
Nicholas Franey ’17 is the tight end coach for Houston Christian University.
Daniel Stantforf ’19 is the Clinton High School wrestling head coach
and the strength and conditioning instructor.
Molly Lyons ’20 is the office manager for financial services with Commercial Trust Company.
Michael Andrew “Andy” Hoos ’21 earned the Certified Information Systems Auditor certification (CISA).
Courtney E. Owens ’21 was appointed to the Missouri Board of Nursing.
Jobe Edwards ’22 was assigned the conservation agent for Jackson County, Missouri.
Laura Riesenbeck ’22 is playing professional soccer with the Austrian team SK Sturm Graz, in the Frauen-Bundesliga.
Ezechiel Daos ’22 received the 2024-25 AAM Gerre Hancock Internship.
Brooke Teeter ’22 will be the new kindergarten teacher at Chillicothe Elementary School for the 202425 school year.
Seven years after graduating from the institution that helped him see himself represented on an opera stage for the first time, DaSean Stokes ’17 debuted his own original opera this spring. “The Saturday Sorrow,” written and composed by the CMU graduate, was shown in a preview concert at Florida State University on May 8. Stokes was inspired to follow his passion when he attended his first opera in Kansas City in 2015, seeing Black actor Gordon Hawkins play a role in Giacomo Puccini’s Tosca. The creator of the Central’s Got Talent scholarship competition at CMU, Stokes is now pursuing his Master of Arts at FSU and is well on his way to being an inspiration for the next generation in his own right.
Fayette resident Kathryn Dickey, age 92, passed away peacefully at the Lodge on April 19, 2024.
Kathryn Dickey was born Betty Kathryn Downey on January 23, 1932, in Tucson, Ariz. She was the last surviving of six children born to the late Ira and Rosalee (Alverson) Downey. Kathryn graduated from Tucson High School in 1951.
Kathryn’s family had lived in Howard County for three generations, but due to her mother’s health settled in Tucson during her
Jane H. Van Benthuysen ’41 of San Diego, Calif. died Oct. 5, 2022.
Helen Louise Schnoor Georgi ’42 of Murfreesboro, Tenn. died Apr. 30, 2024.
Dixie Holliday Nixdorf ’49 of Nacogdoches, Texas died Feb. 2, 2024.
Betty Jean Culbertson Stover ’49 of St. Joseph, Mo. died Jan. 28, 2024.
Mildred Higdon Bartee ’50 of Lexington, Mass. died Jan. 21, 2024.
Gordon E. Flesher ’50 of Halifax, Va. died Jan. 17, 2024.
Marion Sherman Cooley ’51 of Cincinnati, Ohio died Feb. 14, 2024.
William Edward Cooley ’51 of Cincinnati, Ohio died Nov. 25, 2023.
Dorsey Daniel Wallenmeyer ’51 of Scottsdale, Ariz. died Dec. 30, 2023.
Ronald N. Carter ’55 of St. Louis, Mo. died June 21, 2022.
Lynn Munger Miller ’55 of Greer, S.C. died Feb. 27, 2024.
Barbara L. Ackerman Conway ’56 of Maryland Heights, Mo. died Jan. 23, 2023.
Martha Amick Gebhardt ’57 of Glasgow, Mo. died Feb. 6, 2024.
Patricia R. Conz Poole ’57 of Wellsville, Mo. died Mar. 1, 2024.
John Cortes Tincher ’57 of Boonville, Mo. died Nov. 27, 2023.
childhood. Her father was in construction and built many of the houses on West Davis Street, including the family home, which is now the Baylor Farmhouse south of town. Due to the familial ties to the community, she visited family in Howard County often and during a short period attended high school. During such visits she began to be courted by Edward B. Dickey. The Dickey family were long-time friends of the family, and when Kathryn went back to Arizona, Ed followed her to Tucson.
On April 8, 1951, Kathryn married the love of her life, Edward B. Dickey, in Tucson, Ariz. The couple was happily married for nearly 57 years until Edward’s passing on March 1, 2008. Kathryn was a farmer’s wife and lived on the family farm on Route DD with her in-laws Ed and Mae, raising her two sons, tending to the animals, gardening, and doing the chores around the house. On top of being a farmer’s wife, Kathryn worked in the secretarial field for several institutions throughout her career. She started her career at the University of Missouri and later worked for Allied Chemical Co./Allied Services. Kathryn then settled in at Central Methodist College as a secretary to the dean, a job she held for 21 years, retiring in 1993. When she was able, Kathryn loved
Louise Painter Smith ’58 of Rolla, Mo. died Dec. 3, 2023.
George W. Sweet ’58 of Fayette, Mo. died Nov. 28, 2023.
Janet Drew Uhrmann ’58 of Melbourne, Fla. died May 23, 2023.
William Zimmerman ’58 of St. Louis, Mo. died Feb. 29, 2024.
Elaine Kidwell ’59 of St. Louis, Mo. died Feb. 14, 2024.
Dwight C. Look Jr. ’60 of Rolla, Mo. died Feb. 9, 2024. MaryAnna Hickman McNeel ’60 of Washington, Pa. died Dec. 7, 2023.
Charles J. Owens ’61 of Naperville, Ill. died Nov. 24, 2023.
Ronald Dale Kirk ’62 of Moberly, Mo. died Dec. 13, 2023.
Alexander Rahm Jr. ’62 of Manchester, Mo. died Feb. 11, 2024.
Carolyn Cates Fonteyn ’63 of Citrus Heights, Calif. died Dec. 15, 2022.
Mary Ann Grannemann ’63 of Wilmette, Ill. died Nov. 28, 2023.
Norman D. Walker ’63 of Warrensburg, Mo. died Jan. 14, 2024.
Linda S. Fick Brock ’64 of Arlington, Texas died July 6, 2022.
Jerry Allen Fletcher ’64 of Bloomington, Ill. died Jan. 20, 2024.
William Eugene Rohrer ’64 of ., Mo. died Dec. 1, 2023.
traveling to Europe, visiting her siblings in Tucson, and especially enjoyed time spent with her grandkids. When she wasn’t taking her grandchildren to various activities, she could be found in the garden, canning vegetables and jams, and tending to her geese, dogs, and cats. She enjoyed restoring furniture, traveling to craft fairs, and having lunch with “the girls.”
Survivors include her son, Jeffrey E. (Shelly) Dickey of Fayette; two grandchildren, Wendy (Robert) Cole of Fayette and Edward “Eddie” J. (Tabatha) Dickey, II of Hallsville; and four great-grandchildren, Mathias Cole, Emma Dickey, Micah Cole, and Weston Dickey. In addition to her husband and parents, Kathryn was preceded in death by her son, Edward B. Dickey, Jr., and five siblings, Mary Elizabeth Blassingame, Ira Vernon Downey, William Gates Downey, Dorothy Louise Bookman, and Ruth Mae Iaccino.
Visitation was held on Friday, April 26, 2024 at Friemonth-Freese Funeral Home in Fayette. A funeral service honoring her life was held on Saturday, April 27, 2024, at FriemonthFreese in Fayette, with Pastor Chris McGowan officiating. Interment followed at Walnut Ridge Cemetery.
Stephen E. Williams ’64 of Palmyra, Pa. died Apr. 3, 2024.
Roy Carraway ’65 of Flowery Branch, Ga. died Jun. 4, 2024.
Nancy C. Fortune Mitchell ’65 of Ballwin, Mo. died Jan. 16, 2024.
Francis Roesel ’66 of Falling Waters, W. Va. died Dec. 10, 2023.
Sharon Tschappler Beavers ’67 of Raleigh, N.C. died Sep. 28, 2023.
Gary K. Blakemore ’67 of Boonville, Mo. died Jan. 8, 2024.
Frank L. McKinzie ’67 of Wentzville, Mo. died Jan. 19, 2024.
Kent Alan Vick ’68 of Overland Park, Kan. died Feb. 19, 2024.
Kathleen A. Welton Bauer ’71 of Overland Park, Kan. died Mar. 29, 2024.
Dale R. Richard ’72 of Oak Grove, Mo. died Dec. 2, 2023.
Dan R. Brooks ’74 of Salisbury, Mo. died Apr. 24, 2024.
Marsha L. Rowlison Crawley ’74 of Haslet, Texas died Mar. 17, 2024.
Diane Schlotter Eggleston ’74 of Memphis, Mo. died Apr. 5, 2024.
Glen Arthur Lewis ’74 of Tyler, Texas died Sep. 11, 2023.
Judy M. Swift ’74 of Provo, Utah died Jan. 13, 2024.
Richard C. “Dick” Winegard departed this world on Sunday, May 19, 2024, at the age of 88.
He is survived by his wife Kathryn “Kay” (McCord) Winegard, two children, Renée Marie Winegard of Springfield and Richard Blair Winegard and his wife Lauren of Marshfield; eight grandchildren, Grant, Rachel, Derrick, Nikki, Alex, Ragan, Abby, and Ben; and six great-grandchildren Wrenly, Elise, Rorie, Axle, Charlie, and Sylvan.
Dick was born on March 28, 1936, to Clark Lewis and Rachel Matilda (Dancey) Winegard in Kossuth, Miss., their last and seventh child.
He is preceded in death by his parents; sisters Irma Koehler, Frances Schulte, Lorraine
Wilfred Lee Tolson ’75 of Columbia, Mo. died Apr. 23, 2024.
Paul D. Bruce ’76 of Jefferson City, Mo. died May 6, 2024.
Christy Goodwin Hangley ’77 of Sedalia, Mo. died Dec. 29, 2023.
Christopher J. Hindle ’85 of Mount Horeb, Wis. died July 23, 2023.
Hugh Montgomery ’85 of Augusta, Mo. died Dec. 17, 2023.
Kimberly Hendrix Green ’90 of Blackwater, Mo. died Dec. 27, 2023.
Howard Ross Asbury ’07 of Moberly, Mo. died May 13, 2024.
Adam Jeffrey Jennings ’09 of Festus, Mo. died Feb. 22, 2024.
Kelsey Lynn Christisen ’14 of Farmington, Mo. died Dec. 5, 2023.
Elliott; and brothers John, Gerry, and Wendell Winegard.
He graduated from Burlington High School, Burlington College (Associate in Arts), and Iowa Wesleyan College (Bachelor of Arts) and served in the United States Army, stationed in Taiwan. He was an active member of historic St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in Fayette.
Dr. Winegard received a Master of Arts and a Doctor of Philosophy from The University of Arkansas, there becoming a distinguished member of Phi Beta Kappa. He was a professor (emeritus) at Central Methodist College in Fayette from 1970 until his retirement in 2000, teaching classes such as grammar and English literature, of which his favorite was 18th century.
He had a love of reading and writing, singing and playing the piano (Mozart especially), staying physically fit, gardening, and home remodeling, but was extremely adept at sewing and tailoring. He taught himself to sew, making his daughter’s wedding dress and all his own suits, admitting to disposing of the first one. He liked to say to his children, “If you can read, you can do most anything.”
In 2018, he and Kay moved to Marshfield to be close to their children and grandchildren. His family will forever miss his wit, strength, and wisdom.
Contributions in memory of Dr. Winegard can be made to the Richard C. and Kathryn A. Winegard Scholarship through Central Methodist University or St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, both in Fayette.
Brian A. Ashcraft of Fayette, Mo. died May 2, 2024.
Sam W. Bornhauser of Columbia, Mo. died Dec. 13, 2023.
Kathryn D. Dickey of Fayette, Mo. died Apr. 19, 2024.
Mary C. Diehls of Fayette, Mo. died Feb. 4, 2024. Martha Becker Dimond of Fayette, Mo. died Jan. 16, 2024.
Newell S. Ferry III of New Franklin, Mo. died Dec. 5, 2023.
Sally A. Firestone of Kansas City, Mo. died Feb. 26, 2024.
Paul E. Haggard of Fayette, Mo. died Mar. 20, 2024.
Eldon L. Montgomery of New Franklin, Mo. died Feb. 4, 2024.
Ann S. Schafer of Fayette, Mo. died Apr. 5, 2024.
Patricia A. Smith of Springfield, Mo. died Apr. 8, 2024.
Carol V. Staten of Fayette, Mo. died Jan. 19, 2024.
Rodney Sweeney of Pilot Grove, Mo. died Mar. 19, 2024.
Richard Winegard of Marshfield, Mo. died May 19, 2024.
William “Bill” Zimmerman ‘58 of St. Louis, MO, died on Feb. 29, 2024. He was the husband of Beverly (Laidley) Zimmerman ‘60. While attending Central Methodist, he was the Captain of the football team, Class President, Student Body President, President of Beta Sigma, Homecoming King, and very active on campus. After graduating, he taught science at Fayette High School and coached football and track for six years. In 1965, he and his family moved to St. Louis, where he continued teaching chemistry at Mehlville High School, also coaching football, cross country, and track for 34 years. He was named Teacher of the Year in 1991 and retired in 1999. He is survived by his wife Beverly of nearly 65 years, his three daughters, Kara ‘84, Anne, and Jill, seven grandchildren, and many close friends and family.
Eldon Lyle Montgomery of New Franklin, passed away on February 4, 2024, at age 58.
Born in Kirksville, MO, on May 14, 1965, to Edgar and Rosemary Montgomery, Eldon married Heather Newell on July 9, 1994.
He graduated from Schuyler County High School in 1983 and was a member of Faith Family Church in Fayette. Eldon worked in construction and at Central Methodist University since 2012.
He enjoyed spending time with his family, gardening, hunting, and serving at the Fayette Food Pantry and New Franklin City Council. Eldon was a beloved “Papa” to many daycare kids and “adopted” grandkids.
He is survived by his wife, Heather; children, Isaac, Kendra (Kyle) Crowley, Angel (Chris), and Sara (Evan) Storjohann; siblings, Eugene (Robbie), Ellison (Roberta), Lila (Howard) Easley, and Linda (Lester); and grandchildren, Shaun, Sofia, Zoee, Ross, David, and Ivan.
A Celebration of Eldon’s life was held on February 17, 2024, at Faith Family Church.
CMU Day at Busch Stadium – May 9, 2024
CMU Day at Kauffman Stadium — May 5,2024
View more photos at: https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBpCoT
411 Central Methodist Square Fayette, MO 65248-1198
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