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Dear Whitworth
friends,
I can't remember if I have ever written you a pure
fund-raising letter. I probably have, but I don't often. Well, I'm sending
one of those letters now because Whitworth has embarked on a crucial project.
For at least a century, Whitworth has been committed to
the sciences as essential to an excellent liberal arts education. We have
begun construction on a new Biology/Chemistry Building that renews this
commitment and solidifies the university's position as one of the best
Christian liberal arts schools in the country. There are three driving
reasons why we have taken this bold step:
- First,
more than ever, science represents an indispensible component of a
strong liberal arts education. The best colleges have excellent science
programs. Whitworth is certainly in that group, but we have outgrown our
facilities, both in the quality of our teaching/research and in the
sheer space needed.
- Second,
the number of science majors has doubled in the past 10 years without
adding any more classrooms or laboratories. In that same time, most of
our "crossover" application schools have added new science
facilities. In the last several years, we have seen a decline in the
percentage of admitted, incoming biology and chemistry majors. Our lack
of physical resources has put us in a weak competitive position.
- Third, strong student-faculty relationships are
central to our educational mission. In the sciences, opportunities for
faculty-student interaction are best achieved through collaborative
research. This new facility significantly expands the quality and extent
of research space that will be available for our students and
professors.
Ben Spaun, '08, and Ashley Gibbs, '07, are enrolled in
Harvard University's doctoral programs in physics and biophysics,
respectively. Both were awarded competitive full fellowships from Harvard
after turning down matching offers from Yale. Ben and Ashley are the latest
in a long line of scientists, doctors, teachers, engineers and researchers
who are using their Whitworth science and math degrees to advance the
frontiers of knowledge and to tackle some of the world's most challenging
problems. Equipped to embrace curiosity and Christian conviction as
complementary rather than competing values, Whitworth alumni are needed more
than ever to address ethical issues where science, faith and public policy
intersect.
The Biology/ Chemistry Building currently under construction is one of the
most important projects in Whitworth's 120-year history. At its completion,
we expect to turn our attention to an addition and renovation of the Johnston
Science Center to provide improved space for physics, math and computer
science, and health science. In the 17 months left until the new building
opens its doors to students, we are still working to complete funding for the
project. With a price tag of nearly $32 million, this is the most expensive
facility ever contructed at Whitworth, and we have currently identified a
combination of debt and gifts that leaves more than $4 million to be secured.
When we reach that goal, additional gifts can reduce the amount of debt
required for the project.
Rarely has a single project been so vitally important to Whitworth University
and to the larger community. This facility is not just important... it is
urgent. I hope you will take a few moments to consider the role you might
play in helping underwrite this new building. Supporting Whitworth's new
Biology/Chemistry Building is an investment in a better future for Whitworth
students and the world they will serve. We will follow up in the next several
months with regard to specific giving opportunities. For now, there are many
more project details, videos and a webcam of the construction at www.whitworth.edu/supportingthesciences.
In the Whitworth spirit,

Bill Robinson
President
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