Hendrix Magazine

Sheri Bylander ’85 directs documentary on healing, horses and prison

(Alumni and Friends, Winter 2007) Permanent link

Sheri Bylander ’85 directed Homestretch, a documentary that premiered April 13, 2007, at the Sonoma Valley Film Festival. Homestretch tells the story of the power of horses to help heal the hearts of prison inmates.

“Our society warehouses convicts, often in subhuman living conditions. On a parallel track, the world of thoroughbred racing routinely sends over-the-hill horses to the slaughterhouse,” Sheri says.

The film pairs inmates with end-of-career horses and records the changes the inmates experience as a result of this relationship.

Arkansas Community Foundation leadership stays in the Hendrix family

(Alumni and Friends, Winter 2007) Permanent link

Pat Lile ’60, president and CEO of the Arkansas Community Foundation (ARCF), announced her retirement, and the board of directors named ARCF executive vice president Heather Larkin Eason ’93, JD, CPA as incoming President and CEO. The Arkansas Community Foundation is an independent philanthropic organization serving donors, the nonprofit sector and the communities of Arkansas.  ARCF has made grants totaling almost $42 million during its 30-year history.

Lile said her decision to retire ties to recent milestones reached by the Foundation – surpassing $100 million in assets in its 30th anniversary year, moving to office space in the train station with room for future growth and the achievement of significant sustainability and credibility.

 “It is a great feeling to go out at the top of my game,” she said.  “Also, I’m turning 70 next year and I want to spend more time with my husband, children and grandchildren.” A native of Hope, she and her husband, John ’59, a Little Rock attorney, have four children and five grandchildren.

A native of Charleston, Eason graduated from Hendrix College with distinction in Economics and Business. She uses her law and accounting background to work with donors, professional advisors and affiliate community foundations to build philanthropic funds for the benefit of Arkansas. In 2001, she was named a Hull Fellow and attended the Hull Leadership Program, a program to nurture and inspire the Southeast’s next generation of philanthropic leaders. In 2005, she was selected as one of five Americans to be a Transatlantic Community Foundation Fellow.  

 

John Patterson ’75 elected to second term by Arkansas Trial Lawyers Association

(Alumni and Friends, Winter 2007) Permanent link

John Patterson ’75 was named president of the Arkansas Trial Lawyers Association (ATLA) for the 2007-2008 fiscal year. He is the first sitting president to be elected to a second term in the 44-year history of the organization. Patterson was handed the symbolic gavel from past president John Belew ’68 during the awards luncheon at the organization’s annual convention.

Patterson is currently the president of Ring 308 of the International Brotherhood of Magicians where he performs a free annual Holiday of Lights magic show for White County residents. In his acceptance speech, he used the ATLA president’s gavel as a magic wand to levitate a glass of water as he spoke of the magic of ATLA before toasting the members.

Patterson has many years of experience as a leader of the Arkansas Trial Lawyers Association. He has served on the board of governors since 2000 and has been a member of the executive committee since 2004, serving as secretary-treasurer and then vice president in 2005.

Patterson is also a member of the American Association for Justice, the Arkansas Bar Association, and is a past president of the White County Bar Association. Patterson has led numerous legal education seminars around the state instructing other lawyers on how to represent injured clients.

A former Arkansas State Golf Champion, Patterson was elected to the Sports Hall of Honor at Hendrix College in 2002. He is married to Cara Walker Patterson '77 and has two daughters, Anna Patterson Strong '04, an analyst with Acxiom Corporation in Conway, and Amy W. Patterson, the director of weekday child ministries at St. James United Methodist Church in Little Rock. His son-in-law, Aaron C. Strong ’03, is a third-year medical student at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

 

From the President

(Charting Progress, Winter 2007) Permanent link

Checking the charts and noting progress

Hendrix is charting progress. We’re moving ahead quickly. We’re looking back to note how far we’ve come. We’re looking forward, scanning the horizon and turning our sextant toward the stars to make sure we stay on course.

So, what is the result of all this reconnaissance? How are we doing?

Great! Your college is making progress on every front. The progress we have made so far is impressive and inspiring. Some examples:

  • By the time you read this message, I am confident we will have met our original $70 million campaign goal more than a year ahead of schedule. We stand at $69 million today, with more gifts and pledges expected to arrive before the end of the year.
  • We have raised our campaign goal to $100 million and extended the end date to 2010.
  • We have received two challenge grants that, when met, will generate $12 million in endowed funds to support the Odyssey program and embed it in the Hendrix culture.
  • We have built an endowment of more than $10 million to support scholarships and financial aid.
  • We opened a new $23 million Wellness and Athletics Center with a dinner and a convocation attended by more than 700 people where former U.S. Senator Bill Bradley was the featured speaker.
  • We have awarded close to $1 million in grants to support 1,747 Odyssey projects involving Hendrix students and faculty on campus, throughout the United States and on six continents. Odyssey projects have life-changing impact on students like Lynn Christenson ’09 whose work feeding children at an orphanage in Tanzania helped her discover how she can make a difference in the world.
  • We have selected Hendrix alumni to receive honors, among them the 2007-08 Odyssey Medals, which will be presented on Thursday, Feb. 7.
  • We have seen close friends of the College honored. On Nov. 14, Lucile Shivley ’32, a long-time supporter of Hendrix, was named 2007 Outstanding Philanthropist of the Year by the Arkansas chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP). Hendrix nominated Lucile for the well-deserved honor. Her youthful joy in giving is an inspiration to all of us.

We have accomplished much and we have many reasons to celebrate. Yet Hendrix’s odyssey toward national leadership in engaged liberal arts education is just beginning. There is so much more ahead – so many more moments of triumph to savor, so many more challenges to overcome – before this journey ends.

The first challenges on our horizon are housing a growing student population, endowing the Odyssey Program to ensure that this vital component of the College’s curriculum remains a part of our culture and building a new Student Life and Technology Center to meet the needs of Hendrix students now and in the future.

We are addressing the need for housing by beginning construction on townhouses at the intersection of Mills and Front streets (adjacent to the Art buildings) that will provide space for 70 students in the fall of 2008. We are also, with guidance from the campus master plan, evaluating sites for new on-campus housing, and are considering several options for student housing in The Village at Hendrix, the retail and residential neighborhood being developed east of Harkrider.

Keeping Hendrix at the forefront of American higher education is the unifying goal of The Campaign for Hendrix and is at the center of our discussions about the College’s future. To establish and maintain Hendrix as a national leader in engaged liberal arts is the reason we are raising $100 million by 2010. When we reach this goal, we should have the funds to support the Odyssey Program in perpetuity and to construct the kind of Student Life and Technology Center that will meet the needs of Hendrix students in the 21st century.

We can’t reach our goal without your continued support. I encourage you to become involved with Hendrix and discover how your support can make a difference in the lives of today’s students. I believe we really are changing the lives of those who can change the world.

Hendrix faculty support public K-12 education in Arkansas

(Faculty and Staff, Winter 2007) Permanent link

When it comes to service through education, several Hendrix professors have focused on partnerships with public schools in Arkansas in attempt to raise the achievement of elementary and secondary students.

H.E.L.P.

Hendrix College’s Early Literacy Program – a partnership between Hendrix College and Sallie Cone Elementary School in Conway – was created in 2004 by Dr. Susan Perry as an intervention program at the elementary school, allowing Hendrix students to work with children who need extra help reading or writing. The program began in grades K-2 but quickly expanded into third and forth grades soon after it was first implemented.

The program has continued and remains an interactive learning tool for education students enrolled at Hendrix College. Through HELP, Hendrix students begin working with small groups of children on a weekly basis throughout the spring semester of their sophomore year when they enroll in a course titled “Children's Literature.” During the experience, Hendrix students are expected to incorporate children's literature into all of their weekly lessons which include a variety of instructional techniques, including readers' theatre, interactive reading aloud, storytelling, puppetry, and other innovative lessons. Students continue working in the program during their junior years as they enroll in the upper-level education courses at Hendrix.

As Hendrix students work with their small groups of children, they are coached by the instructor of the course. Lessons are video-taped and critiqued by classmates and instructors on a weekly basis so Hendrix students can improve their teaching techniques, skills, and strategies. Hendrix students guide all of their instruction using a variety of assessments they administer to their children at the beginning and middle of the semester. All assessment information is shared with each child's teacher. 

The program has been so successful it is used as a model by other institution and recently received the Innovation in Teacher Education Award from the Southeastern Regional Association of Teacher Educators (SRATE). 

Above the Line

The Above the Line Project, funded by Hendrix College Odyssey program and designed by Dr. James Jennings, an associate professor of education and history at Hendrix, studied 22 third graders in the Forrest City School District who previously scored “below” or “below basic” on the Arkansas Benchmark Exam, a state-sponsored testing program designed to grade the educational aptitude of public school students. Following three weeks of intensive remedial studies utilizing the Above the Line Project curriculum, a majority of students improved their test scores in a number of subject areas.

The Above the Line Project also aims to use strategies to improve parental attitudes toward education and involvement by providing parental support skills, as measured by pre- and post-attitudinal surveys and periodic implementation surveys. All 20 parents surveyed as a part of the recent Above the Line Project at Forrest City answered “Yes” when asked “If the Above the Line Project could be offered as an after-school program at your school, would you be interested in enrolling your child?”, while only one of the parents said they would not be interested in attending a special monthly class for parents designed to provide parenting skills associated with learning at home.

Feedback from the Forrest City parents was wholly positive.

“During this project it allowed me to really evaluate myself as a parent,” one parent wrote on the anonymous survey. “I thought I was active with my child because I was present with him. But I can see that if I slack off of him any he will slack off also. So it’s my responsibility to make sure that he’s performing at a level where he needs to be by any means necessary.”

Ridin’ Dirty with Science

Science was made fun this past summer for a group of public school students in Conway. A team of Hendrix College students, led by Hendrix associate chemistry professor Dr. Liz Gron, hosted “Ridin’ Dirty with Science,” a free two-day camp for students in grades 4-7. The Hendrix students teamed with the Faulkner County Boys and Girls Club for the project in attempt to foster an interest in science in elementary and middle school students.

The camp included three main lab experiments. The first was “The Invisible: What grows on water fountains, doorknobs, and telephones?” The second experiment was “Caught Dirty Handed: Are your hands clean after washing them?” The final experiment was “Cleaning with Oranges: How to make cleaning products from orange peels and dry ice.”

Faulkner County Boys and Girls Club program director, Marie Abrams, believes this is a great opportunity for the kids to learn. “Most of the children now want to be scientists after ‘Ridin’ Dirty with Science.’”

Camp participants aren’t the only ones who learned from this project. “The Hendrix students organizing this activity learned about translating science to other students, how to organize and manage a large project and how to network with the larger Conway community,” said Gron.

1973 graduate is Fulbright lecturer in Finland

(Alumni and Friends, Winter 2007) Permanent link

Dr. Sheri Thompson Carder ’73 was a Fulbright lecturer for the 2005-06 school year at Laurea University of Applied Science in Helsinki, Finland, teaching international human relations and marketing. Since her return to The States, Carder has written several newspaper columns about her time in Finland in the Lake City Reporter. The articles chronicle the fascinating cultural differences of the “European country most like the United States” and some of the lasting interpersonal relationships Carder formed while teaching in Finland. Carder is a business and education professor at Lake City Community College in Lake City, Fla.

Odyssey to Rwanda

(Alumni and Friends, Faculty and Staff, Students, Your Hendrix Odyssey, Winter 2007) Permanent link
Travelers experience beauty, tragedy and hope in African nation

Hendrix trustee David Knight ’71 led 11 Hendrix students, President J. Timothy Cloyd, Provost Robert L. Entzminger and Dr. Daniel Whelan, assistant professor of politics and international relations, on an Odyssey to Rwanda. Through visits to sites such as the Sonrise Academy, where Hutu and Tutsi orphans live in harmony, and meetings with Rwandan President Paul Kagame and his ministers, the group learned first-hand how Rwandans are recovering from the genocidal war that almost destroyed their country.

The Republic of Rwanda in east-central Africa is a primarily agrarian country of 9.9 million people, the most densely populated country in Africa. Per capita income is $1,300. * “It is beautiful, friendly and small – about the size of Maryland,” Knight said, as he spoke to a group of Hendrix alumni and friends attending a Rwanda-focused “Hendrix Huddle” in Little Rock in September. Knight said his involvement in Rwanda began about five years ago when friends recruited him to take photos at Sonrise Academy, a boarding school in Rwanda. He had also been involved with a micro-finance operation that opened in Rwanda.
“What I knew before I went to Rwanda was that tremendous progress has been made in rebuilding the country. But, there is still great need,” he said.

Knight explained the three purposes of the journey to Rwanda:
• An educational experience for our group
• Indentifying internship opportunities for the Odyssey program
• Meeting with the Ministry of Education to finalize arrangements for four students to come to Hendrix for four years on full scholarship.

The travelers met all three goals, learning about Rwanda’s history, culture and people and identifying several opportunities for internships, including one working with President Kagame, and completing arrangements for four Rwandan students who are currently enrolled at Hendrix. “Our trip to Rwanda provided us an opportunity to see and understand how the rest of the world lives,” Knight said. “It allowed us to get involved with meaningful projects and let us see what one person can do.”

“It also gave us practical information on dealing with real and complex problems such as AIDS and poverty,” he added. “And it helped us develop a real personal perspective on our values and our role in life. I believe it helped us answer the question: What do you intend to do in the world and when do you expect to get started?”

“I feel fortunate to have been on this Odyssey and to have spent time with our students,” Knight said.
Dr. Whelan said he welcomed the opportunity to learn more about a country that he believes is misunderstood.

“I appreciated, as a scholar, the opportunity to be a student,” Dr. Whelan said. “The students who went with us were all different,” he added. “They had interests in law, medicine, environment, economics, and accounting. Their differences made the journey more interesting.”

For example, Hendrix senior Jacob Williams of Alma was most interested in the opportunity to learn more about microfinance in Rwanda. He was skeptical about the power of small loans to dramatically transform individual lives.
“But, I got to meet these people and see how their lives have been changed by $50,” Jacob said. “I met a sorghum wholesaler who grew her business from a $300 loan. There was a certain look of pride in her eyes – the look of success. That stuck with me,” he said. “I discovered that microfinance is real and it has a chance to do something real in the world.”
President Cloyd said the impact of the 1994 genocide, when more than 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were slaughtered over 100 days, is seen all over Rwanda.
 
“The U.S. bears responsibility for not intervening when 10,000 a day were dying,” he said.  “We saw first-hand the cost of that non-intervention.”  “But amidst great tragedy, there is hope,” President Cloyd said. “Rwanda has problems, but the Rwandan people also have solutions.”

One solution for the Rwandan people is to help educate their young people. The Rwandan government is committed to improving schools across the nation and to helping young people study abroad and bring their knowledge back to Rwanda. The government is seeking help from colleges like Hendrix to provide higher education for its young people.

*"Rwanda: History, Geography, Government, and Culture." Infoplease.
© 2000–2007 Pearson Education, publishing as Infoplease.
25 Nov. 2007 <http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107926.html>.

Student participants included Ryan Burwinkle ’10 of Bellaire, Texas; Anna Bush ’10 of Hot Springs; Afton Cooper ’10 of Little Rock; Rachel DeCuir ’09 of Lafayette, La.; Mary Flanigan ’09 of Webster Groves, Mo.; Leah Horton ’09 of Austin, Texas; Amanda Keifer ’10 of Cookeville, Tenn..; Leslie Levy ’09 of Austin, Texas; Joe Muller ‘09 of Chesterfield, Mo.; Rosie Valdez ’10 of Little Rock; Jacob Williams ’08 of Alma; and Kelly Zalocusky ’09 of Belleville, Ill.

Their 14-day stay included visits to:
- Kigali Memorial Centre genocide museum
- Cornerstone Leadership Academy
- Kigali School of Finance and Banking
- Kigali Institute for Science and Technology
- Millenium Village and Access Health Care Project
- Living Water well drilling site
- Kigali International Community School
- Opportunity International micro finance bank
- Opportunity International Trust Bank meeting in Ruhengeri
- Sonrise School
- the local Heifer project
- Shyria Hospital
- Bigogwe refugee community
- Imbabzi Orphanage
- Lake Kivu
- the National Museum
- the National University and Medical School
- Paul Farmer’s Partners in Health Project
- a night performance by Intore, a traditional Rwandan dance troupe
- Parc Nacional de L’Akagera

Labyrinth offers place for contemplation

(Alumni and Friends, Construction, Hendrix News, Winter 2007) Permanent link
Proposed by Nicholas Pippins ’07 as part of an Odyssey project, the labyrinth recently completed near the southern border of the campus provides a quiet area for prayer or reflection. Adjacent to it, Hendrix plans to construct a columbarium, a structure of vaults lined with recesses for the respectful storage of urns. Hendrix is a leader in the national trend of providing a final resting place for alumni and friends, which was the focus of a May 18 New York Times article. Hendrix’s planned columbarium is also highlighted on page 26 of the October edition of Reader’s Digest under the heading: “Be a Big Man on Campus – Forever.”

Garth and Joann Martin

(Alumni and Friends, Charting Progress, Winter 2007) Permanent link

Charting Progress: Charitable Gift Annuities

Garth ’52 and Joann Martin ’55 are making a difference at Hendrix, because they believe Hendrix is making a difference in the world.

The Martins, who met on campus and just celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary, still have an affinity for Hendrix after all these years. They recently used planned giving as a means to contribute to the college’s Wellness and Athletics Center. The gift garnered them naming rights for the Hall of Honor.

For Garth, who played football, basketball and ran track at Hendrix, the Wellness and Athletics Center was a perfect fit. Joann, however, is more interested in the upcoming Student Life and Technology Center, which she believes will be a benefit to the Hendrix community.

The Martins believe planned giving is a win-win situation for everyone involved. “Through charitable gift annuities, we were able to make a gift to Hendrix,” said Garth, who added his motives weren’t completely altruistic. “The gift also provided us with an additional income.”

The couple, who served on the Alumni Board of Directors for six years, still find time in their busy volunteer schedule to visit campus regularly for special events such as Alumni Weekend and the Candlelight Carol Service.  Joann says they don’t collect “things” and instead choose to use what money they have to help others through planned giving.

“Hendrix has made tremendous strides in the last few years,” said Garth. “This means we may make some strides in the world,” Joann added.

The Martins are making a difference. Will you?

For more information about giving to Hendrix, contact the Office of Advancement at 501-450-1223 or visit www.hendrix.edu/giving.