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    www.clevelandbanner.com/index.cfm?event=news.view&id=3F - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/15/2009    Last Visited: 5/15/2009  

    Dr. Ollie Lee to speak at TCPS graduation Dr. Ollie J. Lee will be the speaker for the Tennessee Christian Preparatory School's high school commencement on Saturday at 10 a.m. in the school's Victory Chapel, announced Dr. Bill Balzano, president of TCPS.
    ...
    "Dr. Lee is an outstanding leader in education," Dr. Balzano said.
    ...
    "Having Dr. Lee grace our commencement is quite an honor."

    Having graduated from Lee University in 1958 (a junior college at the time), Dr. Lee went on to earn a bachelor's degree and Ph.D. in sociology, only to return to Lee in 1967.

    His career at Lee began with the goal of helping the school transition from a junior college to a four-year liberal arts program. In 1968, he taught sociology to the first class to graduate from the liberal arts program.

    Since then, Dr. Lee has served as Chair of the Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Dean of the Division of Arts and Sciences, and Associate Dean and Academic Vice President from 1987 to 1999. In 2002, he was named Distinguished Professor of Sociology, a title he continues to hold to this day.

    Over the years, he has performed a great deal of research and continues to research social change, social problems, political sociology and globalization.

    Outside of the classroom, Dr. Lee has participated in the Cleveland Optimist Club, Cleveland Helpline telephone counseling ministry, consulted and was a member of city and county citizens' study committees and was a research consultant for the Church of God International Study Commission.

    He is a member of the Southern Sociological Society, Christian Sociological Society, World Future Society, Alpha Kappa Delta International Sociology Honor Society and Association of Christians Teaching Sociology.

    Dr. Lee and his wife, fellow Lee alumna Glenna Sheppard, have three sons, three daughters-in-law and five grandchildren.
    ...
    Active in the Westmore Church of God and the ministry of Gideons International, Dr. Lee speaks for the Gideons in many local churches.

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    www.clevelandbanner.com/index.cfm?event=news.view&id=85 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/7/2008    Last Visited: 8/7/2008  

    Wood, Lee named chairs of Lee University Departments
    ...
    Lee University professors Dr. Randy Wood and Dr. Ollie Lee have recently been appointed chairs of the Behavioral and Social Sciences Department and the Department of History and Political Science, respectively.
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    Lee will replace Dr. Robert Graham as chair of the Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences after Graham accepted a new post at Waynesburg University in Pennsylvania.
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    "Dr. Lee is a veteran administrator at Lee having served as department chair, associate dean, and vice president for Academic Affairs," said Dirksen.
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    "We are very fortunate to have someone with Dr. Lee's experience serving in this position."

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    timesfreepress.com/news/2008/sep/03/chattanooga-environ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/3/2008    Last Visited: 3/14/2009  

    Ollie J. Lee, a sociology professor at Lee, said Christian schools like Lee have not fully embraced the green movement because they fear the political implications of aligning with a cause traditionally viewed as liberal. There also has been a lack of understanding about the scientific knowledge on climate change, he said.

    "People say this is a politically motivated movement pushing bad science," he said.

  • View Online Source
    www.focusthenation.org/praise - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 6/28/2009  

    -Dr. Ollie Lee, Professor, Lee University

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    www.leeclarion.com/news/2009/03/06/new-major-gets-healt - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 6/6/2009  

    "Those who have a heart for improving the quality of life for patients and residents of health care facilities [would be ideal for this major]," said Dr. Ollie Lee, coordinator for the new degree.

    Lee said the event would give students, particularly freshmen and sophomores, a chance to look at the classes required by the major and ask questions.

    Students will have the opportunity to change their major to health care administration during the event. There will also be a video and speakers to introduce the program.

    Lee said that since the health care administration major was approved last year students can already declare it.

    The major was developed in partnership with Life Care Centers of America; the company will have a display at the launch party.

    According to the proposal for the major, Life Care will create a scholarship for students who choose to be health care administration majors.

    Lee said that all of the courses for the major currently exist, save for the introduction to health care administration class.

  • View Online Source
    Bradley News Weekly - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/28/2004    Last Visited: 1/29/2004  

    Flavis Casson, Cathey Barrett and Dr. Ollie Lee.
    ...
    The survey requested public input into a variety of community issues, the results of which were compiled by Dr. Ollie Lee, Professor of Sociology at Lee University.
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    "The greatest discrepancy between importance rating and quality rating," Lee said, "was given to hospital services ... and cable television."
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    "It is most interesting that there was a very diverse set of opinions on the wheel tax," Lee noted.
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    City residents and non-city residents pretty much agree on everything," Lee said.

  • View Online Source
    DB News Story - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/28/2004    Last Visited: 1/28/2004  

    Dr. Ollie Lee of Lee University presented the update. (See story below.)

  • View Online Source
    Lee Clarion: Memories of 1958: Lee remembers Lee - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 6/6/2009  

    Among those celebrating will be Dr. Ollie Lee, distinguished professor of sociology, who is in his 42nd year of teaching at Lee but also holds the title of Lee alumnus from the class of '58.

    Reflecting upon the institution in 1958 compared to now, Lee noted change.

    The era of the 1950s was filled with great change as Lee's campus moved from Sevierville, Tenn., to Cleveland. During this transition, several separate schools came together to form Lee's student body, those schools being the Junior college, Lee Academy (a high school), Lee's Bible College, and Religion Education (a non-collegiate program that served as a continuation from the Bible College and did not require a high school diploma).

    While these schools may have gone by separate names, they did not function separately.

    "It was as if it [were] one school," Lee said.

    The student body as a whole was much more unified, attending chapel services, dining and even taking classes together. Much of what brought the student body together was student government.

    For Lee, participating in student government was one of the vivid memories of 1958 that stuck out in his mind.

    "Campaigns then took on the same kind of passion and participation that the presidential election does today," Lee said.

    Student government did everything from electing officers to running campaigns to planning chapel services for the student body. In the days of Ollie Lee, chapel met every day and the student government was responsible for hosting one of those days by coming up with a service.

    "That was an ordeal," Lee laughed, remembering the challenges and rewards of finding new and exciting ways to engage the student body in chapel.

    Designing chapel services was not the only involvement student government had on Lee's campus. During the '57-'58 year, students began a campaign to bring change to one of the school rules that dealt with dating.

    "It was a hot issue," Lee said.
    ...
    "The highlight of social life in those days was formal banquets," Lee said.

    Approximately 10-12 of these banquets were held a year, hosted in the dining hall and funded by Church of God officials.

    "We had formal banquets that made the Deacon Jones Dining Hall look like the Ritz Carlton," Lee said.

    While student life played a large role in impacting Ollie Lee as a student, one of the most memorable things about Lee at that time was the faculty, he said.

    "I can't believe how hard they worked," said Lee.

    While carrying the weight of 15-18 hour teaching loads, faculty were also involved in the student body through the sponsorship of campus clubs as well as chaperoning. Faculty were particularly helpful to students in times of spiritual need.

    "At Convocation, [they] helped students pray through, sometimes [until] midnight," said Lee.

    Of the 12 alumni that Lee graduated with, 10 have returned to teach at Lee for varying amounts of time. Lee attributes this to the deep impact that the faculty of the time had upon the students.

    "We saw here something you can't find anywhere else: the sense of spirit, both academic and social," Lee said.

    Lee said he is blessed to look forward to the opportunity and privilege of reuniting with past teachers, colleagues and students.

  • View Online Source
    People News Mar04 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/1/2004    Last Visited: 8/6/2006  

    A slanted survey devised by a group headed by Dr. Ollie Lee of Lee University, focused attention on the one item that allowed a tax increase agenda to take foothold and become the new prime objective- the adoption of a wheel tax.Lee's unethical tactics in slanting the survey questions to achieve this objective does not reflect well on his integrity or the integrity of Lee University.

    The survey had no options to cut funding or decrease services, just tricked respondents to navigate a well thought out path to supply impetus for a new tax.Ollie is well versed in his craft.. he knows that given the choice of losing a finger or a leg, most people will chose the finger, but it doesn't mean they wouldn't prefer to keep them both, and so it is with the survey.

  • View Online Source
    Quotes | FOCUS THE NATION - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 2/26/2009  

    - Dr. Ollie Lee, Professor, Lee University

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