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Global Citizenship at Macalester: A Timeline
1885: Originally a preparatory school, Macalester begins
offering college-level classes.
1900: An early mission program of the Presbyterian Church
sends Macalester students around the world.
1915:
Catharine Deaver Lealtad becomes Macalester's first African American
graduate, earning a double major degree in chemistry and history
with highest honors. Commissioned a major in the U.S. Army, she
supervises a medical clinic for displaced persons in war-torn Germany.
By the time she dies at age 93, she has practiced in Harlem, Mexico
City, China and Puerto Rico.
1939: Charles Turck becomes Macalester's ninth president,
emphasizing a commitment to internationalism. The following year,
Turck hires G. Theodore Mitau '40, a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany,
to head the Political Science Department, despite a rule barring
non-Christians from such an office.
1942:
Esther Torii Suzuki is released from a Japanese detention camp in
Portland, Ore., specifically to attend Macalester. Although her
sister Eunice joins her in 1944, the rest of their Japanese American
family remains in an Idaho internment camp. Suzuki becomes a social
worker, writer, storyteller and human rights activist. In 2002,
the Lealtad-Suzuki Center is founded at Macalester to "provide
multicultural and diversity training and development to Macalester
faculty, staff and students."
1943: The Macalester Intercultural Forum discussion group
is formed to "encourage discussion of problems relating to
the divergent cultural groups that make up the people of the United
States."
1946: Yahya Armajani, a historian from Teheran, Iran, joins
the faculty. An authority on Middle East history, Armajani promotes
international understanding during his 28 years at Macalester. Also
that year, The International Studies Program is founded.
1950: President Turck raises the flag
of the newly formed United Nations in the center of campus. The
flag still flies today. Also that year, Sociology Professor Paul
M. Berry sends his race relations class out to do practical investigation
of race relations in the Twin Cities.
1950s: The Cosmopolitan Club, a group of international and
U.S. students, starts organizing International Weekends that draw
college students from throughout the region.
1959:
A young man from Ghana, Kofi Annan, enrolls at Macalester where
he becomes a state champion orator, a member of the 1960 track team
which wins MIAC championships and president of the Cosmopolitan
Club. He graduates in 1961 with a degree in economics.
1961: Macalester opens its International
Center, providing a central location for study away information
and advising for both international and U.S. students. The same
year, the college founds the World Press Institute program designed
to increase international understanding of the United States by
offering journalists around the world an intensive introduction
to the country and its people.
1962: An exchange program with predominantly black colleges
is established at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga., and Knoxville
College in Knoxville, Tenn. Also that year, Student Action for Human
Rights recruits students to participate in Project Awareness, a
summer recreation program on Indian reservations.
1967: The first of 36 international students from Europe,
Asia, Latin America and the Middle East come to Macalester's International
Leader Scholars and Wallace International Scholars programs, designed
to identify and support people with leadership potential in their
country.
1968:
The Hubert H. Humphrey Professorship in International Affairs is
endowed to bring international scholars of the highest caliber to
teach at Macalester. Humphrey teaches political science at Macalester
from 1943-44 and from 1969-70.
1969: The new Expanded Educational Opportunities program
brings 75 freshmen students of color to Macalester. Also that year,
the first Indian Week is celebrated with a pow-wow, bilingual chapel
service, speakers on Indian education and welfare and a Buffy Sainte-Marie
concert. And the Macalester College Black Choir is founded, seeking
"to glorify God by uplifting people of all nationalities through
African American music," founder Gary Hines '74 explains. The
group changes its name in 1971 to the Sounds of Blackness and goes
on to win a Grammy Award.
1972: The theme is Awareness, Education
and Unity as Macalester celebrates its first Hispanic Week.
1980: Earl Bowman, an African American
student who graduated in 1950 and became Dean of Students in 1973,
is one of 12 charter members inducted into the Macalester Athletic
Hall of Fame. Co-captain of the 1949 football team and holder of
numerous gridiron records, as captain of the 1950 track team Bowman
breaks the state pole vault record which he set the previous year.
1987: Macalester hosts a conference on the emerging policy
of openness in what was the Soviet Union.
1988: Macalester's Community Service Office is established
to foster an ethic of lifelong service within all members of the
Macalester community.
1992: Macalester's long-term mission reinforces
the college's emphasis on internationalism, diversity and community
service by setting goals to attract students and faculty from an
even greater diversity of nations, strengthening the International
Studies program, making study-away opportunities available to even
more students and faculty and having students volunteer their time
in the community.
1993:
Walter F. Mondale '50, newly named U.S. ambassador to Japan, speaks
at Macalester, accompanied by former President Jimmy Carter, for
whom Mondale served as vice president.
1994: Ahmed Samatar is appointed to the newly created position
of Dean of International Studies and Programming and initiates Macalester's
International Roundtable. The Roundtable is established as an annual
fall event in which world scholars come to campus to discuss pressing
global issues such as ethnicity and identity, the environment and
the role of literature, the arts and culture in an era of globalization.
1995: The biennial Faculty Development International Seminars,
which engage up to 15 Macalester faculty in a three-week intensive
seminar and research with overseas colleagues, are founded. Faculty
travel to Hungary, 1995; Brazil, 1997; South Africa, 2000; Malaysia,
2002; Turkey 2004 and PRC/Taiwan, 2006.
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1950: President Turck raises the flag
of the newly formed United Nations in the center of campus.
The flag still flies today.
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1998: U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan '61 returns to the
Macalester campus to deliver the keynote address at Macalester's
109th commencement exercises.
2002: Macalester hires its first Dean
of Multicultural Life to help "integrate the ethos and values
of historically under-represented peoples, discourses, thoughts,
and ideas as a catalyst for transforming the traditional ways of
doing the work of the college into a more inclusive model."
2003: Macalester's faculty approve the creation of a new
Department of American Studies: Comparative Racial Formations which
connects programs of African American Studies and Comparative North
American Studies. Also that year, Macalester becomes a founding
member of and holds its inaugural event for Project Pericles, a
not-for-profit organization that encourages commitments by colleges
and universities to include social responsibility and participatory
citizenship as an essential part of their educational programs,
on campus and in the community.
2004: Macalester students contribute more than 50,000 hours
to the community working at Habitat for Humanity, human service
organizations, environmental and arts organizations and shelters.
Students, staff and alumni also have "reading lunch buddies"
at Linwood A+ Elementary School in St. Paul. Over the course of
their college careers, 92 percent of Macalester students are involved
in the community.
2005: President Brian Rosenberg announces the creation of
an Institute for Global Citizenship after receiving a recommendation
from a campus-wide committee which suggests creating a single, well-supported
institutional unit to promote rigorous learning that prepares students
for lives as "global citizen-leaders;" innovative scholarship
that enriches the public and academic discourse on questions of
global significance; and service that enhances such learning and
scholarship while enriching the communities within which Macalester
is embedded. Ahmed Samatar, James Wallace Professor and dean of
International Studies and Programming is named dean, and Andrew
Latham, associate professor, political science and Karin Trail-Johnson,
assistant dean of students and director of the Community Service
Office, are both named associate deans.
- During the past five years, more than half of Macalester students
study abroad for a semester or more in over 63 countries.
- Nearly 200 students receive academic credit for supervised internships
with local, national and international businesses and organizations
each year.
- Macalester's U.S. students are from 49 states plus the District
of Columbia. Of U.S. students, 18 percent are students of color.
In all, 12 percent of Macalester students are international students
from 78 countries.
- The college hires Jane Rhodes, the first Dean for the Study
of Race and Ethnicity, whose charge is to play a major role in
engaging the campus community as a whole in the exploration of
race and ethnicity in the history and structure of U.S. society.
In addition, the Dean attends to issues of race and ethnicity
throughout the campus and curriculum.
2006:
In January, 21 students and seven staff members from Macalester
travel to Gulfport, Miss., to assist with hurricane relief efforts.
Later that year, New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Thomas L. Friedman and United Nations Secretary-General (Kofi)
Annan ('61) speak at Macalester as part of the inaugural events
of the Institute for Global Citizenship.
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