21.12.2012 Views

Spring - University of Central Missouri

Spring - University of Central Missouri

Spring - University of Central Missouri

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

SPRING 2011, VOL. 10 NO. 4<br />

university <strong>of</strong> central missouri<br />

A JAckpot with A<br />

SmAll-town twiSt


Your Coins Impact UCM’s Future<br />

Show Your Impact!<br />

Make a gift at ucmo.edu/giveonline.<br />

Call us to create a new scholarship.<br />

Let us know you included UCM in your will.<br />

People make gifts and impact<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> in unlimited<br />

ways:<br />

AUDREY WALTON’S GIFT<br />

is constructing a new golf<br />

clubhouse at Pertle <strong>Spring</strong>s.<br />

JACKIE AND LYNN<br />

HARMON’S GIFT<br />

is funding a pr<strong>of</strong>essorship<br />

and guest artist series in<br />

theatre.<br />

WAYNE THOMASON’S GIFT<br />

is creating new scholarships<br />

for aviation students.<br />

STATE FARM’S GIFT<br />

is funding a national<br />

marketing and sales<br />

competition.<br />

MIKE WEBB’S GIFT<br />

is refurbishing the Alumni<br />

Chapel.<br />

GIFTS MAKE A DIFFERENCE<br />

to the lives <strong>of</strong> UCM students<br />

whether they are cash, credit<br />

card, electronic transfer,<br />

property, life insurance,<br />

securities, charitable gift<br />

annuity or a bequest. PLUS it<br />

just feels good knowing that<br />

you helped someone achieve<br />

a college education.<br />

contact:<br />

Dale carDer<br />

InterIm executIve DIrector<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ucm founDatIon<br />

emaiL: carDer@ucmo.eDu<br />

Phone: 660-543-8000<br />

toLL-free: 866-752-7257


SPRING 2011, VOL. 10 NO. 4<br />

Published by the Office <strong>of</strong> Alumni<br />

Relations and Development.<br />

© 2011 by <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>.<br />

All rights reserved. Contact the editor<br />

at today@ucmo.edu or 660-543-4545.<br />

Send your address updates to<br />

alumni@ucmo.edu or telephone,<br />

660-543-8000 or toll-free, 1-866-752-7257.<br />

EdItOR<br />

Dalene Abner ’09<br />

dESIGN<br />

Erin Livengood<br />

Annakje Vanlandingham ’12<br />

PhOtOGRaPhER<br />

Bryan Tebbenkamp ’03<br />

CLaSS NOtES<br />

Jody Ritter<br />

Today (USPS 019-888) is published<br />

quarterly by the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong>, Warrensburg, MO 64093. Printed<br />

in USA. Periodicals postage paid at<br />

Warrensburg, MO, and additional <strong>of</strong>fices.<br />

POSTMASTER: Send address changes<br />

to Today, Smiser Alumni Center, <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>, Warrensburg, MO<br />

64093.<br />

3 A JACKpOT WITH A SMALL-TOWN TWIST<br />

In the billion-dollar gambling industry, known for its glitz and high stakes, two<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> graduates hit a jackpot, not at a poker table or slot<br />

machine but in their careers. In becoming successful executives with Ameristar<br />

Casinos, they discovered a common bond to a small-town high school teacher, who<br />

despite the odds, happens also to be a UCM grad and, incredibly enough, also found<br />

inspiration from another alumna who had taught her at the same school.<br />

features<br />

6 A TRUE CRIME JUNKIE<br />

Meisberger Finds Niche in Jackson County Cold Case Unit<br />

9 THRILL OF THE CHASE<br />

Ryan Brown and His Inseparable Companion<br />

14 NEW RECREATION CENTER MIxES OLD WITH NEW<br />

Facility Receives <strong>University</strong>’s First LEED Rating for Energy Efficiency<br />

17 THE BIG BEAR HUNT<br />

Alumnus Unearths Ancient Biggest, Baddest Bear<br />

22 FUTURE THINKING NOW<br />

Eugenia Crain Funds Accounting Scholarship through Annuity<br />

sections<br />

6<br />

3 14 17<br />

12 CAMpUS CURRENTS<br />

16 CENTRAL YESTERDAY<br />

20 pHILANTHROpY<br />

24 CLASS NOTES<br />

27 AWARDS & HONORS<br />

28 IN MEMORIAM<br />

9<br />

22<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 1


“I couldn’t have been who I was without her.<br />

There is always someone who influences somebody.”<br />

2 SPRING 2011


Grads Share high School mentor, Career Success<br />

By Matt Bird-Meyer ’97<br />

When the conversation<br />

turned to mentors, the<br />

two Ameristar executives<br />

realized the same teacher,<br />

Mrs. E., had shaped their<br />

young academic lives.<br />

A JAckpot with A<br />

SmAll-town twiSt<br />

In the billion-dollar gambling industry, known for its glitz and high<br />

stakes, two <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> graduates hit a jackpot,<br />

not at a poker table or slot machine but in their careers. In becoming<br />

successful executives with Ameristar Casinos, they discovered a common<br />

bond to a small-town high school teacher, who despite the odds, happens<br />

also to be a UCM grad and, incredibly enough, also found inspiration<br />

from another alumna who had taught her at the same school.<br />

This story begins with two <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> alumnae separated by hundreds<br />

<strong>of</strong> miles. Roxann Kinkade is director <strong>of</strong><br />

communications for Ameristar and works<br />

from the Kansas City casino. Cynthia<br />

Mercer was chief human resources<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficer and operated from Las Vegas. The<br />

high school teacher they both credit<br />

for influencing their success is Frances<br />

Engelbrecht, or “Mrs. E.” as her former<br />

students know her.<br />

“It’s like something that’s so personal to<br />

you, something you hold in your heart, but<br />

then you realize someone else has that,”<br />

says Kinkade, drawing laughter from all<br />

three women who reunited at the Kansas<br />

City casino.<br />

Kinkade graduated from UCM in 1981<br />

with a degree in public relations. She has<br />

worked at Ameristar for six years, moving<br />

up the corporate ladder from public<br />

relations manager at the Kansas City casino<br />

to managing all communications for the<br />

corporation. With eight properties in seven<br />

markets and annual revenues around<br />

$1.2 billion, Ameristar is a major player<br />

in the casino industry. Kinkade monitors<br />

its public image, including what other<br />

organizations are saying or writing about it,<br />

coordinating interviews with newspapers,<br />

television and other media, and finding the<br />

right people to speak for the company.<br />

(continued next page)<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 3


4 SPRING 2011<br />

thESE hIStORIC PhOtOS Of ERNa RaIthEL ’45, fRaNCES ENGELbRECht ’58, ROxaNN<br />

KINKadE ’81 aNd CyNthIa MERCER ’88 COME fROM a VaRIEty Of SOuRCES, INCLudING thE<br />

RuSSELLVILLE bICENtENNIaL bOOK, hIGh SChOOL yEaRbOOK aNd uCM rhetor.<br />

(continued from previous page)<br />

Mercer graduated from UCM in 1988 with<br />

a degree in broadcasting and film. After<br />

school, she worked in commercial real<br />

estate, which triggered her passion for<br />

business. At the Koll Company, a real estate<br />

firm in southern California, Mercer moved<br />

through the ranks until she held the top<br />

HR position. Next came The Cheesecake<br />

Factory, then Ameristar. As Ameristar’s<br />

chief human resources <strong>of</strong>ficer, she oversaw<br />

hiring, training and “succession planning,”<br />

where she helped position the right people<br />

to move up the corporate ladder.<br />

Business is in Mercer’s blood. She believes<br />

people are the catalyst to making a business<br />

successful. She recently started a new<br />

position with even greater responsibility<br />

for the Sisters <strong>of</strong> Mercy Health System<br />

in St. Louis. As senior vice president <strong>of</strong><br />

human resources, she is responsible for<br />

a substantially larger workforce, going<br />

from some 7,000 at Ameristar to 35,000<br />

co-workers and 4,000 physicians. The<br />

health system has hospitals, acute care and<br />

assisted living facilities in seven states.<br />

Yet, it was as Ameristar executives that<br />

Mercer and Kinkade discovered a common<br />

bond. Four years ago, when Mercer was<br />

in Kansas City for a banquet honoring the<br />

team member <strong>of</strong> the year, the two began<br />

talking about their UCM experiences.<br />

When the conversation turned to mentors,<br />

they realized the same teacher, Mrs. E., had<br />

shaped their young academic lives.<br />

The pieces fell firmly in place when they<br />

connected Mrs. E. to a high school in<br />

Russellville, MO, where Kinkade graduated<br />

in 1978 and Mercer in 1985. Their classes<br />

were certainly small enough for them to<br />

know everyone with 78 in Kinkade’s and<br />

43 in Mercer’s. Yet, time separated the two<br />

until they met as Ameristar co-workers.<br />

Kinkade says her surprise was great because<br />

she couldn’t imagine the cosmopolitan<br />

Mercer mingling in the small farming<br />

town <strong>of</strong> Russellville, population 758.<br />

“She seemed very sophisticated and from<br />

a big city,” she adds. “I see myself as a<br />

farm kid.” Her impression wasn’t too<br />

far <strong>of</strong>f the mark. Mercer was a southern<br />

California transplant in the seventh grade<br />

while Kinkade’s family had deep roots in<br />

the community. Several <strong>of</strong> her aunts and<br />

uncles, as well as her husband, Mark, and<br />

other family members, attended school in<br />

Russellville through the years, and many <strong>of</strong><br />

them had Mrs. E. as a teacher.<br />

ROxaNN KINKadE, LEft, aNd CyNthIa MERCER, RIGht, REMINISCE wIth MRS. E.


Engelbrecht inspired Kinkade to go to<br />

college and break out from a future that<br />

seemed inevitable in farming or factory<br />

work. Only three <strong>of</strong> her classmates went to<br />

college after high school, Kinkade notes.<br />

“I don’t think Mrs. E. realizes the impact<br />

she had on so many <strong>of</strong> us farm kids. I was<br />

driven, but I didn’t see [academic awards]<br />

as a path to a career. I couldn’t see beyond<br />

high school.”<br />

Mrs. E. had that foresight. She helped<br />

Kinkade apply for and earn a college<br />

scholarship. “I didn’t really see a path to<br />

that,” says Kinkade. “Mrs. E. saw something<br />

in me that I don’t think I could see.”<br />

Kinkade says Mrs. E. helped her realize the<br />

power people have in influencing others.<br />

“It’s a huge power. I try to live my life<br />

mindful <strong>of</strong> that power,” she says, tearing<br />

up as she looked toward a fourth woman<br />

who organized the reunion, Celeste<br />

Burks, another UCM graduate. Kinkade<br />

recommended the 2005 alumna be hired as<br />

her successor at Kansas City Ameristar and<br />

became Burks’ mentor in the process.<br />

So continues the influence <strong>of</strong> Mrs. E., who<br />

has lived in Eugene, MO, just south <strong>of</strong><br />

Russellville, since 1959, one year after her<br />

graduation from UCM. She retired after<br />

spending 30 <strong>of</strong> her 37 years teaching at<br />

Russellville High School.<br />

Teaching the classics and requiring her<br />

students to read pivotal authors were<br />

natural for Engelbrecht. That’s what she<br />

was taught by Erna Raithel, who taught<br />

English when she attended and graduated<br />

from Russellville High School. Kinkade<br />

notes that Miss Raithel, a 1945 <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> alumna, was her mother’s English<br />

teacher as well as the town’s historian. She<br />

taught language arts for 31 years, mostly<br />

in Jefferson City, before she retired in 1985.<br />

She died in 2008.<br />

Engelbrecht inspired<br />

Kinkade to go to<br />

college and break out<br />

from a future that<br />

seemed inevitable in<br />

farming or factory work.<br />

Mercer remembers she<br />

was tough, never giving<br />

away easy grades.<br />

CyNthIa MERCER, CENtER IN PINK, LEd thE aMERIStaR tEaM SERVING aS SPOKESwOMaN fOR<br />

thE KaNSaS CIty SuSaN G. KOMEN RaCE fOR thE CuRE.<br />

“I couldn’t have been who I was without<br />

her,” says Mrs. E. “There is always someone<br />

who influences somebody.”<br />

Kinkade and Mercer took Mrs. E.’s drama<br />

class, had lead roles in plays and worked on<br />

the yearbook and school newspaper. That’s<br />

about the extent <strong>of</strong> their similarities as<br />

students. Mercer was more sports-oriented,<br />

and Kinkade, who described herself as<br />

“painfully uncoordinated,” focused more<br />

on academics, band and choir.<br />

Kinkade won numerous speech awards<br />

and a trip to Washington, D.C., in an<br />

essay contest. “I remember I hated speech<br />

and [Mrs. E.] was like, ‘You can do this,’”<br />

she says. Now part <strong>of</strong> her job involves<br />

preparing others to speak in public.<br />

Mercer remembers Engelbrecht was tough,<br />

never giving away easy grades. She recalls<br />

her excitement after earning a B+ on a<br />

report she wrote on George Bernard Shaw.<br />

“Truly, I think Mrs. E. just held me to a<br />

higher standard,” she says. “I think she was<br />

tough in a caring and compassionate way.<br />

She inspired you to reach your potential.”<br />

Mercer carried over her experiences with<br />

Mrs. E. to her corporate life, specifically, to<br />

a leadership class she taught at Ameristar.<br />

One exercise involved writing your “Life’s<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Directors” and sharing that with<br />

the people on your list. Mrs. E. was on<br />

Mercer’s.<br />

“I taught the class and decided to take<br />

my own advice,” she says. She wrote to<br />

Engelbrecht. That letter started a penpal<br />

relationship between the two, which<br />

solidified into the reunion in Kansas City.<br />

Engelbrecht was thrilled to see her former<br />

students. Mercer was in town for another<br />

purpose; she was spokeswoman for the<br />

Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure.<br />

Mercer is in her second cancer-free year<br />

and, as spokeswoman, gave interviews<br />

on television about her battle with breast<br />

cancer. She addressed a crowd <strong>of</strong> 27,000<br />

participants to kick <strong>of</strong>f the race. Ameristar<br />

had some 370 team members, including<br />

workers and their family members,<br />

participate in the race.<br />

“It’s a huge honor. Thank goodness I had<br />

good training,” Mercer says, grabbing Mrs.<br />

E.’s hand. Mercer notes that early detection<br />

saved her life. “You can definitely fight it<br />

and win if you learn about it early enough.<br />

I was very fortunate I worked throughout<br />

my battle and maintained as much<br />

normalcy as possible.”<br />

Engelbrecht says Kinkade and Mercer<br />

haven’t changed much; they still have<br />

the bubbling, energetic and enthusiastic<br />

personalities she remembers. She didn’t<br />

have much trouble recognizing them.<br />

“They’re who they were pretty much…<br />

very much, in fact,” Mrs. E. says. “I am so<br />

proud <strong>of</strong> them. I just rejoice at their success<br />

as I do for all <strong>of</strong> my students.”<br />

reaD it.<br />

rate it.<br />

Did you enjoy this story?<br />

Give us your feedback<br />

at ucmo.edu/today<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 5


A true crime junkie<br />

Meisberger finds Niche in<br />

Jackson County Cold Case unit<br />

By Matt Bird-Meyer ’97<br />

“every day when i get notice<br />

there’s been a new [Dna] hit,<br />

just knowing we’re going to be<br />

able to do something about<br />

a case where the <strong>of</strong>fender<br />

thinks they’ve gotten away<br />

with it after all these years and<br />

saying, ‘nope, we got ya.’”<br />

6 SPRING 2011<br />

At the center <strong>of</strong> operations for a DNA<br />

Cold Case Unit in Jackson County, MO, is<br />

a <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> graduate<br />

who is helping to snare sex <strong>of</strong>fenders from<br />

as far back as 1979.<br />

The work is right up Jennifer Meisberger’s<br />

alley. Criminal justice runs in the family as<br />

both her father, John B. Boyd, and brother,<br />

John R. Boyd, are attorneys.<br />

She got her first taste <strong>of</strong> the justice system<br />

as a volunteer for the Court Appointed<br />

Special Advocates program in Jackson<br />

County prior to starting her master’s<br />

degree at UCM. She volunteered two years<br />

with CASA, helping to support children<br />

who were victims <strong>of</strong> abuse and other crimes<br />

as they navigated the court system.<br />

Her taste for the justice system runs even<br />

deeper. She calls it a “lifelong obsession.”<br />

Meisberger says she remembers when<br />

Kansas City serial killer Bob Berdella was<br />

arrested when she was 4 or 5 years old. She<br />

recalls when she asked at the breakfast<br />

table what a serial killer was, her brother’s<br />

response. “He kills by choking someone<br />

with cereal, <strong>of</strong> course.”<br />

Serious about pursuing a career in criminal<br />

justice, she finished a two-year master’s<br />

degree in about a year, graduating in<br />

2008. Four months later she was hired as a<br />

paralegal with the newly formed unit.<br />

“When this job came up, I said, ‘Wow, this is<br />

made for me to do,’” she says. “It’s exciting.<br />

Every day when I get notice there’s been a<br />

new [DNA] hit, just knowing we’re going<br />

to be able to do something about a case<br />

where the <strong>of</strong>fender thinks they’ve gotten<br />

away with it after all these years and saying,<br />

‘Nope, we got ya.’”<br />

Her work touches every aspect <strong>of</strong> the unit.<br />

During its startup, she worked with three<br />

others for a month in the Kansas City<br />

Crime Lab to catalog the evidence they<br />

saved from 1972 to 1992. Next, they plowed<br />

through the handwritten notebooks<br />

from trace analysts and requested the<br />

corresponding reports from the Kansas<br />

City Police Department.<br />

“It was very tedious work,” she says. But it<br />

was compelling work for the crime junkie.<br />

“You’re holding physical evidence – you’re<br />

touching history <strong>of</strong> true crime.”<br />

In that month, they identified more than<br />

2,000 cases from 1979 to 1992 that fell<br />

within the statute <strong>of</strong> limitations and had<br />

sufficient evidence. Meisberger notes a case<br />

becomes “cold” if all leads are exhausted,<br />

no <strong>of</strong>fender is identified or the investigating<br />

detective leaves for another unit.<br />

Meisberger maintains the unit’s databases<br />

and keeps track <strong>of</strong> the charges they’ve filed.<br />

She assigns cases to analysts and notifies the


lab if a case is approved for DNA testing.<br />

If a sample comes back with a positive<br />

DNA hit, she helps with investigative<br />

activities, such as tracking down suspects,<br />

victims, witnesses, investigative <strong>of</strong>ficers and<br />

hospital personnel. She notes that it can be<br />

frustrating to work on a case only to have<br />

the DNA return with no matches or if the<br />

DNA was too degraded to test.<br />

“But there are those certain ones that just<br />

stand out to you for certain reasons, like<br />

when there’s a child victim,” she says. “It<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> brings you down, but there are<br />

those that give you satisfaction. There’s a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> resolution and you feel really good<br />

when you get those hits.”<br />

“it was very tedious work.” But it was compelling work<br />

for the crime junkie. “You’re holding physical evidence<br />

— you’re touching history <strong>of</strong> true crime.”<br />

reaD it.<br />

rate it.<br />

Did you enjoy this story?<br />

Give us your feedback<br />

at ucmo.edu/today<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 7


T hrill <strong>of</strong> the Chase<br />

8 SPRING 2011


As a bald eagle soars overhead and swoops down for a<br />

fish, Ryan Brown forgets about tying a fly on his line.<br />

More important is the camera in his car’s backseat and<br />

the picture unfolding 30 yards away. Luckily the bird<br />

drops the fish and when it snatches the fish again in its<br />

claws, Brown is ready, firing 10 frames per second.<br />

“That’s kind <strong>of</strong> the thrill <strong>of</strong> the chase, like hunting,<br />

only with a camera,” he says. That’s also why he always<br />

carries a camera, even if it’s just his cell phone.<br />

(continued next page)<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 9


(continued from previous page)<br />

Life is a delicate balancing act<br />

for this 2003 UCM graduate. The<br />

award-winning photographer<br />

juggles new fatherhood, a freelance<br />

business in Lee’s Summit,<br />

MO, and a full-time job managing<br />

the design and lab department <strong>of</strong> a<br />

high-end wedding album maker in<br />

Santa Ana, CA.<br />

Wedding photography pays the<br />

bills, but Brown has a passion for<br />

all photography. He’s endured<br />

cold to capture the sun rising<br />

over the Grand Tetons on a crisp<br />

morning and traveled south for<br />

the rich scenery around the Gulf<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mexico. He describes his distinct<br />

style as romantic. He says others<br />

call it pure, classic or timeless<br />

because it relies on ambient light.<br />

“I like to show the emotion in the<br />

relationship. I don’t go with the<br />

trends. I try to keep my own style.”<br />

As an artist, Brown likes to try<br />

different things. “My style is<br />

always changing. You have to<br />

keep up with the times and do<br />

your own thing.”<br />

10 SPRING 2011


PhOtOS PROVIdEd & REPRINtEd by<br />

PERMISSION Of RyaN bROwN<br />

Whatever Brown is doing, it’s<br />

paying <strong>of</strong>f in terms <strong>of</strong> recognition.<br />

In 2010, he pulled down several<br />

prestigious awards while<br />

staying active in six pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

organizations. He was named the<br />

2010 Heart <strong>of</strong> America Regional<br />

Master Photographer <strong>of</strong> the Year,<br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> Master Photographer<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Year and International<br />

Photographer <strong>of</strong> the Year. He won<br />

a Golden Bellows Award from<br />

the Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Photographers<br />

Association <strong>of</strong> Greater Kansas City<br />

and Fuji Masterpiece and Kodak<br />

Gallery awards.<br />

He also earned the 2010 Canon Par<br />

Excellence Award, which came<br />

with an extra bonus in addition<br />

to the sparkling crystal trophy – a<br />

$3,500 lens.<br />

“Canon is the largest camera<br />

manufacturer in the world,”<br />

he notes, “and my work was<br />

considered worthy <strong>of</strong> winning this<br />

honor? What it meant for me is<br />

that I did something correct this<br />

year, and next year I need to do<br />

something different.”<br />

Brown says UCM gave him the<br />

dedication, motivation and<br />

perseverance to pursue success.<br />

“I wanted to be the best and<br />

insisted on doing whatever I had<br />

to do to make it. The university<br />

gave me the intangible education<br />

to keep going.”<br />

— By Matt Bird-Meyer ’97<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 11


campus currents<br />

12 SPRING 2011<br />

track and field add<br />

More National titles<br />

Two more national athletic titles entered the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> record book this<br />

spring when pentathlete Lindsay Lettow was<br />

named the U.S. Track and Field/Cross Country<br />

Coaches Association’s Women’s National Field<br />

Athlete <strong>of</strong> the Year, and heptathlete Shane Boss<br />

was selected for the NCAA Elite 88 Award.<br />

Lettow <strong>of</strong> Urbandale, IA, smashed track and<br />

field records all season long. Not only did the<br />

junior repeat as MIAA champion in the 60-meter<br />

hurdles, 600-yard run and pentathlon, she also<br />

broke two building, three meet and four school<br />

records. Her point total <strong>of</strong> 39.5 was also a meethigh<br />

for the second straight year.<br />

At the NCAA national championships in<br />

Albuquerque, NM, she stood on three podiums,<br />

adding a fourth-place long jump (19’00”) and<br />

sixth-place 60-meter hurdles to go with her<br />

first-place pentathlon finish. The 4,064 points<br />

she totaled were an NCAA championship’s<br />

meet high and the<br />

most ever scored<br />

by a Division II<br />

pentathlete. In 2011,<br />

across all divisions,<br />

she was only bested<br />

by nine others in<br />

the country for the<br />

event.<br />

Boss <strong>of</strong> Oak Grove,<br />

MO, is a computer<br />

information systems<br />

major with a 4.0<br />

grade point average.<br />

He competed nationally this spring in the<br />

heptathlon, finishing in third place. The Elite 88<br />

embodies the true spirit <strong>of</strong> the student-athlete. It<br />

is given to a male and female participant at each<br />

<strong>of</strong> the 88 national championships recognized by<br />

the NCAA.<br />

The national titles capped <strong>of</strong>f a great spring<br />

season for the Mules and Jennies. The Jennies<br />

bowling team made its eighth consecutive<br />

appearance at the national championship. Player<br />

Natalie Jimenez was tabbed the Division II/III<br />

Player <strong>of</strong> the Year while teammate Kara Richard<br />

was named the D-II/III Rookie <strong>of</strong> the Year.<br />

The Mules golf team reached the NCAA<br />

Tournament as the automatic bid from the MIAA.<br />

They made a perfect run through conference<br />

competition winning the MIAA tournament title<br />

by 29 shots. Honors included Matt Miller as MIAA<br />

Player <strong>of</strong> the Year and Tim Poe as Coach <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Year. It is their second straight MIAA title and<br />

national appearance. It is their third consecutive<br />

regular season crown.<br />

Not just with current players did athletics make a<br />

splash this spring. <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> is sending four<br />

individuals and two teams to the 2011 MIAA Hall<br />

<strong>of</strong> Fame. Inductees include Jorja Hoehn, Jennies<br />

basketball coach from 1980-85; Carla Eades,<br />

Jennies basketball player from 1980-84; Lynn<br />

Nance, Mules basketball coach from 1980-85;<br />

and Ron Nunnelly, Mules basketball player from<br />

1981-85. The four will be inducted, along with<br />

UCM’s 1984 national championship men’s and<br />

women’s basketball teams, at the annual MIAA<br />

Awards Dinner June 9 in Kansas City.


aMbROSE PaRtICIPatES IN<br />

NatIONaL SECuRIty dISCuSSION<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> President Charles<br />

Ambrose participated in two special<br />

events this spring at the invitation <strong>of</strong><br />

the U.S. Air Force and Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Defense. He was selected to observe and<br />

engage with the military and exchange<br />

ideas related to national security at<br />

the DoD’s Joint Civilian Orientation<br />

Conference 81 in Washington, D.C. and<br />

the USAF’s Annual National Security<br />

Forum at Maxwell Air Force Base, AL.<br />

“It’s an honor to be selected to<br />

participate in these events, particularly<br />

as UCM continues building strong<br />

relationships with the men and women<br />

who serve at Whiteman Air Force Base,”<br />

Ambrose says.<br />

“These were unique opportunities that<br />

gave me an insider’s look at what it<br />

means to serve our country and to learn<br />

more about issues affecting the safety<br />

and well being <strong>of</strong> all U.S. citizens.”<br />

bhattaRaI, StaLLMaNN NaMEd<br />

2011 ChaRNO RECIPIENtS<br />

Jackie Bhattarai, a psychology and<br />

Spanish major from Warrensburg,<br />

and Andrew Stallmann, an actuarial<br />

science and mathematics major from<br />

Washington, MO, received the 2011<br />

Charno Award.<br />

The honor for <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>’s top male<br />

and female senior students is named<br />

for George Charno Sr., who established<br />

the award in 1940 to recognize the<br />

outstanding male member <strong>of</strong> the<br />

graduating class. The award for the<br />

outstanding female was created one<br />

year later.<br />

GRab a bIKE, SaVE ON GaS<br />

Parking the car and jumping on a bicycle<br />

to navigate campus became easier this<br />

spring with a program that gives “recycling”<br />

new meaning.<br />

The Re-Cycles Program for students<br />

and staff continues to expand UCM’s<br />

commitment to sustainability. The<br />

program started out with bikes rescued<br />

from UCM surplus, rebuilt by a local bike<br />

shop owner and painted emerald green<br />

by a local body shop.<br />

“We recycled 15 bicycles that had<br />

been discarded as useless,” says<br />

Manny Abarca, the graduate student<br />

coordinating the campus’ sustainability<br />

efforts. “We’re encouraging people to<br />

look to alternatives for fossil fuels for<br />

local transportation while reducing each<br />

individual’s carbon footprint.”<br />

POPuLaR aVIatION PROfESSOR<br />

RECEIVES NatIONaL hONOR<br />

Jack Horine, pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong><br />

aviation, received the 2010 President’s<br />

Award from the <strong>University</strong> Aviation<br />

Association, a nonpr<strong>of</strong>it organization<br />

representing high schools and<br />

universities that <strong>of</strong>fer aviation degrees.<br />

Horine started with <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>’s<br />

aviation program in 1961 and became<br />

department chair in 1990. Although he<br />

retired a few years ago, he continues to<br />

teach as an adjunct faculty member and<br />

advise students in the aviation safety<br />

graduate program.<br />

In the UAA, he is widely respected for his<br />

support <strong>of</strong> the group’s DC Seminar on<br />

Establishing Aviation Policy, to which he<br />

has recruited one <strong>of</strong> the largest student<br />

contingents for the past 20 years.<br />

uNIVERSIty RECOGNIzEd fOR<br />

aLCOhOL PREVENtION EffORtS<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> received the top<br />

award for its student-directed alcohol<br />

prevention initiatives at the National<br />

Association <strong>of</strong> Student Personnel<br />

Administrators annual meeting. The<br />

2011 Prevention Excellence Awards were<br />

announced by Outside the Classroom;<br />

UCM received the Highest Honors <strong>of</strong><br />

Distinction and a $5,000 prize for the<br />

quality <strong>of</strong> its prevention programming.<br />

One campus program contributing to<br />

the national recognition is Encouraging<br />

Positive Interventions in Chapters, which<br />

aims to reduce high-risk drinking and<br />

negative consequences among Greekaffiliated<br />

students. The program was<br />

implemented at UCM in spring 2010.<br />

tOP uCM faCuLty hONOR<br />

GOES tO MCKEE<br />

Rhonda McKee, a pr<strong>of</strong>essor whose work<br />

includes dedication to helping young<br />

women pursue mathematics careers,<br />

has earned the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong>’s highest faculty honor as<br />

recipient <strong>of</strong> the 2011 Byler Award.<br />

Colleagues in the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Mathematics and Computer Science<br />

note that McKee exemplifies the type<br />

<strong>of</strong> individual for whom the award<br />

is intended. They describe her as<br />

exemplary, passionate and pr<strong>of</strong>essional.<br />

Terry Goodman,<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />

mathematics<br />

education,<br />

called McKee<br />

an “enthusiastic<br />

and gifted<br />

teacher.<br />

Students<br />

consistently<br />

‘sing her<br />

praises,’” he<br />

said in his letter <strong>of</strong> support. “While<br />

her courses are demanding and push<br />

students to excel, she works hard to<br />

create a learning environment that is<br />

challenging, yet safe and supportive.”<br />

The award is named for William H. Byler,<br />

an inventor, author and teacher who<br />

graduated from UCM in 1927 with a<br />

major in chemistry and physics.<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 13


Bits <strong>of</strong> the old — like the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair mirror,<br />

tiles from the 1939 swimming pool, even the original<br />

gymnasium hardwood floors — combined with state-<strong>of</strong>the-art<br />

green technology and fitness equipment that rivals<br />

an NFL team make us proud to show <strong>of</strong>f the campus’ first<br />

LEED-certified building. Plus it’s available for alumni to use.<br />

The new Student Recreation and Wellness<br />

Center is open, completing a $36-million<br />

project that included renovation <strong>of</strong> both<br />

Morrow and Garrison gymnasiums. It is<br />

the largest construction project on campus<br />

since Kirkpatrick Library was built in 2000.<br />

14 SPRING 2011<br />

Covering 69,000 square feet, the center<br />

houses six basketball/volleyball courts,<br />

three fitness rooms, three cardio-fitness<br />

areas, indoor walking track, weight room,<br />

climbing tower, bouldering area, conference<br />

room and an Einstein Brothers Bagels.<br />

It’s the university’s first LEED-certified<br />

building, earning a gold rating for its<br />

environmentally friendly design. Features<br />

include automatic sinks and hand driers,<br />

recycled carpet, energy-efficient light bulbs<br />

and motion sensor lighting.


There are elements <strong>of</strong> the original Morrow<br />

and Garrison buildings that make the<br />

center historically unique, such as the<br />

gyms’ hardwood floors in the ceiling and<br />

the swimming pool tiles that surround the<br />

Einstein eating area.<br />

The original swimming pool sits<br />

underneath Einstein’s. It’s being used to<br />

collect rain water to irrigate the grounds.<br />

Garrison’s original stone walls are again<br />

exposed. The old wrestling room was<br />

converted into the athletic training area.<br />

Also impressive is the 36-foot-tall climbing<br />

wall. The university hired a pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

climber to set routes on the climbing and<br />

bouldering wall. Each path is marked by<br />

different colors <strong>of</strong> tape to indicate the<br />

degrees <strong>of</strong> difficulty.<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 15


central yesterday<br />

16 SPRING 2011<br />

Remember the dolphins<br />

and their 1939 debut<br />

Green-tiled swimming depths stretch<br />

across the front entry to Einstein<br />

Brothers Bagels and continue around<br />

the restaurant, symbolizing much<br />

more than a retro recycle from one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the campus’ oldest buildings. When<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> students finally got a<br />

swimming pool in 1939, it was big news.<br />

The day was Dec. 13, 1939, when the university<br />

celebrated the dedication <strong>of</strong> the Walter E.<br />

Morrow Physical Education and Health<br />

Building. At that point, the campus had 15<br />

buildings and 1,631 students. Its largest annual<br />

enrollment had been the previous year at 2,590.<br />

There were 96 faculty members, and so far,<br />

100,000 students had attended with some 20,000<br />

earning certificates or diplomas.<br />

Students had waited quite awhile to get a pool.<br />

It didn’t happen when Dockery Gymnasium<br />

was constructed in 1904. It happened in 1939,<br />

thanks to the Works Projects Administration.<br />

The Depression era, New-Deal program<br />

provided $90,000 toward the $270,000 used to<br />

build the 36,000-square-foot facility. It featured<br />

two gymnasiums, one for men and another<br />

for women; a basketball arena with seating for<br />

2,000 spectators; a health center; locker rooms;<br />

showers, classrooms and special purpose rooms;<br />

<strong>of</strong>fices, laundry and other special facilities. Its<br />

Gothic design was considered modern.<br />

The swimming pool held center stage in the<br />

new building and became home for a new<br />

athletics and entertainment tradition, men’s<br />

and women’s swim teams. Reading about<br />

the Dolphins swim team and its high school<br />

companion, the Dolphinettes, and seeing their<br />

old photos bring back some colorful moments.<br />

Call it a carnival or circus, for the building’s<br />

dedication, the teams presented their first<br />

public show March 28, 1940 — 16 water skits<br />

for the 250 people lucky enough to get tickets,<br />

since seating in the balcony above the pool was<br />

limited. Think what the evening was like by<br />

the titles <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the acts alone: Fish Antics,<br />

Snake Charmer, Water Pyramids, Trained Seals.<br />

The Student reported, “The girls have obtained<br />

new suits <strong>of</strong> velvet, lastex, scarlet in color, with<br />

a black dolphin on the front. A red ‘W’ is on the<br />

dolphin which has a red eye.”<br />

The teams continued to perform and compete<br />

until around 1980, garnering collective and<br />

individual titles at conference, state and national<br />

levels. Other than swim records <strong>of</strong> wins and<br />

losses, history, though, is somewhat sketchy<br />

about the teams and how they ended, but in the<br />

new recreation center, their legacy lives on.


the big bear hunt<br />

Alumnus Unearths Ancient Biggest, Baddest Bear<br />

By Dalene Abner ’09<br />

Most people try to avoid bears, especially big ones with bad<br />

attitudes, but not Blaine Schubert. It’s his lifetime work. It<br />

helps that the bears he tracks are not alive but millions <strong>of</strong><br />

years old. The paleontologist’s discovery <strong>of</strong> the largest known<br />

bear species made the Journal <strong>of</strong> Paleontology and some <strong>of</strong><br />

the nation’s most renowned media, including National<br />

(continued next page)<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 17


18 SPRING 2011<br />

(continued from previous page)<br />

Geographic, Discovery, CBS and others.<br />

“During its time, this bear was the largest<br />

and most powerful meat-eater in the<br />

world,” Schubert notes. “It’s always<br />

extremely exciting to find something that’s<br />

the largest <strong>of</strong> its class and not just a little bit<br />

larger, but quite a bit larger.”<br />

Schubert, a 1994 <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

alumnus, is a pr<strong>of</strong>essor at East Tennessee<br />

State <strong>University</strong>, director <strong>of</strong> its Center <strong>of</strong><br />

Excellence in Paleontology and curator<br />

<strong>of</strong> its Natural History Museum. He<br />

has published more than 20 articles on<br />

paleontology and has appeared multiple<br />

times on national television to talk about<br />

short-faced prehistoric bears, his specialty.<br />

For more than 14 years, Schubert and<br />

Leopoldo Soibelzon, a researcher in<br />

Argentina, have studied fossil collections<br />

for prehistoric South American, North<br />

American and European mammals.<br />

Schubert is only one <strong>of</strong> a handful <strong>of</strong><br />

people who specialize in bear fossils in<br />

North America; Soibelzon is the only such<br />

specialist in South America.<br />

They recently analyzed the fossil remains<br />

<strong>of</strong> a bear unearthed during a hospital<br />

construction project in 1935 at La Plata City<br />

in the Buenos Aires Province and donated<br />

to the La Plata Museum. They describe the<br />

remains <strong>of</strong> this gigantic extinct creature<br />

called Artotherium angustidens in the<br />

January issue <strong>of</strong> the Journal <strong>of</strong> Paleontology.<br />

The bear stood at least 11 feet tall on its<br />

hind legs and weighed about 3,500 pounds.<br />

“It just blew my mind how big it was,”<br />

Schubert says, adding that as meat-eaters<br />

go, “nothing else even comes close.” He<br />

explains that, in comparison, “the largest<br />

record for a living bear is a male polar bear<br />

that weighed about 2,200 pounds.”<br />

The scientists calculated the giant bear’s<br />

size using bone measurements along with<br />

equations for estimating body mass. Most<br />

telling was its elephant-size humerus or<br />

upper arm bone, which had once been<br />

injured and infected. “This would have<br />

been a very large bear that probably had a<br />

bad attitude,” Schubert says.<br />

The researchers aren’t certain what caused<br />

the bear’s physical damage, but speculated<br />

it could have been from male-to-male<br />

fighting, from hunting giant ground sloths<br />

or other megafauna, or from getting into<br />

disputes with other carnivores, such as a<br />

saber-toothed cat, over food.<br />

“We think that these bears were<br />

omnivores, which means that they ate<br />

both plants and animals, but they probably<br />

ate a lot <strong>of</strong> meat,” Schubert says. “Based on<br />

their size, they were probably dominating<br />

carcasses and scaring other animals away<br />

from carcasses, even if they weren’t doing a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> their own hunting.”<br />

He says that scientists don’t really know<br />

why South American bears became so<br />

large, but some attribute it to both a glut in<br />

prey and a lack <strong>of</strong> competition. The bears<br />

prospered after their ancestors traveled<br />

over the land bridge that developed<br />

between North and South America about<br />

2.6 million years ago. Even the sabertoothed<br />

cat was much smaller than the<br />

giant South American short-faced bear.<br />

Over time more carnivores appeared on<br />

the South American landscape, and the<br />

giant bears became extinct. Other related<br />

large bears lived on though; some survived<br />

up until the end <strong>of</strong> the last Ice Age.<br />

The closest living relative <strong>of</strong> the extinct<br />

short-faced bears is the South American<br />

spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), a<br />

relatively small species.<br />

The giant bear isn’t Schubert’s only recent<br />

discovery. He is part <strong>of</strong> an ETSU team<br />

that confirmed a venomous lizard called<br />

Heloderma, today found only in the hot<br />

deserts <strong>of</strong> Arizona and the tropical forests<br />

<strong>of</strong> western Mexico, roamed North America<br />

some five to seven million years ago from<br />

Working as a paleontologist has been all that Blaine Schubert<br />

hoped it would be. His work has taken him around the world,<br />

from his first excavation <strong>of</strong> a buffalo skull in Warrensburg in<br />

1993 to a trip for his Ph.D. dissertation that took him to some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the most important sites <strong>of</strong> human ancestry in Africa.


The bear stood at least 11 feet tall on its hind legs and weighed<br />

about 3,500 pounds. “It just blew my mind how big it was.”<br />

Florida to Tennessee. Their findings are<br />

discussed in Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, a<br />

leading paleontology journal.<br />

Finding the remains <strong>of</strong> such extinct<br />

monster lizards and bears continues to<br />

affirm what Schubert realized almost 20<br />

years ago when he was a student at UCM<br />

— that digging around in the dirt could<br />

become an exciting career.<br />

Schubert and his two brothers grew up<br />

between Lowry City and Osceola, MO,<br />

on a farm owned since the mid-1800s by<br />

his mother’s family. “The country living<br />

provided the perfect environment for my<br />

brothers and me to explore nature,” he<br />

says. Both <strong>of</strong> his brothers became scientists,<br />

and when Schubert came to <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> in 1989, he wanted to do the same.<br />

“At first I was undecided. I originally was<br />

leaning toward biology, but I took Dr.<br />

[John] Sheets’ class, and I became hooked<br />

on the fossil record instead.”<br />

Schubert attributes his career success to<br />

Sheets, pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong> anthropology<br />

and history, and three other faculty<br />

members: John Emerson and John Nold,<br />

both in earth science, and Oz Hawksley, a<br />

retired biology pr<strong>of</strong>essor.<br />

“They all served as my mentors and to this<br />

day, they are the best teachers I had ever<br />

had — and that’s after 11 years <strong>of</strong> college<br />

courses,” he says. “In fact, when I teach, I<br />

emulate their methods.”<br />

He says that Sheets and Emerson helped<br />

him discover his true interests. “They<br />

continually encouraged my research and<br />

helped set me on the path to graduate<br />

school.” Sheets introduced Schubert to<br />

Hawksley, who took him on a dig in an<br />

Ozark cave. “I first realized in Dr. Sheet’s<br />

and Dr. Emerson’s classes that you could<br />

do paleontology as an actual job,” says<br />

Schubert. “Before that, it was just sort <strong>of</strong> a<br />

hobby. Then Dr. Hawksley took me under<br />

his wing, and I developed a passion for<br />

bears and cave paleontology.”<br />

After he graduated from UCM in 1994,<br />

Schubert went to Northern Arizona to<br />

pursue a master’s degree. Next he went to<br />

the Illinois State Museum for three years,<br />

worked on fossil from Ozark caves, and<br />

completed a book titled Ice Age Cave Faunas<br />

in North America. He then pursued a Ph.D at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas on vertebrate<br />

paleoecology. He began working at East<br />

Tennessee State in 2004 and two years later,<br />

joined the faculty.<br />

Working as a paleontologist has been all<br />

that Schubert hoped it would be. “I love<br />

teaching and going on digs,” he says. His<br />

work has taken him around the world,<br />

from his first excavation <strong>of</strong> a buffalo skull<br />

in Warrensburg in 1993 to a trip for his<br />

Ph.D. dissertation that took him to some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the most important sites <strong>of</strong> human<br />

ancestry in Africa.<br />

He’s written articles published in academic<br />

journals such as Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the National<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences and the Journal <strong>of</strong> Zoology.<br />

He’s also appeared on two <strong>of</strong> The History<br />

Channel’s most popular shows, “Monster<br />

Quest” and “Jurassic Fight Club,” because<br />

<strong>of</strong> his expertise.<br />

“I get to travel a lot,” he says. “Last year<br />

I went to England to talk about the bear<br />

specimens that I’ve researched, and before<br />

that, I went to Argentina to investigate a<br />

wide variety <strong>of</strong> fossil bears. The traveling is<br />

definitely one <strong>of</strong> the best parts <strong>of</strong> the job.”<br />

As much as he likes the exploration and<br />

teaching part, he also has responsibility for<br />

getting external funding and supervising<br />

a university department. While Schubert<br />

loves digs and traveling, he also is content<br />

writing articles.<br />

“I really do love what I do,” he says.<br />

“Teaching students is one <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

fulfilling parts.” The challenges <strong>of</strong> being a<br />

paleontologist are balanced by the rewards.<br />

With his colleague Steven Wallace,<br />

Schubert recently received a $320,000<br />

grant to excavate and study fossils at the<br />

Gray Fossil Site, a massive fossil site in the<br />

Appalachians <strong>of</strong> eastern Tennessee.<br />

“This site is one <strong>of</strong> the most remarkable<br />

fossil collections in the world,” he says. “It<br />

represents one <strong>of</strong> the only Miocene and<br />

early Pliocene forested ecosystems in the<br />

Americas and preserves a multitude <strong>of</strong><br />

species and biological communities new to<br />

science. It’s a massive site with less than one<br />

percent sampled.”<br />

Schubert says his job comes close to being<br />

perfect. “I just want to keep doing what I<br />

am doing,” he says. “This is what I love to<br />

do.” He adds that <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> helped<br />

him on his way to his career and passion.<br />

“The university was great, my teachers<br />

were great, and they helped me pick this as<br />

something that I would love to do.”<br />

reaD it.<br />

rate it.<br />

Did you enjoy this story?<br />

Give us your feedback<br />

at ucmo.edu/today<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 19


philanthropy<br />

20 SPRING 2011<br />

a New Clubhouse for Pertle<br />

As <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>’s golf team earned its way to<br />

a second consecutive national NCAA tournament,<br />

the university started construction <strong>of</strong> a new<br />

clubhouse for their home course at Pertle <strong>Spring</strong>s,<br />

thanks to a $1.5 million gift from philanthropist,<br />

Audrey Walton.<br />

“We’re very grateful to Mrs. Walton for making this<br />

new facility possible,” says UCM President Charles<br />

Ambrose during a groundbreaking March 30. “Our<br />

golf course has undergone many renovations<br />

since 2008, and we’re excited about what a new<br />

clubhouse can mean for this outstanding facility.<br />

We expect it to become a focal point for Pertle<br />

<strong>Spring</strong>s and a hub for golfing events and many<br />

other activities not necessarily related to the sport.”<br />

Construction <strong>of</strong> the 5,000-square-foot clubhouse<br />

began in April. It will feature men’s and women’s<br />

locker rooms, a banquet room that can seat up<br />

to 150 people, pr<strong>of</strong>essional kitchen facilities, a pro<br />

shop, staff <strong>of</strong>fices and a patio that overlooks the<br />

18th green and that can seat about 60 people.<br />

“The clubhouse will meet many university needs,<br />

but we also look forward to finding new ways to<br />

share it with the community,” says Athletic Director<br />

Jerry Hughes. He adds that the facility will become<br />

a great venue for such special events as weddings,<br />

family reunions and fundraisers.<br />

PaRtICIPatING IN thE GROuNdbREaKING wERE<br />

PRESIdENt ChaRLES aMbROSE; PhILaNthROPISt audREy<br />

waLtON, hER dauGhtER, aNN KROENKE aNd GRaNdSON,<br />

JOSh KROENKE; aNd athLEtIC dIRECtOR JERRy huGhES.<br />

The UCM golf team attended the ceremony and<br />

helped Walton <strong>of</strong>ficially break the ground where<br />

the facility will stand. Afterward Ambrose and<br />

Hughes presented Walton with a shadow box,<br />

which held a UCM golf ball and artist renderings<br />

<strong>of</strong> the clubhouse, in recognition <strong>of</strong> her generosity.<br />

Walton is one <strong>of</strong> UCM’s largest individual donors.<br />

She contributed funds to help build the football<br />

stadium that bears her name and annually gives<br />

major items, such as her suite at the St. Louis Rams<br />

stadium, to the UCM Athletic Auction.<br />

Keth Memorial Golf Course has held a unique<br />

place in UCM history since it opened in 1964. Earl<br />

Keth, the first UCM basketball player to make All-<br />

American, was its original architect. After serving<br />

as head basketball coach from 1946 through 1961,<br />

he coached the golf team until he died in 1972.<br />

Since its start as a nine-hole sand course, the<br />

facility has been continually improved. It was<br />

expanded to 18 holes and coverted to grass greens<br />

in 1972, the same year that the university also<br />

named the course in honor <strong>of</strong> Keth. Improvements<br />

since then have included cart paths, an automatic<br />

irrigation system and even its designation as an<br />

Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary preserving the<br />

ecology <strong>of</strong> its wildlife setting.<br />

In 2008, the university opened a new 300+ yard<br />

driving range with multiple tees and target greens,<br />

an all-weather turf tee, a four-bay indoor hitting<br />

facility and two short game practice areas.


PRINCIPaL tRuMPEt ChaIR<br />

thaNKS PadGEt<br />

fOR SChOLaRShIP<br />

Alex Caselman loves to play the trumpet.<br />

He’s been interested in music his entire<br />

life but something happened as a high<br />

school junior. He realized music could be<br />

a career.<br />

“I always knew that <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> was<br />

a fantastic educational school, and the<br />

music department was attractive,” he<br />

says. His family also had strong UCM ties.<br />

Both his parents<br />

have music<br />

degrees from<br />

UCM, and his<br />

brother, Adam,<br />

is currently a<br />

photography<br />

major.<br />

For Caselman,<br />

the choice to<br />

attend UCM<br />

happened as<br />

a high school senior when he heard<br />

performances by the Marching Band and<br />

the Wind Ensemble. “I decided then that<br />

I wanted to be part <strong>of</strong> that,” he adds.<br />

He’s now a senior music education major<br />

and for two years, has been principal<br />

trumpet chair for the Wind Ensemble. As<br />

such, he receives the Douglas E. Padget<br />

Principal Trumpet Chair Scholarship.<br />

“This scholarship has made many things<br />

possible for me,” he says. “For starters,<br />

I was able to purchase numerous<br />

recordings <strong>of</strong> famous trumpeters and<br />

buy sheet music to add to my music<br />

library. I was able to get things like<br />

valve oil, mutes and other items that<br />

are essential for trumpet players. The<br />

scholarship has made a tremendous<br />

impact on my education.”<br />

That was the intent <strong>of</strong> Padget when<br />

he established the scholarship in 1993<br />

when he graduated with a bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />

music in education and signed his first<br />

teaching contract. He saw his gift as an<br />

opportunity to give back to help other<br />

deserving students.<br />

As a student, Padget participated in<br />

<strong>University</strong> Concert Band for five years,<br />

and he received scholarships, <strong>of</strong>ten to his<br />

surprise. He since has finished a master<br />

<strong>of</strong> arts in music and is teaching at a<br />

middle school in Blue <strong>Spring</strong>s, married to<br />

another UCM music alum, Robin Rolf.<br />

Caselman is grateful for his UCM<br />

education. “My favorite experience to<br />

date has to be performing with the Wind<br />

Ensemble in New York last year at the<br />

world-famous Carnegie Hall. We were<br />

in New York five days. We had a very<br />

successful performance and received a<br />

standing ovation. It was amazing.”<br />

EStatE GIft ENhaNCES<br />

SChOLaRShIP hONORING SIStER<br />

A gift from the estate <strong>of</strong> Hazel Nance<br />

<strong>of</strong> Lakewood, WA, will increase a<br />

scholarship originally established by<br />

her husband, the late Lt. Col. E. James<br />

Nance, in honor <strong>of</strong> his sister, Corinna.<br />

The Corinna Harte Nance Memorial<br />

AT THE SpRING CAREER ExpO, BLACK AND VEATCH pRESENTED A $2,500 CHECK TO THE UCM SCHOOL OF<br />

TECHNOLOGY TO SUppORT ITS COMpUTER-AIDED DRAFTING AND DESIGN, CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT<br />

AND ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY AREAS. WITH UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS ALICE GREIFE, DEAN; KYLE pALMER,<br />

pROFESSOR, AND JOHN SUTTON, SCHOOL CHAIR, ARE BLACK AND VEATCH EMpLOYEES, FROM RIGHT:<br />

MIKE WAGGONER, STEVE ROBINSON, TERRA GARDEN, TREY BUIST AND MELISSA ALLCORN. ALLCORN,<br />

BUIST AND WAGGONER ARE UCM GRADUATES.<br />

Scholarship helps students who graduate<br />

from Osceola High School or are from<br />

St. Clair County, MO. They must be a<br />

full-time student at UCM pursuing a<br />

degree in teacher education; have a<br />

minimum 3.0 grade point average; and<br />

show good character, leadership and<br />

service.<br />

When he established the scholarship<br />

in 1999, Nance praised his sister’s<br />

intelligence and her penmanship, which<br />

he described as “a thing <strong>of</strong> beauty.”<br />

She was a graduate <strong>of</strong> Osceola and<br />

was Nance’s first-grade teacher. While<br />

attending UCM in 1927, she became ill<br />

and died two years later at age 22.<br />

Nance attended UCM from 1938 through<br />

1940, when he volunteered for flight<br />

training in the Army Air Corps upon the<br />

outbreak <strong>of</strong> World War II. During his<br />

military career, he and Hazel lived in Iran,<br />

Germany and the Canary Islands. They<br />

built La Florida Tennis Club on the island<br />

<strong>of</strong> Tenerife and operated it for 17 years<br />

before returning to Tacoma, WA. They<br />

were married 44 years. He passed away<br />

in 2007; Hazel died in 2010.<br />

NEw SChOLaRShIP fOR OdESSa<br />

hIGh SChOOL GRaduatES<br />

Most people got to know Martha<br />

Johnson as a grade school teacher in the<br />

Odessa R-VII school district in <strong>Missouri</strong>.<br />

She taught for 33 years, primarily in the<br />

second and fourth grades. So respected<br />

were her abilities as a teacher that she<br />

was inducted into the Odessa R-VII<br />

Public Foundation Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame.<br />

Johnson received a bachelor’s degree<br />

in education from UCM in 1957, followed<br />

by a master’s in 1972.<br />

When she died in 2010, her family<br />

wanted to do something special to<br />

remember her so they created a<br />

scholarship they knew Johnson had<br />

talked about doing herself.<br />

The Martha L. Johnson Education<br />

Scholarship will help a graduating senior<br />

from Odessa High School planning to<br />

pursue a degree in teacher education<br />

at UCM. They must rank in the upper<br />

25 percent <strong>of</strong> their high school<br />

graduating class; be actively involved in<br />

school, church or community activities;<br />

and show financial need.<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 21


Future Thinking Now<br />

By Mike Greife ’74<br />

Eugenia Crain established a<br />

scholarship through a charitable<br />

annuity with the UCM Foundation.<br />

Dale Carder, interim executive<br />

director, notes that annuities are<br />

a venue that friends and alumni<br />

should consider. “For people tired<br />

<strong>of</strong> getting a one percent return on<br />

their investments, a charitable gift<br />

annuity pays five percent or better<br />

guaranteed. And you help more<br />

students become UCM graduates,”<br />

he says.<br />

A charitable gift annuity works<br />

simply, starting with a minimum gift<br />

<strong>of</strong> $25,000. “Based on the ages <strong>of</strong><br />

you and your spouse, a return rate is<br />

locked in for the remainder <strong>of</strong> both<br />

<strong>of</strong> your lives. You draw a guaranteed<br />

quarterly payment,” Carder<br />

says. “Upon death, you can have<br />

predetermined what the remainder<br />

<strong>of</strong> your annuity funds, such as an<br />

academic program or scholarship.<br />

Depending on your tax bracket,<br />

about 50% <strong>of</strong> your donation is tax<br />

deductible and in some cases, even<br />

the first two or three years <strong>of</strong> your<br />

quarterly payments are tax free.”<br />

22 SPRING 2011<br />

Eugenia Crain’s career as an educator<br />

provided her with opportunities to meet<br />

interesting people who encouraged her<br />

to explore new challenges. Now retired,<br />

the pr<strong>of</strong>essor emeritus <strong>of</strong> accounting has<br />

made those same opportunities available<br />

to new generations <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> students by establishing a<br />

charitable gift annuity that eventually will<br />

provide a $100,000 gift through the UCM<br />

Foundation for scholarships.<br />

A native <strong>of</strong> Sturgeon, MO, Crain graduated<br />

from Northeast <strong>Missouri</strong> State Teachers<br />

College in 1942. After working for the state<br />

family services agency, she began teaching<br />

high school business classes in 1946 in New<br />

Franklin, MO. She soon moved across the<br />

river to Boonville, where she and her first<br />

husband, the late Aven Roberts, taught<br />

at Kemper Military Academy. While<br />

teaching at Kemper, she obtained her<br />

master’s and specialist’s degrees from the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>.<br />

Following Roberts’ death in 1969, Crain<br />

taught briefly at Northeast <strong>Missouri</strong> State<br />

before accepting an opportunity to come<br />

to UCM as an accountant in the financial<br />

affairs <strong>of</strong>fice working with sponsored<br />

programs. She had remarried, and she<br />

and her husband, Stanley Crain, took<br />

advantage <strong>of</strong> the opportunity to move to<br />

Warrensburg in 1972.<br />

“Dr. Wyss was the vice president for<br />

financial affairs at the time, and I had<br />

known him when he lived Boonville,”<br />

Crain says. “I saw him one day when I<br />

was visiting in Boonville, and he asked me<br />

if I would consider coming to CMSU. It<br />

sounded like a wonderful opportunity.<br />

It seems so many <strong>of</strong> the wonderful<br />

experiences in my life have come from<br />

generous <strong>of</strong>fers from people I know.”<br />

While serving as an accountant in<br />

financial affairs, she also taught a class in<br />

accounting. Wyss encouraged her to begin<br />

teaching accounting courses in the College<br />

<strong>of</strong> Business. That opportunity turned into<br />

a career preparing UCM students for the<br />

business world.<br />

Following Mr. Crain’s death in 2000, she<br />

retired in 2001, but not before making<br />

the decision to establish the Stanley<br />

and Eugenia R. Crain Scholarship for<br />

undergraduate students in accounting<br />

through the UCM Foundation.<br />

Crain is enjoying her retirement, where<br />

she remains active in the Columbia<br />

community. She recalls her years at<br />

UCM and in the Warrensburg community<br />

with fondness.<br />

“My years at UCM were filled with<br />

wonderful friendships on campus and<br />

in Warrensburg,” she says. “I wanted to<br />

enable future students to share the same<br />

benefits I received at UCM. Those benefits<br />

included the counsel <strong>of</strong> fellow teachers<br />

and administrators who worked hard to<br />

provide the leadership and service that<br />

produced the quality education enjoyed by<br />

UCM students.”<br />

She still finds time to interact with young<br />

people, maintaining her season tickets<br />

for the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> women’s<br />

basketball games. She stays in touch with<br />

friends in Warrensburg and still hears from<br />

former students.<br />

“Education is important,” she says. “It’s<br />

important to support the schools that<br />

educate the American public. The<br />

success <strong>of</strong> our democracy depends on<br />

an educated public.”


“Education is important. It’s important to support the<br />

schools that educate the American public. The success <strong>of</strong><br />

our democracy depends on an educated public.”<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 23


class notes<br />

1920-1929<br />

Martha Groner-Fennewald ’33<br />

turned 100 years old Aug. 24, 2010.<br />

She attended UCM from 1929-1933<br />

and received a Regents certificate,<br />

which gave her the required<br />

credentials to teach. Her 30-year<br />

teaching career began in one-room<br />

schoolhouses in Westphalia, Folk<br />

and St. Elizabeth. She remembers<br />

walking four miles one way to<br />

reach the schools, lighting the<br />

stoves and sweeping the floors.<br />

She had five children and when<br />

they were older, she taught at<br />

Immaculate Conception School in<br />

Jefferson City and St. Joseph School<br />

in Westphalia. After she retired<br />

from teaching, she sold insurance<br />

for 25 years, retiring at age 90.<br />

Her daughter, Joyce Fennewald-<br />

<strong>Spring</strong>er, was her student for six<br />

out <strong>of</strong> eight years in grade school.<br />

1960 – 1969<br />

Paul Collier ’61 is retired as a high<br />

school principal in Ohio. He began<br />

teaching and coaching in 1961 at<br />

John Adams High School, then<br />

became head track and field coach,<br />

winning several invitationals and<br />

league championships. In 1973,<br />

he joined Heath High School as<br />

assistant principal and served as<br />

principal from 1961-1992. In 2003-05<br />

he served as interim principal for<br />

Utica High School. He has served<br />

38 years as a registered track and<br />

field <strong>of</strong>ficial, volunteers as a Red<br />

Cross board member, is a lay<br />

delegate to the annual conference<br />

for his church, and is active in the<br />

Licking County Retired Teachers<br />

Organization where he served as<br />

president for two terms. He and his<br />

wife, Nancy, reside in Heath, OH.<br />

Larry Bossaller ’65 is a broker<br />

and sales executive for RE/MAX<br />

Boone Reality in Columbia. He<br />

won Opportunity and Persistence<br />

awards from RE/MAX and has been<br />

involved in more than $163 million<br />

<strong>of</strong> real estate sales. He is on the<br />

board <strong>of</strong> directors <strong>of</strong> the Columbia<br />

Kiwanis Club.<br />

Marilyn (Fajen) Stafford ’65 and<br />

husband, Robert, have sold their<br />

home in Sedona, AZ, and moved to<br />

Nixa, MO.<br />

Chris “Moon Dog” Dautreuil<br />

’69 is an investigator with the<br />

24 SPRING 2011<br />

Louisiana Department <strong>of</strong> Justice<br />

Office <strong>of</strong> the Attorney General. He<br />

has served in military intelligence<br />

in Vietnam and as a special agent<br />

with Southern Pacific Railroad and<br />

Diamond Offshore. He and his wife,<br />

Linda, have one son, Christopher,<br />

who is attending the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Louisiana in Lafayette.<br />

Bill Hays ’69 is raising Black Angus<br />

cattle after he retired from General<br />

Motors. His wife, Karlyn, is raising<br />

registered miniature horses. They<br />

reside in Tipton, MO.<br />

1970-1979<br />

Jerry Hogan ’71 read his story,<br />

“Ozark Beats,” originally published<br />

in the Dead Mule journal for the<br />

Tales from the South NPR radio<br />

program on KUAR-FM in Little<br />

Rock, AR.<br />

Daniel Huggins ’71 is a branch<br />

manager with the Scotts Company.<br />

He and his wife, Mary, have been<br />

Solving eating Disorders<br />

married 30 years and have three<br />

grown children. He has started<br />

flying again after 30 years.<br />

Toni Clark-Moulthrop ’73 and<br />

husband, Mike, have retired to<br />

Treasure Lake in west central<br />

Pennsylvania to golf, fish and boat.<br />

Craig Lowe ’74, ’75 has been<br />

appointed chief appellate review<br />

judge for the Washington<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Social and Health<br />

Services Board <strong>of</strong> Appeals.<br />

John Zey ’75, ’76 completed his<br />

doctorate <strong>of</strong> education from the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> in Columbia<br />

in December. He and his wife, Alice<br />

Greife, who retired from the U.S.<br />

Public Health Service in 1996, have<br />

been with the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> since 1996. They have two<br />

daughters, Sarah and Kat.<br />

Larry Perry ’77 retired as captain<br />

after 30 years with the Shawnee<br />

Kansas Police Department last<br />

June. He served as patrol <strong>of</strong>ficer,<br />

detective, patrol sergeant,<br />

lieutenant, patrol commander<br />

and retired as investigations<br />

commander. He and his wife,<br />

Beverly, reside in Shawnee.<br />

Brig. Gen. Arnold N. Gordon-<br />

Bray ’78 has been named deputy<br />

director <strong>of</strong> operations for U.S.<br />

Africa Command.<br />

Alfred Lomax ’78 has been<br />

nominated by President Barack<br />

Obama as U.S. marshal for the<br />

western district <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>. Lomax<br />

began his law enforcement career<br />

with the Kansas City <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Police Department and after almost<br />

30 years, became chief <strong>of</strong> airport<br />

safety and security at Kansas City<br />

International Airport.<br />

1980-1989<br />

Richard Palmer ’80 is vice<br />

president <strong>of</strong> business development<br />

<strong>of</strong> Integrity Management<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the top national and international researchers in eating disorders traces<br />

her scholarly roots back to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> missouri. dr. denise E.<br />

wilfley has the distinction <strong>of</strong> holding four appointments at the Washington<br />

<strong>University</strong> School <strong>of</strong> medicine in St. Louis – pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> psychiatry, medicine,<br />

pediatrics and psychology. She is also director <strong>of</strong> the university’s Weight<br />

management and eating Disorders Program.<br />

“She really is quite a renaissance woman,” says research assistant Brooke Genkin.<br />

Wilfley frequently speaks about eating disorders and obesity at national and<br />

international scholarly events. She also keeps busy on multiple research studies<br />

and has nailed down about $25 million in funding throughout her career.<br />

Wilfley graduated from UCm with a bachelor’s degree in psychology in 1982.<br />

She and her husband, robinson Welch, live in Clayton, mo, with their children,<br />

10-year-old Wil and four-year-old twins, emma and ella.<br />

not only has Wilfley led groundbreaking research into childhood obesity,<br />

treatments for anorexia nervosa and family therapy, she’s also a strong mentor to<br />

her junior researchers. “She’s an excellent role model, especially as she entered<br />

the field when there weren’t a lot <strong>of</strong> females doing this research,” Genkin says.<br />

“She’s the best mentor i’ve ever had.”<br />

Photo courtesy Robert Boston, Washington <strong>University</strong> in St. Louis


Consulting, a provider <strong>of</strong> full lifecycle<br />

acquisition, contracting and<br />

program management consulting<br />

services for federal sector<br />

customers in McLean, VA.<br />

Christopher Gentile ’81 is<br />

president <strong>of</strong> Honeywell Federal<br />

Manufacturing & Technologies,<br />

which manages and operates the<br />

Kansas City nuclear weapons parts<br />

plant for the federal government.<br />

He was previously vice president<br />

for national security programs<br />

at the Kansas City plant and vice<br />

president for the Honeywell<br />

operation at the Savannah River<br />

Nuclear Solutions facility in<br />

South Carolina.<br />

John Luetkemeyer ’81 was<br />

appointed director <strong>of</strong> state audits<br />

for <strong>Missouri</strong>. He has been with the<br />

state auditor’s <strong>of</strong>fice for 30 years.<br />

Mark Magers ’82 has written a<br />

book, Strategies <strong>of</strong> a Fantasy Baseball<br />

Champ, based on his experience<br />

participating in and winning<br />

fantasy baseball leagues since the<br />

1980s. In the past five years, he<br />

annually has won at least one<br />

fantasy league, and <strong>of</strong>ten he has<br />

won multiple leagues.<br />

John Healy ’83 retired from the<br />

Lenexa Fire Department after 27<br />

years <strong>of</strong> service and 30 years as a<br />

firefighter.<br />

Jerry Harmison, Jr. ’84 was<br />

recently elected chair <strong>of</strong> the<br />

board <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Spring</strong>field <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce. A former<br />

Mules wrestler, he is a lawyer in<br />

<strong>Spring</strong>field.<br />

Steve Gorman ’85, ’96 was<br />

featured in a solo exhibit<br />

at the Nerman Museum <strong>of</strong><br />

Contemporary Art at Johnson<br />

County Community College. He<br />

retired from North Kansas City and<br />

Centerview school districts after<br />

teaching 25 years. He also studied<br />

at the Philadelphia <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

the Arts. His works are included<br />

in the Waterloo Museum <strong>of</strong> Art<br />

in Waterloo, IA, and <strong>University</strong><br />

Art Museum at Southern Illinois<br />

<strong>University</strong> in Carbondale.<br />

Tal Moore ’87 has been named<br />

chief performance improvement<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficer for the Ft. Defiance Indian<br />

Hospital at Navajo Nation and<br />

has been elected president <strong>of</strong> the<br />

National Native American Human<br />

Resources Association. Tal, his<br />

partner, Darin, and their son, Sean,<br />

reside in Placitas, NM and Palm<br />

<strong>Spring</strong>s, CA.<br />

Jennifer (Deardorff) Malcolm ’88<br />

completed a teacher certification<br />

and master <strong>of</strong> education program.<br />

Her specialty is general special<br />

education-learning disabilities.<br />

Timothy Stewart ’88 has been<br />

promoted to warden at the<br />

Federal Correctional Institution<br />

in Morgantown, WV, after 22 years<br />

with the Federal Bureau <strong>of</strong> Prisons.<br />

1990-1999<br />

Joe Harlan ’93 has been appointed<br />

dean <strong>of</strong> physical education and<br />

athletic director at Rio Hondo<br />

College in Whittier, CA. He was<br />

previously athletic director at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin-Stout.<br />

Michael McAfee ’93 has been<br />

named inaugural director <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Promise Neighborhoods Institute<br />

in Oakland, CA. He has spent more<br />

than 20 years in the government,<br />

philanthropic and humanservice<br />

sectors, collaborating<br />

with government, civic, business,<br />

nonpr<strong>of</strong>it and faith leaders to<br />

connect families and children to<br />

economic and social opportunities.<br />

Prior to PNI, McAfee was senior<br />

community planning and<br />

development representative in the<br />

Chicago regional <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> the U.S.<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Housing and Urban<br />

Development.<br />

Justin Page ’94 was promoted to<br />

assistant warden at the Boonville<br />

Correctional Center for the State<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>.<br />

Aaron Barth ’97 has moved to<br />

Ft. Leavenworth, KS, for a yearlong<br />

military school after being<br />

redeployed from Iraq this winter. It<br />

was his third deployment with the<br />

U.S. Army 1st Cavalry Division.<br />

Kelly Melies ’98, ’02 works for<br />

the Department <strong>of</strong> Health at the<br />

Marshall Habilitation Center in<br />

Marshall, MO. She is taking online<br />

classes at Full Sail <strong>University</strong><br />

pursuing a Master <strong>of</strong> Fine Arts in<br />

Creative Writing.<br />

tackling<br />

Solutions<br />

to nuclear<br />

threats<br />

how do you become a respected scientist in the field <strong>of</strong><br />

nuclear threat reduction? You heed your pr<strong>of</strong>essor’s advice to<br />

apply for a summer internship.<br />

that’s what doug berning attributes as the start <strong>of</strong> his career<br />

at Los alamos national Laboratory in new mexico. he credits<br />

John hess, retired pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> biology, for encouraging him<br />

to apply for the internship at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> missouri in<br />

radiopharmaceuticals, which, in turn, led to his pursuit <strong>of</strong> a<br />

graduate degree in chemistry.<br />

“radiopharmaceutical chemistry turned out to be good for me<br />

because it allowed me to use what i had learned from both my<br />

undergraduate degrees in biology and chemistry,” he says.<br />

the 1991 graduate says his experiences had more hands-on<br />

opportunities than most universities <strong>of</strong>fer. “UCm provided a<br />

very solid knowledge basis for my education. Because <strong>of</strong> the<br />

low teacher-to-student ratio, the pr<strong>of</strong>essors can challenge<br />

their students in ways logistically impossible at large<br />

universities.”<br />

Berning explains that he works on a variety <strong>of</strong> threatreduction<br />

and threat-assessment projects, including chemical,<br />

radiological and explosives.<br />

“i am proud to work with people and at an institution that has<br />

such a rich history and impact on national and international<br />

decisions,” he says. “from a personal standpoint, i am proud<br />

and feel privileged to have worked in a wide range <strong>of</strong> fields<br />

including biomedical, renewable energy, environmental<br />

remediation, forensics, emergency response, and global<br />

security. i believe my ability to quickly adapt to each <strong>of</strong> these<br />

areas is a strong testament to the broad education that i<br />

received at both UCm and UmC.”<br />

— By Matt Bird-Meyer ’97<br />

wE waNt yOuR<br />

Have you moved? Been married? Changed jobs? Retired?<br />

Gotten a new email? Received an award? We want your news!<br />

Go online to www.ucmo.edu/alumni<br />

Email us at alumni@ucmo.edu<br />

Write us at UCM Alumni Association,<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>,<br />

Smiser Alumni Center,<br />

Warrensburg, MO 64093<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 25


2000-2010<br />

Andy Ball ’02, ’04 has joined<br />

the athletic staff at Truman State<br />

<strong>University</strong> as defensive line coach<br />

and co-recruiting coordinator. He<br />

spent three seasons at Culver-<br />

Stockton College in Canton, MO.<br />

He also was at <strong>Missouri</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Science and Technology, where<br />

he was in charge <strong>of</strong> the <strong>of</strong>fensive<br />

line, strength and conditioning,<br />

special teams and recruiting.<br />

Stephanie (Benedict) Coulter<br />

’03 received a master <strong>of</strong> art from<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>-Kansas<br />

City. She is working as a freelance<br />

photographer and as an adjunct<br />

You Probably Wear their Stuff<br />

26 SPRING 2011<br />

instructor for the Art Institutes<br />

International Kansas City.<br />

Erin vanVoorst ’04 married Nick<br />

Purifoy in June 2010. They reside in<br />

Lawrence, KS.<br />

Laura Faust ’05 is assisting with<br />

sales and marketing for Pyro<br />

Novelties, Inc. in Lenexa, KS. She<br />

will be attending trade shows,<br />

developing product and editing<br />

artwork. Pyro Novelties is a<br />

family-owned business that creates<br />

customized products.<br />

David Cook ’06 is releasing a<br />

second album this year with some<br />

songs available March 3. The 2008<br />

American Idol winner recorded<br />

Simple Minds’ 1985 hit, Don’t You<br />

Forget About Me, which aired this<br />

season during the elimination<br />

segments.<br />

Sam Flower fs ’06 graduated from<br />

Moberly Area Community College<br />

with an associate <strong>of</strong> arts degree<br />

and is now a history major at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>-Columbia.<br />

Kelly Hemmingsen ’06 is<br />

marketing manager for the<br />

National World War I Museum<br />

at Liberty Memorial in Kansas<br />

City. Kelly will help the museum<br />

create and implement a strategic<br />

Check the label on apparel at college bookstores throughout the country, and<br />

more than likely, you will see the name, Gear. in addition to universities, their<br />

clients include major sports leagues, military bases, golf courses and resorts.<br />

Behind that label, and the apparel designs, are several <strong>Central</strong> missouri alumni.<br />

three UCm graduates are managers in the art production and support<br />

departments at this custom-decorated sportswear company based in Lenexa,<br />

KS. Stu Lantz ’91 is the screen print art support manager. he was recruited to the<br />

company by his co-worker <strong>of</strong> 19 years, Pete Leodler, a 1986 art graduate, who<br />

manages the screen print graphic artists in Gear’s art production department.<br />

John foulke graduated in 1992 from UCm with a degree in graphic arts<br />

technology management. he is a manager in the embroidery design department.<br />

the company prints and embroiders its designs on Gear for Sports apparel<br />

as well as garments with the Champion and Under armour labels. Leodler says<br />

the company ships 60,000 to 100,000 garments each day. their design teams<br />

produce a raft <strong>of</strong> custom art designs, churning out 88,000 designs last year.<br />

“our biggest thing here is the culture and the environment,” Leodler says. “the<br />

people are the best. We hire the most qualified.”<br />

the Gear design studio has 65 artists, and 12 claim UCm as their alma mater.<br />

Lantz credits the university’s art faculty for preparing students for a pr<strong>of</strong>ession<br />

in commercial art. “one <strong>of</strong> the things they continually emphasize today is to<br />

ensure the student’s portfolio is ready and just to make sure you’re ready for that<br />

interview when it comes,” Lantz says.<br />

he adds, “artists are perfectionists, and we want to make sure that portfolio is<br />

perfect front to back, not just the stuff inside but the presentation as well.”<br />

— By Matt Bird-Meyer ‘97<br />

marketing and communications<br />

plan, including public relations,<br />

advertising, promotions<br />

publications, digital media,<br />

photography and outreach.<br />

Patrick Nurse ’06 received his<br />

master <strong>of</strong> business administration<br />

degree from Mississippi State<br />

<strong>University</strong> and works as a project<br />

manager for the Nucor Corp. He<br />

resides in Starkville, MS.<br />

Bryson LeBlanc ’06, ’09 has been<br />

named an assistant coach with<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oregon Ducks<br />

baseball program. He coaches<br />

first base and works with the<br />

outfielders. He has been with the<br />

Ducks for three years and was<br />

previously camp coordinator.<br />

Luke Oyster ’06, ’08 is a tax<br />

associate for the firm <strong>of</strong> Eide Bailly<br />

LLP, one <strong>of</strong> the top 25 certified<br />

public accounting firms in the<br />

nation. He is working from its<br />

<strong>of</strong>fices in Norman, OK.<br />

Alicia Givens ’08, ’10 is a staff<br />

probation <strong>of</strong>ficer for the city and<br />

county <strong>of</strong> Denver.<br />

Brett Cavanah ’09 is playing<br />

arena league football with the<br />

Nebraska Danger. The four-year<br />

letterman for the Mules will play<br />

<strong>of</strong>fensive guard. The Danger, based<br />

in Grand Island, NE, is one <strong>of</strong> 22<br />

teams in the IFL, created in 2009<br />

through a merger <strong>of</strong> the Intense<br />

Football League and United Indoor<br />

Football League. The team began<br />

its schedule in March and will play<br />

throughout the U.S.<br />

April Hayes ’09 is working for<br />

The Steritech Group, the largest<br />

hospitality brand protection service<br />

provider in the U.S. She received<br />

her certified pr<strong>of</strong>essional in food<br />

safety credential in November.<br />

Laylan Hecker ’09 is volunteer<br />

and outreach events coordinator at<br />

West <strong>Central</strong> Independent Living<br />

Solutions in Warrensburg.<br />

2010 – 2019<br />

Scott Roddy ’10 is in his 30th year<br />

in education, teaching in Ohio. He<br />

is a certified firefighter, nationally<br />

certified in para-medicine and<br />

tactical medic, and a certified<br />

medical death investigator with the<br />

coroner’s <strong>of</strong>fice.


Kathy humphrey believes<br />

she can improve the world<br />

— one student at a time. as the vice provost and dean<br />

<strong>of</strong> students for one <strong>of</strong> the nation’s largest universities,<br />

she acts on that philosophy every day.<br />

“i am a leader who believes that everything can be<br />

made better,” she says. “making the world better by<br />

positively impacting the lives <strong>of</strong> students is my life’s<br />

mission.” She does that at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Pittsburgh,<br />

more commonly known as Pitt, with 27,000 students at<br />

its main campus and another 32,000 at four regional<br />

locations.<br />

the 1984 <strong>Central</strong> missouri graduate got her career start<br />

as a resident assistant in houts-hosey hall. “i always<br />

loved working with young people,” she says. “i feel like<br />

my life’s mission is to make a difference in their lives.<br />

higher education is a launch pad for young people to<br />

be what they want to become.”<br />

humphrey returned to UCm to become associate<br />

director <strong>of</strong> university housing from 1991 to 1994. She<br />

continued to advance her career at St. Louis <strong>University</strong><br />

as director <strong>of</strong> residence life, associate vice provost<br />

for student development and then vice president for<br />

student development before arriving at the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Pittsburgh in 2005.<br />

there, she developed outside classroom curriculum<br />

to provide a well-rounded education for students. the<br />

curriculum has students preparing for their careers<br />

early through building resumes, visiting job fairs,<br />

earning credit for leadership positions and public<br />

speaking experiences.<br />

— By Matt Bird-Meyer ‘97<br />

Dick Schromm ’57 received<br />

Sacramento’s Lasalle Club Coaches<br />

Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame award. He was<br />

honored for his 20+ years <strong>of</strong> major<br />

college basketball <strong>of</strong>ficiating and<br />

for serving 12 years as Northern<br />

California Commissioner <strong>of</strong><br />

Officials, assigning <strong>of</strong>ficials for<br />

all sports for more than 100 high<br />

schools. He is president <strong>of</strong> the<br />

59,000<br />

Students,<br />

her Daily<br />

mission<br />

Sacramento Valley Chapter <strong>of</strong> the<br />

National Football Foundation and<br />

Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame.<br />

Morris Collins ’69 has been<br />

named a 2011 Icon <strong>of</strong> Education<br />

by Ingram’s magazine. The Kansas<br />

City business publication chose<br />

nine people for the annual award<br />

based on their contributions to<br />

the success <strong>of</strong> their grade schools<br />

or universities. Collins, a retired<br />

K-12 educator, was the first black<br />

teacher in the Warrensburg school<br />

district as well as the district’s first<br />

black school board president. He<br />

currently is an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

for the UCM Department <strong>of</strong> Art,<br />

which is chaired by one <strong>of</strong> his<br />

former students, Mick Luehrman.<br />

He notes that five <strong>of</strong> the eight art<br />

instructors in the Warrensburg<br />

district were his student teachers or<br />

he was their university supervisor.<br />

Jane (Luehrman) Hillhouse<br />

’77 is owner and president <strong>of</strong><br />

Hillhouse Graphic Design in<br />

Kingsport, TN. The firm won five<br />

local Addy Awards at the 2011<br />

annual celebration <strong>of</strong> the Northeast<br />

Tennessee Chapter <strong>of</strong> the America<br />

Advertising Federation. They<br />

received best <strong>of</strong> show overall for<br />

a campaign produced for the<br />

Silent Heroes Foundation, which<br />

raises funds to help veterinarians,<br />

rangers and conservationists to<br />

protect animals in Africa as well<br />

as a gold for the campaign and<br />

a silver for its stationery. They<br />

also won silver awards for author<br />

Barbara Kingsolver’s web site and<br />

for Eastman Corporation’s history<br />

and vision wall mural. Hill, a<br />

1973 graduate <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong> High,<br />

started Hillhouse Graphic Design<br />

in 1984.<br />

Steven Larson ’80, ’02 is teaching<br />

and coaching at Warsaw High<br />

School. His Warsaw Lady Wildcats<br />

won the 2010-2011 Class 2 State<br />

Championship in s<strong>of</strong>tball, finishing<br />

the season 25-4 with a 4-0 win<br />

over Palmyra in the championship<br />

game.<br />

Meryl Lin McKean ’80 received<br />

the Achoth Award at the 2010<br />

National Delta Zeta Convention<br />

in recognition <strong>of</strong> service to the<br />

Epsilon Gamma chapter. She<br />

also won a Mid-America Emmy<br />

for health science news. She is<br />

the health and medical reporter<br />

for Kansas City’s Fox 4 News and<br />

produces the nightly segment,<br />

“Fox 4 Health.”<br />

Kenneth Ervin ’88 received<br />

second and third places in the Iowa<br />

Newspaper Association Better<br />

Newspaper contest in the Breaking<br />

News Photo category for weeklies<br />

under 1,399. His winning entries<br />

were for his coverage <strong>of</strong> the floods<br />

in 2010 and a picture <strong>of</strong> a fivevehicle<br />

accident that closed I-35.<br />

He also received second place in<br />

the best agricultural advertisement<br />

for an ad thanking Ag Partners for<br />

helping DFS after a fire at its feed<br />

mill. Ervin is editor <strong>of</strong> the South<br />

Hamilton Record-News in Jewell, IA.<br />

Thomas Turner ’90 has been<br />

promoted to executive director<br />

for American Bonanza Society Air<br />

Safety Foundation, which publishes<br />

Flying Lessons Weekly, a free aviation<br />

safety eNewsletter. He was honored<br />

in 2010 as National FAA Safety<br />

Representative <strong>of</strong> the Year. In 2008,<br />

he was named FAA <strong>Central</strong> Region<br />

Flight Instructor <strong>of</strong> the Year.<br />

Amanda Duffy ’99 was awarded<br />

the UCM theatre department’s Ed<br />

See Outstanding Alumnus Award.<br />

She completed the pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

internship program in the wig<br />

program at The Julliard School<br />

and a master <strong>of</strong> fine arts degree<br />

from Case Western Reserve<br />

<strong>University</strong>’s Cleveland Play House<br />

after completing her degree in<br />

design technology from UCM. She<br />

has done pr<strong>of</strong>essional wig work<br />

on Broadway and has worked<br />

regionally and in New York as an<br />

actress in pr<strong>of</strong>essional productions.<br />

Jesse Zeugin ’06 won his first<br />

headlining mixed martial arts<br />

event. He defeated Chris McDaniel<br />

for the 155-pound pro title belt<br />

Feb. 5 at the XCF 14 Super Brawl<br />

in <strong>Spring</strong>field, MO. This was<br />

McDaniel’s 28th career fight and<br />

Zeugin’s sixth. Zeugin teaches<br />

and coaches at Logan-Rogersville<br />

Middle School in Rogersville, MO.<br />

Eric Czerniewski ’10, former<br />

Mules quarterback from<br />

Montgomery City, MO, was<br />

honored at the state capitol in<br />

Jefferson City by the <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

House <strong>of</strong> Representatives and<br />

Senate with a proclamation,<br />

recognizing his achievement<br />

as the 2010 Harlon Hill winner.<br />

Czerniewski was the first <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

native to win this award.<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> | today 27<br />

awards & honors


in memoriam<br />

1910-1919<br />

Mary E. Letz ’12<br />

1930-1939<br />

Edith B. Lehman ’37<br />

1940-1949<br />

Walter A. LePage ’40<br />

Grace Ferrier ’43<br />

1950-1959<br />

Mozelle M. Booth ’50<br />

Patricia R. Briggs ’51<br />

Ralph C. Theiss ’52<br />

Virginia Atwell ’54, ’63<br />

Elizabeth Mae Irle ’54,<br />

College High ’57<br />

1960-1969<br />

Calvin D. Delozier ’60<br />

Juanita M. Wood ’60<br />

Raymond Grossmann<br />

Raymond Grossmann, 80, a 1952<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> alumnus who<br />

organized a construction labormanagement<br />

group that became a<br />

national model, died Jan. 9, 2011.<br />

For nearly four decades, he headed<br />

his family-owned Grossmann<br />

Contracting. It was one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

first sheet metal companies in<br />

St. Louis to automate, and the<br />

business grew. Customers included<br />

Famous-Barr, Dillard’s, General<br />

Motors, Chrysler and the St. Louis<br />

Post-Dispatch.<br />

In 1986, a larger contractor,<br />

Murphy Company bought out<br />

the firm. Grossmann worked for<br />

Murphy until he retired in the<br />

mid-1990s. After retiring, he was<br />

active in the Lake St. Louis Sailing<br />

Club, where he twice served as<br />

commodore. He was co-chair <strong>of</strong><br />

the Peruque Creek Watershed<br />

Alliance.<br />

He is most known for starting<br />

Pride <strong>of</strong> St. Louis Inc., the<br />

nation’s first and oldest voluntary<br />

construction labor-management<br />

organization. In 1972, he also<br />

was chair <strong>of</strong> the local Council <strong>of</strong><br />

Construction Employers.<br />

thomas hollyman<br />

Thomas Benton Hollyman,<br />

89, a nationally published<br />

photojournalist who was honored<br />

in 1988 as UCM Distinguished<br />

Alumnus, died Nov. 14, 2009.<br />

28 SPRING 2011<br />

Marshall E. Smithpeters ’61<br />

Dora May Craven ’63<br />

Lois R. Spurgun ’63, ’88<br />

Verle E. Cornish ’64<br />

Eugene W. Pike ’65<br />

Jack A. Roberts ’65<br />

Rodney P. Dierking ’66<br />

Linda A. Lewis ’66, ’77<br />

Christina M. Porter ’66<br />

Hazel V. Tickemyer ’68<br />

Leon E. Eppright ’69<br />

Lanny K. Grosland ’69<br />

Leon Morris ’69<br />

1970-1979<br />

Paul L. Erickson Jr. ’70<br />

James A. Hardinger ’70<br />

William C. Hunt ’70<br />

Christine E. Keefer ’71<br />

Jack Milton Moore ’71<br />

John M. Sandy ’72<br />

He was a 1940 <strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

graduate who got his start as a<br />

photojournalist at the The Daily-Star<br />

Journal in Warrensburg.<br />

Serving in the Air Force during<br />

World War II, he helped to establish<br />

a photography intelligence<br />

program. He was the <strong>of</strong>ficial<br />

photographer at the funeral<br />

service <strong>of</strong> President Franklin<br />

Roosevelt. While a student, one <strong>of</strong><br />

his pictures was published by Life<br />

magazine. Hollyman later worked<br />

for The Kansas City Star, St. Louis<br />

Post-Dispatch and Acme Newspapers,<br />

the forerunner <strong>of</strong> the wire service<br />

photography division <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Associated Press, in Chicago.<br />

For many years, he specialized<br />

in travel photography, shooting<br />

for Holiday and Town and Country<br />

magazines. In the 1960s, he<br />

moved into television, producing<br />

educational films, a travel<br />

documentary and commercials.<br />

In 1963, British director Peter<br />

Brook tapped him as director<br />

<strong>of</strong> photography for the movie<br />

adaptation <strong>of</strong> Lord <strong>of</strong> the Flies.<br />

Before retiring, he had produced<br />

documentaries, short films, photo<br />

essays, educational television<br />

series, and a commemorative<br />

book. He served as president <strong>of</strong><br />

the American Society <strong>of</strong> Magazine<br />

Photographers (now the American<br />

Society <strong>of</strong> Media Photographers)<br />

from 1969 to 1971. He was a favorite<br />

visitor to campus, especially with<br />

Deborah E. Brewer ’73<br />

Judith A. Collins ’73<br />

Linda A. Good ’74<br />

Stuart E. Gressley ’74<br />

Joe K. McNay Jr. ’74<br />

Gary L. Paul ’74<br />

Gary L. Havrum ’78<br />

Virgil V. Underwood ’78<br />

1980-1989<br />

Robert K. Dempski ’81<br />

Peggy A. Leibrand ’81<br />

Marilyn S. Skipper ’83<br />

Matthew P. Wilson ’83<br />

William L. Chambers ’84<br />

1990-1999<br />

Nyong George Ibok ’90, ’92<br />

Rose A. Crawford ’91, ’98<br />

Steven R. Wallen ’92<br />

2000-2009<br />

Rosina L. Hicks ’04<br />

2010-2019<br />

Lindsey Marie Morris ’10<br />

College high<br />

Ethel Hile ’30<br />

former Students<br />

Maxine W. Henty<br />

Samuel B. Merryman Jr.<br />

friends<br />

Marvin L. Case<br />

Bob C<strong>of</strong>fman<br />

Vernon D. Croy<br />

Dale Emery Ek<br />

Carl E. Elliott<br />

Jim Foster<br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> photography<br />

students. A frequent lecturer, he<br />

inspired students to see beyond the<br />

fundamentals.<br />

With gifts to the UCM Foundation,<br />

he also maintained a fund, named<br />

for his favorite food <strong>of</strong> popcorn,<br />

to help students pay for photo<br />

supplies. He was an emeriti<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the UCM Foundation<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Directors. In 2001, he<br />

received an honorary degree from<br />

the Board <strong>of</strong> Governors.<br />

avis tucker<br />

Avis Green Tucker, 95, former<br />

owner and publisher <strong>of</strong><br />

The Daily-Star Journal in Warrensburg,<br />

a philanthropist and pioneer for<br />

women in the newspaper business,<br />

died Dec. 17, 2010.<br />

She was a <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

graduate but a tremendous<br />

friend also to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Central</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>. She and her<br />

late husband, William, both<br />

loved the newspaper business and<br />

enjoyed life on their farm near<br />

Centerview, MO. She succeeded<br />

her husband in 1966 as publisher<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Warrensburg newspaper and<br />

became involved with the <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Press Association, <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Associated Dailies and the National<br />

Press Association.<br />

She served not only as one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

state’s rare female publishers but in<br />

other leadership roles.<br />

Frank F. Haston<br />

Josephine Henry<br />

Albert Kreisel<br />

Merrill Leutung<br />

John C. Lippincott<br />

Billie McReynolds<br />

Donald L. Quibell<br />

Floyd E. Smith<br />

Donald R. Stewart<br />

Herbert R. Stockton<br />

Julian F. Upton<br />

James M. Weyer<br />

Leroy H. Woerner<br />

Gervase A. Wolf<br />

She became the first female<br />

president <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong> Associated<br />

Dailies in 1973 and received the<br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> School <strong>of</strong> Journalism’s<br />

Honor Medal in 1976.<br />

In 1982, she served as the <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Press Association’s first female<br />

president and received the National<br />

Newspaper Association’s McKinney<br />

Award, given to a woman who<br />

“exhibited distinguished service to<br />

the community press.”<br />

She became the first woman<br />

inducted into the <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Newspaper Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame in 1992.<br />

She also was the first woman<br />

president <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Missouri</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Curators. She<br />

was chair emerita <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Missouri</strong><br />

Press Association’s Foundation<br />

Board, which she helped to<br />

establish and fund.<br />

She served as chair <strong>of</strong> UtiliCorp<br />

United and was a member <strong>of</strong> the<br />

board <strong>of</strong> United Telecom, as well as<br />

the nonpr<strong>of</strong>it board <strong>of</strong> Children’s<br />

Mercy Hospital and a trustee <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Missouri</strong>-Kansas City.<br />

She was appointed to serve<br />

on the first <strong>Missouri</strong> Gaming<br />

Commission and was active in the<br />

State Historical Society. In her<br />

selection to be honored among<br />

Show Me <strong>Missouri</strong> Women, it was<br />

noted that she enriched people and<br />

community with her character,<br />

scholarship and presence.


our serve<br />

“Shuttlecocks have become an iconic representation <strong>of</strong> our community.<br />

That connection inspires us. We seek to create a similar bond with you<br />

by serving as an important cultural resource.” –The KTBG Staff<br />

your match<br />

Support our mission at the $100 level and you’ll receive 90.9 the Bridge<br />

Live Volume 4, a compact disc featuring 18 tracks <strong>of</strong> exclusive performances<br />

from exceptional artists. it’s a unique opportunity to be rewarded with<br />

music donated by artists and songwriters who share your values. Become a<br />

member with your pledge at www.ktbg.fm


100 W. South St.<br />

Warrensburg, MO 64093-2324<br />

Find out about upcoming alumni and other university events at www.ucmo.edu/calendar.<br />

pitch into a<br />

project, the<br />

quicker and<br />

better<br />

the results.<br />

Periodicals<br />

Postage PAID<br />

at Warrensburg, MO<br />

and Additional<br />

Mailing Offices<br />

when more<br />

hands<br />

By volunteering, you<br />

make your UCm degree<br />

even stronger.<br />

after all, education<br />

for Service has been<br />

our motto for more<br />

than 130 years.<br />

Your involvement<br />

can change lives in<br />

communities throughout<br />

the world.<br />

Join us. When we work<br />

together, we accomplish<br />

so much more!<br />

Learn more at:<br />

ucmo.edu/alumni/volunteer

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!