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Five
Will Receive U of M Alumni Association's Highest Honor March
22
For release: Mar. 5, 2003
For press information, contact
Gabrielle Maxey
Five
individuals will receive the University of Memphis Alumni
Association's highest honor at a gala March 22 at The Peabody.
Frank Flautt and Allie Prescott III will be recognized as
Distinguished Alumni; Gene Cashman will receive the Distinguished
Friend Award; and Eric Jerome Dickey and the late Christie
Watts Kelly will be named Outstanding Young Alumni.
A
reception begins at 6:30 p.m., followed by the dinner and
program. The evening also will feature a silent auction. Proceeds
benefit scholarships and programs of the Alumni Association.
Flautt
is president of Flautt Inc. and co-founder of Florida-based
Sandcastle Resorts. Formerly with Holiday Inn, Flautt has
been instrumental in fundraising efforts for the Kemmons Wilson
School of Hospitality and Resort Management. Under his leadership,
the school has raised more than $2.8 million in pledges. A
loyal booster of the Tiger Clubs, he also spearheaded a $2.5
million effort for the Athletic Office Building addition.
Prescott
was president and CEO of the Memphis Redbirds AAA baseball
team from 1997 to 2001. He has been a practicing attorney
and has served in several community service roles, including
executive director of the Metropolitan Inter-Faith Association
(MIFA) from 1989 to 1997. Allie Prescott & Partners manages
the executive and administrative functions for the YES (Youth
Education through Sports) Foundation.
Cashman
is president of LHS Inc. (formerly Le Bonheur Health Systems),
a grant-making organization formed after the 1995 merger of
Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center and Methodist Healthcare.
He was a leading force behind a $5 million grant from LHS
Inc. that created a partnership to develop educational programs
for Methodist and Le Bonheur employees at The U of M.
Dickey
is the author of popular novels featuring romance gone awry.
His books include Thieves' Paradise, Between Lovers,
Cheaters, Milk in My Coffee, Liar's Game,
Sister, Sister and Friends and Lovers. After
graduating from The U of M, Dickey landed a job as a software
designer in the aerospace industry. He also worked as a middle
school teacher, actor and standup comedian before becoming
a full-time novelist.
Kelly,
a devoted wife and mother, author and yoga enthusiast, died
from injuries she sustained in a car accident last November.
She was active with the U of M Campus School, where her daughter
Arabella is a student, and the Barbara K. Lipman Early Childhood
School, attended by her son Graham. Kelly had been a yoga
instructor and had written or co-authored six books on parenting
and health. She was a co-founder of the Memphis chapter of
Attachment Parenting International.
For
reservation information, call 901-678-5314.
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