Published On: 01.08.22 | 

By: 40720

Auburn Alumni Association to honor 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award, Young Alumni Achievement Award recipients

James “Jim” Bullington has been selected to receive the highest honor given by the Auburn Alumni Association at Auburn’s 2022 Lifetime Achievement Awards dinner and ceremony on Feb. 26. Bullington is a retired career diplomat who served the U.S. government in eight countries in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. (contributed)

Four Auburn University graduates, all highly accomplished in their fields, have been selected to receive the highest honor given by the Auburn Alumni Association at Auburn’s 2022 Lifetime Achievement Awards dinner and ceremony on Feb. 26. The association also will honor its Young Alumni Achievement Award winner.

Lifetime Achievement Award recipients for 2022 are diplomat James “Jim” Bullington ’62, Maj. James “Jim” M. Hoskins ’81, William “Bill” McNair ’68 and Anita Gentle Newcomb ‘76. The Young Alumni Award recipient is Dr. Erin McCreary ’15.

Diplomat James “Jim” Bullington

Retired diplomat, former Ambassador to Burundi

Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Bullington was a first-generation college student when he enrolled at Alabama Polytechnic Institute, now Auburn University, in 1957 at age 16. In 1962, he earned his bachelor’s degree in science and literature and went on to earn a master’s in public administration from Harvard University in 1969.

During his senior year at Auburn, Bullington passed the highly competitive U.S. Foreign Service examination and began his diplomatic career immediately following graduation. His first assignment was in 1965 to wartime Vietnam, where he served as vice consul in Hue, staff aide to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge in Saigon and assistant province representative with the joint civil-military counter-insurgency program in Quang Tri. In 1968, Bullington and his Vietnamese fiancée, Tuy-Cam, were trapped for nine days behind enemy lines in Hue during the Tet Offensive before being rescued by U.S. Marines.

Over his 34-year career, Bullington served in eight countries in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. For 27 of those years, he was a career foreign service officer with the U.S. Department of State and was dean of the department’s highest level training program. He was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Burundi by President Ronald Reagan and later served as the director of the Peace Corps in Niger. Bullington was recalled to diplomatic duty in 2012 to lead a State Department effort to help end a 30-year insurgency in Senegal.

While at Auburn, Bullington was the editor of The Auburn Plainsman and in 1961 challenged school segregation through editorials and news stories, often resulting in backlash from community members and the local Ku Klux Klan. Taking pro-civil rights stances was a key factor in launching his career in the foreign services. Bullington and his wife have two daughters.

James “Jim” Hoskins is among the Auburn Alumni Association’s 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award recipients. Hoskins, a 1981 graduate, followed a decorated career as a U.S. intelligence officer with a highly successful stint as CEO of Scitor Corp. (contributed)

Maj. James “Jim” Hoskins

Chairman and CEO, retired, Scitor Corp.

Hoskins earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering in 1981 and embarked on a career in the U.S. Air Force as an intelligence officer, ultimately achieving the rank of major while serving as a leader in the U.S. intelligence community. His government and military experience included key assignments at the Air Force Cryptologic Depot, the National Security Agency, the National Reconnaissance Office and the Central Intelligence Agency. In recognition of his contributions to the defense and intelligence community, he received the Distinguished Intelligence Service Medal from the director of Central Intelligence, the Bronze Medallion from the director of the National Security Agency and two Defense Superior Service Medals from the secretary of defense.

In 1994, Hoskins retired from the Air Force and joined Scitor Corp., one of the nation’s leading providers of engineering services to the intelligence community. He advanced in the company to become president, then CEO and chairman of the Scitor board of directors. His vision, leadership and experience helped Scitor grow from an annual revenue of $16 million to more than $600 million, employing more than 1,700 employees.

Hoskins is a founding member of Auburn Research and Development Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to furthering scientific and engineering research in the state and enhancing economic development in the region. He is a former member of many Auburn leadership boards and committees and a member of the Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame. He and his wife, Bertha ’80, have a son, Alexander, who is a 2010 Auburn graduate.

Bill McNair is among the Auburn Alumni Association’s 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award recipients. The 1968 graduate, a former BellSouth vice president, played a critical role in obtaining BellSouth’s funding of Auburn’s Minority Engineering program. With his wife, Lana, he has established various scholarships at Auburn. (contributed)

William “Bill” R. McNair 

Retired vice president of Network Operations, BellSouth

McNair earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering in 1968 and went on to earn an MBA from Auburn University Montgomery in 1977 and a master’s degree in management through the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan Fellows program in 1986.

McNair’s 33-year career in the telecommunications industry began as an engineer with South Central Bell in 1968. He held positions in the company’s engineering, operations, human resources and marketing organizations before retiring from BellSouth as vice president of network operations. McNair played a critical role in obtaining BellSouth’s funding of Auburn’s Minority Engineering program, which was designed to increase the recruitment and retention of minority engineering students.

McNair and his wife, Lana, established the McNair Auburn Creed Scholarships, the McNair Ever Auburn Scholarship, the McNair Distinguished Professorship in the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering and the McNair Endowed Graduate Fellowship in the Auburn University at Montgomery College of Business. The couple’s contributions have supported the construction of the Shelby Center for Engineering Technology, supported Auburn’s underrepresented students and have been instrumental in establishing the new Office for Academic Advising suite in the Brown-Kopel Engineering Student Achievement Center.

McNair has served on many Auburn leadership boards and committees. For his professional achievements and commitment to engineering education, McNair was inducted into the state of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame in 2010. He has also received the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering Distinguished Auburn Engineer award, the Department of Electrical Engineering Outstanding Alumni award and was recognized as one of AUM’s Top 50 Graduates at its 50th anniversary celebration in 2017. The McNairs have two children, Kelly and Scott ’92, and six grandchildren.

Anita Gentle Newcomb is among the Auburn Alumni Association’s 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award recipients. The 1976 graduate is a nationally recognized banking expert and an independent board director for the Luther Burbank Corp. (contributed)

Anita Gentle Newcomb  

Independent board director, Luther Burbank Corp.

Newcomb graduated from Auburn in 1976, earning a degree in accountancy, with honors, from the Raymond J. Harbert College of Business. She earned her MBA with a concentration in finance from the University of Houston in 1987.

Newcomb served for 20 years as president of A.G. Newcomb & Co., a strategic consulting firm that provided customized strategic and financial solutions for community and regional banks across the United States. She serves on the board of directors for Luther Burbank Corp. in Santa Rosa, California, where she is chair of the audit and risk committee. From 2010 to 2015, Newcomb served on the Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond-Baltimore.

In her more than three decades in banking, Newcomb developed a national reputation as an expert on regional and community bank business models and trends. She has worked on a wide range of financial and strategic initiatives for institutions of all sizes and charters. She is a frequent keynote speaker and presenter at national and state bank conferences, board retreats and symposiums. Early in her career, Newcomb served as president, CEO and board member of ACB Business Partners, the for-profit subsidiary of America’s Community Bankers, a national banking trade association. She spent 10 years in investment banking and strategic consulting with three national firms and served as vice president of strategic planning and senior mergers and acquisitions at Security Pacific Corp. in Los Angeles, then the nation’s fourth-largest bank.

Newcomb has served Auburn in various volunteer leadership roles and in 2013 was honored as the School of Accountancy Alumna of the Year. For 15 years, Newcomb served on and chaired the Harbert College of Business Advisory Council and served on the Women’s Leadership Advisory Board in the College of Liberal Arts. She has a daughter, Rachel, a 2010 Auburn graduate.

Dr. Erin McCreary is the 2022 recipient of the Auburn Alumni Association’s Young Alumni Achievement Award. McCreary, who received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree in 2015, chairs the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center System’s COVID-19 Therapeutics Committee, responsible for all COVID-19-related therapeutic guidelines and information technology support across a 40-hospital academic learning health system. (contributed)

Dr. Erin Kristin McCreary

Clinical assistant professor, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; director of Stewardship Innovation, UPMC and Infectious Disease Connect

McCreary attended Auburn from 2008 to 2015, earning a bachelor’s degree in biomedical sciences and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree in 2015 from the Harrison School of Pharmacy. While a student, she served as class president. Following graduation, she completed two years of residency training at University of Wisconsin Health.

In 2018, she joined the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center team as an infectious diseases and antimicrobial stewardship pharmacist at Presbyterian Hospital. McCreary transitioned into a system-level role at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. She also joined Infectious Disease Connect to establish and grow telemedicine services and was later promoted to director of stewardship innovation. She served as the chair of the UPMC System COVID-19 Therapeutics Committee, responsible for all COVID-19-related therapeutic guidelines and information technology support across a 40-hospital academic learning health system.

McCreary established a robust monoclonal antibody infusion system (50-plus infusion sites) and serves as a lead investigator for REMAP-COVID and OPTIMISE-C19, two large, adaptive, embedded platform trials evaluating key treatments for patients with COVID-19.

In her short time at UPMC, McCreary has led several key initiatives with far-reaching clinical and economic impact. McCreary serves on the executive board of the Society of Infectious Diseases Pharmacists and has held numerous leadership roles in several national medical organizations. She has published more than 30 peer-reviewed manuscripts, developed multiple treatment guidelines and delivered professional presentations at the state, national and international levels.

This story originally appeared on Auburn University’s website.