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Hastings
College (NE) alumnus and astronaut Clayton Anderson discussed
life in Space with students, faculty, and staff via videoconference
from the International Space Station. Anderson had been living on
the Space Station for several months with two Russian cosmonauts.
Anderson’s videoconference with Hastings can be viewed online
at www.hastings.edu.
Presidential Campaign 2008
Political involvement on CIC campuses has been ramping
up during the presidential primaries leading to the general election
this November. Eckerd College (FL) hosted live
TV coverage by Dan Rather of the Florida primary results. The telecast
was filmed in front of a packed audience of students, faculty and
staff members, and others from the community. Students at Franklin
Pierce University (NH) conducted statewide political polling
after several Democratic and Republican debates were held during
2007. Later, the results were used in news reports throughout the
country. Franklin Pierce also partnered with Wartburg College
(IA) to conduct “First in the Nation,” a political study
program in which students travel throughout both Iowa and New Hampshire
to study the critical role these states play as the first primaries
in the presidential elections. Juniata College
(PA) alumna Anne Laird was one of a limited number of individuals
chosen from 3,000 contestants to present a filmed question (via
YouTube) to presidential candidates during a CNN debate in South
Carolina. Lewis University (IL) was visited by
the C-SPAN 2008 Campaign Bus, which offered 30-minute tours of the
bus’s state-of-the-art equipment and production capabilities
to faculty and students. Westminster College (PA)
held Mock Convention 2007—a quadrennial event started in 1936—in
which students campaigned and voted for their favorite presidential
candidates. Emory and Henry College (VA) developed
Election Lab 2008, a once-a-week class that is monitoring the campaign
trail until the November election. The class provides students with
opportunities to meet leading academics, members of the press, and
politicians.
International Scholarships
CIC institutions represented nearly half of the 43
U.S. institutions whose students were selected for 2007–2008
Fulbright awards. Twenty CIC institutions, including Mount
Holyoke College (MA), Wheaton College
(MA), Hamilton College (NY), Kenyon College
(OH), Swarthmore College (PA), Connecticut
College, Kalamazoo College (MI), Washington
and Lee University (VA), Lafayette College (PA),
Manchester College (IN), Spelman College
(GA), Williams College (MA), Earlham College
(IN), Hendrix College (AR), Nebraska Wesleyan
University, Oberlin College (OH), Trinity
College (CT), University of Puget Sound
(WA), University of Richmond (VA), and Willamette
University (OR), provided a total of 102 award winners
out of 810 applicants. During the previous year, a similar number
of Fulbright awards (86 awardees out of 833 applicants) were granted
to bachelor’s students from CIC institutions.
The most
recent round of RISE scholarships also included a notable number
of individuals from CIC institutions. These scholarships—sponsored
annually by DAAD, the German academic exchange service—provide
American science and engineering students the opportunity to study
at top German research institutions. Eleven of the 200 selected
recipients came from ten CIC institutions, including Agnes
Scott College (GA), Albion College (MI),
College of Saint Elizabeth (NJ), Grove
City College (PA), Moravian College (PA),
Park University (MO), Simpson College
(IA), Swarthmore College (PA), Transylvania
University (KY), and Washington and Lee University
(VA). The next round of RISE scholarship winners will be selected
later in 2008. More information is available at http://daad.de/rise/en.indext.html.
Environmental Leadership
Benedictine University (IL) has
joined Clean Air Counts, a northeastern Illinois initiative to reduce
ozone-causing emissions. By joining the initiative, Benedictine
has pledged to implement major pollutant and energy reduction strategies,
such as the use of energy-efficient lighting, appliances, and office
equipment; use of nonpolluting paints, cleaning products, and building
materials; natural landscaping; and transportation alternatives.
Thus far, Clean Air Counts has reduced pollution in the Chicago
area by 2.57 million pounds per day.
Ripon
College (WI) and Centre College (KY) have
introduced bicycles as an alternative transportation source for
the campus community—Ripon’s program provides 200 bikes
(plus bike gear) to incoming first-year students that choose not
to bring a car to campus (the bikes and gear can be kept by the
students, a $400 value), and Centre’s program offers unlocked,
freely available bikes to anyone on campus including faculty and
staff. Calvin College (MI) engineering students
built a demonstration wind turbine on campus that is being used
as an alternative fuel source (the wind turbine can be viewed live
at http://wind.calvin.edu).
Mount Vernon Nazarene University (OH) is using
waste vegetable oil from the campus cafeteria to power various kinds
of maintenance equipment and a campus bus.
Lourdes
College (OH) cohosted EARTH EXPO, an event featuring exhibits
by local organizations, civic leaders, and businesses that are taking
steps to help the environment. University of Richmond
(VA) held a three-day e-waste recycling project to properly dispose
(using green standards) of obsolete computers, monitors, printers,
keyboards, cell phones, and TVs that otherwise would have gone into
state landfills. Eckerd College (FL) has launched
an environmental sustainability website (www.eckerd.edu/green)
to document and raise awareness for a variety of environmental programs
occurring on its campus. Oberlin College (OH),
Berea College (KY), and Warren Wilson College
(NC) were included on Sierra Magazine’s list of the
top ten educational institutions that have taken action against
global warming. Warren Wilson is also developing a new environmental
curriculum, “Advancing Environmental Literacy,” aimed
at forming a comprehensive understanding not only of the ecological,
but also of the political, social, and cultural impacts of environmental
issues. The initiative is made possible by a $193,000 grant from
the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations.
Announcing
New Programs
Many CIC institutions have expanded their academic
offerings with new degree programs. Maryville University
(MO) has added its first doctoral degrees, a doctor of education
in leadership and a doctor of physical therapy; Clearwater
Christian College (FL) will offer a new MEd in educational
leadership; Endicott College (MA) will begin a
master of science in information technology; Pace University
(NY) has announced a doctor of nursing degree; and Southern
Vermont College has added new bachelor’s degrees
in business administration/nonprofit management, professional studies,
and history and politics. In addition, Rivier College
(NH) has added two new degrees, a doctorate of education (the first
EdD in the state) and a bachelor of science in finance. Misericordia
University (PA) has also added a master of business administration
and a doctor of physical therapy. Houghton College
(NY) has announced a new master’s program in theological studies,
and St. Bonaventure University (NY) has established
a new bachelor of science degree in bioinformatics (the field of
science in which biology, mathematics, and computer science merge
into a single discipline).
Campaign Success
Cabrini College (PA) celebrated
completion of the “10,000 Hearts Campaign,” the college’s
first comprehensive fundraising campaign. The college raised nearly
$20 million, surpassing its goal of $16.5 million. Johnson
C. Smith University (NC) completed its “Pathways
to Success” campaign, which raised $81.5 million to be used
for new endowments for student scholarships, faculty chairs, and
programs. Lindsey Wilson College (KY) has extended
its “Changing Lives” campaign after surpassing its original
$12 million goal by raising nearly $37 million. The college’s
new goal is to reach $53 million by 2010.
Creating Partnerships
Chapman University (CA) has partnered
with a local public television station to produce new digital television
content at the university’s Marion Knott Studios, a $41 million
film and broadcast studio with cinematography, journalism, and television
facilities located on the university campus. Chapman students will
work in front of and behind the camera to help produce segments
that will air on the television station’s new 24-hour Orange
County (OC) channel.
Lourdes
College (OH) and Chowan University (NC)
have partnered with local community colleges to offer expanded educational
opportunities. Lourdes has partnered with Owens Community College
to create “Pathways to Completion,” a degree completion
program that allows Owens students to enroll in business and education
majors that transfer into a four-year degree program at Lourdes.
Chowan University has partnered with Halifax Community College (HCC)
to offer an Adult Degree Completion Program, which allows graduates
with an associate in arts or science degree from HCC to obtain junior
status at Chowan and complete a bachelor’s degree in only
two years.
Announcing
Gifts and Grants
Three CIC institutions have announced record-breaking
gifts—the largest in their respective histories. Bennington
College (VT) received a $20 million gift from alumna Susan
Paris Borden and her husband Robert, in part to honor the institution’s
75th anniversary. The College of Idaho received
$50 million from the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation to help
launch a ten-year $175 million fundraising campaign. The gift is
the largest ever given to an Idaho college or university. And Eureka
College (IL) received a $2.5 million gift from the estate
of Ruth Mason McGowan to endow five to six full-tuition fellowships
in the college’s Ronald Reagan Leadership Program.
Other
CIC institutions have received sizable gifts. Saint John’s
University and the College of Saint Benedict
(MN) received combined pledges of $10.3 million ($5 million from
Dan and Katharine Whalen for SJU and $5.3 million from Tom Petters
for CSB) to establish two centers of academic excellence and distinction.
Spelman College (GA) received $10 million from
Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. to help boost minority participation
in the financial services industry. William Penn University
(IA) received $12 million from Musco Sports Lighting to construct
a new student recreation center, several classrooms and laboratories,
an industrial technology center, and a digital communication headquarters.
University of Richmond (VA) received two grants
totaling $8 million from the Robins Foundation to construct an expanded
on-campus stadium and academic building. McDaniel College
(MD) received a $5 million challenge gift from alumnus Leroy M.
Merritt—the largest outright gift from a living alumnus in
the college’s history—to fund student residence halls
and athletic facilities.

Dominican
University of California opened its $21 million Science
Center. The 35,000-square-foot facility houses more than 30 classrooms
and labs, four special instrument rooms, and two computer technology
rooms.
New
Facilities
Milligan
University (TN) completed the new Elizabeth Leitner Gregory
Center for the Liberal Arts. The 30,410-square-foot building houses
a 294-seat theatre auditorium, two classrooms, photography darkrooms,
and general classroom space for the college’s humanities program.
College of Saint Benedict (MN) completed the Gorecki
Dining and Conference Center, a $12 million campus landmark that
is part of the college’s capital campaign, “Our Place
in This World.” The dining center features large windows with
an expansive view of the campus, with seating for 400 people and
seven separate food stations offering a global menu. Mount
St. Mary’s College (CA) unveiled the new Seaver Science
Center, which recently underwent $6 million in renovations and expansions.
Wofford College (SC) debuted the Chapman Cultural
Center, a $47 million venue for arts education and entertainment,
estimated to provide economic revenue for Chapman of $4.14 million
annually and support 143 jobs. And Berry College
(GA) opened the Steven J. Cage Athletic and Recreation Center, a
131,000-square-foot facility to be used for intercollegiate and
intramural sports programs. A key highlight is the 2,000-seat arena
that can be used for concerts, convocations, major speakers, and
other events.
Online
Innovation
St. Edward’s University (TX)
students will be attending class in a new location—an online
virtual world. The online virtual world, called Second Life (www.secondlife.com),
is one of the fastest-growing online communities with more than
nine million members worldwide. Residents within Second Life can
create virtual characters and buildings, then interact with others,
visit virtual locations, and even hold meetings. St. Edward’s
professor Stephanie Poole Martinez and her organizational communication
students created a virtual island classroom in which (using their
virtual characters) they gather regularly to discuss the pros and
cons of new technologies. “I heard about Second Life on the
Today show,” says Martinez, “and I thought
it would be an engaging way to discuss new technologies with my
students.”
Roanoke
College (VA) is bringing its campus online to students
through College Snapshots, a new feature on the college’s
website that displays constantly updating photos of major campus
events, lectures, sports, student life, faculty, and alumni. The
College Snapshots webpage has become one of the top-15 pages on
the college website and draws at least 1,000 pageviews a week.
Changing Status
Judson University (IL) recently
changed its status from college to university, and Albertson College
has returned to its original name, The College of Idaho.
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