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Spring 2008 PDF - University of South Carolina Upstate

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<strong>University</strong><br />

The<br />

Review<br />

SPRING <strong>2008</strong><br />

The George Dean<br />

Johnson, Jr.<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Business<br />

and Economics at<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> Makes<br />

Spartanburg a Place<br />

to Live, Work and<br />

Prosper


4<br />

7<br />

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17<br />

<strong>University</strong><br />

The<br />

2 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

Review<br />

<strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2008</strong><br />

Business<br />

George Dean Johnson, Jr. College <strong>of</strong> Business Administration and<br />

Economics to locate downtown, making Spartanburg A Place to Live,<br />

Work and Prosper. By Tammy E. Whaley<br />

Spartans Athletics<br />

From a farm in the Great Rift Valley <strong>of</strong> Kenya to the world <strong>of</strong> NCAA<br />

Division I Track and Cross Country competition, Emily Tangwar is Running<br />

for Peace, Racing for Opportunities. By Claire Sachse<br />

Arts and Sciences<br />

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Arts recently donated 152 <strong>of</strong> the<br />

artist’s photographs to USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, Bringing the Pop Icon’s Influence<br />

to the <strong>University</strong>’s Permanent Collection. By Tammy E. Whaley<br />

From Vietnam to The Pill, from fraternity parties to Existentialism, <br />

By Tammy E. Whaley<br />

Nursing<br />

A partnership between the Mary Black School <strong>of</strong> Nursing and Mobile<br />

Meals <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg allows nursing students to Bring Care and<br />

Compassion to the Homebound. By Heather Alexander-Engelbrecht<br />

Education<br />

The daily agenda <strong>of</strong> 23 area ninth graders earning college credits in USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>’s Scholars Academy includes The <strong>University</strong> by Morning and<br />

High School by Afternoon. By Claire Sachse<br />

Community Outreach and Philanthropy<br />

Job satisfaction for Nonpr<strong>of</strong>it Administration majors is More Than a<br />

Paycheck. By Heather Alexander-Engelbrecht<br />

Leaving the cold long winters <strong>of</strong> Indiana behind, Michael E. Irvin has been<br />

Tapped to Lead Development Efforts as the <strong>University</strong>’s new Vice<br />

Chancellor for Advancement. By Tammy E. Whaley<br />

Founders’ Day Celebration Honors Loyal Supporters with awards for<br />

dedicated and distinguished service to the <strong>University</strong>. By Tammy E. Whaley<br />

Special Features<br />

The USC <strong>Upstate</strong> campus was busy with presidential campaign activity<br />

in the run-up to the <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> primary, so Could USC <strong>Upstate</strong> be a<br />

Stepping Stone to the Presidency By Claire Sachse<br />

Log on to the <strong>University</strong> Web site for a range <strong>of</strong> Web Highlights including<br />

photos, video, newsletters, class notes and more. By Heather Alexander-<br />

Engelbrecht<br />

40 Alumni for 40 Years: USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s alumni have great stories to<br />

tell about their lives after leaving campus – their ambitions, career paths,<br />

volunteer work and families – as well as some interesting remembrances<br />

<strong>of</strong> their years on campus. Take a peek! By Stephanie Bingham (’07),<br />

Heather Alexander-Engelbrecht and Claire Sachse<br />

<br />

Editor: Tammy E. Whaley<br />

Designer: Bridget Kirkland<br />

Photography: Les Duggins<br />

The <strong>University</strong> Review is published three times a year.<br />

Editorial Office<br />

Office <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong> Communications<br />

800 <strong>University</strong> Way, Spartanburg, SC 29303<br />

Phone: 864-503-5210, Fax: 864-503-5072<br />

E-mail: twhaley@uscupstate.edu<br />

Class News<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> Alumni Association<br />

800 <strong>University</strong> Way, Spartanburg, SC 29303<br />

Phone: 864-503-5235, Fax: 864-503-5264<br />

E-mail: bwsmith@uscupstate.edu<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

John C. Stockwell, Ph.D., Chancellor <strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

Andrew A. Sorensen, Ph.D., President <strong>of</strong> USC<br />

The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees<br />

Mark Sanford, Governor Herbert C. Adams, Chairman<br />

Miles Loadholt, Vice Chairman<br />

Arthur S. Bahnmuller, William L. Bethea Jr., James Bradley, Mark W. Buyck<br />

Jr., John W. Fields, C. Edward Floyd, M.D., Samuel R. Foster II, William<br />

C. Hubbard, William W. Jones Jr., Toney J. Lister, Darla D. Moore, Michael<br />

J. Mungo, James H. Rex, M. Wayne Staton, John C. von Lehe Jr., Eugene<br />

P. Warr Jr., Mack I. Whittle Jr., Othniel H. Wienges Jr., Thomas L. Stepp,<br />

Secretary<br />

Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education<br />

James R. Smith, Chair Milton A. Smith Jr., Vice-Chair<br />

Charles H. Babb, Secretary-Treasurer<br />

C. Dan Adams, J. Eugene Adams, Esq., Sheila S. Breitweiser, Ed.D., Susan<br />

G. Clary, William R. Cobb, Katherine A. Dunleavy, Harold E. Fleming, M.D.,<br />

MBA, Audrey T. Grant, Ph.D., John S. Poole, Albert V. Smith, Esq., John B.<br />

Travers, L. Andrew Westbrook III, Emerson F. Wolfe, Jr., Thomas R. Young III<br />

Ex-Officio: Toney J. Lister, Esq., Jim O. Ray<br />

Emeritus Members: John L. Cobb, Cleveland S. Harley, G.B. Hodge, M.D.,<br />

emeritus chair<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Advisors<br />

Terry Cash, Chair<br />

Athletics: Frank Allgood, Wendy Fleming-Bailey, Eric Grubbs, David Miller,<br />

Neil Willis<br />

Johnson College <strong>of</strong> Business: Barney Gosnell, Ben Haskew, Kathleen<br />

McKinney, Marion McMillan, Jr., Stewart Spinks<br />

School <strong>of</strong> Education: Kim Ashby, Glen Carson, Scott Mercer, Patricia S.<br />

Paul, Scott Turner, Ed.D.<br />

Mary Black School <strong>of</strong> Nursing: Jane Bottsford, RN, Susan Duggar, MSN,<br />

RN, Jo Ann McMillan, Larry Warr, M.D.<br />

At-Large: Ingo Angermeier, Vic C. Bailey, Jr., William Barnet III, Philip B.<br />

Belcher, Glenn Breed, Rosemary H. Byerly, Jerry L. Calvert, Ruth L. Cate,<br />

Esq., Foster Chapman, H. Howell Clyborne Jr., David Cordeau, John H.<br />

Dargan, Frederick B. Dent, Jr., John T. Gramling II, Marianna B. Habisreutinger,<br />

P. Kathryn Hicks, Phil Lane, Zerno B. Martin, Jr., Max K. Metcalf,<br />

Gary W. Poliak<strong>of</strong>f, Princess C. Porter, David O. Roberts, Mark Scott, Rev.<br />

Benjamin D. Snoddy, L. Cody Sossamon, Jr., Dan L. Terhune, Ph.D., Nick A.<br />

Theodore, Rev. Dr. Clay H. Turner, William J. Whitener, Col. USA Ret.<br />

<strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation<br />

Thomas R. Young III, President<br />

David B. Dedmon, D.M.D., V.P.<br />

for Administration<br />

Associate Editor: Heather Engelbrecht<br />

Contributors: Claire Sachse<br />

John S. Poole, V.P. for Finance<br />

Nancy S. Riehle, V.P. for Development<br />

Mike Irvin, Executive Director<br />

Jane G. Bottsford, Raymond H. Brandt, CPA, Robert A. Brannon, Karen<br />

J. Calhoun, Terry L. Cash, David L. Church, William R. Cobb, Robert A.<br />

Coleman, Timothy L. Drummond, Elizabeth B. Fleming, Steven B. Ford,<br />

Barney G. Gosnell, CPA, George Wm. Gramling, Kerin L. Hannah, P.<br />

Kathryn Hicks, Timothy R. Justice, Charles W. Lowe Jr., Julie W. Lowry, Don<br />

L. Martin, Cathy H. McCabe, Esq., John D. Montgomery, Russell R. Raines,<br />

Thomas L. Robinson, Albert V. Smith, Esq., David Jeffrey Smith, James R.<br />

Smith, James W. Terry, Irvine T. Welling<br />

Ex-Officio: Susan U. Holland, John F. Perry, Shane W. Rogers, Esq., Jack<br />

A. Turner, Ph.D., John C. Stockwell, Ph.D.<br />

Emeritus: Bruce H. Carlson, Katie A. Hodge, Susan C. Jacobs


Susu and George Dean Johnson, Jr. at the<br />

December Press Conference.<br />

A member <strong>of</strong> the Patriot Guard leads the<br />

motorcycle escort for The Wall That Heals.<br />

A Disabled American Veteran salutes<br />

wreaths in memory <strong>of</strong> his fellow soldiers.<br />

Rotarian presidents and Dr. Stockwell at<br />

the Rotary Peace Park Dedication.<br />

D<br />

uring the 2007-08 academic year, the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong> celebrated<br />

forty years <strong>of</strong> growth.<br />

We all know the stories…starting with<br />

a two-year nursing program in the basement<br />

<strong>of</strong> Spartanburg General, acquiring<br />

campus properties piecemeal, building<br />

the Administration Building and moving<br />

to four-year degrees and a thousand<br />

students within four years; hiring a great<br />

core faculty, <strong>of</strong>fices in a motel, a national<br />

basketball championship, more buildings…Dr.<br />

Hodge and the Commission<br />

fighting with governors, the State Commission<br />

and others for our very survival.<br />

Frieda Davison, dean <strong>of</strong> the Library, led<br />

a committee that assembled a cluster <strong>of</strong><br />

celebratory events throughout this year.<br />

We recognized and engaged emeriti,<br />

alumni, faculty, staff, friends and neighbors;<br />

and we connected lectures and<br />

presentations related to the historic period<br />

<strong>of</strong> our founding in 1967, the period,<br />

by the way, during which many <strong>of</strong> the<br />

nation’s metropolitan universities were<br />

founded.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> our most important connections<br />

was with the era <strong>of</strong> Vietnam. The <strong>University</strong><br />

hosted the traveling Wall That<br />

Heals, a half-size replica <strong>of</strong> the Vietnam<br />

Wall Memorial in Washington, D.C. Over<br />

17,754 people visited the Wall while it<br />

was on campus, including an unbelievable<br />

phalanx <strong>of</strong> 1,300 motorcyclists who<br />

escorted the Wall on the last leg <strong>of</strong> its<br />

journey to the campus. It was a moving<br />

week <strong>of</strong> ceremony, visitations and remembrance.<br />

During that same mid-April week, the<br />

<strong>University</strong> dedicated The Rotary Peace<br />

Park installed on six acres at the entrance<br />

to the campus, a park supported<br />

by the generosity <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg’s Rotary<br />

Clubs and the dedicated effort <strong>of</strong><br />

Rotarian Elizabeth Belenchia. With its<br />

hundreds <strong>of</strong> newly planted trees and its<br />

benches, walkways, amphitheatre, bridges,<br />

lake and fountain, the <strong>University</strong>’s<br />

Rotary Peace Park, together with other<br />

Rotary Peace parks around the world,<br />

will serve as a continuing reminder <strong>of</strong> the<br />

work <strong>of</strong> peace.<br />

Who could have anticipated in 1967<br />

what USC <strong>Upstate</strong> would become…a<br />

residential campus with 5,000 students,<br />

300 acres, 17,000 living alumni and<br />

1,000 graduates a year and climbing<br />

And even as recently as last year, who<br />

could have imagined not only the residential<br />

campus, but a new downtown<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional campus for the <strong>University</strong>’s<br />

fastest growing programs in business<br />

and economics Who could have imagined<br />

the partnership with the City <strong>of</strong><br />

Spartanburg making possible the downtown<br />

property and a major new parking<br />

facility<br />

Most importantly, who could have imagined<br />

the significant personal financial<br />

commitments that would have made<br />

possible the construction and endowment<br />

<strong>of</strong> this new downtown campus<br />

And who could have imagined the name:<br />

The George Dean Johnson, Jr. College<br />

<strong>of</strong> Business and Economics<br />

This issue <strong>of</strong> The <strong>University</strong> Review begins<br />

to tell the even more exciting story<br />

<strong>of</strong> the second forty years.<br />

Dr. John C. Stockwell, Chancellor


A Place<br />

and<br />

To<br />

Prosper<br />

Live,Work<br />

The George Dean Johnson, Jr. College <strong>of</strong><br />

Business and Economics at USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

currently enrolls nearly 850 majors and is the<br />

fastest growing unit in the <strong>University</strong>. It is fully<br />

accredited by the Association for the Advancement<br />

<strong>of</strong> Collegiate Schools <strong>of</strong> Business, one <strong>of</strong> 41<br />

institutions worldwide with undergraduate only<br />

programs that are accredited. Few business<br />

schools in the nation with a predominantly<br />

undergraduate mission are accredited by this<br />

prestigious international association. In addition<br />

to its major programs in business administration,<br />

finance, marketing, management, accounting and<br />

economics, the College will <strong>of</strong>fer USC’s PMBA<br />

degree on-site.<br />

BY TAMMY E. WHALEY<br />

His hometown, once prosperous<br />

from peach orchards and textile<br />

mills, now fights to recruit<br />

white collar jobs that will entice<br />

generations <strong>of</strong> young leaders to<br />

stay in the community. He believes<br />

that education is the answer to<br />

recruiting these jobs to the area,<br />

bringing with them a higher per<br />

capita income and increase in the<br />

quality <strong>of</strong> living.<br />

It is this belief that led George<br />

Dean Johnson, Jr. to explore<br />

ways in which he could help the<br />

Spartanburg community, now and<br />

for generations to come, to prosper<br />

as others from his hometown once<br />

prospered.<br />

While Johnson is as well-known<br />

for his business acumen as he<br />

is for the philanthropic efforts he<br />

and his wife, Susu, have made to<br />

education and the arts, he is adding<br />

a new dimension to his legacy. The<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

announced in December the naming<br />

<strong>of</strong> the George Dean Johnson, Jr.<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Business and Economics<br />

and the promise <strong>of</strong> a new downtown<br />

location that will assist in economic<br />

development, aid in pre-start-up<br />

and incubation support <strong>of</strong> small<br />

business, and introduce thousands<br />

<strong>of</strong> business majors over the years to<br />

the opportunities for investment in<br />

the City.<br />

“The <strong>University</strong> is greatly honored<br />

by the identification <strong>of</strong> its business<br />

school with Mr. Johnson. And<br />

locating the George Dean<br />

Johnson, Jr. College <strong>of</strong> Business<br />

and Economics in the center<br />

<strong>of</strong> Renaissance Park will be a<br />

tremendous asset not only to<br />

downtown development but,<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the naming, to the<br />

reputation <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>,” said<br />

Dr. John Stockwell, chancellor <strong>of</strong><br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong>.<br />

Johnson is a man <strong>of</strong> immense<br />

talent and versatility — former<br />

practicing attorney, legislator, State<br />

Development Board chairman and<br />

State Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce<br />

president — and one <strong>of</strong> the nation’s<br />

most successful entrepreneurs. He<br />

is founder, former Chief Executive<br />

Officer and a former Director<br />

<strong>of</strong> Extended Stay America, Inc.<br />

Johnson is a former President <strong>of</strong><br />

the domestic consumer division<br />

<strong>of</strong> Blockbuster Entertainment, a<br />

division <strong>of</strong> Viacom, Inc. He was<br />

formerly the managing general<br />

partner <strong>of</strong> WJB Video, the largest<br />

Blockbuster franchisee, which<br />

developed over 200 video stores<br />

prior to a merger with Blockbuster<br />

in 1993. Since 1985, Johnson<br />

has been the managing general<br />

partner <strong>of</strong> American Storage<br />

Limited Partnership, a chain <strong>of</strong><br />

28 self-storage facilities located<br />

in the <strong>Carolina</strong>s and Georgia. His<br />

real estate development company,<br />

Johnson Development Associates,<br />

Inc., has developed and manages<br />

in excess <strong>of</strong> 6 million square feet <strong>of</strong><br />

retail space, industrial space, <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

space and apartments.<br />

Stockwell adds that the new facility<br />

will be located along Saint John<br />

Street adjacent to the Chapman<br />

Cultural Center. The facility will be<br />

a three-story, 44,000 square foot<br />

building. The <strong>University</strong> expects to<br />

break ground in late fall <strong>2008</strong> and<br />

anticipates that construction will be<br />

completed in December 2009.<br />

“Our future is tied to education<br />

and I believe that this project will<br />

help us all in ways that we can’t<br />

yet imagine,” said Johnson. “This<br />

is an investment in the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong> and<br />

in the College <strong>of</strong> Business and<br />

Economics but more importantly, it<br />

is an investment in the community.<br />

It is setting the stage for economic<br />

development, the creation <strong>of</strong><br />

4 <strong>University</strong> Review


entrepreneurs and for life-long<br />

learning. It is an investment in<br />

Spartanburg—one that I hope<br />

will give people’s children and<br />

grandchildren a place to live, work<br />

and prosper.”<br />

Johnson has become wellacquainted<br />

with educational<br />

statistics and can quote those as<br />

easily as he can explain investment<br />

returns. He talks <strong>of</strong> how only 66<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> high school students<br />

in Spartanburg County actually<br />

receive a high school diploma and<br />

only 33 percent <strong>of</strong> those students<br />

seek further education. Johnson<br />

has great concerns that only 18<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg residents<br />

have a college<br />

degree, making it<br />

harder to build a<br />

knowledge-based<br />

economy which is<br />

the way <strong>of</strong> the future.<br />

He cites that our per<br />

capita income, which<br />

is the measure <strong>of</strong> our<br />

economic and social<br />

health, is lower than<br />

the state average.<br />

“With this bold move to locate the<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Business downtown,<br />

it is one step in having a vibrant<br />

downtown,” said Johnson.<br />

“Spartanburg County cannot<br />

be successful unless the City is<br />

dynamic and vital because we<br />

cannot recruit knowledge-based<br />

jobs. The road out <strong>of</strong> poverty<br />

runs directly by the school house<br />

door. If we have the boldness and<br />

the confidence to invest in USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> we will be successful as<br />

a community and our per capita<br />

income will grow.”<br />

Mayor Bill Barnet agrees and says<br />

that bringing the Johnson College<br />

<strong>of</strong> Business and Economics<br />

to downtown Spartanburg will<br />

create a new energy, untapped<br />

opportunities, and an enthusiastic<br />

commitment to education.<br />

“We spawn another great project<br />

that will move the momentum <strong>of</strong><br />

our community forward and that<br />

can benefit the next generation as<br />

we had hoped to do,” said Barnet.<br />

“This is a dream for the City. Dream<br />

with me <strong>of</strong> the 850 college students<br />

and all the potential they will bring,<br />

a distinguished faculty that will be<br />

housed in the center <strong>of</strong> our city,<br />

the potential for our entrepreneurial<br />

talents, the possibilities for<br />

internships, and the promise for<br />

retail and housing. This community<br />

can and will be all that it should be.”<br />

The City <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg is<br />

partnering with USC <strong>Upstate</strong> to<br />

make this new $26 million facility<br />

a reality. The City’s provision <strong>of</strong><br />

land (approximately one acre) is<br />

I see this as an investment in USC <strong>Upstate</strong>,<br />

an investment in the College <strong>of</strong> Business,<br />

and more importantly an investment in<br />

our community. It is an investment in<br />

Spartanburg—one that I hope will give<br />

people’s children and grandchildren a place<br />

“to live, work and prosper.<br />

—Johnson<br />

”<br />

valued at $650,000 and the City<br />

will partner with the <strong>University</strong> in<br />

the construction <strong>of</strong> a new 780-<br />

space parking garage at a cost <strong>of</strong><br />

$11 million with a minimum <strong>of</strong> 250<br />

parking spaces provided for USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. The City will also provide<br />

infrastructure to include sidewalks,<br />

streets and landscaping.<br />

In addition to the City’s financial<br />

commitment, more than $10 million<br />

in private contributions, including<br />

$2 million to endow the College,<br />

was raised in less than 30 days. The<br />

<strong>University</strong> will contribute $5 million<br />

toward the project. The capital<br />

project will be developed and<br />

managed by the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont<br />

Foundation Properties II, LLC.<br />

“The Johnson College <strong>of</strong> Business<br />

and Economics is a gift to this<br />

community in many ways,” said City<br />

Manager Mark Scott. “The St. John<br />

Street address should be among<br />

the best in the entire <strong>Upstate</strong> and<br />

our Downtown Master Plan singles<br />

Dr. John Stockwell, Dr. Diane Vecchio, Susu and<br />

George Dean Johnson, Jr. and Mayor Bill Barnet<br />

Ned Johnson<br />

Stewart Johnson, Sr.<br />

Valerie and Bill Barnet<br />

Susu and George Dean Johnson, Jr.<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 5


Dr. John Stockwell, George Dean Johnson, Jr. and Dr. Darrell Parker<br />

George Dean Johnson, Jr. and<br />

Cantey Heath<br />

Lenna Fulmer<br />

Roger Milliken and Katie Hodge<br />

Rob Chapman<br />

out the Renaissance Park area for future growth. In addition, it<br />

as key to our future downtown will permit the development <strong>of</strong><br />

development. The Johnson College specialized instructional space<br />

<strong>of</strong> Business and Economics will including dedicated computer<br />

stimulate pedestrian activity, labs with business s<strong>of</strong>tware, a<br />

generate pr<strong>of</strong>essional level job<br />

creation in the area, bring meetings<br />

and tourism to the Marriott Hotel,<br />

stock market trading room for<br />

finance classes, and classrooms<br />

with computers to permit students<br />

and perhaps best <strong>of</strong> all, it will to individually run educational<br />

expose thousands <strong>of</strong> future s<strong>of</strong>tware during class. It will also<br />

business leaders to the joys <strong>of</strong><br />

living and working in downtown<br />

Spartanburg. It would be hard to<br />

find a better fit for the goals the<br />

Master Plan presents.”<br />

Dr. Stockwell acknowledged that<br />

“this project would not be possible<br />

support executive education and<br />

other academic outreach activities,<br />

enabling expanded services for<br />

small businesses and connecting<br />

business leaders with the <strong>University</strong><br />

and its students.”<br />

The magnitude <strong>of</strong> this new facility<br />

without the private financial and having Johnson’s name<br />

resources <strong>of</strong> very committed donors<br />

and the leadership <strong>of</strong> Mayor Barnet,<br />

the City Council, City Manager Mark<br />

Scott and the City planning team.”<br />

attached to it is certainly not lost<br />

on Jim Smith, a 1972 graduate <strong>of</strong><br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> and chairman <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Spartanburg County Commission<br />

With the announcement <strong>of</strong> the<br />

for Higher Education. “In 1967<br />

new name and architectural and<br />

we stood at the threshold <strong>of</strong><br />

construction plans currently in<br />

tremendous opportunity with the<br />

progress, it has been hard to<br />

opening <strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong> with 177<br />

contain the enthusiasm and<br />

students and big dreams. Today<br />

excitement <strong>of</strong> Dr. Darrell Parker,<br />

we likewise stand at the threshold<br />

dean <strong>of</strong> the Johnson College <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> a tremendous opportunity. This<br />

Business and Economics.<br />

is a benchmark in the life <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> and in our City. It takes<br />

“First priorities for the College<br />

are modern facilities with current<br />

the <strong>University</strong> a tremendous step<br />

forward toward becoming the<br />

technology, shared space preeminent metropolitan institution<br />

for executive and continuing in the <strong>South</strong>east which we aspire<br />

education opportunities, and a<br />

“Class A” <strong>of</strong>fice environment that<br />

welcomes and serves the business<br />

community,” said Parker. “This new<br />

facility will relieve pressures on<br />

restricted space for teaching and<br />

to be. George Dean Johnson, Jr.<br />

has set a standard <strong>of</strong> citizenship<br />

and stewardship <strong>of</strong> which every<br />

business person and every citizen<br />

in Spartanburg should hold in the<br />

highest regard.”<br />

learning through the creation <strong>of</strong><br />

sufficient classrooms and <strong>of</strong>fices<br />

6 <strong>University</strong> Review


RUNNING For Peace<br />

RACING For Opportunities<br />

BY CLAIRE SACHSE<br />

For Emily Cheptoo Tangwar, distance running has been part <strong>of</strong> her daily routine for her entire life. As an elementary school<br />

student in Eldoret, Kenya, Emily ran back and forth to school from her home on a farm, an average <strong>of</strong> eight miles a day.<br />

Now, this petite 5-foot-2-inch, 97-pound USC <strong>Upstate</strong> freshman runs for her school, on USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s first cross country<br />

team fielded since the Spartans joined NCAA Division I in the Atlantic Sun Conference and on the inaugural track and field<br />

team.<br />

Emily competes in the 800 meters, one mile, 3,000 meters and 5K events, but her race <strong>of</strong> preference is the 5K. In fact,<br />

in all <strong>of</strong> the six cross country meets held last fall, she finished in the top five. For her efforts last season she was named<br />

Atlantic Sun Freshman <strong>of</strong> the Year, All-Conference and All-Freshman. But she proves equally versatile in the shorter races.<br />

So far into the <strong>2008</strong> track and field season, she is ranked number one in the conference for the 3,000 meters and is in the<br />

top three for the mile and 800 meters. At the recent A-Sun Indoor Track & Field Championships, Emily won three individual<br />

championships–3,000 meter, 5,000 meter, 1 mile–and was named the Atlantic Sun Most Outstanding Runner and Most<br />

Outstanding Freshman.<br />

“Emily is very kind, very humble, but fearless once she steps on the track,” says Ed Schlichter, assistant track and field coach.<br />

“She preys on her competition as she patiently waits for the right moment to surge past.”<br />

One <strong>of</strong> nine children growing up on a farm in the Great Rift Valley in Kenya, Emily knew her chances for a college education<br />

would be dependent on her running ability. She had planned to attend college after graduating from Loreto High School,<br />

but the death <strong>of</strong> her father in 2003 derailed those plans for a time. In 2006, another opportunity came along for her, and she<br />

briefly attended the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alaska Fairbanks, where she realized “it was just too cold.” She was able to transfer to USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> in the fall <strong>of</strong> 2007 on a full athletic scholarship.<br />

Being so far from home and family has not been easy for Emily, especially since the recent election violence that erupted in<br />

Kenya after the December 2007 elections. She now knows that her family, while near areas where violence broke out, is safe.<br />

Electric power has been intermittent, making cell phone conversations and e-mail communication erratic.<br />

“I am affected mentally,” says Emily, “and <strong>of</strong> course I worry about their safety, but Kenya is such a nice country, a peaceful<br />

country.” Emily adds that she has “high hopes” for a United Nations brokered peace deal between the tribes <strong>of</strong> the opposition<br />

leader and the sitting president as she sees some normalcy returning to her country.<br />

“What has happened in her homeland has definitely taken a toll on her,” says Schlichter, who, along with the other coaches,<br />

teammates, teachers and friends, surrounded her with support during the worst periods. “But with her support system and things<br />

starting to calm down a bit in Kenya, Emily has really begun to take <strong>of</strong>f.”<br />

Head coach Jimmy Stephens observed Emily during the months <strong>of</strong> unrest in Kenya and says that while<br />

the uncertainty did affect her training, she has now “turned it into motivation to run and train faster.”<br />

“I will get to go home in December this year,” says Emily who has not seen her family since 2006. When she returns to USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> after the winter break, she will begin courses in the Mary Black School <strong>of</strong> Nursing. After she graduates, Emily plans<br />

to return to her native Kenya to begin a nursing career.<br />

“My focus is on general health issues,” she says. Emily adds that she will be equipped to handle the medical, technical<br />

and equipment advances that will come to Kenya in the future because <strong>of</strong> her education in the United States here at USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. She also states that she is very thankful to the United States government for allowing her to study in America.<br />

“Emily’s number one strength is her character,” says Coach Stephens. Coach Schlichter echoes Stephens’ comments, adding<br />

that Emily “is a tremendous person and athlete, and what she does and how she does it should be an inspiration to everyone.”<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 7


Andy Warhol<br />

Photos<br />

Bring Pop Icon’s Influence To<br />

<strong>University</strong>’s Permanent Collection<br />

BY TAMMY E. WHALEY<br />

Andy Warhol is an artist <strong>of</strong> many mediums—<br />

painting, film, books and photography<br />

—who is <strong>of</strong>ten remembered as much<br />

for his art as for his influence on pop<br />

culture. After all, he did take common<br />

American products such as Campbell’s<br />

Soup cans and Coca-Cola and turn<br />

them into art in the 1960s.<br />

As the debate <strong>of</strong> Warhol’s art and<br />

influence remains popular in the art<br />

world, the Andy Warhol Foundation<br />

for the Visual Arts recently celebrated<br />

its 20th anniversary. To commemorate<br />

the anniversary, the Andy Warhol<br />

Photographic Legacy Program<br />

was established and made an<br />

unprecedented gift <strong>of</strong> 28,543 original<br />

Warhol photographs to 183 college<br />

and university art museums across the<br />

U.S., an overall gift valued in excess <strong>of</strong><br />

$28 million.<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> was fortunate to be<br />

selected as one <strong>of</strong> the recipients and<br />

recently took possession <strong>of</strong> 152 original<br />

Warhol photographs, original Polaroid<br />

photographs and gelatin silver prints.<br />

“Andy Warhol is recognized as a pop<br />

artist icon and having his original<br />

work in the permanent collection<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong> is an exciting and<br />

8 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

unprecedented opportunity for a<br />

university <strong>of</strong> our age and size,” said Jane<br />

Nodine, pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> art and director <strong>of</strong><br />

the <strong>University</strong> Gallery. “We look forward<br />

to promoting and making public the<br />

collection through exhibition and<br />

research venues in the near future.”<br />

The intent <strong>of</strong> donating Warhol’s<br />

photographs is to provide greater<br />

access to his artwork and process, and<br />

to enable a wide range <strong>of</strong> people from<br />

communities across the country to view<br />

and study this important yet relatively<br />

unknown body <strong>of</strong> Warhol’s work. The<br />

program <strong>of</strong>fers institutions that do<br />

not have the means to acquire works<br />

by Warhol the opportunity to bring a<br />

significant number <strong>of</strong> photographs into<br />

their permanent collections.<br />

“It’s one thing to read about Andy<br />

Warhol and his art work in class, but<br />

to actually have a sample <strong>of</strong> his work<br />

here on campus is very special,” said<br />

Laura Buchanan, a senior from Lyman.<br />

“Having the Andy Warhol photographs<br />

on campus gives every student the<br />

chance to see work from famous artists<br />

without having to travel to New York or<br />

Europe.”<br />

Dr. Rachel Snow, assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

<strong>of</strong> art history, notes that her History <strong>of</strong><br />

Photography and Twentieth Century Art<br />

classes will be able to conduct research<br />

on original Warhol photographs. For<br />

example, art education majors can use<br />

the photographs to write unique lesson<br />

plans that allow students to think about<br />

how popular culture relates to fine art<br />

culture. Art studio majors can use these<br />

images to think about how to organize<br />

and design art exhibitions and how to<br />

research and write educational materials<br />

that will help the public get the most out<br />

<strong>of</strong> such an exhibition.<br />

In addition to opening up a variety <strong>of</strong><br />

independent study opportunities to<br />

students, including the opportunity<br />

to help catalog, research and write<br />

about art using primary sources,<br />

these photographs will bring more<br />

attention to USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s already<br />

outstanding collection <strong>of</strong> original<br />

artwork, which includes a number <strong>of</strong><br />

valuable Jerry Uelsmann photographs<br />

and a substantial number <strong>of</strong> paintings<br />

by the well-known and respected artist<br />

Beatrice Riese.<br />

“Unlike photographs that have negatives<br />

that allow them to be reproduced in<br />

great quantities, these Polaroids are<br />

unique images that are made and


developed in the camera, they have no negative from<br />

which other copies can be made,” said Snow. “These<br />

truly are one-<strong>of</strong>-a-kind photographs.”<br />

Snow referenced Polaroid’s recent announcement<br />

that the company will discontinue producing the<br />

kinds <strong>of</strong> cameras and supplies Warhol used to<br />

produce these images.<br />

“Although we have all seen and are familiar with<br />

Polaroid instant photographs, one or two generations<br />

from now, these once ubiquitous images will seem<br />

as unfamiliar and curious to viewers as other, now<br />

defunct modes <strong>of</strong> making photographs (such as<br />

Daguerreotypes) seem to us now, ” said Snow.<br />

Warhol would <strong>of</strong>ten shoot a person or event with<br />

both cameras, cropping one in Polaroid color as a<br />

“photograph” and snapping the other in black and<br />

white as a “picture.” By presenting both kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

images side by side, viewers can move back and<br />

forth between moments <strong>of</strong> Warhol’s “art,” “work” and<br />

“life” —inseparable parts <strong>of</strong> a fascinating whole.<br />

“A wealth <strong>of</strong> information about Warhol’s process<br />

and his interactions with his sitters is revealed<br />

in these images,” said Jenny Moore, curator <strong>of</strong><br />

the Photographic Legacy Program. “Through his<br />

rigorous—though almost unconscious—consistency<br />

in shooting, the true idiosyncrasies <strong>of</strong> his subjects<br />

were revealed.”<br />

Nodine is currently working on exhibit space for the<br />

Warhol Collection and expects to have an opening<br />

in fall <strong>2008</strong>.<br />

Warhol displays a<br />

self-portrait.<br />

Andy Warhol<br />

Visual arts students Alexis Rogers, Keith Ball and<br />

Tyler Greenlee, along with Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jane Nodine,<br />

get a first glance at the Andy Warhol photographs.<br />

Nodine is holding a 1980s black and white photo <strong>of</strong><br />

Lauren Hutton.<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 9


Bringing<br />

Care<br />

and<br />

Compassion<br />

to the Homebound<br />

Nursing student Heather Chapman<br />

enjoys interacting with patients such as<br />

Mrs. Lewis as part <strong>of</strong> her placement with<br />

the Mobile Meals nursing ministry.<br />

BY HEATHER ALEXANDER-ENGELBRECHT<br />

It is one thing to sit in a classroom, or even in a laboratory, and<br />

learn the ins and outs <strong>of</strong> one’s desired pr<strong>of</strong>ession. It is quite<br />

another to put that knowledge into action. But that is just what<br />

a partnership between Mobile Meals <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg and the<br />

Mary Black School <strong>of</strong> Nursing at USC <strong>Upstate</strong> is doing for<br />

today’s nursing students.<br />

Course coordinator Charlene Walton, EdD, RN, and Jenny<br />

Holmes, MSN, RN, select eight senior nursing students per<br />

semester to work with nurses from Mobile Meals nursing<br />

ministry in conducting in-home visits to meal recipients. During<br />

these visits the students, who work in pairs, initially conduct a<br />

health history and family assessment to identify the healthcare<br />

needs <strong>of</strong> each client. Based on that information, the students<br />

then develop a teaching/learning plan and over the course<br />

<strong>of</strong> the next five weeks, implement that plan. These plans can<br />

cover anything from vascular disease and nutritional education<br />

to proper medication management and home safety.<br />

Since 1977, Mobile Meals has been delivering meals and<br />

compassion to the frail and homebound in the Spartanburg<br />

area. After seeing that many <strong>of</strong> the neediest people in the<br />

county had no access to healthcare, Mobile Meals president<br />

and CEO Jayne McQueen led the effort to secure $288,000<br />

in seed money from the Mary Black Foundation, and in 2002,<br />

with the help <strong>of</strong> Wylene Bailey, RN, and Janet Shaw, both<br />

former Mobile Meals board members, the organization’s<br />

Nursing Ministry began serving patients.<br />

While no one can quite remember just how this partnership<br />

between Mobile Meals and the <strong>University</strong>’s nursing students<br />

developed, everyone involved agrees that it is an invaluable<br />

learning experience for future nurses and a great asset to one<br />

<strong>of</strong> Spartanburg’s vital community agencies. “Anytime you can<br />

partner with others in the community it helps to further your<br />

own [organization’s] mission,” says Bailey. Dr. Marsha Dowell,<br />

dean <strong>of</strong> the Mary Black School <strong>of</strong> Nursing, agrees. “Whenever<br />

an academic unit can partner with someone in the community<br />

to augment and enhance a program while students learn is<br />

beneficial to everyone. Our students help vulnerable members<br />

<strong>of</strong> the community and learn to apply both theories and caring<br />

in an environment that is incredibly supportive <strong>of</strong> them.”<br />

During the five-week community nursing rotation, students<br />

have an opportunity to experience first-hand the challenges and<br />

rewards that come from working with patients who <strong>of</strong>ten fall<br />

through the cracks <strong>of</strong> traditional medical services. “Community<br />

health allows you to remember this is a whole person,” says<br />

Shaw. “In clinical settings, people are <strong>of</strong>ten categorized by the<br />

disease [they have], but community nurses see them in their<br />

homes and it gives them a broader picture <strong>of</strong> the person.” In<br />

addition to taking vital signs and helping the patients with their<br />

healthcare needs, <strong>of</strong>ten what the patient needs most is just a<br />

visitor to listen to their thoughts and concerns. “The greatest<br />

need for many <strong>of</strong> our patients is loneliness,” says Bailey. “They<br />

love the youthful energy the students bring when they visit.”<br />

Heather Chapman, a senior nursing student, has found her<br />

placement with the Mobile Meals nursing ministry to be a<br />

perfect match. “I would recommend this experience 100% to<br />

other nursing students. This experience humbles you as you<br />

visit so many different types <strong>of</strong> homes,” says Chapman. “Just<br />

because you think you know what people are going through,<br />

you see a whole different perspective when you go into their<br />

environment.”<br />

As Mrs. Lewis opens the door, her face lights up at the sight <strong>of</strong><br />

the students who have come to visit her. Mobile Meals began<br />

visiting Mrs. Lewis and her husband <strong>of</strong> 54 years when he got<br />

sick with Parkinson’s disease. Now that he is in a nursing<br />

home, Mrs. Lewis says it does get lonely but she appreciates<br />

the nursing ministry’s visits. Bailey, one <strong>of</strong> the two full-time<br />

nurses who staff the nursing ministry, stops by regularly to see<br />

how she is doing and to just listen. Mrs. Lewis also enjoys<br />

the students’ visits. “The students are so nice. I had my 81st<br />

birthday and Heather brought me a birthday card. It was the<br />

sweetest thing,” she said. “It means so much to me. They’re so<br />

loving and kind.”<br />

As they sit and talk about how she’s feeling and her recent<br />

visit to her husband, it is obvious Mrs. Lewis has had just as<br />

much <strong>of</strong> an impact on Chapman. “Mrs. Lewis has given me<br />

more than I could have ever imagined. She is an absolute joy<br />

to work with.”<br />

10 <strong>University</strong> Review


<strong>University</strong> by Morning and<br />

High School by Afternoon<br />

Area Ninth Graders Earn College Credits in Scholars Academy<br />

BY CLAIRE SACHSE<br />

Dalton Fowler, Forrest Rossi and<br />

Kortney Schumann take notes<br />

during a government class.<br />

Hilary Martin listens intently to a<br />

lecture by Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Tim Dale.<br />

Students in the first Scholars<br />

Academy class hail from:<br />

Boiling <strong>Spring</strong>s High School<br />

Broome High School<br />

Byrnes High School<br />

Chapman High School<br />

Chesnee High School<br />

Dorman Freshman Campus<br />

Landrum High School<br />

Imagine being 14-years old with college<br />

credits already under your belt! For a<br />

select group <strong>of</strong> Spartanburg County ninth<br />

graders, this scenario is a reality, thanks to a<br />

$2.6 million U.S. Department <strong>of</strong> Education<br />

funded grant program called the Scholars<br />

Academy.<br />

The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong>,<br />

in coordination with educators in seven<br />

Spartanburg County school districts,<br />

implemented this competitive program<br />

which allows academically advanced ninth<br />

graders to take courses on the college<br />

campus during their high school years,<br />

starting in the 2007-<strong>2008</strong> school year. By<br />

the time they graduate from high school,<br />

they will have 45 – 60 college credit hours<br />

to their name, giving them a jump on their<br />

college careers and saving their parents<br />

thousands in college tuition.<br />

Twenty-three students from various high<br />

schools spent half their day on the USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> campus during the 2007-08<br />

academic year. They arrived by bus from<br />

their home high schools at 8:30 a.m.,<br />

attended core classes together until noon,<br />

had lunch in the Campus Life Center<br />

Cafeteria, and returned by bus to their<br />

respective high schools to complete their<br />

day and attend extracurricular events.<br />

Core classes include English, American<br />

history, math, government, physical<br />

science and wellness/fitness. First year<br />

math and advanced English are taught by<br />

certified high school teachers and the rest<br />

<strong>of</strong> their classes are taught by <strong>University</strong><br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essors. As the students advance to<br />

their sophomore, junior and senior years <strong>of</strong><br />

high school, they will be blended gradually<br />

into classes with college students.<br />

“They are <strong>of</strong>ficial college students,” says<br />

Melissa Deloach, director <strong>of</strong> the program.<br />

“They have a college transcript after one<br />

semester and they are able to do all on<br />

campus that normal students do.” They<br />

are provided USC <strong>Upstate</strong> student e-<br />

mail accounts, and they have access to<br />

Blackboard, the electronic forum for course<br />

information, assignments and studentpr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

communication.<br />

But Deloach, who has been a teacher for<br />

19 years and an assistant principal at the<br />

Dorman Freshman Campus, knows that<br />

even though they are on a college campus,<br />

the Scholars Academy students are still<br />

“kids.” Like a mother hen, she supervises<br />

the students while they are on campus and<br />

is careful to ensure they stay together and<br />

have the necessary adult supervision at all<br />

times.<br />

“We want to keep the kids together for<br />

security and maturity reasons for the first<br />

two years,” she says, adding that by their<br />

junior and senior years “they’ll have a lot<br />

more freedom to take what they want.”<br />

Even though the students are considered<br />

academically advanced, they are still new to<br />

college study habits. Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Paul Grady,<br />

who taught American history over the fall<br />

semester, says that many <strong>of</strong> his students<br />

were surprised to receive C’s and lower<br />

on tests at the start <strong>of</strong> the semester. “But<br />

as the semester progressed and as they<br />

realized they had to put more effort into<br />

studying for college level classes than they<br />

were used to, the students quickly shifted<br />

into gear, and finished the semester quite<br />

well.”<br />

Entrance to the Academy is competitive, as<br />

the students must complete an interview<br />

process, which includes their parents<br />

and pr<strong>of</strong>essors. A ratings system is also<br />

used, which includes the students’ grades<br />

to date. There is no charge for students<br />

to participate in Scholars Academy. For<br />

further information about the program,<br />

contact Melissa Deloach by calling (864)<br />

503-5506 or e-mail her at mdeloach@<br />

uscupstate.edu or visit the Scholars<br />

Academy Web site www.uscupstate.edu/<br />

academics/education/scholars_academy.<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 11


USC <strong>Upstate</strong> alumna Carolyn Turner ‘07<br />

organized the tax preparation clinic at<br />

the Middle Tyger Community Center to<br />

help low income and elderly community<br />

members file their taxes online.<br />

More Than a Paycheck<br />

BY HEATHER ALEXANDER-ENGELBRECHTENGELBRECHT<br />

For a relatively small program that has<br />

only 40 majors, USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s Nonpr<strong>of</strong>it<br />

Administration students and pr<strong>of</strong>essors<br />

logged more than 5,636 hours<br />

in 2007 volunteering or interning with<br />

nonpr<strong>of</strong>it organizations to help make<br />

our community a better place to live,<br />

work and play. The Nonpr<strong>of</strong>it Administration<br />

program, <strong>of</strong>fered by the Center<br />

for Nonpr<strong>of</strong>it Leadership as both a<br />

major and a minor, prepares graduates<br />

for careers in management and administrative<br />

positions within a wide variety<br />

<strong>of</strong> nonpr<strong>of</strong>it organizations such as social<br />

services, youth activities, health, the<br />

environment and the arts. Basic leadership<br />

and management principles are<br />

key components <strong>of</strong> the curriculum.<br />

Students also gain real-world experience<br />

through the required internships<br />

and service learning projects with local<br />

nonpr<strong>of</strong>its and have a chance to see<br />

if a career in the nonpr<strong>of</strong>it sector is a<br />

good fit for them. “We’re able to connect<br />

academic majors with practical experience,”<br />

says Dr. Theresa Ricke-Kiely,<br />

director <strong>of</strong> the Center. “Often an organization<br />

will mentor the student during<br />

the internship and create a position for<br />

them after they graduate.”<br />

And more <strong>of</strong>ten than not, the hard work<br />

and energy the students bring to their<br />

internships continues to flow into the<br />

community after graduation as most<br />

nonpr<strong>of</strong>it leadership graduates find<br />

full-time jobs with nonpr<strong>of</strong>its in the<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. At one such organization,<br />

12 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

the United Way <strong>of</strong> the Piedmont, several<br />

recent USC <strong>Upstate</strong> graduates are<br />

working in the community through the<br />

AmeriCorps*VISTA program, a national<br />

service program that places volunteers<br />

with other agencies in communities<br />

to alleviate poverty by building capacity<br />

and programs to sustain their missions.<br />

Rochelle Ladson ’07 is working with<br />

Bethlehem Center in Spartanburg, providing<br />

public relations assistance and<br />

volunteer recruitment and has made it<br />

a personal goal to help keep the food<br />

pantry stocked. She joined the VISTA<br />

program “because I wasn’t done giving<br />

back.” Ladson graduated from <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

with a degree in interdisciplinary studies<br />

and credits her experience with the<br />

nonpr<strong>of</strong>it leadership program as shaping<br />

her as a person. “Nonpr<strong>of</strong>it leadership<br />

is a good fit for people who aren’t<br />

just looking for a paycheck,” she says.<br />

Lakisha Spears ’07 agrees and says<br />

all students should take at least one<br />

class in nonpr<strong>of</strong>it leadership. During<br />

her senior seminar, Chris Steed,<br />

vice president <strong>of</strong> community impact at<br />

United Way, gave a presentation about<br />

the VISTA program and she liked what<br />

she saw. “I was the first person to sign<br />

up!” Spears is working at SAFE Homes<br />

Rape Crisis Coalition in Spartanburg<br />

providing domestic violence and sexual<br />

assault education in an age-appropriate<br />

manner to K-2 students. The outreach<br />

program she is helping to develop will<br />

eventually be used in all schools in<br />

Spartanburg and Cherokee counties.<br />

Spears will soon begin a new position<br />

with the Girl Scouts <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong><br />

Mountains to Midlands as a development<br />

and marketing assistant. Her advice<br />

to students “Join AmeriCorps. It is<br />

a great learning experience,” she says.<br />

As a nonpr<strong>of</strong>it administration intern<br />

with the United Way last spring, Carolyn<br />

Turner ’07 helped Chris Steed write<br />

the grant that now funds the VISTA<br />

program at the United Way. She is<br />

now a VISTA member herself, working<br />

with the Middle Tyger Community<br />

Center where she is researching parenting<br />

among adolescents, creating a<br />

volunteer training manual and writing<br />

a report on programs to address teen<br />

pregnancy. Turner says working with<br />

the center “makes you very appreciative<br />

<strong>of</strong> all you have.”<br />

“The agencies we work with have<br />

had great experiences with VISTA<br />

members,” says Callie Hammond, director<br />

<strong>of</strong> Volunteer Connections &<br />

AmeriCorps*VISTA at United Way.<br />

She adds that the nonpr<strong>of</strong>it leadership<br />

graduates “have a clear understanding<br />

<strong>of</strong> the structure <strong>of</strong> nonpr<strong>of</strong>it agencies;<br />

however I think they have really learned<br />

a lot from actually working in nonpr<strong>of</strong>its.<br />

They all have been extremely grateful<br />

for their experiences. What you learn<br />

in a book can <strong>of</strong>ten be a lot different in<br />

reality.”


Founders’ Day Celebration<br />

Honors Loyal Supporters<br />

BY TAMMY E. WHALEY<br />

Toney J. Lister J. Eugene (Gene) Adams H. Spencer King<br />

Each February the <strong>University</strong> holds its Founders’ Day<br />

Celebration to honor friends and supporters <strong>of</strong> USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> who have been instrumental in the development <strong>of</strong><br />

the institution. This year was exceptionally special as we are<br />

celebrating the institution’s 40th anniversary.<br />

“As we look at today’s campus and reflect on our humble<br />

beginnings, the sheer magnitude <strong>of</strong> our accomplishments is<br />

sometimes hard to fathom,” said Chancellor John Stockwell<br />

at the February 19 reception. “We owe our thanks to<br />

dedicated individuals, such as those we celebrate tonight,<br />

for believing in USC <strong>Upstate</strong> and leading the way for this<br />

<strong>University</strong> to become a driving force in the <strong>Upstate</strong>.”<br />

Both the Spartanburg County Commission for Higher<br />

Education and the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation presented<br />

awards at Founders’ Day.<br />

The Commission bestows its prestigious Founders’ Day<br />

Distinguished Service Award to friends and supporters<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> who have made special and important<br />

contributions to USC <strong>Upstate</strong> and to the community the<br />

<strong>University</strong> serves. Receiving the <strong>2008</strong> Distinguished Service<br />

Award were Joel Eugene (Gene) Adams, H. Spencer King<br />

and Toney J. Lister.<br />

The Commission also presented two Awards for<br />

Distinguished Service in honor <strong>of</strong> long and distinguished<br />

careers <strong>of</strong> service to the <strong>University</strong>. Nancy Bailey, who<br />

retired as budget director and financial planner after a 27-<br />

year career, and Howard “Buddy” Nance, who retired from<br />

the facilities department after a 32-year career, received this<br />

award.<br />

“The careers <strong>of</strong> Nancy and Buddy are both characterized by<br />

exceptional dedication, exceptional work ethic and persistent<br />

commitment to quality,” said Jim Smith ‘72, chairman <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Commission.<br />

The <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation, the fundraising entity <strong>of</strong><br />

the <strong>University</strong>, presented two awards at Founders’ Day. The<br />

Service Award, given to the individual who represents the<br />

very ideals <strong>of</strong> volunteerism and commitment, was presented<br />

to Karen Calhoun. The Foundation Award, given to the<br />

individual or organization that has provided exceptional<br />

philanthropic support, was presented to The JM Smith<br />

Foundation.<br />

“The Foundation and the <strong>University</strong> are indeed blessed to<br />

have generous and supportive friends, such as Karen and The<br />

JM Smith Foundation, who work to ensure that our students<br />

have access to scholarships, facilities and technology,” said<br />

Mike Irvin, vice chancellor for advancement and executive<br />

director <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation.<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 13


Freedom, Civil Rights, Vietnam and Drugs:<br />

Tilt 68 Author Explores Issues <strong>of</strong> the ‘60s<br />

BY TAMMY E. WHALEY<br />

Sarah Colton, author <strong>of</strong> Tilt 68, shares some <strong>of</strong> her challenges as a writer with<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> English Dr. Thomas McConnell.<br />

From Vietnam to The Pill, from fraternity parties to<br />

Existentialism, the novel Tilt 68 brings the late 1960s to life<br />

through the pr<strong>of</strong>ound changes experienced by one <strong>South</strong>ern<br />

woman who dares to look at her own life with open eyes.<br />

Sarah Colton, author <strong>of</strong> Tilt 68, shared her stories with the<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> campus this <strong>Spring</strong> when she spoke to several<br />

classes and gave an author lecture.<br />

“USC <strong>Upstate</strong> students don’t <strong>of</strong>ten have the opportunity to<br />

meet a living writer in the flesh, so it was a great delight for<br />

them to have one on campus,” said Dr. Thomas McConnell,<br />

associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> English. “The chance to pitch your<br />

questions to someone who’s already been through and<br />

conquered the challenges you’re facing as a young writer is<br />

a real privilege. Luckily, we had the benefit <strong>of</strong> Sarah Colton’s<br />

wisdom.”<br />

Colton says she always knew she would write a novel.<br />

Following her graduation from UNC Chapel Hill in 1971, she<br />

worked as a legislative assistant on Capitol Hill for one year<br />

before cashing in all her savings, and moving to Europe with<br />

nothing but a small canvas suitcase stuffed with dreams <strong>of</strong><br />

adventure. What she didn’t realize was that the novel would<br />

be 20 years in the making.<br />

“I began writing a series <strong>of</strong> essays centered around a<br />

burning question which had troubled me for more than two<br />

decades: ‘What happened to me during my first two years <strong>of</strong><br />

college (the years 1967 to 1969)’ Somehow, it seems that<br />

I had entered them as one person and emerged as someone<br />

fundamentally different. So did most <strong>of</strong> my friends. What<br />

happened to us How could we and an entire society have<br />

changed so drastically in such a short time” asked Colton.<br />

Tilt 68 is a novel grounded in the energy and icons <strong>of</strong> the<br />

1960s and tells the story <strong>of</strong> Louisa Ellington, an 18-year old<br />

freshman at a <strong>South</strong>ern women’s college. Louisa is a coed<br />

when the sudden and widespread availability <strong>of</strong> The Pill<br />

thrusts unprecedented freedom on an entire generation <strong>of</strong><br />

women—all within the context <strong>of</strong> the Civil Rights movement,<br />

the Vietnam War and the arrival <strong>of</strong> drugs on campus.<br />

“Tilt 68 will speak to any reader who has ever challenged<br />

authority and wrestled with the conflicting doubts and<br />

convictions unleashed by power shifts along the elemental<br />

fault-lines <strong>of</strong> life: sex, politics, race, religion and war,” said<br />

Colton.<br />

A native <strong>of</strong> North <strong>Carolina</strong>, Colton now divides her time<br />

between Asheville and Paris. Although Tilt 68 is Colton’s first<br />

novel, her articles and fiction have appeared in publications<br />

such as Glamour and Redbook and the short-story anthology<br />

They Only Laughed Later.<br />

14 <strong>University</strong> Review


USC <strong>Upstate</strong> a Stepping Stone<br />

BY CLAIRE SACHSE<br />

to the Presidency<br />

The campaign trail swings through campus<br />

Presidential campaigns were a<br />

frequent occurrence on the campus<br />

<strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong> this past fall. As the<br />

<strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> primaries drew near in<br />

January, the candidates increased their<br />

presence in the <strong>Upstate</strong> by attending<br />

a variety <strong>of</strong> local events and visiting<br />

numerous local venues, including the<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> campus.<br />

In its 40-year history, USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

has never hosted a U.S. president or<br />

former president, that is, until October<br />

29, 2007, when former President Bill<br />

Clinton visited campus to rally support<br />

for his wife, Hillary Clinton, who is<br />

running on the Democratic ticket.<br />

Greeted by a cheering crowd <strong>of</strong> about<br />

1,400 supporters, spotlighted by<br />

national media crews, and surrounded<br />

by his Secret Service detail, Clinton<br />

spoke passionately, yet in his trademark<br />

conversational style, about the hot<br />

button issues <strong>of</strong> the <strong>2008</strong> campaign,<br />

including the environment, the economy,<br />

health care and the war in Iraq.<br />

Xavier Pearson, president <strong>of</strong> the<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> Student Government<br />

Association, was selected by the<br />

campaign and the <strong>University</strong> to deliver<br />

opening remarks at the event.<br />

“I don’t know many people, Republican,<br />

Democrat or independent, who are<br />

not somehow inspired by President<br />

Clinton,” Pearson says. A political<br />

science major with future political<br />

ambitions, Pearson says that the<br />

election has dominated the discussions<br />

in many <strong>of</strong> his courses, as well as<br />

outside the classroom.<br />

“While he was here, Clinton said that<br />

maybe I will be president one day. I<br />

don’t know about all that, but we’ll see,”<br />

says Pearson.<br />

Clinton’s campaign stop to the Hodge<br />

Gym also included a private meeting<br />

with African American religious leaders<br />

from Spartanburg area congregations.<br />

Other notable campaign visits have<br />

included Senator John McCain (R-<br />

Ariz.) who arrived aboard the “Straight<br />

Talk Express” tour bus on October 18.<br />

After a tour <strong>of</strong> the Mary Black School <strong>of</strong><br />

Nursing, McCain delivered his remarks<br />

in the nursing auditorium to a standingroom-only<br />

crowd.<br />

McCain focused his remarks on health<br />

care issues but also included his views<br />

on his opponents, the war in Iraq and<br />

U.S. foreign policy. Students and<br />

faculty also engaged him in a lively<br />

question and answer session.<br />

Hollywood actress Kathleen Turner,<br />

serving as an ambassador for Barack<br />

Obama’s campaign, paid a visit to USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> on August 30. Speaking to<br />

theatre and nursing students, the star <strong>of</strong><br />

Romancing the Stone and When Peggy<br />

Sue Got Married discussed women’s<br />

health issues and women’s rights,<br />

issues she says are close to her heart<br />

and the Obama campaign. Additionally<br />

she dispensed acting advice to many<br />

aspiring theatre students.<br />

And just days before the democratic<br />

primary, actress Kerry Washington, who<br />

starred in the movie Ray as the wife <strong>of</strong><br />

Ray Charles, and actor/comedian Chris<br />

Tucker, from Rush Hour fame, spoke to<br />

a lunchtime gathering <strong>of</strong> students on<br />

behalf <strong>of</strong> the Obama campaign in the<br />

Campus Life Center. On the eve <strong>of</strong><br />

the primary, Chelsea Clinton dropped<br />

in on behalf <strong>of</strong> her mother’s campaign,<br />

and spoke at length in private, casual<br />

discussions with students at the<br />

Campus Life Center.<br />

“It is exciting that candidates are<br />

choosing USC <strong>Upstate</strong> for visits,” says<br />

political science Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Tim Dale.<br />

“It makes sense for several reasons:<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> includes many<br />

undecided voters to whom candidates<br />

need to speak; the issues facing<br />

Spartanburg and the surrounding<br />

area are typical for the key issues<br />

in this race (economy, environment,<br />

employment, education); USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

is one <strong>of</strong> the larger institutions <strong>of</strong> higher<br />

education in the <strong>Upstate</strong>, and we are<br />

in a higher population metropolitan<br />

area; and candidates demonstrate<br />

support for higher education by visiting<br />

college campuses, especially public<br />

institutions.”<br />

Photo galleries <strong>of</strong> Bill Clinton and John<br />

McCain campaign stops are on the<br />

Web at www.uscupstate.edu/images.<br />

Kathleen Turner’s discussion is also<br />

posted to the Web as a podcast, at<br />

www.uscupstate.edu/podcasts.<br />

Bill Clinton,<br />

John McCain<br />

and Chelsea<br />

Clinton<br />

engaged<br />

the campus<br />

community in<br />

lively political<br />

discussions.<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 15


BY TAMMY E. WHALEY<br />

Michael E. Irvin was<br />

recently named vice<br />

chancellor for advancement<br />

and executive<br />

director <strong>of</strong><br />

the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont<br />

Foundation.<br />

Prior to coming to<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, Irvin<br />

was the director <strong>of</strong><br />

advancement for<br />

Purdue Agriculture<br />

at Purdue <strong>University</strong> where he successfully led a campaign<br />

in exceeding a $146 million goal as part <strong>of</strong> a seven-year<br />

$1.7 billion campaign.<br />

“We are fortunate to have recruited someone <strong>of</strong> Mike’s caliber<br />

for this very critical position at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>,” said Dr.<br />

John Stockwell, chancellor. “As USC <strong>Upstate</strong> moves toward<br />

fulfilling its mission <strong>of</strong> becoming one <strong>of</strong> the <strong>South</strong>east’s<br />

leading metropolitan universities, Mike’s development experience<br />

will be key.”<br />

Irvin Tapped To Lead<br />

Development Efforts<br />

“As president <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation, I am extremely<br />

happy and proud that Mike has joined our Foundation<br />

and look forward to his leadership,” said Tommy Young.<br />

“We hope to see the Foundation grow in the amount <strong>of</strong><br />

funds it brings in and in its role <strong>of</strong> advancing the mission <strong>of</strong><br />

the <strong>University</strong>.”<br />

In previous years, Irvin has served as president <strong>of</strong> the Chamber<br />

<strong>of</strong> Commerce in Danville, Illinois; as director <strong>of</strong> annual<br />

giving and major gifts for Habitat for Humanity International<br />

in Americus, Georgia; and as executive director <strong>of</strong> the Danville<br />

Area Community College Foundation in Danville, Illinois.<br />

Irvin earned a bachelor’s degree in education from the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Illinois.<br />

“Opportunities like this generally come along only once in<br />

a person’s career, so I am honored and humbled to be <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

this position,” said Irvin. “My wife, Diana, and I are truly<br />

excited to be joining the USC <strong>Upstate</strong> family and the Spartanburg<br />

community.”<br />

Irvin can be reached at (864) 503-5217 or mirvin@uscupstate.edu.<br />

Web Highlights<br />

Have you visited the USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

Web site lately If not, here are a few<br />

things you’ll want to see:<br />

The <strong>University</strong> Review is now<br />

online. Go to www.uscupstate.edu/<br />

<strong>University</strong>Review/ to view the entire<br />

magazine online, print copies <strong>of</strong> stories,<br />

or e-mail your friends a link to a story.<br />

Special “Web Exclusive” content for<br />

each issue is available online as well<br />

as an archive <strong>of</strong> past issues. And while<br />

you’re there, don’t forget to submit your<br />

Class Notes!<br />

Speaking <strong>of</strong> Class Notes, you might<br />

have noticed there are no Class<br />

Notes in this print edition. Instead,<br />

we’ve included 40 alumni pr<strong>of</strong>iles in<br />

celebration <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>’s 40th<br />

Anniversary. To coincide with the<br />

launch <strong>of</strong> the new Web site, we’ve<br />

included Class Notes as this issue’s<br />

Web Exclusive content. Go to www.<br />

uscupstate.edu/<strong>University</strong>Review/<br />

16 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

classnotes/ to find out what your<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> friends have been up to.<br />

The Office <strong>of</strong> Alumni Affairs has<br />

partnered with Harris Connect, a<br />

third party technology company, to<br />

<strong>of</strong>fer e-mail blasts, alumni newsletters,<br />

online communities and online giving.<br />

This is a great way to communicate<br />

with our graduates and keep them<br />

abreast <strong>of</strong> all <strong>University</strong> activities. Each<br />

alum will create their own password<br />

and user name for access to the<br />

online community. Any alumni with a<br />

valid e-mail address will be invited to<br />

join. Go to uscupstate.edu/alumni/<br />

for details.<br />

The Wall that Heals, a replica <strong>of</strong><br />

the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in<br />

Washington, D.C., made a stop on<br />

campus that brought over 17,000<br />

visitors to campus. Go to www.<br />

uscupstate.edu/40/wall/ for more<br />

information and photos.<br />

Progress on the construction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Health Education Complex can be<br />

viewed via the Web cam and photo<br />

archives at www.uscupstate.edu/hec/. A<br />

fall completion date is expected on this<br />

facility, which will house the Mary Black<br />

School <strong>of</strong> Nursing, School <strong>of</strong> Education,<br />

Bookstore, Enrollment Services and a<br />

Wellness/Fitness Center.<br />

The latest issue <strong>of</strong> the Parent<br />

Newsletter is now online and<br />

includes important information about<br />

fall student housing options and the<br />

Global Discovery Program. Go to www.<br />

uscupstate.edu/parents/ and click on the<br />

Parent Newsletter link.<br />

The Department <strong>of</strong> History, Political<br />

Science, Philosophy and American<br />

Studies’ newsletter, Generally<br />

Speaking, can be found online at<br />

www.uscupstate.edu/academics/arts_<br />

sciences/history/.


USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s alumni have great stories to tell about<br />

their lives after leaving campus – their ambitions, career<br />

paths, volunteer work and families – as well as some<br />

interesting remembrances <strong>of</strong> their years on campus. In<br />

celebration <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>’s 40th anniversary, these<br />

40 alumni highlighted on the next 12 pages, tell a varied<br />

and rich story about the power <strong>of</strong> their USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

degree, and the influence <strong>of</strong> the institution on their<br />

daily lives. We salute these and all <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>’s<br />

17,000 graduates!<br />

1971<br />

Joy McGaha<br />

Joy was a member <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong><br />

the first classes to graduate<br />

from then-USCS, with an<br />

associate degree in nursing.<br />

She remembers feeling like<br />

“a part <strong>of</strong> history” on her first<br />

day <strong>of</strong> registration because<br />

news media were<br />

everywhere due to the fact<br />

that construction <strong>of</strong> the Administration Building fronting<br />

I-585 had just been completed and the building was<br />

open for business. Joy has been a nurse for her entire<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional career, starting out as a staff RN, and<br />

working her way up to the position she has held since<br />

1989 as director <strong>of</strong> health services for the District<br />

5 School system. In this position, she is responsible<br />

for coordinating comprehensive health services for<br />

over 6,800 students, supervising nine full-time nurses<br />

throughout the schools, and ensuring that everyone has<br />

access to emergency care as well as routine daily care.<br />

“My nursing degree,” she says, “gave me a wonderful<br />

foundation for my career…my instructors taught me to<br />

be a true pr<strong>of</strong>essional.” Currently residing in Duncan, this<br />

Spartanburg County native is married to her husband <strong>of</strong><br />

38 years, Chuck, and they have a grown son, Ryan. She<br />

is an active member <strong>of</strong> Cudd Memorial Baptist Church<br />

and has served on various boards including Healthy<br />

Smiles and Middle Tyger Community Center.<br />

development business, and he met his future business<br />

partner, Jim Smith, with whom he has embarked upon<br />

a successful real estate development company, Smith<br />

and Lowe Development. As a real estate developer, he<br />

feels his biggest accomplishment was the development<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Lake Adger community in Polk County, N.C.<br />

He has two children and in his spare time he enjoys<br />

boating and skiing with them. In addition to being on<br />

the <strong>Carolina</strong> Piedmont Foundation board <strong>of</strong> directors,<br />

he also serves on the board <strong>of</strong> realtors for Spartanburg,<br />

<strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong>, and Polk County. He has many fond<br />

memories <strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, and has kept up friendships<br />

and business relationships with many fellow graduates.<br />

1975<br />

Nick Small<br />

Nick was a student at USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> when the campus<br />

was transitioning from a<br />

two-year associate degree<br />

campus to a four-year degree<br />

program. After he completed<br />

two years in Spartanburg<br />

with an associate degree in science,<br />

he transferred to the USC College <strong>of</strong> Pharmacy,<br />

where he obtained his bachelor <strong>of</strong> science degree in<br />

pharmacy. Nick says that the small classes and the oneon-one<br />

relationships with pr<strong>of</strong>essors were very helpful<br />

in preparation for his career. Although several faculty<br />

members left lasting impressions on him, Dr. Tom Davis<br />

was a stand-out because no matter how busy he was, “he<br />

always made time for me with any concerns that I had.”<br />

Currently, Nick is employed as the assistant pharmacy<br />

manager at Publix Pharmacy at Hillcrest Shopping Center<br />

where he fills prescriptions and counsels patients about<br />

their medications. Married for 25 years to Maria, also an<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> graduate (’85), Nick has two children, Andrew<br />

and Despina. He spends much <strong>of</strong> his spare time at his<br />

church and with his elderly parents. Whenever possible,<br />

he tries to squeeze in golf.<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

<br />

Chuck Lowe<br />

Originally from Boiling <strong>Spring</strong>s,<br />

this dean’s list student says<br />

he was well prepared for the<br />

workforce after he finished his<br />

degree back in the days when<br />

the <strong>University</strong> was a two-year<br />

institution. At <strong>Upstate</strong>, he<br />

majored in business administration which<br />

readied him for the demands <strong>of</strong> the real estate and<br />

1976<br />

Mary Lou Hodge<br />

Mary Lou was a non-traditional<br />

student with a husband<br />

and two children when she<br />

attended USC <strong>Upstate</strong>. She<br />

obtained her ADN in 1976<br />

and her BSN degree in<br />

1982. “I now know the entire<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> college was a building<br />

experience and at the end I began to realize how my<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 17


Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

18 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

college experience shaped my life. I think differently and<br />

am able to view the world in a more mature and confident<br />

manner,” says Mary Lou. Immediately after graduation,<br />

Mary Lou worked at the Spartanburg Regional Medical<br />

Center. In 1982, she joined USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s nursing<br />

faculty, but left in 1992 to work at Gardner-Webb<br />

<strong>University</strong>. Eventually, Mary found her way back to USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> in 2002, working full time. She is a member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the American Nurses Association, the USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

Alumni Board <strong>of</strong> Directors, and coordinates a living<br />

window for Spartanburg’s holiday celebration, Dickens<br />

<strong>of</strong> a Christmas. In Mary Lou’s free time she loves to be<br />

with her family, read and cook at family gatherings.<br />

1979<br />

Rita Vinson<br />

Rita was a little older than the<br />

typical college student when<br />

she began attending classes<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, and even<br />

though people asked her “Do<br />

you know how old you will be<br />

when you graduate” she was<br />

undaunted by the challenge. As she<br />

walked out <strong>of</strong> her last exam on the last day <strong>of</strong> her college<br />

career, she realized that she was the same age that day<br />

as she would have been if she hadn’t pursued her dream.<br />

After graduating with honors with a degree in business<br />

administration with an accounting concentration, she<br />

worked for the IRS and then passed the CPA exam.<br />

In 1985 she opened her own accounting firm, where<br />

she still practices, at the Woodland Executive Center in<br />

Spartanburg. The small firm handles payrolls, financial<br />

statements, and tax returns for individuals, corporations,<br />

estates, partnerships and other entities. “My education<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong> was a great investment for my future,”<br />

she says, adding that she feels she received a very<br />

good education for a reasonable tuition rate. A member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the R&B Shag Club, Rita resides in Inman with her<br />

husband, Gene, who also loves to shag. She has three<br />

grandchildren whom she loves to spoil, she says.<br />

1979<br />

Freddie Wilson<br />

Although she planned to<br />

graduate from USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

and pursue a career using<br />

her business administration<br />

degree, and in fact was part<br />

owner <strong>of</strong> three pharmacies<br />

which were sold to Rite Aid in<br />

1980, life took an unexpected turn for<br />

Freddie Wilson. Her husband Jesse became sick with<br />

a long-term illness so she never had the opportunity<br />

to develop a career. She did, however, make room for<br />

numerous volunteer activities, including serving a threeyear<br />

term as state president <strong>of</strong> the <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong><br />

Congress <strong>of</strong> Parents & Teachers, a title which she refers<br />

to as her biggest accomplishment. Additionally, she was<br />

awarded the Order <strong>of</strong> the Palmetto in 2004 by Rep.<br />

Lanny Littlejohn. Her other civic engagements include<br />

judging flower shows and pursuing gardening initiatives<br />

on the local and state level. She is also on the board<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Mountain View Nursing Home. This native <strong>of</strong><br />

Charleston was one <strong>of</strong> eight children, has two children<br />

and one grandchild, and is very proud <strong>of</strong> all their<br />

accomplishments.<br />

<br />

Madora Holder<br />

Madora is now retired after<br />

a twenty year career in<br />

nursing that included jobs at<br />

Doctor’s Memorial Hospital<br />

in Spartanburg; Providence<br />

Hospital in Columbia; Blue<br />

Cross<br />

Blue Shield in Columbia and<br />

Greenville; Kanawha Insurance Company in Lancaster;<br />

and DHEC Home Health. A licensed practical nurse<br />

for 20 years, she came to <strong>Upstate</strong> to get her RN degree<br />

and graduated in 1981. Looking back on her education<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong>, two pr<strong>of</strong>essors stand out in her mind:<br />

“Nancy Babb, RN, and Juanita Thackston, RN, left<br />

lasting impressions on me because they were excellent<br />

teachers and good role models,” says Madora. In her free<br />

time, Madora volunteers as the congregational nurse at<br />

her church, Ben Avon United Methodist in Spartanburg,<br />

and she enjoys exploring genealogy. She is a member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Daughters <strong>of</strong> the American Revolution, United<br />

Daughters <strong>of</strong> the Confederacy and the Colonial Dames<br />

organizations.<br />

<br />

Teresa Hough<br />

“I think I was an excellent<br />

teacher,” says Teresa Hough<br />

proudly. “I was Teacher <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Year three times, Wal-Mart<br />

Teacher <strong>of</strong> the Year and in the<br />

Who’s Who among Teachers<br />

and Educators,” she says.<br />

Now retired, Teresa can look<br />

back and appreciate the difference she made in<br />

the lives <strong>of</strong> her students. “My greatest accomplishment


is knowing that I affected so many precious children in<br />

my lifetime,” she says. Teresa appreciates her education<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong> and remembers Dr. Leo Bonner and his<br />

amazing support and kindness he showed his students.<br />

In her retirement, Teresa is teaching drama classes at the<br />

Spartanburg Youth Theatre and when she is not teaching<br />

or spending time with her family, she enjoys riding horses,<br />

writing scripts and gardening.<br />

<br />

Bill Weathers<br />

Bill was one <strong>of</strong> those students<br />

who had a lot <strong>of</strong> fun during his<br />

college years. A self-described<br />

“average student,” after four<br />

years <strong>of</strong> basketball — including<br />

the first basketball district<br />

championship—and two years<br />

<strong>of</strong> Epsilon Lambda fraternity fun, he says<br />

he was “thankful to graduate.” Dr. Earl Gordon, Dr. Olin<br />

Sansbury and Dr. Tom Davis all provided significant<br />

guidance, support and encouragement throughout his<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> career. Since graduating with a degree in<br />

business administration with emphasis on information<br />

management systems, Bill’s entire pr<strong>of</strong>essional career<br />

has been in the information technology field, either in<br />

sales support or a sales executive role. He is currently<br />

employed as a senior sales executive, responsible for<br />

sales and account management, with SAS Institute, a<br />

leader in business intelligence and predictive analytics<br />

s<strong>of</strong>tware. Bill lives in Alpharetta, Ga., with his wife Beth<br />

and their 16 year old son. An outdoorsman in his spare<br />

time, Bill enjoys lacrosse, basketball and tennis, and<br />

even calls himself a “weekend gentleman farmer.”<br />

<br />

Sandra Faulkner<br />

Sandra has held one job since<br />

graduating with a degree in<br />

education with honors from USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>, and she has held that<br />

same job for 25 years, teaching<br />

from 130 to 175 children every<br />

year at Wren High School in<br />

Anderson District 1 just outside Greenville.<br />

When she graduated from the School <strong>of</strong> Education,<br />

she was well prepared to “write lesson plans, deal with<br />

administration, work with parents, help coach s<strong>of</strong>tball,<br />

serve as newspaper advisor, yearbook advisor and stage<br />

manager, attend staff meetings, perform hall duty…and<br />

oh, yes, teach my subjects!” she quips. Sandra is very<br />

proud <strong>of</strong> both her children: Todd served in the Navy and<br />

is married to a teacher and has two sons, and Shannon,<br />

who famously challenged The Citadel in 1995 for the<br />

right to attend the all-male institution. Married for 44<br />

years, Sandra is active in Bethesda United Methodist<br />

Church, and has become a certified lay minister. As a<br />

charter member <strong>of</strong> the Greenville Chapter <strong>of</strong> the Red<br />

Hat Organization she is “devoted to fun” and “meeting<br />

other women who will not let age change our outlook on<br />

having fun and acting young, even if the calendar makes<br />

mistakes.”<br />

<br />

Kathleen Elam<br />

Kathlen Elam came to<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> from New Orleans,<br />

La., as a non-traditional<br />

student with three children in<br />

high school. She remembers<br />

being a determined student<br />

who graduated with a 3.6<br />

GPAandaBAinele<br />

a elementary education. Kathleen<br />

worked as an elementary school teacher for more than<br />

22 years, and is now retired. In 1994, she was one <strong>of</strong><br />

the first six teachers in <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong> to receive the<br />

National Board <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Teaching Standards<br />

Certification. Kathleen’s fondest memory <strong>of</strong> <strong>Upstate</strong> was<br />

when she and another student were given an assignment<br />

to portray themselves to the public as students with<br />

special disabilities. She says she will never forget how<br />

the public responded to them. “This realistic happening<br />

gave me insights that remained all during my career as<br />

an educator,” she adds. Two <strong>of</strong> Kathleen’s three children<br />

are also graduates <strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong>.<br />

<br />

Claus Foerster<br />

Originally from Bobingen,<br />

Germany, Claus Foerster<br />

received his BS in biology from<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong>. Claus credits<br />

Dr. Jack Turner, pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />

biology, with leaving a lasting<br />

impression on him. He also<br />

appreciates<br />

at “being encouraged to solve<br />

problems on my own and being held accountable for<br />

the decisions I made” during his time at <strong>Upstate</strong>. “While<br />

I’m not using my degree in my career, the experience did<br />

help me gain confidence and make a smoother transition<br />

from academics to the real world,” said Claus. After<br />

graduation, Claus worked as the regional supervisor for<br />

a rental company for five years before moving into the<br />

investment and financial planning industry. He handled<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 19


Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

20 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

the financial affairs for a group <strong>of</strong> families and private<br />

foundations in the <strong>South</strong>east - first with J.C. Bradford<br />

and then with Smith Barney. Claus recently became vice<br />

president <strong>of</strong> Morgan Keegan, another financial planning<br />

firm with <strong>of</strong>fices in Greenville. But even as a successful<br />

businessman, he counts his biggest accomplishment as<br />

helping his wife, Laura, raise their two daughters. Claus<br />

enjoys spending his free time fishing and hunting at the<br />

family’s house in Seabrook.<br />

<br />

Patrick McLaughlin<br />

As a member <strong>of</strong> the cross-country<br />

team Patrick McLaughlin learned<br />

that teamwork, consistency,<br />

discipline and confidence were<br />

keys to succeeding in life. “I still<br />

use those invaluable principles<br />

today as a navy <strong>of</strong>ficer and<br />

author,” said<br />

McLaughlin. “USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

allowed me to be a student-athlete and learn lessons<br />

in both areas.” When asked about his fondest memory<br />

<strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, McLaughlin said, “Easy! The people —<br />

whether it was students or my teammates. In the early<br />

1980s USC <strong>Upstate</strong> was smaller and the student body<br />

was fairly close knit. It was a fun place to be as a student.”<br />

Coming in a close second was his memory <strong>of</strong> setting the<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> course record in cross-country (25:43 for<br />

five miles), making the all-district team and representing<br />

the school in the NAIA national championships in 1982.<br />

Having received a master’s in divinity and a master’s <strong>of</strong><br />

sacred theology, McLaughlin is currently a commander in<br />

the Navy and the Second Marine Logistics Group Forward<br />

Chaplain where he supervises 20 chaplains and religious<br />

program specialists on three bases forward deployed in<br />

the Al Anbar Province <strong>of</strong> Iraq. He also embarked upon<br />

a career as an author with his first book, No Atheists<br />

in Foxholes, was recently released by Thomas Nelson<br />

Publishing.<br />

<br />

Danny Duncan<br />

Landrum native Danny Duncan,<br />

who graduated with a degree<br />

in computer science, started<br />

his own computer services and<br />

consulting company, Respect<br />

Technology, Inc. in November<br />

2007. After spending 20 years<br />

with Hamrick’s and ASI, respectively,<br />

performing various functions ranging from programmer<br />

and customer trainer to hardware and s<strong>of</strong>tware installer,<br />

program writer and information services director,<br />

his new company is <strong>of</strong>fering computer services and<br />

consulting, “from IBM iSeries to pc’s to networking<br />

and anything in between.” Computers are not only how<br />

he earns a living – they occupy his spare time as well.<br />

In his free time as a student he enjoyed being in the<br />

computer club, and today he spends his spare time<br />

learning new computer programming languages and<br />

techniques. Danny is married to Tammy and he has a<br />

13-year old stepson. He stays involved with Five Forks<br />

Baptist Church in Simpsonville and enjoys playing and<br />

watching football with his son.<br />

<br />

Kelly Bryson<br />

According to Kelly, she was<br />

a<br />

typical student. “I always<br />

read ahead on the syllabus to<br />

see how long I could put <strong>of</strong>f<br />

writing the required papers<br />

as it was my least favorite<br />

academic task but overall, I<br />

enjoyed<br />

the classes and interactions<br />

with the classmates,” says Kelly who earned her BA in<br />

early childhood education in 1998 and her M.Ed. in early<br />

childhood education in 1997. “P.O.E.T.S. Days,” or Put<br />

Off Everything ‘Till Saturday Days, are a fond memory<br />

for Kelly, who says that the campus community would<br />

get together on the Quad for these Friday afternoon<br />

events. The late Dr. Bryan “Doc” Lindsay left a lasting<br />

impression with Kelly who says that “he dared us to think<br />

beyond our capabilities, face challenges, try new things,<br />

think about other people’s perspectives in relation to<br />

our own and to value ourselves and others.” For the<br />

past 18 years, Kelly has worked at Burrough’s Child<br />

Development Center, located on <strong>Upstate</strong>’s campus,<br />

where she is responsible for supervising clinical<br />

students, student teachers and supervising the center<br />

when the director is absent. She says she feels a sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> pride seeing young children learn and grow, and<br />

seeing parents being able to complete their education<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong> while their children are attending the CDC.<br />

In her leisure time she enjoys photography and painting.<br />

“I like the challenge <strong>of</strong> recreating the images on canvas<br />

and combining elements <strong>of</strong> my favorite photographs,”<br />

says Kelly. This Little Chicago, S.C. native currently lives<br />

in Inman, with her husband and their two dogs.<br />

<br />

Traci Farrington<br />

Working as a pitching instructor, raising two children<br />

and being a wife, Traci Farrington stays very busy. Since


her graduation from <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

with a BS in physical education,<br />

she has worked as a physical<br />

education teacher for all grade<br />

levels, a back rehabilitation<br />

specialist, and as a pitching<br />

coach assistant for <strong>Upstate</strong>. Traci<br />

currently works at <strong>South</strong>east<br />

Region Fastpitch. She believes<br />

her biggest accomplishments are being a<br />

wife and mother, and influencing young people through<br />

sports and making a difference at <strong>Upstate</strong>. She is<br />

heavily involved in her community, but when she is not<br />

working, volunteering or spending time with her family<br />

she like to SCUBA dive.<br />

<br />

Rusty Williams<br />

Listed in the Wall Street Journal<br />

as one <strong>of</strong> the top 200 real estate<br />

agents in the nation for closed<br />

transactions, and as a member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the RE/MAX 2007 Hall <strong>of</strong><br />

Fame, Rusty credits his business<br />

management degree from USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> as<br />

the “perfect match for working<br />

in today’s real estate market and for operating a real<br />

estate <strong>of</strong>fice that specializes in foreclosures and bank<br />

owned properties.” Now a licensed realtor and broker<br />

for RE/MAX in Spartanburg, this Spartanburg native<br />

focuses on marketing, maintaining and disposing <strong>of</strong><br />

foreclosed bank assets in the <strong>Upstate</strong> as well as parts<br />

<strong>of</strong> North <strong>Carolina</strong>. Rusty has six full-time assistants and<br />

three work crews. Offshore boating and travel abroad<br />

are his leisure-time hobbies, and he is involved with<br />

Spartanburg Children’s Shelter, the Peace Center for<br />

the Performing Arts, Hatcher Gardens and with USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>’s own Susan Jacobs Arboretum.<br />

<br />

Victor Austin<br />

It’s been a busy 18 years since<br />

graduation for Greenville native<br />

Victor Austin, who left USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> with a bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />

science in marketing. He has<br />

worked for Fed Ex, Met Life, and<br />

owned a Port City Java C<strong>of</strong>fee<br />

House. He got married along the way and<br />

has three children. Currently, he owns Palmetto Home<br />

Care <strong>Upstate</strong>, a company that provides in-home care<br />

to individuals who want to maintain an independent<br />

lifestyle. Victor has served the Boy Scouts <strong>of</strong> America<br />

on the board <strong>of</strong> directors and as district commissioner.<br />

He was a member <strong>of</strong> Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity and<br />

served two years as president <strong>of</strong> the African American<br />

Association while a student and says that his years<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong> were marked by active and involved<br />

participation.<br />

<br />

Tracey Jackson<br />

Many USC <strong>Upstate</strong> students<br />

have found that pr<strong>of</strong>essors<br />

can be a great connection for<br />

finding summer internships<br />

or research opportunities<br />

and even landing that first<br />

job. Tracey Jackson is one<br />

such alumnae who launched<br />

her successful career with the help <strong>of</strong> an <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor. A cum laude graduate in political science,<br />

Jackson credits Dr. Ron Romine with helping her find<br />

her first job as a campaign coordinator for the Harris for<br />

House campaign. Tracey is now the executive director <strong>of</strong><br />

Piedmont Care, Inc. Located in Spartanburg, Piedmont<br />

Care is a nonpr<strong>of</strong>it organization providing HIV and AIDS<br />

care, prevention and advocacy. Piedmont Care provides<br />

outpatient medical care, medication, transportation,<br />

nutrition, housing, insurance assistance and other<br />

services to local community members living with HIV/<br />

AIDS. Tracey considers the growth <strong>of</strong> Piedmont Care<br />

as one <strong>of</strong> her greatest accomplishments. Under her<br />

vision and leadership, Piedmont Care grew from a<br />

volunteer-run clinic that was only open one day a week<br />

to a full-time clinic with eight staff members. In addition<br />

to her busy pr<strong>of</strong>essional life, Tracey maintains an active<br />

civic life, serving as treasurer <strong>of</strong> The Snail’s Pace, on<br />

the family selection and support committee for Habitat<br />

for Humanity, as a volunteer and member <strong>of</strong> Fernwood<br />

Baptist Church, and as a member <strong>of</strong> the Board <strong>of</strong><br />

Advisors for USC <strong>Upstate</strong>’s Center for Women’s and<br />

Gender Studies.<br />

<br />

David Miller<br />

Banking is David Miller’s life<br />

passion. While a student<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong>, he founded<br />

the <strong>University</strong> Business<br />

Society with guidance from<br />

Dr. Lilly Lancaster. After<br />

graduating with a BS in<br />

business administration with a concentration in<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 21


Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

management, he worked fifteen years for four different<br />

banks, going through the ups and downs <strong>of</strong> mergers<br />

and acquisitions, management and culture changes.<br />

He realized that along the way he had made excellent<br />

connections and customer relationships that would<br />

benefit from a bank with a simple motto: “The customer<br />

comes first.” So, with partner Allan Ducker, Miller opened<br />

Community<strong>South</strong> Bank & Trust, a bank with $340<br />

million in assets that covers the Spartanburg, Greenville,<br />

Greer, Anderson, Easley and Mauldin markets. With<br />

85 employees and expansion plans on the table, the<br />

president <strong>of</strong> this successful startup bank still has time<br />

for his wife <strong>of</strong> 15 years, Sharon, their two children,<br />

the Rotary and Sertoma clubs, as well as golfing and<br />

SCUBA diving.<br />

1991<br />

Jayne Case<br />

A non-traditional student<br />

graduating with a 3.7 GPA,<br />

Jayne Case claims that she<br />

owes half her degree to her<br />

husband because he took care<br />

<strong>of</strong> the house and their two<br />

children while she attended<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> to<br />

get her nursing degree. “I was<br />

a Mary Black Memorial Hospital Scholarship recipient<br />

for all three years so I had to keep grades high to retain<br />

the scholarship,” says Jayne. She credits Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jim<br />

Ferrell for his “gentle demeanor the helped students<br />

to learn with less intimidation.” After graduation, Jayne<br />

worked at the Mary Black Memorial Hospital. In 1996,<br />

she began teaching at Spartanburg Community College.<br />

Recently, Jayne received her master’s degree from<br />

Clemson and is currently serving as the department’s<br />

interim department head. She is very proud <strong>of</strong> her<br />

two sons, Will and Nathan, and believes that raising<br />

them to be successful men has truly been the biggest<br />

accomplishment <strong>of</strong> her life.<br />

1991<br />

John Feith<br />

As a psychology major, John<br />

Feith learned early on in his time<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong> “that to ‘get<br />

along and get ahead’ in the<br />

workplace you have to be very<br />

perceptive <strong>of</strong> what goes on<br />

around you because there are<br />

all sorts <strong>of</strong><br />

formal and informal networks<br />

in the workplace…and anywhere, really.” While many<br />

psychology concepts make sense in the academic<br />

setting, John’s pr<strong>of</strong>essors were quick to point out that<br />

22 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

applying those concepts to the workplace is not as cut<br />

and dry. “They made me understand that the better I<br />

understood these concepts, the better prepared I would<br />

be in the workforce, managing a workforce and managing<br />

workforce behaviors,” he said. John and his family live in<br />

Dyersburg, Tenn., where he is CEO <strong>of</strong> a string <strong>of</strong> medical<br />

clinics across West Tennessee. He uses the lessons<br />

learned as a student daily in two <strong>of</strong> his most important<br />

roles: hiring employees who can lead and work well in<br />

teams, and staying accessible to his workforce. When<br />

asked if any faculty left a lasting impression on him, John<br />

says that he owes a great debt <strong>of</strong> gratitude to Dr. Jan<br />

Griffin. “As a child, I had always struggled with school and<br />

I was perfectly content to do the absolute minimum to get<br />

by,” he says. “But when I met Dr. Griffin, she wouldn’t<br />

let me slide by. After my first test in her class she pulled<br />

me aside, looked me straight in the eye and basically<br />

told me that she wouldn’t accept mediocre work from<br />

someone who could do much better. If Dr. Griffin had<br />

not intervened and persevered with me, I’m certain that<br />

I would still be struggling for direction and living a much<br />

different outcome.”<br />

1991<br />

Eric Hunter<br />

Farming was not the career<br />

choice Eric Hunter had planned<br />

while a student and baseball<br />

player at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>.<br />

But he did always have the<br />

entrepreneurial spirit, even<br />

while working post-graduation<br />

management jobs in retail<br />

and restaurants. After he and his wife,<br />

Kristi Ulmer, also a USC <strong>Upstate</strong> graduate, adopted<br />

a son Ryan, now 11, Eric struck out in the strawberry<br />

growing business on acreage near Easley in 1997 as a<br />

part-time venture that would allow his wife to be a stayat-home<br />

mother. But when the “Hunter Farms” business<br />

took <strong>of</strong>f, he became a farmer full-time. A pumpkin crop<br />

was added as well as the greenhouse business where he<br />

grows bedding plants, and a corn maze soon followed.<br />

While he began farming “with absolutely no experience<br />

whatsoever – I had never in my life grown anything,” the<br />

farm grew into a family affair with his wife and mother<br />

employed full-time, and 15 – 20 part-timers employed at<br />

the peak <strong>of</strong> the season. Always an athlete, Eric uses his<br />

spare time to compete in triathlons both on the <strong>South</strong><br />

<strong>Carolina</strong> level, where he finished the year ranked ninth<br />

for his age group, and on the international “Ironman” level<br />

where he competed in Cancun, Mexico, and Clearwater,<br />

Fla., last year. On Sundays, you can find Eric at Set Free<br />

Christian Fellowship in Powdersville where he is a care<br />

pastor and a teacher in the children’s ministry.


Michael Moton<br />

All the jobs Michael has held<br />

since graduating with a degree<br />

in business administration with<br />

a concentration in accounting<br />

have been in the accounting<br />

sectors as a bookkeeper,<br />

business analyst and financial<br />

accountant. Recently, however,<br />

he made a career switch and is now employed by USC<br />

Union as a transfer/career counselor where he advises<br />

students with career choices and transfer opportunities.<br />

Originally from McCormick County and currently residing<br />

in Inman, Michael says that the “leadership opportunities<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong> gave me the practice and confidence to<br />

meet most challenges” and that his service in student<br />

organizations improved his interpersonal skills and<br />

helped him meet his job expectations. He fondly recalls<br />

Drs. Carson, Wiles, Drucker, Martino, Rector, Butler and<br />

Clary and says that “overall, I enjoyed all my pr<strong>of</strong>essors,<br />

the staff and classes.” Other memorable moments<br />

include seeing (and blushing at) the French Quarter<br />

while in New Orleans for a Gamma Beta Phi convention,<br />

winning the Earl Gordon Medal, and walking across the<br />

stage to graduate. Married to Nikki, Michael is raising<br />

a son, Shaquielle, now in the ninth grade. In his leisure<br />

time, he enjoys listening to NPR, reading and “tinkering”<br />

with his Web site muatas-quest.com.<br />

1994<br />

Shelly Butterfield<br />

2005 was a momentous<br />

year for Spartanburg native<br />

Shelly Butterfield. She gave<br />

birth to twins Beth Anne and<br />

Zachary, and she opened her<br />

own business, a CPA firm<br />

specializing in small business<br />

tax accounting. As the owner<br />

<strong>of</strong> a growing Greenville firm that integrates accounting<br />

and tax preparation and planning for entrepreneurs,<br />

Shelly is in charge <strong>of</strong> “networking, human resources,<br />

administration and sometimes washing dishes!” A nontraditional<br />

student who says that she was more serious<br />

about college after her first attempt, Shelly credits Dr.<br />

Diana Clary and Dr. Meyer Drucker for encouraging her<br />

to succeed giving her practical advice to jump into her<br />

career. Shelly has been married to Marc for 12 years,<br />

and she is active in various civic groups including Dining<br />

For Women, Downtown Sertoma Club and the YWCA.<br />

1995<br />

Carolyn Farr Smith<br />

As a communications/<br />

journalism major, “working on<br />

deadline” is a familiar phrase to<br />

newspaper and TV journalist<br />

Carolyn Farr Smith, who<br />

graduated with newspaper<br />

experience already under her<br />

belt from working on the student-run<br />

newspaper, The Carolinian. Her Carolinian experience,<br />

in addition to Dr. Ray Merlock and Dr. Nancy Moore’s<br />

friendship and advice, taught her the importance <strong>of</strong><br />

deadlines, “which has served me well in my career.” After<br />

stints at The Union Daily Times as lifestyles editor and<br />

the Spartanburg Herald-Journal as features editor, she<br />

made a career switch to TV. As the assignment editor<br />

at Fox <strong>Carolina</strong> news, she gathers and assigns news<br />

stories to the reporters and photographers, monitors<br />

various news sites for possible news stories, and talks<br />

with members <strong>of</strong> the community about upcoming events,<br />

possible story ideas and important issues to viewers.<br />

Married with a two-year-old son, this Greenville native<br />

also serves as chair <strong>of</strong> Piedmont Media Pr<strong>of</strong>essionals,<br />

president <strong>of</strong> Media Women <strong>of</strong> <strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong>, and on<br />

the USC <strong>Upstate</strong> alumni board.<br />

1996, 1997<br />

Stacey and Jackie<br />

Mills<br />

S<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

Stacey and Jackie Mills<br />

first met in the Dean <strong>of</strong><br />

Students’ <strong>of</strong>fice where Jackie<br />

was working as a student<br />

assistant. Married for ten<br />

years with three children,<br />

Stacey<br />

is now a senior minister<br />

at Mountain View Baptist Church in Greenville and a<br />

teacher at Woodmont High School while Jackie teaches<br />

biology at Eastside High School in Greenville. During<br />

their time at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, the couple was very active<br />

in student life activities on campus, each serving as<br />

president <strong>of</strong> student organizations and participating in<br />

leadership development sessions. “We were exposed to<br />

community and human service organizations which gave<br />

us opportunities to work in the trenches with everyday<br />

people who struggle to make life work for them,” they<br />

said. “Those experiences, coupled with the faculty<br />

and staff who pushed us to succeed, have given us a<br />

sincere desire to give back to our community in many<br />

ways.” In addition to the obvious highpoint <strong>of</strong> meeting<br />

each other, the Mills’ count their involvement with the<br />

search committee that brought Chancellor Stockwell to<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 23


Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

24 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

campus as one <strong>of</strong> their fondest memories. “That was a<br />

historic event for USC <strong>Upstate</strong> and we were involved<br />

with the search committees and the inauguration,” they<br />

said. “It was an incredible time.” Stacey and Jackie<br />

consider their work with young people in the community<br />

to be one <strong>of</strong> their biggest accomplishments thus far.<br />

“Our family backgrounds and personal experiences<br />

have given us insight into potential obstacles that<br />

keep people from achieving their goals,” they said.<br />

“We partnered with Greenville Technical College at<br />

our church last spring to <strong>of</strong>fer a GED program in the<br />

community. Twenty-two people enrolled in the class,<br />

ranging in ages from 18 to 75. Watching those who<br />

thought they couldn’t do it, prepare and take the GED<br />

test was definitely rewarding.”<br />

1997<br />

Tim Drummond<br />

Tim Drummond was a nontraditional<br />

student in more ways<br />

than one. Drummond actually<br />

started his first business<br />

before graduating. Currently<br />

an executive recruiter at his<br />

company, Drum Up Personnel<br />

located in Simpsonville, his experience at<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> was instrumental in laying the groundwork<br />

for his successful career. “I wasn’t an excellent student,<br />

but I understood the value <strong>of</strong> a quality education and<br />

how it would benefit my career,” says Drummond. “I<br />

was taught the necessary skills needed to become a<br />

better business leader, a better manager, and better at<br />

building sound business relationships.” During his time<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, Leon Wiles left an indelible impression<br />

on Drummond. “Leon Wiles is very passionate about<br />

helping students accomplish their goals. He always had<br />

a positive attitude and a way <strong>of</strong> encouraging students to<br />

do their best. He was definitely a role model,” Drummond<br />

says. Drummond’s biggest accomplishment to date has<br />

been obtaining his BS and MBA degrees. “It is very<br />

important for me to be a role model for my two sons,” he<br />

says.<br />

1997<br />

Joey Hines<br />

Every college student likes<br />

their pizza and beer, but<br />

when you use them to help<br />

explain economic principles,<br />

as Dr. Duncan Bailey did for<br />

Hines, “it allowed me to put<br />

economics to use in real life<br />

situations.” situations” A nontraditional student who commuted to<br />

school, worked 25 hours a week at his father’s business<br />

and interned at Merrill Lynch for 10 hours a week for<br />

two years, Hines feels that his degree in business<br />

administration with a concentration in economics from<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> has helped him tremendously in the<br />

financial planning and wealth management career field.<br />

He worked his way up at Merrill Lynch from intern to<br />

client associate to financial advisor, and then left in<br />

2004 to help build the wealth management firm, Global<br />

View, LLC, a company that now manages $130 million<br />

for its clients. As a certified financial planner, he works<br />

with individuals and business owners on retirement<br />

plans, education funding, estate planning and asset<br />

protection. Hines resides in Greenville with his wife and<br />

when he has leisure time he enjoys reading, hunting<br />

and fishing. He also serves on the USC <strong>Upstate</strong> alumni<br />

advisory board.<br />

1999<br />

Frank Allgood<br />

Frank Allgood may have been,<br />

in his words “an average<br />

[high school] student with<br />

average grades,” but this<br />

Earl Gordon Medal recipient<br />

proved himself anything but<br />

average in his time at USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. t After meeting his future wife, Jeneane (formerly<br />

Rekowski), during his senior year <strong>of</strong> high school, Frank<br />

began taking education more seriously and became<br />

very active in campus activities, <strong>University</strong> committees,<br />

the Spartanburg community and the Pi Kappa Phi<br />

Fraternity. “My experience was more than ink on paper<br />

at the end <strong>of</strong> a four-year term,” said Frank. “I was taught<br />

to be decisive, to be innovative, proactive and how to<br />

be a team player. More than anything, I was taught how<br />

to be a good leader.” Now the managing editor <strong>of</strong> GSA<br />

Business, the bi-weekly business journal for <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

<strong>South</strong> <strong>Carolina</strong>, he credits his success in business with<br />

the experience gained at <strong>Upstate</strong>. “Perhaps the greatest<br />

challenge for most graduates is too many think in terms<br />

<strong>of</strong> a job and not a career. And they are not prepared<br />

to deal with corporate culture. My experience with<br />

SGA, Pi Kappa Phi, other organizations and university<br />

committees, as well as working as news editor for The<br />

Carolinian, equipped me with the tools necessary to<br />

succeed in business.”<br />

1999<br />

Kimberly Suber<br />

While there have been plenty <strong>of</strong> changes in Kimberly’s<br />

life since graduating from USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, such as<br />

becoming a mom twice, earning a master’s degree in


teaching school administration,<br />

and a move back to her home<br />

town – she says that two<br />

things have not changed. “At<br />

USCS I was known for my<br />

hair and shopping habits and<br />

those habits have not changed<br />

— I love shopping and being<br />

fabulous!” she says. Now<br />

pursuing a doctorate degree in education,<br />

Kimberly is enjoying being the assistant principal at<br />

Newberry High School, where she helps students “to<br />

understand their purpose and once they understand<br />

their purpose then they will know their possibilities.”<br />

This former member <strong>of</strong> the USC <strong>Upstate</strong> Gospel Choir<br />

proudly boasts that Newberry High has initiated its<br />

own gospel choir, with students readying to travel to<br />

New York for a competition. Dr. Warren Carson, who<br />

directed Kimberly in the USC <strong>Upstate</strong> Choir, challenged<br />

her to do more than just get by because “just enough<br />

was not good enough.” Kimberly says that Dr. Carson’s<br />

“confidence in my leadership skills and by sending me<br />

to a leadership conference, inspired me to be who I<br />

am today.” Kimberly graduated from USC <strong>Upstate</strong> in<br />

1999 with a degree in interdisciplinary studies with a<br />

concentration in sociology and<br />

criminal justice.<br />

<br />

Tonya Beaty<br />

A teacher since graduating<br />

in 2000 with her master’s in<br />

education, Tonya is currently<br />

employed as a master teacher<br />

at Houston Elementary School,<br />

a 4K-6th grade school in the heart <strong>of</strong><br />

Spartanburg School District 7. Named Spartanburg<br />

School District 7 Teacher <strong>of</strong> the Year in 2007-<strong>2008</strong>,<br />

Tonya was surprised to receive the recognition for her<br />

school and “totally floored” when she won for the entire<br />

district. When Tonya came to <strong>Upstate</strong> for her graduate<br />

degree she was working full-time as a teacher, and she<br />

was a wife, mother and taking classes part-time. “I was<br />

a hard worker. I could not afford to mess up, to fail any<br />

classes, or to be slack about getting my post-graduate<br />

degree because my family and career would suffer if<br />

I took any longer than I did getting my degree,” says<br />

Tonya. She credits Dr. Charles Love for contributing<br />

to her success as a teacher because he “gave us<br />

meaningful assignments that made us think on much<br />

higher levels then we were used to…he was fun in<br />

class but he was also serious about helping us become<br />

better educators.” When she is not teaching, she is an<br />

avid reader in her spare time. She also enjoys writing<br />

poetry, and has recently written a teen novel that she is<br />

looking to publish.<br />

<br />

Todd Hardy<br />

In the eight years since<br />

he graduated from USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> with a bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />

science in education, Todd<br />

Hardy worked his way from<br />

social studies teacher up the<br />

ranks toassistant principal and is now<br />

the principal <strong>of</strong> James F. Byrnes Freshman Academy in<br />

Duncan. With a staff <strong>of</strong> 60, Todd is responsible for the<br />

full operation <strong>of</strong> the school which is designed to provide<br />

the “fundamental steps for successful transition into<br />

high school” for students living in Spartanburg School<br />

District 5. Todd remembers his time at USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

fondly, saying that Dr. Jim Charles was a mentor to<br />

him along his non-traditional path through college, and<br />

that he was well-prepared for his career due to the<br />

“wonderful, practical knowledge” he gained here as a<br />

student. Married for seven years, Todd has two children<br />

and spends his free time enjoying his family, church,<br />

reading and working out. Todd serves on the board<br />

<strong>of</strong> directors for the Middle Tyger Community Center,<br />

board <strong>of</strong> trustees for Piney Grove Baptist Church, and<br />

was runner-up for the Mary L. Thomas Award for Civic<br />

Leadership and Community<br />

Change.<br />

<br />

Dan Collins<br />

Having attained the position <strong>of</strong><br />

director <strong>of</strong> global operations<br />

for corporate security with<br />

Fluor Corporation, Dan<br />

Collins says that he had<br />

much support along his<br />

career path and as a nontraditional student at USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. He attended classes year-round in the<br />

evenings and worked full-time during the day, drawing<br />

support from both Dr. Eb Barnes, pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> physics,<br />

and his wife, Angie, who he says “was the sustaining<br />

force <strong>of</strong> the family during those years <strong>of</strong> school.” The<br />

scope <strong>of</strong> Dan’s job with Fluor, the world’s largest<br />

publicly held engineering, procurement, construction<br />

management and maintenance service providers, has<br />

led him to travel abroad extensively, including trips to<br />

Iraq and Afghanistan, to oversee security operations<br />

for the company. But family comes first when he has<br />

free time at home in Greer, where together they enjoy<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 25


Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

26 <strong>University</strong> Review<br />

Gamecocks football games and boating. Dan received<br />

a bachelor <strong>of</strong> science in interdisciplinary studies.<br />

<br />

Cameron Haggerty<br />

There was no “getting one over”<br />

on business pr<strong>of</strong>essor Dr. Faruk<br />

Tanyel, Cameron remembers<br />

fondly about classes at <strong>Upstate</strong>.<br />

“He could see through a<br />

bogus presentation or sales<br />

pitch like it was nothing and<br />

he would not tolerate anything less<br />

than a maximum effort. I remember thinking that he<br />

was the worst thing that could ever happen to a soonto-be<br />

college grad!” says Cameron. But it was through<br />

meeting the tough standards <strong>of</strong> his pr<strong>of</strong>essors that led<br />

this business administration major to accept and excel<br />

at the challenges presented to him in the working world,<br />

he feels. After working for Fairway Outdoor Advertising<br />

as an account representative, he moved on to become a<br />

sales rep for Signature Graphics, a company specializing<br />

in production <strong>of</strong> large format graphics. He is based in<br />

Alpharetta, Ga. Cameron grew up in Spartanburg but is<br />

now enjoying all the cultural, sports and dining attractions,<br />

as well as the numerous networking groups, available in<br />

the Atlanta area.<br />

<br />

Travis Bryant<br />

For Travis Bryant, two <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

faculty members made a<br />

lasting impression on him<br />

in his time at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>.<br />

Laura Puckett-Boler, dean <strong>of</strong><br />

students, “was there to give<br />

me praise and encouragement<br />

when needed,” he said. “Dean Boler<br />

gave me an opportunity to make a big impact at USC<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong>. It was great to have a faculty member that I<br />

looked up to and received great advice from.” Dr. Tony<br />

Pritchard, assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> education, also made<br />

an impact on Travis’ life. “He pushed me in every class<br />

that I had with him. I was convinced that he was trying<br />

to fail me,” he said. But, as it turned out, “the pushing<br />

from Tony was exactly what I needed. I still hear his<br />

voice in my head.” In addition to earning his degree in<br />

physical education, Travis was very involved on campus<br />

with a number <strong>of</strong> organizations and activities including<br />

Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, Orientation Leader, CAB and<br />

Campus Recreation. Now an elementary physical<br />

education teacher at Belleview Elementary School in<br />

his home town <strong>of</strong> Rock Hill, S.C., Travis was recently<br />

named the Elementary Beginning Teacher <strong>of</strong> the Year<br />

for Rock Hill School District 3. In addition to teaching<br />

kindergarten through fifth grade during the school day,<br />

he also is the fifth grade teacher in the after school<br />

program.<br />

<br />

April Dove<br />

Originally from southern<br />

Virginia, April Dove moved to<br />

Greenville with her husband<br />

in 2003 and graduated from<br />

USC <strong>Upstate</strong> two years<br />

later with a BA in sociology.<br />

Now as a graduate student<br />

working towards a Ph.D. in<br />

sociology at USC Columbia, April feels her experience<br />

at <strong>Upstate</strong> helped prepare her for the transition from<br />

undergraduate to graduate work. While at <strong>Upstate</strong>, Dr.<br />

Lizabeth Zack became April’s mentor and encouraged<br />

her to pursue a graduate degree in sociology. April<br />

remembers Dr. Zack’s classes as challenging the<br />

students to be the best they can be. “I worked harder in<br />

her classes than any others that I took,” said April. “She<br />

was an excellent mentor. I’m glad to say that we are still<br />

in contact and are very good friends.” In fact April and<br />

Dr. Zack are working together on a research project they<br />

began in her last year at USC <strong>Upstate</strong> and plan to send<br />

the manuscript to a peer-reviewed sociology journal this<br />

year. April also credits her husband, Nathan, for playing<br />

an important role in her success. “He’s always been very<br />

supportive <strong>of</strong> what I do and he is definitely one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

driving forces behind my success so far. I appreciate<br />

him more than I can say.”<br />

<br />

Laura Fowler<br />

Currently working at St. Louis<br />

Children’s Hospital, named<br />

the seventh best children’s<br />

hospital in the country by<br />

Child Magazine, nursing<br />

graduate Laura Fowler is<br />

extremely happy with her job.<br />

“I sleep well at night knowing that<br />

I have made a difference in someone’s life,” says Laura.<br />

Originally from Spartanburg, she found her calling in<br />

Missouri at St. Louis Children’s Hospital where she<br />

works with patients with congenital heart defects, or<br />

who need heart and lung transplants. Laura looks back<br />

on her education at <strong>Upstate</strong> and recalls a pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

who stood out from the rest: “Dr. Rush’s passion for


teaching was palpable, and her love <strong>of</strong> nursing was an<br />

inspiration to many nursing students,” says Laura. Her<br />

fondest memory <strong>of</strong> USC <strong>Upstate</strong> is being a work-study<br />

student in the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> Alumni Affairs. Laura is currently<br />

in graduate school working towards a master’s degree<br />

in nursing education. She claims if she hadn’t had such<br />

a “loving and supportive environment” from her family,<br />

she would not be where she is today.<br />

<br />

Barbra “Annie”<br />

Trout<br />

“I had a wonderful experience<br />

at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>,” says this<br />

Fountain Inn native who<br />

graduated recently with a<br />

bachelor <strong>of</strong> science degree in<br />

nursing. The nursing program<br />

was like a “close group <strong>of</strong> friends,<br />

and it felt like my second family because we shared the<br />

same interests and the same challenges,” she adds.<br />

Upon graduation, Annie went to work part-time as a staff<br />

nurse at Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital, which is part <strong>of</strong><br />

the Greenville Hospital System, on the medical/surgical<br />

floor. A typical day for her could include everything<br />

from a hysterectomy to a stroke patient to a total knee<br />

replacement. Annie is also excited to be in the master’s<br />

program at Clemson, having been encouraged by her<br />

undergraduate nursing pr<strong>of</strong>essors to pursue further<br />

educational opportunities. She is also working part-time<br />

as a clinical instructor at USC <strong>Upstate</strong>, where she takes<br />

two groups <strong>of</strong> nursing students to Mary Black Hospital<br />

to show them the fundamentals <strong>of</strong> nursing. Married with<br />

three children ages 11, 9 and 18 months, Annie, who<br />

now lives in Landrum, still finds time to exercise and stay<br />

involved in the nursing ministry team at her church.<br />

<strong>Upstate</strong> has made him a competent nurse, saying that<br />

“USC <strong>Upstate</strong> helped me develop the skills necessary<br />

to becoming a critical care nurse.” When he is not<br />

working, a lot <strong>of</strong> his free time is spent in activities with<br />

his five children. He also enjoys traveling, snow skiing<br />

and hiking.<br />

Compiled by Stephanie Bingham (‘07), Heather<br />

Alexander-Engelbrecht and Claire Sachse<br />

We want<br />

to hear<br />

from You!<br />

In addition to sharing your news, births or marriages<br />

with us, we also want to hear about what<br />

exceptional and interesting things our alumni are<br />

doing. Please use the space provided for Alumni<br />

News on the inserted envelope or e-mail information,<br />

updates and digital photos to: bwsmith@<br />

uscupstate.edu.<br />

Alumni Pr<strong>of</strong>iles<br />

<br />

Drew Fisher<br />

Drew excelled vastly while<br />

obtaining his bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />

science degree in nursing<br />

from USC <strong>Upstate</strong>. He was<br />

on the Dean’s list every year,<br />

was selected president <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Student Nurses’ Association,<br />

and received the School<br />

<strong>of</strong> Nursing Leadership Award and the Dean’s<br />

Award. After an eight-year stint in pharmaceutical sales,<br />

he decided to change career paths and become a<br />

nurse. He is currently working at the Greenville Hospital<br />

as a nurse in the Coronary Care Unit. Drew believes that<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review 27


Recent Events at USC <strong>Upstate</strong><br />

On the front cover: George Dean Johnson, Jr. surveys the site on Saint John Street t in downtown<br />

Spartanburg where ground will be broken this fall for the George Dean Johnson, Jr. College<br />

<strong>of</strong> Business and Economics. The new facility will be located adjacent to the Chapman Cultural<br />

Center in the Renaissance Park.<br />

800 <strong>University</strong> Way<br />

Spartanburg, SC 29303<br />

Address Service Requested<br />

NONPROFIT<br />

ORGANIZATION<br />

US POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

GREENVILLE, SC<br />

PERMIT N0. 1234

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