During the Founders Day celebration at East Carolina University on Thursday, faculty and staff were honored for their efforts at the university and in the community. The university’s Centennial Awards for Excellence received 65 nominations with winners in four categories: leadership, service, spirit and ambition.
This year’s recipients are:
Service: Dr. Lee West (Brody School of Medicine); Jane Manning (Business Services Office); Ruth Clifton (Dowdy Student Stores).
Leadership: Mark Weitzel (College of Business); Carolyn Erwin (ECU Physicians); Maurice York (Joyner Library)
Ambition: Dr. Jayne Geissler (Academic Advising and Support Center); Members of the Emergency Communications Assessment Team: Lucia Brannon, Charles Peele and Brad Ritchie (Student Affairs); Erica Plouffe Lazure, Christine Neff and Jeannine Manning Hutson (News Services); Rita Bilbro, Rob Hudson, Billy Long and Petra Rouse (Information Technology & Computing Services and Health Sciences Campus Communications); ECU Police; Mary Schiller (Administration and Finance); Paul Carson (Campus Operations).
Spirit: Willie Warren (Administration and Finance); Jonathan Wallace (Administration and Finance).
Members of the ECU faculty, staff and student body, who embody the spirit of the university’s motto, Servire, or to serve, were also honored for their volunteer efforts.
There were 63 faculty and staff members inducted into the Servire Society – which recognizes those who have performed 100 or more hours of volunteer service. Forty-five students were inducted as well.
This year’s Servire Society faculty and staff first-year inductees are: Harry Adams, Robin Armstrong, Margaret Arnd-Caddigan, William Bogey, Christine Bouck, Elizabeth Carroll, William Clark, Kathleen Cox, Tarrick Cox, Leslie Craigle, Jessica Davenport, Tommy Ellis, Charles Gee, Sandra Hickey, Mary Jackson, Angela Lamson, Mandee Lancaster, Marylee Lannan, Charles Lesko Jr., Susan McCammon, Barbara Memory, Scott Methe, Shawn Moore, Nick Pantelidis, Roman Pawlak, Mary Pollock, Roytesa Savage, N. Yaprak Savut, Kirk St. Amant, Ashley Suggs, Rebecca Sweet, Linda Teel, Robert Thompson, Lathan Turner, Lynn Tuthill, Katherine Warsco, Beverly Wright and Robert Zinko.
Faculty and staff members who earned Servire Society induction for a second year are: Mark Angolia, David Batie, Paul Bolin, Susan Copeland, F. Leonard Darby, Penny Doughtie, William Edwards, Margie Gallagher, Kathryn Griffin, Nancy Harris, Amanda Hodges, Aaron Lucier, James McAtee, Danny L. Morton, Vivian Mott, Amanda Pantelidis, Karen Parker, Annette Peery, Nancy Ray, Ronald Sessoms St., Chris Stallings, Bryan Wheeler, Tina Williams and Wanda Wynne.
Harriot’s use of the telescope celebrated
Engaged in one of the world’s first international space races, Thomas Harriot, whose name adorns the ECU College of Arts and Sciences, was among the first citizens of our planet to pick up a telescope in 1609 and study the planets, stars and moons.
Now, 400 years later, Harriot’s pioneering explorations will be commemorated in a four-day conference, Wednesday-Saturday, sponsored by the Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences.
The Thomas Harriot Quadricentennial Conference is free and open to the public with conference sessions at venues from Chapel Hill to Manteo.
The conference will consist of workshops on map-making and archaeological excavations, as well as a variety of public lectures, featuring 24 researchers and historians.
For more information, visit www.ecu.edu/harriot400 or contact Tise at tisel@ecu.edu.
Film accepted to documentary festival
A film by two ECU faculty members has been accepted into the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, a premier international film event that will be held Thursday through Sunday in Durham.
“Bunny Saunders: The Mayor Who Stood Up,” a 10-minute documentary produced by Erick Yates Green and Bernard Timberg, colleagues in ECU’s School of Communication, shows a rural North Carolina mayor’s fight against the Navy’s proposed Outlying Landing Field.
The idea for the film came from a public hearing about the controversial proposal to install a concrete landing strip for military planes, filmmakers said. At the hearing, filmmakers discovered an “amazing personality” in an outspoken resident who opposed the project, Estelle “Bunny” Saunders, mayor of Roper.
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