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Presidents Council
members enjoy dinner at the home of President Hal Wilde (North
Central). L to R: Benna Wilde, presidents John Moor (Drury)
and Jeanne Neff (Sage), ANAC Executive Director Jerry Berberet,
and President Peggy Williams (Ithaca). Photo by Hal Wilde.
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"Name changes within the ANAC fold reflect the dynamic evolution
of institutions with a comprehensive balance of undergraduate, graduate,
and professional programs and traditional, nontraditional, and commuting
student bodies."
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L to R: President
David Maxwell (Drake), ANAC Chair Betty Ivey (Hartford),
and presidents Joel Cunning ham (Susquehanna) and Jerry Warren
(Belmont) at September Presidents Council meeting. Photo
by President Hal Wilde (North Central).
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"The University Heights Commons will not only enhance the richly
diverse neighborhoods around us, but also will serve as an important
element of economic growth for the City of Albany.
President Jeanne Neff, Chair of UHA
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"Quinnipiac is not now, nor has it any plans to become,
a research-oriented university with Ph.D. programs. A change in our
name will alter absolutely nothing about our current or future operations,
nor will it affect our mission.."
President John L. Lahey
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Quinnipiac
offers one of only 40 accredited physician assistant programs in
the US. Photo by Sven Martson.
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November,
1999 Edition |
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What's
in a Name Change? It May Symbolize the Continuing Evolution of the
New American College. 
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First Drury College (see September
Bulletin) and now Quinnipiac College have
announced that they will become Drury University and Quinnipiac
University in the year 2000. These are not the marketing gestures
of small institutions (1,000-2,000 students) that have sometimes
replaced "college" with "university" in their names in recent years.
Rather, name changes within the ANAC fold reflect the dynamic evolution
of institutions with a comprehensive balance of undergraduate, graduate,
and professional programs and traditional, nontraditional, and commuting
student bodies. Moreover, enrollments at ANAC member institutions
are growing (typical range 4,500-6,500). ANAC member student bodies
both mirror the demography of their local communities and are regional,
national, and international in scope.
Ph.D. level education is not part of the vision, nor will research
become the foremost responsibility of faculty, as these institutions
focus their primary attention on students and a faculty professional
model that integrates scholarship, teaching, and service in complementary
ways. In the tradition of the land grant universities, many ANAC
colleges and universities have forged impressive joint ventures
with their local communities in projects ranging from partnerships
with K-12 schools to inner-city tutoring and mentoring, housing
and social services, and economic development programs. It's hard
to imagine a better model for combining theory and practice in student
learning, for applied faculty-student research, and for institutional
citizenship capable of renewing higher education's significance
in society.
Articles
In This Issue:

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Presidential
Inaugural of Drake's David Maxwell Features University-Community Forum

Next to the October 9 ceremony itself,
the event of October 8"Serving the Common Good: a Forum on the
Place of Drake"was the centerpiece of the inauguration of Drake
University's 12th president, David Maxwell, and a fitting symbol
of the symbiotic relationship of ANAC member institutions and their
local communities. Indeed, in conversation at the ANAC Presidents
Council meeting on September 11, President Maxwell spoke of the
theme of his upcoming inaugural as a celebration of "Drake: Des
Moines' University." Drake's effort to accentuate its interdependence
with surrounding Des Moines (and Iowa) is a significant New American
College phenomenon in renewing an American higher education tradition
of service that originated with the Morrill Act during the American
Civil War which established the land grant state college system.
One might expect public institutions, supported with tax dollars,
to be responsible for sharing the benefits of research and providing
expertise for community well-being. For private colleges and universities
to do so, especially contrary to the classical liberal arts credo
of "learning for its own sake," sets a new standard of service and
accountability that runs counter to the 1990's critique of higher
education's self-absorption. In recent years many ANAC members have
moved from an enrollment-based market relationship with the local
region to one of broad-based economic and social development in
collaboration with business, government, and other nonprofit institutions.
In part these activities are filling a void government programs
used to fill; in part they are responses to long-neglected social
problems in areas close to campus. But most of all these undertakings
reflect the emerging muscle of integrative institutions looking
for places to test classroom theories, to make real higher education's
civic mission, and to pursue applied scholarship that perceives
the community as a laboratory.
The tagline for ANAC institutions"regionally committed, nationally
connected" coined at the Presidents Council meeting in September,
reflects a self-consciousness able to draw energy from a local identity
intertwined with national aspirations. This is a triumph of sorts
in an individualistic and entrepreneurial society much more comfortable
with "either/or" than "both/and" distinctions. The Drake Forum on
October 8, with session titles such as, "Drake in the Public Arena,"
"Drake in the Business Community," and "Drake in the Community,"
and with panelists such as former Iowa governors Robert D. Ray and
Terry Branstad and Des Moines Mayor Preston Daniels, captures a
flavor of the following case studies sampling types of community
projects that can be found at many ANAC member institutions.
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Valparaiso University Receives HUD Community Development
Grant

Valparaiso University is
a second ANAC member (Mercer University featured in the October
Bulletin was the first) to receive one of twenty-two HUD Community
Outreach Partnership grants. Valparaiso's $400,000 grant will be
used to revitalize a low-income, ethnically diverse neighborhood
adjacent to campus. The project will be directed by Larry Baas,
professor of political science and co-director of VU's Community
Research and Service Center. The grant will fund several initiatives
for a project called University Neighbors that links VU with community
organizations in addressing issues of affordable housing, job training
for youth and young adults, and organizational and leadership development
in the neighborhood. Specific initiatives include creating a database
that connects volunteers with organizations seeking volunteers,
developing a mentoring program for fathers, enlisting volunteers
to renovate houses, establishing a home-building apprenticeship
program for area teens, and providing career guidance for those
completing apprenticeships. Working with and assisting the development
of indigenous neighborhood organizations is a major goal of the
project.
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Hartford Community Development Efforts Feature
Magnet School

Work has begun on the University of
Hartford Magnet School, a collaborative project of the University,
the Capitol Region Education Council, the state Department of Education,
and six surrounding communities that has been six years in the making.
Designed for 400 students in kindergarten through fifth grade, the
school's curriculum will be based on the research of Harvard psychologist
Howard Gardner that identifies multiple intelligences (visual, artistic,
kinesthetic, and interpersonal as well as traditional verbal and
mathematical approaches) in the ways students can learn. Scheduled
to open in Fall 2001, the magnet school will benefit from the resources
of all nine of the University's colleges and schools and will provide
Hartford students in such fields as education, the health professions,
psychology, and sociology valuable opportunities to work directly
with elementary school students.
University of Hartford President Walter Harrison has taken
the lead in creating the Center for Community Service to fulfill
a two-fold mission of assisting members of the University to volunteer
for community service and to increase opportunities for faculty
and students to incorporate service-learning in the classroom. The
Center facilitates a remarkable range of volunteer activities and
projects from blood drives and distribution of food to the needy
to participation in Habitat for Humanity and visits to senior citizen
communities. Applied research and service-learning projects include
Educational Main Street, a tutor/mentor partnership with all levels
of K-12 education in Hartford; a block watch and crime data project
involving Hartford's criminal justice program and a high-crime neighborhood
near campus; and a nature trail development and environmental education
project involving a school, the Boy Scouts, environmental groups,
a corporation, and the University.
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The Sage Colleges Joint Venture with University Heights
Association

The Sage Colleges joined with
the Albany Medical Center, Albany Law School, and Albany College
of Pharmacy to create the University Heights Association (UHA),
a nonprofit corporation for purposes of developing a thirty-one
acre adjacent site for the benefit of the four institutions. Central
to the development plan for the area (known as UHA Commons) are
the conversion of a former Christian Brothers high school on the
site as a common instructional space and the purchase of the state
New Scotland Armory on site as a common bookstore, food court, and
commercial mall. In April 1999, a grant from the Teagle Foundation
enabled the University Heights Association to hire its first executive
director.
In May, New York Governor Pataki announced the sale to UHA of the
Armory, clearing the way for development of shared facilities and
services that are expected to realize substantial savings for each
higher education institution. Sage President Jeanne Neff, Chair
of UHA, commenting on the Armory purchase, "The University Heights
Commons will not only enhance the richly diverse neighborhoods around
us, but also will serve as an important element of economic growth
for the City of Albany." In its long term planning, the University
Heights Association expects to build on the interrelated programs
and expertise of the four institutions in law, medicine, and health
services to continue development of shared resources and programs,
including a common technology "backbone," and to take advantage
of new program opportunities as they arise.
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The Making of a Name Change at Quinnipiac College

The name change to Quinnipiac University
that President John L. Lahey announced to the campus community in
September comes after several name changes historically at an institution
originally founded as the Connecticut College of Commerce in 1929.
The name change reflects the expanding importance of graduate and
professional education, Quinnipiac's efforts to increase its presence
internationally, and the University's desire to communicate its
comprehensive character clearly. In contrast with institutions with
long-established national reputations such as Dartmouth College,
Boston College, and the College of William and Mary, Quinnipiac
College, like some other New American Colleges, has seen its
present institutional form take shape more recently and sometimes
has found its name confused with community/junior colleges in the
region, even with colleges named for Native American tribes.
In his announcement, President Lahey articulated what the name
change implies and does not imply: "Quinnipiac is not now, nor has
it any plans to become, a research-oriented university with Ph.D.
programs. A change in our name will alter absolutely nothing about
our current or future operations, nor will it affect our mission.
Quinnipiac's main goal in changing its name is to communicate more
clearly and effectively to the general public our present and substantial
commitment to graduate education at the Master's and first professional
degree levels. This change might also enhance student recruitment
and faculty activities in the international arena where 'college'
is often associated with the U.S. equivalent of high school, and
'university' with postsecondary education at both the undergraduate
and graduate levels." Quinnipiac enrolls nearly 6,000 students,
more than 2,000 at the graduate level in ten separate programs.
The name change takes place officially on July 1, 2000.
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