As Homecoming week continues at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, the candidates for Homecoming Royalty have been announced for voting by the student body.
The Homecoming Royalty will be announced at halftime of Saturday’s football game versus Ouachita Baptist, with two students selected. The winners will serve at various functions throughout the remainder of the academic year, as well as ringing the Swearengin Bell at the 2025 Distinguished Alumni awards banquet.
The nominees for Homecoming Royalty are: McKenzie Hicks, a junior Political Science major from Bryant, Ark., representing Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority Keeden Jones, a junior General Business major from Denison, Texas, representing the Chess Club Mikayla Kirkland, a senior History major from Ardmore, representing the Southeastern Honors Program Allyson Mack, a senior Early Intervention and Child Development major from Bonham, Texas, representing Sparks Dance Team Addison McCortney, a senior Mathematics major from Ada, representing the Line Dancing Club Presley McKnight, a junior Psychology major from Calera (self-nominated) Ryan Murrell, a senior Criminal Justice major from Bonham, Texas, representing Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity Sydney Southward, a senior Biological Health Science major from Ringling, representing Southeastern Cheer Kayla Strong, a senior Sociology major from Cypress, Texas, representing Cardinal Key Honor Society Sydney Williams, a senior Communication AD/PR major from Durant, Alpha representing Sigma Tau Sorority The theme for SE’s Homecoming is, 115 Years of Legacy at the Durant campus.
The SE Distinguished Alumni Awards Banquet is at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the Visual and Performing Arts Center. There will be a bonfire and pep rally at 8:30 p.m. at the SE Amphitheater.
The 2024 Distinguished Alumni class are:
• Blessed Stanley Rother (’65), who earned a bachelor’s degree in history at Southeastern while serving at his first parish, St. William Catholic Church in Durant. In 1968, at his own request, Rother was assigned to the diocese’s mission to the Tz’utujil people of Santiago Atitlán in the rural highlands of southwest Guatemala. He served there until he was assassinated in 1981. He was beatified in 2017, becoming the first American-born priest and martyr to receive this honor from the Catholic Church. The Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine opened in Oklahoma City in 2023.
• Terry Barker (’80), who served his country as a helicopter pilot in the United States Army and was a longtime pilot for American Airlines. He also served as a city councilman in his hometown of Keller, Texas. He was an active member of the Southeastern Aviation Alumni Association, as well as aviation organizations including the Quiet Birdmen, the Gulf Coast Wing of the Commemorative Air Force, and the Grey Eagles. Barker will be inducted posthumously, as he passed away as the result of a crash in a Dallas air show in 2022.
• Gary Sherrer (’73), completed his bachelor’s degree at Southeastern after serving as a combat medic in the Vietnam War. He served four consecutive terms in the Oklahoma House of Representatives from 1981-88, followed by appointed positions as the state’s first Secretary and Commissioner of Agriculture from 1991-95, and two terms as Secretary of Environment from 1995-97 and 2011-13. His lifetime of service to his state and community has been noted by service on numerous boards, as well as his establishment of the “Do Unto Others” endowment, which provides scholarships to high school seniors with a preference to those attending Southeastern.
• Todd Hughes (‘85, ’87), who is the senior director of IT Government Services for the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. He was previously with the Durant Independent School District where in addition to teaching and serving as head basketball coach, he developed and formed the district’s Information Technology department and became the district’s first chief technology director. At the Choctaw Nation, Hughes has maintained an active involvement with Southeastern students, as his department was the first to participate in the co-op program, which allows students hands-on experience as Choctaw Nation associates while still participating as full-time students.
• Roland Fanning (’05), whose success in baseball has rocketed him up the coaching ranks. After playing three seasons for coach Mike Metheny, he was then hired as an assistant coach for the Savage Storm from 2007-2012. Since then, he has been in the Division I ranks with two stints at Oklahoma State, two seasons at Arkansas-Little Rock, and three seasons at Kentucky. He was hired as the head coach at Austin Peay in Clarksville, Tenn., prior to the 2023 season and has turned the program around, as the Governors had their first winning season in five years and highest winning percentage in a decade in 2024. He has coached two conference Player of the Year award winners and 21 All-American Selections. He has seen 65 athletes selected in the MLB Draft, with four chosen in the first round and seven reaching the major leagues.
Tailgate Alley opens at 11 a.m. Saturday and the distinguished alumni will be recognized at 1:30 p.m. during a pre-game ceremony. The football game with Ouachita Baptist begins at 2 p.m.