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Class Notes

The information below is an archive of submissions received through May 31, 2024. All new submissions received as of June 1, 2024 are located here.

Learn the latest news about your former classmates! Search the database below for class notes, births, memoriams and marriages reported by fellow alumni. If no filters are selected, all submissions are shown alphabetically by last name of alumni.

Please contact alumni@maryvillecollege.edu with any questions.

Browse Class Notes:

(Default list is alphabetical of all notes – sort by year or category to filter the list)

Name
Note
Paul L. Merwin
Class of 1953
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Capt. Paul Merwin ’53 recently had a park named in his honor due to his record of service at the Naval Station Norfolk in the 1970s. He “emerged as a leader at a time when leadership was sorely needed at Naval Station Norfolk, and the Captain Paul Merwin Salt Marsh Park is a fitting and appropriate recognition of his priceless contributions.” Read more here: http://hamptonroadsnavalmuseum.blogspot.com/2018/06/captain-paul-merwin-and-renissance-of.html

Dave Miller
Class of 1968
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Davis Miller retired after 26 years as CEO of New Ventures, Inc., a job training business for persons with disabilities and other employment barriers. Highlights include a 50th Anniversary with Judy Hannah (’69); spending time with their grandson Cameron and granddaughter, Autumn Rose, and prepping for another grandson,Charlie, to arrive latter September.

Winnie A. Minear
Class of 1973
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I served in Honduras for 34 years as a missionary with CAM International later named Camino Global and now Avant Ministries. I retired in 2019 and now live in the Richmond, VA area. I am involved in my local church and Community Bible Study. I also hope to teach Bible studies with some of the Hispanic ladies in my area.

Mary Moates
Class of 2014
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Mary Moates ’14 is engaged to Jordan Tarwater ’13.

Mary Moates
Class of 2014
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Mary Moates ’14 has been named Associate Director of Publicity at Crown Publishing, a high profile imprint of Penguin Random House that has published bestselling books by the Obamas, Volodymyr Zelensky, and many more esteemed world voices. She is married to Dr. Rev. Jordan Tarwater ’13. They live in New York City.

Hannah Delaney Monroe
Class of 2009
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graduated with honors from the Florida State University College of LAw in MAy 2012. Hannah accepted a federal clerkship for the Honorable Robert L. Hinkle.

Michael B. Montgomery
Class of 1972
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Dr. Montgomery ’72 has compiled the Bibliography for Scotch-Irish (Scots-Irish) Studies. This bibliography lists 1600 books, articles, and other publications that in some fashion and over the past four centuries connect Ireland (usually Ulster) to either Scotland or North America. It seeks to bring together publications that all too often fall between the cracks (or stools) of existing bibliographies, especially ones of Irish Studies. Central to its focus are emigrants from Ulster from the early-18th century until about 1830 and their descendants until the present day. Within this focus is emphasized the extensive pre-Revolutionary stream of emigrants into the American interior, a region often referred to as the “backcountry.” More here: http://www.scotch-irishsocietyusa.org/research.php#abilb

Michael Montgomery
Class of 1972
General Notes

#InspiringMCAlumni Michael Montgomery ’72 (1950 – 2019) would have been able to translate any of these Appalachian expressions to a traveler unfamiliar with the local vernacular: “frog-strangler,” “flusterate,” “ante-over,” “jackleg,” and “catawampus.” Published this year, The Dictionary of Southern Appalachian English is a revised and expanded edition of the Weatherford Award?winning Dictionary of Smoky Mountain English, published in 2005 and known in Appalachian studies circles as the most comprehensive reference work dedicated to Appalachian vernacular and linguistic practice. Editors Michael B. Montgomery and Jennifer K. N. Heinmiller document the variety of English used in parts of eight states, ranging from West Virginia to Georgia. Decades in the making, the Dictionary of Southern Appalachian English surpasses the original by thousands of entries. There is no work of this magnitude available that so completely illustrates the rich language of the Smoky Mountains and Southern Appalachia.

Chris T. Moore
Class of 2000
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recently earned his PhD in Quantitative Methods in Education from the University of Minnesota. He works as a Data Scientist in the Minneapolis Public Schools.

Fred G. Morrison
Class of 1961
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January 22, 2020. Judge Fred G. Morrison, Jr., 1961, senior administrative law judge in the N.C. Office of Administrative Hearings, receives 50 year State Service Award. The Excellence in Service Awards celebrate North Carolina’s public servants and connects them with the heritage, symbols, and traditions of the state. Judge Morrison has served the people of NC form more than 50 years as an Administrative Law Judge, solicitor, Legal counsel to two former governors and as the first executive director of the Inmate Grievance Commission. In these pictures, he is with Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, Cheri Beasley.

Fred G. Morrison
Class of 1961
General Notes

2013 marks the 50th anniversary for membership in the North Carolina State Bar. Both he and his wife were invited to be guests at their State Bar's annual 50-Year Lawyers' Luncheon. He was presented with a certificate commemorating his anniversary.

Fred G. Morrison
Class of 1961
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This article was shared by the Hon. Fred Morrison, Jr. from Administrative Lawyer, Published by the Administrative Law Section of the North Carolina Bar Association • Vol. 28, No. 1 • January 2015 • www.ncbar.org (See Magic Folder for full newsletter)

A Year Of Recognition By Evan Lohr
For more than five decades, Fred Gilbert Morrison Jr. has epitomized the ideals of the legal profession. This past July, Judge Morrison was recognized at the Wake County Bar Association's monthly luncheon for his 50 years in practice. In October, he received an award recognizing his 45 years of service to the state of North Carolina – in his case a pocket watch in a case bearing the state seal of North Carolina. This recognition was for nearly 29 years as an Administrative Law Judge at the Office of Administrative Hearings, four as solicitor of the Thomasville Recorders Court, more than six as the first executive director of the North Carolina Inmate Grievance Commission, and more than five as legal counsel to Governors Scott and Holshouser.
Raised in East Tennessee, Judge Morrison attended Maryville College and the law school at Wake Forest. In the following interview with the Administrative Lawyer, he looks back at his career and to the future of the legal profession.
Evan Lohr: Judge, in July you were among a small group of Wake County lawyers recognized for having practiced law for 50 years. What did that mean to you?
Judge Fred Morrison: On August 16, all five of those who were recognized will have 51 years in practice. I got my license on that day in 1963. I'm happy to have made it this far. It meant a lot to be included with those other lawyers, particularly Judge Ralph Walker. He's here in Wake County and we were classmates all three years at Wake Forest, passed the bar together, and have kept up with each other over the years.
EL: Your formative years were spent in the town of Newport in east Tennessee. How did growing up in Newport affect your career and were there any lawyers there that inspired you?
JFM: Newport is very small – there aren't very many people there at all. I went through grade school there, then Cocke County High School. I think there were 112 people in my class in a countywide high school. It was sparsely populated.
More than anything, my teachers – in grammar school and high school – I was very motivated by them, particularly to read a lot. From a young age on, I always loved to read and I think that's very important for a lawyer. The lawyers there that inspired me – I can remember them – they didn't live far from the house: Fred Myers, he was one of the prominent ones, Judge Shepherd was one, and Roy Campbell was an attorney and he still is an attorney. He's probably in his 90's now, and he was also a Sunday school teacher in the First United Methodist Church when I was young, and that impressed me and I've kept up with him over the years.
EL: What led you to attend law school? Why did you choose to attend Wake Forest?
JFM: I came home after three years at Maryville College for the summer and I was majoring in business administration to go into my father's small furniture business. I'd still liked to read at Maryville. I read all the paperbacks – Erle Stanley Gardner and so forth – and I thought about whether I wanted to go back to Maryville for the final year and get the business administration degree or to go to law school.
One day I rode over to Wake Forest and I went to the law school and asked to speak to the dean. I met with Dean Weathers, who was from Raleigh, and had been a prominent lawyer here. He said that they had a program there that you could go three years undergrad and if you wanted to go to law school, after your first year of law school, they would give you your undergraduate degree, and after the next two years, they would give you your law degree. So he said he would let me in under that program after three years if I would take two courses that summer and make a B or better in them and make a modest score on the LSAT. I took the LSAT and went to High Point College for the two courses and I notified Dean Weathers and he said he would admit me.
When the day came to go over there and sign up, I hadn't worked enough – hadn't made enough money to go – so I didn't go for the registration day. Dean Weathers called me at home that afternoon and asked me why I hadn't come and I told him. He told me that if I wanted to go I should come over and register and that we'd work all of the other things out. So I went and he got me in touch with the loan person at Wake Forest, and he said if I did well after the first semester he'd consider a scholarship. And I ended up with a small scholarship.
I think, basically, that I was really impressed with Dean Carroll Weathers. He interviewed every student that applied. I'm not sure they do that today.
EL: You have described your proudest moment as an attorney as your appointment by Governor Bob Scott as Legal Counsel to the Governor. How did that come about? How did that ultimately affect your career?
JFM: Very much so. I graduated law school, and had an opportunity to clerk for a Supreme Court justice here, but also to go to work for a man in Thomasville, E.W. Hooper. He had given me the keys to his office the first semester I was at Wake Forest. I could work there, and use his books and all of that. So he offered me an associate position which I accepted, and I worked with Mr. Hooper about a year and a half.
In 1965 Governor Moore appointed me the solicitor of the Recorder's Court in Thomasville. I did that for four years. In 1967 I was the President of the Jaycees so I invited the lieutenant governor, Bob Scott, to come ride in our parade, and he accepted and asked if I would get a few Jaycees together for coffee, which I did. And he told us he wanted young people involved in his campaign, so I was the young voter coordinator in Davidson County for his primary, and after he won that I was coordinator of Davidson, Iredell, Davie, and Rowan Counties. So after he was elected in 1968, he called me, and said he and his wife were coming through town to go to Lincolnton to pick out her inaugural gown, and asked if I would meet him for a cup of coffee. That's where he asked me if I would come to Raleigh as his legal counsel and I said yes.
So I went to Raleigh and served four years with him, and then he went out of office. I had known a lot of Jaycees throughout the state, and so I knew Governor Holshouser, and he kept me on for a year and a half into his term. So Bob Scott brought me to Raleigh, or I wouldn't be sitting here talking with you today.
EL: Chief Justice Mitchell mentioned in his remarks that you are the only lawyer to ever serve as legal counsel to North Carolina governors of both major parties. What personal and professional qualities allowed you to bridge the partisan gap?
JFM: I think being a member of and my association with the North Carolina Jaycees. I was president of the Thomasville Jaycees, then was legal counsel to the North Carolina Jaycees, and then President of the North Carolina Jaycees. In that time we were all Jaycees, we didn't really look at each other as Democrats or Republicans and so I had friends in both political parties who were friends of both Bob Scott and Jim Holshouser. So when Governor Holshouser got elected – he had been a Jaycee in Boone and had come to some meetings – he asked me if I would stay on and I agreed.
EL: Justice Mitchell also told a story about when Governor Scott announced at the 1972 Wake County Chitlin' Strut that he was apappointing you to a superior court judgeship – a position that you later turned down to become the first executive director of the North Carolina Inmate Grievance Commission – a largely thankless job working on behalf of some of our state's most forgotten people. Why did you choose that path? What drew you to the work of the IGC and what did you learn from the experiences you had there?
JFM: Growing up in Newport my daddy used to take me on Sundays to the jail to visit the inmates, sort of a ministry he had. Like Jesus said, "I was sick and in prison and you visited me." When I came on with Governor Scott, one of the things I did was coordinate with prisons, probation, and paroles. In that position, I got to know and visit the prisons. And then as legal counsel and state president of the Jaycees, we formed Jaycee chapters in about 40 to 45 prisons across the state. One of the people I met was John Campbell, who was an inmate at Central Prison, they had a Jaycee chapter over there, and I made him an associate secretary of the North Carolina Jaycees.
So my childhood experiences, involvement with the work of the NC Bar Association under Governor Scott and with the Jaycees, led me to believe it was a calling or something that I'd enjoy doing, and that I wanted to do more with this cause than become a superior court judge.
EL: What is the most memorable case you have heard in 28 years as an Administrative Law Judge?
JFM: The possum drop case, for one, as it is still under dispute with New Year's Eve approaching and a constitutional question case pending in Wake Superior Court. This case was especially interesting for me because Governor Scott had had a possum dinner – a black tie dinner – at the Governor's Mansion. There have been a lot of other memorable cases in 28 ˝ years. One of them was a significant case involving the death penalty controversy going on right now regarding whether the death penalty procedure is cruel and unusual punishment. This case was filed in 2007 and it was for the approval of the execution protocol – a three-drug cocktail that was being used. The first drug was to anesthetize the person, the second to paralyze them, and the third is the shot that really burns the heart to kill them. If the first doesn't really anesthetize them, then they can feel things and they're not totally out, and the second one paralyzes them to the extent that when they administer the third one, which everyone admitted that the third one alone would be inhumane, but because of the second drug they can't show that. So, I ruled in the petitioners' favor, but then it went through the Council of State and the Supreme Court, and they avoided the issue (merits) by saying OAH didn't have jurisdiction.
EL: During your career, you have occupied the roles of advocate, advisor, and judge. How has each role prepared you for the next and what advice would you give a lawyer seeking to change roles?
JFM: I think that if you look at it, I've always looked at it, and Dean Weathers was good about it, that you're an advocate for the public. At the same time as being an advocate for your client, you're an advocate for our judicial system. We settle our disputes not by guns and knives and duels, but by the law. You're an officer of the court, whether you're a lawyer, a mediator, or whether you're advising a governor, it's a public service. As a lawyer, an advisor, or judge you're an officer of the court, and I think each role prepared me for the next by being open to that. Also, realizing that you're investing a part of your life in the parties before you and their dispute gives this work special meaning.
EL: All people experience challenging times in their lives and careers, and lawyers are especially prone to these challenges. How did you manage the more difficult times in your life and career?
JFM: I think it's like Winston Churchill said when he was asked to come to speak at a graduation ceremony. I think he got up and his speech was as follows: "Young gentlemen, never give up, young gentlemen I say, never give up." The tough times, it's that never give up, persevere, and take life a day at a time, don't live in the past, and don't worry about the past or what's going to happen to you next week. Take one day at a time. Learn from the past. I've had some ups and downs, and I'm going to have some more. I am not going to give up! I am pressing on.
EL: What are the most important lessons you learned from your mentors?
JFM: Judge Roy Hughes, I'll never forget him. When I was appointed solicitor of the court in Thomasville, he was the judge. He was very calm and very polite and tried to do the right thing. He was a Sunday school teacher up there, and said, "as a man thinks in his heart, so is he." So if you have good thoughts, you'll have good actions.
Dean Weathers was a good mentor; he wanted us to be involved in our community, not just with the law every day. You have a family life, a community life, and then a legal career. Now we have continuing legal education, and a certain number of those hours have to be ethics-related. I can remember Dean Weathers sitting on his desk saying, "young gentlemen, you can do so and so. Young gentlemen, don't do it."
EL: Can you share an interesting or particularly fond recollection from your time in practice?
JFM: Well, the first one is when I was just out of law school, the youngest lawyer in Thomasville, working for E.W. Hooper. My first brief was for a Supreme Court case and we came down to Raleigh and argued it and afterwards went down to the old 42nd Street Oyster Bar and I had steamed oysters and beer in a frosted mug for the first time. We did not see many oysters when I was growing up in the mountains of east Tennessee.
Another one was as the youngest lawyer, I got a call to Denton, North Carolina, and was told Judge Ruth Garner of the Denton Recorder's Court wanted me to come and prosecute her docket. It would've been my first trial and I was worried to death. I drove down there and I found the courthouse and it was in the back of a fire station. I went in there and Judge Garner was the judge – her husband had been a judge and was a lawyer – but she wasn't a lawyer – you didn't have to be back then. I became a life-long confidante of hers. And so that is a particularly fond memory because of the history that we had from back in Thomasville until she passed away.
EL: How has the practice of law changed over the course of your career?
JFM: When I started we didn't have computers and Internet and now e-filing is coming and we have a goal of being paperless at the OAH. We've got WestLaw, Lexis and all of these other things we didn't have. We did have the North Carolina General Statutes and the North Carolina Reports but they only came out periodically. And the practice of law has become much more specialized.
EL: What do you see for the future of the legal profession?
JFM: Paperless. That's what it's coming to. Someday even exhibits will be, I would imagine. We have telephone hearings now in Medicaid, and we're moving away from the traditional trial as more and more efforts are directed toward settlements.
EL: Thank you for your time, Judge, and congratulations on a remarkable career.
Evan Lohr is an associate with Hansen Law Firm in Raleigh. His practice is focused on land use, real estate litigation, eminent domain, and administrative law.

Fred G. Morrison
Class of 1961
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was awarded the Richard Caswell Award on Aug. 15, 2015. In a ceremony at the North Carolina Museum of History, Judge Morrison was recognized for 45 years of service to the State of North Carolina.

David M. Moss
Class of 2000
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Lt. Col. David Moss welcomed home from Iraq With yellow ribbons and banners lining the neighborhood street where he once learned to ride a bike, Lt. Col. David Moss received a hero's welcome Monday afternoon after a six-month deployment in Iraq. Neighbors stood in the bitter cold and cheered as Moss' SUV slowly cruised down Southview Drive in Maryville. Pulling into the driveway of his childhood home, his parents greeted him with open arms. "Welcome home!" cried a family across the street. A young boy waved an American flag. Moss, 41, standing in camouflage fatigues, beamed with joy. The member of the Tennessee Air National Guard had been back in the country for less than 48 hours. Inside his parents' home, a Christmas tree and holiday decorations remained – his parents' way of giving him a late Christmas. His three young children had presents under the tree. It was family, Moss said, more than McDonald's or cold weather, that he missed while in Iraq. He missed all three of his children's birthdays, his parent's birthdays, his 15th wedding anniversary, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's – not to mention the children's soccer games, gymnastics exhibitions and church plays. Though he kept in touch with video calls, the seven- to eight-hour time zone difference made it difficult, Moss said, certainly more so than when he was deployed to Cuba. But Moss said he is used to it. "Tie up the boots and go, just get it over with," he said of his attitude toward deployment. Moss is the commander of the 241st Engineering and Installation Squadron of the Tennessee Air National Guard. For the service members under his command at Camp Taji in Iraq, he made sure they could stay up on holidays to call their families back home. Normally, Moss is stationed in Chattanooga. He and his wife, Tosha, and their three children live in Harden Valley. His hometown neighborhood in Blount County welcomed him all the same. "I hope he's not going back overseas," one neighbor said to Moss' father, Dean. "Not anytime soon," Dean said.

Andy A. Moss
Class of 1997
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We adopted Ella Kate Moss in June 2019 from China. We have 3 teenage boys, so she completed our family.

Scott Moss
Class of 1996
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Commander Scott Moss ’96 has become the commanding officer of one of the largest aviation squadrons in the U.S. Navy. See more here

Philip H. Muir
Class of 1957
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reports that he and his wife are “busily retired” with church, managing a family fruit orchard, and singing in a community chorale. They are also “generally in excellent health, for which we thank God.”

Gary Wayne Murray
Class of 2008
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are expecting their first child, a boy, in August of this year.

Alvin J. Nance
Class of 1979
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Alvin J. Nance has been Elected as an Independent Director of FHLB Cincinnati Board of Directors. Alvin J. Nance is Chief Executive Officer of LHP Development LLC and LHP Management LLC (fka Lawler Wood Housing Partners) of Knoxville, Tenn. He was first elected to the Board in 2009, re-elected in 2013, and previously served on the FHLB’s Advisory Council, which advises the Board on housing matters. He serves on two Board committees, Housing & Community Development, and Business & Operations. Prior to joining Lawler Wood Housing Partners in 2015, he served 14 years as president and CEO of Knoxville’s Community Development Corp. A former commercial banker, Mr. Nance has served many business, civic and service organizations, including membership on the boards of the Tennessee Housing Development Agency, United Way of Greater Knoxville, First Tennessee Bank, Covenant Health, Fannie Mae Advisory Board, Boy Scouts of America, Habitat for Humanity, Maryville College, and the YMCA. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Maryville College, Maryville, Tenn.

Barbara A. Nead
Class of 1970
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retired from Nursing in 2010.

Donna French Neel
Class of 1955
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shared that her son David died of pancreatic cancer in March of 2014. She and her husband Robert are thankful for the years they had with him. They enjoy their quiet place in Washington and say they have slowed down as they have gotten older. Donna feels that God has blessed them richly.

Charmone Rae Newell
Class of 2006
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started teaching full time at a small private Christian School and is working toward a private school teaching certification

Ryan W. Newhouse
Class of 2002
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On August 29, 2013 of The Bard coffee house fame, was interviewed on Montana Public Radio today about his new book on “Montana Beer: a guide to breweries in Big Sky country”. He covers cultural legacies, economic impacts, environmental best practices in a state that is first in beer jobs/population.

Carol Ann Newill
Class of 1973
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retired from the practice of Internal Medicine in June of 2013. Since then she has been traveling all over the U.S. with her husband for his contracts in architectural photography, enjoying museums, gardens, arboretums and good food along the way. In September she started helping (part-time) as a visiting scholar at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, where she got her PhD long ago. Carol has been teaching graduate students there and organizing a Journal Club for the Wendy Klag Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities. She is also active at Brown Memorial Park Avenue Presbyterian Church in Baltimore, where Carol has served as an Elder, and recently spearheaded a project to help unaccompanied migrant children who are waiting to join family members. She would love to hear from classmates.

Carol Newill
Class of 1973
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writes to say she is busy in retirement from medical practice in Internal Medicine in Baltimore, is serving as Guest Faculty at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, helping grad students in Epidemiology and in education and research on Autistic Spectrum Disorder. She has increased her activities in environmental work, including continuing to serve as co-chair of her neighborhood’s Greening and Recycling Committee, co-founding the Green Towson Alliance this year to work on issues in the broader geographic area, and recently being appointed to Baltimore County’s Commission on Environmental Quality which advises the County Council. And finally she has found time for water aerobics, bird-watching and foreign travel. She says her background from Maryville College, with a major in Biology, exposure to environmental education in the Smokies and to the Oak Ridge National Lab, and an additional major in Med Technology all helped her get started. “Thank you for this!”

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