JMC SCENE SEPT 2009

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FALL 2009JAMES MADISONSCENEMICHIGAN STATEU N I V E R S I T YA newsletter serving James Madison College alumni, students, faculty, staff, and friendsMadison Junior Nada ZohdyWins Truman Awardby Tom Oswald, MSU University Relations Officehttp://www.jmc.msu.eduINSIDE THE SCENE:2JMC Events 3Alumni 4Dean’s LetterIT’S not all that unusual for MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon to visita classroom now and then. But when she stopped into professor LouisHunt’s politics and post-colonialism class in March, it was for more thanPhoto Contest Winners! 5just a friendly visit.Simon surprised student Nada Zohdy with the news that she is MSU’sMADI Happenings 6latest recipient of a Truman Scholarship, a prestigious award given tostudents who have extensive records of public and community service.Faculty Highlights 8An IR, Zohdy is MSU’s 16th Truman Scholar, JMC’s 11th. StudentsStudent Highlights 10earning the scholarship receive 30,000 to be used for graduate study.Zohdy said she was surprised to see the president of the university in herDevelopment 11classroom. At the same time, it tipped her off that she just mighthave won the scholarship.“I was sort of suspicious,” she said. “I just had a feeling I might have won.”MADISON PHOTOAfter earning her bachelor’s degree from MSU, Zohdy plans to earn a master’s degree in publicpolicy and a doctorate in comparative government. Her ultimate goal is to work for the Statecontest winners!Department or a nongovernmental agency.see Page 5“Eventually I hope to work with the State Department on policy issues related to the MiddleWe’re mad forEast. That’s where my biggest interest is,” she said. “Also for a long time I’ve been toying withthis idea of being a scholar-activist. I think that’s something I’d like to try, as well as explore theworld of think tanks.”see page 6In her time at MSU, Zohdy has been active in a number of public serviceactivities, including serving as vice president and political action chair ofPizza Party Mixer Sept. 16the Muslim Students Association; co-founder and campus coordinator ofthe “Peace over Prejudice” campaign; chapter coordinator of AmnestyInternational; and co-founder of the Women’s Faith Forum.It was her dedication to public service,said Honors College Dean CynthiaTHE JMC Alumni Association and the Career Resources office scheduled the annual JamesJackson-Elmoore, that made ZohdyMadison Alumni and Student Pizza Night for September 16 this year. Alumni are alwaysso worthy of the scholarship.invited to show our students the great community we have at Madison. The event is an“Nada has incredible depth andinformal opportunity to kick off the new school year, welcome new Madison students, meetpassion and a remarkable commitreturning students, and catch up with other local alumni. There is no scheduled program, justment to lifelong public service,”an exercise for the students to practice interpersonal skills. The Career Resources office likes toJackson-Elmoore said. “She issee at least 30 alumni attending to make the program a great success. Please contact Jaimiealready demonstrating theHutchison, JMC Field Career Consultant, at dandersj@msu.edu or (517) 353-6756continued on page 3for questions. We look forward to seeing you at these events!MADI!Alums invited to meetMadison students

FROM THE DEANOne of the most exciting developments at James Madison College is theexpansion of opportunities for hands-onundergraduate research. There have always been opportunities for independent studies, and our Field Experienceprogram has more than four decades ofsuccess in providing students a hands-onexperience of applying what they havelearned in the classroom to the realworld. Madison from its very beginninghas understood the need to foster connections with the wide array of realworld challenges that surround us.But our undergraduate research program is unique. Backed by support fromthe MSU administration and generousalumni donations, our undergraduateresearch program gives students seekingenhanced research experiences muchneeded support. We have helped students conduct research trips throughoutthe United States and worldwide. Wehave supported their research presentations at professional and academic conferences. Students receiving collegesupport have studied urban poverty inVenezuela, AIDS in Senegal, popularconfidence in key institutions in Poland,and methods of encouraging betterschool performance among disadvantaged students in South Africa. This pastyear, we supported a new undergraduatejournal on Africa, organized and led bystudents from the JMC but includingcontributions from around the country.Most importantly, we have been able tooffer extended work with professors inside and outside the college on important public policy questions. ProfessorDan Kramer, for example, is working ona National Science Foundation-fundedproject on the economic and environ-2mental impact on a remote region inNicaragua which is now connected by anew highway to Managua. This projecthas supported undergraduate studentsworking in country under faculty supervision to help carry out survey research and other studies. We hope thefirst Madison students can be at workthis coming year.This undergraduate research projecthas also supplemented ongoing efforts,such as our traditional honors program, which culminates in a thesis prepared under the guidance of a Madisonfaculty member and presented at a traditional defense. This program hasgrown over the last several years to include around a dozen seniors at any onetime. In addition, we work with theHonors College to provide a home forfreshman and sophomore ProfessorialAssistants — students working closelywith Madison and MSU faculty onscholarly projects.We have always been serious aboutresearch in the classroom, but as part ofthis initiative, Professors Ross Emmettand Bryan Ritchie launched three yearsago a special, senior-level course inwhich students identify, design, andcreate policies for addressing a policychallenge of importance to the Michigan economy. Students working withfaculty identify a central challenge andbuild a course aimed at developing a response. Students have looked at theissue of university research corridors, aswell as the most promising areas forrestarting the Michigan economy. Ineach of these courses, they have metwith government officials, businesses,labor or ganizations, and analysts toconduct interviews, sponsor policy dis-cussions, and, in the end, present theirown views to an audience of practitioners.Given Madison’s demanding academicprogram and our longstanding connections with careers in law, public policy,advocacy, and the public sphere, expanding opportunities for our studentsto have an opportunity to do research oftheir own is a natural fit with the college.We are expanding the range of researchopportunities in the college and arebuilding requests for more support intoour appeals to you and other generousdonors. We want to give more studentsthe chance to carry out research of theirown; to see that research matures intoconcrete policy recommendations, publications, and presentations; to give students opportunities to link what theylearn in the classroom to the work of thecounty commission, state legislature,Congress, and non-governmental organizations. We believe Madison offers aunique link between the best and broadest educational foundation and meaningful work in public affairs, one thatwill continue to remain strong as we expand our efforts to support undergraduate research.Sherm GarnettDean, James Madison Collegegarnetts@msu.eduJames Madison Scene

Truman Award continued from page 1.JMC EVENTSJMCAA Board MeetingSaturday, September 26th2:00pm in Case Hall.James Madison College Law NightTuesday, October 66:30pm – 9:00pmJMC LibraryPanel discussion allowing students the opportunity to learn aboutlaw school and various fields of law from Madison alumni.Annual Homecoming TailgateSaturday, October 17, 2009Case HallTwo hours prior to kick offFounders Circle LuncheonFriday, October 23, 2009Kellogg Center, MSUFeaturing Madison Alumnus and MSU Political ScienceProfessor Steven Kautz (JMCD ’81) "Every Honorable Device": The Democratic Statesmanship of Abraham Lincoln”capacity to be an engaged scholar who uses innovative ideas, concepts and insights from research to positively impact people,organizations and communities.”Zohdy also served as an undergraduate research assistant in a neuroscience research lab.“She was able to do this because she received aprofessorial assistantship which is granted to incoming freshman who are invited to join theHonors College and are in the top 1 percent ofhigh school seniors in the nation,” Jackson-Elmoore said. “There is something about MSUthat creates and fosters an environment wherestudents like Nada and other Truman Scholars,past, present and future, can excel.”Professor Lisa Cook was also an invaluable advisor for Zohdy during the application process.Zohdy has had two papers published in peerreview journals: The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences (2008) and the MSU Undergraduate Historical Journal (2007).She is a graduate of Rochester Adams HighSchool, where she was leader of the debate team;co-editor of “Expressions” magazine, a publication for Detroit-area Muslim Youth; public relations co-chair of the Michigan Muslim YouthCouncil; and played on the varsity soccer team.She is the daughter of Hoda Abdel-Aty-Zohdyand Mohamed Zohdy.MSU has had 16 Truman Scholars since 1979.In 2007 the university was honored as a TrumanFoundation Honor Institution which recognizesinstitutions that have made exceptional contributions to the Truman Scholarship Foundation.Madison’s majors over 40 yearsCURRENTHonoring the Career of ProfessorKatie See upon Her RetirementSaturday, November 14, 2009Panel Discussions, Lunch and DinnerThis celebration will provide an opportunity for KatieSee's former students, friends, and colleagues to get together to celebrate her time at Madison, with socialevents and panel discussions organized around a set ofenduring issues to which Katie has dedicated her teaching and scholarship.Please include the date on your calendar and consider coming back to campusfor this event. Let us know if you think you will be able to attend.Contact Donna Hofmeister at hofmeist@msu.edu or517-353-9977 to RSVP or for more information on events.Fall 2009IR.International RelationsPTCD.Political Theory and ConstitutionalDemocracySRP.Social Relations and PolicyCCP.Comparative Cultures and PoliticsPASTPE.Political EconomyJMCD.Justice, Morality and ConstitutionalDemocracyETHNIC.Ethnic and Religious IntergroupRelationsMETRO.Metropolitan StudiesSOCEC.Socio Economics Policy ProblemsURBAN.Urban Community Policy ProblemsSR. Social Relations3

JMCAA BOARD MEMBERSALUMNIPRESIDENT’S LETTERIn February of this year, I was honored by again being chosen president ofthe James Madison College AlumniAssociation (JMCAA), a position which I had held 12 years earlier. The honorwas all the more appreciated for having been unexpected. What was not unexpected was the pleasure of working with a board of directors, Dean Garnett,and a dedicated staff, all of whom share an abiding commitment to the continued success of the college.It has been a busy year thus far. At the May 9th commencement ceremony,the JMCAA bestowed its Distinguished Alumni Award upon Randall Smith(JMCD ’73) and the Herbert Garfinkel Honorary AlumniAward (named in honor of the college’s first dean and thefirst recipient of the award) upon William and ClaudiaHolland. And, on May 14th, the association successfullyhosted the most recent of its traditionalreceptions for Lansing-area alumni.As president, I encourage your participation in and support, financial andRandall Smithotherwise, of these endeavors. Why?In February of 1788, 179 years before Madison Collegewas established, James Madison pondered whether it wouldbe sufficient, having allocated the powers of governmentWilliam Hollandamong three co-equal branches, “to mark with precision, theboundaries of these departments in the constitution of the government, andto trust to these parchment barriers against the encroaching spirit of power?”With characteristic discernment, he concluded that such barriers would notbe sufficient and that “some more adequate defense” would be indisputablynecessary.While Madison’s focus was upon the tendency of the legislative branch toencroach upon the executive and judicial branches, his observations wereequally applicable to the tendency of government in general to encroach beyond the limits properly assigned to it. Contemporary events – among themthe firing of a corporate CEO by the White House and the federal government’s acquisition of an equity interest in financial institutions and automobile companies – are but the most recent, albeit unprecedented, examples of acentral government which increasingly admits of no bounds.One abiding bulwark in support of individual liberty is a well-educatedcitizenry, schooled not in narrow professions, but in the nature and purposeof government. That is precisely what a liberal arts education is intended tobestow and what Madison College does so superbly. The necessity for it hasnever been greater.Frederick Headen (JMCD ’78)PresidentJames Madison Alumni Association4PRESIDENTFred Headen (JMCD ’78),Haslett, MIVICE PRESIDENTRichard Warren (IR ’98),Royal Oak, MITREASURERTim Soave (Ethnic ’78),Rochester, MISECRETARYPeter Spadafore (SRP ’07),Holt, MIDIRECTORSRegina Bell (PTCD ’96),Lansing, MIKendra Howard-Averett (MS ’92),Southfield, MIBill Keep (SOCEC ’81),North Haven, CTScott Sowulewski (IR ’86),Dewitt, MIRuju Bhatt Srivastava (IR ’93),Brookline, MAScott Watkins (IR ’01)Haslett, MIAmy Witt (PTCD ’99)Farmington Hills, MIJMC alumnichange the world.To keep upwith what they aredoing, see the special“Alumni Scene”supplement atthe backof this publication.James Madison Scene

James Madison College“Traveling the U.S. and Abroad” Photo Contest—A photography competition for Madison students, faculty, staff, alumni, retirees, and friends Thanks to all of you whoentered our first annualphoto contest!3rd place: Kazakhstan Pride,Dave Hannon (IR ’07)The pictures here represent someof the best images we received. Theselection of photos was so impressivethat we will create a gallery of allsubmissions on the JMC website inthe near future. A selection of photoswill be displayed within Case Hall.INTERNATIONAL2nd place: India, Downtown Udaipur,Dan Blue (IR senior)1ST PLACE: Bangladesh Kids, Debrah Lee (PTCD/STEPPS ’09)DOMESTIC2nd place: Grant Nelson and1ST PLACE: “Only one way up from here," New Orleans 9th Ward,March 2006, Jennifer Bathgate (PTCD ’93)Fall 2009Evan Stewart (PTCD sophomore) contemplating thewisdom of James Madison,”Illinois, Grant Nelson (IRsophomore)3rd place: “History in theMaking,” 2008 Inauguration Washington DC,Katie Ozog (CCP/SRP)5

MADI H A P P E N I N G SMADI programshelp make JMC unique at MSUMADI MENTORING PROGRAMThe Madison Academic Diversity Initiative (MADI) mentoring program completed its second year this spring semester, boasting 84 participants and apanoply of resounding positive responses. MADI is an extension of the JMCOffice of Diversity Programming, supporting its mission to promote leadershipand diversity throughout the Madison community and university as a whole.The upcoming mentor class shows great promise for another positive yearfor MADI.JMC FIRST WRITING CONTESTIn commemoration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the JMC Office of DiversityProgramming co-sponsored the first JMC First Writing Contest with the MSUSchool of Law. In the spirit of Dr. King, the title of the contest topic was “Giveus the ballot and we will no longer have to worry our federal government aboutour basic rights.” The contest was open to all Madison students, but only oneprevailed, Charlie Kraiger. The MSU School of Law acknowledged Kraiger at aspecial reception where he received his award and recited his essay “With Liberty and Justice for All.”WORLD LANGUAGES DAYWorld Languages Day was a one-day mini conference addressing globalization,the importance of learning foreign languages, and the application of foreignlanguage skills to future career opportunities. The event drew over 700 participants from across the state, including students, teachers, and parents. The participants had the opportunity to view over 84 sessions that included over 100presenters and panelists.Gaby TannerMadison Diversity CoordinatorJUDGE MARABLE STUDENTS’VISIT 2009The Judge Herman Marable (Urban ’84)“Student of the Month” program hosted avisit for a group of high school studentsfrom Flint, MI in April. The students participated in The National Race Conference,accompanied by members of the W.E.B.Du Bois Society, who also scheduled otherevents for the students to enjoy.CASE HALL LEADERSHIP SERIESThe James Madison Office of Diversity Programming, in conjunction with Case HallResidence Life, hosted the second part ofthe Case Hall Leadership Program. Therewere two sessions dedicated to increasingcultural competencies in the spring semester, “Developing Authentic RelationshipsAcross Differences” and “Exploring Transformational Leadership and MulticulturalChange.” Madison students and Case Hallmentors were the primary participants inboth sessions.RACE IN 21ST CENTURY AMERICA:THE 6TH NATIONAL RACE CONFERENCEThe MSU Office of Admissions, representatives from the Race Conference committee, Lyman Briggs College, the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, and James Madison College, collaborated to bring high school students tothe National Race Conference to MSU for a sixth year. Over 130 high schoolstudents attended the conference, participating in several workshops related tothe topic of the conference, “Health Care and Communities of Color.”6James Madison Scene

MADI MentorsRace Conference 2009Fall 2009World Languages Day 20097

FACULTY H I G H L I G H TSJMC sponsors “Race in 21stCentury America” conferenceOrganized by Professor Curtis Stokes, the sixth biennial Race in 21st Century America conference occurred April 8-10, 2009 in the Kellogg Center. Thetheme was Health Care and Communities of Color.The conference's primary sponsor was James MadisonCollege. Keynote speakers included Michael Eric Dyson(Georgetown University), M. Joycelyn Elders (formerU.S. Surgeon General) and Evelyn Hu-DeHart (BrownUniversity). In addition to several hundred other attendees, some 150 high school students from a number ofMichiganCurtis Stokescities participated in the conference, including some brought from Flint, MIby JMC alumnus The HonorableJudge Herman Marable.Professor Stokes also publishedhis fifth book, Race and HumanRights (MSU Press, 2009).Hold this DateKATIE SEERETIREMENTSaturday,November 14, 2009Panel Discussions andBuffet LunchCase Hall9:00-10:00 Coffee and pastries10:00-3:30 Panels and lunchCelebratory DinnerKellogg Center, Red Cedar RoomCocktails: 6:00 pmDinner: 7:00 pmRSVP to Donna Hofmeister athofmeist@msu.eduor 517-353-9977JMC’s facultyProfessor Katie See receivesaward for distinguishedcontribution to Honorsstudents.This award is given annually to a facultyor staff member who has made exceptional contributions to Honors College students throughteaching, advising, or mentoring. Such contributions might include designing or teachingHonors classes or sections, offering HonorsOptions, providing Honors advising, mentoringof professorial assistants, or other exceptionalefforts. The recipient receives an honorariumof 1,000.members work outsidethe classroom and aroundthe world to fosterexcellence in thought andaction. Read the special“Faculty Scene”supplement to see moreof what they aredoing now.Katie See8James Madison Scene

Mohammed AyoobMohammed Ayoob will act as principal investigator for administrative purposes on the project proposal titled “Reporting aboutMuslim Peoples and Islam: An Online Resource for ProfessionalJournalism Education.” The Carnegie Corporation funded the Social Science Research Council grant for 88,000 under the rubric“Academia in the Public Sphere: Islam and Muslims in World Contexts.” In June 2009 Ayoob published “The United States and Political Islam: The Dialectic of Hegemony and Resistance”, Middle EastInsights No. 3, Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore. Also, for five weeks in September and October 2009, Ayoobwill visit Baku, Azerbaijan to act as consultant to the newly established Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, to help structure the masterof arts program in diplomacy and international affairs.Dan Bergen and JMC student Kanika Suri, and MSU studentsAli Barlow and Melissa Beard, were awarded a proclamation by thecity of East Lansing for the IVote and YouVote Voter RegistrationInitiative in November 2008. Suri participated in the programthrough the fall 2008 class MC 375, Contemporary Developmentsin American Politics. Bergen has a joint appointment with the College of Communication Arts & Sciences.Anna Pegler-GordonFall 2009Anna Pegler-Gordon was selected by the Organization of American Historians (OAH) to receive an OAH-JAAS Short Term Residency at Nagoya City University in U.S. Ethnic and ImmigrationHistory. The OAH and the Japanese Association of American Studies, with the generous support of the Japan-United States Friendship Commission, select two U.S. historians to spend two weeks atJapanese universities giving lectures, seminars, advising studentsand researchers interested in the American past, and joining in thecollegiality of the host institution. It is part of an exchange program that also brings Japanese graduate students to the OAH annual meeting. As part of this residency, Pegler-Gordon will attendthe Japanese Association for American Studies conference in Tokyo,then travel to Nagoya and Kyoto to give lectures, seminars and presentations to Japanese faculty and graduate students researchingU.S. immigration and ethnicity.9

STUDENTCAREER DAYSTUDENT H I G H L I G H TSFour Madison students represented the MSU Debate team at the NationalDebate Tournament on March 26 as members of two qualifying teams. The National Debate Tournament selection committee chose Garrett Abelkop (IR ’09)and Carly Wunderlich (PTCD/Chemistry ’09) as one of the top 16 teams during the 2008-09 debate season. Carlos Eyzaguirre (IR junior) and Amit Bindra(IR senior) qualified by winning all eight of their debates at a district qualifyingtournament held recently at Illinois State University.Juniors Dan Blue (IR/Economics/Muslim Studies/Arabic) and Cory Connolly (IR/Latin American and Caribbean Studies/Economic and Environmental Policy) have been appointed by the Roosevelt Institution as two of fournational senior fellows for 2009. In their role as senior fellows, these exceptionalstudents will work on their own projects and serve as experts within their field.The program recognizes members for their exceptional knowledge in a field of study,excellence in policy innovation, and eloquence in written and oral communication.The 2009 McGill Model United Nations Conference (McMUN) boasted 13Madison students who were all award winners and members of MSU’s International Relations Organization (IRO):Hayes Brown (IR senior), Allie Carter (CCP/SRP junior), Stephanie Hall(IR junior), Megan Holland (IR/CCP sophomore), Monika Johnson (IR/SRPsophomore), Hangli (Han) Lee (IR junior), Michael Mersol-Barg (IR senior),Tom Nally (IR/CCP freshman), Noel Schroeder (IR senior), Kareem Seifeldin(IR/PTCD/Muslim Studies junior), Kelly Steffen (IR senior), Matthew Sunderlin (IR sophomore), and Amanda Vandermeulen (IR/PE junior).McMUN is Canada's largest model UN conference and one of the largest onthe continent, with over 1400 students and over 60 schools in attendance. MSUrepresented the countries of Germany, the Republic of Korea, Ethiopia, Luxembourg, and Lesotho, as well as a non-governmental organization, the International Crisis Group, and several individual specialized placements. MSU’s IROranks among the top model UN teams, including Harvard, the University ofChicago, Boston University, and Stanford University. The officers for IRO thispast year were Hayes Brown, President, Benjamin Arbitter, VP for Finance,Hangil Lee, VP for Membership, Monika Johnson, VP for Conference Preparation, and Noel Schroeder, VP for Technology.JMC students areamong the best andbrightest at MichiganCommencement 2009State University! See thespecial Student Scenesupplement for a list ofthe awards and achievements of our phenomenalstudent body.10James Madison Scene

DEVELOPMENTLeaving a LegacyRocky BeckettDirector of DevelopmentGreat universities like Michigan State, thrive onchallenge and imagination and grow on initiativeand success. Each year, thousands of alumni andfriends support MSU and James Madison College bycontributing their time, talents, and money to ourstudents, faculty, and programs. Private philanthropy is an enormous resource that has enabled the college’s outstanding faculty and student bodyto excel at teaching and learning.Many donors continue their support beyond their lifetime by includingthe college in their estate planning. Legacy gifts from an estate by way ofwill, trust, or life income agreement, allow donors to make a significant giftto the college. Planned gifts can be used at the discretion of the dean, orcan be directed toward a specific use by a donor’s estate or through anagreement with the college development office.Often, MSU alumni and friends document their intention to make a future gift to the college. Documenting a future gift is not a binding legal obligation on the donor or their estate and information remains strictlyconfidential. Documenting planned gifts is important, as it allows the college to recognize potential future donors today. This is also an importantprocess for donors to establish guidelines and detail wishes for the use oftheir gift.Another way to link your legacy to the future of James Madison Collegeis to establish an endowed fund. An endowed fund is typically named forthe donor or a loved one. Working with the development office, an endowment agreement— guidelines for the use of funds—is established with thecollege. Once the gift is received, the principle is invested and is never expended. Each year a percentage of interest income from the investment isspent as directed by the endowment agreement, with any unused interestadded back to principle.Endowed funds, whether established with outright gifts or with aplanned gift, provide annual funding to the college in perpetuity. If youare interested in learning more about leaving a gift to JMC through yourestate or about establishing a named endowed fund, please contact thedevelopment office at (517) 432-2117.Your Legacy— A NamedEndowed FundIt’s easy to direct your future giftthrough your will or personal trust.Here is a sample charitable bequestlanguage to share with your attorneythat will create an endowed fund forJames Madison College:I give and devise to Michigan StateUniversity, East Lansing, Michigan, thesum of (minimumcharitable bequest must exceed 30,000)to be held, administered, and used by theBoard of Trustees for the establishmentof an endowed fund in support of JamesMadison College at Michigan State University. The earnings from the fund areto be disbursed by the College per theterms of the completed endowed fundagreement on record at Michigan StateUniversity. The endowed fund shall benamed the .I instruct that all my charitable gifts shallbe made, to the extent possible, fromproperty that constitutes “income in respect of a decedent” as that term is defined in the Internal Revenue Code.It’s just that easy! For additional information about creating an endowed fundin your name or in memory of a lovedone, contact Development Director RockyBeckett at (517) 432-2117.Fall 200911

James Madison CollegeMSU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONJames Madison College StaffJoin Online: www.msualum.com Call: (877) MSU-ALUMSherman GarnettDeanNorman GrahamAssociate DeanPRINT: MEMBER NAME-First, Middle Initial, and Last NameMSU GRAD YR (if applicable)Kim AllanAlumni and Public Relations DirectorJOINT MEMBER NAME-First, Middle Initial, and Last NameMSU GRAD YR (if applicable)Rocky BeckettDirector of DevelopmentPREFERRED ADDRESS HOME BUSINESSJaimie HutchisonField Career AdvisorDonna HofmeisterEvent CoordinatorJeffrey JudgeDirector of Admissions and Academic AffairsLori LancourDirector of Finance and AdministrationGrant LittkeDirector of Field Experience/Student AffairsStephanie MurdochDevelopment SecretaryPeter MurrayInformation Technology DirectorLucy RamseyAdmissions and Academic Affairs SecretaryJackie StewartSecretary to the DeanGabriela TannerCoordinator of Diversity AffairsLindsay ThornhillRecruitment CoordinatorAlumni Relations329 S. Case HallMichigan State UniversityEast Lansing, MI 48825James Madison Sceneis published twice annually.Executive Editor: Kim Allan (allank@msu.edu)Managing Editor: Becky Scott, PS PublicationsDesign: Shelee Bush, SheleestudiosEditorial Assistant: Donna HofmeisterMadison Photographer: Oliver Howell (PTCD senior)Main Office Phone: (517) 353-6750Office Fax: (517) 432-1804www.jmc.msu.eduFall 2009(CITY)(HOME PHONE)STATEZIPBUSINESS PHONEEMAIL ADDRESS FOR FUTURE CONTACTSNAME AT GRADUATION(if different)Mail to the MSU Alumni Association, 108 Union Building, East Lansing, MI 48824-1029Type of Membership Annual Single Membership Annual Joint Membership Life Single Membership Life Joint Membership Life Single Senior (65 yrs ) Life Joint Senior (65 yrs ) 45 55 700 750 400 450Life Installment Plans - 3 consecutive yearly payments Life Single Installment ( 325 200 200) Life Joint Installment 200 200)( 375 725 775 Life Senior Single Installment (65 yrs ) ( 125 150 150) 425 Life Senior Joint Installment 150 150) 47

elected as Ingham County Commissioner for the 15th district (not the 14th). Curtis Hertel (SR ’00) was elected to Register of Deeds, rather than re-elected as Ingham County Commissioner. Jesse Sweeney (IR ’96) is the principal of a law firm handling primarily Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 consumer bankruptcy. Sweeney received his juris doctorate .

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