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TROY T O DAY
Troy University Marketing and Communication Fall/Winter 2018
Executive Editor Donna Clark Schubert
From the desk of the Chancellor Troy University has long celebrated its ability to provide students opportunities to study around the world. On the cover of this issue of TROY Today Magazine, you'll see a group of students who participated in one of TROY's study abroad programs this summer. Students studying dance, theatre, and music returned to Pietrasanta, Italy, for the second annual Danza in Arte a Pietrasanta (DAP) Festival. There's an overwhelming sense of pride and satisfaction in seeing our students excel on the world's stage, and we are incredibly proud of those who spend their summers immersed in other cultures. Also featured within this issue are two outstanding Trojans whose generosity has helped change the landscape of our Troy Campus. Lewis and Sue Rushing of Birmingham, members of the class of 1965, reconnected with their alma mater after almost five decades and were so impressed with the growth and progress of TROY, they made a substantial gift to the University. Lewis Rushing has also agreed to serve on our Foundation Board of Directors. The Rushings’ experience tells a powerful story of alumni engagement, and, in the season of homecomings, is especially appropriate. Within the pages of the donor section, you will also be introduced to three TROY alumni and their devotion to the school we love. Former U.S. Rep. Earl Hutto of Florida, who was a TV anchorman before entering public life, has made a gift to upgrade the campus TV studios to assist another generation of aspiring broadcasters in learning the profession. Dr. Harrel McKinney, founder of Alabama Reference Laboratories, Inc., has also established the Dr. Harrel McKinney Mentor Program within TROY’s IDEA Bank. This program will provide student entrepreneurs with resources and mentors that will help them launch their businesses, products and services. Roy Johnson, the father of Sigma Chi brother and mentor Ken Johnson ('82), has created an endowment that not only honors his son but also helps new pledges in need of financial assistance join the historic organization. It's alumni like Johnson who have helped enrich the TROY experience for new generations of Trojans, and we're thankful his legacy lives on through the University's Sigma Chi chapter. In other academic-related news, our Sorrell College of Business has received special accreditation from the Network of International Business Schools (NIBS), which recognizes universities who are committed to internationalization in the teaching of business and economics. TROY is only the ninth U.S. university and only the 65th university globally to receive this designation. It was gratifying to hear from the NIBS visiting team that Troy University was the most international of any institution it has reviewed because of the culture that has permeated our faculty, staff, and students. Finally, with homecoming just around the corner, we pay tribute to this year’s class of Alumni of the Year—Jimmy Baker, Rudee Kritakara, Dawn Railey, and Gibson Vance. Read more about these outstanding Trojans and their professional achievements, as well as their devotion to Troy University. Sincerely,
Editor Samantha Johnson Art Directors Rob Drinkard (’09) Mark Moseley (’97, ’99) Copy Editors Andy Ellis Emily Price (’09) Contributors Reba Allen (’75) Matt Clower (’04) Lauren Cochran (’06) Tom Davis (’81) Andy Ellis Bill Hopper (’72, ’77) Michael Ingram Buddy Johnson (’75) Brent Jones Clif Lusk Jane Martin (’97, ’99) Dionne Rosser-Mims Greg Phillips (’06) Adam Prendergast Emily Price (’09) Jonathan Sellers (’07, ’11) Josh Yohn (’07, ’14) Photographers Joey Meredith (’16) Mark Moseley (’97, ’99)
Chancellor Jack Hawkins, Jr., Ph.D. Senior Vice Chancellor, Advancement & Economic Development Maj. Gen. Walter D. Givhan, USAF, Retired (’89) Associate Vice Chancellor, Marketing & Communication
Jack Hawkins, Jr., Ph.D. Chancellor
Donna Clark Schubert Associate Vice Chancellor, Development Becky Watson
TROY Today Magazine welcomes comments, ideas and suggestions from readers. Editors reserve the right to determine if letters to the editor will be published and to edit submissions for content and length. Copyright 2018 by Troy University, all rights reserved. Troy University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award associate, baccalaureate, master’s, education specialist and doctoral degrees. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia, 30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of Troy University. The Commission is to be contacted only if there is evidence that appears to support an institution’s significant non-compliance with a requirement or standard.
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TROY Today Magazine is published for alumni members, donors, students, parents and friends of Troy University.
Director, Alumni Affairs Faith Ward (’81, ’87)
For more information, contact the office of Marketing and Communication at: 256 Adams Administration Building Troy, AL 36082 Phone: (334) 670-5830 E-mail: troymagazine@troy.edu Find us on: troy.edu/social and at www.troy.today Advertising : Contact Buddy Johnson at 334-670-5830 or see the media guide at troy.edu/advertising.
Director, Marketing Samantha Johnson Director, University Relations Matt Clower (’04) President, Troy University Alumni Association Bill Hopper (’72, ’77)
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"Throughout history, many successful people started from modest beginnings, but more importantly, they possessed great vision and determination. This holds true for the students, faculty and staff of Troy University as well. TROY is a good example of what can be achieved when you don’t see limits." Manley Johnson, Ph.D. Economics ('73) Former Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve System, U.S. Army Special Forces and Ranger
Globally Aware. Engaged. Ethical. Knowledgeable. Successful.
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SUPPORT TROY BUY A TAG TROY Trojans don’t just drive in style—they drive with purpose. For more than 20 years, TROY fans like you have supported students by purchasing TROY license plates at their local DMVs. By adding approximately $50 worth of cardinal and TROY spirit to the cost of your regular car or motorcycle tag, you’re supporting TROY’s Trojan Pride Scholarship fund. These scholarships are given to TROY’s most deserving students. Fans can also support their Trojans by showing team spirit on the water with TROY distinctive vessel identification stickers for their boats! Want to learn more about Troy University’s Trojan Pride Scholarship program? Visit troy.edu/alumni or call the Alumni House at 334-670-3318.
GET YOUR TROY TAG!
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On The Cover
Students returned to Pietrasanta, Italy, to experience the arts, including artist Nall’s “Peace Frame.”
NEWS
FEATURES
2 From the desk of the Chancellor
20 Live Art Renowned artist Dr. Art Bacon not only has a flair for painting but also for teaching. Learn more about his recent visit and classroom exhibition spent with Troy Elementary School fourth graders.
6 Power Up
22 A life-changing experience What do you get when you put a group of talented student vocalists on stage at one of New York City’s most celebrated concert venues? A Carnegie Hall experience one group of Trojans will never forget.
8 New opportunities
24 Smokin’ hot research
9 Hayden weighs in 10 Sorrell earns new recognition 11 World market 12 Park pays tribute to Rosa Parks
Love it or hate it, tobacco has played a major role in United States history. But what’s the history of this high-profile plant, itself? A recent discovery made by TROY’s Dr. Stephen Carmody and colleagues is nothing to blow smoke at!
36 Lasting legacy
ATHLETICS 37 Student athletes excel in class 38 Swinging for greatness 39 Diamond in the rough 42 Grand opening
STUDENTS 44 Aim high 46 Student wins Kennedy Center award 48 A heart for others
13 TROY for Troops Clarksville 14 A decade of success
FACULTY & STAFF 15 Sullivan awards 16 Ingalls award 18 Changing course 19 Building bridges
PERSPECTIVES
27 Italian connection Two weeks spent in Pietrasanta, Italy, has created memories to last a lifetime for one group of TROY dancers, actors and musicians.
DONORS / GIVING
50 Students broaden worldview
ALUMNI 52 From China, with love 54 Alum Notes
34 Learning from experience
55 Where the heart is 57 Life of learning 59 Gov. Ivey receives honor 60 Burks crowned
30 Rushings donate $1.5 million 35 Johnson remembered
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Thanks to the generosity of one TROY alumni couple, a new residence hall has a new name.
63 Alumni raffle 64 Alumni of the Year
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TROY T O DAY
POWER UP:
STEM CAMP ALLOWS STUDENTS TO EXPLORE LEARNING
The Power Up with STEM Camp focuses on various forms of energy and how they impact daily life.
If there’s anything that students at the Boys and Girls Club
in the University’s Department of Teacher Education, the
of Pike County have learned recently it’s that science is not
camp focused on science, technology, engineering and
only interesting and fun but can also be tasty. For two weeks,
mathematics and energy education for children in second
students took part in the Power Up with STEM Camp as they
through fifth grades.
took to the outdoors to put their self-made solar ovens to
“The STEM activity related to solar energy was the pizza box
the test by cooking s’mores using the heat of the south Alabama sunshine.
oven (we used) to cook s’mores,” said Jessica Moran, lecturer in TROY’s Department of Teacher Education. “The students from
The camp, one of two sessions held this summer, was a
the Boys and Girls Club were involved in the engineering and
representation of a partnership among Troy University,
design process of the pizza box ovens. We started (the project)
South Alabama Electric Cooperative, PowerSouth, John
and had the opportunity to test it and improve on it.”
Weis of NASA and the Boys and Girls Club of Pike County.
Moran said it was exciting to see the students truly engage in
Under the direction of professors and teacher candidates
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the projects that were focused on various forms of energy. “The
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Students at the Boys and Girls Club of Pike County cook s'mores in pizza box solar ovens they built during the Power Up with STEM Camp.
kids really enjoyed it,” she said. “They were engaged and didn’t
“This innovative project has truly been a win-win,” Busby said.
feel threatened by the math and science. You could see them
“We know that students miss a lot of their learning during
charting it in their journals, so that was really neat. Our TROY
the summer when they are out of school, so we wanted to try
students have been able to get some hands-on experience and
to bridge that gap through this STEM camp. We wanted to
relate it back to their class assignments on the campus.”
provide our teacher candidates with the opportunity to get
Moran said she hopes the camp has inspired students to see
some field experience with their teaching. We also wanted to
how all subjects can be related. “The ultimate goal was for the students to be life-long learners and to think of math, science, English and social studies as being related,” she said. “When you find something you are really interested in, you can put it all
increase awareness of STEM-related careers, particularly with minorities and girls. We know there has been a tremendous amount of enthusiasm with this project, and we know that learning has been occurring. The students at the Boys and Girls
together and find applications across the different subjects.”
Club have been a joy to work with.”
According to Dr. Fred Figliano, assistant professor within
For TROY graduate student Lauren Brown assisting with
the Division of Teacher Education, the integrated and handson approach was a key component of the camp. “What we tried to do with this project was infuse those concepts with our students and the integrated nature of STEM—how the four disciplines work with each other in solving real-world problems,” he said. “Most of the time in school, students are
the camp was a rewarding experience. “This has been super rewarding,” Brown said. “Just to see the excitement on all the kids’ faces has been great. I’m so impressed with how the students are able to retain so much information. Science and math is a part of everyday life; there is no getting away from it. It is so important for these students to be aware of it, and it is
taught silo STEM where first period may be science and second
very rewarding to see them get excited about these projects.”
period may be math. We were looking at the integrative nature
For the campers, the event provided the opportunity to learn,
of the four disciplines, and I think we succeeded in showing
have fun and meet new friends.
students how they work together.” Dr. Ruth Busby, chair of the Division of Teacher Education, said the project was beneficial for the children, the community and the TROY teacher candidates who assisted.
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“We learned a lot,” fourth-grader Jakobi Hines said. “It was fun because we got to meet a lot of new people.” A second session, which focused on other forms of energy including wind and coal, took place in July.
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NEW OPPORTUNITIES:
TROY WELCOMES MCNAIR PROGRAM THROUGH $232K GRANT
Thanks to a grant from the U.S. Department of Education, Troy University is providing first-generation and underrepresented students the opportunity to pursue graduate and doctoral degrees. The Ronald E. McNair Post Baccalaureate Achievement Program honors astronaut Ronald McNair, who died along with other crew members in the 1986 explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger. The program helps prepare qualified undergraduate students for graduate-level study. “The awarding of the TRIO McNair program to Troy University creates a great opportunity to help qualified undergraduate students take the next step into graduate and doctoral programs,” said Dr. Hal Fulmer, associate provost and dean of Undergraduate and First-Year Studies. “We’re proud to be one of the newest university homes for the McNair [program].” TROY was selected for funding through the grant program for $232,265 over the first of what is expected to be a five-year period. “First-generation and underrepresented undergraduate students who qualify for the program will be provided with graduate-level research experiences and support for the graduate application process,” said Dr. Debora Pettway, director of Student Support Services for the Dothan Campus and interim coordinator of the McNair Program at TROY.
Today, TROY undergraduates have opportunities to pursue their graduate and doctoral degrees through the U.S. Department of Education program honoring the life and legacy of American physicist and NASA astronaut Ronald McNair.
“McNair scholars will attend monthly seminars, which will train them in research writing and design and presentation. They
research component activities. Additionally, select scholars will
will receive intensive advisement throughout the academic
have opportunities to travel to research conferences to present
year as well as travel opportunities to present research and
their research and/or to campuses of universities with graduate
conferences or to take part in campus visits.”
programs that fit their research interests. Successful McNair
Participants will also take part in research internships during
scholars will have access to McNair-specific graduate school
the summer months, Pettway said. “Those internships, which
application fee waivers and scholarships/fellowships offered by
can be at TROY or other universities, will provide opportunities
a variety of universities throughout the country.
to conduct their research while also offering a Graduate
For additional information on the program, contact Dr. Pettway
Record Exam prep course and a Research and Graduate School
at 334-983-6556, ext. 1215 or by email at dpettway@troy.edu
Strategies course,” she said.
or Mary Griffin, TRIO director, at 334-670-5747 or by email at
Scholars will participate in a summer research project under
griffin@troy.edu.
the guidance of a faculty mentor. Scholars will receive up to $2,800 for an approved research project and completion of all
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HAYDEN WEIGHS IN
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O N U.S.- CHINA REL ATIONSHIP
While there may be global issues with
I don’t think there are any good reasons for
“shorter fuses,” the only person to serve
China to ever be an enemy of the
as both head of the Central Intelligence
United States.”
Agency and the National Security Agency believes the most pressing question of the 21st century surrounds the relationship between the United States and China.
China was one of five “potential consequences” facing the United States in 2018 and beyond. “2017 was a year of disruption, and let me be candid, we—the United States—were the disruptors,” he said.
Speaking to members of the Alabama
“There have been significant enough changes
World Affairs Council at Troy University’s
in American policy in the last year that we
Montgomery Campus, retired Air
have created what my grandchildren would
Force Gen. Michael Hayden cautioned
refer to as a ‘great disturbance in the Force.’”
that consequences of failing in that relationship would not be good.
The debate moving into the future, Hayden said, is what role the United States will play in the world.
“The most important question of the 21st century is the Sino-
“What do we Americans now think is our appropriate role in a
American relationship. Get that right, we will figure the other
troubled world in which we are still fairly a unique nation? That
stuff out. Get that wrong, the other stuff won’t matter,” Hayden
is where we are, and that is the ongoing national debate.”
said. “I don’t think China is an enemy of the United States, and
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TROY T O DAY
SORRELL EARNS NEW RECOGNITION
Students within the Sorrell College of Business celebrate diversity and learn from their classmates around the world. Through learning together, students become globally aware and competitive within the marketplace.
Troy University’s Sorrell College of Business has been
University’ slogan is much more than a marketing tool,” the
recognized for its deep commitment to internationalization
committee wrote. “It is a driving strategy for the University
reflecting TROY’s reputation as “Alabama’s International
that is fully embedded in the campus ethos and thoroughly
University.”
internalized by students, faculty and senior leaders at all levels
The Sorrell College was recently awarded accreditation
of the University administration.”
from the Network of International Business Schools
Dr. Judson Edwards, dean of the Sorrell College, said NIBS
(NIBS), an association of business schools from universities
accreditation validates the efforts of administration, faculty
around the world united by a shared commitment to the
and staff to make global awareness a key component of the
internationalization of business and economics. NIBS
comprehensive business education at Troy University. “The
accreditation recognizes the degree to which a school
commitment to internationalization, both University-wide
of business has become international in all facets of its
and within the Sorrell College, truly enhances the educational
organization.
experience of our students and better prepares them for
The NIBS team visited the Troy Campus in March, and the
success in business and life,” Edwards said.
Sorrell College was officially awarded accreditation at the
Edwards said NIBS accreditation opens the door for student
NIBS annual conference in May. In its report recommending
and faculty exchanges and even joint teaching and research
accreditation, the team noted TROY’s multi-faceted approach
opportunities among schools in the NIBS network. “The most
to internationalization. “The ‘Alabama’s International
valuable part of this process has been the enhancement
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TROY's inaugural Student International Trade Show was a celebration of diversity and learning as business students researched and promoted various world cultures.
recommendations given to us by the NIBS team,” Edwards said. “They gave us great ideas for improving study abroad participation and creating ways to better measure global awareness activities. Overall, it is another step forward for the Sorrell College.”
WORLD MARKET
There are only 65 business schools around the world that have
For a group of students in Troy University’s Sorrell College of
achieved NIBS accreditation and just nine in the U.S.
Business, the spring semester offered many lessons with an international flavor. Students in Dr. Clint Relyea’s managing in a global environment course took part in the first Student International Trade Show in April, putting together booths and displays representing countries around the world. “What we do is assign teams a country that I randomly pick,” said Relyea, coordinator of international business programs and associate professor of management. “Their role is to build a booth like you’d see in a trade show to promote that country both in terms of economic development and tourism.” Students were judged in three categories: creativity, knowledge of country and professionalism in booth presentation. Relyea encouraged students to include artifacts and even food samples of typical meals from their countries. He said students needed to demonstrate they had the knowledge necessary to conduct business in their assigned country, along with details such as demographics, tourist attractions and geography. “They had to use that entrepreneurial spirit,” Relyea said. “These kids walked away saying, ‘Wow, that was wonderful.’ They have to know all the economics and the political process. It’s hands on.” The winning display was for Iceland, followed by Sri Lanka and Norway.
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N EWS
PARK PAYS TRIBUTE TO R O S A PA R K S
A park located in downtown Montgomery at the site of the department store where Rosa Parks worked as a seamstress has officially opened and features some special elements paying tribute to the “Mother of the Civil Rights Movement.” Located between buildings at 29 Dexter Avenue, the park has been designated Lower Dexter Park and includes elements of the original Montgomery Fair department store facade and a concrete marker containing a quote from Parks. “The public is invited to enjoy this peaceful place for relaxing and reflecting,” said Dr. Felicia Bell, director of TROY’s Rosa Parks Museum. “There is a great historical marker with information about the store and Mrs. Parks. We appreciate Mayor Strange and the city for involving us in this process and ceremony.”
ON TOUR:
C O N F U C I U S I N S T I T U T E TA K E S C H I N E S E N E W Y E A R TO LO C A L C L A S S R O O M S
Montgomery area school children welcomed the Year of the Dog as a touring group from Troy University’s Confucius Institute brought its Chinese New Year celebration to area Confucius Classrooms. With each stop along the bus tour, TROY’s Confucius Institute introduced students to the traditional Chinese dragon and lion dances, and students from Confucius Classrooms at each school also performed during the events—some singing Chinese songs, while others recited traditional Chinese poetry.
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TROY FOR TROOPS CENTER C O M E S TO C L A R K S V I L L E Troy University’s service to the military continued to grow this spring with the opening of a TROY for Troops Center at the University’s site in Clarksville, Tennessee. A grand opening ceremony took place in May for the center, which features a day room with cable television, computers with printing capability, a study space and coffee, among other amenities. Area Coordinator Shari Carrothers-Ziebell said the TROY for Troops Center is designed for active military, veterans, ROTC members and military families. Visitors can enjoy camaraderie, peer support, fellowship, networking and student organizations. Carrothers-Ziebell said the center represents another example of TROY’s military friendliness and connection to the local community. The Clarksville site joins other physical TROY for Troops locations in Troy, Dothan, Montgomery and Phenix City.
WHALEY CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
"Helping TROY grow since 1931"
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TROY T O DAY
NE WS
A DECADE OF SUCCESS
As hundreds of young, eager campers flocked to the Troy Campus ready to learn songs, dances, lines and acting skills, TROY’s Department of Theatre and Dance celebrated a major milestone in its efforts to develop area youths' interest in the performing arts. This summer marked the department’s 10th consecutive Summer Spotlight—a series of camps and intensives focusing on creative drama, dance and musical theatre. “We started it as a program to give young people the opportunity to have high-quality instruction and experience in the arts during the summer,” said Tori Lee Averett, chair of the Department of Theatre and Dance. Bryce Tatum, a 17-year-old Goshen High School student who attended his first Summer Spotlight as an 8-year-old, credits his yearly work with the Creative Drama Camp for fostering his love of theatre. “I started to grow interest in theatre in
Liam Clower marches in one of his acting sessions during this year's Summer Spotlight.
early elementary school, and I heard about this camp and decided to try it,” Tatum said. “From then on, I’ve just loved the entire experience. It’s just the amount of creativity that’s
Today, Summer Spotlight includes the Spotlight on Dance, the
here—every year is a brand new experience, and I always look
Performance and Tech and Management Intensives for high
forward to it.”
school and college students and the Creative Drama Camp. The
The program’s growth came when organizers began to
program has grown to about 275 participants.
recognize other arts-related needs among both TROY
Many of those children grow up to become TROY students,
students and those in the Pike County area. “There are not a
teachers and theatre and dance professionals. “Another
lot of opportunities during the summer for kids to participate
exciting way we’ve seen evidence of growth is we now have
in theatre and dance,” Averett said. “With the inception of the
students who were children who came to Summer Spotlight as
theatre education degree program, we also saw a need for
participants who are teaching at the camps,” Averett said.
those students to work with children in a classroom setting.
“Many of our guest artists were TROY graduates who have
We are meeting those needs beautifully.”
come back after working in the industry to share what
For the kids who participate in the camp every year, Summer
they’ve learned,” she added. “Over 10 years, it’s been inspiring
Spotlight’s growth has crafted friendships and a sense of
and exciting to see the children, their parents and the Troy
belonging. “I would say Summer Spotlight is definitely a
Campus family really embrace the culture of what we do at
magical experience,” Tatum said. “It’s amazing. I’ve seen it
Summer Spotlight, which is all about inclusion, taking risks
definitely become much more of a community over the years.
and being creative. These young people feel at home here on a
Now, even past Spotlighters are telling their families that this
college campus, and that is the most affirming thing for me.”
is an amazing camp and that they should try it.”
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SU LLI VA N AWA RDS CELEB RATE SERVA NT L EA DERSHIP
From left to right: Sam Moody, Sarah Grace Stone, Chancellor Jack Hawkins, Jr., and Rhonda Taylor pose after the 2018 Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards.
Troy University has honored two students and a member
annually to a male student, a female student and one non-
of the University’s staff with the 2018 Algernon Sydney
student at TROY since 1981. Students, faculty and staff
Sullivan Awards.
nominate candidates for the award.
Sam Moody, a senior risk management and insurance major
“We believe this is one of the highest awards given by our
from Montgomery, Sarah Grace Stone, a senior social work
University,” said Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr. “We feel it is appropriate
major from Pike Road, and Rhonda Taylor, administrative
that we present the Sullivan Awards at Troy University simply
assistant to the dean of the College of Communication and Fine
because it is our mission to continue to develop students into
Arts, received the Sullivan Awards during a luncheon in their
leaders with well-defined values. We think these values are
honor on the Troy Campus. The recipients were also honored
more important today than at any time in our history. We
during the University’s annual Honors Convocation.
want our graduates to be equipped with the skills and values
The Sullivan Award, which is presented at select colleges
necessary to make a difference.”
and universities throughout the United States, recognizes recipients for their excellence of character, humanitarian service and spiritual qualities. The award has been presented
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FA CULTY / S TA FF
MICHAEL ORLOFSKY RECEIVES
INGALLS AWARD Michael Orlofsky, professor of English and director of Troy University’s Creative Writing program, is the recipient of the University’s 2018 Ingalls Award for Excellence in Classroom Teaching. The Ingalls Award is given annually to the professor who has “most diligently, effectively and cheerfully conducted his or her classes during the current academic year.” Students nominate faculty members for the award, and a committee of students and faculty advisors selects the recipient. Orlofsky said he was grateful to the students who participated in the nomination, observation and selection process. “They are some of TROY’s best and brightest,” he said, “and I feel gratified to be held in their good graces.” Orlofsky said his most influential mentor and guide is his wife, Diane, who is a professor of music and director of University choirs at TROY. “She beat me to the award by 24 years,” he said. “She’s always about a quarter of a century ahead of me.”
Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., (left) and Michael Orlofsky (right) celebrate during the 2018 Ingalls Award presentation. Orlofsky teaches English and was selected for the award by members of TROY’s student body.
TROY WELCOMES
GEOSPATIAL INFORMATICS DEPARTMENT A new academic department within the College of Arts and
way,” said department chair Xutong Niu. “This department
Sciences will give TROY students a path to high-tech, in-
can help us unite all the expertise. We can better utilize our
demand jobs. The Department of Geospatial Informatics
personnel and expand our efforts into a broader area now.”
began in May as the new home of the geomatics program, the
Niu said he’s communicated with engineering companies,
geographic information systems (GIS) minor and the unmanned aerial systems (UAS) minor.
law enforcement agencies and energy companies who are interested in hiring students trained in geospatial informatics.
The new department includes geomatics faculty members who
“There’s a big demand for them,” said Geomatics Program
have been in the Department of Mathematics and Geomatics
Director Dr. Steve Ramroop. “Another thing with geospatial
and geography faculty from the Department of Social Sciences.
informatics is it is technology driven. We are using the best of
Located on the third floor of Wallace Hall, the Department of
the best hardware and software, which is one reason why all of
Geospatial Informatics began as a way to accommodate the
our students are employable. You name the field, and there are
significant crossover between geomatics, GIS, geography and
jobs out there for our students.”
drone technology. “In surveying and geomatics, we use drones a lot—to collect data, to generate maps in a fast and efficient
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CHANGING
TROY T O DAY
FA CULT Y / S TA FF
COURSE
TROY appoints Dasinger senior vice chancellor, chief of staff As of July 1, major changes have taken place within TROY
as president of Ingram State Technical College, the state’s only
administration and the College of Education. Dr. Royce H.
educational institution providing postsecondary career and
“Hank” Dasinger, who previously served as the dean of TROY’s
technical education exclusively to incarcerated adults and
College of Education, has taken the position as interim Senior
eligible parolees. Following his retirement from active duty in
Vice Chancellor for Student Services and Administration and
the Air Force, Dasinger also served in several capacities at Air
Chief of Staff for the Chancellor at Troy University, a role
University and Maxwell Air Force Base before being named
vacated by the retirement of Dr. John Dew. As a result of the
president at Ingram State.
shift, Dr. Dionne Rosser-Mims has stepped into Dasinger’s
Rosser-Mims joined the TROY faculty as an adjunct professor
vacated position to become the college’s interim dean.
in 2005 and then as a full-time faculty member in 2007. Prior to
“Dr. Dasinger has provided tremendous leadership within the
joining the TROY faculty, she served as leadership development
College of Education,” said Chancellor Jack Hawkins, Jr. “His
associate for the Fanning Institute for Leadership and research
experience and dedication to serving students equips him well
coordinator at
for the oversight of student services and administration. And
the Carl Vinson
Dr. Rosser-Mims has demonstrated her commitment to our
Institute of
students in the College of Education, as both a faculty member
Government at
and an associate dean. She is both a former Chancellor’s Fellow
the University of
and Faculty Senate president. Her proven leadership abilities
Georgia.
will serve the students, faculty and staff of the College of
Dr. John Dew
Education well.”
joined Troy
Dasinger said he looks forward to serving in the new role.
University in 2007
“Serving as dean of the College of Education has been inspiring
following stints in
and enjoyable. Now, I feel inspired to serve our University in
higher education
more ways,” he said. “Helping students and professionals learn
and industry.
and grow as leaders is a core part of my mission in life, so I look forward to doing my best to make a difference in the lives of
Dr. Hank Dasinger
our students as well as those serving them.” Dr. Rosser-Mims said she is excited to continue the work begun under Dr. Dasinger’s leadership. “I feel inspired to serve as interim dean to continue the work advanced under Dr. Dasinger’s leadership,” she said. “We have an improved strategic direction, which I intend to work hard implementing and to pay it forward by doing all I can to develop faculty, staff and students.” Dasinger has more than 30 years of experience in education and training. Prior to leading the College of Education, he served
Left and right: Dr. Dionne Rosser-Mims, Dr. John Dew
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BUILDING BRIDGES:
LITERACY PROGRAM BRINGS GENERATIONS OF HURTSBORO RESIDENTS TOGETHER
Hurtsboro residents and elementary students celebrate the completion of the storybook created through the Building Relations in Diverse Generational Environments (BRIDGE) Literacy Project.
Two weeks and a summer literacy program designed to
said Dr. Paige Paquette, associate professor in the Department
strengthen students’ reading and writing skills—that’s all it
of English at TROY’s Phenix City Campus. “Throughout the
took to bring generations of Hurtsboro, Alabama, residents
program, the student participants read books, wrote poems,
closer together.
painted pictures, learned interviewing and communication
Combining the youthful exuberance of rising fourth, fifth
skills and wrote biographies about the senior citizens. Literacy
and sixth grade students with the knowledge and experience of the men and women from the Hurtsboro Senior Citizen
and the arts created a bridge between these two generations, and all of the participants involved have realized they have
Center, TROY’s Building Relations in Diverse Generational
much to learn from and teach each other.”
Environments (BRIDGE) Literacy Project proved itself to be a
Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Ed Crowell, who is a member
major success. Funded through a grant from the Dollar General
of the Troy University Board of Trustees and grew up in the
Literacy Foundation, the BRIDGE Literacy Project provided
Hurtsboro area, said he’s thankful a new generation is learning
participants with a variety of reading and writing activities.
to value the experiences of their elders. “It doesn’t matter
Students interacted with seniors throughout the two-week
where you start, it matters where you finish and what you
program and interviewed them to produce a written piece that
learn along the way,” Crowell said. “I appreciate having had
has now become a part of local history—a published storybook
the opportunity to grow up and learn from those within this
presented to the seniors during the event’s closing ceremony.
community, and it is evident that there are still those who take
“This year, 23 local senior citizens dedicated two weeks of
great pride and interest in our youth and our community.”
sharing life experiences and reaching out to 21 local students,”
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F E AT UR E STORY
Troy Elementary School students learn the power of observation from Dr. Art Bacon.
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FE ATU R E STORY
LIVE ART:
ART BACON MESMERIZES ELEMENTARY STUDENTS WITH PAINTING DEMONSTRATION WRITTEN BY: MATT CLOWER
I
t starts with a few brush stokes, brown
As he painted in front of the students,
swoops on a bright white canvas. As art-
Bacon took questions and discussed
ist Dr. Art Bacon leans over to peer at his
his long and varied career. Bacon spent
subject—a young girl seated on a stool—a
40 years as a professor and dean of the
classroom full of fourth graders leans forward
science department at Talladega College.
to watch him.
He retired from academia in 2008 and
Soon, the swoops and swishes of brown paint form the familiar face of one of their classmates, and the students give a round of applause. Bacon smiles as he cleans his brush. “Whatever you do, never stop practicing,” Bacon said. “Because you are never perfect.” Bacon, a renowned artist from Talladega, gave a demonstration of his craft to students at Troy Elementary School, in an event organized by Troy University’s International Art Center. Bacon’s work was featured in an exhibit hosted by the IAC this spring. “Dr. Bacon’s series of live painting sessions with Troy Elementary School served as an enriching event supporting the International Arts Center’s community engagement program,” said Carrie Jaxon, curator of the IAC. “It was a wonderful opportunity for young students to converse with our invited artist as he painted, be inspired by his colorful career and to learn about the art they can
began to pursue his lifelong passion for art full time. It was difficult finding time for art while he worked in science, Bacon told the students—particularly while in grad school. “I was always looking down a microscope,” he said. These days, Bacon is turning his powers of observation—which helped him discover new species of protozoa as a scientist— toward capturing the world around him in vibrant, dynamic paintings. Bacon’s art can be found in numerous art collections, including the Birmingham Museum of Art, David C. Driskell Center, Mobile Museum of Art, Alabama State University, Fisk University, New York University, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and in the private collection of Rep. John Lewis. Bacon said he takes any opportunity to share his passion for art with the public, particularly students.
enjoy right in their own community, here at
“Art is my passion, and I enjoy teaching
Troy University.”
others about it,” Bacon said. “There’s no greater joy than being in the midst of young kids and working with them. They are so enthusiastic.”
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TROY T O DAY
F E AT URE S TO RY
A LIFE-CHANGING EXPERIENCE: TROY CONCERT CHORALE STUDENTS PERFORM AT CARNEGIE HALL WRITTEN BY: ANDY ELLIS
W
PHOTOGRAPHY BY: DAN WRIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY/DCINY PRODUCTIONS
hen members of Troy University’s Concert
While in New York City, the 37-member ensemble
Chorale took to the stage of New York’s
worked alongside two other choirs under the direction of
historic Carnegie Hall on May 25, it was the
internationally renowned conductor and composer Dr. Eric
culmination of hard work in the rehearsal
Barnum as a part of the Distinguished Concerts International
room, as well as raising money to make the trip. And, as the
New York City presentation of “The Music of Eric Barnum.”
performance concluded and choir members realized the
“The trip exceeded my every expectation by leaps and bounds,”
enormity of the moment, it became clear that the experience was well worth all the effort.
said Dr. Diane Orlofsky, conductor of the Concert Chorale. “The kids worked very hard. There were approximately 11 to 12 hours of rehearsal while we were there, we performed for
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a TROY alumni event and then there was a one-hour sound
“The work happens in rehearsal,” she said. “As I watched them
check. I think the kids understood the gravity of the space and
rehearsing, they became so much more invested in the music
realized that they were treading on musical hallowed ground.
and were ready to take it to a whole different level. I know my
And, working with DCI New York was top notch. They really
kids, and I prepare my kids, but I was stunned at the quality. For
took care of us.”
those who performed for the last time with the group, it was
Orlofsky said she had prepared the students for a “work trip”
bittersweet. Those who are coming back in the fall realize that
that not only entailed the Carnegie Hall performance but also a performance for TROY’s Greater New York Metropolitan Area Alumni Chapter.
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they are never going to be the same thanks to this experience. I was super proud of them. They were great ambassadors for Troy University.”
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F E AT UR E STO R Y
24
SMO KI N’ HOT RESEARCH TROY professor helps uncover earliest use of tobacco in U.S. WRITTEN BY: GREG PHILLIPS
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A recent discovery by Dr. Stephen Carmody and his fellow researchers has led many historians to believe tobacco has been used within Native American culture since 1685-1530 B.C.
A
Troy University professor has uncovered
Because Native Americans used tobacco for ritualistic and
evidence of the earliest use of tobacco in North
religious purposes, it played a fundamental role in society.
America north of Mexico, a discovery that may
“Ritual and religion were an important part of everyday life in
change our understanding of the early life and culture of Native Americans.
ancient communities,” according to the official report submitted by Carmody and his colleagues to the Journal of Archaeological
Dr. Stephen Carmody, an assistant professor of
Science. “While some have hypothesized that tobacco arrived
anthropology, along with Dr. Jon Russ of Rhodes
in eastern North America between 2,000 and 3,000 years ago,
College and Dr. Jera Davis of New South Associates Inc.,
our results suggest that it was already well-established in the
recently discovered evidence that native people were using
region by that time.”
tobacco more than a millennium earlier than
The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians helped financially
previously believed.
support the research project, along with Dr. Jan Simek of the
“This new discovery changes how we think about the past,” said
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and a Rhodes College
Carmody, who has studied ritual plant use for years. “Tobacco
Faculty Development Grant.
is one of the most, if not the most, important plants to native
Russell Townsend, Tribal Historic Preservation officer for
peoples. We’ve now dated its use in our area 1,500 years earlier than the earliest dates we had.” The discovery came from tests that found traces of nicotine in a pipe (or “medicine tube”) found decades ago at a nowsubmerged site along the Flint River in northern Alabama, a tributary of the Tennessee River.
the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, said the discovery challenges previous assumptions about regional history. “The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Tribal Historic Preservation Office is proud and honored to be working with Dr. Carmody and his esteemed colleagues. The analysis of residue from these archaeological pipes has helped to
While smoking pipes have been found at much older sites, until
inform our Tribe about prehistoric tobacco use and the use of
now the earliest evidence for tobacco use came from a smoking
medicinal additives,” Townsend said. “Also, the very early date
tube dated between 500 and 300 B.C.
derived from this new sample forces us to re-evaluate our
The new discovery dates to the hunter-gatherer societies of the Late Archaic period, 1685-1530 B.C.
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assumptions about the origins of agriculture in the Southeast. The ramifications of this work are very exciting, and we look
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TROY T O DAY
Study of ancient plants: a key in understanding native history Dr. Stephen Carmody’s recent tobacco discovery is just
part of a larger study to which he’s dedicated his life. The TROY professor’s specialization is paleoethnobotany, or the study of ancient plant remains and how those plants affected ancient people. These remains shed light on the men and women who lived thousands of years ago and can be used to trace the evolution of society through the ages. Tobacco was a ritual plant, but Carmody also focuses on ancient plants that were used as food. Carmody said eastern North America is one of only nine locations around the world where native people domesticated local plants. “In the past I’ve grown those plants, and that’s something
This ancient smoking tube is the subject of the study conducted by Dr. Carmody and his fellow researchers.
we’re going to do here at TROY,” he said. “We’re so disconnected from our food that we go to the store and buy it. That transition in the past is how it’s culminated. This development is probably the most environmentally
forward to continuing our research efforts with Dr. Carmody and his associates.”
and culturally significant transition in the past.” Beyond understanding the plants and their
The article is “Evidence of tobacco from a Late Archaic smoking
transformation, however, he seeks to interpret the history
tube recovered from the Flint River site in southeastern North
of Native Americans.
America” by S. Carmody, J. Davis, S. Tadi, J.S. Sharp, R.K. Hunt, J. Russ. It appears in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, volume 20, (August 2018), published by Elsevier.
“To me, that’s something that’s really important—getting the story right,” Carmody said. “For modern Native Americans, these are their ancestors. These are groups
The Journal of Archaeological Science is aimed at
of people who have been denied, for a long time, stories
archaeologists and scientists with particular interests in
about their past or the idea they had religion or were a
advancing the development and application of scientific
complex society. Getting to tell that story, it is important.
techniques and methodologies to all areas of archaeology.
We can shine a new light on the past. And ultimately, this
This established monthly journal publishes focus articles,
is a shared past for all of us.”
original research papers and major review articles of wide archaeological significance. The journal provides an international forum for archaeologists and scientists from widely different scientific backgrounds who share a common interest in developing and applying scientific methods to inform major debates through improving the quality and reliability of scientific information derived from archaeological research.
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FEAT U R E S TOR Y
ITALIAN CONNECTION TROY dance, theatre and music students take part in second DAP Festival
Students pose in front of Florence, Italy's Cathedral, the Duomo, while touring the ancient city. Student participants: Katie Breland, Graham Butler, Cota Cheek, Hannah Echols, Kaylie Elward, Lilyanna Everett, Noah Finely, Viva Gunter, Abigail Howard, Patrick Jackson, Thomas Mauldin, Andrew Mills, Taylor Montgomery, Kezia Moore, Zipporah Moore, Ella Pitman, Catherine Potts, Jordan Prough, Caitlynn Quintela, Caylee Sanders, Aly Scarborough, Erin Smith, Olivia Tompkins, Makayla Wade, Dallas Welk, Mallory Wintz WRITTEN BY: GREG PHILLIPS
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY: MARK MOSELEY
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28
TROY T O DAY
Guitarists from the John M. Long School of Music perform on stage during the second annual Danza in Arte a Pietrasanta.
Surrounded by more than 700 years of rich history and regal architecture, a group of Troy University students and faculty members honed their crafts as they studied and performed in and around Pietrasanta, Italy, this summer. For two weeks, the group of theatre, dance and music students and faculty became acquainted with the town as they participated in tours and classes and performed in the second annual Danza in Arte a Pietrasanta (DAP) Festival. Set on the streets and stages in and around the coastal city, the DAP Festival is known as a unique international festival combining dance and music with visual arts. “This trip was such a blessing, and I thrived as an artist and individual,” said Catherine Potts, a senior theatre major from Florence, Alabama. “I expected to learn new things and be immersed in a new culture, but I didn’t expect to be woken up and changed by my experiences. I feel like a new person, and my time in Italy has had an impact that will affect me for a lifetime.” Having played a role in the inaugural festival held last summer, TROY students and faculty members were thankful to participate in its second year. “This festival is becoming part of our culture,” said Tori Lee Averett, chair of the TROY Department of Theatre and Dance. “We’re excited that three
Abigail Howard, a dance major from Alabaster, Alabama, was one of 10 dance students to study and perform on the stages and streets of Pietrasanta, Italy.
different groups of students—music, theatre and dance—went this year. It’s growing, and we’ve been very collaborative in the development of it. We’re all working together to make it happen.”
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The success of last year’s trip greatly influenced the expansion
In addition to the 26 students, TROY First Lady Janice Hawkins,
of TROY’s festival role this year.
Coordinator of Dance Deborah Hicks and faculty members
“First of all, we know that study abroad experiences are good
Tommy Newman, Dominique Angel and Dr. Robert Gibson
for students, but what was exceptionally successful about this
traveled to Pietrasanta for the festival.
particular program was the students participating in intensive
While the DAP Festival exposes students to unique lessons
study for two weeks on an international scale,” Averett said.
in their respective fields of study, it’s also a rewarding
“They got to work with a variety of international teaching
cultural journey. “It’s an extraordinary experience for these
artists. They learned new things every day, so their capacity and
young people, many of whom haven’t left the country or
ability to absorb different types of instruction expanded.”
even the region,” Averett said. “It is providing a life-changing
During the college portion of the festival, national and
experience for our students, and many people are helping
international students participate in master classes with
make that possible, including Chancellor Jack Hawkins, Jr.,
a diverse group of renowned teaching artists. “It was a
and Mrs. Hawkins.”
concentrated, authentic art-making collaborative experience,”
TROY’s relationship with the DAP Festival began thanks to
Averett said.
the festival’s artistic director, Adria Feralli, who served as an
This year’s traveling group included 10 dance, 11 theatre and
adjunct dance professor at the Troy Campus in 2016.
five music students—double the total number of students who
After watching the department’s fall student choreography
attended in 2017. “I was deeply affected as an individual and
showcase that November, she invited the student
an artist on this trip, and it was because of my experience of
choreographers to showcase their work at the festival. In June,
being immersed in not only Italian artistry but artistry from all
the spotlight shone on TROY students at the festival. “It was
around the world,” Potts said. “Each night we got to experience
an evening of Troy University, so our students prepared dance
dance from different parts of the world, and each afternoon,
pieces, musical theatre pieces, guitar pieces and collaborative
the other theatre students and I were immersed in the world of
pieces that featured the full company of students working
commedia dell’arte for the first week and musical theatre for
together,” Averett said.
the second week. It was an experience I will never forget.”
TROY intends to return to the DAP Festival next year. Sign up
For the first time, guitar students from the John M. Long School
to receive more information at troy.edu/Italy.
of Music participated in the festival.
To support future trips, visit troy.edu/give and donate to the Travel Study in Dance fund.
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FEAT U R E S TOR Y
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TROY T O DAY
$1.5 MILLION GIFT GIVES NEW HALL A NEW NAME WRITTEN BY: MATT CLOWER
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY: JOEY MEREDITH & MARK MOSELEY
9/18/18 5:59 PM
T
roy University’s New Hall, the residence hall that
When Chancellor Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., thinks about Sue
opened in 2015 at the Troy Campus, has a new
and Lewis Rushing, he said he sees a “special couple” whose
name thanks to a $1.5 million donation from alumni
generosity will continue to leave a positive impact on TROY
Sue and Lewis Rushing.
students for years to come.
The Board of Trustees voted unanimously in May to rename the
“The Rushings have been enormously generous to the
residence hall Rushing Hall in honor of the alumni couple who
University, and it’s simply because they love this place,”
are both 1965 graduates. And on Sept. 1, the Rushings were
Hawkins said. “They want to be a part of it, and they want to
honored as Rushing Hall was officially dedicated before the
help students in the future. It’s wonderful to get them
first home football game of the season against Boise State. The
re-involved, and I think they will be a permanent part
couple said they are proud to be a part of TROY’s continued
of the family.”
growth and to leave behind a legacy that will benefit future
Rushing Hall is Troy University’s newest state-of-the-art
generations of students.
residence hall, featuring 280 single-bed suites, 68 double
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From left to right: Sen. Gerald Dial, Sue Rushing, Lewis Rushing and Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., celebrate the official naming of Rushing Hall, the University’s newest residential facility.
occupancy suites and 12 handicapped suites on four floors
enhancement of the on-campus experience of our students.
totaling 118,754 square feet. In addition to the residential
We are truly grateful to them for their continuing friendship,
rooms, Rushing Hall includes 1,400 square feet of common
support and generosity.”
areas, 2,600 square feet of safe space that double as class and
“Mr. and Mrs. Rushing really set the example for us all,” said
meeting rooms, a convenience store, technology areas, laundry areas and study rooms.
Walter D. Givhan, Senior Vice Chancellor for Advancement and Economic Development. “They’ve been highly successful
“It has been such a pleasure getting to know Sue and Lewis
and now look for an opportunity to give back to the University
Rushing,” said Becky Watson, associate vice chancellor for
and the students it serves. They are visionary alumni who are
development. “Both of them are loyal and dedicated TROY
helping us create a bright future for those who follow them
alumni who value and credit their educational experience
at TROY.”
at TROY to their success in their respective careers in education and business. Their transformational gift is a wonderful testament to their love of Troy University and to the
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Lewis Rushing graduated from TROY with a degree in marketing/business administration and was a member of the baseball team. After graduating, he started his career with Alabama Power before transitioning to the real estate/multi-family housing business in 1973, an industry the Rushings remain active in to this day through a family-owned business operating under the corporate name Penn Properties, Inc. Sue Rushing retired from a career in education, and spent time working for the Mobile, Jefferson County and Midfield boards of education. The Rushings have four children and they and their families all reside in the Hoover area.
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Sorrell College of Business students need to have a plan of action in order to succeed, and TROY alumnus Dr. Harrel McKinney (’62) has donated funds to help team students with business mentors to accomplish that mission. Last spring, McKinney, who founded Alabama Reference Laboratories, Inc. in 1972, donated more than $261,000 to the college’s IDEA Bank to establish the Dr. Harrel McKinney Mentor Program, which will provide students with suggestions and advice on student entrepreneurial interests and help them develop a network that leads to the launch of a successful business, product or service. McKinney said he’s interested in helping new generations of TROY Trojans succeed and help strengthen America’s private enterprise as they pursue their dreams. “I am very supportive of anyone or anything that has the initiative to make a success out of themselves without the help of government support and without government interference,” he said. “They need someone who has done it and can lend guidance for their aspirations. In other words, ‘I’ve done it, here’s how I did it and now you can do it, too.’” With his gift, students in the Troy Bank & Trust Entrepreneurship Program will be paired with mentors from business and industry who will help students build and refine business plans—one of the most critical ingredients for success in business, McKinney adds. The self-made success—the knowledge, experience and
DONO RS / GIVING
LEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE
ethos behind a successful startup—is exactly what Sorrell College of Business Dean Judson Edwards wants to provide Troy Bank & Trust Entrepreneurship students. “To have someone like Dr. McKinney actively engaged with the Sorrell College is truly a blessing to me, our faculty, staff and, most importantly, to our students,” he said. “His life story is the perfect testimonial to any student looking to become a successful entrepreneur. Even more than his accomplished business acumen, it is through his actions as a husband, father, grandfather and citizen that students will better understand what it takes to be successful in life—being an honorable, determined, caring and ethical leader.”
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JOHNSON REMEMBERED THROUGH SIGMA CHI DONATIONS
When members of Troy University’s Sigma Chi chapter think of
Ken Johnson graduated from TROY with a bachelor’s degree
Ken Johnson (’82), they remember the 59-year-old alumnus as
in social science. Johnson was active in Sigma Chi throughout
a dedicated mentor and friend who passed away far too soon.
his college years, and his involvement in the organization
Now, Ken’s father, Roy Johnson, is honoring his son’s memory
only deepened after graduating. Moseley described him as an
with a $125,000 donation to TROY and Sigma Chi to create an
engaged alumnus who was active in fundraising and served as a
endowment that will be used to help new pledges in need of
mentor to the young Sigma Chi members.
financial help pay the cost of joining Sigma Chi.
“He is someone whose presence and support around the
“Sigma Chi was a big part of Kenneth’s college days and long
chapter was always appreciated,” Moseley said. “Many
after college,” Roy Johnson said. “He made lifelong friends
alumni never come back and see the chapter house, but Ken
through the fraternity—great friends—and so did I. They were
actually felt the calling to come back and engage with the
a good bunch of young men, and it means a lot to me to honor
undergraduate men.”
Kenneth in this way.”
One Sigma Chi member who benefited from Johnson’s
Dendy Moseley, advisor for TROY’s Sigma Chi chapter, said
mentorship was Connor Couch, a 2017 graduate now working
the generous gift will ensure that cost will not serve as a
at Troy University as a recruiter. Couch said he and his twin
barrier for a potential member who possesses the values
brother were both close to Johnson, someone who was happy
and characteristics Sigma Chi stands for—values that
to give advice on school or careers. “He spent a lot of time
Ken Johnson embodied.
talking to the pledges and new members, and he was someone
“I think Mr. Johnson saw that his son gained true, lifelong
that a lot of people went to with questions or when they
friends through his involvement in Sigma Chi, through
needed help,” Couch said. “He was a special guy.”
his college years and up until his passing,” Moseley said.
Couch said Roy Johnson’s gift will open the door for young men
“Obviously, that speaks to the bonds created through
to join Sigma Chi who may not otherwise have been able. “Mr.
this organization.”
Roy saw how much Sigma Chi impacted Ken’s life, and I think he wants to see other young men impacted in the same way,” Couch said.
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D ON O R S / G IVING
LASTING LEGACY:
FORMER BROADCASTER, CONGRESSMAN D O N AT E S $ 1 0 0 K TO B R O A D C A S T P R O G R A M
Alumnus Earl Hutto (fourth from right) and his family toured the TROY TrojanVision studios on the Troy Campus in March. Thanks to Hutto's gift, TROY's broadcast journalism students will soon learn in a state-of-the-art studio. Troy University alumnus Earl Hutto (’49), a renowned news
After graduating, Hutto took a teaching job in Cottonwood,
broadcaster who went on to serve eight terms in the U.S. House
Alabama, but continued to be a radio host on the side. Hutto
of Representatives, and his wife Nancy are giving back to the
was soon offered the position of sports director for WEAR-TV
University that helped launch his career.
in Pensacola—a position he held from 1954 to 1961.
The Hutto family recently donated $100,000, which will help
Hutto followed his stint at WEAR with positions at WSFA in
support a renovation of the TROY TrojanVision studios inside
Montgomery from 1961 to 1963 and WJHG in Panama City
Wallace Hall. Hutto’s gift brings full circle a career that started
from 1963 to 1979.
with sharing the news on radio and television, culminating
Hutto transitioned from broadcasting to politics in 1972 when
with him making the news as the congressman for Florida’s First District.
he won a seat in the Florida House of Representatives. He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1979 and
Hutto recalls getting his start as a broadcaster at local radio
served for the next seven terms. “I thank the people for keeping
station WTBF. Hutto said he remembers his years at TROY
me there for 16 years, and I believe I could have gone on and on,
fondly and is proud to have a granddaughter who is attending
but we believed 16 years was enough,” Hutto said.
TROY this fall.
The Huttos’ recent gift to the University will pave the way for
“The whole family is excited about her decision to come to
an upgrade to the TrojanVision studios at the Troy Campus.
TROY, (and) I think she is going to do well,” Hutto said. “I hope
“We are so grateful for the generosity of Mr. Hutto and his
she enjoys it as much as I did.”
family,” said Rebecca Watson, associate vice chancellor for
Hutto was born to humble beginnings in Midland City, Alabama.
development. “This gift will allow future broadcast students
After serving in the Navy from 1944 to 1946, Hutto enrolled
to learn in a state-of-the-art environment and potentially
at TROY to study teaching, then discovered he had a talent for
follow in Mr. Hutto’s footsteps.”
broadcasting when he began to host radio shows on WTBF.
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AT H LETICS
STUDENT-ATHLETES EXCEL IN THE CLASSROOM The academic success of TROY’s student-athletes reached new heights during the 2017-18 academic year, highlighted by junior Daniel Glick’s naming to the CoSIDA Google Cloud Academic All-America Team. He became the first track and field student-athlete and 14th TROY student-athlete to receive Academic All-America distinction. Additionally, four athletic programs led the Sun Belt in the latest NCAA APR release and the women's golf, men's golf and women's cross country teams posted perfect 1,000 scores. The TROY football, women's golf, men's golf, men's basketball, baseball, women's track and field and softball programs all set single-season APR highs during the most recent scoring period.
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TROY T O DAY
SWINGING
FOR GREATNESS
TROY softball player Carli Kayler celebrates with her teammates as she runs to home base during the 2018 softball season.
Following their first appearance in the Sun Belt Conference
to sign consecutive ASWA Miss Softball winners since the
Tournament semifinals since 2010, the TROY softball team and
award was introduced in 2003—the Tigers inked the first three
head coach Beth Mullins have every reason to be optimistic
recipients. "I think having back-to-back Miss Softball winners
when looking ahead.
sign with TROY says a lot about our staff's effort in recruiting
The Trojans improved their win total by 14 games from 2017
the best talent in the state of Alabama," Mullins said.
to 2018, won four games in the conference tournament—more
The duo combined for 91 wins and 1,079 strikeouts during their
than the previous seven years combined—and did it all with just
final year of prep softball. The success translated for Willis, and
three seniors on the roster.
Mullins expects much of the same for Johnson.
Behind Sun Belt Freshman of the Year Annie Willis and junior
On the offensive side, TROY returns 82.9 percent of its runs
Peyton Glover, TROY turned in its lowest team ERA (3.21)
from 2018 including sophomore All-Sun Belt performers Katie
since 2014. With both players returning next season along with
Webb and Logan Calhoun, while rising senior catcher Kaylee
Kynsley Rae Blasingame and Claire Graves, who also chewed
Hussey shut down opponents' running game allowing just 12
up innings last year, Mullins could easily feel comfortable with
stolen bases in 55 games behind the dish. "Our goal is always
her 2019 pitching situation, but contentment doesn't win
to be at the top of the Sun Belt Conference, but it's going
championships.
to take us continuing to get better every year," Mullins said.
For the second straight season, Mullins welcomes the best
"TROY softball has never won a Sun Belt championship, so
high school arm in the state of Alabama. Willis, a product
the first, when it happens, will help this program make huge
of Westminster Christian in Huntsville, and Brantley High
strides forward."
School's Leanna Johnson, who signed with TROY in November,
After a successful 2018 campaign, there are certainly plenty of
represent the last two Alabama Sports Writers Association
pats on the back to be handed out. But for those sporting TROY
(ASWA) Miss Softball recipients—the highest athletic award
softball gear, all eyes are fixed forward to what is undoubtedly a
given to a player in the state. Auburn is the only other school
bright future.
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AT H LETICS
DIAMOND
T ROY TO DAY
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IN THE ROUGH
TROY’s baseball team achieves new heights in 2018
TROY baseball coach Mark Smartt shakes hands with University of Georgia head baseball coach Scott Stricklin during the 2018 season.
Five years, a coaching staff rearrangement and a whole
finishes in the middle of the pack. The expectations were set
new wave of student-athletes later, TROY baseball made
around the same level prior to Smartt’s third season. TROY
its ascension back into college baseball prominence with a
was picked to finish fourth in the East Division of the Sun Belt
spectacular and historical 2018 season.
and seventh overall in the league.
Flash back to the 2013 baseball season, and you’ll find a
Not listening to the critics, Smartt saw the potential in the
baseball program that had just competed in its second NCAA
veteran squad and issued a challenge that would serve as the
Regional final in three years. However, the years that followed
mantra for the entire season.
were relatively quiet. The Trojans experienced a losing season
#6.1.18—June 1, 2018: the date of the first game of the NCAA
in 2014 before three consecutive campaigns of just beating the .500 mark.
Regionals. The date could be seen all around the Lott Baseball Complex. The date that visually represented the goal of
The program’s quietness seemed to get a little quieter when
everyone associated with the TROY baseball program.
all-time winningest coach, Bobby Pierce, retired after the 2015
“Our mission from day one is 6.1.18,” Smartt told the media
season. The transition to new leadership was made smoothly, though, as longtime assistant Mark Smartt hopped in the driver’s seat. As a player, Smartt helped lead the Trojans to back-to-back NCAA Division II national championships in 1986 and 1987. During his first two seasons as head coach, Smartt led the squad to a couple of winning seasons with conference
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prior to the club’s first practice in the spring. “It’s time. We have not been in that discussion over the last four years. As a guy that’s been here a long time and has grown accustomed to competing at a high level, I definitely think it’s time we get back to that point.”
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TROY T O DAY
With a tank full of inspiration and a specific goal in mind,
TROY propelled itself into the NCAA Regional conversation
the Trojans began the season with a true measuring stick—
with a 38-win regular season, a second-place finish in the
playing four returning NCAA Regional teams in the first three
league and a top 40 RPI ranking headed into the Sun Belt Tournament at the conclusion of the season. A run to the conference championship game all but solidified the Trojans’ bid for an at-large berth into the tournament. The 6.1.18 goal was realized on May 28, when the Trojans learned they would be headed to the Athens Regional to do battle with No. 8 Georgia, No. 18 Duke and Campbell. TROY proved it belonged with a dominating 6-0 shutout of Duke on the opening night of the tournament. Unfortunately, TROY was on the wrong end of some ill fortune in regard to weather delays and dropped back-to-back games to Georgia and Duke ending the magical run.
Senior infielder Matt Sanders stands at bat during the 2018 baseball season. Sanders set a new school record with 90 runs scored.
“It was a great group of guys that loved each other,” Denison reflected. “But they also were competitors and winners going out there and winning 42 games. It was definitely a special season, not only for me but for the program as a whole.”
weeks of the season. TROY emerged from the tough non-
Overall, individual Trojans set 10 single-season and career
conference schedule boasting a 12-5 record and didn’t slow
records along with the team records for triples, games played
down from there. In the process, the squad found its recipe for
and strikeouts. Denison (Perfect Game & ABCA/Rawlings)
success—a steady dose of eventual all-conference student-
and Rigsby Mosley (Collegiate Baseball Freshman & NCBWA
athletes Matt Sanders, Drew Frederic and Joey Denison.
Freshman) became the first upperclassman/freshman duo to
Sanders, who set a new school record with 90 runs scored, led
receive All-American honors in the same season.
off the lineup with one of the best on-base percentages in the
Brandon Lockridge won the Rawlings Gold Glove Award and
country at .463. The Sun Belt’s top third baseman Frederic
was the fifth player in TROY history to be drafted in the top
followed in the two-hole and stole more bases than anyone
five rounds of the MLB First-Year Player Draft—taken in the
else in the league. Finally, Sun Belt Player of the Year and All-
fifth round by the New York Yankees. Senior Matt Sanders was
American Joey Denison would clean off the bases on his way
named the NCAA Statistical Champion in runs per game and is
to collecting a school single-season record of 81 RBIs, which
now playing Double-A ball in the Seattle Mariners organization.
ranked second nationally.
“I couldn’t be prouder of this team,” Smartt said. “This was
Even if the opposition was able to slow down the immediate
a team that represented us the right way, in every way;
threat at the top, three more Trojans with .300-plus batting
whether on the field or not. Our group of seniors laid down
averages followed—including fifth-round draft pick Brandon
the foundation for success. Now, I fully expect the juniors,
Lockridge and freshman star Rigsby Mosley. A veteran pitching
sophomores and freshmen to follow that same path to keep the
staff led by Andrew Crane and Daren Osby, along with a stout
cycle going in the years to come.”
defense that posted a fielding percentage that ranked in the Top 50 nationally, aided the powerful offense.
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GIVING DAY October 4
ANSWER THE CALL TO GIVE STUDENTS A BRIGHT FUTURE “When the phone rings, we hope our supportive alumni and friends answer the call,” said Rebecca Watson, associate vice chancellor for development. Troy University is “calling” all alumni and friends to support
Annual Fund donations can make an impact immediately by
colleges within the university, scholarships or other areas of
providing students with scholarships or helping faculty, staff
the institution where financial resources are needed with the
and students attend academic conferences. Gifts can also have
help of a student phone bank.
a long-term effect by helping purchase equipment or other
Established last year, the Annual Giving Phonathon Phone
needed resources.
Bank is the home base for a team of student callers who are
“Donors have the opportunity to designate their gift to
reaching out to alumni and other potential donors. Funds raised
whatever cause is most important to them, whether it be
through thethan phone155,000 bank go Trojans to the Annual Fund, oneglobe, of the most With more around the it’s no scholarships, a specific college or athletics,” Watson said. important support for the said Rebecca surprise weavenues can doofmore when weUniversity, stand together! Mark your The phone bank is located on the third floor of the Adams Watson, associate vice chancellor for development. calendars for October 4, and show your Trojan Warrior Spirit Administration Building and is staffed by a team of 12 students. byMoney getting involved in TroyFund University’s inaugural Giving Day. raised for the Annual impacts virtually everything Next time the phone rings, it may be TROY calling with a great Inatone you can make a difference the lives Troyday, University. Annual gifts enable Troy in University to of current opportunity to support future generations of Trojans. and future Trojans. giftby can be designated to scholarships, provide resources notYour covered tuition or state funding. To find out more ways to help future TROY students, visit No studentprograms, at the University graduates without having been or any academic athletics, facilities, organizations troy.edu/donor or call 334-670-3608. touched in some way by annual gifts from and friends. area or opportunity that inspires you alumni the most. Take a stand on October 4. Visit troy.edu/give or call 334-670-3318.
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AT H LETICS
A TH L E TI CS
GRAND OPENING: TROJANS KICK OFF SEASON WITH BOISE STATE OPENER, NORTH END ZONE REVEAL
TROY's North End Zone Football Facility now boasts a 35-by-90-foot video board and more than 400 new club seats for football fans.
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The 2017 TROY football season was filled with history-making individual and team accomplishments that football enthusiasts will cherish for ages. Today, with a new season in the making full of new expectations and a clean slate, a fresh crop of Trojans are looking to make their mark on this proud football program. In this new season, head coach Neal Brown returned 17 starters from last year’s squad that won 11 games, a Sun Belt championship, the New Orleans Bowl title and knocked off LSU in Death Valley. The Trojans also welcomed a wealth of talent from players who gained valuable experience last season through serving in reserve roles. “We lost a four-year starting quarterback [Brandon Silvers], and we lost our leading rusher [Jordan Chunn], who's with the Dallas Cowboys now,” Brown said. “The general consensus, just looking at pre-season magazines and things, is we're going to have a really difficult time overcoming those losses. I'm just excited to see how our team responds to those losses. We've got so much youth. We have only 11 scholarship seniors. Both of those guys were great players, but my belief is that we're going to respond in a much more positive way than what people expect." Leading up to the 2018 season, TROY’s Sept. 1 season opener against nationally-ranked Boise State was billed as one of the most highlyanticipated games in Veterans Memorial Stadium. The game featured two of the top Group of Five teams in the country, and the excitement was set amid the newly renovated Veterans Memorial Stadium with its state-of-the-art North End Zone Football Facility. Overall, the 2018 season kicked off with the Trojans carrying a seven-game winning streak into their season opener, which was the fourth-longest active streak in the country heading into the 2018 season. The Trojans were expected, once again, to have one of the top defensive units in the country led by bandit Hunter Reese and cornerback Blace Brown, a pair of returning All-Sun Belt First Team selections. Reese finished last season fifth in the Sun Belt with 14 tackles for loss and added 6.5 sacks despite starting only six games. Blace Brown entered the 2018 season ranked second among active players with 11 career interceptions. The Trojans are leaning on an experienced offensive line that returns four starters—Deontae Crumitie, Tristan Crowder, J.L. Gaston and Kirk Kelley—and three All-Sun Belt selections from last season. It was a group that ranked 12th nationally in fewest sacks allowed and 6th in efficiency. On the edge, TROY is paced by a pair of veteran leaders in Deondre Douglas and Damion Willis, while sophomore Tray Eafford proved to be a star in the making toward the end of last season. The schedule is loaded with intriguing matchups including home games against Florida A&M, Georgia State, Coastal Carolina, Louisiana and Texas State, and trips to Nebraska, South Alabama, Georgia Southern, ULM, Liberty and Appalachian State. The pot of gold at the end of the season is new as the league will play its inaugural Sun Belt Championship Game on campus between the winners of the East and West Division on Dec. 1.
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TROY T O DAY
S T UD E N TS
AIM HIGH:
EVENT INSPIRES CAREER DREAMS TO TAKE FLIGHT
STU DE NTS
Cadet Lindsey Starr sits in the pilot seat of a TH-1H helicopter during Pathways to Blue on Keesler Air Force Base. (USAF Photo/Andre' Askew)
Cadets in TROY’s U.S. Air Force ROTC Detachment 017 are
look at the cars and ask questions about them. This is similar
already prepared to “Aim High” as the motto suggests. But an
to ROTC cadets coming to Pathways to Blue. We give them the
event at Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi helped some of
time to talk to someone who does a job they are interested in.
those cadets better aim themselves toward becoming future
This helps them pick the job they are best suited for and gives
Air Force leaders.
the Air Force the best quality future officers.”
This spring, TROY cadets joined some 280 ROTC cadets from
Capt. Antionne L. Morris, operations flight commander and
15 different colleges and universities at the Second Air Force’s
assistant professor of aerospace studies at TROY, said the
fourth annual Pathways to Blue initiative.
opportunity for the cadets to learn what is available to them
“If I were to ask you to buy a new car, what would you want to
through the Air Force is invaluable. “The cadets are given
do,” asked U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. Timothy Leahy, 2nd Air Force commander. “You would want to go to different dealerships,
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the opportunity to interact with officers from a wide variety of career fields,” Morris said. “Throughout the semester we
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Cadet RaShawn Flowers takes a picture while seated in a MC-130J Commando II during Pathways to Blue on Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi. (USAF photo/Senior Airman Travis Beihl)
invite guests to speak on topics such as leadership and their
“My sole reason for going the first year was to find out what job
careers, but with an event like Pathways to Blue, they receive
I wanted to pursue in the Air Force,” Dettmar said. “Getting to
a dedicated two full days to learning about what’s available to
see it all first hand and talk to so many people, I actually came
them in the Air Force. Cadets who attend this event leave with
away with job options that were of interest to me. For those
a much greater knowledge of what they want to do in the Air
who go for the first time, I think it is an awesome experience
Force when they commission, and in some situations, they learn
and a great way to see what Air Force life is really like.”
what they don’t want to do, as well. With this knowledge, the
Along with Starr and Dettmar, other cadets participating in
cadets can research more about those jobs as they continue to work toward becoming a second lieutenant.”
the event were: Madeline Kirkpatrick, RaShawn Flowers, Zachariah Sullivan, Benjamin Ponder, Brittany Gordan,
The event started with opening remarks and a flight briefing
Ethan Hart, Suzanne Mayberry, Moira Pokemire, Robert Fowler,
by members of the 403rd Wing then moved to hands-on
Arik Godwin, Demario Harris and Jalyn Hamilton. In addition
demonstrations of various career fields such as battlefield
to learning about the various career fields, cadets also stayed
airmen, cyber operations, weather, remotely piloted aircraft
in base lodging, received incentive flights and participated in a
operator, civil engineering, aerospace medicine and a mixture
speed mentoring session.
of other commissioning options.
Leahy has expressed excitement with regard to seeing who will
“I got to meet with people in my career field and ask them
step up and become a leader in the United States Air Force.
questions to prepare myself for going down there,” said
“We are bringing together people who are excited about what
Lindsey Starr, a TROY Air Force ROTC cadet. “Keesler will be
they do and watching them talk to the next generation about
my first base, so it was important to me to go and get contact
how great a life it is to serve our nation in the USAF,” Leahy
information so I can have connections later on. It was a really
said. “It is something you cannot help but feel excitement for. I
good learning experience because this is where I’m going to be,
feel that we have found some of those leaders. We have found
and these are my people. It was just a really cool experience.”
some that are going to put on the blue and that are going to
For Cadet Alex Dettmar of Wetumpka, Alabama, the trip
follow that path and be the shield and sword of our nation. I am
marked his third time participating in the event.
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excited for their career, and I’m excited to have them here.”
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TROY T O DAY
TROY STUDENT FIRST TO WIN NEW KENNEDY CENTER AWARD
A TROY student who has “worn several different hats” in the
was the first year they had given the award,” Brown said. “There
theater and graphic design departments has become the first
is no winner in art because art is subjective.
recipient of the John Cauble College of Fellows Award for
“When they announced the award, I thought me being there
Arts Leadership from the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival. The national award recognizes students who demonstrate leadership in the arts. Veshonte Brown, a junior theater and graphic design double major from Gautier, Mississippi, represented the Southeast during an all-expense paid week in Washington, D.C., that was dedicated to art administration. “It was a surprise because this
was the award.” The award included $5,000 cash and a one-year paid internship at the theater of her choice, which she said is the Williamstown Festival in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Her journey started at the ASPIRE program in February, where she was selected as the District 4 representative out of 13 other people. Although there is no art administration major at TROY, Brown said the University has a “really great theater department,” which helped her get to the Kennedy Center. Brown said the week in D.C. included workshops and afternoon meetings with professionals, including Edgar Dobie at Arena Stage and the President of the Kennedy Center, Deborah F. Rutter and her senior staff. The group of students was mentored by Victoria Nolan and Kelvin Dinkins, Jr., of the Yale School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre. “We had the great opportunity to meet with those professionals and get their stories and their journeys,” she said. “That was really important to me to see how people got to where they were, and I saw that each person had a different path.” Brown spent the week with eight other representatives from around the country. “They were all such amazing, amazing people,” she said. “We literally still have a group chat.” Brown said she aspires to become an artistic director by the time she turns 35. “I believe that art is important and needed in society,” Brown said. “I am interested in advocacy because I want to change the culture of theater so more people can experience and enjoy it.”
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9/18/18 4:00 PM
What’s happening there and what it means here
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JOIN THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
SHOW YOUR TROJAN WARRIOR SPIRIT
As you cheer TROY on to victory this football season, you can show your Trojan Warrior Spirit by joining Troy University’s Alumni Association! By becoming a member of this elite group of TROY Trojans, you’ll have access to fun tailgating events, travel discounts for hotels and rental vehicles and a subscription to TROY Today Magazine. Visit troy.edu/alumni to find out more about becoming a part of one of TROY’s largest active organizations! GO TROJANS! VISIT TROY.EDU/ALUMNI TODAY!
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TROY T O DAY
A HEART
FOR OTHERS
Ashley Calloway won a $1,000 check to be donated to Chicktime, a local charity that helps the Alabama Baptist Children's Home in Dothan.
Embracing its founding motto, “Educate the mind to think, the
In May, Dothan resident Ashley Calloway, a senior at TROY’s
heart to feel and the body to act,” Troy University launched a
Dothan Campus, was named the inaugural winner of the
new initiative this spring to recognize a student, faculty or staff
challenge. A selection committee chose Calloway from a field of
member who demonstrates the true heart of the University.
36 individuals who were nominated for the award.
The Trojan Heart Challenge, a joint effort of the John W.
TROY Chancellor Dr. Jack Hawkins Jr., and his wife, Janice
Schmidt Center for Student Success, Student Involvement,
Hawkins, presented Calloway with a $1,000 check to be
the Student Government Association, The Tropolitan, Service
donated to the charity of her choice, the Dothan chapter
Learning and Civic Engagement and Janice Hawkins, First Lady
of Chicktime, a nonprofit aimed at connecting women to
of Troy University, was created to recognize TROY students,
volunteer opportunities in their communities. “You can think
faculty and staff who have demonstrated acts of service or
with your head, but you also need to be led by your heart,”
good deeds.
Dr. Hawkins said. “The world needs more givers like this.”
“A culture of caring, compassion and service has separated
“I’m a little overwhelmed, but I can’t begin to tell you how
Troy University as a unique institution of higher learning,”
excited I am,” Calloway said. “Our ABCH babies are about to
Mrs. Hawkins said. “At Troy University, we believe, as
get spoiled. Anytime we have any type of donation like this, we
individuals and as a whole, that we have been granted the rich
always spend it on them to fund maybe a field trip, Christmas
and rare opportunity of servant leadership to those around us.
gifts or something to make their lives a little better.”
We believe that we are blessed so that those blessings can be shared with others.”
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TROY T O DAY
STUDENTS BROADEN WORLDVIEW IN AFRICA WRITTEN BY: DR. DIONNE ROSSER-MIMS
TROY students and professors explore Uganda during their study abroad trip this summer.
Five students and two professors traveled to Uganda during
TROY students participated in a panel discussion with
May to learn powerful lessons and expand global awareness
Kyambogo University students to discuss the importance of
and understanding.
gender equality and ways to execute the existing partnership
Students on the journey included Brittany Guris, majoring
between the universities. The students established open
in American sign language interpreter training; Tyree McIntosh,
communication with each other through a variety of group
counseling and rehabilitation; Nakisha Thomas, social work;
messaging applications.
Lydia Williams, mass communications; and Erin Woods,
Prior to the trip, participants raised more than $1,200 to
student affairs.
donate to the Sanyu Babies’ Orphanage; $500 (1,800,000
Students learned about the Ugandan government, education,
Ugandan Shillings) was used to purchase baby formula with the
economy and culture. The trip was designed to allow students to connect their areas of study to the activities planned in order for them to expand their perspectives and global identities. The TROY group visited the Buganda Parliament and met the Speaker of the Parliament, The Honorable Nelson Kawalya. Buganda is the oldest and largest traditional kingdom in Uganda. Members of Parliament serve as volunteers appointed by the King.
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remaining amount given to the orphanage director to purchase other needed items. The group also donated 28 stuffed teddy bears made by American Sign Language student Brittany Guris. The orphanage was founded by a midwife in the area to address the large number of abandoned children. Learning the history of the orphanage, TROY students experienced first hand how one person can truly have an impact on the lives of many by recognizing a need and addressing it.
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TROY College of Education students and faculty visited the Buganda Parliament and met the Speaker of the Parliament, the Honorable Nelson Kawalya.
Students also donated toiletries and school supplies to the
With the success and the impact of this year’s trip, the College
Nalinya Iwantale Girls Primary School. TROY students made
of Education already has plans underway for trips to Costa Rica
a difference in the lives of these girls by promoting education
and the United Kingdom during spring break 2019.
and helping them stay in school through these donations. This boarding school, which has been educating and helping girls for more than 100 years, enrolls 530. Participants enjoyed an evening of cultural dances and instruments at the Ndere Troupe Theater. The performance showed the importance of equality by including everyone’s gifts and talents to promote the overall sound of the band.
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Dr. Dionne Rosser-Mims is the recently appointed interim dean of the College of Education.
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TROY T O DAY
FROM CHINA,
A LUM N I
WITH LOVE
Photo Courtesy of Gus Bennett Jr.
TROY alumni living in China celebrate their alma mater with a 1-2-1 graduation celebration. More than 100 former Troy University students and visiting
The first Chinese 1-2-1 students arrived at TROY in 2001
scholars came together for an event in China this spring,
in partnership with the China Center for International
marking the first steps toward establishing the University’s
Educational Exchange. The program enables students from
second alumni chapter there.
partner universities in China to complete their first year of
The event was held as University officials were in China to
studies at their home university before spending their second
welcome the newest group of 1-2-1 alumni. Chancellor Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., awarded 12 diplomas during the Sino-
and third years at TROY. The students return to their home institution to complete their studies, and upon graduation,
American Cooperation in Higher Education and Professional
receive diplomas from both their home university and TROY.
Development’s 15 1-2-1 commencement ceremony in the
“In August 2001, 44 students from China arrived in Troy as
Zhongnan Concert Hall at Shaanxi Normal University.
the first 1-2-1 class in history,” Hawkins said. “The arrival of
“This event brought alumni together and served as an
1-2-1 students on our campus transformed the culture of
th
organizational meeting that represents the first step in chartering a new alumni chapter in China,” said Sohail Agboatwala, associate vice chancellor for international affairs.
TROY, as we transitioned from a regional University to a global institution. These students immediately became an integral part of campus life as they began to share their culture with
“The desire is there on the part of our alumni in China to
classmates from the U.S.”
connect back to the University and promote TROY to others
Today, 1-2-1 is the largest exchange program of its kind,”
in China. The alumni were excited to have the opportunity to
Hawkins said. “It includes 122 Chinese universities and 35
reconnect with each other and the University.”
universities from the United States. More than 4,000 students
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To date, 15 groups of Chinese 1-2-1 students have studied and graduated from TROY. These graduates will help make up China’s second alumni chapter.
from China have participated, and approximately 2,500 have
“Before I started diving training, I used to participate in
graduated, including the members of this most recent class.”
different kinds of art classes, such as violin, drawing and
The impact of the commencement ceremony and the alumni gathering is another example of the type of international outreach that has earned TROY the reputation as Alabama’s
dancing, and I loved them tremendously,” she said. “I literally did not know anything about theatre when I began my new major at Troy University.”
International University. The University serves more than
Transitioning to a new major in a new country was not without
1,000 international students annually on its Troy Campus.
its frustrations and challenges, but Xixi drew on her passion for
Partly fueled by participation within the 1-2-1 program, China
her dream to grow and overcome those hardships.
represents TROY’s largest international student enrollment.
“I felt extremely frustrated and even questioned if I had the
“Life is about relationships,” Dr. Hawkins said. “The secret to the
potential to perform onstage,” she said. “A voice from the
success of 1-2-1 lies in the strong relationships that were built
bottom of my heart and deep in my soul said ‘This is what you
and are being built with international partners. Maintaining
really want and what you have been dreaming for a long time.
relationships and building those connections between the
Don’t give up.’”
graduates of this program and TROY is truly important.”
Xixi said being a part of the 1-2-1 program and studying at
During the commencement ceremonies, TROY and Shaanxi
TROY has had a tremendous impact on her life.
Normal University graduate Xiao Xixi spoke on behalf of the
“I feel that I have grown tremendously,” she said. “I have
new class of 1-2-1 graduates. A former professional diving athlete, Xixi was recruited into the diving program at age 7 and was a part of the Chinese diving team for 10 years before retiring to attend college. She began her college career as an athletic training major, but found and pursued her true passion—theatre and performing arts—thanks to the 1-2-1 program and her time at TROY.
learned to think more independently and my confidence has been enhanced greatly by all the experience I have been given through studying in the United States. I have been taught to try various new things, to respect different cultures and enjoy what I have in my life right now. Most significantly, I have learned that you are never too old to turn your dream into action, as long as you don’t let those so-called limitations and rules stop you from pursuing your dream.”
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A LUM N I
SAA: A LU M N I
A BRIGHT FUTURE FOR ALL
ALUM NOTES
I am excited to serve as the president of TROY’s Student Alumni Association for the 2018-19 academic year. With the Fall semester kicking off successfully, we are looking to continue reaching out to students who will become quality members through getting involved with our organization. This year, one of our main objectives is to reach out and forge new relationships with TROY alumni members. By investing in relationships with one another, we not only learn from one another, but we also add value to our degrees—past, present and future. By facilitating more interactions between alumni and students, today’s students can pursue success through connections, internships and even jobs. Your wisdom, knowledge and experience are just a few things that can aid our student body by equipping each student with tangible skills they can use in their future careers. When we reach out to you for an event this year, I hope that, as a TROY graduate, you are eager to get involved and meet today’s generation of Trojans. Together, we can change the culture of this University’s student-alumni relations for the better. We look forward to seeing you this Fall! As always, go Trojans!
Michael Ingram Connect with TROY! troy.edu/social
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’60 Allen Miller (’66) was recently inducted into the Opp Hall of Fame. The former superintendent of Opp City Schools served in the Marine Corps from 1958 to 1962 before attending TROY. After graduation, he began his education career as a teacher at Opp High School. He later served as assistant principal and principal of South Highlands Elementary School before moving to the system’s central office. He was named superintendent in 1988, serving until 2001.
’70 Charles Cornelius (’74) was one of seven inductees in the 2018 class of the Marshall County Sports Hall of Fame. During his time at TROY, Cornelius was the leading scorer for the TROY basketball team during his junior and senior years, and as a junior, was named to All-Gulf South Conference Team. Following graduation, Cornelius worked in the medical field for 45 years until his retirement in 2017. He lives in Alabaster with his wife, Jane. Tommy Hicks (’76) has been inducted into the Alabama Sportswriter Hall of Fame. He has worked in sports media since the mid-1970s and has been named Alabama Sports Writer of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association on three occasions. Hicks has worked for the Phenix Citizen, Selma Times-Journal, the Montgomery Advertiser, the Anniston Star and the Mobile PressRegister and currently serves as editor for the Call News and Washington County News. Hicks is the author of three books.
Murphy Brown (’78), founder and director of the Decatur-Morgan County Minority Development Association, recently received the Miss Athelyne C. Banks Citizen of the Year Award during the annual meeting of the Decatur-Morgan County Chamber of Commerce. Through the Minority Development Association, Brown has awarded more than 500 scholarships and partnered with Decatur City Schools to launch American Teens on the Move, a program for at-risk minority boys. The association also has formed Strong Pre-K, an initiative to fund more pre-kindergarten classrooms in Morgan County. Clem Richardson (’78), who recently retired after 15 years as principal of Baker High School, was honored with the L’Arche of Mobile’s Lifetime Achievement Award. During his 40year education career, Richardson served numerous roles in the Mobile County Public School System, including coach, athletic director, teacher and administrator. Clark Stewart (’78) has been named to the Board of Trustees for South Baldwin Regional Medical Center. Stewart joined the staff at WHEP radio in Foley in 1979 and currently serves as the station’s president and general manager. He is a past-president of the South Baldwin Chamber of Commerce, the Foley Rotary Club, the Foley Quarterback Club, the Foley High School Athletic Booster Club and is a former chief of the Magnolia Springs Volunteer Fire Department. In 2014, he was inducted into the Baldwin County Varsity Coaches Association Hall of Fame for his contributions to high school sports broadcasting throughout Baldwin County and around the state. David Baker (’79) has been named director of the Beginning Farmer Center at Iowa State University Extension. He had served as interim director since January and has been on the center's staff since 2006. continued on page 56
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WHERE THE HEART IS: TROY SECOND HOME FOR ALUMNA’S FAMILY
Suyoung Nam and her daughter Jisu (left) and son Jason (right) visit Chancellor Jack Hawkins, Jr., before their return to South Korea.
Ask Suyoung Nam about her TROY experience, and she’ll tell
The meeting she and her children shared with Chancellor
you what her last year and a half was like for her and her family.
Hawkins is just one of the many examples of how the University
“It has been like a dream,” she said.
and city of Troy exceeded her expectations. The TROY graduate
For 17 months, the native of Busan, South Korea, studied on
said she was pleasantly surprised by the warm reception and
the Troy Campus and worked toward completing her master’s
treatment her family received within the Troy community.
degree in second language instruction. Now, with degree in
“Parents and teachers [in Troy] are very intentional in
hand, Nam has returned to South Korea to continue her work
guiding children,” she said. “They spend quality time with
as a middle school English teacher.
kids to focus not only on education, but on what’s really
Not only did Nam spend her time at TROY adding value to her
important—character and values. Here, raising children is a
degree, but she also brought her two children, Jason, 8, and
community effort.”
Jisu, 11, to provide them with opportunities to improve their
Nam said she’s grateful for TROY’s global vision because it
English as well as experience American culture.
was through partnerships with international universities that
After watching their mother graduate with her master’s
she learned of TROY. Nam said she was surprised that TROY
degree, Jisu and Jason shared dreams that were, in some ways, shaped by their time spent at TROY. Jisu is interested in science and has a desire to become a college professor, and Jason has decided he wants to be a Chancellor when he grows up. Catching word of Jason’s future ambitions, Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., took the time to meet with the Nam family before they returned home to Busan.
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professors were genuinely interested in getting to know students and providing holistic support—not just in academics. As a student within TROY’s SLI program, Nam researched different approaches for students learning English and said she discovered that a more student-centered learning environment can lead to deeper comprehension. This kind of student engagement also provides opportunities for more creative expression and self-discovery.
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’80
TROY T O DAY
Sam Royse (’82), coach of the Glasgow High School baseball program in Kentucky, was honored recently as the school named its field in his honor. The field will officially be known as Sam Royse Field at John E. Richardson Stadium. Royse, who played baseball for the Trojans during his time at TROY, has dedicated 36 years to the school’s baseball program—34 of those as head coach. He has close to 750 career wins, three regional championships, multiple district titles and two state final four appearances.
Dr. Caroline Gomez (’83) has been elected to serve as vice president for the Autism Society of Alabama. She has worked within the Autism Spectrum Disorder community for more than three decades. Douglas E. Kreulen (’83) serves as president and CEO of the Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority, a position he has held since December 2017. He has been employed by the authority since 2012, first as senior vice president of operations, maintenance and public safety and later as chief operating officer. Kreulen also spent four years as the director of operations for the Port of Huntsville – Huntsville International Airport. Balram Bheodari (’85, ’92) is currently serving as interim general manager of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. Bheodari, who previously
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served as deputy general manager, joined Hartsfield-Jackson in 1999. In 2015, he left Atlanta to lead George Bush Intercontinental Airport but returned to Hartsfield-Jackson the following year. Before joining the airport staff, Bheodari retired after 22 years with the U.S. Army, where he served as a helicopter pilot and led a team writing military doctrines and regulations with his last assignment at Fort McPherson. Liza Lowery Massey (’86, ’97) has been selected to lead the Marin County, Calif.’s Department of Information Services and Technology. She has 31 years of experience in the technology industry, most of those spent working with local and state government agencies. Mary Kay Vause (’87) was recently appointed as the program director for the Fallon Health Weinberg PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly) program. The program helps older adults manage chronic care needs, enabling them to maintain independent living at home or in the community. Vause most recently served as vice president of NIDUS Development where she was responsible for all of the company’s health-care related business lines. Vause resides in Orchard Park, New York, and holds a master’s degree in counseling and psychology from TROY. Frankie Clark (’88, ’90), head football and golf coach at Rehobeth, has retired after 29 years of coaching and teaching, including the last 27 in the Houston County school system. Keith Baker (’89), director of leisure services for Panama City, won a seat on Florida's Bay County Commission. During his time at TROY, Baker was a member of the Trojan baseball team. Brett Kirkland (’89, ’03) is area chairman of the C12 Group, the nation’s largest network of Christian CEO Peer Advisory Groups. He previously served as division director for Marketplace Chaplains. The former president and CEO of the Food Bank of Southwest
Georgia began his career as an accountant in the public and private sector and held positions in sales and marketing. Kirkland then moved into full-time vocational ministry, serving in local missions with Sherwood Baptist Church in Albany, Georgia.
’90 Paul Bowers (’90), chairman and CEO of Georgia Power, will receive the Council for Quality Growth’s prestigious 2018 Four Pillars Award. The award recognizes those who live up to the four pillars of leadership—quality, responsibility, vision and integrity. Earlier this year, Bowers was also appointed by Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal to serve on the board of the Georgia Ports Authority. Kevin Killingsworth (’91, ’95) was recently named superintendent of Coffee County schools. He has served as the Coffee County School System's special programs coordinator since 2016. Killingsworth has previously served as principal of Zion Chapel School and New Brockton High School and has held assistant principal positions at Zion Chapel and Elba City Schools. Ike Sherlock (’91), executive vice president of The Grimes Companies, Inc. in Jacksonville, Florida, has been appointed president of the company. He joined Grimes in 2006, and prior to that, was with Greatwide Truckload management. Bobby Rice (’92) was recently named as the new advertising director at The Tuscaloosa News. Rice most recently worked for WKRG-TV in Pensacola. He has also worked in or overseen advertising departments in newspapers in Florida, Texas, Louisiana and Alabama. James Sewell (’93, ’94) has been named as the band director at Bainbridge High School in Georgia. Sewell has more than 20 years of music education experience, including 10 years assisting Paschal Ward ('75, '78), retiring Bainbridge band director.
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A L I F E OF L E A RN I N G : 8 3 -Y E AR - O LD V IE TN A M VETE R AN E AR N S D E G R E E
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For Wiregrass resident Robert McCloud, the Dothan Campus
“In 1980, when I finally came back home, I went to TROY and
spring commencement was the culmination of a lifetime
took enough courses for them to say, ‘Oh, yeah, come on, and
of learning. The 83-year-old Vietnam veteran received his
we can give (you a degree),’ so TROY took care of me,” he said.
associate of arts degree during the May ceremony. McCloud, whose mother had died when he was just two years old, dropped out of high school in the 10th grade. “I sort of made my own decisions, and I knew I wanted to join the Army,” said McCloud, who retired in 1980 as a master sergeant. When he turned 18 years old in 1952, McCloud enlisted. He stayed in the Army through his first enlistment and sat out two years from 1956 to 1958. “When I entered in ’52, you didn’t have to have a high school diploma,” he said. “But when I rejoined in ’58, you had to have one. So, I got my GED. As time progressed, they started talking about, ‘you needed a little college to get promoted,’ so I took some courses all along.” Over the years, McCloud said he took college classes from TROY, schools in California, Maryland “and all over.”
Chuck McMillan (’94) serves as director of national accounts for Community Coffee Company’s coffee service division. He joined the company in 2016 as senior general manager of coffee service marketing and is a veteran of the U.S. Army. Eric Woodley (’94) has been named interim principal of Curry High School in Jasper, Alabama. Woodley first joined Curry High School as a teacher and coach in 1994 before later teaching at Sparkman High School in Madison County and Carbon Hill High School. He returned to Curry in 2002 and has served as a head coach for football, baseball, track, golf and girls basketball. The last four years, Woodley has served as the school’s assistant principal and athletic director. Brian Blackburn (’95) has joined Compassus, a Brentwood, Tennesseebased hospice, palliative and home health care provider, as vice president of technology. Blackburn has more than 15 years of experience in infrastructure management and implementation with
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HCA Healthcare, where he was an assistant vice president. He is a U.S. Air Force veteran. Kristi Bush (’95) is owner of KNB Communications and travels extensively as a guest speaker empowering educators, students, companies, communities, churches and parents on how to appropriately use social media and warning of the dangers of inappropriate use. Rear Adm. Alvin Holsey (’95) took command of the Carl Vinson Strike Group in June. The group includes the U.S.S. Carl Vinson aircraft carrier and six other warships, more than 7,000 sailors and 75 aircraft. He previously served as deputy director for operations at the National Military Command Center, Joint Chiefs of Staff. His military decorations include the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit (three awards), Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Meritorious Service Medal (two awards), Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal (four awards), Navy and Marine Corps
Achievement Medal and various unit, campaign and service awards. Kevin D. Chapman (’96, ’98), chief financial officer for Renasant Corp., has also taken on the title and duties of chief operating officer for the company. He has been CFO and an executive vice president for the company since 2011 and corporate accounting officer of the company since 2006. Col. Juan Fernandez, U.S. Army (ret.) (’96) is president and CEO of Arpeggio, LLC and a member of the Northern Virginia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce’s Government Contracting Diversity Supplier Committee. He holds a master’s degree in international relations from TROY. Kari McGann (’96) has been named superintendent of schools for the Flemington-Raritan School District in New Jersey. She previously served as the supervisor of humanities in the Readington Township School District. Mark Nichols (’96) was recently named Teacher of the Year for Daleville High School. Nichols is the school’s band
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EXCITEMENT ABOUNDS IN NEW YEAR Trojan Family, As your Alumni Association president, I can’t say it enough—It’s great to be a TROY Trojan! We started off this new academic year with a commitment to bring new opportunities to TROY students. One opportunity in the works is an endowed scholarship we’re working to have fully funded by Dec. 31, 2018. The alumni board is fully committed to this endeavor and has demonstrated their commitment through their personal donations. We’re also excited about our new slate of student alumni officers and their plans for the future.
director and has taught for almost 20 years in Alabama schools. He previously served as band director at Florala and Eufaula high schools. During his time at TROY, he was the section leader and trumpet soloist in the Sound of the South Marching Band and the Symphonic Band. Nichols is a member of the Alabama Jazz and Blues Federation, the Alabama Music Educators Association, National Music Educators Association, the Alabama for the Arts Alliance and the Alabama Bandmasters Association. Rosemary Ragle (’96) is in her first year as athletic trainer for the Connecticut Sun of the WNBA. She previously served as athletic trainer for the New York Liberty. Prior to that, she served as the athletic trainer for 10 national championship women’s basketball teams at UConn. In 2015, Ragle was inducted into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame.
Our TROY Trojan family will continue working together to provide opportunities for these students and their peers. The Alumni Association is also raising money for the long-awaited alumni center. The Chancellor is committed to this important project. We are continuing to gain forward momentum with our planning, so we anticipate having exciting news to share with you in the near future. In other news, I would like to offer a hearty congratulations to our four Alumni of the Year! Our alumni board works hard all year to secure nominations, and it’s always a pleasure to highlight Trojans who are changing the world. As always, make sure your membership dues are current in order to enjoy fellowship and food at our tailgate which is free for all dues paying members both at home and on the road. We look forward to cheering on our Trojans with you!
Chresal Threadgill (’96) has been named as the new superintendent for Mobile County Public Schools. He previously served as superintendent of Elba City Schools. Brent Palmer (’98) was recently named as Sullivan County, Tennessee's high school system curriculum and instruction supervisor. He previously served as principal at Sullivan North High School. Carol Andersen (’99, ’00) was recently named as the executive director of the Emerald Coast Wildlife Refuge. The
Air Force retiree had been a longtime volunteer with the refuge. Crystal Etheredge (’99) was recently named city clerk for the City of Chelsea, Alabama. She previously served as city clerk in Headland, court clerk/ magistrate in the city of Piedmont, an accounting officer for Hughes Construction Services LLC and payroll administrator for Machin McChesney, CPAs and business advisors.
’00 Yerania (Yette) De Luca (’00) was recently appointed as work-based learning coordinator for the Carson City School District in Nevada. De Luca, who has nearly 12 years of business and auditing experience, previously served as a deputy legislative auditor with the Nevada Legislative Counsel Bureau. Richard Fallin (’00, ’01) has been named as executive director of Chilton Shelby Mental Health Center. Fallin has worked in the mental health field for more than a decade, providing mental health services for children, teens, adults and the elderly. His experience includes program development, implementation and oversight. He is a licensed professional counselor and a certified public accountant. Sara Ketcham (’00) has been named as admissions director for Calvary Christian School in Columbus, Georgia. Maricela Alvarado (’01) was recently appointed to the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct. Her term will run until Nov. 19, 2023. The commission regulates the conduct of the state judiciary, including the power to recommend for retirement, censure, suspension or removal of a judge from office. Alvarado is a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel. In her nearly 30 years of military service, she commanded an Allied Counterintelligence Unit in support of International Security Assistance Force. Lindie Snyder (’01, ’08, ’10) was recently named principal at Creekside Intermediate School in Cataula,
Bill Hopper ('72,'77)
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Georgia. She has worked in the Harris County School District since 2001, most recently as an assistant principal at Creekside. Michael Corp (’02) has been promoted to deputy district director for the U.S. Small Business Administration’s South Carolina district office. He previously served as lead business opportunity specialist. He holds a master’s degree in management from TROY. Bobbie Meyer (’02) was recently promoted to assistant administrator at Andalusia Health. Meyer joined Andalusia Health in 2002. She also serves as Andalusia Health’s infection control practitioner. Col. William T. Nuckols (’02) has retired after almost 30 years in the U.S. Army. He served as the director of the Training and Doctrine Command Project Office for Maneuver Robotics and Autonomous Systems, Maneuver Center of Excellence. Jerry Connolly (’03) has joined Florida's Haines City Police Department as the new deputy chief. Connolly previously served as a captain in the Polk County Sheriff’s Office and has 27 years of law enforcement experience.
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59
GOV. KAY IVEY RECEIVES HONOR
Standing in front of the largest graduating class in TROY’s history with nearly 950 graduates, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey encouraged those present at the Spring 2018 commencement to view the ceremony as a beginning and not an end. During her keynote address, Ivey encouraged graduates to have a road map for their future. “Planning is preparation,” she said. “No one can accomplish anything without knowing what you want to do and learning how to do it,” she said. “When
we plan, regardless of difficulties we might face, we give ourselves the opportunity to succeed.” Gov. Ivey encouraged graduates to become active and involved in service to others. “If you don’t enter the race, you can’t win the race,” she said. “If you never offer yourself to serve, you will never know the blessing and the joy that comes from serving others. If you fail to offer yourself, you will exclude yourself from the progress in your community, your state and your world. If you want to make a difference, you must decide that you want to serve your fellow man and your God.” Leadership, Ivey said, requires dedication and hard work. “Once you are given the chance to lead, do it,” she said. “Leadership requires the willingness to work hard, to make sacrifices and sometimes to let others take the fame and credit that you, yourself, may deserve. True leadership requires you to put your hands, your feet and your heart into action.” Ivey was also presented with an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree during the ceremony by Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr., Chancellor, and Sen. Gerald Dial, President Pro-Tem of the TROY Board of Trustees.
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TROY’S SARA JO BURKS CROWNED MS. SENIOR USA
Through the years, Sara Jo Burks has helped prepare many young ladies at Troy University to compete on the pageant stage, but 2018 has been her year to shine in front of the bright lights. Burks, who serves as assistant director of housing and residence life at Troy University, was crowned Ms. Senior USA 2018 during the pageant that took place at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas. “I’m super excited,” Burks said. “It is a tremendous honor and privilege to be named Ms. Senior USA, and I want to be sure to take advantage of all of the opportunities that will be available to meet and talk with people. … I’ll be doing some traveling to talk about women’s issues.” While she has spent countless hours helping to prepare others, Burks said she had never given much consideration to competing herself. “I have helped so many girls prepare for the modeling and interview aspects of pageants, but now to have gone through that myself, I believe it gives me new perspective and a better understanding of what it is like to actually be in that position,” she said. Burks said she is excited for the opportunity to share with others her platform GOAL, which stands for “Go Out And Live.” “I look forward to sharing with others and encouraging them not to give up on their dreams,” she said. “Even when things don’t work out at first, it is important to keep striving for your dreams.” Burks will compete for the title of Ms. Senior Universe on November 3, 2018 in Las Vegas.
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Ronald Gadson (’03) has been named as the new principal at Georgia's Radium Springs Middle School. He has more than 25 years of experience in education. Robert Pizzini (’03) is CEO and managing partner of iFly Virginia Beach, which won the Virginia Beach Small Business of the Year award for 2018 from the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce. Pizzini is also the executive director of the national governing body for indoor skydiving, designated by the National Aeronautic Association. He established an indoor skydiving wind tunnel at the business to assist with military training, establishing the title of the U.S. National Training Center for Indoor Skydiving for the business. Pizzini holds a master’s degree in international relations from TROY. Theresa Austin-Gibbons (’04) was recently appointed as director of WorkSource DeKalb in Georgia, which provides a collaboration of service organizations providing unified education, training and employment programs for job seekers and workforce development services to businesses. Dr. Tosha Williams (’04) was recently named principal of Edwards Middle School in Georgia's Rockdale County school district. She previously served as an assistant principal at Edwards Middle School and also at Anne Street Elementary School from 2014-2016. Williams has also previously served as an English teacher, a literacy coach and a reading coordinator. Melissa D. Hayes (’05, ’06) has been appointed as principal at Harris County Carver Middle School in Georgia. She previously served as an assistant principal at the school and worked in the school district for 20 years as a teacher at Park Elementary School. Col. Donna Lusczynski (’05) was recently promoted to chief deputy of the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Department in Florida. The promotion marked the first time since the agency’s
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founding more than 170 years ago that a woman has held the second-highest post in the department. Lusczynski joined the department in 1991. She most recently served as commander of the Department of Investigative Services. Ashley Burt (’06) was recently named the director of information technology services at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida. Burt previously worked at the Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine as a systems administrator, as well as in an IT management role. Becky Hallman (’06) was recently promoted to vice president of River Bank and Trust. She joined the company in 2006 as a lending assistant and has since served as assistant vice president of credit administration, human resources director and shareholder relations director. Gail Smith (’06) was recently named director of the Edgefield Mental Health Clinic in South Carolina. She had served as interim director since 2017. She began her work as a therapeutic assistant in 1993 and served in several roles during her 25-year tenure with the Beckman Center. She holds a master’s degree in education from TROY. Steve Lester (’07), chief of staff for the Polk County Sheriff’s Office, recently received the Polk State College Foundation’s 2018 Distinguished Alumnus Award. Lester holds a master’s degree from TROY. As chief of staff, Lester reports directly to the Sheriff and is second in command in the department where he has served for more than 30 years. James P. Bienlien (’08) was recently promoted to the rank of brigadier general in the U.S. Army during a ceremony held at Patton Hall in Ft. Meyer, Virginia. He was recently assigned as director of the Requirements Integration Directorate, Army Capabilities Integration Center, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia.
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Rhonda Halstead (’08) was recently named president of Penn Highlands Clearfield hospital where she is responsible for the overall operations and growth of the hospital. She previously served as chief operations officer and ethics and compliance officer at Val Verde Regional Medical Center in Del Rio, Texas. She is a member of the American Association of Respiratory Care, the California Society of Respiratory Care and the American College of Healthcare Executives. James Earl Cray (’09, ’11) was recently inducted into the Jeff Davis High School Football Hall of Fame in Hazlehurst, Georgia. Cray played quarterback in high school but became a wide receiver when he arrived at TROY. He presently serves as an elder with James Earl Cray Ministries in Atlanta. Col. Colleen Frohling (’09) serves as chief nurse for the 375th Medical Group at Scott Air Force Base. She has served more than 24 years in the Air Force.
’10 Annette Funderburk (’11) has been named as president of Ingram State Technical College. She had served as interim president since February 2017. She has served nearly 10 years within the Alabama Community College System. Ingram State Technical College serves only the incarcerated adult population, delivering career technical, GED and job skills training at six locations in Alabama. Jerrel Jernigan (’11, ’16) was recently inducted into the Wiregrass Sports Hall of Fame. Now a wide receivers coach at Eufaula High School and a physical education teacher at Admiral Moorer Middle School, Jernigan was a threetime, first-team All-Sun Belt Conference player for the TROY football team before being drafted in the third round of the 2011 NFL Draft by the New York Giants. He played on the Giants’ Super Bowl-winning team during his rookie year and played in four seasons all for the Giants.
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Carlos Martinez (’12) recently published his first children’s book, “Billy the Blue Falcon,” which is available on Amazon. Kristine M. Scott (’12) has joined the Jacksonville, Florida-based law firm of MarksGray. Dion K. Bass (’13) has joined the Jacksonville, Florida-based law firm of MarksGray as an associate attorney. Bass practices in the areas of civil litigation, employment and labor law, municipal liability and insurance defense. Lt. Col. Daniel P. Beall (’14) took command of the 34 th Intelligence Squadron in June during a change of command ceremony at the McGill Training Center, Fort George G. Meade, Maryland. Beall is married to the former Katie Hawkins, daughter of Chancellor and Mrs. Jack Hawkins, Jr. The couple has a son, Noah, and a daughter, Ellyotte. Tara Blackwell (’14), Ms. Wheelchair Florida USA, was a semifinalist in the Ms. Wheelchair USA pageant held recently in Ohio. Blackwell, who was a standout on the Trojan softball team, was paralyzed in a fall in 2005 during a team road trip. Her platform for the pageant was “The 7 Project,” representative of her jersey number while a member of the Trojan softball team. “The 7 Project” promotes health and wellness for people with disabilities, focusing on seven core values—commitment, determination, faith, fortitude, support, vitality and wellness. B.J. Chitty (’14) is the new head coach of the boys’ basketball program at Dothan High School. He previously served as basketball coach at Cottonwood. Chitty will also teach a law enforcement class at Dothan and serve as wide receivers coach for the school’s football team.
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Paul Evans (’14), a lawyer with the Beasley Allen Law Firm, was selected to serve as programs committee chair for the Hugh Maddox Inn of Court. The American Inns of Court is a national association of lawyers, judges and other legal professionals from all levels and backgrounds who share a passion for professional excellence. It is dedicated to building professional relationships, discussing the legal profession and legal issues and mentoring young lawyers and law
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students. The Hugh Maddox Inn of Court is a local Montgomery chapter. Tyler Logan (’15, ’18) has been named as the band director at Goshen High School. During his time at TROY, he was a member of the Sound of the South, serving as assistant drum major, and was also active in the University’s choral program, serving as a graduate assistant for University Choirs. Ashley Lampley (’17) is a second-grade teacher at Tyndall Air Force Base Elementary School. Greeley Weeks (’17) is a fourth-grade teacher at Andalusia Elementary School. Justin Blowers (’18) recently joined the staff of the Southeast Sun newspaper. Blowers is a former intern with TROY Public Radio and also worked for The Tropolitan student newspaper during his time at TROY. Harold Peterson (’18) has been named the first chief of the new police force created by Florida's Jackson County School Board. He previously served
with the Marianna Police Department in Florida, serving as the school resource officer at Marianna Middle School. A 20-year Marine veteran, he was recognized by the Chipola Civic Club as its 2018 First-Responder of the Year.
Mary King-Miller (’08, ’15) and Curtis Miller welcomed Jaxon Miller into the world on July 9.
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A LUM NI
TROY ALUMNI RAFFLE
63
IS A S P ORTS FA N'S DREA M
Troy University sports fans have a chance to own a piece of
Regional Child Advocacy Center, the Christian Love Academy,
Trojan football history while also supporting several nonprofit
the Troy Nutrition Center and the Colley Senior Complex.
organizations, thanks to the Troy University Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. The Kappa Alpha Psi alumni are offering raffle tickets for a chance to win a TROY football
“The TROY Alumni Chapter is proud to be working with Troy University and Mr. DeMarcus Ware in giving back to a Troy
helmet signed by DeMarcus
community that has been so supportive of all of us over the years,” said Jerome
Ware, the Super Bowl-winning
Solomon, Polemarch for the TROY
former Trojan football star.
Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi
Tickets are available for a $20
Fraternity, Inc.
donation, and the drawing
Tickets can be obtained from any TROY
will be held during the annual
Alumni Chapter brother or contact
homecoming TROY Alumni
troyalumnikapsi@gmail.com for more
Tailgaters Ball. All proceeds
information. You can also visit the
raised through the fundraiser will
chapter online at troyalumnikapsi.com.
support nonprofit organizations in the city of Troy, including the Boys and Girls Club, the Pike
IN REMEMBRANCE Troy University Alumni Glenn D. Addison (’90) Johnny R. Andrews (’78) Tony Edward Bable (’00) Keith F. Bilyeu (’77, ’78) Jimmy W. Bobbitt (’92) Neil D. Bush (’59) Gene Campbell (’74) Marjorie Wiggins Casey (’80) Andrew J. Chapman (’12) Thomas Edward Clark (’79, ’80) James R. Coates (’89) Margaret M. Cope (’63) Johnnie C. Covington, Jr. (’05, ’08) Kennith L. Crabtree (’90) Richard Cruciani (’80) Lucille Crysell (’45) Dianne Anderson Dailey (’94) Lara Ebbinga (’93, ’00) Andrew Erickson (’96) Jerry B. Grove (’99) Dorothy M. Hatcher (’82) Kenneth Haupt (’81, ’82, ’84) Mary B. Deese Hickman (’67) William M. Hinely (’86) Raymond E. Howard (’83) Mary Helen “Jeffcoat” Johnson (’73)
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Harold “Jeff” Jones (’74) Malachi B. Jones (’77) Sarah Turnipseed Lane (’65) Joseph J. Lherbier (’88) Elaine Livington (’99) Michael Margitich (’74) Sam Marley (’55) Faye W. McCollum (’91) Harold M. McCurry (’83) Ruth Elizabeth Milner (’85, ’89) Mary Mulder (’79, ’80) Lelon C. Oliver (’78) Jene W. Owens (’50) William L. Papp, Jr. (’95) Kerry Partridge, Jr. (’07) Virginia D. Pridgen (’65) Margaret Bassett Price (’69) Kathryn Balent Rohe (’89) George Scruggs (’82, ’85) Berdell Stinson (’94) Marjorie Thomasson (’84) Mary Davis Thornton (’73, ’79) Anthony J. Turchirollo (’79) Hubert E. Williford (’58, ’64) Donna Marie Willis (’98) Charles Anthony (Chuck) Wood (’93)
IN REMEMBRANCE Troy University Friends Jo Ann Charles Hoekenga Milton Earl McGregor Brenda McMillan Julia L. Smith James W. Thompson
Weddings and Engagements Savina Louise Adamsky to Benjamin Ellis Kimbrough (’13) Avalon Malissa Dudinsky (’18) to Grant Alan Meacham (’16) Chasity Samone Davis to Evan Michael Hawkins (’08, ’11)
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TROY T O DAY
A LUM NI
ALUMNI OF THE YEAR
Jimmy H. Baker, who earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration from Troy University in 1963, has served the Alabama Community College System since 2015, first as chief of staff and currently as chancellor. His career in education includes serving as superintendent of education for Daleville City and Coffee County school systems and tenures as assistant state superintendent and deputy state superintendent for the Alabama Department of Education. In addition to his experience in education, Baker managed the 1993-94 gubernatorial campaign for Gov. Fob James, served as state finance director under Gov. Jim Folsom, Jr., was a partner and president of an investment banking firm for more than 10 years and has served as a consultant. He also served for six years in the U.S. Army Reserves. Baker and his wife Joy have been married for more than 50 years and have two daughters and four grandchildren. Several members of his family hold degrees from TROY.
Dawn Railey, a 1982 TROY graduate with a bachelor’s degree in marketing, has proudly demonstrated the Trojan Warrior Spirit far and wide. A strong advocate for TROY, Railey has supported TROY events and activities and followed TROY sports teams across the country to cheer on the Trojans. She is a true TROY legacy in that many members of her family—past and present—are TROY alumni. Railey’s dedicated service to the University knows no bounds. She is a member of the Troy University Alumni Association and has served as a volunteer for the association and many other areas of the University. She is currently president of the association’s Pike County Chapter and is an active member and past president of the Sound of the South Alumni Chapter. Railey serves as sales manager for Atrium Hospitality/Embassy Suites in Montgomery and previously served as director of sales for LBA Hospitality/Courtyard by Marriott & Hampton Inn in Troy.
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