University of Richmond Magazine Fall 2000

Page 1

SCHOLARSHIPSTUDENTS

FACULTYSCHOLARS

ATLANTIC10 CONFERENCE



1coNTENTS I FALL2000

FEATURES K F.Y TO AHHH EYIATIONS

EDIT O RI A L DIR ECTO R

U SE D IN TH E lfN I VIJ.HSl1'Y

Brian Eckert

OF ll JCl/ ill OND iH AG A ZINIJ.

E DITOR

School of Arts and Sciences

Dorothy Wagener E D ITOR IAL A SSISTANT

The E. Claiborne Robins School of Business School of Continuing S(udies (forn,cdy

Uni,·c,si1yColle~c)

Laura S.Jeffrey Cm,'TR IBUTING W RITER C

10 EXPANDING Oun

Graduate School of Arts The Richards. Reynolds Graduate School of The E. Claiborne Robins School of Bllsincss Honorary degree

Rand y Fitzgerald , R'63 and G'64

REACH

Enriched student experienc e is the focus of Richmond's new strategic plan BJ' Edu•in StipekJr.

The Jepson School of Leadership Studies Univcn;ityofRkhmond School of Law Richmond College Westhampton College

Lisa Cumbey and Cathy

Vaughn, Design Manifesto EO ITO RIAL OFF ICES

Un/1,;,riily of Richmond .\laryland Hall University of Richmond, VA 23173 E-mail : dwagener@richmond.edu Magazine,

16 SEEKING THE STELi.AR SnJDE:\T

Merit scholarships make 1he difference for the best and brightest students

M AGAZINE TEL EPH ONE

By laura S.Jejfrey

(804)289-8059 FAX(804) 287-6491

20

C LASS C ONNECTIONS

CULTIVATING THE l!\QUIRlNG

MIND

New faculty members join a cadre of teacher-scholars O NT IIE CO \' ERS

By laum S. Jeffrey

Student photos bJ1 ScottK. Brmm, Billy Holl'11rd,jack Mellottmu/ Dm'id Stol'er Photoopposite by ChuckS11mge

AR T D IRECTION AND D ESIGN

23173 E-mail: alumni@richmond.edu ALUMN I O FF ICE TELEP H ONE

25 COMPETl;'l;G IN A

Alumni Affairs Office Jepson Alumni Center University of Richmond, VA

NE\\-REAL\1

How Richmond benefits from the move to the Atlantic 10 Conference /11/ervieu• by Brian Eckert

DEPARTMENTS 2

AROUND lllE LAKE

30

B OOKMARKS

32

CLASS CONNECTIONS

48

VANTAGE P olNT

Class Connections deadlines , p. 36 Speculative stock markets in economic theory By Dr.]. Patrick Raines

(804)289-8026 FAX (804) 287-6003 ALUMNI OF FICE WEB SITE

wwv.·.richmond .edu/ alumni.html The Un/1:erstty of Richmond .lfagazine , of which this is Volurn,:, 63, No. l , is published quarterly for the alumni and friends o f the University of Richmond , Virginia 23173. Opinions expressed in this magazine are those of the authors anddonotncressarily represen1 opiniom of ihe editors nor policies of the Univ,:,rsitv of Richmond . © 2000 University of llichmond


IUKE I University hosts congressional hearings The Commission on Child Online Protection , a congressionally appointed panel authorized by the Child Online Protection Act of 1998, held public hearings July 20-21 on the Richmond campus. The commission heard testimony from the executives of numerous Internet companies about technologies available to protect children from harmful sites on the World Wide Web. The CEOs of client-side filtering pro-

grams Net Nanny, BrowseSafe and Cyber Patrol joined representatives of server-side filtering (AOL, FamilyClick and others) and content providers (PlanetOut , Flying Crocodile, CrossWalk.com). Other sessions deall with consumer and legal issues of Internet content and fi1tering. On the second day, the 16 commissioners heard from four children ages 9 to 15 from Richmond and Virginia Beach , who answered questions about their usage of the World Wide Web and their receipt of unwanted pornographic e-mai l. Attending as observers were 34 students in th e summer Governor's School for the Humanities held on campus during July. The students, who were taking a class called ''On the Stump: Politics and Persuasion ," attended the Friday hearings and offered their views afterward to news media . National and local media covered the hearings exte nsively, including the Associated Press , Internet trade publications, newspapers , and television and radio stations. The COPA hearings came to the Univer sity as a result of a suggestion by James E. Derderian , R'85, chief of staff for the Committee on Commerce of the U.S. House

P;1ge 2 FA LL 2000

Donna HiceHughes,abore, and other members of the Commissionon OnlineChildProtecti011. t1l/he hearingsi11theJepsonAlumni Cmter

COPAis preparinga reportfor Congresson !11temet filtering methods.

of Representative s, which is chaired by Congressman Tom Bliley of Virginia's 7th district. "We thought it would be a good location for the hearingt says Dr. Daniel J. Palazzo lo, specia l assistant to Presiden t William E. Cooper. "It's close to Washington, a beauti ful campus and in Rep. Bliley's congressional district . ''The commission considered our request and then sent Kristin Litterst of Dittus Communications, which handle s advance work for the commission, to visit. She was struck by the cam pus and the facilities. That was a big plus." The commission is preparing a report for Congress on effective Intern et filtering methods and will make recommendations for future legislation in that area.


Alumnus leads Quest at Berlin high school

Richmond again named to 100 Most Wired list

Chad Felt, R'85, an English

The University of Richmond is one of America 's most wired campuses. That 's the verdict of the annual Yahoo! Internet Life survey of all 3,63 1 two- and fouryear colleges and universities. 111eeditors of Yahoo! Internet Life noted that Richmond's students can register and get course

teacher at the John F. Kennedy School in Berlin, immediately thought of "my inquisiti\'e JFK srudents ~ when he read about the Richmond Quest in the Summer 1999 Unimrsity of Richmond Magazine. His 10th-grade class took on the job of mnning a

Quest competition, forming conuninees to handle publicity , fund raising and an awards ceremony.

"The contest ran much like the one at Hichmond , just on a smaller scale ," he says. By the Jan. 29, 2000,

deadline, there were /49 questions submitted and a total of about S 1,500 in prize money, induding a Quest grant awarded the

school by Presidem William E. Cooper. Fdt's team narrowed the entries to the top IO questions, then sent them to Richmond's Quest 2000 director,

Dr.James 1-lall, forhis steering commine e to choose a winner. "All of the 10 questions that wer e sent to us were good, " says Hall. 'The best combined real theoretical interest with prac tical applications. ~ At the 1\fay 15 awards ceremony in Berlin, Dr. Cooper was on hand to winning question and present the prize check Fletcher , a 10th-grader from the United States. Fletcher's question

was, "Does knowledge result in progress, and conversely , docs progress result in knowledge? ~ "Despite the hottest day of the year in Berlin , Dr. Cooper drew a standing-room -only crowd ," Felt says. ''His presence helped our JFKS community to more fully understand the Quesl concept and appreciate its farreaching applications to our school. " The winning question is being studied in JFKS classrooms this fall. A sociology and speech communications major at nichmond, Felt taught English as a secoml language in Tokyo for two years. Then he taught five years at the High School for Environmental Studies in New York City, where he was named the school 's first 'Teacher of the Year." He joined the faculty at JFKS in Berlin in 1998. He and his wife , Nobuko , a native of Japan , have two sons.

Dorothy u:agener ij

~

~-Ql¡ll!!"llm• 8 ~;:ie~1'.:~ :,::\ked

fRl"@ "ii"\7i1 '-!::!}

schedules and

1 fiil(@fiiJ~ L!:!Jl.!:!]l.E:J~l.EJ~ D RtChmond's high-

speed Ethernet connection and the net\vorking of all residence halls and classrooms. Web registration is new, says Ellen WaiteThis Franzen, vice president for information Week services, and helped account for Richmond 's @ Richmond jump from No. 152 last year in the survey to No. 67 this year. A weekly audio But a wired campus is not just a convecalenda r of nience. The University is committed to inteevents on grating technology into the classroom, Waitecampus is availablethrough Franzen says , and a new expert on campus the University of will help faculty and students do just that. Dr. Patricia A. Schoknecht will create and Richmond home direct a Center for Teaching, Learning and page on the \X'orld Wide Web Technology. Schoknecht most recently was associate www.richmond . professor of animal science at Rutgers and edu/ winner of multiple federal grants to fund teaching technology projects. She is nationally known for innovative use of multimedia , including an "electric cow," a module showing bovine nutrient metabolism. She is co-pr incipa l investigator of a $2.6 million grant from the Kellogg Foundation to enhance the quality and accessibility of education in animal sciences. Schoknecht came to Richmond because she was impressed with the University's "vision for the future." "We have a unique opportunity here to expand technology, " she says.

Fromleft, Fellmid wim1er Fletcher11'it/JDr.Cooper U N IVERSI TY OF R IC H MONO

MAGAZINE

Paf-14:'3


New cellist joins Shanghai Nicholas Tzavaras arrived at the Uni\'ersity of Richmond in m id-August to fill a big empty seat: the one vacated by James Wilson in the Shanghai Quartet.

The Shanghai has been the University's resident chamber ensemble since 1989. Wilson had been

i :~:c~r~~~ ~~~:~~ out ~

of a suitcase during a

~ decade of inrerna~

tional concert touring finally got to Wilson, leading him to resign

from the quartet and the faculty position that goes with it. One of four cellists who auditioned with the remaining Shanghai members, violinis t5 W'eigang Li and Yiwen Jiang and violist Honggang Li, Tzavaras demon~trated "the perfect sound that we were look-

ing for,"Weigang Li says. After two weeks of intensive rehearsals , Tzavaras played his first Shanghai concert over Labor Day

weekend at a Connecticut festival. He made his Richmond debut Sept. 20 in quarte ts by Haydn, Beethoven and Schubert at the George M. Modlin Center for the Arts. The Shanghai is Tzavaras' first permanent affiliation with a chamber ensem ble, but the 25-year-old cellist has made music in small groups since early childhood. He is the eldest son of Roberta Guaspari, the music teacher whose violin classes for children in East Harlem, one of New York"s most blighted neighborhoods, inspired Music of the Heart, the film starring Meryl Streep. Guaspari's story is also told on film-more factually, her son suggests-in the documentary Small Wonders. Tzavaras began violin lessons with his mother at the age of 2 and took up the cello at 7. He drifted away from music in high school and initially planned to major in mathematics at Tufts University. After his freshman year, however , he turned back to music study at New England Conservatory. L1st year he doub led as a doctoral candidate at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and teacher at a New York City public schoo l as part of the Opus 118 Music Center, which grew out of his mother's pioneering work with innercity children. ~Bringing music to kids who may not othe rwise get the chance to be exposed to it," the young cellist says, •'is something I'm deeply committed to." He hopes to pursue that commitment in Richmond once he settles into working with the Shanghai and his new students at the University. Clarke Bustard R71 •

Page 4 FALL 2000

Robins sculpture honored The National Sculpture Blcifcld, perhaps best Society has awarded its known for the U.S. pres tigious Henry Navy Memorial in Hering Medal to the Washington, D.C., made University for the sculp - the original model in ture of E. Claiborne his studio in Connecti cut and then sculpted the final statue in Italy. The University's first life-sized figurative sculpture, it was unveiled on April 16, 1999, during the Investiture of President \'Vill iam E. Cooper. architecThe Stern Quadture of rangle , dedicated when the quad- the Je pson Schoo l of rangle. Leadership Studies was The inaugurated in 1992, was the realization of a ward is plan first set forth by renow ned architect Ralph Adams Cram in 1912. Cram's plan for the University campus env isioned an academic quadrangle, but only Ryland Hall was origi nally built there. Now the quadrangle has been completed with Jepson Hall opposite als to the Ryland, and the open University; the area is designed to cre sculptor, Stanley ate the effec{ of an EnBleifeld; and the glish garden with architects, plantings , walks and Higgins Associ- seating. ates Inc., at a The NSS, founded in dinner in May 1893 by Daniel Cheste r in New York French, Richard 1\-lorris City. John Hunt , Stanford While Hoogakker, diand others, is America 's rector of unh·eroldest organization of sity facilities and professional sculptors. a member of the Rall(~)' Fitzg('mld. R"63 Robins statue a11dG'64w committee, accepted the award for the University.


New trustees elected Six new members elected to the Board of Trustees began serv ing their four-year terms July I. They are: Waldo M. Abbo t , 8'7 1, senior managing director of Royal Bank of Canada in New York City. He joined Royal io 1998 after 25 years with

Chemical Bank, during which time he had assignments in ttru~sels and Tokyo and later beeame head of

the bank's global media and telecommunications group. He has .sern:d on the Board of Associa1es.

Richard E. Connors, GB'8 7, senior \'ice presidentand chief marketing officer for the MONY Gll)Up, New YorkCity.He joined MOl\"Yin 1988 aftcr13yt.-arswithMctropolit:mLlfc and Wlb part of the senior management 1eam1hatn.'Centlytook MO!','Y puhlic. He and his v.ifuare parent5of !',tmhew,AR'0.3,and Courtney,AW'04, and arc members of the Society of Farnilit.."S. Dr. J ud ith Owen Hopk ins, W'74, a physidan-oncologbt with Piedmont Hematology/Oncology Associ.nes in \l;faSton~alem, N.C. Earlier, she v.':'ls on the faculty at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. She is married m Or. Marbry B. Hopkins 111,R'74, a pathologist. Virgi nia Ann Kamsky, founder, chainnan and chief executive officer of KamskyAssociatesInc. in \'ew York. an im"estment firm that specializes in the l\."Oplc'sRepublic of China. She also is chair of Zhonghua Jnv<.-stmentmanagement partners of Beijing, Hong Kong and New York. which identifie~

Charles W. Sweet, president of the executive seJrch group al A.T. Kearney Inc. in Chicago. He joined AX . Kearney in 1972 and has been a majOr force in increasing the company's competitiveness ln the executive ~arch market. Sweet and his wife are parents of Rebett.l, A\\''03, and are members of the Society of familie1,

Ge0f3CW, Weikle Jr., 8'74, mmaging dire<.tor of Goldman,Sad1!i & Co. in ~cw York. li e v.urked foethe federal Rescr\e Bank before jOining Goldman,Sachs in inv~mem banking.furfoeeyearshee(). headed the fixed income division fur Goldman,Sachs in Tokyo and wasTokyo branch manager before rt.'tUmingto\'ewYork.

Forum speakers tackle issues of nation 's cities Author Jonatha n Kozol, respected in education wantRichmondand poverty workers ' circles for his observanewsby tions on education, illite-mail? eracy and homelessness , Get electronic opened the Jepson Leadnews bulletins ership Forum season in from the September. University when "Views and Voices on something the City~ is the focus of the noteworthy 2000-200 1 seahappens - an son. The series eYent, achievement, honor, or also will bring to the Univereven a problem sity former Atof some kind. lanta mayor and Spider\Vcb now U.N. Amsubscribers can bassador Anexpect one or drew Young; two bulletins a environmental ist Robert month infonning F. Kennedy Jr.; Mayor them instantly Brown and City of the most Manager Robert Bobb of important Oakland , Calif.; executive Richmond news director of the Girl Scouts USA Marsha Johnson To sign up, send Evans , H'99; and other an e-mail provocative speakers message to the Also appearing is law address below professor Lani Guinier in that says: an event hosted by the ¡subscribe Women Involved in Living Spider\Veb [your and Learning program, e-mail address]." which provides learning and leadership opportuni Spider\X'ebis a ties for students. joint project of ''You may fear the city the alumni affairs or you may ado re it, but office and the it is certain that the commedia-public munit ies we are building relations office or allowing to deter iorate Subscribe1 today are the communiSpiderweb@ ties our children will live rlchmond.edu in or be forced 10 live with tomorrow," says Sue Robinso n Sain, Jepson Forum coor dinator. "Vital commu nity centers create a better qua lity of life for all citizens."

Guinier

Among themes 10 be explored in the 10-program lecture series are solving problems, in\'eSting public money, making sound decisions about public safety, improving schools , structuring political systems, protecting the natural and built environment, nouris hing the arts and encouraging economic expansion. Forum events are free and open to the public , but tickets are required. Those who wish to have a guaranteed seat in a good viewing area may purchase patron's tickets for many of the events. For details, contact the Modlin Center box office at (804) 289-8980.

U N IVERSITY OF RIC H MON D MA GAZINE

Page 5


New class ring offers single design for all

Facultyhonors announced

Stud ents and alumn i need look no farthe r than arm's length to find a mos! personal and constan t rem inder of their alma mate r: the school ring. There 's a new official Universitv of Richm ond ring, a sing le design a¡vailahle to all grad ua tes and enrolled stu dents who mee t academ ic qua lifications. At the same time , the tradition al Westhampt on ring con tinues to be availa ble for Westh ampto n stu den ts and alum nae. "Over the years, a wide variety of ordin ary custom ized class rings have been available on cam pus from several vendors," says Alice Lynch, W'85 , execu tive director of alumni affairs. "Since individuals could design their own rings , they didn't look alike and there was no guaran tee that the purchaser was even a student. The University had allowed its ring tradition to be d iluted , unlike the Westhampton ring, wh ich has always been distinctive." Severa! years' work by a committee led first to the decis ion to pursue a single-ring concept, then to the final design for the ring. The group also decided that stude nts would need to earn the right to wear a ring: They must have com pleted at least 54 credit hours and have junior or senior standing. "I think the new ring design is unique and recognizable," says Bryn Bagby, AW'OO,former Westhampton College Government Association president who served on the ring committee. The committee represented the interests of the students, alumni, Westhampton and Richmond college deans, and the bookstore. The comm ittee had ¡'a lot of conversation abo ut the design and what we would feature on the ring ,'" says Richm ond College Dean Richard Mateer. "In the end , the stude nts decided not to perso nalize it in any way. They wanted simp licity, and they were right. "We know of no other unive rsity ring that's a shield shape , so it's eas ily recognizab le from several feel awav. I like it." Th~ new ring was offered for the first time to qualified juniors and seniors last year, and those who purchased it received it at a presentatio n ceremony last winter. Colleges and universities with a single-ring tradition find their rings in high dem and, according to Ron Brostrum , president of ,\-lilestone Traditions, vendor of the new ring. "'If everyone wears somet hing different , it can'! be a symbol," he says. '"Rings were never abo ut jewelry, they were always about symbolism." '"Wedecided to reclaim the University's ring tradition," says Lynch. '"Westill have the Westhampton ring and we slill have the Ring Dance, even though rings have not bee n presented at the dan ce for a long time ." Lynch says all alumni will be offered an op portun ity to purchase the new ring in the near future. For more information, call Brenda Fogg at (804) 289-884 I. iliro thy \rt:1 gcncr Page 6

r ALL 2000

lj

2000 DISTINGUISHED EDUCATOR AWARDS Dr. Jan e M. Be rry Associ ate professor of psychology

Dr. Rich a rd W. Leatherman Assistant professor of co11/i11uingstudies

W. Hamilton Bry so n Professor of law

Dr. Patricia M. Stohr Hunt Assistant professor of eduallion

Dr. James A. Davis Associate professor of ma themat ics (11/d computer science Dr. Dafna Eyton Assistant professo r of man agement systems

NEW

ENDOWED

CHAIR

Th e W. David Robbin s Chair of Business Policy Dr. R. Duane Ireland The Robert Edward & Lena Frazer Loving Chair in Physics Dr. Michael F. Vineyard

REAPPOINTED

HOLDERS

Th e E. Claiborne Robins Distingui s h ed University Professorship in Busine ss Dr. Richard W. \'i?right

CHAIR

HOLDERS

The Samuel Chiles Mitchell -Jacob Billikopf Professor in History Dr. Ernest C. Bolt Jr.

The Jam es Th o mas Prof esso rship in Philosophy Dr. James H. Hall Jr.

The Lewis T. Booker Pr o fessorship of Religion and Ethic s Dr. G. Scott Davis

The E. Claiborne Robin s Distinguished Profe ssorship of Leadership Studies Dr. Frede ric M. Jablin

The Marcus M. and Carole Weim,iein and Gilbert M. and Fanni e S. Rosenthal Jewish and Christian Studies Chair Dr. Frank E. Eaki n

Corrections TI1eSummer 2000 is;sueof the ('nlinsity of Richmond .Maga::lrn.'contained several errors . A photo that appeared with the C..ommen<:ement article ()11 p.1 in<:Qrre<:tly idemified the family member,i; shown with Courtney Lappas.AW'OO , as her parentS, Or. /\ithola~ and Marcia Ulppas, ln5tead,they are her unde and aunt.

Mt. and Mt$. H. Reginald BeldenJr. An article about mathematics rese--Jrch on p. 5 incorrectly identifieda Student doing summer research :ts James

Bigelow,AR"OO . The srudent"s name is Jamie Bigelow, AW'OO Thc maga,ine regret, these error!> .


New alumni staff appointments

Kenyan official returns to visit his alma mater

Brenda L. Fogg, 8'87 Associate director of alumni affairs

Francis Kollum, undersecretary of the treasury for the Republic of Kenya, was not prepared for the changes he ,.;awin his alma mater when he visited recently. events, including Home<.uming,lkunion Kollum, R'77, the first of several world-class runners W'e<ckendand Arts Around the Lake, as from Kenya who competed in the University's track wd! as .'icvcral other alumni organiza program in the 1970s, IOok a tour of campus and met tions. Prs:"iouslr, shl! ser.,.t:d with the with Chancellor E. Bruce Heilman and former track .\1edical College of Virginia alumni assocoach Fred Hardy. ciation and the American Heart Associa He had been back to campus once before, in 1986, tion. Fogg recehOO the Charks T. Norman Award .is a graduating when he tlew from California to Washington, 0.C., senior,andwasfir:st in herbusine:;s,l,(hool dassin 1987 just so he could come to Richmond for a surprise birthday party for Hardy. He got to see only newly renovated Sarah Bmnet Hall on that visit. ~This is another world," Kollum said, referring to his recent tour. "The Jepson School of Leadership alumni office on a part -timebasis.llagcnmucllcralsoholdsa Studie,.;,the Jepson m;,stt'r'sdegree in for<;:strrfrum Duke University ;ind has reAlumni Center, the ceil'ed tr.iining in rnind/hody wellness programs apartments: None of Linda G. Acors these \Verehere when Kollum, Coach lfardy and Administratit•e assis1a111 lv.'aShere.lammore ChancellorHeilman Acors e<lils and m;mag<::s Class Conthan impressed." nections for the Uni1icrsi1yofRichmo11d Hardy, now retired, made a number of vi,.;its to .lfogazi,wandovcrsccsthcalumni Kenya in the 1970s in search of the ",.;uperb athletes" affa;~\\ 'cbsilc.Shejoincdthcalunmi he knew were there. His first scholars hip offer was staffaftermorethansixyearsinthe to Kollum in 1974, who did not disappoint, going on University's human resource services to earn NCAAAll-American honors in 1976 for his office. E;trlicr,slu : workedasalcg;, l performance on the two-mile relay team. He also ran secretary with Midkiff & Hiner in Richmond, and as a secreother middle- and long-di.'itance races. tarial aide with tlcnrirn Countvschools Kollum double-majored in political science and economics. "I 0\ve the University something," Kollum said. "I was far away from home, and the Richmond again ranked No. 1 University community and Virginians were very kind to me. It was a life-changing experience. LS. Neu:~6 World Report reh:a.se<lits annual ·'Amerka's lkst ColI am very, very grateful." h:ge.s"is.SUL' SL'pt.l, and the Lniversity of Hkhmon<l rankt'd :\'o. 1 He is most grateful for Coach Hardy. "He is still in its category for the se\'t'nth consecutive year. Richmond plan:d my mentor , and I still seek his advice," Kollum said. first by a wide margin over James .'vladison Lniversity and Hollins After graduation, Kollum worked for the College among ''Regional College.sand Lniversities-Sout h:· A.H. Robins Co. in California, then in Nairobi, 'Jhe magazine arbitrarily names tht' rntt'gories, which group colKenya, for several years. Since 1980, he has been lege,.;and univt'rsities by the numher of advanced degn.T and rt.·in government service. He often returns to the st'an:h progr,1ms they operate-not thl· scope of un<letJ.:raduate United States for summer study. coursework or the proportion of .studenL,;fron1 other ,.;tatesand Kollum said the friendships he made as a student niuntries. Hkhmond's Prt'sident \'filliam E. Cooper has been a meal helped him as much as his academic and athletic uitic of lxith the rankings and the names given to the categoril·s achievements to broaden his human understanding "\'\'e are pleased to once again he ranked number one and prepare him for hi,.;life's mi,.;sion:serving his in our rntL•gory,even a.s we continue to build our nacountry's people . He learned that Kenyans and ti;;~;l\,~:~~n~~:t~~On~~s:~f~.~~~)~:~(;t;~tl:;a~:~~~e\ ~ ~t(: · Americans share similar goals: "We are all ,.;triving for better education as security for the future." list of hl·st values-"grL·at college,.; at great prices'':Us.News among regional college.s and universities in the South. Fogg works with major on-campus

_m,;;.,,

UNIVERSITY

o r RICHMOND

MAGAZ I NE

Page 7


Two drafted in baseball For the first time, the Richmond baseball team had two players taken in the firs! five rounds of the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft. J unior outfielder Nie Jackson was selected in the third round by the Chicago Cubs, the 76th player taken. Senior pitcher Mike Smith was chosen in the fifth roun d by the Toronto Blue Jays, the 148th player selecte d. Smith was an All-Colon ial Athletic Association select ion last spring, when he went 10-6 with a 3.90 ERA. He led the Spiders with 129.1 innings pitched and recorded 143 str ikeouts, a Richmond and CAA record. For his career, Smith had a 31-12 record, the second-highest win total in school history and the fourth-highest in CAA history . Smith registered 337 career strikeo uts, a Richmond and CAA record. Jackson star ted 25 times last season in center field for the Spiders, missing 29 games follow ing finger surgery ear ly in the year. He batte d .26 1 with six home runs and 23 RBIs. Jackson was named second team All-East Region in 1999, when he hit .318 with 17 home runs, 63 RBIs and 19 stolen bases in 55 games. Two othe r Spiders signed free agent contracts this spring. Senior first base man G.R. Schalick signed with the Baltimore Orioles. Senior catcher Josh Lamberg signed with the Chillicothe Paints of the independent Frontier League.

Spiders compete in Europe

Golf team reaches NCAAregionals Under head coach Nat Withers, the University of Richmond men 's golf team advan ced to the NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship East Regional Finals in the spring. This achievement came one year after the Spiders earned a berth in the NCAA championship finals for the first time in program history. Though Richmond missed the cut at the East Regional, it marked another season of success for the program. Altogether, the Spiders posted 11 top-10 finishes in the 12 events they participated in during th e 1999-2000 season. The stretch included a victory at the James Madison University invitational in October, where Richmond shot a final round score of seven-under-par 277 to rally from 10 shots back. Individuall y, senior Ken Macdonald totaled a team-best scoring average of 72.9. The three-time all-CAA and all-state selection notched seven top-10 finishes for the season. Honored as the University of Richmond Spider Club 1999-2000 "Male Athlete of the Year/ Macdonald concluded his career as the program 's all-time leader in scoring average (72.6).

Andrew Blair• Page 8 FALL 2000

to Europe in August for touring and basketball. Coach Bob Foley's women's bas ketball team journeyed through England and France. In England, the Spiders visited such histo ric sights as Windsor Castle, Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace and the Tower of London; in France, they visited Notre Dame Cathedra l, the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower and Mediterranean beaches. On the court, Richmond won four of five games, with senior forward Lizz Greene pacing the Spiders w ith 18.5 points and 6.5 rebou nds per game. Senior guard Candice Edwards added 16.5 po ints per contest. Coach John Beilein's men's basketball team toured France, experiencing life in large and small cities. The Spiders started in Nice, then spent three days in Fos-sur-Mer, a small town in southern France, before stopping in the nearby cities of Avignon and Marseille.

On the court, the Spiders went 3-0 to win the first Tournoi Internat ional de Basket in Fos-sur-Mer, a tournament involving teams from France, Spain, Italy and the United States. The Spiders then ventured to Lyon and won two games against local tea ms. The trip concluded with a jampacked 24-ho ur visit to Paris. Senior forward Kinte Smi1h performed consistently for the Spiders , averaging 17.8 po ints and 6.2 assists in the five contests. Sophomore guard Reggie Brown tallied 19.8 points per game and had 17 assists and jus1 eight turnovers. Sophomore center Eric Zwayer averaged 10.2 points and 7.4 rebo unds in the five games. Senior forward Greg Stevenson appeared only in tl1e final two games, averaging 18.5 points and 9.0 rebounds. Phil Sta11to11 and Andrew Blair •


llliililillllll book reviewer for the DR. SAMUELA. BANKS

Dr. Samuel A. Bank-., sixth president of the Uni\·ersity of Richmond, diedStpt. 12. Hewas72 Dr. Banks served a.~ pr~ident from December 1986toAUj.,'l.lSI1987. lluring hisrclati\elybricftenurc , Robert S.JepsonJr., 11'64, GB'75, 11'87and a trustt't', andhiswife , Alice, ga\·e S20rni!liontoestahlishthe Je(™)n School of l.tad,..n,hip Snidies, the first school of its kindatanAmericanrnllege or university. Dr. funks requested early retirement lx-causeofheahh problems. Before coming to the University , Dr. Banh was president of Dickinson College in Carli.~!e, Pa. A natil'e of Florida. he held a bachelor of arts degree in English literature from Duk e Uniwrsity,amaster ofdil'initydegree from Emory University and a Ph.D. in psychology from the L"niversity of Chicago

ROBERT

H. BELL

Robert H, Bell, retired assistant professor of chemistry, died Aug. 29. He was 71. Mr. Bell began his 36-year teaching career at the Unhersity of Richmond in 1961 as an instnJCtorof chemistry. He was named assistant professor of chemistry in 1981 and retired in 1997. Mr.Ucllr(.'Ccin.xihis badidor's degree in d1emistry inl949fromVirginia l'ol}1echnicandState University. After teaching in lslcofWightOmntyschools fortworears,heservedinthe U.S.Armyfrom 1951 to 1953 HegrJduatedfromthe Medical College of Virginia School of PharmaLy with a bachelor's degree in phamiacy in 1956. Ile also attended tlie MCV Gr:iduate School of Phannacy, and had been a registered pharmacist in Virginia since 1956 While at the University , he directed undergraduate research projects analyzing the \\~,ner of Westhampton Lake. He also served as a

American Association for the Advancement of Science and American Reference Books Annual, Libraries Unlimited Inc. .\Ir. &Al was a member of the Virginia Pharmacists As~ociation, the American Association for the AdvancementofScience,the American Chemical Society and the Dendron ! li~torical Soddy. Heissurviv<."<lhyhiswife, Joyce Williams Bell; a son , Robert H. BellJr., of Austin, Tcxas;adaughter , Lou Ann Bell Bradk.-·y,of \Vashington, D.C.:andasister,Ann lld l Edwards, of Greer, S.C.

IN

MEMORIAM

r Wn.1.uM R.

Banks

Louis S. Boom Louis S. Booth. R"30, a generous supporter of the arts at Richmond , died on />larch 23. Hewas91 Mr. Booth, who grew up inDanville . Va.,eameda hachclorofarls degree from Richmond and then continu<.xitothe/llassachu...etts lnstiiute of Technology, where he earned a hachclorofarchitecture degree. He served in the U.S. Am1y Corps of EnginL>tTSin Africa and ltalyduring\\'orldWarll. rel·dving the BronZt'Star. Hewasaformervice prcsickmofLlx:k\\lxxl Greene Engineers-Architects inSpart:mhurg,S.C.llisoth<.T actil'ities included serving on the Spartanburg Planning Conm1is,sion,Spart:mburg HistoricalAssoc~1tion,the DanvilleMuSL1.1mofFineArts and History, and the Engine,:.>ringAdvisorylklard at dem.•,on Unhen.ity. He alsowasanx."ll1berofthe IJnin,TSil}'sBoarJof Associates for several years untilk'avingthat~itionin 1990.He had hem a resident of\'l'.'esuninster-Canrerburyin L}11ehhurg,Va., since 1986 Booth was a longtime supporter of the arts at Richmond. The Louis S. Booth Arts Fund is used to support one major exhibit and one major performing arts e\·ent each season. The fund also supports the development and

presentation of academic programming to maximize the arts experience for students at Rkhmond

Bell

Hoot!,

llarsba/1

=-MARSHAi.i. J R.

WilliamR . .MarshallJr.,L'65, an adjunct professor of business law in the School of Continuing Studies for more than 35 years, died Aug. 7. He was 59 Anali\"eofCincinnati, and a graduate of the University ofCindnnati , Mr.Marshall cametoRichmon<ltoattend theUniversitvofllichmond Sch(xJl of Law. Ile had heen affiliated with the law firm of Taylor Hazen Kauffman and Pinchbeck, PLC, ~ince 1989. He specialized in busines.~ law and over the years argued a number of cases before the Virginia Supreme Court As a gifted teacher and longtimeadjunL·tfarnhy member in the School of Continuing Studies, Mr. .\larshalltaughtbusiness law,clderlawandfamilv law. Ht' developed sever:il new courses and was named the Distingui.~hed Facull}· Member in 1979 Jle was one of two adjunct facultymembcn;toser.eon theUniversil}''slong-range planning rnmmitKae for Uni\·ersity College (now the School of Continuing Studie~) In 1994, he alsoser,;ed on the search committee for the school"snewdcan .\Ir. Marshall is survived by two daughter .~, Dr. Beth Marshall of Richmond, and LeslyeAnn Marshall of Charlolle, N.C.; and a grandson Memorial gifts may be made 10 the William R .\larshall Jr. Memorial Book Award for excellence in paralegal studies at the School of Continuing Studies.

DR. F. BYE RS M n. 1.rn

Dr.F.ByersMiller,thefirst deanofwhatisnowthe E. Claiborne Robins School ofllusiness,diedonJune 10 at his home in Tempe, Ariz. He\vas87yearsold. Dr.Millcrwasagraduate of Baldwin -W"allace College and Ohio State University. where ht' earned ma~ter of business administration and d(Ktor of philo .wphy degrees.He came to Richmond in 1941 as associate profe~~or of applied economics. A year later,he left to join the Office of Price Administration. Ile also was a consultant for the U.S. Department of Commerce before serving in the U.S. Na\·al Reserve during World War II After the war, Dr. Miller returned to the University, where ht'succeeded George M. .\lodlin as dean of the Evening School of Business Administration when Modlin hccame Richmond's president. In 1948, the Board of Trustees approved the creation ofa separate business school for Richmond and nam<.xi Dr. Mi!ler its first dean. The :¼:hoolwasformally establisht'd in the fall of 1949 and opened with 151 full-timestudent5andcight faculty members. Dr.J\lill<.Tlcft Richmond in 1956foracarecrinprivate industry. He served as chief exec:utiveofficerofthe Bank Administration Institute in Chicago unti l ("(.>tiring in 1976. Healsowasan adjunct professor at Arizona State University's business college,andchairedthe bmtrdof<lirec.1orsofthe Arizona State Compensation Insurance Fundund<.TthenGov. Bruce Babbitt.

Da. CHARLES H. WHEELER Ill ,lliller

As this issue \'ient to press, the University received word of the death of Dr. Whee ler, forme r vice president for business and financial affairs, on Sept. 16. Furthe r details will follow in an upcomi ng issue of the magazine.

UNIV ERSITY

o. RI C HMOND

MAGAZINE

rage 9


Enriched student experience is the focus of Richmond's new strategic plan

insights :1ml inrnwati\'i:' i<lcas.

\l'h:it did these individuals fro111difli.:rent parL'iof the globe and on ditlt'n.:nt actdemic and c,m:cr paths han: in common? Fa1.:hw,1s a mcmhcr of Olll' of three strategic planning task forcL·s, or

:1

participant in one of SL'\'L'r;tlotlwr planning

groups, that provided ideas :tnd an:ilysis leading to a l0-yc:1r plan for the University. And each exhibited keen interest in the Unin:rsity by offering idt·as, articubting rich traditions, identifying the llniv1:r.-;ity'sstrengths and t:m·isioning: a dynamic future built on the prindpks of innovalion, collaboration and cxo:lknce.

By EdwinSlipekJr.


"For 14 years the University has been involved in intense Fundamentally, the plan seeks to take advantage of institutional imrospection-planning is continuous/ says Richmond 's relatively sma ll size and institutional Or. John Outland, professo r of political science who played complexity. It calls for the University to build "a third a leadership role on the planning committee. "But this prototype of higher education, " one that combines the process was definitely more democratic than any other virtues of a small liberal arts co llege with the choices typically available at much larger universities. during my time here." Outland, who has taught at Richmond since 1969,\Vas co-chair of the programs task force, "Being not quite of either type, Richmond must look one of three subcommittees; the others examined the to make a special contribution in its own fashion," University's people and its resources. Dr. Cooper says. As the plan states, "Ou r approach will "The most gratifying parts came in open meetings that be to combine small size and complexity.~ Given this approach, the strategic plan stresses that involved students, alumni, the entire University staffRichmond has tremendous opportuniti es to combine gardeners, housekeepers , professional staff, secretaries, electricians/ says Dr. Julie Hayes, chair of modern lanliberal arts with pre-professional education, teaching guages and literatures, who served as co-chair of the and research, extensive choices among academic people task force. "They offered 00th support and ideas." specia lties, curricular and co-curricular programs, and Outland says many of these ideas were well thought out high levels of stu dent -faculty interaction. "Our small and others were, frankly, off-the-wall. But all were sincere. "What we looked for \Vas distinctiveness: Was it size is somea new or even a unique idea? \'fas it appropriate to what thing I would we are as an institution? And finally, did it have univerlike to see sity-wide impact?'' maintained," The strategic planning task forces took ~rio usly their says Kevin charge to take stock of the University of Richmond at the Scotto, AR'OO, present and look toward its future. from "For all Richmond's success, we yearn for more ," Wallingford, Pa., President William E. Cooper told a large Cannon who served as a Memorial Chapel audience in his April 1999 Investiture student repreaddress that set the stage for the committee's work. sentative on the ''We must grow and stretch. Before coming here , I was people task convinced by this board [of trnstees] that Richmond has force. 'It's important for stuPriorities for an appetite for greatness, poised to take its place among dents to have mentoring Resources the brightest stars in the constellation of America's experiences with faculty. • 60 new merit-based institutions of higher learning." Students can get a lot more scholarships and In his speech, President Cooper also challenged done in close academic relationadditional financial Richmond to tackle ''bold initiatives in the way ships. It's our most important aid Mr. Robins and Mr. Jepson envisioned, beyond what strength." Size was one of Richmond's others could see." • 45 additional faculty Dr. Cooper's Investiture speec h set the broad outlines qualities that convinced • New or renovated of the strategic plan by urging the University to think of Anabella Bueso, AW'OO,a physical spaces ways to create distinctive linkages among the schools, member of the people task develop cohe rent learning experiences, enhance facultyforce, to leave Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and enroll at the University. "There aren't 200 people in a class, but 20," student internction, and improve tactics for recrniting the best and brightest people to tl1e University. says the former finance and economics major. "All my professors knew me on a first-name basis. The one-ononc interaction is terrific. " Small size and informality can reap dividends by creating stronger learning partnerships and more meaningful student-mentor collaboration. And this, the fte, 17 month, of" pl,.,ming effott thst plan stresses, will enable Richmond to achieve great began in January 1999, the strategic plan was adopted distinction. by the Board of Trustees last May. This road map charts how the University can propel itself into the top tier of American universities.

UNIVERSITY

Of RI CHMOND

MAGAZINE

Page 11


Complexity at Richmond means not only academic variety, but also co-curricular opportunities. "One of our great strengths is offering a coherent experience-one not totally focused on academics, but offering a wide range of other activities including the arts and athletics," says Dr. Daniel J. Palazzolo, associate professor of political science and the coordinator of the strategic planning process. Although the University has become increasingly selective in admission, and has earned a reputation throughout the Northeast, J\-tid-Atlantic and Southeast for offering a distinctive educational experience, high school students with the highest academic standing still often make a university with a more prominent national reputation their first choice . Therefore, joining the ranks of top universities with national reputation is key to Richmond 's future institutional growth. "I'd like to see the school become more competitive academically," says Bueso.

•

ow can Rkhmond establish itself as an increasingly innovative institution of nationaJ repute and become fin.1"choice for outstanding students? Specifkally, the strategic plan calls for recrniting, developing and retaining talented and dedicated students with solid character who will respond to interactive learning, integrated study and discovery. As a means of recruiting the best and brightest students, the plan calls for increasing merit scholarships and financial aid. "\Ve've always had good students," says Hayes, "but I can sense that the students are getting better and better in that they are more academically prepared. We're really interested in growing that population . We need to build a critical mass of students who can do extraordinary things. We've always had student$ like that , but sometimes they felt kind of lonely." Hayes names Matt DiCintio, A.R'OO-now working on his Ph.O. in French at the University of North Carolina-as a student who exemplifies the "stretch" the University must look for in prospective students. DiCintio's Morning Might Pass v.~J.sthe first student-penned play in University hislOry to receive a main-stage production. DiCintio received research support for his project from the W.M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles, among others. ''The play asked big questions about art and what it means to be a writer ," Hayes says. 'It belongs to the

Pagt' 12 f ALL 2000

French call the!ttre d'idies-the theatre of ideas. It was quite a moment." But to ask and respond to critical

The University must prepare students to learn, live and lead in a world defined by cross-cultural diversity. "Our commitment to international studies is unparnlleled for a school our size," maintains Scotto. But he would like to see the University do even better. "Not only should we increase the number of studenUi from other countries, but we should increase the number of countries represented. It gives all our students the impems to reach out to other people. " Bueso agrees. "I was pleased to see an increase in the number of foreign students during my four years ," she says, something from which the entire community benefited. "A diverse student body enriches the experience for everyone," says Palazzolo. "1\-loreover, demographic trends and global forces predict that American society will become increasingly more culturally diverse over the next 25 years. An educated person in the 21st century must have a global outlook." Increased financial aid for international students , increased incentives for Richmond students to study abroad, a languages-across-the-curriculum program, and


Sources of Funding • Capital cam•

Physical Facility Needs • Additions and renovations to Gottwald Science Center • Additions and renovations to

paign, to be announced • $1,400 tuition increase beginning in Fall 2001 • Revenue from expanded graduate and continuing education programs

Boatwfight Library • Additional classroom and • •

• •

office space Additions and renovations to the Robins Center Space to support the schools of business and continuing studies Student residence areas Richmond Residence facility to support retreats and conferences

steps to internationalize the business school are key aspects of the plan. As Dr. Cooper often says, "We must bring the world to Richmond , and Richmond to the world." The plan also sets as a priority the recruitment , development and retent ion of "teacher-scholars" who provide a greater variety of programs that facilitate higher levels of student-faculty interactio n. "'We want to attract and nourish students and faculty who are forever curious," Dr. Cooper says. And as in recruiting srudents , the plan says Richmond must attract faculty seeking a superlative teaching and rese-.i.rch env ironme nt. The University, it says, must be more flexible in combi ning teaching and research opportunities. For Scotto, who was spending a semester in France when he was invited to join the plann ing committee, the

planning process exJX)sed him to university concerns to which he, admittedly, had given linle thought. In addition to the importance of expanding student diversity, he became aware of the importance of allowing faculty more time for research. "How to free up faculty to pursue their strengths is key to building our university ,'"he says. But the individual student will continue to be the center of the learning experience, the strategic plan maintains. ~\Ve've always felt a kinship with the srudent,;,n says Outland. "We asked, how do you free up faculty time to make these relationships even stronger? And one of the specific things we can do, for instance, is to reduce the teaching load." The plan proposes adding 45 new faculty positions , thereby reducing both the teaching load and the studentfaculty rat io. Adding faculty and encouraging learning opportunities outside of the traditional classroom - in the form of independent research, service learning and internships - are key tactics that build upon the University's strengths and acbpt to changes in higher education. Additionally, as the Internet makes information more easily accessible to nearly everyone, small, residential ~ ,I~ colleges need to offer more than

I ,,

i!,I~'I //-.,~

r

l"

~Jl.!Ji .;'

'TP'": -,.,.__""'--- "

-

traditional classes, where knowledge is transmitted from an expert to a student. Students must have 1 oppornmities to discover new insights and questions, not merely to consume knowledge. This will require more faculty \vho can provide


more individualized attention to sn1dents, and who can romplement classroom lessons with experiences outside the classroom. "Changes in infonnation technology are transforming the way universities deliver education,» Palazzolo points out. ~Many large universities will develop the infrastructure to serve mass populations over loog distances. "At Richmond, learning is both 'high tech' and 'high touch.' We think the highest quality learning experiences and the most enduring lessons come from close human interaction between student,; and faculty. In order to deliver the highest quality experience, we need to invest in our people and our technology."

• Recruit up to 55 percent of either men or women, while maintaining coordinate co11egesystem • Endow 60 merit scholarships, add to need-based aid and increase the amount of CIGNA scholarship awards • Require a challenging capstone experience of every senior

Faculty • Add 45 new faculty posi-

tions over the next 10 years to reduce classroom teaching load, bringing studentfaculty ratio from 10.7:1 down to9:1 • Establish 10 to 20 endowed chairs as funding permits

Stall • Add approximately 42 staff

positions to support changes in the way the University conducts recruiting, teaching and research • Adopt an innovative leave program for staff to pursue professional enrichment

programmatic standpoint the plan calls for enriched learning opportunities by enhancing major academic progrJ.ms, developing linkages between curricula and increasing opportunities for creativity, discovery and student-faculty interaction. Major programs include initiatives in the sciences and business, an endowment for the arts, a master's degree program in leadership studies and an

l'agc 14 fALl

2000

endowment for the Richmond Quest. The Richmond Quest is a recently established program that challenges the University community to engage in broad and meaningful discussion and debate centered around a central, complex topic. "I believe Ricl1mond is the right size to srudy cbunting questions of this sort on a university-wide level," says Or. Cooper. "In ventures like this , we can play a role not easily achieved by either larger research universities or smalle r colleges." The plan also calls for enhancing legal educal ion , developing student-faculty research programs, establishing a center for post-doctoral and senior fellows, beginning an environmental sludies program, and creating a Richmond Research Institute that facilitates interdisciplinary research projects . One imJX)rtant key to existing and new academic programs will be providing sn1dents the tools to excel in

PROGRAM ENHANCEMENTS Science initiative to promote science literacy for all students Endowment for the arts to develop a campuswide arts culture Business school objectives to make the E. Claiborne Robins School of Business a top choice for undergraduate business education by 2010 Completion of the law school's campaign, including initiatives to advance the University of Richmond School of Law to ranking among the top 50 law schools nationally Interdisciplinary master's degree program in leadership studies to enhance the Jepson School of Leadership Studies Richmond Quest program institutionalized to create synergies among schools and departments


technology and information-centered environment<;. "The University has always been great with technology, but increased emphasis will help all students in the future," says Douglas Schaefer, JR'OO,who served on the programs task force and now studies law at the University of Buffalo. In addition to major efforts to attract talented students, faculty and staff, to invest in technology and to enhance programs, the plan calls for providing essential spaces in "inspirational'" settings for the University's academic work and co-curricular life. The University has long recognized the treasures it has in its pine-shaded campus, central lake and handsome inventory of Collegiate Gothic architecture. This past summer the University began to develop a new campus physical master plan that will provide tactical steps for implementing the strntegic plan. A centerpiece of the plan is an addition to the Boatwright Library that will transfonn it into an "academic commons," in which "the book and the Internet, the classroom and the group study room, and texts and technology become one/ according to the plan. Other priorities include expanding the Gottwald Science Center and renovating and enlarging the Robins Center. The plan also calls for greatly improved facilities for the E. Claiborne Robins School of Business and the School of Continuing Studies. Residence halls will be upgraded, classroom and office space expanded, and a "Richmond Residence" established to accommodate those attending conferences on campus.

PROGRAM INNOVATIONS Dramatic increase in resources for student/faculty collaborative research Technology and information fluency program to prepare students to excel in information-centered environments Center for Post-doctoral and Senior Fellows to enrich the intellectual life of the University Richmond Research Institute to serve as an interschool research link to the community and beyond

If you wish to read the Umvers1ty's strategic plan and share your comments, please go to the Web site

www richmond edu/plannmg.

By the time the strategic plan is completed, ~it's going to be a different university from what our alumni experienced," says Susan Gunn Quisenberry , W'65, a member of the Board of Trustees and a Richmond-based information technology consultant who served on the resources task force. "It's going to be more geographically diverse, both nationally and internationally. But all this is going to enhance the diploma."

•

he implementation of such an ambitious strategic plan requires "focus and work," says Dr. Cooper. While .~ignificant funding is needed to achieve the plan's objective, Cooper is confident the University can meet the challenge. To do so, in the coming months he will be presenting the plan in special events to alumni and friend<;of the University, in Richmond and numerous major metropolitan areas along the East Coast from Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Philadelphia, southward to Atlanta. "These places are cmcial to our future as we expand our reach nationally and internationally,'" Dr. Cooper says. "A great university never rests because learning never rests.~ Ultimately, Or. Cooper always returns to the fundamental building blocks of a university: "If you look at our past led by the great philanthropy of Mr. Robins and Mr. Jepson and the thousands of contributions from our alumni - our present, and our fumre, it's the quality people who make the University. Everything else flows from that source. " Quality people: students from around the world who are stretched to think about big questions that span across disciplines; farnlty seeking a vigorous academic environment and unlimited possibilities for teaching, research and service; creative and dedicated staff; informed, involved and supportive alumni. Working together, these people are the key to building synergy at the University of Richmond and enriching the student experience of tomorrow. "People, not computers, will continue to be the prime movers of civilization," said Dr. Cooper at his Investimre, "so long as we remain the askers of incisive questions, the finders of great problems, the generators of creativity." 'I11atcan happen here. And in the process, the University of Richmond will create a thf?iitred'idee.5,as the French say, a theatre of ideas. Edwin Slipekjr. is a Richmond-based free-lance writer.

St11de11tphotos hy Billy Howard , Jack Mellolt and David Stover lJ N IV ERSTTY Of RICH M O N[) MA GAZI N ~ Page 15


• Stellar Student By Lrnra S.Jcffr t:y

i'HOTOS

BY JOHN

HE N LEY

MexiL1,cholar.1,hip.1,__makethe differem:e for the beM and brighteM Mudent.1,

"We need to build a critical ma.2,Aof .1:,tudent1, who can do extraordinary thing,;,." As Dr. Julie Hayes, associate professor of French, says, students are critical to the longterm success of Richmond. They are the foundation upon which the University will build a third prototype of American higher education: one that combines the high level of faculty-student interaction of a small liberal arts college with the array of choices available at a much larger institution. Richmond is competing for students with some of the most Page 16 FA LL 2 00 0

prestigious schools in the nation, and that competition is likely to grow even fiercer in the years ahead. The strategic plan includes a number of measures lO ensure that the best and brightest will choose Richmond. For example, the plan calls for increas ing the number of meritbased scho larships. These scholarsh ips offer significant financial support as well as academic privileges to ensure students reach their highest potential. A student's financial situation is not a factor in these scholarships. TI1c plan also calls for increased levels of other types of financial aid to ensure that Richmond

builds a diverse community of students who are not only academically strong hut also curious, creative and focused. Presently , Richmond offers several merit scholarship opportunities, including the Oldham, Ethyl, University and CIGNA scholars programs. The following is a look at four freshmen who have each received one of these honors to study and live at Richmond. Young adults like these , who bring a variety of talents, interests and life experience to the campus community, will be the core of that critical mass of extraordinary scholars.


CIGNAScholar• Elizabeth Victor NewOrloorw. Loui.t.iana

Coming to Richmond is a move north for Elizabeth Victor, who has lived in the same house in Uptown New Orleans her entir e life. She lives with her mother, father and two older sisters. "With a doctor and lawyer for parents, the question was never if I were going to college," says Victor, "but where." Victor says she always has had an interest in creative writing and literature , and was interested in pursuing a liberal arts education. "A family friend mentioned the University of Richmond to

Ed Kenney's high school teachers call him a renaissance man, and it's easy to understand why. He's musica lly talented , playing both the flute and saxophone. He's academically talented , with top grades and hands-on research experience. He's also ath letic. But perhaps most impor tant, he seems to have a good perspective on life. "I intend to major in mathemat ics or computer science, and I'm interested in leadership studies as a possible minor, " Kenney

my father as a small, private school with good teachers, " recalls Victor, whose sisters attend Louisiana State University and the University of Oklahoma, respectively. "Pretty soon, it became evident how perfectly matched Richmond and I were." Victor came to campus for a visit and was immediately impressed. "Even though it was raining , everything was still gorgeous," she recalls. But what cinched the deal was receiving a CIGNA Scholarsh ip. The CIGNA Corp. Scholars Program at Richmond was established in 1981 by the late Robert D. Kilpatrick , R'48, H'79 and a University trustee. The scholarships are devoted to African-American students who are academically talented , possess the drive to be leaders , and are eager to expand their horizons. Fifteen freshman are CIGNA Scholars, and there are 60 CIGNA Scholars enrolled at Richmond. Victor turned down the University of Virginia, the College of William and Mary and th e University of Georgia to attend Richmond.

says. "I would also like to pursue a master's degree. But the end goal is simply to be happy in whatever I may end up doing.~ Kenney was one of four freshmen to receive an Ethyl Science scholarship to come to Richmond . Established in 1991, the program is targeted to students who will prepare for graduate work and eventual caree rs as scientists, researchers and educators in biology, chemistry, computer science, mathematics or physics. There are currently 14 Ethyl Science Scholars.

Victor has been active in her church, community service and student leadership positions. "I enjoy the privilege of making decisions, speaking on behalf of my peers and, of course, being the first to know everything ," she says. Victor is happy and proud to be at Richmond-though she says she's "scared to death" of her first winter "in the north. " "It's also going to take me forever to get used to spiders being on all my memos and notes ,'¡ she adds, "but otherwise, I'm ready ." She intends to major in English and minor in education, with the goal of teaching middle school English and helping to improve the quality of public schools in her home state. "Most people beg me to avoid middle school," Victor says, but so far, she hasn 't been dissuaded. "I think elementary school kids know so little that it's easy to keep them amused, and high school and college students think they know so much that you can't amuse them at all," she says. "Eleven to 14 is the perfect age group for lighting a fire inside somebody."


The scholarship offers full tuition, fees, room and board for eight semesters of undergraduate study, as well as a $2,500 stipend for undergraduate research. It was a major reason why Kenney turned down Notre Dame, Villanova and Furman, among others. Kenney grev,' up in Killington, Vt., with his father, an industrial arts teacher; his mother , a speech pathologist in the public school system; and his younger sister. Naturally, he's a skier. "It's been my life during the winter for as long as I can remember," Kenney says. "I started when I was 2. I grew up rac-

ing and continued with that in high school, but I'm also a ski instructor during the winter." "Golf is my summer gig," he adds. "I work at a golf course and play quite a bit. I played on the golf team in school; I really love the sport." Kenney hopes his schedule at Richmond will enable him to continue his musical interests. Meantime, he's looking forward to the undergraduate research experience he will gain at Richmond. He is interested in working with coding theory or cryptology. When Kenney was a junior in high school, he was involved in

a research project sponsored by a grant from the University of Vermont. It studied the statistical significance of the "January thaw." "The January thaw is popular folklore that says every January, winter is happily-or rudely, depending on whether you skiinterrupted by a stretch of warm weather chat melts everything." Kenney 's research indicated that indeed, scientific evidence supported the popular wisdom. " It was a great project ," Kenney says , "and a real eye-opener to what in-the-field research is all about. "

Haven Herrin has many ideas about how she will spend the next several years of her life. She is considering careers as varied as physics and painting; plans to study abroad in Asia and Senegal;

and hopes to join the Peace Corps after she graduates. As detennined as she is about meeting these ,b>Oals, however , Herrin recognizes that her college experience may have a profound impact on her decisions. "There is a lot left to be exposed to," she says. "My plans for the future are broad and open to change. " Herrin is one of eight freshmen coming to Richmond as Oldham Scholars. This program , established in 1983 by Mr. and Mrs. Dortch Oldham, R'41, of Nashville, Tenn., provides full tuition , room and board for eight semesters of full-time undergraduate study plus a onetime, $1,500 stipend for travel or summer study, among other benefits. There are now 21 Oldham Scholars. Herrin displayed initiative and creativity while excelling at Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in Dallas. She worked

as a graphic artist for her father , who owns a nutrition and supplement store. She also founded a service co edit papers for her schoolmates , and was a companion of sorts for an elderly woman in her neighborhood. "I was her friend as well as her employee ," Herrin says. "I rook care of her exotic birds and dogs , and ran errands. The job was so much fun that I did not consider it to be work. " Herrin also spent much of her time on service projects. She accompanied her church on six mission trips including three to Mexico , where she helped to build houses. Those trips were "by far the best ," she says , because building the houses "was the most strenuous physical labor I have ever experienced. " Herrin chose Richmond over Amherst, Brown and Wesleyan. "The Oldham scholarship was the deciding factor " in choosing Richmond, Herrin says , "but for reasons other than just money. " She says Dr. Leonard Goldberg ,

Page 18 FALL 2000


vice president of student affairs, and other faculty members she met "made me feel especially valued , wanted and respected. I didn't get the same feelings from other schools I considered. " Herrin is excited about the possibilities for her future , and

University

Scholar·

Adam Weaver

Spring City. Penruylvania

The South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Math requires research as part of the secondary school experience. So Adam Weaver, who graduated from the school before moving with his family to Pennsylvania , worked in the chemical engineering department at the University of South Carolina.

confident that she will be able to meet life's challenges. She looks no farther for role models than her own parents. Her father is a small-business owner and her stepmother is an entrepreneur. Her mother entered law school after spending several years in

the real estate, retail and paralegal fields. She has graduated and is now an associate at a Dallas law firm. "They are prime examples of determination, " says Herrin, who also has an older sister. «1 get my work ethic from all of chem."

USC must have been impressed: It offered him a four-year, full-tuition scholarship. But Weaver turned it down and is coming to Richmond as a University Scholar. This program offers one-half the cost of tuition for eight semesters of undergraduate study. The 126 University Scholars are exempt from most specific course requirements and the need to declare a major. Special opportunities include supervised independent study and research for credit , and a competitive program of funding for undergraduate research. "I plan co major in physics and chemistry, " says Weaver, "and someday do research and teach. " Weaver, one of 40 University Scholars in the Class of 2004, is bringing stellar credentials to the University. Aside from his research experience , he played the saxophone and was coleader of the school 's pep band;

played on the school's soccer team and was a member of the Ultimate Frisbee Club; and was a chess club officer and president of the school math team. Math is a particularly strong talent: Weaver was a member of South Carolina 's all-state math team and placed first out of more than 200 others in a statewide math competition. "The first time I visited the University of Richmond was in the summer, and [the beauty of the campusJ kept it on my list of possibilities ," Weaver says. "The next time I spent a few days on the Scholars Weekend , going to classes and talking to professors. "The third time was the Admitted Students Open House , and there were teachers, admissions people and students who recognized me and remembered my name, " Weaver adds. "That's when I knew I had COcome to Richmond." Laura S.jeffre y is the editorial assistant for the University of Richmond Magazine.

th Class of 2004, one of Richmond's strongest App(ications s,6Bapp lications rece ived 728 underg rad uate students enro lled Class ra nk S6percentofthose with class ran k were in th eupp er one· fifthoft heirgra duat ing class(36 percen t were fro m sc hools that di d not rank)

Test scores The middlesopercentofenrolling students hadacombinedSATscoreof Geographic dis tribution 45p erce ntarefromVirginiaandtheMid· Atlantic sta tes 44sta tesand29othercountriesrepre se nt ed Diversi ty s percentaren

on •nat iveEnglishspeaking

Honors • 61werevaledictoriansorsalutatorians S9wereNationalMeritfinalists,semifina! istsorcommendedstudents 309wereactiveincommunityservicepro. grams and projects , 202receivedAll·StateorAll•Regional athletic recognition


Cultivating

theJn~g Mlnd

New faculty members join a cadre of teacher-scholars

s the University community prepar es to mak e gr eat strides forward , faculty members are charged with leading the way. These men and women will inspire students to move from passive learning into active participation in intellectual developm ent, and to take on ever greater challenges. Their efforts will ensure graduates who leave their mark on the University and beyond, and they will help Richmond become a premier institution of choice.

In today 's academic environment,

num erous colleges and

universities are competing for an elite corps of professors who will motivate, inspire and encourage students on the road to discovery. The strategic plan includes a number of proposals to help re cruit and retain these stellar facult y members. Among them are enhanced options for sabbatical s; increased opportunities

for faculty- student collaborative

research ; and the creation of several e ndow ed chairs. Most significant , th e University will add about 45 new faculty positions during the next decade to reduce class loads and bring the student-faculty

ratio down to 9:1.

Her e are just a few of the talented tea cher -scholars who have joined the Richmond faculty this fall. By wura S.}effrey PHOTOS BY DOUG BUrnL~IN Page 20

FALL 2000


Tanja Softic Associate professor of art Tanja Softic, Richmond's first full time faculty member in

printmaking , says her goal is to develop a comprehensive print

program within the department of art and art history. Based on what she alr eady knows about the Unive rsity , its st udent s, and the Richmond area in

licens ure program, and assistant professor of education

general, she says she is co nfid ent the goal is achiev-

able. "Th e Unive rsity is really

on the move," she says. "Things here are done the

right way; ther e's a strong will to do thal. And I'm very impr essed with the students; I enjo y the inte raction. " ~The arc scene in the Rich-

mond area is very active ," Softil: adds. "It's a vibrant part of the community." SoftiC immigrated to th e United States 11 years ago from Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. She comes to Richmond from Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla. , where she spent almosl eighl years on lhe faculty. Her most rece nt position was associate professor of arl and department chair. '¡1 am interested in building bridges among th e disciplines of individual art, " says SoftiC, whose areas of expertise include nol only

printmaking , but also drawing and painting. SoftiC's personal artislic pursuits also are varied. Her work has been included in group exhibi tions all over the world, including Poland , Germany, Ne,v Zealand , Finland , Northern Ireland and South Africa. SoftiC's work is in public collec tions a t the Academy of Fine Arts of the University of Sarajevo; Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney; Atlanta College of Art and Design; and the New York Public Library, among other places. SoftiC has had 20 solo exh ibi tions and ha s four planned for th e upcoming academic yea r, including one in October in the Marsh Art Gallery. "I'm particularly excited about that one ," SoftiC says . "It will

In his 33 yea rs in public education, Sam Pe rr y has risen through the ranks as a teacher, principal and administrator, culminating when he was named superintendent of schoo ls for Amelia County, Va., in 1997 . He is tapping into all th e sk ills honed in those posi tions for hi s new job: directing the teacher licen sur e pro gram in the University's Scho o l of Contiouing Studies. "The job is a perfect fit ," says Perry, whose responsibilities include recruiting working men and women who are int ~rested in teaching, helping to ensure they get lhe best training po ssible and upon lice ns ur e by the state, pla cing lhem in school systems. Perry also will teach some courses. "There just are n ot eno ugh teachers," Perry says, citing an often-quoted statislic aboul schools needing 200,000 teache rs a year for the next 10 years . "I'm so excited about helping to provide for this tremendous need. My goal is to make sure that Richmond produces the finesl te achers of any

UN IVERSITY o r RICHMOND

MAGAZINE

Page 21


graduate grade point average of at least 2.7, passing scores on academic assessment tests , and three years of post-baccalaureate experience (home making quali fies). But perhaps most important , they muse s it down with Perry himself and explain why they want to be

environment for Perry, who earned a bachelor's degree here in 1967, and a master's degree in educational administration in 1974. (He earned a doctorate in educationa l admi nis tration from Virginia Tech in 1994.) He also has been an active supporter and alumnus in the Fredericksburg alumni chapter. Perry says attorneys, computer programmers, newspaper carriers, engineers, nannies, accountantsand even an adjunct professor with a Ph.D.-have expressed interest in becoming licensed teachers through th e University. Twelve stu dents are enrolled for the fall, and more than 20 applications are on file. Informational seminars and advertisements are generating even more interest; Perry says his office has received more than 150 requests for additional information. Candidates for Richmond's licensure program must have an under-

P:1ge 22 FA Ll 2 0 00

pable, competent, caring and dedicated individuals," Perry says. "I also want to make su re they understand the commitment involved with going to school, and also with becoming a teacher." ~The bottom line ," Perry adds, "is that we want good people who want to teach kids." I '

Dr. Woody Holton Assistant professor of history Woody Holton is the son of a former Virginia governor and once considered pursuing a political career himself. But years as a political activist convinced him that he needed more than that to feel fulfilled. ~I enjoyed the 'noisy side,' which was spiriti ng the troops and socializing," he says. "But there was not much

opportunity for the 'quiet side,' reflective time or intellectual stimulation. Teaching provides the best of both worlds:¡ Teaching at Richmond marks a homecoming for Ho lton . He lived in Virginia 's capital city from 1970 to 1974 when his father, Linwood Holton, was governor of Virginia. "My family used to go to Spider football games,'' he recalls. Holcon's siste r Anne is a judge in the city, and Anne's husband, Tim Kaine, is mayor. Holton earned a bachelor's degree in English from the University of Virginia, and then spent several years as a political activist. He was the Midwest regional director for Public Research Interest Groups, then founded and directed Clean Up Congress. In this position, he recruited and trained hundreds of paid activists and volunteers to get pro-environment candidates elected to the Senate and U.S. House of Representatives. Holton \vorked with Clean Up Congress from 1990 to 1996, and earned a


Ph.D. in history from Duke University in 1990. He also was an adjunct professor of history at George Mason University, and a visiting assistant professor at Randolph-Macon \X'oman's College. In 1996, he joined the history department of Bloomsburg University in northeastern Pennsylvania. Since then, he has written several papers and scholarly articles and is the author of Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution (see Bookmarks, p. 31.) His book has received the Merle Curti Social History Award for 2000, presented by the Organization of American Historians. Holton says he is impressed with the caliber of students and faculty at Richmond. "As I was deciding whether to come to Richmond or to another ,veil -known school \vhere I also had an offer , I spent a lot of time studying the history department Web page," he says. "Joan Bak's class on Latin American history asked the sort of question one might expect in a literature or philosophy class as \veil as more traditional history questions. ·'1 expect that at Richmond , I will be intellectually challenged by both the students and my colleagues on the faculty ," Holton adds. "I value that challenge immensely. It's the reason I decided to come to Richmond." "I am especially interested in helping to recruit and retain African-American and Native American students ," Holton adds. "As our student body becomes more diverse , we not only offer opportunities to a greater cross section of Americans, hut create a richer education experience for all of

IH ·iW idiHiHli1 1

Dr. R. Duane Ireland Professor of management systems and holder of the W. David Robbins Chair of Business Policy Duane Ireland moved to Amarillo, Texas, as a young teen; received his undergraduate, master and doctoral degrees from Texas Tech University; and spent 17 years on the faculty of Baylor University. But leaving a tenured position in the Lone Star State and coming to Richmond was not as difficult as it might seem. "The University of Richmond has a culture that reinforces and values an individual's commitment to being a scholar-that is, to being a learned person," he says. "I find such a culture to be highly desirable and quite unique. "Once I was convinced that this is Richmond's culture, deciding to accept an opportunity to be a part of this community was an easy decision." Ireland comes to the University as a tenured professor of management systems and holder of the \V. David Robbins Chair of Business Policy. At Baylor, he was director of the Entrepreneurship Studies Program in the Hankamer School of Business. He also occupied the Curtis Hankamer Chair of Entrepreneurship, and served as an associate dean for research,

I

department chairman and a research fellow at the John F. Baugh Center for Entrepreneurship. Along with numerous honors from Baylor, in 1999 he received the award for Outstanding Intellectual Contributions to Competitiveness Research from the American Society for Competitiveness. Prior to Baylor, Ireland held teaching positions at Texas Tech University and then Oklahoma State University. At OSU, he met Dr. Michael A. Hitt, whom Ireland calls "one of the management field's most prominent scholars." Hitt, who is now at Arizona State University, and Ireland have remained close collaborators and friends. Together, they have written more than 30 articles and 10 books on strategic management, product innovation, entrepreneurship and corporate governance. An article they wrote for The Academy of Management Executive recently was named that publication's best paper of 1999. One of their textbooks, Strategic Manageme11f· Competitiveness and Globalization (the third coauthor is Dr. Robert


E. Hoskisson), is a best seller. Ireland is looking forward to living and traveling on the East Coast, continuing with his running program, and perhaps even competing in a half-marathon. Professionally , he is eager to continue with his research, and to share the results with his students. "The University has excellent students-individuals who are committed to the pursuit of academic excellence,M he says. ~1 want to contribute to the educational growth and development of these students." He adds, ''The explosion of knowledge in the strategic management discipline is quite stunning. I want to spend more time investigating some of the intriguing areas in my field that have evolved. "Without the continuous availability of new knowledgeknowledge that is generated through research-what we are able to disseminate to our students in the classroom quickly becomes outdated.M

POLITICAL SCIENCE Dr. Avis Jones-OeWeever Assista11t professor of political science Avis Jones-DeWeever seriously considered becoming a lawyer , and even applied to the University of Richmond School of Law. "Although I gained admission, I decided to go to graduate school instead,'' she recalls. "Perhaps I was destined to come here in some capacity." The legal profession's loss is academia's gain. Jones-DeWe eve r, a native Virginian, comes to Richmond as an assistant professor of political science. She will teach public policy; research methods; and race , class and gender in American politics. Her husband, Dr. Guy Earl W. OeWeever , will be on the faculty as a one-year post doctoral fellO\v in political science.

Page 24

FALL 2000

Jones -DeWeever received a bachelor's degree in political science from Virginia State University in 1990, a master 's degree in political science from the University of Akron in 1992 , and a doctoral degree in government and politics last spring from the University of Maryland, College Park. She has worked as a teaching assistant in the University of Maryland's department of government and politics; and as an adjunct professor in the department of history, politics and international relations at Bowie State University. Jones-De\XTeever says she wants to continue to "actively pursue my research agenda" while at Richmond. In previous projects, she has performed statistical analyses to study the impact of welfare reform for the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies; written position papers and fact sheets for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's Institut e for Policy Research and Education; and studied issues affecting students and schools for the Maryland

Delegates. She also ha s received several honors, including a Ford Foundation grant to fund dissertation research on affirmative action in several university campuses. Other research interests include affirmative action; urban politics; and the influences of race , class and gender on public opinion and political behavior. Like many of her colleagues, Jone s-DeWeever is eager to involve her Richmond students in her research experiences. ''I had an opportunity to teach a class during the interview process ," she says. "I ,vas truly impressed with the candor and expressiveness of the students. ~My personal teaching style incorporates interactive learning ," she adds. "I love to get the class room engaged. The students here seem to enjoy that , and such attitudes make my job much easier. " Jones -DeWeever also supports increasing the diversity on ca mpus, both in the student body as well as the faculty. "Having a good mix of people ," she says, "creates the best learning environment for everyone." laura S.Jejfre-y is the editorial assistant for the University of Richmond Magazine.


Competing in A New How Richmond benefits from the move to the Atlantic 1'0 Con\r~ nce

Why is it a good move?

In May, the Un ivers ity of

Q.

Richmond

Miller: The University's strategic plan, recently approved by the Iloard of Tru stees, calls for Richmond to enhance its national image. We look at conference affiliation as an important component of the perception and image of both the department of athletics and the University.

announced

it would

leav e the Colonial Athletic A'i.SOCiationto join the Atlantic 10

Conference as a full member , effective July 1, 2001. In late summer, several Richmond athletic administrators

sat down

with Brian Eckert, director of media and public relations, to talk about the impli cations of th e move. Present were Jim

Miller, director of athletics; Rulh Goehring, associate athletic director ; and Phil Stanton, sports (',{)ebri11g.Miller. Sta111011 and F.ckert information

director.

By moving to the Atlantic 10, we're able to join a league whose teams are not only geographically more national, but also of a national reputation for stro ng athletic competition. Q. How does athletics

contribute to a university's national reputation?

Miller: The television exposure received from playing in the Atlantic 10 will probably be rn times what wc get from playing in the Colonial. We're going to be involved in a conference that is televised nationally on a regular basis, particularly its men's basketball.

Richmond is now going to be regularly cove red in the news media of Cincinnati, Philadelphia, New York, Pittsburgh , and Washington, D.C. We arc going to be competing regularly against programs that are well-known,

established universities in those markets. We saw after the announcement was made that we got tremendous and very positive coverage in papers up and down the East Coast, as well as USA 1bday. Stanton: That coverage will be year-round, too. Men 's basketball will be the bulk of it, but I think with women's basketball, with fall sports, with spring sports, we'll receive coverage in all of those markets, which will be positive publicity for the University all year long.

Miller: One of our primary strategic goals calls for us to focus on becoming a top- ¡100 athletic program in America as measured by the Sears Cup, which awards points to teams that do well in NCAA tournaments.

We believe with the financial strength of our women 's programs and non -revenue sports, we are going to be very competitive and have a chance to regularly be involved in NCAA tournaments. We're excited about the possibility of having five to seven teams annually winning conference championships. That will enhance our university 's reputation as well.

U N IVEl l'> IT Y Of RI C HMO ND MAG,\ZINE

Page 25


Q. Will this change be good for Richmond's current student-athletes?

Goehring: If I were a studentathlete attending Richmond right now, I would be absolutely

thrilled at the prospects of getting into an NCAA championship , which is the goal of almost every one of our programs. Our university will be an impact player in the A-10 almost immediately, particularly our women's teams. Q. What about ticket sales?

It's unlikely that large numbers of visitors' fans are going to travel to Richmondfrom Philadelphia, New York or Bostonto see a game here. Is that going to affect us? Miller: There are not large numbers of people who travel to away games anywhere nowadays. There are three reasons why I think our attendance is going to

increase after we join the A-10. First, we will be on television a lot. I think our fans will see us play great teams, teams that have been in the NCAA tournaments the last several years - for example, Temple , Xavier, UMass, Dayton - on a regular basis. Second, we will be bringing more powerful teams to this area to play - bigger name teams, especially in basketball , where our ticket sales are really driven. Our expectation is that by moving up into the Atlantic 10, we should be able to attract other major basketball programs to play us in the Robins Center. Third , when we are not playing a national power in our nonconference schedule , we will be playing our traditional in-state rivals: James Madison, VCU, Old Dominion, William & Mary. They'll be replacing other teams on our non -conference schedule that aren't so attractive to our fan base. Our ticket sales will

"Tbe Atlantic 10

gives us visibility that only a league can provide." JohnBeilein, men's basketball head coach

Page 26 FALi . 2000

be positively affected hy our move to the A-10.

Stories about corruption in intercollegiate athletics are not unusualany more. Doesmembershipin a premier athletic conferencemeanthat the University of Richmond will automatically face those problems? Q.

Miller: I don 't think that membership in a more national conference necessarily means that you are facing those issues. That 's not to say that any school - any school - can 't find itself in a situation where there are violations of NCAA rules. There are many situations that you can 't control which may result in a violation. It comes down to two things: One is the type of people you hir e - the type of men and women who coach your teams - and the other is your reaction to those issues. I think most major problems deal more with hmv a university responds to problems. Do they cover them up? Do they try to deflect the issues? I know that at this university , we are blessed with having a coaching staff that is committed to winning, committed to graduating student -athletes, committed to providing a great experience for student -athletes while they are here , and they are also committed to doing things the right way. If there is a problem, we will respond to it appropriately.


Goehring: This is an athletic program of high integrity, but then this is an entire university of h igh integrity. There is no reason to envision an increase in vio lations in the future because of a change in conference affiliat ion. Although the name of our league will change, our comm itment to compliance with NCAA rules will certainly not waiver.

~~~r~~~!:~h:, ~11:~~ii~i~~

"Tbe move

basketball team instant credibility ,"

made to benefit men's basketball. Is that the case?

Miller: Men 's basketball is clearly the driv ing force behind the decision. If it were not in the best interest of men's basketba ll, we would not be going.

However, if you poll the rest of our coaches - women 's basketball , for instance - they are ecstatic about competing in the A- 10. There are some negative issues. There are some sports in which we are moving from a very highly

Bob Foley, women's basketball head coach

ranked co nferenc e to a lower ranked one. But, we believ e our coaches will provide great leadership for these programs, and we thin k that they are going to go into that league and be one of the very top teams , get back into NCAA p lay and be a power in the A-10.

Atlantic 10 Conferenceprofile with Richmond Nine of the 12 Atlantic JO member institutions are private and seven have enrollments of 6,500 or less.

IMMfiii§l:i:fl¼IM:i::ii:iF East Fordham, Bronx, N.Y. Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass . Rhode Island, Kingston, R.I. St. Bonaventure, Bonaventure, N.Y. St. Joseph's, Ph iladelphia Temple, Philadelphia \X'est Dayton , Dayton, Ohio Duquesne, Pittsburgh George \Vashington, Washington, D.C. L1 Salle, Philadelphia Xavier, Cincinnati RICHMOND, Richmond, Va. 'Publi c uni, ·er5it)

Type Private

Enrollment 6,275 23,991 11,500

Private Private Type Private Private Private Private Private Private

3,000 3,000 30,000 Enrollment 6,300 9,500 20,246 3,000 6,500 3,000

So, it was important for men 's basketball ; it does drive the television exposure; it does drive the revenue production ; and it was an important , positive step in men 's basketball. But it is a positive for oth er sports , as well.

The Universityrecently completedthe task of bringing Q.

its athletic program into compliance with Title IX, the law under which men and women receive equitable opportunity to participate and earn scholarships. Will the move to the

A-1O affect that? Miller: It will have no impact on our Title IX compliance. We are in complianc e with Title IX, and in fact we are a leader among Division I intercollegiate athletic programs in Title IX compliance . Our student body is approximatel y 50-50 between males and females. Our participation ratio among our studentathletes is approximately 50-50. Our scholarship division more than meets Title IX requirements.

UNIVERSITY

ot

RICH/l.10ND

MAGAZINE

Page 27


Atlantic 10 Conference footprint Percentage of Richmond studenlsfromthe

A-10 region

Percentage of Richmond alumni in the A-10 region

Virginia

Goehring: Because we are so genderequitable , our women - in comparison to whatA -10 women have in terms of resources and scholarships are in a very good position, competitively speaking. We should be in very good shape going into the new conference. Miller: For us to he a top-100 program in America, which we are now commined to being - a significantly higher performance than Richmond has ever had we will rely on our women's programs to lead us there. Their success in winning conference championships and being in NCAA play will earn the Sears Cup points that are the measure of quality of the overall athletic program.

The men's programs have been successful in the past and will continue to be. Q. Richmond is going to be

recruiting at a new, higher level. How will Atlantic 10 membership change the character of University of Richmond student-athletes?

Miller: I don 't think il will have any negative impact on the academic quality of the studenlS we recruit. l'ag c 28 FA LL 2000

When we first started looking at the Atlantic 10, we conducted a very extensive study comparing all of the institutions in the A-10 and the CAA - athletically, academically , every way we could. We were surprised to learn the academic profile of the A-10 schools is a much closer fit to Richmond than that of the CAA schools. Of the CAA schools , we are now the only private school; there are nine in the Atlantic 10. When you compare the academic parameters - entering grade-point averages , entering SAT scores, grnduation rates the A-10 outperforms the CAA in all of those areas as a group. Now , there are fine academic institutions in the CAA, but the A-10 with its preponderance of small private schools having selective admissions more closely resembles the academic profile of our university. Q. Richmond teams, in some cases, will have to travel farther to play away games. How will that affect class and study time?

Miller: It should have minimal or no effect for a couple of reasons. One , the A-10 schedules in such a way as to minimize missed classes. The best example is baseball, where instead of

playing Friday, Salurday and Sunday conference games, you play a doubleheader on Saturday and a single game on Sunday. Many of the sports only invite top-four programs to tourna ments , so you won 't be going away several days to a tourna ment after you've finished eighth or ninth during the regular season. Actually , we think there could be less missed class time at Richmond after we join the A-10.

Goehring: Also, there aren 't requirements in some sports that all A-10 schools play each other. And when you do - let's say a trip to Duquesne - you partner with another school also playing Duquesne and schedule a game with that other school, and play them at Duquesne. That saves a much longer, additional trip. Stanton: In some sports, intercollegiale teams end up making their long trips for non-conference games. Now, we'll be able to get those short trips for non-confer ence games with VCU, James Madison and Old Dominion , so our non-conference travel should be much reduced. It will balance our.


The Atlantic 10 invited Richmondto join after commencementlast May, when much of the university community was awayfor the summer. Haveyou beenable to gauge alumni, faculty and student reaction? Q.

Miller: As far as the student body, no - but there were several very unofficial polls during the CAA men 's basketball tournament in March, when the issue was alive the first time around. I probably asked two dozen students there, with painted faces and dressed up crazy in support of our team, and to a person

'Joining the Atlantic 10 Conference enhances our prospects for qualifying for the NCAA tournament." Peter Albright, women's soccer head coa

they supported a change to the A-10. Adminedly, they're strong

basketball fans, but the studentat hletes on our teams are also excited, as are the coac hes, and many alu mni.

tunities we believe await. In reality, of course, only time will tell.

We have heard from some alumni who wou ld rather see us in the CAA - that's understandab le , because we've been there for a long time and had a successful run - hut my e-mails , letters and phone calls are 10-to-1 in favor of the move.

Miller: You won't find a single coach or administrator who won't tell you that, from a competitive standpoint, it's always better to be the southernmost school in a conference. When you are recruiting for all the outdoo r sports, you have a recruiting advantage over everyone else .

Even the people who are unsure about it, when they see the facts and know that the A-10 and Richmond match very well, become much more positive when they see the stati stics behind the decision. Q. Somepeoplethink Richmond is spreading its wings in the wrong direction, leaving its traditional rivals and warmer climate in the Southfor unfamiliar opponents,colder weather and expensive big cities of the North.

Goehring: You certainly can't argue about the colder weather! However, we've explored the many other variables in depth and are excited about the oppor-

We are leaving the cozy , comfortable environment of th e CAA, that is a fact, although we will maintain rivalries with those schools. All our sports will con tinue to compete on a regular basis with James Madison, William and Mary, Old Domin-

ion , VCU. We'll maintain those re lationships and still continue to play them annually. But, if we're going to succeed at the national level and see how good we can be, we need to jump out of the foxhole and go up the hill. And, that's what we've done. Will we take some nicks and scrapes and bumps and bruises? Yes. We're not going to jump out and dominate the A-10. But we have sta11ed up the hill, to try to be as good as we can be. lfyou would like to receive netl'S releases by e-mail from the athleti c depar1me11/, pl ease send a message lo athletic @richmond.edu.

HowRichmond fits the Atlantic10 academicprofile Atlantic IO member instimtions have performed on par with the Colonial Athletic Association in terms of academic qualifications and graduation rates for students and student-athletes .

Atlantic 10 CAA

Average SAT 1122 1100

GPA

3.29 3.29

Student.athletes 74%

(JN I V rnSITY

66%

OF RICH M ON[)

All Student_,; 66%

61%

MA C AL i NE

Pag e 29


Exploring Realitie s: Stories ofYoung Women Making Decisions and Finding Meaning

Eye of the Storm

MAURA \'<7oLF, W'90

Stone Circles,2000 Young women and the decisions they make about

AIL'~INIBOOKS

careers, relationships,

Book Steps ALEXANDRAK. M lllER,

G'SO Pegub Publ6h er~,

2000 Otildrenleamtoread whenlheyaresurrou"""'1bygood <>·

ample; of

reading ,nd

writing, im·

=™" mgood iruitruction ,andgi\en appropriate books. But how do parentsand educatorsknowwhatthe rightbooksare?And whenistherighttimeto

gh'Cthc.scoooksto children? Millereliminatcsthe gu~work

in t.hi.sspiral-

boundbook,which dtsaibestheleaming -toreadproces.s.Jtaho indudesanannotatedlist of morethan 600 fiction and nonfictionbooks suitableforchildren from pre;d,oolmrough1ruru gra~. .\lillerhascoauthorcds<. "•ernl articles.and has been

involvedin edurntion formorethan20years

asa teacher and administrator.She dc;;ignsandconducts

workshopsin early literacyfor parents and teachersof young children through her

-

firm,A!ixK.Millcr Consu!1ing, which is b-asedin Richmond.

Page 30

FA L L 20 00

spirituality and

Ii

otherissut-sarethefocusof thislX>Ok, whichfearures stories\'i'olfgleant'<lfrom con\'ersatiom with women acrossthecoumry.(lnsome cases,nameswerechanged to protect privacy.) ··Jusednoscientific process,"' the author writes in the introdU<.tion. "I followed amrsteriouspath thatled me from one woman to the next,nC\'Crknowingwhere itwouldleadme.lnterviev.'S wt>TCtapedonbuses,trains, mountaimidesandcity ~treets." Wolf asked each woman threequestions:Whatare the three most significant dec isions she made since leaving school; what did she learn from those decisions; and who and what were the people, places and things that influenced thedecisionmaking process. 111e authorindudesquestions and exercises designed to help readers explore their own life choices Wolf, who was profiled in the Wimer 2000 University

of RichmondMagazine,

LI.NKFORD, R '7O, a n d

Healing an Angry Heart: Finding Solace in a Hostile World

A Journey North: One Woman 's Story of Hiking the Appalachian Trail

Ch arl es F. Br yan Jr .

CARDWELLC. NUCKOLS,

ADRIE.'\'NE H ALL, AW'95

Free Press, 2000

R'7 1, an d Bill Ch ick erin g

E DITED BY NELSON 0 .

In 1994, fourtattered scrapbooks conta ining more than 500wateroolorswere found in a Connecticut bank vault, along with a 5,000-page illustrated memoir. These documents werethelife"sworkofPvt. Robert Knox Sneden, a Union cartographer during the Civil War. Snedenenlisted in the Unionarmyafterthefal!of Fort Sumter.As a soldier andmapmaker,he witnessed many of the mootfamousbattlesofthe war. His diary and paintings, reproduced in this book, bring to life the daily struggle o f the commonsoldier , andare considered some of the mootimportantCi\"i]War documents ever produced. Atravelinge.xhib it ofthe artwork is scheduled for the New York Historical Socicty, Atlanta Historical Society, Chicago Historical Society and Huntington Library in Louisiana Lankfordiseditoro f the

VirginiaMagazine of Historyand Biogmphy, the quartt"Tlyjoumalofthe Virginia Historical Society. He has written and ed ited se\'e ralotherbooks, including 7bela.st American

Aristocrat:1beBiographyof majored in history and Dmul K.E.BmceandAn women"ssrudiesa t Richmond and dt'"\"Ott-d Jrishnumi11Dixie. • muchofhertimeto communityservice.Shecer foundt>JtheVolunteer Action Council, and helped writeaproposaltoestablish the Virginia Campus Outreach Opportunity League on c-J mpus. Wolf li\·es in Boston and works withCityYearlnc.,a national program that seek_~ to persuade young adults to gi\'etimetoservice. •

HealthCommunications

~lnc..1 9()8

"Ne\·erdeludeyourselfinto

disappear.'" Hart Withthcse words , Cardwell C.Nuckols andhiscerauthorguide reade rs through the challenges and pain of rewncilingwithanger.The book chronicles 1he struggles of real people whose heam are in conflict over lost jobs, the deaths of lo\"ed ones and other adversi ties . The authors showthatbystrivingto channel the energy of anger into positive actions, those in conflict can begin to find peace Nuckols,wholivesin Apopka , Fla.,hold5 adl'anceddegreesfrom Governors State University in University Park, 111. ll cis a partner and board member of American Enterprises Solutions Inc. , and has written more than 30journalarticles, 14 books and pam phlets , and ot herpublic.itions. ll ehas received na tional recognition for ou tstanding con tributions to the alcohol and drug addiction fields His co-author is a communica tions consultant whohaspublishedse\·eral booksandarticlesinthe fieldsof business and management, theology, and addictionandrecovery. -

There is no greater pilgrimage for outdoor enthusiaststhan tohikcthe Appala chian Trail, a 2.100-mile route from Georgia to Maine.Hall"slX>Okisa detailed account of completingthcgn1eling "thru -hike"(thehiker's term for the end-to-end trek ),afeatmore commonly accomplisht-d bymcn.Hernarrati\'ehas been called vivid and insightful , rangingfrom honest acknowledgements ofhcrdoubtandfears , to expositions on the env ironmental issues and confessions of growing affection for her hiking companion. who proposes marriage shortly before they complete their adventure. Hall completed a master's degree in environmental studies from the University of Montana andisworkingfortheU.S Forest Service in Denali National Park,Alaska,in park management . She is theauthoroftwoother books , including Backpacking: A U"bman's Guide.

Thomas Jefferson 's Journey to the South of France

-

Roy MOORE, R '38, and Alma Ches n ut ,\-loore

lnthespringof \ 787 , TI10masJe!Tersonleft America fora th reemonth tour through the South of France. The


future president took copious notes and wrote manyleners , andcompiled somuchmaterialthatupon hisretumtoAmerica,he wrote a 44-page encyclopedia of his agricultur-Jl , economic,architecturaland cultural observations.His journeyisre-createdinthis book, which includes photographs of the same images Jefferson viewed; period engm\'ing.~, portraits and maps; and excerptsfromJefferson's notes and leners. 1be New lbrk Timescalled this book 'a simple and easy introduction to this dazzling interlude in Jefferson's life." Moore is a photographer andauthor;heandhiswife 1ookthesamctrip1 1s Jeffersonse1 ·emltimes before completing their tome. LuciaC.Srnnton, Shannon senior research historian at the Monticello Foundation and a participant in the Richmond Quest symposiun1 on thc rebtionship betweenJeffersonand Hcmings, contributed the book\ introduction . •

FACULTY BOOKS Conceil'ing Spirits : Birth Rituals a nd Contested Id e n t iti es Among Lauj e of Indonesia DR. JENNIFER

\Y/,NOl :RSE,

ASSOCIATEl'ROH.SSOROF

Smith!-Oni:m Instituti on !'res~. 1999 Until recently, Inner and Outer Indonesia were (Onsideredtwo

,=

gmphica!lyand cultura lly distinc 1 Here, Nourse bring.~ the two lndonesi as togetherinonestudyas shefocusesonavarietyof

communities inhabitt-J by one ethnic or linguistic group called the LaujC.She explores their ideas about birthspirits,identityand religion, and considers how these ideas create a complex and di1·ersc mix of local and global ideas Nourse focuses on broad socialpauemsaswellas indi1'idualicy,dissonance and disagreement.

ConceivingSpirilsispart of the Smithsonian Series inEthnogmphic lnquiry Nourse writes in her book's introduction that many of her key ideas were dcwlopt:d during her 1997 sabbatical from Richmond • Forced Founders: Indian , Debtors , Slav e s , & the Making of th e American Rernlution in Virginia DR. WOODY HoLTo-.:,

1776, the gentry believed theonlywaytoregain control of the common people was to take Virginia out of the British Empire. Here,theoldstoryof patriot vs. loyalist become .~ more complex. Holton (see article, p. 20) is assistant professor of history at Richmond.This year,hi~book has received theMcrleCuniSocial History Award, presented hy the Organization of AmericanHistorians ,a n<l theFmuncesTa1·em Museum Book Award, presented by the New York Sons of the Rt,ulution. • Leaming Literature an Era of Chang e

in

EDITED BY DR. D ONA H1CKF.Y,ASSOCIATE PROFESSOROf E .\GUSH,

and

Don n a Reiss Stylus Publishing. 2000

In response to challenges and changes in higher edurntion, l,;niversity of North how should Carolina Press. 1999 profossors of literature ~'hy did the owners of vll>1 plantations, viewed by many confrontthe quest ions of of thdr contemporarie; as cultural , aristocrat~, print and computer literacy?Spectfica!ly,how do they apply their thinking aboutnewliternciestotheir ~rovoca1 liter'Jture classes? This book m:e prese nts a range of remterpre,., .,.,~ tationof .,v_ str-&tegiesde1·elopt-d by tcachersoflitemrurewho oneofthe hin-eheardthecallfrom best-known events in srudent~,employersand American history, Holton academic administrators for shows that when Thomas more relevant learning Jefferson,GeorgeWashingexperiencesinane..-er tonandoihereliteVirginians changing worl<l joint--dtheirpt't'fSfromother Integrating critical colonies in declaring theory and classroom indept'lldencefromBritain. they acted partly in respon.'iC experience, the contributors <lcmonstrnte how they 1ograssn:xxsrebellions fosterlcarning,collabomagainsttheirownrule. !ion and cooperation, and Their efforts to shape creati, ·e thinking.These London's imperial policy pmcticingteachersofferan had been thwarted hr exciting range of new British merchants and a models where professors coalition of Indian nations, are partners in learning, so trade was suspended. an<lwhereeduc-Jtion is not TI1is led to rebellions by deli\"eredbutdiscovered enslaved Virginians, and disseminated. Indians and tobacco farmers . By the spring of ASSIST>\NT PROFESSOROF

~ i·-.H·. .r,:.

,;t"'

Hickey teaches literature and composi tion at Richmond,andis1he author of Da,eloping a WrittenVoiceand Figures

of Thoughtfor College lf'riters.Herco-authorisan associate professor of English and humanities, and coordinator of online learningatTidc\\~JtCr Community College. -

Old Taoist : The Life , Art , and Poetry of Kodojin DR.STEPHENLADDISS,

PRO!'f-SSOROF ART

Columbia Uni\'ersity Press.2000 In early modem Japan, ChinescandJapant-searts f\ourL~hed side by side Japanese

artists delved deeply into Chinese painting , calligrnphy, liter:iturcandreligion,often measuring their own achiC\ernentsagainstthose oftheirChinesccounter partswhilcc.11ltiva1ingnati1·e Japanese poetic and cal!igraphicfom1s Kodojin (1865- 1944) the "Old Taoist, " was the last of these great poet-painters in Japan. He composed a number of poems and ink paintingswhileli\ing quietly and modestly. His relianceonthe1 ·aluesofa literaiilifestylemetmany challenges as Japan transformed itself into an industrial and militarized nation,buthene\·er w~&1·ered in his beha1·ior or hisart. This book brings together 150of Kodojin's Chinese poems, more than IOOofhishaikuan<l tanka, and many examples of his calligraphy and ink paintings.Addissdetails the importance of the poetpainter tradition , outlines the life of Kodojin, and offers a criticalappraisalof his work A<ldis.s,theTuckerBoatwright Professor of

HumanitiesatRichmond,is theauthorofsevemlother books including '/'heArt of

Zell:Paintings and Calligmphybyj(lpanese Monks 1600-1925and How tolookatjapaneseArt. • Th e Univer s ity o f Richmond , 197 1-1999: A Sur vey of Its Histor y in an Era ofTr an s ition \Y/. lhRR!SO:-.;i),\NfEL

The Print Shop. Uniwrsi ty of Richmond. 2(XX)

II

Theclosing1hreedec--&dcsof tl1e20thcenturywereoncs

1;~.• ;~~~. Takingup whereReubcn Alley's History

--

•..:._ oftbeUm1'f'rS1tyof Richmond(Unil'ersity Press

ofVirginia, 1977) end~, tl1is accounttrncesthe University's history from 1971 until the inauguration of the institution's eighth president , Dr.\Villiam E. Cooper.inApril 1999. Chaptersincludeadministn th'echanges.dil"crsityin curriculum and community, genderissues,and1he library and campus communications "Through the benefit of hind~ight. . .itcan be acknowledgt--d that the magnificent gift to the uni..-ersityin I969byche E.Claiborne Robins family signaled tl1e end of a long episo<leinthehistoryofthe University of Richmond," the authorwrites."lhisgift usheredinatimeofchange, development, grO\\lh, and optimism which ha.~ continued unabated as the institutionprcpares,with vigorandconfidence,to enter the new millennium." Daniel,prnfessorof history emer itus , ser..-ed on the Richmond faculty from 1956until 1993. He is also the authorofjimmie Foxx: '/be Lifeand Timesof a

&sebal/ Hall of fomer,

1907-1967and Rit-erRoad Church,lk1ptist:A Hislory, 1945-1995. -

UNIVERSITY at RICHMOND

MAGAZINE

Page 31


f113 3

LlzParkerf,one and Howard tookanol-so-\\11nderfulriverboat lripinPmnce,fmughtwith mishapsandinconwniences,not thc!castofwhichwasacaseof foodpoisoningforliz.Gladys 11-lat}·l)'icrPrichard,W,ofBlack liauffman .\lctz hasjust i1ountain,N.C.,conlinues1ott11or retumedfrornagardcntourof asccond-graderinherchurch"s Englandwithhcrdaughtcr. litcraqprogramandslieis Certainlyoneofourmost teachinga 54-yur-oldwomanto tra1·eleddassmatesisAudrey rcad.lnaddition.shevoluntecrsin Gruhin Fixdl , who, withher theRead-\le-a-Storyprogramat hushand,l.es,makesatleast 1helocalcorrec1ionalcenter. threetripsayeartoforeign counlries.AudreyandLes attendedthereunion - herfi1ot ewr - andsheassuresusshe won"tmissanother. f'.atllellerBamiclcandJohn travelarollndtheoountryquitca W.W."Bill"Wright,R,hasffl bit, oonductingbridge rctircdforcightyearsandis toumaments.J\'atshowedus 11JeJ,iainBuildi11g(Ill theQ/dt/Qu-nlrnmRichmondCQ/lege campus.drr:a 1900 enjo}inggoodhealthwhilcliving picturesofsorneofherbeautiful (C<>tirlesy QjDementf.ffiller Studios) atCcdarfJeldinRichmond.His quilts.W11attalent1Natwasable son,W.WiattWrig.htJr. ,dicdof tocontactl,eahl.evinAbraham , cancerDec.2i, 1999.Thc\\7att w·hosaidsheandherhusband \'irginia Cunningham Rose \>eattendedthcBoatwright WrightHousein Harrisonburg,Va., keepb11,1·andwell.Theiroldest 5ocietybanquetonfridaynight, wrotcthatshcwasinRichmond ahomeforthede\-elopmemally grandchildgraduatedsumma theAlumniPicnicatnoon rcunionweekcnd,butwaswilh dis.ah led,wasnamedinhishonor. cumlaudefromLong1rnod Saturdayandawrynicedinner JohnauendingthcMC\'50tl1 Collcgethisiear. wi1htheRichrnondCollege reunion.Shesaidshethought Lintonandlmcwedherefrom alumniandthecla.~\ofl940 aboutus Rev.I. RayBakerJr.,R,of \reweresaddenedtohearofthe TexaslastApril.lt'ssogoodtobe Poquoson,Va.,l'Olunteei,atthret' (don't ~k us whywedidn't know '"aftcr.n nursinghomesplayingthepiano anyofthem,andl'icewr:sa).The demhsoffourclas:smatessinceour backin''God'soountry yearsinTcxas . Thankfuil)'.wewere highlightofthe\\l'l'kend,as 50th reunioo: Alice Rawling.~ andorganeachweekandleading hereinJanu.arywiienLlnton"s alwa)'s,wastheSundaybrunchat Johru;on,ConwayBibbran theresidentsinsinging.l!eis l05·)"Car-oldmotherpassedawa y. thchomeof Lill'arkcrCone and Sl}ke,LydiaCrabtreel.onand Roy,\loore, R, ofNewYorkisthe actileinhischllrth,gardenstwo Whataninspiralionshewas Howard.Theirgracious Christ}'l.ouMillerRussell. acresoff\owcrsandshrubsand photographer andauthorof Annl:larkllo"·ehaswrittena hospita!ityhasbccomethc Alsosadtoreportarethcdeaths belongstoabookclub 'Tbomm Jefferson 'sjourneyto bookforteache1o,CaseJ/11dia;in customaryandrnuch -anticipatcd of1hrccspouses: i\la11·Campbell tbeSo11tbo/Fra11ce,publishcdby Hm1mluryScience&Jucolion , culminationofourreunions Paulson"shusband.Jack;Be tty Stewart,Tabori&Chang.See andshekeepsbusyasa Thank.s,LizandHoward ClementAdair"shusband, F.ddic ; llookmarh ,p. 30 consultantand presenterat Therewerenotes- somt and Martha CloptonJoneiii' Rev.George IUI. Rumney, R,a happyandsomenot-from husbar.d,llert.Ourthooghtsand S)mposiumsaddressingthe retircdculone!intheAirforceand tcachingofscicnceandmalh. several clas:smateswhnwere syrnpath iesarewithallofthem a Iell'ran of WorldWar11and lhl' unabletoattend.l.ibbyKibler J.or,oftrn.velinggoingon\\ith ThisycarAnnhastra1·eled10 Korean\li'ar,ha-itwochildren,six From !be \li:;'/bamp/011 CreteandFrance.Shesa)'Sthat KeihnwrotethatsheandFredhad thed~!Lo ttieBlanton grandchildrenandonegrl'al• ClassSecretaries yforeign heeninandootofthehospitallast Applewhitehasjust returnedfrom Chuckdoesn"tenjo grandchild.l\elhesinDamille,\'a. tra1·el,soshegoeswithfriends NATun: Hnn :NB.IRMCJ.t: ,(;rrece )ear.NancyLeslieChambers L~ atriptothelsleofR/10cles 12 KnollRidgcCourt,#1922 andotherfamilymen1bers oonfinedtoaw™'l'lchairasthe MildrcdDraperAtkimiOlland llaltimore,MD21210-ll38 resuhofareaction1oa Frmk,whoscgranddaughter Johnat@home.com p=riptiondrug.Ruthlliller gmduaccsfrornhighschoolthis Johnson isreco1•eringat home )ear,spenta\\eekinSaintCroix. N ..t~C\" LUEliB\"STABLES frommajorsurgtl)'intheearly Bi~Rosenbaumtturnit:t. woll 8'!0Mulberryl.ane spring.\'l'ewishaquickand onaskitripto\renger,Swill.trland, Culpcper,VAt2701 l.~tables@n\ . gemlink.com andanothertoSteamboat,Colo. R.Franklinlloughjr.,R,of oompletereoow11 ·1oallofyou. AnnTu·omblyJ,eland Cross Shealsokeep.sbUS)"\\ithother Salern.\'a.,hasbeenretiredforl4 l11e18ofusatour55threunion John AtkinsonJr., R,ofVillanova, wasunabletoattendthereunion acti1itiessuchashi.ltinga11dtaprcars.Hccclebra1edhL~80th hadawonderfultime,andweall Pa.,isproudtobecelcbratinghis becauseherhusband, F.mie.was dancing- yes,tap-danc ing1 birthdaylastl\01"Cmberand!a.\t agrecdthatwelookprettygood 53rdaJ1niwrsa11·ofgraduating retiringfromhisadministrative Juneheandltis\\ifccdebratl'<lthe forourage.Ourtha11k\goto fromtheUnil'ersityofRichrnond . birthoftheirfu-stgreat-grandchild,Ruth l,atimer and Doris Colley positionatf.olgate.Ann!i.:l)'Sthey arebuildingahomeonCapef.od AmeUaUttslsk.-y.aswellas50ycars Bergerforgettingital!together. ofmarriage.Onhisanniwrsar!',hc atNorthTruroandhopetumo1e madeahole•in•one. inb)·Seplernber.

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,\lar yLou(.oghillMiller ,W,a.ixl Jean 11-\ood y \"incentrnether UIStMarch1 llarygl)TICooper From the Westha111pto11 · .'ilxn:/11r J' 1\lcGraw:uxi\li'al~·tooktheir"'best llas1> Charliemm"OOtoRaprahannock husband,Scuart,atldaand tripever''tof:gyptforl\\'Oweeksand \\'estmi11~ter -C:mterhuryin Woodfin 'swedding50yearsago, Ellllll "Ell lE" J~cuo~Jo~t:5 r,othiswasananniiersaryofsorts toPrm'f:llce ,France,foroneweek 1208Mcl)o\\-el1Drive lnington,Va. ,in(ktolierl998. forthem Tiieirfourthgranddaughterwas Grcensboro,NC27408 Despiteherse>erefibmmya !gia,shc ,\larihnAlexanderKubu's bomlastOctober. arnlherhusbandcontirmctoS(nld From the Westbamp/011 llarbamllull 'J\,llhasmadeq11ilc hllSband:Ed ,hadopen-heart Othertmvelers11-ere l.ea timemchspringinDuck,~.C.,and Class.l'ecl'J'!ary anameforhcrsdf onthcEastcm surgeryhutisdoing1-erynice~'now Thompson0sb11m ,whospen11WuShoreof~laryland.Shcisinl'Ol,ed takctri["dC"mtlwlntraroastal !UJLDR EDLEE"M1~11 " Weallh0[Jehisrecow11·isaquick weekiinAustrdlia;ll-laryLee Watcrway.Shern;o)'saclose ANOf.R SO\ G1u intl1cproposedPocomokeRill'r relationsh ip11-ithhergranddaugJ19()10\\oodSomlDri\'C andspeedyone i\loore\'inson,whcnisited JWle Diseow11•~nter,amarine tcrllill~ ·,whosemoth€rwa\il 1ary Richmond,\\\23229 l ha1-ejustabou1rocm-eredfromLawsunWillis andCharlotte seienw'[1eritagemuseumwhich Lou"slatcdaughter,l.yd ia myltipreplacementandha1-e llouchlnsOeckcr ; Bets}·lklhune willbebuiltontheri\'erfrontin Fiftieihweddinganni,·er:miesare resumedmyusualacti1ilies. LanghomeandJ.cwwhotraw led PocomokeCity,~ 1d.Harbarais thehigthingagaininthisletter From /be lfrslba111plu11 toCharlottc,N.C.,andSpartan · chairper,onoftlwl'ocomoke andlamcertainth€rearemanJ Class &cretary• burg,S.C. ,to1isitth€irson ,andto Marketingl'artner.Jiip ,whichis other,celebratingwhohall'nOt theBilunoreinAshe\illc,N.C.;and Mrn 1 lhnRO\ IIORIGU coonlinatingfundrabingand contactedm€ 4640Stuarti\lcnuc Jean LowHansonandChuck, pmmotiumd ac:thilies. Thisproj«t Richmond,VA23226 whohadafabuloustriptol.ond on hast,'fllltnenthusiasticsupport withtlieirthreedaughters frumthcgowmor'sofficeandthc lhada11'01lderful rJe11sylctter W<1lter V Powell, Charlottellerrink Sayreha~ fmmllo~ie RinghamKiserin MarylandunilcrsitySj stem.You l.ewisT.Booker, Randa soldherhouseandwillbem01 ing January.Shesta)sbusywithher l'54. spenta memberofthelloardofTru,tees, intoarnndoinSepttmber.Sheis makcusproud.Barbara! 'J\o1oofo11rclassmateshavchad churchandhasbeenhelpingU~ wasre--elec1edchaim1W1ofthe hJkingfurw semesteron a "Jrdtohmingnomore serioushcaltliproblems :Lucy getreadyforher25threunionat Westminster -CantertJury "PoUy"'.twman Smith and Princetonl.niwr,ity.Theyenjoy faculty exchange Foundation.Aseniorpartnerin pnlwurk. lsurelyv.ouldliketolicarfrom Nancyl.ayarenowintheir theirhom€,butwereicedinfora lhelawfirmofllunton& lhoseof)ouv.t1oha1'Cn"tbcen respectivehornesafter at Shanghai fcwda)S inJWlll.11") \li'iJJiams,he reomll)becamethe hcardfrominyears! Howi c,LlsaandDa,idhada hospitali7.ationandsurger rl University llthrccipirntoftheRichrnond under,tandl'oll)'ismakinggood greattripoutWe;tinjul)i999 BarAssocialion"sHill -Tucker Tiiei· wentasfaras\'ellowstone pmgre,sandNanqsa ysshe's Award.Tiieawardispresentedto National1'11rk .l/011 ·iewastrJingto feelingwonde rful.llarbara membersofthelegalprofe;.sion Cronin Lo,·cll11"llSwithNanq persuadehersister .llonnie,to .\lickandJaneOcns fordistinguishedpublicservice come to'iewJerseytoliver,othat Mcll-tanigaltookthcircntire aftcrshecamchomefromthe hospitalandser\'edas"chiefcook shecouldhedo,,ertofamily.i>a, id, farnily(fourchildren , spouscs, whowillheahighsch(x1 lseninr andbottk-washer.'"Thcrehas andall!Ograndchildren)to ElizabethAnn Helms'faylorbccnalargc"hocline··amongus nextyear,ishikingatculleg:e:-. in Maui,llawaii , \\hcrethcy 1.emuine, \'i',ofNev.port&ach, aswe·wsharedinfonnation \'irginiaaJ1d .\urthCarulina occupiedindivid11a lcll1Ster Calif.,andherhu,band,RolaJ1d, aboutNancyandl'olly.\\'ehaw lnmid-Apriljackandlhada oottagessoeachfamilyhadboth tra,eledtol'arisandBurgundi kn()llneachmberfor50years grea1surprise,isitfrom lk1ty theirprirncyandthecompanion winccountryinJuncand andwe'restillaclose-knitcla:;.s O'BrienYeatsandjoc.TI1Cj were shipoftherest- mostofthe JelTD.SmithJr.,R.hasbcen Scp1Cmbcr!999.Togctlierdie)' Someofthelll'll~l\-epickedup in\Ollnforthe50th -arutiw1'S.11") time.Agoodarrangement! apix:,intedtodieboan:lofdirectorshaweigJitchildrenandl3 celebratio11ofsomeAnnl'frieods . fromourhotlinemncemstrips llenandLouWinn ofdiclirginiaBoan:lofOptornctry.grandchildrenandenjoy1isitsto TI1Cjlooi-:edand seemedverywell McCutcheonspenltlwirSOthat NancyGraham Harrell and andfromthemall.!nShehas TiieirSOt l5,\li111andJa.inie ,are Waltcrha1-ebeenlot"rance;Susie From the '.f"e.1/hamptcm thesceneofthecrirne ,where~· retiredfromteachingbut Kcgan.',uttlcandlicrsistcrare maniedandli,edose hy.Daughter actuallyspen1d 1eirhoneynK01150 ClassSecrelarJ' remains"h11\) ' ll.\ever." Kate y l'inowinAndrnon,S.Cllett)· )earsagoattheHighHarnptonlnn Gr\~ fft :HRIW COPPOCK planningatriptoSpain and :mdJoev.l're(Hl theirwaybackfr1HnatCushicrsindicbeautifu Francc;andJoSu eLeonard 9()13WestStreet l 'iorth SimpsonandRemhopetotravcl a1isitv.ithher. VA20110 CarolinaSmokeyi1ountains.TiieirMana~sa~, totlieBalticsandtoAntarctka GinEllet1,ournH1st:u1ttm1eler,thrttchildrenandmograndsons Congratulationsto FrancesAllen \\'instonandlhavedoriealittle enjoyedabargetripthrough joinedthemforav.ttk Schools'son,Da,id.Collegiate dome;tictraveling-<;eorgia, lloUandinApril. llcknColc TomandFloGrayTullidgetm k Schoolhasestablishedth€Schml\ noridaandCharlottesville,\'a. KichardsonandStraughanalso theirchildrenandgrandchildrento FamilyScholarsh ipFundtohenefit mjoyedaEurop can1·acationd1is 1ldesl1mtohelpthemcelebrate amusical~·talentedCollegilll' HowardHarnie, R, recently spring.11lcirtripincludcdcmising tlwirSOthweddinganni,-eNlr) ' retiredfromUnis)~Corp. ,wherehe studentandtohonorhothOa,id onthe RhioeandDanuberi1m lleforethat ,h<)\\~w,~ ·11mtto andFrances.Fmncestm1eledto wasamarketi11gdirector.!!eli11.'!Sin lnAprillhadlunchwith roouny's50threunionatth€\lest ,\lherl'i,Ga.,lastMarchandlhen Relton,fa MarylouMa'iSieCUmbyat the Poinli\l~itar!'Maderny.Thl'iroldcst wmtooloFortLauderuale ,f1a.,for Walter\'.Pum~ll,L,spentthe \1rginia.\\u,eum.Theocca~ionv.-a,;grandsongraduatedfrom~\1nnan a1·isit11id1NMC1·Ta}lorJohnsonspringseme;teronafaculty a1i~i1from Almai\k\H1erterfr1Hn andhissistcrfro:nCollegiateSchool. andfk:tt}·Jl-\unsc}'Spatzandlloo l'XffiangeatShanghai Margaret Hall nir,pen , W,of Deca1ur,Ga .S~was11ithu,our WOOOftnandldaEant'S lnlemationalUnhersityindi ina. Paula Aberneth)' Kelton·s Ft.\lyers,Fla.,enjoysplayinggolf firsll\\'O)l'arsalWcstha.inplonandPatrickcelcbratedthcir50th Po\.cllisaprof=rofgowrnment 99-ycar-oldmother-in-lawdied andispresidentnfthe\li'omen·s tlK'nlransfcrred1odieUnivcrsityof weddinganniversarywitha low~• inFebrnary. Shehadbeenliiing andlawat Sliwer)'RockUniversity 9-llnlet:olfAwJCiationinher Grorgia.lktty'limley Andrews , rartyinHarnpton,\'a..givenby in Pennsyhwiia. lie andhiswife, inDa,idr,on,N.C.. nearPaula community.Shealr,odirectsthe lie\•Patton Browne.GinF.lletand tlll'irchildren.Quiteafew 'iancy,hareeightgrandchildren andJohn SevenLakesChorus DeeD'.t,mport(shcalsov.-a,;\\i!h \li'esthamptoogalsattended llelenfJarkllenslt}'tm,-eledto usl\\uyears)joinedtheparty ElizabethWilbumllookerand Athlone,Jreland ,inllebmarrto1 ·isi1 lamsorl")toreportthedeathof i\limiAndersonGillstoppedin herdaughter ,v.hoisadriropr..lCtor nr.JuliaDickinsonPhillipsof Williamsburg,l 'a,,tob'l'IAud~y there.ln.\la)'.HelenandDickwere Dallas,Ore.Shewasaretiredht-dlthBradfordSaupc.Wldaftcrthe in'J\rcsonfortheirgranddauglitcr's officer11iththeOregonStatelloanlpartytheyrecumed 10Richmond highschool graduation.Helen ofl!ealth.Shet""Mliedhermedical reportsthat Jeanettei\derhold degreefrom~lC\' inRkhmond Bro~nisnowadeaconather churchin Chatham,\'a

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Saturdaymomingfoundsomeof Wearesorrytohearthatb1the Thercaresomanyprograrnsforthc Welcarncd1ha1Elirnbeth 11\backinclaS'i.Aill O()llallreunKlll la\tfiwyea15wehm-elosttwo current\\'e.lthamp1011 itcstostudy Nicholls,granddaugl1tcrof t1clcn cla1.se;enjo yedapicniclunchatthe clawnates:DotSinkSmithers ahroadthesedaysandisn"tit LukhardandDce,isattending wonderfulthatoneof""our'' Jt'!NmAlumnif.enterfol11111l'libya andllelenTimmpsonOlstad theSchoolofArtat\1rginia truUeitourofthecampm.SaturdaJ Fromthefacultyweknowofthe granOChildrenhashadthe Commonwealth Uniwrsity, where e-.eningadinll!'rwash€!datthe dealhsofDr.Chalkley,~li~~&llandOfl[l(lrtunit)'loparticipate? sheismajoringinpainting Mis.sRudd JlelenandJanetKnobelJones F.lizabethistheyoungersisterof ltishard1obelie...eithasb!.'CI!45 IOl'fl)'homeofGro~andJoJ'tt 'lidcyfordieclassof'SSfrom oontin~toenjoyconductingtours Rebecca,whoisaseniorat yearssinccwcgradllatrdfrom RichmondCollcgc,thebusinClli ofdicJepsonAlllmniCcnteron \Vesthampton.Theirlatemmher, Westhampton Collrgc.On variousoc:casions Lind~ayl.ukhardNicholls,wa\a April28-29,32ofusl'l."tun1Cdto sci1ool,mKIW'csd1amptonCollcgc. Mytripd1roughdiePanama I978graduateofWesthamplon reminisceaboutoldlimcsandjust WethaitktheTideysforirnitingus Sundaymorni11gfou1Klusoncc Canal11ithstopsinAruba,lheSan enjoybeingtogetheragain Blaslslands,CostaRicaand Theweekendstartedonfriday againenjoyingbn1nchatthebome ofRurrellWilliamsStu ltz.This Guatemalafol1™edbylm1dtrarcl noon,.,,itha!unchattl'M'Sillelrish Eugmell.FarlerJr.,R,recentty inMexicoduringN01embcr11-as PubinShockoeSlip,followe<lbya ha~becomean anticipatedevent whichllumllgracio11~lyh(t.ts.(lurretireda;;pre-;identofthta reallyS[lOCial.Thecanalwasnotasl narratedboatrideontbecanal \\'ashingtm,D.C. ,and\1rginia hadpicturedittobe;itwasmuch Irida}'e-.ening,.,,egllthtaredfora thanksgotoher. CreditUnionl.eagues.l!ewa\ .\\an)'thanksgoalsotothe moreSJ10Clac11lar.The d1:,astation rereplioninl~Rosenthalliling reoogruzedincoojunction11iththeofearthquakesand\Olcanoeswa'i Gerald'je rrt'Vaughn , R,a committee that planoofour45th RoomatthebealllifulnewJepson nalionaJGOlemmentalAffairs e1ideminmuchofounightseeing 44-yearwteranofthetraditional AlunmiCenter,andthenaeatcred rcunion:Jean Criuenden humanresources,.,,urkforce,is c.onfc=,sjX)HSOredh)'theCredit Kaulfman,Mart1·Glmn laylor, dinnerin the Rosenbaum UnionNationalAs.sociation.Anew dira1orofTripreferrals.com,a ConferenceRoom.11ielablcs11ereNanqJohnson 'w1ti1c,Alice award,tlieEugeneFarleyl.eague full-senicelntemetjobplacement i\lcCart}'llaggerty,Grace decoratedwithbeautiful EugeneH. lcadershipAward,wascstablisllCd ser,icr.lkbeganhiscart'trin arrangerncntsofOowerspro1idcd PhillipsWebbJean Ruddle tohonorhis40-yearcreditunioo humanrcsourccswithNcwport Farley;,.B'.56, Migneaul1,SueSrnithlan byReny1,eighStembridge career.HealsoreceiwdtheHcrb NewsShipb11ildi11g,1hen111Jrkcd Wlckler,Renyl,eighStembridge Leggett.JodyWeawr Wampler receivedthe Wegnerfjfetim e .>.;hievement 11itl1tlieJAJonesCo11structionCo hroughtherkeyboardandwithJoy l,eggeU,RarbaraTumer\\lllis, AwanlfmmtheNationa!Credit for25)-ears.ln1988hesen'edas Herb Wegner JodyWean~rWampler,Rurrrell Winsteada.sour songleader,we llnionfoundatiOll executi1-edirectoroftlte sangmanyofourfa1·oriteoolle~ WilliamsStultz,JoyWinstead, L((etime llelenSinerWood,W,of Constructionl'ersonnelEx ec11ti1 -e Wyker. songsincluding"'Th€0ddsllomin andBobbieRC)lKllds Richrnond,andherhlN!and, Groupandheha'Stwicebetti Achier'fment Othersinattendancefor1~trious Us,"ourwinningoriginal recogniz.edbytheCharlotte , N.C.. e-.en1Sthroughoutthta,.,,rekend Rudy,arefieldcoordinatorsfor proclamationsongwrittenb) Award.fromthe thelrrginia-AuslriaBaptiSI branchofthenational lNROADS 11ere: RuthO,,,,enRatt,i\laryIda AnnAllen,i\larl}'GlennTa)'ior Paruiershipwhichbcganin programas the Business National Credit NelsonBolton,SallyDornon andothers Janllary.ThcyLi1edinVienna, CoordinatoroftheYear.Hiswifo, Brndlc~·,Arnctt Kiuia Bromcll, 1\lartyGlennTallorandAlicc Union Foundation Austria.fromMaythrough RebeccaGordon\'aughn.isa Jacciuel}TIKilbyBrooks,Janc .\1cCartyltaggcrty,ollrfllnd .'i'pternbertofacilitatetrarela.cKI physicalthcrapistY.l10pro1idcs floublt'liDa\is,Poll)•Bundick raiscrs.discusscdp!a.ctsfor 1uluntaryministryoftcarnscoming coris11hationforl iealtl1caredonati-Onsduringthc!IC}.1fivc Di7,e,EmilyMenefeeJoh.nston, from\ll"giniatoassistAustrian relatedjobplawnents Pal Kantner Knick,BettyJean LisaSimmondsSmartwrote years.Wehopewewillha,.ea churchesinvariousendea1urs Pani5h Knott,MargaretEnglish thatslieandltefhusband, Bob,are significantainountforagiftto 1.e!iter,ArmShirlecGarrett enjO)·ingagroupcalledScnior WesthamptonCollegein2005 Fmm /be l,l'e:,·/bamptrm UniH~rsity,whichoffersthreeseries Whenyoumakeyourcontrihutions, Ma\.<;0n,AliceCreath l1assSecrelaries McCullough,\irginiaMunlen, ofclassesayearoowringawide besuretomarl<.yourchock OottieSmokerl\"ielsen,\1rginia F.0~1 W ,1GS1'Uf W,1.K~CKF. varietyofsubject~. Shereported '"\re:..1hampto11CollegeC!3.'..~of •5; t956 Hathaway Hoad, '"401 Thoma<> Phillips,\irginia Swain taking(:remllooksandaserieson - 50thReunionh:count." Richmond,\'A2322'i Hu~~ia11ilhthisgroup.Shealso Jt)'J.k1it,L,hasreceil'edthe Ourcla,~photowa~ takenFriday Saunder..,i\targaret"Pegg)" E-mail· saidsh€hasbeguntosendher night.Jfan1ur.edidnotgt"tanorder Armstrong11usu:zandM}'r.l quimb)wamcke@prodigy.net chair"sawardforouts1a.ciding bouk,"TeachY011rCh ildtoRe-<1d Wonnald form,apicturemaybeonleredby F.mbre}· contribulio1tstothclaborre lations .\liriam11turstonlluttreports A~Nt: STIJ.tRT lltRT/, G .-1.RN~TT l'fitho11lllis'.'lolicing,'"oulto sending$111o:Photographylly m1demplO)lHCJ1tlawsectionoftlie _',848llrookHoad thatsheLivcsinColumbia, .\\o .. agentsandpllblisherssosliehasto \1rg.iniaBarAs.sociation Burroughs.lnc.,19(XiSwcc1\1atcr . Le-.-it isa Richmond, \'A23227 stedherselffor)XlSS iblerejcctions founderofl.e-.it,~\annand wheresliewasanursc,taught l.ane,Richmond.W,2.)229 \rcsurel)•11ishhergoodfortunc nursb1gandlatcrworkedh1 Clas.sofflcersdcctedtoSCl'l'fthc Jeannie Branin spentlast Hal]igan,fom1erlyl.e'oitand 11i1hgeuingitpublisl1ed.Shelol'esMann,withofficesinRichmond DianeRrown nex1fileyearsareJea11Crit1e11denphannaceuticalresearchuntilshc TiianksgMngwith retiredin1993..\liriamhasfiw Higginsandtheymanagedtofind togotoDallasonceortwicea KaufTman,pre;idcnt,andJoy andAshland,fa. \linstead,secretary,Joy'sadd~i5 childrenandfourgram;khildren timetocome tomyhousefordinner monthtoenjoyhergrandson SheenjO)~pla)inginacornmunity 01te€\-ening.Wethorough~ On\larch25,sevemlofus 122HollyRo:id.Williamsburg, \'A · orche$1:raandinchamberrnusic et1jO)l'litalking01'efoldtimesand enjoyedtheRichmond{:lub 2318';,oryoucane-mailherat annuala;;sociationmeetingand grou~.l!erhushandretiredfroma gettingcaughtupabitoneach ,.,,instead@11idomaker.com careerinacademicmedicilll'in other'scumnthappening,;.}eannie lunchintheJepsonAlumniCenter. 1995.T h eyspendfiwmonth~a)'t'ar bretiredandenjU}ingNewYork. 11toseattendingindude<lAnne inNOlaScolia. 'Jhtiyenj~· l'o~ Kitchcn;i\l:tryLou Lamb Viant'conlinLiestoworkinthe gardening,sailingandspending fk;terfieldCounty,Va.,public andherdallghtcr,BethLamb Dr. Peter R.Ne"man, R, isa limcwithdieirfmnUyandfriends schools.WrallgottoenjO) Bergcr,W'86;Jane1Knobcljone:s;mcmbcrofthead1isoryco11ncil 'seclng Mynewssincr the reunionis Diane'sdallghter,Kathy,singingin Helcni\lel1onLukhard;and forthcl.egall nforrnation EdnaWags1alT\'li'amcke .We thebirthofourl3thgrandchild. Tuc1tMCA1,S~.-m.; theWcstl'.ndAsscmb!yofGod's NetworkforCancer. LauraGrace\\'orrnald,bornto cnjoyedhearingthenewdeanof duisunaspTOOuction Sen.WalterA.Stosch,Rand lfyousentyourdMS~ Kcnncth(our youngestsonwho dieE.ClaibomeRobinsSchoolof GR'84,hasbeenekctedtothehoard llelenMeltonLukhard"s prior1olhiSi!.$ue'ideadline alsoattendedtheUni1·ersityof Ne111nan , granddaughtcr,Rcboc'ca',icholls, Business,Dr.KarenL. ofdirectorsofUniwrsalCorp ofMa}ISand)1md!11\tRichrnond)andhis,.,,ife,Rachel , hadawonderfulscn1estcrst1Kl)ing speak.'il'ewishe<lthatmoreofthe ithere.itma1•h~1cbffil onMa1·l! inNew7.ealandduringtltefallof memhersofourclasshadbeen lostthrough"acompoter ahletoattend 19')').ShestudiedattheUn iversit,,· glitchlnthealumnhi!llce; ofOtago,whichislocate<latthe · P!easebepatlemwilht)f ~lllthemtipofthtalowerisland

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SueLudington}one,;isstill TileCaU:SC)•SWCrejoincdbysons thatd1eycanbene:1rtheirtwo workingfulltimefori1oserFurieralRobertandAndyforatripto sonsandtwogranddaughters. flomeinWarrell\011,\'a.,andhas \\1tidbeylsland,Wash.,101isit1heir Chris11illoontinucconsuhingi11 OC'Cllbm)-chairingthel50th sonKurtandhisfamilyfor healthadministrationandLouis anniversar.·ctlebrationat planstojobhunt Christmas.lheCause)SlllOltdto \\illianisburg,\\L,inJanuaryand Robertl::.llowe, R,ofthe CharlcsSaumlers, B,ofllopewell, Wal'Tl'!ltonBartL'il.Ornrch11t.ere herhusband,5am,retiredassenior have11~1mmed Barbara'sfather !nternaliona[A.s.sociationof Va.,retirellaspublicschool intotheirhome . lloh11illcommute Machinists'C€11terfor administmkirafter30}e-.ir.;ol pastorinSepternberl999. and toRichmondashecontilluesto ser-.iceinPrinceGeorgc,\'a.llenow MaryLouWakle11Wagner Admi11is1eringRehabilitalionand v,ori,;forSalomonSrnithllamey. EmplO}mentSer,ices,hasbcen worksparttimeasasupel"'lisorof herhusband,Scon,arestil! enjo)in.gmembershipin.a11ine JessicaScarborough studenlteachcrsatlon)\\'ooi appointcdtotheboardof College.lnFebn.ial)'i996heretirellgroup,which11wttoltalyfori1S Bunne:sterandherhusband, directorsofthe\irginia Robcrt/1.Colgin, R,recentl)' 20thannil'Cl"Sal)·andisgoingto Ra)mond,oonlinuetheirad.-ricacy\'ocationalRehabilitation .tirolonclintheAnnyRe1erves11ith retiredasdirectoroftheNa,1· Oreg011inAug1.1stforits25tl1 v,-orl,;onbehalfofpeople11ith CouncilfortheBlind 36yemofsel"'lice. Mid-AtlanticRegionMaterials The!OofusinRichmondindie mentaldisabilities.Raimondis Carol}TIAnthonyPowers,W Fra11klinWolf , R,ispresidelltof ,of Testl.aboratory.Hehadworked sel"'lingootheGO\ernor's EwreadyCorp.Jle11lC';electtrl TowcrlmW/nemClubenjoy Richmond,still11-orksat(.ourtside ll)('Wng,sociali1ing,leam ingand Commis.s iooonCommunity Jll™dentiithel:anral\1rginia \\'estShestaysh~•a,;adeaconat intheNa11·35years.Heandhis wift,Peggy,thedirectorofa makingmoneyeachmonth. Yes ,11, Sel"'licesandln-Patien tCare,and FirstBaptistChun:h chapterofAirOmditioning pri1·ateschoolattheirchun:h, areacruallydoingquite11ell,thanks Jes.sicaisfirst1icechainnanofthe ConlmctorsofAmerica hawtwogrownchildren,Robert partirularlytotheguidaoceof \'irginiaAssociationofCommunity and Michael. BeckyGrissom\'anAusdall . Smiceslloards.Theseduties FromlhelfWhm11p1011 SandersT."Bud"Schoolarlll,B C/as.1Secrelary' meanthatJes.sicaandRa}mond andarnemherolthelloardof trnwlfrequentlytoRichmondand EIAU,EG11rnS1.1t:GHTl:R Associates,w.tieloctedtotheboard 825WesthamParkwa1· otherpartsof\'irginia.Being oftrusteesoftheli:'estminster• Richmond,VAB229. retirellmeansthattheyalsocanbe Canterburyfoundation thOierl); E-mail 11-orldtra,elcrs.l.astMarchthey Ma~1<llG.Cisne,G,11i BernardW.''Bemie"TralTord wmps@mindspring.com Bekaert&Holland,hasOC'Cllelocted enjO}'edathrce-wttktripto 111 , B,ofMarlborougll,Conn.,has presidentofGatewayll omesof AustraUaandNew7..ealand Alpanolour40thrcunion Ed"'llrllC."Ned"PepleJr., R,has GreaterRichmondlnc.,anonpmfittwogr-anddaughte~oneage2and SallieMagruderRa"is ctlebration,26ofourclas.smatcs OC'Cllnarneddirectorofpayor recentlygottogethernith onebomFeb.25,2000.ln1999he organizationthatpl'Ol-ides Sally enjo}tdadeliciousbulfetinthc relation'iandmaiteling11ith retirellfromAetnaandfron1tlV! traru.itionallilingopponunitiesfor SpillerSettle,Nancylingle Deaner}·onFridaye1ening, PatientFir:,1Medicalcenters. adults11ithchronicmentalilllless.f.on!ll'dirutAnnyNationalGuard TraylorandKittyThofflum waoched01-erbyMis.sl,uttsfantastic Ebbll.Williamslll,Ra11d Ne-.tle .Shert]XJrtsthattheirmain JohnMoreau, RandG'7J,isa f1U[lflels.Weall1J',1e l.aure1Burkett L'64,receiwdthe\'irginiaState topicofconwrsationis grandfathertoJames Barnabas Lonnesabigthankyouforasurerf:> llar'sTraditionofExcellenc e grdlldchiklren.\\hentheyaddup ''Bames'"Moreau,sonofScottand johofplanninga11dorganilfog AwardinJune \ickyLeeMoreau alltheliuleooes,thereareeight boththefridayandSatunlaynight ElaineRobertsonSnyder,W, Forthelast12years,lletty fe;ti,i~ll mel)nSt.ClairKey, From the Westhampton lil-esinNe111ington ,Conn.flerson, llillsmanKidwellandher herright-hand11oman,e1rn ClassSecretary• l)a1id,wholi1-esinnearbyGroton, husband.Gerald,R"6o,of organil.eddoorprizRs.l.aureldid RobertMhkimon,R,of\'ashon A ~~·Hi\1111.SSIZE.'t!ORH Conn.,isretiringfrom20}l!al">of Springfield,\a.,ha1·espentmoot suchagreatjOOthatweaskcdherto lsland,'il'ash.,isa1Hedicalwriter 510f.astMi~issippiStreet submarinesel"'lict.Herclaughter, ofeachsummerattheirOcean doitagainin2005.Shcgraciously Li1·er1y,M064o68 forCBSNev.~ledscape.flehadhis City,Md.,oondo.Joiningthem AmySnyderllale,AW"93, consen!OO.lagret;'dtotakeoothe Fax:(816)41)-5023 ~nc:r,1!1,U"batDeoJhCan'llmd!, grJduatedfromtheUni1<ersityof ewryyearforashortvisitare secretal')'sjOO,replacing l.ynn pub!MedbyPublishingOnline.oom Glen'I'yler,R'63,andhis11ife, Pit1Sburgh11ithaPh.l.l.illph}SiCS Mapp\liggins.Thank)OO,l.)llll, lnAugustl999Judith'Jud)'' and,,.illli1<ein.JnsAngelesv,ith ofSeattle OltonMuellerofMcl.ean,Va.,and My=,fromOnancock,\'a.,and forajOOwelldone Fromthehiosthatwesubmitwd, MarthaHinkleFleerof\\'insto11 Michael"Mike"Witt,8'61,and herhusband,Da-id.Amyv,illbe itlookslikemostofusarebocorningSalem,N.C.,spenttwo-and-a-half hiswifefromArlingtonlleights, doingresearchatMountWtlson hastwo 11cek.sinUl.bckistanpl'O\idin.g lll.Bettyhastwodaughtersand Observatory.Snyder COlll[llllerlitemte,enjo}ing grandchildren,G11wdol)n,6,and gr.tndchildrenandtrnwlingall trainingfordircctorsofwomen's fh1<grandchildren Nathaniel,4 01erthe11ork1.11ereareafewof centersfromUzbekistan, LouisOliverWilson ,W,andher AfghanistanandTurkrnenistan )"OUrans\\crsfromthe husband,Christopher,aremo1'ingC.Antho11)'RulTa,RandG'74 TI1ey11ereinTashkentmootofthe ,of qucstionnaircforthebenefitof after35)1<arsinCanadatothe ir Tokyo ,isthefi~foreignteacherto d10Stwhodidn1setthefinNIW time,butthepisitedctntersin fan1ilyhomein Norfolk,\'a.,so Kil'aandSamarl,;andas11ell.They bepromotedtotherankofprofessor resultBetty Bro1,1,nCreech and panicipatedinahumanrighlS atJumonjiWomens IJnilu.;ity, herhuSOOnd,Frank,oolloctantique .,..,.~~holligfuhmd perfumebonles,some01er2,00J oonferencesponsoredbytheScios Spanish.Jlealsoteachesglobal yearsold,andha1eheeneditinga Foumlatioo,andaWomenand l.len~!opment: BuildingGlobal issuesandAmericancultureonthe full-colormagazineforan a<iSOCiationofanliqueoollocton;Network.sCollfereJ1cesponsorellby adj~nctfacultyatShib~ra lnternationalResearchand lnwtuteofTechnologymSaitama, Maryl',ooleyMalone andher Exchange.Judy and Martha really Japan,andpublishesf.nglishtesting husband,Dick,ha1eOC'Cll('l]jO)ing materialsfortheTOffiandTOE!C, R\'tr:wclandha1-ejustrctumed enjO}tdsharingthisextraordinary "?'~= frooialripto.\lynlclleach,&C., Newalumniaffairsstaff forAratakePub li.shin.gin.Tokyo. RarbaraSpiersCausey andtlorida retirellfromteachinginTerre i\leurial\'l'ebbMcl.ainhas Haute,lnd. , lastJune.Shthas Brendal. Fog,g, 8'87 ,and Paul 0. Hagenmuel!erjr. , retirell.butisstiUdel'Oling 1-oluntocrtirnetohelpstudents, enjoyedteachingeighthgraders R'68, havebeennamedassociatedirectorsin the inphysicalscienceandnowlook.s par1irularlyd1roughLlteracy alumniaffairsoffice.JoiningthemisLindaAcors,as forwardtospendingmoretime \OlunteersofAmerica l.orettalludgi11sjohnson isthe withfamilyandfriends.Barbam administrative assistanteditingClas:s Connections. andBobsrentThank.sgili11gw ith managerofthehousewares Seearticleonp.7. theirso11,Robert,athishomein departrnentatllud<.onllelk Bellidcre,NJ,closetothe CrabtreeMallinRaleigh ,N.C. DelawareRi1·erGap.

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UNIV~R.SITY

Of RICHMOND

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betnthedirectorofpublic estatctransactions,taxplanning, Ro)'M.TerryJr., L,ischainnanof estateplanningandestate relationsforRar.dolph -~tacon tl1ebankn1[IOC) 'practicegroup of CollcgfinAshland,\ 'a administration. D11rrette ,lnin&8radsl1aw R. MatthewHaU,R.wasprornoted LewisT.Stoneburner, toscnior1ictpresidentofBB&T.He authoredan article,"Professional joinedthebankinl<)C)7 . RalphL"Bill"A1:selleJr.,L .has Markt'.Bender, H,wll.'lnamed ~ igenaal:Ill'.l'ultinganendto RichartlP.SneederJr.,B,recently 1·icepresidentofbackpaneV exren11it1~proliferat ionin bemell'cterltotheboardof directorsoftheCu ltura!ArtlCenter n\Q\-edtoChicagotoacceptanew printfficin:uitboardas.semblies professionalneg!igencecases:·11 rosition.lleis1icepresidentand 11l1Spub lishedinthe11interl999 at\ "iasystemsGrouplnc .,where atGJenA!len,\ll. oontrollerofTrueNorth heisresJIOnsibleforoJICrationsin2000is.9.ieof1bejo11nud,a G. ThomasEf)el,L,hasbetn Communicatiomlnc. theAmericas,1heU ni1edKingdom publicationofdie\'irginiaTrial apJJ0inlC1lpresidentoftheboard U\11)-ersAssociation andChina. Hehadbetn1·ice ofdirector:;atSandsAnderson presiden1ofglobal111a rketingfor Marks&Miller. t'CIElectronics ColleenMurphy,W,mo1·('1f10 Londoninthesummerofl999 withherhusband,apor tfolio DonJoni an, R. waspromotedto manager,andher4-year-old Judith Olton branchmanageratC&F W.TI1omaslludson , l.,of son. SheisenjoyingherpostMortgage.Heisavicepresiden t Muellerand TheodoreLChandlerJr. , L,of Timelnc.lifeasatourist. andloanofficerattheRichmond Richmond,hasbemappointedto thel'irginiaf.oalandEnergy ,lfartha Jlinkle Midlothian, \'a., hasbetn JosephS. Whitelll,R ,of southoffice apJIOintedtotheboardof Petersburg,l'a.,waspromo!C1lto RobertS."Bot,b}'"Ukrop,Banda Commi.'nionboord Flee1; both W"61, WilliamE.MartinJr .,B,was dircctorsoftheitutua!Assurance juniorexaminerinthcassct memberofthelloardofl'rustees,is ' amemberoftheSal1";1\ioni\nny's profiledinthe"lll'cisionMakers' trained directorsof Societ)Of\'irglnia.Heissenior managementcompliance oolumnoftheMctroBusin('SS executi1 ·el'icepresidemof departmentat FirstUnion Leadership Council women'scentersin s«tionoftheRic/111w11d1t11UJS Ulnd.\mcricaFinancialGroup SecuritiesInc.in Richmond RichardB.Cht_ss,J~isareal Disptilch. HehasjoinedtheBankof Uzbekistan, Han,wcraspresidentandCl::O. estateacoountrnanagerat\li 'instar A fgbanista11 and forRuildings,aunitof\rinstar Dr.A.DennisWatson, B,rece:i1-ed Communicationslnc.\li"instar theU.S.Deptofl'ransfxlrtation Turkmenista11 pro1idesfixed -ba<;1> ,11,irele,;s Surfa<l!TransponationBoard's MeritollOU'iSenireandTearn broadbandrummunications. FrankBuhrman, R,hasleft :rwanlsforhiswork11iththemediaDeLaneWilliam RichardCullen, L,apartner s Portcr, W,has SusanllazclwoodBuffington , L, MountSLMary"sCollegeand ontherecentC}X -~orfolk withMcGuirel"i'oodsLL¥,hasbeen is,ictpresiOC111ofopcrationsfor SeminarytobecomecoordinatorofSouthem-f.onrailrailroadmerger.be.>nappointedtothelloardof directorsofllrginia 'sJarncsu,,.n- appointffitodirectthefinn's PorterRcalr, ·Co.inRichmor.d communicationsandnet\\orking Jtwa,;thenation'slargestsuch gowrnmentim·estigations YorklO\\nfouodation StephenD. Busch,L,of fortheS)nodoftheTrinity, mergertodate.lleistheSorface practice nd,hasbeenelected Presb}teriand1urch(ll.SA.)in TransponationBoanl"s directorof GrantS. Gr-.t)"Wll,L.and Bruce Richmo chainnanoftheboardofdirectors CampHill,PaTiieS)nodisan mediaafJairs E.A.rkema,L'79,harebetn 'aterfowlFoundation. intermediate!l()l--erningbcxtrofthe electedtotheboardofdirectorsat oftheOelta\li anintemationaloonserYation PresbyterianChurchC01eringsonie Cantor,Arkema&Edmonds organi7ation.lleisanatl0m eyat 1,350churchesandmorethan McGu ire\roodsU.~ 3(X),000membersinPenn.•;yl·,ania Samuel.\l.Chamblisslll,A. and\li'e,t\1rginia lleOOlllimJe<ilO C.Knox llubard, GH,of andhiswife,lilizaf)ethUpshaw li1-einCarmll\'al ley,Pa Richmond,isamemberofthe Ghambliss,W'Sl ,sta)'WT }'busy Charle:sl)·singer,B,isamember boardofdirectorsoftheJapanraisingfi,·echi!drenrangingin BenjaminW.F.merson , Rand oftheSalrntionArmy's ll rglniaSociety L'IH,ofRichmond,hasbemelecterl\\iltiamJ . lr\in , L,ofRichmond. agtfrorn2to l2.HisAtlanta Leadership Council tothehoardofdira:torsatSand<; isamemberoftheadl'ison· John C.'Jac k"' Gould, L,has oommcrcialrealestatefinn .llarks& recentlyjoinedMcCuire , WOOOS. AndersooMarksandM iller. councilfortheLegal lnfonnation becomcaswciatedwith llarrison.llehadser,edasthe Battle&Boothe Danie!S.Smith,B,istheownerof NetworkforCancer. rral'c!Ad1isors,aRichmondtrarelEdwardF. Parsons, l,.of llopewell,\'a.,oomrnor111-ealth 's F.arlll. ,\1cC1enne)'Jr., l.,of Richmond,hasbeenappointffi agencyHewasprofiledintl1e Richmond,hasfom1edPa™.ms& attomeyfor15years Dr. W. Stanley}enningsJr., G,of totheboardofdirectorsofthe businesssectionoftl1eRichmo11dAssociates.alawpractice 11m.s -Dispatchin~1an:h Richmond,ha~joinedtheboardof t:ommonwealthComretition representingindi1·idualand UndaNiemannE\'lllls, W,isa director:;ofGaltll'3)'H~ t:ouncil closelyheldbu~inessdients in oofounderoftheSolutionGroup BethLKaufman,L, waselected JuliaD.l) ·e, L,hasretiredas theareaofbusinessandn>al 11.C,afu ll-senicepublicrelations totheexecuti1·erummit1eedllSS as.sis tantaltorne)'gener,ll inthe agencyin GJenA! len,\'a.Shehad of2004fortheAssociationof officeof1hea1tornC} ·gtneralin tht'BaroftheGityofNewYork. Suffolk, l'a. Sheisapartner11,ithS.Cboeman La\iniaJames\ 'aughn, Gand Letus hear fromyou!Youhelpkeep L'8},wasrectntlyelecteda Updike&Kaufman 8ruce,\1.Marshall, L,ar1attorne y shareholdcrintheTampa,fla., Richmondalumniin touchwitheachother. 11ithDurrcue,lnin&Bradshaw, finnofCarltonField~,whereshe Material Appears wasell'cterl1ictpresidentoftl1e practicesrealestateand in issue received by firm'sboardofdirectors rommen:ialtranr.actions. ColleenMcNally,8,withtl1e Nov. 15 Spri ng \1rginiaflealthQualityCenter ,ha"i eamedtheCenifiedProfessionalin Summ e r Fe b. 1 llealthcareQualitycrl'Oe ntialfrorn Fall May 15 theNational,\.WJciationfor 111"J.lthcareQ uality. Au g. I Wi n ter

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fFSl for the new executive director of alumni, and currently gives tours of the Jepson Alumni Center through her participation as a chatelaine. John is serving on the finnthatownssixregional at the University of Richmond, he alumni advisory board, which is hmkeragefinnslocated didn't know anything about his studying how to increase involvethroughoutthcoountl') future alma mater except that it RohfrtOonaldMurphyJr ., I., ment with the University by the was "some school with a lake." isani,westmentana1)'5tat school's 36,000 alumni. NorthwestemMutualUfe/llaird Af1erserving in Korea and "We do just about anything Se,;uritiesinRichmond working for a few years, the 24[the alumni office] asks us to do," 1,auraAddicottParroU ,W,of year-old Norfolk native enrolled says John, who retired as the l.ondonderry,NJl., andher at Richmond because it was ''the vice president of marketing for a husband,llruce,hal"ethree first school to accept" him. childre11.Sheis1·eryacth·ein small insurance company in oommunity,churchandschool Pete rsburg native Burrell 1993. When he's not busy with affairs. Williams Stultz, W'55, selected University activities, John, an BarbaraModeRose,L,isa \X'esthamp1on because of its avid fisherman, also donates his mcmbcrofthcad,·isor ycouncil proximity to home. The niece of time to his church as a volunteer fortheLegallnformation two former University student~, NctworkforCancer . landscaper and bus driver. Burrell applied to many colleges but eventually Nol yet ready to retire, Burrell teaches science selected Westhampton. part time at the Collegiate School in Richmond. In In the fall of 1954,John and Burrell were set up addition to being involved with professional on a blind date. Although they had met previously, teaching organizations and tl1e Uni\·ersity, she says John did not make the immediate connection. 111ey she ~loves sports and loves to dance," taking all were married in 1956 during John's sophomore types of classes, including shag and line dancing. \1illiamRandCook,L,was year. Burrell, who graduated with an elementary University of Richmond volunteer efforts are not elected,icechaim1anofthe educalion major and math and sociology minors, the onlv activities the Stultzes share, however. boardofdirectorsofllano1"tr began teaching third grade, while John continued Burrell ·and John are active wilh an outreach Bankin\'irg_i nia studying toward a bachelor's degree in business. Srot1G.Jenkins,R,ofMd.eari,\a., program through their church, and tliey love to During his senior year, he sen·ed as president of isaseniormanageratSprintin travel and explore bed and breakfasts. They llemdon,fa. (Apn'\~issue ofthe Kappa Alpha fraternity, while his young bride was especially enjoy vacationing in Georgia, where their magazinehadlistedincom'CI honored as the KA Rose. daughter lives with her husband and two children. infonnationabouthisemployer .) Although Burrell and John had wonderful l11e University has been and continues to be an PhyllisC.Katz.,L, l'l'Ceil'edlhc memories of their college years, neither became important part of the Stultz.es'lives. A member of annualProBonoPublicoAward involved in alumni activities immediately after fromthe RichmondBar her class reunion committee, Hurrell has remained A.s.sociationforhcrworkwiththe graduation, despi!e remaining in Richmond close to her classmates, getting together with many Legallnforrnation lietworkfor Dividing their time between their young daughof them every ft'\\· months. Whenever possible, cancer,whichshefounded.Sheis ter, work. local volunteer activities and tmvel, Burrell takes courses at Richmond to renew her an attomeywithSand\.Ande™>n, they had little time for much else. teaching certification and has conducted workshops Marks&Miller. Hov.'CVer,as their daughter grew older and Burrell with Dr. Mavis Brown, associate professor of \'ictorA.Shaheen,1.,haseamed phased out of her local volunteer commitment5 so thedesignationofcertified education. And each weekday, she drives through relocationprofessionalfromthe she could return to teaching, the Stu!rzes began campus on her way home from reaching. EmployeeRelocationCouocil.lle volunteering for and attending more alumni evenl5 John , who developed lasting friendships with isapriocipalwiththelawfirrnof Today,the Stultzes are co-chairpersons of the Llke many of his fraternity brothers, also is a frequent Shaheen&Shaheen Sodety, a group that provides hands-on volunteer visitor to the Richmond campus, whether he's assistance for a variety of University activities.l11e taking out-of-town guests on a tour or driving his group's members-couples where at least one church's elderly parishioners through for another individual is a Richmond graduat~n be found visit. And in true Spider fashion, the Stulrzes volunteering at Arts Around the Llke. serving as participated in a catalog photo shoot for the ushers for plays and concerts, registering alumni for University Bookstore a few years ago, modeling Homecoming events, or hosting international M.l>eanCrouch, B, hasjoined sweatsh irts in the heat of August. CountyBankofChesterficld , l'a., studenl5 during their time at the University.John and As for the future of the University, John says he asa..sistant1·i cepresidcntand Burrell say they like the group because it allows hopes to see the school continue to grow creditanah'Sl.l!calso11illwork them to spend their volunteer time together. academically while still maintaining its small size. withmemberbank.sof l11e Stultzes also find time to share their energy "I really do think if I hadn't had such a good Communit)Bankshareslnc with Richmond on an individual basis. Burrell experience [at Richmond!,"says Burrell, "I \\'Ouldn't sen·ed on the committee that developed the criteria be so involved in alumni activities." • KennethS.Klipper,B,is

Leading the Lake Society

executi1-evicepre:sidentandchief financialofficerofTucker AnthonySutro,a11ublidytraded When John L Stultz, 8'58, arrived

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BYAuSSAA. MANCUSO. AW'94 UNI V ERSITY Of RI C HM OND MA GA Z I NE 1-'age 37


FJ84

Dr.RobertM."Bo" Doline,R,of Erica OrlolTDiaz,W,ofBoca 5oull1portBusincssParkin andconstmctionandtcchnology Midlothian , \'a.Sheis11ith Raton,Fla.,ispresidentof industries.Heisanadjnnct Charlotte,N.C .. hasjoined HolidayBamPetResorts \li'orldmast£rlnc.Slirrccent1Y assistantprofcssoroflawat 5outheastRadiationOnoology Group.llewasfonnerlyan RichardD.RasorJr.,R.of signedabookdealwithSt. ,\lartins Richrnond,andpreviouslywasan a,;.';()(iateandpartnerv.ith assistantprofeswrofradiation Larchmont ,NY,hasjoinedCll.5 Preo;sforabookonpopular onoologyatWakeForest culture.Sheafaohasfour Maloney,lluennekens,Park~, Karen ll-1.Adams,L,ispresident- Sjxirtslinelntemetadl'erfoingsale; inManhananafterSl.'l'l'ralyear.,;children'slxx1k1comingoutinther:ecker&l'arso11, 1Jniver5it)-'SchoolofMedicineand dectofthellenricoCounl)'Bar medicaldirectorofthelillianJ 11ith .\:l>iandSkiingmaga.t.ines .lle next}earthatarebasedonanew Da11. n8onham ~Duer, L,has ,\ssociation.Sheiswiththe PhillipsCancerP,,11·ilionatlligh HenricoCounl)'attomcy'sofficc. andhis11ife,Kathy ;hawl\\llSOllS, children'stelea. ·isiunprograrn beeuelectedapartneratthe PuintRegionall\uspita l.lleand Thomas.\l.DiBiagio,L,isa Richrnondlawfim1ofMa)S& Jllelanie1\lasseyAmterson, B,of Drew,3,andRyan,2 partncrinthc\"i'ash.ington,D.C. ,law \alcntinc.Shei~allll'lt1berofliir hiswife,Staq,havcason,Scou,5, Nashville,Tcnn.,rccenllywas andadaughterAnnaLat1ren,l promotedtodirectoratSunTnist furnofDycrEllis&Joscph.He firrn"sbusinc:ssandcummercial practiccsindirareasof11t1ite-<:0Uar Jean11.Proffitt,C,ofRkhmond. EquitableSecuritiesCorp,where litigationpracticegrollp waseloctoototheOOardofdircctors ()!fenscandcommcrcial litigation nr.Mary Durgin lacocca,W,of sheisaninstitutionalflxed TerryGranger-Duby,W,of ChaptlHill,N.C.,isaphysicianin oftheREADc.entcr,anonprofit incornebroker.Sheandher organization dedicated tohelping husband,Joe,ha1·etwochildren, \1enna,\'a.,isaspecialagentwith thedepartrnentofpaihologyat adultsdevelopbasicreadingand ErinandAhigail.Herhusbandisa theFRl.Sheandherhusband ,a thellniwrsityofNorthCarolina JillSomerdw~on,W,of communicati011$kills seniorsoftwareengineer,havea Schoolof~ledicine pilotforAmericanAirlines. Richmond,11urksparttirnein daughter,f.a.,;eyl.ee,l WalterP.Redfeam,B,hCFO/ Joseph Keta ner,R,teache;English JosephD.Gillet,B,ofSanta hurnanre<,ourresatthellillegiate Bradleyl.J ohnson,R,of trea~urerandmemberofDard ick Monica,Calif.,founded asasecondlant,'ll~<eattheDcfense TechnologyU.C,doingbusines.-;as .,isco-ownerand Lllllguagelnstituteon~andAir sadd!etude.com,abroadband School.ShehasthreEchlldren: Clintun,Tenn Bobby,5;JohnR)lln,3;andLJ-dia,2. _\\arketsini\lotion,aRichmond managingrneml>erofOpened forceBaseinSanAntonio.Texas nctworkforthcequestrianworld ,isa basedinfonnationtechnology TerreEverettHooe,W,andher AccessMortgagelli.,LlC.His Karenl ebo,L,ofRichmond compan)·suppl)inginteractiw husband,Charles,liwin companydoesoomcntionaland rncmberoftheboardofdircctors TerryGrangertouch-;;creenkioskstoairlincs, Ma:haniC51-ille,\'a.,\\iththeir noncom·entionalfirstandsecond oftheadvisorycouncilofthe rnortgagcsas11·ellasdeveloprnent \1rginiaTreatrnentCenterfor airports,hotels,resorts,C1:1llcgrs, children:Eric,1\;Undsey,9;and Duby, W'85, a11dcorn111crciallending Children.Sheworksinthe unin:rsitiesandotl1erlocations. t,;insAustinandSavannah,5.She is a specialagent Carolynl ,awcchia,L,of anomeygeneral"soffi~ GregoryK.S now,R,hasjoincd isanindependemkitchen SlabaughMorgan\l11iteand Richrnond,v.ithWilliarnson& Joseph \'.i\lurrayJr.,f~of consultantfortheParnperedChef. witbtheFB!. Ridunoiid,1\-a,;pnJITKlkdtodinrtor Awxiatesasaconsultantinthe l.avea:hia,hasbeenela:1ed PatridaA.L.Nunley,L,ha~been compan}'S Richmond healthand chairrnanoftheboardof offuiaro:ehrtheCapit:dRegion promotedtoassistantgeneral directori;ofthead, ·isor)'Council Ailp)rtl:urnrnL'>.,;ion.llejoinedthe welfarepractire.llewasana<,<;iMant counselatthefedera]Reserl'C J. Thumas8radleyJr.,B,ofl:ssex 1'icepre;identanddientamsultamBankofRichmond ufthe\'irginiaTreatmentCenter COJJUJrissioninl985and11as . for~laishUSAinc forChildren promolOOtoromptrollerinl'f)7 J\larthaWiUlams l'ridcaux,B, falls,SJ.,rerentlywa.1namcd .\ lar,,·Annei\lcConcgh}·,B ,joi!)(',i Richard1)-Jcr i\lcGrath,L,has hasbeenelectedsecretaryofthc presidentof1UWaterhouseGrot1p's institutionalseniccsbusincssand bcenap!X)intedby\irginiaGol ' dicfir111ofSokol,Behotand boardofdirectorsofthc exccutiw,icepresidentofdir JimGilmorctothcboardofthe FiorenroinHackens.1ek ,N.J 5outhportAswciation,an company. He and his wife,Susan, ~lillcrSchoolofAlbcmarle.Heis Afomier~rtifiedP11blic organi7..ationofbusinessesinthe ha,'l!fourchildren . ana1tolTJC) 'llitl1Kane,jeffries, aocoontan~shehassiX)Wl'5of Gayleand,\1cGrath practireinci1illitigationmatteri;. 1.indaD.Slough,L,wrote "Worters'CompensationLaw:the overlookedWorters'ComJl('n>.1 tionfee"forthewinterl999-2000 issueof1h~Jo11ma/,a publicationofthe\'irginiaTrial La111"ersAssociation.Sheisan The follo\\.i ng indhidual s sen ed as Unh'ersity of Richmond delegates at .\-legan 'ThomsonAnnstrong,W, a1torncy11ithChandler,Franklin presidential inangurations betweenjulr 1, 19?9, and June 30, 2000. andherhusbandhawrelocated &O'BryaninFishcrs1ille,fa Dr.Charles TUniey,R'58and G·59• PfeifferCn!vers.ity, Misenheimer, N.C, fromCalifomiatoWatchung,NJ.,PaulSweeney,B,ofSur nrni~'iJ , forhcrhusband"snewjob\\ith Dr. Stephen M.Dahlstedt, R'82• Elon College,'.i.C. isamanagingdirectorintlieequil) Johnson&Johnsonasasenior researchdepartmemofCredit Daniel F..l.rnch, l.'87• James Madison University,Harri,wnburg,Va. e,11iromnentaler1gineer.SheisatSul,;.<,ef1ri;tlloston.Heandhl~11ife , Patrick B.Reilly,R'89 • RensselaerPolyteclmicInstitute, Tror, N.Y homev.iththeirchildren:l.exi,5; Karen,ha,ethreechiklren:tv.ins Dr. Martha A,carpenter, W'Sl, H'84,trustee • Piedmont Virginia CommunityCollege, T:n1or,3;and\li111iarn,l JuliaandKi€ran ,1;andJordan,l Charlottesvi!le,Va. ~nMath i~Dallinger,W,of IY. ma D.S}'kes,L,ofRichrnond , Richmond,i,;ateacherat Alma Rosenbaum Hurwitz,W'45• Skidmore College,Saratoga Springs,N.Y. hasbeenna/llffiseniorcounselat 'fappahannockElemenlarySchool. Thomas DelPonti, R'$7• l.oyola .\larym-0untUni\1€rsity, LosAngeles llamiltonlkach/ProctorSilex , ShieldsFerber,R,of8emards1ille , whereshe11illberesponsiblefor LlndseI~ters. GhristianS€n,W'68• The CollfgeofNewJersey,Ewing,KJ, NJ.,openedhissixthmicrobre,,,wycorporate andcommercial issues John M.Sewards,B'6) • Allentown Collegeof Saini Francis de Sales,Center \'aller, Pa. inNt-..Jerse)' .Hiscompany,Brewing TheRev.Robert11.Griuard, R'66• 11UnoisSlate Un«'el'$ity,Nonna\, JU. inf1al'orfulfashions,11illbclisted J~ M.Close,R'67 • Dickinson College,Carlisle, Pa. ondicNASDAQunderthcS}mbol Dr.Thomas C. Smith, R'63and G'65• Trinity Uniwirsity,San Antonio BIFF.Hehopestoopenachainof micl"OOreweriesinhishomestate Dr.Henry0. Patterson, R'70 • AlbrightCollege,Reading, Pa.

pi85

Alumni representatives at inaugurations

Mary M.Niblock,W'92 • FiskUniversity,Nashville,Tenn, Charles A.Tulloh, R'53and G'58 • Conwrse College,Spartanburg, S.C. Dr.Keith B. Owen,R'94 • Rhodes College,Memphis,Tenn. Eliiabeth PowellYerxa,W'S! • MeredithCollege,Raleigh, N.C. The Hon. Colin R. Gibb, R'72 and L'75 • Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, BlackshurgiVa. Dr. Horton It ll9bbs III, R'67 • Antioch L'nin!rsit}I. Yetitl',\'Springs, Ohio.

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JamesC.Cosby,L,hasjoined CantorArkerna&Edrnondsasa i\laryCullecnBrodcrickllurl cy, partneranddirector .llewill W,ofRidgcwood,N.j.,ismanagcr practi~intheareasof ofintemationalhurnanresources commerciallitigationand forGrcyGlobaJCommunications arbitration,repre;entingclients in~·Yorkat•,.Shcandlicr husband,Michael ,hal'C1'1'osons, insecuritiesandfinancial servi~s,realcstatcde1'Clopment,Jack,4,and"Brody,"1


Shannon M.Kelley,R,isa crnnmunityvolunteerandha\been electcdtotheboartlofdin,:torsof theRF.AllCenter,a111mpmfi1 organizationd€dicatedtohelping atlull1dt-.'!'lopbasicreadingand cummunica~on.sskills. Ste..en .\I. Kramer, L,ha,;joined theW"ashington.D .C.,officeoflhc intemationallawfinn.\lilbank. l\\ft'd,lladle y&\lcCloy.Hev,ill focusontherepresentationof dectricutilityandnaturalga"i companiesonmaltefl;subjecttothe jurisdictionofthefederalfJ'1ergy Regulato1j'f.ommL..;sion .lleha.1

contributed to the Richmond Cluh of the \X'esthampton College Alumni Association for a scholarship. Last year, the event Although she hasn't painted a raised $4,000-the most everpicture in years, Allison Jones for the scholarship fund. Vogler, \\1'78, has found another Vogler says Arts Around the wav to draw on what she learned Lake is a natural alumni activity wh.i!eearning a studio art degree for her to get involved with not only because it connects her with prai,'licl'<lt'lll'rgyandrelated from the University of Richmond. TI'j,'lllaluc)·lawformorethan!O Since 1994, Vogler has been an art-one of her favorite thingsalumna volunteer with Arts years,andpre-,iouslywa,;11ith but because it al.so draws upon Fulbrigh.1&Ja11orski . Around the Lake, one of the the events-planning experience .\lariaGrady1\l urph};\ll,uf biggest annual events on rnmpus. she gained while she was ClewlandHcights ,Ohio,is "l don't paint anymore-that's chairwoman of the University marketingproje,;tmanagerof something I'll have to do when I Squire,Sandersandllcmpscyln Student Union at Richmond. Cle..-e!and.Sheandherhushand get older," jokes Vogler about her As the first female head of this Jay,hal'etwosons. busy life as a part-time training coordinator for organization, Vogler planned campus activities MichaelG.Phelan, L,ha-;IH>n US Ainvavs and mother of two daughters.~ , am such as concerts in the Robins Center using eloctedtothelxJartlofdil'l'CIOISat one of th~se frustrated, non-working artists. money from the student activities fund. She thcRichmondlawfinnofCan1or, Arts Around the Lake satisfies a lot of that.'' credits this experience with giving her selfArkema&F.dmonds. Vogler first began volunteering on the Arts AlcxandcrLTa)" lorJr., L,is1icc confidence and with helping her to meet her presidcntofth cRidunon dchapter Around the Lake committee when a friend asked husband, James Vogler, R'77. oftheOld[)ominiOll Bar.Heisan her to help . "I had been to (Arts Around the Lake] While she was a srudent at the University, as.sistantattomeygeneralforthl: many times but it was jw;t because someone Vogler also was a te--.H.:hing assistant in the art Commonwealthof\lrginia reached out to me that I got involved,'' she says. department: worked in the student activities G.Srott ThorbalmJr.,R,li1ein "I was working part-time and looking for a office; took photos for the yearbook; was an Mahmi,Pa..11ithhi:mife,Unda, volunteer opportunity. r have been working with andchiklrenS!l'phan,4,and orientation counselor; and swam on the swim ,\legan,3.lleisdinrtorofsale<;and it ever since." team her freshman vear. But despite her campus territorymanagement at lnteistate Today, Vogler is co-chairwoman of the event involvement, and th·e fact that she chose to ShelterAIJ,aCamilybusinessin with artist Joanne Gill Worth, W'68, leading a 12- remain in Richmond following graduation (she is outdociradl-ertising. person committee thro ugh the nearly year-long originally from Daytona Beach, Fla.) she was •·rankG.Umnni,L'87,11-as process of planning for the event. Vogler reluctant to get Involved in alumni activities. acccptcdasalifememberbythc estimates that her committee puts in about 450 t-/ational Registryof\\lio ·s\\lio.A ~When I graduated we didn't have a Young Grad cililtrial lawyerinstateandfederal hours, while she herself spends dozens of hours program like they do now," she explains. "\Vhen I court,heisana1sociate11,ith each year gear ing up for Arts Around the Lake. finished school, I felt like you didn't come back to ZwenllingandOppleman "The primary reason I like it is because it campus until you were a grown-up .... But I have Rafe\l ilkinson,R,ofRichmond, draws so many people from the community to always had an affection for UR and I think my andthreepartn€JShavefomwd campus for something othe r than athletics," involvement has gonen me more in touch with Tr.msadineU.C,anonlinediMI· Vogler explains of her interest in Arts Around the what is going on there now. It's been a kind of responsemarkctingfinn. Lake, adding that last year, the event brought circle. T've rediscovered my feelings for the school nearly 20,000 people to the University. "I like that by being involved on campus as an alumna," it reaches out to the commun ity, that it's for the Sirn.:eshe started working with Arts Around the arts and it supports a scholarship fund." Lake, Vogler also has helped to plan her class This Oct. 8, Arts Around the l ake celebrated its reunion and is currently an officer in the 21st year, drawing nearly 100 artists from the \'fosthampton College Richmond Club. "I don't Anne Bentley,W,ofRichmond, Richmond area to the campus to exhibit their art . feel that I can make a significant financial isanassociatcaltome)'al The show is juried by the Arts Around the Lake contribution to the University, so l like giving my McGuil'l',Woods.Bauleand committee, meaning tha t artists who want to liootheinRichmond. time,~ she says. display work in the show must be voted in on the Jonathan Colehower,R,joined But Arts Around the Lake will always hold a OradcCorp.anicepresidcntof merits of their work. .special place in her heart. "It's really a fun opportu· NorthAmcricancxchangcs.Helives Admission to the show, wh ich is always held nity just to work with Other women,n she says, "I get inA!lai1tawithhis11ife,Debbie ,and the Sunday of Family Weeke nd, is free, although to see some friends (from college] because I've thcirthreedauii,hteJS artists must pay to ren t space at the show. Funds reached out to others to get involved. That has been collected-from the artists, from food vendor fees the best part about getting back on campus.n • and from sales of promot ional items-arc

Co-chairing Arts Around the Lake

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MA(jA/INE

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JoelGetis,R,isafoundingpartner Arthur\'.Shaheen,L,hasheen inancwcompany,l.aunchFue llnc., re~lectedhythela111'errnf ane·businessacceleratorfocused !lenricoCountytosen-ean onhelping!ntemet -ba-;e:btartup additionalthree-1-earten no nthe compa11ies11ithblJSi1~and l'irginiaStateBarCouociLHeisa strategicpl:uming,mam'ling priocipalwithShaheen& progr:unsandfinancl'progr::uns. Shahem,wherehefocuscson lletSmanagingpartnerandCFOof prrsooalinjurylitigationforboth theRCSIOrl,l'a ..company . llcandhis plaintillsanddcfcndants,and wife.Carey\1'illiamsGetis,L'93, familylaw liveinStcrling.\'a.,11iththeirtwo G.BryanSlater, R,ofRk:hmond, hasbeenapixJintaltotheboardof daughters. CarolMcClellandJenkins,W, directorsoftheCommonwealth recentlyrelocatedtoll:tltimore, Competition Council whereherhusband,Boris , Dr.RohinllamptonSmith,W, practkesasanOly'(:YN.They issciencedepartmentchairat hai'ethreechildren:Joshua,8; ll'otreUameHighSchoolin !lannah,b:andRubyAnn,1. Chattanooga.Tenn Dr.KellyKirkpatriCk ,W,has mo1edtoNe11YorkCity ,11hereshe isdirectorofresearchand technologyinitia1il·csin ColumbiaUnil ·ersih'sCcnterfor Stratcgiclnitiatires.Shewill dei:elopnewmulti - and Da\'id,\I.Caudill, L,ispresident intcrdisciplinal"!' 'research ntyHar capacitiesthatspandepartments, oftheGoochlandCou Associationin\'irginia.lleisan schoolsandinstitutions attomeyin prirntepractice. G.PaigeManley,W,of(;wjnn, Timoth}'W . llouck,H,issenior \'a.,worksforahoatingnev.~Jetter r atGenzime andforarealestatemanager.She "alidationenginee li1-esinthesouthemChesapeake Corp.lliswife,RaeleneRoberge Rayareaduringthesummerand Houck,8'91,istechnicalmruitn forElias.senGroup.Thcylilcein duringthewintersshel:mtsup Bedford,Mass .,11ithtl1eir anddollnthelntracoostal daughter,CordeliaAnn Waterwa)'and in1heBahamas SharonMai1landMoon,L,isan auomeyatleClairRyanin Richmond.

Dr.i\licahT.lloughton,R,11,urks Leellendricksl\1rpin, W,of inaprirntepmcticeatAlleeFarnil)' Chatham,fa,hasherownlaw l'h}siciansinMechanic;1ille ,1a.11e practicei11Dan1· ill€,l'a..whereshe andhis11ifo,utura,Li1cein spcdalit.eSinfamilyandcriminal Rk:hmo™1v,ilhtheirchildrcn law.Sheandherhusband.Dcnnis, limoth)'..)andCharlottcfay,l hawason,Graison WilliamF.Crockett, R,is DianeKra)Tiak,W ,isaregistcrcd pre5identofLC.Oistrihlllmsln c., nurseinlheneonatalintensin:care in\\'estConshohocken,Pa.The unitatMCl'Hosp italsinRichrnond companymarketsautomoli1-e Dr.Kel~v Sheisfinish inghermaster'sdegree partsthroughoutl'enns1frania. innursingat\UJf/,\Cl' andplan\ro DclawareandNewJersei·.llisv,i[c, Kirkpatrick,W'88. beapediatricnursepractitioner. Lisa,worksforSAPAn1ericain is directorof Ericl.ink, Randl.'9 7,isworking Ncv,1011nSquare,Pa forl'enguinRadio,anlntemet DonnaRossettiKlein ,W,isan research and start-upcompan)·.llepre1iousl1· =uti1l!recruiterfortlieKlcin tech11ologv workedforthellouseComm itlee GroupinPhiladelphia onCommerce MaryJacobsMagerkurth,W, initiatiuesin Da,idParr,R ,isanauome)'at andherhushandhaiemo,ed Br=cell&Pattersonin Columbia fromAnchorage,Alaska,to Washington,D.C downtownChicago. U11iversityS Center ~lieA.Rudnick,W,of 8rtntMcadows, ll,andhiswife. Arlington,\'a.,ismanager, for Strategic LisaNcurohrMeadows,W, e,,;po5 itionandsponsorships,atthe mo1cdfrornBoston10Princeton. Initiatives NationalAssociati(HlofSe<:(Hldal') ' NJ,forBrent'snewpositionas SchoolPrincipalsinReston,\ 'a. globalstrategicmarketing JeffreyW.Stone, B,andhiswife, managcrforJohnson&Johnson's Tamarn,relocatedfrornAtl antato Richardll.Whileman , H, phannaceutia!group.Usais theCharlottesl'ille,\'a.,area, oprnedl'ixel\\'orks,agraphic takingtimeofffromherposition wheretheyhawpurchasedthe designstudiospeciali1.ingin asanoncologyphannacisttostay ad,·crtisingartdirection. WintergreenWinel') · homewiththeirhahydaughter. SusanTullcr,W,andhcrh16band , publicationdesign,photo CaroleYeatts'f)ler, W,was retouchingandWebdesign .The Bil!Bridgeland,workfortheforeign electedchainnanof1heboardof seniceatdieA111erica11Embassyin Richmondbusines5canbefound direc1orsof1heREADCenter,a PortauPrince,Haiti ,11·herethey onthe\\'ehatPixel-l,l;'orks.com nonprofitorganization 11illbeuntil0ctooer2001 dedicatcdtohelpingadulls dc1·elopbasicreadingand communicationsskills

READY FOR THE NEXT STAGE OF YOUR CAREER .. BUT WANT A LITTL E COACHING? TheUni\"ersityof RichmondCareerDevelopment Centerha~justtheticket. Stopbyourofficein RichmondHallforhelpwithyour self-assessment, explorationofcareers,resumeor job search.Wecan alsooffercareeradvice1·iae-mailand putyouintouchwithouronlineservicesforcareer planning. Andif youcan serveasa guideforotheralumni enteringyourfield, l'Olunteer tosen·ewithhundreds ofotheralumniin theAlumniCareerNetwork, which is accessible onlinewitha pas,~wordat http//cdc.richmond.edu:591/acn/. Nomatterwhetheryou'rejustenteringa careerpath or makinga mid-careertransition,theCart.>er Development Centercan helpyoumapyour journey.

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l'aulAdams,C,ofRichmond, hasbeenrccognii'.CdbyAccuBanc Mongagcforoutstanding perfonnance,andwasnamedto mernbershipinthecompany's PresidcnrsClub.Heanda collugueproducedmorethan $12millioninmongageloans duringl999. EllenBradley,W,wasnarned marketingdirfftorforthe UnilersitJ·ofRichmond inl999. ,\1arkUcllingcr, RandL'94, andhiswife,JaneNoi·es Dcllingcr, W'9l,lirein Roanokc\a.llcisanaltomeyat Gemry,Locke.Rakes&Moore, andsheisasixth-gradeteacher. RaeleneRobergellouck, B,isa technicalrecruiterforEliassen Group.llerhusband.TimothyW. llouck, R,issenior,·alidation engin~ratGenzymcCorp.They lil'einlledford.~1ass.,w iththcir daughln,CordcliaAnn.


EricA.Harris, L'91,hasbeen appointcdregionallegala(hi ser forthe U.S.Depanmcntof Agriculture,001·eringa 22-state regionheadquaneredin Atlanta Michael C.llar ter, R, placed thirdinthe rookiesingles di1·isionattheannual foothall WorldChampion~hipsinOallas inSeptemherl999.Jle li1·esi11 Sa11Fran cisco. Michael S.Lempner,8 ,isstaffing theRichmondoffi ceo[Comergent Domains,anAlexandria-based finnsr-,xializingincreatingWet>delh"ereddecisionsupponsi~tems andinter.ictin~Webal)pli cations William T.i\lallon, R,graduated fromllamud11ithadoctomtein education. NancyL.Quinn , L,has cstablisheda lawfinn,Kanad)'& Quinn.Her practicewillfocuson allaspectsoffamilylawincluding divorce,custody,support,and equitahledistributionand adoption.Sheprel'ious!yw35with Bames&Batzli Eileen N.Wagncr,L,11 'lLS awarded

Sharing in Alumni Career Network

During her sophomore year at the Universityof Richmond, Tracy Zimmennan Gillespie, W'82, discovered her calling. After visiting the University's Career Development Center, she uncovered her future career: museum education. "It combined my love of history, kids and teaching," says Gillespie, "and meant that I wouldn't have to be in the classroom everyday." \ Today Gillespie, who has worked in the museum industry for 16 years, shares her passion for history and teaching with Richmond students as a member of the Alumni Career Network. She is available to talk with srudents who have an interest in her field and has offered to supen 'ise an intern at Mon>enPark in Loudoun theoutstandin gs.>r.i cea11ard fromthe Richmondchapterofthe County, Va., where she currently sen ·es as curator. ArncricanA.s.soc iationofUni1crsi1j • Earlier this year, as a member of a panel discussion Womcn.Shehasher01"11lawfinn on campus, Gillespie offered insights to current in Richmond history majors about careers in the field "Historyis .somethingthat can teach you how to think, how to read, and how to write," says Gillespie. Raised in Loudoun County aix>ut90 miles northwest of Richmond, Gillespie learned about the Universityof Richmond at her high school's college night. Although she had never heard of the school, KcllyJanisAndcrso n,\\ ', is teachingsecondgrade inlt ano,-er she says she was impressed with Richmond'sphotos County,\'a.Herhusband.RustJ and presentation and made an appointment to visit. Anderson,R,11 w\isforthc Like many Uni"ersitygrJduates, Gillespie says, marketingdcpanmentofCar,\1ax "There was no competition once I saw Richmond." corporateheadquaners As a college student, Gillespie participated in MatthewR.Aprahamian,8, h35joinedthe\\'hitlockGroup"s many activities sponsored by the University eBusinessSolutio11Sdi1t1ion asan Srudent Union, nnored elementary studenL~in accountmanager. reading and completed an internship at the Sha11nAteocio,R,teac heshigh Valentine Museum in Richmond during her senior schoo!chemistr yatllar...ardyear. Knowing that she wanted to attend graduate 11' estlakeSch oolinStudioCi ty,c.alif. school, Gillespie also studied hard, graduat ing \\"yattS.Beazleyl\',L,h35 becomcasharcholderwithth c summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. Richrnondlawfinn of'iillliams. After grad uation, Gillespie enrolled at the Mullcn,Clark&Dobbill5.H e College of William and Mary, where she received practicesinthe capitalfonnation sectionofthehusint'$department her master's degree in education with an emphasis in museum education. A graduate Bruce Bn1baker lll ,B,ispart internsh ip at the Loudoun Museum in Loudoun ownerofChampionFord ,Llncoln MemHJ,MazdainOwensboro ,Ky. County led to her first job as museum education lnJune ,thedealeThhipmOl-edintoa specialist/ad ministrative assistant. new,52,00J--square-f ootbuilding. Her position was a first for the museum, which Christophcr R.Oclgazio,R,has had never had an educator on staff Using museum brromcanawx:iateinth e artifacts, photos and his!Oricalrecords, Gillespie corporatedepartrncntofShapi ro, lsracl&'ii 'einerinllo'iton . He developed a variety of educational programs pre1iouslywasanawd ateof during her 10 years as educator, including f'erkins,SmidiandCo hen. scavenger hunts, hands-on simulated archaeology digs and walking tours.

Named executive director of the museum in 1994, Gillespie m·ersaw the day-to-day management of the museum and it~ programs, including strategic planning, fund raising and development, community outreach and educational programs. She also supeivised nine part-time employees and a large \'Olunteer staff. After 16 years at the Loudoun Museum, Gillespie has left to explore new opportunities at Morven Park in Leesburg, the former home of Virginia Governor \'{lestmorelandDavis (1859-1942). In her new role as curator, she will assist in the long-range development of a museum for the estate's equestrian heritage. She also will help to oversee all of the Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation's collections, including its carriage collection, and be involved in the restoration of the former governor's home. First as a museum director and now as a historic site curator in a historic but rapidly-growing area, Gillespie stays involved in local activities to preserve some of l.oudoun County's history. One of the fastest growing counties in the nation, Loudoun is home to nearly 200,000residents. And the area fom1erlyinhabited by dairy farmers is now home to such mega-corporations as America Online. Her passion for presen,ation is evident in every aspect of her life. She li\'es with her husband, Rich, a high school social studies teacher, in a 200-year-old German farmhouse in a lessdeveloped area of Loudoun County. She is active in the American and Virginia museum communities, sen'ing as a frequent speaker for many of the associations' programs. Even her vacation time is spent exploring the past, whether it's her husband's Celtic heritage during a trip to Great Briiain, the area where he spent his childhood in Maine, or her own family"sroots in Ohio. Even with her new job responsibilities, Gillespie plans to continue devoting some of her spare time to Richmond "I loved my four years at UR," Tracy recalls. "I was always happy with my decision to go there." Gillespie says she "continues to be impressed with the Uni\·ersity" and the ability of iL5leadership to be fonvard thinking and change with the times. "Richmond has only gotten bettert says Gillespie, who always tries to talk up the Universityto her husband's srudents. And although she was the first student from her high school to attend Richmond, Gillespie says she hopes she's not the last. ij

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E::iiiiiiiif Hii

BYAuSSAA. MANCUSO, AW'94 UNIVERSITY Of RICHMO N D MAGAZINE

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KiistenGiindalllopp,W,livcsin DanaHasten,RW,isinl'a.risfor ElizabcthRanson,AW,is Ericton.gfiekl,AR,Li1~inOkl PhilipJ.Markert , L,i!>astaff Sarasota,Fla,11ithherhusband se1eral1earso11anintemational workinginsalesforllershe)' To1mAlexandria,\'a,andisa attomeyintheStaunton,\a., anddaughterShehaslefther a5.Signmcnt 11id1 Ernst&Young.She ChocolateUSA.She recently co1~1.iltant11ithDeloincandTouche. offictofthe\'irginiaDepartment teachingjohtosiayathome worksintheauditdepartment, movffitothellostonarca JenniferMinarczik ,JW,ofFalls forRightsof\'irginianswith KeithN.llurleyandPeterA. prirnari~•11ithFreuchsuhsidiariesMaiionF.arlySpargo,AW,isthe Church.\'a.,worksforGTEinthe Disahilities.lleprel'iouslywas Koort,bothl.,havefonnedl!urley ofcompaniesinthe[JnitedStatesor a~sistantadministra1i1"emanagergo1"emment/congressional withlllack,Noland&Reid llnitedli.ingdom. &KooninRichmond.Jluriey ofReynold,;AluminumSupplyC.O.affairsdepartmentin Suzannel'ruex.\lc,\lister,AW, pra1,1:ire;incriminaldefen1e(in JohnT.Pendleton,L,hlls~lined rccei1e<lamaster'sdegreein inCharlotte,N.C Washington,D.C.Shehas stateandfederalrnurts),cil· il theLtwfinnufGottcsman&Jlo llis Alan"Chad"Thompson,BR, cnrollcdasapart-timcstudencat ph)"Sicaltl1crapy from ShcnandoallUnil·rrsil).Sheis litigalion,personalinjury,\\ills, inNa,;hua,N.11 hasbeenprornotedtosenior Gcorgci\lasonSchoolofl.a" ' workcrs'cornpensationandSocial AlcxanckrF.Skirpan,L,of accountcxecutil·ew iththe\lartin Jenn.iferO'Loughlin, BW,was employcdb)'Thcrap)'Rcsources promotrotosupcn.·isorat inCharlcston,S.C. Securitydisability.Koortpractio.'sin Kichmond,ispresident--c\cctoftlK'Agcncyandtransfcrredtothe thcarcasofrealestate.creditors' 00..1rdofgorcmorsofthe\1rginia finn'sNcwYorl:Ci1' ·offict Goodman&Co Sw.annel.N°)feler,L,isamcrnbcr rightsandcollections,wills,trusts AssociationofMministr:uivel.aw Courtney\'ilardi , BW,is HeatherRestino , HW,is oltheadlisorycouncilfor thclegal andcilillitigation managerofjointl'enturesatSony lnformalion'iehl1Jrl:forCancer. JudgcsandllearingOfficers.He dilisional1icepresident,client workswiththeSmtef.orporation rclationshipmanager,for Musici11NewYorkCity Mary llethutingRomani ,HW,l~ Con1ml,~kln. PaineWehberin\\'eehawken ,NJ JeffreyS.Shapiro , L,hasjoined aseniorconsultantatllooz-Allen& McGuire,\\'oods,llaltle&lloothe Jlamiltunlnc.in.\lcLean,\'a. MargeeSmither,L,haslH'll asana...wciateinthelaborand Amy Terdiman electl'rltotheOOardufdirectorsof llcidiWcrnerStansbur y,A\\',is thel.egallnfonnationXetworl:for emplo)mentdcpartmrnl intemcoordinatoratCapitalOnc Lovelt, AW94, (amu .OtherboJ.nlrncmbcrs Dal'idj.Walton, L,hasjoined inGlenAllcn.\'a C.OzmandO'Connorin Dr•.~bby\l'ilson,AW,graduated indutlt,C.RandolphSullimn,L basbeennamed LisaGra}Swab)••Rowe,AW,is Philadclphiaasanas.sociate.lle fromthe\\'est\'irginiaSchoolof editor of the oounsdsemployersandlitigates Os!eopathicMedicine,andwill directorofdil'Crsitycducarion andprogramsattheUnil'crsityof JenniferAshby,AW,ismJrl:ingin claimsim·ohingemplo)1nent oompletearesidencyinpe<liatrics WilliamsAlumni theRichmondareaa.sa$ales Baltimore'sdi1isionofstudent discrirnination,restric1i1"e at(:ei~ingerl!ealthSystemin Review,the engineerforHillPhoe!lixCorp.Shecm·enantsandtrade!ffrets affairsandenrollment Uam"ille,Pa. 3lldherfiancearere-,1oringa managtment CrystalWright,AW,recehffia AmyWitler,AW,teach esfirst magazi11eof hi,mrichomeintheFandistrict Thoma,K.Warren, HR,is Ph.D.in>ocialp:-,)·cholog)'from grJdeinDallas Williams College Shannaine llradhan1,L,~1l!S in worl:ingasamanagerfor thelJni1"ersityofCalifomiaat Andrealli'llrtl£1,L,isarncmbcrof PhiladelphiaandislheEqual thcad,isorycouocilfort!K'l.egal Pricewaterholl~.Jn Santallarbara.lnAugust,she Llecemberl99'),hemovffito~lilan,Hmplo)mentOppo1111nityollkcr brcameanassistantprofcssorof !nformationNct11orkforCar.cer. psychologya1i1al)1·illeCollcge. Kristinc DalakcrKraabcl, W Jtaly,foratwo-)earassignmenL forSwarthmoreCollege andL'97,mowdtoSingaporcand ShcilaRappazzoYorkin,AW,is MarcusBriones,AR,worksfor \\'cstacinBcthesda.Md.,andlives worksasanassociatcinthclaw acorporateoommlmication fimiof\\'hite&Case.Hcrareasof analystwithSaltLakcCityC.Orp in Arlington.Va JohnF.CarrolllV , l.,hasjoin('([ pracliceincludecapitalmarkets, HamiltonBeacM'roctor-Silex me~rsandacquis itions,anddebt lnc.a,oounsel.\\ithresponsibilirestnicturinginSoutheastAsia tiesforintellec!ualproperty AmandaJ.Abate,AW,hasjoined JaneC.l.ebcns,W,isaneonatal i11cludingpatents,coprrightand Abigaillllakcr,L,isarnemberof theRichrnoodli.ickcrsasdirectorof nursepractitionerattl1e trade-secret law. lheadi-isoryeotmci!forthel.egal salcsandmarketing.SlichadlH'll \lniwrsityofMarylandMed ica! adcwloprnenta.ww:iateattlie ShcUC)'Fm.11 cis,AW,!T10\'l'l'.!to lnfonnationNctworkforCar.cer. Ce11teri11Raltimorc JacquclineGu}'Ash11orth,AW, drapelltill.N.C.,lastAugustco Roman811la11"Ski ,AR,worksfor 01ildre11's\luse11mofRkhmo11d ChristophcrWalker,R,and ToddD.Ander~n,L.ha.~joined livesinMarietta,Ga.,andworksasa lry;ins111dicsintl1eUNCSchoolofGEFinancialSer;icesin llrcndaQuino11csWalkcr, lli', Sandsilnderson,\lark\&,\lillera., PublicHealth'sdoctoralprog.raminRicilmond.Va.Hcalso coachesa scniorm:ruiterforSprinL leda lellllloftcen-agrrsona maternalandchildhealth highschoolboys'varsity anawJCiateinthehealthcare missiontriptoi1crida.Vcnczuda, ruchardK.CaMemll,i\.R,is icf Ryan Hoffman, AR,ha~graduatro volleyhallteam in thefall,and practice group thissummcr.Chrisisanas.sociatc SCl'li.nginthcU.S.Anny.Heisch oftrainingforFirstBrigade,First fromtheUniversit';ofSouth helpscoachthejuniornationals Kel'inBaron,AR,worksasa pastorofChristPresbyterian JnfantryDi1ision ,atFortRiley , Kan CamlinaSchooloi~ledic i11€.!le te3Jl1inthespringandsummer. policyspecialis1withtheAlliance ChurchinRichmond,fa,and \'incerettaTaylorChiles,L, andhiswife,Missj;rn01-edto TracyLllamilton,L ,of forlnWmatiorrnJEducationa l Brendaworl:satCar~lax O(ll'nedherownlawpracticein <:olumbia,S.f.,wherehebegana Richmund,hasjoinedllall&Hall andCulturaJExchangcin Richmond.Thegeneralpractice residenc)'inemergencrmedicineat as an associate. \\"ashington,D.C JulieRodine , BW ,isalli'cb fim1empha.sizesemployment RichlandMl.'fTloriallkl;pital. AllisonLllcld,L,ofRidunond, law,criminaldefense,persona l JeffersonJ.joncs,AR,waslicenscd hasbcenclocted1'icepresiden1of producerforFodors.oominNew asa·1cxasauomcyinNorcmbcr dicboardofdircctorsofthel.egal Yorl:City injuryand collections H.SeanDc\'lin,AR,was 199'),andnowisaJAGofficerind ic lnfonnationNctworkforCar.cer. CatheiinePilcherBrad~haw, AW,completedammer·sdegree JillKasselbcrg,AW,hasjoined promotcd1os11pen.isorof U.S.Nal'y .JnAug.ust,hebegan faciliticsandsmicesatthc\l'alt woOOngasaprosecutorinthetrial CarterRyleyThoma\Puhlic incounselingp:-,ychologyinMay ElliottM.Buckncr, BR,rrcrntly DisneyCo.inBurbank,Calif. SCl'liccsofficeinYokosuka,Japan RelationsandMarketingCounsel 1999atthelJnil'ersityufGeorgia cornplctl'dlrisfinalycarof!aw a~ana,sociate schoolattheCollegeof\\ll liamand AmyTerdimanl.o\·ett, AW,has S1ephanieP.Karn,L,an SheiSwllrkingo11aPh.D. in \laryllcandtwoclassmateswon beennamededitorofthe attomeywiththeRichmondfinn Micheller. 1am, candl'99 ,has de1elopmentalpsychologya1 firstplaceinthei\mericanllar Wiiliam.1Alu11miRl1le11•.the ofHannan,Cla)-·tor ,Corrigan& ~lint'rlShaheen&Shaheenasan C.Omclllnil'Crsil)',11hcreshe Association NationalApp~llate alumnimagazi11eofWilliaJlt~ Wellman,hasbeenelectedtothe a.<;_wciluepracticingintheareasofst11dirsthedc1·clopmentof ci,illitigaliooandfami!ylaw aggrcs.si1·eand1·iolentbeha1·iorin i\drncacyCornpetitioninApri lin t:ollegeinWilliamsto11n,ilass. hoanlofdirectorsoftheREAD childrenand adolescent~. Chicagolm')·bt>-JtmorethanHXl Shepm"iouslysen.-eda.seditorof (knter,anonprofi1organization FordhamMag(l;:frte .Sheandher dedicatedto helpingadults teamstosecurethetrophJ &,e!opbasicreadingand ElizabcthGassmanCheron,AW, hushand,Ken,areportcrforthc isli1ingin\crsaillcs,Franct,11ith l\'eu•YorkPost'sAlbanybureau, oomm11nicatio11Sskills herhlisband,Pa.ul,andthcirson. lil'CinPetersburgh,N.Y. SheriLiccioni,AWandL'OO,isan associatcintlicRichmondlawfinn of\\i:Guire,'ii'oods,llattle&lloothe

'95

P94

P.tge 42 FALi 2000

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CamilleTopv,Cade,JW,isin mcdicalschoolattheUni1·ersity ofMarylandandplanstoapply foranesthesiologyresidencies AnnMarieCamden,AW,is administmtoroflegalaffairsfor TelogyNetworks,aTexas Jnstrumentsoompanym Gennanto11n , Md. \"ickyCarle,BW,isfinishingher They say the squeaky wheel gets master'sdegrefinteachingfor the grease, bm in the case of elementaryeducationat\'CUand Wesley R. Hendley, R'82, the workingaithec(lrnputer technologyoompanySyf.om.She squeaky wheel got put to work. and Roman Rulmnki, AR"96, After Hendley wrote a letter to houghtahouseinRichmond. Dr. E. Bruce Heilman in 1989 Che11IAnnllergassiCt:my,AW, ofllolton,.\\ass., isas.si.stanldirector "suggesting" improvements to the University of Richmond's alumni ofresean:hatBentle). ·College events in the Atlanta area, he was KateClements,AW,oompleted hermaster'sdegretinpublic invited to join Richmond's Atlanta affairsreportingandisa alumni chapter. ne11spaperreponerattheDailJ• "They basically said it was time Hera/din suburbanChicago for me to put my money where AnnaJohnsonCramer,JW,and my mouth was," Wes recalls witl1 herhusband,PhillipCramer, AR,bothgraduatedfrom a chuckle, "{time]for me to get involved.~ l'anderbiltLawSchoolinMa)·.Jn Hendley, and his wife, Terri Allen Hendley, Augusl.theybeganclerkingfor W"85, ha\'e done just that. Not only did they judgcsinWashington,D.C begin to attend events for Richmond alumni Da1idR.Cumming::s,L,of living in Atlanta-events they previously didn't Hope11"tll.\ 'a.,hasbeenpromotcd know existed-but for the past six or so years, toprogrammanagerofthe planningunit11i1htheRichmond the couple has co-chaired the University's Atlanta PoliceDepanment.l!ehadbeena alumni chapter crimeanal)S! "I have much more appreciation for Richmond KimlMT lyLDean,AU',isa.ssistanl nowt Wes says. ~It keeps me in touch with the directorforPartncrshipforth e school and up-to-date with what the school is t"utureinRidunond. Sha1rnDe.Mers,B R.11-0fkswith doing. Ifs let me be a part of the school's DeJo;ctc&ToucheinNasl11ille phenomenal growth." along11idifellowalumnusRll5S Wes and Terri met while students at the Fallis,RR"96. University of Richmond when introduced by Terri"s Joannel>elloss,JW,graduated older sister, Debbie Allen Talley, W'81. They were fromjohnsllopkinsinMay11itha mastl'r"sdegreeinJlllblicpolicy.Shemarried in 1986at Cannon Memorial Chapel. Wes, who grew up in Aiken, S.C.,says he chose to islilinginArlingtoo,\'a.,and 11orkingfortheNationall'ark attend Richmond because he wanted ~to ge1 as far Sel"\'icein\\ 'ashington.D.C a\va.yfrom home as I could." He 100k a campus tour ErinDugan,AW,isalawstudent and fell in love with 1he school's beautiful campus. atU.\'a.Shespentthesummerin Terri, a political science and sociology major Richrnondworkingforthelaw from Emporia, Va., chose the Uni\·ersity of finnof\rilliams,Mullen.Clark andl>obhin.s Richmond because her older sister attended the ChrisEngels,JR,isworkingwith school. Her younger sister, Robin Allen Floyd, Renais.sanceConsu l!ingin W'88, then followed in her footsteps. Atlanta.andplannedtospendthe 111ccouple settled in Atlanta, where Terri is the summercompetinginbiathlons litigation paralegal coo rdinator supervising six andtriatl1lons

Serving the Atlanta alumni chapter

1\laurttnJudetiood,AW ,

litigation paralegals at the law fim1of Long

completedhersel"\iceasasmall Aldridge & Norman LLP,and Wes, a political businessdel-elopmentrnlunteer science and economics major, is responsible for 11iththel'eactCorpsinllonduras. sales in the Southeast region for All American Poly, DanielJGerl\aCO\',AR,isback fromSouthAmericaandis11orking an industrial packaging company. The couple has two children, Robby and Katherine , ages IO and 7. a.'lcoonlinatoroftheAmcricas

progr.im11ithllusinessforSocial Much of their spare time is spent planning and RespJnsibilit)'inSanfrancisoo attending Richmond alumni events. l11e Atlanta alumni chapter serves one of Richmond's larges! alumni groups in the country, v,rithmore than 700 members. Typically, the

Hendleys plan five or six events per year, ranging from happy hours at downtown Atlanta bars, to Atlanta Braves baseball outings, to an annual Christmas party, to watching Spiders basketball games on TV,sometimes with members of William and Mary's Atlanta alumni group. In their decade-long inwlvement with the Atlanta chapter, the couple has witnessed tremendous growth in the group, especially in the past three or four years. "A lot of Richmond grJ.ds are settling in Atlanta," Wes says. "It has been a challenge to keep up with that. We need to have more events every year to reach out 10 more people." Terri savs one of the most successful events the chapter h•lds each year is the new student cookout, hosted by Roland Anderton, R'48, and Peggy Kyle Anderton, \X"43.This event offers an opponunity for rising Richmond freshmen and their parents to meet with current students and older alumni. "Usually all the new parents leave feeling a little more secure with their decision to send their kids to Richmond," she says. ~You will see rising freshman talking with juniors and seniors, or talking with a grad from the '70s," Wes adds. "And they all have something in common. The school still has the same ideals and has pretty much siayed true to itself." Wes says he has gained a greater appreciation for the traditions of the University of Richmond through his alumni activities. ~, used to think it was stoic or 100 conservative," he says. ~Now I have a new appreciation for it." Recently he anended the induction of the new president of Agnes Scott College in Atlanta as a representative of the University.··1 walked into the ceremony along with [representatives] from Yale and Harvard,'"he says. "It was me and 125 other college dignitaries, and almost to a person, when they found out I W'J.Sfrom Richmond, they wJ.nted 10 talk about [the school]. It was a real eye opener." Terri's appreciation for the University has also grown through her alumni activities. Not only has her invoh·ement with the group helped her to make many new friends in Atlanta, but it has also kept her in close contact with old college friends. "It has definitely strengthened my tics to the Uni\·ersity of Richmondt she says. "I don't know that I would go back there if I weren't involved like this. I think ii allows us to see the school differently.'' •

BY J ESSICA RONKY HADDAD,A\X/'93

UNIVERSITY Of RICHMON

D MAGAZINE

l'age 43


ll-likeGifford, BR,startedhis ChyrreaSebree, L,hasbeen Bradenlloucek, AR,isastudent MichelleWalls,AW ,isasludentat 01111company,MGfood promotedtooounselforE.l .du inlawschoolatFloridaState Han·artll.awSchool.Sh€${lt'llther l'.nterpriseslnc.lnh issparetime, PontdeNemoursandCo.in Unil'ersityinTallahassee.llewas surnmer\\'Orl,;ingfor!logan& l"(j]mington,Del.She\\illcontinueasummeras.sociate\\ithStems, H~ILPinWashington,D.C. heplaysonafa·isionchamp Wea,·er,Miller.Alhadeff& outdoorsoccerteam11ith 8rian topracticepatentla\\ ',andhas Ubhaus, BR'98;Scott Castiglia, as.sumcd1heposicionoffu111rc SiuersoninMiami,andinthefall 1_9Rl/PatrickS.Simmons, R. \\illclcrl,;foraFloridaSuprcme BR'97;Erica Lanzo,AW'98;and chairforDuPont"sminority andSandrallruce,MayU,2000, Ste\·eSchreiber,A.R'98. oounselconJerence.Sbehasbeen Courtjustice.Hcreportsthathe atCannonMemorialChapel HeidiGottschalk,JW,worksfor \\iththecompanysincel99l! hasbeenn>eogniredonArnerica·s TheJ·l!\'einRichmond. Campbell,\lithunF. ,sty.an RobertW.Shinn , L,\\ithCSX, Intriguing YoungBachelorsList 1986/Aimll-lathis, W,andWalt adl"ertisingagern:rinMinneapolishasbeenelectedtotheboartlof (1999edition) Ballingcr.Oct.2,1999.Jncluded ;L,hasjoined 1/eraroJUntsincludeSesameStreet directorsofTheatrelV AmandaBruning,JW ,ofRasking Da1idP.BuckleJ intheweddingpartywcreLois McGuirel'l'oodsl.LPasanassociate children"sapparelandThomMcAnKayrenShoffnerJW,isa Ridge,NJ.,isatechnicalrecruiterat delHuenoand\'alcrie\'l'cbster shoes.Sheli,es11ith SusanParker, oommunityooUaboration.sand ,\\yrecruiter .oominNewYorkCity. inthefinn'srealetateand llaldernan,bothW'86.Thecouple en,irorunentalgroup AW,11hoiscompletingherPh.D.in iniliati,-e;specialislfortheUnited Adrienne Capps,JWandBW, liwsinRichrnond Rob)nS.T.Carlson,L,hasjoined childde>elopmentatlheUnhersitJl"('ayofGrcaterGromsboro,N.C. hasjoinedGatewayHomesof 1988/AnneRentley,W,andJoel McGuire\'loodsLLPasanas.sociate ofMinncsota. Jason Shull, BR,isa Richmondasdirectorof McCray,Apri18,2000,in She\\illsefl.e\\iditheta.\and de1·elopmcn1andpublic J.T. llenry,JW,11orksatBdl prograrrnncr/analrstatFocus Williarnsburg,\'a.Theyli1-ein crnplo)'l'Cbenefitsgroup AtlanticinArlington.\'a .,asanlT HcathcareManagemcnt!nc.in relations.Shcpre1·iouslywas Richmond. RobinR.Cooke, L,hasjoincd collegerecruiter. Franklin,Tenn directorofde,·elopmcnt 1990/\' 'illiamt'.Crockett, R, McGuire,Woods,Baule&Boothe l.aurallollister,BW,isafinancial Den:kSmith,A.R ,worksinthe iltfonnationfortheBoysand andLisaAitken,Sept.26,1998,in asanattorneyintbeintellectual anal)"st\\ithAvenueA.anlntemel sportsinfonnalionolfireat GirlsClubofMetroRichmond Brcwstcr,Mass. propertygroup.Shepmiously companyinSeanle D:nidsonCol~intl"onhCarolina JohnCarleton,JR,isamarketing f99 // 1'1ark0ellinger, Rand lberlal.ziin Michaelllormth,L,isro1mselfor LauraSneade,AW,isanaa:ount rnanagerfor\\'ebleyS~~ernslnc 11aswithStudiol L'94,andJan eNoyes,W'92, Milan,ltaly theLlbertyMutualGroupinlkNoo.exerutin~forGr8.rnm,forrnerfyofinf.hicago.lletelecornrnutesfTIHll March25,2000,inRoanoke.\'a. lleconcentratesooinlemational EarlePalmerlll'OIITilnterdCl.in•,in Kings1on,Jarnaica,wherehis11ife,\larlenaJenkins,AW,isa 1991/Gine\'l'aE. Conklin,W, mergersand acquisitions PhiladelphiaSh€11oOOonthe isaconsularofficerwiththeU.S. consultantinthestrategicfinance andGlennAlphen,AR"9l andeconomicdhisionofArthur Oiarlc:sJcff erson,AR,isli,ingin Noi-artisAnimall!ealthoccount. StateDepartmenl. Marchl998.Thecouplelil'esin Dallas,whmtic~ani.-... •ofl1re LauraConneratStcllart,AW,is JanetD.Collins, L,hasstartedher Andersenin\l:'ashington.D.C. Richmond. forhiso:xnpan);Af'EXSystems worlcingasaneditor11ithNarlor 01111 lawfimtin Rkhmond,JanctD KarenKadin,BW,isastrateglc 1991/PatriciaDann,Band market'ianalrstfordicM0;,,1" TraciMargolis, BW,is\\orlting\\idi Publicationslnc.inGairtCS1'illc,f1a ColLins,PLC. GB" 97,andJohnLoyde,Ma)'l3, Group,afinancialsenices yDa\idStewart,AR,isa AndeiwnConsuhinginDcmer. TU11oth SarahGraham,AW,is 2001,inCannonMemorialChapel. oompanyinNewYorl,;Ci~ studentindentalschoola tthe comrnunicationsmanageroflhe Stefanie Mathew,JW, t993/AllenG. llallo11 ·c,BR,and completedherrnaster"sdegreein UniversityofFloridainGai1lt'Slille AspenlnstituteinWash ington.D.C OehraRosel.ewis, BW.of llylali.\l.Boyd,May\3,2000 Fairfax,\'a.,isananalystwith artrnanagernentatCamegie James B.Stnele c, BR,of PamelaM.Herrington,l~has TI1e..-li\eeinRichmond Mellonl'ni\·ersitvandisworking Arlington,\'a,,isasenior joinedtheRichmondlawfirrnof AndeiwnConsulting 1993/1.isaGray,AW,and SuzanneJaneMcBride,AW,isa infundraisingf~rPittsburgh accountantwithELink llutler,\'l'il!iams,Pantele&Skilling MichaelKS11aby•RO\\'e,May29, ics PublicTheater. Communication~lnc DouglasE.Lamb, L,hasjoi!K'd ltM' sportsteam-landsport.-,laeroh 1999,KimberlyLCarey.AW"93, ins!ructoratClubMedon Shannonll-laynard, AW,liHisin SarahWeinzierl,AW,of Richmondlawfinnof~la)S& 11asrnaidofhonor.Thecouple Washington,D .C.,andisdin>etorof Gaines1·ille,fla.,isinlawschool 1\uentineasanas.sociate,\\itha Paradiselsland,Bahamas. 1i1·esinllaltirnore f.milyEliiab,cth1\loore,AW,of outreachatYouthSer;iceAmerica,andishopingtopursueacareer ooncmtrationinpublicfinance. 1993/AmJ'j.Moore, AW ,and anonprofitorganiiationthat inci\'ilrightslaw.Earlicr,shchad ThomasN.Lappas, A.R ,hasbeen Richrnond.isaclicntsel\·ice MarkEMiller,Sept.25,1999. encouragesyoungpeopleto \\Wkedatajul'Cniledctention prornotedtoeditorof7bellmriro specialist\\·ithllmningcr Theyli,·einCharlotte,N.C . Richmond. volunteerintheirconummilics. programforgirlsinTampa C<mntyleader,aweek.Jy / 993/)eanll-lorrissei·,AW,and lyP.Woodward,AW,has newspaper,andlbeFarlr1:5tF,11dF.rinPooleP:ue,AW,isan HercurrentprojcctisSel\icerote K.imber MatthewAlanSanner,Fcb.5,2001. as.sistan tac:countexecut i1'eatdie 2000,anationalcarnpaignto moi-eclbacktoRid1rnondfrorn Pres.J,arnonthlymagaz ine.in TI1ecouplelh-esi11Richrnond. publicielatITTfirrn(jti!}ltel:lewe addres.sthediscon11ectbet11een Raleigh,N.C.,and11Tirksasahenel1t GlenAllen,l'a.Tbetwo f99J/Sheila Rappazw,AW,and RogersoninChicago l'Olunteeringandvotingamong analystfor,\larshUS>l.lnc publicationsare subsidiariesof AndrewKurtYorl,;in,March4. Lind,;aJ·WoodworthRall, BW, 18-to2'l-year-old5 GoodNewsPublica tionslnc 2001,inSaltl.akeCity.lnduded DanielleMen:alante ,AW,isa JosephW.,\lam.oLiJr .,ARofKeme, is marketingmanagerfor intheweddingpal1)·11asMegan ;,,·.11.,iscountyprogrdrildire:tor<iHandango,anlntem€toornpany Callahan,AW"93,Theooupleli\'!'S Ph.ll.studentstudying inFortWorth,Texas pharrnacologyattheUnil-ersityof lheOieshiieCountyYMCA inSaltLakeCity. DanaW. Tra)"ham, L isasta!J NorthCarolina,Uiapelllill. l't'n)· W.ll-lil es l\',L,hasjoined J!J94jSeanDc1·lin,AR,and auomc)'forthcDepartmmtfor .\kGuirel'l'oodsLLPasanassociacc PollyO"Ncil,AW,isbeginninga MariaElcnaCabero,Scpt.4,1999. Rightsofl'irginiansw ith gradualeprograrninhcalth and\\illserw\\i didicpnx!tlCIS 1994/Marion Early,AW,and Disabilities,focusingonthe managCTncntandpolic)'Ollafull BenjaminR.Bates,AR,receil-ecla liabiUtygroup. MichaclSpargo,Oct.16,1999,in master'sdegreeinspeech scho!arshipatthcUniwrsityof Holl)'Reddington,AW,ofReston, protectionandadnicacyof Mcrnphis.Tenn.lncludedintbe oomrnunicationatlheUni1'ersitvof indil'idualswithrnentalillness 1'1ichiga11"sSchoolofPublic \\l.,isaw,;hnicalrecniiter\\ith weddingpartywereKristineSwett Georgia,and\\illbegin\\'Orl,;ona PencomSystemslnc. Hcalth.Shetooktimcoffthis \'olp.JW'94:and.\lelanieMorgan, summerto1isitThailandbefore Ph.D.inthefall.llehasbeen ShelhyS.Serls,BW,11asprornoted Pam~1adryandAmySchroedernn;,gniz.edhyltM'SouthemStateifromintemalaud startingschool itortoagency lleamn,allA\'109-tThecoup le Communicationi\ssocialionforhisfinancialanal;~tat!!ilb,Rogaland TimRupright, AR,of li1-esinl:harlotte,N,C 11orl,;ongenderstudie<;andpopular Alexandria,\'a.,isenrolledat HarnilkmCo.inGlenAllen,\'a. 1994/JacquelineGuy,AW,and cultul'1',andhasbeenin1itedtogi,e Johnsllopkins!Jni1-ersity'~Pau l DanielllrittainAsh11orth,Aprill, pn-sentationstolheEastem NitzeSchoolforAdrnnced 2001.Jncludedinthewedding StefanieSandler,AW,is Cooun.unicationA.%ociationand lnlemational Studies.Heisina partywasNikkiMunll,AW"94 e~ommerceconsultantat rnas1Cr'sdegreeprogram11ith lheRhetoricSocietyofAmerica l11ccouplelil'csinMarietta,Ga Xpediorlnc.inA lexandria.\'a concentrationsin international cconornicsandJapanstudies.

MARRIAGES

P'98

fl!" QO

P:ige 44 FAI I 2000


1994/lkianC.l'ais lcy, AR,and ArnyC.Jones,April26,2000.They \il·cinRichmond /994/Courtnci ·\'ilardi , BW, andRickMorris,Oct.23,1999 lncludedintheweddingpart)'"115 CoriMO()re,ll'i\""9-i.Thecouple lil"esinHohoken ,NJ 1995/EricR.Longfield,AR.and Christinel'restage,Octoherl999 lntheweddingpartywasAndria Bilotto,B\J:"94,andasbestrnan, &njaminSabloff,AR"95.111e

Two years later, tired of 60--hour work weeks and daily hour-long commutes, Donnell briefly worked as impot1/export manager for "The minute I drove into campus,n Crown Automotive Sales Co., says Megan Donnell,AW'95, "I processing documents for air and knew it was the right place for me ocean export shipments worldA native of Hanover, l\-fass., wide. Today she works as a project Donnell knew she wanted to administrator for MIS,an ADP coupleliresin0ldTown attend a small university that Alexandria,l'a company, where she provides wasn't too dose co home. 1996/GregClika,JR,and\li'endy customer service to 40I(k) plan A.llassler,Oct .9,1999,in\li'est Although she had nL'Verheard of trustees and 40\(k) company Chester,Pa.lncludedinthe the University of Richmond, she contacts. Ald1oughshe no longer weddingparl) ·wereJarnesSherrill, applied at the suggestion of her uses her language skills on the job, IIK'96,and,11ikeDre.1·,AR·96.The high school adviser, whose son she does rely on them at home. couple lill'SinRaleigh,N.C. was enrolled at Richmond. Once 1996/1.oriDunn, AW ,a ndChris In 19%, while still living in Chile, accepted , Donnell visited the Coatcs.June8,l998.'J11ecouplc Donnell manied her husband, Luis 1i1l'SinRoanokc,l'a. campus and was hooked. "Patricio~Morales Ruz, a native of 1996/Mari·Bcthl.aing,BW.and During her years at Richmond, Chile.They met, says Donnell, "on a ChristopherRlKnani.Marchll. Donnell was active with a variety of activities public bus twice when I wJ.s te-.ichingEnglish in 2000,inllallas.lndudedinthe Santiago.The first time he sL,redat me the whole weddingparl)·11l'rel.ee\li'allace, including her sorority, Alpha Chi Omega; band; Mortar Board; and Alpha Phi Omega, a service 1111r96,andJenniferllick,A\li"96 bus ride but only asked me the time as I got off The fraternity for which she served as president her SallyRarnsdenandStaceyTrmis, second time he follo,;,,1!<1 me and asked me out. We bolhAW'96,"erere-.«lers.The junior year. She also worked in the law school were manied less than a year later." coupleli1l'SinMcL.ean,1·a admissions office and spent a summer in Chile as In December 1999, their son, Michael, ,vas OOm. 1996,'i\tichaclG.i\lontgomeri ·, an exchange student. Because Patricio speaks limited English, Don11eU L,andChristine,\I.Riddlc,Feb.19, following graduation, the Latin American speaks Spanish at home and plans to raise her son 2000.TIIC'llireinRichmond studies and Spanish double major decided to 1996/Kris1enF,.No1,AW.and in a bilingual household. She also has an 11-yearMatthewC.l.osd1ert,AR"97, return to Chile. She lil'ed there for almost two old stepson in Chile. .llay7,2000.Thecoupleli1l'Sin years leaching English to workers in Chilean In addition to working full-time, taking gradua1e Midlothian,\'a companies. One of her largest clients was Hyatt classes toward an MBAin global management, and 1,996/S uranneTruex ,AW ,and Hotels, where she taught everyone from the spending time with her family, Donnell continues JustinMcAlister, AR,SeJJ tl 8, 1999,inCannonMcmorialChaJ)l'I housekeeping staff to the front desk personnel to volunteer for Richmond. Today she represents Jrrdudedinthc"eddingJJar!)'WC!I' how to speak English. the Universityat fairs in southeastern MassachuCathcrincPanrer,AIV96;Richard While adjusting to life in Chile, Donnell spent setts and Rhode Island. Singlcton.AR"96;andbcstman three montl-tsliving with Jenney Peery Bramson, Once she even flew to Mexico for a college fair 1ril!McC.1mrn on,BR'96.The AW95.\Vhen a member of the University'sadmission when no one from the admission office could go. couplelil-esinCharleston.SC office called Bramson about representing Richmond " I loved going to the fair there-ii was huge!""she 1997/Phillip Cramer,AR, and , Donnell tagged along. AnnaJohtt'>On,JW ,Aug.14,1999, at a college fair in Santiabro says. " I actually have never met anyone in Enjoying the opportunity 10 educate prospective admission, yet they still asked me to go. I've inGallatin.Tenn.lncludedinthe weddingJ)ltrl)'lll'rebridesrnaid students about her alma mater, Donnell, who always had fun doing college fairs." KatieMoore,ll\\''97,andreader speaks fluent Spanish, volunteered to represent ''At the fairs, you have to look at each student MichaelGciscr,AH'98.ThecouJJll' the University at other college fairs and in 1995 individually,nshe says, especially when talking to lh·esin\ashlillc.Trnn. became a member of Richmond's Alumni Recruit· internation al students. Because test scores /997/raraAnne llamilton,B\\', andPhilipl!.llennen.May6,2000. ment Committee. She continued altending fairs in determine the type of university a student can Chile and Mexico until relurning to the United Theylil"einRichmond auend in Latin America, internatio nal student~ are 1997/AnnM.Shaffer,BW ,and States in early 1997. often .significantlyconcerned about admission Sh:11111 I':S""t-eney, ~larch 4,2000. Back in Massachusens, Donnell's dual language criteria when looking at Richmond, inAnna1JOlis,Md skills landed her a job in the emerging market bond Donnellbelievesthat "a lot of Americansneed to be and loan syndications depattment of BankBoston. exposed to other cultures,"and says she is impressed Her fluency in Spanish allowed her to translate with Richmond"sincreasingnumber of international documents and correspond with foreign b'()vem• students and more diverse student body. ment officialsand clients in Argentina, Chile and She also says she would like to see her son Brazil.She also began taking Portuguese classes to atlend Richmond, although she acknowledges assist in her interactions with some of her Brazilian that he has to make his own choices. Howe\"er, if clients. But with no financial background, Donnell those choices were to include becoming a Spider, learned everything else, including finance and Donnell says she wouldn 't argue. • computer skills, on the job.

Helping with Alumni Recruitment Committee

BYALISSAA. MANCUSO,AW'94 UNIVERSITY

OI RICHMOND

MAGAZINE

l' agc 45


1999/CatherineA.lndeUcato, /98-Wiancy'il"illiamsGregor}', 19&$thristopher McKenna,R, J99(!1enniferNachajskiLe11is , 1994'fhnma\ ll. Walsh, AR. L,andllr.AndrewW.Henrit7.e, R,andherhusband.Robbie.aSOll, l.'93andGB'93,andhiswife, B,andherhusband,Jordan andhiswife,lindsay,twins,Ernily May\3,2000.Thecouplelivesin MatthewThomas,March27,2000.Caroli11.tv.insom,\\-illiarnGremeLe11is,R,adaughtcr,Mallory and!Jregory,Aprill,2000 Roanoke,\'a 198q/Dr.WilliamT.Roland,R, andllrendanC.Ollins,April6,20'.Xl Akacialellis,March27,2000 199i;Oa1idBrianturnmings,L, 1999/ErinR.Poole,AW,and andhiswife,Leighann,ason, Thej·joinbrotherChri.mijlherJr.,2ShejoinssisterBristol,2 ardhis11ife.Elizabclh,adaughtl'r, Stephen). Pate,AR.Aug.7, Rohert(:ray ,No1·.l!, 1999.lle 198/0iharonll-laitlandMoon, /9.90/1.isaNeurohr Meadows, AnneliseSeabrook.Dcc.7,!999 1999,inJackson,.\lis, .The1·!1\e joinsbrotherliam,3 L,andherh11~band, "J,"a W,andherhushand,Brent in Chicago · J9S(ytarol Churilla-D'Anjolell, daughter,.\\aryilaitland"Mattie"' Meadows,B,adaughter, /999/1.indsa}·Woodworth,BW. W,andherhusband,Robcrt,a Moon,Jan.21.2000. Catherine~largaret,April 5,2000 andDustinRall,.\Jarch25,2000. daughtcr,ChristinaLlnda, 198,$'.)acquel)TI Bro1111 Schick, 1990/(;hipll-lorgan,R,and his inFort\'i'orth.Te.>.as.lncludcdin i\larch8,2000.Shejoinsbrotl 1ers B,andherhusband,SlCl'l',a 11-ife,Kalhy,adaughlcr,!Jeorgia theweddingparty11creArny daughter,Cathcrine"Catc"'~lagee Porter,frb.13,2000 Robcrt,4.andMichacl,3 19.10/R.ccd I. West, R,of Coker,AbbyRueandArnyAgnew./98(y'Kate0wens Dolan,W, Shejoinsbrotl1erBrmdan,ll/2 199MclTOli10 , B,andhisl'ife, allA\\'"99.l11ecoup lelivesin andherhusband,Christopher 1989/.JenitaTaylorBeach,B, Cara,asa~B~~jcrutings,Jan.20, Richmond,.\larch17,2000.Aftcr Fon\\'orth D.Dolan, R"90,ason.Riley andherhusband,JohnR. 2001HcjoinsbrothersDanm,9, acareerofbuyingandselling James,April21,2000.Hejoinsa Beach, R'SS,a daughter,Jalene andKendall,8;ardsiW'sHaik-t.6. businessesin transportationand insurance,Mr.Westretiredand brother,ChristopherPatrick,2 EL"'1,Dec.30,1999.Shejoinsa :mdMorganardAlicia,2 1984,1.isale\'an llaarmann , sister,JacieLyn,2 19.90/1.orie GoodeWard,L, and continuedasaconsultant.He11as thefonnerowneroftheC.C W,andherh usband,Keith.a 19891.JenniferCru;ey llines, W, herhushand,Ed,a,;on,,'iolan daughtcr,CamcronMorreau. andherhusband,Karl,lllinboys, Matthew, .\\archl 7,2000.Hejoins fochraneTransportationCo., whichheboughtinl937and 1'-larch14,2000 .Shejoinssis1ers Gre;-sonEdwardandGarrett bmtherllenjamin,6,andsMer dewlopedtruckingterminals Clay,6;Logan,5:andSara.3 Thornas,Jan.18,2000.ThC)-·join Caruline,3 198IJl.aura AddicottParron, fromRichmond10:--ewYork /98(j;MaryDurgin lacocca, W, bigbrothcrGriffinJohn.21/2. 199.ljl.aura WolfDysart, W, W,andherhusband,Rruce,ason, andherhusband,Al,ason. bcforcsclling1hccompanyin 1989/rimoth~·W. Houck,R, andherhusband.ScottD)"sart, l\ruce\\'illiarn ,Feh.6,2000.1/e 1968.Hcthenbecarnechainuan Michae1Albcrt,March24,2000 andhis11ife,RaeleneRoberge R,ason,Brai1don.~1a y26, 1999 joim,si.,"ttrsEmily,5,and~legan,3/_91ityColleen Brune Kammar, llouck, R"91,adaughter, /99ljtorannMcCullionWood,B, oftl1eboardofFirstComrnon198.VCarlafoung llarrington , B,ason,BraydenThornas,Jan .8, fortMiaArm,No1·.28,1999 andherhw,ar,:\.larry.adaughter, wealthlnsuranceCo.,11·hichwas W,andherhushand,Win, soldinl986.MrWestisafom1er 2000.l!ejoin~brotherPatrick,2, 1.%'9jteorgeShril'er,R,andhis Madeloullelle,NmA,1999 adoptedadaughter,Kathryn 11ife,Oiris,ason,George"'~\oc'" 199~ell yJan ·isAnderi;on,W, presidemoftheRichmond andsisterlindsey,12 Yulia.onjune21.1999.She11as J98i/Meg Gehret Enkine, H, follegealumnicouncilanda McLeanShril"er\',April4,2000 andherh11\band,RuII}' bomD«:.14,1996,inRussia. fonnerrnemberoftheexecutil-e andherhusband.Hal,adaughter, 19891.JefTrt) ' W.Stone, B,and Anderson,R,adaughter,Kyra /984/Richard G.Alexander,R, Anna,Fcb.2.2000.Shejoinssister hisl'ifc,Tarnara,adaughter, comrnittt't'ufth~Boatwright Jane,.\lay3,I999. andhiswife.Dana,ason,Nathan Mercdith.4,andbrotl1crJa.ke.). AlannaGracc,ll-lay24.1999. Soc.iety.Mr.Wcslwasan 199.z.,tirianJ. Popp,B,and his John. llejoinstwinbrothcrsRyan /98i//llaryCo\leen Broderick /989/Grttchen Haas accornplishcdballroomdanccr wife,Cheryl,ason,Bracdan andJordan,9 andan avidgolfer. Hurley,W,andhcrhusband, Theodore, B, andher husband, Timothy,Aug ..'I0,1999 19H5/.J. Thomas Bradley,B,and Michael.ason,~lichaclBroderick Mark,ason,Alexandcr~lark, /912/Samuel CecilChildress, /991/.\ndrea Boylan hiswifo,Susan,ason,Garret t ..April9, 'llrody,",\ug.3.1999.He joins Sanderson,W,andherhusband, R.ofGreensboro.N.C Junel0,1999 Sarnuel,~larch21,20(Xl.llejoin, brotherJack,4. 2000.Hewaschainnanofthe 1.%'9/LeellendricbTurpin,W, Mark,ason,CalehRandall, sisterSarah,6,andhmthers 1/enricoCounty,\'a.,schoolboard 1_91iif'i\laureenFl}nnJohn!lOII,andherh11'\band,Hennis,ason, March17,2000 Drew,4,andGrant,2 whenthecountyimegratedil~ B,adaughter,Pa igeAm1,Marchl6, (:raysonAleksamler,April23 ,2000 199.VChristopherWalker, R, schoolsinthelatel9(i0s.After 1984,IKartn11-larinr , GB,and mi.Shejoinslllinbrothm,21/l 19H_9jSeth Warren, R, andhis andhi.~11ife, BrendaQuinones hcrhusband,BiJIBellarny,a graduatestudyatl:olurnbia J98i/.Julie D.McClellan,W, wife,,\laureen,ason,Christian WalkH,W,ason,Brandon daughtcr,CarolincLiscttcGracc L'90 and GB'90,andher Unilersity,helaughtalfork Pcter,March\2000.Hejoinsa Christopher,Feb.18,2000. Bellamy,Fcb.22,2000 husband,GregBeckwi th,Jf 86 brother,Huntcr. 19'J.VAm) ·KosiorekOwsik,BW, UnionMilitaryAcadcrnyfora 1985/.J. Thomas Bradley,B,and andG'89,ason,GregoryM.''B.J" 1989/.JulieFerrigno Weigel,W, andhcrlmsband,David,adaughter,ycar,thelll'OTkcdforlhc andhiswife,Susan,ason.Garrett BeckwithJr.,March21,2000.He andherhusband,Michael,ason, Akxil11ctoria,Ju~•2,1999. lnsurJJlccCo.ofNorthAmcricain Samuel,.\larch2t,2000.Hejoins joinssisterBrittany,2 NCIIYorkandPhi ladclphia.He MauhewTobias.Feb.15, 1999.lle /99J;Baldwin Smith,AR,and Sarah,6;Drew,4;andGrant,2 retumcdto\lrginiaandbecan1e l98ij11-laria Grady.\1urphy,W, joinsasister,FmilyEUzabeth.3 hiswife.Laura.adaughter, 1.985/l'hoebeW.Figlaml, R,and andherhushand,Jay,ason, 19H9jl.isa Henion Whitt, W, \1rginiaMadeline,~larch 12,2000 activein communityaffairs. herhusband,adaughter,Rachel {:eorge,Dec.28,1999.llejoinsa andherhushand.Walterf. servi11gontheschoolboardfrom 1994/.JolmR."Barney" Bo}'le, JlelenRoI.eJJfeld.Jan.30 ,200) 1960101972anda~chainnan hrother,Tommy,3. Whitt IV, B, a son,William GB,adaughter,Natalieliico le. 1985/l'erryGranger-Dub}',W, 19~onathan Colehower,R, 11iristopher ,Sept.9,1999.lle Dec.21,1999.Shejoinshmther froml\l68to1')72.Jlealsoserl'ed andherhusband,Jim,adaughter, amlhiswife,Debbie,adaughter, aspresidentofthellighland joinsbrother\1'alterE\\hitt\',3. Jack,3 ~-Let>Dub)',Aprill8,I999 SpringsCi1·icAssocia1ionandthe Natalie.Shejoinstwosislers 1990,IStephanieGrana 199#,lulieSchucht\\hitlock,L, llighlandSpringsVfA,andasa 198,V.,oelGetis, R, and his wife, Bernbcris,WandL'93,andher andherhusband,N'lin,ason , Malli1C11 •'il'OOOrow, ,\larchl0,20'.Xl. dcaconandSundayschool Carey WilliamsGetis, L'93, a husband,Scottl . superintcl\dentofhischurch daughtcr,SusannaRachcl, Bemberis,R'89 and L'93, a 1995/11-lcgan Donnell, AW,and ,'l icoleElaina"Cole," March27, 2000.Shejoinssistcr dauF,hter hcrhusband.PatricioMorales,a Elinbeth,3 Jan.27,2000 son,MichaelJosephMorales l!J&'!,tarol.\lcClellandJenl..ins, /990/.JoshEaster,R,andhis Donnell,Htc.21,19')9.llejo ins '\'l',andherhushand,Boris,a wife,Laura,a>0n,Jackson brother~latia~.11 daughter.RubyAnn,Aug.30,1999McKellar,April26,2000.llejoins 199.Vl.auraWhiteMdlcm-ell ,AW , Shejoinsbrotherjoshua,7,and sisterFmnLl'S,2 and~rhu-Jx1nd,Tun};a~Jarne; sislerllannah,5 19_90/.Julia Breaks!Jardner, H, Nicholas'Jac:k,"St-pt. 10,1999 andherhllsband,lirn!Jardncr, H."89 , a daughter,Amanda Harriot,March23.2000.Shejoins brotherAustin,3

f'bEATHS

BIRTHS

Page /46 FALL 2000


1933/Dr.Marion Elmo Clark, 1943/Dr.C. Sidney King, R,of W,ofRichmond,Va.,Ja n.13, Lynchburg,Va,Feb.10,2000 .He 2000.Aprofes,oremeritaof wa.saph)'siciansrecializingin mathematicsatKingCollegein internalmedicine llristol,Tem1.,shehe!damaster 1943/Ernest W.MooneyJr., R ofsciencedegreefromlhe andG'47,ofYork1011n,Va, Unh-ersityofM ichigananda April27,2000.Hcwasalongtime doctora!Cineducationfromthc teacherandschoolad!ninistrator. Uni1·crsityof~1rginia.Aftcr Hetaught Englishand journalismin\lrg,iniahigh tcachingin\lrginiapublic schools.shetaughtat\'irginia schools,foundingthestudent lntennontCollegeforl9ycars nev.-,paperatJohnMarshallHigh btforejoiningthefacultyatKing SchoolinRichmond.1/ethen ser1·edintheRichmondl'ublic f.ollege.Sheretiredinl979and returnedto Richmond. Schoolsadministrationfrom 193.1/Marthafran ets Ra\\lings 1960101968,andintheYork Ware,W,ofCulpeper ,\'a,No".H, Countyschooladministration 1999.Shcreceivedhcrmaster"s umilhisrctircmentinl981 dcgreeinsocialscicncefromJames Mr.MoonevwasaHumanities Madisonllni1"Crsityinl960 Fel!owoftJ1eJohnHayWhitney /935/f .ertrudeD.l.euis, W,of Foundation,andalsowasa 1:ulr,epl'r,Va., .\lan:.h3l,200J.She memberoftheRichmond wasaretirededucator11hohad AstronomyClu b.DuringWorld worked13ye=in\1'1:iniaruhlic Warll,hesem.•tlintheArmyin schoob,bothasada.~roomte-dCher Africaandl:uropeandrecei1l'lla andguidancecounselorandlater l'urpleHeartwithclusters. ashighschoolguidar'icfcounsdor 194{VAnn Ware Fry,W,ofFalls supcr1i.5orforthe11rginia a1urch,Va.Junc9,2000.Shehad OcpartmentofF.ducation.She bttnatrainerniththeLlteracy n:ceinrlherrnastcr"sdegroein Councilof'iorthern\'irginia, educationfrumtheUniversitnlf working11iththeprogramin \"irginia,taughtschoolatCuire(ll'r F.nglishasasecondlanguage llighSchoolandestablishedthe /9410'atriciaFullerGatlin,W, guidancetJt,partmentthen'.lnl961 ofllelle\ille,lll.,Dec.22,1999. shebocamethestateeducatiun Shehadretiredassuper1isorof departmcnt'shighschoolb'llidaricelibrarysen·icesforUnionElectric coumdorsupcr1isorfor1he Co.inSt.Louis,Mo Shenandoah\'all{'),sminguntil 1949,IR . Tomer Blake, R, of herrctire111er1tinl978.TI1e\'irginia Richmond,Fcb.18,2000.Hehad Genera1Assemblyin1996pa.«da beenaviceprcsident11·ithfirst resolmionrecogni?ingherfurher \lrginiaBanksharcs contribllliontoeducationinthe 195~11.ewisS. PendleionJr. , I., state.,\ctiwinherchurch,she11as ofKemersville,N.C.,April20, theauthorof!listoriadllighlighls 1999.Anattomey,hepracticed efNnditliem&l{Jlis/Ch 11n:h. lawwithanumberofRichmond 19.18/Betsy ,\lusc])ouglass,W , lawfirmsfroml95Itol989.A ofRichmond,Fcb.19,2000.Shc sur,hmofthroatcancer,he11':lS wasamnnberofWcstminstcr actil'cinthcNcw\'oiceClub, Presbj1erianChurch hclpingthroa1cancersur1•i1·ors 1940/fheRev. Warren F.Taylor, learntospeakagain.Hehada R,ofSmithfield,\'a.,July7,l994 sccondcareerasanartist,andhe Hererei1l'llama~terofdilinity alsowasanal"idfishennanand degreefromCroI.erTheological pilot.DuringWorldWarll,he :ieminary.Hesefll'llBaptist ser1·edinEuropeandwona churchesin\"i'est\'irginiaand llronzeStar. NorthCarolinabeforebecoming pa.storoftheSmithficldBaptist Church.1111erehesefll'll27wars. /940/ Arnold F. Watts, R, of Che1'yCha.,;e, .\ld.,Jan.9,2DOO .He wa.\founderandpresidemofl'at i\molde'sTallsinWashington, IH:.,froml954tol980,thenhe wasarealestatebrokerinFlorida untilrelircment.DuringWorld Warllhcscfledinthemilitarysix ycarsandanainedrankof lieutenantcolonel.

1955/.lamesR.Sipe, R,of llarrisonhurg,Va.,Feh.25,2000. l!ewasan attom~·with his law finn,Lltten&Sipe.Hesemrla.1 commonwealth's attorneyfrom 19601ol968andasasubstitute judgeofthcRockinghamDistrict Courtinthcearly1970s.Healso wasoneofthcoriginaldevelopers oftl1eMas.sanuttcnresort Mr.Sipewasarnemberofthe boardofdirectorsofComSonics lnc.andwasthecommi~ionerof accountsforl!arrl<;onburg/ RockinghamCuunl)'.Jle a!sowa~ aformerpresidentofthe l\arrisonburgBarA.lsociationand wasapastpresidentandtrusteeof RockinghamPub!icLibrary.He sef1'edintJ1eAnnydur ingthe KoreanWar. /959;tarrol Andrc\\'S Roberson, W,ofRichmond, Dec.1;,1999.Shewa\afonner teacherwith ChesterfieldCounty, \'a.,schoolsandafonnerchoir directorat Ramse1·Memorial United.\lethodistChurch /96//Vir giniaDi~"Dixie " Hargra1·e Whitehead, W,of Chatharn,\'a.,April23,2000.She wasdirectorofstudiesand chainnan of the mathematics departmentattheChathamHall GirlsSchool 196}"Wayne R. ll-lorgan, B, of NewportNews,Va.,Feb .23,2000. Hc11':lSretiredfromthcOfficeof Na1-allntelligmce. /96<$1PhiUpJ. Bottoms, R,of Salisbury,N.C.,April4,2000.He hadpracticedlawinSalisbury sincel984.lnadditiontohislaw degreefrom\rakeForest lJniwrsity,Mr.liotloms a!,o held a master'sdegreeincounseling fromWakeFores tandamasterof di1initydegreefromSo utheastern BaptistTheologicalSeminary.He wasanactiwmcmberofFirst BaptistChurchinSalisbury, whereheservedaschurch moderatorfor!Oyears.Hehelped beginthe~len"sl'rayerBreakfast and11-orkedfortherightsof dewlopmentallydisabled indh"iduals 19S7;th ristine tl. t:bert, W,of Arlington,Mass .,April4,2000. ShewasanattomeywithSurn1·an &\l'orcrsterLLPinBoston

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UN l VERSITY or RICHMOND

MAGAZINE

Page 47


SPECULATIVE STOCK MARKETS IN ECONOMI C THEORY Before reading this es.say, allow me to caution you about one thing: Your efforts are unlikely co make you rich. However, if your interest is protecting wealth in turbulent markets , read on. In fac1, I remind readers of Will Rogers' humorous admonishment not to gamble ; to ·'take all your savings and buy some good stock and hold it till it goes up , then sell it. If it don't go up, don't buy it."

In case you may have missed the debate as the value of your retirement funds soared, analysts are making noises that today's stock market is overvalued.Some have even taken swipes at the academic

theories known as efficient markets and ra1ionalexpectations.n1ese theories would have us believe that investors incorpornte

all available economic informationinto an individualeconomic model to form expectatio ns of future equity prices. One wonders if that completely rules ou t stock purchases based on hunches , hot tips, and Uncle Ll.zio's "sure things'' Proponents of the efficient market hypothesis argue that the stock market moves swiftly from one set of rational prices to another rational set. For example, the 22 percent one-day drop in the Dow in October 1987 was simply rational markets working at incredible speed. Another explanation of the new bull market contends that the current market is in the midst of a speculative buying panic driven by excessive media coverage of financial news , the baby-boom effect, the belief that institutions and regulat ions ex ist to protect investments , and the view that stocks are the only profitable investment opportunity . The purpose of our book entitled Economists and the Stock Market: Specula tive Theories of Stock Market F/11ct11ations is to establish the nature and existence of speculative markets. In the book, the views of John Maynard Keynes and John Kenneth Galbraith on stock market speculation are shown to anticipate virtually all modern explanations of speculative bubbles. Keynes and Galbraith de arly anticipated current behavioral finance theories. Themes in their work explain speculative bubbles as a result of a national mood that

Page 48

FALL 2000

favors financial euphoria. Characteristics of this herd mentality include an inordinate desire to get rich quickly with a minimum of physical effort; a pen'asive sense of confidenc e and optimism in the belief that ordinary people are intended to become rich; and the belief that investors possess a special genius for knowing exactly when to leave the market Keynes made the issue of stock spe culation a fundamental con cern in his economic analys is because it affected stock prices, wealth , and therefore consumption and im·estment. He defined "speculation " as the activity of forecasting the psych o lo&'Yof the market. U>m·ersely,"enterprise " wastheactivity of forecasting the prospective yield m 'er the life of investments. He warned investors not to ignore the prospect for future changes by assuming the present is a b'llide to the future and by confonning to the behavior of the majority. He described itffestor motivation as wanting to he-.1tthe b'lln, outwit the crowd , and ultimately "pass the bad, depreciating half-crown on to the other fellow.tt

On a more comforting note , Keynes was able to sec the other side of the speculati\ ·e coin . He noted that sociery should not conclude that all equity values are determined by irrational psychology , because frequently the state o f long-term expec tations is steady and other factors (public policies) may exert a compensating influence on volatile markets. Galbraith 's work on the behavioral influences on stock market spe culation includes a January I987 article in the Atlantic Momhl y in which he described the parallels between the 1920s and 1980s. He presented historical evidence to prove that speculative binges always end with disastrous crashes. According to Galbraith, speculative stock market behavior is characterized by a pervasive mood of financial euphoria which becomes central 10 the wll11re. Rumors of higher profits , expec tations of lower inflation , and the salaried optimism of brokers provide justifications for rising stock price s in a "world of speculative make -believe .'' TI1ere are no evil spin-mei5ters using mass hypnosis 10 rnuse large numbers of people to lose their financial sanity. When the speculati\ ·e mood prevails , people need only an excuse to belic\'e. finally, the willingness to trust the good intentions of government officials evolves and an element of faith reinforces speculative euphoria Keynes and Galbraith anticipated the current remedies for speculation being employed or considered by the SEC and the Fed. They suggested that public officials should widely acknowledge the dangers of a sudden collapse and be willing to use all the instruments at their discretion legislation , interest rates , margin require ments and jawboning - lo dissuade speculation. Alan Greenspan's now-famous "irrational exuberance description of the market validates the view that warnings from high authorities can, at least temporarily, break the speculati\'e spell. However , their best advice to investors is to work harder at forming long -term expectations and withstand the social pressure to ride the speculative bubble inflated by the unrealistic financial euphoria of the masses. II


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your human resources department to learn more and find out if your gift is eligible .

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Leslie Hutchens, Director of Annual Fund (804) 289-8616 or 1-800-480-4774 ext. 3 E-mail: lhutchen@richmond.edu

O You ' ll receive gift club credit for the full amount of your individual gift plus your employer 's match . Matching gifts through the Annual Fund help support the goals of excellence outlined in the University's strategic plan. Thank you for supporting the University of Richmond.


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