Friday, May 27, 2016

Astrid Lowery Recalls 17 Years As InterCOM Advisor

InterCOM Staff with Astrid Lowery, 1980s
The College of the Mainland student newspaper was published over the years under a variety of names such as The Comet, The Gander, and most frequently the InterCOM. The newspaper seemed to change names at the whim of the advisor or student editors. When I was hired in 1986 to be the advisor as well as the instructor of the journalism classes which formed the basis for the newspaper, I suggested that the name should again be InterCOM since that was the name most frequently used over the years. This was a welcomed move.

The student newspaper, a print publication, was started in the early years of the college’s 50 year existence and continued on, though not on a yearly basis, until the beginning of 2004 when it was discontinued. I was privileged to be the InterCOM advisor from fall 1986 through the end of 2003, an unbroken 17-year tenure for the newspaper.

InterCOM Staff, 1960s
InterCOM had a following not just on the COM campus, but throughout the surrounding communities, where it was welcomed and read with delight. The student reporters covered a variety of subjects, some of great importance like the 25th and 30th anniversaries of the college or profiles of various COM professors, and some mundane, such as the fact that the pond, named Lake Eckert, was colored with green dye to make it more attractive, yet not harmful to the species that lived on the water and below, as well as the surrounding vegetation.

Most stories (newspaper lingo) were accompanied by pictures taken by student photographers. Each issue generally also featured a political cartoon, drawn by a variety of artist staff members. The InterCOM staffs, which changed from semester to semester to include one publication in the summers, were headed by both a student editor and a student assistant editor.

InterCOM Staff, 1990s
The editors worked hard to ensure that all important events were covered, such as reviews of COM plays, art gallery exhibits, Phi Theta Kappa initiations, and Student Government elections. Also included were announcements for upcoming events as well as the popular People Speak Out, which gave students, faculty, and staff the opportunity to voice their opinions on a current subject. Many issues also featured an editor’s or a student reporter’s views on a COM-related problem or the death of a celebrity such as Tupac Shakur. One interview even featured spokesduck, Quack Quacker’s, negative view of serving duck for Christmas dinner.

Each year as InterCOM advisor, I entered newspaper stories, editorials, photos, and cartoons in the prestigious Texas Intercollegiate Press Association’s contest, with the result that over a 17-year span, staff members earned approximately 47 first, second, third, and honorable mention prizes, thereby allowing InterCOM to advertise itself as an award winning newspaper.

As part of the COM History project to collect, preserve and make accessible items of historical interest, COM Library has digitized issues of COM Student Newspapers, which you can read online

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Lake Eckert, Ducks and a Fountain

1997 - 30th Anniversary - Jean and Norman Koneman
Jean and Norman Koneman at Fountain Dedication, 30th Anniversary 1997

Fishing, kayaking, walking, feeding ducks or just taking some down time, COM Students, faculty, staff and community have been enjoying Lake Eckert for decades. But there is some history behind Lake Eckert that you might not know.

Beginnings 

When the campus was built in 1968, the site that later became the lake was to be used for fill dirt for the site (to shore up buildings); as flood drainage; as an irrigation source for watering the shrubbery;  and later as campus beautification.

Lake Eckert

It was not until 1970 that the lake got its name. Lake Eckert was named in honor of the first president of the COM Board of Trustees, H. K. “Griz” Eckert. In 1987 Eckert passed away and his ashes were sprinkled on the lake in a private ceremony. In 2015 College of the Mainland's first president, Dr. Herbert Stallworth and his wife Yvette Stallworth also had their ashes scattered over Lake Eckert.

Ducks 

In 1973 11 ducks were contributed by Bernard Levin of Texas City in memory of the 11 Israeli athletes killed in the Munich Olympics by a group of terrorists. Today we have ducks of many varieties as well as geese that make their home on campus.

The Fountain 

The most recent addition to the lake is the fountain, dedicated to Norman Albert Koneman III at the celebration of COMs 30th Anniversary Open House Oct. 5, 1997.

More COM History
See our Lake Eckert album, all currently available COM History photos or go to our COM History LibGuide for more COM History.

Let Us Know!
We’d love to hear from you if you’d like to help us identify events or individuals in our photos. Just make sure to include the URL (web address) of the photo when sending information. Please contact Tillie Henson at (409) 933-8205 or email Thenson@com.edu.