COLLEGE
FALL 2018 | GEORGETOWNCOLLEGE.EDU
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI BRING HONOR TO THEIR ALMA MATER
A message from the ALUMNI RELATIONS DIRECTOR Dear fellow Alumni, The fall semester is well underway. We’ve welcomed new and returning students to campus, celebrated homecoming, and enjoyed fall break. So many more activities lie ahead and it is wonderful to be part of it all. As we’ve come to appreciate, Georgetown College has produced thousands of successful alumni over the past 189 years. An integral part of this year’s homecoming festivities included presentation of Distinguished Alumni Awards recognizing four very deserving and talented graduates: Chris Hogan ’93, Melissa J. Hogan, JD ’95, Dr. T.C. Lackey ’97, and Chelsea Clarke ’07. I am
LAURA OWSLEY ‘92
honored to know each of these outstanding individuals and invite you to read PUBLISHER Jim Allison DESIGNER Kelsey Berry '11
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jim Allison, Jenny Elder, Robin Oldham ‘69, Jonathan Sands Wise PHOTOS Jim Allison, Paul Atkinson, Ken Parks, Richard Davis, H.K. Kingkade ‘83 FOR COMMENTS, QUESTIONS AND INFORMATION, CONTACT: Office of College Relations & Marketing 400 East College Street Georgetown, KY 40324-1696 502.863.7922 GC Magazine is published by the Georgetown College Office of College Relations & Marketing.
about their accomplishments in this issue of GC Magazine. Working at Georgetown College these past 13 years and now serving as Director of Alumni Relations I have had the opportunity to meet many students, faculty, staff, coaches, and alumni. There are so many heartwarming encounters. I invite you to read the wonderful story about how how the women’s soccer team brought joy and encouragement to a high school team that needed a boost early in its school year, thanks to efforts by GC alumna, Deana Mullins Caldwell ’93. In the past five years, I have seen a new level of alumni engagement for our beloved alma mater, and it has given me a renewed energy as well. Georgetown College has ongoing support from so many graduates and friends. A splendid example is that of Bob and Betty Lykins who continue to demonstrate their affection and dedication. Read their story in this issue, too. It takes each of us supporting GC every year to ensure that future generations of students enjoy the great Georgetown experience. Happy reading! Go Tigers! Laura Owsley ‘92
© Copyright Georgetown College, 2017 Director of Alumni Relations Georgetown College admits students regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, or age.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
With December 31 upon us, please consider making a gift to Georgetown College. In order to ensure that your gifts are processed before the 2018 tax deadline, we encourage you to complete your charitable giving before December 31, 2018. You can make your gift on our secure website, gogc.me/new. Thank you for helping to turn possibilities into reality.
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THIS ISSUE IS INTERACTIVE!
Click headlines to be taken directly to each story. Click the arrow to come back to the table of content.
GET SOCIAL Follow Georgetown College on your favorite social media networks.
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DR. GREENE ANNOUNCES IMPENDING DEPARTURE AS PRESIDENT
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GRADUATE BRIDGES PAST TO FUTURE WITH NEW GC LOGO DESIGN
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ONE CALL CHANGED IT ALL: BISHOP SCHOLAR ALUMNUS HAS BRIGHT FUTURE
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HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS FROM HONG KONG LEARN AMERICAN COLLEGE LIFE
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FAITHWAYS ACADEMY: CHANGING LIVES AND SERVING CHURCHES DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI BRING HONOR TO THEIR ALMA MATER
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‘MORE THAN A DEGREE’ - GC EXPERIENCE ATTRACTS EAST KENTUCKY SIBLINGS
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HONORS PROGRAM LEADS TO STUDENT’S LOVE FOR SCIENCE
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CELEBRATING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT, SERVICE TO COLLEGE COMMUNITY
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2018 HOMECOMING
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ADDITIONS TO THE GEORGETOWN COLLEGE LEADERSHIP TEAM
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NEW FACULTY
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GEORGETOWN COLLEGE RANKED #1 IN KENTUCKY FOR GRADUATES GETTING A JOB
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A DECADES-LONG LOVE AFFAIR WITH EACH OTHER, GC
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THE GC EXPERIENCE: WOMEN’S SOCCER OFFERS ENCOURAGMENT FOR OTHERS
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GC ATHLETICS
31
CLASS NOTES
33
IN MEMORIAM
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
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Dr. Greene announces impending departure aS president Sometimes, five years is more than just five years. Certainly Dr. Greene’s five years at Georgetown College feel that way to many people who love the college, from faculty, staff, and students to alumni and community members. After his arrival in October of 2013, Greene led efforts to clarify and strengthen the College’s mission as a quality Christian institution. During that time period, the College grew enrollment on the undergraduate and graduate levels, expanded academic programs, built endowment, and reduced indebtedness. Sadly, Dr. Greene’s oversight of the college’s growth will come to a close with the conclusion of the current academic year, as he announced in early September. In a message to the College’s staff, Dr. Greene stated, ““With every good wish for Georgetown College in the years ahead, personal and family considerations will soon draw me away.”
Retired judge David Knox, chair of the College’s Board
He continued, “Be assured that I am looking forward to
of Trustees, expressed both his sadness at Greene’s
leading the College through this academic year.”
departure and his gratitude for Greene’s years of service.
Fortunately, for as much as Dr. Greene has meant to Georgetown College, the growth that he has helped to build and mature will not end with his departure. New and expanded programs included the addition of a Principal preparation program in Graduate Education, as well as new
“Georgetown College has made remarkable progress the past five years under Dr. Greene’s leadership,” said Knox. “While we are saddened that he will depart the College next year, we look forward to his continued guidance this academic year. We cannot overemphasize what Dr. Greene
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
has meant to this College.”
undergraduate majors in sports administration, healthcare administration, social and criminal justice, and biomedical
The College’s provost, Dr. Rosemary Allen, commented
sciences, will allow for additional enrollment and value for
that Greene brought “the right experience and the right
GC’s students. The College also added new honors programs
character to the leadership of this College, at a time when
and expanded other curricular and extracurricular
it was needed.” She added that the result has been “the
programs to enrich the experience of undergraduate
construction of a solid foundation for future growth.”
students.
As Georgetown College begins its search for its
In addition, the College built relationships with alumni
25th president and prepares for its bicentennial in eleven
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and other donors, resulting in fundraising successes that
years, it will continue to build on that solid foundation as it
exceeded 10-year records and that significantly increased
pursues its mission “to prepare students to engage in their
the College’s assets. The “Love and Loyalty” initiative, so
life’s pursuits with thoughtfulness and skill by providing
well-known among alumni, saw their donation percentages
an exceptional educational experience in a vibrant
more than double over the course of five years.
Christian community.”
GRADUATE BRIDGES PAST TO FUTURE WITH NEW GC LOGO DESIGN History and tradition underpin the Georgetown
review, the choices were narrowed to three.
College brand. Recently, however, GC set about
These were then reviewed by focus groups
establishing a modern look for its logo, creating
comprised of prospective students, alumni,
a brandmark that would depict a direct link
faculty, staff, and trustees.
from heritage to future.
“Working on a brand identity is always
To guide the planning
challenging and rewarding,” said Betty,
and design, GC reached
“However, working on your alma mater’s brand
out to Betty Bone, Class
identity is full-on exhilarating. Getting to design
of 2000, owner of Betty
the Georgetown College brand identity was a
Bone Designs. “I love doing
dream. My time at Georgetown was so rich,
brand identities,” explains
filled with curiosity, learning, friendship, and
Betty. “But this brand
love. I wish words could explain what it means
identity project wasn’t just
to give something back; something I know has
a project, it was a labor of
the power to change perceptions and increase
love. I love that I could bring an expertise that started at Georgetown College back and use it to help my alma mater.”
value.” The new design reflects a direct link to the College’s heritage and communicates the strong
Betty, who earned a degree in graphic design
academic foundation on which the college was
from GC, worked tirelessly with the college’s
built and which it has maintained through its
marketing personnel and leadership team to
history.
create multiple designs. After an exhaustive
WHYGC ? COLUMBUS, OH Plans to major in Business Administration & Economics
A
“I chose Georgetown College because it was something different for me. I’d never been in Kentucky. Coming here, I was nervous, but I realized this college is better than expected. Once I got here, I got a proud sense of community. My visit here was one of the best; I would be lost and people would stop to help me. On top of that I would walk around campus and people would just say ‘hi’ to me and greet me. That was something I wasn’t used to, especially being from Columbus, Ohio. I was not used to people really interacting with you if they didn’t know you. One of the main things I love about the college is the care that faculty and professors take to get to know you and to help you in any way they can.”
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
QKHALA
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College who had established a relationship with alumni of the defunct Bishop College in Texas and developed a Bishop Scholars Legacy program at Georgetown. That phone call was what put Georgetown at the top of Spears’ list, he said. He accepted Dr. Crouch’s invitation to visit campus and was immediately impressed. “It just felt like home. It felt like I truly belonged at GC,” said Spears, adding that “Mrs. Robbi Barber and the other Bishop Scholars made me feel like this was the place for me.” Robbi Barber is Director of the Bishop Scholars Program. Spears enrolled, initially with the intent of majoring in marketing. But mid-way through his sophomore year, after working for a local insurance agent as an accounting assistant, he decided to switch to accounting. “I still liked marketing and I took classes that exposed me to it,” he commented, “but I felt being an accountant provided more stability.” Along with his studies, Spears immersed himself in
HIS GC EXPERIENCE PREPARED THIS BISHOP SCHOLAR FOR A BRIGHT FUTURE It was 2011. Fort Worth, Texas. Kenneth Spears, like many high school students, was looking at colleges, trying to choose the one that would be the best fit and benefit for his future. Imagine his surprise when he received a phone call from the president of a small, liberal arts college located in Georgetown, Kentucky. “Being called directly by the president of a college definitely stood out to me,” Spears commented via email recently. “It was not something many of my peers could say they experienced.” The caller was Bill Crouch, thenpresident of Georgetown
campus life. He was a Bishop Scholar, of course, but he was also involved with the Georgetown Activities Council (GAC), Ambassadors of Diversity, and the Strategic Planning Council. He served as a President’s Ambassador, worked in residence life, was a student worker in the Office of Institutional Advancement, and became student representative to the Board of Trustees. He also found time to play JV basketball. “When I envision a Bishop College Scholar at Georgetown College, Kenneth Spears comes to mind,” said Mrs. Barber. “Kenneth worked at a level of excellence in and out of the classroom. He prepared himself for every opportunity and that preparation opened many doors for him. He’s a great example of what a Bishop College Scholar at Georgetown College should be.” All of these involvements really gave him confidence, he said. “One of the biggest life skills I developed while at GC was the ability to network and really be comfortable talking to anyone. Being a President’s Ambassador and working in the Institutional Advancement office required me to really get out of my shell and talk to any and everybody, which became something of a knack for me.” After graduating from Georgetown College in 2015 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Accounting and Communication, Spears enrolled at Thurgood Marshall School of Law at Texas Southern University in Houston, Texas. From there, in May 2018, he earned his Doctor of Jurisprudence degree. He then completed the Texas bar exam in July 2018. Now, he has moved from Houston to Washington, D.C. where he is pursuing a Taxation LL.M. degree from Georgetown
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ABOUT THE BISHOP SCHOLARS PROGRAM University Law School. He is studying tax law right where the nation’s laws are made, interpreted, and enforced. Spears credits his time in Kentucky at Georgetown College with preparing him for his life’s pursuit.
The Bishop Scholars Program was established in 2007 through a unique and distinctive partnership between Georgetown College and the African American alumni pastors of Bishop College, which closed in the late 1980s. It provides opportunities and scholarships for students who are either descendants from or recommended by alumni of the former Texas school. Fifteen students are now enrolled
from freshman year to graduation, I think the biggest
as Bishop Scholars or Bishop Legacy Scholars. They are
change that I experienced was that my horizons were
pictured with Mrs. Barber, bottom right.
completely broadened in all aspects of life,” he said. “As an African American male coming from a large metropolitan city, going to a majority white school in relatively rural Kentucky was a culture shock for me. But in it, I learned to adapt to any situation life could throw at me which ultimately made me a better person. GC helped me be comfortable in any life situation.”
The Program provides numerous leadership and mentoring opportunities. In conjunction with the Graves Center for Calling and Career, GC’s career services office, future leaders hear leaders in various career fields describe their styles of leadership. Students also gain unique learning experiences and develop leadership skills by mentoring second and third grade students at a nearby elementary school, and each spring the Program sponsors an annual four-day
His future plans include establishing a sports and
Bishop Revival featuring alumni pastors of Bishop College as
entertainment tax law practice.
speakers.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
“Aside from the natural maturity that is common
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Communication and Media Studies; Ecology with Dr. Tim Griffith, Associate Professor of Biology; and Theatre with Mr. George McGee and Dr. Ed Smith, Professors of Theatre and Film and instructor Ms. Diana Hall. These classes introduced the Chinese students to a variety of American college courses of study. “Our teachers commented on what excellent students they were. It was a great experience for all involved,” enthused Dr. Hunt, Associate Professor of Spanish and Chair, Department of World Languages, who coordinates the Summer Experience program. “It is our hope that these high schoolers will consider going to college in the U.S., maybe even Georgetown, after participating in this program.” The students also received an introduction to business in the U.S. from Mr. Kelly McEuen ‘93, an international business expert, and received instruction for applying to college in the U.S. from Mr. Jeremiah Tudor, Dean of Admission at Georgetown College. Afternoons afforded students sightseeing opportunities throughout the beautiful Central Kentucky countryside and GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 7
A Georgetown College program known as the Georgetown Summer Experience gives international high school students exposure to small college life in the United States. In its second year, the 12-day summer experience in July welcomed 27 students and five teachers (pictured in the Ensor Learning Resource Center, above right, with Dr. Laura Hunt) from Hong Kong who took part in numerous activities both on- and offcampus. During the morning hours, students were engaged in classes taught by Georgetown College professors. Among the courses offered were Chemistry, led by Dr. Amanda Hughes, Visiting Assistant Professor of Chemistry; Communications with Dr. Susan Dummer, Associate Professor and Chair, Department of
included tours of horse farms, Toyota Motor Manufacturing, and Buffalo Trace Distillery, among others, along with a visit to Mammoth Cave, the world’s longest cave, and trips to the state capital and the City of Louisville waterfront, to mention but a few. Many of these excursions were relevant to the courses students had taken. For example, chemistry and business at Toyota and ecology at Mammoth Cave. Other off-campus activities included dining in the homes of professors and friends of the
college, visits with President and Mrs. Greene in their home, and numerous dining and recreational interactions with staff members. “They (the students) talked about how wonderful it was to meet pets and children and enjoy a meal in an American home,” commented Dr. Hunt. They also were able to enjoy a bonfire and a water balloon fight, she noted, saying those were “something many of the students had never experienced, and they loved being a part of those activities.” The two week Summer Experience concluded with a send-off dinner. Dr. Hunt described the students as “teary-eyed” as they talked about how warm and kind Americans are, and how they wished they could stay in Kentucky instead of returning to Hong Kong. “Several students said the experience ‘changed their life’,” she remarked. In an open email letter to members of the campus community who assisted with the project, Dr. Hunt, who, herself, received numerous well-deserved accolades for her leadership, wrote, “I would like to express my gratitude to the many people who made the summer camp for our students from Hong Kong a success. I know the folks at Georgetown College learned as much from this exchange as the students and teachers from overseas did. What a wonderful experience!” Photos may be viewed on Facebook at www.facebook.com/gcsummerexperience
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
SEVERAL STUDENTS SAID THE EXPERIENCE CHANGED THEIR LIFE
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FAITHWAYS ACADEMY :
CHANGING LIVES AND SERVING CHURCHES
In practice, this means that Andrew Noe, Director of the Faithways Academy since its founding, works hard to provide students both with meaningful classroom-like experiences, and with opportunities to practice what they are learning through communal worship and new experiences. Andrew believes that much of the value comes from sharing a variety of opportunities together: “Our classes, worship times, and field trips to local churches to hear what makes each denomination unique are all moments of learning and fun.” Like all Faithways Scholars, as the students are called, Austin took a Bible class from Pastor Tim Schindler of Georgetown Baptist Church, a theology course from Dr. Sheila Klopfer, chair of religion at Georgetown College, and a Church History course from Dr. John Inscore Essick, of the Baptist Seminary of Kentucky. Austin also chose two electives: a course on Worship taught by Ms. Elizabeth Sands Wise, and a course on Biblical Storytelling taught by Rev. Dr. Bryan Langlands, Campus Minister and a religion professor at Georgetown College. For each elective, students completed a final project that they Summer 2018 Faithways Academy participants pose on the steps of Giddings Hall with director Andrew Noe (top center) and student leaders. Austin Caldwell admits that he wasn’t real sure about the Faithways Academy camp when it began. “When I first got to Faithways,” he writes in an email, “I was thinking to myself this is not going to be for me, but I knew that God had given me that opportunity and I needed to take it.” It is a good thing that he GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 9
stuck it out, because Faithways, by his own account, changed his life.
could use in their home churches as well. For the Worship elective, for example, Austin created a worship brochure that details how all of worship reaches up in praise, reaches out in service, and reaches down as we bow before our Creator and Lord. Other students learned to retell a biblical story as a dynamic and interesting narrative, then returned and shared those narratives in their churches. Other electives, such as Supermen and Saviors, Young Adult Literature, and Advocacy, helped students to create different final projects. It was wonderful to see what the students created after their time together. As Dr. Klopfer says, “I can’t think of a better
A quiet and intelligent high school student, now in his senior
way to spend a week in the summer than with young people
year at North Laurel High School, Austin came to Faithways
like Austin!”
Academy in the summer of 2018 along with about 20 other students to study the Bible, Theology, and various elective courses of their choosing. Faithways Academy, Georgetown College’s High School Theological Institute, will be entering its third year in the summer of 2019. Founded with a grant from the Lilly Foundation, the goal of the Faithways Academy is to provide high school students a pre-college experience that enables them to reflect deeply on their faith in an academic setting and to explore their faith in the world.
The effects of attending Faithways are real and tangible. All participants this past year are eligible to receive a $10,000 scholarship to attend Georgetown College ($2,500 per year, for four years). As the VP of Enrollment, Dr. Jonathan Sands Wise, noted, “Students who attend the Faithways Academy are exactly the kind of students that excel at Georgetown College. They are looking for additional opportunities to grow mentally and spiritually, and that is what we will offer
STUDENTS ARE INVITED TO APPLY AT :
gogc.me/faithways
Applications now open, grades 9,10,11. them at GC through all of our classes, through our worship, and through wonderful programs like the Christian Scholars Program.” Even more important than the scholarship, though, is the effect that Faithways has on students’ lives. “I want to thank you for allowing me to have such a wonderful time at Faithways,”Caldwell wrote. “It gave me the
WEEK 1 JUNE 15-21, 2019 | $225 WEEK 2 JUNE 22-28, 2019 | $225
opportunity to dive deeper into my faith and allowed me to be able to come a little out of my ‘shell.’” “After Faithways,” Caldwell continued, “I began to be more and more active in my church: teaching classes and [helping] organize and run outreach events.” Caldwell, who attends Philpot Chapel Baptist Church in
QUESTIONS?
Contact Andrew Noe andrew_noe@georgetowncollege.edu
Laurel County, said that in the months since Faithways Academy he has been leading nursing home ministries, going out to different places as directed by his pastor to pray with people, and just be there to help them. Previously a two-week, on-campus, residential experience, Faithways Academy beginning next summer will be held as two single-week sessions accommodating a maximum of 46 students per week. This will give more students the opportunity to attend. The dates are June 15-21 and June 22-28. The cost for each one-week program is $225 per person. Interested students are encouraged to speak with their church leadership, as many churches are willing to fully sponsor or split the cost. Please help promote this great opportunity to any interested. Speak to the ministers at your church, encourage them to send us a student or two for this wonderful program, or ask them to contact Andrew Noe (Andrew_Noe@GeorgetownCollege.Edu) for more information. Additional information is available online as well: http://www.georgetowncollege.edu/faithwaysacademy “I believe that it if wasn’t for Faithways, none of this would have happened,” Caldwell concluded. “Thank you for allowing me to attend and for encouraging me to come back home and do work out in the community.”
WHYGC ?
LOUISVILLE, KY Plans to major in History “To be honest, I was not interested in going to Georgetown until the middle of my senior year when my mom, an alum of Georgetown College, said I had to tour. They say to choose the school you feel most at home at, and it wasn’t long after I stepped onto campus that I felt comfortable with the small and friendly atmosphere. I intend to go on to grad school to either become a curator in a museum or to become a teacher so I can share my love of history.”
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
current 9th to 11th graders you know who might be
Q SYDNEY A
10
After a son was diagnosed with Hunter
finance expert, were honored as Distinguished
Syndrome in 2009, MELISSA HOGAN, JD,
Alumni, as were T.C. Lackey II, DO, Class of
Class of 1995, left her career as a healthcare
1997, a surgeon and expert in the treatment
corporate lawyer and strategy consultant to
of varicose veins, and Chelsea Clarke, Class
focus on advancing awareness, education, and
of 2007, a senior manager with National
research in the Hunter Syndrome community.
Geographic. The recognition, established
The original founder of Project Alive, the
in 1953, is given annually to individuals who
lawyer, author, and speaker focused on issues
distinguish themselves professionally and
important to the rare disease community. She
through service to Georgetown College and the
now also serves as a Patient Representative for
greater community.
the Food and Drug Administration, an External Advisory Board member for the Mayo Clinic Social Media Network, and as a board member for several rare disease organizations.
CHRIS HOGAN, a former football Tiger, is now a bestselling author, personal finance expert, and America’s leading
Melissa was back on campus during
voice on retirement. His
Homecoming 2018 where she and her husband
book Retire Inspired: It’s Not an
Chris, Class of 1993, an author and personal
Age; It’s a Financial Number is
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 11
MELISSA HOGAN, JD, CLASS OF 1995
BROCK (LEFT) AND TYSON ACCEPT FOR THEIR DAD, CHRIS HOGAN, CLASS OF 1993
a number one national bestseller, and his podcast, now radio program, The Chris Hogan Show, has millions of downloads. A second book is due for release in January 2019. Chris is in high demand nationwide as a speaker; in fact, one of those commitments prevented him from accepting his award in person, but he did appear by video. Chris and Melissa have three sons, two of whom accepted on their dad’s behalf. DR. LACKEY, the only physician within a fivecounty radius certified to utilize VenaSeal, an alternative to surgical treatment for varicose veins, is a team member at Florida Lakes Surgical in Sebring, which is the only VenaSeal teaching facility in that state. He received the Award, “Resident of the Year,” in 2006 as well as Teaching Assistant of the Year in 2004 and 2005. He was named “Best Surgeon” in Highland County (Fla.) every year from 2010 to 2014, and “Best Doctor” in 2013. The former GC tennis athlete is married to GC alumna Kitty Hanson Lackey ‘97. They have six children. Two daughters are currently enrolled at Georgetown.
WHYGC ?
WILLIAMSTOWN, KY Undecided “I wanted to attend a small college, well-known for its academic rigor, that is close to home and that integrated faith and learning. And I wanted to play in the Tiger band because I am passionate about playing my euphonium and making music with new friends.”
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
University of Florida Exemplary Teaching
Q TYLER A
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CHELSEA CLARKE is a senior manager at National Geographic in Washington, D.C. Her role in project and operations leadership for over five years sets her apart as a trusted partner to the organization’s executive team. She has extreme international traveling experience to 30-plus countries, building positive relationships with diverse populations. The very proud Kentucky native was recently
Q A ALEXA
WHYGC ?
ASHLAND, KY Plans to major in Health Science
selected as a 2018 Baptist Joint Committee Fellow. In accepting their awards, each recipient expressed their appreciation to their professors for the solid academic foundation of their Georgetown College experience. “I’m much honored, so grateful, for my incredible time at GC and incredible professors and coaches,” commented Chris Hogan in the video. “They helped shape my thinking, helped me look at things critically.” Melissa Hogan, who met her future husband when both were on the debate team, said her undergraduate experience gave her the ability to communicate and
“I was attracted to GC the moment I stepped onto campus. It truly just felt like my home away from home. I chose to come to GC because of the faculty’s willingness to help me get here at any cost, which made me realize I was making the right choice. I believe by the time I finish my experience at Georgetown I will have grown into a better person ready to enter into the world working with God toward his intended path for me.”
connect with other people and to love and be loved. And, crediting the late Professor Dr. Keon Chi, she commented, “to this day I hear his admonishment to be thorough and the best you can be.” Dr. Lackey recalled that his science professors made the subject come alive and explained how he was taught to study, a skill he said he has tried to pass along to his daughters. “I went from being a decent student to number 1 or 2 in my medical school class,” he said, also expressing
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 13
T.C. LACKEY II, DO, CLASS OF 1997
CHELSEA CLARKE, CLASS OF 2007
appreciation for his foundation in the liberal
to think. And I was inspired to be a lifelong
arts, one “that enables me to bless thousands of
learner.” She credits that for inspiring her to
people every day.”
seek new opportunities and experiences “that
Citing his numerous campus opportunities,
continue to enrich my life and make me a better person.”
by all recipients when he said that almost
“The recognition is not just the College honoring
everyone had a common experience, developing
the recipients,” remarked President Dr. Greene,
a network of people, enjoying unique traditions,
“but it’s a matter of the College affirming the
and acquiring an amazing foundation for life
fact that these people have honored Georgetown
and career.
College with their lives and careers, making the
Chelsea Clarke spoke of how she was taught
world better and helping so many other people.”
to be resilient and persistent in pursuing
Honorees received an acknowledgment of the
her dreams and how, while being challenged
award for their personal display, and their
academically, she was nurtured spiritually
names along with all other Distinguished
and allowed to grow and change. “I was given
Alumni honorees are displayed prominently in
incredible opportunities to try new things,”
the entrance foyer of Giddings Hall.
she said. “I was taught how to think, not what
w a P
l l a H g n li
h 5t in
eries the s
Order online at
gogc.me/ornament $22 Each $3 shipping
Contact: Laura Owsley
Director of Alumni Relations
(502) 863-8007
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
Dr. Lackey summed up the feelings expressed
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GC A PERFECT MATCH FOR EASTERN KENTUCKY SIBLINGS Turner explained further that many of his relatives from eastern Kentucky were also graduates of Georgetown, citing cousins Derek Sword ‘08, Jacob Sword ‘11, and Tara Sword ‘12, as examples. “It was testimony from my family and their proven academic success plus Georgetown’s live-on-campus lifestyle and small class atmosphere that sold me,” he added. As an undergraduate, Turner quickly immersed himself in campus life. He joined Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity where he won Man of the Year honors, served two terms as president of the Student Government Association, was a student representatives to the Board of Trustees, and was an orientation leader, among other activities. He was also recognized by the College as Most Outstanding Student Leader. “I was often asked if I felt like Georgetown had prepared me for my future in Optometry school,” he said of his undergraduate years. “Honestly, I didn’t know what skills it took to succeed at that level, but (at UAB) I quickly found GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 15
out that what I learned at Georgetown helped me, because I was taught how to think and learn, how to be my own person with my own opinions and beliefs, and how to search for truth while pursuing them with all I had in me.” “I wanted a college experience, not just a degree,” declared alumnus Turner Altman with a broad smile. A 2017 graduate of Georgetown now in the second year at the School of
He added that the Georgetown experience helped develop his skills and abilities, thereby preparing him for success in professional school. “It made me a better, more self-aware,
Optometry at the University of Alabama – Birmingham, the
contributing citizen.”
Pikeville, Ky. native says he was first attracted to GC because,
That preparation has served him well, apparently. He has
“as a small town guy” he “valued living in a community where
been on the Dean’s list each of his semesters at Optometry
everyone knew each other.” He also wanted to be ‘away’ at
school and was elected by the student body as UAB’s
college but not too far from home.
American Optometric Student Association national trustee.
As one who also plans a career in health care, she says the strong student-professor relationship was primary. “This has been a key element during my application process for medical school as I have received so much advice and encouragement from all of my professors.” “Emily is such a lovely young woman. She always has a smile on her face,” said Tracy Livingston, Professor of Biology. “I think she will make a great physician one day – she is very intelligent, kind, and caring.” Like her brother, Emily has been active in many aspects of campus life. “I wanted to grow individually, academically, and become wellrounded,” she said. “I have gotten countless opportunities to do this by serving as an officer of the Student Government Association, my sorority, Kappa Delta, Alpha Lambda Delta Honors Society, Campus Outreach, and too many extracurricular activities to mention.” “She is a great example of a student leader,” added Dr. Livingston. Emily also serves as did Turner as the student representative to the Board of Trustees, is a In Turner’s junior year he was joined on campus by his sister
member of the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi,
Emily, who is now a senior and will graduate in 2019. She is
and a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, the
one of nine current GC students from Pike County in Eastern
national leadership honor society.
Kentucky.
“I feel like Georgetown has provided a great
“Georgetown stood out to me because everyone who attends
foundation as I prepare to move on to my next
this school has a unique experience, but each one loves it,”
stage of life,” said Emily. “Georgetown is a place I
Emily explained. “I just could not imagine myself at any
will forever be thankful for because it has been a
college other than Georgetown.”
major factor in making me who I am today.”
WHYGC ? LOUISA, KY
Plans a double major, Spanish and English
A
“When I first set foot on campus, there was an immediate sense of community. Everyone was encouraging and cooperating with each other. I chose Georgetown because I wanted to be part of that. I also loved that Georgetown emphasizes education for its own sake while you are here, but then works to set up job opportunities when you have to leave. I intend to double major in Spanish and English and minor in Religion, and I know that Georgetown will teach me both to master those subjects and to put them to use for the betterment of others.”
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
QCARRIE JO
16
Discovery: it’s what the college years are all about. Discovery of oneself, of one’s real interest, and of one’s possible future career. Cameron Kenner always had an interest in science. In the summer before he enrolled as a freshman, he took advantage of PEAMS, the pre-college academic experience in math and science summer camp at Georgetown College. At the time, he thought a pre-veterinarian program would be his career path, but soon he discovered that wasn’t his passion. Then he was introduced to the Science Honors Seminar led by Timothy Griffith, associate professor of biology, which, in turn, initially piqued Cameron’s interest in biochemical research. It wasn’t long before he was an honors student in the sciences, discovering the thrill of becoming a scientist. “I learned all about what science is and was able to dive into the reading of scientific literature. It helped me develop my love for science,” Cameron said. The Science Honors Program was formed in 2017 as a successor to the GCPALS (Georgetown College Program to Accelerate Learning in the Sciences) that was started in 2009 through grants from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Over the eight years of GCPALS’s existence, HHMI awarded two grants to Georgetown College totaling $2.4 million. “A significant component of these grants funded the Science Careers Seminar at that time. It brought visiting scientists to speak on campus and provided fellowship GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 17
support for student summer research,” explained Dr. Griffith. Describing GCPALS as tremendously successful, he said
SCIENCE HONORS PROGRAM PIQUES INTEREST IN SCIENTIFIC STUDY
that by the time the grants ended over 180 science majors at GC had received summer research funding. “Alumni from this program have gone on to graduate schools and careers in fields ranging from medicine to chemical and bioengineering to psychiatry to environmental management.” Georgetown College’s current Science Honors Program, established as the HHMI funding came to a close, is unique
“I CAN’T SAY ENOUGH ABOUT MY PROFESSORS AT GEORGETOWN. THE SCIENCE HONORS PROGRAM HAS HELPED ME DEVELOP MY LOVE FOR SCIENCE.”
Science Honors students like Cameron delve into science courses at Georgetown College with Honors Increments courses such as the ethics of stem cell research or field trips to study the natural history of Kentucky. They take a seminar class reading the cutting-edge scientific research – and meet the scientists who wrote these papers. “Cameron was one of nine students in our first Science Honors Seminar last fall,” said Dr. Griffith. “Even among this great group of students, his curiosity and enthusiasm stood out. I can’t think of very many students who discover they have passions for such diverse interests as the philosophy of science, biochemistry, and student outreach, but Cameron brings all of these interests together.”
in undergraduate science education. It provides
Looking to the future, Cameron said he hopes to
opportunities for a student to see the way scientific
one day have his own lab overseeing people doing
knowledge shapes the understanding of our world,
that kind of work. After developing those skills, he
enables a student to conduct original research just
ultimately hopes to become a professor helping
about anywhere in the country, and to share the
students in much the same way he credits Dr.
work with scientists across the country and around
Griffith and other professors with guiding him.
the world. The Science Honors Program now gives honors students with an interest in the sciences the opportunity to do summer research at the end of their junior year and use this research as the basis for their honors thesis. For Cameron, a junior from Frankfort, Ky., a Science Honors Program fellowship of $4,000 enabled him to spend a ten-week summer internship after his sophomore year working in the lab of Dr. Konstantin Korotkov in the University Of Kentucky Biochemistry Department. While that lab works mostly with X-Ray Crystallography, the project Cameron worked on was Novel Antitubercular Nanobody Synthesis.
“I was thrilled to hear about Cameron’s research over the summer,” added Dr. Griffith. “He has also talked about his research with current students in the Science Honors Seminar and he is a wonderfully engaged peer-leader for my section of freshman seminar with our newest Science Honors students.” Cameron’s enthusiasm for science is contagious and he is obviously most appreciative of a supportive faculty. “I can’t say enough about my professors at Georgetown. The Science Honors Program has helped me develop my love for science,” the future research scientist said. “Academic research, teaching, and trying to solve problems – it’s really where I want to spend the rest of my life.”
“This was just creating nanobodies that would prevent the bacteria that causes Tuberculosis from he explained. “The main processes we used to do this were Protein Expression, Protein Purification through liquid chromatography methods, and Differential Scanning Fluorimetry to test for binding and inhibiting ability.” Furthermore, “Getting samples to be tested, I learned a lot about tuberculosis and the bacterial resistance,” Cameron remarked. “I’ve come to understand that we must identify problems in the world and get ahead of diseases like this, so that we do not become complacent in how we treat them, allowing these bacteria to adapt.”
HOW TO APPLY: High School Students
can apply to the Science Honors Program during their senior year. Application information can be found online: www.georgetowncollege.edu/ academics/honors-programs. Academically strong GC freshmen who do well during their first year are also encouraged to join the program. Students with an interest in joining the Science Honors Program are encouraged to contact Dr. Tim Griffith (tgriffi0@ georgetowncollege.edu) or any of their science faculty.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
surviving and reproducing inside of the body,”
18
Academic Achievement, Service to College Community A spectacular spring day enhanced a joyous
for their dedication to
occasion on the lawn of Giddings Hall as
Christ and exemplary
the Georgetown College community came
service in His name.
together Saturday, May 12 to reward the accomplishments and impressive achievements of 171 graduating seniors earning Bachelor’s degrees and 99 Master of Arts in Education graduates.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
recognitions are named for outstanding individuals who
Special recognitions included presentation of
have been associated with the College through
the President’s Honor Award given to Ms. Jodi
the years. They are the George Walker Redding
DeJohn, a double major in biology and Spanish,
Faculty Award, the Kenneth Claiborne
and the Don and Chris Kerr Cawthorne Award
Fendley Staff Award, and the Norman and
for Excellence in Teaching which was presented
Martha Yocum Lytle Graduating Senior
to Dr. Sheila Klopfer, Professor and Chair,
Award.
Department of Religion.
19
The three annual
The 2018 Redding Award was
Since this was a combined undergraduate and
presented to Dr. Brad Hadaway,
graduate ceremony, an additional presentation
Professor of Philosophy. Recipient
was the Graduate Dean’s Honor Award. It went
of the Fendley Staff Award was
to Sarah Paige Sturgeon, a teacher in the Paris
Ms. Wanda McManus, a member
Kentucky public school system, recognizing her
of the College’s facilities staff
innovative approaches to teaching English as a
who retired on June 30. Two
second language.
graduating seniors were
Although Commencement is the main event of
honored as recipients of the
graduation weekend, the Baccalaureate service held on Friday evening in John L. Hill Chapel is a time for graduates and their families and friends to slow down, appreciate the moment, and let emotions come and go as they will. Each year an integral part of the Baccalaureate service is the presentation of three Christian Service Awards by the Marshall Center for Christian Ministry. The awards recognize selected members of the campus community
Lytle Award. They were Ms. Landry Jung, an art major from Corbin, and Ms. Jessica Rounce of Bowling Green, an accounting and Spanish major.
From left to right: Christian Service Awards. Dr. Brad Hadaway receives the 2018 Redding Award from Rev. Ken Holden, Ms. Wanda McManus, the Fendley Staff Award, and Rev. Dr. Bryan Langlands presents graduating seniors Landry Jung and Jessica Rounce with the Lytle Award.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 20 From left to right: Dr. Greene presents the President’s Honor Award to Jodi DeJohn, Dr. Sheila Klopfer receives the Cawthorne Award from Provost Dr. Rosemary Allen, and Sarah Paige Sturgeon receives the Graduate Dean’s Award from Dr. Joy Bowers-Campbell during Spring Commencement.
2018 HOMECOMING What a joyous gathering of former students, faculty, and staff on a weather-perfect weekend - generating a lasting feeling of pride and a renewal of nostalgia through wonderful recollections, stories, recognitions, performances, brunches, and athletics. View many more photos online at Facebook.com/GeorgetownCollege
Ben Martin and Maddie Fletcher, Homecoming King and Queen, with GC First Lady Carolyn and President M. Dwaine Greene
v
Ruth Meadors Bradley ’66, Bob Durham ’66, and Robin Singer Ison ‘67
Carolyn Hunter Keith ’69 and Delbert Keith ‘55
The Tigers touch The Rock out of respect for tradition, unity, brotherhood, honor, and pride.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 21
acham Duncan ’68, Carolyn Eubanks Hardison ’71, and Nancy Forgy Birdwhistell ‘68 Mina Blue Smith ’90 with her daughters and sister Kelsey Cottle ’18, Brittney Moshos ’17, Lisa Postell ’89 and current student Ellen Postell and Jordan Osborn ‘18
Howard Primous ’79 and
Professor Ed Smith ’88 visits with Jessie Pennington Brassfield ’09 and Ross Smith ’19
Mitch Deal, fiancé of Shelby Eden ’14 (MA ’16), Marsha Eden ’87, Mike Eden ’86, Katie Eden ’19
Kids Zone – Pony ride for the son of Andrew Adler, Director of Library Services.
Amanda Hutchinson ’91 and Rob Hutchinson ’88 with daughter Samantha, a current student.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 22
Lee McClain ‘79
Elaine Meacham Duncan ’68, Carolyn Eubanks Hardison ’71, and Nancy Forgy Birdwhistell ‘68
Zach White ’15, Rachel Rouse ’17, and Mary Stallard Rouse ‘14
ADDITIONS TO THE GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
LEADERSHIP TEAM
Georgetown College is pleased to introduce two new members of its leadership team: Curtis Sandberg, Ph.D., Dean of Students, and John Len Davis, Vice President of Development. Both bring years of expertise and leadership experience in all aspects of small, private, liberal arts college settings to their respective roles.
John Len Davis,
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 23
Curtis Sandberg, Ph.D.,
Vice President of Development
Dean of Students
Mr. Davis, a West Virginia native, comes
Dr. Sandberg grew up on a farm/ranch
to Georgetown College from Transylvania
in southwest Wyoming and attended the
University where, since January 2014, he
University of Wyoming for his undergraduate
was director of development and a major
and master’s degrees in Psychology and Public
gifts officer. Before that, he served in various
Administration with a graduate minor in
positions and as both a major gifts officer and
statistics. He earned a Ph.D. in the University
director of the annual fund at Berea College, his
of Kentucky’s Education Policies Studies and
alma mater.
Evaluation Program.
Q TIMOTHY A WHYGC ?
HARRODSBURG, KY Plans to major in Political Science “I chose Georgetown because of location and the amazing programs this place has and the persistence of the college to get me here. I think this will be a good school to come from for law school.”
He taught in Japan for three years and worked with the University of Wyoming’s TRIO and GEAR UP student preparation and support programs for a decade before becoming Director of Academic Services at Berea College, a position from which he comes to Georgetown.
THE GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
SCHOLARSHIP SERIES MARCH 29 | 8PM | JOHN L. HILL CHAPEL
SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER: STEVE HARTMAN, CBS NEWS For more information, please contact Tricia Gaetz, Director of Annual Gifts at patricia_gaetz@georgetowncollge.edu or (502) 863-8058 We are delighted
airs Fridays on the CBS Evening News and repeats on CBS
to welcome as our
Sunday Morning. “On the Road” is modeled after the long-
featured speaker
running series of the same name originally reported by one
for this inaugural
of America’s greatest TV storytellers, the late Charles Kuralt.
scholarship series Mr. Steve Hartman who has been a CBS News correspondent since 1998. He brings viewers moving stories from the extraordinary people he meets in his weekly feature segment “On the Road” -- which
Hartman has won dozens of prestigious broadcast journalism awards for his work. He has received an Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Award, three national Emmy awards and nine RTNDA/Edward R. Murrow awards, including a record seven citations for best writing. Watch for more detail on Mr. Hartman’s visit to Georgetown College in the weeks and months ahead.
NEW FACULTY Georgetown College is pleased to welcome four new faculty members. Pictured, left to right, are Kayla Steltenkamp, Ph.D., Ms. Lisa Padgett, Ms. Andrea Ratcliff, Eric Battaglioli, Ph.D. GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
Dr. Steltenkamp is Visiting Assistant Professor of Education. Her Ph.D. in Special Education is from Bellarmine University. She earned a Master’s in Special Education from Georgetown College. Her undergraduate degree in Elementary Education is from Transylvania University. Ms. Padgett is a Visiting Instructor of Education. She holds a Master’s in Education from the University of Kentucky. Her undergraduate degree in Education is from EKU. Ms. Ratcliff, Lecturer of Mathematics, earned her Master’s in Educational Leadership from Union College, and both MAT in Secondary/Middle Grades Mathematics and B.A. in Elementary Education with a Science Emphasis from Morehead State University.
Dr. Battaglioli is Visiting Assistant Professor of Biology. He earned his doctorate in Microbiology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His undergraduate degree in Molecular Biology is from Colgate University.
24
GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
RANKED #1 IN KENTUCKY FOR
GRADUATES GETTING A JOB
Using the latest data on job placement ratings for
of College and University Business Officers
colleges, the career-guidance site Zippia.com ranked
(NACUBO) confirms that a college education
Georgetown College the best college in Kentucky for
increases lifetime earnings by $1 million and
graduates “getting a job” after graduation. Using the
significantly increases retirement income. Data
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System
further suggests that college graduates have
(IPEDS), Zippia identified the college in each state
healthier lifestyles and healthier children, are more
with the highest listed job placement ratings.
likely to volunteer, vote, contribute to philanthropic
Georgetown College achieved a placement rate of
entities, pay more taxes, and experience lower
92.54%, ranking it #1 in Kentucky.
unemployment rates.
“The ranking confirms what we know about
“Georgetown College is more affordable than you
Georgetown College and the value of a liberal
think, and certainly more valuable,” confirmed
arts education,” stated President M. Dwaine
Jonathan Sands Wise, Vice President for Enrollment
Greene. “Students who come to Georgetown
Management at the College. “A college degree
receive an exceptional educational experience
remains one of the best investments a person can
that prepares them to communicate effectively
make in herself, and Georgetown College is an
and approach problem-solving with a breadth of
excellent place to get a broad and excellent Christian
insight. Employers value problem-solving and
education.” Sands Wise advises students and their
communication skills.”
families to contact the campus to find out exactly
Greene shared, “I love to tell people about the
what a Georgetown education will cost. “Then they
unique combinations of degrees Georgetown students receive, like one student who was a
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 25
will be able to make an informed decision regarding the potential return on their investment in a
Philosophy major and Biology minor, now serving
Georgetown College degree.”
as a vice-president at a bank. Or a student who
He continued, “The personal attention from our
majored in Chemistry and minored in Biology who
faculty and staff and the opportunities that every
went to law school and became a judge. These kinds
student is given to get internships in their field, to
of stories are the norm rather than the exception,
network with important professionals,
and they speak to the quality of education that
and to get career-ready skills, really
Georgetown provides.”
explains why our graduates are so
As families and prospective students contemplate
successful.”
the costs of education, there is much to consider. Research data provided by the National Association
Decades of Affection
FOR ONE ANOTHER, AND FOR GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
It’s a love affair dating back 58 years. Bob and Betty Bell
campus event – sports, concerts, alumni gatherings –
Lykins share a love that began on the campus of Georgetown
lending support with both time and treasure.
College. Not only is it love for one another as a couple but also love for the school that brought them together.
“We support GC because we believe God has a purpose for the College,” Bob explains, “and since we have been blessed
“GC is special to us because this is where we met, and
by the giving of past alumni and friends, we want to be a part
in December we will have been married for 57 years,”
of continuing that tradition so that young people will have
Betty said. “Faith, family, friends, and GC have been
the opportunity to receive a quality education in a Christian
the cornerstones of our life, and GC has been woven
setting.”
throughout.”
Betty added, “Alumni giving connects the students to the
Betty came to Georgetown College from the Logan/Mingo
past and the alumni to the future. It shows students that GC
Counties of West Virginia. “A friend recommended GC,” she
alums not only believe in the mission of Georgetown College
said. Bob is a Harrodsburg native who said getting a small
but also in the students and want to help them be successful
football scholarship from Coach Bob Davis brought him here
not only during their time at GC but also in their future
after a stint in the U.S Navy. And one day, they chuckled
endeavors.”
recently, holding hands, their eyes met in the cafeteria. A careful observer can still see the twinkle in their eyes.
There is a legacy to the Lykins’ story, too. Their two daughters attended GC in the 1980s. Lisa graduated in 1986 and went on to earn both a Master’s and Doctorate at the
year-career took the family to several towns through the
University of Kentucky. She is now Associate Professor of
Commonwealth where they were heavily involved in church
History at GC. Daughter Julie, a Hospice nurse, attended
and community activities, their hearts always remained
for four years and then earned a nursing degree from
loyal to Georgetown College. Bob retired in 1998 as a
EKU. Julie’s oldest son, Robert Maxwell Venables, is a 2018
Kentucky Utilities Company Regional Vice President.
graduate.
“GC was a wonderful experience for us. The Christian example of (then-President Robert and First Lady Millie) Dr. and Mrs. Mills, faculty, staff, and
“Our whole family has great love for Georgetown College,” said Betty. “Within a Christian environment, caring and dedicated faculty members are helping students broaden
other students had a very positive impact
their horizons, learn critical thinking, and reach their full
on our lives,” Bob remarked. “We also made
potential in order to meet the challenges of the future.”
wonderful friends while we were here.” That impression, their love for the institution, and those lifelong friendships bring Bob and Betty back to campus regularly. You will see them at just about every
Bob sums it up, thusly, “GC is always in our hearts and we are loyal Tigers.”
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
The couple left school in 1962. Even though Bob’s over thirty-
26
: E C N E I R E XP E S C R G E E H H T T O OR F T N E M E G A R U O C EN
At the beginning of the current school
GC’s team to travel to Irvine, Ky. to meet
field, tears came to my eyes. They were
year, when the Estill County High School
with the Estill County team prior to its
circling up with our girls and coaches to
girls’ soccer team needed a morale boost
afternoon game against Oneida Baptist
pray with them before the game.”
after losing its coach, Deana Mullins
Institute on Sat., Aug. 25. “I thought
Caldwell, the school’s psychologist, knew
that going down to a game to show
just where to turn. The 1993 Georgetown
our support in person would be a lot
College graduate contacted her alma
more meaningful,” commented Coach
mater and Sigma sorority sister Laura
Castleman.
Owsley, Director of Alumni Relations, to see if the GC women’s soccer team might GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
help lift her Estill County team’s spirits.
27
adding “I was blessed by her. And never
Deana said she was thinking of a poster, maybe a card. Within days of that initial call, Laura had Deana in touch with GC women’s soccer coach Leah Castleman. Of her request, Coach Castleman replied, “Oh, we can do better than that!” recounted Deana, prouder to be a Tiger.” Right away, plans were formulated for
But there was more. GC’s soccer team members learned Estill cheers and rallied everyone on the sidelines to cheer with them. Deana recalled “They brought their own homemade posters
That caring nature is but one example
and held them on the sidelines yelling
of what is often referred to as the
encouragement for individual players by
Georgetown College experience –
name on the field.”
outreach to those in need, whatever the situation may be.
Though GC’s women’s soccer team had to leave before the Estill County game
In recapping the day, Deana remarked,
ended in order to get back to Georgetown
“As I pulled into the ECHS parking lot and
for its own game in the evening, they left
saw two Georgetown College buses, I was
behind, in Deana’s words, “a bit of hope
overcome with pride and emotion that
and sunshine.”
my alma mater would selflessly invest so much of themselves and their resources into our girls’ soccer team in Estill County. As I walked down the hill to the
And how did the game end? Estill County won, 5-0.
MEN’S TENNIS A.J. Berk Philipp Hoeper Isaac Mathis Cole McCreary Tristan Nosek WOMEN’S TENNIS Katie Eden Lauren Fazenbaker Natalie Fiepke Shae Henry Madelyn Kauffman Amanda Moore Emily Novak MEN’S GOLF Michael Brown Patrick Oakley Trey Ogle WOMEN’S GOLF Baylee Salyers Tatum Wessling MEN’S TRACK & FIELD Austin Hamlett Austin Keene Erick Mills Grant Carr Rodnee Little WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD Courtney Lee Haley Carr Haley Oliver Jaycey Kendall Karina Egger Lucy Berlanga Stevie Ogburn Tori Hafner
MEN’S BASKETBALL Shadell Millinghaus Quan Poindexter Troy Steward CHEERLEADING Macey Mckenzie Leah Pederson Taylor Roy Sarah Weiner LACROSSE Avery Blackmon Katherine Leighty Olivia Archer Doreen Brabble Christina Kennedy BASEBALL Shawn Dubin Chris Gilbody Sean Williams John Shattles Tyler Wagner SOFTBALL Chaselyn Allgeier Kara Howard Hannah Morton Cassidy Janes Alli Watson MEN’S TENNIS Ryo Takeda Tristan Nosek WOMEN’S TENNIS Lauren Fazenbaker Shae Henry Madelyn Kauffman Amanda Moore MEN’S GOLF Kaleb Lester Conor Taylor Drake Stepter MEN’S TRACK & FIELD Jordan Hampton Austin Hamlett Austin Keene Erick Mills Grant Carr Ben Peterson WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD Lucy Berlanga
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Martina Lytle LACROSSE Laura Cuseo Taylor Irwin Rachel Kidwell BASEBALL Ryan Garner Chris Gilbody Larkin Heldt Taylor Morris Jake Purkins Sean Williams SOFTBALL Cassidy Janes MEN’S TENNIS A.J. Berk Cole McCreary Tristan Nosek WOMEN’S TENNIS Shae Henry Emily Novak MEN’S TRACK & FIELD Grant Carr Austin Keene WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD Haley Oliver Karina Egger Lucy Berlanga
ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAM
CONFERENCE ALL-ACADEMIC
MEN’S BASKETBALL Shadell Millinghaus WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Anna Arrastia Shelby Beam Kaci Currens Kennedy Flynn Leslie Fries Lydia Graves Hailey Ison Dasia Kilbourne Martina Lytle CHEERLEADING Josh Brodzik Shelby Douthett Grace Greenwell Holly House Jerryn Jones Leah Pederson Ellen Postel Breanna Ragland Taylor Roy Becca Slagle Aubrey Walter Madi Webster Abby Wheeler LACROSSE Avery Blackmon Laura Cuseo Taylor Irwin Christina Kennedy Rachel Kidwell Katherine Leighty Selena Marino Claire Oyler Sara Shawver BASEBALL Chase Ambrose Kyle Fieger Ryan Garner Chris Gilbody Larkin Heldt Jeremiah Johnson Rodnee Little Taylor Morris Jake Purkins Ben Robison Sean Williams SOFTBALL Kara Howard Hannah Howes Cassidy Janes Loren Roby Alli Watson
NAIA SCHOLAR ATHLETE
ALL-AMERICAN
WINTER & SPRING ACCOLADES
MEN’S BASKETBALL Shadell Millinghaus Quan Poindexter Troy Steward LACROSSE Avery Blackmon Katherine Leighty SOFTBALL Kara Howard Chaselyn Allgeier
28
GC ATHLETICS
WOMEN’S GOLF Georgetown College women’s golf team was a youthful bunch for second year coach Marlene Schulte, but
MEN’S TRACK & FIELD
the Tiger alumnae was pleased
Georgetown College men’s track and field excelled through very difficult weather conditions this past spring: Four school records were
with the growth her team showed. Schulte feels confident that Baylee Salyers, one of the best players in the MSC, and Mary Catherine Borders will
set: pole vault (Jordan Hampton),
guide Georgetown in the upcoming year, which also sees
5,000 meter walk race (Ben
the return of Jordan Frodge.
Peterson), 3,000 meter run (Justin Tavner), and shot put (Ben Jackson). Jordan Hampton won the MSC Championship pole vault, coming just shy of a national standard.
MEN’S GOLF Tigers finished first twice, second once, and third twice, and improved from last in the MSC spring
WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD
championships a season ago to fourth. Third year coach Austin
Despite having zero two-day meets until the three-day Mid-South Conference Championship in late
Sparks was voted MSC Coach of the Year.
April due to crazy weather, two women qualified for nationals and six new school records were set: shot, discus, and hammer (Maggie Mollak), high jump (Emma Bianchi),
BASEBALL Record: 30-22, including 13-4 in the final weeks
3,000 meter run (Jodie Smith), and long jump (Sydney
Result: One game from the MSC
Jones). Mollak and Bianchi each showed well at their
championship series
first NAIA National Championship Meet in late May.
Georgetown College baseball had
Haley Oliver was named MSC Champion of Character, as voted on by the league athletic directors.
a strong start to the season, was slowed by inconsistent play due to weather conditions, but finished strong; this makes six of the past seven seasons with 30-plus wins. Highlighting the postseason accolades was the Houston Astros drafting senior pitcher Shawn Dubin, MSC Pitcher of the Year, with the 13th round pick.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 29
SOFTBALL Record: 34-17 Result: Runner-up in MSC tournament Georgetown College softball had an exciting season, challenging many top-level opponents and making some noise in postseason play. Corrin Robinson and Cassidy Janes both earned Gold Glove awards. Chaselyn Allgeier, Kara Howard and Hannah Morton were NFCA All-Region honorees.
ARCHERY
ACRO & TUMBLING
Georgetown College added archery
Acro and Tumbling continued to show
for the 2017-18 year and under the
improvement in this nationally
direction of coach Jimmy Dummer
growing sport as coach Alicia
had a good first year. The season is
Castagneto and her team enter
divided into three different parts –
their third year. The Tigers had
fall, winter, and spring – with three
historic moments, winning two
different national tournaments. Fall and winter served as learning
events inside a meet with Adrian College.
curves and the team showed well at the spring regional meet – picking up the program’s first win. Tigers Tyler Dummer, Mika Gray, and Gabrielle Combs competed in the men’s team bowhunter event and beat University of
WOMEN’S TENNIS Record: 11-7
Pikeville for the bronze medal. Coming off this success, the team is hopeful for the second season.
Georgetown College women’s tennis rallied from a rocky start, stringing eight wins together and
MEN’S TENNIS Record: 6-12 The Tigers showed great mental toughness through a difficult, rainy spring, finishing with six wins, including several dominating victories. Tristan Nosek was honored as the Mid-South Conference
finished 11-7. Three of those losses came to teams ranked or receiving votes and all by one point, 5-4. A bounce here or there in any of those matches and the Tigers easily could have been 14-4.
LACROSSE Record: 11-8
Champion of Character, as voted on by the league
Result: finished the year ranked
athletic directors.
sixth, advanced to fourth national tournament
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Record: 8-22 (Home: 6-7) Result: 7th in MSC Former men’s assistant James Jackson took over the reins in April of 2017 and with a large
Georgetown College lacrosse shied away from nothing, playing 14 of its 19 games against teams ranked or receiving votes, and 10 against teams ranked at the time inside the top ten for women’s lacrosse. Avery Blackmon was AAC Offensive Player of the Year.
returning group continues to
CHEERLEADING
MEN’S BASKETBALL Record: 27-7 (Home: 20-2) Result: 2nd in MSC, advanced to
Georgetown College competed for
NAIA quarterfinals
the first time in the Mid-South Conference Championships in
Georgetown College men’s
Pikeville, Ky. setting the bar high
basketball continued its tradition of trips to the NAIA
for all to follow with a close third-
National Tournament with its
place finish. GC finished second in the all-girls and mixed group results; the co-ed squad of Leah Pederson and Alex Hughes won that division.
27th consecutive and 37th overall, both national records. Shadell Millinghaus was also MSC CoPlayer of the Year.
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
slowly make the transition to his system.
30
Class Notes APRIL
1
-
S E P T.
30,
2018
1971 |
Joseph L. Price, Ph.D., has released a 400 page baseball memoir, Perfect Pitch – The National Anthem for the National Pastime (Mercer University Press, March 2018). He is the Genevieve Shaul Connick Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at Whittier College and co-director, Institute for Baseball Studies.
1979 | Mike Williams has retired as associate
pastor/administrator after 30 years at Lone Oak First Baptist Church in Paducah.
1981 | Sarah “Bookie” Hayes Wilson of the
Woodford County Library has received the 2018 Kentucky Library Association award for outstanding community library service.
1986 | Mike Eden has been nominated into the
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018 31
Kentucky Tennis Hall of Fame. He currently serves as Vice President on the United States Tennis Association (USTA) Kentucky Board of Directors, chair of the Marketing Committee, and serves on a Southern Section committee and subcommittee. The induction ceremony is scheduled for January in Louisville.
1987 (M.A. Education, 1998)
Allison Bell of the Education Professional Standards Board (EPSB) received the Friends of Education Award from Kentucky Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (KACTE) during its 2018 annual conference.
1993 |
Matt Collinsworth is interim executive director of the Lexington Art League.
1995 | James Koeppe, director of campus
recreation at the University of Illinois Springfield, is the winner of the school’s 15th annual Chancellor’s Academic Professional Excellence (CAPE) Award. Koeppe was instrumental in starting the new UIS Rising Stars Program for new university employees. Jason A. Springs, Ph.D., associate professor of Religion, Ethics, and Peace Studies in the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame, has released his latest book: Healthy Conflict in Contemporary American Society (Cambridge University Press, April 2018).
1996 |
Rebecca (Beckie) Rasdall Stobaugh, Ph.D., associate professor in the Western Kentucky University School of Teacher Education Department, has been selected by WKU’s College of Education and Behavioral Sciences to receive the department’s Public Service Award. WKU annually recognizes outstanding contributions by faculty members in the areas of teaching, research/creativity, public service, student advisement, and part-time teaching. Daniel Lockwood has been hired as principal at Marion County Middle School in Lebanon, Ky. Lockwood joins Marion County Public Schools after working at the Department of Education as a Leadership Development Specialist where he supported principals and assistant principals from around the state. Before that, he was the principal at East Hardin Middle School in Hardin County for six years. Randy Phillips has been selected as the ‘voice’ of Mercer County Boys Basketball. He will be the public address announcer for the Titans.
1997 | Dana Adamson has been promoted to
senior vice president of marketing for Traditional Bank in Lexington with oversight of the bank’s marketing and training departments. She joined Traditional Bank in 2003. She is also a graduate of the American Bankers Association School of Bank Marketing & Management. She achieved a certified financial marketing professional designation from the Institute of Certified Bankers.
1998 |
Jeremy Reiss joined a San Francisco startup named Crew as Senior Visual Designer. He completed five years with the social media company Twitter. He, his wife Amanda, and their children continue to reside in the Bay area.
Angie College has been promoted to Senior Vice President, Operations, for Adecco, the worldwide global staffing leader. She has served in various positions since joining Adecco in 2012.
2002 | Covington Catholic head football coach
Eddie Eviston has received the 2017 Cincinnati Bengals Paul Brown Excellence in Coaching Award. The former standout quarterback for the GC Tigers is in his fourth season at CovCath after leading the Colonels to their first-ever undefeated season and their first state title in 11 seasons.
2003 | U.S. Army Captain Jason A. Reinhardt, a
former band scholar, has assumed command of the 8th Army Headquarters Supply Company at Camp Humphreys, South Korea.
Eli Barber has been named Citizens Commerce Bank’s CFO and COO. He has been employed with Citizens Commerce in a variety of roles since 2003. He has a bachelor of business administration degree with an emphasis in finance from Georgetown College, as well as a master’s of business administration from UK. Barber was named an emerging leader by the Kentucky Bankers Association in 2016. Experienced litigator Laura L. Mays, nee Morgan, has joined Steptoe & Johnson’s Lexington office. Her practice will focus on general litigation as well as labor and employment. After GC, she earned her law degree from the University of Kentucky.
2004 | Seth Adam Faulkner has been named
principal at Mason County High School. He previously was vice principal and before that taught math.
2006 |
Kara Hellman has been named head women’s volleyball coach at Urbana University. As an undergraduate, the Louisville native produced an AllAmerican playing career for the Tigers. Davonna (Hobbs) Saier, MHA, is now Community Relations Director at Highgrove Senior Living in Lexington.
2008 | Rachel Thomas and J.W. Brown married
Jan. 6 in Lexington. She is a pediatrician; he is a territory sales manager.
2011 |
Pikeville, Ky. native Jacob L. Sword, DMD, MDS, has joined Hartsock Orthodontics in that city as an associate orthodontist. Sword and his wife, Kaitlin (Johnson) Sword, also Class of 2011, have two daughters.
2012 |
The Rotaract Club of Lexington’s 2018-19 executive committee includes Brandon Gardner, treasurer. Gardner is a tax supervisor at MCM CPAs & Advisors, LLP in Lexington. He is a 2012 graduate of Georgetown College and a 2013 graduate of the University Of Kentucky Von Allmen School Of Accountancy. The Rotaract Club of Lexington is a nonprofit organization of professionals and students ages 21 to 35 who are committed to service, leadership, and professional development within the community.
2013 | Mallory Johnson joined Benchmark Family Services in Georgetown in April as a Therapeutic Support Specialist.
2014 |
John Hunter has joined Coldwell Banker Rogers Realty in Shelbyville as a Realtor. The Shelby County native competed on the baseball, golf, and fishing teams as an undergraduate. Upon graduation, he qualified to compete in the highest level of professional fishing, the ESPN televised Bassmaster Elite Series and is one of 100 in the world on this tournament series.
2017 |
Robyn Vickers Armstrong is now an Edward Jones Financial Advisor. She has partnered with her father, David Vickers, at his office in London, Ky. where she lives with her husband Jesse and their son Jack.
Emilie Ziese is in her first year as a graduate assistant coach for the Peru State College (Nebraska) women’s basketball program.
2005 | Rachel Stone Lowdenback, DO, was
Daniel Orr has joined Cecilian Bank in Elizabethtown as a Graphic Designer.
voted the 2018 Best Pediatrician by The Paducah Sun Readers’ Choice Awards.
2018 |
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
Tabetha Housekeeper has been named principal of Lemons Mill Elementary School in Georgetown. She most recently served as assistant principal of the school where she was a teacher for five years. Previously she was a teacher at Georgetown’s Anne Mason Elementary School. She holds a bachelor’s degree in elementary education and a master’s degree (2011) in learning and behavioral disabilities, both from Georgetown College, and Rank I certification in principal leadership from Asbury University.
Jim Mercke has been promoted to Plant Engineering Region Environmental Manager for UPS Supply Chain Solutions, effective June 1.
32
In Memoriam
1981-1988. She was a member of First Baptist Church of Mount Sterling, KY and a former vice president of the Montgomery County Education Foundation and a charter member of the Montgomery County Humane Society.
EDDIE FIELDS | ‘57 Eddie Wehrmeyer Fields ’57 passed away January 4, 2018 in
DR. BEN ELROD, GC’S 21ST PRESIDENT
Loveland, OH.
Dr. Ben M. Elrod, who served as
Student Union and the Georgetonian staff. She was selected
president of Georgetown College from 1978-83 passed away August 7, 2018. He was 87.
While a student at Georgetown, she was a member of Baptist Miss Belle of the Blue in 1956. Eddie and her late husband Bob ’57 had served as missionaries with the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. They
Dr. Elrod, an ordained minister, had
later were co-directors of cleftRock, a Christian retreat
served as president of Oakland City
center in Mount Vernon, Kentucky. She was a member of
College in Indiana, and as vice president
First Baptist Church, London, KY.
for development at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkansas prior to accepting the presidency at Georgetown. He also was president of the Independent Colleges and Universities of Arkansas and president of the Association of Southern Baptist Colleges and Schools.
RACHEL KING | ’57 Rachel King, a 1957 graduate of Georgetown College and former trustee at the school, passed away March 25, 2018 at her home in Lexington. A native of Virginia, Mrs. King worked at the University of Kentucky following her
He was named president of Ouachita Baptist University in
graduation from Georgetown. She later was a homemaker for
1988, a position he held until 1998. He was named chancellor
several years before becoming president of R. King Trucking
of Ouachita Baptist University following his retirement as
in the 1980s. She was a member of the Woman’s Association
president of the school.
of Georgetown College. Mrs. King was an active member
Dr. Elrod is survived by his wife of 67 years, a daughter and a son, four grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
DR. CHARLIE BOEHMS Dr. Charlie Boehms, former professor of biology, vice president of academic affairs and provost at Georgetown College, passed away at his residence October 19, 2017. A native of Whites Creek, TN, Dr. Boehms was a veteran of the Korean War. He was inspired to become a teacher after meeting a Navy shipmate who was illiterate. He studied to become a teacher at Peabody College where he would complete his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. He earned the PH. D. at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. After teaching at Austin Peay University, Dr. Boehms joined
of Lexington’s Calvary Baptist Church, where she taught Sunday school to third graders for more than 30 years, served on the finance committee, was chair of the Nurture Committee, and was part of the founding committee that established the Calvary’s Women’s Ministry in 2008. Mrs. King was married to her husband, Lawson King, for more than 60 years. Mr. King passed away on March 10, 2018.
FRANK RICKMAN SNYDER, II | ’88 Frank Rickman Snyder, II. ’88 passed away August 28 in Georgetown. He was the son of Ruth Wineland Snyder and the late Frank Snyder, both Georgetown graduates. Frank was a business major and a member of Kappa Alpha. He had been an assistant customer service manager at Kroger in
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
Georgetown for several years.
the biology faculty at Georgetown College. He later was
33
In addition to his wife of 65 years, Dr. Boehms is survived by
Seminary in Louisville. Following his years at Georgetown,
two children and five grandchildren.
Dr. Yarbrough moved to Nashville where he served as the
named vice president of academic affairs and provost at
DR. GLENN YARBROUGH
Georgetown. While at Georgetown, he helped develop a
Dr. Glenn Yarbrough, Director of the Baptist Student Union
student exchange program.
at Georgetown College in the late 1950s and 60s, passed away
Following retirement, Dr. Boehms and his wife, Sammye, returned to Clarksville, TN. The Boehms were active members of Hillsdale United Methodist Church.
SUSAN CARRINGTON Susan Carrington, 100, passed away August 14, 2018. Mrs. Carrington served as a Georgetown College Trustee from
June 29, 2018. He was 94. Dr. Yarbrough was a graduate of Southern Illinois University. He earned a doctorate from Southern Baptist Theological
state director for Baptist Student Unions in Tennessee. He was a longtime member of First Baptist Church in Nashville where he was Sunday school teacher and deacon.
1940
Alma Winona Gatton McCall 8/24/2018 Palm Beach Gardens, FL
1942
Walter Lucian Elmore 4/23/2018 Charleston, IL
1945
Dr. Frances Wilmoth Collins 3/6/2018 South Hadley, MA Dorothy Elaine Moore Kaufman 7/22/2018 Greenville, SC
1948
Dr. John William Kurtz 4/20/2018 Irving, TX Alta Lorene McKeehan Hatcher 3/8/2018 Clermont, FL
1951
Dr. James “Jim” Owen Coldiron 7/7/2017 Tucker, GA Delores Weddle Sasser 5/28/2015 Louisville, KY
1952
Alfred Morris 1/20/2018 West Chester, OH Lois Ann Sanders Cloar 1/19/2018 Chandler, AZ James William Smith 8/7/2018 Cynthiana, KY
1953
Martha Carolyn Goodwin Hobgood 4/5/2018 Dallas, TX Virgil Lee Kearney 11/13/2015 Grand Prairie, TX
John Edwin Earle 3/22/2017 Pensacola, FL
Frank Monroe Homan 9/13/2018 Springfield, KY
Elizabeth Grainger Dunn 7/26/2018 Franklin, KY
1956
1949
Dr. Alvin “Al” W. Davis 3/17/2017 Fort Oglethorpe, GA Rev. Dr. George William Harrison 5/15/2018 Spanish Fort, AL
1950
Richard Wayne Payton 3/16/2018 Wichita Falls, TX Betty Jean Henry Nichols 10/10/2017 Lexington, KY
Rev. Harold Foley Bratcher 3/23/2018 Richmond, KY James Dee Boyd Jr. 5/18/2018 Lawrenceburg, KY Edna Mae Godbey Harris 5/1/2016 Boonville, IN Anna Laura Herford Rush 3/17/2018 Clovis, CA
Mary Frances Doyle Robinson 10/8/2017 Eden, NC James “Jim” Howard Gordon Robinson 9/11/2017 Owensboro, KY Panzie Merilyn Miller Stevens 7/11/2018 Charlotte, NC
1957
Rachel Nickels King 3/25/2018 Lexington, KY Eddie Wehrmeyer Fields 1/4/2018 Loveland, OH James Rodney New 5/4/2016 Cynthiana, KY
1958
Lynn Dunlap Swanagan 4/6/2016 Millington, MI
1959
Herman Swanagan 6/9/2018 Versailles, KY
1960
Dr. Sandra Lou Noe 5/8/2016 Kingsport, TN
1961
Lucien Lee Royse 4/28/2018 Georgetown, KY Carvel Carter Baker 6/2/2018 Bellville, TX Donald Milton Cowherd 8/16/2018 Damascus, MD Charles Edwin McDonald 8/5/1991 Marshall, NC
1967
Louis “Charlie” Charles Ison 4/5/2018 Harrodsburg, KY Alvaro Vee Enalani Alvaro 8/26/2016 Kaneohe, HI
1968
John David Hoffman 2/9/1997 Titusville, FL
1969
Beverly June Hall McNeely 11/24/2017 Louisville, KY Lawrence “Larry” W. Bottom 4/1/2018 Winter Garden, FL
Robert Hirl Martin, Jr., PhD 7/28/2018 Bay City, MI
1970
Sylvia Jacobs Fryman 6/13/2013 Cynthiana, KY William Brown McGibney 5/14/2018 Owenton, KY James Ervin Higgins 5/30/2018 Cumming, GA
1963
Rev. Deems Timothy Herring 4/5/2018 Orlando, FL Carole Louise Beverly Carlson 5/12/2018 Beavercreek, OH
Jerry Estil Pelphrey 4/7/2018 Annapolis, MD
1973
Harry Douglas Walker 5/8/2017 Nazareth, PA Robert Clifford Venn 7/3/2018 Nicholasville, KY
1975
John L. Morgan 3/19/2018 Winchester , KY
Doug Earl Thompson 3/25/2018 Shelbyville, KY
Friends and Formers Ollie T. Smith Friend 3/21/2018 Lexington, KY William Glenn Luckett Former 3/20/2014 Marietta, GA Ernest “Ernie” H. Horning Former 12/7/2017 Fairlawn, OH Nancy Shropshire Blazer Friend, Scholarship Donor 11/17/2017 Georgetown, KY Dr. Richard Gene Puckett Former 5/12/2013 Raleigh, NC
1985
1988
Loretta Sue Rosich 10/11/1998 Edgewood, KY
2001
Lorraine Burgher Kaufman Former, Former Trustee Spouse 4/22/2018 Louisville, KY
Rebecca Lynn Waites Helfenstein 6/11/2018 New Orleans, LA
1964
Joseph William Palmer, Jr. 6/24/2018 New Philadelphia, OH
Lisa “Mickey” Bottom Miller 3/17/2018 Lexington, KY
1976
James “Jim” Baber, Jr. 8/30/2017 Louisville, KY
1966
1994
Oswald “Buddy” M. Kington Former Trustee 8/2/2016 Madisonville, KY
Karen Ann Hatfield Cross 7/9/2018 Jacksonville, FL
Gerald Christian Eddleman 7/19/2015 Louisville, KY
Stephen Ray Banks 8/23/2017 Lexington, KY
Susan Love Chamblin Chamblin 4/23/2017 Hagerstown, MD
Raymond Lester Lows 12/15/2014 Ocala, FL
1962
1992
Mark Raymond Marsh 10/26/2016 Cynthiana, KY Lynn Michelle Potter Ratliff 7/27/2018 Winchester, KY Frank Rickman Snyder II 8/28/2018 Georgetown, KY
Charles Neal Apple, Jr. Former 4/25/2018 Greensboro, NC Dr. Roma John Sanders Former Trustee 5/15/2018 Louisville, KY Gerald “Butch” Thomas Burnette Former Trustee 5/16/2018 Hendersonville, TN George Connor Williams, Jr. Former 1/12/2014 Louisville, KY
Rev. Marshall Eugene Phillips Former 5/29/2018 Shelbyville, KY Dr. Judith “Judy” Stout Hood Former 5/26/2018 Richmond, KY Harold Kohnen Former 6/18/2018 Newport, KY Dr. Glenn Yarbrough Friend 6/29/2018 Brentwood, TN Oliver Jacob Hyams Former 5/3/2018 Mendon, VT Kenneth Boyd Denton Trustee/Former 7/9/2018 The Woodlands, TX Harold Glenn Wright Former 7/16/2018 Lexington, KY Susan Woods Anderson Carrington Former Trustee 8/4/2018 Mount Sterling, KY Leslie Harrison Rogers Former Trustee 9/4/2018 Frankfort, KY Betty Gean Collins Former 9/1/2018 Myrtle Beach, SC Betty Jean Brandenburg Noonemacher Former 9/22/2018 Pickerington, OH Dr. John L. Creech, Jr. Former 8/27/2018 Louisville, KY
GC MAGAZINE | FALL 2018
William Harold Slack 5/17/2016 Greensboro, NC
Rev. Albert J. Gisler 5/16/2016 Nicholasville, KY
Joyce Ford Kinnison 9/15/2012 Spring Hill, FL
34
NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID LOUISVILLE KY PERMIT #879
400 East College St. Georgetown KY 40324
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GCTIGERTUESDAY OUR GOAL:
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