DATE: 14
November 2000
TO: Board
of Regents
FROM: G.
M. Dennison
President,
The University of Montana
RE: Campus Report for the
November, 2000 Board of Regents’ Meeting

·
UM now has 49 National Merit Scholars—18 of whom began as
freshmen this fall.
·
UM received a $7 million grant from the Centers for
Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) to advance research in neurological
diseases.
·
The Davidson Honors College grew this fall to over 600
students for the first time since its founding nine years ago.
·
UM’s Volunteer Action Services and ITRC recently received a
Digital Divide AmeriCorps program grant of approximately $245,000 from the
Corporation for National Service. The
AmeriCorps program will develop computer technology training programs for low-income
youth and families.
·
The Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (CESU)
includes UM, Montana State, Idaho, Washington State, Utah State, and
Salish-Kootenai in a consortium to coordinate researchers in national parks to
lay the groundwork for studies ranging from grizzly bears to noxious
weeds.
·
Gifts to the UM Foundation in FY 2000 set a record at $15.3
million. Just over 47 percent of that
amount--$7.2 million—goes to endowments.
·
UM became one of 40 institutions in the U.S. to have Access
Grid Nodes which are used to engage in new collaborative audio-visual and
software transmissions for long-distance collaboration.
·
The John C. Hoyt Athletic Complex, the newly-completed west
wing in Adams Center funded by private donations, now houses more than 60
Intercollegiate Athletics’ staff members.
·
After a mere six years of existence, the Women’s Grizzly
Soccer Team recently won the Big Sky Conference Championship and, for the
second time, made it to the NCAA Tournament.
·
Grizzly Football clinched its fifth Big Sky Conference
Championship in six years and will make the 1-AA playoffs for the eighth
consecutive year.
·
Plans continue for a $300,000 privately-funded renovation of
Dornblaser Track, including new bleacher seats, track re-surfacing, and
landscape improvements.
·
Dennis McAuliffe, Native American Journalist-in-Residence,
was chosen by the Freedom Forum to help lead its national diversity
initiative. As such, he visits Native
American communities as an ambassador for diversity in the nation’s newsrooms
and serves as a model for recruiting and retaining minority students.
·
Dr. Barbara Hollmann, Vice President for Student Affairs,
received the Region V Fred Turner Award for Outstanding Service to NASPA, the
National Association of Student Personnel Administrators, at the recent
regional conference.
·
In October, UM kicked off a Year of Dialogue on
multicultural topics and issues which will include guest speakers and classroom
discussion on related concerns.
·
UM President George M. Dennison has accepted an appointment
to the Commission on Colleges of the Northwest Association of Schools and
Colleges.
·
In October two couples—the late Bill and Rosemary Gallagher
and Dennis and Phyllis Washington—received UM’s Order of the Grizzly Award for significant
civic and philanthropic contributions.
