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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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| A
ninth-generation Floridian, whose roots go deep into Stetson
and Florida history, Lisa Carlton serves as state senator
from District 24. Co-manager of the Mabry Carlton Ranch, a
Sarasota County cattle and citrus operation owned by her family
for four generations, she is the daughter of the late Mabry
Carlton Jr., Stetson class of ’57, and grand-daughter
of the late Mabry Carlton Sr., class of ’29, both of
whom served as Stetson trustees.
She and
her husband, Robert Robinson, have two daughters, Carlton
Elaine Robinson and Savell Louise Robinson, and a son, Mabry
Robert Robinson. Carlton received her bachelor’s degree
in sociology in 1986 from Stetson, where she was a member
of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and earned a law degree from
Mercer University. She has practiced law in Sarasota County
and served as a legislative aide in both the Florida House
and Senate.
In 1994,
she was elected to the Florida House of Representatives from
District 70, which she served for four years. Her Florida
Senate responsibilities include chairing the Committee on
Finance and Tax; and serving on the committees overseeing
banking and insurance, comprehensive planning, local and military
affairs, and ethics and elections. She also heads the Reapportionment
Subcommittee on Congressional Apportionment and Redistricting.
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| Putting
her scientific background to work with environmental theory,
Dr. Bunny Johns serves as chief executive officer of the Nantahala
Outdoor Center in North Carolina, the Southeast’s largest
outdoor recreation and education outfitter. A 1962 Stetson
graduate, with a bachelor’s degree in biology, she earned
a master’s degree from the University of Richmond, and
a doctorate in plant physiology from North Carolina State
University. She worked as an educator and researcher from
1968 to 1973, then earned a degree in nursing.
An avid
outdoorswoman, Johns worked part time as an instructor and
guide at the Nantahala Outdoor Center, while continuing to
work as a nurse, and by 1977 headed Nantahala’s instructional
programs. She became president of the company in 1991 and
was later named CEO. Specializing in whitewater rafting, mountain
biking, adventure travel and corporate and youth team building,
the Nantahala Outdoor Center has grown from an outfitter on
two rivers with a few guides, to a $16 million firm with 100
full-time and 500 seasonal employees.
Blending
her grounding in science with an ability to work with others
to solve difficult natural resource issues, she has served
as president of America Outdoors, a trade association for
outfitters; and on the board of directors for American Rivers,
the North Carolina Clean Water Management Trust Fund, the
Pigeon River Fund and the Swain Country Economic Development
Commission.
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triple Stetson alumnus, Richard Pearce earned a law degree
in 1950, bachelor’s degree in history in 1955 and master’s
degree in American studies in 1957. Admitted to the Florida
Bar in 1950, he spent 12 years practicing law, but his interest
in education led him back to the classroom.
While
practicing law part-time, he taught business, finance and
business law at Stetson for 25 years, interrupting his teaching
career to serve for 15 years as an administrator at two other
colleges: Florida Southern College, Lakeland, where he was
vice president, academic dean and dean of the college; and
Methodist College in Fayetteville, N.C., where he was president.
He returned to the Stetson faculty in 1984 and retired as
professor of finance emeritus in 1999. His publications include
Law and Society, written with Dr. Carey K. Ganong (Irwin,
1965).
Active
in state circles of the United Methodist Church, both in Florida
and North Carolina; Pearce was also an advisor to Bethune-Cookman
College and headed Stetson’s School of Business Foundation.
He served for 10 years as Pierson town attorney, six years
as vice chairman of the Volusia County Board of Public Instruction
and eight years as secretary/treasurer of the Central Florida
League of Small Municipalities.
He provided
Stetson with many years of legal representation in real estate
contracts and estate planning. In 1991, he and his wife established
the Richard and Neva Pearce Scholarship Program to provide
merit scholarships to well-rounded, leadership-oriented Stetson
students with high academic achievements.
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| A
prolific writer whose historical novels offer young people
a deeper understanding of the United States, its values and
the role faith has played in its development, Nancy Naylor
Rue earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Stetson
in 1973. She later received a master’s degree in education
in 1978 from the College of William and Mary and a bachelor’s
degree in theater in 1988 from the University of Nevada. She
taught high school English and theater for several years,
and has also directed children’s theater, given creative
dramatic workshops for children and taught and directed college-level
theater.
Author
of 18 novels for children examining American history 1690
to 1861, Rue is working to bring the series up to the 1970s.
She has also written several children’s plays, that
have been produced by theaters around the country. Her young
adult fiction is popular in Europe as well as in the United
States, with several books translated into French, German
or Swedish.
Her work
for adults includes two novels, Retreat to Love and Melding
the Circle, as well as two non-fiction books. She won first
place in the National Short Fiction Competition of the Evangelical
Press Association in 1996, 1991 and 1988. In addition, her
young adult novel The Janis Project, won the C.S. Lewis Honor
Book Award in 1991, and Row This Boat Ashore won the Campus
Life Book of the Year Competition Award of Merit in 1986.
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