Why I believe in giving back.
Transcription
Why I believe in giving back.
WINTER 2015 The Magazine of the University of South Carolina Upstate Why I believe in giving back. Brian Kelley ’04 SHOESTRING PLAYERS’ production of ‘Memigery’ gaining attention. PAGE 12 1 BUSINESS STUDENT stays the course, maintains perspective. PAGE 14 ATHLETICS WELCOMES five new inductees into its Hall of Fame PAGE 19 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Upstate Magazine • Winter 2015 Editor: Tammy E. Whaley Designer: Elvia Resendiz Videographer: Matthew Johnson, ’14 Associate Editor: Meg Hunt Photographer: Les Duggins Contributing Writers: Carolyn Farr Shanesy,’95 Upstate Magazine publishes three times a year in printed format and three times a year online-only. The Magazine of the University of South Carolina Upstate Editorial Offices Upstate Magazine Office of University Communications 800 University Way, Spartanburg, SC 29303 Phone: 864-503-5210 / Fax: 864-503-5264 E-mail: twhaley@uscupstate.edu FEATURES 8 13 21 Class News USC Upstate Alumni Association 800 University Way, Spartanburg, SC 29303 Phone: 864-503-5240 / Fax: 864-503-5264 E-mail: alumni@uscupstate.edu University of South Carolina Upstate Thomas F. Moore, Ph.D., Chancellor of USC Upstate Focus y t l u c a F o Take Tw 4 9 10 The Impact of Giving Whether as an endowed scholarship, professorship or through other contributions, gifts to the University have a lasting impact. Making a Difference in the Lives of Youth Alumnus turning his passion to serve into effective change. Founders Day Awards Three recognized for distinguished service and outstanding contributions. The University of South Carolina Board of Trustees Nikki R. Haley, Governor John C. von Lehe, Jr., Vice Chairman Eugene P. Warr, Jr., Chairman Chuck Allen, Paula Harper Bethea, J. Egerton Burroughs, Mark W. Buyck, Jr., Thomas C. Cofield, A.C. Fennell, III, C. Edward Floyd, M.D., William C. Hubbard, William W. Jones, Jr., Toney J. Lister, Miles Loadholt, Hubert F. Mobley, Leah B. Moody, C. Dorn Smith, III, M.D., Molly M. Spearman, Amy E. Stone, Secretary, Thad H. Westbrook, Mack I. Whittle, Jr., Charles H. Williams Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education Thomas R. Young, III, Chair Charles H. Babb, Secretary-Treasurer Milton A. Smith, Jr., ’78, Vice Chair C. Dan Adams, ’83, Russell W. Booker, Ph.D., Jane G. Bottsford, R.N., ’69, Susan G. Clary, ’69, William R. Cobb, ’74, T. Charles Conrad, III, David L. Eubanks, Ed.D., Jennifer C. Evins, Benjamin Graves, Harold D. McClain, Allen Newman, John B. Travers, Emerson F. Wolf, Jr., Mike Wood, ’77 Emeritus: James R. Smith, ’72 Ex Officio: Toney J. Lister, Jim O. Ray, Ed.D. University of South Carolina Upstate Foundation Steve Harvey ’80, President Chris Crowley, ’11 Treasurer Victor Austin, Jr. ’90, Vice President Karen Calhoun, Secretary C. Dan Adams ’83, Ann Angermeier, Vic Bailey, III, Hope Blackley, Ralph Brendle, Matt Cash ’06, Dan Collins ’03, Kenneth E. Darr, Jr., Chris Dorrance, Teri Ficicchy, Richard Genoble, P. Kathryn Hicks, Charles W. (Chuck) Lowe ’72, Zerno Martin, Cathy McCabe, Michael Meilinger ’93, Max Metcalf, David A. Miller ’90, Mark S. Reilly, Tiffany Santagati-Simpson ’00, D. Ralph Settle, III, Stephanie Tillerson, Cyndi Waters ’83, Irvine T. (Irv) Welling Ex-Officio: Dr. Thomas F. Moore, Thomas R. Young, III, Dr. Faruk Tanyel, Roger Sullivan Emeritus: George William (Will) Gramling, Katie Hodge, Susan C. Jacobs ’80 17 21 Collaboration Defines True Community Outreach USC Upstate and Charles Lea Center program creates spirit of possibilities. Class Notes * Brian Kelly ’04 is using his unique talents to help others as he was helped. 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine USC Upstate Capital Development Foundation George William (Will) Gramling, President Tim Camp, Treasurer Josh Henderson, Secretary John Montgomery, Vice President John Bauknight, Robert A. Brannon, Nancy Riehle Look for this symbol throughout the magazine to access video extras. You can also link to the magazine and these extras by visiting www.uscupstate.edu/upstatemagazine. You may need to upgrade your Flash Player. Viewing this eMag version of Upstate Magazine requires Adobe Flash Player version 11.1.0 or above. 2 2 A MESSAGE FROM THE Chancellor Dear Friends, Spartans Head Coach Eddie Payne gives instructions to his team at the Homecoming game against Stetson University. Welcome to the Winter 2015 issue of the Upstate Magazine. What an exciting time it is at USC Upstate. While no single “publication” can capture all that this University contributes and means to individuals, families, and communities, this issue gives examples that demonstrate the range and level of such contributions. You will find articles and presentations on a remarkable variety of activities and accomplishments by members of the Upstate community: faculty, students, staff, alumni, and friends. Who knew that we have a state champion in karate as Director of the Metropolitan Studies Institute and Vice Chancellor for Planning and Institutional Research? You will be amazed at the accomplishments of the five newest members of our Sports Hall of Fame. Please read about several ways students and faculty are engaged in serving the larger community. If you haven’t see “Memigery,” you have missed the student written and produced play that is a Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival Region IV finalist. And you don’t want to miss all the pictures and information about the biggest and best Homecoming in Upstate history. The UPSTATE Gallery on Main exposes the University's permanent collections and exhibitions to a much wider audience. I’m pleased to share two of the latest Upstate developments with you. UPSTATE Gallery on Main recently opened at 172 E. Main Street in downtown Spartanburg and is dedicated to contemporary and original exhibitions that include selections from the permanent collection by artists Andy Warhol, Jerry Uelsmann and Beatrice Riese. It will also be a “lab” for experiential learning as students will be involved and working at the gallery on all activities. A partnership with Spartanburg County Communications 911 is directing all of the University’s emergency calls to county dispatchers, which will improve services and enhance the safety of members of the campus community and our police officers in the field. We all know that these things are possible because of effort, commitment, and support from thousands of individuals and groups over the 48-year history of USC Upstate. We continue our tradition of delivering transformative educational experiences to students who come to us from across the upstate, the state, the nation, and the world. Thank you for your involvement with USC Upstate. Go Spartans! USC Upstate students enjoy the bonfire tradition at Homecoming. Sincerely, Dr. Thomas F. Moore Chancellor Klay Peterson, director of Public Safety and chief of police at USC Upstate, went above and beyond to ensure that everyone knew of the 911 changes. www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QjLMNfJjkE 3 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine KEEPING DREAMS ALIVE… Building A Legacy of Giving That Fosters Support and Guidance BY CAROLYN FARR SHANESY ’95 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine 4 Some dreams start with a simple act. Take for instance the early beginnings of the University of South Carolina Upstate. click here for video extra. From humble beginnings to avert a serious healthcare labor shortage to a University that has seen continued growth in response to the community’s needs, USC Upstate’s mission that was true 48 years ago, remains so today – delivering an educational experience that will prepare students to meet the challenges of an ever-changing world. Providing this type of education depends on the generosity of alumni, faculty, staff, parents and friends. Donors come from all walks of life, but all have one thing in common – a love and passion for USC Upstate. It’s a legacy of giving that will help the next generation of USC Upstate students not only reach their goals, but achieve them. 5 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Kelley has added 25 to 30 images to a limited collection and, in partnership with Arnold’s “I Can Do Anything Foundation,” has designated that the monies generated when sold will go to the Dr. Mac Arnold Scholarship established in 2014 at USC Upstate. The photos are valued at about $7,000. USC Upstate alumnus Brian Kelley ’04, right, initiated the Dr. Mac Arnold Scholarship in honor of Arnold, left, for his passion of education and the arts. The Dr. Mac Arnold Scholarship USC Upstate wasn’t the first college that Brian Kelley ’04 attended, but it’s the one that has made an impact on his life. An artist and photographer, the Fork Shoals native was in his senior year at Erskine College when he learned his degree program was being cut from the curriculum. “I was from the country, there on an academic scholarship and living on moderate means,” Kelley said. “I wanted to finish my degree, but where could I do that and how would I pay for it?” Kelley met USC Upstate professor Jane Nodine through a class he was taking. It was Nodine who would convince him to visit the Spartanburg campus and take a look at the art program. “At USC Upstate, everything just sort of fell into place for me,” Kelley said. “I visited the Spartanburg campus, and it just seemed like a perfect fit for me. ” Kelley would complete his degree through the 2 Plus 2 program, but the staff and the program made such an impression on him that he now wants to give back so that other students gifted in the arts can find the same support and guidance he found. Kelley started kicking around the idea with his friend of more than 10 years, legendary Blues musician Dr. Mac Arnold. The two struck up an unlikely friendship, entrenched in a love of good Blues music and a desire to keep the arts alive in public schools. “I enjoyed my time at USC Upstate, but without scholarships and grants I would have never been able to complete college,” Kelley said. “The Dr. Mac Arnold Scholarship Fund gives me the opportunity to give back and help future art and music scholars in their pursuit of a career in the arts.” The Dr. Joseph C. and Mrs. Deanna M. Bowman Scholarship Dr. Joe Bowman spent a lifetime at USC Upstate. “It was our home for more than 40 years, we watched it grow,” he said. “We moved into the first building on campus, and we, the first faculty members and administrators, put the chairs together, we moved the books from the library at the hospital. There was no one else to do it. We were proud to do it.” It’s that same source of pride that led Bowman and his wife, Deanna, to make a bigger commitment to the school in the form of the first endowed scholarship in athletics. “In spite of the bad times, the hard times, USC Upstate has been great for us and for our family,” Bowman said. “My oldest son graduated from here and our younger son started his education here. This place is a major part of our lives as a family.” Bowman was hired in 1969 to teach physical education, but he also served as the head men’s basketball coach, in addition to coaching golf and tennis. It was a time when Bowman said USC Columbia wasn’t exactly helpful to folks in Spartanburg, and they were determined to make the University successful. “Academics were always first,” Bowman said. “It was a source of pride. We started with 177 students and we had goals we had to “The first time I ever saw him, he was driving his pickup truck in the Fork Shoals Christmas Parade,” Kelley said. “I had to meet him.” Kelley would go visit Arnold at his home on Slatton Shoals Road, their conversations would turn from life in Fork Shoals to Arnold’s life as a musician. “I grew up on the same street with a man who played with people like John Lee Hooker, B.B. King, Muddy Waters, and I never knew it,” Kelley said. “Then, one day, he told me to get on the bus and go with them on the road.” Kelley would follow the group around for a couple of years, taking photos of Arnold and his band, Plate Full of Blues. From those images, Kelley is building a foundation for future Upstate students. 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Dr. Joe Bowman and his wife, Deanna, hope the scholarship they recently endowed will inspire others to give back to the place that gave them a good start. 6 meet. We needed 700 students to add a third year, so we would work together to recruit 774.” Bowman said the hard work of the faculty, staff and administration helped them change minds in Columbia. “It was one of those neat experiences where we all banded together and we were proud and worked hard to maintain what we were building,” Bowman said. “We were truly a family.” Bowman watched as the campus grew and transitioned from coach to faculty member. Though he retired from teaching full-time in 1998, he continued to teach part time through 2010. “This scholarship is our way of giving back to the University for what it gave us,” Bowman said. “We hope that it will inspire former students and others to give back to the place that gave them a good start.” The William S. Moore II Palmetto Professorship Dr. Elnora Stuart was recently named the recipient of the William S. Moore II Palmetto Professorship. Stuart, an associate dean in the George Dean Johnson, Jr. College of Business and Economics, is the second person to receive the honor. Established in 1996 by Bill Moore and his family, the professorship was established to promote quality programming and student services for business students in the Spartanburg community. An executive for the textile company Reeves Brothers, Inc., Moore later purchased and served as president of the Spartanburgbased fundraising company, Sally Foster Gift Wrap. As a board member and chair of the Carolina-Piedmont Foundation, now the USC Upstate Foundation, the late businessman advocated for the business college to create co-ops and internships within the business community. Today, Stuart and others at The George are working to make those relationships stronger. Stuart’s proposal to Dr. Frank Rudisill, dean of the Business College, was to grow the internship program in a way that makes USC Upstate the first thought when businesses are looking for a new hire. “The way we grow our internship program can be a significant differentiator for the Johnson College,” Stuart said. “We want to provide top-quality intern candidates to local businesses and to be able to provide training for our students that will prepare them to go into those internships and be successful.” Rudisill said he likes Stuart’s ideas because it will open more doors for students. 7 “We want to be proactive with our students and we’ve never really had someone who could sit down and put some strategic thought and planning behind our internship program,” Rudisill said. “We have some wonderful community partners, who provide incredible internships for our students, and this is an opportunity for us to grow that partnership. We want to be able to look at the employer’s needs and be able to provide them with the type of students they need, the skills that they would require, so that our students hit the door running.” Stuart said the funds from the endowed professorship will be used to develop a number of initiatives to enhance the internship experience. All interns will be required to participate in the existing Johnson College Professionalism Program, a series of workshops that focus on the soft skills needed in the workplace. New initiatives include intern events that would bring in speakers from the business community and, in the future, a semi-annual trip to a major city to visit businesses to see how they operate. Moore’s son, Spartanburg businessman John P. Moore, is excited about Dr. Stuart’s plans. “I think it’s a plan that my father would be proud to support,” Moore said. “Education, in his mind, was the best possible way for you to be successful. My father would be extremely pleased to see where the University is today and to have his name associated with a bridge for students to real-world experience, he would have loved that – couldn’t be a better way to honor him.” This scholarship is our way of giving back to the University for what it gave us. We hope that it will inspire former students and others to give back to the place that gave them a good start. For more information about establishing a scholarship or designating specific gifts, contact Bea Walters Smith at 864-503-5235 or bwsmith@uscupstate.edu. To learn about the various options for giving, visit www. uscupstate.edu/advancement. 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Puncke Leaves Unparalleled Legacy of Service BY TAMMY E. WHALEY Perhaps it was the civil engineering education he received at the U.S. Naval Academy that trained him for very challenging situations where tightly structured deadlines were routine. The two years he spent on a minesweeper certainly prepared him to work long hours, be fortified for nerve-wracking situations, and to build relationships based on trust and respect. The combination of these experiences mixed with his time in Vietnam and a career with the Navy Civil Engineer Corps undeniably prepared Rick Puncke to lead the facilities management efforts at USC Upstate for the past 22 years. When he came to the University in 1993, he had retired from the Navy and the campus was still in its infancy stage, mostly contained to the eastern section of the campus and consisting of nine buildings and athletic fields. His first project was to oversee the construction of the Olin B. Sansbury, Jr. Campus Life Center, a 55,000-square-foot facility that opened in 1995. With his steady, quiet demeanor and solutions-based approach, Puncke provided unparalleled leadership in the implementation of the 10-year, $185 million campus master plan that was initiated in 1997. The master plan transformed the physical footprint of the campus with new academic facilities, expanded parking, residential housing, athletics and recreational facilities, beautification initiatives, and new infrastructure to create highly visible entrances to campus that included expansion of existing roads and creation of new roads. USC Upstate,” said Dr. John C. Stockwell, former chancellor who executed the master plan. Over the years, Puncke served as a liaison for the University between USC and with numerous local and state agencies to build new facilities and to make capital improvements to older University buildings. He also led the campus in sustainability efforts that resulted in state and national recognition. “For the past 22 years, Rick Puncke has been invaluable to USC Upstate,” said Chancellor Tom Moore. “His expertise, integrity and relationships with external partners and vendors enabled USC Upstate to best utilize capital dollars and resources to provide topnotch facilities and a safe environment for students, employees and citizens within the University community.” Puncke retired on January 31, 2015, leaving a lasting legacy on the USC Upstate campus. “He was vital in successfully growing the campus from its once small beginnings to the size and complexity we now know as The University of South Carolina Upstate presents Bob Woodward Pulitzer prize-winning journalist and one of America’s preeminent investigative reporters and non-fiction authors “Presidential Leadership and the Price of Politics” Thursday, March 19, 2015 at 7 p.m. • USC Upstate Sponsorship opportunities are still available, contact Bea Walters Smith at (864) 503-5235 or bwsmith@uscupstate.edu. Tickets on sale now at www.uscupstate.edu/woodward 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine 8 TURNING PASSION INTO EFFECTIVE CHANGE 2008 Alumnus Making A Difference in the Lives of Today’s Youth BY MEG HUNT For Victor Durrah, Jr., ’08, talking about change is fine, but if you want to effect change in yourself and in your community, you must be willing to tap into your true passions and, as the phrase attributed to Mahatma Gandhi says, “Be the change you wish to see in the world.” From an early age, Durrah knew he wanted to serve his community, so when it came time to choose a college, he chose the University of South Carolina Upstate for its education program because “I wanted to teach for a living.” “I’ve always wanted to help our youth in an impactful way,” he noted. “I grew up in a disadvantaged neighborhood in a singleparent home, but I had mentors who poured into me as a youth.” Once on campus, Durrah took advantage of the various opportunities to become active in college life. He joined Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, played intramural sports, coached youth basketball at a local church, became an AmeriCorps 7 volunteer, and was an active member of the African American Association, as well as the NonProfit Leadership Alliance Club. So that year, he and Boyd established Brothers Restoring Urban Hope, Inc., Services (BRUH) and filed as a non-profit organization. Eight years later, they are still in the mentoring business, focusing on restoring the urban community through mentorship, leadership training and spiritual guidance. “Our program is so important today with youth who lack leadership in the home, community and schools,” said Durrah, the first in his family to graduate from college. “Our organization strives to make personal connections with those we mentor, helping them to discover who they are, developing their strengths and helping them meet their challenges.” And some of those challenges are bigger WE ALL MAKE TIME FOR WHAT for some than for others, but it doesn’t mean don’t keep trying to help young people or WE FEEL IS IMPORTANT. I we communities face those challenges, he noted. FEEL THAT GIVING BACK IS “We do as much as we can, although not IMPORTANT. every kid we reach makes it through their “It was very important for me to be engaged with the college community because I was able to build leadership skills, friendships, collaborations and character through being involved on campus,” emphasized Durrah. “As I became more active in the civic clubs, specifically the Non-Profit Leadership Alliance and Kappa Alpha Psi, I was able to tap into my true passion to serve the community.” It was at that point Durrah knew he had found the right outlet for his passion. He switched his major to Non-Profit Administration and Management and began working toward his professional goals. During his junior year, Durrah and classmate Clevon Boyd took to heart the lessons – and challenges – presented by professors in their Interdisciplinary Studies classes. “One professor would ask us all the time, ‘Who is here to learn to run their own non-profit organization?’” remembered Durrah. “Clevon and I would always raise our hands. We truly believed in our vision to create a mentoring organization that would help local youth identify with themselves and build character.” situation,” he added. “But when we see a kid transition into a respectable, productive, mature and happy young man that is rewarding because at that point, they are able to become a leader and leave the victim role behind.” Never one to shy away from an opportunity to help youth, Durrah is also a Senior District Executive with the Boy Scouts of America Spartanburg County (BSA) where his responsibilities run the gamut from program coordination and fundraising to marketing and board recruitment. His passion for giving back has allowed him to focus on learning how to be most effective in his efforts. In addition to graduating with a degree in non-profit administration and management, Durrah also graduated from the Grassroots Leadership Development Institute and is currently participating in the Non-Profit Administration Certification Program at Clemson University. When asked how he’s able to balance both his work with BRUH and BSA, his answer was simple, “We all make time for what we feel is important. I feel that giving back is important.” For more information about Brothers Restoring Urban Hope, Inc., visit www.bruhmentor.org, Facebook: BRUH Mentor or e-mail bruhmentor@gmail.com. For more information about the Boy Scouts of America in Spartanburg County, visit www.palmettocouncil.org, e-mail info@palmettocouncil.org or call 864-585-4391. 9 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine 48 Annual th Founders’ Day Celebration C. Dan Adams ’83 The Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education recognized three individuals who have contributed greatly to the University of South Carolina Upstate at its 48th annual Founders’ Day Celebration on February 19. C. Dan Adams ’83, president and chief executive officer of The Capital Corporation, received the Founders’ Day Award, which provides recognition to those persons in the larger community who have been of exceptional assistance to the University. Adams was honored for his service to USC Upstate as an alumnus, donor and member of the Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education and the USC Upstate Foundation. Adams has demonstrated extraordinary commitment to providing higher education to the students of the Upstate and has utilized his political connections to assist the University in educating the South Carolina Legislature and the general public regarding the need for parity funding among all 10 South Carolina public comprehensive institutions. The Award for Distinguished Service, which honors those who have demonstrated a long and distinguished career of service characterized by exceptional dedication 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Jimm Cox to the work at hand and to the institution, was presented to James “Jimm” R. Cox and Frederick “Rick” D. Puncke, Jr. Jimm Cox, now in his 42nd year of teaching in the University of South Carolina system, was lauded for his extraordinary commitment to students both in and out of the classroom as a teacher and mentor. Cox had provided exceptional leadership of the theatre program, earning it nation and international recognition and collaboration such as advancing to the American College Theatre Festival Regional IV finals and an exclusive partnership with The Rose Theatre in London. For the past 20 summers, Cox has led a five-week foreign study program in London exposing students to theatre on an international stage. He has collected a host of accolades while at USC Upstate, include being cited for excellence in directing by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the American College Theatre Festival, named the 2009 South Carolina Art Administrator of the Year in Higher Education, nominated for the Andrew Heiskell Award for Innovation in International Education, and twice nominated Cox for the United States Professor of the Year Award. Rick Puncke, who retired at the end of Rick Puncke January as director of facilities management, was being honored for his 22-year career at USC Upstate that was characterized by his exceptional dedication of his time and talent in working to provide top-notch campus facilities in an ever growing and changing environment. Puncke’s first project was to oversee the construction of the Olin B. Sansbury, Jr. Campus Life Center, which opened in 1995. He provided unparalleled leadership in the implementation of the 10-year, $185 million master plan that literally transformed both the physical footprint and reputation of the institution with new academic facilities, expanded parking, residential housing, athletics and recreational facilities, beautification initiatives, and new infrastructure to create a highly visible entrance to campus that included expansion of existing roads and creation of new roads. He was vital in successfully growing the campus from its once small beginnings to the size and complexity now known as USC Upstate. In addition, he led the campus in sustainability efforts that resulted in state and national recognition, and he fostered and maintained relationships with external 10 10 USC UPSTATE FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES New Appointments The University of South Carolina Upstate Foundation recently elected new members to its board. Alumnus of the Year Award in recognition of his many professional accomplishments and philanthropic work. President of the Foundation is Steve Harvey ’80. A native of Spartanburg, Harvey is president of Roebuck Advertising, Inc., a 39-year-old marketing and promotions company. He has 29 years of experience creating marketing/ sales promotions and employee incentive programs and has been recognized with two national awards for promotional campaigns. In addition, Harvey is a public speaking coach, speech writer and public relations consultant. The Foundation, chartered in 1973 as the Carolina Piedmont Foundation and renamed in 2009, has raised and administered funds primarily for capital construction and endowment purposes. Accredited as a non-profit organization under section 501(c) 3 of the Internal Revenue Code, the Foundation raises private funds for facilities and programs, administers scholarships and loan endowments, and supports USC Upstate public service activities. To date, the Foundation has helped to fund numerous University facilities including the Palmetto House residential halls, “the George” – home of the George Dean Johnson, Jr. College of Business & Economics, the Health Education Center, the Hodge Arena which is home to Spartan Athletics, the Jacobs Arboretum and the Rampey Center, as well as numerous campus land acquisitions. The Foundation’s 28-member Board of Directors oversees Foundation fundraising efforts, as well as endowment and current funds. Victor Austin, Jr. ’90 was elected vice president. A native of Greenville, Austin is founder and president of Palmetto Home Care Upstate, LLC, which specializes in providing individuals with non-medical in home care to promote and maintain confident and independent lifestyles. He currently serves on the Executive Board of the Blue Ridge Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Austin’s past board experience includes The Advisory Board of the Urban League of the Upstate, USC Upstate Alumni Association Board of Directors, and The American Heart Association. Elected as a new board member is C. Dan Adams ’83, president and CEO of The Capital Corporation. He co-founded The Capital Corporation in 1991 as an investment banking firm focusing on mergers and acquisitions to the middle market. He has over 30 years of experience in finance and has directed over 200 merger and acquisition transactions during his career. Active in civic affairs, Adams currently serves on several nonprofit boards including The Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education, The Museum Association, Artisphere Board, Heart Ball and Rose Ball. He has also served on the board of the Boys and Girls Club. He was the USC Upstate 2008 Distinguished partners and vendors that enabled USC Upstate to best utilize resources. Dr. Kevin Krause '06, an adjunct instructor of history, gave the keynote address where he shared his personal story of being paralyzed from the chest down after a diving accident. Four years later he enrolled at USC Upstate to complete his college degree and soon embarked upon an unexpected journey that led to earning a Ph.D. in history and returning to campus to teach, where he is highly-respected and admired among students and faculty. 11 11 In addition to the new appointments, the Foundation Board includes Chris Crowley ’11, Treasurer, Karen Calhoun, Secretary, Ann Angermeier, Vic Bailey, III, Hope Blackley, Ralph Brendle, Matt Cash ’06, Dan Collins ’03, Kenneth E. Darr, Jr. , Chris Dorrance, Teri Ficicchy, Richard Genoble , P. Kathryn Hicks, Charles W. (Chuck) Lowe ’72, Zerno Martin, Cathy McCabe, Michael Meilinger ’93, Max Metcalf, David A. Miller ’90, Mark S. Reilly, Tiffany Santagati-Simpson ’00, D. Ralph Settle, III, Stephanie Tillerson, Cyndi Waters ’83, and Irvine T. (Irv) Welling. Serving as Ex-Officio members are Dr. Thomas F. Moore, Chancellor, Thomas R. Young, III, South Carolina Commission for Higher Education Chairman, Dr. Faruk Tanyel, Faculty Representative, and Roger Sullivan, Executive Director. Emeritus members are George William (Will) Gramling, Katie Hodge, Susan C. Jacobs ’80. “The Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education is pleased to host this celebration each year as it provides an opportunity to pay particular tribute to individuals who have made outstanding contributions in support of USC Upstate,” said Thomas R. Young, III, chairman of the Spartanburg County Commission for Higher Education. “The unwavering commitment of these awardees and the vital role they each play in enriching the legacy of USC Upstate is a true testament to why this University was founded in 1967.” click here for video extra. Magazine 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Shoestring Players' "MEMIGERY" ADVANCES TO REGIONAL FINALS OF THE KENNEDY CENTER AMERICAN COLLEGE THEATRE FESTIVAL BY CAROLYN FARR SHANESY ’95 The University of South Carolina Upstate’s Shoestring Players’ production of “Memigery” has been selected as a regional finalist for the Region IV finals of The Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival. The winner of the regionals will advance to perform at The Kennedy Center. “The last six productions I have directed have been juried by a representative of the The Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival and out of those, four have been cited,” said Jimm Cox, professor of theatre. “This is the first time in 40 years that we have made it to the regional finals for our production of “Memigery.” “Memigery” is a compilation of stories written by USC Upstate theatre students about memories of images from their childhoods, with music composed by student Elliot Ratgen. The production was initially performed at The Rose Theatre in London as a participant in the International Youth Arts Festival and most recently at the South Carolina Theatre Association Convention. “We started by sitting in a circle and we had blank pieces of white paper in front of us and we had X number of weeks to put something onto those pieces of paper,” Cox said. “Students began to tell their stories and they sort of put them together in a narrative and then I revised to give it some dramatic structure, helped with turning a phrase differently for an audience.” 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine The group began to capture physical images that would represent the words being spoken. With only one dancer in the piece, there is a lot of stage movement. The show runs about 68 minutes. “It is such an honor to be selected and to be this close to a performance at The Kennedy Center,” Cox said. “The visibility this brings to the campus, to our program and to these students makes all the sweat, toil and tears worth it.” The cast and technical crew includes: Jordyn Chelf of New Mexico, Seth Kemp of Landrum, Harley Bevill of Greer, Andrea Azmuendi of Mexico, Ryan Barry of Spartanburg, Alistair Mann of Spartanburg, Garrett Gibson of Spartanburg, Michael Quinn of Spartanburg, Eliot Ratgen of Greenville, Jake Salgado of Alabama and Bethany Lancaster of Spartanburg. Region IV is comprised of participating colleges and universities in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky. “Memigery” is sponsored by the USC Upstate Office of Academic Affairs, USC Upstate Faculty and Staff, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard F. Odasz and the General Electric Foundation, the Greenville Healthcare System and Mr. and Mrs. George Dean Johnson, Jr. - Phifer Johnson, a family foundation. 12 12 FACULTY News Faculty and staff members at the University of South Carolina Upstate are committed to ensuring that students appreciate the journey toward earning their degree and are able to maximize opportunities within the University community. s u c o F y t Facul o w T e Tak And as gifted as they are at their jobs, whether in a classroom or office setting, many of them have other interests, too; interests that help give them even greater perspective for encouraging students and colleagues to be all they can be. “Faculty Focus – Take Two” brings to life these other interests in a video-only feature of Upstate Magazine. Through on-location video shoots and in-depth interviews, we can now share some remarkable stories of what faculty and staff members do in their spare time. We hope you enjoy the show and look forward to hearing from you with more leads for “Take Two.” WHAT'S PLAYING Ready for Anything DR. KATHLEEN BRADY Vice Chancellor of Planning, Institutional Research and Metropolitan Studies What started as a way to stay in shape has become an integral part of life for Dr. Kathleen Brady. Three years after stepping onto the mat at Carolina Karate for her first lesson, she is now a brown belt and two-time South Carolina karate champion in her age division. approach are designed to bring out the best in every individual. And bringing out her best is clearly what Brady believes she’s accomplishing. “Whether I’m multitasking or working on one project, I feel more confident,” she added. “It’s about respect, discipline, balance, peace and being ready for anything.” “I’m surprised that I love it as much as I do,” she said. “There is a huge sense of accomplishment in terms of learning technique, using the power that’s already in your body and being able to go within yourself to ‘block out’ all the extra ‘stuff.’” She’s also found that many of the disciplines of karate correlate with those of her “day” job as Vice Chancellor of Planning, Institutional Research and Metropolitan Studies. “Both require strict attention to detail and full engagement at that specific time,” she said. “It’s a very detailed, very disciplined approach that takes full concentration.” Which are the lessons Sensei Tommy Hood of Carolina Karate hopes his students learn. His curriculum and 13 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Staying the Course… Despite Tragedy and Challenges, Blandin Maintains Perspective BY CAROLYN FARR SHANESY ’95 However, it was the one thing that she had never done for herself. After graduating from Parker High School in Greenville, Blandin began working and started a family. Blandin works days at the processing plant for the U.S. Postal Service in Greenville. She studies on lunch breaks, attends classes at night and the day she will graduate is now just a few months away. But her journey to cross the stage with a degree in hand is not one without heartache and struggle along the way. Just a short time after beginning classes at the Greenville campus, Blandin received a phone call that changed her world. As her four children got older, there really wasn’t a reason that she couldn’t concentrate on her own college career, so she applied at the University of South Carolina Upstate. When the phone rang, it was early in the morning on Aug. 30, 2009. “I knew if someone was calling that early in the morning, something was wrong.” Zella Blandin knew the power of a college education. It was one of the things she had always told her children, “get a college education and you can go anywhere.” 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine 14 As she listened to the caller, her stomach was in knots. “‘Ms. Blandin, there’s been an accident…’” The caller, the dean of students at Allen University in Columbia, told her that she needed to drive to Columbia and go to Palmetto Regional Hospital. It was there Blandin would learn that her 20-yearold son, Jerry, a student at Allen University, had died as the result of a head-on collision involving a drunk driver. A second student also was killed and a third severely injured. “Part of me died that day, too,” Blandin said. “He wanted to transfer back to USC Upstate so that we could graduate together.” Heartbroken over the loss of her son, Blandin took more than a year off from school. Coming back was hard, but something she knew she had to do. Zella Blandin works diligently to balance a full-time job and her college coursework, but through it all, she keeps her focus on graduation in May. “I had a good support system – my family, my friends, my coworkers – they all were there for me,” Blandin said. “When I decided to come back, I came and talked to Dr. Judy Prince, she told me, ‘you are on the right track, come on back. If you need to take more time off, you take time off. But you are going to graduate.’” Blandin decided to honor Jerry’s life and switched her major from interdisciplinary studies to business administration. “My college experience has been challenging and joyful,” Blandin said. “I had wanted to focus on psychology and maybe one day be a counselor. The switch to business administration has been a good one.” Blandin said that Prince gave great advice in telling her not to rush herself, to take one or two classes at a time, and that sooner than she thought, she would be ready to graduate. “The administrative staff, especially Dr. Prince, Stacey Mills and Rosie Meindl, have provided guidance, leadership, direction, knowledge and solutions throughout my time here. Being a college student is exciting. It is all I thought it would be and more, and it’s been because I’ve had these people watching out for me.” Blandin said her children have helped her study and have told her all of the same things she used to tell them. “‘You can’t quit, keep pushing, you can do this,’” Blandin said. “So I’ve cheered my way to the finish line with their support. I feel like I’m a better student than I would have been earlier in life. Working full-time, makes be organized, to use your time 15 you wisely, to study an hour when you have an hour.” If she had it all to do over again, Blandin said she wouldn’t think twice. “When people ask what I’m going to do with my degree, I usually respond ‘what will I do without it,” Blandin said. 15 After graduation in May, Blandin hopes to continue working with the Postal Service and through their upward mobility program, find a job in the business sector or the management sector. But for the next months, Blandin is soaking it all up. She said some days she looks around at her classmates and she realizes she’s not the oldest one sitting there. “I try to encourage young people to understand the importance of education, to encourage my peers to seek a degree of their own. You’re never too old.” But she also notices the faces of the young men, their mannerisms and she thinks about the young man that should have been seated there with her. “I love to listen to these young men talk, because they’ve got jokes,” Blandin said. “Some are mild-mannered and polite, they remind me of my son. They remind me that he’s still here with me on this journey. And in my heart, I feel like we are still going to cross that stage together.” Editor’s Note: Jabari Harding, the driver of the vehicle involved in the crash, pleaded guilty to two counts of Reckless Homicide and was sentenced to prison for a term of 10 years on each charge, to be served concurrently. Harding waived a parole hearing last year and according to media accounts was scheduled for release in February. When people ask what I’m going to do with my degree, I usually respond ‘what will I do without it.' 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine COLLABORATION DEFINES TRUE COMMUNITY OUTREACH USC Upstate and Charles Lea Center Program Creates Spirit of Possibilities BY MEG HUNT Participants in the USC Upstate School of Education’s Charles Lea College of Educational Enrichment program were honored for their accomplishments during a graduation ceremony in December. Since 2006, the School of Education at the University of South Carolina Upstate and the Charles Lea Center have collaborated in a college enrichment program that offers classes on campus for adults with special needs. This community outreach program, known as the College Enrichment Experience, has grown from serving 50 participants to now more than 350 in just eight years and continues to serve as a viable example of how these types of educational partnerships truly make a difference. “Many USC Upstate students have had little or no interaction with persons with disabilities, so interacting in this setting allows Upstate 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine students to be directly involved with this population and enables a connection to individuals,” said Dr. Laura Hooks, program director and USC Upstate professor of early childhood education. “Many University students are quick to tell me how much the program’s participants are able to do. It is a great way to focus on strengths not weaknesses.” Each academic semester, participants from the Charles Lea Center make a selection from the program’s course listings. They then attend class one night a week at USC Upstate. A number of School of Education students volunteer with this program each semester and receive clinical/observation hours for their involvement. Faculty members also lend their expertise in teaching the various courses. 16 Courses offered include Reading, Consumer Math, Science, Computer, Health & Fitness, Music, Art, Crafts, Sign Language and Zumba/Dance. After completing five courses, participants earn their Initial Degree of Educational Enrichment. When they complete eight courses, they earn the Advanced Degree of Educational Enrichment. Upon completion of 12 courses, participants earn the Exceptional Degree of Educational Enrichment. Once participants have earned all of the degrees, they can spend two years as interns before being eligible to assist University instructors. “I heard about the Charles Lea Program in my Exceptional Learners class,” said USC Upstate sophomore Kayla Sherbert. “It’s really made a difference in my life seeing my students having fun, enjoying the activities we have for them and helping them further their education.” In addition to the benefit the participants themselves receive, their parents see the program as a positive avenue for interaction. “It means Mark has a chance for a social outlet that’s not open to him any other way,” said his mother Marilyn Clarkson. “It gives him a sense of self-worth, as well as an opportunity for social interaction.” For more than 40 years, the Charles Lea Center has provided innovative services that often cannot be found elsewhere in the Upstate. The collaboration with USC Upstate to provide an inventive approach to continued learning is a testament to the commitment both the Center and the University have to meeting the needs of the community at large. and that many participants’ families didn’t believe they would ever see added Cyndi Beacham, president of the Charles Lea Center Foundation. “For USC Upstate to be able to offer this kind of program is a meaningful example of how educational partnerships can produce positive outcomes with rewarding and ongoing effects,” she noted. For USC Upstate to be able to offer this kind of program is a meaningful example of how educational partnerships can produce positive outcomes with rewarding and ongoing effects. “This is a great opportunity for our individuals to experience college life and to become more integrated in the community,” said CLC Executive Director Dr. Jerry Bernard. “Traditionally, people with disabilities are viewed as not being able to learn, and that’s just not true.” The collaborative nature of a partnership like this provides something many program participants didn’t think was possible Judy Adams McGregor, mother of a College Enrichment Experience participant concurs. “This program offers my daughter, Megan, and the other participants unconditional acceptance,” said McGregor. “It means that I can see my daughter spend time with her peers while she is learning new things and building her self-esteem.” Megan gets super excited on Wednesdays and loves coming to USC Upstate, according to McGregor. And though this is only her third class, she also notes that they are all looking forward to Megan’s completion of the fifth class. “Everybody deserves a chance to go to college and without this program that would not be happening for all of these very special adults,” noted McGregor. “We are looking forward to Megan’s graduation day; I just know she will be so proud, as will I.” This program is an example of how these types of collaborative efforts can not only create new opportunities where none existed before, but can demonstrate the intrinsic value of developing such opportunities that lead to an improved quality of life which effects positive change for all involved. “The Charles Lea Center is forward thinking and very supportive of this partnership,” said Hooks. “Their support and vision have enabled this partnership to grow and strengthen. It is a win-win for both USC Upstate students and those who come to the College Enrichment Program. I am honored to be a part of this program.” 17 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine FACULTY FAST FORWARD MONTESO COORDINATING TRANSLATING AND INTERPRETING PANEL Maria Monteso, Spanish instructor in the Department of Language, Literature and Composition, has spearheaded efforts for the first Translating and Interpreting Panel to be held March 23 in USC Upstate’s Tukey Theater. The program will focus on raising awareness about the quality and ethics of professional translating and interpreting. Despite today’s demand for Spanish translators and interpreters in the United States, the number of unqualified translators and interpreters continues to hinder effective integration of the Hispanic community. BUTLER SERVES THE NEEDS OF BUSINESS TRANSFER STUDENTS Prospective business students wishing to transfer to the George Dean Johnson, Jr. College of Business and Economics will find a new resource with the hiring of Sarah C. Butler as the transfer advisor and student services coordinator. She will provide an array of services to transfer students, current students enrolled at the USC Upstate Greenville Campus and prospective transfer students from community colleges. BECK SERVING AS PRESIDENT OF REGIONAL TEACHER EDUCATORS ORGANIZATION Dr. Judy Beck, interim director of Greenville Campus and director of Teacher Education Programs, was elected president of the Southeastern Regional Association of Teacher Educators (SRATE) earlier this year. She was also recently elected to the Association of Teacher Education Board of Directors and currently serves as a member of the Legislative and Niagara Falls Planning Committee. In addition, she is executive director for the South Carolina Association of Teacher Educators (SCATE). GOLDBERG RECOGNIZED AS FEATURED SCHOLAR BY USC OFFICE OF RESEARCH Dr. Abraham Goldberg, assistant professor of political science, has leveraged his research program to promote citizenship and livable communities throughout South Carolina. He recently released the South Carolina Civic Health Index, which analyzes political participation, community involvement, and neighborhood engagement rates across residents with varying levels of educational attainment, race, and age. The report offers recommendations aimed at enhancing citizenship across the state. 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine TURNER RECOGNIZED WITH CLEAN WATER CHAMPION HONOR Dr. Jack Turner, director of the Watershed Ecology Center, was recently recognized by Upstate Forever as a Clean Water Champion during the Sixth Annual ForeverGreen Awards Luncheon which celebrates individuals and organizations for significant contributions in the fields of land conservation, water quality, air quality, sustainable development, waste reduction, public service and volunteer work. Since the creation of the Watershed Ecology Center in 1999, Turner has been educating children – and adults – about the need to be good stewards of the environment and its resources. The outreach efforts he and WEC staff continue to promote have reached nearly 70,000 in Spartanburg County. ONEY PRESENTS TWO ORIGINAL COMPOSITIONS DURING BIG BAND CONCERT Commercial Music faculty member Dr. Tish Oney recently presented her nationally touring big band show, “BEYOND THE SEA: Tish Oney’s Big Band Excursion” during which she introduced two of her original compositions. The audience enjoyed a concert which also featured fellow Commercial Music faculty members Shannon Hoover, Adam Knight and Vern Weygandt and music for an 18-piece jazz orchestra written by Grammy winning arranger Chris Walden, as well as the world premiere of a new big band work by jazz legend Joe Riposo with lyrics by Oney. Special guests were the Greenville Jazz Collective Big Band, a professional jazz orchestra. Proceeds from the concert supported jazz education in the Upstate. BAREISS WINS TOP AWARD IN REGIONAL COMPETITION Dr. Warren Bareiss, assistant professor of mass media in the Department of Fine Arts and Communication Studies, will be honored in April for a paper he submitted to the Gender Studies Division for the Southern States Communication Association. The paper, "Mothers, Daughters, and Ritual Abjection: Narrative Analysis of Adolescent Self-Injury in Four US Films,” examines the construction of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) in motion picture films, “Girl, Interrupted,” “Secret Cutting,” “Prozac Nation,” and “Thirteen.” He said this was the first time that he had ever entered a paper in this division, as most of his work focuses on Health Communications. In addition to this honor, he will participate in a panel discussion at the Central States Communication Association April 15-19. 18 Into Athletics Hall of Fame The USC Upstate Athletic Department welcomed five new inductees into its Athletics Hall of Fame recently. The Class of 2015 consists of all-time greats Ricky Charles from men’s soccer, Shay (Slater) Norris from softball, Anna Novo from Women’s tennis, Luke Payne from men’s basketball and Angie (Gambrell) Russell from volleyball. The Hall of Fame, established in 1998-99, honors individuals for outstanding athletic accomplishments and/or who have made significant contributions to USC Upstate Athletics. All former student-athletes, coaches and athletic administrators and staff are eligible for nomination. RICKY CHARLES ’03 In a program chalked full of excellence, Charles transcended the storied program both in numbers and impact. After transferring to Upstate as a Junior College All-American at Bryant & Stratton, Charles was phenomenal in his two seasons as a Rifle at USC Upstate, then USC Spartanburg, from 2002 to 2003. He led the team to back-to-back appearances in the NCAA Division II quarterfinals and was a two-time All-American selection. He finished his career ranked 10th all-time in scoring at Upstate with all nine players above him playing four seasons at the 19 19 University. In fact, Charles averaged 57.5 points per season and finished just 62 points shy of the all-time program record of 177 held by fellow Hall of Fame member Henrik Ronnevig. SHAY (SLATER) NORRIS ’08 Shay (Slater) Norris is the fifth person affiliated with the softball program to be inducted into the Upstate Athletics Hall of Fame and the first to have played a portion of her career on the Division I level. A member of the program from 2004-08, she spent the first three seasons of her career leading the Spartans to three-straight appearances in the NCAA Division II Tournament before helping lead the team to a share of the 2008 Atlantic Sun Conference Regular Season Championship as a senior in Upstate’s first year playing on the Division I level. She set the all-time single-season records with 89 hits and 70 runs, both of which are records that remain today. She currently ranks 10th all-time in the history of the program with a .370 batting average and leads the all-time career lists in games played and started, runs scored, stolen bases and at-bats. ANNA NOVO ’09 Anna Novo, who played from 2005-09, is the third person affiliated with the women’s tennis program to be inducted into the Upstate Athletics Hall of Fame and is the first who played at least a portion of her career on the Division I level. She burst onto the scene as a freshman in 2005-06 and was named the Peach Belt Conference Freshman of the Year and a First Team All-Conference selection in singles after leading the Spartans to a 7-2 conference record and a third-place finish in the Peach Belt Conference Tournament. When Upstate transitioned to NCAA Division I membership in 2007-08, she and the team flourished just as it had on the Division II level. She ranks first all-time with 161 career combined wins, 90 career singles victories, 71 career doubles wins, 52 combined wins in a season (2007-08) and 47 singles wins in a season (2008-09). LUKE PAYNE ’08 Luke Payne is the 14th person affiliated with the men’s basketball program to be inducted into the Upstate Athletics Hall of Fame. He is also the first to have played at least a portion of his career on the Division I level. A member of the program from 2004-08, he helped the Spartans reach the national stage in NCAA Division II. He was instrumental in helping lead the team to the 2004-05 Peach Belt Conference regular season championship, marking the first league title for the program since Magazine 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine Upstate Softball Picked to Win A-Sun Robinson and Shubert Title Picked as League’s Best After winning two straight A-Sun championships, making two consecutive appearances in the NCAA Tournament and returning a veteran team, the USC Upstate softball team has been picked to win the Atlantic Sun regular season championship. In addition to the Spartans being picked to repeat as A-Sun regular season champs, senior outfielder Shellie Robinson has been voted as the Preseason Player of the Year, while sophomore Lexi Shubert has been unanimously tabbed as the Preseason Pitcher of the Year. The two are joined on the preseason all-conference team by seniors Cheyenne Griffin and Kendall Settlemyre. Upstate was a unanimous selection to win the A-Sun regular season title and earned the maximum 64 points and eight first-place votes in the preseason coaches poll. The Spartans are coming off a 2014 campaign that saw it run away with the regular season championship with a 22-2 record. That came one year after the team claimed the 2013 A-Sun Tournament title. “We have a lot of veterans on the team who have been through battles and achieved a tremendous amount of success over the last few years, including winning two conference championships the last two seasons. So, it is not a surprise that the A-Sun coaches have picked us to win the regular season championship again,” said Upstate head coach Chris Hawkins. “Like I say every year…we are proud of the success that we have achieved, but this year's team has to put that aside and work hard to get better every day of the season if we want to put ourselves in position to achieve our goals. We have built a solid reputation and received a lot of respect, but that is not going to win us games. The work we put into it will.” Upstate is coming off arguably its top season in the history of the program in 2014. The Spartans finished the year with a 46-9 the 1991-92 season. He helped lead the transition to Division I when he was the goto player on the 2007-08 squad during the school’s first year playing on the Division I level and in the Atlantic Sun Conference. Payne ranks 10th all-time with 1,381 points, is in the Top 5 all-time in free throws made, three-pointers made and attempted and games started and in the Top 10 in assists, field goals attempted and games played. ANGIE GAMBRELL RUSSELL ’90 Angie Gambrell Russell is the 10th person 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine overall record and stormed through the A-Sun to the tune of a 22-2 record en route to its second regular season A-Sun title and third overall (2013 A-Sun Tournament championship) in seven years. Upstate also advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive season, this time as an at-large selection while marking the first time that has occurred in the history of A-Sun softball. Hawkins, who is in his 21st year as head coach of the program and who surpassed the 700-win plateau last year, returns a veteran squad in 2015 with 10 seniors on the team. That unit helped the 2014 Spartans break the program's all-time record for wins in a season on the Division I level, A-Sun wins, home runs and eight other team records. One senior that Hawkins can rely on is Robinson. She was a 2014 NFCA Third Team All-American and the A-Sun Player of the Year. She led the conference in runs, doubles, total bases and slugging percentage and was second in batting average, home runs and on-base percentage in 2014. Hawkins will also rely on Shubert to carry the load in the circle as the only returning pitcher from last year's pitching corps that was ranked No. 1 in the nation in ERA late in the season and finished the year among the country's elite staffs. She was the A-Sun Freshman of the Year and a first team all-conference selection. Griffin and Settlemyre were first team all-conference selections a year ago in leading Upstate at the corner infield positions. Griffin hit .337 with 32 RBIs and 27 runs last year while maintaining tremendous discipline defensively with a .993 fielding percentage at first base. Settlemyre ranked second on the team and fifth in the A-Sun with a .373 batting average en route to earning her first all-conference nod at third base. affiliated with the volleyball program to be inducted into the Upstate Athletics Hall of Fame. She played both volleyball and softball at then-USC Spartanburg from 1986-90. She is being inducted for her efforts on the volleyball court where she was a two-time All-District Six selection and remains among the all-time greats in the record books. Her teams topped the 30-win mark all four years she wore a Lady Rifle uniform and she led the team to 134 victories in her career (134-47). She was a part of three-straight NAIA District Six championship teams from 1987-89 and helped lead those teams into the NAIA Nationals. She still owns the all-time single game school record with 31 kills. She was also a tremendous defensive player at the net and still owns the program’s all-time records with 516 total blocks and 266 solo blocks. She is second all-time with 250 assisted blocks and fourth all-time with 1,639 points, fifth with 1,148 kills and seventh with 1,095 digs. 20 20 Notes 1981 2002 Nancy Holland has been named executive director of Mental Health America of Spartanburg County. Cathy J. Drummond is establishing a new non-profit called the Love Never Fails Center. 1983 Felicia Reid is the CEO of her new business, All Seasons Counseling & Mediation Services, LLC, in Orangeburg. Jon McClure was honored during the Entrepreneurs Forum Gala for his accomplishments in business and contributions to the prosperity of Upstate South Carolina. He founded ISO Poly Films, Inc., and is now constructing a warehouse in Hunter Industrial Park in Laurens, S.C. 2005 Cyntreena Palmer is currently working on her first book. Jessica Singleton now works as a Mental Health Counselor at the Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice. 2006 2009 Chip Johnson retired after 27-year career in public education. 1987 Renee Meehan started I Teach, LLC, a new business teaching and tutoring students in mathematics and handwriting. 2008 Matthew Cash is a new member of the USC Upstate Foundation Board. 2007 LaKisha Spears was named director of development for Charlotte United Christian Academy. Liam Slack received the Dissertation Award from the Association for Applied Sport Psychology, an international professional organization that promotes the field of sport and exercise psychology. The award recognizes the completion of an outstanding dissertation by an AASP doctoral student. Dr. Aleksey Zelenko and associate Dr. Andy R. Butcher recently opened the Palmetto Dental Studio in Pelzer, S.C. This new practice offers state-of-the-art general and cosmetic dentistry services. Alumni News CLASS 2010 Stephen McMillan is in his first year of working and coaching at Saluda High School. SHOW YOUR SPARTAN PRIDE IN TOWN AND ON THE HIGHWAY WITH A DISTINCTIVE USC UPSTATE LICENSE PLATE! For only $70 you could sport this official tag on your vehicle AND have $40 of that amount sent to the USC Upstate General Scholarship Fund as a tax-deductible contribution! The time is now - commit to purchasing this new license plate and help support the University! REGISTER BY MARCH 1. Contact the Alumni Office at 864-503-5240 or cnestlen@uscupstate.edu for more information. You can also visit www.uscupstate.edu/licenseplate. 21 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine CLASS Notes 2011 Chris Crowley is a new member of the USC Upstate Foundation Board. 2013 Kimberly Young has written “Live a Wonderful Life: Free of Financial Stress,” an e-book now available on Kindle/Amazon. The book provides a financial guide for those who may struggle with day-to-day and longterm choices. Yuliya Kapralov now works for SantoLubes. Alumni News Anita Brinager is a registered nurse at Spartanburg Regional Hospital. Benjamin Augenstein is a volunteer assistant baseball/pitching coach at Cal Ripken League and Indian River Elite Baseball in Vero Beach, Florida. Marriages 2014 In Memory Matthew Johnson now works as videographer for University Communications at USC Upstate. Shaunta Manigault ’05 married Zachary Jones on May 25, 2014. Evelyn B. Caldwell ’71 passed away on December 5, 2014. Mikey Eaves now works for SantoLubes. Wayne Truesdale ’89 passed away on December 14, 2014. Engagements Jeffery Doyle Black ’98 passed away on November 12, 2014. Jessica Flack ’12 and Matthew Skinner ’10 are engaged to be married on April 11. Shanna Alexander ’04 and Steve Corn are engaged to be married on May 30. UPCOMING EVENTS Mark Your Calendar! FRIDAY, MAY 1 FRIDAY, MAY 15 Bike Race Tailgate Main Street Spartanburg 6th Annual Alumni Golf Tournament Woodfin Ridge Golf Course For more information about these or other events, contact: CHARLIANNE NESTLEN, ‘03 Director of Alumni Relations (864) 503-5240 • cnestlen@uscupstate.edu Alumni Relations Office is now located in Library 202 to better serve alumni from a central point on main campus. Stop by and see us! 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine 22 Then as Now USC UPSTATE GIVES STUDENTS A CHOICE AND A CHANCE From humble beginnings in 1967 in Spartanburg General Hospital with just 177 students, USC Upstate has grown to become the only four-year public university on the I-85 corridor and is a campus now serving more than 5,500 students. Driven to always be responsive to the economic needs of Spartanburg, Greenville and the Upstate, the University continues to respond to changes in the community with high quality, affordable education attracting students from the area and around the world – the majority of whom stay in the Upstate upon graduation. 23 With your support, we can ensure that these students will be able to meet the challenges and help shape the ever-changing future of the Upstate. For more information on how you can further these efforts, go to www.uscupstate.edu/advancement or contact: Bea Walters Smith Director of Development and Foundation Scholarships 864-503-5235 or bwsmith@uscupstate.edu Roger Sullivan Vice Chancellor for University Advancement 864-503-7417 or rsullivan@uscupstate.edu 2015 Winter Upstate Magazine NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION US POSTAGE 800 University Way Spartanburg, SC 29303 PAID SPARTANBURG, SC PERMIT N0. 104 Address Service Requested This Summer, think Upstate. Visit www.uscupstate.edu/admissions. Homecoming 2015 saw many alumni return to campus for fun and fellowship. A reading and reception was held for Mary Ann Claud in honor of her first book, “The Dancin’ Man.” Upstate business leaders joined JCBE students and faculty for breakfast recently to share their expertise. Brian Nash and Carter Smith from the Spartanburg Economic Futures Group were two of the speakers for the Wells Fargo Speaker Series in February. Alice Rodriquez, left, and Dr. Angie Davis, interim assistant director of the Mary Black School of Nursing, share a moment during Heart Week. Dr. Tish Oney, assistant professor of music, performs during her nationally touring big band show, “BEYOND THE SEA: Tish Oney’s Big Band Excursion.” U.S. Army Veteran and Purple Heart recipient Roger D. McCullough, right, was recognized and honored for service to his country during a recent Spartans basketball game. JCBE business faculty and students underwent training to participate with the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program.