Be The Change home page

JMU's presidents

Julian A. Burruss

Samuel Page Duke

G. Tyler Miller

Ronald E. Carrier

Linwood H. Rose

World-Changer Profiles

James Madison

Carolyn Abitbol ('67)

Donna Amenta

Shawn Arnold ('76, '81M)

Andy Bacon ('00)

Carole Baldwin ('81)

Brian Balmages ('98)

John Barrick ('76)

Ken Bartee ('83)

Phil Bigler ('74, '76M)

Norlyn Bodkin

Casey Boutwell ('08)

Keith Brill ('77)

Shelby Brown ('83)

Bill Buck

Tom Carr ('84)

Ginjer Norris Clarke ('94)

Dan Cole ('87)

Cynthia Coolbaugh ('70)

Maj. Patrick Creed ('93)

Joe Damico ('76, '77M)

Kai Degner ('03, '05M)

Mark Dertzbaugh ('82)

Sue Dickson ('52)

Lt. Col. Mike Dillon ('81)

Tom Dingledine

Dr. Dan Downey ('75)

Linia Duncan ('07)

Curt Dvonch ('08)

Katy Elmore ('01M)

Ed Estes

Karen Evans

Richard Evans

Vanessa Evans ('93, '97M)

Judith Flohr

Bruce and Lois Cardarella Forbes ('64)

Marlon Foster ('82, '95M)

Joanne Gabbin

Mark Gabriele ('95)

Chris Gatesman ('94M)

Elizabeth Gauldin ('50)

Valerie Gibbs ('11)

Joann Grayson

Oris Griffin

Jazminia Griffith ('06)

Jennifer Griffith ('09)

David Grimm ('74)

Debbie Grimm ('74)

Donna Sizemore Hale ('81)

Charles Haley ('87)

Barbara Hall ('82)

Sarita Hartz ('02)

Kim Hartzler-Weakley ('00,'07M)

Derwin Henderson ('83)

Mike Hoss ('84)

Vida Huber (1937-2005)

Dan Irwin ('90)

Eric Johnson ('95)

Pamela Johnson

Jessica Kahn ('91)

Josh Kelaher ('11)

Shannon Kennan ('97M)

Katie King ('97)

Lesley Kipling ('99)

Karina Kline-Gabel ('92)

Margot Knight ('74)

Jonathan Koves ('05)

Susan E. Kruck ('94) ('95M)

David LaMotte ('90)

Emily Lewis Lee ('43)

Steve Leeolou ('78)

Gordon Leisch ('56, '65M)

Laurence Lewis ('08)

Gladys Kemp Lisanby ('49)

Nathan Lyon ('94)

Amy Macaleer ('01)

Gina MacDonald

Sonja Macys ('97)

Virginia Mann ('06)

Samier Mansur ('07)

Nate Marsh ('01)

Maj. Gen. Raymond Mason ('78)

Special Agent Charles T. May Jr. ('83)

Beth McGinnis ('00)

MeMe McKee ('99)

Amy McPherson ('83)

Challace McMillin

Matt Miller ('98)

Sushil Mittal

Marcy Morrison ('91)

Roger Myers

Tracey Neale ('89)

Dee Nilsen ('00)

John B. Noftsinger Jr. ('85)

Nursing Student Association

Mary Ellen Garber Otto ('58)

Ross Paterson ('90)

Erin Peacock ('07)

Michael Peretich ('06)

Joy Petway ('07)

J. Peter Pham

Janet Phillips ('88)

Laurie Tusing Phillips ('85)

Robert and Frances Plecker

Ryan Powanda ('09)

Jim and Julie Riley ('99P, '05P)

Don Rhymer ('82)

Dave Rizzo ('83)

Richard M. Roberds

Dick and Shirley Hanson ('56) Roberts

James Robinson

Inez Graybeal Roop ('35)

John Rothenberger ('88)

Bertie Martin Selvey ('58)

W. Raymond "Buddy" Showalter Jr. ('50) (1928-2007)

Mary Slade

Charles Douglas 'Doug' Smith ('93)

Wesli Spencer ('06)

Anne Stewart

Stanley Stewart ('78)

Diane Strawbridge ('80, '02M)

Judy Strickler ('60)

Debra Sutton

Elizabeth Swallow

Laura Taalman

Kimberly Taylor ('79)

Jason Teasley ('02)

Casey Templeton ('06)

Samantha Terry ('05) ('08M)

Bruce Thayer ('84)

Kathy Thomas ('78)

Mike Thomas ('76, '77M)

Jeff Tickle ('90)

Sean Tobin ('92)

Dennis Tracz ('78)

Kate Trammell

Christina Updike ('73)

Cathy Webb

Louise Wilkins-Haug ('76)

J. Craig Williams ('79)

Mandy Woodfield ('05)

Grace Wyngaard

Amy Porter Zacaroli ('88)

Gladys Kemp Lisanby ('49)

Founding president, Mississippi State Committee,
National Museum of Women in the Arts

Photo: Gladys Kemp Lisanby

Change is not always easy. Gladys and her family know that all too well -- Hurricane Katrina changed their lives forever. Her family's 100-year-old Pascagoula, Miss., home, which had withstood numerous coastal storms, was no match for Katrina. But then, Katrina was no match for the indomitable spirit of Gladys and other Gulf Coast inhabitants. When women artists in the region made the bold decision to turn heartache into artistry, it was a move wholeheartedly endorsed by Gladys, who is founding president of the Mississippi State Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts. The resulting book, Katrina: Mississippi Women Remember, bears witness to one of America's greatest natural disasters and the spirit of the survivors. Gladys has always nurtured the belief that art is essential to life. As she wrote in the book's foreword, "There is nothing so strong and powerful that it cannot be made better through the eye of the artist." In addition to her roles as a Navy wife, mother, community leader and successful businesswoman, Gladys has worked tirelessly to support and encourage women in the arts. She participated in the development of the National Museum of Women in the Arts, which is the only museum dedicated to women in the visual and performing arts. In 2007, the NMWA named Gladys a "Mississippi Treasure" in recognition of her contributions and dedication to the arts. And while she and her family, like so many other Gulf Coast residents, continue the hard work of recovery, Gladys is determined to adorn the face of change with beauty.

"The best and truest test of the human spirit [is to] absorb the hardest blows of life and respond in beauty."

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