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In October 2000, Board of
Trustees Chairman Alan M. Dachs '70 made a pledge to the Wesleyan community:
"I promise you that
when you contribute to the Wesleyan Campaign, your gift will produce
results and ensure Wesleyan's legacy for the next generation and
generations to come," he said.
His promise is already
being fulfilled.
Five years and $281
million dollars later, Wesleyan has renovated dozens of classrooms,
added 20 new faculty positions across the curriculum, offered 140
additional scholarships and rejuvenated Clark Hall, Memorial Chapel and
The Patricelli '92 Theater and Ring Family Stage with the Zelnick
Pavilion connecting the buildings. The Rosenbaum squash center with nine
courts and the Andersen Fitness Center have also made a presence on
campus.
These projects are all
made possible through the Wesleyan Campaign, which capped its $250
million goal by $31 million on December 31, 2004.
"With the success of
this campaign, we have learned that our alumni, parents and friends are
incredibly generous and they know their gifts can help shape the
university," said Barbara-Jan Wilson, vice president for University
Relations. "People had a wonderful time when they were students and
that's why they give. They want students to have the same opportunities
that they had."
The priorities of the
Campaign came directly from the Strategy for Wesleyan and, of the funds
raised, $47,160,000 went towards Endowment for Financial Aid;
$48,700,000 to the Freeman Asian Scholars Program; $19,900,000 into the
Fund for Excellence; $40,300,000 was directed toward Faculty and
Academic Programs; $46,100,000 to support new facilities and the Campus
Renewal Fund; $57,000,000 into the Wesleyan Annual Fund. An additional
$21,800,000 pledged is currently undesignated.
Because of generous
gifts to support financial aid, students are borrowing on average $8,000
less over their four years at Wesleyan.
"The students are the
life blood of this institution, and lowering their post Wesleyan loans
was one of our biggest priorities," Wilson said. "The students are
already seeing the effects of the campaign in their scholarship packages
and through the physical environment."
A record-setting 68
percent of alumni participated in the campaign, along with 3,472
parents, 219 corporations and foundations and more than half of the
senior faculty.
This was Wesleyan's
second official campaign drive, built on the foundation of the Campaign
for Liberal Learning, which raised $67 million by 1987. In 1995, a firm
advised Wesleyan to set a $100 million goal for the Wesleyan Campaign.
Wesleyan continued to set the bar higher. They decided to aim for a
quarter of a billion dollars, a number that appealed to John Woodhouse
'53, chair of the Wesleyan Campaign.
"Some donors give $25 a
year and 56 individuals or families made commitments of $1 million or
more," said Ann Goodwin, assistant vice president for university
relations. "Each and every gift is incredibly important as Wesleyan
continues to provide an excellent education for our students. We asked
people to stretch for Wesleyan and they did!"
Although the campaign
is over, University Relations is building on the momentum of the
campaign to focus on the Wesleyan Annual Fund, further increasing the
endowment for financial aid and emerging facility priorities, including
support for the Usdan University Center and a new Life Sciences
building.
The campaign has
brought Wesleyan to a new level and it has given us the building blocks
to maintain our level of excellence," Wilson said. "But we can't rest on
our laurels. Excellence is dynamic. It doesn't just stop."
A "Thank You" in
sound and photos from President Bennet on behalf of Wesleyan can be
viewed at
http://www.wesleyan.edu/campaign/thankyou/.
By
Olivia Bartlett, The Wesleyan Connection
editor |
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Campaign Contributions
$281 million was raised
through the Wesleyan Campaign, which ended December 31, 2004. As a
result, Wesleyan has been able to:
Hire 20 new faculty
members, improving the student-faculty ratio from 1:11 to 9:1
Offer 140 new endowed
and current scholarships to students
Secure the Freeman
Asian Scholars Program, which enrolls 22 top-level Asian students in
each class from 11 Pacific Rim countries
Create more than 40
multimedia classrooms
Build and open the
Andersen Fitness Center and Rosenbaum Squash Court
Launch a new Center
for Faculty Development
Design the Usdan
University Center. Groundbreaking is planned for March
Establish six new
professorships
Encourage more than
60 science students to participate in summer research each year
Convert a former
Middletown school into the Green Streets Arts Center
Initiate new programs
in areas such as environmental studies, genomics and bioinformatics,
computational biology and bioethics
Develop a Center for
Community Partnerships
Provide generous
financial aid packages, reducing student borrowing by 25 percent
Create a visiting
scholar-in-residence, an endowment for speakers in Jewish Studies and an
endowment to benefit Jewish life activities
Build the Zelnick
Pavilion and Center for Film Studies
Launch an endowment
for the College of Social Sciences
Renovate the Center
for the Americas, the Stewart M. Reid Admission Center, Clark Hall,
Memorial Chapel, the Patricelli '92 Theater and Ring Family Stage,
Downey House |