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23 results for "East Carolina University--Alumni and alumnae"
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Record #:
25398
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Kelly King reflects on his time at ECU, his first job at BB&T and how he got to be president and chief operating officer at BB&T.
Record #:
25401
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David Gerrard, quarterback for the Jacksonville Jaguars expresses details from his time in college at ECU and how it got him to where he is today.
Record #:
25402
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Phil Dixon always gives back to ECU in any way he can. Now a successful lawyer with his own firm, Dixon started out dirt poor and just looking for a way to change his life. He found that at ECU.
Record #:
25408
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Beth Grant is an actress and a former ECU pirate. She says that part of her success comes from the lessons she learned while performing in ECU productions.
Record #:
25416
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Roddy Jones began his career at his dad’s construction company straight out of ECU. He eventually became the president of that company and worked on some of the biggest projects in North Carolina like Raleigh’s Crabtree Valley Mall.
Record #:
25419
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Hugh Johnson, an ECU alum, brought the big names to Minges for concerts in the 1970’s and 80’s. Now, he has been working for Vince Gill since 1989. He is on the road a lot, but enjoys the family feeling from the group he works with.
Record #:
25391
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Walter Williams, executive vice president of WilcoHess, has been a major benefactor to ECU for years. Having attended the school while it was still the East Carolina Teachers College, he has a close bond with the school.
Record #:
7650
Abstract:
Few women attended college in the 1920s, but four sisters from Magnolia in rural Duplin County attended and graduated from East Carolina Teachers College during that period. They called themselves the “Magnolia Belles,” and a tradition was started. Over the following years at least one woman from each succeeding generation has graduated from East Carolina. In 2005, a member of the fourth generation earned her ECU diploma.
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