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Board of Trustees, 2025-26

Patricia Thrower Barmeyer ’68

Atlanta, Georgia

Patricia Barmeyer

Patricia Thrower Barmeyer was a history major at Hollins and spent a year in Paris on Hollins Abroad. She is a recipient of the Hollins Distinguished Alumnae Award.

Barmeyer went straight from Hollins to Harvard Law School, where she graduated cum laude. She clerked for two years for a federal district court judge in Atlanta and then began a fifty-year career as an environmental attorney. She worked first for the State of Georgia Attorney General’s office, where she litigated landmark environmental issues, and had an argument in the United States Supreme Court. In 1990 Barmeyer joined the firm of King & Spalding. She was repeatedly ranked by Chambers USA Leading Lawyers for Business as the top environmental lawyer in Georgia. She is a Fellow of the American College of Environmental Lawyers.

While in private practice Barmeyer served on boards of legal services organizations, including the Georgia Legal Services Foundation and the Atlanta Volunteer Lawyers Foundation, and on the Piedmont Park Conservancy, Trees Atlanta, and Ossabaw Island Foundation Boards.

Since retiring in 2023 Barmeyer has enjoyed spending more time with family and friends. She resides in Atlanta and has children and grandchildren in Athens, GA and Washington, D.C. Barmeyer is currently on the Institute for Georgia Environmental Leadership Board, and the Trust for Public Land Georgia Advisory Board.


C. LaRoy Brantley F’15

Boston, Massachusetts

LaRoy Brantley

Brantley joined Meketa Investment Group in 2017 and has over 20 years’ experience in the investment industry, in the role of consultant and portfolio manager. A Managing Principal at the firm, his advisory work includes investment policy design, asset allocation modeling, portfolio construction, investment manager due diligence, and fund performance evaluation, among other responsibilities. Brantley serves as a Co-Chair of the firm’s Emerging and Diverse Manager Committee and as a member of the Investment Policy, Endowment & Foundation, and Diversity Leadership Committees.

Prior to joining the firm, Brantley was a Managing Director at Cambridge Associates for 15 years, where he provided investment guidance to endowments, foundations, pension funds, and high net worth families. Before working at Cambridge Associates, Brantley worked as an investment banker at Adams, Harkness, & Hill helping to structure capital market deals for technology companies. Before attending business school, he spent seven years as a Classics instructor at the Roxbury Latin School. Brantley has served for over two decades on the Investment Committee for the $100 billion Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management’s (“Mass PRIM) pension portfolio. He also completed a decade‑long term of service as Treasurer and on the Board of Trustees for the Edward Brooke Charter Schools located in Boston, Massachusetts.

Brantley holds a B.A. in Classical Languages from Amherst College (1988), and an M.B.A. in Finance from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management (1999).


Lucy Davis Haynes ’84

Nashville, Tennessee

Lucy Davis Haynes

Lucy Davis Haynes began her marketing career in Memphis at Schering Plough and later The Promus Companies (Hampton Inn) in brand management. She moved to Nashville in 1994 and worked in sales and sales training for Worth New York for 28 years. She told the Vanderbilt Owen School of Business for an article in 2009 that the “sales job (was meant) to be something of a timeout, a way to keep her hand in the business game as she relocated to Nashville while pregnant with twins.” More than 30 years later, she is still selling. Davis Haynes currently works as a stylist for three luxury fashion companies (Lafayette 148 New York, Anatomie, and shortyLOVE) in the luxury direct to consumer market. She received a B.A. in economics from Hollins and her M.B.A. from Vanderbilt University in 1988.

Davis Haynes has served on the Alumnae Board two separate terms (1998-2000, 2007-2008). She currently sits on the Nashville Public Library Foundation Board, the Nashville Public Radio Board, and the Montgomery Bell Academy Board of Trust. Past volunteer roles include: MBA Mother’s Club President, Antiques and Garden Show Chair, Frist Gala Chair, Junior League Show House Chair, and the Women’s Fund Board. Davis Haynes and her husband Jeff live in Nashville and have four adult children, Campbell, Benjamin, Furman, and Carrie.


Clifford Fleet III F’44, ’67, ’01

Richmond, Virginia

Clifford Fleet III – Hollins Board of Trustees

Clifford Fleet III is president and CEO and the Colin G. and Nancy N. Campbell distinguished presidential chair of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. A corporate executive, teacher, community volunteer, board member and consultant, he has enjoyed a broad and deep career with leadership roles across a variety of disciplines and organizational sizes. In addition to his role at Colonial Williamsburg, Fleet teaches at William & Mary, is chair of the William & Mary Foundation and co-chair of the Hampton Roads Executive Roundtable and is a board member of the Omohundro Institute and the Virginia Business Higher Education Council.

Previously, Fleet served as President of the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation and as President and CEO of several companies. A native of Virginia, he earned four academic degrees from William & Mary, including graduate degrees in history, business administration, and law. Fleet also earned his Master of Education from the University of Virginia.


Sandra Frazier ’94

Louisville, Kentucky

Sandra Frazier '94 - Hollins Board of Trustees

Sandra Frazier has over 30 years of public relations, public affairs and community relations/investor relations experience at both the corporate, non-for-profit and agency levels.  In 2005, she founded Tandem Public Relations, a boutique public relations and communications firm.  Tandem’s clients include Fortune 500 corporations, non-profit organizations, public institutions, and smaller businesses.

She served on the Hollins Alumnae Board from 1999 – 2002 and served on the Board of Trustees previously from 2003 – 2018. Frazier serves as a director of The Glenview Trust Company, and previously served as a director of Brown-Forman Corporation and Commonwealth Bank and Trust. She currently serves on the Boston University Board of Trustees, is a trustee of the James Graham Brown Foundation, the executive committee for Impetus for a Better Louisville, and the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.

Frazier is a past participant in the year-long Rockefeller Foundation Philanthropy Workshop and Next Generation Leadership Program. She is a past recipient of the Greater Louisville Inc. Gold Cup, the Lyman T. Johnson Distinguished Leadership Award from the Louisville Central Community Center, and she was honored by Boston University’s College of Communication as a distinguished alumnus for service and leadership to profession.  In 2018, Frazier was inducted into the Junior Achievement Kentucky Business Hall of Fame, has been named as an inaugural member of Business First’s “Power 50,” and was recognized by the Kentucky Gazette in their 2022 list of Notable Women in Kentucky Politics and Government. 

A native of Louisville, Frazier has graduate degrees from Boston University in addition to her undergraduate degree from Hollins.


Ellen Goldsmith-Vein ’84

Los Angeles, California

Ellen Goldsmith-Vein

ProducerEllen Goldsmith-Vein is the founder and CEO of The Gotham Group, a global entertainment company anchored by its literary management practice representing some of the most prolific, award-winning writers and directors in television, film, publishing, journalism, and content creation.  The Gotham Group, which was founded by Goldsmith-Vein 30 years ago, has expanded into developing and producing films and series based on universally recognized and award-winning intellectual property, and remains the only major management/production company in Hollywood owned solely by a woman. Gotham retains one of the largest rosters of established writers, producers, creators, directors, and artists from around the world working in film and television today. 

Goldsmith-Vein’s producing credits include films such as The Spiderwick Chronicles, the Stargirl franchise at Disney, The Maze Runner film trilogy, the NAACP and AAFCA award-winning Wendell & Wild, the Clint Eastwood-directed Juror #2, and the anticipated Fall 2025 release Deliver Me From Nowhere, detailing the making of Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska album.  Her television and streaming credits include the multiple Emmy® Award-winning Disney+ series Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Roku’s The Spiderwick Chronicles, WondLa on Apple TV+ and the Hulu limited series Washington Black and the Emmy®-nominated animated series Creature Comforts.


Callie V. S. (Ginny) Granade ’72

Bay Minette, Alabama

Ginny Grenade '72 – Hollins Board of Trustees

Judge Ginny Granade is a Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District of Alabama in Mobile, nominated by President George W. Bush in 2001. Other highlights of her distinguished career in law include joining the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Alabama in 1977 as that district’s first female Assistant U.S. Attorney. In 1990, Judge Granade was promoted to Chief of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and from 1997 to 2001, she served as First Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of Alabama, supervising both the legal and administrative operations of the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

A native of Lexington, Virginia, Judge Granade has been a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers since 1994 and was Alabama’s first female Fellow. She has served as an instructor of criminal trial and grand jury practice at the Department of Justice’s Attorney General’s Advocacy Institute.


Rev. Dr. Cynthia L. Hale ’75

Decatur, Georgia

Cynthia L. Hale '75 – Hollins Board of Trustees

Rev. Dr. Cynthia Hale is the founder and senior pastor of Ray of Hope Christian Church in Decatur, Georgia. She has been recognized nationally and internationally for her leadership, integrity, and compassion during her distinguished career in the ministry. Rev. Dr. Hale presently serves as the chairperson of the IC3 (Issachar Conference) Board, a member of the UNCF NFEI Advisory Council, a member of the Welcome.US Council, and an emeritus member of the Board of Visitors of the Divinity School at Duke University. She is most recently the past president for the Hampton University Ministers’ Conference.

Rev. Dr. Hale holds a Master of Divinity degree from Duke University and a Doctor of Ministry from United Theological Seminary. In 2010, she authored her first book, I’m a Piece of Work: Sisters Shaped by God.


Antoinette Hillian ’00

Cleveland, Ohio

Antoinette Hillian '00 – Board of Trustees

For the past 10 years, Dr. Antoinette Hillian has worked in clinical research operations. She currently works for Merck as a Senior Clinical Scientist, where she is responsible for monitoring data and ensuring protocol compliance for a renal cell carcinoma clinical research trial.  Prior to transitioning to clinical research, she worked in biomedical research including as a Post Doctoral Fellow at the Cleveland Clinic.

Dr. Hillian is thankful for the opportunity to have attended Hollins and as such has always been dedicated to giving back to Hollins. She is committed to helping support and increase engagement among all Hollins alumnae/i, and increasing access for current and future students. She has acted as class reunion chair, class reporter, and admission volunteer. She served on the Hollins Alumnae Board from 2016-2024, including as Secretary and as President, and previously served on the Board of Trustees from 2021-2023. Dr. Hillian is currently co-chair of the Northeast Ohio Alumnae chapter and moderates the Hollins STEMinist networking group.

She holds a B.A. in Biology from Hollins University and Ph.D. in Genetics from Case Western Reserve University. Originally from Springfield, Virginia, Dr. Hillian now resides in Shaker Heights, OH with her husband Nate and their 6-year-old son, Harrison.


Paul Hollingsworth P’22

Vienna, Virginia

Paul Hollingsworth

Dr. Paul Hollingsworth has been an intelligence advisor for the international energy company bp since 2014. He previously served for 27 years in the CIA, including eight years on three overseas tours, a rotational assignment at the FBI, and two years as a special assistant for national security affairs on the NCS staff under President Barack Obama.

A 1977 graduate of Georgetown University with a B.A. in Catholic theology, Dr. Hollingsworth also holds a Ph.D. in Byzantine and Medieval Slavic Studies from the University of California – Berkeley. Married with three children, his daughter, Anna, is a member of Hollins’ class of 2022.


Cynda Ann Johnson

Roanoke, Virginia

Dr. Cynda Johnson retired at the end of 2018 after having served for 12 years at president and founding dean of the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. She created every aspect of the school from the design of the building to the curriculum. Highlights of her tenure include fulfillment of all accreditation standards on the first attempt, and graduation of six classes, all matching to competitive residency programs. Previously Dr. Johnson was dean at East Carolina School of Medicine; chair of family medicine at University of Iowa School of Medicine; and long-time faculty and residency director at University of Kansas Medical School.

As a family doctor Dr. Johnson’s special interests were maternal-child health, including obstetrics and outpatient gynecology, about which she wrote two editions of a medical textbook. She was the first woman chair/president of several national organizations including the American Board of Family Medicine and the American Board of Medical Specialties. Dr. Johnson received her B.A. in German with Honors from Stanford University, her medical doctorate from UCLA, and M.B.A. from the University of Missouri at Kansas City.


Terri Kallsen

San Francisco, California

Terri Kallsen – Hollins Board of Trustees

Terri Kallsen is an award-winning high growth Wealth Management Executive, leading RIA growth, digital solutions, and innovative ways to improve service and scale for advisors and clients. Terri was honored as the San Francisco Financial Woman of the Year in 2019 for her dedication to mentoring others in the community and empowering women in the workplace.

Kallsen is the former COO of Wealth Enhancement Group (WEG) where she led Advisor Teams, Platform/Digital Strategy, High Net Worth & Trust Services. Prior to WEG, she was Executive Vice President of Investor Services at Charles Schwab, leading 7,000 employees and $1.6T in AUM. Her tenure at Charles Schwab was highlighted by multiple JD Power awards for client satisfaction, a clear testament to her commitment to delivering top-tier service.

Kallsen is a 2019 graduate of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business Financial Management/CFO Program, with an M.A. from the University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh and a B.A. from the College of St. Benedict/Saint John’s University. She is a Certified Financial Planner and serves on the CFP National Board of Directors.

An enthusiastic and accomplished marathon runner, Kallsen lives in the San Francisco Bay with her husband Scott and has three children and two dogs.


Kay Kendall ’66

Washington, D.C.

Kay Kendall recently retired as the chairperson of the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, the arts agency of the District of Columbia. She brought more than four decades of arts, education, and community outreach experience and leadership to this vital post. She was also a 25-year board member of the Washington Ballet, including eight years as its chair. 

Kendall is currently chair of the board of CityDance, an organization dedicated to the transformative power of dance in children’s lives. She leads the effort to raise a million dollars annually for The VIVA School, a selective pre-professional dance school that works to eliminate barriers of access to high level training.

She also serves on the board of Building Bridges, the parent organization for THEARC (Town Hall Education, Arts and Recreation Campus), a state-of-the-art facility that offers the opportunity for families to receive world-class services directly, including affordable lessons in ballet, music, and art as well as the chance to attend theater performances and see movies. 

Kendall previously served as the chair of the board of Maret School for five years, and as the founder of Kendall+Associates in 2008, she was a consultant on fundraising and non-profit board governance, helping community groups build leadership and organizational structure. 

Since coming to Washington in 1977, she has also served on the boards of the Kingsbury Center and has been involved with Ashoka International and the Ladies Board of Children’s Hospital.  

A native of Chattanooga, Tennessee, Kendall earned a B.A. in English from Hollins.


Christine LeFever Kmieczak ’92

Lancaster, Pennsylvania

LeFever Kmieczak currently serves as director of class and affinity giving at Franklin & Marshall College where she focuses on securing operating support for the College and works closely with volunteer leaders. Before arriving at Franklin & Marshall, LeFever Kmieczak served as the director of annual giving at George Mason University and a major gifts officer at Dickinson College. While her career in higher education now spans several decades, early entry-level roles in admissions and college relations at Hollins were pivotal in shaping her trajectory.

She earned her B.A. in English with a concentration in creative writing from Hollins and her M.A. in English, professional writing and editing, from George Mason University. During her junior year at Hollins, LeFever Kmieczak participated in the Hollins Abroad-London program and Semester at Sea through the University of Pittsburgh. 

She became a member of the Hollins Alumnae Board of Directors in 2020, served as secretary from 2022-2024, and currently serves as president. Additionally, she is the class fund chair for the sesquicentennial class. LeFever Kmieczak co-chaired her 10th, 25th and 30th reunions and volunteered with the Washington, DC Chapter of the Hollins Alumnae Association as a recent graduate. She is a recipient of the Cornelson-Halsey Leadership Award and the Pat Thomas Bain Award. 

LeFever Kmieczak and her husband reside in her hometown of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and are the proud parents of two young adult daughters. Her local community volunteer activities have included membership in the Junior League of Lancaster; support for Anchor Lancaster; a decade of volunteer leadership for New Choices Career Development Center, an organization that helps women with re-entry into the workforce through job skills training and educational support.


Elizabeth Brownlee Kolmstetter ’85

Arlington, Virginia

Dr. Elizabeth Kolmstetter is an award-winning Industrial-Organizational Psychologist and senior executive leader with over 30 years of federal service across eight major agencies. A visionary in talent strategy, leadership development, and organizational culture, she has shaped national workforce policies and led large-scale transformation efforts at NASA, TSA, CIA, ODNI, FBI, USAID, and most recently, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). Dr. Kolmstetter retired in 2025 as CISA’s first Chief People Officer, where she pioneered a “People First” workforce strategy that boosted employee engagement to record levels and transformed internal leadership, training, and communication systems. At NASA, she directed culture and workforce change, authored its “Future of Work” strategy, and helped the agency achieve top government-wide rankings in employee satisfaction and pandemic response. 

Dr. Kolmstetter holds a Ph.D. and an M.S. in Industrial and Organizational Psychology from Virginia Tech, as well as a B.A. in Psychology and Computer Science from Hollins University, where she also received an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree. She is a Fellow of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP), and has received the Presidential Rank Award, the National Intelligence Superior Service Medal, and NASA’s Outstanding Leadership Medal. She and her husband, Michael (MALS 1990), are proud parents of twins Miles and Nicole. Dr. Kolmstetter’s mother is Paula P. Brownlee, a former Hollins president (1981-1990).


Anne Lindblad ’79

Reddick, Florida

Anne Lindblad

Dr. Anne Lindblad, a biostatistician with more than 40 years of experience serving both industry and government clients, retired as the president and CEO of Emmes, a global contract research organization. She has supported clinical research throughout her career, serving as principal investigator of projects spanning diverse disease areas, including oncology, dialysis, transplantation, ophthalmology, speech and hearing, dentistry, and neurology. Dr. Lindblad has contributed to the literature in such fields as patient-reported outcome development, central statistical monitoring as part of a risk-based monitoring plan, disease classification systems, and barriers to recruiting for clinical trials and serves as a member of Data and Safety Monitoring Boards for government and Industry.

After completing her B.S. degree in statistics at Hollins, Dr. Lindblad went on to earn a master’s degree in biostatistics from the Medical College of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University, and a Ph.D. in statistics from George Washington University.


Tamina McMillan, M.D., ’95 P’23

Jackson, Mississippi

Tamina McMillan

Born in South Korea and raised in Richmond, Virginia, Dr. Tamina McMillan graduated from Hollins with departmental honors, majoring in biology and minoring in chemistry. She subsequently joined the recruiting team in Hollins’ Office of Admission and also worked as an assistant coach for the school’s fencing team, leading them to two state championships. In 1997, Dr. McMillian moved to Nashville to attend Meharry Medical College, the first medical school in the South for African Americans and currently one of the top medical schools in the nation for physicians who want to practice primary care.

After graduating from Meharry, she completed her residency and worked as a primary care physician in Las Vegas, Nevada. Dr. McMillan worked in clinical and administrative roles at Nevada’s first and largest federally qualified community health center, which allowed her to pursue her passion for pediatric primary care and working with underserved children. At Nevada Health Centers, she built the pediatric department from the ground up to encompass multiple clinicians in a range of settings, including outpatient pediatric care, school-based care, and a mobile medical unit.

Dr. McMillian is currently a physician at TrustCare Health Organization in Brandon, MS.


Debra Cartwright Meade F’76
(Board Chair)

Roanoke, Virginia

Debra Cartwright Meade enjoyed a distinguished career in the newspaper business, including 30 years at The Roanoke Times. Hired as a reporter in 1983, she rose through the ranks in the newsroom and then on the business side of the company and became its president and publisher in February 2007. At the time, she was one of only two dozen women publishers of metropolitan newspapers in the country.

Under her leadership, The Roanoke Times twice received the Virginia Press Association’s highest honor, the Journalistic Integrity and Community Service Award for its news and editorial coverage. She retired in 2013 after the paper was sold to new owners.

A Norfolk native, Meade holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree from Virginia Tech. She also attended Longwood College, now Longwood University, when it was a women’s college.

She was appointed by Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine to the Roanoke Higher Education Authority Board of Trustees in 2009 and served until 2014, including as vice chair. She has served as board chair and annual campaign chair of United Way of Roanoke Valley; board vice chair of Roanoke’s Planned Parenthood affiliate; board chair of Bethany Hall, a residential recovery program for women; a trustee of the Taubman Museum of Art and on the board of the Roanoke Business Council. 

A Hollins trustee since 2016, Meade also is a founding board member of Cardinal News, a nonprofit digital news service covering Southwest and Southside Virginia.


Emily Morgan ’79

New York, New York

Emily Morgan '79 – Hollins Board of Trustees

Emily Morgan majored in economics at Hollins and went on to complete her MBA at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business.

She has held a variety of chief of staff positions during her career, most recently for the founder and CEO of Every Mother Counts, a nonprofit organization in New York City focused on maternal health and birth justice. Morgan previously served in similar capacities with CEOs at Public Health Solutions and Planned Parenthood Federation of America; sports icon Billie Jean King; and senior executives at JPMorgan Chase. In between those roles, she owned a small printing business in NYC’s East Village and was acting executive director of Dixon Place, an experimental off-off Broadway theater. 

Morgan is currently a consultant to several nonprofits, helping with administration, planning, and special events.

She is a fourth-generation Hollins alumna, following in the footsteps of her great-grandmother, grandmother, and mother.  She has served on the Alumnae Board, is her class fund chair, and until recently, was class news coordinator of the Hollins Class Letters magazine. Morgan is a recipient of the Rath Award, the Pat Thomas Bain Award, and the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award.


Janet C. Nicholson ’69

Buffalo Grove, Illinois

Janet Nicholson

Janet Nicholson majored in political science and participated in the American University study program as an undergraduate at Hollins. After graduation, she lived in Rome, Italy, for five years, where she served on the Board of the American Women’s Association and as editor of the monthly news publication. Nicholson is retired from a career of operations management, process improvement, and strategic planning with Firestone, Hewitt Associates, and Hewlett Packard. 

She led the strategic and change management planning to build and staff Hewitt’s first operations in India. She was part of Hewlett Packard’s first entry in HR and payroll outsourcing, working in Europe for two years. In retirement, Nicholson performed pro bono consulting with the city of Chicago in process improvement and operational metrics. Currently, she serves as Hollins Fund co-chair for the class of 1969.


Mary Flynn Niemitz F’75

Atlanta, Georgia

Mary Flynn Niemitz is the co-founder of Trinity Community Partners, a nonprofit and philanthropic advising consultancy. Collaborating with social impact leaders, she develops creative solutions to increase mission impact, effectiveness, and promote organizational sustainability. Mary Flynn also serves on the Atlanta Philanthropic Collaborative for Mental and Behavioral Health and is a founding member of Bloom, a women’s giving circle in Atlanta. Mary Flynn and her husband Matt have two young children and reside in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mary Flynn holds a M.P.A. from the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University and a B.A. with honors from Washington and Lee University.

Her Hollins roots go back three generations, including her great-grandmother, grandmother, and mother Suzanne Detlefs, who served on the Board of Trustees until Spring 2022.


John W. Poulton P’06

Chapel Hill, North Carolina

John Poulton

Dr. John Poulton served as senior scientist at Nvidia Corporation 2009-2021, where he designed power-efficient chip-to-chip communications circuits for high-performance computers. He continues as a consultant at Nvidia. As a research professor at the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill’s computer science department in the 1980s-1990s, Dr. Poulton and his team developed techniques for computer graphics systems and image rendering that became industry standards. He has published over 50 papers, co-authored a textbook, is an inventor on some 80 patents, and is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers.

Dr. Poulton holds a B.S. degree from Virginia Tech, an M.S. from SUNY Stony Brook, and a Ph.D. from UNC-Chapel Hill, all in physics. He co-taught the first course in computer programming at Hollins as an assistant professor of physics from 1968-1970. His daughter Sarah is a member of Hollins’ class of 2006, and his grandmother Elizabeth Macatee Poulton was Assistant to the Social Office and Supervisor of Buildings at Hollins from 1929 to 1951.


Karen Rabenau ’89

Durham, North Carolina

Karen Rabenau

Karen Rabenau earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in American Studies from Hollins, where she was elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa, a Hollins Scholar, and received the Sarah McCutchen Cook Award for American studies.

Rabenau is a litigation attorney and counsel to Stevens Martin Vaughn & Tadych in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she focuses her practice in business litigation and communications law. Prior to joining Stevens Martin, she practiced for 26 years and was a partner with Twiggs Beskind Strickland & Rabenau in Raleigh and Research Triangle Park. Rabenau is recognized in Best Lawyers in America and North Carolina Super Lawyers for her work as a litigator. Rabenau earned her J.D. from the University of North Carolina School of Law, where she was a member of the Holderness Moot Court Invitational Team and one of two students in the second-year class to represent the Holderness Moot Court National Team in appellate advocacy.

Rabenau has served as a director for the North Carolina Bar Association (NCBA) Board of Governors and chaired the NCBA’s Litigation Section and Medico-Legal Liaison Committee. At Durham Academy, an independent K-12 college preparatory day school, Rabenau served for seven years as a trustee, chaired the board’s Learning Environment Committee during its 2015 Strategic Plan implementation and most recently a two-year commitment as chair of its board of trustees. She has previously served on the board of International Montessori School of North Carolina, a Spanish, French, and Mandarin immersion day school for pre- and elementary school students, as well as the board of Caring House, a nonprofit devoted to affordable housing for cancer treatment patients at Duke Cancer Institute.

Rabenau currently serves as a trustee for Hill Learning Center, a differentiated learning hub for students with learning and attention challenges, chairs the Durham Academy Capital Campaign Steering Committee, and serves as chair of the Friends Board at Duke University’s Nasher Museum of Art.


Sabrina Rose-Smith ’00

Alexandria, Virginia

Sabrina Rose-Smith

Sabrina Rose-Smith is an equity partner in Goodwin Procter’s Consumer Financial Services Litigation practice, and a member of the firm’s executive committee. Her nationwide practice includes both defending financial institutions against consumer class actions and government enforcement actions and providing regulatory compliance and litigation risk counseling to banks, credit card issuers, mortgage lenders, and specialty and small-dollar FinTech companies. Rose-Smith is also a member of Goodwin’s CSR + ESG practice, and focuses on fair lending/banking, financial inclusion, and Community Reinvestment Act risks and obligations. She is ranked by Chambers USA for her expertise in consumer finance enforcement and investigations and she is a Legal500 Recommended Attorney for Financial Services Litigation.

Rose-Smith serves as the chair of Goodwin’s Women of Color Collective and is a member of Goodwin’s Black Anti-Racism Task Force. Rose-Smith also serves on the Board of Directors for Black Women in Asset Management, an organization of professionals in the asset management industry aligned around a common goal to advance and retain Black women leaders across all investment strategies. At Hollins, Rose-Smith was a double major in history and classical studies, and chair of Hollins’ Honor Court. Rose-Smith received her J.D. from Vanderbilt Law School, and now resides in Alexandria, Virginia, with her husband John, her two young sons, Julian and Jaden, and her best ever baby dog, Toby.


P = Parent of alumna/us;
F = Family member of alumna/us

Emeriti Trustees

Year of designation noted in italics. Updated July 1, 2024.

Claudia Watkins Belk ’60 (deceased)
2013

Anna Logan Lawson ’65, M.A. ’70
2010

William “Bill” R. Johnston
2019

Elizabeth (Lisa) Valk Long ’72
2015

Linda Koch Lorimer ‘74
2024

Elizabeth “Libby” Hall McDonnell ’62
2020

Brooke Morrow ’78
2016

Wyndham Robertson ’58
2012

Walter Rugaber
2010

Kay Massey Weatherspoon ’54
2008