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DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD
2000s
•1990s
•1980s
The Distinguished
Service Award is presented annually to an alumnus/a or friend in recognition
of his/her personal commitment to the ideals and objectives of the Stetson
University Alumni Association and dedicated service and advancement of
the goals of the University.
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2000s |
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| Michael
Fronk served as president of the Stetson University Alumni
Association from 2002 to 2004, working hard to build bridges
between alumni, students, parents, friends, faculty, and staff.
He gives generously of his time to attend alumni and prospective
student events, always presenting the Stetson message in an
engaging style.
Under
his leadership, the Alumni Board of Directors re-aligned its
priorities with those of the University, restructured itself
to better represent key constituent groups, established new
initiatives to interest alumni, led the completion of the
Meadows Alumni House backyard beautification, and created
the Outstanding Young Alumni Award.
A 1974
religious studies graduate, Michael Fronk served as a resident
advisor and head resident at Stetson. He was a member of Pi
Kappa Phi fraternity and was the first president of the Student
Judicial Council. He also worked as a minister to youth in
area churches. After graduation, he spent a year as a Stetson
admissions counselor, and went on to earn a master of divinity
degree in 1979 from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
in Louisville.
President-owner
of Fronk-Hartman and Associates, Inc., a marketing and consulting
firm working with funeral homes across the nation, he was
a full-time pastor in Florida and Indiana churches until 1986,
when he began working in the funeral industry. Currently pursuing
his church ministry as a volunteer, he also serves as chaplain
of the Independent Funeral Directors of Florida. Oldest of
four children to graduate from Stetson, he and his wife Stephanie
have six children, two of whom, Christopher and Jamie, graduated
from Stetson in May of 2003.
Active
in the DeLand community, he serves on the DeLand Planning
Board and is vice president and president-elect of the DeLand
Museum of Art. He is a member of the DeLand Breakfast Rotary
Club and the board of directors of the DeLand Fall Festival
of the Arts. He served on Stetson's Board of Trustees during
his term as Alumni Association president, and is a member
of the Stetson University Hatter Club. An avid motorcyclist,
he belongs to the Harley Owners Group.
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| A
devoted teacher, Dr. Michael W. Raymond has served on Stetson
University’s English faculty since 1972, building a
reputation for focusing on his students and subtly leading
them to discover and develop their own talents.
A Stetson
graduate, Raymond earned his master’s degree and doctorate
from the University of Florida, and returned to his Alma Mater
to teach. An innovative professor, he has taught courses jointly
with colleagues in geography, psychology, sociology, law and
economics - learning from them and using their disciplines
to teach writing.
An advocate
of Stetson’s values, his university service includes
conducting writing workshops, helping to launch the University
Experience course for new students, and directing First-Year
English for many years. He has represented the faculty on
the Annual Fund committee and served as faculty advisor to
both the student newspaper and the campus literary magazine.
He often participates in a student-led poetry group and currently
serves as the faculty representative on the Stetson University
Alumni Board of Directors.
Beyond
Stetson, he serves as a writing and educational consultant
to such firms as Florida Hospital Medical Center, Orlando:
Humana Hospital Corp., Louisville; and AT&T, New York.
A prolific writer, his publications range from academic critiques
of modern literature to works of fiction and creative nonfiction.
Drawing from his own experience, he has published several
books and manuals on living well with diabetes, including
The Human Side of Diabetes: Beyond Doctors, Diets and Drugs.
He also frequently publishes articles on the art of teaching.
Raymond
received Stetson’s 1992 McEniry Award for Excellence
in Teaching, the highest honor the university bestows upon
active faculty members; and Stetson’s Hand Award for
Creativity and Research in 2002. He was named Florida Professor
of the Year in 1993 by the Council for the Advancement and
Support of Education, and designated an “Exemplary Teacher”
in 1996 by the U.S. Department of Education. He also held
the Nell Carlton Endowed Chair of English for four years.
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| Dedicated
to Stetson University and its missions, Thomas E. Stringer
Sr. is a fair and hard-working jurist and a man of many “firsts.”
He was the first African-American graduate of the Stetson
University College of Law (1974), and later became the university’s
first black trustee. In the judiciary, Thomas Stringer was
the first black circuit judge in the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit.
He was elevated to the Second District Court of Appeal where
he was also the first African-American appellate judge in
the district.
Stringer
has served the people of Hillsborough County, the Thirteenth
Judicial Circuit and Second District as an appellate, circuit
and county judge; private attorney; and prosecutor since 1974.
Stringer serves the community through membership in and dedication
to many organizations, including the Boys & Girls Club
of Greater Tampa, Pi Iota chapter of Omega Psi Phi fraternity,
Tampa chapter of the NAACP and Tampa/Hillsborough County Youth
Council Inc. He also serves Bay Area Legal Services Inc.,
Timucua District of the Gulf Ridge Council of Boy Scouts of
America and the Hillsborough County League of Women Voters.
He has been a member of Stetson’s Board of Trustees
since 1994 and of the College of Law Board of Overseers since
1986.
Today
he continues to be an inspiration to Stetson’s law students,
who recognized his commitment to legal education and the college
by honoring him with the annual Judge Stringer Youth Day for
area high school students. A 1974 Stetson University College
of Law graduate, Stringer served in the U.S. Air Force for
close to four years and attained the rank of captain. He is
a graduate of New York University, where he received a bachelor’s
degree in mathematics in 1967.
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| Gary
Meadows earned his bachelor’s degree in psychology in
1959 and began working as an admissions counselor the next
day. He earned a master’s degree in counseling from
Stetson five years later.
During
his 30-year tenure in admissions, Meadows served as assistant
director, director and dean. While
in admissions, Meadows helped bring fine students to the university
and counseled them when making education and career decisions.
He saw some of those same students give back to Stetson and
become re-involved in the university while working in Alumni
Relations.
In addition
to his duties in the Admissions and Alumni offices, Meadows
has been the voice of the Hatters at various times at the
men’s basketball games for 35 years. Stetson also honored
Meadows by naming its Alumni House the Meadows Alumni House
on March 30, 2001. Mark Whittaker, vice president for University
Relations, said that he, President Doug Lee and the Alumni
Board wanted to name the house for Meadows because of his
loyalty and dedication to Stetson over many years.
In retirement,
Meadows hopes to spend more time enjoying some of his hobbies,
which include singing, fishing and traveling. Over the years,
he has lent his deep bass voice to the Stetson Choral Union
and is on the board of directors of the Bel Canto singers.
He also is a soloist in the choir at First Baptist Church
of Deland and is president of the Deland Breakfast Rotary
Club. Meadows has three grown children and lives in Debary
with his wife, Gail Kadlec Meadows.
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| Dr.
Dennis C. McNamara Sr., Class of 1944, received a Distinguished
Service Award from Stetson University. McNamara served as
chairman of the Operating Gifts Division of the successful
Stetson University $50 Million Campaign and, through a major
gift, established the McNamara Chair of Marketing in the School
of Business Administration.
A member
of the Stetson University Board of Trustees from 1984 until
1999, he served as both vice chair of the Board and as chairman
of the Development Committee during the $200 Million Campaign,
and was named Trustee Emeritus in 1999. McNamara and his family
named a tennis court in the Mandy Stoll Tennis Center in memory
of his late wife, Mary Estella Palmer McNamara, Class of 1944,
and made a contribution to the new baseball stadium, Melching
Field at Conrad Park. He has provided scholarship assistance
to deserving students through the Dennis McNamara Scholarship
Fund, which he created in 1985, and through the Trustee Challenge
Gift Scholarship Program, in which he has participated since
1988.
The first
recipient of an Honorary Diploma in 1982, McNamara received
the Honorary Doctor of Commercial Science degree in 1986 and
was a recipient of the University’s Distinguished Alumni
Award in 1993. He was named a Champion of Higher Independent
Education in Florida (CHIEF) in 1986 by the Independent Colleges
and Universities of Florida.
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| <1990s |
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