Bill & Nancy Doemel's Retirement Celebration
The College celebrated the long and distinguished careers of Bill and Nancy Doemel on Wednesday. Bill served the College for more than 40 years as a biologist, director of the computer center, and most recently as the director of operations for Trippet Hall and the Center of Inquiry in the Liberal Arts. Nancy served the Advancement Office as grant writer and Senior Advancement Officer, and for more than a decade directed Wabash's overseas program in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Bill Doemel is greeted by his long-time friend Aus Brooks, who recruited Bill to teach biology at Wabash in 1969.
Bill said to the large crowd gathered to honor him, "I have had an exciting time because of you. You have made each day special, a new opportunity, as I like to say. And every day has been different. I’ve met such wonderful people who’ve had so many great ideas that just energized me."
Nancy and Bill Doemel have not only been devoted to Wabash for the last 40 years, they have been dynamic members of the community. Bill has served on a number of boards, and recently completed two years as president of the Christian Nursing Service. He's now working with to establish the Montgomery County Free Clinic. Nancy has been a long-time board member for the Montgomery County Community Foundation; her MCCF colleagues Cheryl Keim and Ann Malott helped celebrate her retirement. (Not pictured from MCCF is Kelly Taylor.)
Dean of the College Gary Phillips paid tribute to Bill Doemel. He said, "Your teaching wasn’t just focused on the students. I remember the day I was walking home and we’d been doing some work on the Lilly Grant, and Bill came up to me and said, 'You have to understand that this is about students!'
"He did this with his index finger in my chest. I remember not only the truth and power of that but also the fact that you help hold people and the college accountable for the things that matter the most, in the classroom with your teaching colleagues, with your administrative colleagues, with the alums who come back and acknowledge not just that you’re here, but that you have continued all these years to hold the mission of the place in your heart and make us mindful of it."
Dean for Advancement Joe Emmick paid tribute to Nancy Doemel. He said, "One of the things I appreciate, and I know our colleagues appreciate, is the way in which Nancy thinks broadly about our work. She’s constantly thinking about how to pull together this alumnus with this opportunity, how we can broaden the reach of our grants to involve people across campus and involve our alumni. It’s that kind of reach — that kind of global thinking about Advancement — that I think has been Nancy's deeper value to the College over these past 30 years."