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This list of Colby College alumni includes graduates, non-graduate former students, current students, and honorary degree recipients of Colby College. Colby, which was founded in 1813, has a total of more than 25,000 living alumni.
The Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award was established by Colby College in his honor. It is awarded annually to a member of the press who "has contributed to the nation's journalistic achievement." A major classroom building at Colby is also named for Lovejoy. An inscribed memorial rock from his birthplace was installed in a grassy square at Colby.
The Colby Echo is published every Wednesday that the College is in session, with 1,300 copies printed each week. A full year subscription costs $60. The paper is available at many locations throughout campus, including the three dining halls, the Street in Miller Library, Pulver Pavilion, the Diamond building, the alumni center, the admissions building and the athletic center.
Pages in category "Colby College alumni" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 264 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Ninetta May "Nettie" Runnals (January 14, 1885 – June 1, 1980) was an American academic and college administrator. She served as Dean of Women at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, her alma mater, for 27 years, advocating for gender equality for women students and faculty members.
The news of his untimely death sent shockwaves through the community he served, leaving c. In a somber moment during Monday’s broadcast on KTLA, Colby Rubin, the son of the late Sam Rubin ...
The inaugural issue of the Colby Echo student newspaper, 1877. Colby's 2,000 students, evenly divided between men and women, come from every state and more than 60 countries. Colby students are listed as 67.2% white, 10.2% unknown race, [73] 24% of its students being ALANA (Asian, Latino, African American, etc.) and 7% being international. [74]
Cotter was the longest-serving president at Colby, throughout his years also teaching Constitutional law in the Government Department. Under his leadership, the College increased its endowment from $23 million to 373 million (1979–2000), constructed or expanded more than 20 buildings, and added more than thirty endowed faculty chairs.