Betty
(Bates) Michel (1926-2009):
Ambassador Pioneer
By Neil EarleBetty (Bates) Michel,
wife of Gene Michel, died peacefully at her home in Santa Clarita, California
on January 28, 2009.
In an age of hyperbole it
is no exaggeration to say that her death marks the end of an era in the
history of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG). Betty Bates was born in
Arkansas
on May 19, 1926 and moved with her family to Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was while she worked there in the miliner's section of a
department store that she heard the booming voice of Herbert Armstrong
on The World Tomorrow program from 1942 to 1945.
"I didn't know much
about the church, she told me in an interview on October 21, 2005,
"but I was interested in the College Mr. Armstrong was talking
about."
As early as 1946, radio
evangelist Herbert Armstrong had seen the need to move his Oregon-based
operation to
Southern California. In 1947 appeals went out in Armstrong? flagship publication The
Plain Truth for interested young people to enroll at Ambassador
College. In 1947 the college was one building on a tiny acreage in West
Pasadena that would grow over the years into the best landscaped and
best-maintained campus in
America
with branches in Bricket Wood, England
(1960-1974) and Big Sandy, Texas (1964-2007). The purpose of the College
was to staff workers for the expanding outreach of the then Radio Church
of God.
 |
| The first
four students of Ambassador College at entry to main classroom
building, later the library: (left to right) Herman Hoeh,
Raymond Cole, Richard "Dick" Armstrong, and Betty
Bates. Click to enlarge. |
Betty Bates had the
distinction of being the first co-ed student and in actual fact the
first graduate of
Ambassador
College. ?he was able to graduate a semester earlier than the other three
men so she has that distinction as well, her brother-in-law Bernel
Michel told me on February 4. Betty came from solid small-town roots.
Her father owned cattle and real estate and owned a motel with certain
investments. Herbert and Loma Armstrong were both there to meet her on
her arrival as they did most of the early female students experiencing
their first taste of life in Los Angeles.
 |
| Betty
(Bates) Michel as she appeared in the 1953 Ambassador College
Envoy as "Instructor in Poise." Click to
enlarge. |
That folksy, friendly
atmosphere of Ambassador? early years made Betty a favorite of the
small faculty. She taught ?oise in the early years of the college
as the Armstrong philosophy was to educate the whole person, in the
words of Glendora Assistant Pastor Emmett Rushing who showed up in 1952.
The 1953 College yearbook, the Envoy, showed girls trying to balance
books on their heads to learn the art of decorum under Betty's
watchful eye—old school and quaint now, perhaps, but a testimony to
Ambassador's early gung-ho approach to life and learning and
self-improvement. "We did what it took," said Emmett Rushing.
Betty Michel was an
employee at the college until 1958.
Shirley (Englebart)
Jones, a minister? wife in England, has fond memories of Betty Michel from the late 1950s. "I got to
know her because she was a senior advisor on the steering committee for
the Ambassador College Women's Clubs. I remember her as a warm and
friendly person with a lively approach to life. She was elegant and
poised and she brought these qualities to our discussions and
deliberations."
Betty married Gene Michel
who showed up at Ambassador in 1948. He went on to become the WCG's
longest-serving employee, a stalwart of the church's accounting and
financial departments across six decades. They had one child, a daughter
named Elizabeth. For hundreds of thousands of people associated with the early
Worldwide Church of God and the Armstrong ministry, the picture of those
first four pioneering students at Ambassador, Pasadena shown here will
bring back some warm memories. It took a special kind of person to be
the female trail-blazer during Ambassador? early years of struggle,
hardship and almost impossible challenges. Betty (Bates) Michel did it
and her achievement is now a matter of record. |