East Tennessee State University
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East Tennessee State University | |
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Established: | October 2, 1911 |
Type: | Public university |
Endowment: | $74.3 million (2006)[1] |
Chancellor: | Dr. Charles W. Manning |
President: | Dr. Paul E. Stanton, Jr |
Provost: | Dr. Bert C. Bach |
Vice-Chancellor: | David Gregory |
Faculty: | 725 (2006)[2] |
Staff: | 2,087 (2006)[2] |
Students: | 13,389 (2007)[3] |
Undergraduates: | 10,204 (2006)[2] |
Postgraduates: | 1,650 (2006)[2] |
Doctoral students: | 302 (2006)[2] |
Location: | Johnson City, Tennessee, United States |
Campus: | Urban |
Colors: | Navy Blue and Old Gold |
Nickname: | Buccaneers |
Mascot: | Pepper the Parrot & Bucky the Pirate |
Affiliations: | NCAA Division I |
Website: | ETSU.edu |
East Tennessee State University (ETSU) is an accredited American university, founded October 2, 1911 and located in Johnson City, Tennessee. It is part of the Tennessee Board of Regents system of colleges and universities. ETSU has small off-campus centers in nearby Kingsport, Bristol, Elizabethton, and Greeneville, Tennessee.
Graduate programs include a fully accredited medical school, the Quillen College of Medicine, named in honor of U.S. Congressman James H. Quillen who successfully fought for its creation in the 1970s. In 2005 a College of Pharmacy was approved which further augmented the medical specialties at ETSU. Classes in the ETSU College of Pharmacy began in January 2007. The university is listed by The Princeton Review in their 2007 edition of America’s Best Value Colleges.
ETSU has been increasingly noted for its Appalachian Studies programs and features a nationally acclaimed and accredited program in Bluegrass and Country Music. Recording star Kenny Chesney, 2004 and 2006 Country Music Association Entertainer of the Year, graduated from the school, and holds a degree in advertising.[4] Another notable ETSU attendee is Timothy Busfield, known for his Emmy Award-winning role on the popular 1980s TV series thirtysomething. Busfield attended ETSU for a short while, but did not graduate. He starred in a series of advertisements for the school in the late 1980s.
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[edit] History
ETSU was founded as East Tennessee State Normal School, to educate teachers; the K-12 training school, called University School, operates to this day. East Tennessee State officially became a college in 1925 when it changed its name to East Tennessee State Teachers College, subsequently gaining accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in 1927. In 1943, East Tennessee State Teacher's College was expanded into a college with a range of liberal arts offerings, becoming East Tennessee State College. The college became a University in 1963, adopting the name it holds today.[5]
[edit] Presidents
- Sidney G. Gilbreath, 1911-1925
- Charles C. Sherrod, 1925-1949
- Burgin E. Dossett, Sr., 1949-1968
- D.P. Culp, 1968-1977
- Arthur H. DeRosier, Jr., 1977-1980
- Ronald E. Beller, 1980-1991
- Bert C. Bach (interim), 1991-1992
- Roy S. Nicks, 1992-1996
- Paul E. Stanton, Jr., 1997 to present (Stanton has announced that he will retire in 2009)
[edit] Athletics
ETSU collegiate athletic teams, nicknamed Buccaneers, presently compete in the NCAA Division I Atlantic Sun Conference. In the 2006-07 year, ETSU won both of the conference's men and women's All-Sport trophies, winning seven team titles.[6]
Current men's sports at ETSU are baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, tennis and track and field. Women's sports are basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, track and field and volleyball. Men's soccer will compete at the club level in the fall of 2007, before entering NCAA and Atlantic Sun competition as a scholarship program for the 2008 season.[7] A new on-campus soccer field, the Summers-Taylor field, opened in Fall 2007. In the 2008 season, the women's basketball team made their first trip to the NCAA tournament, but they lost in their opening game by 12 points to the Oklahoma State Cowgirls.
[edit] Football
The 2005 move of the Buccaneers from the Southern Conference to the Atlantic Sun was an indirect result of ETSU President Stanton's decision, following the 1999 ETSU Athletic Task Force recommendations, to drop the ETSU football program after the 2003 season, in response to budget limitations imposed by the state legislature. The football program was posting close to $1 million in financial losses each year between 1999-2003.[8]
The end of the ETSU football program permitted the "Mini Dome", the largest building on the ETSU campus, which served as an U.S. indoor arena venue for college football and track and field competitions, to be used for other purposes. The Mini Dome has hosted many non-athletic events which could not be housed in an indoor setting on most American college campuses. The dollar savings that resulted from ending the ETSU football program was equally divided between both the ETSU athletic and academic departments.
[edit] Proposed student athletic fee increase
ETSU President Stanton announced on December 22, 2006 that the ETSU administration is now supporting the return of the ETSU NCAA Division I FCS football program to the university, after accepting the recent ETSU Football Task Force report calling for increased student athletic fees to both restore the ETSU football program and additional funding for equivalent female athletic programs in order to meet U.S. federal Title IX gender equity requirements. Dr. Stanton has also stated that ETSU will "...need $4 million to $5 million" collected each year from of a combination students fees and private contributors to "...get it all done."[9]
Both the ETSU student body (by a referendum vote) and the Tennessee Board of Regents would have needed to approve Dr. Stanton's proposal to increase ETSU student athletic fees for funding a new football program before competing in the 2010 season.[10]
Dr. Stanton also stated that ETSU generates approximately $500,000 of revenue from every $25 student athletic fees collected each semester at ETSU (i.e.: a conservative estimate of student fees fully funding ETSU football at the $5 million dollar level would amount to an additional $250 in ETSU student athletic fees each year).[9] During the last year of the football program in 2003, ETSU was only able to raise $127,000 (of the minimum $1.5 million needed) in private contributions toward the operating costs that will associated with the ETSU football program (excluding approximately $15 million dollars for a new 10,000 seat stadium).[8]
On April 10-11, 2007 the football referendum failed by a vote of 59%-41%, with about 3,500 students voting. Dr. Paul Stanton released a statement following the vote, saying the issue of football was dead for the immediate future.[11][12]
[edit] Future Tobacco Ban
As reported by the Johnson City Press on February 12, 2008, President Paul Stanton announced that ETSU will be a tobacco free campus. The tobacco ban will take effect on August 11, 2008. Tobacco use will be limited to private vehicles only.
[edit] References
- ^ Foundation President's Report. ETSU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ a b c d e Fact Book 2006. ETSU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ ETSU enrollment surpasses 13,000 for first time. ETSU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-09-16.
- ^ Kenny Chesney 1998 Distinguished Alumnus in the Arts. ETSU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
- ^ History. ETSU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ Atlantic Sun All-Sports Race. AtlanticSun.org. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
- ^ ETSUBucs.com (2007-01-12). "Calabrese named head coach of inaugural men's soccer program at ETSU". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
- ^ a b Sterling, Feleesha. "Football at what cost?", East Tennessean, 2006-12-07, pp. 1, 3. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ a b Watson, Sam. "ETSU poll shows support for return of football program", The Kingsport Times-News, 2006-11-21. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ ETSUBucs.com (2006-12-22). "Stanton defines plans for return of ETSU football". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ "Students vote down football fee referendum", ETSU.edu, 2007-04-11. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
- ^ Watson, Sam. "ETSU bucks football - Student fee hike vote fails, thwarting plans for sport’s return", The Johnson City Press, 2007-04-12. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
[edit] External links
- Official websites
- ETSU website
- ETSU athletics website
- ETSU Alumni Association online community
- ETSU Natural History Museum / Gray Fossil Site
- WETS 89.5 FM public radio
- Other websites
- History of East Tennessee State Normal School
- Buccaneer Nation: The official forum of ETSU athletics
- Buc Football and Friends Foundation
[edit] See also
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