
His law partners at Brooks, Pierce are proud of John and pleased to provide the funds to name this Scholarship in his honor. Through all the changes of life, John and Susan have carried the lessons they learned at Governor’s School with them-the importance of critical thinking, that listening to other opinions expands your own thinking, and that you never know where an opportunity might lead. He is committed to their church and serves as General Counsel for the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. John became one of the North Carolina’s first Board Certified Specialist in Business and Consumer Bankruptcy law and has received numerous accolades in his chosen field of law. In 2008 John became Chair of the firm’s Finance Committee and served in that capacity for nine and half years.

Fill out an application today and apply for the Presidential Scholarships. After law school, John joined the firm of Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard in Greensboro where he has practiced for almost 40 years. Carolina University offers very generous scholarships for international students. John went to the University of North Carolina and then to the Yale School of Law. She taught high school, pursued a seminary degree, was a stay at home mom and now works as the discipleship director at their church. With this sense of expanded possibilities, Susan chose Meredith for college. “Of course, we had dreams,” said Susan “but Governor’s School helped us imagine that those dreams were actually possible and motivated us to work hard to make them a reality.” The opportunity to engage their minds with exciting new ideas stimulated a new sense of what was possible for their lives.

For the first time, they had evidence of the many possibilities that were available to them. The interaction with other gifted students from across North Carolina changed the way they saw the world, and their place in it. Governor’s School changed their lives in other ways too. As the summer progressed, they fell in love and thus began the relationship that would in time result in four children (one of whom, 32 years later, met her spouse at Governor’s School), six grandchildren and 40 years of marriage and continued conversation.

They became friends over Mayberry’s ice cream, Moravian sugar cake and stimulating intellectual conversations. They met each other in the Governor’s School social science class. They had no idea that it would change their lives. There was very little opportunity for gifted education in their area and Susan Jordan, from Chowan County and John Small, from Pasquotank County were excited about this intellectual adventure. In 1971 two rising seniors from northeastern North Carolina prepared to attend Governor’s School at Salem College in Winston Salem.
