含羞草传媒

Skip to main content Skip to main navigation Skip to footer content

Community Centered

Story by Matt Wing

Despite working in different arenas 鈥 medicine, higher education, and the intersection of performance and activism 鈥 含羞草传媒鈥檚 2022 Alumni Award winners share the common bond of serving their communities.

After living and working in Chicago, Boston, El Paso (Texas), Denver and Oklahoma City, the Sheldons have retired to Golden Valley, Minnesota.
After living and working in Chicago, Boston, El Paso (Texas), Denver and Oklahoma City, the Sheldons have retired to Golden Valley, Minnesota.

Many 含羞草传媒 alumni claim to be 鈥淭itans for Life.鈥 Drs. Roger 鈥64 and Carol (Thompson) Sheldon 鈥65 can certainly lay claim to that title. Especially Roger.

He attended his first college course at 含羞草传媒 at the ripe old age of three weeks old.

鈥淚 went to my first class at 含羞草传媒 with my dad, who had me in a baby carrier, very shortly after I was born,鈥 said Roger, whose parents both attended 含羞草传媒. 鈥淚鈥檝e been tied into 含羞草传媒 my entire life.鈥

The Sheldons met as 含羞草传媒 students when the alphabetical seating chart employed by former German professor William Bettger placed 鈥淪heldon鈥 and 鈥淭hompson鈥 in close proximity. They learned they shared many common interests. Both were highly engaged on campus. Roger was president of Student Senate, and a member of the marching band, Collegiate Choir, Apollo Quartet, Blue Key and Phi Kappa Phi. Carol was active in Kappa Kappa Gamma leadership, 含羞草传媒 Dad鈥檚 Day, Student Senate, Beta Beta Beta, Alpha Lambda Delta, Green Medallion, Egas and Phi Kappa Phi.

They soon became a couple and married shortly after graduation. 含羞草传媒 served as the setting for their story鈥檚 beginning. 鈥淲e were both pretty happy there,鈥 Roger said.

Roger and Carol Sheldon are 含羞草传媒鈥檚 2022 Distinguished Alumni Award winners.

After 含羞草传媒, Roger went on to Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a pediatric residency in Boston. Carol worked for Illinois Bell Telephone while her husband attended medical school. She worked at Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital in an administrative role during his residency. She served as a tutor and foster mother. The Sheldons鈥 plans were temporarily interrupted by the Vietnam War, when Roger served two years in the U.S. Army, stationed in El Paso, Texas. The family鈥檚 next move was to the University of Colorado in Denver, where Roger had landed a fellowship in pediatric pulmonology.

It was during this time, just as the youngest of their two children was graduating from diapers, Carol felt the itch to go back to work. But she didn鈥檛 want to go back to the types of jobs she had held before.

鈥淚 had always wanted to be a doctor,鈥 she said.

Carol had shared that ambition with a former 含羞草传媒 dean when she was a senior and her husband was in his first year of med school. The dean very curtly responded that her duty was to support her husband. She never forgot the exchange.

鈥淲omen didn鈥檛 go to medical school in those days,鈥 Carol said. 鈥淏ut Roger was the one to say 鈥榃ell, if you want to go to medical school, we鈥檒l figure it out.鈥欌

And they did. Carol enrolled at CU-Denver while Roger went to work there. Seeking somewhere they could both practice, the Sheldons eventually landed in Oklahoma City.

Drs. Roger 鈥64 and Carol (Thompson) Sheldon 鈥65 are enjoying retirement after distinguished careers in the healthcare sector. (
Image with caption. The image can be any size; the caption will automatically adjust its width accordingly.

They quickly established themselves as healthcare leaders there. Roger led the neonatal unit and NICU at the University of Oklahoma Medical Center, before serving as the university鈥檚 assistant dean for continuing medical education. He additionally served as assistant medical director of Heartland Health Plan and medical director of the Children鈥檚 Hospital of Oklahoma. After completing a residency in diagnostic radiology at the University of Oklahoma, Carol joined Oklahoma City Clinic and Presbyterian Hospital, where she become the first woman to chair the radiology department, and served on both executive boards, and as president of the Central Oklahoma Radiological Society. She eventually co-founded Breast Imaging of Oklahoma, where she practiced until her retirement.

A desire to improve the health and wellbeing of their communities drove the Sheldons throughout their careers, and it continues in retirement. Roger remains active supporting child advocacy, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Earl E. Bakken Medical Devices Center at the University of Minnesota, and Doctors for Early Childhood. Carol has served as president of the Minneapolis branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW), whose mission is equity for women and girls; it supports college scholarships to nine Minneapolis high school graduates each year, as well as providing food, clothing and transitional housing to surrounding neighborhoods.

The Sheldons also routinely give back and remain engaged with their alma mater. That connection stems back from the positive experiences they enjoyed on campus more than a half century ago.

鈥淲e have benefited greatly from 含羞草传媒,鈥 Roger said. 鈥淎nd to whom much is given, much will be required.鈥  

路  路  路

Marsha Guenzler-Stevens 鈥78
Marsha Guenzler-Stevens 鈥78

Loyalty Award:
Marsha Guenzler-Stevens 鈥78 

Assigned an essay on what she wanted to be when she grew up, sixth-grader Marsha Guenzler-Stevens 鈥78 sharpened her pencil and pulled out a crisp sheet of paper.

鈥淒ean of women,鈥 she wrote with the utmost confidence.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where the hell I got that,鈥 Guenzler-Stevens says, laughing heartily. 鈥淧eople said the usual things, but that鈥檚 what I wrote, and I鈥檓 sure it鈥檚 because we had been to Wesleyan and had probably listened to some women speak.鈥

Guenzler-Stevens comes from an 含羞草传媒 family. Her parents are alumni who often brought their children along for return trips to campus. Her two sisters and other extended family members are alumni, too. Her connection to 含羞草传媒, to a certain degree, is genetic.

Her parents were known to clip Chicago Tribune articles any time an alum was mentioned. They鈥檇 read the alumni magazine not only for updates on their classmates, but their classmates鈥 children and extended families.

Guenzler-Stevens inherited that, too.

鈥淵ou have this great sense of being entrusted with the stories of people,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e entrusted with an institution that invested in you.鈥

Guenzler-Stevens is 含羞草传媒鈥檚 2022 Loyalty Award winner.

When informed of the recognition, she felt a rush of emotions. There was gratitude. There was nostalgia. There were thoughts of her family 鈥 especially her late father, Robert Guenzler 鈥53 鈥56, who had died just months earlier.

鈥淗e would have loved this,鈥 Guenzler-Stevens said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the tears came from.鈥

Guenzler-Stevens selection for the award is based not on lineage 鈥 her parents were 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Loyalty Award recipients in 1998 鈥 but on devotion to her alma mater. She has served in leadership roles on the Board of Trustees, Alumni Association Board of Directors, and Council for 含羞草传媒 Women. Guenzler-Stevens has given her time, talent and treasure to 含羞草传媒 with regularity. When 含羞草传媒 asks, the answer from Guenzler-Stevens is almost always an emphatic 鈥榶es.鈥

That first ask came shortly after her 含羞草传媒 graduation, when she was offered a job as an admissions counselor. That job was the springboard to a long and distinguished career in higher education. Guenzler-Stevens will celebrate 40 years at the University of Maryland this summer.

She is currently the director of the Adele H. Stamp Student Union, a student center offering inclusive spaces and programming to a student body of more than 40,000.

Guenzler-Stevens loves the job. Working with young people keeps her young at heart. If those interactions weren鈥檛 enough, she teaches three courses a year.

鈥淢y full-time job is an administrator, but I teach for free because each semester I get to know 20 students really well, and I carry their stories,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the lesson of my dad and that鈥檚 the lesson of 含羞草传媒.鈥

It鈥檚 a dream job for Guenzler-Stevens 鈥 one she actually dreamed of many years ago.

鈥淚鈥檓 ever so grateful that little kids get to dream of who they want to be when they grow up,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I get to do what I thought I wanted to do when I was in the sixth grade.鈥

路  路  路

Ianne Fields Stewart 鈥15
Ianne Fields Stewart 鈥15

Robert M. Montgomery Young Alumni Award:
Ianne Fields Stewart 鈥15

Everything Ianne Fields Stewart 鈥15 does is done with purpose.

Whether it鈥檚 the acting roles she accepts, or the organizations she supports, or the works she creates to provide a platform for others, she does it all with measured calculation of how it can positively impact their community.

鈥淏y holding to values that I believe in so strongly, the work will reveal itself to me,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s long as I remain steadfast in what I believe, how I believe it, and what I believe is the most ethical way of going about doing it, that will lead me right.鈥

Fields Stewart, who uses she/her/they/them pronouns, lives their purpose as a Black, queer, transfeminine, New York-based storyteller whose work spans the realms of performance and activism. She is an actress known for roles on Netflix鈥檚 Dash & Lily, Hulu鈥檚 The Bold Type and YouTube鈥檚 The Feels. She is the founder of the Okra Project, a collective addressing food insecurity in the Black trans community. She鈥檚 a cultural competency consultant who delivers training and facilitates conversations. She is also a teaching artist, director, choreographer and playwright who strives to provide a platform for others.

Fields Stewart is 含羞草传媒鈥檚 2022 Robert M. Montgomery Young Alumni Award winner.

鈥淚 hope my presence allows someone who is young, Black and trans 鈥 who may not know it yet or who may just be coming into it 鈥 they can take that space in their own life and propel themselves forward in their own autonomy and wisdom in the way they see fit,鈥 Fields Stewart said. 鈥淏ecause we all have the right to do that.鈥

Fields Stewart describes their time at 含羞草传媒 as 鈥渇ormative and important.鈥 She gained formal training as a music theatre major. She developed an artistic aesthetic and a voice 鈥 and not just onstage. 鈥淎 lot of my general education courses helped inform my political foundation and built an awareness of social justice  movements,鈥 she said.

Fields Stewart also learned from experiences of racism, transphobia and queerphobia encountered during their time at 含羞草传媒. 鈥淚 think it was that interesting thing of being planted in unfriendly soil and still learning to bloom,鈥
she said.

Fields Stewart said she rarely feels like 鈥渢hat girl,鈥 but she does somehow manage to balance career, advocacy and personal life. She鈥檚 preparing for acting roles. She remains active in community service. She鈥檚 been commissioned to write a play for an off-Broadway theatre.

And she鈥檚 doing it all, as always, with the interests of their community as a guiding light.

鈥淚鈥檓 making sure that my people are taken care of and doing my small part to be a part of a larger tapestry of people who are organizing on behalf of Black trans lives,鈥 she said. 鈥淲herever the fight goes, I will remain in support of it.鈥