EC Alumni - Fall 2011

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Homecoming 2011 Celebrate your Pirate heritage back on campus October 28-29

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EC Alumni, the magazine of the East Carolina Alumni Association, takes a closer look at the accomplishments of our alumni, bringing you engaging feature articles highlighting their success. EC Alumni also features news from around campus, updates from University Advancement, career advice, how alumni and friends can support ECU’s legislative initiatives, and a look back at the University’s treasured history. This issue features Homecoming information, our 2011 award recipients, and Betty Speir '63.

Transcript of EC Alumni - Fall 2011

Page 1: EC Alumni - Fall 2011

Homecoming 2011Celebrate your Pirate heritage

back on campus October 28-29

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East Carolina University sustained an estimated $1 million in damages from Hurricane Irene, a storm that is being called one of the top ten most destructive and deadly hurricanes to hit the United States since 1980. The category 1 storm made landfall at Cape Lookout, North Carolina, close to Atlantic Beach, at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, August 27 with wind gusts in excess of 100 miles per hour in some locations. Irene battered North Carolina’s eastern region, including the often fragile coastline, for more than 12 hours as the 800-mile-wide hurricane started its journey up the East coast.

ECU classes were cancelled August 29-30 to allow time for felled trees to be removed, power lines repaired, and give faculty and staff members an opportunity to tend to their own property damages.

For more photos of the damage to campus, visit www.ecu.edu/news/ireneimages.cfm.

ECU Cheerleaders live the University’s motto “To Serve” by lending a helping hand in the Greenville community cleaning up broken limbs and debris.

Hurricane IreneAugust 27, 2011

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12 homecoming 2011 Come home to East Carolina and

Greenville during Homecoming 2011: PeeDee Goes to Hollywood. See

how your alma mater has grown and catch up wtih old friends and

classmates.

16 award recipients Eight individuals will be honored at

the annual Alumni Awards Ceremony & Dinner this fall. Meet these

exceptional alumni and friends.

20 a pirate remembers A true Southern lady, Betty

Smith Speir ’63 loves people, loves politics, and loves East Carolina

University. Get to know this elegant, poised Pirate.

DEPARTMENTS

FEATURES

Artist Bill Mangum captures the beauty of Wright Auditorium in this limited edition print. Get yours at WilliamMangum.com or by calling 800-887-5580.

ON THE COVER

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dear pirate nation

pirate connections

legislative matters

advancement update career corner

around campus

a look back

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EC Alumni, the magazine of the East Carolina Alumni Association, takes a closer look at the accomplishments of our alumni, bringing you engaging feature articles highlighting their success. EC Alumni also features news from around campus, updates from University Advancement, career advice, how alumni and friends can support ECU’s legislative initiatives, and a look back at the University’s treasured history.

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The mission of the East Carolina Alumni Association is to inform, involve, and serve members of the ECU family throughout their lifelong relationship with the University.

Paul J. CliffordPRESIDENT AND CEO

Monique BestACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN

Stephanie BunnASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR ALUMNI PROGRAMS

Emily Adkins ’08ASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR ALUMNI PROGRAMS

Candi High ’97ACCOUNTANT

Tanya Kern ’02DIRECTOR OF ALUMNI PROGRAMS

Betsy Rabon ’86ALUMNI CENTER COORDINATOR

Doug Smith ’00, ’07DIRECTOR OF ALUMNI

COMMUNICATIONS & MEMBERSHIP

Jennifer WatsonASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR ALUMNI COMMUNICATIONS

Chris Williams ’01ASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR ALUMNI MEMBERSHIP

EC Alumni (ISSN: 2152-3886) is published quarterly by the East Carolina Alumni Association. The Alumni Association is a member of the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) and Council of Alumni Association Executives (CAAE) and is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that operates interdependently with East Carolina University. The views expressed in EC Alumni magazine do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of the Alumni Association or the University. Reproduction of EC Alumni in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

©2011 East Carolina Alumni Association

Read EC Alumni online at:PirateAlumni.com/ECAlumni

ISSN: 2152-5668

To contact us or comment on this magazine:252-328-6072 | 800-ECU-GRAD

[email protected]

Send change of address to:East Carolina Alumni Association Taylor-Slaughter Alumni Center

901 East Fifth StreetGreenville, NC 27858

EC Alumni is paid for with non-state funds.

“If you were talking to a high school senior about ECU, what would you tell them about your experience?” This was a question we recently posted on the East Carolina Alumni Association’s LinkedIn group. The responses inspired my letter in this issue of EC Alumni. Each, in their own way, touch on the elements that make our University great: the people, the culture, the education and Pirate pride. Here are a couple samples of what your fellow Pirates had to say about ECU.

Mandi Fleitz ’09 of Garner wrote, “Something I noticed right away about ECU is the people. Whether you were on the bus, walking around campus, at the

grocery store, downtown; everyone was so friendly. Going to a different college before I went to ECU really made me see the difference in how friendly the people are. When you don’t know a lot of people in a new city, at a new school, it’s very comforting to know that everybody is so welcoming. Smiling at people you did not know in passing was a normal thing at ECU.”

Bailey Tucker ’88 of Raleigh feels like ECU was one big family. “The best thing about being a Pirate to me is the fraternal nature of the student body and the alumni. The color purple calls to you in a crowd. I saw a family at a restaurant in Raleigh and the father was wearing his ECU T-shirt. I said “Go Pirates!” and he smiled ear to ear and said “Arrrgh!” His expression changed and he then commented that he just dropped his son off at NCSU for his first day as an incoming freshman and he just had to wear his ECU shirt as a dig. I can’t think of anything negative except that the years went by way too fast.”

Rich Waldrop ’77 of Kinnelon, New Jersey, agrees with Bailey, “I agree with the comments that when you are a Pirate and wear the purple, you are part of a bigger family. After living in NJ for 32 years, I really enjoy it when we go over to NYC and watch the football games with fellow Pirates.”

Chip O’Rear ’00 of Greenville gives some good advice. “Value your time spent at ECU. Make sure you take full advantage of all of the opportunities that an experience at East Carolina affords you. Become involved in campus organizations, take time to get to know your professors, especially in your major. Those relationships will serve you for many years after you’ve graduated. East Carolina University’s motto is ‘servire’, which translates to service. I have found that each instructor I encountered while there takes that motto to heart and genuinely has every student’s best interest at heart.”

College, for many people, is about preparing for the real world. Renee York Van Kirk ’01 of Phoenix, Arizona, says ECU did just that! “One of the best things I experienced at ECU was the diversity of students. Coming from a small town, everyone I went to school with had a similar background as me. By going to ECU, I was exposed to classmates from all over. I still keep in contact with an exchange student from Japan. It really prepared me for the real world after graduating and I was able to transition to working with companies all over the US.”

What are your thoughts? Tap into the power of the Pirate Alumni Network and join the conversation online (visit PirateAlumni.com/LinkedIn to be taken directly to the East Carolina Alumni Association group). There you will find more than 4,500 other ECU Pirates ready to share advice, network, and connect. Put the Pirate Alumni Network to work for you, for others, and for East Carolina. GO PIRATES!!!

Paul J. Clifford President & CEOEast Carolina Alumni Association

DEAR PIRATE NATION

VOL. 4, NO. 4ALUMNI

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ECU Scholarship Classic WeekendCome to Greenville a couple of nights before the UNC game and partake in the Alumni Association’s fun and philanthropic weekend of events

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Your bids could win you a bounty of treasures at the Pirate’s Bounty Scholarship Auction at the Hilton Greenville on Thursday, September 29 at 7:00 p.m. Guests will enjoy live music by Scott Mueller ’96, hors d’oeuvres, Pirate beverages, and live and silent auction items. All proceeds benefit Alumni Association scholarships given to current ECU students. Tickets are $20.00 per person. Visit PirateAlumni.com/piratesbounty for a list of all auction items, more information, and to purchase tickets.

A tradition among Pirate golfers, the ECU Alumni Scholarship Classic golf tournament is Friday, September 30 at Ironwood Golf & Country Club and is presented by the Hilton Greenville. This four-person, super-ball tournament offers two tee times, breakfast, lunch, and the 19th Hole Reception with prizes and trophies.

Player and sponsorship opportunities are available. Visit PirateAlumni.com/golf to register to play or call the Alumni Center at 800-ECU-GRAD. Thank you to our generous sponsors: 5th Street Inn, Acura, Aramark, Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina, Carolina Ale House, Carolina Wealth Management, Coca-Cola, ECU Dowdy Student Stores, ECU Vending, Goldsmith Golf & Tennis, Ironwood Golf & Country Club, Josten’s, Liberty Mutual, Occasions Party & Tent Rentals, Pirate Radio 1250 & 930 AM, Potash Corp., RA Jeffreys Distributing, Ralph Finch ’67, State Farm Insurance, The Fresh Market, Tony Misenheimer ’69, University Printing and Graphics, and WITN.

Away Game Tailgates Tickets still available for two away games

Join the Alumni Association and the Pirate Club when the Gridiron Pirates go on the road. Away game tailgates are $25.00 per person and include great food, Pirate beverages, and terrific door prizes. Children 12 and under are free of charge.

HoustonSaturday, October 8PirateAlumni.com/houston2011

NavySaturday, October 22PirateAlumni.com/navy2011

Tickets can be purchased by visiting the links above or calling 800-ECU-GRAD.

Alumni Awards Ceremony and Dinner

Join the Alumni Association Board of Directors, Chancellor Ballard, and members of the Pirate Nation as we recognize eight special alumni and friends who have demonstrated outstanding merit and achievement at the 2011 Alumni Awards Ceremony and Dinner on Friday, October 28 at the Hilton Greenville.

A cocktail reception begins at 6:00 p.m. with dinner and the Awards Ceremony to follow at 7:00 p.m. This year’s award recipients are featured on pages 16-19. The Alumni Association would like to thank this year’s generous sponsors: Robinson Law Firm P.A., Metrics Inc., and Overton’s.

All proceeds from the Pirate’s Bounty Scholarship Auction and ECU Alumni Scholarship Classic golf tournament benefit ECU student scholarships that are awarded to students who excel in the classroom, participate in student organizations, and give back to their community. This year’s goal is to raise $25,000.

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PIRATE CONNECTIONS

Carl Davis ’73, ChairRaleigh, NC

Adrian Cullin ’03, ’04, Vice ChairCharlotte, NC

Jim Newman Jr. ’68, ’74, TreasurerRaleigh, NC

Glenda Palmer-Moultrie ’79, SecretaryDerwood, MD

Ernest Logemann ’68, Past ChairWinston-Salem, NC

Paul J. Clifford, President and CEOGreenville, NC

Diane Davis Ashe ’83, ’85Celebration, FL

William Burnette ’96Virginia Beach, VA

Justin Conrad ’96Greensboro, NC

Tarrick Cox ’96, ’07Greenville, NC

Neal Crawford ’85Richmond, VA

Ralph Finch ’67Midlothian, VA

Dave Fussell Jr. ’90Rose Hill, NC

Robin Good ’80Houston, TX

Melanie Holden ’79Raleigh, NC

Wesley Johnson ’85Powder Springs, GA

Pat Lane ’67Chocowinity, NC

Charlie Martin Jr. ’68Greenville, NC

Marian McLawhorn ’67, ’88, ’97Grifton, NC

Michael McShane ’66Alexandria, VA

Doug Morgan ’88South Riding, VA

Steve Morrisette ’69Richmond, VA

Angela Moss ’97, ’98Raleigh, NC

Joanie Tolley ’65Elon, NC

Jason Tomasula ’00, ’03, ’10Charlotte, NC

Linda Lynn Tripp ’80, ’81Greenville, NC

EMERITUS MEMBERS:Virgil Clark ’50

Greenville, NC

Dave Englert ’75Norfolk, VA

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Pirate Career CastsFree career-related webcasts to broaden and enhance your work experiencePirate Career Casts are interactive Webcasts hosted by the Alumni Association and facilitated by various ECU departments and industry experts. Offered throughout the academic year, each session covers career-related topics relevant to today’s competitive market. You will have the opportunity to gain insights, engage in discussion, and get answers to your questions on a different topic each month.

Pirate Career Casts, which are held once a month (generally the first Thursday) from 12:00-1:00 p.m. ET, are FREE and open to all alumni, friends, and ECU seniors. When you register for a session, you will be given a Web address to access the Webcast on the day of your session. A PowerPoint presentation will be included in your session for reference. Participants are also welcome to attend a Pirate Career Cast in person on ECU’s campus at the Global Classroom in the Science and Technology building.

Fall Dates and Topics:

How Your Alumni Association Can Assist Your Job SearchOctober 5 from 12:00-1:00 p.m.Presented by Paul J. Clifford, President and CEO of the East Carolina Alumni Association

Job Transitioning and Job Seeking Helpful HintsNovember 2 from 12:00-1:00 p.m.Presented by Nadirah Pippen ’00, ’09 of the ECU Career Center Social Media to Network Professionally December 7 from 12:00-1:00 p.m.Presented by Francesca DiMarco ’09 of ECU Student Life Marketing and Communications

Want to suggest a topic? E-mail [email protected].

Watch football with fellow Pirates Can’t make it to ECU games? Then join fellow alumni and Pirate fans this fall at your favorite watering hole for a viewing party. All ECU football fans are welcome to attend these viewing parties and if you are an East Carolina Alumni Association or Pirate Club member, you will have the chance to win ECU goodies during halftime.

Scheduled Viewing Parties will be hosted in the following cities:

• Arlington, VA• Atlanta, GA• Charlotte, NC• Greenville, SC• New York, NY• Raleigh, NC• Richmond, VA• Virginia Beach, VA• Winter Park, FL• Washington, D.C.

Visit PirateAlumni.com/viewingparties for additional locations and details on each scheduled city’s Viewing Party location.

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PIRATE CONNECTIONS

ECU Alumni ReceptionsComing to a North Carolina town near you!

Ready to get together with fellow Pirates for great company, good food, and lots of fun? Then join the East Carolina Alumni Association for a Pirate Alumni Reception in your town! Don’t miss these opportunities to gather with East Carolina alumni and friends in your area to enjoy the camaraderie and pride of the Pirate Nation. Network and socialize with fellow alumni and also hear from local Board of Visitors and Alumni Association Board representatives. All are welcome, so bring a friend.

Craven County Alumni Reception in New BernThursday, October 6 at The Chelsea

Guilford County Alumni Reception in Winston-SalemThursday, October 13 at River Birch Lodge

Wilson and Nash Counties Alumni Reception in WilsonFriday, October 14 at Quince A Southern Bistro

Lenoir County Alumni Reception in KinstonThursday, October 20 at Chef & the Farmer

New Hanover County Alumni Reception in Wrightsville BeachThursday, November 3 at Bluewater Waterfront Grill

Wake County Alumni Reception in RaleighThursday, November 10 at Sullivan’s Steakhouse

Beaufort County Alumni Reception in WashingtonThursday, November 17 at Pia’s of Washington

Wayne County Alumni Reception in GoldsboroFriday, November 18 at Murphy’s Place

Pitt County Alumni Reception in GreenvilleWednesday, December 7 at the Hilton Greenville

Mecklenburg County Alumni Reception in CharlotteThursday, December 8 at Upstream

All receptions begin at 7:00 p.m. and are $5.00 for members and $10.00 for non-members, and include hors d’oeuvres and entry for door prize. Visit PirateAlumni.com/upcomingevents or call 800-ECU-GRAD for more details and to register.

Pirate VoyagesExperience the waterways and canals of Holland and Belgium on a Pirate Voyage

There is no better way to experience the beauty, history, and culture of Holland and Belgium than by cruising their legendary waterways. Travel into the heart of one of Europe’s most colorful and fascinating regions with a unique educational program that creatively combines learning, recreation, relaxation, and remarkable fellowship aboard a stylish and modern vessel, the MS Amadeus Brilliant. In Belgium, admire the unrivaled charm of the important port city of Antwerp and the amazing architecture and art of Bruges. See the renowned Zeeland coast. Glimpse the scenes Vermeer immortalized in the picture-perfect vistas of Delft. Step into The Hague and feel the reverberations of political history. Explore Amsterdam, a beguiling city of canals and contrasts. Cruise the Magnificent Waterways and Canals of Holland and Belgium, and enrich your life with an educational adventure you will never forget!

Pirate Voyages provide opportunities for alumni to cultivate their passion for learning through travel. We have partnered with AHI Travel and Go Next to offer you these special opportunities to travel the world with fellow Pirates at affordable rates. Other upcoming trips include:

Visit PirateAlumni.com/piratevoyages for specific trip information or call 800-842-9023 and ask about the East Carolina Alumni Association trips.

Islands of Antiquity: Athens to Athens October 2012

Tuscany October 2012

Holland and BelgiumApril 2012

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University Finances

A large university is one of the most complex financial organizations in the country.

At ECU, we educate 28,000 students. We also employ more than 5,300 people; we run a housing operation with 5,400 beds; we provide 130,000 meals weekly at 27 food outlets; we have a medical practice with 500,000 patient visits annually; we field athletic teams competing in 19 Division I sports; we operate and maintain more than 6 million-square-feet of buildings; and on and on.

Some parts of a university are run very much like a business. Others are appropriately the domain of the faculty—the individuals most knowledgeable about what is important to learn and research in physics, accounting, medicine, education, and another 200 degrees.

Higher education is much more complex than hiring faculty members and buying desks, chairs, and chalk. It should not be surprising that the financial structure of a university is complex as well.

As individuals, when we get paid, we often put it in our checking account. We can use that money for almost anything—the light bill, groceries, rent, or a vacation. Such is not the case in a university. Some money ECU receives can be spent in flexible ways, but more than half can be used only for specific purposes and nothing else.

For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2010, our most recently audited fiscal year, ECU had revenue from all sources of about $780 million. However, the majority of that revenue is restricted as to use.

For example, we received $29 million of federal financial aid. That money must be given to students for Pell Grants or similar aid. We cannot use it to hire a faculty member, pay a utility bill, or buy a library book.

Similarly, we received $42 million in federal, state, and nongovernmental grants and contracts that must be used for the research or work for which the funds were awarded. The $163 million in patient services is from individuals who received medical care from ECU Physicians and the money pays for that service. We received grants and gifts that must be spent to complete the tasks for which the money was given. Housing and dining collected more than $39 million, which must be used to house and feed our students.

There are only two items that can be used in general support of our academic and associated operations: $88 million of tuition (part of the total tuition and fees paid by the students) and $263 million of state appropriations. Less than half our revenue can be used for faculty and staff salaries, building maintenance, information technology, accounting, libraries, utilities, student services, admissions, and the like.

Our permanent state appropriations budget for the recently completed fiscal year (2010-2011) was about $306 million. For the new 2011-12 fiscal year that began July 1, there is no question whatsoever that we received a cut to our state appropriations of $49.1 million, or 16 percent. That is on top of permanent and temporary cuts in the last three fiscal years that add up to another $80 million.

Our tuition revenue in 2010-11 was about $100 million. Thus, resources that could be used for the academic and operational side of ECU last fiscal year totaled about $406 million. The $49.1 million cut as a percentage of that revenue is more than 12 percent.

Any way you calculate it, our campus will be dealing with significant cuts to classrooms, libraries, grounds, and offices. Classes will be larger, fewer sections will be offered, activities will be reduced or eliminated, and fewer people will be employed at ECU.

In addition, students are paying more for their education and the state is paying less. Reasonable people can debate whether this shift is appropriate.

For more than 100 years, East Carolina University has made a significant, positive difference to the East and to the State of North Carolina. That will not change.

Nonetheless, there is no question that ECU now has far fewer financial resources for its teaching, research, and service missions. That fact will have long-term and far-reaching implications for our students, our region, and our state.

Rick Niswander, Ph.D., CPAVice Chancellor for Administration and Finance

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Live Pirate FootballWatch WITN for

Sept. 24 vs. UAB

Oct. 15 at Memphis

Oct. 29 vs. Tulane

Nov. 5 vs. Southern Miss

Nov. 12 at UTEP

Your source for ECUNews, Sports, Video

witn.com

Games, dates and times are subject to change. Check local listings.

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After reaching its original goal of $200 million in May, East Carolina University’s Second Century Campaign is aiming even higher, continuing through December 2011 to raise even more resources for vital programs, scholarships, professorships, research and outreach, and facility support.

“Since its launch in 2004, the Second Century Campaign has provided vital private support for nearly every aspect of the University,” said Vice Chancellor for University Advancement Mickey Dowdy. “The generous support has touched thousands of students, enriching their East Carolina experience and helping to provide them with a world class education and an experience that is uniquely East Carolina. However, this is only the beginning of our goal to harness the University’s full philanthropic potential to meet the many additional priorities that have surfaced since the campaign began.”

Private contributions to ECU are extremely important in this era of declining state support.

“Gifts to the Second Century Campaign and ECU can be designated to the program, school, college, or area of your choice,” Dowdy said. “Your contributions, whether large or small, designated for a specific program or not, all truly make a difference at ECU.”

Contribute online to the Second Century Campaign today by visiting www.giving.ecu.edu, or for more information about the campaign, visit www.ecu.edu/devt or call 252-328-9550.

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Second Century Campaign continues through December 31

Support of colleges, schools, departments, centers, and institutes

$54,948,148

Distinguished professorships and lectureships $14,848,526

Scholarships $25,132,326

Research, education, and outreach (Corporate / Foundation grants)

$37,658,000

Capital projects $5,200,000

Total academic program support $137,787,000

Athletics (scholarships, endowments, facilities) $69,656,000

CAMPAIGN TOTAL (as of 6/30/2011)

$207,443,000 103.7% of GOAL!

Deferred gifts (included in total above) $26,926,383

$207,443,000(as of June 30, 2011)

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ADVANCEMENT UPDATE

As we begin the fall semester, you’ve heard news of budget cuts across higher education in the state of North Carolina. We’ve seen the headlines and wonder what the future holds. There’s no question, the $49 million budget cut in state funding will have a significant impact on East Carolina University.

What does this mean for academics at ECU and for all current students? Each college and department is faced with the daunting task of cutting its budget.

Despite this financial challenge, ECU is committed to protecting its student experience. With your help we will remain a strong university, devoted to North Carolina and to the 41 counties in the east.

Annual alumni contributions to ECU’s academic programs provide resources for student scholarships, state-of-the-art equipment, and programs that enrich the educational experience of each student. Your donations will have a greater impact this year than ever before. Your support will cover the gap left by the reduction in state money.

Your annual contribution to your college or department will keep programs in place and provide materials and equipment. Your donation, combined with donations from fellow Pirate alumni, will impact students today.

Every dollar makes a tremendous difference. Thank you for your continued support!

Throughout the year, ECU’s Annual Giving program provides multiple avenues for alumni to have an impact on the academic area of your choice. Giving through direct mail, over the phone, or online at www.giving.ecu.edu, your contribution will impact students today.

Through Annual Giving’s Telefund program, ECU students call fellow Pirates year round. With this personal connection, students develop real-life skills for life after graduation, while hearing about your ECU experience and what your degree means to you. It’s also a chance to catch up on the latest campus news and events. You can designate your contribution to the college, department, or specific program of your choice. We want to hear from you. Take a moment to talk with a student today!

Annual giving support is crucial, now more than ever; helping ECU exceed education, research, and service goals—regionally and globally.

You don’t have to wait for a phone call or a letter in the mail. ECU Annual Giving is always available at www.giving.ecu.edu. By giving online, your gift will go to immediate use and save the cost of paper, postage, and resources—maximizing the impact of your gift. As with all Annual Giving opportunities, you can support the area you treasure the most.

East Carolina University has been the fastest-growing university in North Carolina for the past five years. Together, we are building the ECU of tomorrow.

The philanthropic purpose of the Women’s Roundtable is to provide financial support to students at ECU. For the past two years, the Women’s Roundtable has funded two Access Scholarships that have been awarded to students with high academic potential, but great financial need. These $20,000 awards provide a $5,000 scholarship annually for four years to qualified students who maintain the scholarship’s eligibility requirements. The goal of the Women’s Roundtable Board of Directors has been to fully endow an Access Scholarship, and the Roundtable is extremely proud to announce this goal has been reached with the creation of two new endowed Access Scholarships: the Kathy A. Taft Memorial Women’s Roundtable Access Scholarship and the Kay Chalk Women’s Roundtable Access Scholarship. Earlier this year, the Women’s Roundtable board unanimously voted to establish the Kathy A. Taft Memorial Women’s Roundtable Access Scholarship in memory of Kathy Taft ’81, a founding member of the Women’s Roundtable at East Carolina University. Kathy was a strong advocate for education serving as a member of the Pitt County Board of Education and the Board of Education for the state of North Carolina for many years. Kathy was recognized by the Women’s Roundtable in 2007 as one of 100 Incredible ECU Women. The Roundtable board of directors made a $125,000 pledge to fully endow this scholarship in Kathy’s memory. With a generous matching gift, the scholarship will be awarded this fall.

The Women’s Roundtable thanks founding member and chair from 2005-2010 Kay Chalk ’76 for pledging to create the second $125,000 fully endowed fund. Through Kay’s generosity, the Kay Chalk Women’s Roundtable Access Scholarship Fund has been established. With a generous matching gift, this scholarship is also being awarded to a student this fall. Kay is a tireless advocate for the Women’s Roundtable and East Carolina. She led the Women’s Roundtable for five years, and under her leadership the organization has grown to be a vehicle by which alumnae and friends reconnect with ECU, attend educational programming, and help raise funds for student scholarships and support.

2011 Inside ECU with the Women’s Roundtable

The second Inside ECU will be held April 20-21, 2012. Save the date for this rare look inside our University!

Protecting the student experience

Women’s Roundtable establishes two endowed Access Scholarships

SAVE THE

DATE!

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ADVANCEMENT UPDATE ADVANCEMENT UPDATE

Brenda Myrick ’92 is an established Pitt County resident who is passionate about her valuable experiences at East Carolina University. She has been involved in many facets of the University since receiving her undergraduate degree in nursing. She is currently pursuing her master’s degree in nursing at ECU and is set to graduate in December 2011.

Myrick is from the rural countryside of Northampton County in North Carolina. She moved there with her family before high school, from the bright lights and noisy streets of New York City.

“It was definitely a culture shock,” Myrick said about the move. Fortunately, Myrick fell in love with her new surroundings and knew she wanted to attend college in North Carolina.

“East Carolina University was where my friends and I all wanted to continue our education,” says Myrick.

East Carolina attracted Myrick because it exudes the warm sense of a small-town atmosphere, but still was a growing institution that gave students the opportunity to meet people. Looking back at her college years, Myrick never imagined the growth that has occurred at ECU since she graduated.

“When I was studying nursing, we only had one building near the Croatan. Now we have our own campus,” she said.

Myrick was initially interested in

receiving a degree in psychology, but found that her love for taking care of people was stronger and entered ECU’s nursing program. “Now,” she said, “I couldn’t fathom doing anything else with my life.”

After graduation, Myrick worked as a pediatric nurse for six months before transferring into the operating room and finding what she calls her true passion. Currently, Myrick is the operating room nurse administrator at Pitt Country Memorial Hospital. She works in a 23-bed operating room that is responsible for daily operations ranging from simple traumas to the most critical surgeries, including transplants and revolutionary robotic surgery.

“It’s a dynamic and exciting trauma center,” Myrick said. “[It is] never the same day twice.”

Myrick describes the O.R. as a “collaborative of services and resources” committed to giving the best care possible, and that standard changes continuously with technology.

“We are always evolving,” she said, adding that she is amazed by the revolution in technology and the recovery period.

“It used to take all day to perform heart surgery, now it’s half the time and you can do it with robots. It is simply amazing.”

Myrick loves the transition of care in her occupation.

“When you treat trauma patients, you witness the immediate reaction to the care

Women’s Roundtable Spotlight: Brenda Myrick ’92

Myrick with an Alumni Scholarship recipient and Virgil Clark ’50

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ADVANCEMENT UPDATE

you give them. That’s what I like.”Myrick is also a former board member

of the ECU Black Alumni Chapter and learned vital skills to connect with alumni.

“We were initially geared toward a small part of the population of East Carolina alums, so we focused on connecting with other alumni,” she said.

Myrick’s sincere efforts were noticed and she received the opportunity join the East Carolina Alumni Association Board of Directors. Shortly thereafter, her peers elected her president of the board.

“With that surprise came a lot of responsibility,” she said. Myrick shifted the Alumni Association board’s main focus to actively engaging more people to be involved with ECU.

“Since I have been president,” a term she held from 2006-2008, Myrick said, “it has transformed and grown immensely.” She commends Alumni Association President and CEO Paul J. Clifford for becoming increasingly competitive in marketing ECU’s existence.

“It’s an exciting time of growth and participation at ECU,” she said.

Tomorrow starts here.

A gift from your IRA, 401(k) or qualified retirement plan can provide future support for ECU and produce multiple forms of tax savings

When you gift a percentage or specific dollar total from your retirement plan to East Carolina University through the East Carolina University Foundation Inc., East Carolina University Medical & Health Sciences Foundation Inc., or the East Carolina University Educational Foundation Inc. (Pirate Club), you can help future students while gaining a tax advantage.

By utilizing this specific asset, where often the greatest amount of your wealth resides, you can avoid/reduce both income and estate taxation. This asset is among the most difficult to pass to heirs/beneficiaries because it is a deferred tax asset. Therefore, gifting this asset can allow you to leave resources that will not face income taxation for your heirs while creating a perpetual legacy at ECU. This easy process can be done through one simple piece of paperwork (Beneficiary Designation Form) provided by your plan provider.

For more information about this planned gift or joining the Leo W. Jenkins Society, please contact Greg Abeyounis, assistant vice chancellor for development, at 252-328-9573 or e-mail at [email protected]. For examples and more information on planned giving mechanisms, visit our Web site at www.ecu.edu/plannedgiving.

Myrick also serves on the board of directors for the Women’s Roundtable at East Carolina University and she is passionate about what this group does.

“I am in the company of amazing women that are committed to maximizing the potential of growth at ECU, the surrounding community, the state, and every student that comes through this University.” Myrick is proud to be part of the Women’s Roundtable because of its focus on women and how they can contribute to and support ECU.

“The Women’s Roundtable has made such progress since the short time it was formed by focusing on core issues, such as health and personal finances, that are essential to the overall welfare of women today.”

To Myrick, giving back is crucial for a supportive community. Over her lifetime, she has seen many individuals with talent and drive who are waiting for an opportunity or that extra support to achieve their goal.

“All I want to do is give something back to help someone grow,” Myrick said. “You

don’t know who it always is that you’re helping, but to me, it makes you all the more appreciative.”

For more information about how you can become a part of the Women’s Roundtable at East Carolina University, contact Marcy Romary, senior major gifts officer and director of women’s philanthropy, at 252-328-9580 or [email protected]. Visit the Women’s Roundtable on the Web at www.ecu.edu/womensroundtable or on Facebook!

Myrick volunteering at the annual ECU Night at UNC-TV during Festival.

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Celebrate your Pirate heritage during Homecoming 2011! The Alumni Association and many campus departments have planned terrific activities for you to come home to East Carolina, reunite with old friends and classmates, and share your Pirate pride with your family. Welcome home!

OCTOBER 28-29, 2011

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28

Homecoming Luncheon11:30 a.m.Mendenhall Student Center, Cynthia LoungeUniversity Archivist Dr. John Tucker will present “Leo Jenkins’s First Year: Reflections on a Decisive Presidency.” $10.00 for Alumni Association members; $15.00 for non-members. Pre-registration is required.

Walking Tour of Campus1:15 p.m.Tour departs from Joyner Library Clock TowerBring your walking shoes and enjoy an informative stroll around east campus. ECU Student Ambassadors will lead you on a walk down memory lane while showing off ECU’s newest buildings and campus landmarks.

Bus Tour of Campus 2:45 p.m.Bus departs from Joyner Library Clock TowerECU Ambassador tour guides will narrate a lively bus tour of East Carolina’s campus for alumni and guests.

Alumni Awards Dinner and Ceremony6:00 p.m. Cocktail Reception7:00 p.m. Dinner and CeremonyHilton Greenville, Carolina BallroomJoin the Alumni Association Board of Directors, Chancellor Steve Ballard, and members of the Pirate Nation as we recognize eight special alumni and friends who have demonstrated outstanding merit and achievement. $40.00 for Alumni Association members; $50.00 for non-members. Pre-registration is required.

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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29

Homecoming Breakfast sponsored by 9:00 a.m. Breakfast10:00 a.m. Parade WatchingTaylor-Slaughter Alumni Center

Homecoming Alumni Tailgate1:00-3:00 p.m.Outside Gate 1 of Minges ColiseumGather with fellow fans for a buffet lunch, Pirate beverages, live music, games for children, and a chance to win great door prizes. $10.00 for Alumni Association members; $25.00 for non-members; children 12 and under are free. Pre-registration is required.

Homecoming Football Game – Tulane vs. ECU 3:30 p.m.Dowdy-Ficklen StadiumFootball tickets can be purchased through the Athletic Ticket Office at 800-DIAL-ECU.

CLASSES WITHOUT QUIZZESGet out your Blue Books and backpacks—it’s time to go back to the classroom! These experiences take alumni back to college days and provide unique learning opportunities. (Unless noted, these events are free.)

Culinary Experience: Pairing Wines and FoodsFriday, October 28 at 2:30 p.m.Rivers Building, Red Lobster Dining RoomCome learn the art of pairing wines and foods. $5.00 for Alumni Association members; $10.00 for non-members. Program is limited to 30 participants. Pre-registration is required.

Examining the Stars Over ECU on Homecoming WeekendFriday, October 28 at 1:30 p.m.Mendenhall Student Center, Room 221Alumni will take a closer look at stars of the celestial kind, specifically the stars shining on campus this fall. Experience the exciting resources ECU has to offer as you listen to this presentation by Dr. Daniel Bellittiere.

Education, Innovation, and Technology in Today’s ClassroomsFriday, October 28 at 2:30 p.m.Rivers Building Irene Howell Assistive Technology CenterThe College of Education will present back-to-back classes about education in today’s classroom. The first class will provide an overview of where educators stand in today’s economic and political climate and where the profession is headed. The second class will be an interactive session in which participants will have the opportunity to learn how to use new classroom technology as well as learn about what new educational technologies are available for their students. Pre-registration requested as seating is limited to 30.

Homecoming Celebration Dinner Dancefeaturing The Collegians7:30 p.m.Hilton GreenvilleTop off your Homecoming weekend by attending the Homecoming Celebration Dinner Dance. This event is sure to please with good food, great music, dancing, time to reminisce with old classmates, and opportunities to make new friends.

REGISTRATION

VISIT PirateAlumni.com/register

CALL 800-ECU-GRAD (328-4723)

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ALLIED HEALTH “It’s So Good To Be Home”Saturday, Oct. 29, 8:00-9:30 a.m.CAHS LobbyComplimentary reception and tour of the College of Allied Health Sciences

“Welcome Home” complimentary brunchSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:30-11:30 a.m.Brody School of Medicine meeting and conference suite, Brody 2W-38/2W-40A/2W-40B/2W-50

Alumni TailgateSaturday, Oct. 29, 1:00 p.m.Outside Gate 1 of Minges Coliseum$10.00 for Alumni Association members, $25.00 for nonmembers. Children 12 and under are free. Call 800-ECU-GRAD for tickets.

BIOLOGYHomecoming TailgateSaturday, Oct. 29, 1:00 p.m.Belk Building parking lotNo cost. RSVP by Wednesday, Oct. 26 to Jone Letsinger at 252-328-6204 or [email protected].

BUSINESSHomecoming Social with Continental BreakfastSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:30-11:30 a.m.On the lawn between Chancellor’s Way and Fifth Street (across from the intersection of Fifth and Student Streets) Complimentary to all alumni, students, faculty, and staff of the College of Business and their families. Contact Anne Fisher at 252-328-4369 or [email protected].

CHEMISTRYAlumni SocialFriday, Oct. 28, 5:00-8:00 p.m.Science and Technology Building, Third Floor Atrium area/C-307 (large classroom)Cost is less than $15.00. RSVP by Oct. 1 to Jennifer Burnham at 252-328-9710 or [email protected].

CRIMINAL JUSTICE Alumni ReceptionFriday, Oct. 28, 4:00-6:00 p.m.Rivers 208Complimentary. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 14 to Vicki Taylor Rowe at [email protected].

EDUCATIONBreakfast on the PorchSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:00–10:00 a.m.Speight Building front porchComplimentary for all alumni, students, faculty, staff, friends, and family. Contact Kendra Alexander at 252-737-4162 or [email protected].

ENGLISHHomecoming ReceptionFriday, Oct. 28, 5:00–8:00 p.m. Ledonia Wright Cultural CenterComplimentary wine and hors d’oeuvres. RSVP by Oct. 17 to Susan Howard at 252-328-6042 or [email protected].

FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION

School of Music Alumni Homecoming Reception & RecitalFriday, Oct. 285:00 p.m., A.J. Fletcher Music Center7:00 p.m., A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall

College of Fine Arts and Communication Breakfast on the Terrace and Parade WatchingSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:00-10:30 a.m.Jenkins Fine Arts Center Terrace (next to Gray Gallery)All alumni of the Schools of Art and Design, Communication, Music, and Theatre and Dance are invited. All activities are complimentary. RSVP to Mary Jane Gaddis at 252-328-1268 or [email protected].

Events in the Schools, Colleges, and Around Campus

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HONORS COLLEGE

Open House and Tour of Mamie Jenkins BuildingSaturday, Oct. 299:00 a.m.–12:00 noonMamie Jenkins BuildingNo charge. Contact Kevin Baxter at 252-328-6373.

HUMAN ECOLOGYContinental Breakfast for Alumni and FriendsSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:00–11:00 a.m.Rivers Building, North end patioComplimentary for all alumni and friends of child development and family relations, criminal justice, hospitality management, interior design, merchandising, nutrition science and social work.

Marriage and Family Therapy master’s program and Medical Family Therapy doctoral program Open HouseSaturday, Oct. 2911:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.Family Therapy ClinicNo charge for alumni and their families. Contact: Lisa Tyndall at 252-328-4206 or [email protected].

MEDICINEGolf at IronwoodFriday, Oct. 28BSOM alumni are invited to play a round at Ironwood Golf & Country Club. Please call Karen Cobb at 252-744-3231 for more details.

Brody School of Medicine Alumni Reunion Cocktail Reception and DinnerFriday, Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m.ECU East Carolina Heart InstituteClasses of ’81, ’86, ’91, ’96, ’01, ’06

BSOM Alumni Society annual fall meetingSaturday, Oct. 29, 10:00 a.m.Winslow’s Tavern, 120 W. Fifth Street

NURSINGHomecoming ReceptionFriday, Oct. 28, 5:30-8:30 p.m.ECU College of Nursing Lobby, Health Sciences BuildingComplimentary. RSVP to Jane Boardman at 252-744-6504 or [email protected].

PHYSICSAlumni Homecoming LunchSaturday, Oct. 2910:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.Howell Science Complex, room C207Complimentary for alumni and professors. RSVP to Dr. Tom Sayetta at 252-328-1857 or [email protected].

POLITICAL SCIENCE

Homecoming ReceptionFriday, Oct. 28, 2:00-4:00 p.m.Brewster C-105 (department library)Complimentary. RSVP by Wednesday, Oct. 26 to Brad Lockerbie at [email protected].

Campus Recreation & WellnessFriday, Oct. 28–Saturday, Oct. 29Student Recreation CenterNo charge for alumni and one guest. Two additional guests will be admitted for $5.00 each. Mention you are an alumnus at the Customer Service Desk. Contact Dena Olo at 252-328-6387 or [email protected].

Dowdy Student Stores Open House and Alumni SaleFriday, Oct. 28, 7:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 29Wright Building StoreStop by the Student Store to sign an “autograph” banner and take 10 percent off all regular priced gifts and apparel. Alumni who graduated more than a decade ago will receive an additional 1 percent discount for each year when you show your class ring, up to 30 percent off! See store for details.

ECU Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered Student Union and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered Resource Office

Evening SocialFriday, Oct. 28, 5:30–7:00 p.m.Contact Aaron Lucier at [email protected] for location.

Pre-Parade Breakfast on the lawn in front of Jarvis HallSaturday, Oct. 29, 9:00–10:00 a.m.The GLBTSU, GLBT Faculty and Staff, and affiliated alumni will participate in this year’s Homecoming parade. Contact Aaron Lucier at 252-328-2758 or [email protected].

Events in the Schools, Colleges, and Around Campus

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Sen. Robert B. Morgan’s ’47 service is immense at East Carolina. He was president of the Alumni Association, the first president of the Society of Buccaneers (precursor to the Pirate Club), and served on the University’s Board of Trustees from 1958-1973, of which he was chair from 1964-1973. Along with Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, Sen. Morgan received the University’s first honorary doctoral degree in 1983, was named an Outstanding Alumnus by the Alumni Association in 1955 and 1965, and received the University’s prestigious Jarvis Medal in 2004.

He and wife Katie ’46, ’54 are life members of the Alumni Association, members of the Chancellor’s Society, the Old Austin Society, and the ECTC Club. Always a vocal advocate for East Carolina, Sen. Morgan was influential in the fight for the institution to receive university status. Along with Dr. Jenkins, Sen. Morgan also worked tirelessly for the creation of the Brody School of Medicine and the College of Nursing.

Sen. Morgan’s political life began in law school when he was encouraged by hometown Democratic Party leaders to run for Clerk of Court in Harnett County, a race he won. This led to terms in the North Carolina State Senate from 1955-1969, including president pro tempore in 1965. Sen. Morgan then served North Carolina as attorney general from 1969-1974, followed by six years in the U.S. Senate from 1975-1981. He was also director of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation from 1985 to 1991.

Although retired, Sen. Morgan is a trial lawyer and remains active with his law firm. He is a military veteran, having served in the U.S. Navy, Navy Reserves, and Air Force Reserves. He was active duty during the Korean Conflict and retired from the military at the rank of lieutenant colonel.

Service to East Carolina defines William K. “Kel” Normann ’85. As a member of the ECU Foundation Board of Directors, Normann successfully serves as chair of the Investment Committee and oversees the investment portfolios of the Foundation and University Endowment. He is also a member of the College of Business Advisory Council. Normann and his wife Parker support the University through generous gifts, funding the W. Kel Normann Business Scholarship, an annual scholarship that recognizes a full-time undergraduate business student who has demonstrated both outstanding academic achievement as well as financial need, and were among the first

to support the East Carolina Scholars Program and Access Scholarship Program with annual gifts.

Normann is a member of the Order of the Cupola, the Chancellor’s Society, the Old Austin Society, and the Leo W. Jenkins Society. He is a life member of the Alumni Association and longtime supporter of the Pirate Club. Normann has also contributed to ECU’s College of Nursing, the College of Human Ecology, the Division of Student Life, and the ECU Foundation. In 2008, Normann was recognized by the ECU Foundation with an Advancement Award for his extraordinary contributions to the University.

In his professional life, Normann is managing director of the Normann Financial Group for Wells Fargo Advisors in Sanford, North Carolina. His daughter Jordan is a current ECU student in the College of Human Ecology.

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A Greenville, North Carolina businessman, V. Parker Overton is a strong advocate of the community and East Carolina University. Best known as founder and former CEO of Overton’s Boating Accessories & Watersports Store, the “World’s Largest Watersports Dealer,” Overton remains active as a business developer.

Since 2007, Overton has served on the University’s Department of Chemistry’s Advisory Board. In this role, he suggests strategies to allow the department to find the best course of action through recent difficult economic and

budgeting situations. Overton’s efforts, along with those of Metrics, Inc. founder and CEO Phil Hodges ’79, ’84, secured almost $100,000 in funding from the Golden LEAF Foundation for new instrumentation to equip the Department of Chemistry undergraduate teaching laboratories.

In addition to advancing the Department of Chemistry, Overton has supported numerous University scholarships, is a member of the Order of the Cupola and Pirate Club, and was influential in helping East Carolina secure funding for the new School of Dental Medicine. Overton received a Department of Chemistry Honorary Alumni Award in fall 2010.

Overton’s volunteer service extends beyond ECU. He is a member of the Pitt County Memorial Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees, chairman of the Pitt County Memorial Hospital Finance Committee, and serves on the Investment Committee for the Randall Terry Foundation at N.C. State University. Overton is a founding member of Select Bank and Trust Company, where he serves as chairman of the Board, and is former president of the N.C. State Veterinary Foundation. In 2010, N.C. State awarded Overton with an honorary degree.

A beloved East Carolina School of Music professor, Beatrice “Bea” A. Chauncey has been an active member of the Pirate Nation for more than sixty years. Her career began at East Carolina Teachers College in 1949 as a flute instructor. During her decades of teaching dedication and mentoring students, Chauncey served on the Faculty Senate, on numerous School of Music committees, and was faculty representative to the Friends of the School of Music Board. She also taught sailing at East Carolina.

Chauncey has received awards for outstanding participation in professional organizations such as the North Carolina Music

Educators Association, the honorary education society Kappa Delta Pi, and honorary music organizations Pi Kappa Lambda and Sigma Alpha Iota.

After retirement in 1990, Chauncey helped establish and run the ECU Retired Faculty Association. She served as president for multiple terms and was a catalyst in getting other University retirees involved with the group. Chauncey is still active with this group.

Chauncey gives generously to East Carolina, having established the Beatrice A. Chauncey Endowed Music Scholars Program, the largest comprehensive endowment ever given by a faculty member of the University. She also contributes to an annual ECU music scholarship and two fellowships given through the Retired Faculty Association. Chauncey is a member of the Order of the Cupola, the Leo W. Jenkins Society, and the Chancellor’s Society.

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A lifelong teacher, Marsha Moore Lewis ’76, ’85 is dedicated to the education of today’s youth through encouragement, nurturing, and personal growth. Lewis is a beloved 2nd grade teacher at Kenansville Elementary School in Kenansville, North Carolina, where her “Reading Maniacs” days are a favorite among students, fellow teachers, and parents. Students learn to enjoy the adventure of reading by sharing story time with family members, local politicians, retired community members, sports figures, and even favorite stuffed animals. Lewis has given a number of professional presentations to various academic boards and councils, including the International

Leadership Conference and the Southeastern Regional Reading Conference.Since 1988, Lewis has held a number of leadership roles. Most notably, she is

a member of the International Reading Association Board of Directors, where she serves as an ambassador and has traveled to Japan, Costa Rica, New Zealand, Australia, and across the United States. She is legislative chair of the North Carolina Reading Association, member of the North Carolina Literacy Advisory Board, and member of the Sampson County History Museum Board. Lewis also served the North Carolina Social Studies Commission, served with fellow literacy specialists to give suggestions to Congress and the president on developing literacy ideas for potential policy changes, was a member of the State Department’s K-2 Literacy Assessment Revision Review Team, and was state coordinator of the North Carolina Reading Association.

Lewis has been honored as Business and Professional Women’s Career Woman of the Year for North Carolina, Career Woman of the Year for Duplin/Wayne Counties Business and Professional Women, twice selected as Kenansville Elementary Teacher of the Year, and was nominated for the National Teachers Hall of Fame.Lewis

Finch

A business leader, Ralph A. Finch Jr. ’67 has kept East Carolina close to his heart. A member of the first graduating class after East Carolina College received university status, Finch is an influential mentor and philanthropist, always willing to serve his alma mater. As president of Virginia Land Company, Finch has been successful in developing retail sites in Virginia and North Carolina for Ashley Furniture Stores, Family Dollar Stores, and Tractor Supply Company, among others. A U.S. Air Force veteran, Finch also spent time in his career as a real estate agent, focusing on second home and

vacation properties. He developed corporate sites for Heilig-Meyers Furniture and Family Dollar Stores across the United States.

Finch may be best known in the Pirate Nation as author of the University’s first mascot book The Adventure of Pee Dee the Pirate, with all proceeds given back to ECU as scholarships. Prior to the book’s launch, Finch gave ECU marketing students real-world experience through research, planning, and idea sharing for the book’s marketing plan. Finch stays involved with the College of Business as a visiting lecturer, student mentor, and supports College of Business Etiquette Dinners. Finch is a member of the Chancellor’s Society, the Old Austin Society, the Alumni Association, and Pirate Club.

In Midlothian, Virginia, Finch is still actively working and serves as a deacon at Bon Air Baptist Church. He loves spending time with his grandchildren and restoring his 1930 Model A Ford.

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Emilie Tilley ’60 is a widely recognized pioneer among women in educational administration. Her career started in elementary education, but soon took her into high school health and physical education. Tilley is an award-winning coach for field hockey, track and field, and gymnastics, and was the first female coach to serve on the Virginia High School League Executive Committee. After many years in the classroom and earning a master’s degree in education from the University of Virginia, Tilley became one of the first female administrators in the Virginia Beach School System. In 1985, she was appointed the

second female principal in the school system’s history. Upon her retirement, Tilley was assistant superintendent for the Virginia Beach School System.

Tilley has been recognized for her arduous work and dedication in helping girls and women gain equity in high school sports in Virginia. She was honored with a VHSL Regional Award of Merit and the Claudia Lane Dodson Equity Award, and is a member of the VHSL Hall of Fame. In 1972, she was the first female Coach of the Year named by the Virginia Beach Sports Club and in 1987 named the first female Sportsman of the Year by the same organization.

At East Carolina, Tilley is a member of “100 Incredible Women,” a College of Health and Human Performance Centennial Leader, and member of HHP’s Dean’s Advancement Council. She is a member of the Chancellor’s Society, the Old Austin Society, and the Alumni Association. Tilley annually funds three scholarships in the College of Health and Human Performance and often speaks to classes about the significance of the profession, the importance of being a role model, and why giving back to ECU is important.

An executive partner at Holland & Knight, an international law firm, Steven H. Wright ’78 oversees management of the firm’s Boston, Massachusetts, office—a 120-lawyer firm. In his practice, he serves as lead counsel and strategic advisor for several Fortune 500 companies, where he represents senior, in-house counsel and corporate executives in complex commercial, corporate, intellectual property, litigation, and regulatory matters. He also chairs the Boston office’s New England Executive Steering Committee and Compensation Committee. He is a member of Holland & Knight’s Directors Committee. Wright served the mayor of New York City as deputy counsel,

where he resolved legal and policy issues for the mayor and his Executive Cabinet, and was general counsel to New York City’s Public Advocate. Wright’s court admissions include the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, the U.S. District Court for New Jersey, and the Court of Appeals of New York State.

Wright is a director for the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and serves as co-chair of its Commerce Transportation Committee. He is a member of the Business Law Section of the American Bar Association and the Corporate Law Forum, and member of the Commercial Litigation Section of the National Bar Association. He is a former trustee and executive board member of the Boston Bar Foundation and past president of the Massachusetts Black Lawyers Association. He is currently a director for the Savings Bank Life Insurance Company of Massachusetts and a member of it’s Executive and Investment Committees.

At East Carolina, Wright is co-chair of the University’s National Leadership Advisory Council, chairman of the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center Advisory Council, and a former member of the Board of Visitors. He is also a member of the Chancellor’s Society. Wright is the son of Ledonia Wright, who was an associate professor of community health at East Carolina, and for whom the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center was named.

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An elegant woman that exudes Southern genteelness, Betty Smith Speir ’63 is a fixture in Greenville and at East Carolina—a role she has enjoyed for many years. A current member or former member of many East Carolina boards, founder of the Pitt County Educational Foundation, and an influential North Carolina democrat, Speir’s influence is far reaching—beyond East Carolina and eastern North Carolina.

A PIRATE REMEMBERS

Smith Speir Class of ’63

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AA native of Pitt County, Speir grew up in Bethel with her two younger brothers Dr. W. Jim Smith, who taught biology at ECU, and Bob Smith, who is an attorney in the North Carolina State Attorney General’s Office. Their father owned Bethel Manufacturing, a mill and cotton gin, and their mother was a music major in college. Education was important in the home and encouraged to the siblings. Speir followed her father’s footsteps and attended Duke University for undergrad, where she studied English and history, and met her husband Dave. The couple married in 1950 and moved to Mint Hill for Dave’s job with Atlantic Refining. It wasn’t long before the draw to return “down east” brought the couple to Speir’s hometown, where they put down roots and started their family.

Speir taught 8th grade in Farmville her first year out of college before getting married. After a few years at home with daughters Candy and Christie, Speir became a teaching fixture in Pitt County.

She spent years in the classroom teaching English and literature at Bethel High School, and when the new North Pitt High School was slated for opening, Speir was asked to shift roles and serve as guidance counselor, which she did for nearly two decades. Her East Carolina master’s degree in education and subsequent certification in counseling helped her advance in her career and fueled a passion for the University.

Politics is also a passion for Speir. Her father served as a County Commissioner and also chaired the board. His commitment to the community was

inspiring to Speir, so when the chair of the Pitt County Democratic Party asked her to serve as vice chair of the group, Speir accepted. “They needed a woman on the executive committee and I agreed to fill the position. At that time, there was a trend in the nation to get more women involved in politics and serving

on political parties. I enjoy meeting new people and found the work quite interesting. It was a fulfilling part of my life,” she said.

Speir’s moxie is something of legend among democrats in Pitt County and her sheer tenacity to push for what she believes in—in her sweet, convincing way—is laudable. It was this resolve that convinced East Carolina College President Dr. Leo Jenkins to ask Speir to be the one to graciously let the people in Raleigh know that then governor Dan Moore was not welcome in Greenville at the statewide Democratic Women’s meeting. (The governor did not approve of ECC seeking university status.) “I had to stand up, in Raleigh, in front of the state’s Executive Committee and say to them, ‘We think he is a delightful man, but I’m sorry, he would not really be appreciated in Greenville right now to speak at the Democratic Women’s meeting. Perhaps you could send the Lieutenant Governor?’ There was dead quiet. I mean dead quiet. I sat down and I have never been so embarrassed in all my life. Lt. Gov. Bob Scott ended up attending and it worked out just as well since he became the next governor.” Whether it was a sense of duty or pure gumption that gave Speir the courage to stand up for East Carolina that day, it surely wouldn’t be the last time the

Leo Jenkins, Pat Jones, Sen. Sam Ervin, Walter Jones, Betty Speir, and Mrs. John D. Robinson, 1967. (l-r)

Betty’s first official visit to East Carolina was during a dinner hosted in honor of then U.S. Vice President Alben W. Barkley. She attended the event with her father (circled).

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school had her in its corner.“I believed wholeheartedly in the medical school opening

at East Carolina and I’m proud to have been a part of that. I don’t think I’ve ever done anything as one person, but it’s good to contribute to something worthwhile,” remarked Speir. Her influence in the state’s Democratic Party helped former Governor Jim Hunt get elected and earned her a spot on the Democratic National Committee. Speir was chair and vice chair of the North Carolina Democratic Party, chair of Pitt County Democratic Women, and the first woman chair of Pitt County’s Democratic Party. She has been recognized with a North Carolina Democratic Woman of the Year award and the Order of the Long Leaf Pine, among others, including an East Carolina Alumni Association Distinguished Service Award and was named one of ECU’s 100 Incredible Women.

Although Speir did not attend East Carolina until graduate school, the University has been an important part of her adult life. For years she and husband Dave have enjoyed the many cultural and athletic activities East Carolina offers. Speir even served as chair of the Friends of Joyner Library Board. But her most notable service to the University was her eight years on the Board of Trustees. It was during her board tenure that all ECU sports joined Conference USA, Joyner Library’s collection topped one million volumes, and the Student Health Center was revamped.

Speir has high hopes for the future of East Carolina. Now that the School of Dental Medicine has welcomed its first class of students, she feels that broadening the engineering program would be beneficial, as well as adding a school of law. “I enjoy my involvement with East Carolina very much. I’ve met some fascinating people and I believe, in my own small way, I’ve helped do some good for the University.” She continues to answer the call of East Carolina through work with the College of Education, the Women’s Roundtable, the Honors College, and the ECU Club at Cypress Glen.

When not busy with East Carolina, Speir enjoys retirement with her husband, gardening, spending time at the beach, playing bridge, singing in the church choir, reading, and music.

“I enjoy my involvement with East

Carolina very much. I’ve met some

fascinating people and I believe, in

my own small way, I’ve helped do

some good for the University.”

A Lifetime of ServiceECU Board of Trustees

ECU Board of Visitors

Democratic National Committee

NCCAT Board of Trustees*

NC Crime Commission

NC Commission on the Education and Employment of Women

NC Democratic Party*†

NC Democratic Party Executive Committee

NC Museum of History Board

NC State Board of Education

Pitt County Educational Foundation‡

Pitt County Democratic Party*

Pitt County Democratic Women*

Pitt County Memorial Hospital Gifts Committee

Pitt County Memorial Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees

United Methodist Retirement Homes of NC Board of Trustees*

United Methodist Retirement Homes of NC Foundation

Women’s Forum of NC Board*

* Chair† Vice Chair‡ Founder

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Where Pirate Memories Continue...“As a former member of the Board of Trustees at East Carolina University, it’s wonderful to have my Cypress Glen family so close to my East Carolina family.”

Official Partner

Mrs. Betty S. Speir is a 1963 East Carolina University alumna with a master’s degree in Education Administration. She is a founding member of the East Carolina University Women’s Roundtable, has served on the ECU Board of Trustees, the ECU Board of Visitors, the North Carolina State Board of Education, the North Carolina Museum of History Board, and the North Carolina Crime Commission. She has chaired the Women’s Forum of North Carolina, the Board of the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching, and the Communities in Schools of Pitt County. Betty founded the Pitt County Educational Foundation and she is an ECU Distinguished Service Award recipient. Betty is also a co-founder of the Cypress Glen ECU Club.

Betty SpeirCypress Glen Resident since 2005

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Careers change for a number of reasons, from company closures and layoffs to employee burnout and the need for a change of scenery. Have you or someone you know been faced with career changing decisions and you’re not sure where to go or what to do? Fret not! The Career Center at ECU can help. Below are some frequently used e-tools to assist you in your research and the decision making process.

Online Resources:

Labor Market Information (LMI) is statistical-based data gathered through the U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, N.C. Department of Commerce, and other sources that is disseminated to help employers, job seekers, students, educators, economic developers, and policy makers with important decisions that rely on up-to-date information on occupations and employment. For job seekers, it is important to know what jobs and occupations are in demand, the skills and education required for those jobs, as well as the projection of job growth or decline, which relates to job stability over time. LMI for the state of North Carolina can be found on the North Carolina Employment Security Commission website (www.ncesc.com). There is also a direct link for Career Management Tools for job search, career exploration, and self-assessments.

O*Net online supports workers and students in the career planning process by allowing them access to key data for identifying and developing workplace skills. The O*Net program is the nation’s primary source of occupational information. Developed and maintained by the U.S. Department of Labor/Employment and Training Administration, the system contains a database of nearly 1,000 occupations with a thorough description of the knowledge, skills, tasks, values, interests, and abilities associated with each occupational area. The information is clear and straightforward and is an excellent resource for career research. O*Net can be accessed through their primary website (www.onetonline.org).

The Dislocated Worker Toolkit (DWT) is a service provided by the N.C.

Thinking of Making a Career Change?Department of Commerce to assist those that have been dislocated from their jobs or those that transition from one job industry to another. By visiting their website (ncrapidresponse.com/DWT) you are directed to information regarding job seeking, job transitioning, employment, training, and even health insurance for the unemployed or underemployed. You can also be directed to your nearest Employment Security Commission that is a central “one stop” for employment, training, and valuable community resources.

ReferenceUSA helps job seekers locate and research companies they want to work for. The database includes details on 14 million U.S. businesses including 200,000 human resource contact names, business descriptions, company size details, and links to company websites where you may find job postings or details that will allow you to write effective prospecting letters. ReferenceUSA also allows users to download this information into handy Excel spreadsheets that will help job seekers stay organized. On-campus users can go directly to www.ReferenceUSA.com to use the system. Off-campus users will need to contact The Career Center or Joyner Library for login instructions.

Another tool to help career changers plan their new career path is mySkills my Future (www.myskillsmyfuture.org). Users will enter their current or previous jobs held, or even a job of interest, and get a list of careers that require similar skills. You can explore the careers listed as well as narrow down your search by city or state and apply for actual job openings. You are also directed to valuable information that may reflect if additional education is necessary in order to obtain the job of interest.

It is highly encouraged that after you do initial exploration on your own, or whenever you run across a more complex crossroad in your decision making process, that you contact The Career Center at 252-328-6050 and set up an appointment with one of our skilled Career Counselors. More helpful information can also be found on our Career Center website www.ecu.edu/career.

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Pirate pride

“...your joys we’ll all share, and your friends we’ll ever be. We pledge our loyalty, our hearts devotion to thee...”

During a celebration of Physical Therapy Month, five alumni gathered for a photo opportunity. Represented are four decades of ECU-educated clinicians. The clinicians are members of the Physical and Occupational Therapy Department at Carolinas Medical Center, a Level 1 Trauma Center and Teaching Hospital in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Sherry Troutman ’77 has worked in acute care about 90% of her career and most of this was at CMC. She also worked a little in home health PT and really enjoyed seeing where folks lived and how they managed at home. Her favorite job is at CMC working with a large variety of patients including neurology, cardiology, medical surgical, and wound care. For twenty-one years, she has also worked on the weekends at her veterinarian’s office as a vet assistant. She lives with her loveable cats.

Cassandra McLeod ’87 has managed a wonderful team of therapists in acute care for the past twenty-one years. She

loves to travel and spend time with family and friends. Her most memorable travel moments are from two medical missions to Kenya, Africa. McLeod completed DPT in 2010.

Leslie Glenn ’98 lives in Charlotte and her first child Beckett Glenn Quinn was born in August 2011.

Emily Murray Deering ’00 worked at New Hanover Regional Medical Center for four years treating patients in acute care and in the neonatal nurseries after graduation from ECU. She took a little detour from North Carolina and moved Columbus, Ohio from 2004-2008, working at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. But, she missed her Tarheel roots and now lives in Davidson, North Carolina with her husband and 2-year-old daughter. She works at Levine Children’s Hospital (part of Carolinas Medical Center) in the Inpatient Rehabilitation Unit.

Latasha Ruffin ’06 has worked at Carolinas Medical Center for five years where she has accomplished many things, including obtaining her Doctorate degree and becoming a Level III Physical Therapist. She has a passion for working with critically ill patients and enjoys leisure reading in her spare time.

Allied Health alumni working at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte.

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throughout the fall, culminating with a celebration during Homecoming Weekend.

The College is also announcing its Diamond Anniversary Campaign, which will create a merit-based scholarship pool for business students.

“This will be an exciting year as we celebrate 75 years of excellence, along with the accomplishments of our graduates and partners,” Eakins said. “Thank you to students, alumni, corporate partners, staff, and faculty who have helped to shape the program over the years. We look forward to the next 75 years.”

DENTALMEDICINE

ECU extends west, awards scholarship

On August 2, the ECU School of Dental Medicine traveled west to announce Spruce Pine, North Carolina, as the fifth location for a community service learning center. Located in Mitchell County, Spruce Pine is the second site named in the North Carolina mountains. Previously named sites include Lillington in central North Carolina, Sylva in the west, and two sites in the east expected to open in 2012, Ahoskie and Elizabeth City.

At the announcement, the Samuel L. Phillips Family Foundation presented a scholarship in line with the School’s mission to bring dentists to underserved communities. The scholarship, awarded to Mitchell county resident Kyle Duncan, provides full tuition, fees, and living expenses for four years of dental school, given the recipient returns to practice for at

BUSINESSKerns ’73 steps down as associate dean

After a career at ECU spanning more than 37 years, Dr. Richard Kerns has stepped down as associate dean for College of

Business Computer Services effective July 1, 2011.

During his time in the College of Business, Kerns led the Computer Services Department and its predecessors through almost every technology from

card punches to iPads. Under his leadership, the operation has grown from himself and a few hand-picked student assistants to an organizational and operational structure that serves the technology needs of more than 150 faculty and staff and almost 4,000 students. From the first personal computer lab on campus to an environment where everyone owns computer equipment of some sort, Kerns says it has been an ever changing and interesting world in which to work.

Dr. Stanley G. Eakins, interim dean of the College of Business, said, “We all owe Richard a debt of gratitude for his leadership. The changes in the computer environment over the last 37 years have been mind-boggling. Richard and his staff have made sure the College of Business is on the leading edge of computer technology and its application to teaching, research, and service.”

During his tenure at ECU, Kerns also contributed significantly to the formation and growth of IT support in many other units on campus as well as the campus-wide Information Technology and Computing Services (ITCS). In addition to his extensive Computer Services work, Kerns also created the initial Management Information Systems curriculum in the College of Business, teaching each of the original set of courses the first time they were taught (except one).

Kerns said, “Since the announcement of my stepping down, I have had the enjoyable experience of having many people I have known throughout the years come up and tell me how I was of assistance to them. I am very thankful for the opportunities that have

been given to me, and I hope that others feel I have contributed to their success.” Kerns gives much of the credit for the success of Computer Services to the individuals who have and are working in the unit.

Kerns earned his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Virginia in 1972. He also holds an MBA from East Carolina University, which he earned in 1973, as well as a BS in physics from the University of Kansas. His research interests have included personal computers and tablet computers as well as local area networks in business, desktop publishing, and desktop video. Kerns wrote two textbooks that were used in the Introduction to Computers course for several years.

After stepping down from his associate dean role in July, Kerns will remain on faculty as professor of Management Information Systems.

College of Business celebrates 75 years

The College of Business at East Carolina University will mark its 75th anniversary in fall 2011 with special celebrations planned to honor its graduates and accomplishments.

“The success of the College of Business is reflected in the many successes of our alumni,” said Stanley G. Eakins, interim dean of the College of Business. “It’s humbling to consider the impact that our thousands of graduates have had in our community, our state, our nation, and our world.”

To mark its 75th anniversary, the College is inviting all business students, alumni, faculty, and friends to join in special events

AROUND CAMPUS

Dr. Richard Kerns

Kyle Duncan, far right, received the Samuel L. Phillips Family Foundation Scholarship at the August 2 site announcement in Spruce Pine. Members of the Foundation, pictured left to right, include Fred Stout, Gina Phillips and Van Phillips. Also pictured, Dr. Phyllis Horns, Vice Chancellor for Health Services, and ECU Chancellor Steve Ballard.

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least five years in Mitchell, Avery, or Yancey Counties.

The new Dental School will build a total of ten community service learning centers in rural, underserved areas of North Carolina to provide much needed dental care. The centers will serve as community-based dental practices where fourth year dental students and advanced general dentistry residents will gain hands-on experience under the supervision of dental school faculty. Each 7,700-square-foot center will be designed similarly with 16 treatment rooms, X-ray equipment, an operatory to accommodate wheelchair-bound patients, and video conferencing technology to allow seminars and consultations. The centers will employ faculty, dental hygienists, dental assistants, and business staff, and will welcome Medicaid and sliding scale patients.

There are significant opportunities for alumni support and involvement as the Dental School works to improve oral health quality in North Carolina. For more information, please contact Kristen Ward, director of development, at 252-744-2239 or [email protected].

School of Dental Medicine welcomes inaugural class

Fifty-two dental students reported to orientation August 15. All admitted students are North Carolina residents, representing 32 counties. In selecting the inaugural class, the admissions committee placed strong emphasis on applicants’ commitment to serving others as well as academic achievement.

The students will attain their doctor of dental medicine degree (DMD) after successfully completing 11 terms over four years. Students will learn in a realistic clinical atmosphere on state-of-the-art, anatomically correct dental simulators. Currently, students occupy a renovated learning hall and simulation lab in the Brody Medical Sciences Building. In the summer of 2012, Ledyard E. Ross Hall will open; an 188,000-square-foot building named after benefactor and retired Greenville orthodontist Dr. Ledyard E. Ross ’51.

Community service is integral to the curriculum. On select weekends, students will set up temporary dental sites in disadvantaged areas to provide free cleanings, fluoride treatments, sealants, and screenings for oral cancer. In their fourth year, the students will complete three, nine-week rotations under faculty supervision at ECU community service learning centers—educational and patient-care facilities built in rural areas of the state. Through this innovative model, the students will give back to the community while garnering the skills and knowledge needed to successfully

operate a dental practice. The School of Dental Medicine was

established to address North Carolina’s critical need for dentists by recruiting and training students to serve rural communities. The state ranks 47 in dentists per capita, with 27 of the 100 counties served by two or fewer dentists per 10,000 people (national average: 5.8/10,000).

School of Dental MedicineInaugural Class Profile

Applicants: 369

Enrollees: 52Male: 28Female: 24

Caucasian: 38Asian: 8African American: 5Hispanic: 1

Average Age: 24.7Overall Grade Point Average: 3.5

All students are North Carolina residents. Thirty-two counties are represented: Alamance, Beaufort, Bertie, Brunswick, Caldwell, Catawba, Chatham, Cumberland, Davie, Durham, Forsyth, Gaston, Greene, Guilford, Halifax, Harnett, Haywood, Iredell, Jackson, Johnston, Lee, McDowell, Mecklenburg, Mitchell, Moore, Nash, New Hanover, Onslow, Perquimans, Wake, Wilkes and Wilson.

Members of the inaugural class show pirate pride with benefactor Dr. Ledyard E. Ross and his wife, Mrs. Alta D. Ross. Dr. Ross donated $4 million to the School of Dental Medicine.

Area legislators express their support at the August 2 site announcement in Spruce Pine.

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EDUCATIONUNC System to implement programs inspired by ECU’s Project STEPP

The Harold H. Bate Foundation has pledged $333,000 over five years to endow a distinguished professorship for Project STEPP (Supporting Transition and Education through Planning and Partnerships) in the ECU College of Education. The program pools community and University resources to provide academic, social, and life-skills support for students with identified specific learning disabilities who have shown the potential to succeed in college. Dr. Sarah Williams, associate professor and Project STEPP director, said the program helps students “who have historically fallen through the cracks in terms of university access and retention.” The program boosts STEPP students through guidance in the transition from high school to college. It includes courses in self-advocacy, time management, study skills and note taking. Participants have individualized plans including set study hall hours and assistance from a network of advisers, mentors, assistive technology specialists, tutors, counselors, instructors, and other experts. The program’s success has attracted attention in Chapel Hill. STEPP staff members have been asked to work with the UNC System to implement customized learning differences programs at other universities in North Carolina.

Flat Pee Dee journey modeled after Flat Stanley

Four graduate students in ECU’s College of Education sent Flat Pee Dee on his journey, in a collaborative project with Rollins College in Orlando. While Pee Dee went south, Rollins mascot Tommy the Tar toured eastern North Carolina. The exchange models the popular Flat Stanley program, in which a cardboard cutout of a young boy travels from one elementary school to another, engaging students in learning about new places. ECU graduate students Stephanie Burress, Sylvia Dieu, Laura Wetherington, and Beth Laughridge developed the project as part of collaborative work done in their course Literacy in the Content Areas. The course is led by ECU faculty member Patricia

Anderson in the ECU Master of Arts in Teaching program. The students exchanged cardboard mascots with Lauren Brown, who is enrolled in a similar program at Rollins College. The mascots’ adventures, photographed in detail and published online, can help teachers instruct students at any elementary grade level in multiple content areas. Teachers can adapt the materials to teach subjects from history to geography, while adjusting the content as appropriate for the children’s ages.

Scholarships remain vital for education majors

This past year, the College of Education awarded more than $313,000 in scholarship dollars to 96 College of Education students, courtesy of generous donors. This includes forty Maynard Scholars who receive $5,000 for four years and four Lane Scholars who receive $7,000 for two years. The College is grateful to have donors who are investing in its students, especially with the impending loss of the state funded NC Teaching Fellows Scholarship Program that results in roughly $1.3 million in scholarship support to ECU education majors every year and $5.2 million over the course of 4 years. Wachovia, a Wells-Fargo Company, has also made a $75,000 gift to the Wachovia Partnership East program within the College of Education. This gift will support tuition for forty-seven Wachovia Partnership East students as well as five competitive $750 stipends for students during their internship semester.

HUMANECOLOGY

Kristi Forbes has carved her career at AmericasMart

What began as an internship and a thirst for corporate knowledge is now a highly successful career for Kristi Forbes ’91. An Atlanta native who earned a bachelor’s degree in fashion merchandising (the expanded degree is now simply called merchandising) and a minor in business at ECU, is vice president of leasing at AmericasMart, the largest market center in the United States that brings together wholesalers and retailers worldwide.

Forbes is responsible for leasing showroom space to wholesalers in the

general gift, resort, gourmet, and housewares industry. “I began as an ECU intern and volunteered for everything and anything that came along at AmericasMart,” she says. “I just wanted to work, so I took on every new challenge that came my way.”

Part of Forbes’ expertise includes flexibility and embracing challenges that come with economic downturns. The industry, she says, has been directly impacted by slowing retail, causing AmericasMart to

change the way it does business. “Retailers took their inventory down to practically nothing due to low cash flow,” she says, “so when consumers were ready to begin buying again, retailers had to make sure their shelves were full, and full with new product.”

Forbes’ area of focus, including higher-ticketed items like furniture, fine jewelry, and apparel, suffered the most from the economic downturn, but many new stores nationwide are opening, partly because laid-off workers are creating businesses. Forbes follows such trends and helps ensure that retailers have new, quality products to sell. “AmericasMart has been a very important part of growth for many businesses,” says Forbes.

Forbes believes that learning to run a business through economic ups and downs is one way ECU graduates can be successful in merchandising and related industries. “Also important,” she says, “is the capacity to build strong business relationships and the willingness to put in long hours.” She says such efforts can get graduates noticed in the sea of qualified applicants. She urges students to complete an internship during their last semester and establish a strong professional presence on LinkedIn, Facebook, or blogs. “Because the merchandising industry is so far-reaching,” she says, “researching companies, visiting cities with more job opportunities, and subscribing to industry-specific publications also serve graduates well.”

With some of the best times of her life at ECU, Forbes has carried her college experience forward and turned it into an exciting, ever-evolving career.

Kristi Forbes

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“Professionally, I am proud that I have grown so much with AmericasMart over the years and worn many hats,” she says. “I know the company from the ground up.”

College of Human Ecology upcoming events

Don’t miss the Second Annual ECU School of Social Work Alumni and Friends Celebration on September 30, 2011, 7:00-10:00 p.m. at the Brook Valley Country Club in Greenville. For details, visit www.ecu.edu/che/socw.

The ECU Department of Criminal Justice will hold an Alumni Reception on Friday, October 28, 2011, 4:00-6:00 p.m. in the Green Room at the Croatan Restaurant on ECU’s campus. For details, call Vicki Rowe at 252-328-4192.

Home Economics Education/Family and Consumer Sciences Education has had a proud heritage of helping democracy fulfill its promises of better living for the many. The 100th Anniversary of the discipline at ECU will be celebrated April 20-22, 2012. Alumni and friends are needed to help plan the event. Please call the Department of Child Development and Family Relations at 252-328-4273.

MEDICINEBrody welcomes Class of 2015

The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University celebrated the start of medical school for seventy-eight new students by presenting each with a white coat during a ceremony August 12.

The forty women and thirty-eight men in the Class of 2015 range in age from twenty to forty-one. As usual, they are all North Carolina residents, with twenty-eight counties of residence listed. They received their undergraduate degrees from twenty-four different colleges and universities, with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill having the most graduates, twenty-two. ECU has fifteen alumni in the class, and North Carolina State University has twelve.

Dr. Benjamin Gersh, an ECU faculty member in family medicine and psychiatric medicine, told the new medical students to stay true to themselves, passionate about interests outside medicine, and the things they value most. Gersh is a 2006 ECU medical graduate.

“No matter how exciting it is to get the white coat, do not lose sight of those who helped you get here,” Gersh said. “Do not lose sight of the things that make you who you are.”

The class includes three Brody Scholars, Sunny Darji of Charlotte, Scott Gremillion of Raleigh, and Marlana Sheridan of Roanoke Rapids. The scholarship program pays tuition and living expenses, and encourages participants to design their own summer enrichment program that can include travel abroad.

Gremillion decided to enter medical school after leaving active duty in the U.S. Air Force in 2007 and serving in Iraq. He is a captain in the reserves. “I’m getting into this to help people and the best way to do that is in primary care,” he said. “I’m just looking forward to helping people, wherever that is, so that I can be a part of their lives.”

Also in the class is Tiffany Lee ’11 of Greenville, who received a Fullerton Scholarship worth $20,000 a year. Lee received her undergraduate degree in neuroscience and biology from ECU.

“It’s really exciting for me growing up here, and having the opportunity to learn medicine so that I can serve people who have given me so much,” Lee said. “I’m excited to be going into a profession that I really love and I’m honored to have the opportunity.”

Two students in the class received 2011

Robert H. Wright Awards while seniors at ECU, Brittany Leigh Carr of Mount Olive and Parteek Singla of Greenville. The most prestigious award given to ECU undergraduates, the Wright Award recognizes academic achievement, service, and leadership.

The Brody Scholars program honors J. S. “Sammy” Brody, who died in 1994. He and his brother Leo were among the earliest supporters of medical education in eastern North Carolina. The legacy continues through the dedicated efforts of Hyman Brody and David Brody. Subsequent gifts through the Brody Foundation have enabled the medical school to educate new physicians, conduct important research, and improve health care in eastern North Carolina.

The scholarship is administered through the ECU Medical & Health Sciences Foundation.

“The symbolic white coats are a gift to class members from the Brody School of Medicine Alumni Society,” said Karen Cobb, director of development for the foundation. Ninety-eight alumni donated more than $8,000 to pay for the coats and welcome breakfast. Participating alumni were given note cards to write a personal note to their students, and Dr. David Collier ’01, an assistant professor and president of the alumni society, gave one to each new student.

Vice Chancellor for University Advancement Mickey Dowdy with members of the Brody School of Medicine Class of 2015.

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STUDENT LIFEPhase II opens at North Recreational Complex

East Carolina University’s Campus Recreation and Wellness has completed Phase II of the North Recreation Complex and opened to the ECU community, including alumni, in August.

An official grand opening took place on September 15, which included special guests and dignitaries as well as a variety of activities to showcase the facility. Phase II will consist of a 51,000-square-foot beach on a 5.6 acre lake for boating and fishing, and a 2,000-square-foot boathouse.

In addition, ECU faculty, staff, students, and alums can enjoy sand volleyball courts, horseshoes, grills, fitness equipment, six walking/running trails, a 5k trail, a disc golf course, and an Odyssey Course which includes a 300-foot zip line as well as canoes and kayaks for check out.

“We are very excited about the opening of Phase II because it adds a whole other dimension to the North Rec Complex,” said Janis Steele, associate director of facilities for Campus Recreation and Wellness. “Phase II is a major attraction for ECU Pirates with diverse recreational needs and is an amazing addition to what was launched in Phase I.”

Phase I of the North Recreation Complex opened in fall 2008 with eight multi-purpose fields and a host of other amenities.

Check out information about special alumni membership packages for the Student Recreation Center as well as for news and information about the North Recreation Complex by visiting www.ecu.edu/crw.

Students and faculty navigating the brand new Odyssey Challenge Course at North Recreational Complex.

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Designing Women

What does a mid-19th cenutry family of tobacco farmers have in common with male servants in a royal governor’s household?

All are characters portrayed by living history interpreters at North Carolina historic sites, and they wear authentic costumes researched, designed and constructed by ECU home economists.

Dr. Vicki L. Berger, who heads the clothing and housing department at the School of Home Economics, and two graduate students combine costume design techniques with intensive historical research. The result is an array of historically accurate garments for interpreters at Duke Homestead near Durham and Tryon Palace in New Bern.

Recreating the clothing of the past is not simply a matter of avoiding manmade fibers or using buttons instead of zippers. The location of shoulder and side seams in pre-1900 clothing, for example, differs greatly from modern tailoring.

Assisting Berger on clothing for the Duke homestead staff was Rebecca A. Cornwell, a 1985 MS degree graduate who now teaches at Georgetown College in Kentucky. Her Tryon Palace project collaborator is a current master’s degree candidate, Terri A. Riggs ’84.

Work on these historic costumes is the subject of each student’s master’s thesis, and the two projects have been reported at

1986 and 1987 meetings of the American Home Economics Association.

At the start of each project, a specific goal is identified. In the case of Duke Homestead, two sets of clothing were desired: one for everyday wear and one for church, community socials and other special occasions of the type enjoyed by rural middle class North Carolinians in the 1860-70 era.

The purpose of the Tryon Palace project was to produce correct outfits for a blacksmith and a typical manservant employed in the gardens.

“Not only did each project call for garments that were authentic for historical and educational purposes, but each item had to be strong and hold up under heavy use,” Berger says.”Fortunately, the tailoring techniques of the past resulted in good, serviceable clothing that was made to last.”

This is particularly apparent with the everyday cotton dresses she designed and made for Duke Homestead. Each full, floor-length skirt features a hem that is faced and bound with double-fold bias tape, which represents the edging of horsehair braid found on period examples. This braid had a very practical use for a hem that would be constantly subjected to soil and wear from frequent contact with uncarpeted floors and bare ground.

This article describes historical costume making by the School of Home Economics. This and other articles may be found in the University Archives. Citation for this article is: Rees, Franceine. “Designing Women,” ECU Magazine, Winter 1988, Volume 2, No. 1. The remainder of this article can be found at PirateAlumni.com/alookbackfall2011

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Liberty Mutual’s Coach of the Year Award celebrates

college football coaches who best demonstrate the

qualities of responsibility, integrity, and excellence.

Four winning coaches each receive $20,000 for the

school’s alumni association and $50,000 for the

charity of his choice. So support your school and vote

for your coach today!

Did you know Liberty Mutual partners with more than

700 alumni associations to offer exclusive savings

on auto and home insurance? Just by being an East

Carolina alum, you could save hundreds of dollars on

our quality coverage.*

Show your school spirit! Visit coachoftheyear.com to

be saving on auto and home insurance!

*Savings available where state laws and regulations allow, and may vary by state. To the extent permitted by law, applicants are individually underwritten; not all applicants may qualify.Coverage provided and underwritten by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company and its affiliates, 175 Berkeley Street, Boston, MA. ©2011 Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. All rights reserved.

Snap it and vote.

Get the free reader mobile app at http://i-nigma.mobi

This organization receives financial support for allowing Liberty Mutual to offer this auto and home insurance program.

VOTE FOR YOUR COACH AND SCORE WITH SAVINGS.

Page 36: EC Alumni - Fall 2011

PRESORTEDSTANDARDUS Postage

PAIDPermit No. 795Greensboro, NC

Taylor-Slaughter Alumni CenterMail Stop 305 | East Carolina UniversityGreenville, NC 27858-4353

FANS STAND UP FOR EAST CAROLINA AFTER A TOUCHDOWN, A SLAM DUNK, OR A HOME RUN.

But what about the rest of the time?

As a member of the East Carolina Alumni Association, you make a tremendous impact on East Carolina University everyday!

JOIN NOW AT PIRATEALUMNI.COM/JOINTODAY

Did you know that alumni and fan support plays a significant role in how East Carolina is ranked among peer institutions in the U.S. News and World Report annual ranking of the nation’s best universities? The East Carolina Alumni Association encourages you to become a member so ECU can reach new heights in these rankings.

Not only does membership help with national rankings, but your tax-deductible membership contribution supports the programs and services offered by the Alumni Association, including networking events, alumni publications, student scholarships, alumni awards, faculty recognition, and numerous events held across the Pirate Nation. Membership is open to all who want to see ECU succeed; you do not have to be a graduate to be a member.