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Check out our photos from Boise State’s Day at the Capitol.
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Kathleen Probst’s exhibit “Kurva” highlights her skill with fabric art.
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January 27, 2013 • Issue no. 34 Volume 26
Boise, Idaho
First issue free
Sandy lee: The legacy
Sandy Lee has watched Boise State grow since 1974
Ryan Thorne @Ryanthorne86
Q: What jobs have you held over the years on campus? Lee: I was hired in 1979 and I worked as the secretary to John Kaiser (former Boise State president) and I worked for him for almost a year and a half. Then I quit to have my daughter, stayed home for a year and a half, and then I came back and actually worked part-time for the department of Physics and Engineering. So I worked part-time, had the summers off and then they called me up in 1987 and asked me to come back to the President’s Office and work as the executive assistant to the president. I have pretty much worked in this office for the majority of my time here. Q: What would you say are some of the biggest changes you have seen here at Boise State?
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Lee: Technology. I started out with an electric typewriter where you used carbon paper. I remember the first time we went online with the Internet. It was just the most bizarre thing. I mean it was so exciting to have this new world opened up to you. It used to be that you had to come to
campus to attend class. Now you can sit in your living room using distant learning and online classes. It’s just amazing, students just have access to so much information. Q: What do you enjoy most about your job?
Lee: (Laughs) I think they were very nervous that they would see me open up a window and wave to them or sign up for a class with them and sit next to them. (Laughs) But it worked out great.
Lee: The people. You get to meet so many interesting people. Governors come in here and CEOs; Steve Appleton from Micron, as well as legislators. Every day is just different. There is no one day that is exactly the same and you are in on what goes on here on campus. I love it here. I have worked in other departments but I love it here. They let me work part-time so I could be home with my kids and now I work fulltime now that they are married and don’t need me at home.
photo :Bsu focus fact sheet
Sandy Lee has worked at Boise State for nearly 30 years and has served under three presidents. Lee graduated from Boise State in 1974 with a degree in Secretarial Science and has watched the university grow from a two-year college to a nationally recognized university with a student population exceeding 20,000. Lee currently works in the President’s Office as an executive staff assistant and recently sat down with The Arbiter to share her
stories and experience of over three decades as a campus fixture.
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Q: How many children do you have?
a/ THE AR BI TE R
Lee: Two. They are both graduates of Boise State. Q: What was it like working here while your kids attended school?
Lee back in 1981
Devin Ferrell/THE ARBITER
page Design Christian Spencer/THE ARBITER
Campus Sound
News
The Arbiter
pg 3
On Jan. 23, the Student Union Performance Series (SUPS) brought the funk/ blues and southern bluegrass sounds of T-Bird and the Breaks along with the smooth blues sounds of Marshall Poole to campus. The two bands brought big sound and drew a lunchtime crowd in the Student Union Building.
Features
pg 5
Arts & Entertainment
pg 6
Sports
pg 8 arbiteronline.com