As students push their way through the double doors into UGA’s Snelling Dining Commons, welcoming shouts of “come on in darlin,” “hello sweet pea!” and “How are you doin boo?” ring through the air. At the cashier turnstile stands a short African-American woman clothed in an over-sized hunter green polo shirt, with embroidery reading “The University of Georgia” (complete with the arch logo), and “Food Services” below that in white lettering. On the opposite side, she wears a name badge that reads, “Ms. Sandra Patterson, Cashier-Snelling.” She smiles broadly revealing a large, yet perfect gap between her two front teeth. Bangs hang just above her eyebrows, and her neatly combed hair is shoulder length. Snelling’s soul and many students mom-away-from-home, stands right in front of me sipping on cranberry juice from a UGA Food Services mug.
She was raised by her father and grandmother, the South Carolina native has bittersweet memories childhood with her nine sisters. She commends her father on a job-well-done and comments, “He was one in a million.” Her family relocated to Athens, Ga. when she was six years old. She was educated through the Athens-Clarke County school system and graduated from Clarke Central High School in 1978. “I was pretty much a quiet girl,” she recalls, “because there was so many of us, I didn’t get to do much.”
Ms. Sandra began her adult life at the age of 18, when she got married. At the time, she was working at a children’s daycare center. She somberly remembers coming out of work for three years because of her newborn’s problematic heart condition. After her son’s recovery, she went back to work, reporting though to a different place. Ms. Sandra begins to smile, despite not feeling well, as she reminisces about her beginning days at Snelling: “When I first started here, I wasn’t a cashier. I was on the main line and a salad maker.” She then moved around campus a bit to The Bulldog Café and other campus eateries. She came back to Snelling though, “because this was home,” she says pointing passionately to table we sat at.
Speaking of the “home” suddenly makes her cheeks perk up and eyes brighten as she states that she’s the proud mother of three and a grandmother to five. “I love children” she says, “that’s my main focus.” Ms. Sandra says her love for children is “probably because my mom died when I was small and who ever takin care of you, they don’t take care of you like mom.” Looking downward yet smiling, she says “that’s probably part of my life I’m missing, so I try to take it up now, and give. And I enjoy it too.”
Giving is the most important part of Ms. Sandra’s cashier position. She works Monday through Friday from 6:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. most days, including some Saturdays. On average, she greets 2,400 students a day, according to the Executive Director of Food Services, J. Michael Floyd. Ms. Sandra beams joy into student’s lives daily with her up-beat personality and warm greetings. She gets that joy “from God” she says, “he’s the one keeping me happy [and] making sure I have it in me to give out to others.” Students pass through the turnstiles and immediately she reigns them in for a hug. Not one person walks by Ms. Sandra without being touched emotionally or hugged physically. Some students even stop to share their problems such as, “I’m not getting A’s Ms. Sandra,” in which she replies, “uh ah, we can’t have that,” and proceeds to examine the problem further.
She’s more than a cashier to most students at UGA, including a recent alum, Chris LeCraw, creator of the Facebook group, “I love Sandra the Snelling Dining Hall Lady” which now has 3,149 members. Respect and appreciation for Ms. Sandra runs deep through bulldog blood. LeCraw comments “no matter how I felt before entering Snelling, I couldn’t help but walk away feeling happier after seeing Miss Sandra.” LeCraw is just one of the many students who formed a friendship with Ms. Sandra over the years he spent here at UGA. He remembers, she “would ask me about my classes, how I was feeling, girls I was dating, etc.”
She blushes humbly as I remind her of the immense love UGA students feel towards her. Floyd spoke of UGA alumnus memories pertaining to Ms. Sandra: “when they think of their four years at UGA, they’ll remember Ms. Sandra because she’s the lady at Snelling that made them feel at home.” Floyd also notices that, “it’s the joy that her customers show her, that is her paycheck.” Ms. Sandra is not only appreciated by the study body for her loving character, but also by her coworkers at Snelling.
Although unnoticed formally as part of University of Georgia’s desegregation movement, Ms. Sandra is one of the biggest contributors to change for the good. She has been a Snelling employee for 22 years, Ms. Sandra has never let an opportunity to greet students pass her by. The instant she lays eyes on a student, she begins to care for them as her own, regardless of their race, color, ethnicity or creed. Ms. Sandra’s self-made goal is to “make sure everybody feels comfortable so they’ll want to stay here. “
What a remarkable spectacle it is to see Ms. Sandra, fleshing out love and joy into everyone’s day at the Snelling Dining Commons. The process of desegregation at the University of Georgia has been going on for 50 years now. With each day, Ms. Sandra furthers the cause, by spreading the same love and joy to all students and staff she comes in contact with.
Sources
Miss Sandra Patterson
Snelling Cashier
Phone: 706-201-0589
Chris LeCraw
UGA Alum
E-mail: clecraw@gmail.com
J. Michael Floyd
Executive Director of Food Services
Phone: (706) 542-1256
I really enjoyed talking to Holly about Ms. Sandra. I think it is great to have a positive story like this in the publication. We discussed that the story needs to talk more about its relation to desegregation with out taking away from the background and facts about Sandra. I liked that Holly was so descriptive in details because it made the story very real. Although I know and love Ms. Sandra I found out so much from reading this article.
ReplyDeleteI like the unique point of view given from Ms. Sandra. I also agree that the story needs more information and focus on desegregation. I like all of the description, and Holly really makes the reader feel like they are right there with Ms. Sandra.
ReplyDelete