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Anonymous Gift Sparks One Million Dollar
Renovation Project
Wells has received a gift of $250,000
from an anonymous donor to begin renovation of Weld House, one of the college's
five historic residence halls.
"This gift will enable Wells to be a more cohesive, residential community,"
said the college's Dean of Students Susan H. Ryan. "Weld has been under-utilized
in recent years - its re-opening will create a tight circle of residence
halls at the center of campus and enable all our students to feel they
are a part of the close-knit community that Henry Wells envisioned when
he founded the college."
In 1993, Weld was closed as a student
residence due to extensive deferred maintenance. Since that time, it has
provided housing for conferences, visiting sports teams, parents, and alumnae
visitors.
Named in honor of William Ernest Weld,
the college's eighth president who served from 1936-46, the Greek Revival
structure was designed by Frank Frederick Larson and built in 1948. Weld
housed 57 students and a head resident when it first opened. In the 1960s,
it served as Das deutsche Haus (The German House) for summer language institutes
and became the college's international student dormitory in the early 1980s.
The $250,000 gift has been pledged
by a member of the Wells Class of 1937 and comes in the form of a challenge.
In order to fully realize the donation, the college must raise an additional
$750,000 by June 30, 1997. "The donor has great personal affection and
respect for former President and Mrs. Weld and their family and wishes
to honor them. Restoring the residence hall that bears their name is also
a top priority in our current comprehensive campaign," says Arthur J. Bellinzoni,
Wells' director of planned and leadership giving and professor of religion.
Renovation plans include both improvements
to infrastructure and cosmetic refurbishment of living spaces. The building
will also be networked as part of the college's technology initiative.
The anonymous gift will be used to restore public spaces on the first floor,
the resident adviser suite, and three student rooms in honor of Dr. Weld
and his family.
October, 1996
Wells Representatives Attend ACLU Celebration
in Texas
In this election year when women are noticeably
absent in the race for the nation's highest offices, the American Civil
Liberties Union in Texas honored the first woman to have her name placed
in nomination for vice president of the United States: former Wells College
President Frances Tarlton "Sissy" Farenthold.
On Saturday, September 28, the Greater
Houston Chapter of the ACLU presented Farenthold with The Lifetime Achievement
Award for Civil Liberties, the organization's highest honor. Arthur J.
Bellinzoni, professor of religion and director of planned and leadership
giving at Wells, and Attilio Rezzonico, manager of Wells' bookshop, attended
the event.
Bellinzoni met Farenthold when she
served as Wells' president from 1976-80. "I was honored to be invited to
Texas," he says. "The most impressive thing about Sissy's years at Wells
and her distinguished life of public service is her dedication to reform,
equal rights for all, environmental responsibility, humanized government,
and most of all her integrity."
A native Texan, Farenthold successfully
ran for the Texas legislature in 1968. She ran for the Texas Democratic
gubernatorial nomination in 1970 and 1972. During that era, she also had
an impact on national politics: her name was put forward as a possible
vice-presidential candidate at the Democratic National Convention in Miami
- the first time a woman's name had ever been brought forth in that capacity.
From 1973-94, she repeatedly served
as a human rights observer and sometimes leader of delegations of elected
women officials to Iraq, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Cuba, South
Korea, the former Soviet Union, and other countries.
Farenthold was the first woman president
of Wells. She balanced the college budget, increased alumnae giving, established
a new athletic facility, boosted enrollment, and made curricular innovations.
She also founded the Public Leadership Education Network (PLEN) - a consortium
of women's colleges that offers programs designed to prepare women for
active involvement in political life and public leadership.
Farenthold received a letter from President
Clinton which she shared with Bellinzoni. It reads in part: "In a lifetime
of monumental achievement, many things stand out. I want to thank you for
two in particular. First, for your service to Texas, to the nation, and
to the Democratic Party. Second, for being such a good friend to us [Hillary
and me] over all these years."
October, 1996
Wells Soccer Team Wins Conference Title
In their first year of competition in
the Atlantic Women's Colleges Conference, the Wells College soccer team
won the AWCC tournament on Saturday, October 26, defeating Hood College
and Mary Baldwin
College.

The tournament was played at Hood College
in Frederick, Maryland. Wells defeated Hood 3-0 in the semi-final game
to advance into the championship round. Goals were scored by first-year
students Jalina Kahler of Cold Brook, New York, Corine Sebast of Burnt
Hills, New York, and senior Lillian Atteridge of Amherst, Mass.
In the championship game, Wells defeated
Mary Baldwin College of Staunton, Virginia 1-0. The Wells goal was scored
by Jalina Kahler. Kahler was named the tournament's MVP.
"We were absolutely thrilled to win
this tournament in our first year in the league," said Wells' Soccer Coach
Chris Perkins. "Our students are great players, and they truly deserve
this."
The AWCC is committed to promoting
the highest level of excellence for women in academics and athletics through
organized regular and post-season competition among its members.
In addition to competing against teams
in the AWCC, Wells competes against schools in New York State and is a
member of the New York State Women's College Athletic Association.
October, 1996
A Wells Student's Research Contributes
to Tropical Disease Study
Wells junior Katherine W. Abold synthesized a new compound last summer
that may eventually lead to new treatments for malaria. She made the discovery
while working at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Washington,
D.C. as part of the college's internship program. Her discovery is currently
being analyzed and tested for anti-bacterial and anti-fungal activity.
Abold is a biological and chemical
sciences major with a concentration in chemistry at Wells. Her internship
was in the medicinal chemistry department of the division of experimental
therapeutics at Walter Reed where she joined a research group under the
supervision of Dr. Nancy Roth that develops anti-malarial compounds from
natural products. "Dr. Roth gave me ideas about how to do the experiments,
and I developed them by myself," says Abold.
Dr. Linda S. Schwab, professor of chemistry
at Wells, provided contact information for Walter Reed's Col. John Scovill
to set up the internship. "Walter Reed is a premier location for the study
of tropical diseases," says Schwab. "I knew Kate enjoyed synthetic work
in medicinal chemistry and the study of natural products."
Abold modified the structure of artemisinin,
a natural anti-malarial substance found in plants of the wormwood family,
used since ancient times in China for the treatment of malarial fevers.
She prepared the new compound, deoxyartelinic acid, by removing an oxygen
atom from the peroxide bridge of artemisinin. In addition to her work in
chemical synthesis, she evaluated the anti-malarial activity of various
compounds prepared at Walter Reed.
"Research I was doing at Wells was
very similar to what I did in the internship," says Abold. "The lab techniques
were about the same. The technology at Walter Reed is more sophisticated,
so I had to be trained to use it. In the lab, I was well-prepared." She
continues to explore anti-cancer compounds at Wells and plans another internship
at Walter Reed in January.
These research experiences have helped
shape Abold's plans for the future. "After the internship I made the decision
that research on anti-cancer compounds will be my career," she says. "I
want to go into an M.D./Ph.D. program. I'm going into the Air Force, and
what I would ultimately like to do is work in the medicinal chemistry field
as a doctor who does research rather than work directly with patients."
A resident of Woodbridge, Virginia,
Abold is involved in many college activities. She is a member of the soccer
team, a singer with the Whirligigs vocal group, a resident adviser, and
a participant in the Air Force ROTC program.
Schwab is proud of the fact that an
undergraduate from Wells is already making important contributions to science
and medicine. "Kate got off to a great start in the biological chemical
sciences major at Wells since she had the advanced placement credit to
begin her college study of chemistry at the second course, Organic Chemistry.
In particular, her coursework in Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products
was directly relevant to her malaria research. These two courses are not
invariably available in college chemistry programs even singly, much less
together - it's an excellent combination for someone with Kate's interests
and I think helped her to tie together her other coursework in biology
and chemistry." Abold has been involved in research projects with faculty
members at Wells for several semesters, and this experience has given
her
not only practical experience but also the setting to exercise her curiosity,
creativity, and independence.
"Finding out just which features of
a chemical structure are necessary for a desired kind of biological activity
is the cornerstone of the drug development process. Potential new pharmaceuticals
are always valuable. The more we learn, the better may be the range of
treatments we will eventually have for diseases like malaria, endemic in
so much of the world," says Schwab.
October, 1996
Other Articles
in Wells College News:
| September,
2002 |
September,
2000. - May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| August, 2002 |
September,
1999 - August, 2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| September,
2001. - May.,2002 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
|
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
November - December,1996 |
|
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
|
February -March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
|
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
|
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
|
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
|
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
February - March,
1996 |
Last updated 01/22/2003
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