THE SENTRY SOUND
This Site Is Dedicated to Bettye J. McClendon
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Dr. McClendon-This is Bettye J. McClendon. She was the first
female official to referee a men's college basketball game on any
level. She has a basketball tournament named after her at Morris Brown
College called The Bettye J. McClendon Classic. Listen to Part I of an interview
with McClendon in the Sentry Sound section. Photo copyright 1998, Outwrite. Picture courtesy of
Bryan Steven Follins (Nov. 13)
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Note: Your computer must have a sound syetem
(sound card and speakers) to listen to this.
Left click on the hyperlink below and the file (Asu.wav)
should download. After it downloads, the Microsoft "Sound Recorder"
should begin playing the file.
was the first female in the United States to officate a NCAA men's basketball
game. But her accomplishments did not begin or stop there. Part I of a
three-part interview. File size: 592k. Download time: three minutes.
File name: Bmac.wav
Sentry history took place Saturday, Jan. 31, in Albany, GA.
That night, the Albany State and Fort Valley State women's basketball teams met
in a first place showdown in the SIAC. The score was tied 71-71 with five seconds
left. Albany State would win the game 73-71. Who was the heroine for ASU???
Click on the link below to find out. The Sentry would like to thank
Albany State sports information director Edythe Y. Bradley and
athletics director Craig Curry for their cooperation in this venture.
Albany State vs. Fort Valley women-Jan. 31,
1998. Hear the last 1:16 of the game. Size of the file: 1.1 megabyte-five minute max download.
Play-by-play done by "The Unknown Announcer" (losing his voice and audio as
the game came to an end.) Note: the file name once again is Asu.wav
If the file does not play, do the following:
To listen to these sound files you will need to download Winamp 1.9 or Audioactive.(ABOVE)
Winamp is shareware. You can listen to it for free for two weeks. Then you will have to pay $20
for it. (which is not bad) Audioactive is free, however Winamp has more extras, like an equalizer.
Remember that these sound files are .wav files, so they will have the .wav extensions.
In order to download them on your site, you will right click on the highlighted links. When it asks
you where to save a file (target), save it to the folder that you wish.
When you use either Winamp or Audioactive, you right click on the amplifier. On the pull-down menu,
It will state "play file". Click on this, and it will send you to the area where you chose the
folder to save the file. You may see the name without the wav extension, but it is the
same file. Type it in its appropriate space.
Click open,and you are on your way. This presentation was done for those of us not
as familiar with using audio (.wav) files online.