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DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI
Current
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2000s
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1990s •
1980s •
1970s and prior
The Distinguished
Alumni Award is presented annually to up to four Stetson University alumni
who, through outstanding achievement in their lives and professions, have
brought distinction and special recognition to Stetson University.
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2008 |
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| A
1979 Stetson Biology cum laude graduate, Amos Bailey earned
his medical degree from the University of South Florida’s
College of Medicine. He did an internship and residency in
Internal Medicine at the Fletcher Allen Health Care Medical
Center Hospital of Vermont in Burlington and received a fellowship
for further work in Hematology and Oncology from the University
of Alabama at Birmingham. He practiced medicine for five years
at Raleigh Regional Cancer Center in Beckley, W.Va.
Now assistant
professor of Internal Medicine in both the Division of Geriatric
Medicine and Gerontology and the Division of Hematology and
Oncology at the University of Alabama, he also serves as an
attending physician in Hospice and Palliative Care. He is
director of Palliative Care at the Birmingham Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, where he also works at the Geriatric Research
Education and Clinical Center. He is the founder and medical
director of the Safe Harbor Palliative Care Project at the
Birmingham VA Medical Center, as well as the founder of Birmingham’s
Balm of Gilead Palliative Care Center and a past medical director
of the Birmingham Area Hospice. Respected nationally by his
peers, he serves on the Board of Directors of the American
Academy of Hospice and Palliative Care.
His book,
The Palliative Response, was published in 2003, and he has
also written numerous scholarly articles and lectured at many
major conferences on end-of-life issues. His work has received
more than $2 million in grant support, and he has been honored
with the Palliative Care American Hospital Association’s
“Circle of Life” Citation of Honor. He was also
included as an expert in Bill Moyers’ Public Television
series, “On Our Own Terms: Moyers on Dying.” |
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| Shephard
Hill, a 1975 Stetson graduate in history, served for seven
years as chief of staff and legislative director to the late
U.S. Congressman Bill Chappell of Florida. He is a 1984 alumnus
of the Naval War College and a 1989 graduate of Harvard University’s
John F. Kennedy School of Government’s Program for Senior
Executives in National and International Security.
Named
president of Boeing International in 2007, he oversees The
Boeing Company’s international affairs, with leadership
responsibilities for 20 Boeing in-country operations around
the world. Previously, he served The Boeing Company as senior
vice president of Business Development and Strategy, responsible
for analyzing and developing plans to drive the company’s
growth and nurture new businesses. A member of the Boeing
Executive Council, he coordinated Boeing’s Corporate
Development function, with responsibility for acquisitions,
divestitures, mergers, equity investments and joint ventures.
He has
also served twice as vice president for Business Development
at Boeing Integrated Defense Systems (IDS), responsible for
the development, integration, and implementation of IDS customer
and business strategies; and as vice president for Boeing
Space and Communications (S&C) Government Relations, charged
with the management and direction of S&C’s business
interests and activities in the Washington, D.C., area.
He joined
Boeing when the company acquired Rockwell’s Aerospace
and Defense business in 1996, where he was serving as vice
president for Aerospace Government Affairs and Marketing.
His first position with Boeing was vice president, Space Systems,
for the company’s Integrated Space and Defense Systems
business unit. |
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| Interested
in literature, James Lea earned two Stetson degrees, a Bachelor
of Arts in 1964 and a Master of Arts in 1965, both in English.
He taught for two years at Miami-Dade Community College, returning
to teach at Stetson from 1967 to 1970. He then earned a doctorate
in American Literature from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill in 1973.
Now a
professor of Family Medicine in the University of North Carolina’s
Chapel Hill School of Medicine, he works on such projects
as developing thermoelectric cooling for the transportation
of vaccines and other biomaterials and planning and conducting
management training for physicians and others serving in conflict
and post-conflict settings. For the past 20 years, he has
also advised U.S. and foreign family-owned companies on resolving
performance and relationship issues. His book, Keeping it
in the Family: Successful Succession of the Family Business
(1991), has also been published in Spanish (1993). He writes
a twice-monthly column on family business for the American
City Business Journals and has published numerous journal
articles on both family business and global health issues.
He is also a frequent speaker to professional organizations,
trade groups and university audiences, and he has been quoted
by The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington
Post, and Entrepreneur Magazine.
His work
has taken him to 30 countries on five continents. In 1979,
he founded INTRAH (Program for International Training in Health),
a non-profit global health services development organization
administered by UNC until 2003. While serving as a consultant
to the Iraqi Ministry of Health, he lived and worked in the
center of Baghdad, moving about the city in a helmet and body
armor, and counts his effort there as one of his most rewarding
experiences. |
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