I moved to South Carolina in 2012 to teach at Presbyterian College, a small rural liberal arts institution in Clinton, just off the interstate between Greenville and Columbia. One of my first students in what has become a decade of badass PC graduates was Grant Burnette LeFever, a brilliant double English and History major (’13) who did things like write a compelling sixteen page essay for a World Literature final. Meeting Grant, and her parents Mike LeFever (PC English class of ‘69) and Malissa Burnette was a wonderful introduction to how PC is a quiet force for social justice in the state. Malissa is one of our most important South Carolina feminist leaders, fighting for equal protection for women and LGBTQ people in employment, sports, college admissions, and reproductive rights.
It's a Good Day to Fight the System
It's a Good Day to Fight the System
It's a Good Day to Fight the System
I moved to South Carolina in 2012 to teach at Presbyterian College, a small rural liberal arts institution in Clinton, just off the interstate between Greenville and Columbia. One of my first students in what has become a decade of badass PC graduates was Grant Burnette LeFever, a brilliant double English and History major (’13) who did things like write a compelling sixteen page essay for a World Literature final. Meeting Grant, and her parents Mike LeFever (PC English class of ‘69) and Malissa Burnette was a wonderful introduction to how PC is a quiet force for social justice in the state. Malissa is one of our most important South Carolina feminist leaders, fighting for equal protection for women and LGBTQ people in employment, sports, college admissions, and reproductive rights.