Latest news with #OutstandingAlumniAward

Yahoo
03-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Rhodes graduates 275, first bachelor student
May 3—LIMA — One hundred and forty-five Rhodes State College students walked across the stage, and 275 graduated Saturday, including the school's first bachelor's program graduate. Julie Retcher, who has been a nurse for 20 years, said it was important to receive her bachelor of science in nursing degree to improve her skills, rather than advance her career. "This has been on my bucket list for a lot of years, so I'm really excited to be a part of the first class," Retcher, currently a quality assurance manager at Paulding County Hospital, said. "It was a degree that I wanted to complete to make me better at the position I'm presently in." Rhodes President Cynthia Spiers congratulated students and their families and introduced Outstanding Alumni Award recipient Marc Augsburger, as well as Circle of Excellence Alumni Corey Foster, Joel Harris and Michael Rex. "I am forever grateful for what Lima Technical College/Rhodes State College has provided for me, and my wish is you will find your education just as important," said Augsburger, a nurse and 1988 graduate. President and CEO of the Ohio Association of Community Colleges Avi Zaffini advised students to always say yes to opportunity in his commencement address "We are witnesses to our endurance and it is humbling to be in the same room as you," he said. "Sometimes the possibility that we will fail is what keeps us from succeeding and oftentimes these feelings are wrong. Each time, I said yes to an opportunity, I've been blessed by a great experience, and each moment of every day is an opportunity to prepare for difficult moments. "Trust that you can get through the moment you are in because you've done it before." Spiers said after the ceremony she was emotional thinking about how hard students worked to graduate and echoed Zaffini's words. "I work so much with the employers and hospitals and I know what they're looking for," she said. "When I see the students come across the stage, I see excellence for our communities and the world." Reach Jacob Espinosa at 567-242-0399. Featured Local Savings

Yahoo
21-03-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
Remembering the voice of Texas agriculture Horace McQueen
The voice of agriculture in Texas for more than three decades, Horace McQueen, 86, passed away Wednesday. For more than 36 years, thousands of East Texans started their day with McQueen greeting them with 'Pleasant good morning to you,' on his popular Farm and Ranch News on KTRE-TV in Lufkin and KLTV-TV in Tyler. McQueen was born July 3, 1938, in Crockett to Thomas F. and F.L. McQueen. In 1955, McQueen caught a calf during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo's calf scramble. The following year, he returned with that calf and was awarded Grand Champion Brahman Heifer. His heifer sold for $700 and those funds, plus another scholarship he earned, allowed him to enroll at Texas A&M University to study agricultural journalism. After graduation, McQueen served as an associate editor for the National Future Farmers American magazine in Alexandria, Virginia, from 1960 to 1961. He then moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he served as regional editor for Farm & Ranch Magazine. He was later hired by the Extension Service to be a field editor in West Texas. In 1964, he and fellow Texas A&M graduate Jack Tompkins started the Farm and Ranch News broadcasting on TV stations in Lubbock, Abilene, Midland/Odessa and Big Spring. In 1973, he moved back to East Texas and started broadcasting the Farm and Ranch News on KLTV-Channel 7 in Tyler and KTRE-Channel 9 in Lufkin. In addition to being a popular TV farm broadcaster, he's been an influential voice for agriculture in Washington and abroad. During his career, he met with four U.S. presidents and regularly traveled to Washington to speak with top economists and leaders. He also led several agricultural delegations to Europe, Australia and New Zealand. After selling his TV show in 2000, McQueen continued to inform East Texans with a morning radio show, and wrote a weekly newspaper column for several East Texas newspapers, including the Palestine Herald-Press. McQueen has been honored with many awards in his lifetime, including being named the Farm Broadcaster of the Year by the National Association of Farm Broadcasters, Man of the Year in Texas Agriculture by the Texas County Ag Agents Association, and being honored by Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences with their Outstanding Alumni Award in 2012. In 2023, McQueen received the Ralph W. Steen East Texan of the Year award. The Steen award honors individuals who play major roles in leadership and service to Deep East Texas. DETCOG President and Shelby County Judge Allison Harbison said Horace McQueen fit the bill perfectly. I was so sorry to hear of Horace's passing. He was a beloved institution in East Texas, and the most knowledgeable person I know about anything related to agriculture. Horace was a great ambassador for us around the world. And as he often said, 'if you eat, you're involved in agriculture.' After he retired from his television show, it was my pleasure to interact with him on a daily basis for several years on his morning radio show. He will be greatly missed, and I'm praying for Carole and his family. "In 2022 DETCOG honored Horace with our most prestigious award, the Ralph W. Steen East Texan of the Year Award," said Lonnie Hunt, executive director of DETCOG. "We were thrilled that Horace was able to attend the presentation. He was in a wheelchair, so we took a wireless mic and made the presentation at his table. Once he had that microphone in his hand, the old broadcaster instantly came out. He never missed a beat, regaling the audience with stories about past experiences, including a connection he had with Ralph Steen. It was a great day." McQueen and his wife Carole have four children. The McQueens, who lived in Grapeland, have raised cattle and timber and been involved in real estate as well as oil and gas production.