#ElonTBT: The Pendulum publishes first issue in 1974

In this edition of #ElonTBT, we look back to the beginning of The Pendulum, Elon's student newspaper, as it celebrates its 45th birthday.

In the #ElonTBT series, the Elon University News Bureau, along with Archives & Special Collections, will flash back to the past to take a look at Elon over the years. You will find videos, newspaper clippings, photos and more to celebrate Elon’s past, while looking ahead to the future. Follow along on Today at Elon and the university’s TwitterFacebook and Instagram pages every Thursday to see what we dig up.


For nearly half a century, Elon’s student newspaper, The Pendulum, has kept the community informed about news and events happening around campus. This month, the paper celebrates its 45th birthday.

Beginning in 1919, the Maroon and Gold newspaper served as Elon’s source of campus news, but because of publication delays, the administration decided to discontinue the biweekly newspaper in 1970.

Elon would go without an official source for campus news for the next four years.

The front page of the Oct. 14, 1974, edition of The Pendulum.

On Oct. 14, 1974, The Pendulum published its first edition for the Elon community. The paper’s front page previewed a speech by political activist and former third-party presidential candidate Ralph Nader, an upcoming performance by the Emanons Jazz Band and the addition of 10 new faculty members.

The beginning of The Pendulum followed the establishment of the Board of Student Communications Media in the spring of 1974. President J. Fred Young created the board to manage plans, funding and policies for student media on campus.

Young thought the media board, comprised of an equal number of students and faculty, would allow a campus newspaper and radio station to operate independently of the administration and Student Government Association. Elon and the SGA shared funding for the board, which would in turn approve budgets and funding for the newspaper and radio station (WSOE, est. 1977).

Mary Ellen Priestley, an English professor who had worked as a newspaper reporter, editor and freelance writer, served as The Pendulum’s first faculty advisor, overseeing a staff of 15 members. Debbie Cochran and Patsy Lynch were the newspaper’s first co-editors.

The front page of the Oct. 16, 2019, edition of The Pendulum.

In its first year, The Pendulum produced only 10 issues but continued to increase its annual number of publications each year until it became a weekly newspaper during the 1977-78 academic year.

The newspaper achieved success early in its history, earning the “All-American” designation from the Associated Collegiate Press, the organization’s highest rating, in 1982. A decade later, The Pendulum’s staff earned seven first-place awards from the Intercollegiate Press.

The Pendulum’s success has continued to today, as the Princeton Review ranked Elon 20th on a list of the nation’s top college newspapers.

Anton Delgado ’20, The Pendulum’s current managing editor, says he feels fortunate to be part of the newspaper’s storied history.

“Working to continue this nearly half-century institution is the honor of my life,” he said. “Everything that The Pendulum has accomplished this year is thanks to the generations of student journalists that put their community before themselves.”

To read the entire first edition of The Pendulum or to see newspapers from throughout Elon’s history, visit the Elon Archives and Special Collections website.

Do you have any special pieces of Elon history? Share your photos and videos with us via email at news@elon.edu or using the hashtag #ElonTBT on TwitterFacebook and Instagram.