AlumniVoice_Winter2013_Web.pdf

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e v o L Do You Why! Tell Us

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il y in S m a F s l l u B a tings from INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

From the Fields to the White House Pg. 16 Engineering the Future Pg. 18 Meet Coach T. Pg. 36



CONTENTS FEATURES

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14 The Kantor Family Adventure in Spain Rob and Gabriela Kantor say hasta luego to their friends, family and business in Tampa to spend a year in a small village in northern Spain raising their sons and reconnecting as a family. Their philosophy is that the only risks you regret are the ones you don’t take.

16 From the Fields to the White House Lourdes Villanueva grew up as a migrant farmworker. With hard work, determination and a little support from the Redlands Christian Migrant Association, she earned a degree in social work and was named as a White House Head Start Champion of Change for her work on behalf of migrant families.

18 Engineering the Future Gordon and Paula Gillette consider the scholarships they endow for USF engineering students as part of their broader efforts to support the university that means so much to them.

36 Meet Coach T.

Alumni Voice is printed with bio-renewable ink at Interprint, a TEC-certified Green printing facility.

New Bulls Football Head Coach Willie Taggart is proud to be back in Bulls Country and is ready to rumble.

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DEPARTMENTS

Father of USF

Sam Gibbons

2 Why Do You Love USF? 3 President’s Message 4 USFAA Board of Directors 7 News Roundup 10 Where’s Rocky? 19 Bulls Eye: USFSP 19 Bulls Eye: Dodé Ackey 20 Bulls Eye: Shawna Machado 22 Blast from the Past

23 That was Then, This is Now 24 Chapters & Societies 27 Employ-A-Bull 28 Alumni Travel 29 Class Notes 34 2012 Annual Report Summary 36 Athletics 37 Calendar

January 20, 1920 – October 10, 2012

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Alumni Voice® USF Alumni Association Gibbons Alumni Center University of South Florida 4202 East Fowler Avenue, ALC100 Tampa, Florida 33620 alumni@usf.edu USFalumni.org Alumni Voice Editorial: Karla Jackson, jacksonk@usf.edu or Rita Kroeber, rkroeber@usf.edu Advertising: Rita Kroeber, rkroeber@usf.edu or 813-974-6312 Design: State of Mind Design, LLC Contributors in this Issue: Drema Howard, Ph.D Karla Jackson, `88 Hilary Lehman Meghan Palmer Tom Scherberger Alumni Association Contact Information Executive Director: Bill McCausland, MBA `96 Membership: 813-974-2100 or 800-299-BULL Alumni & Student Programs: 813-974-2100 General Alumni e-mail: alumni@usf.edu Giving/Scholarships: Ron Sherman, `74 rsherman@usf.edu USF Bulls License Plate: www.BullsPlate.org Alumni Association website: USFalumni.org Letters to the editor are encouraged. Please write to Karla Jackson at jacksonk@usf.edu or mail to the address at the top of the page. Views expressed in Alumni Voice do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the USF Alumni Association, the University of South Florida or the editorial staff. ALUMNI VOICE (USPS# 025203) Number 23 Alumni Voice is published quarterly in the Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall as a benefit of membership in the University of South Florida Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. Periodical Postage Paid at Tampa, FL. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: University of South Florida Alumni Association, Communications Department, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. New Address? Moving? Update your official USF alumni record at myUSFbio.org or email your information to alumni@usf.edu. You also may remove the magazine label and send it with your correct address to Alumni Voice, USF Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave. ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620. © 2012 All rights reserved.

president’s message Hello Fellow Alumni, As I think about the year ahead, two things become crystal clear for me. First of all, now more than ever, I am incredibly proud to be a USF graduate. Second, I’ve come to recognize the power that each of us individually as alumni and collectively as part of the Alumni Association have on the future of our university. Over the 20 years since I graduated there have been many shining moments for USF that have given me great pride to be a Bull. However in the past year, we have outdone ourselves, with nationally recognized professors and the most academically gifted incoming freshman class we have ever had. And now we have an exciting new head football coach! Across all of USF’s campuses, incredibly hard working faculty, staff, administrators, and most of all students, are striving every day to continue this trajectory of global success. It extends from our campuses to the more than 265,000 alumni around the world who are excelling in their endeavors and proving that USF is unstoppable. In this issue you will read about just a few of these alumni, like Tampa Electric President Gordon Gillette and his wife Paula, who were so moved by hearing from students what it meant to receive a scholarship they endowed Engineering scholarships themselves. And you’ll also read about Lourdes Rodriquez, who, through hard work and perseverance, went from a life as a migrant farmworker to become the Director of Advocacy for the Redlands Christian Migrant Association and a White House Champion of Change. Also featured is Robert Kantor who, along with his wife, Gabriela, and business partner, Jason Sluka, built a company that is not only profitable, but also helps to “make people better.” The next few months will be a busy time for your USF Alumni Association. I hope you will join your fellow Bulls at the inaugural Fast 56 Awards dinner on April 12. This program recognizes the 56 fastest-growing USF alumni owned or managed businesses. These hardworking Bulls are a great example of the impact USF has locally and nationally. We’re also planning to have a little Caribbean-style fun at our 3rd annual Bulls Around the World gala, scheduled for March 9. You can visit www.USFalumni.org for ticket information for both of those events. It’s a great way to network and enjoy yourself at the same time. For me, the USF Alumni Association is the best way I’ve found to share my Bull pride and reconnect with alumni from around the world. Its only purpose is to help make USF successful. If you are not already a Life Member of the USF Alumni Association, we’ve made it easier than ever with a new installment plan that makes it very affordable. Won’t you help us help USF succeed? I wish you the best for 2013 and look forward to seeing you at the Fast 56 Awards dinner on April 12 and at the Bulls Around the World gala in March. Go Bulls!

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Did You Know?

There are more than 260,000 USF alumni nationwide and dozens of chapters and societies you can join to stay connected. See page 26 for contact information.

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION 1. Publication Title: Alumni Voice 2. Publication Number: USPS# 025-203 3. Filing Date: 10/8/12 4. Issue frequency: Quarterly 5. Number of Issues Published Annually: 4 6. Annual subscription price: Free to USF Alumni Association members 7. Mailing Address of Office of Publication: 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. 8. Mailing Address of Publisher’s Business Office: 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. 9. Full Names and Mailing addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing Editor: Publisher: Bill McCausland, USF Alumni Association, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. Editor: Karla Jackson, USF Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. Managing Editor: Rita B. Kroeber, USF Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. 10. Owner: University of South Florida Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455. 11. There are no known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders. 12. Tax status has not changed in the previous 12 months 13. Publication Title: Alumni Voice 14. Issue Date for Circulation Below: Fall 2012

15. Extent & Nature of Circulation A) Total number of copies printed (Net Press Run): B) Requested distribution: (1) Outside County Requested Subscriptions, including written, internet, telemarketing requests, advertiser’s proof copies and exchange copies: (2) In-County Requested Subscriptions, including written, internet, telemarketing requests, advertiser’s proof copies and exchange copies: (3) Sales through dealers, carriers, street vendors and others paid or requested distribution outside USPS: (4) Requested copies sent through other USPS mail classes: C) Total requested circulation: D) Non-requested Distribution: (1) Outside County Nonrequested Copies, including sample copies, requests over 3 years old, requests induced by a premium, bulk sales and names obtained from other sources: (2) In-County Nonrequested Copies, including sample copies, requests over 3 years old, requests induced by a premium, bulk sales and names obtained from other sources: (3) Non-requested copies sent through other USPS mail classes: (4) Non-requested copies distributed outside of the Mail: E) Total Non-requested distribution: F) Total distribution: G) Copies not distributed, including spoiled after printing: H) Total: I) Percent requested circulation:

Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months

No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date

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613 12,744 256 13,000 95.1%

16. The Statement of Ownership will be printed in the January (Winter) 2013 Issue. 17. Rita Kroeber, Managing Editor

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Your 2012-13 USF Alumni Association Board of Directors These fellow alumni volunteer their time to work with your USF Alumni Association leadership and staff to fulfill our promise to you: to connect alumni and create meaningful ways for you to help USF succeed. Front row, from left: 1 Betty Otter Nickerson, `76; 2 Christi Womack-Villalobos, `92; 3 Kimberly Choto, `92 & M.A. `02; 4 Lisa Provenzano Heugel, `93, `96, & M.S. `07; and 5 Merritt Martin, `04 & MPA `06. Middle row, from left: 6 Lee Winter, `85; 7 Mary Harper, `97, M.Ed `01 & Ph.D `07; 8 Audrey Hirst, `89 & M.S. `94; 9 Ed Hoeppner, `81; 10 Donna Brickman, `81; 11 Jon Smith, MBA `07; 12 Richard Hedley, `93 & M.Acc `95; 13 Michael Peppers, `85 & M.Acc `90; 14 Manley Jaquiss, `86; 15 Michael Griffin, `03; and 16 Brad Kelly, `79. Back row, from left: 17 Jeff Reynolds, `91; 18 Ken Griffin, `96 & MBA `98; 19 Randy Norris, `79; 20 Monty Weigel, `76; 21 Bill McCausland, MBA `96; 22 Rich Heruska, `99; 23 Brian Campbell, `93; 24 Sean Grosso, `05 & M.A. `08; 25 George Pappadeas; 26 Andrew Mayts, `93; 27 Carl Abeleda; 28 Tony Umholtz, `99 & MBA `02; and 29 Andrew Coe, `95 & MBA `00. Ex-Officio members not pictured: USF System President Dr. Judy Genshaft; USF Foundation Board Chairman Gordon Gillette, `81 & M.S. `85; and USF Senior Vice President of Advancement and Alumni Affairs Joel Momberg. 17

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news roundup

Fall 2012 Outstanding Graduates Daniel Boyd, `12, a graduate of USF St. Petersburg, and Marina Cosgrove, `12, a graduate of USF Sarasota-Manatee, were named Fall 2012 Outstanding Graduates by your USF Alumni Association. Boyd graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Accounting. A married father with an infant daughter, Boyd earned a 3.85 overall grade point average while working full time as CFO of his family’s business, operating a graphic design and illustration company part time, and serving in leadership roles with USF St. Petersburg’s chapter of the finance and accounting honor society, Beta Alpha Psi. Boyd participated in community service efforts benefitting Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Habitat for Humanity, and Project Homeless Connect, among others. He has an internship in the Tampa office of the Big Four accounting firm, Deloitte, focusing on international taxation and plans to take his CPA exams, in addition to pursuing an MBA at USF St. Petersburg. Cosgrove, a native of Yugoslavia, earned a Bachelor’s degree in Accounting, with an overall grade point average of 3.83. Overcoming a language barrier, Cosgrove has been a student leader, serving as an officer for USF Sarasota-Manatee’s chapter of the Future Business Leaders of America-Phi Beta Lambda, and as a member of the university’s Accounting Society, and the Phi Kappa Phi and Phi Theta Kappa honor societies. Cosgrove plans to begin a career in accounting and earn a Master’s degree in Accounting. Both Outstanding Graduates were recognized during commencement ceremonies Dec. 16. Congratulations, Daniel and Marina!

USF Named “Best Value” University The University of South Florida ranks among the nation’s top 100 best values in public higher education for 201213, according to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, the country’s oldest personal finance magazine. USF claimed the 57th spot on the latest Kiplinger’s list, which ranks four-year colleges and universities that combine outstanding education with economic value. Admission rate, incoming freshman test scores, freshman-to-sophomore retention, student-faculty ratio, and four- and six-year graduation rates are among the factors that Kiplinger’s uses to assess each school’s quality. Cost criteria, meanwhile, include tuition, fees, room and board, financial aid, and average debt at graduation. The overall rankings are based on various considerations as they affect in-state students, though each college

or university also receives a secondary “out-of-state” score (with USF ranking 56th in that category in 2012-13).

University Presidents Unite Launching a new initiative in partnership with student government leaders, Florida’s state university presidents have joined forces to ask for a $118 million state investment in their institutions that would allow universities to freeze tuition at current rates. With that investment, the university presidents said they would not raise tuition by “even one penny.” University of South Florida System President Dr. Judy Genshaft was among those highlighting their institutions’ powerful annual economic impact – nearly $80 billion systemwide – and their vital roles in training Florida’s future workforce. The presidents also supported tying the additional state investment to performance goals, such as increased graduation rates. Although tuition at Florida’s public universities remains among the lowest in the country, students and their families have faced double-digit tuition increases in recent years as universities have coped with severe state budget cuts. The State University System of Florida’s state funding has been cut almost 40 percent during the past five years. A state investment of $118 million would be the equivalent of the revenue generated by a 15 percent tuition increase at each of the state universities next year. State funding, which once covered about three-fourths of the cost of a student’s higher education, now pays for less than half of the cost at most state universities.

America’s Best Doctors Work at USF Health Thirty-six percent of the local physicians who made the 2012 Best Doctors in America® list work at USF Health. The annual list for Best Doctors in America is compiled from surveys of physicians asking them who they would go to for treatment in their specialty. The result is a national listing of 45,000 physicians in more than 40 specialties. Locally, the USF totals went up in all three areas: on-staff faculty, volunteer faculty, and alumni (MD degree program, as well as graduates from USF resident physician and fellowship programs). This year, the list included 594 physicians from the Tampa Bay area. Of that, 212 are full-time, courtesy or adjunct physicians for USF. The list also included 102 physicians who are volunteer and affiliate faculty members for USF, and 132 Continued on page 9 WINTER 2013 | ALUMNIVOICE

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news roundup

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alumni of the USF Morsani College of Medicine (many alumni are also faculty – those numbers are not double counted in the overall total), bringing the total to 407 physicians (69 percent) who have a connection with USF Health. “Clearly, USF is a force in local health care,” said Stephen K. Klasko, MD, MBA, dean of the USF College of Medicine and CEO of USF Health.

Engineering Professor is Named 2012 U.S. Professor of the Year Autar Kaw, a University of South Florida mechanical engineering professor who was an early adopter of new technologies and social media to teach complex mathematical calculations, has been named a 2012 U.S. Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Kaw, a USF professor for 25 years, is one of four professors – selected from more than 300 nominees – to receive the award that is considered the nation’s highest honor for undergraduate teaching. Kaw was selected in the category

of Outstanding Doctoral and Research Universities Professor of the Year. He was lauded for his innovative work in using technology and social media to reach tens of thousands of students around the world studying to be engineers. Known to engineering students as the “Numerical Methods Guy” through his Holistic Numerical Methods Institute website, his blog and YouTube video lectures, Kaw has dedicated his career to eliminating one of the most significant obstacles to engineering students being successful by providing students everywhere free access to supplemental lessons. “The U.S. Professor of the Year award is the highest honor in the nation for undergraduate teaching and Dr. Kaw’s selection reaffirms what the University of South Florida and his students have long known about this exceptional professor and outstanding individual: His commitment to education and his dedication to his students knows no bounds,” said USF President Judy Genshaft. Sources: USF University Communications and Marketing, USF Health

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Rocky? where’s

Take Rocky on your next trip and send your photos to: Karla Jackson at jacksonk@usf.edu or to her attention at the USF Alumni Association, 4202 E. Fowler Ave. ALC100, Tampa, FL 33620-5455.

The Wells family, two generations of proud USF Bulls, took a trip to Antigua in August. Pictured here, exploring Devil’s Bridge with Rocky, are from left: Jake Wells, USF sophomore; Kimberly Wells, `93; John W. Wells III, `90; and Shelby Wells, USF freshman.

Larry and Mary Boswell, both Class of `84, took Rocky with them to the top of Mount Mitchell in North Carolina.

USF Geology alumni Angela Dippold Beeson, M.S. `09, and Jeff Beeson, `08, were married in October in Pennsylvania, with Rocky and their fellow geology alumni in attendance. From left are: Adam Springer, M.S. `10; Andrea Hughes, `07; the bride and groom; Dorien McGee, Ph.D `10 and Sean Callihan, M.S. `10.

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Jackie McCain, `04, and Brandon Whiteman, `04, far left and far right respectively, were married in May in Lima, Peru. The newlyweds traveled to Machu Picchu with eight other USF alumni, including Brandon’s parents, USF Alumni Association Life Members Cheryl and Tom Whiteman, `71, center.

Kevin Jackson, `85, shows Rocky what autumn is like in the Smoky Mountains while visiting Waynesville, NC.

Joyce McFaul, `84, met one of Rocky’s cousins during her 25th wedding anniversary trip to Belfast last summer.

Michelle Barkoviak Pizarro, `07 and MHA `11, and Jose Pizarro, `08, took Rocky on their Alaskan honeymoon cruise last summer and showed him the sights in Skagway.

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Where’s Rocky?

Tara Klimek Price, `01 and her mother-in-law, Mary Beth Fry Cooper, `70, rafted the Colorado River in July with their family and Rocky. They’re pictured here at a waterfall in Rock Creek, AZ.

Scott Wheeler, `83, USF sophomore Kelsey Wheeler, and Rocky enjoyed the views and did a little snorkeling during their trip to Cancun last summer.

Louis Struikman, `07, chair of the USF Alumni chapter in Atlanta, took Rocky along on a business trip to Lusaka, Zambia last summer. Matt McCollough, `87, took his family on an Alaskan cruise in July and Rocky stowed away with them so he could check out Ketchikan.

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Jim Parkhill, M.Ed `86, and his wife Laura were a house divided at the USF vs University of Nevada-Reno game last fall, but they both enjoyed meeting Rocky. Rocky met a medicine man when he accompanied Janice Hill, MPH `91, to a pow-wow in the Kahnawake Mohawk Territory in Quebec last summer.

USF Alumni Association Life Member Tina Johnson, `80, and Rocky explored Machu Picchu in Peru last August.

Diane Upton Williams and her husband Michael, both Class of `06, visited Etosha National Park in Namibia with Rocky. WINTER 2013 | ALUMNIVOICE

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Feature Rob Kantor

The Kantor family with the U.S. Ambassador to Spain and Andorra, Alan Solomont, and his wife Susan, at left.

Bulls in Spain The Kantor Family says hasta luego and heads across the Atlantic for an adventure. By Karla Jackson, `88

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Holding down the fort at work is fellow Bull ast fall, Rob Kantor and his wife Jason Sluka, `98, co-owner of Suncoast and a Gabriela, bought five one-way airline friend of Kantor’s since their days in the second tickets – one each for them and their three young boys – to Burgos, grade in Ellenville, NY. Of course, it’s not like a city in northern Spain that they Kantor and Gabriela, a USF Class of `99 Chemical Engineering grad, just up and left everything for had never visited, located some 4,400 miles and a Sluka to handle while they traipsed off to Europe. world away from their New Tampa home. Their The “Kantor Family Adventure,” as it’s called on goal: To live there for a year, become fluent in proper Castilian Spanish, immerse themselves in the family’s blog, required four years of careful the European culture and strengthen their bond as planning, both personally and professionally. It was November 2008 when Kantor a family. approached his wife and his business partner with So how’s that working out for them? his dream of moving his family abroad for a year. “It’s been an amazing transition for our Fortunately, they were both family,” says Kantor, `94, CEO “We’re so proud of Suncoast Coffee Service and receptive to the idea. Gabriela, who speaks fluent Spanish, Vending. “Seven days a week, to be USF alumni and I have three meals a day with grateful for the education loved the thought of bonding as a family and giving their my family. We have siesta we received.” sons – Frank, Benjamin, and every day and come home for lunch. We take walks, hold hands. Coming from Harry, now 9, 7 and 4, respectively – a chance to working 50-60 hours a week, as a father having “take off their American glasses” and get a broader perspective of the world. However, more time this time with my boys is priceless.”

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with the family means less time committed to growing and at work, so Kantor and Sluka had becoming better versions of to figure out how to make that themselves, it naturally flows into Rob Kantor, `94 happen while keeping Suncoast their job and the way they do growing strong. Q. What is the last book you read? their job,” says Kantor. “That’s “It forced us to build an why companies like Publix, A. Do You! by Russell Simmons even better infrastructure, Southwest Airlines, Chick-fil-A, quicker,” Kantor says of the Zappos – the list goes on and Q. What is your favorite movie? business. “When you’re an on – consider their culture to be A. “Gandhi” entrepreneur you wear a lot such an important part of their Q. Where is your favorite place of different hats. You can’t just business strategy.” in the world? walk away from your company. The strategy seems to be A. San Carlos de Bariloche, It took four years of planning working for Suncoast. Year-toArgentina, a spectacular town to bring in other players to help date sales in the coffee division in the foothills of the Andes build a better infrastructure for are up 60 percent and the mountains. the organization.” company is “not participating in Kantor is still involved in the recession,” as Kantor puts it. Suncoast at a strategic level while Q. What’s the best advice you’ve But focusing on profits misses the he’s in Spain, but he leaves the point, he says. ever received? day-to-day operations to Sluka “We measure our success by A. A couple of things: Never stop and the staff. how many people are embracing learning and lead a life of giving. It may seem like an the books, attending company unorthodox move for the CEO of functions with their families, Q. What super power do you wish bringing in new ideas, and a growing company, especially you had? in these tough economic times, also being accountable to their A. The ability to make everyone but it’s a good example of the manager for their core duties.” happy. The purpose of our lives is corporate philosophy he and In addition to making people to be happy – Dalai Lama. Sluka created at Suncoast, one better, Kantor and Gabriela are that encourages personal growth helping to make USF better. and self-improvement, not just for the bosses, but They are generous donors, Life Members of the for all 23 employees. USF Alumni Association, USF Athletics Bulls Club “We are really focused on our corporate members, and a regular presence at football and culture. It’s our No. 1 strategy,” Kantor says. “As a basketball games when they’re not living across business owner, I think the best thing I can do is the Atlantic. Kantor and Sluka employ two fellow to help make people better. Make better parents, Bulls at Suncoast, as well as an intern from the better spouses, better community members, better Honors College. humans.” “We bleed green and gold,” Kantor says. Hence, Suncoast’s Making People Better “We’re so proud to be USF alumni and grateful (MPB) program, a book club designed to give for the education we received. We’re proof that employees the information they need to improve dreams can come true if you plan, work hard and their minds, their bodies, their relationships and are willing to take a risk.” their futures. Suncoast provides employees with a book – past selections have included everything from Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom to The Five Love Languages by Dr. Gary Chapman – which they have one month to read. Then they meet in small groups to talk about it, just like a regular book club, but in this case, employees who read the book and participate in the discussion get a $50 bonus. “Readers are leaders,” says Kantor, an avid reader himself. “Reading is such an important part of success, in my mind. But this is not about making better employees or making more money. It’s about making people happier.” In addition to the books, Suncoast provides employees with free, healthy lunches and snacks, and holds regular company outings for employees and their families. They also hold quarterly goal groups in which employees can track their Jason Sluka, `98, and Rob Kantor, `94, in a warehouse at Suncoast Coffee Service personal and professional goals. and Vending. Photo from Tampa Bay Business Journal “When you have great people who are

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Feature Lourdes Villanueva

Lourdes Villanueva: From Fieldworker to Advocate By Karla Jackson, `88

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hen someone from the White House emailed Lourdes Villanueva to say that she had been named as a Head Start Champion of Change, she deleted the email without even opening it. “I was like, ‘Yeah right, like I’m going to get an email from President Obama,” says Villanueva, director of advocacy for the Redlands Christian Migrant Association, an Immokalee-based nonprofit that offers child care and other educational and support services to rural, low-income families. The RCMA is a grantee of the federal Head Start program. Several weeks later, on her way to one of the RCMA’s 75 centers throughout Florida, Villanueva received a call on her cell. It was from the White House. The email was legitimate. She was being honored for her work with migrant farmworkers and their families. Could she be in Washington, D.C. next week? And could she please have some ideas ready to share with the national Director of the Office of Head Start, who was interested in insights from front-line professionals such as herself? Being named as a 2012 White House Head Start Champion of Change marked a high point in Villanueva’s life, which started out in the fields near the border town of Tamaulipas, Mexico, just like many of the people she now helps. Even so, she was skeptical right up until the moment that she was ushered through the White House doors. “When they took me to this tiny room in the White House, that’s when I realized there were only 11 of us, and one of us was Dr. Brazelton! Just meeting him was worth the trip,” says Villanueva, who earned a Bachelor’s degree in Social Work from USF in 2000. For the uninitiated, T. Barry Brazelton is a famed pediatrician, author, professor, and founder of the Brazelton Institute, a Harvardaffiliated research institute that promotes the healthy development of young children and families. Villanueva could hardly believe she was in such company. She toured the White House, received her award, spoke to Head

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Start Director Yvette Sanchez-Fuentes, and then it was back on the plane to Florida. June is a busy time for migrant farmworkers and their families. She had to get back to work. Villanueva first came to Hillsborough County with her mother, father and six sisters to pick strawberries during the spring. She dropped out of school in the ninth grade because her family had to follow the harvest, so she was never able to finish a semester. She returned to the area to work year after year, first as a daughter,


then as a wife, then as a young mother. But Villanueva and her husband Rogelio had better things in mind for their children, Roger, Anna and Oscar. “Both my husband and I made a conscious decision very early on that once the children started school, we would stop traveling,” she says. “It was very difficult. There was no work in the summer. It took us at least two years to get a handle on how to manage. We just knew that we were going to stay put.” It was around that time that Villanueva’s family became clients of the RCMA. The children thrived in the Head Start day care and after school programs. Staff at the center encouraged Villanueva to get her general equivalency diploma. “I’m not going to tell you it was easy,” she says. “I picked strawberries all day and went to school at night. But it’s doable.” Once she earned the GED, Villanueva thought she was done with her education, but Barbara Mainster, now RCMA’s executive director, thought otherwise. “She drove three hours to come to my graduation,” says Villanueva. “And she said, ‘Now you have to sign up for college.’ It took me a while to wrap my head around that.” Villanueva took one class at a time at Hillsborough Community College. By then, she had become part of the RCMA staff and her children were older and graduating from high school themselves. She transferred to USF and began work on her Bachelor’s degree, as her job and life and pocketbook permitted. “I was not a model student,” she says. “I would have to withdraw because of work or other things.” But she finished and walked proudly in commencement in 2000. Her son Roger also graduated from USF, earning dual degrees in Management and Marketing in 2007. Villanueva shares her story with the migrant parents she meets as she travels across Florida visiting RCMA centers. “I tell them it’s no piece of cake. It’s not easy but they can do it. And they should do it.”

Above: Lourdes Villanueva, right, greets Gabriela Rodriguez and her daughter Jessica as they sign in for an RCMA seminar at a church in Plant City. Left: Lourdes Villanueva at the White House for the Head Start Champions of Change Awards.

5Questions with Lourdes Villanueva, `00

Q. What is the last book you read? A. The Best Democracy Money Can Buy by Greg Palast Q. What is your favorite movie? A. I love all children’s movies. Q. Where is your favorite place in the world? A. Home Q. What’s the best advice you’ve ever received? A. Always be true to your values. Q. What super power would you like to have? A. I’m not sure it qualifies as a super power: Wisdom.

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Giving Back The Gillettes

Paying it Forward

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Gordon and Paula Gillette: Helping USF’s Future Engineers

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few years ago, Gordon Gillette, `81 & M.S. `85, president of Tampa Electric and Peoples Gas, of the TECO Energy family of companies, sat transfixed at a luncheon honoring current and former recipients of the Dominick & Emelene Aripoli scholarships. For more than half an hour, recipient after recipient stood at the front of the room at the USF Lifsey House and told moving stories of how the Aripoli scholarships they received changed their lives forever. Another life was changed forever that day. Gordon Gillette would never be the same. Since that luncheon, Gordon and his wife, Paula, have established an endowed scholarship fund in the USF College of Engineering. After that day, Gordon’s commitment to his alma mater and to philanthropy was redoubled, and Paula agreed that scholarship giving made the most sense on a number of levels. “We chose scholarship funding because we knew that this was the best, most immediate way to help students directly,” Paula said. The Gillettes are focused on providing scholarship aid to both undergraduate and graduate students in the USF College of Engineering. Both of Gordon’s USF degrees come from the college. “We hope that we can help a number of students at different levels of the educational process,” said Gordon. “We are attempting to accomplish this by providing a mix of undergraduate and graduate scholarships to students studying mechanical, chemical and industrial engineering – the areas I studied while a student at USF.” The USF College of Engineering holds a special place in Gordon’s life; he is quick to point out that the time he spent at the college as both an undergraduate and a graduate student made a real impact in his career. “The College of Engineering gave me the basic tools to pursue my profession at TECO Energy,” said Gordon. “In the energy business, I have to use engineering, problem-solving, business and financial skills that have their original basis in what I learned at USF.” Gordon, now the chairman of the USF Foundation Board of Directors, believes that all Foundation Board members must do all they can

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to give back to the USF System, including financial giving. His giving to the College of Engineering is just one way he leads by example. “At the USF Foundation, we are talking a great deal these days about philanthropy in the broadest of terms – time, talent, and treasure. And we talk about staying focused on the end product of the entire process – our students and research,” said Gordon. “Paula and I looked at our scholarships as being one part of our overall philanthropy on behalf of USF. We look at other areas where we’re spending our time and helping where we can as equally important parts of our overall relationship with the USF System.” For Paula, it is these relationships that ultimately are the most important part of their philanthropic work with the USF System. Relationships with undergraduate and graduate students in the USF College of Engineering began at home. “Gordon graduated from USF, and my son, Matthew, will be graduating from USF this spring. I look at our gift as a way of giving back for the gifts that USF has given our family.” ®


Bulls Eye USFSP

A Group For Alumni Who Call USF St. Petersburg Home By Tom Scherberger

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housands of people consider USF St. Petersburg their home campus, and now there is an alumni society just for them. The USFSP Alumni Society formed last year, and its four officers are busy getting organized. The society is different from a USF alumni chapter. Anyone who considers USF St. Petersburg home can belong, whether they took a few classes in the ‘60s when it was the small Bayboro branch of USF or more recently with a USFSP diploma. That means more than 15,000 people are potentially eligible to join the USFSP Alumni Society. “The purpose of the USFSP Alumni Society is to promote and maintain relationships among the alumni, current University of South Florida St. Petersburg students, community and friends of the University of South Florida St. Petersburg,” said Bryan Bejar, `10, the group’s chairman, pictured second from left. “The Society will work to preserve the interests of both the University of South Florida St. Petersburg and the USF System.” The group hopes to achieve that goal by bringing together USFSP

alumni and connecting with current students through events and networking opportunities, communicating news and information and engaging with the community through service projects, said Bejar, marketing director for online retailer Moda Collection. This isn’t Bejar’s only effort at supporting USF. He also is founder of Building Tradition at USF (BTUSF), which seeks to build a tradition-rich atmosphere at USF. The society held its organizational meeting in May and elected officers. Besides Bejar, the officers are: Jackie Wertel, `01, secretary, pictured at left, Tyler Drennan, `07, second vice chair, second from right, and Sue Porter, `89, vice chair, at right. Future plans include networking events to connect USFSP graduating seniors with Tampa Bay business owners and campus events to bring alumni back to the campus, including a wine tasting event before a sunset sailboat cruise. Alumni who have not been on the waterfront campus in a few years may be surprised at the changes, including Harborwalk, the University Student Center and the Student Life Center. For more information about the USFSP Alumni Society, contact Bryan at bryanbejar@gmail.com. ®

Bulls Eye Dodé Ackey

Dodé Ackey, `02 & MBA `04, Pays it Forward By Hilary Lehman

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hen Dodé Ackey came to the United States in 1996 as a refugee from the nation of Togo, he quickly began to study and learn English, taking advantage of education that had been limited in his native country. Ackey began at USF as a Gates Millennium Scholar in 2000, earning his Bachelor’s in Finance and his MBA by 2004. The education enabled by the scholarships he received inspired Ackey to think he might one day do the same for other African young people. “I told myself that if I did anything to help people back home, because I know how they struggle over there, it has to be in the area of education,” he said.

Then, for a project in a class taught by entrepreneurship professor Michael Fountain, Ackey came up with the idea to start a university in his homeland to provide students with quality education. Despite it being the only idea in the class that was nonprofit, five classmates signed on to help him make the idea a reality. When he graduated, he started saving his money to put toward the nonprofit. Now, Ackey, an assistant vice president with Citigroup in Tampa, has finally realized a portion of his dream. In 2011, he opened the International Academy of Niamey in his wife’s home country of Niger, providing education as well as school supplies to nine seventh- and eighth-grade students over the past year. All of them graduated to the next grade, far outpacing the national average. While Ackey still hopes to start a university someday, he said he’s concentrating on doing what he can in the present with the funds he has. “I knew that the need is everywhere in Africa, whether it’s an elementary school, middle school, high school, or university,” Ackey said. ®

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Congressman Sam Gibbons January 20, 1920 – October 10, 2012 Your USF Alumni Association is blessed to have a home in the Gibbons Alumni Center, named in honor of the congressman and his late wife Martha. To learn more about Congressman Gibbons life and contributions to our alma mater, please visit. www.magazine.usf.edu/2012-winter/ features/founding-father.aspx

Father of USF Photo credit: Bob Croslin/Tampa Bay Times

Bulls Eye Shawna Machado

Shawna Machado, `12: From Homeless Student to a Shining Example of Success

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hawna Machado faced some earned her Psychology degree and serious hurdles in her pursuit was named USF-SM’s Outstanding of a Bachelor’s degree from Graduate for the strength of her USF Sarasota-Manatee, but her academics and advocacy in the face perseverance has paid off in ways of hardship. she never could have imagined. Her story made Machado After earning an Associate’s somewhat of a media darling, degree from a for-profit, online but that wasn’t all. She now has university, Machado enrolled a job as a case manager at the at USF-SM in 2010 to finish Safe Children Coalition of Sarasota her undergraduate degree in Dr. Jane Rose and Shawna Machado, right, at Brunch County and was awarded the Psychology. But she was laid off Florida Commission on the Status 2012, after the announcement of her scholarship. from her job as a medical assistant, of Women’s Florida Achievement then lost her apartment – and unbeknownst to her professors Award for her work with Social Justice Initiative and the and most of her friends – she lived mainly out of her car for Sarasota School of Social Justice, where she focused on two years, occasionally couch surfing at friends’ homes. Even solutions for abused, neglected and homeless children. Then, so, Machado maintained an overall 3.5 grade point average at a Nov. 1 taping of the Steve Harvey show, where Machado despite having nowhere to study or sleep, often showering in was a guest in a show on homelessness, Dr. Jane Rose, dean the ladies locker room on campus. She got by with sporadic of USF-SM’s College of Arts and Sciences, surprised Machado odd jobs and threw herself into community service projects, with a full-tuition scholarship to attend graduate school. volunteering at a domestic abuse shelter and mentoring at“We’re given things in life and we’re given a different risk youth, causes near and dear to her heart after enduring walk of life and I think we have to take that and challenge similar experiences in her past. In May 2012, Machado ourselves to inspire others,” Machado said of her journey. ®

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Advocacy Bill McCausland, MBA `96 Executive Director, USF Alumni Association

Bulls Protect USF

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y first day on the job last year as executive director of your USF Alumni Association was one that I’ll always remember. Near the end of a long day of meetings, paperwork, matching names to faces, and assessing the resources and priorities of my new post, it was announced that the Florida Senate intended to strip $128 million in funding from our alma mater and sever one of our regional institutions from the USF system to create the state’s 12th university. To say I was surprised would be an understatement – I thought (hoped) I had left higher education funding issues behind in Texas! As both a businessman with more than 20 years of experience and an alumni relations professional with eight years in higher education, I understand the give-and-take of legislative budget issues. But this was beyond the pale. It would have meant a 60 percent cut in our appropriation for academic affairs, far more than any other university was being asked to absorb. The fate of our new Pharmacy program was in jeopardy, as was our ability to complete the education of USF students in Polk County. The prospects looked grim. It was then that I saw what Bull Pride looks like in action. Our university leaders and trustees joined forces to protect USF and negotiate a compromise. USF’s “alumni army” – graduates like you and I, as well as numerous friends of USF who recognize the university’s regional economic impact and expanding national prominence – rallied on behalf of our alma mater, sending more than 40,000 emails and placing countless calls to your elected representatives demanding equal treatment for USF. That outpouring of public support was

instrumental in strengthening USF’s negotiating position. Like all Florida universities, we still ended up with deep budget cuts – some $45 million systemwide, to be specific – but the Pharmacy program was spared, and our Polk County students are afforded the opportunity to finish their degrees as Bulls. Your actions helped us to ensure that USF was treated equitably. I shudder to think what would have happened otherwise. Now another legislative session looms, scheduled to begin March 5. The State University System presidents, including our own Dr. Judy Genshaft, have asked the Florida Legislature for a $118 million investment in higher education that would allow universities to freeze tuition at current rates. The $118 million is the equivalent of the revenue generated by a 15 percent tuition increase at each of the state universities next year. State funding, which once covered about three-fourths of the cost of a student’s higher education, now pays for less than half of the cost at most state universities. Over the past five years, Florida’s public universities have eliminated and consolidated programs and saved millions of dollars through energy efficiency and other cost-cutting measures. I believe that it’s now time for the state’s elected officials to show the same support for the economic and social impact of higher education that they have shown for the state’s other leading industries. You can help make that happen by staying informed and involved. Your USF Alumni Association has made it easy for you to track legislation that affects our alma mater and contact your elected representatives to express your opinion. Once the session starts and bills begin to be filed, we will post key bills and legislative alerts on our website at USFalumni.org/advocate. Please bookmark this page and visit it often. Your university needs your vigilance to continue its quest to be a top tier academic powerhouse. Let’s continue to work together to protect USF.

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Blast from the Past

Peanut Farmer to President to Peace Prize Jimmy Carter, President of the United States from 1977-1981, spoke at USF in 1986. His speech was titled “American Foreign Policy: From Carter to Reagan.” Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his work with the Carter Center and is a key figure in Habitat for Humanity. He’s pictured here with USF Ambassadors and students. USF Photograph Collection, USF Special Collections, USF Tampa Library

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SHARE A Memor y Enjoy these excerpts of memories from members of the USF Alumni Association. Email your favorite USF memory to jacksonk@usf.edu or post it on our Facebook page.

50 Years Ago… President John F. Kennedy visited Tampa four days before his assassination in 1963. USF alumni recall hearing the news. I was studying in the library on Nov. 22 when I saw a crowd around the lobby desk. That’s where I learned President Kennedy had been shot … I was privileged to introduce Sergeant Shriver when he came to speak at South Florida when he was head of the Peace Corps. He told me he had come to see why so many volunteers came from our school. Peter Hughes, `65 A few days before the president’s fateful Dallas trip, three of us represented USF in Washington, D.C., at a national conference on religion and race, the purpose of which was to urge our representatives to support the Civil Rights Act. Shortly after our return to Tampa, President Kennedy was killed. The campus was stunned and in tears. Some classes were cancelled that terrible afternoon, but many of my classmates and I showed up for our political science class with Professor Harrigan, a large, imposing man and a wonderful professor, who stood in front of us and wept like a baby, then dismissed class for the day. Raleigh Mann, `65 I was a freshman in 1963, studying for an accounting test when Aiden from down the hall rushed in and shouted “Our leader’s been shot!” I blurted out a name of someone on campus and he responded, “No, I mean Kennedy.” They say you’ll always remember where you were when you learned about JFK’s assassination. Jim Bockover, M.A. `95

That was Then; This is Now A Student Perspective

Reflection on the Election By Meghan Palmer, `13 Whether you’re a Republican, Democrat, Independent or Uninterested, by now you are no doubt aware of the results from our latest election. After countless debates and endless press coverage, President Barack Obama was re-elected for another four-year term. The beautiful thing about living in America is our right to vote and have an opinion on the issues facing our country. No one seems to have been quite as fired up about the recent election as my college peers. One could argue that having students so heavily interested in politics shows a lot of promise for the future, but the flip side is that the nature of the arguments created extreme hostility between the parties and their supporters. “This presidential election split our country stronger than any other election has. The question is no longer what you believe, it is what team are you on,” said Nicholas Smart, an advertising major graduating in 2014. There is one hot button issue however, that bonds students regardless of their party affiliation: financial aid and student loan debt. Being financially independent in college is a daunting task. Increased tuition, education funding cuts and a high unemployment rate is a recipe for serious student loan debt, and students are feeling the pain on their Oasis billing statements. (Oasis, for those of you who graduated a while ago, is the software program through which students are billed and pay for classes.) It’s really tough for students to work their way through college and pay for their tuition and books without incurring some sort of debt. Two-thirds of college seniors who graduated in 2011 had student loan debt, with an average of $26,600 per borrower, according to the Institute for College Access & Success. And I don’t have to tell you what the job market is like for new grads. “I’m really worried about paying back my loans. I’m not able to work enough hours while in school full time and I don’t know how I’ll afford graduate school,” said Courtney Keedy, a freshman elementary education major. The Occupy movement has even taken up the cause, moving from Wall Street to start the “Occupy Student Debt Campaign,” which pledges to “end the debt financing of higher education.” Of course, that won’t help students who are already in debt. Despite all of this, the students I talked to are trying to stay positive about job prospects upon graduation, counting on their passion and skills in their field of study to pave the way for their futures. I have to say, I am the same way. Studying public relations is no guarantee for a job, but I’m hoping that my internship experience and student involvement will stand out on my resume when I am out there on the job hunt next summer. When it comes to managing debt, both personally and politically, Andy Rodriguez, a chemical engineering student graduating in 2014, said it best: “At the end of the day, the most important thing is how much money we have and how much money we are spending.” But it’s not all about us, of course. As students, we care about the world around us. We voted for the person whom we thought would take our country to where it needs to be economically, environmentally and ethically. We don’t have much political power, but we do have a voice. All we can do now is work hard in school and have faith in our elected leaders to get our country back on its feet. ®

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chapters&societies

USF Alumni Association Board Member Manley Jaquiss, `86, center, and fellow members of the USF Ft. Myers-Naples Alumni Chapter presented Aviva Feldman, assistant manager of Shoeless Joe’s, with a plaque thanking the restaurant for serving as the official watch party location for the alumni “herd” in the area.

USF San Diego Alumni Chapter member John Torres, `07, left, and chair Carlos Sayan, `04, joined others for the California Coastal Cleanup Day in San Diego County in September.

Members of the USF Philadelphia Alumni Chapter geared up for the game against Temple at a happy hour held the night before the game at Tavern on Broad. Pictured in the front is chapter chair Adam Feinberg.

Arupa Gopal, `07, chair of the USF New York Alumni Chapter, took this photo at their watch party for the game against University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. Pictured from left are: Ashley Brady, `09; Jennifer Thomas, Ben Thomas, and Tyler Brady, `06.

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USF Washington, D.C. Alumni Chapter President Kathy Dorf, `08, on the left, works for the USO and took part in a Care Package Service Project on Capitol Hill on Sept. 11 in which congressional members stuffed care packages for troops in Afghanistan. Congresswoman Ileana RosLehtinen, R-FL, took a picture of the alumna from Florida universities showing their school pride.

Longtime USF Atlanta Alumni Chapter member Denise Dimbath, `94, shows her Bull Pride at the FSU game.

Members of the USF Denver Alumni Chapter met at Jackson’s for watch parties during the football season. Here are the Denver Bulls who met to watch the Louisville game.

Former Ambassador Jessica Barber, `12, on the right, traveled from Utah to New York City to help out with a volunteer program sponsored by her employer Goldman Sachs when she happened to meet fellow alumna Kristin Dunn, `07 & M.S. `11, left, who is a development coordinator for the YMCA in Manhattan. Barber and Dunn did mock interviews with women hoping to re-enter the workforce.

Members of the Student Alumni Association met with USF Alumni Association President Kimerbly Choto, in pink, and former USFAA President Michele Norris, in purple, to get advice on careers and interviewing at a 7 at 7 Dinner held in October.

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chapters&societies

The 2012-13 USF Ambassadors pose for their formal portrait in the courtyard of the Gibbons Alumni Center. Ambassadors are student leaders who serve as a link between USF’s student body and the university’s alumni and the community at large. The Ambassador program is one of several student programs funded by your membership in the USF Alumni Association.

No matter where you live, you’ll always be a Bull! The USF Alumni Association has alumni chapters all over the country. We also have college and special-interest societies for likeminded alumni. It’s easy to get involved. Just email the contact person of the group you’d like to visit. Societies Ambassador Alumni Jackie Wertel jackie.wertel@gmail.com

Library and Information Science Society William (Bill) Harris wharris3@mail.usf.edu

Marine Science Alumni Bruce Barber Anthropology Alumni bbarber@terraenv.com Brian McEwen bmcewen@cachillsborough.com Beau Suthard bsuthard@coastalplanning.net Architecture Alumni Adam Fritz Medicine Alumni adam@cgharchitects.com Christina Brown-Wujick cbrown7@health.usf.edu Association of Filipino Students Alumni Society MIS Alumni Aileen Aqui afsalumnisociety@hotmail.com Brian Day Bjday@us.ibm.com Black Alumni Music Society Shomari Sanford Keith Sanz shomari1906@yahoo.com usfmusicalumni@gmail.com College of Business Alumni Nursing Alumni Maegan Fader Edwin Hernandez Maegan@usfcobalumni.org ehernan5@health.usf.edu Education Alumni Pharmacy Alumni Freda Abercrombie Patti Shirley aber2@aol.com pshirley@health.usf.edu Engineering Alumni Public Administration Robert Andrew Alumni usf.engineer@yahoo.com Mike Rimoldi mike@rimoldiconstruction.com Entrepreneurship Alumni Jennifer Sineway Public Health Alumni jennagator@aol.com Patti Shirley pshirley@health.usf.edu Geology Alumni Bruce Nocita Social Work Alumni bnocita@smeinc.com April Steen steenmsw@yahoo.com Honors Alumni Lisa Provenzano Heugel Theater Alumni lproven1@tampabay.rr.com Kimberli Cummings Kbdiva901@aol.com Kosove Alumni Justin Geisler USF St. Petersburg justingeisler@hotmail.com Bryan Bejar bryanbejar@gmail.com 26

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Women’s and Gender Studies Zoe Fine usfwgssociety@gmail.com

Florida Chapters Brevard Todd Bonanza bonanza298@aol.com John Carpenter j-carpenter2@ti.com

Miami-Dade Carlos Rodriguez USFmiamialumni@gmail.com Greater Ocala Russ Fascenda usf-alumni-ocala@pobox.com Orlando Katie Giglio Kgiglio@usf.edu

National Chapters Atlanta Louis Struikman usfalumniatlanta@gmail.com Austin Brad Heath gobulls@austin.rr.com Boston USFBostonBulls@gmail.com

Palm Beach Scott Teich Charlotte scott.teich@raymondjames.com Ryan Franco Barbara Lyn barbara@barbaralyn.com USFAlumniCharlotte@gmail. Panama City com Janet Caragan Broward janetcaragan@yahoo.com Ruth Rogge Chattanooga/Cleveland, TN R_rogge@yahoo.com Erin Bell and Bryan Bull Pasco County/New Tampa ChattanoogaBullsAlumni@ Kimberly Choto Alan Steinberg yahoo.com usfbrowardalumni@hotmail.com kchoto@success-sciences.com Chicago Pensacola/Spanish Fort/ Fort Myers Greg Morgan Mobile Sanjay Kurian WindyCityBulls56@gmail.com skurian@becker-poliakoff.com Nick Kessler nickess@aol.com Columbus, OH Manley Jaquiss Jason Griffin John Spurny manleyjaquiss@yahoo.com columbususfalumni@gmail.com usfpensacola@hotmail.com Hernando D.C. Regional Pinellas Robert Neuhausen Kathy Dorf Brenda Kenny usfhcac@gmail.com kathyd286@yahoo.com bdkenny@tampabay.rr.com Highlands (FL) Dallas Polk Charles Devlin Jamie DeVriend Randy Dotson cdevlin@devtechsales.com jdevriend@gmail.com randy.dotson@gmail.com Jacksonville/St. Augustine Denver St. Lucie Gary Hoog Chris and Ashley Gilbert Frank Pennetti oldcitymunc1@yahoo.com denverbulls@gmail.com franker@adelphia.net Ellen Rosenblum Greenville, SC Tallahassee rosenblum.ellen@gmail.com Brittany Link Phil Canto GreenvilleUSFAlumni@hotmail. pcantompa@gmail.com Manatee/Sarasota com Jay Riley Greater Tampa jayriley@sar.usf.edu Houston Eric Penvose Alan Goldsmith cireltd@gmail.com alshmaly@flash.net

Michael Peppers mike.peppers@comcast.net Indianapolis Ali Bridwell alibridwell@gmail.com Kansas City, MO Nathan Collins usfalumnikc@gmail.com Los Angeles Janet Foster usfbullsnla@yahoo.com Nashville Melinda Dale nashvilleusfbulls@live.com New York Arupa Gopal arupa.gopal@gmail.com Philadelphia Adam Feinberg usf.tri.state.alumni@gmail.com Phoenix Jillian Papa jillianpapa@gmail.com Portland, OR Matt Hromalik m_hromalik@hotmail.com Raleigh, NC Bob Cohn bob.cohn@mssb.com San Antonio, TX Ruben Matos captram02@yahoo.com San Diego Carlos Sayan USFBullsSanDiego@gmail.com

Corporate Affinity Group Lockheed Martin Brent Lewis brent.a.lewis@lmco.com


Employ -A-Bull

Build a reputation for delivering results. Establish a successful track record of being able to handle projects and tasks and deliver results for whatever you take on. Document your progress and provide updates to key decision-makers as a way of reinforcing your ability to deliver what you promise.

Drema Howard, Ph.D., is the director of The Career Center at USF. For more details about career services available to alumni, please visit www.career.usf.edu.

Strategies for Building & Enhancing Your Professional Reputation

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n today’s work world, as it has always been, what keeps you employed are your own abilities and the recognition by your employer that you are making contributions. If your abilities, skills and talents are not being fully utilized, or your contributions are not recognized by your employer, you have two choices. You can either leave or you can re-evaluate what you need to do (or stop doing) to build a successful career and professional reputation. Whatever the career field or industry, those who seem to do best in terms of promotions, job satisfaction, career progression and garnering professional respect exhibit a combination of skills, attitudes, characteristics and behaviors that work together to ensure success. Whether you’re a seasoned professional or in your first professional position, the following strategies can significantly build and enhance your professional reputation: Formulate a plan and timeline for achieving your career goals. It’s your career and who better than you should be planning and managing your career destiny. What goal(s) will you achieve this year? In the next three years? Be specific. State the goal, describe the action(s) you will take to reach it and the date you will achieve it. Be public about what you hope to achieve to show you know where you’re headed. Accept and welcome change as an opportunity for growth. The reality is that jobs have never been static, so rather than complaining about how everything is always changing, welcome it as an opportunity. Even the most successful employee won’t remain successful if he or she won’t change and adapt as their job and workplace evolves.

Maintain a positive attitude. No one likes being around a complainer, gossip or negative person. Carry out your work and interaction with others in a positive manner. Maintain a high level of enthusiasm when talking about your work and the organization. In fact, if you can’t speak well about where you work or those you work with, when it’s time to “trim the fat” you may be one of the first to get cut. Keep your skills up to date. Your workplace is constantly changing. Keeping up with the latest skills, news and trends in your field is critical to your success. Take classes, read trade journals, attend conferences and learn from colleagues. Ensuring your skills and knowledge are up to date also lays the groundwork for thinking about the implications for your own job and your organization. Help others be successful. To be truly successful you must help others succeed. Look for ways to support others, offer encouragement for their ideas, let them know you believe in them and find ways to help them propel their careers. Share your talent, expertise and time. Do this without expecting anything in return, knowing that at some point someone else will do the same for you. Cultivate and maintain strategic networks. Focus on strategic relationships with individuals, both in and outside of your organization. Be intentional in selecting and developing your network. Are those in your network willing to share and/ or trade information with you? Do they have some level of inside knowledge that makes them an invaluable resource? Find ways to be visible. Place yourself in situations or on projects where your abilities can be observed by critical career enhancers. For example, offer to coordinate the office community service initiative, serve as the company newsletter editor, conduct a training session for co-workers or lead a challenging project. Always strive to do it better. Keep an idea log at your desk and at home. You never know when a great idea will pop into your head. You may think you’ll remember it later, but what if you don’t? Get in the habit of jotting down good ideas. Go back later and flesh them out. Let it be known that you have an idea log and are always looking for ways to improve and enhance your work performance. Look beyond today’s disappointment. Unfortunately, things don’t always go the way you’d like. You have a choice. You can choose to be angry, bitter or shut down and decide you’ll only do the bare minimum from now on, or you can choose to recognize that this is just a temporary set-back. Look beyond today’s disappointment and reflect on what you learned from the experience and what you’ll do differently next time. Have an updated resume and professional online image. If an opportunity comes your way you need to be ready to forward your resume in a short period of time. Keeping an updated resume also forces you to keep up with all your latest achievements. Maintaining an updated online image is also important to your professional success. You never know who might be looking at your profile. It just might be your current employer! WINTER 2013 | ALUMNIVOICE

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Alumni Travel

Bulls in the Big Apple for Thanksgiving

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In addition to seeing the legendary Rockettes r. Aurora Sanchez-Anguiano, `99, had and a Broadway show, Dr. Sanchez-Anguiano also promised her daughter Tania a trip to had time to visit New York’s amazing museums, New York City, so when she received the pay her respects at Ground Zero, and take a bus email from the USF Alumni Travel program about tour of Manhattan and a boat tour of the Hudson spending Thanksgiving in the Big Apple, the good River during her stay. The Thanksgiving meal doctor knew the time had come. was held at a restaurant “They offered a great called Autumn, which location, a place to see the changes its décor and parade directly without being in the crowd, the menu with each of the Rockettes, a Broadway four seasons. “Dinner was show, etc.,” said Dr. very good, with good Sanchez-Anguiano, who is conversation,” she said. a professor in the College “The place was very of Public Health. “We always felt welcomed and small and attractive.” well taken care of.” Upcoming trips offered through the USF The alumni group stayed at the Residence Alumni Travel program Inn in Times Square Dr. Aurora Sanchez-Anguiano, far right in white, and include a tour of Italy’s during their four-night in March, her daughter, Tania, center in the red sweater, joined Amalfi coast th excursion, one of the the 139 Kentucky fellow alumni for a Thanksgiving trip to NYC. few hotels located on Derby in early May, and the new route of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day a European Tour for new graduates in mid-May. Parade. The weekend kicked off with a welcome A European Tapestry cruise is scheduled for midcocktail reception, followed the next morning by June and a riverboat tour of Autumn in America’s a breakfast gathering that offered a close-up, yet Heartland is planned for October. uncrowded, view of the parade and its famous Check out the details for all of these balloons from the hotel restaurant windows. upcoming trips at www.USFalumni.org/travel.

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classnotes Don’t be shy Alumni! We’d like to include your news and photos in Class Notes. Send in your information to: jacksonk@usf.edu or you can mail your information & photo to: Karla Jackson USF Alumni Association Gibbons Alumni Center University of South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave., ALC100 Tampa, FL 33620-5455

60s

William A. Eickhoff, Business `69 & MBA `83, was elected as an emeritus member of the USF Foundation Board, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to USF. He has been an integral part of the Foundation Board for 15 years, serving as both its treasurer and secretary. In addition to his service to the Foundation Board, Eickhoff has served the University of South Florida as both the president of the Alumni Association Board of Directors and as a member of both the USF College of Business Dean’s Executive Advisory Board and the USF Bulls Club Board of Directors.

70s

John Evenhouse, Marketing `76 & Geology `87,

debuted an exhibit of his historically accurate model ships at the HiBrow Gallery in Dade City in October. Evenhouse spends hundreds of hours replicating vessels such as the 1776 USS Boston and the 1811 French war ship L’Astrolabe, using reference guides and blueprints ordered from the Smithsonian. He retired in 1997 from a career as a geologist. He is also a U.S. Navy veteran of the Vietnam War.

80s

Jennifer Farber, `81, joined American

Momentum Bank as vice president/ treasury management. A career banker with 25 years of experience, she came to American Momentum from Andersen Bank, now 1st United Bank, where she was senior vice president for deposit operations and various compliance functions. Farber works in Tampa and lives in Trinity, FL.

Mike Grego, M.Ed `89 & Ed.D `97, was selected as superintendent of Pinellas County Schools in August. Grego, 55, built his reputation by moving from a 28-year career in Hillsborough County schools to be superintendent in Osceola County, where he was credited with dramatic academic gains in the 55,000-student school district. He also earned recognition as Florida’s interim chancellor for public education. Most recently, he has taught doctoral and graduate-level courses in educational leadership at the University of Central Florida. Linda D. Hartley, Marketing `89, was selected to join the Community Foundation of Tampa Bay Board of Trustees. The Community Foundation of Tampa Bay is an administrator of permanent endowment funds created by a broad spectrum of individuals, families, corporations and private foundations. Hartley serves as practice group leader for trusts and estates at Hill Ward Henderson, Attorneys at Law, in Tampa. Her practice is primarily devoted to estate planning, probate, trust administration and post mortem tax planning. She is the immediate past chairman of the board of the Tampa Bay Chapter of the American Red Cross.

Elizabeth G. Lindsay, `83, was elected as an emeritus member of the USF Foundation Board. She has spent more than two decades as a member of the USF Foundation Board of Directors, and served on the State University System Board of Regents for 10 years, ending her tenure as its chair. Lindsay currently serves on the USF Sarasota-Manatee Campus Board of Trustees. She is a past recipient of the USF Alumni Association’s Distinguished Alumnus Award as well as a Distinguished Citizen Award from Goodwill Industries of Manasota. Michael Manning, MBA `89, was appointed as chief financial officer of the AGC Composites & Aerostructures Group. David Mearns, M.S. Marine Science

`86, received the Order of Australia Medal (Honorary) during a ceremony in London for discovering two sunken Australian naval vessels. Mearns, a USF 2011 Distinguished Alumnus Award recipient, and his team discovered the HMAS Sydney II in 2008 and the AHS Centaur in 2009. The medal was presented by Australia’s Governor-General, Quentin Bryce, in a ceremony held during the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee.

J. Michael Peppers, Accounting `85 and M.Acc `90, was named as chief audit executive for the University of Texas System in December. Peppers is a nationally-recognized internal audit executive who had previously served as vice president and chief audit officer for the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2005. Peppers began his career in public accounting 25 years ago and has worked in higher education since 1993.

Joe Guidry, Mass Communications `73 & M.A.

English `80, received the T. Terrell Sessums Award for community leadership and environmental service from the Physicians for Social Responsibility/Florida Chapter and the University of South Florida College of Public Health. Guidry, an opinion editor for The Tampa Tribune and a Tampa native, has been a longtime advocate for the community and its environment. The T. Terrell Sessums Award was established in 2009 to recognize a person who has made significant contributions to improve and protect the environment of the Tampa Bay area. Guidry also was recognized Sept. 7 at the Tribune with a celebration for 40 years of service to the company.

Edward J. Page, Criminology `78, was recognized in the 2012 edition of The Best Lawyers in America and in the 2012 edition of Florida Super Lawyers. Page is a partner with the law firm of Carlton Fields, P.A. in its Tampa office and practices white collar criminal defense, civil litigation, and family law.

Past, present and future USF Alumni Association Board presidents pose with USF System President Judy Genshaft at the annual brunch held at USF Sarasota-Manatee in November. From left are: Brad Kelly, `79; Dr. Anila Jain, `81; Rich Heruska, `99; Dr. Judy Genshaft, Monty Weigel, `76, Kimberly Choto, `92 & M.A. `02; Roger Frazee, `71 and John Harper, `76. WINTER 2013 | ALUMNIVOICE

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classnotes Adam Feinberg, Economics & Inter-

national Studies, `90, is the area sales manager of the Pennsylvania and New Jersey markets for Serviceexperts.com, the largest HVAC company in North America. Previously, he was general manager for Brinks Home Security in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. Feinberg is also the head of your USF Alumni Association’s Philadelphia chapter and a Chi Phi alumnus.

Kamel Ghandour, Biology `96, was promoted to

assistant chief of anesthesia at St. Barnabas Hospital in New York City.

Class VIII gubernatorial fellow and current MPA graduate student Samantha Stratton, `11, left, with Col. William “Bill” Beiswenger, `79, director of military support at the Florida National Guard’s Joint Operations Center, show their Bull Pride at the Robert Ensslin Armory in St. Augustine.

He joined the UT System in 1999 as the director for audit services at the UT Medical Branch - Galveston, where he served for five years. Peppers serves as the 2012-13 chairman of the Institute of Internal Auditors North American Board and frequently writes and speaks on internal audit related topics. Peppers also received the 2009 Outstanding Professional Contributions Award from the Association of College and University Auditors.

O. Kumar Prasad, Finance `89, was promoted to

manager of business analysis at Publix Super Markets in Lakeland, FL.

Eileen Rodriguez, M.S. Geology `87 & MBA `02, received the Society of Latinos 2012 USF SOL Award, which was presented during the Hispanic Heritage Kickoff on Oct. 4 at the Marshall Student Center. Rodriguez is the regional director of the Small Business Development Center at USF.

90s

Terrance Anderson, Business `99,

was recognized as one of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation’s 2012 40 Under 40 Outstanding Lawyers of Miami-Dade County. Anderson and the other attorneys were honored Nov. 3 at an event held by the foundation. He is an attorney in the Miami office of GrayRobinson, P.A. He has been with the firm since 2008 and his practice focuses on commercial litigation. Anderson holds memberships to The Florida Bar, the Miami-Dade County Bar Association and the U.S. District Court Southern District of Florida. He has also been recognized on Florida Super Lawyers’ Rising Star list, Florida Trend’s Legal Elite and is a graduate of the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce’s Leadership Miami program.

Maria Cabrera, Biology `97 & MPH `03, is the

director of health initiatives for the American Cancer Society, Inc. She is assigned to the Florida Division and based in Tampa.

Thea Cernohous, English Education `92, owns Pet-

als and Presidents, a flower and gift shop, in Estero, FL. Previously, she was a teacher at Estero High.

John P. Cleveland, M.A., Philosophy `98, accepted a position as director of the Tutoring Center at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University in Brooklyn, NY. He lives in Jersey City, NJ. John Connery, Jr., M.Acc `96, was selected to serve as the 2014 Capital Connection co-chair for the Association for Corporate Growth (ACG) Florida. Each year ACG hosts the Capital Connection event, which brings more than 500 representatives of private equity firms, commercial and investment bankers, growth-oriented companies and accountants, attorneys and other professionals together to focus on the art of the deal. Connery is a shareholder in the Tampa law firm of Hill Ward Henderson and co-chair of its taxation group. He is a member of the tax sections of The Florida Bar and American Bar Association, serves on the board of directors for the ACG, Tampa Bay Chapter, and is president for the ACG, Tampa Bay Chapter. John A. Fallon, MBA `98, was appointed to Insulet Corporation’s board of directors. A leading health management expert, Fallon’s career includes 25 years of experience in health management, overlapping with two decades of clinical practice in internal medicine.

Katherine Gibson, M.A. School Psychology `96, has established Arthouse3, an art consulting firm for both residential and corporate clients that emphasizes the work of regional and local artists. Gibson is also the gallery director at Gallery 221, located on the second floor of the library at Hillsborough Community College’s Dale Mabry campus. The gallery specializes in displaying the work of nationally recognized talent and also includes emerging and established local artists. Jennifer L. Griffin, ProfessionalTechnical Writing `97, has joined the law firm of Quarles & Brady as a partner in the firm’s trust and estates practice group, practicing out of their Tampa offices. Griffin has been an active practitioner in Tampa’s trusts and estates legal community for the past decade. In addition to her client representations, she is a published author through the Real Property, Probate, Trust Law Section of the Florida Bar, and on a local level, serves as a member of the American Red Cross Planned Giving Committee and of the David A. Straz, Jr., Center Planned Giving Committee. Lakecia Gunter, Computer Engineering `95, is a validation manager at Intel. Gunter and her team recently won an Intel Software Quality Award for their work on the Café tool, a tool that helps identify bugs in CPUs and enables Intel to deliver the highest quality processors across multiple market segments. A total of 77 nominations were submitted for the award from teams all across Intel. Sandra Kischuk, M.S. Information Systems `97, has written and published Fighting the Dragon: How I Beat Multiple Sclerosis. The book details her 30year battle with the disease, how she beat it and resources that may be available to others with M.S. She also has authored the children’s book Whose-its and Whats-its. Kischuk is a professional writer, editor and success coach who lives in Tampa. Eileen A. Sarris, Accounting `91 and M.Acc `92

recently joined The Field Club as its chief financial

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officer. She is a certified public accountant and was previously a partner at Natherson & Company, P.A., CPA. She serves as the finance chair of the Leadership Sarasota program and on the finance committee of The Greater Sarasota Chamber of Commerce.

David Theung, Civil Engineering `90, has joined Sam Schwartz Engineering as a project manager/ senior civil engineer. He will manage roadway design projects for the Florida Department of Transportation and local municipalities. He is a registered professional engineer with more than 30 years of experience in transportation engineering. Todd A. Webster, Political Science `94 & Accounting `97, recently completed a two-year fellowship with the Governmental Accounting Standards Board. He is now serving a two-year rotation with KPMG’s National Professional Practice Group in New York City. Denise L. Wheeler, Accounting `91, addressed the James M. Johnson Physician Leadership Course in Traverse City, Michigan on Sept. 14. Wheeler is a partner with Roetzel & Andress in Fort Myers. Her presentation was entitled “Employment Claims Can Kill You - Prescription for Best Practices Going Forward.” Board certified in labor and employment law by the Florida Bar Board of Legal Specialization, Wheeler focuses her practice on representing employers in all types of employment law issues. She holds an AV Preeminent rating from MartindaleHubble Law Directory and has been selected as one of the Nation’s Most Powerful Employment Attorneys - Up-And-Comers by Human Resource Executive Magazine and as a Florida Super Lawyer by Law & Politics magazine.

00s

Tyler Freriks, Marketing `08, has joined Marketing in Color as an account coordinator.

Mike Griffin, Marketing `03, a longtime

USF Alumni Association board member and past Outstanding Young Alumnus Award winner, is the recipient of the inaugural Deanne Dewey Roberts Emerging Leader Award. The award was created in honor of Roberts, a fellow USF alum and prominent Bay area business woman, to recognize service and dedication to the local business community. Roberts, Mass Communications `74, passed away in January 2012.

Alrecia L. Gulley, Psychol-

ogy `05, graduated from Florida A&M University College of Law in 2012 and passed the Florida Bar exam in 2012. The Honorable Judge Raymond Gross, Political Science`69, performed Gulley’s oath

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classnotes ceremony in his chambers in September. Gulley was a student in Judge Gross’ Law & Legal Careers class at USF. Judge Gross is also a past president of the USF Alumni Association, Distinguished Alumnus Award winner and a Life Member of the USF Alumni Association.

Matthew Tucker, MSPH `01 and Ph.D Public

Nancy Harper, Accounting `01, accepted a grant

business services executive. He leads commercial and business banking efforts in Florida. He has more than 35 years of experience in commercial banking and was most recently the regional vice president and manager of commercial operations for Wells Fargo Bank for the west coast of Florida. He previously worked for Bank of America and Wachovia Investment Banking.

Health `10, is a principal scientist at the Biomedical Research Institute in Rockville, MD. He manages the NIH repository for schistosomiasis and conducts research of this disease and malaria.

John Watts, MBA `01, joined Cadence Bank as a

accountant position with Florida Home Partnership, Inc. She is responsible for accounts payable, bank account reconciliations, cash receipts and deposits, payroll processing, accounts receivable and project reports.

Jason Heffelmire, Mechanical Engineering `00,

was promoted to division director at TLC Engineering. He develops marketing goals and revenue projections for the Tampa division and serves as senior project engineer for complex projects. He was previously a senior mechanical engineer.

Stephanie L. Jeffries, Economics `08, is a graduate assistant at Southern Illinois University, where she is pursuing a Master’s of Science degree in Economics and Finance. Previously, she was a commercial banking analyst for JP Morgan Chase.

Sage Kamiya, MBA `06, Manatee

County deputy director of Traffic Management, received the Edward A. Mueller Award from the Florida Chapter of the Institute of Transportation Engineers, an international educational and scientific association of transportation professionals. The award is the profession’s top honor among a 1,000 member section that includes Florida and Puerto Rico. He also was elected as chapter secretary for 2013. Both distinctions were announced at the group’s annual awards banquet in Bonita Springs in November.

Juan Luque, MPH `04 and Ph.D Anthropology

USF alumni Megan (McNerney) Hartman and Beau Hartman, both Class of 2008, were married August 25 at Holy Family Catholic Church in Orlando. They made sure their guests got a taste of their Bull Pride with their USF wedding cake at the reception. University (IUPUI). His appointment began Jan 1. Dr. Moreno-Madriñán is a fellow with NASA’s Postdoctoral Program in Huntsville, AL.

Alok Ranjan, M.S. Information Management Systems `03, developed iFood.tv back in 2007 with a partner. The web channel streams online video cooking classes in different styles and ethnicities, including Italian, Mexican, kosher, Chinese, Indian, healthy and vegetarian food. The site recently achieved more than 7.7 million unique hits and has offices in California, New York and India. iFood.tv also has a mobile app. Ranjan married Tulika Ranjan, M.D., in 2001,and together they started NutritionRank.com, a site that compares food according to its nutritional value.

`06, and researchers from the Georgia Southern University Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health and Georgia Health Sciences University Gynecological Cancer Prevention Center have been awarded a $143,912 grant from the National Institutes of Health to evaluate a large cervical cancer screening initiative in Cusco, Peru. The researchers will use their findings to design and pilot a brief social marketing intervention to increase cervical cancer screening. Previously Dr. Luque collaborated on a study that examined human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine acceptability among Latina farmworkers, which found that Latina farmworkers have many misconceptions about the HPV vaccine and the potential links between HPV infection and cervical cancer. Dr. Luque is an assistant professor at GSU’s Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health.

assistant chief executive officer for the Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE) in Washington, D.C. In this role, she works closely with the CEO to lead strategic health promotion initiatives that support SOPHE’s mission and assure the long-term growth and sustainability of the organization. For the past 12 years, Sellers assisted medically vulnerable populations in diverse health care settings located in urban and rural communities. She served as the health program manager for the University of Maryland School of Medicine and as executive director of the Capital City Area Health Education Center. Most recently, she worked for Booz Allen Hamilton as a health care analyst.

Max Jacobo Moreno-Madriñán, Ph.D Public

Marsha Stevens, MPH `05 joined Florida Interna-

Health `08, accepted a tenure-track assistant professor position in the School of Public Health at Indiana

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Melanie J. Sellers, MPH `05, is the

tional University College of Medicine as associate director for administration of research programs.

Candace Webb, MPH `06, is a

public health analyst with the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. She serves as a federal project officer with the Ryan White CARE Act Program in the HIV/AIDS Bureau and resides in Washington, D.C. Earlier this summer, Webb was invited to a lunch with Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

10s

Kimball R. “Kim” Adams, CPA, Accounting `80 and M.Acc `12, has joined USF St. Petersburg as an adjunct professor teaching accounting. Richard Baskas, M.A. Science Education `10, is currently pursuing a docotorate in Higher Education and Adult Learning via Walden University. He has had numerous assignments published in the Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) database and is working as a 911 dispatcher, night shift supervisor, for MacDill Air Force Base. Atalie A. Ashley-Gordon, Psychology `10 and MPH `12, recently joined the staff of Florida Hospital in Orlando. She is the public health project manager for Community Health Impact. In November, she presented her special project titled “An Examination of the Association between Kindergarten Attendance and Academic Performance in Primary School” at the Florida Educational Research Association annual meeting in Gainesville. Lauren Kelly, Biomedical Sciences `10, has joined Power Design Inc. as a financial analyst.

Jordan B. Markel, Biology `10 & MPH `12, co-founded Advocates for World Health, with Ryan Kania. The nonprofit organization provides struggling nations with surplus medical supplies from the U.S. Markel is currently pursuing a medical degree at USF’s Morsani College of Medicine.


Carla Millar, MPH `11, has joined the University Area Community Development Corporation (UACDC) as a grant writer. The UACDC is a 501(c)(3) public/ private partnership whose primary focus is the redevelopment and sustainability of the at-risk areas surrounding the Tampa campus of the University of South Florida. Millar will work to secure and expand funding sources for UACDC programs and services through federal, state and local grants, as well as build partnerships to support economic development.

Aniska Tonge, Psychology `12, won

the title of Miss Virgin Islands 2012 in August, three months after her graduation from the University of South Florida. Tonge competed in the Miss America 2013 pageant in January.

Enrique Gonzalez-Velez, Ph.D Civil Engineering `11, joined Sam Schwartz Engineering as a transportation engineer, working on safety and research projects nationwide.

In Memoriam Craig L. Bexley, `78, 11/14/2012 Heather Hall, `07 & M.Ed `11, 11/13/2012 Della Marie Spurlock-Hallenda, `78, 10/20/2012 Michael J. Hillman, MPH `07, 11/24/2012 Jack Edman Norris, `78, 12/13/2012 Dawn Hewitt Seligson, `86, 9/24/2012

Lisa Noury, Mass Communications `12, has joined Vista Communications in Tampa as a public relations specialist. She previously worked as a reporter for ABC TV-20 in Gainesville, FL. Noury was a USF Ambassador, Miss USF 2010, and in the Miss Florida pageants in 2008 and 2010. Christopher Pauling, English `10 & M.A. English Education `12, was recognized as Florida’s Beginning Teacher of the Year by the Florida Council of English Teachers. He teaches at Booker Middle School in Sarasota. Mathieu Poirie, MPH `12, is a re-

searcher with the University of Notre Dame Haiti Program based in Leogane, Haiti. He was lead author of a research paper “Re-emergence of Cholera in the Americas: Risks, Susceptibility, and Ecology” in the Journal of Global Infectious Diseases, with USF researcher Sharad Malavade, MPH, and Ricardo Izurieta, MD, Dr.PH, MPH, an associate professor in USF’s Department of Global Health. The paper is an original article on the environmental, climatic, and human factors responsible for the reemergence of cholera in Haiti. The research team predicted the risk of the spreading of cholera in Cuba many months in advance.

Maria Rivera, MPH `11, was one of 11 recipients of the Association of Schools of Public Health/CDC Public Health Fellowship. As a 2012 fellow, Rivera will spend one-year with the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.

Justin Smith, Public Health `12, is a graduate

student at Valdosta State University in Georgia. He is pursuing a Masters of Education degree in Higher Education Leadership, with a concentration in student affairs. Smith also earned a graduate assistantship in the dean’s office at Valdosta State.

Jacri Stubbs, Marketing 2012, recently accepted a position in New York City with GHG Pharmaceutical, a division of Grey Advertising.

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athletics Meet the Man in Charge of Bulls Football By Karla Jackson, `88

New Bulls Head Football Coach Willie Taggart has high aspirations and no use for excuses. “We’re going to be a Top 25 team year in and year out, starting with 2013,” Photo credit: J. Meric/Getty says Taggart. “That’s our intention. We’re not going to settle. It’s not going to be easy, but that’s our goal.” The Taggart File Coach T. isn’t wasting any time. Born: August 27, 1976 Recruiting is going well, he says. He’s Hometown: Palmetto, Florida looking for quarterbacks and linemen, as College: Western Kentucky well as skill players. University, `98 “We’re getting calls from kids who Wife: Taneshia have already committed elsewhere, which Children: Willie, Jr.; Jackson shows you how attractive South Florida Playing Experience is,” Taggart says. “They see an opportunity 1994-98: WKU (Quarterback) to come here and play for a new coach. Coaching Career It’s an even playing field now.” 1999: WKU (Wide Receivers) As a former first-team all-state and 2000: WKU (Quarterbacks) all-conference standout at Bradenton 2001-02: WKU (Co-Offensive Manatee High, Taggart says his familiarity Coordinator /Quarterbacks) with Florida and its talent will help him 2003-06: WKU (Assistant Head convince recruits and their families that Coach / Quarterbacks) USF is the place to be. Sure, he might lose 2007-09: Stanford (Running Backs) a few players to other universities, but he 2010-12: WKU (Head Coach) feels like there is plenty of talent to go around. Source: USF Athletics “There are so many talented athletes, we really have no excuse not to be successful,” Taggart says. “A lot of these kids have won championships before so they know how to win. It’s just holding everyone accountable for doing their job and doing it in a first class manner on and off the field. If you keep doing those things, it’ll translate to the football field.” 36

ALUMNIVOICE | WINTER 2013

Taggart says that returning players are going to see some changes in the way Coach T. does things. “What we want to do offensively and defensively, it’ll be totally different than what Coach Holtz did here,” he says. “It’s going to be more of a pro-style offense like you see in the NFL. Defensively, it’ll be a little different schematically.” Taggart’s football philosophy comes from his experience in the Harbaugh system, an organizational tree of up-and-coming coaches mentored by the San Francisco 49ers head coach, Jim Harbaugh, and his father Jack Harbaugh, who Taggart played for in college. Jim’s brother John is the head coach for the Baltimore Ravens. The Harbaugh philosophy is pretty simple, Coach T. says. “It goes back to being detailed and physical; no nonsense. It’s discipline and playing with a lot of enthusiasm. Winning is not complicated. People complicate it. We’ve got to make sure we’re not complicating things and do them the right way and we won’t make any excuses for losing because we won’t lose.” He claims that he’s not worried about the BIG EAST, the realignment of conferences, and how that might affect his hopes for the playoffs and a national championship. “We can’t control that,” Taggart says. “We can control this football team and win every ball game that we play. I figure if we win all the ball games, then it won’t matter what conference we’re in, especially with the new playoff system that’s coming,” in 2014. And to all of those USF alumni and fans who lost heart after the disappointing 2012 season, Coach T. has a message: “Get on board with the Bulls now, while you can,” Taggart says. “This train is on the move and we want you on board with us. The only way were going to be a top notch team is for everyone to get on board together: alumni, fans, everybody. Our guys know how to play football. We’ve just got to get to work.” ®


calendar

your membership in action

February 11

USF Young Innovator Competition, 6 p.m., Patel Center for Global Solutions, USF Tampa campus. Visit USFyounginnovator.com for details.

23 USF Alumni Association Board of Directors and Annual Membership Meeting, 9 a.m., USF Tampa campus. Contact Jenny Cater at jennycater@usf.edu or 813-974-9127 for details. March 4

Jerry Greenfield of Ben & Jerry’s, University Lecture Series, 8 p.m., Marshall Student Center ballroom, USF Tampa campus. Free. Visit uls.usf.edu for details.

9 Bulls Around the World gala, 6 p.m., Gibbons Alumni Center, USF Tampa campus. Visit USFalumni.org/bullpride for tickets. 12-16 Spring Break. All USF campuses closed for classes.

April 9 John Legend, Grammy Award winner, University Lecture Series, 8 p.m., Marshall Student Center ballroom, USF Tampa campus. Free. Visit uls.usf.edu for details. 12 Fast 56 Awards Banquet, 6 p.m. reception, 7 p.m. banquet, Marshall Student Center, USF Tampa campus. Visit USFalumni.org/fastgrowing for tickets. Feb. 11 USF Young Innovator Competition Developed by Anton Hopen, `91, the mission of the USF Young Innovator Competition is to promote innovation and creativity in young people by motivating them to solve problems and improve upon the things around them. In doing so, children discover why education gives them increasingly more powerful tools and resources to solve bigger problems and challenges.

Eventdetails detailsare aresubject subjectto tochange. change.Please Pleasevisit visitUSFalumni.org USFalumni.orgfor for Event

updatedinformation. information. updated


PERIODICALS

USF Alumni Association Gibbons Alumni Center University of South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave. ALC100 Tampa, FL. 33620-5455 Membership Renewal Date:


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