The pendulum Volume 30, Issue 9 Celebrating October 26, 2004 30 years of covering the Elon connmunity. www.elon.edu/pendulum EXTRA! extra ! Newspaper marks 30 years of nhronicling the Elon legacy jrindsay Porter __— Wanag/ng Editor '03 There was a buzz surrounding Elon College in October 1974. Fall was in the air, the Fightin’ Christian football season under way and students were in the middle o their semester. And nestled in the confines o *-^ng Student Center, a small group o fitted students was recording it all ^ the win ®d losses, the speakers, the quirky anec o es and events that were continuously shaping campus both consciously and sublimin y 'Their stories became the buzz of the campus for just one week, but their words would live for eternity. In print. In Tlie Pendulum. Six enterprising editors, 12 one typist joined pioneering professor a Ellen Priestley in publishing the first edition o The Pendulum in 1974. Priestley, a professo in the journalism and English departments, im her husband, also a professor, even ea Space under the old Pendulum office w they housed the Priestley Art Gallery, ing to Provost Gerry Francis, who starte a school in 1974. , “She was just a wonderful an ' ,, woman,” Francis said. “She wiis very stately^ Priestley led a campaign encouraging the Board of Tnistees to not only establis as ^ents newspaper, but also a communicati tlepartment, a media board and a Student Communications. At the time. College was home to just 2,175 stu studying 26 majors. ^ Patsy Lynch, co-editor in chief o Pendulum from 1974-1975, is credited wi developing the name of the paj^r. Wend had mentioned including a time e em in the name, and referenced daytime so p Lindsay Porter / Photographer TT,. nhrases “As the Pendulum Tums” PenJulum Swings" were t»sed , H forth and the staff finally agreed they back an ’ pendulum. “Just would name the contents and Pendulum swing right to left attitudes ot “Some years r"—e.o..,ea.:, „ newspaper on Elon’. ca„.pus. H»ee sepiirate attempts were made to create a stu dent press. The Maroon and Gold was pub lished Dec. 1, 1919 to May 22, 1969, but was discontinued due to lack of student interest. Funding for the publication was also eliminat ed because members of the Academic Council felt the paper “was not serving its purpose.” In the meantime. The Veritas had emerged as an underground newspaper in October 1968. The Veritas editors called The Maroon and Gold a product of Eton’s administration and declared themselves a “liberated press.” In 1962, Student Government Association published The Campus Crier, and 18 to 22- page periodical of campus happenings. Francis recalled the The Pendulum’s hum ble beginnings. “The first edition was just four pages,” he said. “There was no color and it was all done on a typewriter.” Perseverance and diligence were the keys to making The Pendulum successful. Securing funding, keeping up with technology and fac ing the potential of censorship were always threats to the livelihood of the new organiza tion. When Priestley, who served as adviser to The Pendulum for many years, first started working with the newspaper, she requested $500 to purchase a compugraphic-typesetter. Her request was denied; school officials con sidered the purchase unnecessary. In The Pendulum office today, now housed in Moseley Center 233, staff members use $1,500 Macintosh computers to write, design and layout the stories the campus enjoys each week. “The Pendulum has grown in conjunction with the institution’s growth,” Francis said. “We have a great community, and The Pendulum is a part of the community. It con tains points of view and stories that people read and value.” Many years, editions and staff members later. The Pendulum continues to cover the sto ries that matter to Elon. Fall convocation speaker Anna Quindlen said, “Words on a page are my best self.” The words on each page of The Pendulum represent Eton’s best self— they tell the stories that shape a collective memory, a living record. Here’s to the next 30 years.