PARK UNIVERSITY
PARK Office of University Advancement
Dear Friends, The theologian Frederick Buechner defined one’s calling as “the place where your deep gladness and the world’s great hunger meet.” Buechner’s quote connects giving with passion — “deep gladness.” When our passion propels our giving, our impact is profound. Passion is the common thread uniting Park University students, faculty and supporters. At Park, our passion is helping students reach their goals by turning their passions into successful careers. Our donors invest in their passions by equipping the next generation of leaders and achievers. In the following pages, you’ll meet donors who have paid forward their passions through gifts to Park University. • You’ll read about a Park alumnus whose passion for service led him to establish a scholarship for military veterans. • You’ll discover the passion for artistry that fuels Park’s International Center for Music and the donors who support it. • You’ll learn about a family of Park alumni and donors whose passion for education has impacted generations of students through an endowed scholarship fund. • You’ll meet a retired Park professor who funded a scholarship for students with a passion for justice and a financial services professional who hopes to spark a passion for leadership through scholarship support and career mentoring for female students. Throughout its history, Park University has fostered passionate learning, passionate teaching and passionate giving. This would not be possible without the contributions of its donors. As a Park supporter, thank you for investing in passion. Sincerely,
, Nathan Marticke, MACL 10 • Chief Advancement Officer • Park University
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Jeanette E. Prenger, ’09 Chair Kansas City, Missouri Vince Clark Vice Chair Kansas City, Missouri Troy Teague Secretary Kansas City, Missouri N. Lynn Craghead Treasurer Kansas City, Missouri Scott D. McRuer Immediate Past Chair Parkville, Missouri Robert Bucker Parkville, Missouri
Mitzi Cardenas Kansas City, Missouri Mara Cohara, J.D. Weatherby Lake, Missouri Michael M. Collins, ’04 Leawood, Kansas James Cornelius Kansas City, Missouri Linda Coventon Parkville, Missouri Dennis D. Fisher, Ed.D. Kansas City, Missouri W. Ann Hansbrough, J.D. Parkville, Missouri
Lt. Gen. (Ret.) Richard Keller Leavenworth, Kansas Anthony Melchiorri, ’90 New York, New York Sarah Moe Meyers Kansas City, Missouri
Andrew Shoffner Basehor, Kansas Cyprienne Simchowitz, J.D. Mission Hills, Kansas Jacqueline Snyder, Ed.D. Parkville, Missouri
William Perry, ’67 Dallas, Texas Andrew Romer, ’07 Oak Grove, Missouri Adelaida Severson, Ph.D. Gilbert, Arizona
Park University students enjoy a beautiful day on the Parkville (Mo.) Campus.
The Robert R. McCormick Foundation, Chicago, Ill., is a research investor in Park University’s Valor Medals Review Project being conducted by the George S. Robb Centre for the Study of the Great War. McCormick, at the age of 36, volunteered for duty in World War I and served with the First Division, U.S. Army. The Foundation continues McCormick’s legacy, investing in education, veterans’ programs and other philanthropic endeavors. The Foundation’s support assists in researching individual servicemembers, funding student internships and in the digitization of servicemember records.
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Ron and Phyllis Nolan
After attending a performance by the Kansas City Symphony with Behzod Abduraimov, Park University International Center for Music artist-in-residence, as the piano soloist, the Nolans were determined to know more. “After the concert, we made it our mission to find out what was going on at Park,” said Phyllis. “We wanted to know what this program was and how it was producing artists like Behzod.” The Nolans were so impressed with what Ron calls “this incredible gem of classical music right in our backyard,” they decided to sponsor a scholarship for a student. Their contribution funds full-time study for a piano protégé.
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“There’s nothing like it in the region,” said Ron. “There’s nothing like it anywhere.”
As Kansas City Symphony subscribers, Ron and Phyllis Nolan are no strangers to memorable performances by world-class musicians. Still, they knew they were in the presence of exceptional talent when pianist Behzod Abduraimov played with the Symphony as a featured soloist. Consulting their program, they were astonished to learn that Abduraimov is the artist-in-residence at Park University’s International Center for Music. The Nolans discovered that the ICM is modeled on the European master/apprentice system, which pairs master instructors with a handful of gifted students. No other program in the U.S. allows student musicians to work as closely with master instructors. The program’s world-renowned instructors include pianist Stanislav Ioudenitch, who won the 11th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in 2001, celebrated violin pedagogue Ben Sayevich and cellist Daniel Veis, winner of the 1978 Tchaikovsky International Competition. Park ICM students routinely win top prizes at prestigious international competitions throughout the world. Most recently, Kenny Broberg, who is pursuing an artist diploma certificate, won what some consider the national championship of piano competitions, the 2021 American Pianists Awards. By funding a student’s education, the Nolans have become part of a family. They’ve gotten to know International Center for Music faculty and students, and feel a personal stake in the program’s success. In addition to advancing the career of a talented musician, they hope their support will help Park University’s boutique conservatory become more visible within and beyond Kansas City. For more information about the Park University International Center for Music, visit icm.park.edu.
, Javier Centonzio, 09
When he enrolled at Park University after enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corps and a deployment to Iraq with the Kansas National Guard, Javier Centonzio, ’09, knew that service would be part of his long-term career. But he didn’t yet know what civilian service would look like. Ron Brecke, Ph.D., retired Park University professor of political science, helped Centonzio fill in the picture.
“Dr. Brecke was also a Vietnam veteran,” Centonzio said. “He challenged me to not be defined by my past service or what had happened to me, but what I could do now.”
“With veterans, you already have a group of people who have shown their willingness to serve others,” Centonzio said. “I wanted to help them pursue higher education as a means of continuing to do that.”
With that mindset, Centonzio found his calling as a veterans’ advocate while still a student. He helped Park expand support services for veterans and win a $100,000 Success for Veterans Award from the American Council on Education and the Walmart Foundation. After graduation, he earned a law degree from Stetson University and an advanced degree in elder law to assist a growing population of aging veterans.
Centonzio believes that creating a scholarship is a powerful way for donors to influence the future. He previously established a scholarship at Stetson in memory of his friend, Sgt. Jessie Davila, who was killed during a mission in Baghdad. “If you want to change the way things are going, you can create a scholarship and tailor it to your values,” Centonzio said. “Instead of complaining, do something. Create a scholarship and recruit the next generation of leaders in your field.”
Now, Centonzio is honoring his mentor and helping the next generation of veterans pursue their calling through the Dr. Ron Brecke Veterans Scholarship. Beginning in 2022, the scholarship will be awarded to a military veteran majoring in political science or public administration.
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As a criminal justice administration professor at Park University, Carol Getty, Ph.D., taught her students that criminal justice is a “people business.” “Criminal justice is more than law enforcement,” Getty said. “I wanted students to understand the broader system and how it helps people. That’s the purpose of the system: to help people become upstanding citizens.” That was Getty’s vision as an instructor: to help students make a positive contribution to the criminal justice profession.
Carol Getty
Dr. Carol Getty
Getty, who retired in 2011, has established a scholarship to support students who have chosen that path. The scholarship will be awarded to a junior or senior criminal justice administration major in recognition of their dedication and accomplishment. “I had some incredible students who worked hard for their education,” Getty said. “I wanted to say ‘good job’ and support these students as they moved into their careers. A scholarship was a way to do that.” Getty said Park’s criminal justice administration program is among the best in the nation due to the diversity of its faculty, who have academic credentials combined with professional experience in law enforcement, corrections and the court system.
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Getty arrived at Park with a distinguished background in corrections. She served for five years on the Arizona Board of Pardons and Paroles before President Ronald Reagan appointed her to the U.S. Parole Commission. President George H.W. Bush later named her chair of the Commission, becoming the first woman to serve in that capacity. Getty recognizes opportunities earlier in life that opened the door for her achievements. She believes that establishing a scholarship is a way to foster and reward individual accomplishment in the next generation. “I like the idea of making an impact on an individual,” she says. “That individual will disperse the benefits by making a contribution in their field.”
For brothers Jim and Tom Scheib, giving to Park University is a family affair.
Jim and Tom Scheib by the iconic mosaic on the first floor of Mackay Hall on Park University’s flagship Parkville (Mo.) Campus.
The Scheibs’ grandfather, B. William Scheib, graduated from Park University in 1908. His three children followed in his footsteps, each turning their Park education into a remarkable career. Jim and Tom’s father, Burton, became an orthopedic surgeon. Their aunt, Lillian, was one of the first women admitted to the medical school at Indiana University and became a pediatrician. Their uncle, Hal, and his wife, Wini, also a Park alumna, founded a special effects company in Hollywood and won two Academy Awards. The Scheibs have been giving back to Park since Jim’s and Tom’s grandmother established the Scheib Family Endowed Scholarship in memory of their grandfather, who died in 1940. The first scholarship was a $50 award to a pre-med student. Today the Scholarship supports Park students majoring in communications, science or finance. Jim and Tom continue to contribute to their family’s scholarship fund as both have inherited a commitment to education. Jim, a retired partner in an insurance and financial services firm, has served on several advisory boards at the University of Toledo. Tom is the retired
director of an organization that partners with community colleges to help unemployed adults obtain an education. “We want to help people get a college education because that means they have a real opportunity to go on and make something of their careers,” Tom said. Jim agrees. He recently expanded his giving by including a bequest to Park in his estate plan. Jim said his decision was affirmed when he and Tom visited Park’s flagship Parkville (Mo.) Campus in September, where Jim presented a guest lecture in the new Robert W. Plaster Center Free Enterprise Center and School of Business finance lab. The Scheibs saw Park University fulfilling its mission to provide a quality, accessible education that prepares students for lifetime success.
“People give to things that make an impact,” said Jim. “Park is making an impact.”
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Pam Johnson
Pam Johnson is dedicated to helping women gain financial literacy and leadership skills. As a State Farm Insurance agent in Gilbert, Ariz., Johnson equips her female clients to take an active role in household financial planning.
“Financial pressure can be disabling,” Johnson said. “I’m hoping I can take the pressure off a couple students, like that scholarship did for me.”
In her own field, Johnson has noted an underrepresentation of women in leadership. Statistically, women fill more than half of entry-level jobs in North America’s financial services industry, but fewer than one in five executive roles.
“It’s important for me to give back to the community,” Johnson said. “This is how I’ve chosen to do it, by providing opportunities through education.”
In addition to funding a scholarship, Johnson looks forward to providing career mentoring and financial seminars for students in the near future.
To promote financial leadership in the next generation of women, Johnson has established the Pam Johnson Women in Business Scholarship for female business majors at Park University’s Gilbert Campus. “I wanted to help young women further their education so they can have an incredible career,” said Johnson. The first recipients of Johnson’s scholarship received support for the 2020-21 academic year, and additional awards were given this year. Johnson hopes the funds will allow recipients to focus on their studies, reducing their need for outside employment to finance their education. Johnson worked three jobs while attending college and recalls the impact of a $500 scholarship she received.
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A 2021 Park University Gilbert (Ariz.) Campus graduate celebrates.
(Fall 2021)
8,782
TOTAL NUMBER OF STUDENTS
15:1
STUDENT-TO-FACULTY RATIO
56%
PERCENTAGE OF MILITARY STUDENTS (ACTIVE DUTY, DEPENDENTS, RETIRED MILITARY AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE)
After face-to-face classes on Park University’s flagship Parkville (Mo.) Campus were moved online for the second half of the 2020 spring semester and summer session due to the coronavirus pandemic, students returned wearing masks in accordance with safety protocols.
274
NUMBER OF INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
60
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES REPRESENTED
57%
Park University transforms lives through accessible, student-centered, quality higher education.
PERCENTAGE OF MINORITY STUDENTS
78
NUMBER OF DEGREE PROGRAMS (UNDERGRAD/GRADUATE)
Park University will meet learners’ needs for a lifetime. 9
The COVID-19 pandemic hit the performing arts community particularly hard. With the help of Park University’s steadfast International Center for Music donors and a grant from the Richard J. Stern Foundation for the Arts, the annual Stanislav & Friends gala concert had to be reinvented.
With honorary co-chairs Kay Barnes and Tom Van Dyke at the helm, creativity was key. An indoor concert was not be feasible during a pandemic, so efforts focused on recording and producing a concert experience unlike any other. The production opened with a dramatic view from the National World War I Museum and Memorial where superstar pianist Behzod Abduraimov, Park ICM artist-in-residence, played Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” under a blue sky. Behzod Abduraimov performing at the World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo.
With the resulting hour-long virtual concert and the Stern Foundation grant, Park University’s International Center for Music: •
Hosted 250 benefactors and friends to a party under the stars with classical music on the big screen at the Boulevard Drive-In Theatre in Kansas City, Kan., a first for most of our faculty, students and alumni
• Placed the concert on KSMO-TV in Kansas City, reaching more than 230,000 households in the region, and garnered a Mid-America region Emmy nomination for Park University and its production partner, Toto TV Media. Honorary co-chairs Tom Van Dyke and Kay Barnes.
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• Raised $153,625
Contributors to Stanislav & Friends 2020 and the Park University International Center for Music help power a program of international acclaim. During the 2020-21 academic year, Park ICM had five students win top prizes in some of the most prestigious international music competitions in the world. The International Center for Music celebrated 20 percent of its student artists winning an award, the most awards in a single academic year since the inception of the program in 2003. It is not possible without the generosity of our devoted supporters.
A very special thank you to our benefactors for investing in Park University’s International Center for Music.
Originally from Uzbekistan, cellist Dilshod Narzillaev came to Park University to study with Daniel Veis, assistant professor of music/cello, in 2015. In 2019, Narzillaev won fourth prize at the famed International Cello Competition Antonio Janigro in Croatia. In 2020, he began studying under full scholarship with Laurence Lesser at the New England Conservatory of Music. Narzillaev said, he will always return to the Kansas City area as it is his second home. Violinist Igor Khukhua won the bronze medal at the 2019 Elmar Oliveira Violin Competition in Florida. Originally from Russia, Khukhua has studied with Ben Sayevich, professor of music/ violin, in Park University’s International Center for Music since 2016. In 2020, he began work on a master’s degree and is also a member of the ICM’s violin adjunct faculty.
Pianist Kenny Broberg is one of the most Kay Barnes and Tom Van Dyke highly decorated pianists under the age of , , Erik Bergrud, MPA 94, and Kimberlee Ried, MACL 16 30 in the world. Broberg, the winner of the Libby and Bob Berkebile 2021 American Pianists Awards, was a bronze medalist at the 2019 International Tchaikovsky Suzanne Crandall Competition and a silver medalist at the 2017 The DeBruce Foundation Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. ECCO Select A Minnesota native, Broberg came to the Park Beverly Lynn Evans International Center for Music to study with 2001 Van Cliburn gold medalist Stanislav Paul Fingersh and Brenda Althouse Ioudenitch, associate professor of music/ Brad and Theresa Freilich piano, in 2016 and is currently pursuing an Anne Gatschet artist diploma in piano performance. Laura Lee Grace Another highly decorated musician, pianist Greg and Laurie Gunderson Kyoshiro Hirama, originally from Japan, earned Donald J. Hall fifth prize at the Sendai International Music Shirley and Barnett Helzberg Jr. Competition in Japan in 2019. Hirama completed Lisa Merrill Hickok his bachelor’s degree in 2020 from Park and began pursuit of a master’s degree, continuing Ronald and Nancy Jones Fund his studies with Ioudenitch. Steven and Jeannette Karbank Stephen and Ellen Kort Dean, ,53, and Charlotte Larrick Born in Russia in 1997, pianist Simon Karakulidi Benny and Edith Lee earned the gold medal at the 2019 Wideman International Piano Competition in Louisiana. Nathan, MACL ,10, and Crystal Marticke That same year, Karakulidi won an additional John and Jane McMillan three medals (two gold, one bronze) in Mira Mdivani/Mdivani Corporate Immigration Law Firm international piano competitions. Karakulidi earned his Bachelor of Music degree from Park Jackie and John Middelkamp in 2020 and is now at Yale University’s School Louise Morden of Music pursuing a master’s degree. Ronald and Phyllis Nolan Neal and Angela Sharma Jackie Snyder A special thank you to the Richard J. Stern Foundation John and Debbie Starr for the Arts for their support of our TV special on Steve and Evelina Swartzman KSMO-TV and its resulting Emmy nomination! Liza and Guy Townsend Jerry White and Cyprienne Simchowitz 11
UNDERSTANDING
Delivering technology and internet connectivity to students who need it most.
COMPASSION
Providing for basic needs of students and their families via the Pirate Pantry.
COURAGE
Supporting the recognition of World War I heroes via the Congressionally authorized Valor Medals Review.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Park University livestreamed its 2021 Night at the Helm event on June 9. The new platform allowed attendees to watch from the comfort of their home while learning more about the University, the George S. Robb Centre for the Study of the Great War and its Valor Medals Review initiative from those impacted by this work. Sponsors again made this event a tremendous success as the University raised more than $159,000. Thank you for your generosity. 2021 NIGHT AT THE HELM PREMIER SPONSORS
Commerce Bank ECCO Select Donald, ,69, and Carol Johnston Kansas City Chiefs
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Dean, ,53, and Charlotte Larrick John and Marny Sherman Walz Tetrick Advertising White-Simchowitz Family Charitable Fund
drink hole
Canteen Park University’s 2020 Golf Scramble was held at Shoal Creek Golf Course in Kansas City, Mo., on Oct. 12. The event, which included about 25 teams, supports the flagship Parkville (Mo.) Campus athletic programs. In addition to hole sponsors, a raffle was held to raise funds for the Pirates programs.
From left: Shane Smeed, Park University president, Charlie Tetrick, Bill Stapp and Long Huynh, associate vice president of marketing and strategic growth.
Autographed helmet donated by the Kansas City Chiefs helped raise funds for Park University’s Parkville Campus athletic programs.
ben
The 2020 Golf Scramble winning team. From left: Kevin Morrison, Tom Palace, Pat Donovan and Larry Maiorano.
2020 GOLF SCRAMBLE PREMIER SPONSORS
Heartland Motor Coach Inc. Kansas City Chiefs BKD LLP • Charlie Hustle LLC • Enterprise Holdings Inc. Husch Blackwell LLP • Straub Construction UMB Financial Corporation • Walz Tetrick Advertising 13
JULY 1, 2020 - JUNE 30, 2021 ALUMNI
BUSINESS/ CORPORATION
FOUNDATION OTHER INDIVIDUAL
OTHER NON-INDIVIDUAL
Fiscal Years 2018-21 Cumulative Funds Raised - $9,002,336 • Fiscal Year 2020-21 - $2,191,927
JULY 1, 2020 - JUNE 30, 2021
ALUMNI
14
OTHER INDIVIDUAL
BUSINESS/ CORPORATION
FOUNDATION
OTHER NON-INDIVIDUAL
NATHAN MARTICKE, MACL ,10 Chief Advancement Officer (816) 584-6844 nathan.marticke@park.edu
LISA HICKOK
Executive Director, Park University International Center for Music (816) 584-6484 lisa.hickok@park.edu
KELSEY HILDEBRANDT
Alumni and Development Coordinator (816) 584-6265 kelsey.hildebrandt@park.edu JENNY KEANE, MBA ’21 Development Director (816) 584-6846 jenny.keane@park.edu LORRAINE MOORE, MACL ,18 Development Director (816) 584-6406 lorraine.moore@park.edu
Lorraine Moore, Nathan Marticke and Jenny Keane
Park University Office of University Advancement 8700 NW River Park Drive | Parkville, MO 64152
Advancement Services
LAURA HANAVAN Director of Advancement Services and Donor Engagement (816) 584-6329 laura.hanavan@park.edu
advancement@park.edu (816) 584-6200
JOMARIE MORTELLI Advancement Services Manager (816) 584-6815 jomarie.mortelli@park.edu KATE JORGENSEN Prospect Research and Stewardship Coordinator (816) 584-6527 katherine.jorgensen@park.edu
Nathan Marticke, chief advancement officer, during a “hard hat” construction tour of the new Robert W. Plaster Free Enterprise Center on the Parkville Campus.
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The collective generosity of Park University donors enables modern and relevant education for students all over the world. Every gift of every size makes a difference. Park University’s Honor Roll acknowledges all donors at varying levels during the fiscal year. This Impact Report recognizes all gifts received between July 1, 2020, and June 30, 2021. Park’s Office of University Advancement has made every effort to ensure accuracy. If you believe corrections or additions are needed, please e-mail advancement@park.edu or call (816) 584-6200.
FIDES ET LABOR Gifts totaling $100,000 or more Peggy Oechsle Trust
1875 CLUB Gifts totaling $25,000 to $99,000 The Bunnell Family Trust Centonzio Law Carol P. Getty Heart of America Patriot Foundation Steven and Jeannette Karbank Edmund Loew Robert R. McCormick Foundation Ronald and Phyllis Nolan Victor E. Speas Foundation Richard J. Stern Foundation Straub Construction
CLOCK TOWER CLUB Gifts totaling $10,000 to $24,999 Charles Beech, ’67 ECCO Select Estelle S. and Robert A. Long Ellis Foundation Dean, ’53, and Charlotte Larrick * Benny and Edith Lee Lockton Companies Inc. Mark One Electric Co. Missouri Colleges Fund Inc. Donovan N. Smith Jr., ’56 Lawrence D. Starr Charitable Foundation Steve and Evelina Swartzman U.S. Bank VFW Foundation White-Simchowitz Family Charitable Fund
CARILLION CLUB Gifts totaling $5,000 to $9,999 Joshua M. Brecke Tho and Mary Bet Brown Commerce Bank The DeBruce Foundation Enterprise Holdings Foundation Everglades Fund GEHA Donald J. Hall Donald, ’69, and Carol Johnston Joachim Kaiser Jr., ’43 Kansas City Chiefs Muriel McBrien Kauffman Foundation Louise Morden * North Kansas City Hospital William and Linda Lawton Perry, both ’67 * Rayhons Financial Robert R. Roth John and Marny Sherman Jacqueline Snyder and Kenneth R. Gibson Walz Tetrick Advertising David B. Wentz Kathryn Brown Willson, ’56
CANARY AND WINE CLUB Gifts totaling $1,000 to $4,999 Arts Engagement Foundation of Kansas City Asian American Chamber of Commerce Kay C. Barnes and Thomas W. Van Dyke Bell Road Barn Players Irvin Belzer and Sue McCord-Belzer Erik Bergrud, MPA ’94, and Kimberlee Ried, MACL ’16 Libby and Bob Berkebile BKD LLP John Blair, x65 Blue Cross Blue Shield of KC
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BlueScope Foundation Donald and Sandy Breckon Margaret Ellen Brisch, ’63 Lisa Browar Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner Wm. Robert Bucker Cantigny Foundation Steve and Mitzi Cardenas Charlie Hustle LLC Robert and Shirley Miller Clark, ’61 Vince and Julie Clark
Mark and Gaye Cohen Copaken Family Fund Linda Coventon Suzanne C. Crandall Michael and Katheen Dodd Robert Dodds and Deana Bland-Dodds, ’89 Betty Dusing Roger and Darla Dusing Enterprise Rent-A-Car Beverly Lynn Evans Paul Fingersh and Brenda Althouse
Erycka K. Fisher, ’09 Fisher Family Fund Bradley and Theresa Freilich Donor Advised Fund Anne Gatschet Paul H. Gault, ’65, MPA ’88 Joseph Henry Geeter III, ’99 * Gregg and Cheryl Givens Family Fund John A. Gondring, ’64 Laura Lee Grace Greg and Laurie Gunderson * David R. Hackathorn, ’67 * Harold E Hirsch Foundation of Florida Inc. Heartland Trailways Shirley & Barnett Helzberg Jr. Foundation Lisa Merrill Hickok Brian, ’86, and Nadienne Hoffman, ’03 Robert E. Hoskins Paul, ’59, and Sandra Houghtaling Michael W. Hurley, ’70 * Husch Blackwell LLP Pam Johnson Insurance Agency Inc. Ronald and Nancy Jones Fund Pete, ’71, and Kelly Kale Rich Keller Stephen and Ellen Kort Family Fund Gregg and Dana Laiben
Lathrop GPM Foundation Donald and Barbara MacDonald Nathan, MACL ’10, and Crystal Marticke * Mark A. Martin Virginia McCoy Jeff McKinney, ’81 * John and Jane McMillan Mdivani Corporate Immigration Law Firm Tom Meier Anthony, ’90, and Nancy Melchiorri Jackie and John Middelkamp Ricki L. Moran, ’11 Florence Asako Naylor, ’65 North Kansas City Electric Bruce Edward Patterson, ’68 Pipe Fitters Local Union 533 Audrey J. Pollard, ’49 Louise Poole Family Fund Patrick Pound and Theresa Baker, ’75 RecognizeGood Ricoh USA Inc. Roger S. Rikkola, ’65 Carlos Riojas Dorothy F. Roberts Estate Rome McClellan Dental Group John C. Ryan Saint Luke’s Northland Hospital
SCHEELS Barry and Adelaida Severson Stanley and Kathleen Shaffer Neal and Angela Sharma Thomas A. Shoffner Shane and Angela Smeed Joann E. Smith, ’50 Melanie R. Smith Joshua & Jane Sosland Philanthropic Fund Henry J. & Lucille J. Straus Scholarship Shawn Thomas Bernice J. Thompson, ’58 * Martha Lee Cain Tranby Music Enrichment Fund UMB Financial Corporation Val Vista Vision Mike Vargas Gary and Lynette Wages William Jr., ’71, and Karen Walinow * Philip and Carol Groundwater Wheeler, both ’62 * Bruce Williams, ’62 Williams Spurgeon Kuhl Freshnock Architects Henry E. Wurst Family Foundation Levi Young, ’01 * Club 1000 members
PARKITE CLUB Gifts totaling $100 to $999 Shilo Acebedo-Moore Kathleen Albin Harriet Allgood, ’47 Stephen B. Allison, ’69 Joseph A. Altieri, ’76 Lorna Amundson, x58 Andy and Kathy Anderson Kenneth, ’74, and Patsy Andrews Alexandr Arakelov and Manana B. Elia ARCO Business Services Jose III, ’06, and Carmelita Arispe Ramona F. Arroyo, ’04 Dana M. Autry David, ’58, and Sandra Axon Eva Bachman, ’80 Susan Bailey Allen G. Bain, ’69 Lisa Balzereit, ’95 Deborah L. Barber, ’15 Charles, ’63, and Ruth Barton Kalyani S. Basetti, ’74 Linton T. Bayless Jr. and Sara Deubner Melinda L. Beal Judith Becker James K. Bellamy, ’66
Robert, ’91, and Pamela Bellman Stephen and Joyce Berg Theodore, ’71, and Mary West Betsch, ’72 William Dan Betteridge, ’76 Brad and Sarah Biles Susan Black Blackbaud Giving Fund Nancy Blackburn Clint, ’71, and Joyce Blithe Rick Blount, ’84 BNSF Railway Company BNZ O&G LLC Iris T. Bonapart, ’98 Suzanne, ’96, and Raymond Bond Melvin Bowie, ’76 Peg Bradley Robert, ’90, and Lezlie Brillhart Charles E. Broach, ’90 Pauline Brock, ’13 Tony Brooke Dale W. Brouk Kirby R. Brown Browne Kee Charitable Fund Jeffrey S. Bulthuis, ’14 Burns & McDonnell
William L. Byrd, ’86 Francis C. Campbell, ’78 Jackie M. Campbell, MHL ’11 Robert and Beverly Somerville Cantine, both ’62 Carol and David Porter Donor Advised Fund Jerry S. Carter, ’79 Nicholas Casale Cutrina Catlin Central Bank of the Midwest Cynthia Cerrentano Ho-Seop Cha John and Ramona Chaske Tim Chelpaty Dong Choi David and Laure Christensen, ’16 Adrian D. Clark, ’18 Gregory D. Claycomb Larry Coats Gary, ’70, and Cathy Cobb Mark and Mimi Comfort Harold L. Condra Corneal M. Conn Mary J. Cooke, ’55 James H. Cornelius
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PARKITE CLUB Gifts totaling $100 to $999 Continued
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James Corr, ’95 Linda Council Lynn Craghead Larry Crenshaw, ’07 Tepring Crocker Barnard Cross, ’00 Wilbur D. Curtis, ’96 John Czarnota, x67 Keith M. Dailey, ’00 Amber Dailey-Hebert Ronald and Sheryl Davidow Pamela J. Davis, MACL ’11 Woody and Louise Davis Jaynee Day, ’75 Gustavo R. De Ugarte John S. Dean Geri G. Dickey John and Nancy Dillingham Dinosaurs of Antarctica LLC Michael and Katheen Dodd Roberta Dunlap, ’55 Sherburne W. Dunn, MPA ’90 Robert C. Eckardt Robert J. Eckerle, ’85 Jamila Edwards Jeff and Donna Ehrlich Christian and Jamie Els, ME ’12 The Fagan Company Steve Fenske Hilton J. Ferguson, ’91 Karie Beth Schaefer Fields, ’06, MACL ’12 Kristopher and Brandy Fisher, ’05 Leah Fletcher Ronald, ’75, and Karen Fory David, ’61, and Anita Ferrer Foulk, ’63 Robert, ’81, and Karen Frank Karen R. Frankenfeld, ’59 Arthur, ’65, and Martha Giffen Freeman, ’66 Brad and Theresa Freilich SuEllen W. Fried, ’75 Wendi Frohna Cheryl L. Gabello, ’17 Geiger Ready-Mix Foundation Fund Gilbert Chamber of Commerce Foundation Inc. William Gillespie and Terry Seelye-Gillespie, ’65 Donald, ’69, and Linda Good Norman W. Gourley Jr., ’73 Charles H. Greene, ’14 Tamekia Green-Judge, ’01 Alan Gremli and Nancy Stichnot Gremli, ’95 Mary-Eleanore Griffin, ’98 Scott and Beth Hageman
Joshua Kelsey Hall, ’13 Carrie Anne Hallensleben, ’07 Frank P. Hamilton and Marie Corry Joseph, ’05, and Blanche Hamilton Laura Hanavan James, ’69, and Virginia Handerhan Ann Hansbrough and David Stout Danielle N. Hansen Jimmie Hardaway Jr., ’94 Joyce Ann Harner, ’11 Angela Harpalani, ’93 Kenneth Harris Judith A. Hartegan, ’05 Christine Ann Hayward, ’65 Timothy John Hebert, ’98 Catherine E. Heegn, ’94 Elizabeth A. Henry, ’65 Terrence K. Henry, MACL ’13 Michael Hernandez Cordero R. Hinds, ’20 James and Danita Hodges, ’12 John and Col. Sharon Hoffman Glenda J. Holder Melvin A. Holland III, ’82 Eric and Kathryn Holtze Jerome L. Hood, ’79 Loyd S. Hooper Hopkins Family Charitable Fund Raymond G. Horvat, ’89 Kathleen Howe David and Karen Myers Huinker, ’69 Thomas L. Hunzeker, ’71 Beverly J. Hurston, ’80 Leonard Hutchinson Nghia, ’93, and Minh-Quan Huynh, ’02 Arthur, ’80, and Shirley Jackson Clarine M. Jacobs Larry and Gretchen Jacobson Stewart, ’76, and Virginia Jaehnig Adrian James Thomas M. Jenkins Andrew T. Johnson Jerry and Barbara Johnson Joseph K. Johnson, ’99 Mark W. Jones, ’86 Kenneth, ’89, and Rosalee Justus K & S Associates Inc. Jennifer Keane Thomas G. Kemp Brian M. Kent, ’13 Diana S. Kilbarger, ’86 Steven E. King, ’94 David H. Kinney, ’76 Melanie J. Kinney, ’13 Curtis, ’71, and Charlotte Kirby Brad and Janet Kleindl Robert and Susan Hanson Klemmer, ’64 James R. Kline, ’17
Randy Knight Susannah L. Knox, ’71 Herb and Nancy Kohn Isaac and Jenene Kolensie, both ’08 Bill and Regina Kort Stephen and Ellen Kort Matt F. Krich, ’61 Rebecca Kudrna Janet Lake, ’73 Audrey and Asher Langworthy Larry E. LaRoe, MBA ’17 Matthew Larson Don and Evelyn Frierson Lawrence, ’90 Roger S. Layman, ’58 James L. Leath, ’93 Michael J. Ledgard Andrea K. Lee Robert Lee and Margarett A. Fields Samuel and Judy Leonard Siobhan McLaughlin Lesley Steven & Jayne Lewin Charitable Fund Lincoln Valley Farm Eric Lindeman, ’73 Richard and Donna Trelease Loraine, ’75 Roy R. Lorenz, ’79 Lovie J. Loyd, ’14 Larry and Nanese Loza, both ’05 Clarence K. Lundquist, ’80 Leanetta Malone Edward and Jody Manchion, ’99 Mann’s Lawn & Landscaping Inc. George Martin Richard and Sandra Martin, ’92, MPA ’95 Summer Masters Joseph, ’68, and Linda Traphagen Mastrangelo, x70 Robin L. Matney, ’96 Michael S. Mattson, ’94 Sally E. McAfee Brian McCallister McCownGordon Construction LLC Gregory and Ligia Bramlett McDonald, both ’93 Don L. McIntire, x48 Joel, ’55, and Carol McKean David J. Meatyard, ’93 Jay Memmott Ann Mesle William G. Meyer, ’71 Elaina Michalski Susan Michaud, ’03 Robert, ’56, and Marcia Miller Susan Miller Charles, ’64, and Sandra Minert Mel and Heather Minnis Kenneth A. Mitchell, ’11 Sarah E. Moe Bob and Kay Moffatt David, ’92, and Lisa White Moore, ’08 Gregory A. Moore
Lorraine Moore, MACL ’18 Richard N. Moore, ’70 Victor Moreno II Alton A. Morey, ’74 Anna Marie Morrissey, ’92 Ora L. Mosely, ’83 Michael and Elizabeth Weese Muncal, ’05 Lesa B. Mundwiler, ’17 Mark P. Murfitt Michelle Myers Robert C. Myers, ’61 Ted, ’70, and Kathleen Nace Pooya Naderi Beth Nay Negro Leagues Baseball Museum John Nelams, ’81 Stewart, ’61, and Jean Heaney Nelson, ’60 Michael Newmyer, ’74 John C. Nickell, ’08 Edward Novack, ’71 Gwen M. Obermeyer Ricky A. Oltman, ’02, MPA ’05 Aderinola H. Osifeso, ’14 Cindy Otts Jennifer C. Owen Christopher Parks, ’02 Linda Passamaneck Patton Leadership Consulting LLC Nikki Pauls DeSimone Eugene L.D. Pearson, ’82 Walter, ’90, and Virginia Pearson Jutta C. Pegues Javier E. Peraffan Michael O. Perry, ’96 Leif Peterson Marvin and Janice Gow Pettey, ’66 Robert Pevitts and Beverley Byers-Pevitts Pfizer Foundation Matching Gifts Program Robert J. Phillips Ozell Phoenix, ’95 John Thomas Pieklik, ’99 Rosemary Fry Plakas, ’63 Angela Ponomarenko Susan and Charles Porter Sam and Nancy Rohlfing Potter, both ’66 Ergys Prenika, ’05 Prevost Family Foundation Anton Joseph Price Jr., ’72 ProPrint Inc. David L. Purdin, ’90 Nathaniel Purdy Hanh Van Quach, ’79 Tami Radohl Jasur Rakhimov, ’16, and Gulmira Isomadinova, MBA ’17 Murali Ramachandran and Renuka Lakshmikanthan Sandy E. Ramos, ’13
Roxie J. Reavis, ’83 Michele R. Reeves, ’03 Carrie A. Register-Haley, ’97 Tammy Adonna Reid, ’91 Jeffery T. Reimche, ’09 Patricia E. Rhoades, ’51 L’Tanya A. Richardson, ’95 Marion and Patricia Ricono Mae L. Ridges, ’01 Timothy Riggs, ’94 Saundra M. Ripper, ’98 Darwin M. Rivera, ’04, MBA ’07 Diana Rivera Anthony R. Robinson, ’03 Oliva U. Rodriguez, ’01 Gregory Roger, ’16 Stanley and Annelle Hauetter Rogers, ’60 Briana Rogers Andrew C. Romer, ’07 Joseph, ’88, and Grace Rosboschil Gary, ’67, and Trudy Henderson Ross, ’66 Peter C. Rothberg, ’66 Lester, ’70, and Maria Ruark David A. Rumpf, ’67 D. Keith Sader, ’05 Andrew and Emily Sallee Shelley P. Samuels, ’93 Greg Lattig and Jill Saunders, ’93 Salvatore L. Schembri, ’76 Mary J. Schenk, ’61 Julia Scherer/Sheer Joy Piano Studio Rose Schneeberger, ’87 Penelope Scialla, ’69 Treva E. Selvin, ’97 Robert E. Shannon II Bobbi J. Shaw, ’01 Brian Shawver Efrem B. Shimlis, ’97 Bruce A. Shopfner, MAT ’13 Laura Shultz Sicley M. Sidoran, ’09, MBA ’14 Angela Marie Siefkes, ’97 Michael L. Simmons Diane Simpson Gloria J. Smith, ’89 John, ’89, and Helen Smith Leslie H. Smith Sr., ’85 Robert, ’52, and Elaine Smith Robin and Mark Smith Gordon Lynn Sparlin, ’99 George C. Spence, ’00 Macondray J. Steiger, ’72 Stifel, Nicolaus & Company Inc. Bruce, ’70, and Valerie Strauss, ’71 Hugh G. Stocks and Laurie N. DiPadova-Stocks Skyler Stuke, ’19 William H. Sumrall III
Sunflower Hills Golf Shop Larry Sutton and Sophia Yu Frederick, ’69, and Somjit Swain Carl E. Swanson III, ’93 Mark Swift, ’82, and Christine Davis-Swift, ’77 Rashone Janelle Tate, ’91 Gillis M. Taylor, ’01 Troy and Tonya Teague Barbara Tegtmeyer, ’51 Bert J. Terrazas, ’87 Warren, ’69, and Verna Thompson James and Laura Threatt Charles E. Thurig, ’73 Ranza J. Thurman, ’05 Dennis and Marcia Tighe Doris K. Tousley, ’98 Wade G. Tripp Two West Advisors Ronald, ’64, and Lynda Steele Tyrl, ’66 U.S. Bank Foundation Serena Uible, ’77 Roger and Phoebe Wolfe Vance, ’53 Kathy L.VanCleave Ralph Varnum Maureen O.Viall, ’83 Donald and Carole Vollintine Roger and Lorraine Fleming Wagner, ’66 Daniel E. and Alice D. Waite Family Foundation Fund James A. Waldrop Jr., ’05 Gordon, ’08, and Olga Walker Linda Watkins Bayon, ’06, MBA ’15, and Canethia Watts Florence Byham Weinberg, ’54 Harold and Carole O’Brien White, ’70 David N. Whittaker Walter Widemond Jr., ’82 Susan Wilcox Charles K. Williams, ’96 Donovan A. Williams, ’08 Margaret Wilson, ’65 Patricia M. Wilson, ’84 Rita Wilson J. Bryan Winston, ’79 Scott and Ami Wisdom Muriel S. Woodburn, ’91 Jeff, ’03, and Patricia Wooden Robert, ’97, and Kellie Woodruff Anthony, ’13, and Samantha Wright, ’08, ME ’13 Lisa A.Yarger, ’11, MBA ’14 Robert, ’64, and Gretchen Young Steven and Barbara Youngblood, ’09 YourCause LLC Jean S.L. Zamora, ’00 Benjamin M. Zibers, ’11 Abdulhamid Zlitni and Bobbi Diem, ’94
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* Deceased
IN HONOR OF KAY BARNES
Laura E. Shultz
IN HONOR OF MICHELE GREER
Michael Greer
IN HONOR OF LISA HICKOK IN HONOR OF ROSEMARY FRY PLAKAS, ’63
IN MEMORY OF ROGER E. BELL, ’78
Nancy D. Bramley, Stephen J. Ciesielski, Clifford A. Eller, Jerry and Barbara Johnson, and Brandi Kiper
IN MEMORY OF ED BRADLEY
Peg Bradley
IN MEMORY OF JAY FLAHERTY, ’71
Theodore, ’71, and Mary West Betsch, ’72, and Harold E Hirsch Foundation of Florida Inc.
IN MEMORY OF JOYCE WILSON LOEW, ’56
Edmund Loew, x55
IN MEMORY OF ROGER E. BELL, ’78
Nancy D. Bramley, Stephen J. Ciesielski, Clifford A. Eller, Jerry and Barbara Johnson, and Brandi Kiper
IN MEMORY OF ED BRADLEY
Peg Bradley
IN MEMORY OF JAY FLAHERTY, ’71
Theodore, ’71, and Mary West Betsch, ’72, and Harold E Hirsch Foundation of Florida Inc.
IN MEMORY OF JOYCE WILSON LOEW, ’56
Edmund Loew, x55
IN MEMORY OF MEARL E. MARTIN
Mark A. Martin
IN MEMORY OF ROBERT M. SMITH, ’49
Joann E. Smith, ’50
IN MEMORY OF DENIS WALSH, ’71
Theodore, ’71, and Mary West Betsch, ’72
IN MEMORY OF JAMES G. WILLSON JR. ’56 Kathryn Brown Willson, ’56
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Siobhan McLaughlin Lesley Anonymous
Hazel Adams, ’27 * Deanna Medlin Armstrong, ’70 * Robert Bryan Armstrong Noble I. Ayers * Clifford E. Backstrom, ’32 * Evelyn Dahlstrom Backstrom, ’33 * Rev. David Laird Barclay, ’53 * Phyllis B. Bayer Richard C. Bayer, ’54 * Roger E. Bell, ’78 * John A. Bennett, ’50 * Eliot S. Berkley * James F. Bigalow, ’39 * Dorothy E. Blackman * Ralph E. Blackman, ’31 * John E. Blalack, ’82 Robert B. Booth, ’68 Rutheloise Borchardt * Donald J. Breckon Sandy Breckon Ethel M. Metheny Bricker, ’44 * Frances Neil Broadhurst, ’42 * Virginia Bruch, ’97 * William B. Bruch H. Hildreth Buterbaugh, ’65 Anita B. Butler * Beverley Byers-Pevitts Vincent Campanella * Beverly Somerville Cantine, ’62 Robert R. Cantine, ’62 James G. Cariddi, ’49 * Mae Cariddi * Shirley M. Clark James L. Cobb, ’56 Phyllis Dawson Cobb, ’58 Mark Comfort Mimi Comfort Mary Alice Corbett * Robert P. Corbett, ’38 Anna M. Cory John C. Cory, ’42 * William Cozort, ’57 * Martha A. Crockett James E. Crockett, ’45 George T. Croskey, ’40 * Beverly Ann Dame Tamas Gyorik DeSalanky, ’69 * Katheen Dodd Michael Dodd
Ruthann Crinkelmeyer Donahue, ’64 Michael Droge Molly A. Droge Betty Eason, ’33 * Kenneth Eason, ’32 * Richard M. Eberst, ’69 Charles J. Edwards, ’42 * Bonnie Wallace Epperson, ’70 Dennis Epperson, ’69 John Ferguson Lorretta Jeanie Ferguson, ’87 Marion Tollaksen Fischer, ’33 * Herman Fishcher * Karen Peters Frankenfeld, ’59 Arthur B. Freeman, ’65 Audrey H. Freeman * Beryl Fuller, ’53 * Paul H. Gault, ’65, MPA ’88 Sylvia Helms Gault, ’60 * Steven F. Gebert, ’92 * Doris McClatchey Gerner, ’51 * James P. Gerner, ’52 * John F. Gibby, ’49 Mabel Gibby, ’45 Ricky C. Godbolt, ’93 Courtney Goddard Malcolm J. Good, ’39 * Josephine Barni Green, ’33 * Kathryn Houghton Groves, ’31 * William P. Guilkey, ’97 Edwin E. Hancock, ’34 * Margaret Hancock, ’34 * Oradelle Malan Havey, ’32 * Gwendolyn Hawks Christine Ann Hayward, ’65 John Heckman * Loucile Mayhew Heckman, ’33 * Carl F. Hedquist, ’37 * Dean Henricksen * Kathryn Henricksen Alice Hornecker, ’30 * Robert E. Hoskins, ’74 Eva Mae Tyree Hougland, ’50 * Kenneth Robert Hougland, ’49 * Doris A. Howell, ’44 * Ruth Rinehart Hunter, ’44 * Thom H. Hunter, ’42 * Joan Ioannidis * Mary Lou Jaramillo, ’92, MPA ’96 Richard W. Johnson, ’69
Theresa Johnson Katharine Cox Jones * Louise Mann Juergens, ’27 * Pete Kale, ’71 Fred R. Kenower, ’25 * James Kensett * Lenore Brownlee Kensett, ’48 * Arthur H. Kensler * Joyce Kensler, ’88 * Diana Kilbarger, ’86 Arthur F. Kluge, ’65 Lorene Metheny Knight, ’39 * William R. Knight, ’39 * Eleanor Woulfe Krumbiegel, ’67 Anne L. Wickham Lane, ’91 Dean Demotte Larrick, ’53 Cathy R. Lennon Patricia L. Sapp Lutz, ’44 * Edward F. Lyle, ’25 * Ora Mae Lyle * Kenneth MacDonald, ’33 * Margaret Haner MacDonald, ’34 * Donald M. Mackenzie, ’33 * Ruth Yoakum Mackenzie, ’33 * Harriss Cleland Malan, ’28 * Michael John Mangus, ’95 * Donald H. Martin, ’45 * Margaret Nichols Martin, ’47 * Robert E. Martin, ’50 * Royce Martin * Dorothy May Hugh B. McAfee, ’41 * Kenneth B. McAfee * Mary Ann Sackville McAfee, ’42 * Helen H. McClusky * Howard Y. McClusky, ’21 * Virginia B. McCoy David W. McDowell, ’60 * Diane K. McDowell Maria E. McGregor Neal L. McGregor, ’89, MAR ’92 Marcia S. Miller Robert Clinton Miller, ’56 George D. Mills, ‘72 Ferne Mohler * Milton H. Mohler * Margaret Ann Monahan * Rita Monahan David F. Monchusie, ’00 Thomas R. Mooney, ’67 * John M. Moore, ’25 *
Margaret Whiteside Moore, ’27 * Louise Morden Cameron H. Morrison * Robert Myers, ’61 Florence A. Ito Naylor, ’65 Michael Newburger, ’70 * Jessie Craig Obert, ’31 * Andrea Lang Pelton, ’70 Timothy Pelton, ’70 Linda Lawton Perry, ’67 Lora Turner Perry, ’40 * Thomas A. Perry, ’34 * William L. Perry, ’67 Harry Peters, ’35 * Rosena E. Eldridge Peters, ’36 * Robert R. Pevitts Rosemary Fry Plakas, ’63 Jeffrey W. Popovich, ‘92 Barbara Ann Potts, ’54 * Constance Koning Proffitt, ’54 Russell Proffitt, ’55 * Mary Ann Metheny Putman, ’41 * David V. Quemada * Patria Quemada * Thomas A. Ray, ’71 * Mary Bess Markward Renken, ’33 * Marjory Louise Rodgers Rice, ’38 * Verna Griffin Richardson, ’55 * Dorothy Riggs, ’30 * Betty Ann Meyers Riley, ’45 * Robert M. Riley, ’43 * Annelle Hauetter Rogers, ’60 Stanley K. Rogers Gerald L. Rushfelt Penelope Tipton Salazar, ’63 Lucille Crawford Sauby, ’43 * Weston T. Sauby * Barbara Moser Schaible, ’56 Harold Scheib, ’39 * Winifred Harris Scheib, ’37 * Charlene Schwenk Schoggen, ’43 * Joe G. Schoggen, ’43 * Maxine Spoor Schoggen, ’46 * Phil H. Schoggen, ’46 * Robert W. Seamans, ’56 Joseph T. Sefcik, ’43 * Barry D. Simpson, ‘59 Barbara L. Small * Betty G. Snapp Terry Snapp Talma B. Stanley, ’29 *
Starfire, ’65 * G. Ross Stephens, ’49 * Hila Richards Stratton, ’35 * James David Stratton * Jerrie McComb Sullenberger, ’45 Willard Franklin Sullenberger, ’45 * Mary E. Swallen, ’25 * Eleanor McDaniel Taylor, ’54 * Stanton A. Taylor * Hugh Temple * Saranna Johnson Temple, ’43 * Bernice J. Collins Thompson, ’58 Tammy M. Thompson Timothy Joel Thompson, ’93 Francis Throw, ’33 * Betty Broadbent Turner, ’31 * Berniece M. Miller Vaughan, ’34 * Constance Vulliamy, ’33 * Gary Wages Lynette Wages Irvine D. Walker, ’32 * Marie Hubbard Walker, ’34 * Clara M. Mariner Wallace, ’26 * Alice W. Winter Waln, ’23 * Charles Walters Dorothy K. King Walters, ’47 Dorla D. Watkins, ’80, MPA ’00 Dorothy J. Harper Watson, ’52 Ann Elizabeth Webb, ’81, MPA ’99 Michael A. Weighill Rita Weighill, ’90 Thomas M. Wells, ’34 * Martha Findlay Welsh, ’27 * Marjorie Jacoby Westmoreland, ’41 * Carol Groundwater Wheeler, ’62 Philip D. Wheeler, ’62 Jim Willson, ’56 * Jerome W. Wilson, ’33 * Mary Alice Webb Wilson, ’32 * June Delores Withers Herbert Snow Wolfe, ’18 * Mary Wolfe *
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Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Kansas City, MO Permit No. 6112
8700 NW River Park Drive Parkville, MO 64152-3795
Park University faculty and staff give back to the University and the community in a variety of ways. In 2020-21, Park faculty and staff reported they volunteered nearly 300 hours in their communities as a part of the Staff Advisory Council’s Park Gives Back one-week volunteer initiative.
More than $2,000 was raised in 2020 to support the University’s Pirate Pantry and a holiday box campaign, providing groceries to make turkey dinners for more than 30 students during the Thanksgiving holiday.
#ParkUnited was exemplified in the 2021 It Starts with Us campaign for the Robert W. Plaster Free Enterprise Center and School of Business as 100-plus faculty and staff raised more than $33,000. Park employees are recognized for their generous support in the Plaster Center’s second floor collaboration space. Stop by and see this unique art piece.