Campus Update
An outstanding first-year class of over 300 students
and nearly 90 new transfer students arrived on campus
for the start of the fall semester August 29. New and
returning students were greeted with a number of changes
to the campus landscape, as well as several projects
in progress:
• Construction is underway on a 15,000-square-foot
addition to the Yates-Gill College Union. This work
will take virtually the entire academic year, causing
some inconvenience, but will result in a beautiful
addition and renovation to the building.
• Construction is also underway on the Fred and
Shirley Pryor Center for Leadership Development. This
is a renovation of the former Kappa Alpha house on
the south edge of the campus. The renovated building
will be a state-of-the art classroom facility when
it is completed around the first of January.
• A new parking lot has been added north of the
Mabee Center and the “sahara” lot has been
completely resurfaced.
• Browning, Jones and Eaton Halls were all improved
over the summer. The windows have been replaced in
Browning and each residential room has been updated
with a new fan-coil (heating and cooling) unit, new
flooring, and a fresh coat of paint. In Jones, the
carpet was replaced and the carpet on the walls was
removed. The walls have a clean painted finish rather
than the wall carpet. The first floor in Eaton has
been refinished as well.
• The restrooms in Greene Stadium have been given
a fresh look. All the old fixtures and partitions have
been removed. The bathrooms have been reconfigured
to accommodate more fixtures and to provide free accessibility.
• Information technology changes include the
installation of numerous wireless connections on campus,
new switches, new servers and a faster connection to
the Internet. Speed on our network and to the Internet
will improve significantly. The Academic Technology
Center opened in Marston 306, with 28 new computers
and a much needed space for academic testing, technology
training, and cyberspace presentations. In addition,
new Help Desk resources have been enabled, and the
computer classrooms in Jewell Hall have been outfitted
with new machines, providing the latest technology
to faculty and students. A number of classrooms in
Marston Hall and White Science Center have been upgraded
with new technology installations.
• Design and installation of new signage across
campus has been completed and a number of landscaping
projects are also underway.
U.S. News & World Report Cites
Jewell’s
First-Year Experience as a ‘Program To Look For’
The 2006 “America’s Best Colleges” edition
of U.S. News & World Report has named
William Jewell College’s First Year Experience
as a “Program To Look For” in its annual
ranking of the best American colleges and universities.
“Orientation can go only so far in making freshmen
feel connected,” the magazine notes in its annual
college guide, which hit newsstands on Monday, August
22. “Many schools now build into the curriculum
first-year seminars or other academic programs that
bring small groups of students together with faculty
or staff on a regular basis.”
William Jewell College president Dr. David Sallee
expressed satisfaction at the college’s most
recent accolade: “We are gratified that the work
we are doing to facilitate the transition to college
life has received national recognition,” Dr.
Sallee said. “This recognition provides important
validation of Jewell’s student-centered approach
to providing a superior liberal arts education.”
The 2006 edition marks the fourth year that U.S. News
has published lists of schools with outstanding examples
of programs that are believed to lead to student success.
“With the help of education experts, including
staff members of the Association of American Colleges
and Universities, we identified eight such program
types,” the magazine states. “We then invited
college presidents, chief academic officers, and deans
of admission to nominate up to 10 institutions with
stellar examples of each kind of program.”
Colleges and universities that were mentioned most
often are included in the publication. In addition
to First-Year Experiences, other types of programs
cited included internships, study abroad, service learning
and undergraduate research. Jewell’s First-Year
program was one of 43 nationwide named for excellence
from among more than 3,500 institutions of higher learning.
William Jewell has been among the pioneers of the
First-Year Experience programs for college students.
Jewell’s orientation and assimilation program
was previously cited by TIME Magazine, which named
William Jewell its “Liberal Arts College of the
Year” for 2001-02.
Jewell’s First-Year Experience program is aimed
at easing the transition to college life for incoming
students. It includes such elements as a shared introductory
seminar, assignment of multiple faculty and student
contacts for newcomers and leadership development opportunities.
William Jewell Among Princeton Review’s ‘The
Best 361 Colleges’ for 2006
William Jewell College has been named one of the
nation’s
361 best institutions for undergraduate education,
according to The Princeton Review. The New
York-based education services company features the
college in The Best 361 Colleges, the new
2006 edition of its annual “best colleges” guide.
Only about 15% of the four-year colleges in America
and two Canadian colleges appear in the guidebook,
which features profiles on the schools and student
survey-based rankings in various categories. 
The guidebook cites Jewell’s “highly selective
and extremely intense” Oxbridge Honors Program,
which offers instruction in the English tutorial style.
The Review noted that “the distinctive quality
of the Jewell student body is a repeated emphasis on
thoughtfulness and self-reflection,” and scored
the college among the top 20 in community relations
(#2) and “happiest students” (#14).
“The main factor in our selection of schools
in the book was our high regard for their academic
programs,” says Robert Franek, vice president
of publishing at The Princeton Review. “We
evaluated them based on institutional data we collect
about the schools, feedback from students, and visits
to schools over the years. We also considered the opinions
of independent college counselors, students and parents
we talk to and survey. Finally, we worked to have a
wide representation of colleges in the book by region,
size, selectivity and character.”
The ranking lists in The Best 361 Colleges are
based on The Princeton Review’s survey
of 110,000 students attending the colleges in the book.
Students rated their schools on several topics and
reported on their campus experiences. Ranking list
categories range from best professors, administration
and campus food to lists based on student body political
leanings, interests in sports and other aspects of
campus life. The Princeton Review posts the
book’s ranking lists on its website at www. PrincetonReview.com.
The Best 361 Colleges is the 14th edition of The
Princeton Review’s annual “best
colleges” guide. The Princeton Review,
which is known for its education, admission and test-prep
services, has previously cited William Jewell as
the number one “Best Bargain” among private
colleges and as a “Best Value” among
all colleges.
Jewell introduces Sophomore Year Experience
Following up on the success of its nationally recognized
First-Year Experience that has eased the transition
to college life for hundreds of incoming students,
William Jewell College is launching a new Sophomore
Year Experience aimed at extending the assisted period
of adjustment to the academic and social components
of college life.
“William Jewell’s first-year and orientation
initiatives have been recognized nationally and continue
to be highly successful at assisting new students with
their transition to college, preparing them for the
academic rigor and social integration that occurs within
the campus community during the first year,” said
Rick Winslow, Dean of Students at William Jewell. “In
initiating the Sophomore Year Experience, our intention
is to extend those same principles in a comprehensive
and integrated way to facilitate students’ transition
from the first year to the sophomore year.”
Winslow said that the new program focuses on two institutional
imperatives related to sophomore level students. First,
it will immerse students in an active and directed
program of service to the larger community, which is
one of the key elements of the college’s mission.
As part of the Sophomore Year Experience, sophomore
students will hope to work with Habitat for Humanity.
A second emphasis of the program will focus on the
specific developmental needs of sophomore students,
whom studies show often experience some measure of
disorientation during the second year of college.
“The research indicates that sophomore students
often describe a kind of lull and have expressed a
sense of feeling lost during this particular year of
college,” Winslow said. “Sophomores can
end up searching socially and academically for direction,
and may feel that they lack a needed support system
for this unique stage in the collegiate maturation
process. The result can be difficulties in committing
to a discipline of study.”
To better assist the developmental needs of sophomore
students, William Jewell will be developing new programs
and services targeted at students during their second
year of college. These services include the designation
of a college staff member to work specifically for
and with sophomores. The college will be providing
additional advising opportunities for sophomores, in
addition to more focused opportunities for interaction
between students and faculty.
Woman’s Committee Serves Campus
The President’s Home, which observes its centennial
this year (see article on page 8), is among the many
beneficiaries of the work of the Woman’s Committee.
For its spring 2003 meeting, the group hosted a hospitality
shower for the President’s Home. Table linens,
glassware, china and serving pieces were purchased
for the purpose of entertaining guests during receptions
and other gatherings. Individual members of the Woman’s
Committee donated heirloom silver pieces to enhance
the home’s gracious hospitality.
Following the devastation of the 2003 tornado, which
destroyed 48 trees on the grounds of the President’s
Home, Woman’s Committee members purchased expansive
planter boxes for the veranda. Now filled with beautiful
flowers and greenery, the large planters are a beautiful
addition to a landscape that is missing all of its
century trees.
Other recent projects have included the founding of
the First Ladies Gallery, hosting a Christmas Tree
Festival, and the purchase of original art work for
the lobby of the renovated Melrose Hall.
Formed in 1965 by a group of Liberty alumnae, Woman’s
Committee has expanded to include women across the
country joining in support of the college. The Committee
quickly identified its role as funding scholarships
for deserving women students and pursuing some practical
and aesthetic projects for the campus. Over 100 scholarships
have been awarded in the 40-year history of the Woman’s
Committee.
“One of the delights of my role is seeing how
many ways this campus is loved,” said presidential
spouse, Mary Sallee. “The interest and generosity
of Woman’s Committee begins with students, expands
to the president’s home, and overflows to the
rest of the campus. Financial gifts make scholarships
and projects possible. The gifts of ‘nurture’ and ‘personal
interest’ enrich our lives.”
Woman’s Committee is open to alumni, faculty
and staff, parents/grandparents of current and former
students and other friends of the college. For information
on membership, please contact membership chair Judy
Rychlewski at 816-415-5938, or by email at rychlewskj@william.jewell.edu.
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