Leadership Summer 2011

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Leadership The Magazine of Westminster College



CONTENTS

SUMMER 2011

Features

10 Pull Up a Chair! Perpetuating great teaching

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Westminster Grads Weigh In

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Tradition with a Twist

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Remember Rebuild Rejoice

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What a Difference 10 Years Makes!

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Westminster Pride Hits the Road

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Alumni Weekend 2011

Do college diplomas spell success?

Alumni Directors through the years

Joplin alumni look forward from devastation

A decade of growth

2011 Blue Jay Road Trip Recap

Preserving the Past, Framing the Future

In every issue... 4

President’s Column

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Campus News

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Class Notes

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Baby Blue Jays

Leadership is published twice a year. Please submit suggestions and comments to: alumni@westminster-mo.edu

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Wedding Album

If you are interested in advertising in Leadership please contact: the Office of Marketing & Strategic Communication at (573) 592-JAYS

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In Loving Memory

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Last Impression

KRIS LENSMEYER, Executive Director of Marketing & Strategic Communication ROB CROUSE, Director of Media & Public Relations MELANIE BARGER, Director of Alumni Engagement & Event Management JAMIE PATTERSON, Marketing Manager DIANE HAMMERSTONE, Class Notes SARAH CARNES, Multimedia Designer

PHOTO COVER: Westminster Alumni Directors Past and Present

Leadership Magazine, Summer 2011

Contributors: Dak Dillon (Photographer), James Fashing (Photographer), Laura Marty (Writer), Becca Reape ‘12 (Writer), Becca Reape '12 (Writer)


PRESIDENT’S

COLUMN

Dear Friend of Westminster:

T

he past academic year was filled with memorable events and achievements. I want to shine a particular spotlight on community service at Westminster.

Student leadership was abundant on significant issues such as world hunger. Students in our Westminster Poverty Initiative established a plan for college food service to donate leftovers to the local soup kitchen. One of our fraternities created a program to raise money to provide additional food to a local homeless shelter. Another fraternity shoveled walks for town neighbors during the significant snow storms we endured this winter. Members of the Westminster community performed over 10,000 hours of community service this past year.

This past summer has been eventful for the college as well. Two of our students who received a Projects for Peace grant have been in Nepal, installing water filtering systems in schools and providing supplies. Kurt Jefferson’s pilot project, the Asian Summer Experience, brought U.S. high school students as well as a group of Chinese students to campus for a week to learn together. Thanks to Dr. Sue Serota’s leadership, for the first time, faculty members offered a number of on-line courses to keep students engaged in learning throughout the summer. Over a hundred youth workers and high school students from Knox Presbyterian Church in Napierville, Illinois, spent a week on campus doing significant community service work in Central Missouri. Kudos to alumni Randy and Jessie Johnson and Randy’s wife Kim for coming up with this project. At the end of May, Jane and I packed our bags to enjoy the alumni trip of a lifetime–Churchill’s England–with a wonderful tour guide, our own Dr. Rob Havers. That week contained too many high points to elaborate, but certainly at the top of the list would have to be a reception with Lady Mary Soames, Churchill’s daughter, and a visit to Churchill’s estate, Chartwell. The highlight of the week, however, was the time spent with alumni and friends. Now we begin the new fall semester with great anticipation as we welcome another strong class to campus. The Sixth Annual Symposium in September will focus on the digital age. The keynote speaker and Green Lecturer will be Bill Roedy, former CEO of MTV International. Other presenters will include neuroscientist David Eagleman, who was just profiled on NOVA, and David C. Everitt, President of the Worldwide Agriculture and Turf Division of the John Deere Company. This edition of Leadership magazine features the rich contributions of our endowed chairs, profiles early success of our recent graduates, and gives you a nostalgic look at the outstanding line up of alumni directors who have served our college and its graduates. One of the traits that makes our Westminster experience so unique is the willingness of our alumni to share their good ideas with others. I want to personally invite you to share your expertise with Leadership readers in the next edition of our college magazine. Our alumni have a wealth of successful experiences in a variety of areas. Please send our Leadership staff information on a topic that you feel would be helpful for other alumni to know. Choose anything from how to invest in the stock market to planning the perfect vacation–whatever topic you would feel comfortable sharing with Leadership readers. Those who are selected will be featured in the next Leadership edition and receive a Blue Jay Fun Pack for their efforts. Please send your submissions to marketing@westminster-mo.edu.

President George B. Forsythe, Ph.D.


The seventeen students who participated in the Biology in Belize trip pose on a stone wall at the Maya ruins with Professors Mike Amspoker and Bob Seelinger. This is the 10th Westminster group Professor Amspoker has taken to this tropical paradise.

Biology in Belize students enjoy Maya ruins at Lamanai.

Alumni and friends of Westminster enjoyed the Churchill's England trip led by Rob Havers Executive Director, National Churchill Museum

Senior Angie Schenewerk sings a solo during WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU 5 “Wanting Memories� at the Spring Vocal Music Concert.


Former U.S. Ambassador Thomas D. Boyatt, an internationally renowned Foreign Service Officer who risked his life to negotiate the release of hostages from Palestinian guerillas when he was a passenger on a TWA flight, spent a week in the spring semester conducting classes, seminars, workshops, and lectures at Westminster as a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow.

A new sculpture of Sir Winston Churchill which showcases the moment he delivered his famous “Iron Curtain” speech now greets visitors at the entrance of the National Churchill Museum on the newly renovated Plaza. The work by St. Louis sculptor Don Wiegand was unveiled by Weigand, Churchill’s granddaughter Edwina Sandys, President Barney Forsythe, Dr. Rob Havers, Westminster Board Chair Dr. Bruce Brookby, and benefactor Dick Mahoney on May 13.

On March 6, British journalist and author Sir Max Hastings delivers the Crosby Kemper Lecture on the topic “Churchill the Indispensible Man.”

President Forsythe and graduate 2LT Stephan McKee celebrating Stephan’s commissioning as an officer in the U.S. Army.


Dr. Michael P. Williams ’73, Senior Pastor of Joy Tabernacle of Houston, Texas, delivers the spiritual message to the graduates at the baccacalaureate service May 7.

Seniors of the Year, Brigitta Vieyra, a psychology major from Aurora, Colorado, and Derick Dailey, a political science and religious studies major from Little Rock, Arkansas.

Al Sikes ‘61, from Easton, MD, delivers the commencement address this year entitled “A Revealing Hoax” at the annual commencement exercises on May 7.

A group of Westminster and Fulton dignitaries who participated in the Civil War commemorative ceremony pose in front of the new historic marker that has been placed at the entrance of Westminster by the Kingdom of Callaway Civil War Heritage group and the Westminster College Alumni Association to trace the story of an historic Civil War event as a part of a new Mid-Missouri cultural attraction of seven historic markers in the area called “The Gray Ghosts Trail.”


Westminster College Board of Trustees Update Member Farewell Westminster College would like to thank the following people for over 50 years of service and dedication to Nine American high school students spent five days in July on campus becoming immersed in the Asian Summer Experience, a pilot summer project conducted by Dr. Kurt Jefferson, Director for the Center for Engaging the World (CEW). The students were introduced to the Chinese language by a native teacher; learned about the culture, history, and politics of Asian nations; and interacted with 22 visiting Chinese high school students. They also enjoyed swimming, movies, field trips, and evening leadership speakers. The CEW is the administrative hub for coordinating international programming and events.

the Westminster Board of Trustees. Mike Linihan '63 has served on the Board since 1998, including service on the Enrollment and Governance & Trusteeship committees, and vice chair of the Institutional Advancement and Salary committees. John M. Panettiere '59 has served on the Board since 1996, including service on the Student Life, Executive, Investment, and Strategic Planning committees, and chair of the Financial Affairs, Enrollment, and Salary committees. Suzanne Richardson has served on the Board since 1998, including service on the Churchill Institute & Memorial, Development, Marketing & College Relations, Executive, Academic Affairs, and Nominating committees, and chair of the Churchill Institute & Memorial committee. Alan C. Henderson '68 has served on the Board since 2000, including service on the Financial Affairs, Governance & Trusteeship, Investment, Development, Salary, Student Life, Enrollment, and Buildings &

Online classes were offered for the first time in Westminster College history this summer in accounting, marketing, child development, educational diversity, British literature Spanish civilization, scientific history, social psychology, and world religions. Professors Assma Sawani, Robert Eames, Linda Aulgur, Sue Serota, David Collins, Craig Dennison, Jim Concannon, David Jones, and Wynter Miller all taught in this pilot project. 136 students enrolled, taking class from places as far away as Korea and a cruise ship in the Atlantic. Feedback from both students and online faculty was very positive. According to Professor Sue Serota, who was in charge of online classes, students found the material interesting and appreciated the flexibility to complete assignments at their own pace.

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Grounds committees, and vice chair of the Financial Affairs committee. Douglas E. Hazel '81 has served on the Board since 2005, including service on the Institutional Operations, Enrollment, and Investment committees.

Learn more about our new board officers and trustees at www.westminster-mo.edu/go/newboard


The Westminster Board of Trustees elected new leadership and four new Board members at the spring board meeting May 14. Each of them brings a level of leadership to the college that will continue to provide Westminster students with an outstanding educational experience.

Bob Muehlhauser '68 Chairman of the Board of Trustees Former Executive Vice President & Managing Director Bank of America Securities

Wallace L. Head '72 First Vice-Chairman of the Board of Trustees Founder and Managing Director Personal Fiduciary Advisors, LLC

Hal Oakley '90 Second Vice-Chairman of the Board of Trustees Partner Schmiedeskamp, Robertson, Neu & Mitchell L.L.P.

June McAllister Fowler Board of Trustees Member Vice-President of Corporate and Public Communications BJC HealthCare

Donald P. Lofe, Jr. '79 Board of Trustees Member Executive Vice-President, Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Administrative Officer The PMI Group, Inc.

James C. Morton, Jr. '67 Board of Trustees Member Former Vice-Chairman Nissan North America, Inc.

Dr. Michael P. Williams '73 Board of Trustees Member Founder and Senior Pastor Joy Tabernacle WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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Pull Up a Chair!

Perpetuating Great Teaching at Westminster College

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hen alumni get together to talk about their days at Westminster and the great teachers they enjoyed, names such as Warry Williams, Bill Parrish, Brooke Sloss, John Randolph, Bill Bleifuss, Bob McCreight, and Cameron Day are just a few of the academic giants who enter into the conversation. These and many other wonderful educators are legendary in the hearts and minds of Westminster graduates. Why? Because these faculty members possessed not just the academic knowledge, personal charisma, and instructional skills to get their subject matter across to their students. They also held such love for that subject matter, their students, and Westminster College that they gave the kind of one-on-one personal attention that guided the successful development of character, leadership, and ultimately the direction of their students’ lives. 10

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To demonstrate how much Westminster values extraordinary teaching, the College established its endowed chair program. Endowed faculty chairs are the hallmark of academic quality and provide a way to honor distinguished teachers. They draw their inspiration from the past—established in memory of iconic Westminster professors. Yet their goal is to dramatically influence the future. The five current faculty members who hold these cherished positions have national reputations for teaching, mentoring, research, and publication. Here are some highlights of the remarkable contributions they are making to their field, their students, and the reputation and future of Westminster College.

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JOHN ASHLEY COT TON CHAIR

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rofessor Zade was selected by the leaders of the Humanities Division to serve as the John Ashley Cotton Scholar’s Chair last year. Established and funded in 1998 by Mr. Cotton’s sister, Johanna McMechan, this prestigious chair provides a faculty member in the Humanities the time and financial support to engage in professional development with the intent of benefitting the College curriculum. The Chair serves a three year term and is provided with funds for research and travel. As Cotton Chair, Zade is preparing a new course for Westminster’s transnational studies program on the jazz fiction of Haruki Murakami, one of the most important Japanese contemporary writers. He hopes to put together a new poetry manuscript, research the literary influences of writers on jazz musicians and the influences of jazz on modern American writers and particularly study jazz in Japan. He hopes to travel to Japan as well as to the major Japanese cultural centers in New York, Washington, D.C. and San Francisco to conduct research. Professor Zade believes it is important to document the artistic process, ideas, and contributions of jazz musicians while they are still alive. Zade has taught in the Westminster English Department since 1976 and was department chair from 1983-1986, 1998, and 1999-2000. He has been Chair of the Division of Humanities since 2008. He was honored with the Missouri Governor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1995 and the Patricia Kleine Leibling Parents Association Faculty Award in 2009. He received an MFA in English from the University of Iowa in 1973 and was a student in their acclaimed Writers Workshop. He also holds an MA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Patrick Friend ’10, describes him: “his passion for literature, music, creative writing, and teaching, his openness to fostering the creative mind, his thoughtful advice, and his friendship causes student after student to want to work for this man. All I can say is thank you.”

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JOHN E. SIMON CHAIR

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rofessor Buckley was chosen to assume the John E. Simon Chair when it was vacated with the departure from Westminster by Dr. Gyan Pradhan in 2008. Established in 2004 to honor Mr. Simon, a past member of the Westminster Board of Trustees, the Simon Chair was funded by a bequest from the trust of Mr. Simon and his wife Adaline to strengthen the work and the reputation of the Westminster Department of Business. Professor Buckley has continued the work of Dr. Pradham to raise the profile of Westminster’s programs through increased research and publication activity. Another of his goals has been to develop and redirect department programs, expanding and strengthening its offerings. Future direction includes an expansion of the department’s entrepreneurship program, international business program, and economics. An Associate Professor of Business and Chair of the Accounting, Business Administration, Economics and Management Information Systems (ABEMIS) Department, Buckley teaches the capstone course for the business and international business majors as well as international business, marketing, advertising and consumer behavior. He has led student groups on international travel courses to England, Australia and New Zealand and his interest in Latin America led him to team teach a course in Latin American economy and business practices. He came to academia following a 15- year career in the oil and gas industry as a licensed professional engineer. He holds an MBA from the University of California at Los Angeles. Whitney Tenholder ’11, says: “Professor Buckley is an influential teacher, both in and out of the classroom. His ability to teach with enthusiasm, along with his witty personality, pushes his students to work hard in order to achieve success.”

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FULBRIGHT-ROBERSTON CHAIR

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rofessor Quinault is the 18th Professor to hold the Fulbright-Robertson Chair. The Fulbright-Robertson Visiting Professor in British History award is given to a British historian who agrees to teach and conduct research specifically at Westminster College. The professor is assigned to the history department and required to teach one upper level 3-hour course on British history and one 3-hour survey course on British history in both the fall and spring semesters. The candidate is also expected to establish a collaborative relationship and conduct personal research at the National Churchill Museum and neighboring presidential libraries as well as accepting speaking engagements and participating in academic conferences in the United States and Canada. He also delivers The Fulbright-Robertson Lecture to the Westminster College community every year. Last fall Professor Quinault gave this annual lecture on Winston Churchill and America: Personal Contacts in War and Peace. He has written extensively on British history since 1800 and has a particular interest in political leaders, the Churchill family and Anglo-American relations. He co-edited AngloAmerican Attitudes from Revolution to Partnership in 2000 and Winston Churchill in the Twenty-First Century in 2004. Dr. Quinault received an BA, MA and Doctorate from the University of Oxford where he was a scholar at Magdalen College and a Research Fellow at Merton College. Dr. Rob Havers, Executive Director of the National Churchill Museum, said Professor Quinault “endeavored to promote the profile of Westminster College by giving lectures at other universities and speaking to various organizations such as the English-Speaking Union and the International Relations Council. He encouraged his students to adopt a comparative approach to national histories and the diversity of Anglo-American relations.�

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WILLIAM GORDON BUCKNER CHAIR

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rofessor Phelps assumed the Buckner Chair in 2010 and that action has allowed her to pursue a much more ambitious research agenda, collaborating with another professor on analysis of communication patterns and delivering a presentation on entrepreneurship at an international conference. William Gordon Buckner created the chair to honor his parents, Charles Madison Buckner, Jr. and Mary Margaret Buckner, and strengthen the work of the Business Department. Gordon Buckner attended Westminster from 1952-54. Along with teaching Management Information Systems and business courses, Professor Phelps is redesigning the MIS major with an emphasis on groundbreaking combinations of business/ decision science theory and MIS practice. She spent one year at Carnegie Mellon University on a Turkish Council of Higher Education scholarship and six months at Purdue University as an exchange scholar. She tries to challenge herself with at least one novel experience every semester. She holds a PhD from Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey, and an MBA with a concentration in MIS from Governors State University. In addition to teaching and academic research, she described having worked “as a consultant, statistician, interpreter, speech writer, and the lyricist/ director of the first Turkish rock opera.” Recent graduate Luke McKinley says: “Her passion for teaching is contagious as she has inspired me and my peers to excel both inside and outside the classroom. She always strives to make sure that every student understands the material while also holding them to a high level of accountability. In doing so, she challenges us to rise to the occasion, while supporting us along the way.” WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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C A M E R O N D AY C H A I R

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rofessor Mike Amspoker has been able to explore

his academic research labor of love, the study of the ecologically significant microscopic algae group diatoms, and make presentations and write manuscripts in relation to his research, due to the Day Chair. Created in 2004 to honor the memory and contributions of Professor Cameron D. Day, this Chair provides strong support to the Biology Department. Made possible due to the donations of a long and distinguished list of Professor Day’s former students, the Day Chair has been held by Professor Amspoker since its inception. Along with his research, holding the Day Chair has allowed Professor Amspoker to devote himself tirelessly to his students, developing on-going internships at the University of Virginia, St. Joseph’s Health Center in St. Charles, Missouri; and the School of Medicine at St. Louis University. He has invited numerous outside speakers to his classes, arranged field trips for students aspiring to health care careers, and written many recommendations for students, gaining them entrance into prestigious medical schools and nursing programs throughout America. Professor Amspoker has also taken students on a number of three-week summer session trips to Belize, Kenya, Peru and Ecuador (including the Galapagos Islands). One of his former colleagues, Professor Hank Ottinger says: “Mike is, above all, an inspiring teacher who has inspired many students to go on to stellar careers. One of his students told me a while back how Mike had rescued him as an aimless sophomore and steered him onto the path of entomology.”

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Just as these five endowed chairs have influenced so many students’ lives, helping them decide what their degree will be and helping them get their foot in the door to beneficial internships and new jobs, the creation of new endowed chairs will determine the direction of Westminster and its students for the future. When benefactors establish endowed chairs, they accomplish several important objectives. First, they immortalize a professor whom they treasured. Second, they keep the best teachers at Westminster and provide them with the resources to be at the forefront in their research and course content. Third, they ensure their contributions live on for years to come. To learn how you can make a permanent investment in the extraordinary teaching for young people through the endowed chair program, please contact the Westminster Office of Development at 573-592-5370.

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September 20-21, 2011 | Westminster College Symposium

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Weigh In

westminster grads

do college diplomas spell success?

When a group of Westminster graduates met at the columns on The Hill to pose for a final picture before walking through The Columns for a final time, the mood was definitely celebratory with smiles and laughter all around. Obviously, this group was not deterred by the rash of recent articles posing the question whether it is worth it for today’s young person to spend all the time and money earning a college diploma in this bad economy and bleak job market. When asked, they were unanimous in saying receiving their college diploma was worth it. More in-depth questioning revealed a number of reasons why they felt the experience was worth it. They talked a great deal about the self confidence they gained, the better understanding they discovered of their own identities through the process, the ability to compete they acquired from such a competitive academic environment, and the sense of direction for the future they received. But why shouldn’t they be walking on air? All of them are headed for great first jobs, impressive fellowships. or prestigious graduate studies. The next step in their future includes (pictured from bottom to top, left to right):

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Bernardo Vimpi (Luanda, Angola) — Graduate school in Diplomacy & Public Administration at Seaton Hall College Stefanie Kavanaugh (Washington, MO) — Vanderbilt University Law School

Raghela Scavuzzo (Harrisonville, MO) — Graduate School in Public Health at Boston University Jacque Sanders (Little Rock, AR) — Teach for America in Mississippi

Brigitta Vieyra (Aurora, CO) — Graduate School in Higher Education at New York University

Derick Dailey (Little Rock, AR) — Teach for America and then Divinity Studies at Yale University Mike Butera (St. Clair, MO) — Securities Studies at Georgetown University Grant Portra (Fulton, MO) — Financial Advisor for Edward Jones

Kristen Bail (Camdenton, MO) — Teacher of Second Language in South Korea

Angela Schenewerk (Kirksville, MO) — Animal Science Two-Year Fellowship at University of Missouri Patrick Friend (Little Rock, AR) — Teacher at Little Rock High School for Boys in Arkansas

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011


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COLLEGE FAST FACTS Undergraduate enrollment increased from 7 million to 18 million from 1970 to 2009 Of the 18 million undergraduate students, 76% attended public institutions, 15% private not-for-profit institutions, and 9% private per profit institutions Undergraduate enrollment to increase to 20 million by the end of this decade Number of bachelor degrees has increased by 1/3 over the last decade 77% of full-time students and 48% of part-time students who entered four year institutions in 2008 returned the following year to continue their studies 63% of students were Caucasian, 14% Black, 12% Hispanic, 75% Asian/Pacific Islander, 1 percent Native American/ Alaska Native, and 3% nonresident aliens (Fall 2008)

International student enrollment was at 3% (2007-2008) 69% of all young adults in the labor force with a bachelor’s degree worked full time for the entire year as compared to 55% of those with a high school diploma Those full time working adults with a bachelor’s degree earned 50% more than those with a high school diploma SOURCE: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

When questioned about why going to college was worth it for them, the group universally talked about the self confidence they received from interacting closely with such a diverse group of people at Westminster. They felt their educational journeys gave them a better understanding of themselves and a clear sense of direction. Vieyra referred to what she had gained as “intellectual independence—personally and professionally.” Schenewerk discussed the benefit of being able to explore a variety of choices through a liberal arts education. Vimpi emphasized that this tough economy made it even more important that young people go to college so they are accustomed to living in a competitive environment and are prepared to compete for the jobs that they want when they graduate. While all in the group believed they received valuable knowledge, skills, and social skills from the small liberal arts college environment found at Westminster, all of their experiences were different. Bail was a residential assistant. Portra was a Student Ambassador. Vimpi worked in the Center for Engaging the World and Career Services. Butera and Kavanaugh were both involved with the Student Government Association (in fact, Butera was SGA President), and Kavanaugh did work for her sorority. They all talked about the leadership opportunities they received and the many chances to develop self confidence through public speaking and the sharing of ideas. Several talked about how the diversity of the campus had helped them become comfortable interacting and sharing ideas with people from all ages and walks of life. As Dailey phrased it so well: “At Westminster we learned the world is larger than our space and where we are.” Many in the graduate group felt comfortable stating that they received an education at Westminster unlike any they could have received elsewhere. Bail had spent time comparing her experience at Westminster with those of her friends attending other colleges and universities and found none of them had attended institutions that were as committed to service learning and community service or had encountered faculty who challenged them to think deeply enough to challenge accepted wisdom. Sanders found the Westminster experience as an education major to be different from her friends at other colleges. At Westminster she was allowed to work at all grade levels where her friends were confined to either elementary, middle school, or secondary school experiences. Vimpi’s


“At Westminster we learned the world is larger than our space and where we are.” friends at other schools were surprised at the close relationships he was able to establish with faculty and staff members. The willingness of Westminster staff to allow Vieyra to work with them side by side behind the scenes and receive opportunities few students ever receive has led her to her career goal of becoming a Dean of Students. Dailey’s twin brother, who chose another school over Westminster, had to admit that the access Derick received to his professors and the administration at Westminster was far superior to what he had encountered, particularly when he found out Derick even had President Forsythe’s cell phone number. Perhaps the most pleasing discovery from the graduate interviews was discovering how closely Westminster’s faculty, staff, and alumni work with graduates to ensure their future success. Dr. John Langton was extremely helpful in advising Kavanaugh through the Vanderbilt process because his daughter had just graduated from there. Alumni Heather Biehl ’89, and Read Parham ’98, both well known in the fields of securities and intelligence, mentored Butera in his quest to be accepted to Georgetown’s program. Dr. Bob Hansen shepherded Vieyra through the process at NYU, and Jackie Weber, Director of Residential and Greek Life, sealed the deal in a phone interview with the insightful, personal glimpses she was able to give admission officials about her. Alumnus Dr. Mike Williams ’73, who went to Yale, helped Derick Dailey get accepted there, and Professor Cliff Cain, who graduated from Vanderbilt, wrote a glowing recommendation. Both Sanders and Schenewerk said Westminster officials who wrote letters of recommendation for them went above and beyond the call of duty, able to cite personal examples because they knew the two students so well. Portra gives credit to alumnus David Crane ’90, for whom he worked through high school and college and alumnus Wes Gregory ’93, at Edward Jones for helping him achieve his dream of becoming a financial advisor. Vimpi had an entire team in his corner assisting him with gaining admission to Seaton

Hall. Dr. Bob Hansen and Meg Langland, Director of Career Services, gave him input on his resume and helped prepare him for the interview. His advisor, Professor Kurt Jefferson, and Professor Sam Goodfellow guided him through the application process. The strong belief in the value of pursuing a college education expressed by this Westminster sampling is certainly corroborated by national statistics. Even in this bleak economy, a comparison of median salary numbers for full-time workers aged 25 and over still shows the median salary for those with a college degree is 64 percent higher than those with a high school education. Unemployment rates reflect that those with a college degree have an unemployment rate that hovers around half of the national average. However, a college degree still does not automatically open the door to future success. That is why many college bound young people are seeking majors where the employment odds are in their favor. According to the National Association of Colleges and Employers, those who graduate with math skills are more likely to gain speedy employment over their friends in other majors. Accounting, business, engineering and economics majors are all safer disciplines for today’s job market. Nevertheless, whatever the occupational prognosis for a college graduate, all of them can take solace in the statistics that correlate their college degree with great social benefits and better health decisions. Individuals with college degrees are more likely to vote, exercise, carry health insurance, and have pensions. They are less like to smoke, be obese, or have low birth rate babies. Yet for the group of graduates profiled in this article the future looks promising indeed. A Westminster diplomat, politician, attorneys, State Department and college officials, research analyst, financial wizard, and teachers may all be making their mark on the world when these young people are able to fulfill their dreams. WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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tradition with a twist Alumni Director Melanie Barger embraces new opportunities, stays true to Westminster legacy.

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ummer is ending in Fulton, and Westminster College students have returned after months of enrichment, new experiences and relaxation. They’ve unpacked, rekindled old friendships and sparked new ones, and they’re settling in for the fall semester. The same process is under way in a campus office, where Director of Alumni Engagement and Event Management Melanie Barger is working to help alumni relationships with each other and the College last a lifetime.

finding the right fit Melanie’s newest role is the culmination of years of interest and experience in alumni relations. It was as an undergraduate at the University of Missouri that she realized the importance of an active alumni community. After earning a master’s degree in education, Melanie taught Family & Consumer Sciences, coached varsity cheerleading and advised the FCCLA chapter at California (Mo.) High School. She soon realized she was meant to work in higher education. “I missed the energy and excitement of being on a college campus,” she said. Melanie was first considered for an admissions position at Westminster, where she met Pat Kirby, now International Student Coordinator. Although that opening wasn’t the right fit for her, Pat knew there was a home for Melanie at Westminster, and she joined the College’s staff in 2001 to work with Kris Lensmeyer in Alumni & Parent Relations. “When people ask me how I came to Westminster, I tell them I was ‘recruited’ by Pat,” Melanie said. Melanie has been active in the Council for Advancement & Support of Education (CASE) since the start of her Westminster career and has coordinated the College’s 22

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entries for CASE’s District VI awards, resulting in multiple awards for events and programs, as well as repeated recognition with the coveted Sweepstakes Award. Melanie and Kris spent nearly a decade devising and implementing ways to bring together prospective and current students, parents and alumni, including the Blue Jay Across the USA cross-country road trip, which now has logged three successful summer journeys. “It has been an amazing experience for the four-student road crew, as well as the people they visit,” Kris said. Earlier this year, Kris moved into a new role as Executive Director of Marketing and Strategic Communications, and Melanie took the reins as Alumni Director. Even with her extensive experience with Westminster alumni, the position still poses new challenges. Luckily, Melanie has decades of experience and support standing behind her in the form of previous alumni officials, many of them Westminster graduates: past Alumni Directors Kris, Pat, Phil Reynolds ’61 and James Flink ’83, and past Alumni Secretary and Director of Publicity Jack Marshall ’53.

long distance relationships Travel has been a highlight in the careers of Westminster alumni staff, and the College’s sterling reputation draws students from every corner of the globe. Visits to alums across the country top the list of favorite memories for Jim. “So many outstanding Westminster alumni — New York, L.A., D.C., San Diego. Fun times!” he said. And Pat now works to bring the Westminster spirit to prospective students in distant lands.


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Current Alumni Director Melanie Barger (top) with previous alumni officials Kris Lensmeyer, Pat Kirby, Phil Reynolds ’61, James Flink ’83 and Jack Marshall ’53

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But the worldwide College community brings challenges as well. With such active, widespread alumni, it’s tough just to keep track of them – much less find out what they’re up to. So the alumni relations staff has utilized new technology to bring alumni the latest on their alma mater. Pat initiated the alumni listserv in 1997, and electronic communications have continued to expand – with websites, the Columns Connection e-newsletter, Facebook and Twitter to keep Westminster fresh in the lives of alumni. Melanie is working to further enhance Westminster’s outreach. Among the programs under way are affinity groups, aimed to bring together alumni with “shared interests and common bonds … beyond the traditional class and regional structure,” Melanie said. The groups unite alumni based on identity, involvement with student organizations, personal interests and career specialties.

a lifelong bond Melanie and her staff are faced with the monumental task of keeping the sense of connection with Westminster alive in alumni. This means preserving memories as well as instilling in them a sense of pride in the advances the College has made. Previous alumni staffers worked to achieve the same goals. “Although many significant changes have been made to the campus, and the student body may be larger, it is still the College that opened the door of opportunity to all of us who attended this ‘great small college,’ ” Phil said. Staff also marvel at the special place Westminster holds in the hearts of alumni, even decades after graduation. Jack shared a special moment from Alumni Weekend in 1959. “A medical doctor from Cuba returned for his 50th anniversary. He had been sent to Westminster by Presbyterian missionaries in Cuba, who awarded him a scholarship. After graduating in l909, he returned to Cuba and never again visited the States until he returned for the reunion. As I was walking him and his son around the campus, he broke away from the two of us when we approached the Columns. The next thing I knew, he had thrown his arms around one of them and had tears running down his cheeks. He said: ‘If it had not been for those missionaries and Westminster College, I would probably be picking sugar cane in Cuba today.’ … I can still envision him clinging to that column.” Westminster staff today strives to make the same singular experiences possible for the College’s future alumni. “Westminster is a special place and deserves and needs to be supported by alumni,” Kris said. “It is essential to the College’s future.”

keeping up the conversation That support comes in myriad forms — sharing stories about the College, wearing Westminster gear, visiting campus, offering advice or opportunities to current students and younger alumni, or making annual gifts to the Westminster Fund to support student scholarships and programs. “Engaged alumni have a wider impact on the college than they realize,” Melanie said. “They help us recruit and retain quality students, achieve higher rankings nationally, and are factors of consideration for accreditation reviews and foundation grants.” The latest innovation to help alumni support Westminster is Event in a Box. The program — piloted in St. Louis and Chicago by Alumni Council members Betsy Humphreys ’83, Randy Johnson ’74 and Sorin Ciesielski ’00 — helps alumni host events independent of the alumni staff. The packages provide all the essentials for a Westminster get-together: invitations, information, napkins, coasters and door prizes. “This will help Westminster go into areas that our travel schedule or budget will not allow, and promote more frequent gatherings,” Melanie said. This goal of frequent contact isn’t a new one. Jim and Phil focused on restructuring and revitalizing the Alumni Council, and their successors have worked to maintain that momentum. “The Alumni Council provides outstanding support to the College,” Phil said, and pointed out that many Alumni Council members have served on the College Board of Trustees. As Melanie embarks on her journey as Westminster’s Alumni Director, she hopes to both broaden the scope of alumni involvement and help alumni support Westminster in ways that complement their interests and lifestyles. “I want alumni to feel pride in their institution and reflect on how their experiences were supported by previous generations of Westminster alums,” she said. “Everyone has the capacity to make a personally meaningful and significant contribution to Westminster’s future just by being engaged.”

Want to read more? Additional stories and comments from the Alumni Directors online at www.westminster-mo.edu/go/alumnidirectors! WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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STORY BY BECCA REAPE '12 | AP PHOTO BY CHARLIE RIEDEL

T

he power and strength of nature has

Pictures however, do not even begin to capture

From Hurricane Katrina in 2005 to

after the storm hit with two other Westminster

been witnessed time and time again.

the 2010 earthquake in Haiti; vast amounts of damage are caused by Mother Nature. Upon hearing about the tornado that tore through Joplin, Missouri on Sunday May 22 and seeing the pictures that emerged of the devastated area, I could not help but be reminded of this idea.

26

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011

the tornado damage. I went to Joplin two weeks students, Alex Berry ’13 and Sarah Humphreys ’13, and a Westminster alumna, Karri Birch ’10

to do some volunteer work. When first entering Joplin, there is no evidence of a tornado. The

buildings are intact, the streets are clean, and the trees are lush and green. But it is a completely


REMEMBER REBUILD REJOICE

different world further into town, which the

Debris that is impossible to tell what it once was

followed by silence in our car. Not only is it clear

buildings that are still standing have their insides

sight of produced gasps from my companions

that a tornado tore through this town of nearly

50,000 people, but that it did so with vehemence and violence. It has been described as looking

like a war scene. On the side of the road are cars that look as if they were simply a piece of paper

crumpled up into a ball and dropped back down.

is piled everywhere. Some of the commercial spilling out of them; metal beam after metal

beam lies twisted and destroyed on the littered ground. Heaps of splintered wood, cracked

bricks, and bits of plaster are where homes once stood, now complete rubble. The expansive area

where the tornado hit is completely flattened. In


every direction, the destruction is all encompassing, sending chills up your spine. The most unsettling aspect of the damage is the trees, if they can even be called that. All that is left are the trunks; the branches have been ripped off unwillingly and the leaves are nowhere in sight. Even the bark has been stripped from parts of the once strong trunks. The power and ferocity of nature is seen in the remnants of these trees and there is something utterly wicked about the self-destruction that has taken place. It feels as if this place will never be the same . . . at first Once the shock of the damage wears off however, signs of hope can be seen throughout Joplin. Literally. With the damage from the storm and some creativity, the sign in front of the high school that once read “Joplin High School” now reads “Hope High School.” Numerous American flags stand tall in the affected area, representing the fight that still remains in the hearts of Joplin citizens. There is a quiet energy throughout the town as Joplin refuses to surrender. Rebuilding and recovery are not easy things to do, but Joplin has taken them on with full force. It has now been nine weeks since the massive tornado took 158 lives and damaged 8,000 structures in an area nearly seven miles long in the city. It is amazing to hear about all of the progress that has been made in the short time span. I had the opportunity to speak with Joplin native and Westminster alumnus, Dan Stanley ’67, about the rebuilding process. He said that the city has a goal to have all of the debris cleaned up by August 7. Having seen the astonishing amount of debris that needs be cleared, this goal did not seem feasible. But Stanley is very confident that Joplin will meet this goal. 28

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011


Stanley reported that after the tornado there was

communication keeps everyone on the same page.

1.8 million cubic feet of debris, and 1.2 million

FEMA has even noticed how remarkable the

cubic feet has already been cleared away. In addition,

Joplin community is. Rather than waiting for the

the city has begun issuing building permits for

government’s aid, the leaders took action right away.

most areas that were affected, as long as the debris

A website was established, rebuildjoplin.org, where

has been cleared. As of the end of June, nearly

people can go to volunteer as well as contribute.

1,500 permits had been issued, and this is just in

Originally, FEMA representatives questioned the

residential areas. Many commercial buildings have

website and whether it was counterproductive to

already begun repairs and rebuilding.

their efforts. However, after looking into the website further, they embraced it and have even considered

Looking at the actions of the community right after

using it as a model.

the tornado, these statistics do not seem so hard to believe. Just six days after the tornado hit, St. John’s

If you were to talk to anyone from Joplin, you

Hospital (which was destroyed by the tornado)

might not realize all of the wonderful things they

had sixty beds and a surgery center established in

are doing. They are a humble and generous people

a “M.A.S.H-like set up,” described Stanley. Before

who care more about trying to help others in the

the tornado, Joplin was in a housing recession but,

community rather than worrying about themselves.

that business is now booming. Joplin is definitely on

Even people whose belongings were destroyed in

the road to recovery with such intensity that is, as

the tornado show no concern over what they lost;

Stanley stated, “simply amazing!”

they are too busy helping others. The people of Joplin are simply grateful to be alive. They do not

We must recognize why Joplin is making such

see themselves as victims, but survivors. Remember.

a strong comeback: the people. Stanley was very

Rebuild. Rejoice. is the theme of the Joplin people

quick to tell me how proud he is of the magnificent

and they live those three words every day.

leadership that the people in the key offices have shown. “They are outstanding leaders” Stanley

Winston Churchill said, “We shall draw from the

says, “because they make hard decisions fast with

heart of suffering itself the means of inspiration and

intelligence, common sense, and compassion.”

survival.” Joplin has done just that. New buildings signal a new beginning for this great city. Nothing

Collaboration between all of the different groups in

can stop the heart of this city from beating, even

charge has been essential. Stanley shares that even

nature. The trees that seemed barren and dead and

the leaders of the hospitals who were once fierce

stood as the epitome of nature’s power, are now

competitors have put away the competition for now

sprouting new green growth. A new symbol for

and have put on the “Joplin jersey.” They have come

Joplin. Dan Stanley said it best, “As harmful as

together to do whatever is necessary to save lives.

Mother Nature can be, it can also be inspiring.”

Many different focus groups have been meeting to brainstorm plans for Joplin. And even though all of these groups are meeting separately, constant WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

29


Westminster College | 2001


– 2011 | A Decade of Growth 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001


ROAD TRIP RECAP

Road Trip Fun Facts 626 6,553 4,468 1,899 326 312 29 26 24 24 21 19 17 14 13 8 7 $4.21 $3.29

32

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011

Alumni, Students, Family & Friends engaged events and stops Miles Driven Website Visits Pictures Taken Tweets Check-Ins on Foursquare CD's Listened To Cities State Lines Crossed Gas Fill-Ups Times Kelsey Yelled at Traffic Homes Stayed In Gas Stations Changed In Miles Walked in NYC States Visited Hotels Stayed In Average Times Per Day Gaurav put on Hand Sanitizer Most Expensive Gas (New York) Cheapest Gas (Texas)


F

rom San Antonio, Texas to Boston, Massachusetts, Kelsey, Gaurav, Nicki, and I saw more of the U.S. in a shorter amount of time than we will probably ever do again. We hosted events in 26 cities, visited 13 different states, crossed over 24 state lines, and clocked over 6,500 miles on the minivan, which in case you didn’t know, had our faces on it. From groups of 169 to parties of six, every event (whether at the ballpark or a beautiful home) and every city was different and unique in its own way. We heard stories about what Westminster was like over 50 years ago, and what it’s like after we walk back through the columns. It’s nice to hear that some things haven’t changed (Tif’s/Tap Room) and yet that some things have (classes on Saturdays). You can put numbers on how many people we met, the hotels we stayed in, and the t-shirts we gave away, but what you can’t count are the endless number of success stories we heard from alumni across the country and seeing them relive that love for Westminster they had when they were students. What continuously impresses me about our grand college is the undying loyalty of Westminster alumni, faculty/staff, friends, and family who are willing to outstretch their hand to assure that the school and its graduates remain on a prestigious level. The opportunities and the connections made you would not get at another school. I signed up for this road trip, really unaware of where it would take me (even if we had the route mapped out), what would be in store along the way, or literally just what to expect. And now as a past member of the road crew, I speak on behalf of all of us when I say this was an opportunity of a lifetime and we couldn’t be more excited to be Blue Jays from THE Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri! The 2011 Blue Jay Across the USA Road Trip was a huge success and the credit goes to those of you that joined us along the way, helped support us as we ventured from city to city, and shared incredible stories that all tie back to Westminster. So for this, we thank you!

RACHEL BACKES

Keep spreading the Westminster spirit and we hope you make a flight back to the home nest in the near future! And don’t forget…every day is a GREAT day to be a blue jay! - Rachel Backes Class of 2012

Fuel the Fund – 2011 Total Support: $6,772 Thank you to all the Westminster alumni, family and friends who stepped up to support the Blue Jay Road Trip and the Westminster Fund. Support comes in many forms – here’s a breakdown of how we achieved our full tank! $865 in raffle ticket sales $3,328 in cash donations/pledges *This figure reflects submitted receipts through 7/26/11.

$1,400 in out-of-pocket expenses for events* $1,179 in sponsored hotel stays for Road Crew WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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BLUE JAY

ALBUM

BOSTON

ATLANTA

BIRMINGHAM

HUNTSVILLE

COLUMBIA, SC

DALLAS

DC

FORT SMITH

NEW YORK CITY

OKLAHOMA CITY

RALIEGH

ST. LOUIS

PHOTO CAPTIONS Boston: Derek Duncan '07 and Gaurav Atlanta: Chris '93 and Cathy Panettiere and the Road Crew Birmingham: Scott Morales '94, Julie Metheney '99, Heather Meggers-Wright '98 & Sean Wright '00 Huntsville: Peter '59 & Jane Yu and Pauline & Jerry '60 Robertson Memphis: Ted ‘77 and Ann Cashion Charlotte: Kristin ’95 and Todd Arnold Columbia, MO: Mandela Byam '12, Logan Ray '11, Becca Reape '12 and Max Edele '12 Kansas City, MO: Peter Gattermeir '62, Sara (Reid) Murray '93, Jean & Bill ’61 Hervey Columbia, SC: Danielle Vance and the Peterson boys: Lloyd '76, Beau '06 and Spencer Dallas: Durwood Stringer '54, Travis Sartain '97 and Andrew Darkow '09 DC: Meredith Gibbons '11, Lara Banner '12, Emily Herzog '09, Fon Komkai '10, Sara Weir '04 and Alice Burt '09 Fort Smith: The Road Crew with Lauren Sergent '09, Wilson Ward '00, and the Merry Family: Philip '76, Leigh, Bryan '02 and Abbey

34

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011


MEMPHIS

CHARLOTTE

COLUMBIA, MO

KANSAS CITY, MO

FAYETTEVILLE

FORT WORTH

HOUSTON

INDIANAPOLIS

ST. LOUIS

SAN ANTONIO

SPRINGFIELD

TULSA

Fayetteville: Rachel, Spencer Kirkpatrick '15 and Gaurav Fort Worth: The Borish family: Ellen, Robin '13 and Paul Houston: Kelsey, Lee Jantzen, Rachel, Rich Walton '70 and Mark Ehrlich '72 Indianapolis: Glad to help out the Indianapolis community through the food bank! New York: Nicki, Kelsey, and Jack Fuller ‘78 Oklahoma City: Rachel, Colin McCormick '10 and Jeff McCormick '77 Raleigh: Drew ’70 and Arleen Young St. Louis (1): Gina Campagna '09, Bethany Moran '97, Lacy McFadden '10, Sara Beth Leininger '10 and Kathryn Ayers '11 St. Louis (2): John McFarland '62 and President Forsythe San Antonio: David '65 and Pam McInnis Springfield: Mike White '09 and Michael Nesbitt '03 Tulsa: Bailey Word '60, Danna Sue Walker, Janet Word and Steve Wolfe '62

WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

35


ckes '12

What will you miss most about being on the road? Getting to be in a new city and place almost every single day, and, of course, all the amazing food we got to eat. I’m gonna miss that!

W

ey m

uth '12

What did you learn from the Road Trip? That the Westminster Spirit is strong no matter where you are. Westminster has a great alumni base who really love their college and enjoy being with others from the community.

a iS

lvo '11

What was your favorite city and why? My favorite city would have to be Boston. The alumni in the area were passionate about having more alumni events and so hospitable. We also had an entire day off to explore the town which revolved mainly around food, and a history tour....two of my favorite things.

G a ur av

Nicki

D

Kelse

y

R ac h

el

Ba

Kh

anal '13

What will you miss most about being on the road? The thing I will miss the most would be meeting different people, talking about the past, present and future of Westminster.

SPECIAL THANKS Peter ’62 & Barbara Gattermeir Greaves Family Ken Meyer Pam (Miranti) ’02 & Jake Spain Joe ’72 & Susan Miranti Jim Orton ’55 Peter ’58 & Rosalie Childs Bailey ’60 & Janet Word Bruce ’68 & Jean Brookby David ’73 & Ginger Veitch Jon ’77 & Jaclyn Brinlee John & Leigh (Ogle) ’84 Reaves Scott ’86 & Jennifer Veitch Scott ‘90 & Carol Keeter ’90 Meyers Bob ’94 & Karen Darby Shawna (Fitzgibbon) ’94 & Chris Moore Drew Veitch ‘05 Gino ’04 & Lauren (Humphrey) ’03 Paternostro Justin ‘04 & Lindsey (Borgelt) ‘04 Manning 36

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011

Jeff ’94 & Emily (Richardson) ’94 Blake Jenna (Manning) ’06 & Josh ‘07 Harlow Art ’75 & Margaret Hoge Mills Family Travis ’97 & Mitzi Sartain James ’83 & Anita Karney Jeff ‘77 & Joanne Leeka David ’65 & Pam McInnis Jim ‘60 & Katie Reed Jack ‘49 & Patricia Aitken Laura Hill & Desmond Taylor Bryan Merry ‘02 Philip ’76 & Leigh Merry John Elrod ‘68 Ted Planje ‘68 & Lee Lange DiSalvo Family Mrs. Ramey Harper Lisa Thibault ‘92 Frank Turner ‘84

Greg Richard ’88 Spencer Kagan ’68 Heather Triplett Biehl ‘89 Jeff Palmer ’99 Thom ’91 & Karen Mangan Patti (Sanner) ’85 & Eric Sanner Leigh Hildebrand ’97 Reverend Joseph Mullin ’49 Beau Peterson ’06 Ryan Cook ‘08 John Lee ’10 Chris ’93 & Cathy Panettiere Jim ’67 & Susan Morton Scott Morales ’94 Tyler Walker ’14 & Aaron Walker Peter ’59 & Jane Yu Jerry ’60 & Pauline Robertson Tom ’63 & Judith Wilson Ted ’77 & Ann Cashion


Turn your college thinking

inside out. Inside the classroom, outside the classroom – at Westminster College, you’ll engage in every aspect of your college experience. This is an active education, a whole education, enabling you to become your very best – as a scholar, as a leader, as an engaged citizen in a global world. Come – get involved, try new things, meet new people, learn and grow as never before. Engage in a full college experience. Inside the classroom. And out. To learn about more visit us at www.westminster-mo.edu, or call our Admissions Office at 1-800-475-3361.

WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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38

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011


Alumni Weekend 2011 T

he dreary spring weather did not put a damper on the fellowship and celebration during Alumni Weekend 2011! Hundreds of alumni, family and friends gathered on the Westminster campus to catch up, reminisce and see the wonderful changes on campus. The theme Preserving the Past, Framing the Future encouraged alumni to reconnect with their Westminster family. The weekend had a number of exciting events, giving alumni many opportunities to get together. On Friday, the rain stopped long enough for close to 80 Westminster golfers to hit the course (cart paths only) for the annual Westminster/William Woods Tournament. The grand Backer Dining Room served as the backdrop for the Westminster/ William Woods Cocktail Party, and featured a snapshot photo booth for alumni to create new memories with old friends. The Class of 1962 celebrated their Golden Anniversary in style with a fabulous dinner at the Fulton Country Club. Saturday was a day of recognition and rennaissance. The morning began with the dedication of a new historical marker commemorating the Gray Ghosts Trail on Westminster's campus, a collaboration

with the Callaway County Historical Society. Nine alumni were recognized for their professional accomplishments and commitment to Westminster with the Alumni Achievement and Alumni Loyalty awards. Ever-popular, former professor Dr. Bill Parrish drew a crowd at all three events he spoke. Affinity networking receptions brought together alumni and students who share similar interests or experiences - the ROTC/Veterans and the Skulls of Seven receptions were popular. The Blue Blazers Investment Committee celebrated their 15th anniversary. Members of the Phi Mu chapter of Phi Gamma Delta hosted a FIJI Pig Dinner - the first reunion since the late 1980s. An alumni photo gallery in Champ Auditorium showcased the work of Baxter Watson ’44, Monte Klein ’59, Wesley Philpott ’03, Niki Carver ’08 and several students. Prity (Vanmali) Stubinger ’02 offered her services for our first I Said Cheese – Headshot Studio, and captured our alumni and families in professional portraits. Whether you had the opportunity to come home to Westminster for the weekend or not, check out all the photos online at www.shutterfly.com/pro/Westminster/ alumniweekend2011.

Opposite (top to bottom): Left - Madalynn & Durwood ’54 Stringer, Marie (Gonzalez) ’09 & Chapin ’06 Deel, Tyler, John ’78 & Laura Kennedy, Candace Turner-Gerlemann ’06 & Doug Gerlemann ’06; Middle - Liz, Mike ’81 & Meredith ’12 Gibbons, Libby (Murrie) ’01 & Andrew Paulsen, Helen Sue & Bill Parrish, Shane & Betsy (Carney WWU '00) Bates and Steve ’05 & Merideth Carney; Right - Janet & Jim ’55 Orton, Tom Winter ’74, Walter Logan ’74, Vic Adams ’74, Ralph Heck ’75, Erin Hunter ’12 & Mary Jo (Milligan WWU '76) Hunter, Jessica, Monique & Byron ’78 Bagby WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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Alumni Weekend 2011 1

2

5

6 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Westminster/William Woods Cocktail Party Brock Ayers ’82, Pat Kirby and Laura (Dierberg WWU ’82) Ayers FIJI alums test the capacity of the Snapshot Photo Booth 2011 Alumni Award Winners from left: Byron Bagby ’78, Les Baledge ’79, Beth (Howard) Stubbs ’00, Gordon Buckner ’56, President Forsythe, Don Lofe ’79, Robert Mather ’98, Tom Thomas ’66, Lana (Cross) Zerrer ’95, Mike Gibbons ’81. Past and present officers of the Blue Blazers Investment Committee celebrate their 15th anniversary. I Said Cheese! The Sander’s Family takes advantage of the headshot studio to showcase their Westminster legacy – (front) Tamara Caston ’06, Jessica (Sanders) Harris ’06, Jenn Sanders ’08, (back) Jacque Sanders ’11 and Jorden Sanders ’14 Gretchen Johnson, Baxter Watson ’44, Myrna & Rick ’61 Hosto, and Howard Johnson ’61 Bill Parrish puckers up for the Pig Ceremony during the FIJI Pig Dinner & Reunion. Class of 1961 celebrates their Golden Anniversary. Front Row from left: Bill Hervey, Tom Russell, President Barney Forsythe, Art Bickel, David Beard, Howard Johnson, David Ross, Judd Presley; Second Row from left: Bill Hartford, Bill Kenney, Herb Six, Kurt Tegtmeier, Payson Adams, Kent Carlin, Don Henneke, Phil Reynolds; Back Row from left: Bill Owens, Wayne Wilke, Phil Lowry, Tom Kleinschmidt, Randy Lindblad, Gordon Webb, Rick Hosto


4

3

7 8

9


1

2

5

1. FIJIs spirit is still strong! From left: Wally Head ’72, Mark Hubbard '71, Ed Evans ’72, Clay Logan ’70, Jim Canella ’71, Bill Daniels ’71, Chris Benson '71, Paul Branham '72 and Bob Milner '72. 2. Students asked for alumni support of their philanthropy programs to benefit Japan. 3. Memorabilia from the Phi Gamma Delta chapter was on display. 4. President Barney & Jane Forsythe show off their Snapshot photos. 5. Beth (Hart) Gann ’97, Andrea (Wiley) Sagely ’96 and Heather Foster ’96 6. Herb Six ’61 and Randy Lindblad ‘61 catch up at the Class of 1961 dinner. 7. Tom Treece ’66 enjoys the Alumni Lunch and new dining options. 8. Both celebrating their 50-year reunions, spouses Bill ’61 & Jean (Cox WWU ’61) show off their new statuses – “Golden Legion” and “Grande Dame”. 42

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011

8


4

3

6 7

Save the Date for Alumni Weekend 2012 April 20-22! If you have a suggestion for an event or are interested in organizing a reunion, contact the Alumni Office at alumni@westminster-mo.edu or 573-592-5319

WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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CLASS

NOTES

1. Howard Kerstine ‘64 2. Phil Bowser’s ’70 “In the Shop”

1

2

1950s Gordon Buckner ’56 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster.

1960s Dr. Clifford Bragdon ’62 is writing a chapter for a new book entitled Winning Cyber Warfare, and his seventh book entitled Global Resilient Cities will be published in 2011. Howard Kerstine ’64 [1] won a gold medal for backstroke at the 2010 Senior Olympics in Prescott, AZ. Tom Thomas ’66 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster.

1970s Joe Aull ’70 has been named Vice President of Academic Affairs at Wentworth Military Academy and College in Lexington, MO. Aull served in the Missouri House of Representatives from 2004-2011. Dr. John Bender ’70 received the James A. Lake Academic Freedom Award from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Faculty Senate for his work with the Nebraska High School Press Association to promote freedom for the student press and for supporting high school journalism teachers. Bender is a Professor of Journalism at

44

LEADERSHIP SUMMER 2011

University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Journalism and Mass Communications. Phil Bowser ’70 [2] has a photo titled “In the Shop” in the Portland Photographer’s Forum Group Show. He is retired after 36 years as a school psychologist and is an Adjunct Faculty member of the School Psychology Department at the Lewis and Clark Graduate School of Counseling and Education in Portland, OR. P.K. Holmes III ’73 was confirmed as a new Federal Judge by the US Senate to serve on the US District Court for the Western District of Arkansas. Dr. Joe Ashley ’74 was presented with the Expanding Opportunities Award in recognition of his commitment to sharing resources that build and enhance the Virginia Workforce System. Ashley is the Assistant Commissioner for Grants and Special Programs at the Virginia Department of Rehabilitative Services. Byron Bagby ’78 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster. Les Baledge ’79 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster. Don Lofe, Jr. ’79 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster.

1980s James Berry ’80 executive consultant for De Lage Landen, a global subsidiary of Rabobank, will be leading the expansion of their commercial financing business group into Asia Pacific. Mike Gibbons ’81 received the 2011 Lifetime Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster. Brooke Hawkins ’84 is in Regional Sales at Enwisen, a human resource service company in Kansas City, MO. Katie (Pawley) Steiner ’84 earned an MBA from Walden University. Heather (Triplett) Biehl ’89 received the 2011 Distinguished Alumni Award from Jefferson City High School. Biehl is a Vice President with BBN Technologies in Cambridge, MA.

1990s Tracy Hennrich ’90 is the Executive Director for Retirement Investment Sales with JPMorgan Chase in Kansas City, MO. Scott ’94 [3], Stacey, Hunter (7) and Harrison (5) Morales. Roger Nail ’95 received the Thomas J. Conway Award, which honors a younger trial lawyer who has outstanding trial skills and the ability to be a fierce advocate. Nail works for the Goza Honnold Law Firm in Leawood, KS.


Dr. Lana (Cross) Zerrer ’95 received the 2011 Young Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster. Marcie (Bail) Moses ’96 is a Principal Scientist in Global Technology Development at Novartis in Holly Springs, NC. This is the first facility in the US to produce cell culture-derived flu vaccines. Andrea (Wiley) Sagely ’96 has been selected as Mrs. Tulsa International 2012. Dr. Eric Gottman ’97 is the Interim Director of the Oncology Support Clinic at University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Dentistry in Kansas City, MO. Travis Sartain ’97 has been named partner at McQuearyHenry-Bowles-Troy Employee Benefits, in Dallas, TX, one of the largest privately owned insurance and risk management firms in the US. Brandon Beshears ’98 has joined the American Meat Institute as Senior Director of Legislative Affairs in Washington, DC. Dr. Dao Le ’98 [4] was featured in the Spring 2011 issue of Pharmacy magazine from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Pharmacy. Dr. Robert Mather ’98 received the 2011 Young Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster.

Tyler Schaper ’98 [5] was a second time winner of the Certified Financial Analysis Society of St. Louis Annual Outlook Contest. Schaper is a Certified Financial Analyst and Senior Financial Advisor for US Bancorp Investments & Insurance, Inc. Leslie Hunt ’99 [6] has been named the 2011 Outstanding Young Lawyer of Fort Worth and Tarrant County by the Fort Worth-Tarrant County Young Lawyers Association.

2000s Candice Criswell ’00 is an Account Executive with Sunbelt Finance in Jonesboro, AR. Beth (Howard) Stubb ’00 received the 2011 Alumni Loyalty Award from Westminster.

Evan Prout ’04 is a Chemical Engineer for Honeywell Specialized Materials in Baton Rouge, LA. Juris Pupcenoks ’04 earned a PhD in Political Science from the University of Delaware. He teaches at Washington College in Maryland. Andrea Kaufmann ’05 received a Master’s in Human Resource Management from Lindenwood University in St. Charles, MO. Kaufmann is employed at Magellan Health Services in St. Louis, MO. Julie Linden ’05 graduated from the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. Ryan Renne ’05 is a Software Engineer for Computerized Medical Systems in St. Louis, MO.

Jamie (Stewart) Brainard ’03 is the Director of Alumni Engagement at Hendrix College in Conway, AR.

Scott Schutte ’06 is a co-owner of Columbia Strength and Conditioning in Columbia, MO.

Blaire (Leible) Garwitz ’04 is the Associate Editor for Alumni Periodicals in the Department of Public Affairs at Washington University in St. Louis, MO.

Casey Coffey ’07 was promoted to Associate Project Engineer with S2L Incorporated, an environmental consulting firm in Orlando, FL.

Malissa (Mautino) Miller ’04 graduated from University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Pharmacy.

Ashley Creek ’07 is the Access Services Librarian at the University of Saint Mary in Leavenworth, KS.

Dave Norman ’04 released his third book White River Junctions with f/64 Publishing in February 2010.

Natalie Cress ’07 is a Legal Assistant with Jennifer Benedict Law Office in Independence, MO.

3

4

3. Scotty ’94, Stacey, Hunter (7) and Harrison (5) Morales 4. Dr. Dao Le ‘98 5. Tyler Schaper ‘98 6. Leslie Hunt ‘99

5

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Chris Cauley ’08 is a Social Marketing Specialist for MidwayUSA in Columbia, MO. Joey Hoflander ’08 earned a Juris Doctorate from Valparaiso University School of Law in Valparaiso, IN. He was recognized as Editor of the Year for Law Review. Kelly Lipka ’08 earned a Juris Doctorate from the University of Akron, School of Law in Akron, OH. Evan McCormick ’08 earned a Juris Doctorate from Oklahoma City University School of Law in Oklahoma City, OK. Kate Sickendick ’08 earned a Juris Doctorate from George Washington University School of Law in Washington, DC. Marissa Tyler ’08 is a Mortgage Loan Processor/Underwriter for First National Bank of St. Louis in Des Peres, MO. Gina Campagna ’09 is the Assistant Director of Advancement Services at Westminster College in Fulton, MO. Dustin Davis ’09 earned a Master’s of Fine Arts in Film and Television Producing at Chapman University in Orange, CA. Megan McCormack ’09 studied Literature and graduated from the University of Missouri in Kansas City, MO. Scott Oldebeken ’09 is pursuing a Masters of Public Health Degree. Kurt Belcher ’10 is working as an Intern for Northwestern Mutual Financial Network in Missouri. Sandy Bourquin ’10 recently completed US Navy basic training at Recruit Training Command in Great Lakes, IL. Lisa Brown ’10 is an Instructor for Behavior Intervention Services atThe Lodge in Des Peres, MO. Vania Damanso ’10 is attending Maxwell School of International

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Relations at Syracuse University in New York. Sam Denehy ’10 is working as a Bond Research Analyst at Wells Fargo Advisors in St. Louis, MO. Alouat Hamoudi ’10 is attending Kroc Institute of International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, IN.

Danielle Bazan ’11 is pursuing a Pharmacy Degree at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, KS. Ashley Belfield ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Occupational Therapy at St. Louis University in St. Louis, MO. Alexander Belykh ’11 is an IT staff member with Blue Cherry in Fulton, MO.

Fon Komkai ’10 is working in Program and Public Relations for US-ASEAN Business Council in Washington, DC.

Behe Bekera ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Systems Engineering at George Washington University in Washington, DC.

Feiyu Li ’10 is pursuing a PhD in Clinical Psychology at the University of Nebraska.

Mike Butera ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Security Studies at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

Matteo Lowell ’10 was awarded in internship with the European Parliament and is pursuing a Master’s of European Public Policy at King’s College in London. Clayton Prewitt ’10 is a Safety and Rescue Technician for Sitex Environmental Safety and Rescue in St. Louis, MO. Hassaan Sipra ’10 is an Intern at the Embassy of Pakistan in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Frank Soltys ’10 is a Peri-Operative Assistant at University of Missouri Women’s and Children’s Hospital in Columbia, MO. Wouter van den Boogaard ’10 is an Office Manager for American Appliances in Werkendam, Netherlands. Dane Winkelmann ’10 is a Development Department Intern for Americans for Prosperity in Arlington, VA. Kathryn Ayers ’11 is an Electronic Medical Record Implementation Specialist Intern for KIG Healthcare Solutions in Kirkwood, MO. Kristin Bail ’11 is an English Teacher in South Korea. Meaghan Barron ’11 is teaching 6th Grade Language Arts at Thomas Jefferson Middle School in Jefferson City, MO.

Rachel Burrus ‘11 is a Residential Technician with Child CenterMarygrove in St. Louis, MO. William Cartee ’11 is a Chemist with Sigma Aldrich in St. Louis, MO. Jeffrey Chacko ’11 is a Gene Sequencing Lab Technician at Washington University in St. Louis, MO. William Cornett ’11 works in the Pathology Lab at University Hospital in Columbia, MO. Derick Dailey ’11 is teaching Secondary English in the Teach for America Program in Blytheville, AR. Rachel Drennan ’11 is pursuing a Doctorate of Physical Therapy at the University of Missouri in Columbia, MO. Victoria Flynn ’11 is pursuing a Medical Degree at the University of Arkansas in Little Rock, AR. Patrick Friend ’11 is teaching at the Little Rock Catholic High School in Little Rock, AR. Robert Fyalka ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Biological Sciences at Southern Illinois University in Edwardsville, IL. Meredith Gibbons ’11 is a Staff Assistant for Senator Roy Blunt in Washington, DC.


Erin Haslag ’11 is an Intern at the Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, MO. Jennifer Humphrey ‘11 is a Foreign Policy Blogger for the Examiner.com in St. Louis, MO. Eric Hunt ’11 is pursuing a Juris Doctorate at Duke University School of Law in Durham, NC. Tyson Kankolenski ’11 is working as an Associate Implementation Delivery Engineer for EMC, Corp. Andrew Kinkade ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Martial and Family Therapy at Louisville Presbyterian Seminary in Louisville, KY. Mike Lawson ’11 is a Cadet at the Missouri State Highway Patrol Law Enforcement Academy in Jefferson City, MO. Chien Le ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Computer Science at Washington University in St. Louis, MO. Steven Lee ’11 is studying Theology at a Seminary in Korea. Roy McKenzie ’11 is an Intern for Senator John Boozman in Washington, DC. Aly Monroe ’11 is participating in a Teaching Fellowship through the University of Missouri, Columbia where she will pursue a Master’s in Education while teaching for the Columbia Public Schools District. Jake Mydlo ’11 is pursuing a Masters of Education in Higher Education at the University of Missouri in Columbia, MO. Jahnvi Pananchikal ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in English at the Institute of English and Foreign Languages in Hyderabad. Shelly Rosenfelder ’11 is pursuing a Juris Doctorate at the University of Missouri, Columbia School of Law. Erin Rustemeyer ’11 is the Assistant Volleyball Coach for Westminster College in Fulton, MO. Corwin Ryck ’11 is teaching 2nd Grade at St. Peter’s Elementary School in Marshall, MO.

SHARE YOUR NEWS... We encourage you to submit your latest news to be published in the Class News & Notes section of Leadership Magazine. Emailed photos should be taken in at least 300 dpi resolution in tif or jpg format. Submit class notes to: alumni@westminster-mo.edu Class News & Notes Office of Alumni Engagement & Event Management Westminster College 501 Westminster Ave Fulton, MO 65251-1299 (573) 592-5319 The deadline for the next issue is December 15, 2011.

Jacque Sanders ’11 is teaching in the 2011 Teach for America Program in Mississippi.

Andrew Weber ’11 is part of the ONTAP Program for Wells Fargo Advisors in St. Louis, MO.

David Schatz ’11 is an Agent Aspirant for State Farm in Washington, MO.

Elizabeth Williams ’11 is a Library Assistant for Westminster College, Fulton, MO.

Angela Schenewerk ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Animal Science at the University of Missouri in Columbia, MO. Jacqueline Stigall ’11 is teaching Secondary English for Pilot Grove High School in Pilot Grove, MO. Marlon Turner ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Business Administration at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN.

Zach Williams ’11 is an Advertising Intern for Catch Phrase Communications in Jefferson City, MO. Allison Wisniewski ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Library Sciences at the University of Missouri in Columbia, MO.

Brigitta Vieyra ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Higher Education at New York University in New York, NY. Bernardo Vimpi ’11 is pursuing a Master’s in Public Administration and Diplomacy at Seton Hall University in East Orange, NJ.

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Abby Coats [1] and husband Walter welcomed Eleanor (Nora) Lynn Coats on May 9, 2011. The family resides in Columbia, MO. Coats is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Westminster College.

Erik Lescher ’97 [6] and wife Amy welcomed Stevie Jane Lescher on September 30, 2011. The family resides in St. Louis, MO where Lescher is a Managing Partner with Steve Lescher & Associates.

Jen & Dave Dyson [2] welcomed Breklin James Dyson on May 6, 2011. The family resides in Fulton, MO where Jen is the Women’s Soccer Coach, and Dave is the Men’s and Women’s Tennis Coach for Westminster College.

1998

1995 Chad ’95 and Kelly (Ruland) ’98 deRoode [5] welcomed Harper Lily deRoode on May 5, 2011. Harper joins older sister Avery, age 5, and older brother Evan, age 2. The family resides in St. Louis, MO where Chad is an Attorney with Brinker & Doyen, LLP.

1996 Trisha (Howard) ’96 and Mike ’96 Pflantz [3] welcomed Delia Elizabeth Pflantz on May 5, 2011. Delia joins older sister Maisy, age 2. The family resides in University City, MO where Trisha volunteers as a Court appointed Special Advocate for foster children, and Mike is Vice President of Corporate Finance with Suddenlink Communications.

1997 Chris Leminger ’97 [4] and wife Jessica welcomed Gregory Isaac Leminger in October 2010. Gregory joins siblings, Benjamin, age 7 and Emily, age 6. The family resides in Plano, TX where Leminger is a Certified Pharmacy Technician at the Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas.

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Amy (Schaeperkoetter) Herman ’98 [7] and husband Dale welcomed Bryce Frady Herman on April 23, 2011. Bryce joins older sister Ivie, age 5. The family resides in Durham, NC where Herman is an Assistant Athletic Director for Compliance at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Emily (Northcraft) McRady ’98 [8] and husband Cody welcomed Harley Christine McRady on March 18, 2011. The family resides in Cheyenne, WY where McRady is a Designer and Project Coordinator with Scotch Boy, Inc. Harley is the Niece of Jonathan Northcraft ’03.

2000

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Josh Bartley ’00 and wife Nili welcomed Tess Elizabeth Bartley on January 17, 2011. The family resides in Natick, MA where Bartley is a 4th & 5th Grade PE Teacher at Sikinib Schechter Day School.

2001

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Courtney (Stubbs) Swan ’01 [9] and husband Ryan welcomed Callum McCaul Swan on March 28, 2011. The family resides in Springfield, MO where Swan is an Advisor with Citizenship and Service Learning at Missouri State. Callum is the grandson of Dr. David Stubbs ’68, and nephew of Thad Stubbs ’99, Beth Stubbs ’00, Zach Stubbs ’07 and Becca Stubbs ‘08.

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1. Nora Coats 2. Breklin Dyson 3. Delia Pflantz 4. Gregory Leminger 5. Avery, Harper & Evan deRoode 6. Stevie Jane Lescher 7. Bryce Herman 8. Harley McRady 9. Callum Swan

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9. James Lynch 10. Ella Moore11. Kayla Pitts 12. Teddy Vollbrecht 13. Tenley Campbell 14. Henry Buss 15. Charlie Gerlemann 16. Chace Grayson 9

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Peter Jones ’02 and wife Molly welcomed Caroline McMahon and Isabelle Roby Jones on March 21, 2011. The family resides in St. Louis, MO where Jones is a Teaching and Learning Consultant with Promethean, Inc. Betsy (Sharp) Lynch ’02 [9] and husband Jake welcomed James Sharp Lynch on October 5, 2010. The family resides in Kansas City, MO where Lynch is an Attorney.

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Dr. Randall “Colin” Wetz ’02 and wife Carrie welcomed Emerson Claire Wetz on February 3, 2011. The family resides in Jenks, OK where Wetz is an Internal Medicine Resident at Oklahoma State University Medical Center.

2003

Whitney (Johnston) ’03 and Casey ’04 Moore [10] welcomed Ella Nicole Moore on March 21, 2011. The family resides in Springdale, AR where Whitney is an Audit Associate (CPA) with Tullius Taylor Sartain & Sartain LLP, and Casey is an Accountant with Ernst & Young LLP.

2004

Lindsey (Brondel) Pitts ’04 [11] and husband Phillip welcomed Kayla Renae Pitts on April 28, 2011. The family resides in Jefferson City, MO. Pitts is a Senior Computing Support Specialist with the University of Missouri-Columbia. 16

Melissa (Raymer) Vollbrecht ’04 [12] and husband John welcomed Theodore “Teddy” Wrigley

Vollbrecht on April 6, 2011. The family resides in Dallas, TX where Vollbrecht is a 3rd Grade Teacher at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School.

2006 Emily (Greeno) Berendt ’06 and husband Grant welcomed Gaines Harris Berendt on February 11, 2011. The family resides in Jefferson City, MO where Berendt teaches Math at Jefferson City High School. CaraLee (Baker) ’06 and Cory ’05 Campbell [13] welcomed Tenley Ann Campbell on May 29, 2011. The family resides in Shelton, CT where Baker is a Sales Support Consultant with Aetna, Inc. and Campbell is an Account Manager with Computer Discount Warehouse. Jennie (Kaminski) Buss ’06 [14] and husband Rich welcomed Henry Richard Buss on March 30, 2011. Henry joins older brother Brayden, age 2. The family resides in St. Louis, MO where Buss is a District Manager with ALDI. Candace (Turner) ’06 and Doug ’06 Gerlemann [15] welcomed Charlotte “Charlie” Leslie Gerlemann on February 8, 2011. The family resides in Peoria, IL where Doug is a Property Manager with the US Federal Government and General Services Administration. Kyle Grayson ’06 [16] and wife Hailey welcomed Chace Allen Grayson on December 21, 2010. The family resides in Jefferson City, MO where Grayson is an Environmental Specialist with the Missouri Department of Transportation.

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Share your expertise in any topic ranging from making good financial investments to good parenting or planning the perfect vacation and you may be selected to appear in the next Leadership plus receive a Blue Jay Fun Pack of prizes. Send your tips to marketing@westminster-mo.edu.


1996

David Roberts ’96 married Josie Zeiger on October 16, 2010 in Aspen, CO. The couple resides in Dallas, TX where Roberts is a Regional Wine Manager with Pernod Ricard USA.

Corporate Events for Chesapeake Energy Corporation and Gino is an Associate Title Landman for Chesapeake Energy Corporation.

2004

Casey Sparkman ’97 married Matt Finch ’97 [1] on November 6, 2010. The couple resides in Little Rock, AR where Sparkman is an Independent Fashion Consultant and Finch is an Attorney for Gill Elrod Ragon Owen & Sherman, PA.

Nick Staudenmyer ’04 [4] married Danielle Weatherford on October 2, 2010 in Fulton, MO at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury on the campus of Westminster College. The wedding party included Eric Conner ’04 and James Pitts ’04. The couple resides in Ashland, MO where Staudenmyer is a Senior Marketer for Timeline Recruiting.

2003

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Lauren Humphrey ’03 married Gino Paternostro ’05 [2] on May 21, 2011 in Oklahoma City, OK. The wedding party [3] included Kathryn Swisher ’02, Jordan (Bram) Teeple ’02, Lauren Christmann ’03, Richard Sheets ’03, Melissa (Raymer) Vollbrecht ’04, Peter Works-Leary ’05, Cole Prenger ’05 and Bryan York ’05. The couple resides in Oklahoma City, OK where Lauren is the Supervisor of

Liz Icenogle ’05 [5] married Mark Joseph on May 21, 2011 at Country Club Church in Kansas City, MO. The wedding party included Sara (Weir) King ’04, Kalenna Escallier ’05, and Jenna (Manning) Harlow ’06. Pete Miranti ’04 sang in the ceremony. The couple resides in Kansas City, MO where Icenogle is a Grass Roots Coordinator with Associated Builders & Contractors.

1. Casey (Sparkman) ’97 and Matt Finch, Bailey (8) and Reese (5) 2. Lauren ’03 and Gino Paternostro ’05 3. Lauren ’03 and Gino Paternostro ’05 Wedding Party 4. Nick ’04 and Danielle Staudenmyer 5. Liz (Icenogle) ’05 and Mark Joseph 6. PJ ‘08 and Dianna (Townsand) ‘08 Morales

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2008

PJ Morales ’08 married Dianna (Townsand) ’08 [6] on June 11, 2011 in St. Louis, MO. The couple resides in High Ridge, MO. PJ is a Biology Teacher with St. John Vianney High School in St. Louis, Mo and Dianna is an International Traffic Coordinator-Client Services with UniGroup Worldwide UTS in Fenton, MO.

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IN LOVING Charlie W. Brauer of Jefferson City, MO on January 10, 2011. He was a member of the Fulton Colleges’ Board of Associates. He graduated from Central Missouri State and Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy in Rolla. Brauer taught Chemistry at Westminster for 32 years retiring in 1995. He was a First Lieutenant in the United States Air Force. Terry R. “Coach” Cannon of Jefferson City, MO on January 26, 2011. He earned a Bachelor’s from Central Methodist College and a Master’s in Education Administration from the University of Missouri. He taught and coached at many schools throughout Missouri, also serving as Principal and Athletic Director. Cannon was in his third season as an assistant football coach at Westminster. He was a member of the Missouri Football Coaches Association and Missouri Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association. Maurice “Rip” Russell of Fulton, MO on May 20, 2011. He was a member of the Fulton Colleges’ Board of Associates and a Friend of the National Churchill Museum. Russell retired from the Missouri State Highway Patrol in 1988 with the rank of Sergeant after nearly 30 years of service. Lt. Col. Robert W. Tinkle of Fulton, MO on May 17, 2011. He retired from the US Army having served in Korea and Vietnam. He received a Master’s in Political Science and Public Administration and worked toward a Doctorate in Political Science. He taught ROTC at Westminster College in the late 70’s. His son Robert Tinkle ’83 and daughter Nikki (Tinkle) Wade ’94 also attended Westminster. William H. Taft ’37 of Columbia, MO on February 21, 2011. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta. Taft earned a Journalism and Master’s Degree from the University of Missouri and a Doctorate from Western Reserve University. He was drafted into the service in 1941 and served in WWII. He later was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Infantry and transferred to the Air Force where he attended combat intelligence school and served as an intelligence officer with a B-29 group. He was associated with Hiram, Youngstown, and Defiance colleges from 1946-1950 before joining Memphis State College where he established the Department of Journalism. In 1956 he

MEMORY

joined the University of Missouri faculty as Associate Dean of the journalism graduate program until retiring in 1981. He was executive director of Kappa Tau Alpha for 30 years. Taft received the Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster in 1987. He received the UM Faculty Alumni Award and was inducted into the Missouri Press Association Newspaper Hall of Fame. He was presented the MU School of Journalism Distinguished Service in Journalism medal in 2004. His brother Dr. Jim Taft ’52 also attended Westminster. Rudolph H. Pletz ’39 of Powell, TN on February 4, 2011. He graduated from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana with a Bachelor’s in Bacteriology and Chemistry. He retired from the Union Carbide Y-12 Plant. Donald C. Chadwick ’40 of Los Angeles, CA on May 21, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. After graduating from Westminster College he served in the US Navy until 1946, retiring from the Naval Reserves as a Lieutenant Commander. He did post-graduate work at MIT. Chadwick worked for Convair as an Aerospace Engineer, transferring to General Dynamics of Pomona in 1952, where he stayed until 1970. Ray Hatfield ’41 of St. Petersburg, FL on February 2, 2011. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta. He graduated from North East Missouri State College in 1941 and was listed in Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities. He served in WWII as a head bomb soldier in the 8th Air Force. He was a Captain and original member of the 482nd Pathfinder Group, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross with three Oak Leaf Clusters, European Theatre Ribbon with six battle stars and a Presidential Citation with the Oak Leaf Cluster. Hatfield was an executive with the General Telephone Directory Corporation in California, Kentucky, Florida and Vancouver British Columbia before retiring in 1978. Phillip C. Brooks ’42 of Fayetteville, AR on March 2, 2011. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi. He attended the University of Oklahoma and served in the US Air Force during WWII as a gunnery instructor. He was the retired owner of Admiral Pest Control.

Dr. Richard A. Ellis ’42 of Duncan, OK on December 24, 2010. He was a member of the Highlanders. Ellis earned a Medical Degree from the University of Oklahoma before serving as a Captain in the US Army during WWII, and Chief of Medicine at the Army Hospital in Pittsburg, CA. After his Army stint, he returned home to Duncan to practice medicine until he retired at the age of 78. Robert G. Griffin ’42 of Fort Myers, FL on January 25, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. He graduated from the University of Missouri and worked as a Shift Supervisor in the world’s largest TNT plant in St. Louis. He volunteered for military service and became a pilot in the Army Air Corps flying both the B-17 and the B-29 Super Fortress. In 1946, he began a 36 year career in the oil industry as a Sales Representative at Sinclair Oil retiring as Executive Vice President for Marketing of Standard Oil of Ohio. During this time Griffin was interrupted by another stint in the air Force during the Korean War. He received the Westminster College Alumni Achievement Award in 1968. William “Hob” Schlanker ’42 of Macon, MO on March 21, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. He attended Westminster before entering into the service in 1941. He served in the Navy Air Corp until 1945 as a pilot, achieving the rank of Senior Grade Lieutenant. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and Five Air Medals. He received a letter of Commendation from the Commander in Chief of the US Atlantic Fleet. Schlanker attended mortuary school and worked at Carson Funeral Home. He founded Schlanker Furniture in Macon and remained active in the business until retirement. George B. D’Arcy ’43 of St. Louis, MO on January 28, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. He joined the Navy during WWII and served on ships in both the North Atlantic and Pacific. D’Arcy worked for many years as a Manufacture’s Agent selling multiple lines of notions and dry goods to retailers throughout the MidWest. In 2001 he received the Volunteer of the Year Award for the State of Missouri. LeRoy M. Law ’43 of South Salem, NY on March 20, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. He was a Lieutenant Junior Grade in the US Navy and served WWW.WESTMINSTER-MO.EDU

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in a Patrol Torpedo Boat Squadron in the South Pacific during WWII. He worked as an Ad Valorem Tax Manager for International Paper Company. Law served as Chairman of the Planning Board and was responsible for developing the Master Plan for the Town of Lewisboro, NY. Bayard C. Plowman ’44 of Hannibal, MO on February 23, 2011. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. After attending Westminster he joined the Army Air Corps during WWII serving four years earning his wings. Plowman began working for Marion County Mutual Building and Loan and during his 65 year tenure it expanded and went through multiple mergers to become F & M Bank and Trust. He remained the Chairman of the F & M Bank and Trust until his death. Lieutenant General Robert J. Baer ’45 of Fairfax Station, VA on February 26, 2011. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. He graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point 1947 and served in the Army for 36 years in Germany, Fort Knox, KY, Japan, Vietnam, and Fort Hood, TX. Bear graduated from the Command and General Staff College, Armed Forces Staff College, and the Army War College. He received numerous commendations including the Silver Star and Distinguished Service Medal. Promoted to Brigadier General in 1971, his General Officer service is highlighted by his performance as the first Project Manager of the XM1 Main Battle Tank Program that produced the Abrams M1 Tank. Promoted to LTG, he culminated his uniformed service as the Deputy Commanding General for Research and Development, U.S. Army Material Command. In 1980 he retired from the Army and became Senior Vice President of XMCO Inc. and began private consulting in 1988. He received the Alumni Achievement Award from Westminster in 1982. Dr. Robert Duran ’45 of Columbus, OH on May 10, 2011. He was a member of the Highlanders. He attended Westminster College prior to entering the US Navy. He graduated from the University of Oklahoma Medical School in 1947 and was recalled into service by the US Air Force as a medical doctor. He took his surgical residency at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN and specialty training in hand surgery in New York and San Francisco. He established his surgical practice in Columbus, OH in 1956

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specializing in hand surgery. He was on the faculty at Ohio State University Medical School. Dr. Dale M. Blankenship ’47 of Savannah, GA on April 16, 2011. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. He received his Medical Degree from the University of Colorado. He served in WWII as a US Marine in Iwo Jima. He practiced family medicine in Cape Girardeau, MO until his retirement in 1988. Joseph E. King ’47 of Enid, OK on April 15, 2011. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta. He graduated from the University of Oklahoma. He was a Navy veteran and served on the USS Oakland. In 1966 he became Executive Vice President for Central National Bank in Enid and later President where he stayed until retirement. He continued to serve on the Board of Directors until his death. He was a 50 year member of the Oklahoma Bankers Association. His sons, Tom King ’75, David King ’77, Bill King ’78 and Jim King ’81 also attended Westminster. John S. “Jack” Morton III ’47 of Houston, TX on February 19, 2011. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta and the Skulls of Seven. He was accepted into the Midshipmen School at Columbia University in the Navy Seals program and served in the US Navy during WWII as a Lieutenant. After the service he worked as a Chemist for Ethyl Corp. His brother Howard Morton ’52, son-in-law Fritz Beich ’69, son Robert Morton ’72, and grandson Kolby Beich ’99 also attended Westminster. William H. Lake ’50 of Santa Maria, CA on July 27, 2010. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi. John R. Richards ’50 of College Station, TX on May 17, 2011. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He served in the Air Force during the Korean War. Richards joined Texas A&M University in 1973 and spent his entire career as the Texas A&M Scheduling & Services Manager until he retired in 1994. He was a founding member and President of the Association of Collegiate Conference and Events Directors-International. He also served on the initial advisory boards of the Brazos Center, the Aggie Hostel, and Bryan College Station Hotel Association Board. George C. Foster ’51 of Yuma, AZ on December 27, 2010. He was a member

of Beta Theta Pi. Foster was managing member in a mining company and a veteran of the US Navy. He received the Westminster Alumni Award of Merit in 1963, and was a member on Westminster’s Board of Trustees from 1970-1982. He is a former Alumni Council member serving as President from 1974-1976. His nephew, Ford Houts ’82 also attended Westminster. Charles W. Rootes ’51 of Kansas City, MO on January 25, 2011. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. He served in the Army Air Force on active duty from 1945-1947 in Germany. He graduated from the University of Missouri in Columbia and became a certified Public Accountant while employed by Ernst and Ernst in St. Louis. Rootes held various financial executive positions with A.B. Chance Co., Spencer Chemical Co., and Rival Manufacturing, retiring as President and Chairman of the Board in 1988. He served as a member on Westminster’s Board of Trustees from 1988-1997. He received the Alumni Achievement Award in 1985. His sons, David Rootes ’79 and Timothy Rootes ’89 also attended Westminster. C. Richard “Dick” Stanley ’51 of San Antonio, TX on April 23, 2011. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi. He graduated from Washington University. He served in the US Army in WWII with the 743rd Tank Battalion. His father, Harry “Durand” Stanley ’33 also attended Westminster. Robert W. Weihe ’53 of Coralville, IA on February 9, 2011. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta. He attended the University of Illinois. He enlisted in the US Navy in 1953 and served during the Korean Conflict as a commissioned Naval Aviator. Weihe worked as a Sales Service Manager for both Owens Brush Company and Anchor Brush Company retiring in 1990. Kenneth K. Kirkland Jr. ’56 of St. Louis, MO on February 15, 2011. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. He served in the US Army. He was a Supervisor with Crown Finance for over 15 years and owned Kirkland Home Furnishings. Dr. Darrel D. Domann ’58 of Harrison, AR on January 17, 2011. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He graduated from the University of Missouri School of Medicine in 1962. Following his general surgery and plastic


surgery residencies he set up practice in Springfield, MO. Domann was a founder of the Crippled Children’s Clinic which continues to provide corrective surgery for young people. He was a member of the Missouri Board of Healing Arts, American Medical Association, American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, American Society of Plastic Surgeons, Missouri Medical Association and past president of the Greene County Medical Society. His son, Gustave Domann ’86 also attended Westminster. John A. “Tony” Doudican Jr. ’58 of Oklahoma City, OK on February 18, 2011. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He graduated from Oklahoma State University with a Bachelor’s Degree in Business. He was a golf professional for 19 years and was engaged in the management and development of the Jimmie Austin Golf Course and the Thunder Creek Golf Course in. Ronald H. Schoen ’62 of St. Louis, MO on January 31, 2011. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He served as an officer in the US Army.

John D. Harwood ’67 of Plano, TX on May 14, 2011. He served in the US Army and completed tours in Vietnam and Germany, as well as assignments throughout the United States, retiring as a Major. In 1993 he underwent a lifesaving liver transplant procedure and spent much of the rest of his life helping others with transplants, both locally and through service on the national board of Transplant Recipients International Organization. Harwood served as managing director of a family charitable foundation based in Tulsa. Dr. Eugene “Gene” Smith ’65 of Waelder, TX on March 21, 2011. He studied archaeology and graduated Phi Beta Kappa from St. Louis University with a PhD in Classics. He was the Assistant Archaeologist at the Texas Department of Transportation for 20 years, and taught at the Governor’s Center for Management Development. Smith lectured for various state agencies on Texas history and archaeology, and was a member of the faculty in the Department of English and Communication Studies at Texas

Designation: Westminster Fund Scholarships “I give to the Westminster Scholarship Fund to show my appreciation for the scholarship that I received and to ensure that other students have the opportunity to experience the extraordinary education that Westminster College has to offer. While I focused on biology and environmental studies as a student, my educational and professional experiences in the years since graduation have helped me realize the true value of a liberal arts education, especially one from a college that really cares for and focuses on each student. I know that my donations cannot repay the investment that Westminster made in me 20 years ago, but I hope that they help put other students on a path to a happy and successful life!” –Kristi Smith, Class of 1995 Visit us online at www.westminster-mo.edu/go/makeagift for more information on the Westminster Fund.

Lutheran University in Sequin. He acted in stage, television, and movies including 2010’s True Grit and Drive Angry. He was an Associate Producer, Location Coordinator and extra for the film The Garden in the Wilderness, and was the co-writer and producer of the short film Old Rodeo. Jack “Randy” Judd ’71 of Bartlesville, OK on January 10, 2011. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta. He graduated from the University of Tulsa and served in the Air National Guard. Karen S. Kenworthy ’74 of Tulsa, OK on April 11, 2011. John L. Breyfogle ’77 of Cedar Rapids, IA on May 11, 2011. He attended the University of Illinois in Champaign and received a Master’s in Computer Science from the University of Wyoming. He spent 26 years with Rockwell Collins. Clayton A. Fraser ’00 of Tulsa, OK on January 10, 2011. He was a member of Sigma Chi. He received a diploma in Baking and Pastry from The Art Institute of Seattle and worked at Macrina Bakery.


How will you plan for your future?

What happens in the future may impact your loved ones and your estate in countless ways. This is why careful planning is important to ensure that your loved ones are well cared for and your estate is not subject to unnecessary and burdensome taxes and fees. We would like to help you organize and plan for the future by offering you a FREE Wills and Trust Guide. You can’t afford not to plan! Please call to receive your FREE Guide today. Ask for Lee Jantzen in the Planned Giving Department. Our toll-free number is 888-687-9266.

VALUES-BASED LEGACY PLANNING You may also be interested in completing the Wills Planning Guide 888.687.9266 www.wclegacy.org wclegacy@westminster-mo.edu

online at www.wclegacy.org. All your information is kept private. You select your password, and only you have access to the data you enter. The website is secured with two firewalls to protect your confidential information. Once you have finished, you can print the Guide and take it to your attorney. If your circumstances change, you can access the saved information and update it as needed.


The father-daughter alumni team

of Randy ’74 and Jessie ’10 Johnson of Napierville, IL, were captured living the Westminster mission of community service by volunteering their time to construct a privacy fence at SERVE, a not-for-profit social services organization in Fulton. They also performed other service projects to benefit Central Missouri during a weeklong mission trip to Westminster by their church, Knox Presbyterian. The idea was the brainchild of Randy, who along with Jesse and his wife Kim and another 129 youth leaders and students, spent a week living on the Westminster campus tackling cleaning, renovation, and construction projects in Fulton, Jefferson City, and Columbia. The Johnson family is just one example of how Westminster graduates and members of the Westminster campus family make a difference in their communities.


WESTMINSTER COLLEGE 501 Westminster Avenue Fulton, Missouri 65251

save the date Upcoming Events

Upcoming Dates At a Glance August 20 New Student Convocation and Columns Ceremony September 20 & 21 Symposium on Democracy VI: My Digital Life @ the Speed of Light September 30 & October 1 Alumni Council Meeting October 13-15 Board of Trustee Meeting October 14 President’s Dinner October 21-23 Homecoming, Family Weekend April 20-22 Alumni Weekend 2012 To find out more on these and other events visit www.westminster-mo.edu


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