binding force - Western Carolina Magazine
Transcription
binding force - Western Carolina Magazine
Fall 2013 Western CAROLINA THE MAGAZINE OF WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY BINDING FORCE FROM HOMECOMING AND THE JUG TO THE TOWNHOUSE AND THE TUCK, TRADITIONS KEEP ALUMNI CONNECTED TRAINING SCHOOL STRESSES OUTDOOR SAFETY, SURVIVAL CHANGES ARE NOTHING NEW IN SOUTHERN CONFERENCE STUDENTS STREAKED INTO RECORD BOOK 40 YEARS AGO Western CAROLINA FALL 2013 | VOLUME 17, NO. 3 The Magazine of Western Carolina University is produced by the Office of Communications and Public Relations for alumni, faculty, staff, friends and students of Western Carolina University. The views and opinions that appear in this publication are not necessarily those of the editorial staff or the official policies of the university. CHANCELLOR David O. Belcher CHIEF OF STAFF Melissa Wargo MANAGING EDITOR Bill Studenc MPA ’10 ASSOCIATE EDITORS HOMECOMING 2013 OCTOBER 24-27 Jill Ingram MA ’08 Teresa Killian Tate ART DIRECTOR Rubae Schoen CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER Mark Haskett ’87 GRAPHIC DESIGNERS THURSDAY, OCT. 24 The Last Lecture. 2:30 p.m. Coulter recital hall. Burton Ogle, director of the environmental health sciences program, “What is Cool about Environmental Health.” Information: 828.227.7196 or lcruz@wcu.edu. Spirit Night. 8 p.m. Central Plaza. Music, food, fun. FRIDAY, OCT. 25 Alumni Scholarship Homecoming Golf Tournament. Noon. Waynesville Inn Golf Resort & Spa. Four-person captain’s choice format. $85 per person. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 18: 877.440.9990, 828.227.7335 or magill@wcu.edu. Homecoming Parade. 6:15 p.m. Main Street, downtown Sylva. SATURDAY OCT. 26 Chancellor’s Brunch and Alumni Awards. 10 a.m. A.K. Hinds University Center Grandroom. Honoring Joan MacNeill, Distinguished Service Award; Johnny Carson ’71, Academic Achievement Award; Wes Elingburg ’78, Professional Achievement Award; Manteo Mitchell ’09 MAEd ’12, Young Alumnus Award. $15 per person, business attire. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 18: 877.440.9990, 828.227.7335 or magill@wcu.edu. Tailgating. Noon-3:30 p.m. Parking lots adjacent to E.J. Whitmire Stadium. WCU vs. Elon University. 3:30 p.m. E.J. Whitmire Stadium/Bob Waters Field. Tickets: 800.344.6928. African-American Alumni Postgame Reception. 6:30-8 p.m. A.K. Hinds University Center’s Club Illusions. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 18: 877.440.9990, 828.227.7335 or magill@wcu.edu. Stompfest. 8 p.m. John W. Bardo Fine and Performing Arts Center. Annual stepping competition by black fraternities and sororities; sponsored by the Organization of Ebony Students and the Department of Intercultural Affairs. Tickets/information: 828.227.2276 or ica@wcu.edu. STAFF WRITERS Keith Brenton Randall Holcombe Daniel Hooker ’01 Patrick O’Neal Steve White ’67 STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS Ashley T. Evans John Witherspoon VIDEO EDITOR Joseph Hader ’12 PRODUCTION MANAGER Ashley Beavers CIRCULATION MANAGER Cindi Magill Homecoming Concert – Country music artist Kacey Musgraves. 9 p.m. Ramsey Regional Activity Center. Tickets on sale at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 24. Information: ramsey.wcu.edu or 828.227.7677. SUNDAY, OCT. 27 Inspirational Choir Concert. 1 p.m. A.K. Hinds University Center Grandroom. Information: 828.227.2276 or ica@wcu.edu. See the complete Homecoming schedule online at Homecoming.wcu.edu. 2 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University John Balentine Will Huddleston Zack Keys Joseph Moon Search for this icon throughout the magazine for stories that feature online extras – videos, photographs and more, available ONLY online. magazine.wcu.edu CONTENTS 20 28 18 FEATURES SECTIONS 18 BOSTON STRONG 4 Worth Repeating A former WCU track athlete recalls close call at marathon bombing 5 Opening Notes 20 TEST OF ENDURANCE 6 News from the Western Hemisphere A couple builds a top school for outdoor responder training 28 GET THE MESSAGE? The university is making huge strides in emergency notification 30 BINDING FORCE Traditions help maintain campus connections with alumni and friends 38 THE BARE FACTS Forty years ago, WCU was the epicenter of collegiate streaking in the U.S. 38 12 WCU Athletics 40 Alumni Spotlight 44 Class Notes 52Calendar 54 The View from Here 55 Last Look ON THE COVERS FRONT A symbol of WCU’s longstanding rivalry with Appalachian State, the Old Mountain Jug will be on the line one more time Nov. 23 when the Catamounts travel to Boone for what may be their final football game against the Mountaineers, who are leaving the Southern Conference after this season to join the Sun Belt Conference. BACK More than 100 booths of Western North Carolina’s finest arts and crafts will be on display and for sale as the 39th edition of WCU’s Mountain Heritage Day, the university’s tribute to traditional Southern Appalachian culture, kicks off on campus Saturday, Sept. 28. More information available at MountainHeritageDay.com. Fall 2013 | 3 WORTH REPEATING “It’s sort of like that guy who lived next door when you were growing up. He’s a little bigger, has a little more money and you always used to fight him. Then he moves away, and you don’t have anybody to fight with anymore. You didn’t necessarily like him, but you’re going to miss him.” – Steve White ’67, WCU’s athletic historian, to the Asheville CitizenTimes on archrival Appalachian State’s decision to leave the Southern Conference. “Reminded me of a Saturday a.m. back in the late ’60s. The mirrors in the dorm were swaying ... had never been in an earthquake before then.” – Bunny Bennett Parish ’69, replying to a WCU Alumni Association Facebook post about a June 6 tremor near Cullowhee measuring 2.5 on the Richter scale. “Seeing their faces along with hearing their stories while you basically help rebuild their lives is about the most rewarding experience I have ever been involved in.” – Junior Matthew Chevalier, one of 10 students involved in a May servicebased leadership course that traveled to Staten Island, N.Y., to assist with rebuilding after Hurricane Sandy. “Ultimately, we are looking at the river park as a catalyst for the revitalization of downtown Cullowhee.” – Anna Fariello, associate research professor at Hunter Library and leader of CuRvE, a grassroots nonprofit dedicated to improving the Cullowhee community, to the Smoky Mountain News on a proposed park along the Tuckaseigee River near campus. 4 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University “We’ve been trying for many years to get a provision under which concealed handgun permit holders who’ve proven themselves sane, sober and law-abiding can protect themselves in restaurants, on educational property and elsewhere.” – Paul Valone of Grassroots North Carolina to the N.C. News Network, on a legislative proposal that would allow gunowners who hold concealed-carry permits to store their firearms in vehicles on university campuses. “I’m just not convinced, based on what I’ve seen, that allowing more firearms on campus is going to make campuses safer. I’ve not seen anything to make me think that is the case.” – WCU Police Chief Ernie Hudson to the Asheville CitizenTimes on that same proposal. OPENING Notes As the beginning of the fall semester approaches, Western Carolina University is in the midst of the process of sharpening its focus. It is no coincidence that the university’s “2020 Vision” strategic plan is subtitled “Focusing Our Future.” Those who worked on the plan – and there were many from across the campus and the broader external community – realized the importance of a well-defined institutional focus in order for the university to move forward and continue to meet the needs of students and the region we serve. Perhaps the most significant “focusing” activity in which we are engaged is academic program prioritization. Through this rigorous and inclusive process, we have examined all programs in our academic mix, assessing their quality, productivity and connection to mission. Academic program prioritization was a direct outcome of the “2020 Vision” plan, and it was called for by the first initiative of the first goal of the first strategic direction. Academic program prioritization will become a regular activity, ensuring that we have the proper array of programs to enable us to meet our institutional mission and position us for the opportunities and challenges ahead. We also have thoroughly reviewed the structure of our administrative and other non-academic areas. As a result, we have made several organizational shifts designed to meet the “2020 Vision” goals of improving the effectiveness and efficiencies of campus business processes and ensuring the appropriate leadership and organizational structure necessary in order to fulfill our mission. We have eliminated a vice chancellor position, combined several units and functions, streamlined procedures and practices, and created operational synergies that make the university a more nimble organization. In addition, we are in the final stages of a comprehensive master planning process that will guide the development and improvements of campus over the next several decades. Through this effort, we are addressing issues such as new building needs, use of existing space, parking and transportation, technology and other infrastructure, sustainability, safety and security, preservation of our unique heritage, and integration of campus with the surrounding community. Master planning will help clarify how we will develop our campus and its infrastructure to meet the changing needs of our growing student body. These activities are occurring against the backdrop of challenging times. The university has absorbed more than $32 million in cuts to state funding since 2008-09. As I write this, our elected officials are debating the budget for the 2013-15 biennium, with further reductions anticipated. Simply put, we do not have the resources to do everything we would like to do or to be all things to all people. We never have. That is why we are taking a hard look at all of our functions in order to make informed decisions about how to use limited resources toward the goal of maintaining the growth, vitality and excellence of the university and WCU’s ability to serve students and the people of North Carolina. That said, harsh fiscal realities alone are not driving this need to sharpen our focus. Institutions of higher education – like any organization – should engage in a systematic process of review and prioritization of all of its functions as a normal order of business. And we will do just that. Regular examination of what we do and how we do it will be an ongoing initiative of this forward-looking university in its pursuit of distinction. As good stewards of the resources and trust granted us by the people and the state, we must constantly evaluate our operations toward the goal of continuous improvement. Doing so will make us more efficient and will leave us a stronger institution. In fact, these efforts already are producing results. Enrollment continues to climb, and a higher percentage of students who come to WCU are staying to complete their degrees. We expect the trend of record enrollment to continue this fall. Western Carolina is a university with a proud tradition and a future of extraordinary possibilities. By sharpening our focus, we are better positioned to live up to the legacy of our past, meet the challenges of our present and embrace the opportunities of our future. You are part of Western Carolina, and I trust that you share my pride and belief in the future of our university. DAVID O. BELCHER Chancellor Fall 2013 | 5 MARCHING BAND MAKING PLANS FOR THANKSGIVING 2014 AFTER SCORING ANOTHER PARADE INVITATION Confetti fills the air as members and friends of the Pride of the Mountains Marching Band celebrate the invitation to participate in the 2014 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. magazine.wcu.edu When the 400-plus members of the Pride of the Mountains Marching Band leave campus for the Thanksgiving holiday break next year, it won’t exactly be a matter of “over the river and through the woods, to grandmother’s house we go.” That is, unless grandma lives in the Big Apple, because Western Carolina’s marching band is one of only 10 from across the nation invited to participate in the 2014 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City. Representatives of the Macy’s parade visited campus at the end of the spring semester to surprise the marching musicians with the invitation to take part in the 2014 edition of the annual holiday spectacular. Band members had assembled in the theater of A.K. Hinds University Center under the guise that they were attending a mandatory organizational meeting when Wesley Whatley, the parade’s creative director, broke the news. “It’s my job to look across the country to find the best bands, the most entertaining bands, the most fantastic, most fabulous bands to represent their states and perform in our event,” said Whatley. “This year we received well over 175 applications from bands across the country and even some international groups. We selected 10 from over 175. And let me tell you this: your name – Western Carolina University – was the first band I wrote up on the board, the very first. It was a resounding yes from our committee. It was so clear. And that’s a testament to all of you.” Whatley also unveiled a parade banner and presented a commemorative drum head to David Starnes, director of the Pride of the Mountains, as the students showered Starnes with a rain of colorful confetti. “We’re not going to do this in a way where we go up and go, ‘Hi New York, bye New York,’” 6 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Starnes told the band members. “The trip that we’re looking at right now would have us in New York on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday of Thanksgiving, Friday after Thanksgiving and drive back Friday night, so we’re talking about a week in New York City the week of Thanksgiving.” For students such as Joel Gerome Jeffries Jr., a junior education major, the Macy’s invite represents the latest accolade bestowed upon the WCU marching band. “Being a member and now drum major of the Pride of the Mountains has given me many opportunities to experience things that most college students aren’t able to say they’ve done: marching in the Rose Parade in California, performing halftime for a Carolina Panthers football game, and performing for the largest marching band stage in the country at Bands of America Grand Nationals in Indianapolis,” Jeffries said. “These opportunities are tremendous and now the Pride of the Mountains Marching Band is able to add on another major experience to the books.” The band received the 2009 Sudler Trophy, presented by the John Philip Sousa Foundation, considered the nation’s ultimate honor for college and university bands. When the WCU marching band appeared in the 2011 Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif., it won “favorite band” in a poll conducted by KTLA-TV, earning 72,287 votes – 40 percent of all votes cast in the poll and more than any of the parade’s other musical groups. And now comes the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade. Founded in 1924, the parade attracts more than 3.5 million spectators lining the streets of New York and 50 million at-home viewers. –By Bill Studenc MPA ’10 WCU LOOKS TO THE ARCHITECT OF ITS STRATEGIC PLAN FOR THE RETIRING CHIEF OF STAFF’S SUCCESSOR After Dianne G. Lynch announced her retirement as the chancellor’s chief of staff earlier this year, Western Carolina University did not have to look far for her successor. The university found its new chief of staff, Melissa Canady Wargo, working as assistant vice chancellor for planning and effectiveness in the same H.F. Robinson Administration Building where Lynch served for 10 years as senior executive staff member in the Office of the Chancellor. Wargo guided WCU’s yearlong strategic planning process and led a 36-member committee in drafting the “2020 Vision: Focusing Our Future” strategic plan approved last June by the Board of Trustees. She currently serves as co-chair of the master planning committee, charged with creating a comprehensive plan to guide development of campus over the next several decades. Her April appointment as chief of staff concluded a national search conducted by a seven-member committee, which presented three finalists to Chancellor David O. Belcher for his consideration. “Melissa Wa rgo brings a n exceptionally strong skill set to the position of chief of staff. In addition to a keen analytical mind, she has an excellent reputation on and off the campus for her ability to bring together a diverse collection of faculty, staff, students, alumni and community representatives to find common ground and a sense of shared direction in developing our university’s strategic plan,” Belcher said. “She sees the big picture and understands how things work in the University of North Carolina system, as well as at the regional and community levels. She Dianne G. Lynch (left) departs the position of WCU’s chief of staff while Melissa C. Wargo (right) assumes the role. will be able to hit the ground running and have an immediate impact as the university meets the challenges and opportunities ahead.” Wargo assumes her new role as the university is in the first phase of a process of institutional restructuring. In addition to serving as principal aide to the chancellor on important university operational matters and leading the university’s government relations activities, she oversees WCU’s communications and public relations functions and a new marketing unit formed from several existing offices. Before Wargo changed offices June 1, her predecessor accepted two of the university’s highest honors. Lynch in March became just the 10th person ever to receive the Trustees’ Award, presented only on rare occasions in recognition of exemplary service. “Dianne more than meets the criteria for this award,” said Joan MacNeill, board chair. “Any time that Dianne Lynch is involved in a project, you can rest assured that it will be done to perfection. She makes it all look effortless, but we all know the large amount of effort that she puts into everything she does.” Lynch also received the Paul A. Reid Award for Administrative Staff at WCU’s annual spring Faculty and Staff Excellence Awards event in April. As chief of staff, Lynch oversaw several high-priority university events and projects, including commencement ceremonies, the Chancellor’s Speaker Series, Fall Opening Assembly activities, and chancellor’s installation events in March 2012. She served as a liaison to local, state and federal elected officials and to the UNC General Administration. She oversaw the renovation of the Chancellor’s Residence and H.F. Robinson Administration Building lobby, co-chaired the university’s organizational structure review process and played an important role in the transition of institutional leadership from former chancellor John W. Bardo to the university’s current leader. –By Bill Studenc MPA ’10 FINE ART MUSEUM GETS NEW DIRECTOR David J. Brown, a longtime arts professional experienced in many facets of arts and cultural organizations, has been named director of the WCU Fine Art Museum. “David has worked in North Carolina a number of years in the arts and brings a localized perspective to a national outlook on arts in our communities,” said Robert Kehrberg, dean of the College of Fine and Performing Arts, which oversees the museum. Brown, of Winston-Salem, has worked in the field of art and visual culture for more than 25 years. Since 2010, he has worked as an arts management consultant. From 2007-10, he was deputy director of the Taubman Museum of Art in Roanoke, Va., where he transitioned the 50-year-old institution into a new facility. Brown also has served in leadership and administrative roles with the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in WinstonSalem, the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati and the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. “Some of the most rewarding times of my career have been in collaboratively creating unique and meaningful intersections with students, artists and the community, and I view the entire WCU campus and region as vibrant partners full of potential,” Brown said. WCU’s Fine Art Museum opened in 2005 with a focus on education, community outreach and development of a permanent collection of high artistic merit. Brown fills a position left vacant by founding director and curator Martin DeWitt’s retirement in December 2010. Curatorial specialist Denise Drury has served as interim director of the museum for the past 2½ years. Fall 2013 | 7 ALUMNI AND FRIENDS CREATE NEW ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS Smartphone users meet the Dillsboro Mobile Man (right), an 8-foot-tall costumed character emblazoned with a QR code allowing access to a mobile website. WCU-PLANNED EVENTS IN DILLSBORO WIN INTERNATIONAL AWARDS For the second time in less than a year, events that faculty, staff and students helped plan, publicize and produce as part of Western Carolina University’s partnership with the town of Dillsboro have won awards from the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals. The Dillsboro Mobile Web App Launch Party held in March 2012 recently landed one of eight gold awards in the association’s Hermes Creative Award special events category. Meanwhile, another WCU project team won an AMCP Communitas Award in November 2012 for helping significantly increase attendance during a holiday event the previous year. “Dozens of faculty, staff and students from across the university contributed hundreds of hours on just these two events, and we were successful because of their expertise, commitment and willingness to make a difference in our community,” said Betty Farmer, professor of communication and special assistant to the chancellor for Dillsboro. Initiated in 2009, the Dillsboro/WCU Partnership is a universitywide effort designed to match WCU expertise and support with Dillsboro’s challenges and opportunities. Computer information students and faculty within the College of Business worked with Dillsboro business owners and community members to create mobile.dillsboroplaces.org. The mobile Web application connects smartphone users to the town’s businesses and attractions, and features business and town information including turn-by-turn directions, social media links, promotions, special events and weather. To publicize the release of the app, public relations students and faculty developed a campaign that included a launch party held at Dillsboro’s historic Jarrett House. The event featured a countdown timer to the app’s launch, an “Experience Dillsboro” giveaway and the Dillsboro Mobile Man, an 8-foot-tall costumed character designed and created by faculty and staff in WCU’s School of Stage and Screen. Escorted at the event by Paws, WCU’s mascot, the character wore a QR code enabling smartphone users to scan to be immediately directed to the mobile website. Meanwhile, the Dillsboro project won a Communitas Award for bringing larger crowds to the 2011 Dillsboro Lights and Luminaries. Communitas is a Latin word that means people coming together for the good of a community, and AMCP judges said that the Dillsboro 2011 luminaries event “clearly exhibits communitas.” To promote the 28th annual luminaries event, Farmer and her students designated the festival’s opening evening as WCU Night and planned special activities and prizes just for faculty, staff and students. Not only did merchants report increased sales and visitors, but also said they had customers return. In addition, merchants donated $550, a portion of their proceeds from WCU Night, to a charitable organization in support of the WCU Poverty Project. “Dillsboro is so proud to have been chosen to partner with WCU on this venture,” said Susan Leveille, co-owner of longtime Dillsboro business Oaks Gallery with husband Bob Leveille MBA ’87. “The partnership has been great for all of us. We have learned so very much from each other and about each other and have developed a relationship that I hope will continue.” –By Teresa Killian Tate 8 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Western Carolina University alumni and friends are continuing to answer Chancellor David O. Belcher’s call to provide the additional financial support needed to create more endowed scholarships for WCU students. Belcher identified raising funds for endowed scholarships as the university’s No. 1 philanthropic priority, in order to ensure access to higher education for all capable students, during his installation address in March 2012. Through endowments of at least $10,000, scholarship assistance to deserving students can be awarded on an annual basis in perpetuity. Several new endowed scholarships have been added to the books between April 1 and June 30 of this year. They are: • Steven C. Jones Endowed Scholarship Fund (for inclusive education majors); donors Eva Jones and Jacob Jones. • Dr. Janice H. Holt Endowed Scholarship Fund (for students in the Whee Teach Program); donors Adam R. Holt ’05 MSA ’10, Robert L. Holt ’73 and David L. Holt in memory of Janice Holt ’76 MAEd ’77 EdS ’87 EdD ’12. • Construction Management Alumni Endowed Scholarship Fund (for construction management majors); donors include alumni of the construction management program. • Mickey and Sondra H. Pettus Alpha Xi Delta Endowed Scholarship Fund (for students in Epsilon Gamma Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta sorority); donors Mickey Pettus ’75 and Sondra Pettus ’76. • Coach Bob Waters Football Walk-On Endowed Scholarship Fund (for walk-on student-athletes on the intercollegiate football team); donor Dan Brooks ’76. • Clarence Claude Teagarden Jr. Endowed Scholarship Fund (for business administration and law majors); donors include the late Clarence Claude Teagarden Jr. and colleagues from the College of Business. • Wells Fargo Endowed Scholarship Fund (for accounting, finance, information systems and economics majors); donor Wells Fargo Foundation. • John Davies Memorial Football Endowed Scholarship Fund (for a member of the intercollegiate football team); donor James Williston “Bill” Klugh ’72. • Kathleen Wright Endowed Scholarship Fund (for communication majors); donor Donald Connelly. • McCracken Family Scholarship Fund (for Honors College students); donor Sandra Jayne McCracken ’65. • Kenneth M. Hughes/Dixon Hughes Goodman Endowed Scholarship Fund (for accountancy majors with preference given to students from Yancey and Buncombe counties or Western North Carolina); donor Kenneth M. Hughes ’74. • Berniece Lloyd/Nancy Potts Coward Endowed Scholarship Fund (for Honors College students); donors Carolyn and Orville Coward Jr. • Paul and Nora Jones Endowed Athletic Scholarship Fund (for a student-athlete on an intercollegiate team); donors Paul Jones ’69 MAEd ’70 and Nora Jones MAEd ’87. HONORS COLLEGE DEAN PUBLISHES POST-APOCALYPTIC NOVEL TO SUPPORT HIS DAUGHTER’S MISSION TRIP The possibility of a zombie apocalypse has come up so often around the dinner table that the daughter of Brian Railsback, WCU Honor’s College dean, said she was not surprised her dad wrote a post-apocalyptic novel. “He and my two brothers are always scheming about what they would do,” said Cadence Railsback. “I feel confident we would be well-prepared.” What did surprise her, however, was her dad’s offer to direct all proceeds from his book “A Going Concern” to help her raise enough money to participate in the World Race. Adventures in Missions, a Christian organization, sends “World Racers” in squads to 11 countries in 11 months to serve. “It makes me feel like he really supports what I am trying to do, and it also makes me feel very humble to know that I am so loved,” she said. “This is a project that he spent at least five years of his life on that he handed over so readily Honors College Dean Brian Railsback is directing proceeds from his book to help me.” “A Going Concern” to help fund daughter Cadence’s mission trip. The concept for the novel struck Brian Railsback, an award-winning writer, after he read Cormac McCarthy’s postapocalyptic book “The Road.” He began Inset photo by Katherine Freshwater to wonder what would happen if most of the human population were dead but the rest of the world Railsback completed the novel in 2009. After no initial was fine. Was it possible to write a post-apocalyptic story response from literary agents, he set the project aside until that wasn’t completely dark? Could there be a story that was deciding to self-publish the book. The experience would at once frightening, dramatic and humorous? “I lay awake at help him learn about the emerging e-book industry and night wondering how that would play out and what it would support his daughter. Among the book’s fans is Ron Rash, be like,” said Railsback. WCU Parris Distinguished Professor of Appalachian He dreamed up someone ill-equipped to survive – Culture, who said the novel is excellent and noted that someone who was not a scientist, not knowledgeable, not the story “has taken the bleakest of human scenarios and spiritual and who was wrapped up in popular culture. within it found decency and hope.” Who emerged was Trent Sheets, a 42-year-old guitarist in Railsback’s previous works include the novel “The a band called Subculture. The book follows Sheets as he Darkest Clearing,” which was published in 2004. Awards comes out of the woods near Cullowhee, discovers a virus for his writing include the Prose for Papa (Hemingway) award, which was bestowed in 2006 for his short story has killed almost everyone and treks across the country. Railsback titled the novel “A Going Concern” to capture the “Clean Break.” “A Going Concern” is available online story’s exploration of the future of humanity – will people at Amazon. thrive or fade away? –By Teresa Killian Tate STUDENTS SLIDE INTO JELL-O AT TURTLE TUG Losers slid into green Jell-O at the spring Turtle Tug, which turned out to be a winner for a camp for children with serious medical conditions. Organized by Western Carolina University’s Delta Zeta sorority, the event raised more than $1,300 for The Painted Turtle camp. magazine.wcu.edu Fall 2013 | 9 Photo by Joan Marcus PROFESSOR TERRENCE MANN EARNS TONY NOMINATION FOR ‘PIPPIN’ Terrence Mann and wife Charlotte d’Amboise share the stage in the Broadway revival of “Pippin.” The School of Stage and Screen no longer has a two-time Tony Award nominee on the faculty. That’s because Broadway star Terrence Mann, WCU’s Phillips Distinguished Professor of Musical Theatre, was nominated this spring for this third Tony Award, this time for his performance in the smash revival of “Pippin.” Mann was among nominees in the category of best performance by an actor in a featured role in a musical, nabbing the Tony nod for his portrayal of King Charles, father to the title character. “Pippin” racked up 10 nominations and won four awards, including best musical revival. Although many odds-makers had Mann as the favorite in his category, the Tony went to Gabriel Ebert for “Matilda.” PROFESSOR GARCÍA-CASTAÑÓN’S POEM WINS INTERNATIONAL HONOR A bilingual poem by Santiago García-Castañón, professor of Spanish and head of the Department of Modern Foreign Languages was one of 20 finalists in an international poetry contest organized by La Pereza publishing house. The poem, titled “Una noche en compañía/ Night Company,” is from GarcíaCastañón’s forthcoming poetry collection “Objetos Desechables/ Disposable Objects.” He also recently traveled to Argentina for the release of his sixth poetry collection, “Equis (X),” during the Buenos Aires International Book Fair. In addition to his books of poetry, his publications include two novels as well as scholarly publications. 10 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Mann previously was nominated for his role as the original Beast in the Broadway production of “Beauty and the Beast,” which also garnered Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle nominations for best actor, and as the original Inspector Javert in “Les Miserables,” which enjoyed new life as an Academy Award-winning film last year. In an interesting twist, the latest Tony nomination came as the School of Stage and Screen unveiled its 2013-14 Mainstage season, a lineup that includes a spring production of “Les Miserables,” which Mann will direct. Mann, who came to WCU in 2006, provides invaluable insight into the onstage and behind-the-scenes tricks of the trade, said Robert Kehrberg, dean of the College of Fine and Performing Arts. “Terrence not only brings his life experiences as an accomplished theatrical professional to share with our students, he also frequently takes students to New York City to go backstage and see first-hand how things really work in the world of theatre,” Kehrberg said. “He provides our students with a rare, insider’s perspective on the business of mounting major theatrical productions.” Other highlights of Mann’s career include the roles of Rum Tum Tugger in “Cats” and Chauvelin in “The Scarlet Pimpernel.” He also has taken the Broadway stage in “Lennon,” “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” “Getting Away with Murder,” “A Christmas Carol,” “Rags,” “Barnum,” “Jerome Robbins’ Broadway” and “Jekyll and Hyde.” Mann’s wasn’t the only familiar face in Radio City Music Hall for the Tony Awards show. Former WCU student Ariana DeBose, who made her Broadway debut this season in the nominated “Bring It On” and who currently can be seen in “Motown,” performed in musical numbers from both those shows while Benny Enfinger ’08, who works as an actor in New York City, could be spotted in the audience. –By Bill Studenc MPA ’10 ACADEMIC REVIEW PROCESS RESULTS IN DISCONTINUATION OF SEVERAL PROGRAMS Chancellor David O. Belcher announced in July that the university will proceed with the phased discontinuation of 10 of the 13 academic programs previously recommended by a campus task force for closure. Belcher also announced that programs in motion picture and television production, Spanish and Spanish education, which had been recommended for discontinuation, will be retained, with program directors responsible for developing plans to make improvements. Programs to be discontinued are a bachelor’s degree program in German; master’s degree programs in health and physical education, mathematics, mathematics education, music, music education and two master’s programs related to teaching English to speakers of other languages; and a minor in women’s studies. In addition, several programs have agreed to voluntarily discontinue operations because of low enrollment or similarity to other programs available at WCU. Those programs are undergraduate minors in American studies, Appalachian studies, broadcast sales, broadcast telecommunications engineering technology, digital communications engineering technology, earth sciences and multimedia; an undergraduate program in business designed as a second major for nonbusiness students; and master’s degree programs in chemistry education and teaching music. Belcher accepted all other recommendations as presented in May by the Academic Program Prioritization Task Force, which spent the past year thoroughly examining 130 programs as part of an effort to give WCU leaders information to guide decisions regarding the best allocation of limited resources and to ensure that the university remains focused on strong academic programs aligned to its mission. In addition to recommending some programs for discontinuation, the task force recommended that the majority of programs be retained at current resource levels. Those 96 programs are categorized as functioning at appropriate levels. The task force also assessed eight programs as “truly exceptional and high-performing,” and designated them for potential enhancement as additional resources become available. Those eight are bachelor’s degree programs in emergency medical care, environmental science, natural resource conservation and management, nursing, parks and recreation management, and recreational therapy; and master’s degree programs in communication sciences and disorders, and social work. The task force identified five programs as needing to develop action plans to address weaknesses and take steps toward improvement: an undergraduate minor in residential environments; bachelor’s programs in middle grades education, and stage and screen; and master’s programs in chemistry, and elementary and middle grades education. Programs slated for discontinuation will not close immediately. The university will “teach out” students in those programs or help them transition into a similar program at WCU or to another institution. Decisions to eliminate academic programs are subject to the approval of the University of North Carolina system and the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, WCU’s official regional accrediting agency. –By Bill Studenc MPA ’10 Detailed information can be found online at programprioritization.wcu.edu. ART STUDENTS CREATE MINIATURE GOLF COURSE Five students constructed the Wacky Western Miniature Golf course when challenged with using line, color, mass and other kinetic elements to present risks and rewards as part of a threedimensional design honors project. Angel Butler, Jessica Grant, Katana Lemelin, Elizabeth Mosher and Cole Johnson primarily used found and secondhand materials to build the course. They placed works of art within the holes and incorporated challenges such as requiring a golfer to send a ball through a Slinky. The course made its debut on campus in May and will open again Saturday, Sept. 21, at the Jackson County Green Energy Park’s Youth Arts Festival in Dillsboro. NEW DEANS NAMED FOR GRADUATE SCHOOL, COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SCIENCES Two new faces – one familiar and one fresh – joined the ranks of Western Carolina University’s Council of Deans over the summer. Douglas Robert Keskula, formerly associate dean for academic affairs in the College of Allied Health Sciences at Georgia Regents University in Augusta, Ga., is now dean of the College of Health and Human Sciences, while Mimi Fenton, who had been serving as interim dean of the Graduate School and Research since July 2012, is that academic unit’s permanent leader. Keskula had been in his position at Georgia Regents University, formerly the Medical College of Georgia, since 2009. He filled a vacancy created by the summer 2012 departure of Linda Seestedt-Stanford, founding dean of the College of Health and Human Sciences, who left WCU to become vice president of health sciences at Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Va. In his role as associate dean at GRU, Keskula had been responsible for the development of new and expanded programs, student and faculty recruitment, curricula revisions, programmatic accreditation, distance learning and the integration of educational technology in the classroom. Keskula garnered broad support among the faculty and staff of the College of Health and Human Sciences during his interview, said James Zhang, dean of the Kimmel School of Construction Management and Technology, who chaired the search committee. “We had a pool of outstanding candidates for the dean’s position. Dr. Keskula’s academic background, leadership experience and vision for the future of the college made him the best fit for the position,” Zhang said. Fenton, a professor of English, has been leading WCU’s graduate programs and research activities since the retirement of the previous dean, Scott Higgins, who stepped down in June 2012 after 31 years of service to the university. A faculty member at WCU since 1992, Fenton previously served as associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences from 1997 until 1999 and as director of graduate studies in English from 1995 to 1997. “Mimi has done a wonderful job in her year as interim dean and has implemented significant initiatives to improve the efficiency of both the graduate studies side of the operation and the research administration side,” said Mark Lord, acting provost at the time of the dean appointments. “She worked closely with program directors on strategies to increase enrollment, initiated a summer research assistantship program and restructured the Office of Research Administration.” –By Bill Studenc MPA ’10 Fall 2013 | 11 CONFERENCE CALL MEMBERSHIP CHANGES IN THE RESILIENT SOCON ARE NOTHING NEW By STEVE WHITE ’67 Collegiate conferences are constantly looking for corporate sponsors to enhance their financial spreadsheets. In light of recent developments, the Southern Conference might look into teaming with Timex Group USA, which produces watches advertised to “take a licking and keep on ticking.” For those predicting the Southern Conference’s demise following announcements by five member institutions in the past several months that they would be leaving the league for so-called greener pastures, they might read the history of the nation’s fifth-oldest NCAA Division I league to understand its ability to endure and evolve. The SoCon has survived numerous exoduses by multiple schools since its inception in 1921, including two that spawned a pair of the NCAA’s elite conferences. The first mass exit came 81 years ago, when 13 of the conference’s 23 schools (Alabama, Georgia, LSU and Florida included) departed to form the Southeastern Conference. Twenty years later, seven members (North Carolina, Duke, Clemson, South Carolina and N.C. State among them) left to start the Atlantic Coast Conference. In the ’60s and ’70s, six more schools (West Virginia, Virginia Tech, East Carolina and Richmond included) exited before the league settled in for more than three decades of relatively stable membership. OUT WITH THE OLD: College of Charleston, Georgia Southern, Elon, Appalachian State and Davidson. 12 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University The latest upheaval started late last fall with the College of Charleston announcing its move to the Colonial Athletic Association effective for the 2013-14 year. This spring, Appalachian State and Georgia Southern announced their jump to the Sun Belt Conference to join several schools from Alabama, Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas beginning in 201415. Davidson, looking for a “more prestigious basketball environment,” accepted an invitation in April from the Atlantic 10. Finally, Elon, citing its heavy concentration of alumni and students from the mid-Atlantic, announced in May its move to the CAA. Heading into 2014-15, SoCon members will be current schools (logos displayed in top banner) Western Carolina, Chattanooga, UNC-Greensboro, Furman, Samford, The Citadel and Wofford, who will be joined by three institutions that accepted membership invitations in late May – East Tennessee State, Mercer and Virginia Military Institute. All of the new members eventually will participate in football. VMI, a conference member from 1924 to 2003, returns after nine years in the Big South Conference and will compete for all SoCon championships in 2014-15. East Tennessee State also returns after spending the past seven years in the Atlantic Sun Conference. ETSU, a member of the SoCon from 1978 to IN WITH THE NEW: (from left) Virginia Military Institute, East Tennessee State and Mercer. 2005, will restart its football program in 2015 and is expected to play a conference schedule the following year. Its other 16 sports will compete for conference championships in 2014-15. Mercer, a private school with an enrollment of 8,300, has been a member of the Atlantic Sun Conference since 1978 and its men’s basketball and baseball teams advanced to postseason play in the past year. Based in Macon, Ga., the school will resurrect its football program this fall after a 72-year hiatus and will play in the non-scholarship Pioneer League for one season before beginning SoCon play in 2014. The Bears will field 18 men’s and women’s teams. John Iamarino, Southern Conference commissioner, says the league moved quickly from a defensive position earlier in the year to an offensive position, with interest in membership from 12 to 18 schools and the eventual addition of the three new members. “Our membership is excited about rekindling old rivalries and establishing new ones. More importantly, we’ve been able to grow without extending our geographic footprint to an extreme extent,” Iamarino said. “Our core group of seven schools is committed to staying together and making the SoCon viable and more attractive financially, geographically and academically for current and future membership while creating more opportunities for our student-athletes and continuing our diversity and commitment to athletics integrity.” Many fans of those seven schools and the media that covers their athletics programs are skeptical about the SoCon continuing to rank as a top Football Championship Subdivision conference and its potential to remain among the NCAA’s top basketball and baseball leagues. Athletics directors Randy Eaton at Western Carolina and Richard Johnson at Wofford say they understand those concerns, but both foresee only a temporary loss of prestige for those sports. The departure of perennial top 10 football programs Georgia Southern and Appalachian State obviously will create a void, but other programs should step up quickly, Eaton said. “Wofford is already there,” he said. “The Citadel and Samford are coming off good seasons. Furman has been there and, along with Chattanooga, is on the rise again. Hopefully, we are not that far away from helping to fill the void, and Mercer appears to have the right idea and East Tennessee has a new and stronger commitment to football and a new stadium.” Davidson’s exit will mean a drop in the SoCon’s basketball status, he said, but Mercer beat Tennessee in the National Invitational Tournament last season, East Tennessee State has a strong basketball tradition and VMI has been competitive recently. “And Wofford won backto-back conference championships in 2010 and 2011,” he said. “Baseball is losing four strong programs, but Samford won it all in 2012, we won the regular season this year, The Citadel is strong again and Mercer won the Atlantic Sun this past season.” Despite the changes, the SoCon remains true to its original mission, said Johnson. “The major reason we have conferences is so student-athletes can compete in the same geographic region against schools with similar objectives and athletics philosophies and where families and friends can follow and enjoy their collegiate experience. It’s great to have most of your road trips within a one-way three-to-four-hour framework. It’s not in the welfare of student-athletes, families, friends and the school’s supporters to spend the better part of two days traveling to and from games,” Johnson said. “Some of our sports initially might go through a rebuilding process in terms of national numbers, but give the conference a couple years and we’ll have a chance to be as strong as ever and a solid mid-major conference. I feel very good about the makeup of the conference and where we are headed.” Will the SoCon expansion continue? Probably, said Eaton. “But we are going to hit the pause button and see what happens with the middle level of the Football Bowl Subdivision, which seems to be in constant flux, and see what happens with some of the other schools that expressed interest in our conference. There were 12 to 18 schools initially interested, and many will still be there when the dust settles. We’ll take a long look over the next couple years,” he said. The bottom line is that the Southern Conference, like a certain brand of watches, may have taken a licking, but it once again will keep on ticking. “From Western Carolina’s perspective, this a great opportunity to fill a void, seize the moment and embrace the new Southern Conference,” Eaton said. Fall 2013 | 13 CATAMOUNT ATHLETICS GOOD CHEER WCU SQUAD FINDS INSPIRATION IN A CHILD FIGHTING CANCER By TONY HOLT At 18 months old, Kase Powell was diagnosed with a tumor in package that included signed posters, T-shirts, pompoms and, his brain – a large mass that was pressing against his pituitary from the baseball team, signed baseballs and a batting helmet. gland and stunting his growth. Days after he was diagnosed, (Cherry-Beck’s husband is assistant baseball coach Alan Beck surgery removed 95 percent of the tumor. It saved Kase’s life, but ’04 MAEd ’06.) The Powells reciprocated by sending bracelets nothing is likely to spare him from having regular treatments with Kase’s name on one side and the words “fight back” on the other, which the cheerleaders and baseball players wore and visits to the doctor. Based on classifications from the World for the remainder of their seasons. Health Organization, Kase has a grade-two brain tumor, a “Obviously, he’s our team’s hero,” said Cherry-Beck. “He’s malignant mass that grows slowly but persistently. a fun-loving boy who’s fighting a hard battle. He’s so brave.” Kase is now 3, and his story of endurance has spread across the country. The family – parents Ken and Amy Powell and twin In April, the team competed in the national Collegiate brother Knox – live in Palm Coast, Cheer and Dance Championship Fla. While they have no other family in Daytona Beach, Fla., where Ken in the area, they hear from supporters and Amy Powell brought Kase to the far and wide. competition and he met his admirers Towne & Reese, a jewelry line out of face-to-face for the first time. “He Charlotte, offers a “Kase Necklace,” a took off hugging all of them,” his popular item. The necklace’s proceeds mother said. go toward the Kase Powell Fund. The The lobby was extremely noisy design of the necklace includes a and filled with people, mostly college gray stone that signifies the color of students who have proven abilities to brain tumor awareness and the metal show spirit. But the loudest screams KIM CHERRY-BECK ’01 represents community strength. that afternoon came from the Western Kim Cherry-Beck ’01, coach of the Carolina cheerleaders when they first Western Carolina University cheerleading team and a fan of the saw Kase. “I instantly got cold chills,” said WCU junior Logan jewelry line, learned the story behind the necklace and shared Farnsworth. “I started tearing up when I saw him.… He was really sweet. He gave us hugs and he gave us high-fives.... He it with her squad, who adopted the child as they prepared for was shy, but you could tell he was so happy to see us.” their recent national competition. The team contributed to a can tab drive for the Ronald McDonald House organized by the Reprinted in edited format with permission of The Daytona Beach Powells and sent the family a “Whee are cheering for you” care News-Journal. “OBVIOUSLY, HE’S OUR TEAM’S HERO. HE’S A FUN-LOVING BOY WHO’S FIGHTING A HARD BATTLE. HE’S SO BRAVE.” - Little Kase Powell has Kim Cherry-Beck ’01 (first row, second from right) and her squad cheering for him. Photo by Steven Notaras/News Journal 14 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University TITLE CASE THREE CATAMOUNT TEAMS EARN SPRING SPORTS CHAMPIONSHIPS By BILL STUDENC MPA ’10 The Catamount Department of Athletics added three more Southern Conference titles to its trophy case over the spring as the men’s and women’s track and field teams both found themselves at the top of the podium at the SoCon championships in April and the baseball squad went on a torrid 11-game winning streak to claim its first regular season championship since 2007. The Bat Cats swept Wofford in the home series finale, later taking two of three games on the road at Appalachian State to enter the conference tournament as the No. 1 seed. The Catamounts would go on to win its opening game, but stumbled in the next two games en route to an early tournament exit. Several upsets in other conference tournaments prevented WCU from getting an at-large invitation to the NCAA baseball tournament field of 64, said Coach Bobby Moranda. “We were ranked No. 29 in the nation for the last two weeks of the regular season, but less than one-third of the No. 1 seeds in the country won their respective tournaments, and there just weren’t enough at-large spots to go around,” Moranda said. “I told the guys they still have a lot to be proud of. We ended the year nationally ranked in a lot of categories, including homeruns and doubles, and we were in the top 10 in the number of strike-outs thrown. We do have a lot of positives, including rattling off 16 straight Southern Conference wins, which has never been done here before.” Winners of 22 of their last 27 games, the Cats wound up with a 39-20 overall record and 23-7 in the SoCon, the most conference victories in program history. WCU landed seven players on the post-season All-SoCon team, including the media’s Player of the Year, senior third baseman Tyler White, who was joined on the first team by junior shortstop Aaron Attaway, junior outfielder Julian Ridings and relief pitcher Preston Hatcher ’13. Ridings and White also were selected during the 2013 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, Ridings in the 18th round by the Tampa Bay Rays and White in the 33rd round by the Houston Astros. The Catamounts also had second-team selections in junior catcher Adam Martin and sophomore starting pitcher Jeremy Null – a two-time National Player of the Week selection – with reliever Jonathan Waszak named to the all-freshman team. “Our No. 1 goal for next year is to get to the regionals,” said Moranda, named SoCon Coach of the Year. “Our No. 1 goal this year was to win a championship, and we did that. The guys say they want to do everything it takes next year to take that next step and get to the regionals. We’ll have a lot of guys back, and we have 22 players in summer leagues all across the country, from Cape Cod to California. They’ll be working hard to get better over the summer and then hit it hard when they return in the fall.” Earlier in the spring, the women’s track and field team followed up its February indoor SoCon championship with the conference’s outdoor title. Not to be outdone, the men’s squad also claimed a conference crown. The teams are guided by Coach Danny Williamson ’84 MAEd ’86, who was named conference Coach of the Year for the 31st time and pushed his total number of SoCon titles to 26, including both outdoor and indoor. Several Catamounts also won individual awards. Senior Brandon Hairston ’13 was named Most Valuable Men’s Track Performer, while sophomore Alisha Bradshaw was named Most Outstanding Women’s Field Performer and Tayla Carter was named Women’s Freshman of the Year. Hairston and Carter were joined by junior Jocelyn Keen at the NCAA East Region Preliminaries in Greensboro. The baseball Catamounts celebrate one of their 23 conference victories (above); Alicia Bradshaw helps put the women’s track and field team in the championship spot (below). Fall 2013 | 15 CATAMOUNT ATHLETICS GRIDIRON GLORY DAYS FESTIVITIES WILL HONOR THE 30TH ANNIVERSARY OF WCU’S NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCE By DANIEL HOOKER ’01 The 2013 football season marks the 30-year anniversary of Western Carolina’s improbable run to the NCAA Division I-AA National Championship game. Plans are in the works to commemorate that accomplishment and honor the 1983 football team during the weekend of the final home game this fall – Saturday, Nov. 16 – against the Furman Paladins. Festivities include a 1983 team reunion for former players, administrators, athletic trainers, managers and other students affiliated with the season, followed by a pregame tailgate for reunion participants and their families. During the football game, members of the 1983 team will be honored as the Catamounts battle the Paladins, an opponent that has special significance: Western Carolina and Furman met twice during the Catamounts’ 1983 season, tying in Cullowhee while WCU pulled off a 14-7 victory on the road in the semifinal round of the playoffs to advance to the title game. Ten years ago, the 1983 football team was enshrined in the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame – coincidentally also on the same day the Catamounts faced Furman in Cullowhee. Eight individuals off the ’83 squad have been inducted, as well. Under the direction of legendary Head Football Coach Bob Waters, the 1983 Catamounts rode a string of 12 straight unbeaten weeks to make the Southern Conference’s firstever appearance in the NCAA Division I-AA (now Football Championship Subdivision, or FCS) title game. The squad got off to a slow start, dropping its first two games before starting its run of 12 weeks without a loss to earn a post-season bid. The span included the 17-17 tie with Furman, which also made the playoffs. In the playoffs, the Catamounts upset three teams, including Furman in a rematch. WCU dropped the title game to nationally ranked Southern Illinois to end the season. The 11 victories compiled in 1983 remain the benchmark for WCU football, while the 15 games played by the Catamounts marked the most by any NCAA football team at all divisions in a single-season at the time. WCU finished ninth in the final NCAA national rankings, the highest for a Catamount squad all-time. Eleven Catamounts landed on the post-season All-SoCon squad, including eight first-team selections and three honorable mentions. Seven members of that team went on to earn All-America honors during their WCU careers: Eric Rasheed and Tiger Greene in 1983; Mark Buffamoyer ’86 MAEd ’88, Louis Cooper ’87 and Steve Kornegay ’87 in 1984; and Alonzo Carmichael and Clyde Simmons ’96 in 1985. Players Dean Biasucci ’88, Cooper, Greene and Simmons all went on to play in the NFL. 16 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Photo by Chris Vleisides PITCH PERFECT GREG HOLLAND BECOMES THE FIRST EX-CATAMOUNT TO PLAY IN BASEBALL’S ALL-STAR GAME Former Western Carolina relief pitcher – and current Kansas City Royals closer – Greg Holland became the first Catamount baseball player ever selected for Major League Baseball’s AllStar Game when he was tapped to replace Seattle Mariners starter Hisashi Iwakuma on the American League roster for July’s “Midsummer Classic.” A right-hander, Holland entered in the seventh inning of the game, which was played July 16 at Citi Field in New York. He retired the first hitter he faced, forcing Arizona’s Paul Goldschmidt to hit a groundball to the third baseman, who threw Goldschmidt out at first. Holland then gave up a single to David Wright of the New York Mets before leaving the game. Holland was one of three Kansas City players on the American League squad, joining teammates Alex Gordon and Salvador Perez, who all played roles in the 3-0 victory over the National League. “It was a dream come true,” Holland told MLB.com after the game. “We had 30 percent of the winning All-Star team out there in Royals colors, so that was pretty cool.” The MLB All-Star selection is the second such honor of Holland’s professional career. He earned Texas League AllStar honors in 2009 while playing in the Royals’ farm system with the Northwest Arkansas Naturals. Holland dominated opposing hitters in the first half of the 2013 MLB season, posting a 1.80 ERA with 22 saves over 35 innings. Going into the All-Star break, the closer had struck out 44 percent of the batters he had faced this season to lead MLB and had struck out the side six times. Originally from Marion, Holland recorded 19 saves for Western Carolina from 2005-07, currently fifth best in program history. He posted 10 career victories in his 82 career appearances. He recorded 154 career strikeouts against 70 walks. Holland was drafted by Kansas City in the 10th round of the 2007 MLB First-Year Player Draft on the heels of WCU’s runner-up finish in the NCAA Baseball Chapel Hill regional. He went on to make his Major League debut on August 2, 2010, against the Oakland Athletics. Greg Holland pitches his way into Major League’s All-Star Game. Fall 2013 | 17 BOSTON STRONG A former WCU track athlete describes the kindness of strangers in the wake of the marathon bombing Morgan Turner ’12, a former member of the WCU cross country and track teams, was competing in the 2013 Boston Marathon on Patriots’ Day – Monday, April 15 – when she suddenly found herself immersed in a terror attack as two bombs exploded near the finish line, killing three people and injuring 264. A resident of Lincolnton, she recently completed her first year of teaching at S. Ray Lowder Elementary School. This is her account of what happened that day in Boston. 18 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University “They gave both me and the girl I was with a finishing medal and said we had earned it even though we did not get to cross the finish line. I could not care less if I had finished; I just wanted to find my family.” My race was going well, but at mile 25 I decided I would stop at a bathroom at the side of the course so I could sprint the last mile in and enjoy that final mile. I came out of the bathroom and started running into the city, where tons of spectators were gathered, cheering us on. I was so excited to be heading toward the 26-mile marker and finish line when I heard a noise like a cannon in the distance and saw a huge cloud of gray smoke coming up from the buildings ahead of us. I tried to rationalize it and thought that maybe they were shooting off cannons because it was Patriots’ Day and they were celebrating runners coming in. I had a bad feeling it was more but continued running and then heard a much louder boom and saw more smoke. I began to realize that this was not a cannon. The police started streaming into the road and told us to stop running. Everyone was asking questions and trying to figure out what was going on. We could all hear loud sirens and saw police running toward the smoke. Runners then started to say it was a bomb at the finish line. At this point I really started to panic because I was positive my parents would be waiting for me at the finish line. My phone had gone dead, so I asked other runners if I could borrow theirs. I started calling my mom and dad over and over again but no calls were going through. This made it even worse because I thought they had been where the bomb was and that their phones had been blown up. After 26 miles, your mind and body are not working right; when extra panic is added, it turns bad quickly. I started crying and fell to the ground because my legs could not hold me up anymore. Another girl around my age came and sat with me, and we both just sat there awhile in shock. People who lived in the city were starting to come into the race route and offering phones to use. A Bostonian let me use her phone, and I texted my mom and did not get a response. About 15 minutes later, the Bostonian came back to find me to tell me my mom had texted back “yes” to tell me that they were OK. I can’t explain the relief I felt at that time, but I still did not know where they were. The police then told us we had to leave the area immediately. I wanted to go to the finish to look for my parents, but they would not allow us in that location. We decided to start walking to the family waiting area to see if our family members were there. Along the way we were both having a hard time walking and I was starting to get very bad stomach cramps so we had to stop for breaks. During one of those breaks, a sweet lady named Donna had come down to the street offering her phone to every runner she saw so that they could contact their loved ones. She started calling my parents’ phone numbers while she walked with us to our bags, but nothing was going through. After we made it to the park, a lady named Savannah came down to help and texted my mom to tell her my location. Then, volunteers who had run from the scene of the finish line found us. When they were running from the scene, they had accidently taken the finisher medals with them. They gave both me and the girl I was with a finishing medal and said we had earned it even though we did not get to cross the finish line. I could not care less if I had finished; I just wanted to find my family. We were still worried because there were reports of more bombs in the area. My mom’s call finally got through and she told the first lady from Boston where she was. The lady ran all the way to where my mom was and brought her back to where I was waiting. We finally got in touch with my dad and he found his way to the park. The Boston lady offered to drive us to the airport so that we could catch our flight to Charlotte. We finally touched down and got home to Lincolnton around 10:30 that night, where my sister, uncle and grandparents were waiting to see us. I have never been so happy to see Lincolnton in my life. I cannot even begin to describe how thankful I am to those ladies from Boston and the people of the city. Without them, I do not know how I would have ever found my parents in the chaos or how we would have made it to the airport for our flight. They even offered to let us stay at their homes for the night. The people of Boston streamed out of their houses onto the streets to help any runners who needed them. In a time when I was physically and extremely emotionally drained, these people stayed with me and went above and beyond to reunite me with my family. Those who did this horrible, evil act did it to the wrong city and the wrong group of people. Bostonians are a tough, proud, close-knit family – just like runners. We will be back to run the Boston Marathon again, and it will be the best and largest Boston Marathon the world has ever seen. I continue to pray for the people of Boston and families of runners and spectators who were hurt and killed in this horrible incident. The bombs went off and we stopped running around 3 p.m. I did not see my parents until after 5 p.m. These were the longest two hours of my life. Yet, I was fortunate, because my family and I came out of this situation safely. Many others cannot say the same. I could not put it better than the statement we received in an email from the Boston Athletic Association, which read: “What was intended to be a day of joy and celebration quickly became a day in which running a marathon was of little importance.” Although this is a terrible way to be reminded, remember to always show your love and thankfulness for God, family and friends. These will always be the true things of importance. Fall 2013 | 19 F O T E S C E T N A R U D EN CINE I D E M NCY E G R E TATE EM G N A N I I L D A LEA TERESA KIL D L I U BY TO B L S O E O V I H E STR RAINING SC L P U O AC OR T O D T U AND O WILDERNESS RESCUE LL1.WCU.EDU "IT CAN BE AN ALARMING FEELING TO BE DEEP IN THE BACKCOUNTRY WITH AN INJURY AND REALIZE YOU HAVE NO WAY TO COMMUNICATE WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD." –JOSH WHITMORE S tanding in the snow on a forest road in Cullowhee, Justin “Padj” Padgett MS ’00 pulls make-up out of his backpack to help set the scene of a mock emergency involving a trail runner and equestrians. “The horse kicks you in the head, sound good?” Padgett asks Ambrose Sleister III, a student in a “Wilderness First Responder” class composed of therapeutic youth program counselors; rock climbing, mountain biking, rafting, backpacking and mountaineering guides; and members of the U.S. Forest Service. Wielding a cosmetics container of red, Padgett suggests Sleister, a student from Young Harris College and summer raft guide, remove his rain jacket to avoid getting “blood” on it from his simulated head injury. Padgett instructs him to lie partially in the bone-chilling creek along the road and to be mostly “out,” but report feeling pain. With Sleister and other “victims” ready and the rescuers on the way, Padgett slips out of sight into the trees to meet up with co-instructor Kevin Williams ’10 and observe. Having previously experienced hypothermia in real-life, Sleister braces for the dulling cold by closing his eyes and focusing on each breath. He lets himself sense some of the discomfort a patient in that situation might – an experience Padgett said often helps students develop empathy for those they are learning to help and gain a new perspective and deeper understanding of rescue techniques. As classmates check Sleister’s condition, monitor vital signs, cover him with a sleeping bag and move him to a backboard to be carried out, he shivers – and not because he was a good actor. “I wanted it to be as real as possible so if they are ever faced with these things it doesn’t catch them off guard,” Sleister said later. “These scenarios are aimed at keeping you from finding yourself in a situation, and, I guess, freezing up and not knowing what to do. As a first responder, that’s one of the worst things you can do – someone looks to you for help, and all you can do is respond with ‘I don’t know.’” Preparing students to confidently and competently take action in emergencies and intense, life-threatening situations comes second only to preparing them to anticipate and prevent accidents from happening in the first place at Landmark Learning, a Cullowhee-based school founded in 1996 by Padgett and his wife, Mairi Padgett MAEd ’00. Committed to serving the outdoor community with education and training, Landmark Learning courses range from intensive “Emergency Medical Technician” classes to safety, rescue and instructor certification courses associated with the American Canoe Association, American Heart Association, Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics and the National Outdoor Leadership School Wilderness Medicine Institute. In addition, the Padgetts have created unique courses, including a wilderness lifeguarding program and a community medic class, and this spring launched the “Landmark Semester,” a six-week course in which participants gain multiple certifications and college credit through a partnership with WCU. Meanwhile, they are seeking accreditation from the U.S. Department of Education. If successful, Landmark Learning will become the first training school of its kind in the nation to be accredited. Maurice Phipps, professor of health, physical education and recreation at WCU, said the couple provides vital specialized wilderness training behind-the-scenes for the outdoor recreation industry. “Most guests just put their lives in instructors’ hands, whether it be rafting, climbing, zipping or other activity,” said Phipps. “They seldom think, ‘How much training has this instructor had?’ and ‘Who taught them?’” Josh Whitmore, WCU associate director of outdoor programs, said Landmark Learning’s courses and custom training have helped staff at Base Camp Cullowhee, which offers outdoor adventures and experiences for students, become, on average, more highly trained in wilderness medicine and emergency response than their counterparts at other universities. Whitmore said WCU is fortunate to have so close and accessible a school that professionals across the country attend. “In the backcountry, extraction times could be many hours or even days,” he said. “Where an ambulance carries premade splints for unstable broken limbs, you’ll need to manufacture one out of the materials you are carrying or can find – sticks, shoelaces, belts, tape. A lot of people think, ‘Oh, we’ll just call a helicopter,’ but in most remote wilderness locations, cell phones don’t work, and dense vegetation make helicopter landing zones few and far between. It can be an alarming feeling to be deep in the backcountry with an injury and realize you have no way to communicate with the outside world. Survival depends on the choices you make.” Fall 2013 | 21 MA adgett Mairi P d n a 0 . MS ’0 in 1996 adgett earning Justin P mark L d n a L d founde T he “outdoors bug” bit both of the Padgetts young. Although Mairi’s family moved a lot and money was tight, her parents committed to sending her to camp twice. Two extraordinary summers at Alford Lake Camp in Maine turned into 11. She came back year after year as a camper; a counselor; a leader of canoe trips, hikes and seven-week mountain treks; and head of the out-of-camp trips program. Camp director Sue McMullan said Mairi’s love of every part of the natural world, including a pet white rat she brought with her one summer, was infectious. “As Mairi grew, so did her leadership in our community – living with campers, helping to lead trips and sharing along the way the fascinating aspects of every path, every tree, every camping skill and every challenge that comes when camping in the out of doors,” said McMullan. Mairi realized just how attuned she was to nature when, five weeks into a seven-week trek in which swimming in your clothes was “doing laundry,” a perfumey smell overwhelmed her. She finally connected the fragrance to two freshly showered hikers. “I can feel a difference now because of my time outdoors with plastic or manmade smells,” said Mairi. “They don’t seem right.” For Justin, time outside was connected to family and, later, scouting. His dad, a Methodist minister, served churches in the Charlotte area and Western North Carolina, and Justin enjoyed accompanying him on outdoor youth outings. He also treasured hunting and fishing trips with his grandfather and their annual expeditions to The Pink Motel on the Oconaluftee River in Cherokee for little adventures. For him, spending time outside helped him navigate the rapid thoughts and ideas competing for attention in his mind. “Adventure, to me, is really about focus,” he said. “You can’t think about anything else but what is right in front of you.” Years later at Appalachian State University, in addition to majoring in social gerontology and pursuing a minor in psychology, he sought a minor in outdoor recreation, which at the time was called “leisure studies.” “I told my dad I was minoring in leisure studies, and he said, ‘You’re paying for that? It costs money?’” said Justin with a laugh. “During that time, the outdoor recreation industry was not necessarily recognized as professionally as it is now.” After Justin graduated from Appalachian and Mairi from Fitchburg State College in Massachusetts, the two found themselves in the same emergency medical technician course in New Hampshire in January 1994. At the time, Justin had shoulder-length hair and a lot of tie-dye in his wardrobe, and Mairi had a pierced nose and skateboards in her car. Justin coaxed her into taking the seat next to him, saying “I am a great study partner. I’ve got a 3.8 GPA from Appalachian State. 22 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Ed ’00 "AS GUIDES OURSELVES, WE KNEW THE SAME LANGUAGE." –MAIRI PADGETT '00 Maybe I can help you.” She accepted the seat but let him know she could hold her own. “She said, ‘I don’t think I need your help, but maybe I can help you,’” he said. After the class they went to the Adirondacks together and watched dogsled races before Mairi headed to Maine and Justin to River’s Way Outdoor Adventure Center in Tennessee, where he developed programming including caving, climbing, ropes courses, rafting and canoeing activities to enable people with disabilities to take part. Now and then, Mairi and Justin exchanged post cards and letters but did not talk again for a year. That was when Justin, while eating burritos in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven in Colorado, was advised by his mountaineering partner that it was time to take action. “He said, ‘Man, look, if you keep talking about this lady, it’s just going to make me crazy. … We are mountaineering, and you need to focus, and if you need to call her to get that complete, you need to do that,’” said Justin. So, armed with quarters at a pay phone, Justin made four or five calls until he found someone who had Mairi’s phone number. When he reached her, he could only talk for about five minutes, but that was all he needed to make a plan to fly to Portland, Maine, to see her. The couple began to spend more and more time together while still leading trips and working at camps. They guided rafts on the Nantahala, the Pigeon, the Ocoee and world-class sections of the New and Gauley in West Virginia. To make ends meet between seasons, Mairi worked as a veterinary technician and Justin as an EMT and, later, as a paramedic. Not long after they were married in 1996, they started to dream about owning and operating their own outdoor school. “When trip leading, we spent a lot of time teaching – that was a passion we had,” said Justin. “As soon as a student has an ‘aha’ moment, you kick into high drive.” They decided to apply to graduate school and chose Western Carolina University, which offered programs that matched both of their interests. Mairi was drawn to educational administration and Justin to human resources development. Plus, Justin’s dad, Frank Padgett, was serving as a pastor at Cullowhee United Methodist Church on campus, and the area offered access to trails and whitewater. The only sacrifice seemed to be less convenient access to rock climbing, so they sold their climbing gear. It was a sacrifice they were willing to make. “We decided it was easier to swim than fly when things go wrong,” said Justin. They founded Landmark Adventures and began offering guiding services and outdoor instruction based out of their basement apartment and “The Camel,” their 1992 fourwheel drive truck. They chose the name to represent their commitment to incorporating the diverse landmarks and touchstones students need to find their way, and they used the school as a platform for their graduate school projects. They led trips and taught outdoor skills as well as CPR and first aid. They later added swiftwater rescue and wilderness and emergency medicine to the course offerings. Many of their early clients were colleges that hired them to facilitate programs and businesses for which the Padgetts hosted group initiatives and teambuilding as part of corporate training and development. What they quickly realized was that they did not want to compete for clients with their friends and colleagues at other outdoor schools and companies. What they preferred was to facilitate and teach certification courses and classes needed by those, who like them, had a passion for working in the outdoors. They acquired additional training and qualifications needed to teach instructor-level classes. As Jon Lowrance, a Landmark Learning alumnus-turned-instructor says, students with no prior medical training would leave the school knowing how to handle injuries such as open fractures, head trauma or seizures “at night, outside, in the rain, in the snow and with no ability to call 911.” The couple’s teaching styles proved complementary. “Mairi’s directness, pragmatism and compassion offer excellent balance to the humor, paramedic and wilderness experiences and boundless energy that define Justin’s classroom presence,” said Shana Tarter, assistant director of the National Outdoor Leadership School Wilderness Medicine Institute. Meanwhile, the Padgetts enjoyed the group dynamics and immersing themselves in the subjects as well as hearing their students’ adventure stories and aspirations. “As guides ourselves, we knew the same language,” said Mairi. “It became a very easy piece of our fabric.” In 1998, they they put a lot of energy into designing and creating a nine-day, multicertification course called the “Landmark Trip Leader School.” “We told ourselves, ‘We are graduating from graduate school soon, and either this is going to work and is worth our energy, or we have had a hobby up to this point, and we need to use our degrees and get real jobs,’” said Justin. When students came from Tennessee, Georgia and North Carolina to participate, the Padgetts went all in. They streamlined Landmark’s courses, focusing on what outdoor educators and trip leaders needed and eliminating services such as leading trips. “That was a turning point,” said Justin. “We went from being Landmark Adventures to Landmark Learning.” INTERVIEW: JUSTIN'S 6TH GRADE RESCUE LL2.WCU.EDU Fall 2013 | 23 formed 0 trans . MAEd ’0 g office tt e in g rn d a a e L iP dmark n nd Mair a a L 0 e ’0 to th MS reek in adgett C an e C Justin P g) bin on in a c rn a s e 0 L 2 mark this 19 y L an d courtes (Photo INTERVIEW: NOTHING TO LOSE LL3.WCU.EDU W hile continuing to teach at venues from community centers to trailheads to the Andes Mountains in Ecuador, the couple committed to building a base for Landmark Learning in Western North Carolina. Without any financial backers, without grant assistance and while trying to pay back student loans, they took out a high-interest loan with a one-year balloon payment in spring of 2000 to purchase nearly 30 acres of land with a small cabin on Cane Creek in Cullowhee. “It wasn’t secure, but back then it seemed to match our adrenaline junkiness, and it was the only way to move forward,” said Justin. Although the couple loved their creekfront land, the house appraised at zero-dollar-value and turned out to need more work than a new coat of paint and siding. As they pulled back its crumbling layers, they found newspapers dating back to 1927 in the walls and sofa cushions and clothing in the insulation. When they asked an acquaintance who came to fix the initial, nonfunctional plumbing if he could help shore up the house and make it a little more square, he told them, “You can’t polish a turd.” Thus began the Padgetts’ education in construction, permits and building codes as they rebuilt the house around itself. They lived in their truck and bought supplies with credit cards. They spent days off on tasks ranging from rebuilding the original walnut foundation to installing drywall. Helping them was Matt Cole, a Penn State student who had taken one of their courses and was adamant about being their intern. They told Cole they didn’t have a place for him to stay, but he wanted to come anyway. He slept in a hammock under an apple tree, and his assistance with course logistics, construction and cabinetry, and other initiatives proved invaluable. “We were in a race,” said Mairi. “When it got cold, we needed to be able to move indoors. Second, if we weren’t able to flip the whole thing within the year, we were going to be in a world of (financial) hurt.” A week before the first frost the building was sealed in. They were soon able to refinance and pay off their credit cards. Within a few years, the campus came to include a 1,200 square-foot classroom, bathrooms, showers, a kitchen, a pavilion, a gear room and a recycle station. There also now is a bunkhouse and primitive camping area that transforms during courses into “tent city.” The deck attached to the office 24 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University and the office itself feature a forest view and the sound of the rushing water of the creek, and the size of the campus has grown to 40 acres. Landmark Learning also achieved steward forest classification. The couple adopted a 20-year plan for land management to improve forest habitat health. The steward forest designation enabled the Padgetts as private landowners to benefit from state forest service resources and knowledge. They were able to buy seedlings for as little as a nickel to help reforest the property, which they also have opened to WCU students in biology and environmental health for research projects. Meanwhile, skills learned at WCU, including research methods, program design and statistics, proved crucial to developing curriculum for courses and creating new courses such as “Community Relief Medic,” which evolved from a class called “Mission Medic” that they developed while working and kayaking in Ecuador. Years later, while talking with mission teams en route to Haiti at the Miami airport, Justin realized an adapted version of the curriculum could benefit the many volunteers he met who he said had “golden hearts,” but limited, if any, medical training or understanding of how to safely and efficiently serve in a disaster area. Another important element of their course design is fun. Final written exams are “lovingly referred to as a celebration of their knowledge,” according to an entry in the Landmark Learning blog. Hands-on, lifelike scenarios woven into the curriculum include unexpected twists to leave students questioning and thinking. “We believe when someone has fun doing what they are doing, which is largely what happens in scenarios, that memory lasts way longer than a PowerPoint, a lecture or a comment from an instructor,” said Justin. Students have written Landmark Learning after their courses to share examples of how they used what they learned – from assisting at car accident scenes on the way home from their classes to caring for patients with injuries from broken ankles to seizures on remote trails and in the desert. But what the Padgetts hope is that there won’t be many stories – that their students learn enough about accidents to prevent as many as possible. “The best trip leader is almost like a neurotic parent,” said Justin. “You have this premonition about this thing that could happen, and you do everything you can to rule it out.” E C N A M R O F R E P K A PE A nnual enrollment in Landmark Learning courses has grown in the past decade from several hundred to more than 2,000, and among them are “Landmarkians” – students who return for more courses. The cadre of the school’s contract instructors, whom the Padgetts select based on their experience as trip leaders and as dynamic, effective educators, has grown to several dozen. Also on staff are a full-time instructor, logistics coordinator and student services coordinator. This spring, the school launched what Justin has dubbed the “mothership” of Landmark Learning – the Landmark Semester. In six weeks, students become EMTs and Leave No Trace master educators as well as proficient in wilderness medicine and comfortable with canoe instruction, swiftwater rescue and wilderness lifeguarding. What they take home are seven certifications and up to nine hours of college credit. “Many college programs are not able to provide some of the very specific professional development courses and certification programs we offer, and the Landmark Semester takes folks that have completed or just completed a program such as parks and recreation management and catapults them into the outdoor recreation industry,” said Justin. Also this spring, Landmark Learning hosted a site visit related to its quest to become accredited from the Accrediting Council for Continuing Education and Training. The Padgetts want to be able to transfer college credit directly, thus saving students from the expense of paying Landmark Learning tuition in addition to college tuition for each course. They also want to make sure their practices are as robust as they can be. To prepare, Mairi spent a Saturday in front of a computer "THEY EMPOWER PARTICIPANTS TO TEACH OTHERS, TRAIN THE WORLD AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE." –BEN LAWHON ying a tice carr c ents pra ing stud ise. e exerc rk Learn a u c m s d re n La ck o m a during wo o d s patient out of th e Fall 2013 | 25 "LANDMARK IS GETTING A REPUTATION AS A LEADER IN THE SOUTHEAST FOR OUTDOOR INSTRUCTORS, WHATEVER THEIR MODE IS." –DEB SWEENEY WHITMORE SPINAL STABILIZATION LL4.WCU.EDU HYPOTHERMIA RESCUE LL5.WCU.EDU VERTICAL PIN RESCUE LL6.WCU.EDU reviewing information that, in the end, left her grateful for her experience at WCU. “I felt like saying, ‘Thank you, Kevin Pennington. I just used my entire graduate degree in 10 hours,’” she said, referring to WCU’s former director of higher education programs at WCU. Up next for Landmark may be more construction in Cullowhee. Thirty-five percent of courses are taught on site, and the Padgetts say students would benefit from an updated and larger classroom and would enjoy better bunkhouse facilities. They are even considering replacing the office and classroom they worked so hard to build. “Part of what has helped us is the ability to change on a dime,” said Justin. “When we realize we need to change a policy or a practice, we don’t have to wait for a committee meeting or months for the ideas to be discussed. When we say, ‘It’s crazy, we should do it,’ we do it.” What has emerged are strong affiliations, partnerships and relationships, and a reputation of quality. Michael Belcher ’09 MHS ’12, an emergency medical science instructor at Southwestern Community College, said he has not only worked with Justin in the field as a paramedic but also with students who decide to further their educations at SCC after taking a Landmark Learning course. “Landmark Learning is setting the standard for EMS education not only locally, but nationwide,” said Belcher. Deb Sweeney Whitmore, a Landmarkian herself and director of program operations at the North Carolina Outward Bound School, said the Padgetts offer high quality from classroom instruction to customer service. Phone calls to Landmark Learning often ring only once before they are answered, said Whitmore, who is married to Josh Whitmore from WCU. “Our staff would say hands down they have a great experience with Landmark, and Landmark is getting a reputation as a leader in the Southeast for outdoor instructors, whatever their mode is,” she said. Ben Lawhon, education director for the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics national organization and a past Landmark Learning instructor, pointed out that Landmark is one of only seven organizations in the United States approved to offer the highest level of the Leave No Trace trainings available – the “Master Educator” course. “Our organization looks to bring only the most qualified organizations on to offer our course,” said Lawhon. “The quality of Landmark is reflected in what Justin and Mairi have instilled as their standard, and it’s a high standard. They integrate Leave No Trace into everything they do, and they require their instructors to do the same. They really walk the talk in terms of their commitment to stewardship, and through their programming they are empowering their participants to teach others, train the world and make a difference.” E V R E S D N A T C E T O R TO P T he Padgetts recognize that while they may not yield the same kind of financial rewards as some of their classmates working in more traditional corporate settings, they believe their work is important and extends to everyone their students go on to serve. “We love our students, the subject matter and the skills we are teaching,” Justin said. “Sometimes, to our financial detriment, our decision-making is about relationships and not bottom lines.” Through their work, they also want to advance the profession and protect the environment. They are involved with industry organizations, present at conferences and join efforts to improve national standards in the industry in such ways as helping co-author a wilderness medicine field guide. In 2012, the Appalachian Center for Wilderness Medicine presented Justin with the Mountain Laurel Award, which honors an individual who has made extraordinary, lasting and substantial contributions to wilderness medicine in the Southern Appalachians. In addition, how they teach and how they live are connected to their ethic of helping others, said Tarter from the National Outdoor Leadership School Wilderness Medicine Institute. “From the ‘Community Relief Medic’ program, to their work with underserved communities in Ecuador, to their contributions in the local community, they role model service,” she said. “I believe students who engage with Landmark come away with a new perspective on how to help.” For some, the perspective changes everything. Jon Lowrance came to Landmark Learning as a college student studying outdoor education, and conversations with the Padgetts on the porch and while paddling down WNC creeks pointed him in a new direction. “They lit a spark in me to pursue a career in health care and experiential education,” said Lowrance. After training as a wilderness first responder, he was an EMT and then a nurse in addition to continuing his outdoor pursuits and becoming a Landmark Learning instructor. He worked in critical care and is now in graduate school at WCU studying to become a certified registered nurse anesthetist. For the Padgetts, service ranges from tracking a possible threat to the Jondachi River in Ecuador to attending community revitalization meetings and working in a community garden in Cullowhee, and they participate as a family with their 8-year-old daughter, Ellie, and 5-year-old son, Alex. They have watched the outdoors come alive for their children as they hike, tube, paddle and ride scooters together. What it’s really all about for them – what they do with Landmark Learning and what they do in service – is encouraging people to have the skills and knowledge to be able to enjoy the outdoors and protect it, said Mairi. Over the years, they have seen an increasing amount of use and traffic at the rivers and trails where they teach and visit, and they are glad. “If you don’t create a love for the resource, you can’t create a voice for that resource to protect it,” said Mairi. “We encourage people to go out and play, but to play appropriately with risk management and risk prevention in mind so these resources can be enjoyed for generations to come. I wish for all kids that they have a chance to go outside, climb a mountain or go down a river.” ENJOY VIDEOS AND SLIDESHOWS IN THE ENHANCED ONLINE VERSION OF THIS STORY AT LANDMARK.WCU.EDU. Fall 2013 | 27 WCU is making huge strides in emergency notification By RANDALL HOLCOMBE Redundancy is not usually considered a good thing, but when it comes to emergency notification, the more methods available for sending out an alert to the public, the better, even if an individual receives the same message several times, says Tammi Hudson, Western Carolina’s emergency manager. When a situation occurs at WCU that presents a danger to the public, all those involved in public safety on campus want to have at their disposal a toolbox that contains numerous types of notification systems, Hudson said. 28 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University The idea is to get the message out to the campus community by several methods, in case an individual system does not work as it should, and to improve the potential for reaching individuals no matter where they are or what they are doing. Toward those goals, over the past year, Hudson has been overseeing massive leaps in the university’s ability to communicate with its population of students, faculty, staff and visitors during emergency situations, with the greatest improvement in that capability scheduled to happen this fall. The 2007 mass shooting at Virginia Tech that resulted in the deaths of 33 people played out live on television and computer screens all across the country to an unprecedented degree, said Hudson, who was then working as physical security and emergency operations center manager at the Indianapolis International Airport. “Because it was on a college campus and young people were involved, I think it deeply affected people,” she said. Virginia Tech was a wake-up call for colleges and universities across the country “to take notice and realize that bad things can happen on a college campus,” she said. One of the issues highlighted by the tragedy was the need for efficient ways to communicate with a campus community during an emergency situation. Another outcome of the Virginia Tech shooting was a directive from University of North Carolina General Administration that each UNC campus should have an individual working as emergency manager, and Hudson became WCU’s first emergency manager in March 2009, taking on duties that had been shared by several individuals and offices on campus. Since Hudson’s arrival at WCU, several situations have warranted alerting the campus community through its emergency notification systems. One that stands out was a robbery on a Wednesday in December 2011 at the State Employees Credit Union, located across N.C. Highway 107 from the east campus in Cullowhee. The search for the armed suspect resulted in WCU police issuing a “timely warning” for the campus a few minutes after confirmation of the robbery, and then a campuswide emergency notification with a “shelter-inplace” advisory that was in effect for just more than two hours as law enforcement authorities searched for the suspect. The suspect was eventually arrested off campus, but investigators determined that he had been on campus, unarmed, before the arrest took place. During that incident, a variety of emergency notification systems were used to communicate with the campus community, including WCU email; the PIER/Cat Tracker system that sends out text messages, voice calls and email to registered individuals; the campus siren system; and the WCU home page and emergency information page on the Internet. The notification systems worked well overall, Hudson said, but sending out each message required the involvement of seven individuals across campus. That will change this fall, Hudson said, as the new Alertus desktop notification system goes online, providing a single interface that will make it possible for one individual to simultaneously send out an emergency message through all of WCU’s campus notification systems in a few easy steps. Ernie Hudson, WCU police chief, calls the upgrade “a real coup” that will allow public safety telecommunicators (formerly known as “dispatchers”) to focus more of their attention on the response during emergency situations. The telecommunicators at WCU’s Emergency Communications Center, supervised by Tammi Hudson, are at the focal point during those instances, communicating with the public, police officers and other emergency responders, and often are the individuals who send out the first alerts to campus, Ernie Hudson said. During the December 2011 shelter-in-place situation, more than 200 telephone calls from the public were received at the Emergency Communications Center in an hour-and-a-half, and the single interface for public notification will be a big advantage during tense situations, he said. In addition to providing “one button” use for all the campus notification systems, the Alertus system adds a new and efficient notification tool to WCU’s toolbox, Tammi Hudson said. The system is being provided to the university free of charge through an Alertus grant program, with WCU having to provide only hardware space. WCU’s Division of Information Technology began the process of remotely pushing out Alertus software to faculty, staff and classroom computers during the spring, and tests of the system have been going on through the spring and summer. The software communicates with a server located in WCU’s Forsyth Building, and when an alert is sent out, it will take the form of a full-screen message that will display on the computer user’s monitor. Students’ personal computers may be added to the Alertus system in the future, Tammi Hudson said. Neil Calvert, support analyst in WCU’s IT division, and his colleagues in IT have played an integral role in Alertus system implementation, said Hudson, calling the project “a great example of collaboration and teamwork.” Calvert reported that as of mid-June more than 2,100 faculty, staff and classroom instructor computers had received the new software, and the process will be continuous to install the software as new computers are booted up on campus. A big test of the system, involving faculty and staff computers, was planned for Aug. 2. Calvert said he and his IT colleagues have been pleased to assist in implementing the alert system. “IT staff members work on projects that are important to WCU all the time, but this one is especially significant,” he said. Yet another upgrade in WCU’s emergency notification efforts occurred in early summer, when university officials contracted with RAVE Mobile Safety to provide texting, voice call and email service during emergencies. The PIER/Cat Tracker system will be retained for a time to provide a backup website in emergency situations, Tammi Hudson said. RAVE also will interface with Alertus and the rest of WCU’s emergency notification systems. The improvements being made with WCU’s emergency notification systems is not just a passing fancy, said Robert Edwards ’77, vice chancellor for administration and finance. Maintenance and improvement in the systems is called for in the university’s strategic plan. “Emergency preparedness and safety of our students, faculty, staff and visitors is at the forefront of our mission,” Edwards said. Tammi Hudson said improvements being made on campus in the area of emergency notification would not have happened without the ongoing support of Edwards, Chancellor David O. Belcher and the university’s executive council. Other ideas being discussed for improving the systems include disseminating messages through digital signage and campus cable television, she said. “Managing our notification systems is a constant process of evaluation and training, and also looking at new technologies to find those that are a good fit for our campus. We have a very safe campus community and environment, but bad things can happen in great places. You have to be prepared,” she said. BINDING FORCE FROM THE TOWNHOUSE TO THE WOODLAND STAGE AND THE OLD MOUNTAIN JUG, TRADITIONS KEEP US HAPPILY CONNECTED TO OUR BELOVED UNIVERSITY BY JILL INGRAM MA ’08 Traditions are born and traditions die, and while they survive, traditions can take on powerful lives of their own. With their regular occurrence and specific requirements for conduct, “traditions affirm our sense of identity and belonging,” said Richard Starnes ’92 MA ’94, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. “They help us connect to something larger and to each other. For a university, they help us to recall pleasant memories and reaffirm our sense of place.” Here, we survey some of the traditions in the university’s long history in an effort to understand a little bit better the ties so many alumni have to this very special place. THE TOWNHOUSE For generations of students, two simple words – “The Townhouse” – are enough to evoke waves of nostalgia and affection. Though it changed hands a number of times during its history, from the late 1940s to the mid-1980s, the establishment was a popular gathering spot for students. Betty Allen ’68, former president of the WCU Alumni Association, recalled time spent at her “favorite hangout” as among her fondest WCU memories. Like many others, Allen “checked in before or after most classes, athletic events and meetings,” she said. It was small and lacked polish, but in an era when many students didn’t have cars, the Townhouse was one of only a handful of nearby alternatives to eating in the cafeteria, and its booths, menu and jukebox were a siren call to the masses. “That was like taking another course, even though you didn’t get credit for it,” said Steve White ’67. “You learned so much about what was going on at the university – you picked that up at the Townhouse. It was the meeting place and social place on campus.” Gurney Chambers ’61 recalled that jukebox “going all the time.” Winfred Ashe ’54 MAEd ’59 and his wife, Ellen Ward Ashe, owned the Townhouse from 1957-1973, and lived in an apartment above the restaurant the entire time. While the formal hours were 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., most mornings customers were piling in at half-past six (perhaps, like White, for a friedpie breakfast) and “it was sometimes almost 1 a.m. before we got closed down,” Winfred Ashe said. The menu certainly contributed to the restaurant’s popularity. Hot dogs were 15 cents, cheeseburgers a quarter and coffee, Coke and ice cream 5 cents apiece. But it was more than that. “A lot of the students hadn’t been away from home before, and they realized they could come there and have friendship and someone who cared about them,” said Ellen Ashe. Some students used the restaurant as a home base to such an extent that they kept their textbooks there, Winfred Ashe said. “They would bring their books at the beginning of the quarter, and at the end of the quarter they’d gather them up again.” CLASS PHOTO While printed yearbooks faded out about a decade ago, this fall will mark the fourth year that the freshman class has congregated on the football field after convocation for a class photo. While the photo isn’t mandatory, the promise of a new WCU T-shirt draws new students to the field, said Phil Cauley ’83 MS ’90, director of student recruitment and transitions. A team from the Pride of the Mountains marching band outlines the corresponding class year on the field, and personnel from student affairs direct the approximately 1,500 newcomers – in their new T-shirts, of course – to their places. “It’s a huge production,” said Ashley T. Evans, the university photographer who snaps the picture. The photo finds a place online, and admissions staffers use it in promotional materials. Fall 2013 | 31 SCOTT BEACH In the 1970s and ’80s, the grassy, west-facing strip of lawn at Scott Hall was the place to be on hot, sunny afternoons. Limbo and “sexy legs” contests kept the crowds entertained; indeed “Scott Beach,” as it was affectionately known, was so popular that the student radio station would set up there for live remotes and some enterprising soul printed “Scott Beach Lifeguard” shirts. A Scott Beach photo on a Facebook page for WCU alums of the 1980s has drawn numerous comments. “Those were the days!” wrote Ricky Deese ’78 MIT ’80. “Used to love hanging out there, skipping class, cold beverage in hand!” Those days mark a different time in Cullowhee, before increased technology and the four-lane, when the campus had a more remote quality, said Bill Clarke ’78 ME ’80, director of WCU’s Ramsey Regional Activity Center. “People were creative about making their own fun,” said Clarke, who would admit only to being in the general vicinity of Scott Beach and flat-out denied ever participating in the sexy legs contest. 32 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University FRESHMAN RUN Folks in the stands at the first home football game of the season the past two years have witnessed the birth of a new tradition at WCU, the Freshman Run, when hundreds of the newest members of campus sprint with Chancellor David Belcher and the president of the Student Government Association onto the field just prior to play. Belcher won’t take credit for conceiving the idea, but he immediately warmed to it. “It seemed like such a great idea – a way to get the new freshmen engaged in the football experience,” he said. “It’s also impressive to people in the stands. When you see that many students coming at you, you get a sense of just how many students came to the university.” The logistics of the run – which marks fall 2013 as its third year – are no small thing, said Phil Cauley ’83 MS ’90, director of student recruitment and transitions. Timing is everything, as the game is scheduled to start just minutes after the freshmen bound onto the field, and collecting stray students and ushering them into the stands is key. While the event is exciting, said Cauley, who watches from the safety of the stands, he admits to worrying about potential headlines the next day: “Chancellor trampled by freshmen.” Not to fear. Belcher, who calls the event “a blast,” addresses the students in the Ramsey Center before the run. “I get up and I say, ‘There are just a few rules here. Don’t trample the chancellor. It will not really enhance your likelihood of success here.’” TUCKASEIGEE RIVER For decades, students have made use of the nearby Tuckaseigee River for recreation, riding on inner tubes in the waterway’s gentler stretches and tackling its whitewater rapids by kayak or raft. Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity once hosted a popular annual raft race on the river, and countless students have floated down the Tuck on tubes in warm weather months. Even now, Daniel Hooker ’01, assistant athletic director for media relations, will break away occasionally to relive those float trips of his undergrad days. “Finding an escape from the rigors of school work then – and real-life work today – is important,” Hooker said. “I fondly remember trips to the river at East LaPorte and the old rope swing down North River Road – and still to this day float past that bend in the Tuck where it once was. One would be hard pressed to find a more relaxing way to spend a hot summer’s day here in the mountains than on the Tuckaseigee.” On those current-day tubing trips, Hooker is sometimes joined by colleagues including Haywood Community College instructor Greg McLamb ’00, the Catamounts Sports Networks’ roving sidelines reporter. “I fell in love with the Tuck my sophomore year when I lived at Carolina Village. The river was across the street and I could not wait for warm weather to go tube,” said McLamb. “Now, every time I get in the river, it takes me back to my college days and summer school at WCU.” Activity on the river took a more ecological turn in 1985 when WCU began sponsoring the annual Tuckaseigee River Cleanup. “The river was a dumping ground, and we used it all the time for recreation,” said Tim Jacobs ’71 MAEd ’75 MA ’99, former director of A.K. Hinds University Center, who helped convince about 50 volunteers to pick up trash along the riverbanks 29 years ago. “We didn’t make it a third of the way down the river before we were out of trash bags. This made us realize that we needed the event to be even bigger.” Mission accomplished. Today, the event attracts more than 600 volunteers annually, and it has grown to become what Mark Singleton of American Whitewater calls “the largest single-day river cleanup project in the nation.” ROCK WALL As solid and permanent as rock walls tend to be, the specifics of a certain rock wall at WCU are a bit tricky to nail down. After digging around a bit (and hitting our own rock wall, so to speak), staffers at The Magazine of Western Carolina University have determined that, on a campus filled with rock walls, the exact location of said “rock wall” likely changed with the times. At any rate, the connotations are the same: male students would position themselves at particular spots around campus and hoot and holler at female coeds as they passed. Or as WCU archivist George Frizzell ’77 MA ’81 so delicately phrases it, “It had connotations about dating.” Indeed, a 1974 story in the student newspaper refers to a “Horney Wall” that likely is the one shown here. Gurney Chambers ’61 and Steve White ’67 recall students gathering along the rock wall close to the entrance of the Old Student Union. After dinner at the nearby Brown Cafeteria was “the best opportunity of the day to observe each other,” Chambers said. “As the girls would walk into the student union for supplies or a Coke, they’d hear all kinds of wolf whistles.” (While he admits to admiring the girls, Chambers is adamant he did no whistling.) No word on how the women felt about this. For his part, Chambers doesn’t ever recall seeing a female perched on the wall. According to White, “A lot of the young ladies would try to avoid it, but they couldn’t.” Fall 2013 | 33 SENIOR TOAST Heading into its third year, the Senior Toast is a growing tradition held at the Chancellor’s Residence for graduating students who have made a small financial contribution to WCU (an invite requires a gift equivalent to graduation year, such as $20.13, for example). The toast, made with commemorative glasses filled with sparkling cider, is a way for students to express how much the university means to them. “Western has presented me with so many amazing opportunities. Its faculty and environment have allowed me to succeed and realize my dreams,” said Tess Branon ’13, a recent toast participant. “This is only the first of several gifts I hope to give back to this wonderful institution.” While she initiated the toast as a means of fostering annual giving among new alumni, it’s become more than that, said Natalie Clark of WCU’s Office of Development. “Response has been great,” she said. “What’s really nice about it is that it’s held at the chancellor’s house, because Susan and David are just so welcoming. It’s a nice atmosphere – parents and friends of the students are invited, and everyone feels like they are part of the WCU family.” WOODLAND STAGE Many a graduate speaks tenderly of the Woodland Stage, a sloped, grassy expanse adjacent to Madison Hall. Fashioned in 1926, apparently with dirt excavated from a nearby construction project, the outdoor amphitheater for many years was the spot for formal events from the annual May Day Festival – May Queen Dottie Sherrill ’58 ’MAEd ’70 EdS ’84 and her court shown here – to plays (what better setting for “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”?) and even commencement. “Just to see a graduating class march on this stage and, amid laughter and joy, receive their diplomas is enough to make even a small child love better God’s great outdoors,” gushed a 1930 article from the student newspaper. The Woodland Stage also was the place for fun of the less formal and even spontaneous nature. Gurney Chambers ’61 recalls watermelon dished out there every July 4 for students on campus in the summer, and Thomas Lyndon Smith ’61 wrote in to report that when it snowed, “we slid down it on cafeteria trays.” 34 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University MUD VOLLEYBALL It was dirty, unsophisticated and a lot of fun. Sigma Phi Epsilon (now inactive) launched an annual mud volleyball tournament in the late 1980s, held on a stretch of land across N.C. Highway 107 from the Ramsey Center. Flooding a pit a few days prior to the weekend-long event (rumor has it the Cullowhee Volunteer Fire Department provided that service), students would form teams and compete for first in all its muddy glory, with proceeds benefiting nonprofits (including, in 1990, the CVFD). Athletes, friends, Greek organizations, groups from residence halls – “It was something that everybody did,” said Brenda Gallagher Holcombe ’94, now director of university scholarships. Sadly, this tradition died in the mid1990s. One contingent probably happy to see it go? The housekeeping staff. “The residence halls would be trashed,” said Holcombe, at the time a resident assistant in Helder Residence Hall. “There was mud everywhere – in the hallways, shower stalls, stairwells.” She reported once seeing a member of the housekeeping staff attach a hose outside Helder so players could spray themselves off before they came in. DANCES “They used to have dances at the drop of a hat,” notes George Frizzell ’77 MA ’81, who wrote about forgotten campus events in a 2011 article in the Hunter Library newsletter. A formal dance always accompanied May Day events, held until the early 1970s, with other dances mentioned in the yearbooks and newspapers from the late ’40s through the ’50s, including dances for Halloween, the New Year and Valentine’s Day. Such dances typically observed a strict protocol, including a dress code and chaperones, Frizzell said. An exception was Sadie Hawkins Day, a particularly popular event perhaps because it encouraged students to reverse the prevailing social norms of the day concerning dating. Based on the popular comic strip “Li’l Abner,” the fall event (sponsored by the campus Women’s Athletic Association) “encouraged participating women to ‘catch’ a dance partner for the evening’s event in a freewheeling afternoon footrace,” according to Frizzell. Participants often attended the dance in costume as their favorite comic strip characters. Indeed as time passed, the formality of the early dances faded; a 1959 Beatnik Ball encouraged students to “abandon the shrouds of society for the mysticism of Beatland.” Nightly dancing remained popular on campus even into the early 1970s, said Steve White ’67. Students regularly congregated at the Old Student Union for a couple hours after dinner to socialize and listen to the jukebox. “That’s where I learned to dance,” he said. Fall 2013 | 35 OLD MOUNTAIN JUG Called “the best football rivalry you’ve never heard of” by Sports Illustrated in the 1980s, the Appalachian State-WCU Battle for the Old Mountain Jug is a tradition with legs, and one that is near and dear to Steve White ’67. In the early 1970s, when White was in the WCU sports information post, he and his counterpart at ASU wanted to create a trophy for the mountain rivalry. They settled on a moonshine jug – “a takeoff on the Hatfields and McCoys” – that a Boone man crafted. App State went home with the jug the first year, in 1976, with the Catamounts bringing it home the second. The jug seesawed through the rest of the decade and into the early ’80s, but it had been sitting in its trophy case in Boone for more than a dozen years when Brad Hoover ’00 (pictured here) led the Catamounts to victory in 1998. The last time WCU possessed the jug was in 2004. “App fans will tell you that it really doesn’t matter to them until they lose it, and then it’s the most important thing on the planet. It definitely brings something to the rivalry,” said David Jackson, Appalachian State’s associate athletics director for public affairs. What will become of the Old Mountain Jug after the Mountaineers hightail it out of the Southern Conference? That all depends on what happens Nov. 23 when the Catamounts travel to Boone for the final game of the regular season. Whoever wins it this year will almost certainly lock up the jug long-term. White, for one, is feeling pretty confident. “I think we’re going to be extremely motivated this year,” he said. VICTORY BELL “Ring out the false, ring in the true,” bears the inscription on the Victory Bell, which originally hung in Old Madison Hall (torn down in 1938) and was used to mark class periods. Though its formal role became marking athletic victories, it hung near the Old Student Union when Steve White ’67 was an undergraduate, and he recalls students hijacking it to mark pretty much anything they considered significant. “Say, if it was the last day of class, or the first day of class, or holiday break – things like that,” White said. Now strung safely atop the Alumni Tower, the unauthorized ringing is less frequent. Since 2008, a replica bell has been rolled into Whitmire Stadium to announce the football team’s arrival. A tradition no one seemed to mind crossing off the list? Beanies (like the one shown here), which were introduced in 1957 to strengthen school spirit and died out about a decade later. The rules said freshmen could take off the headwear if the Catamounts won the Homecoming game; otherwise they stayed on until winter break. 36 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University HOMECOMING What better example of collegiate tradition than Homecoming, with a variety of activities designed to appeal both to current students as well as to alumni sometimes old enough to be the parent, grandparent, perhaps even great-grandparent, of those current Catamounts? The university’s Homecoming traditions trace their roots to 1933 and the re-establishment of the football program, which had been suspended for several years because of a drop in men’s enrollment in the late 1920s, as Curtis Wood and Tyler Blethen explain in their history of WCU, “A Mountain Heritage.” Prior to the rebirth of football, alumni had returned to campus for events surrounding commencement. Over the years, Homecoming evolved to include a barbecue dinner prepared by faculty and staff for campus visitors (an activity still carried on today by members of the Division of Student Affairs), the election of a Homecoming Court, and the presentation of awards to notable alumni. In addition to the standard crowning of a Homecoming queen, the university in 1995 added the naming of a Homecoming king to the mix of activities and revived the traditions of a student banner competition and bonfire. The 1999 tragic Texas A&M bonfire accident, in which 12 people were killed and 27 injured, prompted universities across the country, including WCU, to extinguish campus bonfires. (Similarly, safety concerns after a fireworks explosion on July 4, 2009, at the Ocracoke campus of the N.C. Center for the Advancement of Teaching that claimed five lives resulted in the discontinuation of pyrotechnic displays at WCU’s Homecoming). In 1996, organizers returned the annual Homecoming parade to downtown Sylva for the first time in some 40 years and added a new community service element to the array of activities. “Homecoming is not all fun and games” Joab Cotton IV ’04, then-president of the Interfraternity Council, said in 2003. “We want to take the opportunity to give something back to the community that serves as our home away from home.” In recognition of the unique traditions of African-American students and alumni, the university’s Homecoming events have grown to include “Stompfest,” featuring step-show dances performed by members of African-American fraternities and sororities, and a concert of gospel music by the Inspirational Choir. In 2012, WCU held its first all-sports reunion for former athletes, coaches, trainers and managers, with the second annual reunion scheduled for Homecoming 2013. SAVE THE DATE OCTOBER 24-27 HOMECOMING WEEKEND For a detailed schedule of events, see page 2. HOMECOMING.WCU.EDU | 877.440.9990 Fall 2013 | 37 THE BARE FACTS BY R A N DA L L H O LCO M B E “OUR MOMENT IN THE SUN WAS BRIEF, BUT GLORIOUS! ” RICH HALL BOB SABIN DWIGHT SPARKS Years before he became an Emmy-winning comedian, with appearances on “Saturday Night Live” and David Letterman’s show, Rich Hall was a quirky Western Carolina student who was spotted one day in the winter of 1974 exhorting his fellow students to gather in their birthday suits for an attempt to establish a new national collegiate streaking record. “Rich stood on the overhang of Leatherwood (Residence Hall) with a megaphone, calling out to students as they were coming out of Dodson Cafeteria,” recalls Bob Sabin ’75, then a WCU junior who reported on the unclothed antics for the campus radio station. “It got their attention.” Dwight Sparks ’75 covered the record attempt for the student newspaper, the Western Carolinian, and as a clothed observer, he remembers the evening of Thursday, Feb. 21, 1974, as being uncomfortably cold for a bunch of college students running in the buff. Braving the chilly conditions, the WCU students succeeded in setting a new record for participation in a coed college streak, as trumpeted in Sparks’ article published on the newspaper’s front page the following week. According to his account, 113 naked male students emerged from the basement of Leatherwood and ran about 400 yards before returning to the basement. At the same time, 25 unclad female students darted from the basement of nearby Helder Residence Hall and ran about 100 yards before returning to that residence. (Leatherwood and Helder, as well as Dodson, have been replaced in recent years.) The participation by 138 WCU students broke the previous record of 125 streakers that had been set earlier in 1974 by students at the University of Maryland. After observing the record WCU streak, reported to have taken place around 9:30 p.m., Sabin hurried to the radio station, known then by the call letters WCAT, and composed his account of the event. He relayed his story to the Raleigh bureau of a major national news service, United Press International, and it was picked up by print and broadcast media around the nation. “My mom heard it on the radio in Los Angeles,” Sabin said recently. “And somebody from NBC called me to talk about it the next morning.” The WCU students’ time in the limelight was limited, however. The collegiate streaking fad was at its high point during the mid-1970s, and several days after the mass streak in Cullowhee, a new record was set by students on another campus. But, as Sparks describes it now, “Our university received publicity money couldn’t buy. Our moment in the sun was brief, but glorious!” THE INSTIGATOR University records indicate that Richard Travis “Rich” Hall was from Charlotte and attended WCU from fall semester 1972 through spring semester 1975. (Multiple attempts to contact Hall to comment on this article were unsuccessful.) He was a sophomore with an undecided major at the time of WCU’s record streak. While in Cullowhee, Hall earned a reputation as a jokester, said Sabin, a nonstreaker at WCU who now lives in Marietta, Ga. “He wasn’t a radical, but he was known as a character on campus,” Sabin said. Sparks reflected that Hall also liked to keep up with the news. “My mother sent me Newsweek magazine so I would have regular mail at Western,” he said. “Rich lived directly across the hall from me in Leatherwood and regularly lounged in my room, reading my Newsweek, while I tried to be a serious student.” Eventually, a story about the University of Maryland’s record streak caught Hall’s attention, and his reaction, Sparks said, was “We can beat that!” From then on, breaking the record was Hall’s obsession, Sparks said, but before alerting the student body about the record streak attempt, the duo concocted a plan for a “warm-up” streak involving them and a third student whose identity is unavailable. Their route would be across the lawn of A.K. Hinds University Center, and the streak would be timed to take place just before the start of a concert in the nearby Reid Gymnasium. They planned to leap out of a car near the gymnasium, do the streak, and then jump back in the car idling behind the University Center. “Our courage failed and our driver had to make three passes before we jumped out,” said Sparks, who had arranged for a Western Carolinian photographer, Steve Cook ’75, to be on the scene. “Hardly anyone noticed three naked guys running like fools in the night.” However, the campus newspaper published the following day contained a photograph of Sparks and Hall streaking, along with an article composed by Sparks, further helping to boost participation for the record streak that took place later that week. (Opposite page) Western Carolinian photographer Steve Cook ’75 captured Dwight Sparks ’75 (left) and Rich Hall during the “warmup” streak that preceded the record-breaking streak. The photo has been manipulated for public consumption. THE AFTERMATH Following the record WCU streak and subsequent nationwide publicity, several hundred letters from individuals unhappy about the streaking in Cullowhee landed in the office of Glenn Stillion, the university’s vice chancellor for student development at the time. Stillion was quoted in the Western Carolinian as saying, “It’s our main job to try to get the damn students to have some sense,” and he implied that streaking students would be punished. But no streakers were charged in either student court or criminal court, and university officials tried to take a low-key approach, recalls Stillion, now retired and living in Florida. “We didn’t get excited and overreact too much,” he said. “Some people across the country were burning buildings down in the ’60s, so we thought running around naked was fine, compared to that. A lot of people were terribly upset, but it really didn’t get the university totally fouled up.” “We didn’t get excited and overreact too much. Some people across the country were burning buildings down in the ’60s, so we thought running around naked was fine, compared to that.” EX-VICE CHANCELLOR GLENN STILLION In newspaper reports about WCU’s record streak, Hall confessed to being the organizer and explained that his goal was to gain attention for issues he was promoting, including beer on campus, 24-hour guest visitation and the need to “update” Cullowhee, but he admitted that most of the students in the record streak did not participate for political purposes. Looking back on the events almost four decades later, Sparks said he believes the students were motivated by a variety of reasons. “We were young, it was winter, and maybe we had cabin fever,” said the Mocksville resident. “For many students, I suspect it was the novelty of running naked without getting arrested. We were on the leading edge of a phenomenon that swept the nation’s campuses.” Fall 2013 | 39 alumni SPOTLIGHT a whole world out there, “There’s who knows what opportunities we will come upon.” –MEGHAN DOHERTY ’03 ADVENTURE OVERLAND One couple refuses to allow a nightmarish event to cut short their tour of the Americas By JILL INGRAM MA ’08 For many people, a week or two of vacation every year suffices to satisfy the hunger for adventure. Meghan Doherty ’03 and her husband, however, are a different sort. Doherty and Jed Wolfrom share a sense of adventure and a love of travel, and since they met in 2005 at a ski resort in Jackson Hole, Wyo., had talked of an extended trip driving the Americas. “At some point, we realized if we were going to do it, we needed to do it,” Doherty said. The couple, who married two years ago and split time between Wyoming and Moab, Utah, spent two years saving, planning and relentlessly searching for the perfect vehicle for their adventure. Ultimately, they decided on an older model truck, which they outfitted with a customized camper to serve as kitchen, bedroom and – in adverse conditions – living area. Doherty and Wolfrom’s general plan was to travel along the coast, where they might enjoy beach life, with sojourns into the mountains for climbing and hiking, with the southernmost tip of Argentina as their ultimate goal. Leaving Wyoming on April 1, 2012, they started down the Baja Peninsula, took a ferry across the Gulf of California and journeyed through mainland Mexico. Crossing the border into Guatemala, they spent two weeks in Spanish language school and explored the country’s natural pools and caves. On through Central America they went: El Salvador and then a sprint through Honduras to reach Nicaragua, where they hiked a volcano that cradles a sunken lake and enjoyed extended surfing. Then to Costa Rica, where Doherty’s mother joined them for two weeks. 40 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University After shipping their truck – and themselves – to Cartagena (there is an essentially impassable 100-mile gap between Panama and Colombia), they traveled through Colombia for climbing and caving and then into the Southern Hemisphere via Ecuador, where Doherty – who played Catamount soccer – was delighted to unexpectedly score stadium seats at a “futbol” match between Ecuador and Chile. For Doherty, the game captured what she and her husband love about traveling. In a post to the blog she kept while chronicling the trip (at adventureamericas.wordpress.com), she wrote: “There’s a whole world out there, who knows what opportunities we will come upon, what we will learn about people and about ourselves. We only have one life to live, why not live it to the fullest!” Unfortunately, a terrifying experience in Peru temporarily changed their perspective and nearly ended their fun. A few days after Christmas, Doherty, Wolfrom and Wolfrom’s sister Jennifer, who had flown in from her home in Wyoming to meet them for 10 days, found a quiet spot to camp for the night off a road near the village of Pallcca, not far from Machu Picchu. By this point, Doherty and Wolfrom had been traveling for nine solid months and routinely camped roadside with no incident. On the evening of Dec. 29, however, as the trio toasted Jennifer Wolfrom’s 30th birthday, they were noticed by a couple of village residents and soon attracted a crowd. When the travelers refused to turn over their documents – experienced travelers typically make it a practice to share their passports only with officials – tensions escalated and the crowd turned violent. For the next 11 hours, into the early morning of Dec. 30, a mob of at least 30 people pelted the travelers with rocks and chased, beat and whipped them, holding them at gunpoint before ultimately allowing them to go. The travelers at first were hesitant to court media attention, but with action from U.S. and Peruvian governments slow to arrive, they eventually did speak with Contessa Brewer of NBC for an interview that aired Jan. 25 on “Today.” The story spread worldwide; Wyoming lawmakers helped initiate assistance from the American Embassy in Peru, and Peruvian tourism officials offered an apology. “I don’t know if we would have even gotten our truck back or gotten any of the help we needed if we hadn’t had the media attention,” Doherty said. Their physical injuries were extensive. Jed Wolfrom lost teeth in the attack and the three received 100 stitches among them. Their vehicle was smashed and broken, and their passports, money, debit cards and electronics were stolen. Perhaps most pronounced was the emotional trauma. “We did consider ending the trip,” Doherty said. “That was the initial thought: ‘We want to go home.’” But as time passed in Lima, Peru, processing paperwork and waiting for the return of their vehicle, the couple made the decision to travel on. “We’d had so many great experiences it was worth it to us to at least try,” Doherty said. They did make an adjustment, from then on always traveling as part of a larger group. They spent months exploring Argentina with two other overlanding couples, including Danni LeTendre and her husband, Cesar Morales, formerly of Washington, D.C., who described Doherty and Wolfrom as “awesome travel companions.” That their friends bounced back from the attack in Peru is inspirational, Morales said. “It blew me away how open and engaged they were to new experiences on a daily basis after having a pretty horrible experience,” he said. They also proved to be reliable and fast-thinking in an emergency. The couples were together, with Wolfrom and Doherty ahead in their vehicle, one afternoon when an accident rolled LeTendre and Morales down a riverbank. Having seen it in the rearview mirror, Wolfrom and Doherty came bounding down the bank to check on their friends. Wolfrom, who has EMT training, gave his friends a once over and declared no major injuries. Then they worked together to coordinate a piece of heavy equipment to pull the vehicle out of the ditch. “I don’t even want to think how that day would have happened without them there,” LeTendre said. “It was such a relief to see their faces.” With its landscape and food – not to mention cheap and delicious wines – Argentina proved a high point for Doherty. “We pretty much ended with my favorite country,” she said. With Morales and LeTendre, they drove into Ushuaia, commonly regarded as the southernmost city in the world. Then they drove a bit farther, to a place called Rio Moat, where the road actually ends. They had reached their destination. After 13 months of travel, the couple flew to Miami toward the end of May and were embraced by family. They were reunited with their vehicle at a Virginia port at the end of June. They spent time visiting family and friends on the East Coast over the summer as they transitioned back to a more routine way of life. “There’s a little cultural adjustment,” Doherty admitted. Soon after their arrival back in the U.S., they learned that four individuals will be charged with aggravated assault and robbery in the act of violence against them. While Doherty wants to pursue justice, she has achieved an emotional distance. “We’re not letting it rule our lives,” she said. The couple plan to head back to Wyoming by fall at the latest. Doherty has resumed her work with an environmental consulting company. Wolfrom is a carpenter and typically has work wherever he lands. Perhaps most exciting, they want to have children. “We met a lot of families who traveled together with young kids. It seemed really neat,” Doherty said. Another new adventure down the road. During their trip from the United States to the southernmost tip of South America, Meghan Doherty ’03 and husband Jed Wolfrom set up camp on the coast of Chile (above), the couple’s last view of the ocean for a while. Later, they crossed the border from Chile into Argentina, the final country on their cross-continental adventure (below). Fall 2013 | 41 alumni SPOTLIGHT EQUAL PLAY An educator-administrator advocates for diversity, inclusiveness and healthy living By KEITH BRENTON magazine.wcu.edu Ron Morrow ’78 (left) traces his interest in teaching and coaching to his undergrad years at WCU and Otto Spilker, professor emeritus of physical education. Health and fitness is not just a concern for the physical body, but for the whole person. That’s what Ron Morrow ’78 believes, and he has built a 30-year career on that principle. An educator and administrator in the field of health and physical education, Morrow has advocated for diversity and against obesity, and his achievements have led to receiving the 2012 Academic Achievement Award from Western Carolina University. His passion began at a young age, inspired by his family: brothers Jack Morrow III and twin Donnie Morrow Sr. ’79, mother Mary Louise, and especially his dad, the late Jack Morrow Jr. “My father was the aquatic director for the YMCA in Charlotte for 50 years,” Morrow said, “I began early, learning different sports well enough to teach them. I was teaching swimming when I was 6 years old, and I saw the proud and excited reaction of children who learned a new skill.” He grew up participating on the swimming and diving teams, and also played racquet sports, gymnastics and martial arts. “I wanted to learn to do everything well enough to teach it,” he said. But becoming a star athlete wasn’t in his future. “My older brother and my twin brother were natural athletes, whereas I was not. I was not the last pick on the team; I just wasn’t picked, ” Morrow said. “I wanted to make sure the children I taught never had to experience that harassment due to their lack of skill and a lack of empathy from their teacher.” Following his brother Donnie to WCU, he signed up to study health and physical education – and met another source of powerful inspiration, Otto Spilker. “Not only did Dr. Spilker provide excellent subject knowledge and expertise, but his 42 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University professionalism and personal example raised the standards for everyone,” Morrow said. “Dr. Spilker never had to tell you how to be a good teacher; he showed you.” His mentor encouraged Morrow in coaching/training roles in gymnastics, cross country team and swimming at WCU. A yearning to teach led him to earn his master’s degree in kinesiology and physiology at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1984. During that decade, he served in various positions at Charlotte and Gaston County YMCAs and schools. From 1990 to 1998, Morrow was swimming-diving coach and later instructor of physical education at Davidson College. Serving in those positions made him aware of the problem of inclusion in health and physical education settings – people being socially disfranchised. The experiences took him back to those of his childhood. “As a teacher, I saw very clearly that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students were being excluded, not included,” Morrow said. “The focus was on the natural athlete. The other kids were doing their homework in the bleachers.” He returned to UNCG and earned a doctorate in exercise and sports science in 2000, focusing on creating a safe, inclusive climate in physical education for all participants – especially those in the LGBT community. In 2011, he established the Ronald G. Morrow Scholarship at WCU for health and physical education majors who intend to research in the area of diversity. “Although racial and gender issues have been researched and investigated, very little to no research has been done on the inclusiveness of LGBT students – not to mention the LGBT professionals who are teachers,” he said. Morrow’s career also continued to emphasize inclusion and healthy lifestyles. While he served as executive director of the North Carolina Alliance for Athletics, Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance from 2001 to 2011, the organization grew from 800 to almost 3,000. There he launched a fitness testing program for 1.4 million K-8 schoolchildren in 2008 to address childhood obesity. Later, Morrow founded the nonprofit North Carolina In-school Prevention of Obesity and Disease, tracking student data and delivering “fitness report cards” to parents and physical education teachers at nearly 500 participating schools. He has published articles in The Journal of Homosexuality, Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, Journal of Sport Management and Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport. He has presented at meetings of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance; North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity; Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network; and the Association for the Advancement of Applied Sports Psychology – often about inclusiveness. “This issue is not even being addressed in teacher education classes’ textbooks,” Morrow said. “If you teach, you teach LGBT students, and more than likely have more than one colleague who is LGBT.” BREATH OF FRESH AIR The road from fandom to stardom is navigated by a band’s new drummer By PATRICK O’NEAL Randall Harris ’09 MM ’11 has played in front of thousands of fans and appeared on national television as the drummer for alternative Christian rock band NEEDTOBREATHE. And it all started while Harris was still a Western Carolina University student. NEEDTOBREATHE, based in Seneca, S.C., consists of three core members – Bear Rinehart on lead vocals, Bo Rinehart on lead guitar and Seth Bolt on bass – and a roster of touring members. The band has released four studio albums, with 2011’s “The Reckoning” reaching No. 6 on the Billboard charts, and is currently on tour and working on a new album. Harris started drumming at a very early age. “When I was in third grade, I saw the music video for AC/DC’s ‘Back in Black.’ I went outside, whittled some sticks and started hitting everything in the house,” he said. His parents bought him a $100 used drum set and the path to stardom began. In Harris’ sophomore year at WCU, as he was scanning radio stations, he happened to hear the final 30 seconds of NEEDTOBREATHE’s song “Washed by the Water.” He bought the band’s album “The Heat” and became an avid fan. Harris had the opportunity to meet the band in 2010, while he was in graduate school studying music and interning as a lighting and sound operator at the Ridgecrest Convention Center, near Black Mountain. It was a cold February day, and during the process of unloading gear from the band’s van for a concert, some equipment crushed Harris’s hand. He hid his injury and continued unloading; his efforts were not in vain – he met the tour manager and the two exchanged numbers. A couple weeks later, the manager asked him to fill in for two weeks as a guitar tech while the band was on tour. Harris wanted to, but the gig was smack in the middle of the semester. After Bruce Frazier, WCU’s Belk Distinguished Professor of Commercial and Electronic Music, agreed to accommodate his schedule, Harris joined the band as a crew member. “Randy was a conscientious, responsible student,” said Frazier. “When his obligations overlapped, we arranged it so he could complete his school assignments early and satisfy both responsibilities.” “They threw me into the fire quick,” recalled Harris. “I had 14 guitars, a banjo and a mandolin. In addition, I had to be the drum tech, a monitor engineer and make tea three times a day for the lead singer.” Harris continued to work in the studio with NEEDTOBREATHE after graduating with his master’s degree and was on hand when the band’s drummer quit unexpectedly a week before the start of a national tour. The departure proved an opportunity for Harris, who had been so quiet about his own musical talent that NEEDTOBREATHE front man Bear Rinehart didn’t even know he played drums. After an impromptu tryout, Harris sat in for a recording session and was then invited to join the band, which in October 2012 performed on the late-night TV show “Conan.” As part of its current tour, the band also performed in the Ramsey Regional Activity Center in April. Harris is as surprised as anyone with where his work has led. “I always wanted to be part of this band, but I never expected to be in the limelight,” he said. Drummer Randall Harris ’09 MM ’11 performs with the rock band NEEDTOBREATHE in an April concert at WCU’s Ramsey Center. magazine.wcu.edu Patrick O’Neal is a senior communication major concentrating in public relations and journalism. Fall 2013 | 43 TRACK THIS Timothy Vaught ’01 is associate head men’s and women’s track and field coach at Coastal Carolina University, where he coaches team members in the sprint, jump, hurdle and combined events. In June, Vaught was named the Southeast Region Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year by the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association after his 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams qualified for the NCAA Championships. From 2002-06, Vaught served as an assistant track and field coach at CCU; he left the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where he was the associate head track and field coach, to return to CCU. While at WCU, he earned all-conference honors in the 4x100 meter and 4x400 meter relays and was a member of the 4x400 meter NCAA Championship qualifying team. Vaught, also a running back for Catamount football, got his coaching start as a WCU track and field graduate assistant. Photo courtesy of Coastal Carolina University. classNOTES 1961 Marie Benge Craig Roth MAEd ’63 is a 1967 John Henzy has retired as provost of 1972 Philip B. Bowser MA had a selection of retired math teacher and has written three award-winning books on the history of Davie County. Roth teaches genealogy and tatting at John C. Campbell Folk School. Gloucester County College in New Jersey. In his 43 years with the school, Henzy held positions including lecturer, full professor, dean and acting president. He calculated that during his career he taught as many as 30,000 students. his fine art photographs hanging in the Springbox gallery in Portland, Ore., this past spring. Bowser teaches in the school psychology program at Lewis and Clark College. Shown here is Bowser’s work titled “Rainy Beach.” 1964 Daniel Tharpe MAEd ’68 is a 2013 inductee into Florida’s Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame. Billed by the Hall of Fame as “one of the most versatile and greatest all-round athletes in the history of Brevard and of the state of Florida,” Tharpe earned 15 varsity letters in basketball, baseball, football and tennis as a student at Cocoa High School. Tharpe started in all four sports during his time at WCU and was inducted into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame in 1991. Early in his career, he returned to his Brevard community and coached basketball and tennis at Cocoa High and started a basketball league for children ages 6-12. He later returned to WCU as an assistant coach and then coached at East Texas State. 1966 A novel by William Pipes EdS ’75 titled “Darby” was published by Ecanus Publishing of Great Britain. Pipes describes the novel as “a story of danger, suspense, romance and intrigue interwoven with the history and culture of the Appalachians.” 44 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University 1969 Ludy Wilkie has donated to the Bostic Lincoln Center more than 20 years worth of research material on the legend that Abraham Lincoln was born in North Carolina. Wilkie, who has written two plays about the legend, offered the materials to the center to make them accessible to a wider audience. The materials primarily explore Lincoln’s paternity. (Photo by Deborah Keller) 1976 Joni Mabry Brown, retired band director at Bates Middle School in South Carolina, has been inducted into the South Carolina Band Directors Hall of Fame. 1977 the A-B Tech campus. Parker also worked collaboratively with Isothermal Community College in her role with Rutherford County Schools. She lives in Haywood’s Crabtree community with husband Greg Parker MAEd ’88. 1988 WCU staff members made cards and wrote letters to soldiers for care packages to be distributed by Operation North State, a nonprofit organization founded by Terry Snyder to support military programs connected to North Carolina. Lisa Winders, director of military student services at WCU, reached out to Operation North State to explore possible needs as WCU’s Staff Senate planned spring service activities. Snyder, the organization’s chairman, said the timing was perfect as he had just been contacted about helping a special forces unit. Fourteen staff members together wrote 100 cards for the care packages. Snyder is married to Miriam “Dawn” Eldridge. 1981 John Knight MAEd ’83 is retiring from Buncombe County Schools, where he was a speech therapist and coach in the Owen District for 30 years. At Charles D. Owen High School, Knight coached girls’ volleyball, boys’ basketball and boys’ and girls’ golf (he formed the first girls’ varsity golf team there in 1998) and earned golf coach of the year honors 16 times. In May, Knight supporters surprised him by raising enough money to send him to play the Pebble Beach golf course in California. 1984 Jim Davidson MBA is CEO of Miamibased Farelogix, which provides technology to help airlines personalize the way tickets are sold to frequent fliers. 1987 Barbara Sue Messer Parker MAEd EDS ’03 EdD ’07 is the new president of Haywood Community College. Parker comes to the position from Rutherford County Schools, where she was assistant superintendent of curriculum and instruction. She also spent long stretches in administrative positions in the public schools in Haywood and Buncombe counties. While in Buncombe, Parker worked closely with Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College to implement a middle college program and an early college high school program on Margaret Simpson Vestal MA ’91 recently opened RE/MAX Results in Asheville. Vestal (known as Peggy during her WCU years) has been a real estate broker in Asheville for 12 years and a RE/MAX associate for six years. She will continue in real estate sales while her husband and co-owner, Jimmy Vestal, oversees office operations. She achieved RE/MAX 100% Club status in 2012 and 2011 for productivity levels that were more than double the industry average. 1989 Sherri Holbert is director of the Park Ridge Health Foundation. Holbert had served as a development officer at Park Ridge since September and is responsible for coordinating annual giving and major gift initiatives and planning and implementing special events. 1991 Don Lourcey MAEd is director of professional learning and Michelle Harrison Lourcey MA ’93 is chief academic officer for the North Carolina Virtual Public School. The couple has a 9-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, and lives in Statesville. 1992 John Connet is the new city manager for Hendersonville. Prior to this role, Connet had served as city manager of Clinton, his hometown, since 2002. 1993 Brigette Welton has been appointed to the Striving for Excellence committee of the Society for Marketing Professional Services. During her three-year term, Welton will be responsible for facilitating the SMPS national awards program, including developing standards criteria, as well as promoting the organization at the local and national levels. She is marketing manager in the Raleigh office of Dewberry, a professional services firm that provides architecture, engineering, management and consulting services to public- and privatesector clients. Alumni Association announces election results The 2013 Alumni Association board of directors election has closed, and five new members are joining the slate of representatives. Elected to serve three-year terms that expire at the end of 2015: From District 1, Timothy E. Gillespie ’86, of Asheville. District 1 consists of the N.C. counties of Alleghany, Alexander, Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Rutherford, Polk, Swain, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes and Yancey. From District 2, Benjamin “B.J.” Pendry ’07, of Charlotte. District 2 consists of the N.C. counties of Alamance, Anson, Cabarrus, Caswell, Catawba, Cleveland, Davidson, Davie, Forsyth, Gaston, Guilford, Iredell, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Montgomery, Randolph, Richmond, Rockingham, Rowan, Stanly, Stokes, Surry, Union and Yadkin. From District 3, Allison Hinson Kenney ’02 ME ’05, of Chapel Hill. District 3 consists of the N.C. counties of Bladen, Chatham, Columbus, Cumberland, Durham, Edgecombe, Franklin, Granville, Halifax, Harnett, Hoke, Johnston, Lee, Moore, Nash, Northampton, Orange, Person, Robeson, Sampson, Scotland, Vance, Wake, Warren and Wilson. From District 4, Jillian Hardin ’99, of New Bern. District 4 consists of the N.C. counties of Beaufort, Bertie, Brunswick, Camden, Carteret, Chowan, Craven, Currituck, Dare, Duplin, Gates, Greene, Hertford, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir, Martin, New Hanover, Onslow, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Pender, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrell, Washington and Wayne. From District 5, James “Josh” Paris ’01, of Alpharetta, Ga. District 5 consists of all states except North Carolina. Fall 2013 | 45 class NOTES 1996 Jeanne Dulworth, assistant professor of 1997 Ellen McCann received her doctoral 1998 Channing Austin is the 2013 N.C. social work, won WCU’s Excellence in Teaching Liberal Studies Award for the 2012-13 academic year. The award was presented at the annual spring Faculty and Staff Excellence Awards event. degree in criminal justice from Rutgers University in 2012 and now works for the Pew Charitable Trusts in Washington. Fraternal Order of Police Officer of the Year. Austin also was recognized as Officer of the Year by the Statesville Police Department, where he has served for more than 19 years. Construction of a new complex for Smoky Mountain Obstetrics and Gynecology, founded and owned by Dr. Janine Keever, is under way in Jackson County, with completion expected later this year. The facility will provide women’s health care for residents of Jackson, Macon, Swain and Graham counties. Jason Queen is a sports reporter for The Dispatch newspaper in Davidson County, where he recently earned second-place honors for sports columns from the North Carolina Press Association in the category of daily newspapers with circulation of less than 12,500. Queen worked for The Dispatch from 2005-09 and rejoined the paper in 2011. Angie Cooley is a music teacher at Mitchell Road Elementary School in Greenville, S.C. Cooley has been named among the finalists for 2013-14 Greenville County Schools Teacher of the Year, to be announced in August. Eric T. Perry has written a novel, “Before I Go,” about a terminally ill man coming to terms with his mortality. Perry, inspired to write the novel by a 2012 cancer scare, has pledged to donate a portion of the proceeds to The V Foundation for Cancer Research, founded in 1993 by the late Jim Valvano and ESPN. 1999 A Privilege to Give “The valuable lessons I learned at WCU have served me well in life,” says Donna Winbon ’80. Positive thinking, teamwork and leadership were among the skills she gained from playing on the women’s basketball team, serving as a resident assistant in Helder and head resident in Walker, earning her degree and simultaneously deepening her love of the mountains and the outdoors. After 15 years as a retail store manager, area manager and regional manager, Donna started her successful career as a financial adviser with Edward Jones Investments in Raleigh. “As a financial adviser, I discuss legacy planning with my clients and prospects daily. It comes naturally, then, for me and I feel it is a privilege to give to WCU,” said Donna, who lists WCU as both a tax-deferred and testamentary trust beneficiary as part of her own legacy planning portfolio. When trying to determine what areas to support at WCU, Donna said she wanted to make the greatest gift possible to serve the university. She said she realized that an unrestricted gift serves WCU best because the future needs of the university will change from one decade to another. “True joy in life comes from giving, whether it is of your time or support. Even though I live in Raleigh, a part of me will always be in these beautiful mountains,” Donna said. For more information, contact Herb Bailey, director of gift planning 828.227.3049 | herbbailey@wcu.edu | giftplanning.wcu.edu 46 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University Doug Coe MPT and his wife, Emily Hinton Coe, have helped organize the annual Marine Mud Run in Pinnacle since it started in 2010. The race has grown from 1,335 participants the first year to 4,000 for the race held June 1. For each of the past two years, the event has raised more than $70,000 in support of North Carolina military and veterans organizations. Doug Coe helps with course design and obstacle construction and directs the run for children 12 and younger while his wife focuses on runner registration and editing print publications. 2000 Brad Hoover is the new head football coach at Union Academy, a charter school in Monroe. Hoover was the starting fullback for the NFL’s Carolina Panthers for nine years and was a star running back while at WCU. 2001 Jayme Linton, director of teacher education at Lenoir-Rhyne University, was named one of “20 to Watch” for 2012-13 by the National School Boards Association’s Technology Leadership Network for her ability to inspire colleagues to adopt innovative technology that contributes to high-quality learning environments and more efficient operations. Kam A. McDonald graduated with a master’s degree in social work from Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C. Gordon Smith MS has been a member of the Asheville City Council since 2009 and is running for re-election to a second term this fall. Smith is a child-and-family counselor in private practice. He and his wife, Rachael, live in West Asheville. 2002 Cory MacGillivray MAEd ’06 was named the middle school science instructional coach with Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools. He previously taught biology at West Forsyth High School in Clemmons. MacGillivray and his wife, Stephanie Lee MacGillivray ’05, welcomed their second child, Sawyer Benjamin MacGillivray, in February. 2004 Eric Newsom MA ’07 is a professor in company since 2007, most recently as senior event manager. the Department of Communication at the University of Central Missouri. Christian E. Dwight Edwards MA is manager of the Thomas Wolfe Memorial in Asheville after working there six years as a historic interpreter. Jason Woods is vice president and manager of retail projects for Bank of Oak Ridge, a community bank with five locations in Greensboro, Summerfield and Oak Ridge. Woods has worked with Bank of Oak Ridge for five years and most recently served as branch manager and vice president. 2007 2005 Brandon A. Robinson MA ’10 earned his juris doctor degree from North Carolina Central University School of Law in the spring. During Robinson’s final semester in law school, he completed a 12-week externship at the University of North Carolina Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity and, with a former classmate, co-authored an article published in the spring 2013 issue of the NCCU Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Law Review. 2006 Shannon Ilsley is director of events at Patrick Properties Hospitality Group in Charleston. Ilsley has been with the Stacey Mitchell Atkins and John Atkins ’08 are married and living in Charleston, S.C. Stacey Atkins is a consultant with Nerium International and John Atkins is an engineer with APAC-Ballenger Paving. The couple wed in June 2011 at Nantahala Lake with multiple WCU alumni as members of the wedding party. They are Bobby Applewhite ’07 ’09 (third from left), Jesse Ramirez ’09 (fifth from right), Jessica Stroupe ’08 ’09 (left of bride), Sally Mitchell ’10 (right of groom) and Kristen Lynch ’08 (third from right). Josh Kitchens (seventh from left), Jamar Frazier (second from right) and Davina Cook Pike (far right) also attended WCU. Disability doesn’t stop long-distance student from powering through degree This is how Bill Miller ME ’13 rolls: With serious determination. The 36-year-old, of Leesburg, Fla., graduated in May from WCU’s online master’s degree program in entrepreneurship. This comes five years since he graduated from the University of Florida with a bachelor’s degree in business administration, also earned online. That achievement came 11 years after a fall dislocated two vertebrae in his neck and left him a quadriplegic confined to a wheelchair. Miller’s trip to Cullowhee for commencement was the first time he met his professors and some of his classmates in person and saw the WCU campus, which he said is “absolutely beautiful,” according to the Orlando Sentinel, which produced a story about his achievement. Miller was recognized as the entrepreneurship program’s 2013 outstanding student. According to Miller, who keeps a personal website at www.lookmomnohands.net, his goal since his injury has been to improve physically as well as remain productive. A decade ago, Miller and a partner developed a device that attaches to a wheelchair and allows quadriplegics to bowl. He then co-founded a company, called Manufacturing Genuine Thrills, to sell the device. And by the way, Miller bowls a 255. Miller also uses his injury as a platform to speak to church groups, Rotary clubs, chambers of commerce and schools, the paper reported. “My brain is very active. I’m never bored,” Miller said, adding that he plans to write a book about his experience. With his entrepreneurship degree in hand, Miller’s next goal is to secure work as a teacher at the college level, he told the paper. “Entrepreneurship is what this country needs to thrive again, economically speaking. If I can do a small part to help people start their own business, I feel like I can make a difference for people and my small part of the country,” he said. Commencement weekend was the first time that Bill Miller ME ’13 (center) met some of his classmates, including (from left) Jeremy Balog ME ’13, Arlene Childers ME ’13, Sharon Martin ’94 ME ’13 and Lindsay Keene ME ’13. Fall 2013 | 47 class NOTES Rosanna Pearson Bare in March was named teacher of the year for Wilkes County Schools, where she is a first-grade teacher at Moravian Falls Elementary School. Bradley J. Botts MPM is vice president of membership (an active voting board member position) for the North Carolina chapter of the Project Management Institute. The N.C. chapter has more than 2,800 members. Natasha Janicki ’11 and some of the children she met during a mission trip to Haiti in early 2013. Trip to Haiti opens alumna’s eyes to poverty When Natasha Janicki ’11, a recreational therapy major, wasn’t accepted into a graduate program for occupational therapy, she decided to make other plans. “I was unsure of what my next move should be and just really felt that I needed to do something more productive with my life,” said Janicki, who grew up in Kitty Hawk and returned there after college. A member of Kitty Hawk United Methodist Church, Janicki asked her pastor for ideas and learned that a neighboring church, Bethany United Methodist, was planning to send a team of volunteers to Haiti for approximately two weeks in January 2013. Janicki, who didn’t know any other participants (although she did meet her boyfriend on the trip), hopped on board for an experience she describes as “life-changing.” Janicki and her teammates spent the majority of their time on a construction project in Croix-des-Bouquets, about 20 miles northeast of Port au Prince. While construction was new to Janicki – “it’s very different to see everything done by hand as opposed to using all the heavy equipment we have here in the U.S.” – the day-to-day living conditions were the real eye-opener. “The most shocking part of the trip was the poverty and hunger I saw,” she said. On the final day of the trip, Janicki and her teammates distributed a food donation of rice, beans and oil they had collected before the trip, enough to feed just more than 100 families of six for one month. When the food ran out before everyone had received some, a riot began; the mission team made its way to safety through a screaming, grabbing crowd. “I have always known there were starving people in the world, but there is nothing that compares to seeing it up close,” Janicki said. “I thought ‘feeding the hungry’ would be a joyous experience, but it was the exact opposite.” Janicki now works as a behavior therapist for specialneeds children, and while taking an extended break isn’t an option at the moment, she hopes more mission trips are in her future. “It definitely is something I would like to do again if I got the opportunity,” she said. 48 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University 2008 Jamie Crumley- Tate lives in Nashville, Tenn., where she is establishing a career as a singer and songwriter and performs at venues including NASCAR races, universities and festivals. Tate also is a licensed attorney in the state of Tennessee. Erika L. Impagliatelli has been accepted as a member of Teach for America, an organization that serves students in urban and rural public schools. Impagliatelli will attend summer training in Houston and will begin teaching math this fall in a middle school in the Rio Grande Valley area of Texas. She will continue her graduate studies in learning, design and technology through Penn State’s World Campus. 2010 Nathan Gatto and Sarah Clark ’12 are owner-operators of Wright’s Backyard Birding Center in Winston-Salem, a birdsupply business that started in 1983. The couple is engaged to be married in April. Janette Hammett MHS ’12 is the child nutrition director at Cherokee Central Schools. Prior to her employment there, Hammett worked as the tobacco prevention coordinator at Macon County Public Health and as a nutritionist and director of the Women, Infants and Children program in Swain County. Tara B.W. Gleason MS ’10 manages a branch library for Clemson University’s School of Education. Gleason worked at WCU’s Hunter Library as an undergraduate student and as an assistant supervisor while completing her graduate degree. 2011 Ronnie Garcia is an account executive 2009 Anna Browning Sgt. Brandon Lee Monteith deployed to Afghanistan in the spring for a yearlong tour as part of the N.C. National Guard’s 210th Military Police Company in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. The unit will be conducting law enforcement and customs inspection operations as American military forces begin working toward a coordinated withdrawal from that country. A resident of Jackson County, Monteith has been with the 210th for approximately five years. has written a 32page children’s picture book titled “Tanner Turbeyfill and the Moon Rocks.” Josh Crawford ’10 illustrated the book, about a boy whose tree house turns into a spaceship that takes him to the moon so he can gather the moon rocks he has always wanted. Browning is an administrative support associate in WCU’s Writing and Learning Commons. with the Carolina Panthers. Garcia, a former member of the WCU golf team, began as an intern with the Panthers in 2011. Leslie Putnam spent from March 2012 to April 2013 as a resident acting intern at Wayside Theatre in Middletown, Va., where she choreographed, taught musical theatre classes and performed in shows including “Hank Williams: Lost Highway” and “Private Lives.” 2012 Mercedese R. Brouard recently enlisted in the U.S. Navy under the delayed entry program. Brouard will undergo basic training at the Navy’s Recruit Training Center in Great Lakes, Ill. Andres Guillama of Waynesville was one of 12 contestants on the most recent series of Food Network competition series Performer raps heart around fellow Hurricane Sandy survivors A resident of New Jersey’s Atlantic coast, Patrick Whelan ’06 has an alias: “ShoreShot.” It’s his professional identity, the name by which he is known as a rap and hip-hop artist. It’s a career that has come from the background to the forefront – and now to the shorefront. As a student majoring in communication, Whelan worked at WWCU-FM and Channel 62 while also producing original music from his dorm room. After graduation, he worked as production assistant and sales rep with CBS in New York City before taking a sales job with AT&T Interactive, where he earned enough to finance and produce his debut album, “Slowly but Shorely,” in June 2010. The label he formed the following year, ShoreShot Music LLC, produced his sophomore album, “The Progress Report,” in February 2012. Whelan began showcasing his talents and promoting his albums by performing on university campuses throughout the mid-Atlantic region. Then, like many of his neighbors, he became all-too-well-acquainted with a force of nature named Sandy. “The hurricane hit at the end of October, and things took quite a bit of a turn for a whole lot of people, including myself,” Whelan said. Cleanup and restoration at his home, in Brick, N.J., became an unexpected source of inspiration. “While I was pumping 4 to 5 feet of water out of my crawlspace and pushing out wet insulation, I came up with a song,” Whelan said. That song, “Sho Love (You Survived It),” soon was recorded with the help of Erich Wald of Waretown, N.J., and the children’s chorus of the Russell O. Brackman Middle School in Barnegat, N.J. A music video, available on YouTube, was directed by another local artist/ cinematographer, Joey Salpietro, also a resident of Brick. “Sho Love” began to gain momentum locally and on YouTube and then was made available for purchase through a number of online vendors. Whelan chose to donate all of the online MP3/single sales receipts to Holy Family St. Vincent de Paul Society in Union Beach, N.J., a charity capable of distributing the income directly to families in need. As of mid-June, Whelan had contributed approximately $670 to the nonprofit and “Food Network Star,” which concludes in August. The winner earns his or her own show on Food Network. Zach Heaton has finished working on a new fly fishing TV show called “In the Loop.” Heaton also shot one episode of another fishing show titled “Fly Nation” and helped shoot the pilot of a new show titled “Action Sports Information Desk.” Anderson Miller continues to work on building a well in the Kenyan village of Gerliech, a project he undertook while still a student at WCU. Miller and Christopher Pedo, an adviser in the has helped raise additional money by participating in other fundraisers. “We wanted people to understand ‘Sho Love’ is more than simply a song title – it’s a call to action and a way of living,” said Whelan. “Even though this project highlights the devastation New Jersey shore communities endured, the commitment to show love to our neighbors and those in need should not be limited to times of crisis.” Whelan currently is working on his third album, “Return of the Tides,” set to release this summer. WCU Office of International programs and Services who is from Gerliech, traveled with members of a nonprofit organization to work on the project. The group planned to train approximately 10 people from the local community there to also participate. Miller works in Raleigh as an assistant to Rep. Joe Sam Queen of N.C. District 119. Christina Banner Pettus was married in October 2012. She works at Clater Kaye Theatreworks in Hickory, where she helps run the performing arts school. Groce Scot Robinson MAT has been accepted to the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom to pursue a doctoral degree in history focused on the late medieval period. Patrick “ShoreShot” Whelan ’06 inspires — and is inspired by — pupils at the coastal New Jerseyarea elementary schools where he conducts benefits for victims of Hurricane Sandy. WE WANT THE SCOOP ON YOUR LIFE EVENTS Send us your news and photos EMAIL: MAIL TO: magazinestories@wcu.edu Class Notes editor 420 H.F. Robinson Cullowhee N.C. 28723 For more information, call 828.227.7327. Fall 2013 | 49 Two new members appointed to WCU Board of Trustees The University of North Carolina Board of Governors has appointed two new members to the Western Carolina University Board of Trustees, including alumnus Kenny Messer ’86, an executive with Milliken Corp. Joining Messer on the WCU board this fall is Phil Drake, chief executive officer of Drake Enterprises. The appointments are for four-year terms. The UNC system governing body also re-appointed current trustees Edward Broadwell Jr. of Asheville, retiring in November as chairman and CEO of Home Trust Bank, and Southern Pines businessman George Little to four-year terms. A resident of Greenville, S.C., Messer is global business director of specialty chemical and packaging at Milliken & Co. in Spartanburg, S.C. He is a past president and member of both the WCU Alumni Association Board of Directors and the Catamount Club Board of Directors. Messer served on the search committee that helped select David O. Belcher as chancellor in 2011 and was part of the 2020 Commission, a 36-member committee that led a strategic planning process to guide the university’s direction and development over the next decade. A native of Franklin, Drake began developing tax software in 1977. His companies now employ more than 500 people in businesses that include accounting, retail, software, dining, theater, golf, printing, Internet service, family entertainment, construction and fiber optics. A frequent guest speaker for business students at WCU, he was a member of the WCU Millennial Initiative Select Committee, which helped develop strategies for the university’s comprehensive regional economic and community development effort. Drake and Messer fill vacancies created by the departure of Joan MacNeill, board chair, and former N.C. Sen. Steve Metcalf, both of whom reached the end of their terms June 30. MacNeill, a co-founder and former president of the Great Smoky Mountains Railway in Dillsboro, was named by the N.C. Senate to the 32-member Board of Governors. The UNC board selects a total of eight trustees for each campus of the university system, and the governor appoints four. Appointments from the governor are forthcoming. In addition, the president of the WCU Student Government Association is an ex-officio member of the WCU Board of Trustees. class NOTES ALUMNI DEATHS Shirley Muse Bryson ’37 April 17, 2013; Sylva. Melissa A. Freeman Ledgister ’88 April 10, 2013; Asheville. Otho V. Cagle Jr. ’56 Feb. 20, 2013; Waynesville. James Leo Luther Jr. ’86 March 15, 2013; Asheboro. Bruce Dennis Carden ’60 MAEd ’61 March 23, 2013; Waynesville. David Henley Marshall ’72 March 1, 2013; Stokesdale. Irma Melvynie Casey ’71 April 10, 2013; Sylva. Linda Kay McClure ’92 March 9, 2013; Waynesville. David Bryce Clemmer ’09 March 11, 2013; Forest City. Harold Dennis Melton ’75 March 7, 2013; Graham. Betty Elaine Penland Coin BSEd ’41 March 10, 2013; Franklin. Curtis Stephen Metzger ’94 March 3, 2013; Beverly, Mass. Pauline Pressley Collins ’42 April 15, 2013; Amherst, Mass. Douglas W. Murajda ’73 April 12, 2013; Boiling Springs, S.C. Louise Edwards Cowan ’47 April 29, 2013; Murphy. Ned C. Owings MAEd ’70 April 23, 2013; Union, S.C. Michael Deaver ’69 April 1, 2013; Waynesville. Laura K. Phillips ’54 Feb. 25, 2013; Advance. Mary M. Crampton Deere MED ’72 April 13, 2013; Hayden, Ariz. Watson Smith Rankin ’57 MA ’62 March 25, 2013; Loris, S.C. Mildred P. Dodson ’76 MAEd ’78 EDS ’81 April 21, 2013; Rosman. Emmett Sprinkle Sams ’41 April 2, 2013; Mars Hill. Jill J. English ’91 March 27, 2013; Hendersonville. Ralph H. Sharpe Jr. ’67 March 27, 2013; Winston-Salem. Julian Milo Fields Jr. ’77 April 5, 2013; Williamsburg, Va. William A. Sink ’67 MAEd ’70 March 2, 2013; Etowah. Allen J. Fisher MBA ’86 March 1, 2013; Raleigh. Herbert Matthew Smith ’92 March 7, 2013; Ruffin. Bruce Harvey Fitchett ’63 April 22, 2013; Asheville. James F. Smith ’57 March 18, 2013; Hayesville. Harvey Edgar Franklin ’51 MAEd ’58 March 26, 2013; Marshall. William “Bill” Taylor Jr. ’58 May 3, 2013; Raleigh. Carolyn Corry Gay MAEd ’76 March 23, 2013; Hendersonville. James Donald Tomberlin ’50 May 4, 2013; Asheville. Bill Chrest George ’64 April 24, 2013; Waynesville. Charles Holman Venable ’54 Dec. 29, 2012; Clemmons. Winnie Wilkinson Gray ’40 May 7, 2013; Buxton. Frances Tarleton Wheeler MAEd ’04 May 19, 2013; Hickory. Walter Keith Hampton ’75 MIE ’81 April 25, 2013; Brasstown. Dorothy Martin Williams ’54 March 3, 2013; Bryson City. Norman Clifton Hardin ’57 April 15, 2013; Forest City. Roy L. Williams ’63 April 6, 2013; Reidsville. Linda G. Hardy ’76 MA ’81 April 16, 2013; Sylva. Donald Gene Young EDS ’94 Feb. 20, 2013; Glendale, Ky. Elizabeth F. Hargett ’70 Feb. 27, 2013; Newman, Ga. Kristen Ann Almand ’05 March 4, 2013; Trinity. Martha J. Harrison ’75 March 20, 2013; Charlotte. Carolyn Jeanie Ashe ’87 March 2, 2013; Hendersonville. Rosalind Stalcup Hawk ’80 Feb. 28, 2013; Andrews. Robert Jack Baker ’65 Sept. 12, 2012; Bryson City. Laverne Isarael Hendrix ’39 MA ’56 March 9, 2013; High Point. Sara Sullivan Boone ’69 March 23, 2013; Buford, Ga. Charles David “Babe” Howell ’54 MAEd ’56 May 4, 2013; Newland. Patricia D. Brown MAEd ’03 EDS ’05 EDD ’11 March 23, 2013; Leicester. Louis Lunceford Kovacs ’70 Feb. 26, 2013; Charlotte. 50 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University UNIVERSITY DEATHS Angela Laird Brenton, provost, May 8, 2013; Dillsboro. Sona G. Norton ’86, Mountain Heritage Center office manager, June 15, 2013; Sylva. Horace Ray, former staff member in WCU dining services, Feb. 27, 2013; Sylva. LASTING LEGACY Provost Angi Brenton had a major impact on WCU in a short period of time By BILL STUDENC MPA ’10 Angela Laird Brenton served as provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs for only nine months before pancreatic cancer claimed her life May 8, but members of the campus community agree she left an indelible mark on the institution. In addition to guiding WCU through the process of program prioritization (see related story on Page 11) and hiring three deans, Brenton spearheaded the creation of a new campus leadership initiative and established an event designed to encourage young people to share innovative ideas for improving their communities. “Our hearts are broken,” said WCU Chancellor David O. Belcher. “In her short time in Cullowhee, Angi has been a wonderful colleague and friend. Although Angi was at Western Carolina for less than a year, she has had a tremendous impact on this university through her leadership on several significant initiatives, and she quickly became a respected and beloved member of the WCU family. Her passing saddens us deeply.” Brenton was instrumental in launching WCU’s new Leadership Academy. Patterned after a similar collegelevel initiative she started at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, the effort to nurture faculty and staff leaders by providing them with professional and personal development opportunities alongside other campus colleagues gets under way this fall with its first class of participants. “She wanted to carry the spirit of what she had done at UALR and expand it to the entire WCU campus and the whole region. Part of the concept of leadership on an engaged campus like ours is having leaders reach out to the community, which is one reason why our academy will end with a leadership tour across the region,” said Laura Cruz, director of WCU’s Coulter Faculty Commons and chair of the Leadership Academy Steering Committee. “And she would say, ‘this is no sage on a stage,’ where somebody talks to you for two or three hours about leadership. It’s about people coming together in an interactive format to help solve problems. She had a real vision of our strength as educators, and how to make those strengths even better.” Brenton also helped establish the inaugural WCU Discovery Forum, part of an initiative launched by the N.C. State University-based Institute for Emerging Issues to promote young leaders and community interaction. At the WCU event in April, student teams selected by a special campus committee shared with an audience of students, faculty and community members the results of research projects aimed at offering a potential solution to a significant societal problem, doing so in a series of five-minute presentations. Among her top priorities was the hiring of deans to lead WCU’s Kimmel School of Construction Management and Technology, College of Arts and Sciences, and College of Health and Human Sciences; and conducting a comprehensive examination of the university’s academic programs, the first since the 2000-01 academic year, in order to assess their quality and productivity and to help determine allocation of resources. “I have reported directly to six vice chancellors or provosts and learned from each of them. Still, I was absolutely amazed at Angi’s work as provost in the short time she was here,” said Brian Railsback, dean of the Honors College. “She brought the concept of the Discovery Forum to campus, and she did a very difficult yet brilliant job with the program prioritization process. At meetings, she moved the discussion along efficiently while being a good listener and she had that rare talent of bringing large groups to decisions rather quickly. All the way around, her passing was a huge loss for the university.” Brenton came to WCU from UALR, where she had served as dean of the College of Professional Studies since 2001. Belcher and Brenton had worked together previously at UALR, where he served as provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs prior to his appointment as WCU chancellor in 2011, and at Missouri State University, where he was dean of the College of Arts and Letters and she was head of the Department of Communication and Mass Media. After Brenton’s death, her husband, Keith (who works in WCU’s Office of Communications and Public Relations), suggested that anyone wishing to make a lasting tribute consider a donation of any size to a variety of organizations, including a scholarship fund she established at WCU for Honors College students. Beth Tyson Lofquist ’78 MAEd ’79 EdS ’88, who served as interim provost from 2011 until 2012, has agreed to come out of retirement and serve again in an interim capacity while a national search is under way for the next provost. Angi Brenton (shown here speaking at a campus gathering) quickly became known by her colleagues for her skills as a communicator. Fall 2013 | 51 eventsCALENDAR AUGUST SATURDAY, AUG. 17 Valley Ballyhoo – Annual event highlighting student and community organizations. Music, food, entertainment. 4:30-7 p.m. University Center lawn. 828.227.3621 TUESDAY, AUG. 27 School of Music Faculty Showcase Concert – Musicians who teach display their multifaceted gifts and passions. 7:30 p.m. Recital Hall, Coulter Building. 828.227.7242 SEPTEMBER TUESDAY, SEPT. 3 Belchers and Friends Concert – Chancellor David Belcher (pianist), wife Susan (soprano), and some of their colleagues and friends will perform. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 SUNDAY, SEPT. 8 Catamount soccer – vs. Charlotte. 2 p.m. Catamount Athletic Complex. 800.34.GOWCU SATURDAY, SEPT. 14 Catamount football – vs. The Citadel. Catamount Club Day. 3:30 p.m. E.J. Whitmire Stadium. 800.34.GOWCU MONDAY, SEPT. 9 – FRIDAY, SEPT. 13 Sand Mandala: Mystical Arts of Tibet – “Painting” with colored sand, from the artistic traditions of Tantric Buddhism, will be displayed. Part of the Arts and Cultural Events Series. 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. Grandroom, A.K. Hinds University Center. 828.227.3622 SATURDAY, SEPT. 21 Catamount football – vs. Mars Hill. Family Weekend. 3:30 p.m. E.J. Whitmire Stadium. 800.34.GOWCU WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11 Sacred Music Sacred Dance – Multiphonic singers of the Drepung Loseling monastery will be performing in conjunction with the Mystical Arts of Tibet event. Part of the Arts and Cultural Events Series. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 EXHIBITS FINE ART MUSEUM | 828.227.3591 | fineartmuseum.wcu.edu “Concepts of the Book: Conceptual Artists’ Books from the Collection of the Fine Art Museum.” Selected in collaboration with professor Seth McComick and his fall 2012 “Contemporary Art” class. Through Sept. 13. “Credo: The Photo-ethnography of Rick Cary.” Cary’s work as a documentary photographer is rooted in his academic training in both photography and the psychology of art. Through Sept. 6. MOUNTAIN HERITAGE CENTER | 828.227.7129 | mhc.wcu.edu “Horace Kephart in the Great Smoky Mountains.” Examines the life of one of the founders of Great Smoky Mountains National Park and showcases the museum’s collection of his camping gear. Through September. “100 Years of Service: Home Demonstration Clubs in North Carolina.” Opening Aug. 1. “Cherokee Arts & Crafts: Tradition and Innovation.” Opening Sept. 9. “Migration of the Scotch-Irish People.” Focuses on early settlers to the mountains and explores the tension between religion and law. Ongoing. “A Craftsman’s Legacy: The Furniture of Jesse Bryson Stalcup.” Handcrafted furniture from the early 1900s. Ongoing. “Western Carolina: The Progress of an Idea.” An examination of Robert Lee Madison’s “Cullowhee Idea.” Ongoing. 52 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25 – SATURDAY, SEPT. 28 “Next to Normal” – Musical depicting the struggles of a suburban mom with bipolar disorder and its effects on her and her family. Part of the Mainstage theater season. 7:30 p.m. Hoey Auditorium. 828.227.2479 SATURDAY, SEPT. 28 Mountain Heritage Day – 39th annual celebration of Southern Appalachian culture. Food, mountain music, dance, arts, crafts. 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Intramural Fields / Mountain Heritage Center. 828.227.7129 / MountainHeritageDay.com SUNDAY, SEPT. 29 Brass Transit – Tribute to the band Chicago, 1968-1976. Part of the Galaxy of Stars Series. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 OCTOBER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2 Nai Ni Chen Dance Company – Fusion of American modern dance with the splendor of Asian art. Part of the Arts and Cultural Events Series. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16 Alash Tuvan Ensemble – Tuvan, the art of throat-singing multiple pitches at once, will be performed by an ensemble from Siberia. Part of the Arts and Cultural Events Series. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center Theatre. 828.227.2479 WCU is a University of North Carolina campus and an Equal Opportunity Institution. 55,000 copies of this public document were printed at a cost of $19,330.32 or $.35 each. Office of Public Relations/Creative Services | August 2013 | 13-152 SATURDAY, OCT. 19 Catamount football – vs. Wofford. Hall of Fame Day. 3:30 p.m. E.J. Whitmire Stadium. 800.34.GOWCU FRIDAY, OCT. 25 - SATURDAY, OCT. 26 Homecoming – Event schedule online at homecoming.wcu.edu. Parade 6:15 p.m., Friday. Main Street, Sylva. Catamount football – vs. Elon. 3:30 p.m., Saturday. E.J. Whitmire Stadium. 800.34.GOWCU NOVEMBER FRIDAY, NOV. 8 Catamount soccer – Senior Day match vs. Wofford. 2 p.m. Catamount Athletic Complex. 800.34.GOWCU WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13 – FRIDAY, NOV. 15 SUNDAY, NOV. 17 – TUESDAY, NOV. 19 “Zombies on Campus! A SlaughterPocalypse” – An original drama in an intimate stage setting. Part of the Mainstage theater season. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 SUNDAY, NOV. 24 “Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash” – Thirty-five hit songs portray the life of the legendary artist. Part of the Galaxy of Stars series. 5 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 SATURDAY, DEC. 14 Winter Commencement – 2 p.m. Ramsey Center 828.227.7216 Events, times and dates are subject to change. DECEMBER TUESDAY, DEC. 3 “An Enchanted Broadway Holiday Show” – Part of the Arts and Cultural Events Series. 7:30 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 WEDNESDAY, DEC. 4 Taradiddle Players Holiday Performance – A version of Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” performed in the “commedia dell’arte” style. 1 p.m. Grandroom, A.K. Hinds University Center. 828.227.7242 SUNDAY, DEC. 8 “Sounds of the Season” – Holiday music performances by WCU instrumental and vocal ensembles. 3 p.m. Bardo Arts Center. 828.227.2479 For up-to-the-minute information, event details and a complete listing of university events, visit events.wcu.edu. VISIT US ONLINE AT MAGAZINE.WCU.EDU FOR ANYWHERE-ACCESS TO MAGAZINE FEATURES AND ONLINE EXTRAS. ON THE ROAD AGAIN Alumni events scheduled across the Southeast through 2014 Chancellor David Belcher (above) connects with alumni and friends in the Asheville area at a recent reception. Among them are (below, from left) Matt Janney ’01, Aaron D’Innocenzi ’10, Terri Lynn Queen ’88 and Josh D’Innocenzi ’04, who all work at Clear Channel Radio in Asheville. Chancellor David O. Belcher is spanning the Southeast for a series of events designed to keep the university connected with alumni, friends and elected officials. The visits – with stops across North Carolina and in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee – is a follow-up to the 2011 “Get Acquainted Tour,” which took Belcher and wife Susan to some 15 municipalities over four months during his first year as chancellor. “When we visited communities across the region and state in 2011, one thing we heard over and over again was that the ‘Get Acquainted Tour’ should not be a one-time thing,” said Marty Ramsey ’85, director of alumni affairs. “Friends and alumni asked us to return to their communities and update them about what is going on at the university, and that is what we intend to do.” The new series of visits began with a June event in Murphy at Doyle’s Cedar Hill Restaurant, sponsored by the Murphy Electric Power Board, for alumni and friends from Cherokee, Clay and Graham counties. It was followed by a July reception for members of the Greater Asheville/ Hendersonville communities held at Highland Brewing Co., sponsored by Tim Gillespie ’86 and Betsy Gillespie ’86. Next stops are Wednesday, Sept. 11, in the Greater Raleigh/Triangle area at the Raleigh Marriott City Center and Tuesday, Sept. 24, in the Greater Charlotte area at the Westin Charlotte. Both events will be from 6:30 until 8 p.m. The tentative schedule includes future visits in North Carolina to Greensboro, Sylva, Cherokee, Hickory and Southern Pines, and out-of-state stops in South Carolina, Greater Atlanta, Tampa and Orlando in Florida, and Nashville and Knoxville in Tennessee. For information, contact the Office of Alumni Affairs at 877.440.9990 or via email at magill@wcu.edu. Alumni and friends are invited to share photographs taken during these events on the WCU Alumni Association Facebook page, www.facebook.com/WCUAlumni. Fall 2013 | 53 THE VIEW FROM HERE Public higher education provides benefits to the individual and society alike Chris Cooper, head of the Department of Political Science and Public Affairs, shared these thoughts at WCU’s Graduate School commencement exercises. Cooper was named WCU’s recipient of the University of North Carolina Board of Governors Award for Excellence in Teaching for 2013. There is much to celebrate this commencement day. You have sacrificed a lot over the past one, two, three, four – or in a few cases six, seven or eight – years. You’ve chosen education over work, over play and over time with family and friends. You are preparing yourself to be successful in a rapidly changing economy. You recognized that education does not end the moment you receive your undergraduate degree. For all this, you should be proud. And you chose to further your education in a public institution. For this, you should be proud, as well. Most of you had a choice of where to go to graduate school, and there were public and private options. Take the MBA, for example. I did some some Googling (or, in today’s parlance, “research”) and there are 14 private schools offering MBAs in the state. But you chose WCU. My guess is that cost was among the reasons why. One private university charges $24,000 a year for its MBA program. You can go to WCU for a third of that cost. Does that mean we offer an education that is one-third the quality, or that we’re such terrific money managers that we can run a program for one-third as much as our private school colleagues? Maybe we give you the same degree for one-third the number of credits? Of course not. We charge what we charge because your fellow citizens and your government made an investment in your education. The state appropriates more than $11,000 annually for every UNC system student’s education. Even if you paid “full freight,” state government put in more money toward your tuition than you did. These days, it is unusual to point out how our accomplishments are connected to government. As a political scientist, I can tell you that people hate government. Democrats hate government, Republicans hate government, people who own cats hate government, people who hate the people who own cats hate government. People who want to be in government run campaigns based on how much they hate government. Can you imagine this in another line of work: interviewing for sales manager of Doritos by saying you’re patently against snack foods? Yet that’s what we do. And it’s pretty successful. Only a quarter of all people trust government nationally. In North Carolina, it’s not much better. Recent polls suggest that people here aren’t real fond of the Legislature. And you Democrats don’t get too excited – when you were in charge, people were so upset that they voted you out of office. Despite this hatred of government, there are some things government does well – public education is one of them. Fortunately, we’ve long recognized that in this state. We’ve had three different North Carolina Constitutions, and there have been a lot of changes across those documents. But one theme has remained virtually untouched. In 1776, about 100 years before Robert Lee Madison hatched the “Cullowhee Idea,” and just 54 | The Magazine of Western Carolina University before Chapel Hill enrolled its first students, the state Constitution proclaimed “all useful learning shall be duly encouraged, and promoted, in one or more universities.” In our second and third state Constitutions, the state declared education is “necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind” and then instructed the General Assembly to “provide that the benefits of the University of North Carolina and other public institutions of higher education, as far as practicable, be extended to the people of the state free of expense.” Why were they so committed to education? Did they just want you to make more money and get a good job? Partially, yes. If you’re making more and are gainfully employed, you will contribute more to the economy. You’re more likely to buy a house or the entire collection of “Game of Thrones” and less likely to commit crimes. According to your state Constitution, you’re also more likely to be a better citizen and to live a happier life. Public education is a rare example of something that provides both private benefits to you and public benefits to the state as a whole. Of course, not all government is good. As my economist friends remind me, most goods are better provided by the private market. I don’t want a national, state or local department of snack foods, and there’s a reason Congress is less popular than Nickelback, traffic jams or cockroaches, but our support of public education has worked tremendously well for 200-plus years. It works in Cullowhee, it works in Wilmington, it works in Chapel Hill and, much as it pains me to admit, it even works in Boone. You went to a public institution for graduate school, so you may be wondering what you owe the state. Fortunately, from here on your interests align pretty well with the state’s. You owe it to the state to use your degree to be financially stable and prosperous. On average, a graduate degree translates to about 38 percent more income per year – so far, so good. Drawing from the Constitution, you also owe it to the state to live a life that benefits “the happiness of mankind” and “supports good government.” Here, too, your graduate degree will help. Education is consistently tied to happiness. Those with graduate degrees are much more likely to vote, engage in other forms of political participation, and volunteer. Most importantly, you owe it to the folks who will walk across this stage in the future that they will have the same support from the state that has allowed you to be here today. So give yourself a pat on the back. You deserve it. Hug your family; they deserve it, too. Then walk up to any North Carolina adult you don’t know and say “thank you” for contributing to your education; they certainly deserve it, as well. Finally, remember that among your goals, along with money and prestige and security and happiness, should rest an obligation to the welfare of the whole North Carolina community that has taken a part in lifting you up. LAST LOOK The Catamount and Mountaineer mascots arm wrestle for the Old Mountain Jug in 1997. END OF AN ERA? When the Western Carolina football team travels to Appalachian State for a Nov. 23 game, it apparently will signal the end of “The Battle for the Old Mountain Jug.” With ASU leaving the Southern Conference for the Sun Belt next season, this year is expected to mark the last time the longtime mountain rivals, who have met 77 times since 1932, will compete on the gridiron – at least for the foreseeable future. There have been moments both memorable and forgettable in the games that have been played since the jug was created in 1976. What’s your favorite memory from the WCU/App State rivalry? Email us at magazinestories@wcu.edu (subject line: “Old Mountain Jug”) or send us a letter at Old Mountain Jug, 420 H.F. Robinson Building, Cullowhee, N.C., 28723. And while passions run high when it comes to this rivalry, keep it clean! Fall 2013 | 55 WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY 1 UNIVERSITY WAY CULLOWHEE, NC 28723