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The Tennessee Tech Alumni Association will honor six alumni of the
university during a reception and ceremony as part of Homecoming
2005 festivities.
The Distinguished Alumnus, Outstanding Service
and Outstanding Young Alumnus awards are the highest bestowed by
the university’s alumni association. They recognize those
who have demonstrated professional excellence and achievement or
outstanding service to the university.
This year’s Distinguished Alumnus Award
winners are M. Dianne Murphy, athletic director at Columbia University,
and Terry W. Warren, a strategic planner for international insurance
broker Willis Group and an accomplished artist. Cookeville business
leaders Lem and Donna McSpadden are this year’s Outstanding
Service Award winners. Donald D. Viar, owner and managing partner
of Cookeville’s Epic Technologies, and Stephen A. Arnette,
director of professional service for Sverdrup Technology, are this
year’s recipients of Outstanding Young Alumnus Awards.
The awards reception and ceremony is set for 4
p.m., Friday, Nov. 4, in the Tech Pride Room. Everyone is welcome.
M. Dianne Murphy. A native of
Putnam County and a 1972 and 1973 Health and Physical Education
graduate of TTU, Murphy was named athletic director at Columbia
University in August 2004.
Prior to joining Columbia University, she served
for six years at the University of Denver, transforming its athletics
program from Division II status into one of the top Division I programs
in the country, winning four NCAA Division I titles and making it
a model for regional and national academic excellence. In 2003,
Denver’s program finished in the top 20 percent of all NCAA
Division I schools in the USSA Director’s Cup.
Murphy previously served as associate athletics
director and senior woman administrator at Cornell University, where
she oversaw nine Division I sports, marketing and promotions, sports
information, and alumni and booster activities.
An 18-year veteran athletics administrator, Murphy
served as assistant athletics director responsible for external
operations at the University of Iowa, coached for 13 years as head
women’s basketball coach at Eastern Kentucky, Florida State
University and Shorter College, and held several teaching positions.
She was named 2003 Administrator of the Year by
the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association and National Association
of Collegiate Directors of Athletics General Sports Turf West Region
Athletic Director of the Year for 2003-04.
Terry W. Warren. In 1974, Warren
began his career as a management engineer for Carolinas Hospital
and Health Services in Spartanburg, S.C., after graduating from
TTU the previous year with a degree in Industrial Engineering.
In 1975, he began an 11-year career with the Hospital
Corp. of America, serving as vice president for management services
in Nashville until 1981 and in Sydney, Australia, until 1983. He
then returned to Nashville, where he served as director for national
accounts until 1986.
In 1987, he joined the Willis Corroon Group, now
known as the Willis Group, one of the world’s largest firms
specializing in risk management services employing more than 14,500
people in 300 offices in 100 countries. Warren held various high-level
positions before moving into his current position with the organization
in 2003. Currently, he serves as assistant to the CEO of Willis
North America and fills the role of chief change agent for the organization.
Also an accomplished painter, Warren’s first
public art show is set for March 1, 2006, at Belle Meade Plantation
in Nashville. In an art career that began in 1982, he studied under
Jean Poole in Sydney and Mildred Williams and Sandy Shou in Nashville.
His style is photorealism, and he is primarily a landscape artist
who works in acrylics, colored pencil, and pen and ink. He especially
enjoys painting New England landscapes, and his show next year will
feature works from a series on the Cape Cod area.
Donna and Lem McSpadden. The
Cookeville couple, alumni who have been major financial contributors
to TTU since 1985, received one of the first-ever Chancellor’s
Awards for Excellence in Philanthropy from the Tennessee Board of
Regents in 2002.
Donna McSpadden is a Business Administration graduate
who has served since 2000 as a senior consultant at DLM Associates
in Cookeville, providing medical management consulting services
and practice set-ups.
Her career began in 1975 as an accounting manager
at Cookeville Regional Medical Center (then Cookeville General Hospital).
In 1979, she began what would become a 13-year career as an administrator
at Putnam Radiology, a four-physician, 11-employee radiology group
that underwent three building projects during her service.
Prior to her current position, she served as president
and CEO of Medical Consulting Specialists Inc., of Cookeville, from
1993 until selling the business in 1999. During that time, the organization,
which provides management and billing services to medical practices,
maintained 20 employees and underwent two construction projects.
Lem McSpadden, an alumnus of our Industrial Technology
program, is owner of Cookeville’s A+ Home Inspection Services,
which has provided examinations of structures and their operating
components since 2002 in order to help both buyers and sellers.
He began a 30-year career at Fleetguard as a sales
training manager in Nashville, where he provided training and development
needs for the business’ sales department. In 1989, he was
promoted to senior account manager, where he led the development
of new business opportunities for Fleetguard customers.
From 1994 until his retirement in 2001, he served
as a global account executive at Fleetguard in Nashville, where
he led a cross-functional team of engineers, sales and marketing
personnel to achieve growth for specific customers on a global basis
and was responsible for developing and communicating business plans
for customers, as well as developing and achieving sales plans for
them.
Donald D. Viar. A life-long entrepreneur
who started his first business out of his parents' basement when
he was still in high school, Viar started his second venture, a
consulting business to meet the technological needs of small businesses,
while he was still a student at TTU.
After earning a bachelor’s degree in 1992
in Management Information Systems, and an M.B.A. with an emphasis
in accounting two years later, he began his career as a certified
public accountant and financial auditor for Ernst and Young.
He soon became a key resource on the firm’s
elite national health care emerging technologies team, where he
frequently served as an advisor for technology decisions to top
executives of multi-billion dollar and Fortune 100 health care companies.
At the height of the “dot com” boom, Viar helped co-found
ConnectedHealth.Net, a $15 million subsidiary of Ernst and Young
that delivers health care news and continuing education services
over the Internet.
In 1998, he became lead financial officer for
the retail products division of Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores,
where he worked for two years before the lure of entrepreneurialism
struck again.
Today, Viar serves as owner and managing partner
of Epic Technologies of Cookeville, which develops advanced voice
and data communication solutions and provides data security consulting
services for more than 425 organizations across the Southeast. In
2003, industry trade publication CRN Magazine named the
company as the 14th fastest growing technology reseller in North
America.
Stephen A. Arnette. A 1990 graduate
of our Mechanical Engineering program, Arnette began his career
in 1995 at Sverdrup Technology, a 4,500-employee, $700 million-revenue
subsidiary of Jacobs Engineering. His responsibilities included
design analysis and engineering, project management and establishment
of a computational fluid dynamics capability.
He left the following year to teach in the Mechanical
and Aerospace Engineering Department at the University of Dayton,
where in one year, he helped acquire research support totaling $200,000
from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the state of
Ohio.
He returned to Sverdrup Technology in 1997 to
help form the Aerodynamic Engineering and Research Branch of the
company, which is dedicated to aerodynamics, acoustics, experimental
methods and computational simulation.
In October 1999, Arnette formed the Advanced Technology
Segment, a new business unit within the company that provides advanced
engineering services to clients in the automotive and aerospace
markets.
In December 1999, he became the youngest vice
president in the history of Sverdrup Technology. As vice president
and director of advanced technology, he is responsible for the performance
of the segment’s two engineering groups — one in Tullahoma
and the other in Southfield, Mich.
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