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Monday, August 11, 2003, 9:00 a.m., Coleman Coliseum
Speaker | Awards
| Graduate Features
SPEAKER
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| Thomas C. Hubbard |
Thomas C. Hubbard, U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea
-- A 1965 UA alumnus, Hubbard has spent his entire 34-year career
in the U.S. diplomatic corps, holding his current position since
Aug. 2001. Prior to that, Hubbard served for a year as Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs.
Before that, he served concurrently as U.S. ambassador to the Republic
of the Philippines and to the Republic of Palau. He has served in
postings throughout the Pacific Rim as well as in Washington and
Paris. Hubbard will receive an honorary doctor of humane letters
from UA.
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AWARDS
Julia and Henry Tutwiler Award: Gloria Narramore Moody
-- Moody, a longtime patron of the arts, is the recipient of the
Julia and Henry Tutwiler Award, UA’s most prestigious award for
volunteer service to UA and the people of Alabama. A 1956 UA alumnus,
Moody has devoted much of her life to the development and support
of music at The University of Alabama and in the Tuscaloosa community.
She and her husband, the late Frank Moody, were instrumental in
providing and obtaining funds for the construction of the University's
School of Music building which bears the Moody name. An accomplished
pianist, Moody began the Gloria Narramore Moody Foundation in 1990
to support the arts and music, particularly by providing Alabamians
with the opportunity to see and hear the world's best musicians.
Artists have included bass Samuel Ramey, New York Metropolitan Opera
soprano Benita Valente, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, pianist Emanuel Ax, and
violinist Itzhak Perlman. Moody is president of the board of the
Alabama Symphony Orchestra; chairman emeritus of the Tuscaloosa
Symphony Orchestra; and a board member of Opera Birmingham. Moody
also serves on the board of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, the
Birmingham Museum of Art, and the Alys Stephens Performing Arts
Center.
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GRADUATE FEATURES
For more information on these graduates or to
set up interviews, contact Suzanne Dowling in Media Relations at
205/348-8324 or sdowling@ur.ua.edu.
Ann McAfee: After 38 years, UA Employee Earns Degree
-- Like a lot of women in the early 1960s, Ann McAfee decided to
quit pursuing her college degree and instead get her “Mrs.” by getting
married. Since then, by way of the “University of Life,” she found
herself earning positions of increasing responsibility, including
her current position as UA director of stewardship. She also had
two children, divorced, remarried, and became a grandmother three
times. But the unfinished business of the college degree was still
a goal she wanted to reach. So, for the past seven years, she has
been working and going to school to accomplish that goal. And on
Aug. 11, she will graduate summa cum laude with a degree in interdisciplinary
studies.
Jeanette Darcy: Gets Degree for her 50th Birthday
-- Turning 50 is certainly a milestone in anyone’s life, but for
Jeanette Darcy the day will have even more meaning since she will
be earning her bachelor’s degree in human development and early
childhood education. Darcy, who quit school in the mid-70s – is
a single mom to two (now grown) children – and took jobs in daycare
centers, developing a desire to make helping children learn a career
choice. With support from family and friends, she has achieved her
dream. “Having choices was very important to me and without the
degree, I didn’t have many. But I want people to understand that
if you really want something, you have to work for it, and it’s
worth the effort.”
Brynna Scott: Silently Earns Her Degree -- When
Brynna Scott receives her degree in business, she won’t hear the
applause of her family and friends, but she might feel the vibrations.
Scott is legally deaf and reads lips with such skill that she has
been able to complete her degree at UA with little more extra help
than a few note-takers in some classes and her family's unconditional
support.
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