News       
from ABAC

Michael D. Chason
Director of Public Relations
ABAC 30 -- 2802 Moore Highway
Tifton, GA 31793-2601

Phone 229-391-5055
Fax 229-391-5056
mchason@abac.edu

 

Green Bar Divider

IMMEDIATE                                                                                                                                                                                                 APRIL 1, 2007

ABAC KICKS OFF 100th BIRTHDAY, HONORS ALUMNI AT HOMECOMING 2007

TIFTON—Huge birthday cakes glowing with lighted sparklers served as a glittering opening ceremony for the 100th birthday celebration of Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College during Homecoming 2007 activities on Saturday.  The college will celebrate its 100th birthday through 2008. Former ABAC students and supporters were also honored for professional achievement, community service, and service to the college during the ABAC Alumni Association awards luncheon.

Award recipients included George T. Smith, Abraham Baldwin Distinguished Service Award; Julie Ewing Hunt, Distinguished Alumnus; Brian Ponder, Master Farmer; Kathy Butler Murray, Helen Brown Sasser Award; Pat Sirmans Puckett, Outstanding Health Care Professional; Keith Rucker, J. Lamar Branch Award; Glenn P. Willis, Jr., Outstanding Business Leader; and Joan Griffin Marshall, Outstanding Educator. The Family Legacy Award was presented to the J.R. Gibbs Family.  Dr. Ron Jones and Henry “Bo” Miller were named Honorary Alumni.

            Smith is the first recipient of the Abraham Baldwin Distinguished Service Award, recognizing individuals who demonstrate unprecedented public service.  Smith was Student Body President at ABAC in 1940.  He served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1959-1966, and was Speaker of the House from 1963 – 1966.  He was Georgia’s Lieutenant Governor from 1967-1970.  Later he was elected to the Court of Appeals of The State of Georgia from 1977-1980, and to the Supreme Court of The State of Georgia from 1981-1991.  He is the only person in Georgia history to win contested elections in all three branches of state government – legislative, executive, and judicial.  The award is named for the great statesman Abraham Baldwin for whom the college was named. 

Hunt is a 1964 graduate of ABAC. She owns J.H. Services, which includes Captain D’s and Shoney’s franchises; Park Place apartments; and Hunt Advertising. She serves her community as chair of the Tift County Tourism Association, past chair of the Tifton/Tift County Chamber of Commerce and as a founding director of the Foundation for Educational Excellence.  She received the Athena Award in 1989 and the Stafford Award in 1996, both presented by the Chamber.

Hunt was a very strong advocate for ABAC during the four years she served as a member of the University System of Georgia Board of Regents from 2003-2007.   She was also a member of the Georgia Development Authority for six years.  She is a member of the ABAC President’s Club and serves on the finance committee at First United Methodist Church.  Hunt’s late husband, John, was also an alumnus.  Their children, Dallas and Julie, are both ABAC alumni. 

            Ponder is a 1987 ABAC graduate. When he graduated, he started farming with his father and brother in Omega.  Today, he and his brother, Ken, operate a 2,100-acre farm which produces cotton, peanuts, watermelons, processor green beans and pine timber.  Ponder was one of the first farmers in the area to practice conservation tillage on cotton and peanuts. 

            Ponder is the past chairman of the Middle South Georgia Soil and Water Conservation District.  He serves on the Tift County Farm Bureau board and is president of the Georgia Alternative Energy Cooperative, an ethanol cooperative.   Ponder and his wife, Missy, have two children – Cyrus, 15 and Victoria, 9.  They are active members of the Union Grove Church of God.

            Murray, a 1972 graduate, has successfully balanced family and career for 34 years.  After completing a dietitian internship at Vanderbilt University Hospital, she worked as director of school food service in Worth and Colquitt Counties before joining the staff of Colquitt Regional Medical Center in 1984.  She is a member of the Georgia and American Dietetics Associations.  

            Murray married her ABAC sweetheart, Eddie, an agriculture education teacher in Colquitt County.  She says her greatest accomplishment is raising three outstanding children – Jay and Katie, who are alumni and Michael, who is a current student.    She is also active at Heritage Church

            Puckett, Class of 1967, is the director of Women/Children’s Patient Services at South Georgia Regional Medical Center in Valdosta.  She has been employed at South Georgia Regional her entire professional career, serving in a variety of positions.   

            Puckett is chair of the board of Lowndes Associated Ministries to People, also know as LAMP.   In 2005, she was named Woman of Achievement for Lowndes/Valdosta Business and Professional Women.  In 2004, she received the Nursing Leadership Award from the Georgia Organization of Nurse Leaders.  She and her husband, Edward, are very active in First United Methodist Church.

            Rucker, a 1991 graduate, has worked as the County Extension Agent in Tift County since 1999.  Prior to that, he worked with ProGro and Gold Kist.     

             Rucker received the Donnie H. Morris Award for Excellence in Extension by the Georgia Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association for 2005.  He also received two national awards:  2005 Epsilon Sigma Phi Southern Region Early Career Award and 2005 National Association of County Agricultural Agents (NACAA) Achievement Award.  Rucker is a past president of the Tifton Kiwanis Club, a member of the Agrirama Foundation and a graduate of Leadership Tifton. 

            Rucker crafted the college mace used at President David Bridges’ inauguration in his woodworking shop.   He lives in Tifton with his wife, Julie, also an ABAC alumnus and their two children – Hannah and Rebecca.  They are active members of First Baptist Church in Tifton. 

            Willis earned his business degree from ABAC in 1980 and continued his education at UGA.  Currently, he is senior vice president at South Georgia Banking Company in Tifton where he has been employed for 22 years.

            Willis, an ABAC President’s Club member, is extremely active in the community.  He has served on the Tifton-Tift County Chamber of Commerce executive board for five years, two years as vice president of financial services and as the 2006 president.  He also serves on the Tift County Development Authority, Downtown Development Authority and the Airport Authority.  He is a graduate of both Leadership Tifton and Leadership Georgia.  Willis is very active in the American Cancer Society and has held a variety of leadership roles in the First Baptist Church.

            Willis and his wife, Terri, also an ABAC alumnus, have two children – Amanda  

and Austin.   

            Marshall is a 1951 graduate of ABAC.  From 1953 until the present, she has worked for the Tift County Board of Education in a variety of positions teaching elementary school children.   She was instrumental in developing the Migrant Education program for the Tift County Schools, where she currently works part-time.  She also works with migrant children through Northside Baptist Church and the Mell Baptist Association. 

            Marshall is active in the Professional Association of Georgia Educators and Delta Kappa Gamma, both professional educational organizations.  She was named a Tift County Foundation Teacher of Excellence. She and her husband, Alton, have two children, Sue Roberson, an ABAC alumnus, and James Marshall. Her granddaughter, Kelly Weeks, is a current student. 

            The 2007 Family Legacy Award was presented to the J. R. Gibbs, Sr., family from Irwin County.  The family has 12 family members spanning three generations who are ABAC alumni ranging from Dorothy Gibbs Chapman, class of 1948, to current students Perry White and Haley Gibbs. 

            Gibbs family members contribute to their communities in a variety of professions ranging from education to agriculture to business.  Jane Gibbs was named Outstanding Educator in 1995.  She serves on the Alumni Board of Directors and represents alumni on the ABAC Foundation Board of Trustees. She and her husband, Randolph, host the Classes of 1951-52 each year at Homecoming.  Members of the Gibbs family support ABAC through recruitment of students, the Birthday Fund and Dollars for ABAC Scholars.   

            Jones became a member of the ABAC faculty in 1967. He retired from ABAC in 1994 as an agriculture economics professor and chair of the Division of Agriculture and Forest Resources. He received the Carlton Award for Teaching Excellence; was named an honorary member of the Georgia Young Farmers Association; and received a National FFA Honorary American Farmer Degree.

            Miller began his ABAC career in 1971 after 10 years of service in the United States Air Force. He retired from the college in 1995, serving as Dean of Men, Director of Student Activities and Assistant Dean of Student Affairs. He also served as SGA and IAC advisor for a number of years.

            While at ABAC, he received a Pacesetter and twice earned the IMPACT Award.  He and his wife, Bobbye, have two daughters, both ABAC graduates.

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