Freshman’s family surprises MTSU with $100K gift (w/video)

When MTSU freshman Jonathan Lusk moved into Corlew Hall last fall, he and his mother were surprised to learn that the guy helping lug the boxes was President Sidney A. McPhee.

MTSU freshman Jonathan Lusk, left, joins President Sidney A. McPhee in accepting a $100,000 donation to the College of Basic and Applied Sciences from Lusk’s grandfather, William, and his mother, Ju-Hsin. (MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)

The Lusk family later surprised McPhee with a $100,000 donation, which they asked be split between scholarships and a computer science laboratory renovation.

They presented the check to the president during a recent visit to campus.

“My wife and I want to support my grandson and make sure he gets a quality education,” said Jonathan’s grandfather, William C. Lusk, a retired senior executive vice president and CFO for Shaw Industries Inc.

Shaw, a Fortune 500 company, based in Dalton, Ga., is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of carpet and floor coverings.

Jonathan’s mother, Ju-Hsin, recognized McPhee during “We-Haul,” a three-day event each fall when volunteers from across campus pitch in to help about 3,000 students move into MTSU’s 14 traditional residence halls, two apartment complexes and two houses on Greek Row.

“I was very impressed,” said Ju-Hsin Lusk, who is managing director of corporate training, workforce development and continuing education for Chattanooga State Community College.

MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee, right, helps new freshman Shuntez Smith, a commercial songwriting major from Covington, Tenn., carry a load of supplies into Corlew Hall during the annual We-Haul move-in event on campus in August 2012. (MTSU file photo by Andy Heidt)

MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee, right, helps new freshman Shuntez Smith, a commercial songwriting major from Covington, Tenn., carry a load of supplies into Corlew Hall during the annual We-Haul move-in event on campus in August 2012. (MTSU file photo by Andy Heidt)

Jonathan said that while he appreciated the kindness, he had no idea who McPhee was that busy day.

“The first time I met him was when we were moving into the dorm and he shook my hand,” Jonathan said. “My mom pointed out to me that it was the president.”

McPhee, who helps out during We-Haul each year, said the Lusk family’s gift to the College of Basic and Applied Sciences is deeply appreciated.

“The contribution by the Lusk family will be put to very good use and will help many students,” McPhee said. “We are delighted that the Lusk family honored our university with this generous gift.”

Jonathan is studying computer science and hopes to take advantage of the improvements that his grandfather’s gift will make possible. He said he’s been impressed with campus so far.

“Good teachers, great students,” he said.

Watch a video about the donation below.

— Andrew Oppmann (andrew.oppmann@mtsu.edu)

Alumnus Wall honored with new medical scholarship at UTHSC

More Tennessee students can work toward becoming doctors, thanks to an MTSU alumnus’s new scholarship at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center’s College of Medicine in Memphis.

Dr. Hershel “Pat” Wall

Dr. Hershel “Pat” Wall, who earned his Bachelor of Science degree from MTSU in 1957, is being recognized for his years of dedication to education, medicine and public service with the Dr. Hershel P. Wall Endowed Scholarship, which will be awarded for the first time in fall 2013.

Fellow College of Medicine alumni and friends created a $50,000 endowment fund for the student scholarships, UTHSC officials said Nov. 30.

Wall earned his medical degree from the college in 1960. He’s served in a wide variety of roles in the Health Science Center community since then, most recently focusing on fundraising, capital development and alumni relations as special assistant to the president of the University of Tennessee.

A longtime UTHSC faculty member and administrator, Wall has served as the center’s chancellor, interim dean for the UT College of Medicine, associate dean for admissions and student affairs and division chief of general pediatrics.

“Dr. Wall is volunteer medicine,” said Dr. Joseph DeLozier, a 1982 graduate of the UTHSC College of Medicine and one of the donors to the new scholarship fund. “He is an example to doctors and our society of what we should all be about — unconditional giving to his students, colleagues, patients, friends and even strangers. There will be others to follow, but he has created the path and the standard, all out of love.”

During his 45-plus-year career as a physician, Wall has been recognized for his contributions to medical education, his clinical skills and many contributions to the community. He returned to MTSU in May 2011 to serve as a special guest speaker for the spring commencement ceremonies.

Nontraditional women earn full-tuition MTSU scholarships

Two young women who are pursuing their academic goals in nontraditional ways are the recipients of this year’s June S. Anderson Foundation Scholarships.

Foundation board members presented the full-tuition scholarships at a luncheon May 8. To be considered for the scholarships, applicants must be 23 years of age or older, maintain excellent grades, have a financial need and aspire to succeed in fields in which women traditionally are underrepresented.

Recipients of the 2012 June S. Anderson Foundation Scholarships are, from left, Merideth Allen, who is majoring in economics, and Darby Campbell, a photography major, joined by Dr. Andrienne Friedli, chemistry professor and June S. Anderson Foundation vice president, and Foundation President Mary Magada-Ward, an MTSU philosophy professor. (MTSU photo by News and Media Relations)

Darby Campbell, a Murfreesboro-based photography major minoring in psychology and art, is the head lab assistant at MTSU’s photography laboratory. She also serves as head photography editor for Collage, the student visual arts magazine, and works periodically for MTSU’s Baldwin Photographic Gallery.

Campbell plans to intern with a local professional photographer during the summer. She says her long-term goals are to work as a commercial advertising studio photographer while expanding her fine art portfolio. Eventually, Campbell says, she wants to teach at the collegiate level.

“I will be successful in my field, regardless of any gender bias,” Campbell wrote in her application essay. “I am relentless in my pursuit.”

Merideth Allen, a Fairview, Tenn., native majoring in economics and minoring in business administration and accounting, initially chose aerospace engineering as her course of study in 1986. She postponed her college education in 1989 due to financial and life circumstances.

A mother of three, Allen says it is important to her to finish what she started so she can be “an example of diligence and determination” for them. She says she hopes to work or a policy-oriented organization, a not-for-profit organization or an agency such as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“Working on completing my degree has helped build my confidence and self-esteem and has helped me through some tough times in my life,” Allen wrote in her application essay.

The June S. Anderson Foundation is named for the late chemistry professor who founded Concerned Faculty and Administrative Women in 1975 to improve the status of women at MTSU. In 1977, she established the Women’s Information and Services Center, the forerunner of today’s June Anderson Center for Women and Nontraditional Students.

For more information, go to http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jsa/.

– Gina K. Logue (Gina.Logue@mtsu.edu)

AAUW book sale raises funds for student scholarships

Books, CDs, DVDs, VCR tapes, cassette tapes, journals and magazines will be available at greatly reduced prices at the American Association of University Women’s annual book sale April 2-3.

The event is planned for 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday, April 2, and Tuesday, April 3, in front of Phillips Bookstore in the Keathley University Center.

Contributors may drop off their donated items from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, March 24, and Saturday, March 31, in front of Monohan Hall along Old Main Circle. Volunteers will be curbside to help you unload your items. Donations also will be accepted at the desk in Monohan Hall through March 31.

All proceeds will benefit the Ruth Houston Memorial Scholarship for MTSU students. For more information, contact Cathy Crawford at cathy.crabtree@mtsu.edu.

– Gina K. Logue (Gina.Logue@mtsu.edu)