Friday, April 13, 2012

Ride in comfort to GCC's Scholarship Monte Carlo Night on April 21




The Germanna Educational Foundation brings a little bit of Las Vegas to Culpeper with its 18th Annual Scholarship Monte Carlo to be held on Saturday, April 21 at the Daniel Technology Center from 6 p.m.–11 p.m.

NEW THIS YEAR: Foundation Director Mike Catell has chartered a Martz Group bus for sponsors, their guests and individual ticket buyers. The bus will pick people up at the Gordon Road commuter lot off State Route 3 in Spotsylvania at 5:45 p.m. and will leave the Daniel Center at 10:30 p.m., after the auction. Plenty of seats are available and reservations may be made by calling 540/423-9060 or emailing foundation@germanna.edu by Wednesday, April 18.

Monte Carlo Night raises money for the Germanna Guarantee Program. This program provides financial assistance to students who have the potential to succeed, and who need additional financial support, the opportunity to pursue and achieve their educational goals at Germanna. The program goal is to ensure that no student is denied access to an education because of financial need. During the current academic year, more than 100 Germanna students are receiving Germanna Guarantee scholarship funding because of the success of last year’s Scholarship Monte Carlo.

Call the Foundation Office at 540-423-9060 or email foundation@germanna.edu for more information or to sign up.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

MAKING A DIFFERENCE FEELS GOOD



Philanthropist Doris Buffett, a Germanna supporter, met with dozens of students and parents at Friday's GCC Educational Foundation Scholarship Reception

Harlan Ellison once wrote that the only three words more meaningful than “I love you” are “Let me help.”
During the Germanna Community College Educational Foundation Scholarship Reception on March 16, 2012 at Fawn Lake, donors learned how much their uttering the words “Let me help” has meant to students they have helped attend GCC.
They learned their donations are turning lives around.
They learned they are giving those students a chance they might not have otherwise had to be successful, a chance to make lives for themselves and their families that they are proud of and to become good citizens in our communities.
And they learned that providing those chances is making a real difference for the students, their families and our area.
“In the past year,” GCC President David A. Sam said, “our Educational Foundation has provided $175,000 in scholarships to about 300 students. That’s great and we want to do even more. Without the support of the donors, that wouldn’t be possible. “
GCC Educational Foundation Director Mike Catell introduced one of those donors, Doris Buffett, sister of Warren, who has given $150,000 for scholarships over three years, in addition to other support for Germanna.
As of March 2012, Catell said, “Through Doris’ Sunshine Lady Foundation Scholarships, 25 students have received scholarships that allowed them to get an associate’s degree.” Many have transferred to four years schools to pursue bachelor’s degrees. “You have certainly changed the lives of thousands of people, including students at Germanna, and we thank you.”
Ms. Buffett lives in Fredericksburg and has given away $120 million of her own money in what her brother calls “retail philanthropy.” He says most philanthropy is “wholesale.” Hers is different in that she often deals with people “unlucky through no fault of their own” one on one, and stays involved in their lives, helping them turn things around.
“There are no short cuts.” she told a room packed with students, parents and donors. “You don’t go on to pro ball. You don’t go on to be a rap star. Those things don’t happen. But a good education will take you all the way. Here at Germanna, you can start a life for yourself better than you ever thought you could have.”
Also in attendance were Lee Kirk, president and CEO of Culpeper Regional Health System, who donated $35,000 on behalf of CRHS and the Culpeper Regional Hospital Foundation, to the Germanna nursing program at the event, and Fred Rankin, president and CEO of Mary Washington Health Care. Between the two of them, they have given over well over $2 million to Germanna, making GCC nursing the nationally respected, cutting-edge program it is and helping to double its size so it can produce the nurses our area needs.
Culpeper Regional Health System’s total overall giving, includes Culpeper Regional Hospital, Culpeper Hospital Foundation now stands at more than $600,000. CRHS was the GCC Educational Foundation’s 2011 Philanthropist of the Year.
Mary Washington Health Care has given a total of $1.4 million and is the Educational Foundation’s 2012 Philanthropist of the Year.
In the crowd were students Kim and Brian Morris, who have gone from living in their car to finding themselves on the road to success, in part because of the Germanna Guarantee Scholarship Program, which helps students who don’t qualify for financial aid or have gaps in that aid that might otherwise prevent them from attending college.
“Scholarships are an essential element, in order for many Germanna students to achieve their dream of higher education,” Catell said. “Our students are committed, intelligent, passionate, and persevering, but sometimes they face challenging obstacles – one of which is having enough funds to pay for their education. Time and again, our benefactors step forward to help students achieve their dreams, and I am most grateful on behalf of the Foundation for their very generous support.”
Kim Morris said the support has allowed her to focus on being a full-time student. She is doing so well she’s on the President’s List and was invited to join the Phi Theta Kappa honorary society.
“When I was living in my car, just trying to make it from day to day and find some way out, I never imagined this could happen,” she said. Both her parents are high school dropouts. “Now I can say my father is proud of me because I’m on my way to getting a degree.”

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Couple goes from living in their car to finding themselves on the road to success at Germanna


Germanna Community College students Brian and Kimberlie Morris (above) were living in their car, wondering how they were going to find their way out of a seemingly bottomless pit of despair.
"Seven or eight years ago, my husband and I were actually homeless," Kimberlie said. "Going from figuring out how to pick ourselves up to be making the grades that I'm making--it's very much not where I thought I'd be at this point."
The 33-year-old is on the President's List and joining the college's chapter of the Phi Theta Kappa international honorary society. She's on course to graduate with an associate's degree in business administration in December 2013.
"She actually inspired me to go back to school," her husband Brian said. "This is my first semester. To go from living in our car to this..."
"It was a pipe dream," Kimberlie said, finishing his sentence.
"It was less than that--it was a puff of smoke," Brian, who just turned 40, said. "When we were homeless, we were more concerned about living from day to day, trying to get back on our feet. Once we did, that pipe dream became a reality." The couple lives in Spotsylvania County.
Neither of Kimberlie's parents finished high school.
The Morrises said things turned around when someone was willing to rent them an apartment and allowed them to pay the deposit over time. Brian found a job and they were on their way. "You don't have a phone number," she said. "You don't have a permanent address. How do you find a job when you don't have those things?"
Having been through that, they now try to help others whenever they can, even though they have little money.
Because someone gave them a chance, she said, "It's been a complete, 360-degree turnaround. We didn't want a handout, we wanted a hand up. If we can do that for someone else, fantastic."

Kimberlie applied to Germanna, with support from the GCC Educational Foundation. "I thought, life starts over," she said. "Things happen and you can actually go. This time I'm just going to put my foot down and see what happens. To have my dad understand and say,'You went beyond what I though you could accomplish...' "
After a stint in the military, Brian also began taking classes at GCC.
"Every time I go to class, I'm early," Kimberly said. "Every time I sit down in my chair in class, I appreciate my professor's time. As soon as I get home, I do my homework. Maybe if younger students understood that... Every time I see a kid who's younger than me miss a class, I just see dollar signs. I think, 'You're just throwing your education down the toilet bowl.' Not that you don't have reasons to miss class. But it's just that I think I respect it more, having not gone directly from high school to college.
"Now I'm a college student my father can brag about."

Lee Kirk, Culpeper Regional Health Care and Culpeper Regional Hospital Foundation boost GCC nursing


Lee Kirk, President and CEO of Culpeper Regional Health Care, presents Dr. David A. Sam, president of Germanna Community College, with a check for $35,000 in support of the college's nursing and Allied Health program Friday at a scholarship reception at Fawn Lake. From left, Mike Catell, director of the GCC Educational Foundation, Tiffany Bell, Culpeper Regional Hospital emergency department director, Butch Davies of the GCC Educational Foundation, Dr. Sam, and Cindy Colson, executive director of the Culpeper Hospital Foundation.
Kirk said CRHC and the hospital foundation have been enthusiastic supporters of GCC because of the quality of the nurses and other health care professionals it produces for the community. Germanna President Sam thanked Kirk, saying that the support of CRHC and the foundation has helped make it possible for the college to double the size of its nursing program and will make a difference for the Culpeper area for decades to come.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

DE CAPO PRESS LAUNCHES "BUTTERFLY IN THE TYPEWRITER", BIO OF "CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES" AUTHOR JOHN KENNEDY TOOLE BY GERMANNA'S CORY MACLAUCHLIN

The saga of John Kennedy Toole is one of the greatest stories of American literary history. After writing “A Confederacy of Dunces,” Toole corresponded with Robert Gottlieb of Simon & Schuster for two years. Exhausted from Gottlieb’s suggested revisions, Toole declared the publication of the manuscript hopeless and stored it in a box. Years later he suffered a mental breakdown, took a two-month journey across the United States, and finally committed suicide on an inconspicuous road outside of Biloxi. Following the funeral, Toole’s mother discovered the manuscript. After many rejections, she cornered Walker Percy, who found it a brilliant novel and spearheaded its publication. In 1981, 12 years after the author’s death, “A Confederacy of Dunces” won the Pulitzer Prize.

In “Butterfly in the Typewriter: The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of a Confederacy of Dunces," Germanna Community College English Department Chair Cory MacLauchlin draws on scores of new interviews with friends, family, and colleagues as well as full access to the extensive Toole archive at Tulane University, capturing his upbringing in New Orleans, his years in New York City, his frenzy of writing in Puerto Rico, his return to his beloved city, and his descent into paranoia and depression. The book will be released by De Capo Press on March 27, 2012.

There will be a signing at The Griffin in downtown Fredericksburg on from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, March 31.

“There wasn’t an adequate biography,” MacLauchlin, who lives in Bristow with his wife and children, said. “I found myself wanting to know more and to tell a fair story about his life, which hadn’t been done yet, as many of his friends I’ve interviewed would attest.
"A Confederacy of Dunces," MacLauchlin said, is "a hilarious book. It’s the quintessential New Orleans novel. Toole was the only native New Orleansian to write a successful book about New Orleans and somehow capture its spirit.”

MacLauchlin said that when publishers kept saying no, Toole “fell into a deep depression and suffered from paranoia that people were after him. He beleieved his work had been stolen and had been published under another name.

“The pressures in his home were very intense. His mother was a very dominant personality and his father quite weak—physically and mentally ill… His freedom was his novel. When he couldn’t revise it and to satisfy Simon and Schuster, he put it away and found himself lost in a world he couldn’t get out of.”

Toole took most of his money out of the bank and hit the road for two months,” MacLauchlin said. “On the way back home, a few miles outside of New Orleans, in Biloxi, he decided to attach a garden host to his exhaust pipe and take his own life.”

“She finally cornered a publisher and forced him to read it. He sent a note saying ‘It’s a genius work’--nothing had captured the spirit of that city as well.”

Fredericksburg resident Joel Fletcher had written an earlier book about Toole and his mother titled "Ken & Thelma."

Press release combines De Capo and Germanna information.

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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

A FLOOD OF GOOD NEWS: GERMANNA STUDENT BEATS CANCER, WINS NATIONAL AWARD FOR TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION, SEES SECOND CHILD BORN IN SHORT PERIOD OF TIME



Germanna Community College student John W. Tyler of Stafford County has been selected as one of two national 2011-2012 Terry O’Banion League for Innovation in the Community College Student Technology Champions.
“The League received a record number of nominations this year and the competition was strong, but John’s accomplishments and personal story rose to the top,” said the League’s LaRita Phillips. “The selection committee was impressed by John’s dedication and passion for the technology field. His perseverance when faced with adversity is inspirational.”
Tyler will receive an award of $1,000 and will be honored at the League’s annual Innovations Conference in Philadelphia on March 5. Germanna Associate Professor Anita L. Sutton, who nominated Tyler, will attend the conference and will also receive recognition. The other League Student Technology Champion to be honored is Justin G. Cree Carl of Sandberg College, in Gaylesburg, Ill.
Tyler has maintained a 3.85 grade point average at Germanna in spite of going through hardships that included battling cancer.
“The struggle has been monumental while going through treatments,” Tyler said. “If not for the faculty and instructors, especially Gerald Miller and Anita Sutton, my accomplishments through Germanna may never have been possible. Germanna is an institution that cares about people, and employs some of the brightest and most caring people I have ever met. There are a lot of people who deserve recognition, including the faculty. There are many people going through hardships that choose to fight every day, such as single mothers struggling to make a better life, students with disabilities, students with medical issues and depression, and other cancer patients. At Germanna, anyone is welcome and can have an opportunity to change their stars.”
The New Orleans native was displaced by Hurricane Katrina, moving here in 2005.
He began classes at GCC in 2006, but had to take some time off in 2008 because of financial and medical problems. He returned to Germanna in 2010 and changed majors from science to technology. Tyler is 35 and has a 3-year-old daughter Aydan Emily Tyler. He and his fiancée, 27-year-old Alicia LaPatra, were expecting the birth of their second child this week.
“I fought my way off the streets of New Orleans, where I spent most of my childhood, to get a GED and eventually went to Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College,” he said. There he earned a trade certificate as an Electrical Lineman.
“I worked as a line-jumper and established a home for myself until Hurricane Katrina came through and I lost everything. I moved to Fredericksburg shortly after with a car and three changes of clothes and my financial life has been a nightmare ever since. I have been fighting cancer [Lymphoma] for a little over two years, and just before I received notice of this award was informed that I am in remission. I beat it!”
Tyler lives in Stafford’s England Run North subdivision.
In spite of everything he’s been through, his GPA at Germanna is 3.85.
He’s pursuing a degree in Information Systems Technology – Networking, and also a certificate in E-commerce, both of which he will be completing this semester. He’s a member of Phi Theta Kappa, Psi Beta, and a member of the Student Government Association.
Tyler was recognized by the League for his pursuit of excellence in technological innovation, because of his courage in the face of adversity and due to financial need.
“John’s spirit and ability to overcome adversity are best demonstrated by the difficulties he is facing in his personal life,” GCC Associate Prof. Anita Sutton said. Hurricane Katrina wreaked havoc on John and his young family. They survived Hurricane Katrina and moved to Fredericksburg, for a new start. Over the past year-and-a-half, John has continuously battled Lymphoma. John receives treatments several times a week, including some hospital stays. However, through all his cancer treatments, no matter how sick he feels, John remains a positive influence in the classroom; a model student. He attends class, completes required work in a timely manner, performs independent research, and maintains an outstanding GPA. His work is always completed at an outstanding level.
“He pushed himself beyond what I asked,” Sutton said.
Sutton said that even when Tyler was undergoing chemotherapy treatments, he helped and encouraged other students, particularly one who also had cancer and is now recovering.
“That showed what a caring human being he is,” Sutton said, adding that no one would have known he had Lymphoma if not for a wool cap that read “Cancer sucks.” He wore the cap because he had lost his hair due to treatments.
“John is also a husband and father. In fact, John and his wife are expecting their second child this March,” Sutton said. “ He is the main provider for the household. The cancer treatments, Hurricane Katrina, and the current economy have taken a toll... In his own words, his family is having serious financial troubles, in short a financial nightmare. John’s greatest wish is to graduate and improve his family’s financial status. Through all these difficulties, John remains a positive influence on his peers in the classroom. He embodies the spirit of a true Computer Technology Champion.”
Tyler was recognized last year for his efforts creating the Fredericksburg Chamber of Commerce Workforce NOW (fredericksburgchamber.org/education/index.htm). He recently did a non-profit website for the local Thurman Brisben Center for the homeless (www.brisbencenter.org) and has continued to donate work on non-profit sites.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Fred Rankin to be honored as GCC Educational Foundation's Distinguished Person of the Year on Feb. 10

The Germanna Community College Educational Foundation will award its 2012 Distinguished Person of the Year award to Mr. Fred M. Rankin III, President and Chief Executive Officer of Mary Washington Healthcare, at 6 p.m. on Feb. 10 at the Fredericksburg Country Club.

"Fred Rankin is a difference-maker," GCC President David A. Sam said. "He's made a difference in our community and he and Mary Washington Healthcare have made a difference for Germanna's 15,000 students. I don't think he knows how much of a positive impact he's had on our college and our area."

In 1992, Mr. Rankin was named president of Mary Washington Hospital. In 1995, he was promoted to and continues in his current position with Mary Washington Healthcare. Under Mr. Rankin's leadership, Mary Washington Healthcare has been Germanna's biggest corporate benefactor, investing $1.4 million in the college.

"Mr Rankin and Mary Washington Healthcare have been critical partners in developing Germanna's highly-respected nursing program and helping us double the program's size," said Michael Catell, director of GCC's Educational Foundation and Alumni Relations,

The event will begin with a 6 p.m. reception, followed by dinner and the award presentation.

Go to www.germanna.edu or call 540/834-8988 for reservations or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities.



Germanna Educational Foundation Distinguished Person Of The Year BanquetDate: Friday, Feb 10th, 2012

Time: 6 p.m.
Location: Fredericksburg Country Club

Cost: $75 Per Person


Share in a very special evening to honor this year's recipient Fred M. Rankin III. President and Chief Executive Officer, Mary Washington Healthcare.

The reception will be followed by dinner and award presentation.