| November
1 , 2004 Print
this page
La
Salle University Launches $25 Million Campaign to Build New Science
and Technology Center and Increase Endowment
La Salle University
has launched a $25 million campaign targeted to build a new science
and technology center and increase the endowment for scholarships.
Over $13 million in gifts and pledges have been secured toward the
$25 million goal.
J.
Hugh Devlin, a 1964 La Salle graduate, is Chair of the “Shoulder
to Shoulder” fundraising initiative. “I have always
admired the Christian Brothers, who founded La Salle, and their
commitment to providing a Catholic education to good students of
modest means so that they can make their way in the world and also
make the world a better place,” remarked Devlin, of Fair Haven,
N.J. “It is my belief that the values imparted to us by the
Christian Brothers—connectedness and giving back—will
inspire the alumni community to stand together to advance the mission
of La Salle through this important initiative.”
Construction
of the new science and technology center will follow the completion
of a new $24 million residence and dining facility currently under
construction. The new residence halls, which will accommodate 435
students, are scheduled to open in the fall of 2005.
“La Salle
is investing in the future, which is also an investment in the city
of Philadelphia and the region. A new science and technology center
will not only support the University’s traditional science,
business, and nursing programs, but also strengthen newer programs
like Integrated Science, Business, and Technology (ISBT), Digital
Arts, and Speech-Language-Hearing Science,” said 1971 graduate
James J. Lynch, Chair of the La Salle University Board of Trustees
and a member of the “Shoulder to Shoulder” Steering
Committee.
“Shoulder
to Shoulder” is the way many great things in this country
have been accomplished,” said Lynch. “The theme of this
fundraising effort was chosen specifically to reinforce the values
at the heart of what will make this campaign a success: hardworking
people—working together—to secure the future for La
Salle.”
“I
am very encouraged by alumni support for this initiative,”
said La Salle President Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C. “Great
universities are great because their alumni make them so, and this
campaign will make La Salle even greater.”
In addition
to a new science and technology center, the campaign will also raise
funds for the endowment, which is critical to the University’s
ability to offer a La Salle education to as many qualified students
as possible. Today, more than 90 percent of students attend the
University with some form of merit- or need-based financial aid.
Since 1997,
the University has experienced significant growth in overall enrollment
as well as in the number of resident students. Undergraduate full-time
enrollment this year is 3,358; graduate enrollment is 1,880; and
983 students are enrolled in the University’s Continuing Studies
Program. The total of 6,221 students makes this the largest campus-wide
enrollment since 1990, the largest undergraduate enrollment since
1992, and the largest graduate enrollment in La Salle history. Overall,
campus-wide enrollment has grown 21 percent in the past seven years.
La Salle is
an independent, coeducational university founded in 1863 by the
De La Salle Christian Brothers, a Catholic order dedicated to teaching
and career preparation. The University derives its name from the
patron saint of teachers, John Baptist de La Salle, a priest and
educational innovator who founded the order in France in 1680.
The University
currently offers undergraduate concentrations in almost 60 academic
areas within its three schools: Arts and Sciences, Business, and
Nursing. Additionally,
La Salle offers 14 graduate programs, including the University’s
first doctoral program, in clinical psychology.
|