| (Click
on most images for enlarged versions. Place mouse over images for captions.)
Wells
College Hires Field Hockey Coaches
Co-position best
serves athletes, College
Wells
College Athletics Director Lyn LaBar announced last week that two Wells
coaches have been appointed as co-coaches for the field hockey team. Former
assistant hockey coach Amy “Ace” Dolan and Sandra Jones, past assistant
softball and swim coach at Wells, will manage the field hockey program
together.
“I am excited that Ace Dolan
and Sandra Jones will serve as co-head coaches for the Wells field hockey
program,” says LaBar. “For the past few years, both have been closely associated
with the squad. I am confident that they will work well together to build
upon the hockey program’s strong foundation and achieve new levels of success
both on and off the field.”
For the past two seasons,
Ace has served as the assistant field hockey coach under LaBar, and has
worked primarily with the goalkeepers. As a result of her instruction
and guidance, Wells goalkeepers have led, in overall save percentage, all
Atlantic Women’s Colleges Conference (AWCC) goalkeepers. She also is Wells’
head softball coach. Ace received a B.S. in natural resources from Cornell
University in 2001. This will be her fourth year coaching for Wells.
Sandra,
Wells Class of 2004, was a member of the field hockey team for three years
while a student, and served as captain during her senior season. She was
an AWCC Second Team All-Conference selection. Sandra received the Lesley
Wead Zabriskie Express Award for field hockey during her senior year. In
addition to field hockey, she was a member of the softball and swim teams,
and was active with the Wells Student Athlete Advisory Committee, serving
as a hockey team representative.
This past spring, Ace and
Sandra worked together as head and assistant coach, respectively, for the
softball program.
“It will be great to work
alongside Ace again, this time as co-coaches of the Wells field hockey
team,” said Sandra. “Thanks to the opportunities I had to work with some
amazing coaches as a student here, I am eager and confident that I have
the skills necessary to lead the squad successfully. I am looking forward
to another wonderful season.”
Ace too is excited about
the new appointments: “I am confident that we will continue to maintain
the high quality student athlete that Wells has become known for. I also
look forward to working with Sandra in this new role.”
For more information about
athletics at Wells College, please contact Communications Director Kelly
Tehan at 315/364-3260 and visit the Wells Athletics website: www.wells.edu/slife/sl2c.htm.
August, 2005
Wells
College Hires Coaches for Swimming and Cross-Country
Wells College Athletics Director
Lyn LaBar is pleased to announce that two coaches have been hired. Jack
Eckhardt will be the College’s swimming coach, and Tim Ingall will lead
the newly formed cross-country teams.
John
“Jack” Eckhardt of Homer, New York will begin his full-time duties as head
women’s and men’s swim coach on August 1. He will be responsible
for managing and developing all aspects of the women’s and men’s club swim
programs, will serve as aquatics coordinator, and will teach aquatic-related
physical education classes.
“Jack brings to Wells a great
sense of enthusiasm, determination, and positive energy surrounding his
plan to develop the Wells swim program,” says LaBar. “His background
and experience will assist him in taking our women’s program to the next
level and starting a men’s program. I’m confident that Jack will provide
some much needed stability to the program, and I am excited that he will
be joining us at this pivotal time for Wells athletics.”
Eckhardt most recently taught
physical education and was head modified lacrosse coach for the Horseheads
School District in Horseheads, New York. He has also served as assistant
swim coach for the Kingston Swim Club in Kingston, New York and for the
SUNY-Cortland swim team. He is the founder and head coach of the Cortland
Adapted Swim Team, and is a Certified Adapted Physical Educator (CAPE).
He received his B.S. and M.S. in physical education from SUNY-Cortland.
“I’m looking forward to working
with a great group of students, and guiding them to athletic excellence
over the next few years,” says Jack. “I’m also really excited to
have the chance to continue building the women’s swim program, and to developing
a new men’s program.”
Also
starting in early August is part-time women’s and men’s cross-country coach
Tim Ingall of Lansing, New York. Tim will organize practices, prepare runners
to participate in meets, recruit student-athletes, and assist with meet
scheduling and the development of new running courses for the cross-country
program. Because Wells does not yet have its own courses, student-athletes
will participate in away invitationals in this inaugural year.
“We are most fortunate to
have secured Tim Ingall as head coach of our newly established cross-country
program,” says LaBar. “Tim has extensive knowledge in the sport, has a
great passion for running, and is very active in local running clubs and
track communities.”
An avid runner and sports
enthusiast for 30 years, Ingall holds a USATF Level I certificate in track
and field coaching. In addition to being a member of the High Noon running
group at Cornell University, he is on the executive board of the Finger
Lakes Runners Club, where he organizes several track meets and races each
year. Through the FLRC, he introduced and coordinates the annual Family
Fun Run each March, and the “Forge the Gorgeous Trail” race at Fillmore
Glen in August. Tim received a Higher National Diploma from Writtle Agricultural
College in Essex, England, and is also employed as general manager of Sheffield’s
Seed Company in Locke, New York. He now competes at the Master’s level
in running competitions.
“This is an exciting opportunity
for me to start up a new sport at Wells,” says Ingall. “I expect that the
new cross-country program will attract more students and be successful.
I’m pleased to be an active leader in this process.”
Athletics plays an important
role as Wells seeks to recruit and retain more students. In March, Michael
Paolini was hired as Wells’ men’s soccer coach. The new soccer team will
play the 2005-06 season at the club level and will elevate to varsity in
2006-07. Starting out as a club program will allow Paolini time to develop
a recruiting base upon which to build before elevating to varsity status
in 2006.
Wells’ athletic facilities
are also undergoing significant renovations. A men’s locker room is being
expanded, and cardio and weight rooms are receiving upgrades. A new
entrance to the Schwartz Student Union will welcome athletes, the sports
medicine training room will be moved and enlarged, and coaches’ office
space enhanced. Outdoor projects include resurfacing existing tennis courts
and the development of cross-country running trails. The improved facilities
will be available to student-athletes arriving on campus for the Fall 2005
semester.
August, 2005
Wells
College Trustees Elect Leaders to Executive Committee
At
their spring meeting in Aurora, the Wells College Board of Trustees elected
officers to top board leadership positions for 2005-06, effective July
1, according to President Lisa Marsh Ryerson.
Wells
graduate Suzanne Grey of New Canaan, Connecticut, was named board chair.
Sue was appointed to the board in 2001 and currently serves as vice chair
and member of the executive committee. She was instrumental in guiding
the Board of Trustees through a planning process that included the 2004
decision to move to coeducation.
A philosophy
major and mathematics minor, her first appointment to the Wells board came
in 1972, the year she graduated, when her classmates nominated her to serve
a two-year term as collegiate trustee.
Ms.
Grey has more than 30 years of experience in business. She has spent the
last 23 years with Pitney Bowes, a Fortune 500 company, most recently as
a corporate vice president of business planning and chief of staff for
its Global Enterprise Solutions group. This is a portfolio of businesses
with $1.4 billion in annual revenues and 15,000 employees worldwide. Ms.
Grey has focused on resolving strategic and operational issues confronting
the business units, establishing effective planning processes, and working
closely with home office and field management. She also served as vice
president of strategy and product development for Dictaphone Corporation,
a subsidiary of Pitney Bowes.
Prior
to Pitney Bowes, Ms. Grey held positions with Quantum Science Corporation,
William E. Hill & Company (a Dun & Bradstreet Company) and the
JCPenney Company. In addition to serving her alma mater, she has been board
president of St. Luke’s LifeWorks (a social services agency in Stamford,
Connecticut) and volunteered at the Waveny Care Center (New Canaan, Connecticut).
Pat
Parnie Purcell Wahlen of St. Petersburg, Florida was elected vice chair.
A philosophy major, she received her bachelor’s degree from Wells in 1966
and began her fundraising career at the College shortly after graduation,
eventually being named Wells’ Vice President for Development. She joined
the board in 2003 and chairs the External Relations Committee.
Ms.
Wahlen has also held top-level fundraising positions at Goucher College
and the University of Maryland. She made national headlines when she raised
a record-breaking $40 million for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. During
her seven-year tenure with the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, she raised
nearly $200 million. Since 2000, she has been a fundraising consultant.
Ms.
Wahlen was named one of Northern Ohio’s top ten most influential women
in 1998 by Northern Ohio Live magazine. She received the Wells College
Alumnae Award in 2004 in recognition of her career achievements and service
to the College.
Gail
L. Kitch, of Charlottesville, Virginia, will continue in her current position
as board secretary. She joined the Wells board in 1999 and is chair of
the Enrollment Committee and a longtime member of the Campus Affairs Committee,
which encompasses administrative leadership in both student life and academic
affairs.
Ms.
Kitch is currently executive director of By the People: America in the
World, an initiative of MacNeil/Lehrer Productions designed to energize
the national conversation on America’s global presence through work with
local PBS stations. Previously, she was president of the Federation of
State Humanities Councils.
She
earned her B.A. from Bryn Mawr College and her law degree from the University
of Chicago.
For
additional information, please contact Communications Director Kelly Tehan
at 315/364-3260.
July, 2005
Preparing
to Greet the First Coed Class
Campus excited to
welcome the Class of 2009
As
high school seniors across the nation make final college choices, Wells
will be greeting more new students than it has seen in many years.
Last
October, trustees announced that Wells would admit men beginning in the
fall 2005. Wells had been a women’s college since its founding in 1868.
This year, as the College transitions to coeducation, Wells received 1,012
applications for the entering freshman class that can accommodate about
130 students. Sixty-eight transfer students have also applied.
To
date, 134 students, 22 of them males, have sent in their deposits, indicating
their intention to enroll as freshmen this fall. Additionally, the College
has received deposits from 28 transfer students, 23 of whom are women.
“We’re
extremely pleased with our success this year,” said Director of Admissions
Susan Sloan. “The freshman numbers are likely to change a little over the
course of the summer; we’ll probably see a few withdrawals and receive
a few more deposits. Transfer students are accepted on a rolling basis,
and we are very likely to see more enroll for the fall semester.”
Sloan
said 20% of deposited first-year students have self-identified as persons
of color. Thirty-five percent are from outside New York; they come from
states including California, Hawaii, Idaho, Minnesota, South Dakota, Texas,
Washington, and Wisconsin. Two percent are international students. Four
students are the children of Wells alumnae.
In
the previous five years, when Wells identified as a women’s college, the
College received an average of 396 applications annually. The College expects
to raise total enrollment from 425 to 600 students over the next five years.
Among
the students planning to attend Wells next fall is Stephanie Redmond of
Camas, Washington. Class valedictorian, a student leader, and athlete,
Stephanie was accepted by Cornell University and the University of California
at Berkeley, but chose Wells. Redmond is Wells College founder Henry Wells’
great-great-great-great-granddaughter.
Redmond
said, “I chose Wells because of the intimate attention given to the students.
The opportunity for internships built into the curriculum and the connection
with Cornell were also very significant draws.” She plans to participate
in Wells’ engineering program affiliated with nearby Cornell.
July, 2005
Earlier Articles
in Wells College News:
Wells
College News Archive
Last updated 02/14/2006 |