Hendrix Magazine - 2011 Spring

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spring 2011


hendrix magazine A Magazine for Alumni & Friends Spring 2011 Volume 23, Number 2 Editor Helen Plotkin plotkin@hendrix.edu Associate Editor Rob O’Connor ’95 Art Director/Designer Joshua Daugherty Alumnotes Editor/Designer Courtney Johnson ’12 Assistant Editor Natalie Atkins Staff Photographers Joshua Daugherty Courtney Johnson ’12 Contributors Charles Chappell ’64 Amy Meredith Forbus ’96 Stuart Holt Bruce Layman ’12 Brian Rejer­ Werner Trieschmann ’86 Hendrix Magazine is published by Hendrix College, 1600 Washington Avenue, Conway, Arkansas 720323080. This magazine is published for Hendrix College alumni, parents of students and friends. Permission is granted to reprint material from this magazine provided credit is given and a copy of the reprinted material is sent to the Editor. Postmaster, please send form 3579 to Office of Institutional Advancement, Hendrix College, 1600 Washington Ave., Conway, AR 72032-3080 501.450.1223 Fax 501.450.3881 Alumnotes submission deadlines: Spring Issue: Feb. 1 Fall Issue: Sept. 1

Fowl Play Hendrix seniors Lydia Nash and Jayce Hafner raised chickens on campus as part of their Hendrix Odyssey. Page 28

Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

on the cover: Printed on paper containing 10% post-consumer recycled content with inks containing agri-based oils. Please Recycle.

A Commitment to National Leadership: The Hendrix Campaign has invested more than $100 million in preparing students like Bernice McMillan ’11 to take on the world. In this issue of Hendrix Magazine, we celebrate a successful campaign and illustrate how Hendrix is changing the lives of those who can change the world. Cover photo by Mike Malone


06

A Fond Farewell

Four longtime faculty legends retire this year.

10

Elements of Success

14

A $101 Million Difference

Chemistry Professor Liz Gron is named Arkansas Professor of the Year.

The largest campaign in Hendrix history raised $101.3 million.

26

Eat This

Student group grows ‘edible forest’ and heirloom, heritage vegetable garden.

30

Farm Boy

Physics graduate is a leader in local food movement

32

Garden Girl

Alumna studies public health impact of urban gardening

34

Serving up Success

Entrepreneurial alumni open interesting eateries

8 4 40 13 03 11

Alumni Voices Alumnotes At Home at Hendrix Campus News Faculty News

12 46 45 45 02

Hendrix Through Time In Memoriam Marriages New Children President’s Message

36

Book It

Professor Emeritus Charles Chappell interviews Mark Jacob, author of What the Great Ate.


A Message from the President

Our Odyssey Continues Hendrix College passed an important milestone on Dec. 31, 2010. A Commitment to National Leadership: The Hendrix Campaign came to a successful close. With the support of alumni, parents, friends, foundations and the United Methodist Church we surpassed our campaign goals. We raised more than $101.3 million and fulfilled the Trustees’ priority to position Hendrix as a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education. This campaign financed a variety of new facilities that have raised the level of experience for all Hendrix students including the Art Buildings, the Wellness and Athletics Center, and the Student Life and Technology Center. But, the construction projects are only the most visible result of our fund-raising efforts. The Hendrix Campaign was about more than bricks and mortar. It was about programmatic changes and curricular and co-curricular changes that were entrepreneurial and innovative. Many of the goals of the campaign are embodied in Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning. Odyssey was created by taking things that are organic to us and that represent what we value about the nature of our liberal arts and sciences education and making them real for all our students. Your Hendrix Odyssey has lengthened the shadow of the institution and has created a national buzz. We’ve created that buzz by putting a name to what we believe and putting the dollars behind it to make it happen. We created things like the Odyssey Endowment that funds student grants, Odyssey Distinction Awards that recognize students for

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their gifts, talents and passions, and Odyssey Professorships that provide grants to fuel faculty creativity and innovation. Through the course of this campaign, one new idea has led to another idea: together we have built the momentum necessary to move Hendrix forward. With the campaign complete, it is our task to build on our current momentum and keep Hendrix moving forward. To that end, we have already begun the process that will lead to another set of Board Priorities like the 2003 version that served as the impetus for this campaign. The next strategic initiative will be focused on how we secure ourselves as an institution that is prestigious, has broad market appeal and is firmly positioned as the leader in hands-on liberal arts and sciences education. Over the next year or so, in conversation with the Trustees, the faculty, students, alumni and friends of the College, we will outline a new vision for the future of Hendrix – a vision for 2022 that will help launch students on their life’s odyssey. Our vision will be bold and our goals ambitious. A bold vision and ambitious goals will inspire us to continue our journey and see what new wonders we can discover together on our Hendrix Odyssey.

J. Timothy Cloyd, Ph.D. President

www.hendrix.edu


campus news

campus news The first four Rwanda Presidential Scholars will graduate from Hendrix this spring. The students and their majors are Mireille Mutesi ’11, mathematics; Gilbert Julles Ndayambaje ’11, mathematics and computer science; Albine Niwemugeni ’11, computer science; and Jean Pierre Rukundo ’11, physics. The group arrived on campus in September 2007 during Shirttails Weekend. Overcoming stressful cultural adaptation challenges and language orientation issues, they successfully established themselves as individuals and, during their four years at Hendrix, have greatly enriched the Hendrix community, according to Dr. Sarah Lee, Rwanda Presidential Scholars Program Coordinator in the Office of International Programs and Adjunct Professor of Anthropology. “They have completely different personalities, attitudes, and engagement,” said Dr. Lee, who described Mirielle as “the glue” of the group and Albine is the “quiet strong one.” The students have been ambassadors for Rwandan culture, sponsoring a program for Rwandan and traditional African dance for Hendrix students and traveling to other schools. They have also educated the Hendrix community about the Rwandan genocide, promoting genocide awareness and remembrance, Lee said. Most importantly, they have made the adjustment to Hendrix easier for successive groups of Rwandan students. There are now 27 Rwandan students at Hendrix through the Rwanda Presidential Scholars initiative. After commencement, the students will return to work in Rwanda or enroll in graduate school.

2011 get smart-go green award Hendrix received the 2011 Get Smart-Go Green Award from the Conway Area Chamber of Commerce at the Chamber’s annual meeting in March. The award is presented to a business or organization that is committed to “green” initiatives and has made a commitment to recycling and utilizing environmentally friendly products. The award was announced by Ronnie Williams ’76, Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Conway Area Chamber of Commerce. “[Hendrix] has a long history of embracing sustainability issues,” Williams told a sold-out audience of local business leaders at the Chamber’s annual meeting.

www.hendrix.edu

Photo by Mike Malone

inaugural class of rwandan students to graduate

The first group of students brought to Hendrix through the Rwanda Presidential Scholars Program, a partnership with the Rwandan government, will graduate in May. From left, Jean Pierre Rukundo, Mireille college and community celebrate Mutesi, Gilbert creative campus space Ndayambaje and The Hendrix community and leaders of Conway celebrated Albine Niwemugeni. the opening of The Grotto, the passage beneath Harkrider, connecting campus to the Wellness and Athletics Center and other facilities across the street, at a public opening in March. The Grotto features “Harmonic Fugue,” a unique artistic work of motion-activated light and sounds, many of which are indigenous to Arkansas. The installation was created by Boston-based artist, architect, and composer Christopher Janney, who attended the unveiling to explain his artwork. President J. Timothy Cloyd thanked Janney for bringing his genius to bear on a project that otherwise would have simply been a tunnel but is now a work of interactive art for students and the public to enjoy. “Through their Odyssey Program, dozens of students have been encouraged to develop projects that study sustainability and environmental issues.” Williams also cited the College’s work in developing The Village at Hendrix, the new Ecological Restoration Area under construction between The Village and Southwestern Energy Co.’s new regional headquarters in Conway, and the Student Life and Technology Center at Hendrix, which is the first LEED-Gold building on a college campus, according to the U.S. Green Building Council of Arkansas.

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Photo by Nelson Chenault

campus news

Left: The Hendrix Dance Ensemble performed at a public unveiling of “Harmonic Fugue,” an artistic light and sound installation created by Boston-based artist, architect, and composer Christopher Janney. The interactive artwork is located in The Grotto, the passage beneath Harkrider, connecting campus to the Wellness and Athletics Center and other facilities across the street.

that will line Harkrider are in the design phase. The units will be available for rent. Construction will begin this summer. Also, The Village is pre-selling six townhouses (two 2,300-square-foot three-bedroom models and four 1,500-square-foot two-bedroom models) that will feature Viking appliances, 11-foot ceilings, and courtyards. On the commercial side, Iberia Bank has signed a lease, making it the first bank branch in The Village. Iberia joins Panera Bread Co., ZAZA Fine Salad and Wood Oven Pizza Co., and Village Books, as well as Green Cart Deli, a solarpowered hot dog vendor, in the commercial center of The Village. Negotiations are also under way for the final tenant in the commercial center, and The Village is now discussing pre-leasing arrangements for the next commercial building, which will be east of ZAZA, Davis said. One of the most unique components of The Village is

Cloyd also recognized Conway Mayor Tab Townsell for his support of the recently completed redesign of Harkrider to include four lanes, a median, and two roundabouts at the north and south ends of campus. At the event’s conclusion, Janney, accompanied by student members of the Hendrix Dance Ensemble, gave a live demonstration of the lights and sounds in the “Harmonic Fugue.”

hendrix receives avd grant Hendrix students will continue to have access to unique and exciting hands-on learning experiences thanks to a recent $250,000 grant from the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations of Jacksonville, Fla. The grant will support the endowment of Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning. Previously, Hendrix received the Foundations’ 2005 Excellence Award, which also supported the Odyssey Program, as well as a grant in 2004.

Below: The new Ecological Restoration Area, located between The Village at Hendrix and Southwestern Energy Co., will provide educational and recreational opportunities for the Hendrix community. The 18-acre area will feature native plants and trees, as well as aquatic life, and will include an outdoor classroom, boardwalk, pedestrian bridge, and walking trails.

The Village at Hendrix, the New Urbanist, mixed-use neighborhood adjacent to campus, continues to take shape. “We are delighted by the momentum we’ve seen,” said Village CEO Ward Davis. Nine single family homes are occupied and three more are sold and/or under construction. “That is a great milestone for us,” said Davis, adding that when The Village is up to 30 occupied homes, the “dynamic will change” and attention will shift from “a focus on the beautiful architecture to the function of the neighborhood.” One “live/work unit” is complete and another is under construction. Live/work units combine ground-floor retail or office space with upper-level living, a solution that has become “increasingly valuable,” Davis said. In addition to the student apartments above the commercial businesses in The Village, 18 “row house” units

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Image courtesy of The Village at Hendrix

a village grows

www.hendrix.edu


research equipment grant Photo by Joshua Daugherty

Science students at Hendrix will be better prepared for research thanks to a recent grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The $275,000 award will fund the acquisition of a new 400 MHz Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectrometer. The new NMR spectrometer will replace an older unit the chemistry department has used for several years. The new model will create a stronger magnetic field, offering better resolution so students can observe the nuances in molecular structure. Students in organic chemistry, biochemistry and the college’s Advanced Techniques in Experimental Chemistry course will benefit directly from the new instrument.

did you hear that ?

Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

Hendrix students enjoyed several national musical acts this year. In the fall, Grace Potter & the Nocturnals, called one of the “best new bands” by Rolling Stone magazine, played on a campus, courtesy of Student Activities and Hendrix Special Events. Atlanta-based rap duo Ying Yang Twins entertained couples at Winter Formal at Michelangelo’s, an Italian restaurant just down the street from the Hendrix campus. In the spring, Big Boi, one half of the Grammy Award-winning hip hop duo Outkast, along with opening act Yelawolf, kicked off 2011 Campus Kitty Week with a sold-out show in the Student Life and Technology Center.

good kitty Students collected $26,500 in cash, $2,000 in donated goods from local businesses, and $700 in canned food donations for local charities during Campus Kitty Week 2011 in March. Events included the Martin/Veasey Auction, Red Light Revue, a silent auction featuring goods and services donated by nearly 75 faculty and staff members, and sold-out shows for Big Boi, Yelawolf, and Miss Hendrix. Among the charities that benefitted from Campus Kitty were Bethlehem House, Camp Aldersgate, Conway Cradle Care, Conway Interfaith Clinic, Habitat for Humanity, and the Women’s Shelter of Central Arkansas.

Top: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals performing in the Student Life and Technology Center in November. Photo by Joshua Daugherty

Middle: The Ying Yang Twins performing at Winter Formal at Michelangelo’s in February Bottom: Big Boi performing in the Student Life and Technology Center in March as part of Campus Kitty Week

www.hendrix.edu

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campus news

the Ecological Restoration Area located between The Village and the newly opened regional headquarters for Southwestern Energy Co. The Ecological Restoration Area is a progressive storm water management system that will include recreational health and wellness amenities, such as trails and boardwalks. It will also provide hands-on learning opportunities for students interested in water quality and other environment-related research projects. Approximately 500 native trees are currently being planted, and the boardwalk and trails are being installed. For more information on The Village, visit www.hendrix.edu/village or call 501-764-1109.


Born: April 30, 1940 Hometown: Meriden, Conn.

Four retiring faculty members with 122 years of combined service get good marks from friends and peers

Education: B.S., Danbury State College; Ph.D., University of Connecticut

Ralph McKenna

Five children: Colleen McKenna Anthony ’87, Tim McKenna ’90, Kevin McKenna ’92, Daniel McKenna ’97 and Connor McKenna ’13.

By Bruce Haggard

Dr. Ralph McKenna drove his family to Hendrix in the heat of the summer of 1976. Some of his future colleagues distracted him while one of them jumped into his overloaded U-Haul truck and raced it down the nearby hill, and then slammed on the brakes in order to shift the load of everything he owned forward enough to free the rear door so it could be opened. Fortunately most of the belongings survived. The faculty ‘moving crew’ couldn’t resist laughing at the sight of his toboggan when the door was opened. Who knew that this Connecticut Yankee, his wife Linda and their five children (Colleen, Tim, Kevin, Daniel, and Connor, who was yet to be born), would play such a vital role at Hendrix and in the Conway community. Ralph and I co-founded the Hendrix Faculty Colloquium Series that gives faculty an opportunity to present their experiences or discuss their research with their colleagues once a month throughout the academic year. Ralph was very active in the Hendrix AAUP faculty organization that played a significant role in helping form a sense of community and in dealing with multiple Hendrix faculty concerns over the years. He is a community activist, working to implement bike trails throughout Conway, and has a real passion for organic gardening. Ralph plays a mean sax and had his own swing band starting in junior high. He drove his used 28 hp Volkswagen to local gigs, making the three-hour trip from Connecticut to gigs in New York to earn his way through college. He was a music education major and taught secondary school music before going to the University of Connecticut to obtain a Ph.D. in Social Psychology. He still loves to jam and can usually name the song, the singer, and give you the rest of the lyrics upon hearing a single key phrase from any 1950-70s rock and roll song. He used his knowledge of music

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Pre-Hendrix teaching experience: Music supervisor in the Middlebury, Conn., public schools 1963-1965; Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa., 1969-1976 Wife: Linda McKenna ’90

Six grandchildren: Alistair, son of Colleen and Martin Anthony; Nathan and Will, sons of Tim and JoDee Wilson McKenna ’94; Ryan and Sean, sons of Kevin and Carmen Kunde ’92; August, son of Daniel and Sarah Wood McKenna ’98 Why did you choose to teach at Hendrix? I was looking for a quality liberal arts college, as Wilson was about to close. I anticipated taking another position in New England but was smitten by Hendrix.

Photo by Stuart Holt

faculty

Class Dismissed

Ralph McKenna Facts

Dr. McKenna’s Last Lecture is Saturday, April 16, at 3 p.m. in Mills A as a DJ on KHDX and for the development of some unique courses such as “American Roots Music and Southern Culture” as well as “Psychology, Music, and American Culture.” Ralph was co-founder (1985) of the Arkansas Symposium for Psychology Students. He has been recognized for the quality of his teaching on multiple occasions (including Teacher of the Year) and clearly enjoys mentoring student research, as well as conducting research and presenting papers of his own at the annual Southwestern Psychological Association meetings. He is teaching three courses this spring, though he officially ended his phased retirement last year. He thoroughly enjoyed leading the Hendrix-in-London Semester in the spring of 2005. Not so much his roles as Chair of the Department of Psychology for the 10 years between 1980 and 1990, followed by his ‘sentence’ as Chair of the Social Science Area from 1990 to 1994. Alumni who wish to contact Ralph should email him at mckennarj@hendrix.edu. I am sure he would appreciate hearing from you. Ralph has helped lots of alumni to achieve their goals.

What is the most significant change you’ve seen at Hendrix during your time on campus? The negative impact of social media (from cable television in the dorms through Facebook) on faculty-student community outside of class time. What is your favorite meal in the cafeteria? Crusted tilapia and chicken fried chicken. What is your favorite place on campus and why? First, Mills — it’s where I taught for most of my Hendrix career; second, the late lamented jogging and fitness trail put in by Tom Clark, Jim Holland, and Frank Roland which was sacrificed for the Village If you could do anything over again, what would it be? Focus earlier in my career on my interest in American studies, especially roots music and Southern culture. What’s next for you? Community involvement with biking, running, and alternative transportation; professional writing on roots music; hone my guitar skills

www.hendrix.edu


Bruce Haggard Facts

By Ralph McKenna

www.hendrix.edu

Hometown: Farmland, Ind. Education: Indiana University (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) Wife: Pat Haggard Children: Tina Haggard ’87 and Kelly Haggard Olson ’88 Grandchildren: Alexander Photo by Stuart Holt

“You’ll really love the Haggards – they’re into organic gardening and have goats – just like you all do! They have kids around the age of your oldest two, and recently moved to a house on a lake with three acres of land. And … his wife Pat is a potter!” So went my introduction to the Haggard family when I interviewed for a position at Hendrix. One of my first memories of Bruce is holding up one end of a monster 8,000 pound player piano that Linda and I had brought from our Pennsylvania farmhouse. Bruce and Jon Arms, holding up the other end, were stuck going down a flight of stairs, as the rest of us debated where the piano should best be placed for aesthetic prominence. Both have keen memories of that day whenever their backs go out. Bruce and Pat, Tina ’87 and Kelly ’88 preceded the McKennas to Hendrix by four years, coming straight from Indiana University and some world-class graduate work in genetics. An unabashed Hoosier in the land of the Razorback, Bruce brought his love of sport to Conway. I remember his tree-like presence as center for our faculty intramural basketball team, and his rifle arm as center fielder for the faculty city-league softball team, where I had the brief chance to play right field. Many alumni will recall Bruce’s 10 years keeping the scoreboard for the Cliff Garrison- and Jim Holland-coached Warriors, working alongside Bob Meriwether (announcer) and Larry Graddy (statistician). After 39 years at Hendrix, Bruce is retiring from his position as Virginia McCormick Pittman Professor of Biology at the end of this academic year. For years, Bruce was the “kid” member of a legendary department in biology, teaching nine courses per year alongside Art Johnson, Tom Clark, and Albert Raymond. This biology lineup had a statewide reputation for its highly successfully pre-med program. Over these years, Bruce has taught well over 400 students who have gone on to become physicians. Arkansas summers were never complete without the Haggards’ Fourth of July celebration, which brought together colleagues, kids, friends, mimosas in bloom, a keg or two, kids lighting fireworks, and some folk music singing from the newest biology kid, Joe Lombardi, on guitar. Though a confirmed biologist in his

Born: Dec. 26, 1943

Dr. Haggard’s Last Lecture is Saturday, April 16, at 2 p.m. in Mills A training, Bruce’s thinking and behavior began to be permeated by the liberal arts. In 1974, he was chosen as one of nine faculty members to spend six weeks at Columbia University studying ways to best implement a new liberal arts curriculum at Hendrix. Six years later, Bruce was asked to help establish the Arkansas Governor’s School, legislated into existence by then Governor Bill Clinton. Bruce was director of the program from 1983-2000 and fended off considerable controversy over teaching methods and content, especially when Clinton ran for President. Bruce was also central to the formation of a Hendrix chapter of the American Association for University Professors, the closest thing we have to a union, dedicated to protecting and promoting faculty rights. An avid canoeist, Bruce fought to save the Cadron Creek watershed from damming; a decade later he was immersed in the Arkansas Creation Science controversy. He was even elected a Faulkner County Justice of the Peace. Hendrix was a different institution in the 1970s. When hired, Bruce was instructed not to do research or serve alcohol at parties (even parties attended only by faculty friends and spouses). Rumor has it that he nearly ran down our president of that time, Roy Shilling, zooming away from Buhler on his Honda 250 motorcycle in the winter’s darkness. In many ways, Bruce Haggard’s Hendrix career symbolizes a time of intellectual commitment, innocence, social camaraderie, family bonding, and community activism in the history of our college. It’s been fun, too.

Why did you choose to teach at Hendrix? Because Art Johnson recruited me. I wanted to take a “real job” rather than take a post-doctoral in Europe because I had been in school for a long time and because of the quality and congeniality of the Hendrix students and faculty. Have you ever been thrown in the fountain? Once. And that was enough. What is your favorite meal in the cafeteria? Christmas dinner. What is your favorite place on campus and why? My office, where everything I need is located, with large windows overlooking campus. Describe the most memorable moment of your time at Hendrix. Being tackled hard in a game of flag football by a Hendrix orientation leader who mistook me for an incoming freshman before I had ever met my first classes. There are many others, of course, since then. What is something that others would be surprised to find out about you? As an elected member of the Faulkner County Quorum Court (Justice of the Peace), I performed civil ceremonies of marriage for at least 20 couples, several of whom were Hendrix alums. Some of the ceremonies were on campus. What’s next for you? Staying healthy; putting my wife, rather than my job, first (after all these years); playing in my woodworking shop; public service of some sort; and lots of reading and travel.

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faculty

Bruce Haggard


Eric Binnie Facts

By Werner Trieschmann ’86 The impending retirement of Dr. Eric Binnie will leave – just on the auditory level – the Hendrix College campus bereft one distinct Scottish accent. For Binnie’s collegues in the Theatre Arts and Dance department and for former and current students, the loss is greater than his warm vocal burr. “Over the last twenty years I have shared books — novels, plays, memoirs — films and good stories of travel and coffee, both good and bad, with Eric,” says Ann Muse, chair of the Theatre Arts and Dance department. “His enthusiasm for what is good in life is a source of joy for me.” “Dr. Binnie’s attendance at student performances and presentations is legendary,” says theatre professor Danny Grace. “I can remember only a handful of departmental performances he might have missed. He knows as many great places to eat in the world as anybody I have ever met. And he is happy to share that information with you. Like so many of our retiring faculty, Eric cannot be replaced.” Binnie was born and raised in Kilsyth, a small mining town in central Scotland. He was hired by Hendrix in 1989 and was working at Northeast Missouri State (now Truman State) before coming to Conway. Did he have any hesitation in relocating? “I enjoyed the faculty and students I met then,” recalls Binnie. “If you had ever seen Kirksville, Missouri, you would not ask this question — anyone would be glad to get out of there. But I was surprised here by the striking natural beauty of the surroundings here, particularly Little Rock, of which old black and white film images from TV had burned themselves into my mind — so a very pleasant revelation, indeed.” In his time at the Theatre Arts and Dance department, Binnie worked as a director and taught classes in theatre history, voice and acting. It is clear that, over the years, Binnie became known for his classes on stage movement and the Alexander Technique. “About ten years ago when Dr. Carole Herrick and myself began teaching the Alexander Technique on campus, one young student in particular was very resistant, and frequently challenged our claims for the demonstrable efficacy and relief involved in use of the Technique,” says Binnie. “We could both see that she had changed during the length of the course, yet she was unwilling to admit this.

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Born: Aug. 26, 1938 Hometown: Kilsyth, Scotland Education: B.A., Strathclyde University; M.A., McMaster University; Ph.D., University of Toronto Why did you choose to teach at Hendrix? I was teaching at a small school in Missouri that was not “my cup of tea” so when this opening came up, I came for a visit, liked the look of the college and the students I met – so I was happy to come here.

Photo by Stuart Holt

faculty

Eric Binnie

Dr. Binnie’s Last Lecture is Saturday, April 16, at 4 p.m. in Mills A She graduated at the end of that semester and, the next day, the local newspaper had a wonderful photograph of this particular student smiling to those around her, and clearly demonstrating what, in the Alexander community, is called ‘good use.’ At last I had the proof she needed, so I mailed a copy to her the next day.” In Binnie, students found a mind that wasn’t narrowed or preoccupied with one aspect of the theatre. “I found the culture of Hendrix reflected in many of his personal characteristics — intelligent, curious, warm and multi-talented,” says James Mainard O’Connell, who graduated in 2003 and is working in theatre in New Jersey “In a world that increasingly values specialization, I was inspired by the variety of subjects that he taught within the general discipline of theatre. Each class that I took from him inspired a love of the subject in me. His advanced acting class, which focused on Shakespeare, so inspired a love of Shakespeare in me that I went on to earn an M.F.A. in the subject.” For his days after Hendrix, Binnie sees time to go to the gym, fix up his house and act when the occasion arises. “I’ll be staying in the area, at least for a while, and I hope to continue to be of service to Hendrix College and to the community whenever possible, probably give more private Alexander Technique lessons than I’ve had time for till now.” So the good news is that Binnie’s talent, mind and — yes, his voice — won’t be completely absent from Hendrix for long.

What is the most significant change you’ve seen at Hendrix during your time on campus? The college is a lot bigger. I’ve been here under three different college presidents. I used to know all of the faculty and students and most of the staff, now I do not. Now much more is provided to help faculty members with projects, through travel grants, Odyssey funding, Lily/ Miller funds, Murphy funding and the like. I’ve never had much trouble acquiring support, but now there are many more options. Have you ever been thrown in the fountain? I prefer not to answer this in case it is ever published and taken as a challenge to some too-eager students. What is your favorite meal in the cafeteria? Robby Burns day, which I instituted some years ago, and which has become more popular with the passing years. Now we even have pipers in the hallway for that day every year. What is something that others would be surprised to find out about you? I go to the gym three times a week to work with my trainer, Kathy Kelly, and have lost more than 30 pounds in the last couple of months. I intend to lose more before Commencement this year. What’s next for you? At least for a time I’ll be staying in Conway, certainly during the more temperate months. I want to see some of my underclassmen/ women graduate. I’ll travel, write, study, possibly do some acting if I’m offered.

www.hendrix.edu


Ian King Facts

By Jay Barth ’87

www.hendrix.edu

Hometown: Digby, Lincoln, England Education: B.A., University of Hull; Ph.D., University of Minnesota Wife: Cindy Thornton Why did you choose to teach at Hendrix? Luck. It was the best offer I had at the time, and my first visit suggested Hendrix was a good fit for me. Photo by Stuart Holt

I just didn’t understand Ian King when I met him midway through my undergraduate career at Hendrix — literally. My provincial ear just couldn’t get a handle on his British accent. But, it was also figurative. I didn’t understand his allusions to Monty Python sketches, his references to soccer and cricket, or his mentions of the politics in parts of the world that I had difficulty locating on a map. It’s safe to say that I wasn’t alone. Hendrix— then a fairly provincial place with almost all of its students coming from Arkansas—didn’t fully get Ian King when he first arrived on campus in the fall of 1985. Wearing his trademark t-shirts, he didn’t look like a professor. His classroom style differed from the lecture style practiced by most of his older colleagues. His political views were challenging to a place that liked to describe itself as “liberal” but was very mainstream politically. And, his wife didn’t share his last name, a fact fairly disruptive to the norms of the Hendrix Dames (the already archaic faculty “wives” club that disbanded soon after his and Cindy’s arrival on campus). My first engagement with Ian came during his first year on campus as we served together on a task force developed by President Joe Hatcher to study the College’s investments in companies doing business in apartheidera South Africa. The following year I was a student in the first offering of “Politics and the Creative Arts,” a course that became one of Ian’s most popular across time. In my two years of interacting with Ian King inside and outside the classroom, I slowly came to “get” him and to admire him personally and intellectually. That admiration has grown exponentially across our 17 years as colleagues. Since 1994, I have watched his work as a faculty advocate, as a builder of the sense of community at Hendrix, as a model of life-long interdisciplinary learning, as a masterful classroom teacher and out-of-class mentor, and as a force for globalized thinking on the Hendrix campus. While his hard-headedness has occasionally frustrated me, Ian has been an irreplaceable colleague. I had seen Ian’s willingness to challenge the Administration on the divestment task force because of principle. The willingness to confront those in charge has earned him the respect and appreciation of his colleagues across campus. It’s not accidental that Ian has likely served more terms as an elected faculty member on the Academic and Professional

Born: March 27, 1951

Dr. King’s Last Lecture is Saturday, April 16, at 1 p.m. in Mills A Concerns Committee than any other faculty member across his time on campus. That sense of community building goes beyond Ian’s work on campus committees. It shows itself in his playing basketball or Wallyball with fellow faculty weekly, his showing up for the sporting events and theatre performances of his students, and his encouragement of the research of his colleagues. Ian has also constantly strived to better himself intellectually with an eye to bringing that growth back to the classroom. Participation in seminars around the globe has taken his summers but enhanced his teaching about those parts of the world. Moreover, Ian’s teaching and research links to the natural sciences and humanities showing his students how the disciplines intersect. Ian is the model of a life-long, interdisciplinary learner that we strive to create in our students at Hendrix. That breadth and depth of knowledge combine with a sense of humor that deprecates himself and others to make him an extraordinary classroom teacher. His patience makes him just as good as an out-of-class mentor. The ultimate role that Ian has played at Hendrix is in internationalizing the provincial liberal arts community that he entered in 1985. Year in and year out, Ian has worked to enhance the opportunities for students to spend time abroad and to enlarge the academic offerings related to global issues. Much has happened across the last quarter-century to make it clear that Hendrix College is part of a global community. But, it is Ian King that has ensured that we embrace that reality rather than resist it. As a result, hundreds of students (including this one) are more prepared to understand and shape that world.

What is the most significant change you’ve seen at Hendrix during your time on campus? Physical changes; number of folks on campus; the lamentable fact that there are some (usually fairly new) faculty and staff whom I still do not know, even by name. Have you ever been thrown in the fountain? Yes. On my birthday many years ago. A former math professor, Silke Allen rounded up some students to help her. I had a wet butt all afternoon. What is your favorite meal in the cafeteria? I rarely eat there, not because I don’t like the food but because I don’t like to eat too many meals. What is your favorite place on campus and why? The Wallyball court in the Mabee Center, because I like the game and enjoy being with other faculty having some fun. Describe the most memorable moment of your time at Hendrix. The fact that I managed to survive 26 years! What is something that others would be surprised to find out about you? I was in the military – Royal Navy. If you could do anything over again, what would it be? Being in the Royal Navy! What’s next for you? Maybe some drawing, painting, and writing, but I won’t know until I actually arrive at retirement.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 9

faculty

Ian King


faculty

Fab in the Lab Chemistry teacher Dr. Liz Gron chosen Arkansas Professor of the Year Photo by Mike Malone

By Rob O’Connor ’95 Associate Editor Chemistry Professor Dr. Liz U. Gron was selected as the 2010 Arkansas Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education. In an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Gron, who grew up in a bluecollar community outside of Boston, Mass., gave her Danish immigrant parents – the late Poul and AnnMarie Gron – credit for shaping her career. “It’s not uncommon in immigrant families that education was the key to success,” she said. Gron graduated from Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., and earned a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin. She later worked as a chemical engineer at the University of Delaware. She joined the teaching faculty at Hendrix in 1994. “We knew we were fortunate to get Liz here, but the ensuing 16 years have shown that we had no idea how lucky we were,” said Gron’s colleague and friend Dr. Tom Goodwin, Professor of Chemistry, who is no stranger to the kind of dedication to teaching exemplified by Professor of the Year honorees. Dr. Goodwin

10 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

received the national Carnegie/CASE Professor of the Year award in 2003. “Liz excels at teaching, mentoring, advising, counseling, research, publications, presentations, proposal writing, organizing meetings and workshops, curricular and laboratory innovation, lab and classroom assessment strategies, and community service, as well as increasingly displaying leadership on a national stage,” Goodwin said. “She is just a whirlwind of activity, a blast of fresh air, an encouraging and compassionate teacher and friend, and an inspirational dynamo.” Dr. Eva Hurst ’98, a private practice dermatologist and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Washington University, was a student of Gron’s. She praised Gron’s passion for teaching and tireless devotion to student success. “I took several courses with Dr. Gron and was always impressed by her teaching skills, but more importantly, by the care and dedication she exhibited for her students,” Hurst said. “She is an amazing combination of honesty, kindness, passion, brilliance, and enthusiasm.” In addition to her teaching and research, Gron is very active in the local community. Most visibly, she has organized Ridin’ Dirty with Science, an outreach program for

Hendrix students to teach science skills and concepts to local students at the Boys and Girls Club of Faulkner County. In addition to Ridin’ Dirty, Gron is known at the Boys and Girls Club as the “Cookie Lady,” a reference to the cookies she uses as an incentive to motivate young children to read. Gron organized a holiday outreach project providing Thanksgiving dinners for people in need. In the past year, she raised more than $7,000, involved more than 100 high school students and 30 adults, and fed more than 1,500 people. Dr. Robert L. Entzminger, Provost and Dean of the College, called Gron’s community leadership a “natural extension” of her work on the Hendrix campus and in the national community of chemistry scholars.” “In an institution, and in a department, that takes justifiable pride in the quality of its faculty, Dr. Gron nonetheless stands out as exceptional,” Provost Entzminger said. “The excitement for her subject that she exudes is infectious, and her commitment to the success of all her students is legendary.” Gron has two sons, Erik Urban ’13 and Bryan Urban, a senior at Conway High School. Five years ago, Gron married Dr. John Krebs, Professor of Music at Hendrix. The couple lives in Conway.

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• Fred Ablondi, Morriss and Ann Henry Odyssey Associate Professor of Philosophy, published “Absolute Beginners: Learning Philosophy by Learning Descartes and Berkeley” in Metascience, Vol. 19.

• Joyce Hardin, professor of biology, received $120,000 from the Associated Colleges of the South. The grant will fund a post-doctoral fellowship in environmental studies.

• Lawrence K. Schmidt, professor of philosophy, published “Critique: The Heart of Philosophical Hermeneutics” in Consequences of Hermeneutics: Fifty Years After Gadamer’s ‘Truth and Method’.

• Jay Barth, M.E. and Ima Graves Peace Professor of Politics, co-published “Educating Citizens or Defying Federal Authority? A Comparative Study of In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students” in The Policy Studies Journal.

• J. Brett Hill, assistant professor of anthropology, reviewed The Neighbors Of Casas Grandes: Excavating Medio Period Communities Of Northwest Chihuahua, by Michael Whalen and Paul Minnis, in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

• J. Aaron Simmons, assistant professor of philosophy, served as Humanities Advisory Editor for CultureFrame.

• Chris Camfield, assistant professor of mathematics, received a $2,500 grant from the Academy of Inquiry Based Learning.

• James Jennings, Cynthia Cook Sandefur Odyssey Professor of Education and History, was a guest commentator on four episodes of African Americans in the Military for the Arkansas History DVD series by the Arkansas Educational Television Network.

• Stella Capek, professor of sociology, published “Foregrounding Nature: An Invitation to Think About Shifting Nature/ City Boundaries” in City & Community, Vol. 9. • Jenn Dearolf, associate professor of biology, received a grant from the National Institutes of Health, IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence ($641,840 for 2010-2015) for her research “Effects of prenatal steroids on the fatigue properties of breathing muscles.” • Robert Entzminger, Provost and Dean of the College and Professor of English, reviewed “Spiritual Architecture and ‘Paradise Regained’: Milton’s Literary Ecclesiology” by Ken Simpson in Milton Quarterly. • Gabe Ferrer, associate professor of computer science, served as the Regional Board Chair for the Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges in the MidSouth Region. • Tom Goodwin, Elbert L. Fausett Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, received $274,374 from the National Science Foundation for the acquisition of a 400 MHz NMR spectrometer to enhance faculty and undergraduate research (with co-PIs Andres Caro and Christopher Marvin).

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• Lisa Leitz, assistant professor of sociology, served as a reviewer for European Political Science Review and The Social Service Review. • Kim Maslin-Wicks, associate professor of politics, published “Public Displays of Emotion (PDE): Some Preliminary Advice for Leaders” in Public Leadership. • Maxine Payne, Judy and Randy Wilbourn Odyssey Associate Professor of Art, presented a solo exhibition titled “Making Pictures: Three for a Dime” at the Arkansas Studies Institute, Concordia Hall. • Aleksandra Pfau, assistant professor of history, published “Crimes of Passion: Emotion and Madness in French Remission Letters” in Madness in Medieval Law and Custom. • John Sanders, professor of religious studies, published “The Eternal Now and Theological Suicide: A Reply to Laurence Wood” in Wesleyan Theological Journal Vol. 45.

• Tom Stanley, professor of economics and business, served as Associate Editor for Journal of Economic Survey. He also served as Senior Visiting Fellow at London School of Economics. • Alex Vernon, James and Emily Bost Odyssey Associate Professor of English and Humanities Area Chair, published Approaches to Teaching the Works of Tim O’Brien. He also presented “Revisiting Hemingway’s Spanish Civil War Dispatches” at the 14th Ernest Hemingway International Biennial Conference in Lausanne, Switzerland. • José Ramón Vilahomat, associate professor of Spanish, published “Sátira menipea en trayecto: La literatura latinoamericana actual vuelve a los orígenes” in Pterodáctilo: Revista de Arte, Literatura y Lingüística. • Ann Willyard, assistant professor of biology, served as a reviewer for the American Journal of Botany, International Journal of Plant Sciences, and Annals of Botany. • Leslie Zorwick, assistant professor of psychology, co-published “Urban debate and prejudice reduction: The contact hypothesis in action” in Contemporary Argumentation and Debate, Vol. 30.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 11

faculty news

Hendrix Faculty News

In addition to their work in the classroom, Hendrix faculty members engage in research and professional activities that expand their expertise and enrich their teaching. Here is a small sample of the professional activities of Hendrix faculty. See the full list at www.hendrix.edu/hendrixmagazine.


1948 The current dining hall opened in January 2010 in the Student Life and Technology Center. Miss Martha Dayer (right), a server in the home-style line, has worked for Dining Services since 2002. She knows each student by name, and her compassion and connection with students was recently featured on Conway Corporation’s Living Local program. To view the feature, visit youtube.com/hendrixcollege.

2011

hendrix through time

Mrs. Georgia Hulen serves a meal in Tabor Hall, assisted by student John Cooper ’51 (left). Mrs. Hulen came to Hendrix in 1917 with her husband, B.A. Hulen, who was an instructor for the Hendrix Academy. She assumed the position of college dietician the following year. A new dining hall, opened in 1950, was named after her. For almost 40 years, she strived to make dining at Tabor Hall and later at Hulen Hall a great experience for students, faculty, and staff.

12 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

www.hendrix.edu


Courtesy photo

Photo by Mike Malone

at home at hendrix:

Highlighting Alumni Faculty and Staff

Leigh LassiterCounts ’01 “Flag This!,” Leigh’s sophomore intramural flag football team, didn’t quite tear up the competition on the field, though they “could have won the intramural championship in laughing,” she says. The team may not have won a championship, but not many teams choreographed their own halftime show. A decade later, Leigh, who by this time was working for the College’s Advancement Division, watched as Grove Gymnasium was torn down and replaced by a new Wellness and Athletics Center. One of the strangest things she recalls as a staff member is the gym floor being carved into pieces for alumni during the “Goodbye Grove” celebrations. “You think about all the games that have been played, all the stories that gym had seen, the blood, sweat and tears left out there by a generation of Warriors ... and there it was, sitting in six-inch square pieces in my office.” Grove gave way to a great new facility for current students, but as a former student athlete, she is “completely jealous” of the Wellness and Athletics Center. Along with being a four-year letterman in intercollegiate tennis and championship intramural laugher and choreographer, Leigh was active in Campus Kitty, Social Committee, Student Athlete Advisory Council, Orientation, and the Volunteer Action Committee. A Monticello native, Leigh graduated from Hendrix in 2001 with an interdisciplinary major she designed called “The History of Medicine.” She was also awarded the President’s Medal, given to the student who best exemplifies the values of Hendrix. After Hendrix, she earned a master’s degree in Higher

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Education Administration from the Univer sity of Arkansas. She worked as a fundraiser at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, Texas, before returning to Hendrix in 2005, where she has served as Major Gifts Officer, Associate Alumni Director, and Director of Annual Giving. In her current role as Associate Director of Career Services and Internship Coordinator, Leigh works with current students looking for internships or post-graduate employment, coordinates employer site visits and identifies professionals for students to shadow in their career field of interest. She also runs the Friday Alumni Connection Time (F.A.C.T.) program, which invites alumni from different career areas to come to campus each Friday to meet oneon-one with students. “This job is a perfect mix for me – combining my passion for helping students with my relationships and friendships built through my five years in the development and alumni offices,” says Leigh. “[The students’] imagination, energy and ideas make every day an adventure.” Outside of work, Leigh recently ran a half-marathon. She enjoys her book club and attending Hendrix sporting events with her husband, Richard Counts ’01 and their daughter, Eliza Clare Counts, born on April 11, 2009. Having spent nearly a decade of her life on campus, Leigh says Hendrix “has always felt like ‘home’ to me both as a student and now as a professional. [The college] is still holding true to the values that made me love it as a student – the faces and buildings may have changed, but the “feeling” of Hendrix is still the same.” Photo by Stuart Holt

By Natalie Atkins Assistant Editor

Top Left: The members of ‘Flag This’ (top from left): Amy Swesey Smith ’01, Katie Rogers Newman ’01, Chelsey Bryant ’01 and Michelle Copley Webb ’01, (bottom from left): Leanna Dye Wall ’01 and Leigh Top Middle: Leigh advises student Jordan Suydam ’11

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 13


Our Odyssey toward National Leadership

Hendrix Campaign makes history, reaching record-breaking $100 million goal for new scholarships, programs and facilities In politics, campaigns help elect leaders. In higher education, campaigns help institutions become leaders. Through A Commitment to National Leadership, the largest campaign in the history of the College, alumni, friends, faculty, staff, the United Methodist Church, and philanthropic foundations invested $101.3 million in a bold vision for Hendrix established by the Board of Trustees in 2003: To become a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education. The first step in this journey was both remarkable and reflective. Faculty members were challenged to create an innovative academic program that distinguished Hendrix among the country’s leading liberal arts colleges. To do this, they examined essential elements that have consistently defined the Hendrix experience for generations of students – namely the opportunity for students to work closely with faculty who are dedicated to teaching undergraduate students in the classroom and mentoring students in research, internships, international study, and other hands-on learning activities. The Hendrix faculty answered this challenge. They identified something that makes Hendrix unique in the landscape of liberal arts education – an atmosphere that encourages active learning or engaged liberal arts. And they gave it a name. Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning was announced in 2004 and formally launched in 2005. Through Odyssey, faculty broadened the horizon of what has historically made Hendrix an incredible institution. Encouraging undergraduate research and other hands-on activities has long been a hallmark of the Hendrix experience and is increasingly more common on the campuses of national liberal arts colleges. What made Odyssey distinct was that it was universal, not elective. Through Your Hendrix Odyssey, students were now required to complete – not simply encouraged to pursue – a minimum of three engaged learning experiences. They could choose these experiences from six broad categories, including Artistic

14 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Creativity, Global Awareness, Professional and Leadership Development, Service to the World, Special Projects, and Undergraduate Research. Not only was Your Hendrix Odyssey to be universal for all students, it was to be embedded – not ancillary – to the academic program. Students graduating from Hendrix would not only receive a transcript noting their performance in academic courses but also an Odyssey transcript detailing their engaged learning experiences. The Odyssey transcript would show not just what or how well they had learned but what they could do. To encourage students to undertake the most ambitious engaged learning experiences, Hendrix needed substantial resources to endow the program and create a means for students to apply – on a competitive grants basis – for project support. So with the introduction of Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning, the College announced the campaign to fund Odyssey and other critical needs that would make Hendrix a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education. It wasn’t enough for Hendrix to simply excite students with the unique opportunities inherent in Odyssey and the enterprise of engaged liberal arts. The reality of a fiercely competitive marketplace, even more acute in

the wake of post-9/11 economic uncertainty, meant that Hendrix would have to commit substantial resources to access and affordability just as it had committed to making sweeping curricular change. Just as the inception of Your Hendrix Odyssey required a dual focus – affirming tradition and imagining the future – Hendrix had to look honestly at its position in the marketplace of leading liberal arts colleges. Research showed that the current generation of college-bound students was more sensitive to the level of institutional financial assistance (both meritand need-based awards) offered than they were to the price of tuition they saw printed in the viewbooks they received from college admissions offices. Surveys of students who had considered but did not ultimately select Hendrix showed that – based on the printed

Hendrix College stands on the threshold of a transformational moment in its history. We can choose to let our fate be determined by external forces and risk gradual erosion of the stature this institution has earned over the past century. Or we can boldly and assertively chart our own course as the nation’s leader in a distinctive type of education. The latter course will require the commitment of all supporters of the College, with primary leadership from the Board of Trustees through creative planning and provisions of philanthropic resources necessary to realize this transformation. Hendrix College Board of Trustees, 2003 www.hendrix.edu


cost of tuition – students did not perceive Hendrix to be as competitive with its peers. To address this curious perception, Hendrix adjusted its tuition structure, concurrently raising the printed cost but increasing the level of institutional financial assistance. The latter required an added emphasis in the campaign on raising annual and endowed gifts to support student aid. Following the precedent established by Your Hendrix Odyssey, the College devised the Odyssey Distinction Awards, a new program to award institutional financial assistance based on the students’ gifts, talents, and passions. Along with an entrepreneurial re-imagining of the academic program and price positioning, the Board of Trustees addressed the critical need for new facilities on campus. A decade earlier, Hendrix had completed a major

campaign that revitalized the teaching and undergraduate research infrastructure for the sciences. The result was a quantum leap forward in the College’s capacity to deliver on its historic strength of preparing future leaders in health, medicine and science. A similar leap forward was now needed for Hendrix to fulfill its promise as a national leader. So in preparation for A Commitment to National Leadership, the Board of Trustees identified the need for two new facilities, one to include recreational health and wellness and intercollegiate athletic programs and another to offer enhanced student life opportunities and weave the most advanced academic and social technology into the fabric of campus life. Through A Commitment to National Leadership, the College would seek philanthropic support to complete a new Wellness and Athletics Center and new

Student Life and Technology Center. The precincts are closed. The votes are counted. Hendrix College is a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education. Through A Commitment to National Leadership, Hendrix significantly increased the level of financial assistance and scholarships offered to students, providing access and affordability for all qualified students. Our faculty collaborated to create innovative programs that blend intellectual inquiry and hands-on learning, programs that have quickly become national models and are now being emulated at other institutions. Stateof-the-art facilities that enrich academic and student life every day now stand on campus as a monument to a courageous course chartered by the College at the beginning of this campaign.

critical to our continued success and the success of our campaign.” Murphy is likewise appreciative of the role of Dr. Cloyd, who became the tenth President of Hendrix in 2001 after serving as Vice President for College Relations and Development. “He rose to the challenge boldly, creatively, and entrepreneurially,” Murphy said. “In addition to seeking the funding to complete the campaign, he found more work to be done.” “Through his persistence, we have the Hendrix Miller Center for Vocation, Ethics, and Calling, which furthers the College’s foundation as a United Methodist Church institution and places faith exploration and life calling

as a central part of a liberal arts education; The Crain-Maling Center of Jewish Culture, which celebrates the growing diversity of the student body; The Village at Hendrix, a walkable New Urbanist neighborhood that echoes institutional values with regard to sustainable community development; a new student and faculty exchange program in Harbin, China, and other international alliances that prepare students to be leaders in a global society; the Rwanda Presidential Scholars Program, which recognizes the role we can play in helping other nations recover from events we cannot imagine,” said Murphy. “To me, Hendrix would not be the institution it is today without him.”

Hendrix is a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education. That was the goal set by the Board of Trustees in 2003 and accomplished through A Commitment to National Leadership. “This campaign gave us the momentum to enhance the Hendrix experience by increasing scholarships, supporting faculty and student Odysseys, and building critical new buildings on campus,” said R. Madison Murphy ’80, Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Murphy and his wife, Suzanne Nodini Murphy ’80, co-chaired the campaign with Board of Trustee member Dan Peregrin ’80 and his wife, Jennifer Jacuzzi Peregrin ’81. “We are deeply grateful to the many alumni and friends of who have made this success possible,” the Peregrins said. “The campaign has brought national attention to Hendrix for its focus on offering unique learning opportunities to students.” The institutional goal of national leadership would not be possible without the individual leadership exemplified throughout the campaign by Hendrix faculty, staff and the Board of Trustees, said President J. Timothy Cloyd. Cloyd praised Murphy’s leadership of the Board of Trustees. “The Murphy family’s generosity has historically been very instrumental in the progress of Hendrix,” Cloyd said. “And Madison’s leadership, commitment and vision have been

www.hendrix.edu

Photo by Nelson Chenault

Leadership of a National Leader

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 15


Robert & Ruby Priddy Trust of Wichita Falls, Texas, awards a $3.9 million challenge grant to fund scholarships for students from middleincome families; Hendrix must raise $6 million.

Hendrix completes a $3 million three-building Art Center.

President Cloyd appoints a task force “to develop a focus on hands-on liberal arts experiences for all students.”

2003

J. Timothy Cloyd, Ph.D., installed as the 10th President of Hendrix College.

2002

2001

Hendrix is awarded a $2 million gift from the Lilly Endowment to create the Hendrix-Lilly Vocations Initiative.

Yearly Gifts Give Access, Affordability & Unique Experience

16 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

variations in their careers, they embody the same respect for differences in culture and life experience that I came to appreciate from my Hendrix experience,” said Johnson. “Now more than ever, these values in our society are immensely important, and one of the ways to help them grow into wider acceptance is through support of our alma mater.” Parents of current Hendrix students are important Annual Fund supporters through their gifts to the Parent Fund. Cindy and Rick Maley of Mountain Home are the parents of Dana Maley ’13 and proud Parent Fund supporters. “Our gift is a form of unconditional giving.

It is an example we, as parents, feel obligated to set,” said Cindy. “The opportunities presented to her encourage us to support Hendrix so that others needing any kind of financial supplement can benefit as she does. We are committed to supporting such programs, hoping our children will perpetuate the same principles and ideals.” “As parents, we feel inspired and obligated to recognize and promote the program that benefits our daughter and affords her unique opportunities,” she said. “She’s evolved into a more focused and driven person. It’s opened her eyes to new opportunities and her own budding potential.”

Photo by Mike Malone

Annual gifts are the most important means of support that Hendrix receives from alumni and friends. By providing competitive scholarships and financial aid, the Annual Fund enables Hendrix to recruit and retain the best and brightest students. The Annual Fund also underwrites many academic, co-curricular, and campus life projects that tuition alone cannot cover. During A Commitment of National Leadership, the Hendrix Annual Fund received $29 in gifts from alumni, friends, parents, and other supporters. While the campaign is complete, the College continues to rely strongly on annual gifts to ensure current students have the kind of unique experience that Hendrix alumni enjoyed as students and appreciate today. As a student, Shawn Johnson ’98 received grants and financial aid to help offset the cost of attending Hendrix. A double major in politics and history, Johnson was involved in Student Senate, Social Committee, Student Congress, Hardin Hall Council, the Hendrix Choir, Young Democrats, and worked in the Registrar’s Office. As an alumnus and member of the Alumni Board of Governors, Shawn supports the Hendrix Annual Fund. “Hendrix taught me to think critically and to consider diverse views while forming and expressing my opinions,” said Johnson, Assistant Attorney General in the Arkansas Attorney General’s Office. “The Annual Fund ensures that other high school graduates like I was in 1994 will have the opportunity to afford the expenses at Hendrix and thus have the benefit of the Hendrix experience.” “In my professional life as a lawyer, I have found that Hendrix alumni are everywhere in business, the arts, and sciences. Despite

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Dr. Tom Goodwin, Professor of Chemistry, was named U.S. Professor of the Year for baccalaureate colleges by the Carnegie Foundation and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.

Your Hendrix Odyssey is launched and receives national attention in Time Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New York Review of Books.

2004

The Board of Trustees approves A Commitment to National Leadership: The Hendrix Campaign to support the vision of Hendrix as a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education.

Photo by Bill Denison

Priddy Challenge Kicks Off Campaign with a Buzz

As a student, Bonnie Garrigan ’07 co-founded a bee-keeping society and served on the Environmental Concerns Committee. Her Hendrix education was made possible, in part, through a challenge grant the College received from the Robert and Ruby Priddy Trust of Wichita Falls, Texas, during A Commitment to National Leadership.

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After attending a large high school in Dallas, Texas, Bonnie Garrigan ’07 wanted to find a small, private college with a close sense of community that offered a more personal learning environment. She wanted to go to Hendrix. But Bonnie’s family did not qualify for federal financial assistance, and her father, a computer consultant, had been out of work for three years when it was time for her to go to college. In 2003, Hendrix received a $3.9 million challenge grant from the Robert and Ruby Priddy Trust of Wichita Falls, Texas, to establish a new endowed scholarship program for middle-income families. Alumni and friends responded enthusiastically to the Priddy Challenge with more than $6 million in gifts to help Hendrix establish a $10 million endowment for this vitally important scholarship program. With the support of a Priddy Scholarship, Bonnie came to Hendrix. During her four years, she was an active student leader. She helped start an Ecology House for students who desired an environmentally-conscious lifestyle, and she co-founded a bee-keeping society. She also served on the campus’ Environmental Concerns Committee. She graduated in 2007 with an economics degree. Bonnie would not have been able to attend Hendrix without the financial assistance that she received from Hendrix and the Priddy Trust. “The scholarship made a huge difference in my decision to come to Hendrix,” Bonnie Hendrix Priddy Middle-Income said. Through its support of HenScholarship Program drix during A Commitment to National Leadership, the Amount # of Student Robert and Ruby Priddy CharYear Awarded Awards itable Trust positioned Hen2003-04 $314,790 98 drix to meet its goal of pro2004-05 $429,690 112 viding greater access to higher education for hundreds of tal2005-06 $504,128 131 ented and deserving students. 2006-07 $520,256 137 The result of the Priddy 2007-08 $528,835 129 Challenge – 1,079 student 2008-09 $642,915 161 scholarship awards totaling $4.16 million have provided 2009-10 $628,638 162 transformational educa2010-11 $596,846 149 tional opportunities and access to a world of unlimited Total $4,166,098 1,079 possibilities.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 17


The J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation of Tulsa, Okla., awards a $2 million challenge grant to support the new Wellness and Athletics Center.

Acclaimed urban planner Andres Duany updates the campus master plan and recommends Hendrix develop a New Urbanist neighborhood on 129 acres across from campus.

The first class of students enrolls under Your Hendrix Odyssey. Enrollment is 1,031 students.

2005

Alumni Odyssey Medals are introduced to recognize alumni who exemplify the values of Hendrix and engaged liberal arts and sciences education.

2004

A Commitment to National Leadership: The Hendrix Campaign is publicly announced with $33 million raised toward a $70 million goal.

Buildings That Build Leaders Through A Commitment to National Leadership, Hendrix revolutionized its academic program into a national model of innovation in higher education. As a result, the College experienced a record enrollment of students from Arkansas, across the country, and around the world. With the support of $45 million in capital gifts and pledges from alumni, friends, and philanthropic organizations during this campaign, the Hendrix campus too was transformed with more than 200,000 square feet of new facilities completed during this campaign. In 2004, a three-building Art Center was completed with studio space for ceramics, drawing, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, along with welding and wood shops and an auditorium for art history. In 2007, the College completed a new

Photo by the Office of College Relations

Wellness and Athletics Center, which includes space for aquatics, intercollegiate basketball and volleyball, intramural and recreational sports, personal health and wellness, and classrooms for kinesiology. The Wellness and Athletics Center also serves as the gateway to a new athletics complex featuring an eightlane track with artificial surface infield for men’s lacrosse and women’s field hockey, and new lighted fields for baseball, soccer, and softball. In 2010, Hendrix opened a $26 million Student Life and Technology Center, the largest capital project in the history of the College. Among its many amenities, the SLTC is the home of Your Hendrix Odyssey; the Oathout Technology Center; the Hendrix-Miller Center for Vocation, Ethics, and Calling; the CrainMaling Center of Jewish Culture; and offices for Academic Support Services, International

Programs, Student Affairs, and Student Activities. The SLTC also includes a beautiful main dining hall. The SLTC was certified LEED-Gold by the Green Building Certification Institute, making Hendrix the first college in Arkansas to receive this environmentally-friendly distinction, according to the Arkansas chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council. Marshall Oathout ’65 and his wife Edie provided a significant gift to the SLTC through his estate. The Oathouts estate gift was used to support a state-of-the-art environment for students and faculty to work collaboratively using the most advanced academic and social technology available. “Our careers focused on science, technology, and education, so we felt that the SLTC and the Technology Center would be a good fit for us,” Oathout said. To honor their commitment, Hendrix was pleased to name the Oathout Technology Center in their honor. Garth Martin ’52 and his wife, Joann ’55, supported the construction of the Wellness and Athletics Center through a charitable gift annuity. New buildings are much more than bricks and mortar, Martin said. “The new Wellness and Athletics Center is such a great improvement over what was there when I was a student,” he said. “I’m just delighted to see the College upgrade their facilities, and I count it a privilege to help them continue to develop.”

Photo by Bob Handelman

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

Top Left: A new three-building Art Center was completed in 2004.

18 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Bottom Left: A 100,000-sq.ft. Wellness and Athletics Center opened in 2007, replacing Grove Gymnasium. Middle: The new Student Life and Technology Center, which opened in 2010, is the first LEEDGold facility on a college campus in Arkansas.

www.hendrix.edu


Hendrix completes the Mabee Challenge and receives $2 million.

The Odyssey Program awards nearly $250,000 to support 65 student- and faculty-proposed projects.

New athletic facilities are completed, including a competition track and a new soccer field with lights.

Men’s lacrosse and women’s field hockey programs are added.

Student enrollment climbs to 1,195 students.

2007

2006

Hendrix establishes academic partnerships with Accademia dell’Arte in Arezzo, Italy, and Heilongjiang University in Harbin, China.

The Impact of Engagement For some, the word Odyssey will conjure images of the epic Greek poem by Homer about Odysseus and his return to Ithaca after the fall of Troy. For others, Odyssey might simply mean an intellectual or spiritual journey or quest. At Hendrix, Odyssey is the way in which students challenge what they learn in the classroom with what they encounter in the world through hands-on learning. It is how they discover their gifts, talents and passions. It means a liberal arts education is the beginning of a life’s journey, not the end of four years of studying and student life. During A Commitment to National Leadership, alumni, friends and philanthropic organizations invested more than $5 million in gifts to endow this landmark initiative and provide the financial resources for students to fulfill their Odyssey. Since Your Hendrix Odyssey was introduced, the College’s Committee on Engaged Learning has considered nearly 800 funding requests for a total of $3,442,464.66 and has funded more than $1.7 million in project grants, supporting 526 projects involving more than 1,200 students. Through the support of Odyssey grants, students have hiked the Appalachian Trail and chronicled Aboriginal culture. They have examined the face of Islam in Europe and Tibetan Buddhist monks exiled in India. They have studied social psychology, Southern poverty, and solar power. With the excitement among prospective students created by Your Hendrix Odyssey, the student body grew from 1,000 students to a record enrollment this year of 1,468 students, representing 43 states and 14 countries. Not only are there more students. Because Hendrix is committed to a 12:1 student-to-faculty ratio, there are more professors teaching more courses. There are more majors and minors for students to explore. There are more mentors creating more engaged learning opportunities for students. Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning earned national attention for Hendrix with hearty endorsements from Loren Pope’s Colleges that Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think About College and U.S. News and World Report, which listed Hendrix as the nation’s #1 “Up and Coming” liberal arts two years in a row. Through Odyssey, Hendrix College became a national leader in engaged liberal arts and sciences education.

www.hendrix.edu

Photo by Mike Malone

College experience transformed by creative, cuttingedge academic initiative, Your Hendrix Odyssey

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 19


Hendrix raises $6 million to complete the Priddy Challenge and establish a $10 million endowment to support scholarships for students from middle-income families.

Board of Trustees increases the campaign goal to $100 million and extends the campaign through December 31, 2010.

Hendrix receives a $3 million challenge gift from the Murphy Foundation of El Dorado to endow 12 Odyssey Professorships.

2007

The Wellness and Athletics Center opens and Grove Gymnasium is demolished to make way for a new Student Life and Technology Center.

Oh, the Places You’ll Go With funding from Your Hendrix Odyssey, students have traveled to nearly 50 foreign countries across nearly every continent, completing engaged learning experiences across all categories of the Odyssey Program. From Belize to Bosnia, China to Chile, Ghana to Greenland, Malawi to Mexico, The Netherlands to New Zealand, Peru to Portugal, Romania to Rwanda, Singapore to Slovenia, Tanzania to Turkey. The impact of these international Odysseys is an institution whose alumni have engaged with the world before they enter it as college graduates and professionals. The support of Your Hendrix Odyssey doesn’t simply take students to countries all over the world. It ensures that students bring what they learn back to campus and connect those experiences to the classroom, share their encounters with peers and place their newfound knowledge in new contexts, creating effective and entrepreneurial solutions to new challenges that impact their campus and their local and global communities. How has Your Hendrix Odyssey internationalized the Hendrix campus? “The easy response is that the Global Awareness category helped codify study-abroad and other international experiences that students were already having,” said Dr. Peter Gess, Director of International Programs and Associate Professor of Politics. “But Odyssey brings intentionality to the experience, requiring students to reflect on the cross-cultural experience.” The breadth of Odyssey categories has contributed to a diverse body of international experiences for students, said Gess. For example, theatre students performing at the Fringe Festival in Scotland earned Artistic Creativity credit; and students have earned Undergraduate Research credit by studying traditional medicine in China and comparative health care policy in Europe. “We have moved far beyond the traditional model of study abroad,” said Gess. “Students are engaging foreign cultures and ideas through faculty-led endeavors and through self-designed activities. This type of engaged learning can both supplement traditional study abroad and complement it by offering new avenues for the experience.” “We really want to see how a student is changed by the experience, how this contributes to creating the ‘citizen of the world,’ how it teaches students to apply what they learn in the classroom, how they become ‘the whole person,’” said Gess.

20 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Courtesy photo

Your Hendrix Odyssey is Internationalizing Hendrix

Last summer, Kaci Billings ’11 (pictured) from Germantown, Tenn., and Hailey Hundley ’11 from Jonesboro, Ark., volunteered at the Maseno Missions Hospital in Kenya, observing doctors as they provided healthcare to the underprivileged people of Maseno and nearby regions in Kenya.

Other countries students have visited through Your Hendrix Odyssey: Brazil Cambodia Czech Republic Costa Rica Dominican Republic El Salvador France Germany

Greece Guam Honduras India Italy Japan New Zealand Nicaragua

Panama Puerto Rico Republic of Georgia Spain Trinidad Uganda Vietnam Zanzibar

www.hendrix.edu


Hendrix enrolls a record 1,350 students, meeting the Trustees’ enrollment goal five years ahead of schedule.

The Miller Foundation of Fort Smith awards a $1 million gift to Hendrix to establish the Hendrix-Miller Center for Vocation, Ethics, and Calling.

The Crain-Maling Center of Jewish Culture is created through the generosity of Trustee and former parent Dr. Michael Maling and his mother Mrs. Beatrice Crain.

2008

The Willard and Pat Walker Charitable Foundation of northwest Arkansas awards a $2 million challenge gift to build a $6 million endowment to support Your Hendrix Odyssey.

“What sets Hendrix apart is the fact that the focus has been on quality, not merely quantity, and on preserving the integrity of a liberal arts education rather than specialization, knowing that it is more important to be creative and innovative than to await someone else’s creativity and innovation.” -Former Arkansas Lt. Governor Winthrop Rockefeller, parent of Win Rockefeller ’01, at Founders Day 2004

While Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning has only existed formally for five years, decades of Hendrix alumni have exemplified the value of engaged liberal arts education. When Your Hendrix Odyssey was announced

at the inaugural Founders Day Convocation in 2004, Hendrix began a new tradition of awarding Odyssey Medals to alumni in recognition of their personal and professional accomplishments in the six categories of the Odyssey Program, including Artistic Creativity, Global Awareness, Professional and Leadership Development, Service to the World, Special Projects, and Undergraduate Research. Odyssey Medals are awarded yearly by the Board of Trustees. Students who have completed Odyssey projects that are closely connected with the Odyssey Medal recipients and their experiences after Hendrix are chosen to introduce the alumni at Founders Day Convocation each fall. Odyssey Medal recipients are also invited to speak to students in class. The interaction between alumni and students at Founders Day allows students to see firsthand how their Hendrix experience can change the world.

Photo by Ryan McCullough ’09

The Odyssey Medal

2007-2008 Odysssey Medal recipients

Past Odyssey Medal Recipients 2004-2005

2006-2007

2008-2009

2010-2011

P. Allen Smith, Jr. ’83 R. Paul Craig, Jr. ’60 Linda Poindexter Chesterfield ’69 Jo Luck ’63 Mary N. Steenburgen ’75 Dr. I.L. Claude, Jr. ’42

James R. Hayes ’88 Jana G. Eggers ’91 Darren D. Peters ’90 Dr. Mary Nell Ford ’87 Dr. R. Edward Hendrick ’68

Dr. Darren McGuire ’89 Terry J. Ticey ’80 W. Shane Nunn ’87 Dr. Joseph M. Beck II ’77 Robyn Horn ’73 Bryce Leigh Williams Reveley ’66

Randy Goodrum ’69 Andrea Anderson Gluckman ’96 George G. Gleason II ’74 Chris Newlin IV ’86 Dr. Steven W. Barger ’74 Mark A. McCalman ’75

2009-2010

Learn more about each of the Odyssey medalists online at www.hendrix.edu/odysseymedal

2005-2006 Theodore H. Bunting, Jr. ’81 Susan Dunn Tilley ’76 Jennifer L. Platt ’92 Don W. Harrell, Jr. ’59 Alan W. Eastham, Jr. ’73 Stephanie L. James ’72

www.hendrix.edu

2007-2008 Dr. Jack L. Blackshear, Jr. ’64 Dr. John H. Adams ’78 Natalie S. Canerday ’85 Bracken P. Darrell ’85 Kenneth Nixon ’65 Walter O. Pryor ’87

Sheri Bylander ’85 Douglas A. Blackmon ’86 Dr. William H. Fox, Jr. ’60 Eric A. Kenefick ’84 Dr. C. Michael Crowder ’82 Martha Jane Murray ’77

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 21


Hendrix enrolls a record 1,463 students.

Art & Science Group research reveals that 40 percent of current students enrolled at Hendrix because of Odyssey.

Hendrix is named the nation’s #1 “Up and Coming” Liberal Arts College by U.S. News & World Report.

Hendrix completes $1.5 million Mabee Challenge to support the SLTC.

2009

Hendrix receives a $1.5 million Mabee Foundation challenge grant to support the new Student Life and Technology Center (SLTC).

2008

Hendrix raises $3 million to meet the Murphy Odyssey Professorship Challenge and awards the first five of 12 Odyssey Professorships.

Engaged Educators Hendrix faculty members have been closely connected to students’ engaged learning experiences since the launch of Your Hendrix Odyssey. Each Odyssey project includes a faculty mentor. Many Odyssey experiences are collaborative projects between faculty and students. Your Hendrix Odyssey has also provided a source of financial support for activities that allow faculty to continue to grow as teachers and scholars. In 2007, Hendrix introduced the Odyssey Professorships program to acknowledge the vital role that faculty members play in the success of Your Hendrix Odyssey, its effect on academic life at the College, and the impact of engaged learning experiences on students. Hendrix received a challenge grant from the Murphy Foundation to endow 12 Odyssey Professorships that provide resources for faculty development and encourage faculty members to develop courses and co-curricular projects that create additional engaged learning opportunities for Hendrix students. “The Odyssey Program and the Odyssey Professorships have had a profound impact on the academic culture at Hendrix,” said Dr. Robert L. Entzminger, Provost, Dean of the College, and Professor of English. “They have provided the means to weave together formal classroom teaching with out-of-classroom learning opportunities in a way that is unique in higher education. In so doing, they have shifted the relationship between faculty and student to something closer to a partnership.” “The Odyssey Professorships carry sufficient funding for a large number of students to be involved, and they are sustained over a three-year period, so projects that require a longer period for gestation can be pursued,” added Entzminger. “They also allow for faculty professional development.”

Photo by Nancy Nolan

Faculty put students first in Your Hendrix Odyssey

Odyssey Professorships Awarded Bill and Connie Bowen Odyssey Professor Tom D. Stanley (2008-2010) Rod Miller (2010- )

Cynthia Cook Sandefur Odyssey Professor James Jennings (2009- )

Morriss and Ann Henry Odyssey Professor Ian T. King (2008-2010) Fred Ablondi (2010- )

22 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Julia Mobley Odyssey Professor

Nancy and Craig Wood Odyssey Professor

Judy and Randy Wilbourn Odyssey Professor

James and Emily Bost Odyssey Professor

Thomas E. Goodwin (2008-2010) Jennifer Penner (2010- ) Jennifer Peszka (2010- ) Joyce M. Hardin (2008-2010) George Harper (2008-2010) Matthew D. Moran (2008- ) Maxine Payne (2010- )

John B. (Jay) McDaniel (2008-2010) George Harper (2010- ) Randy Kopper (2010- ) Alex Vernon (2010- )

www.hendrix.edu


Hendrix enrolls a (new) record of 1,469 students.

U.S. News & World Report names Hendrix the #1 “Up and Coming” Liberal Arts College for the second year in a row.

The SLTC is completed and receives LEED Gold Certification for sustainable design.

Hendrix meets the Kresge Challenge, completing the $26 million fundraising goal for the SLTC.

Campaign is complete! $29 million in annual gifts + $45 million in capital gifts + $27 million in endowed gifts = $101 million.

2010

Odyssey grants surpass the $1 million mark.

Kresge Foundation of Troy, Mich., awards a challenge grant to complete the SLTC.

In 2009, Dr. James M. Jennings, Professor of Education and History, was awarded the Cynthia Cook Sandefur Odyssey Professorship. The Odyssey Professorship has enabled Jennings to build upon work he and students had begun during two previously funded Odyssey projects called “Above the Line,” which studied 22 third graders in the Forrest City School District in 2007 who previously scored “below” or “below basic” on the Arkansas Benchmark Exam, a state-sponsored testing program designed to grade the educational aptitude of public school students. Following three weeks of intensive remedial studies utilizing the Above the Line Project curriculum, a majority of students improved their test scores in a number of subject areas. “Our findings can be a roadmap for improving test scores in struggling school districts,” Jennings said following the success of his program. “Specifically, providing intensive educational attention to these students, while arming their parents with proven techniques to continue the learning process at home, could drastically change the lives of these students and the educational footing of school districts fighting to meet minimum standards.” Through his Odyssey Professorship, Jennings expanded the project to examine a full grade level for a full school year at Junction City Elementary School and Retta Brown Elementary School in El Dorado. In the project, Hendrix students conduct research, surveying teachers and principals each quarter, and collect the data. Jennings and the students work with Sheri Shirley, principal of Oakland Heights Elementary in Russellville, who serves as a third party evaluator of the student-collected data. Shirley was featured in Karin Chenoweth’s It’s

www.hendrix.edu

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

Above the Line

Being Done: Academic Success in Unexpected Schools, which Jennings called “a leading book on turnaround schools.” Jennings is also teaching a course called Closing the Achievement Gap to six Hendrix students interested in local and state policy needed for turnaround school success. In the course, Jennings and students examine education policy in Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana and, based on their analysis, will make policy recommendations related to turnaround schools. “Hendrix students are very concerned with statistics that I’ve shared about what’s going on in the Delta,” said Jennings. “They know that for students who are not succeeding in the third grade, there are long-term implications for high school success, and college and career choice.” “They realize they have a responsibility to address social problems,” he said. “I was really surprised at how much students are really interested and concerned about what needs to be done to make these schools and these students successful. That’s a social justice project.” Your Hendrix Odyssey and the Odyssey

Professorships Program have changed the academic environment at Hendrix, Jennings said. “We’re creating possible solutions, as opposed to just memorizing information for a test,” he said. “Students come here with that interest,” he said. “They want to be involved in decisions that shape their world before they step into it officially.” Your Hendrix Odyssey has also changed the way students and faculty members collaborate, Jennings said. “We sit down as a group. It’s not just a case of the professor instructing them,” he said. “We were solving it together, and it’s important to have that experience in liberal arts education.” Jennings, who joined the Hendrix faculty in 1992, has seen firsthand a renaissance of faculty and student research thanks to Your Hendrix Odyssey. “Now there is an emphasis on and support for research, but we think of the student connection to research and how we can involve students in a meaningful way … and learn from them too. Odyssey did that.”

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 23



Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

Food Show

student perspective

Students help themselves to food at the Food Show hosted by Dining Services on Jan. 19, 2011. The Food Show was started in 2000 in hopes of giving the students a voice in the menu selections and has become an annual event. This year approximately 15 vendors were present, offering students the chance to taste and comment on more than 50 potential new food products.


Edible Odyssey

Hendrix students hunger to make a difference Photo by Joshua Daugherty

By Rob O’Connor ’95 Associate Editor Hendrix students have a healthy appetite for more than simply eating. They want to know where it comes from, how it was grown, and how it can improve their health and their world. In this issue of Hendrix Magazine, we highlight just a small sample of students who are engaged in food-related projects through Your Hendrix Odyssey: Engaging in Active Learning, along with some examples of Hendrix alumni and their food-focused Odysseys. As a senior capstone project for an interdisciplinary studies major she designed in sustainable development, Katherine Roehm ’11 from Austin, Texas, developed “Hendrix Edible Forest Garden and Arkansas Heritage Vegetables.” With the help of an Odyssey project grant, she and a group of five students spent three weeks before the beginning of the fall semester creating a garden of multifunctional, perennial fruits and vegetables, on a College-owned plot of land across from campus between Washington Avenue and Clifton Street and adjacent to a community garden operated by a student garden club.

26 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Students tilled and tested the soil, which they enriched with organic manure they received from Cody Hopkins ’01 of Falling Sky Farm (Read more about Cody on page 30). They planted 22 species of edible perennial fruits and vegetables, including 15 edible species native to North America. The Edible Forest uses the principles of permaculture, incorporating a layered landscape of trees, shrubs, vines, and groundcovers. Roehm studied permaculture in a previous Odyssey experience that took her to Sirius Ecovillage in Massachusetts. Ultimately, the Edible Forest will feature a forest-like structure of stacked perennial plants and vegetables that is self-sustaining or at least low-maintenance. In a special section in the garden, students planted heritage vegetables – beans, peppers, cabbage, cucumbers, and mustard greens – grown from seeds from the Ozark Mountain Bioregion. They enjoyed a bumper crop of Big Potato Cucumbers, which they made into pickles and presented to students during a presentation on their Odyssey project. They also spoke about the Edible Forest Garden project in classes, including Dr. Stella Capek’s Food, Culture, and Nature course, Dr. Joyce Hardin’s Introduction to Environmental Studies, and Dr. Ann Willyard’s Plants and People.

www.hendrix.edu


Courtesy photo

In addition to the Edible Forest Garden, Roehm served as a co-chair of the Environmental Concerns Committee during her sophomore year. She helped start several new campus sustainability initiatives, including the Green Team, which collects cardboard and other recyclable material from students during move-in day, and Trash to Treasure, a similar concept for collecting material when students move out. She also participated in a sustainable development study abroad program through the School of Field Studies in Costa Rica and served on a campus sustainability committee appointed by the President. After graduation this spring, she plans to participate in an organic farming program in South America operated by the World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms and ultimately pursue a master’s degree in ecology or landscape architecture. Opportunities like these are why Roehm chose Hendrix. “The Odyssey Program is a big part of it,” she said. “For self-starters who are motivated, there is support. I definitely would not have been able to do this without the help of Odyssey.” “You can really get involved with what you are passionate about,” she said. “I think Hendrix is a really great place for that.”

Alumni Odyssey Medalists & Their Food-Related Odysseys Jo Luck ’63 Former CEO of world hunger and humanitarian aid organization Heifer International, 2004 Odyssey Medal for Service to the World

Eric Kenefick ’84 World Food Programme, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2009 Odyssey Medal for Service to the World

Max McCalman ’75 International scholar of artisanal cheese, 2010 Odyssey Medal for Special Projects

P. Allen Smith ’83 Nationally renowned garden authority and media personality, 2004 Odyssey Medal for Special Projects

Before the fall semester began, Hendrix students installed the Edible Forest Garden across the street from campus. Pictured left to right are Katy Brantley ‘11, Katherine Roehm ’11, Madeleine Keenan ’12, Stephen Borutta ’13, Gabe Levin ’11, Katherine Dennis ’13, and Laura McCaughey ’13, seated, in the wheelbarrow.

www.hendrix.edu

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 27


Which came first?

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

For Hendrix seniors Lydia Nash and Jayce Hafner, the answer to the age-old question is simple. The chickens came first … about a dozen hens from a commercial hatchery in Iowa, to be precise.

28 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

They – the chickens – are Rhode Island Reds (“a hearty, all-American breed”), Barred Plymouth Rocks (another strong, American “Puritanical” breed), and a Chilean breed called “Easter Eggers” for their ability to lay pink, green, and light blue eggs. The chickens are the subject of Fowl Play: The Hendrix Chicken Project, an Odyssey project designed by Nash, a mathematical economics major from Fremont, Calif., and Hafner, an international relations and sustainable communities major from Edinburg, Va. They – Nash and Hafner – anticipate an approximate weekly yield of 70 eggs, demonstrating the viability of small-scale, self-sufficient agricultural production. They also plan to donate a share of eggs to a food bank in the local community. The project comes at a time when a number of families in rural, suburban and urban areas are initiating back yard chicken projects of their own, Hafner said. “The chicken movement is taking off across the U.S. as well as the U.K., and will likely continue to expand,” she said. “While I was studying abroad in the Findhorn eco-village in Scotland last semester, watching that particular community rally around the initiation of their own chicken project was especially inspiring, and I expect that we will see similar results here at Hendrix.”


“While a few other schools such as Pomona and Earlham have initiated similar smallscale chicken operations, Hendrix is a pioneer institution in this movement,” she said. “It’s incredibly exciting that the administration supported us in being a leader in chicken/ livestock raising.” The timing of the project has been serendipitous for student interest in food and sustainability. “Student interest in food is growing … People were really eager for it,” said Nash, who was president of the Hendrix Student Senate during her senior year. Prior to the chicken project, Nash studied organic gardening in Ireland. She spent the past summer as an intern for former U.S. Sen. Blanche Lincoln observing up close the workings of the Senate Agricultural Committee. “Students have really claimed it for their own,” agreed Hafner, adding that students work in shifts and keep logs and journals on the chickens. The birds are tame enough to be taken for walks on campus, even bike rides.

An e-mail list for the project goes to about 80 students, 25 of whom actively care for the chickens, she said. The birds live in a small portable pen that is easily transported around the yard behind Physical Plant, which the administration agreed to supply for the project. Chicken manure is also used to fertilize a community garden, yet another student Odyssey project. One unforeseen advantage of the location has been the input and support the project has received from Physical Plant staff. “They really love the chickens,” Nash said. “They have actually set up chairs around the pen to watch the chickens during their lunch break!” A number of staff have raised chickens before and have been very helpful, offering advice on how to care for the chickens and other tips, she added. The chicken project has brought people with varying interests (e.g. student athletes, student body leaders, artists, activists, etc.) together around a common interest, Hafner said.

“I’ve met so many people through this that I never would have met. That’s really exciting,” she said. “Chickens seem to have an almost universal appeal on campus. Hafner said the project is “never truly ending” and hopes it will pass down to other students. After graduation, Nash plans to pursue a Ph.D. in agricultural economics. This semester, she is interning with Hendrix alumna Emily English ’02 in the Delta Garden Study (Story, Page 32). Hafner, who grew up on livestock farm in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, hopes to have a farm of her own one day. “It’s always been in my life,” she said. A former Heifer International intern, she hopes to combine her interest and experience in sustainable agriculture with a career in diplomacy. “This project is an effort to begin that journey.”

Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

www.hendrix.edu

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 29


Green Acres

(Organic) farm living is the life for he

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

By Rob O’Connor ’95 Associate Editor Despite his physics degree from Hendrix and leadership of two successful start-up businesses, Cody Hopkins may have dashed the dreams of his father and grandfather. “They were brick masons, and they didn’t want me to have to work with my hands,” he said, laughing at the irony. When he graduated from Hendrix in 2001, the Van Buren native became the first member of his immediate family to graduate from college. And soon after, he became a farmer. In 2007, Cody formed Falling Sky Farm near Marshall, Ark., with his partner Andrea Todt, a Searcy County native and alumna of Earlham College in Indiana. In addition to raising grass-fed livestock, they have a newborn son, Samuel Hopkins, who was born in November 2010.


Like the food he grows on the farm, Cody’s interest in farming and food culture grew organically. “One of the side effects of going to a liberal arts college is that you get interested in so many things,” he said. During college, Cody spent two summers working in a restaurant in Providence, R.I., where he first became interested in food. When he graduated from Hendrix, he moved to Providence and spent two years teaching math and physics at an all-boys Catholic high school. “I enjoyed teaching, but not in a classroom per se,” he said. “And I missed the South and missed my family.” He followed his interest in food back to the South, first to Lafayette, La., where he lived for a year baking bread, before he moved back to Arkansas to manage Serenity Farm, a bakery in Leslie beloved by locals and travelers. Living in rural Arkansas quickly left an impression on the recent college graduate. “Searcy County is an economically-challenged environment,” he said. “It’s hard to find a job. Most people go off to find work.” Inspired by reading Michael Pollan and Joel Salatin, he began to get interested in economic development. He initially considered getting a master’s degree but decided instead for a more hands-on look at the local food movement and its impact on rural economics. “I thought ‘Wouldn’t that be awesome if some of these farmers marketed their products this way’,” he said. “The idea at the time was there was no way in hell.” So he resolved to start “a demonstration farm” to show that organic farming can be a viable agri-business model that’s better for the farmer, consumers, animals, and the land, he said. Somewhat fortified with capital thanks to a grant from Wild Gift, an Idaho-based nonprofit that supports young entrepreneurs, the couple started raising meat chickens, turkey, ducks, beef, and pork on 40 acres they leased for free from a family friend of Andrea’s. They stayed there for three years before they outgrew the space and moved to a 160acre parcel, where they now live in a newly acquired Airstream trailer. “We don’t have a lot of money, but we’re committed to showing it can be done,” he said. Most customers will immediately notice the improved flavor of 100 percent grass-based livestock. More importantly, Hopkins noted, is the meat is healthier because of the conditions it’s raised in. “It’s not just what you eat but what you eat eats,” he said. The couple realized really quickly that the

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infrastructure for their type of farming doesn’t exist anymore. “A hundred years ago, 80 percent of the population lived on a farm, today it’s less than one percent,” he said, adding as an example that there are no more than three USDA-certified facilities in the state where small scale farmers can get a cow butchered. To sell their products, Cody began establishing relationships with central Arkansas farmers. He joined the Certified Arkansas Farmers Market, a group of central Arkansas area farmers, and now serves on its board. They began selling crops to restaurants and looking for a venue in Conway. Hopkins soon met Eric Wagoner, an Athens, Ga.-based farmer, at a conference in Kentucky. Wagoner had created Locally Grown, a web-based farmer’s market program. Cody quickly adapted the turn-key program and, in 2008, Conway Locally Grown, his second venture, was born. It has grown rapidly – from five farmers, 15 customers and less than $30,000 in total sales in 2008 to 40 farmers, 300 members, to more than $150,000 in gross sales in 2010. “That’s pretty fast growth,” he said. “It’s going to be really interesting to see how the growth trend continues.” “We’ve grown really fast, but I still feel like we’re in the start-up phase of this business,” he said, adding that the money they have made so far has gone back into the farm. Their goal is to make the farm financially viable and to serve as a model for rural economic development. The couple has clearly piqued the interest of the local community, which voted them Searcy County Farm Family of the Year. “It was surprising because we’re kind of oddballs,” he said. “We didn’t have any experience, which was sort of a good thing … Young people trying to start a business in this community are unheard of.” Though he didn’t exactly meet his family’s goal of not working with his hands, Cody calls his journey “stressful but exciting,” and no one is more surprised than he. “Out of all the things I’m doing, the thing that surprises me most is being an entrepreneur,” he said. “I wish I would have taken more accounting classes in college.” Farming, he said, is an education unto itself. “Farming is a lot like going to a liberal arts college,” he said, citing the accounting, marketing, product development, and research that go into farming. “There’s lots and lots of problem solving, which hopefully you get better at in college … I know I did.”

Gabe Levin ’11 Before interning with Cody at Falling Sky Farm during summer 2009, Arkansas native Gabe Levin had no prior farm experience. His image of farming was limited to seeing Tyson Foods poultry farms near his hometown of Clarksville. “The first time I met him was in Dr. Capek’s Food, Culture, and Nature class,” said Levin, a senior environmental studies major. “I thought, ‘Wow, here’s somebody who’s actually doing this’ … It’s very progressive and almost unheard of.” “I’d never really thought about farming as a career choice,” he said. “I never thought it was possible in that kind of context.’ “They kind of have a different practice,” said Levin, referring to Hopkins’ system of holistic grazing, a form of rotational grazing. One goal of the internship was to learn how to do that, he said. “The benefits are wide ranging ... It’s about trying to establish a symbiotic relationship between the animals and the land, which results in happier, healthier animals, healthier farmland, and healthier food products,” he said. In raising grass-fed chicken, cattle and turkeys, the focus is on quality, not quantity, Levin said, which means it costs more per pound, presenting a marketing challenge. Learning direct marketing was another goal of his internship, and Levin helped Hopkins at Conway Locally Grown and other farmers’ markets, including the one in Argenta in North Little Rock. Levin returned to the farm the following summer to work part-time. Levin is now looking at programs in sustainable agriculture after graduation or potentially the Peace Corps, with the ultimate goal of starting his own farm. In addition to his farming internship, he is a pitcher on the men’s baseball team and assisted in the Edible Forest project.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 31


Photo by Joshua Daugherty

A Garden-Grown Odyssey Alumna leads landmark food study By Amy Meredith Forbus ’96

Focus on sustainability

Growing up in Little Rock, Emily English ’02 had no experience with gardening. She hopes her current work leads to fewer Arkansas children being able to make that claim. As Program Manager of the Delta Garden Study for the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Research Institute, English works on a USDAfunded research project bringing fruit and vegetable gardens to 10 middle schools across the state. “As far as we can tell, it’s the largest school garden research study that’s ever been conducted,” English says, adding that school gardens can help students make valuable connections, both to where their food comes from and to other aspects of having a healthful life.

She’s a city dweller who loves farming. How did that happen? “There’s farming in my roots, but nothing I remember, per se,” she said. “I’ve always been very connected with the environment and being outside, even as a small child. “It turned into sustainable agriculture when I started to focus.” English’s time at Hendrix helped her hone in on her interests to the point that she was able to create her own degree program. Working with an advisory team of four professors, she chose Sustainability, Culture and Environment as her major, which included studies in science, sociology, politics, and anthropology. She also earned a minor in religion.

32 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

As she designed her major, English’s advisory team encouraged her to think carefully about her word choice. “We talked about using the word ‘sustainability,’ and the dangers of it being a buzzword,” she said. “They had me keep that in mind ... [but] I wanted to understand this idea of sustainability as something that could be applied to every area of your life. It’s so exciting that now I think we can safely say that it is no longer considered a buzzword.” One of the experiences that led her to that particular word choice came during her sophomore year. She enrolled in religion professor Dr. Jay McDaniel’s State of the World course, which required logging five hours of service learning per week. McDaniel recommended Heifer Ranch in Perryville, as a service

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Discovering a calling As her 2002 commencement approached, English became convinced that she needed to spend time as a full-time farmer. “So I went to Heifer and I farmed,” she said. After graduation, she secured a job at Heifer Ranch, working on the CSA farm during 2002 and 2003. Photo by Joshua Daugherty

“I worked for a $200 a month volunteer stipend,” she said. “I didn’t really know if I would be a farmer the rest of my life, but I knew that somehow or another, my destiny was to be involved in this movement toward fresh, local produce, and helping people reconnect to where their food comes from. “I decided that no matter what, I needed to know how to grow, and I loved it. I loved farming,” she said. “I loved being outside, I loved the magic of putting a seed in the ground and taking care of it, and watching it grow, and then feeding people. That was the best part of all of it, sharing that harvest.” Weekly deliveries to Conway and Little Rock gave her the opportunity to take food harvested from the eight-acre plot of land and put it directly into the hands of the people who would eat it. It was during those deliveries that she first saw a child get excited about a vegetable. “Kids loved our fresh tomatoes,” English said. “It was amazing having kids come up and eat and be covered in tomato juice ... knowing that they could pick them up and eat them right there. They were freshly plucked, chemical-free, sweet, tasty tomatoes. Nutrition at its finest!” In 2004, English returned to Little Rock and took a job at Boulevard Bread Company. Boulevard’s then-owner, Scott McGehee, knew her background and asked her to help him start Boulevard Organics, a small farming enterprise that served the bread company and sold at the Little Rock Farmers Market. It was during the Boulevard Organics year that English realized how much she valued the educational aspects of growing produce. “At Heifer, there were kids who came and did service learning, and there were all kinds of educational experiences for people, and I missed that part of it,” she said. “And I think it was that moment of farming just for business that I realized how important the service of education was to me.

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

learning option. Owned and operated by Heifer International, Heifer Ranch includes a communitysupported agriculture (CSA) farm. English’s service learning hours at the farm soon extended beyond her course requirements. She even used the farm as a case study for her senior thesis. “I just really fell in love with the magic of growing food,” she said, “and had a hard time walking away from it. I connected growing fresh produce with the sustainability of individuals, communities and relationships.” Some of her core classes came from outside of Hendrix. In the fall of English’s junior year, she studied abroad through the University of New Hampshire in a four-month learning community-designed program. “It examined the study of sustainability in the context of community, ecology, and spirituality,” she said. The study included time in Vermont and France, then an extended amount of time in India, where the students lived for two months with “a sustainable spiritual community, who through the study of their spirituality had developed a lot of sustainable practices around living and growing and being together,” she said. English appreciated the support of her advisory team in pursuing the study abroad option. “They understood that this could form the core of my major,” she said, “and that they could continue to support and enhance it during the rest of my time at Hendrix. “It was amazing, and very life-changing.”

Above: Emily English ’02 works with Hendrix students Katie Jones ’11, right, Lydia Nash ’11, back left, and Kelsey Manning ’13, who are interning with the Delta Garden Study. Left: English working with students at Mabelvale Middle School in the Delta Garden Study, a USDA-funded research project organized through Arkansas Children’s Hospital Research Institute. “I definitely believe you can combine the two, but I’m not a business person, I’m a service person.”

A broader context English then held a couple of other jobs in other states—some related to farming, others not. For the 2006 growing season, she returned to Heifer Ranch as a co-manager of the CSA farm. Returning to that work helped her conclude that it was time for another adventure in learning. “It was in that year that I realized again, ‘It’s time to go back to school. It’s time to figure out how I can apply this to a larger picture,’” she said. “What’s the bigger picture? How can I take my skills and my interest level and apply it in a way that really moves the movement?” She saw two options: Learning more about health education and nutrition, or more about how to serve the world. She considered applying either to the UAMS College of Public Health or to the Clinton School of Public Service. Continued on page 38

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Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 33


At Your Service

Alumni serve up entrepreneurial success in the food service industry By Werner Trieschmann ’86

John Beechboard ’01 majored in history but was lured away during his last year with classes in the business department. “It kind of piqued my interest,” says Beechboard. “The rest of my senior year I took all business and finance courses.” While Beechboard, a co-owner of ZAZA Fine Salad and Wood Oven Pizza Co. with Scott McGehee, enjoyed cooking back in his Hendrix days, he says, “I never thought it would be my profession.” But business was on his mind, even in high school, where he started his own record label. After college, he worked for a time for McGehee at his Boulevard Bread Company in Little Rock’s Heights neighborhood. “I just started out in front retail,” says Beechboard. “Then I started cooking and became a sous chef. The way that it all started was that Scott and I both like to sit around and come up with restaurant concepts that would never see the light of day. These were outlandish ideas. ZAZA was one of those concepts.” Outlandish idea or not, ZAZA has been nothing short of a hit in Little Rock. Raves came almost immediately in the form of long lines. While the frenzy has died down a bit, ZAZA is consistently earning first-place accolades in readers’ polls taken in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and Arkansas Times. Beechboard admits that at the start he and

34 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

The restaurant industry never sits still. There are always new movements, new ways to make a plate into an adventure and turn a night out into an evening of surprise and delight. Not surprisingly, Hendrix alumni are at the forefront of satisfying Arkansas’ everchanging appetite, giving customers a singular dining experience, whether that be pizza from an Italian built wood-fired oven, authentic French crepes from a mobile truck or a smorgasboard of local food grown within miles of the table where it is served.

John Beachboard ’01 McGehee were passionate about different aspects of ZAZA’s yet-to-be formulated menu. “We almost didn’t do it,” Beechboard says of his restaurant. “He thought I was insane for wanting to do salads the way we do them. I thought making gelato from scratch was too laborious. It was just one of those things. I had to take him to New York to this one salad place I liked. He took me to a place in Brooklyn that made gelato. Everything started making sense.” Today Beechboard is overseeing the ZAZA that opened in the Hendrix Village in October. He is quite high on the location and is especially proud of the wood-burning pizza oven in the Conway restaurant.

“One of the things that the Little Rock restaurant can’t touch is that we have this absolutely incredible oven over here,” says Beechboard. “It was shipped over from Italy piece by piece. It is amazing.” Beechboard likes the fact that his restaurant doesn’t just attract one type of customer. He noticed this on a recent night after coming back from a catering event. “There were different age groups all over the place. This was nine at night. You had thirtysomethings. There were grandparents with kids and college students. I just looked around and there were all these elements that had come together. Wow, this is really awesome.”

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Jack Sundell ’00 won’t likely open his Little Rock restaurant, The Root Cafe, until May but a website (www.therootcafe.com) is up and running and anticipation is building. The Root Cafe, which is taking over an old burger and ice cream place on Main Street, aims, as the website notes, “to build community through local food.” The website also touts a quote from Michael Pollan’s In Defense of Food. “Food consists not just in piles of chemicals; it also comprises a set of social and ecological relationships, reaching back to the land and outward to other people.” Sundell graduated from Hendrix in 2000 and majored in International Relations and Global Studies. He worked for while in a restaurant in New York City before eventually joining the Peace Corps. It was while he was with the Peace Corps in Morocco that he started to see food in a different way. “It was where I got interested in food systems and animals,” says Sundell. “It seemed like the people doing this kind of work were doing something productive. There in Morocco having a cow and chickens in the backyard was a normal part of life.” When Sundell came back to Arkansas, he went to work for Heifer International and had an internship in livestock. He made connections with area farmers during his internship. Those connections have come in handy as he

Photo by Joshua Daugherty

Jack Sundell ’00 and his wife Corri

and his wife Corri prepare for opening day at the restaurant. “I had always had this idea that I would like to someday own a cafe,” says Sundell. “I guess a lot of people have this idea. Just by happenstance the local food movement had become a big thing around the country and it was something I wanted to participate in.” Root Cafe will have fans at the ready because Sundell and his wife have spent the last two years as caterers and holding workshops on canning and other food-related topics. Sundell says the part about opening a restaurant that he had not anticipated was the depth of government regulations. “We met with the health department and had inspections from the city,” says Sundell. “I had to meet with the fire marshall the other day.” But the Root Cafe is slowly coming into view. Sundell notes that those interested can keep current thanks to the blog on Root Cafe’s website. “We’ll have breakfast and lunch,” says Sundell. “We are striving to have all our meat from local suppliers. When you come, you’ll have an experience unlike anywhere else. We want the food to be delicious and want you to be totally satisfied whether you care about local food or not.” For Sundell, his restaurant and the local food movement are small parts of a larger idea.

“Food is a good entry point in a conversation about local as a lifestyle. The dollars stay in Arkansas and increase the tax revenues we have here and make the place better.” In her post-Hendrix life Paula Jo Chitty Henry ’88 has worked as an actress in Key West and in France, where she filmed a scene in a cab with Omar Sharif. But today she can be seen working cast iron skillets while making French crepes for Crepes Paulette, the mobile trailer restaurant that’s currently parked in downtown Bentontville. Crepes Paulette is a partnership Henry shares with her husband, Frederic, who is a native of Brittney, France. The couple wanted to open a sit-down restaurant but went another direction when they looked at the numbers. “We worked a couple years trying to get a brick and mortar place,” says Henry. “We didn’t feel like taking on that much debt. This is a way to step back from that and see if it works.” Crepes Paulette, which opened alongside the Bentonville Farmers’ Market, has been a draw from the first day. Henry says that it wasn’t necessarily part of the plan that she do the cooking. “We didn’t have any idea what we were doing,” says Henry with a laugh. “I had made 10 crepes in my life. Fred started taking the orders and he would take all comers. We had people waiting for an hour for their crepes. Now we only take five orders at a time.” They are still working out issues with what hours they are going to be open — the winter weather has played havoc with Crepes Paulette’s schedule — but they try to serve crepes at least two days a week. Henry is trying to keep fans notified by e-mail and through Facebook. Crepes Paulette serves authentic French sweet and savory crepes filled with various fruits and meats. For the winter, French soup was added to the menu. “We don’t do any plate service,” says Henry. “We have tables near the trailer.” Henry’s restaurant fits right in with a growing downtown Bentonville that will get an even bigger boost when the highlyanticipated Crystal Bridges Museum opens in November 2011. Henry is quite happy to have Crepes Paulette be part of the scene. “We enjoy the idea of people strolling around with the crepes and being casual about it.” Hendrix alumnus Werner Trieschmann is a freelance writer, playwright and instructor. He lives in Little Rock with his wife and two sons.

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Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 35


Eat, Drink, and Be Notable An Interview with Mark Jacob ’76, Co-Author of What the Great Ate By Charles Chappell ’64, Professor Emeritus of English

Jean-Paul Sartre would not eat crabs and lobsters because they reminded him of insects. Galileo Galilei engaged in an egg fight with a Jesuit priest. Flannery O’Connor received a letter from a reader who complained that one of O’Connor’s books “left a bad taste in my mouth.” O’Connor’s reply: “You weren’t supposed to eat it.” Georgia O’Keefe read cookbooks in bed at night before she went to sleep. Maria Callas, in preparation for an operatic role, lost weight by ingesting a tapeworm. Henry Ford regularly ate a lunch featuring weed sandwiches. Former and current Hendrix students of philosophy, physics, literature, art, music, and business will find these morsels of unusual information featured in the 2010 book What the Great Ate, written by alumnus Mark

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Jacob ’76, and his brother Matthew Jacob. Readers devoted to all of the other traditional liberal arts disciplines, as well as people who maintain a keen interest in popular culture or in the art and science of cuisine, will encounter in this delightful volume a treasure trove of facts concerning the food choices and dining habits of hundreds of famous or infamous men and women representing many diverse cultures and different eras. On May 21, 2011, Mark Jacob will lead a discussion of this book at the annual Alumni Odyssey College to be held on campus. Recently, Mark cheerfully agreed to answers questions concerning his career as a journalist and author and about the evolution of What the Great Ate. Q. After your graduation from Hendrix in 1976 as an English major, did you directly enter the field of journalism? Please summarize your occupational history during the past 35 years. A. After Hendrix, I had two job offers: Become a sportswriter at the Pine Bluff Commercial newspaper or manage a Taco Bell in Little Rock. The Taco Bell job paid $10 a week more, but I opted for the newspaper job. After a year, I moved to Boulder, Colo., where I washed dishes and processed magazine subscription letters for a year. Then back to

Arkansas, where I was a copy editor for the Arkansas Democrat for six months and the Arkansas Gazette for five years. Then I moved to Chicago to work at the Chicago Sun-Times as a copy editor. I eventually was promoted to executive news editor and then Sunday editor. After 14 years at the Sun-Times, I jumped to the Chicago Tribune as a news editor. I was promoted to foreign/national news editor and then to deputy metro editor, the position I now hold. Q. By what process and over how long a period of time did you and Matthew decide to undertake the project that resulted in the publication of What the Great Ate? A. I had already co-authored three books when I persuaded my younger brother Matthew to collaborate on a book that would be his first. We spent at least six months brainstorming dozens of ideas before we settled on gathering stories about the dining habits of history’s most famous people. Matt and I both like history, and he’s a foodie. So it made sense. I was trying to get a literary agent to help me sell a novel I’d written, and the agent asked if I had any non-fiction projects. I told him about our idea and that I had come up with the title “What the Great Ate.” He said he wanted to represent us. I had already been collecting historical trivia for many years (I co-write a

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history feature for the Chicago Tribune called “10 Things You Might Not Know”), so that gave us a start. Then Matt and I spent about two years or so working on the book. Q. At the end of the book you include a “Selected Bibliography” that covers 19 pages. What methods of research did you and Matthew employ to be able to conduct this massive gathering of facts? A. We are speed-readers. We drafted a list of hundreds of “greats” and then checked out books about them and searched for articles online. One weekend, I speed-read about 2,000 pages from four different histories of Richard Wagner. He was a detestable guy, and I’m not just saying that because he consumed my weekend. Here’s another trick: We would go to Google Books on the web and type in search terms such as “Eisenhower” and “breakfast,” or “Amelia Earhart” and “meat.” Sounds time-consuming, and it was, but we found fun stories that way. We also read many, many histories of food. One of my favorites was a history of bread. Did you know that the Eucharist that Catholics take at mass used to be the size and shape of a wreath and feed an entire congregation? Another important aspect of the research was debunking stories that were too good to be true. For example, we got a nutritionist to help us disprove the story that Elvis Presley’s daily calorie intake was equivalent to that of an Asian elephant. Elvis ate a lot, but not that much. Q. You organize the book into chapters based on the principle of the professional endeavors or life statuses of groups of individuals: Rulers; Writers; Prophets and Philosophers; nine more chapters. How did you decide upon this structure and upon the sequence, with (in this era of obsession with celebrities) stage and screen stars coming sixth and musicians ninth? A. We tried to find categories that would cover most of humanity and were of interest to readers. We probably could have organized it in any of a dozen ways, but this way seemed to work. The book is intended to be both amusing and informative, so we knew we had to include movie stars and musicians. But we didn’t want the book to seem too frivolous, so we put the chapters about world leaders and religious figures at the front. Q. Did you and Matthew consider devoting an entire chapter to Elvis? A. We certainly had enough material to do that,

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but it would have broken the format. Besides, we wanted to touch on as many “greats” as possible. There’s an excellent book devoted to Elvis’ diet – The Life and Cuisine of Elvis Presley by David Adler. That book was helpful to us. But in general, we found our anecdotes about famous people by sifting through long biographies in order to sift out the one funny story that might be on Page 342. And believe me, food anecdotes are not flagged in any indexes. You simply have to read the whole book. Food must have been unimportant to the architect Le Corbusier, because I didn’t find a single food story in his entire biography. It’s a wonder he didn’t starve to death. Q. Please talk about the website and the blog that you and your brother have created in connection with your book. A. We created whatthegreatate.org to promote the book, and we continue to post interesting facts several days per week. Since the book came out last summer, we have encountered a lot of new food facts. For example, Tina Fey said that “the recurring dream of my childhood is to be in a room up to my neck in McDonald’s French fries and I’ve got to eat my way out.” She said that after we had finished our book. Maybe we’ll put that story in a sequel someday. Q. Please describe the three books that you have published before this one. A. The Game That Was: The George Brace Baseball Photo Collection (Contemporary Books, 1996), co-authored with Richard Cahan. This collection of black-and-white photos, the vast majority never before published, was praised by the New York Times Book Review. Wrigley Field: A Celebration of the Friendly Confines (Contemporary Books, 2002), co-authored with Stephen Green. Photos by Green, the Cubs’ official photographer, were combined with my text. I got terrific access to the ballpark, including spending a game inside the scoreboard with the guys who manually change the scores. I also got to interview Ernie Banks and ghost-write his foreword. Chicago Under Glass: Early Photographs from the Chicago Daily News (University of Chicago Press, 2007). co-authored with Richard Cahan, sponsored by the Chicago History Museum. This was an examination of the glass-plate negatives produced by the Daily News from 1900 to 1930, with captions that provided historical insight into that era. I also write fiction. An unfulfilled goal is to get a novel published, but my short stories

have appeared in the literary magazines Other Voices, Pikestaff Forum, Samsara and Minnesota Review. My non-fiction articles have been published in Library Quarterly, Chicago magazine and Chicago History magazine. Q. Heartiest congratulations on your winning of the Pulitzer Prize. As you may know, two other alumni – Mary Ann Gwinn ’73 and Doug Blackmon ’86 – join you in having won this highly prestigious award. Please summarize the work that you did resulting in this honor. A. I was part of a team of journalists who won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism. But it was a staff award, with dozens of Tribune employees involved and no one cited by name. Frankly, there were others on the staff that did much more than I did. It was an excellent series. Called “Gateway to Gridlock,” it explained why O’Hare Airport is such a disaster for travelers. We revealed chronic overbooking that guarantees that planes are late, plus preferential treatment for some passengers at the expense of others. Q. What are your most vivid memories of your experiences working as a member of The Profile staff? A. When I was a freshman and worked on The Profile, the editor was Larry Jegley ’74, who is now the prosecuting attorney for central Arkansas. We would go down to the Log Cabin Democrat every two weeks, where our news stories had been set into print and were waiting for us. We’d use X-acto knives to slice the copy into strips and put melted wax on the back. Finally we would “paste up” the newspaper pages by hand. The process was barbaric—just a little more sophisticated than chipping words into rocks. The next year I was co-editor with Junius Cross ’75. We went hunting for controversy, which is what newspapers are supposed to do. In an interview with the chief officials of the Hendrix administration, we learned that these leaders believed our students to be satisfied with the strict dormitory visitation policy then in effect. When we published the interview, the resulting uproar led to a reform of the policy. We also caused trouble when Congressman Wilbur Mills got into a scandal in Washington with a stripper named Fannie Fox, also known as the Argentine Firecracker. The new social science center on campus had just been named for Mills, and we demanded a name change. I know now that we were wrong about that stance. Mills was actually a responsible lawmaker with a temporary drinking problem, and later he reformed

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 37


himself nobly. It’s easy for 19-year-olds to be overly judgmental. Q. Do you have any particular recollections relating to food while you were attending Hendrix? A. I ate at Hulen Hall, since my parents paid for it and I was quite poor in college. I liked the food quite a lot. I recall mixing red Jell-O and vanilla ice cream for dessert every night. (I think of the Hendrix cafeteria whenever I tell the story of Maya Lin, the designer of

A Garden-Grown Odyssey Continued from page 33 While researching her options, English discovered that the two schools were starting a program together. The timing was perfect, and the partnership matched her interests. She earned concurrent masters degrees in public health and public service, graduating from both schools in December 2009. During her time at the Clinton School and UAMS, she joined the board of Arkansas Urban Gardening Education Resources, Inc. (AUGER), the non-profit organization that works with Dunbar Garden, the community garden situated between Little Rock’s Gibbs Elementary and Dunbar Middle Schools. Her work with AUGER led to her work on the planning committee for a farm-to-school conference for Arkansas. “‘Farm-to-school’ is a national movement to get fresh produce into school cafeterias,” English said. “My capstone project for both of my degrees was to help plan Arkansas’ first statewide farm-to-school conference, sponsored by Heifer in November of 2009.” Around the same time, the Children’s Hospital Research Institute approached AUGER for help in gardening expertise. The Institute was preparing a grant proposal to the USDA that would fund research examining the impact of school gardens on childhood obesity. The convergence led to English’s dream job. The Institute needed to know how to build a school garden. They also needed to know what the school garden movement looked like, what its larger implications were, and what was already going on. “I had just finished my master’s, so my work experience and education lined me up to be exactly what they needed,” English said. “And so when they got funded and the position of program manager opened up, I applied.” The Delta Garden Study team spent the first year of the four-year study designing the program: curriculum, garden plans and building

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the Vietnam War memorial on the mall in Washington. Lin was a student at Yale when she created the winning design, and her brainstorm occurred in the school cafeteria. She created the original model out of mashed potatoes. And then she ate her design.) I lived in Couch Hall and Martin Hall, where we ordered pizza deliveries a lot (my roommate got a monthly Social Security check, and spent it on pizza for himself and his friends). We drank Tang during the day and Pabst Blue Ribbon at night. In the student union, we used to order

“grichburgers,” which were cheeseburgers cooked like grilled-cheese sandwiches. Late at night, we would go to an all-night diner down the road. I’m not sure what it was really called, but we always referred to it as the Glittering Jesus Truck Stop, or GJ’s, because there were religious icons inside. We were served by an old waitress we called the skull lady.

relationships with the schools. One test garden is already in progress, and in the fall of 2011, four more will launch. The remaining five schools will launch their gardens in the 2012-2013 school year. The study will monitor students’ fruit and vegetable intake, physical activity levels, academic achievement and a concept known as school bonding. “School bonding is a child’s attachment to his or her teachers, peers, and to the school in general,” she said. Literature shows that children with those types of strong connections may have lower rates of absenteeism, fighting and other social risk behaviors. “Each of our ten intervention schools, those with gardens, will be demographically pair-matched with a control school,” English says. “Both will be measured exactly the same, and hopefully allow us to draw conclusions about the impact of gardens on these identified childhood obesity risk factors.” Each of the intervention schools receives its full-time Garden Program Specialist in June. That person then spends the summer developing a small section of the garden to serve as a model for what the students will do. “When the kids come to school, they’re inspired, and they’re excited, and they get to taste something right away,” English says. “And then they spend the duration of the school year expanding, using that initial garden as motivation.” Mabelvale Middle School has served as the test site, and English reports that the experiment is going well. “So far, the kids are enjoying it,” she says. “They’ve seen and tasted new vegetables, they’ve prepared recipes from garden-fresh produce, they’ve learned how to use shovels and hoes and raise worms. “We want [kids] to take responsibility for what they eat. When they’re at the grocery store, we hope they will be able to recognize what all those different vegetables are, and

to be able to ask for them from their parents or at a restaurant or wherever life takes them. We also want them to know that it can taste good, too—it can be healthy and taste good.” English also hopes to see at least a few students develop the same excitement she has for growing food. “Even if out of the whole study we get just a couple of kids interested in growing, then we’re contributing to the number of farmers in our state and in our country, we’re increasing the ability for other people to have access to fresh produce,” she says. She is especially glad that she has had the experience of working in the fields, dealing with pests, bad weather, drought and more. “I never thought I would be in research at all,” English says. But it doesn’t just feel like research to her. “It feels like grassroots community development around school gardens and our local food system. But, it’s the research component that gives us an opportunity to gather much-needed data that will hopefully be the evidence we need to ask for systematic change.” It’s a path she may not have expected to follow, but one she truly enjoys. “I don’t think coming out of Hendrix I knew exactly where I would be in 10 years, but this is quite a fantastic place,” she says. “And I’m really glad that I’m in Arkansas, and that I’ve been a part of and witnessed the growth of Arkansas’ local food system and sustainable agriculture movement. “I am so glad to see this movement grow in Arkansas. There are amazing people out there working to make these changes reality for our state. It pleases me to be part of it all, and I’m incredibly excited to see what our future holds.”

Mark Jacobs will discuss What the Great Ate at Alumni Odyssey College May 21-22. www.hendrix.edu/odysseycollege

Amy Meredith Forbus ’96 is editor of the Arkansas United Methodist, the newspaper of the Arkansas Conference of the United Methodist Church. She lives in Little Rock with her husband John.

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Hall of Honor Banquet

Worsham Student Performance Hall Saturday, April 16, 6:30 p.m. Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

The Hendrix Sports Hall of Honor was created by the Hendrix College Booster Club in 1994 to preserve the history of the College’s great athletes, coaches, fans, friends and supporters.

Women’s Basketball Team makes it to SCAC Championship Game

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Photo by Bruce Layman ’12

The Hendrix College women’s basketball team capped off another exciting season with their second-straight SCAC West Division crown and a championship run in the 2011 SCAC Tournament. Hendrix finished the season with a 17-11 overall record and 11-5 conference mark. The Warriors started the season on a low note with just a 6-8 record through the first half of the season, however, the women’s team caught fire and finished the year with an 11-3 run. Hendrix snapped a three-game skid with a 71-63 win over Rhodes on Jan. 21 to ignite an eight-game win streak and a 59-55 senior day win over Millsaps on Feb. 12 clinched the Warriors’ second SCAC West Division title. Hendrix dropped a hard-fought contest at Colorado on Feb. 18 to end the run, however, Hendrix gained the momentum it needed heading into the post season with a big win over Austin in the regular season finalé. First year head coach Emily Cummins led the Warriors into the SCAC Tournament as a number one seed for the second time in school history. For the third time in four years Hendrix, who has qualified for the SCAC Tournament each year of its existence, faced off against No. 4 East Oglethorpe in the opening round of the 2011 classic. The Warriors rolled past the Stormy Petrels, 80-57, on Feb. 25 to advance to their secondstraight final four appearance. Hendrix qualified for its first SCAC Title shot after an all-around team effort trumped No. 2 West Trinity on Feb. 26. The Warriors snapped an 0-3 skid in the semifinals by outscoring the Tigers, 41-11 off the bench, and 14-of-16 from the free throw line in the last six minutes. In their first SCAC Championship game in program history, the Warriors took on No. 1 East DePauw (ranked ninth in the nation) on Feb. 27. DePauw scored 21 second-chance points off 15 offensive rebounds and had five players in double figures to outlast Hendrix, 80-71. Hendrix senior forward Christina Byler earned two post-season honors with her fourth SCAC All-Conference honor (twice First Team, twice Second Team) and second D3Hoops.com All-South Region honor. Byler finished her career as the Warriors’ all-time leading rebounder (753) and free throw shooter (487-569, 85.6), and third all-time scorer (1,721). Junior guards Anna Roane and Katy Ashley-Pauley received SCAC Honorable Mention and first year forward Jamie Tate garnered two Newcomer-of-the-Year votes.

Register for this and more at www.hendrix.edu/alumniweekend

Hendrix senior midfielder Dan Fox scored three goals and made one assist to help lead the Warriors to their first win in program history, 18-2, over University of Dallas on Feb. 25.

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athletics

warrior booster club


alumnotes

alumnotes Connecting with Classmates 1952

Garth Martin has been named an Outstanding Alumnus of Arkansas State University-Beebe. He attended what was then Beebe Junior College before transferring to Hendrix in 1950. He is now retired after spending 50 years in the commercial property and casualty insurance industry.

1963

Dr. Robert Keene has been appointed to serve on the Arkansas State Board of Dental Examiners for a fiveyear term. Dr. Keene is a practicing oral and maxillofacial surgeon in North Little Rock.

1964

John A. Edens of Buffalo, N.Y., received the New York State Archives’ Debra E. Bernhardt Award for his work with the Jewish Buffalo Archives Project.

1967

Dr. David Woodall was appointed interim president at Lake Washington Technical College in Kirkland, Wash.

1968

Vickie Witt Dunn has been appointed Interim Director of Federal Programs for Fayette County Schools in Somerville, Tenn.

1973

Dr. Ron McDonald of Memphis, Tenn., has written a new book, Walking in Memphis: 16 Historic Tours, published by Schiffer Press.

1977

Dr. Lee Cyphers is celebrating 25 years of practice as a veterinarian in Hot Springs.

1978

Jay Morgan of Benton completed his first book, Fingerpainting in Psych Class: Artfully applying science to better work with children and teens. The book is a psychospiritual look at childhood and adolescence and can be purchased

Share your news with other alumni by visiting www.hendrix.edu/alumni and using the online form. Information received after February 1 will appear in the fall edition. through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Iuniverse Publishing.

1982

George A. Griggs founded a new company, American Pain Solutions, Inc., in San Diego, Calif., and Palo Alto, Calif.

1983

Sharon Keck Parker was installed as Director of Music Ministries for St. Elizabeth of Hungary Catholic Church in Eureka Springs.

1984

Chris Borst Garnes relocated to Montana and started two online businesses this year:

kncorganiccoffee.com, featuring organic coffee, and kncgunracks.com, which offers gun racks, scopes, and binoculars to hunters.

1986

Dr. James W. Bryan IV retired from private practice in September 2010 to take a position in flight medicine at the Little Rock Air Force Base. He also serves as a team physician and medical director for the Athletic Training Education Program at Henderson State University and was elected to a threeyear term on the Board of Directors of the Arkansas Academy of Family Physicians.

Jenifer Ward ’80 Publishes Book Reworking the German Past Dr. Jenifer Ward ’80, of Seattle, Wash., published a book titled Reworking the German Past: Adaptations in Film, the Arts, and Popular Culture. The book, a collection of essays that consider the ways in which adaptations of literary works alter a story-or history- for a subsequent audience, was edited by Dr. Ward along with Susan G. Figge. The book focuses on the preoccupation with coming to terms with the past in German culture and German Studies since WWII. Reworking the German Past is available for purchase at major book retailers.

40 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Dr. Ward graduated from Hendrix with a degree in German. She attributes her collaboration skills to lessons learned during her time as an undergraduate. “Hendrix taught me how to collaborate, how to hold both the big picture and the details in focus at the same time, and how to love ideas and questions: even — especially — the hard ones. I used these lessons every single day of working on this book.” Dr. Ward is currently the Associate Provost at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, Wash.

www.hendrix.edu


alumnotes

Arkansas Parks and Tourism Teams up with P. Allen Smith ’83 to Promote the Natural State P. Allen Smith ’83 and Arkansas’ Department of Parks and Tourism are partnering to promote the state in a series of segments that will appear on the syndicated television program “P. Allen Smith Gardens.” Ads that will run during this program will be seen on more than 100 cable stations across the country. Smith is well known as an advocate of sustainable

green lifestyles and the farm-to-table movement. Smith is the author of P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home and has contributed to magazines such as Women’s Day and their interest publications. His articles reach more than 21 million readers and his website hosts more than 3 million monthly hits.

Tim Griffin ’90 Elected to Congress Tim Griffin ’90 was elected by voters in Arkansas’ Second Congressional District to the United States House of Representatives. He became only the second Republican to represent this district since 1874. “Many friends from Hendrix supported my campaign, and I am proud to be a Hendrix alum in Congress,” says Griffin. He graduated cum laude from Hendrix with a degree in economics and business. He then studied

at Oxford University and graduated from Tulane Law School. Griffin served in the U.S. Army Reserve for 14 years, was deployed to Iraq and holds the rank of Major. He has held positions as U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas and as Special Assistant, Deputy Director of the White House office of Political Affairs for President George W. Bush.

1987

Eric Dillner has joined the staff at the David A. Straz, Jr. Center for the Performing Arts in Tampa Bay, Fla., as artistic/producing director of in-house productions.

1993

1991

Shane Owings of Las Vegas, Nev., was promoted to Director of Asset Protection at Polo Ralph Lauren for U.S. and Canada operations.

David Teague of Wilmington, Del., published a children’s book, Franklin’s Big Dreams.

1988

Terry Bradshaw was inducted into the Forrest City Athletic Hall of Fame on Sept. 17, 2010. Bradshaw played at Hendrix under Coach Cliff Garrison, a native of Forrest City.

1989

Karen Kennedy Seifert has been named the new Hospital Patient Advocate for Iron County Hospital in Pilot Knob, Mo.

1990

Joanna Crump is working on her master’s degree in Library and Information Science at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

www.hendrix.edu

Capt. Devon Cockrell of Little Rock returned in May 2010 from his second tour in Iraq as commander of U.S. Army Tactical Psychological Operations Detachment 3622.

1992

Dr. John Krueger of Claremore, Okla., has been named a George W. Merck Foundation Fellow at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. He will spend the 2010-2011 year at the Harvard School of Public Health Program in Clinical Effectiveness.

Dr. Jason Murphy has been appointed to assistant professor of philosophy at Elms College in Chickopee, Mass.

Robert F. Thompson III of Paragould was reelected to the Arkansas State Senate and was elected by his colleagues to be Majority leader of the Senate in 2011-2012.

1995

Dr. Elizabeth G. Bridges is a tenuretrack assistant professor of German at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn. She also received the “Best Article of 2009” award from the

Six alumnae from the class of 1993 visited campus to celebrate the birthday of Lynn Gazaway Roebuck. During their visit they took a tour of campus, led by Taylor Kidd ’11 to see the changes that have come about in the past few years. On their visit they stopped at Butler Plaza to take a photograph of their reunion. Pictured: Pattie Magee Weed, Stephanie Anderson Bunderman, Michelle Lassonde Hix, Lynn Gazaway Roebuck, Jennifer White Johnson, Allison Fox Gillaspy American Association of Teachers of German for her article, “Bridging the Gap: A LiteracyOriented Approach to the Graphic Novel Der erste Frühling.”

Crystal Phelps of Little Rock was appointed as General Counsel for the Arkansas Natural Resources Commission.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 41


When Cheri Prough DeVol ’90 came back to visit campus, it wasn’t for a weekend reunion. Cheri, the first recipient of the Hays Scholarship, the college’s premier scholarship, returned this fall to teach as a visiting professor in the theatre department where she trained 20 years ago. “It’s a little strange … like being an outsider in a very familiar place,” she said. The Van Buren area native’s first exposure to Hendrix was through Arkansas Governor’s School, which she attended on the Hendrix campus during the summer before her senior year of high school. Likewise, Cheri didn’t choose Hendrix for its theatre program. She wasn’t active in theatre in high school. She chose Hendrix because it was “the right size school for me” and began as “an undecided major leaning toward math or English.” “I was interested in everything and delighted by all the opportunities I was

Photo by Courtney Johnson ’12

alumnotes

Alumna Returns to Cabe Theatre for New Role

42 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

presented,” she said. As a theatre major, Cheri studied mostly under Dr. Rosemary Henenberg, who is now retired, and Danny Grace, who she is now filling in for while he is on sabbatical. During her senior year, she designed the scenery and lights for Restoration Revisited under the direction of Dr. Eric Binnie, who was then in his first year of teaching at Hendrix. This fall, Cheri taught Intro to Theatre and Production I, which focuses on scenery and lighting. She also served as the design and technical director for two fall productions, Make ‘Em Laugh and The Rivals. This spring, she is teaching CAD set and lighting design and served as the technical director for Violet. After graduating from Hendrix, Cheri went to the University of Texas in Austin, where she earned her M.F.A. in theatre design and taught. “When I graduated from Hendrix, I was very much excited at the prospect of teaching,” she said.

She briefly taught at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., and returned to Hendrix in 1995, when Grace was overseas serving as faculty advisor for the Hendrix-in-London study abroad program, and again in 1996, while Grace was on sabbatical. “I was unsure whether I had enough experience to teach effectively. I wondered ‘Did I really know enough or was I just recreating what I had been taught?” she thought. “I decided to get more experience in professional theatre, so I free-lanced for a little bit, mostly in lighting work.” That hands-on experience led her to the Barter Theatre, a Great Depression-era theatre company in southwest Virginia originally founded by a professional New York actor who was committed to continuing his theatre work despite the nation’s economic collapse. Cheri joined the group in 1997 as props master and later served as resident scenery and lighting designer. When she returned to Hendrix to teach, Cheri was not alone. She brought her husband Mark, whom she had met at Porthouse Theatre, in Kent, Ohio. An Ohio native, Mark was the Barter Theatre’s technical director, a role he continued this year at Hendrix. In the fall, he was responsible for the lighting of the Hendrix Dance Ensemble’s production of Rubiks Rendition. Cheri, Mark, and their 8-year old daughter Cassidy now live in Conway. Graduating 20 years ago, Cheri can easily see how and in what ways her alma mater has evolved. “Subtle things have changed, in addition to the obvious architectural changes, which are great,” she said. Hendrix is still a “good group of really bright folks,” she has found. “Conway seems bigger to me that it used to,” she added. “It’s a big town now … it has restaurants.” “Cabe is still the same,” she said. “The theatre itself has been upgraded.” Ironically, her current office contains the last remnant of the theatre’s original orange carpet. The technical upgrades are great additions though the theatre’s shop is “just as small as it ever was,” she laughed. “Having trained in Cabe, I understand the dynamic of the space because that’s kind of where I grew up, as it were,” she said. Perhaps no one appreciates Cabe Theatre’s stage more than she. “It definitely has informed my work in design,” she said. “Not everybody has a thrust stage … That stage is a major signature thing we have.”

www.hendrix.edu


Amy Meredith Forbus of Little Rock is editor of the Arkansas United Methodist, the newspaper for the Arkansas conference of the United Methodist Church.

1998

Angel Johnson Belsey works for the UK Civil Service as a Technology in Business Fast Streamer in central London. See Marriages. Ryan Douglas Parson was elected “Teacher of the Year” for Parkview Magnet High School in Little Rock by the faculty of the school. Parson was also elected as school representative for the Little Rock Classroom Teachers Association.

1999

Katie Helms completed her Ed.D in Recreation and Sports Management at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. She has also been busy completing four marathons and two 50K trail races, including the Boston Marathon. Dr. Gary Charles Wilkens recently completed his Ph.D. at the University of Southern Mississippi and is now an assistant professor of English at West Virginia University Institute of Technology in Montgomery, W.Va.

2000

Capt. Bradley E. Bowlby completed his military service in August of 2006, obtained

www.hendrix.edu

Tamara Powell ’92 Earns Honors for Developing Online Training Program Dr. Tamara Powell ’92, director of distance education for the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and associate professor of English at Kennesaw State University, designed and implemented a training program for faculty that has received the Excellence in Faculty Development Award at the Sloan Consortium’s 16th international conference. Sloan-C is an association of institutions working to integrate online education into the

mainstream of higher education. The “Build a Web Course” training program is a 12-week course designed to train KSU faculty to develop new online and hybrid courses. “The course design is based upon secondary research into adult learning and 10 years of grant-supported primary research in professional development instructional technology,” Powell said.

Scarlet Sims ’99 Receives Artist Fellowship Scarlet Sims ’99 of Springdale received a 2011 Individual Artist Fellowship Award from the Arkansas Arts Council. A jury of out-of-state professional artists, writers, performers and art administrators selected the fellowship recipients. The fellowship awards artists $4,000 in recognition of their artistic abilities and enables them to set aside time to improve their skills. Artists are selected from three different artistic mediums: dance choreography, literary nonfiction, and works on paper. Sims was awarded a

fellowship in the literary nonfiction category. She will spend her award to get records from the Supreme Court for a nonfiction book she is writing. Sims graduated from Hendrix with a degree in international relations. She is currently a reporter for the Northwest Arkansas Edition of the Arkansas DemocratGazette covering higher education. She has also held positions as reporter and editor for Arkansas newspapers in Bentonville, Dardanelle and Russellville.

Greg Vander Veer ’02 Screens Film at Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival Greg Vander Veer ’02, of Brooklyn, N.Y., recently screened his documentary Keep Dancing at the 19th Annual Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival. The film follows Marge Champion, a 90 year-old star of movies, theater, and TV, and her dance partner Tony-Award winning choreographer, Donald Saddler, as they continue to pursue their passion of dance even in old age. The film has been shown all around the country but it was important to Vander Veer to have the film shown

a juris doctorate from the University of Oklahoma, and is practicing law in Tulsa, Okla. Mary Katherine Razer Parson of Little Rock is the Central Arkansas Teacher of the Year and one of four finalists for the Arkansas Teacher of the Year.

2002

Dr. GerShun Avilez accepted the position of Assistant Professor of English and African American Studies at Yale University in New Haven, Conn. Ryan Fuchs works as a Financial Planner with Ifrah Financial Services, Inc., of Little Rock.

at this particular festival. “As a graduate of Hendrix College, I used to attend your festival every year ... I’m thrilled with having my first film screened at Hot Springs,” says Vander Veer. Vander Veer graduated with a degree in interdisciplinary studies: historical film. He is also a video contributor and co-editor of IndexMagazine.com and has worked as a camera man for various film projects.

2003

Sarah Razer Carnahan is the Assistant Branch Manager of the Maumelle Public Library. She is also finishing her master’s degree in library sciences.

2004

a master’s degree in Clinical Mental Health at Mercer University.

2005

Matt Kennett of Paragould was appointed Director of Operations for the Arkansas Symphony.

Charity L. Simpson of Atlanta, Ga., is pursuing

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 43

alumnotes

1996


alumnotes

2006

Molly Housh Gordon of Somerville, Mass., graduated from the Divinity School of Harvard University with a Master of Divinity degree. See Marriages. Brad Howard was the Communications Director and spokesperson for the Mike Ross for Congress Re-Election Campaign. Joni Podschun coauthored “Voices for Change: Perspectives on Strengthening Welfare to Work from DC TANF Recipients,” a report on the Temporary Assistance Program in District of Columbia, published by the DC Fiscal Policy Institute and SOME, Inc.

Elizabeth A. Smith is the new Director of Service Ministries at the Congregational Church of New Canaan, Conn. She is also a board member of the Darien/New Canaan Chapter of the Salvation Army.

2008

Courtney Lobban earned a master’s degree in history from the University of Nottingham in December 2009 and left her teaching post in Oxford to teach in London in the fall.

Two Alumni Recognized in ‘20 in their 20s’ Casey Carder ’03 of Little Rock and L.J. Bryant ’09 of Newport were featured in Arkansas Business’ latest edition of “20 in their 20s.” Those included in the list are described as creative, talented individuals who have found early success in their profession but also show future potential for leadership in Arkansas business or politics. Carder earned a degree in international studies and also graduated from University of Arkansas at Little Rock Bowen Law School. She is the degree audit coordinator for Pulaski Technical College in North Little Rock, where she reviews academic records to find students that are eligible or close to degrees but never applied for them. Through this initiative 2,100 degrees have been awarded. In addition to her position at Pulaski Tech, Carder is working to complete her doctorate in educational administration and supervision from UALR and she volunteers with reading programs in the Little Rock School District. Bryant graduated with a degree in political science and currently owns three Jackson Hewitt Tax Service

locations in Jonesboro. In addition to being a business owner, Bryant has pursued his interests in public service by running for a seat in the Arkansas House of Representatives as well as Arkansas Commissioner of State Lands. Although he was not elected to either, he says if his supporters want him to run again for another office in 2012, he will do it. “Hendrix helped develop me and shape my belief in developing the whole person. It helped reinforce my passion for public service not only in politics but also in my business life,” says Bryant, “I believe in developing all people and all things to their fullest potential.” Bryant is very involved in the Big Brothers Big Sisters of North Central Arkansas. He wrote the grant to implement the program and also serves on its governing board. “BBBS is a great program that truly makes little moments into big magic as the motto says. It illustrates how a little effort can go a long way,” says Bryant.

1974 Hendrix Reunion Choir and Friends Row 1: Richard Scott ’75, Lynne Kilgore Crow ’74 Row 2: Lisa Dale Riley ’79, Cynthia Cole Fisher ’76, Linda Ferstal, Leigh Riddick ’75, Margaret Brown Coley ’76, Thomas Bemberg ’74, Anthony Little ’77, Daniel Rowe ’75, Allen Kimbrough ’75, Scott Lewis ’77, David Green ’77, Celia Robinson Reynolds ’76, Patricia Collier Sloan ’74, Linda Kinnard Ryder ’77, Amy Claxton ’77 Row 3: Becky Sue Moore ’77, Leslie Swindler Price ’74, Kathy Rowe, Rolaine Green Hetherington ’75, Elizabeth Ragsdale Norton ’75, Elizabeth See Scott ’73, Bill Whitley ’74, Jess Anthony ’74, Bruce Ryder, Charles Peer ’75, Bob Jones ’75, John Hetherington, Larry Morse ’76, Bill Wells ’74, Allen Dawson ’77, John Weir ’74, Richard Cox ’75, Susan Whitley Cox ’78, Debbie Whitley Hill ’75, Julia Hilliard Frost ’76, Melinda Morse ’74 Alumni in the St. Louis, Mo., area gather each year at the Alien Luau. Pictured: Jason McClelland ’91, Natascha Walker ’92, Todd Porter ’93, Avery Vance, Steven Vance ’92, Shannon Maddie Earnest ’91, Jason Burke Murphy ’93, Greg Smith ’93, Maggie Dyer ’93, Nora Dyer Murphy, Carol Fletcher ’92.

44 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

www.hendrix.edu


Photo courtesy Kleinpeter Photography

Marriages Sheridan Cole ’88 to Jon Chadwell, Oct. 16, 2010.

Carter Tobe Honeycutt, 2, son of Josh Honeycutt ’00 and his wife Danielle.

Susan D. Campbell ’92 to Jerry D. Elizandro. Robert A. Pruss ’96 to Ted G. Howard, Oct. 28, 2010. Misty Hollis ’97 to Jeffrey D. Berry, Oct. 2, 2010. Angel Johnson ’98 to Giles Belsey, Sept. 17, 2010. Jenna Carter ’00 to Tom Vardell, May 2010 Chrissy Jennings ’01 to Jeremy Chatham, October 2009. Jennifer Hui ’02 to Micah Fullerton, Jan. 29, 2011. Vanessa Norton ’02 to Tim McKuin ’09, Oct. 10 2009. Birc Morledge ’03 to Amy Patterson, May 15, 2010. James Gordon ’04 to Molly Housh ’06, June 19, 2010. Langston Lee ’07 to Britney McCarthy ’07, July 26, 2008.

Birc Moreledge ’03 and his wife Amy Patterson.

www.hendrix.edu

Jacob Kai-Jiun Warren, son of David M. Warren ’98 and his wife Lola.

New Children George Miller, first son, to Marty Gage ’88 and his wife Justine. James Grayson Fitzjurls, first son, second child, to Misty Leigh Williams ’96 and her husband James Fitzjurls, Aug. 1, 2010.

Mandy Thomas ’08 to Alan Lemmi ’09, Jan. 15, 2011.

Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011 45

alumnotes

Hendrix alumni at Mandy Thomas and Alan Lemmi’s Jan. 15 wedding. Standing: Claire Custer ’09, James Hyde, Chris Schulze ’09, Tasha Honomichl ’12, Lucas Harder ’10, Alan Lemmi ’09, Mandy Thomas Lemmi ’08, Don Bennett ’09, Becka Burrows ’07, Rob Price ’09, Justin Breland. Kneeling: Nora Jencks ’12, Amanda Dawson ’10, Monica McNeil


alumnotes

Zachary Alexander, first son, to Trent Hubbard ’98/ ’99 and Liz Goldner Hubbard ’00, Jan. 4, 2011. Joshua Alexander, third son, to Lee Razer ’98 and Andrea Johnson Razer ’00, Aug. 19, 2010. Carson Tanner, first son, to Jeanna LaCroix Potts ’99 and her husband Floyd.

Luke Patrick, first son, to Colin Gorman ’00, Sept. 25, 2009. Moriah Elizabeth, second daughter, third child, to Nathaniel Langford ’01 and his wife Elizabeth, Aug. 30, 2010. Loren Shae, first daughter, to Traci Williams Terrahe ’02 and her husband Albert, Aug. 14, 2010.

Connor Robert, second son, to Sarah Ludlow McCurry ’03 and her husband Robert, April 17, 2010. Conner joins his brother Spencer, 3. Benjamin Wesley, first child, to Angela Mann Glover ’06 and her husband Michael, Sept. 25, 2009.

Jernelle Beryl Spencer, first daughter, to Tanya Breedlove ’00, July 16, 2010.

in memoriam Joseph H. Walden ’27 Helen Towner Hagee ’33 Ruth Jumper Martin ’33 Rev. John William Hammons ’34 J. Turner Bradford Jr. ’35 William A. “Bill” Dean ’36 Dr. Robert Newton Arbaugh ’37 Marilyn Robison Ward Graves ’37 Mildred Allan Neal Dickey ’38 Virginia Ragsdale Fewell Robertson ’38 Janelle Lay Gunn McCammon ’39 Charles Bernard Erwin Jr. ’40 Victor Hill Jr. ’40 Claude “Buddy” E. McCreight, Jr. ’40 Ruth Hope Wade Slayden ’40 Lodie Vaden Biggs Jr. ’42 Cecile Myover Graham ’42 Marie Stapleton Claude ’43 Mary Evelyn Markham Ellis ’43 Wayne George Franzen ’43 Mary Jo Hamilton ’43 Thomas Henderson Newton ’43 Shelton Goodwin Jr. ’44 Tomme Greenlee Krueger ’44 Trona Robinson Meyers ’44 Carolyn Baird Almand ’45 Dr. Charles M. Leslie ’45 Nolan Jackson ’45 Rena Lou Disheroon Elliott ’46

46 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

Virginia Ann Fergeson Morris ’46 Lt./Dr. Ralph Oliver Davis ’48 William C. “Bill” Finch ’48 Rev. James T. Fleming ’48 Sonya M. Hays Fuchs ’48 Elizabeth “Betty” Wakefield Shedd ’48 Dr. Burvin C. Alread ’49 Anita Carr Benafield ’49 John L. Bowen Jr. ’49 Martha E. Hassell Rolig ’49 George Stroud ’49 Betty Jo Bowen ’50 Charles Henry Garner ’50 John W. Hanna Jr. ’50 Dr. Charles Floyd Wells ’50 William Calhoun Sr. ’51 Dr. James T. Clemons Sr. ’51 Jack Perdue ’52 Emma Witt ’52 Dr. Grady Joel Greene Jr. ’53 Luke W. Quinn Jr. ’53 Charles Warren Lindsey ’54 Carol Jean Sickles ’54 Dr. Wanda Jean Ward Stephens ’54 Ann Lucy Wilford ’54 Clive L. Cooper ’55 Taylor Brown ’56 Dr. Doyne Graham ’56 Nancy Rice Lawson ’57

Carol Ann Scroggin Balmaz ’58 Dr. Ronald Beck Harper ’59 Sally Keller Jackson ’59 Dale McKinney ’59 Chester Leon Stinnett Jr. ’60 Kelly Yount ’61 Phillip Hugh Goodwin ’62 Ray Allen Goodwin ’62 Lewis P. Mann Jr. ’63 Rev. James Kenneth Dodd ’68 Alice Elrod Bailey ’74 Dr. Rebecca Smith Behrends ’74 Mary Wynne Parker Perryman ’74 Jeffrey Scott Dacus ’76 Toni Lynn Matthews ’76 Daniel Crane Meriwether ’85 David Holley ’92 Nicholas Roger Fender ’10 Phillip Anthony Thomas ’10 Faculty/Staff Helen Yvonne Hughes (1959-1981) Hugh Lawson Hembree III - former trustee (1976-1981) Lavada P. Waller (1988-2005)

www.hendrix.edu


“...happy, happy birthday, from the Hendrix gang!�

Alumni are invited to campus each month to enjoy lunch and a birthday cake in the cafeteria, along with the traditional Hendrix birthday song from the cafeteria staff and everyone else in the dining hall. Is your birthday coming up? Let us know at 877-208-8777 or alumni@hendrix.edu


Courtesy photo

We all get spam messages. My favorite spam is the one I regularly receive from someone trying to sell me cheap Viagra pills (do they know something I don’t?). These messages usually end up in the trash, but the other day I received a spam message at work that set me to thinking. The subject of the message read: “Stop the painful craving for food.” As a natural reflex I was just about to hit the delete button but since I’m living in Africa and working for the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), the largest provider of food aid to the world’s hungriest people, I thought it might be worth a read. At first I thought it might be some clever new anti-hunger slogan from one of our very creative public relations folk. Turns out, it’s about some miracle pill that helps people shed unwanted pounds. Sign me up! I kind of like the idea of a magic pill that makes all those nasty little cravings for things like processed Velveeta cheese and pork rinds go away. Just before dialing in my pill order, it occurred to me that the state of the world’s food situation has become extreme. On one end, obesity, which is caused by overeating, is dramatically increasing. The

48 Hendrix Magazine | Spring 2011

World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 1.5 billion adults and 43 million children under 5 are overweight. By 2015, the number is expected to increase to 2.3 billion posing serious health and economic implications. On the other end of the spectrum, are the almost 1 billion people who do not have enough to eat. Most of these 1 billion “food insecure” people live in developing countries. They are hungry and it’s the kind of “hungry” that stunts a child’s growth because their bodies lack nutrients needed for proper development. With these extremes, and the expected population growth from 7 to 9 billion people in the next 40 years, we need to get smart about food production and food access, and take a critical look at the entire global food supply system. We need a frank discussion about not only the kinds of food we eat and how to expand access to the right kinds of food, but also how to create a sustainable food supply to meet rising demand for future generations, who stand to inherit a much hungrier planet. Recently, some big names in the agriculture and food production industries came together at the World Economic Forum to launch a new vision for global agriculture. The roadmap

titled “Realizing a New Vision for Agriculture: A roadmap for stakeholders” challenges the reader to think about food as our collective responsibility. It’s worth a read. The document asks the reader to think of what we can do to ensure a safe, nutritious, abundant, accessible and sustainable food supply for the coming generations. It doesn’t offer a magic pill to stop our craving for food; it calls us to have an honest global dialogue about everyone’s right to this most basic human need and how best to create a sustainable food supply. With global food prices on the rise again, this roadmap has come just at the right time. Jonathan Rhodes ’98 has worked for WFP for five years, first in its Rome, Italy, headquarters and now in Sudan, Africa, where WFP fed 9 million people in 2010 alone. Prior to joining WFP, he served on U.S. Senator Blanche Lincoln’s Washington staff for more than seven years, including as her aide for hunger issues. Jonathan is from Cherokee Village, Ark. For more information about WFP or the “Realizing A New Vision for Agriculture” report go to: www.wfp.org or www.weforum.org/agriculture

www.hendrix.edu


Hendrix College Alumni Weekend April 15-17, 2011

Office of Institutional Advancement and Planning W. Ellis Arnold III, J.D. ’79 Executive Vice President and Dean of Advancement

Jennifer Nail Administrative Assistant to the Executive Vice President

Advancement Services Dan Turner Director of Advancement Services

Yvonne Morgan Director of Research and Prospect Management

Friday, April 15 Half-Century Club Luncheon

Worsham Student Performance Hall, SLTC 11 a.m.

Warrior Booster Club Hall of Honor Banquet

Rhonda Sipes Gift and Records Manager

Alumni and Constituent Engagement Pamela R. Owen ’82 Associate Vice President for Alumni and Constituent Engagement

Worsham Student Performance Hall, SLTC 6:30 p.m.

Claudia Courtway

Saturday, April 16

Director of Stewardship

Alumni Association Awards Brunch

Administrative Assistant for Alumni and Constituent Engagement

Worsham Student Performance Hall, SLTC 10 a.m.

Oxford Program 30th Anniversary Reception Murphy House Noon

Reading and book signing of Franklin’s Big Dream by David Teague ’87 Village Books 12:30 p.m.

Last Lectures: Retiring faculty give lectures in Mills A, each followed by a reception in Mills Library. 1 p.m. Dr. Ian King 2 p.m. Dr. Bruce Haggard 3 p.m. Dr. Ralph McKenna 4 p.m. Dr. Eric Binnie Rehearsal for Alumni Choir Reunion Trieschmann 4:40 p.m.

Sunday, April 17 Alumni Memorial Worship Service, featuring Alumni Choir Greene Chapel 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Lunch

Main dining hall, SLTC 11:30 a.m.

These are just a few highlights from this year’s events. To see the full schedule and to register, go online to www.hendrix.edu/alumniweekend.

Director of Parent Engagement

Barbara Horton Andrea Morell Newsom ’06

Teresa Clogston Osam ’72 Coordinator of Special Events

College Relations Helen S. Plotkin Associate Vice President for College Relations and Advancement Planning

Natalie Atkins Communications and Design Specialist

Joshua Daugherty Lead Designer

Rob O’Connor ’95 Director of College Communications

Development Michael V. Hutchison Associate Vice President for Development

Jack Frost ’72 Senior Development Officer

Julie Janos ’94 Development Project Coordinator

Melissa Jenkins Director of Annual Giving

Lori Filogamo Jones ’81 Director of Planned Giving

Ginny McMurry Director of Foundation Relations

Heather Zimmerman Director of Leadership Gifts

Office of the Chaplain J. Wayne Clark ’84 Chaplain and Director of Church Relations

J.J. Whitney ’96 Assistant Chaplain

Lindsay Singer Assistant to the Chaplain


Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Little Rock, AR Permit #906 1600 Washington Avenue Conway, Arkansas 72032

Hendrix Social Media

Alumni, friends, parents, and students can keep up with current events, news, and other opportunities at Hendrix through the Hendrix Web Community (alumni.hendrix.edu/netcommunity) and other social media outlets, including:

Facebook

Twitter

facebook.com/hendixcollege facebook.com/hendrixalumni

twitter.com/hendrixnews twitter.com/hendrixalumni

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