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Donald Taylor is Director of Lyon College Title III Thriving Scots Grant

Lyon College Executive Vice President and Provost Dr. Kurt Grafton has announced the appointment of Donald R. Taylor as director of the Title III Thriving Scots Grant, effective Jan. 2.

Taylor, now in his 24th year at Lyon, has held leadership roles across Advancement, Academics, Admissions and Human Resources. Since 2022, he has served as director of academic support and accessibility, overseeing student success programming and disability support services. He previously served as director of TRIO Student Support Services at Ozarka College in Melbourne and as director of human resources and Title IX coordinator at Cottey College in Nevada, Missouri.

A graduate of Newark High School, Taylor has lived in the Batesville area since 1986. He earned a Bachelor of Science from Lyon College and a Master of Education from the University of Arkansas. Beyond his work in higher education, Taylor has been active in the local arts and nonprofit community, serving on the boards of the Batesville Community Theater, the Batesville Area Arts Council and the Humane Society of Independence County. He currently serves on the board of the Independence County Historical Society. In 2014, he received Lyon College’s Outstanding Staff Member Award.

The Thriving Scots Title III Strengthening Institutions Program grant is a five-year federal initiative designed to expand Lyon College’s capacity to support first-year, first-generation, low-income and academically underprepared students. The project includes the creation of residential learning communities and the modernization of the college’s data systems to improve retention, persistence and graduation outcomes.

“I’ve spent my career helping students navigate their path to success, and this grant gives us the resources to reach more students, earlier and more effectively,” Taylor said. “Our commitment is simple: no student should feel invisible. Through the Title III initiative, we are building structures that ensure every student—regardless of background—has a place and a path to thrive.”

Taylor’s leadership in student success is widely recognized at Lyon College.

“Donald has a deep understanding of student success and a proven record of leadership across multiple areas of the college,” Dr. Grafton said. “I am confident that under his direction, the Thriving Scots initiative will make a meaningful difference in the lives of our students and strengthen the college’s ability to support all who come through our doors.”

Posted by Carol Langston at Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Blanchard Springs Caverns’ Early Story Lives on in Lyon College Archives

As state leaders move toward designating Blanchard Springs Caverns as Arkansas’s 53rd state park, a quieter but equally significant chapter of the caverns’ history rests in a climate-controlled room inside Lyon College’s Mabee-Simpson Library in Batesville.

Years before the state of Arkansas took steps to elevate Blanchard Springs Caverns toward state park status through a new memorandum of understanding with the U.S. Forest Service, two local explorers were crawling through the darkness armed with curiosity, carbide lamps and hand-drawn maps.

One of them, Batesville native Hail Bryant, would become a pioneer of northern Arkansas spelunking. With his exploration partner Hugh Shell, Bryant spent the 1950s and 1960s charting the hidden caves that honeycomb the Ozarks. Their work led the first professional expedition to explore and map the caverns that later became known as Blanchard Springs Caverns, now one of the state’s most visited natural wonders.

Bryant, who died in 2011 at age 83, was not only a trailblazer in caving but also a lifelong community leader. Born in Huff (Independence County) in 1927, he attended Batesville High School and studied at both Lyon College (then Arkansas College) and the University of Arkansas. A draftsman and business leader, he produced the blueprints for many homes built in the area, including the first all-electric home built in Arkansas.

He co-owned Bryant Lumber Company and helped develop numerous subdivisions around Batesville. An avid outdoorsman and amateur geologist, he explored hundreds of caves, collected Native American artifacts, fossils and geological specimens, and taught hunter safety for more than three decades.

Beginning in 1959, Bryant, his wife Faye, Shell and others began exploring Blanchard Springs Caverns, then known as One-Half Mile Cave. Their mapping, photographing and careful documentation convinced the U.S. Forest Service to develop it as a tourist attraction.

Today, the Mabee-Simpson Library preserves Bryant’s legacy in the Hail Bryant Collection, a trove of photographs, slides, maps, newspaper clippings and videotaped interviews documenting decades of cave discovery. The collection also includes cave inspection reports and Bryant and Shell’s hand-drawn map of Half-Mile Cave. Nancy S. Griffith, retired archives and special collections librarian at Lyon College, completed processing the collection in 1992. Kim Halpain and Judy Blackwell finalized detailed indexing and the website finding aid in 2002.

For some, the history preserved in the archives is also deeply personal.

“Growing up in Batesville, we lived next door to Faye, Hail and their son, Dale, for several years,” said Skip Rutherford of Little Rock, a member of the Lyon College Board of Trustees. “I remember hearing Hail tell stories about how magnificent these caverns were. I am grateful that Lyon College has preserved and documented his historic collection.”

The reach of Bryant’s work extended well beyond exploration and into scientific understanding, preservation and even Cold War-era civil defense planning.

“The cave inspection reports produced by Hail Bryant, Hugh Shell and their compatriots were an especially useful resource in my own cave research,” said Dr. David Thomas, W.D. Bryan Professor of Biology and adviser for Cavers Of the Batesville Region of Arkansas Grotto (COBRA Grotto) at Lyon College. “The group surveyed approximately 200 caves and mines in Arkansas to find out how many would be useful as fallout shelters. Keep in mind that this was right around the same time as the Cuban missile crisis.”

“Fortunately, nuclear war did not happen, and most caves would have been poor shelters,” Dr. Thomas said. “What did result was a much deeper understanding of caves in the region. I spent my 2010 sabbatical compiling and mapping those reports and preserving them in digital form.” Thomas’s digitized copies of Bryant and Shell’s cave inspection files are housed on CD in the Mabee-Simpson Library at Lyon.

That spirit of research and education continues today through Dr. Thomas and COBRA Grotto, an official chapter of the National Speleological Society that engages in scientific, recreational and educational caving throughout the Ozarks. The group meets at 7 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month during the school year in Room 16 of the Derby Center for Science and Mathematics at Lyon College. Meetings are open to the public.

As Arkansas moves toward formally establishing Blanchard Springs State Park, the Mabee-Simpson Library’s archives serve as a reminder that the caverns’ future is rooted in the curiosity and persistence of explorers who mapped its depths long before it became a tourist destination.

The Hail Bryant Collection is open to researchers, students and the public. The full collection can be accessed online at https://lyon.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16642coll2/search, and the primary box of original materials is available for in-person study by appointment.

Researchers may request access to the physical collection by contacting Kassandra Meyer, resource sharing librarian, at Kassandra.Meyer1@Lyon.edu to schedule an appointment.

Thomas’s digitized copies of Bryant and Shell’s cave inspection files are also housed on CD in the library at Lyon College.

Lyon College also maintains an extensive collection of geological resources on the third floor of the Derby Center for Science and Mathematics, which is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Above: Hail Bryant stands along a cave wall wearing caving gear and a headlamp during an exploration of an Arkansas cave.

1. Hail Bryantposes atop rocks near a flowing stream at the entrance to an Arkansas cave.

1. Hugh Shellposes beneath stalactites inside an Arkansas cave.

Posted by Carol Langston at Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Lyon College to Hold Fall 2025 Commencement Saturday; Dr. James W. Carr to Deliver Address

Lyon College will celebrate its fall 2025 commencement at 10 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 20, in Sloan Auditorium of the Brown Fine Arts Building on the Lyon College campus, 2300 Highland Rd. A livestream of the ceremony will be available at https://youtube.com/live/FbILntKDZ3Q?feature=share.

During the ceremony, Lyon College will award its first-ever master’s degrees — the Master of Arts in Teaching — marking a significant milestone in the college’s academic history.

The ceremony will begin with a processional by the Lyon College Pipe Band, led by Pipe Major James Bell, followed by the Class of 2026, staff, faculty, emeriti faculty, and administrators and the official party.

Dr. Terrell Tebbetts, Martha Heasley Cox Chair in American Literature, will open the ceremony. The presenting of colors will be led by Jerry Bowling, Lyon College ROTC military science instructor, followed by the national anthem performed by Vera Richardson, ’29. The invocation and benediction will be offered by Student Government Association President Zoe Papazoglou, ’26.

Dr. Melissa P. Taverner, president of Lyon College, will offer welcome and comments. Reflections from the senior class will be given by William Litton, ’26, senior class president. Litton, of Quitman and North Little Rock, is a political science major with a pre-law focus and a minor in history. A student-athlete on academic and football scholarships, he has served on the Honor Council, the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee and the Student Government Association, and has been a residence assistant and treasurer of the D&D Club. He interned this summer with the Arkansas Attorney General’s Office and has earned recognition as a semifinalist for the William V. Campbell Award and as a recipient of the SCAC Elite 19 award.

The commencement address, titled “What the World Needs Now,” will be delivered by Dr. James W. Carr, president and chairman of Highland Home Holdings. Dr. Carr retired in 2019 after 25 years as executive vice president and professor of business at Harding University. In 2005, he was appointed by President George W. Bush and confirmed by the U.S. Senate to the National Security Education Board. He currently chairs the Arkansas Higher Education Coordinating Board and previously served on the Arkansas Forestry Commission. A two-time recipient of the Martin Luther King Commission’s gold medallion for promoting racial harmony, Dr. Carr has served on numerous corporate and civic boards, including World Christian Broadcasting, the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce, Comsafe, the Quapaw Council of the Boy Scouts of America and First Community Bank. A native of Tallahassee, Florida, Dr. Carr holds a Doctor of Philosophy from Florida State University.

The alumni engagement charge will be delivered by Rachel Golden, ’06, alumni council president. Musical selections will be provided by the Lyon College Chamber Choir, directed by Dr. Bethany Neese, with Dr. Skye Hart, ’06, on piano.

An honorary degree will be presented by Victor Werley, ’03, chair of the Board of Trustees. The honoree, Henry L. Nichols, is a longtime Arkansas business leader and devoted supporter of Lyon College. Over his career, Nichols led several successful enterprises, including Central and Southern Companies, Central Records Services, Central/Terminal Distribution Centers and Central Cold Storage, and served as chairman of the board for Farmers and Merchants Bank of Des Arc. He served on the Lyon College Board of Trustees from 1989 to 1997 and played a key role on the steering committee for Fulfilling the Promise: The Campaign for Lyon College, which raised more than $90 million. Alongside his wife, Carolyn, Nichols helped establish a lasting legacy of philanthropy benefiting initiatives such as the Fulbright and Clinton professorships, Young House and the Nichols Travel Program.

The presentation of the Class of 2026 will be made by Dr. Anthony K. Grafton, executive vice president for academic affairs and provost, followed by the conferral of degrees by Werley and the presentation of degrees by Dr. Taverner, Dr. Grafton and Dr. Tebbetts. The ceremony will conclude with the singing of the alma mater and a recessional by the Lyon College Pipe Band. The college mace will be borne by Dr. Fonzie Geary, faculty assembly president and professor of theatre.

Lyon College will also celebrate the fall 2025 baccalaureate at 5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 19, in Sloan Auditorium of the Brown Fine Arts Building. The service will recognize the newest graduating Scots during an evening of tradition, community and celebration. A livestream of the baccalaureate will be available at https://youtube.com/live/WkL7W6Q1y_A?feature=share.

Posted by Carol Langston at Sunday, December 14, 2025

Lyon College Researcher Explores Link Between Oral Health and Alzheimer’s Disease

New research from the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine suggests that maintaining good oral health may play a far greater role in preventing Alzheimer’s disease and other chronic conditions than previously understood.

Dr. Josh Landers, chair of biomedical sciences and assistant professor at the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine, was the lead author of “Oral Health as a Determinant of Alzheimer’s Disease,” a narrative review published in the journal Physiologia. The paper synthesizes emerging evidence that bacteria associated with periodontal disease can contribute to neuroinflammation, blood–brain barrier disruption and vascular injury — all key components in the development of Alzheimer’s disease.

“This research reinforces what many in the dental and medical fields have suspected for years,” Dr. Landers said. “The mouth is not separate from the rest of the body. Chronic inflammation that begins in the gums doesn’t just stop there. It can enter the bloodstream, travel to the brain and impact long-term neurological health.”

The narrative review includes contributions from two Lyon College School of Dental Medicine students and three faculty members — the first published work from the new dental school to feature student researchers. Dr. Landers said the school recently received approval from the Lyon College Institutional Review Board to begin two studies involving students, marking an important milestone for LCSDM’s growing research program. “We’re excited to see our students engage in this level of scientific inquiry so early in their training,” he said.

Dr. Stefanie Leacock, director of research at the dental school, said the publication reflects the institution’s commitment to building a robust scientific culture from the ground up.

“Research is woven into the fabric of our program,” Dr. Leacock said. “Seeing our students co-author peer-reviewed work in the school’s first year is extraordinary, and it’s just the beginning. Our students are getting hands-on experience and contributing to research questions that matter for the future of oral-systemic health and dental education.”

The review highlights a growing body of studies showing that pathogens such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, commonly found in periodontal disease, have been identified in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. Research cited in the review also shows that individuals with poor oral health may have more than twice the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

“While we are still uncovering the exact mechanisms, the evidence is compelling,” Dr. Landers said. “Good oral hygiene, including brushing, interdental cleaning and routine periodontal care, isn’t just about preventing cavities. It may also play a role in reducing disease burden later in life.”

Dr. Burke Soffe, founding dean of the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine, said the study underscores the school’s mission to advance integrated, preventative health care.

“Dr. Landers’ work shows how dentistry fits squarely into the broader health conversation,” Dr. Soffe said. “We have long understood the oral-systemic connection, but this research brings sharper focus and urgency to that relationship. It is further proof that dentists, physicians and specialists must work together if we are serious about preventing chronic disease.”

The review also explores practical strategies that patients can adopt to reduce inflammation and bacterial spread, including scaling and root planing, nutrition practices and emerging tools such as salivary diagnostics and AI-supported risk assessments.

“The paper presents a series of actionable steps that the students intend to share with the local community to support oral health literacy outreach,” Dr. Landers said. “Our goal is to put actionable science into the hands of providers and patients,” Dr. Landers said. “Preventing oral inflammation today could mean a healthier brain decades from now.”

The Lyon College School of Dental Medicine, located in Little Rock, opened in summer 2025 and is Arkansas’ first dental school. The institution emphasizes interdisciplinary research, rural oral health access and patient-centered clinical education.

To read the paper, visit https://www.mdpi.com/2673-9488/5/4/49.

For more information about the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine, visit lyoninstitute.com.

Posted by Carol Langston at Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Lyon College Dental Students Collect More Than 2,300 Food Items for Our House

Students in the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine’s Academy of General Dentistry chapter collected 2,350 food items for Our House in a service project that far exceeded their original goal, chapter president Terry Miller said.

Miller, a member of the dental school’s inaugural class, said the idea for the food drive grew from the group’s desire to make a meaningful contribution to Central Arkansas as the state’s first dental school.

“As future healthcare providers, we felt a responsibility to support the well-being of the broader community – not just in the clinic, but in ways that address basic needs like food security,” Miller said. “Our House does vital work for families experiencing homelessness and hardship, and partnering with them felt like a perfect opportunity for our student body to live out the school’s values of service, compassion and community engagement.”

Once the drive began, Miller said participation quickly grew thanks to the group’s motivation and a friendly class competition. Students also solicited donations from family members and hometown supporters, helping the total climb rapidly.

“We received incredible encouragement from faculty and local dentists – especially Dr. Brian Skinner of Skinner Family Dentistry in Sherwood, who generously donated Visa gift cards for our top contributors,” Miller said. “His support added a fun level of excitement and definitely helped push us past our original goal.”

The donation will help strengthen resources available to families served by Our House.

“We hope this donation eases some of the burden on Our House as they continue their essential work – especially during a season when the need is often at its highest,” Miller said.

Miller said top contributors included inaugural class members Brianna Carmony, who serves as chapter treasurer, Noah Pruitt and Sarah Thompson going “above and beyond.”

“Brianna contributed nearly a quarter of our entire total on her own,” he said. “Noah showed up with multiple truckloads of donations, each one bigger than the last. And Sarah brought in more boxes of ramen noodles than I’ve ever seen in one place.”

Miller said AGD executive officers — Vice President Erika Bittinger, Secretary Ravdeep Warar, Membership Engagement Chair Nour El Ammar, D1 Representative Karlee Carmony and Brianna Carmony — helped promote the drive, organize donations and keep classmates motivated.

Dr. Burke Soffe, founding dean of the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine, said the initiative demonstrated the values the school seeks to instill in future dental professionals.

“This project reflects the heart of who we want our students to be — compassionate, community-minded leaders who understand that dentistry is about more than clinical skill,” Dr. Soffe said. “Their dedication to serving families in need shows the kind of impact they will make throughout their careers.”

“One of the biggest takeaways was seeing how powerful it is when our class comes together with a shared purpose,” Miller said. “It reminded us that our role as future dentists goes beyond clinical care — we are part of a community, and we have a responsibility to support it.”

Above: Students in the Lyon College School of Dental Medicine’s Academy of General Dentistry chapter collected 2,350 food items for Our House in a service project that surpassed their original goal. Pictured from left are Brianna Carmony, treasurer; Karlee Carmony, D1 representative; Nour El Ammar, membership engagement chair; Erika Bittinger, vice president; Terry Miller, president; and Ravdeep Warar, secretary.

Posted by Carol Langston at Friday, December 5, 2025
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