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For Immediate Release: October 29, 1999
Founders of Montgomery
College’s Macklin Business Institute To be Honored Nationally as
Community College Benefactors of Year - Gordon and Marilyn Macklin
to Receive Award at November 5 Gala
(Washington,
D.C.) – Gordon and Marilyn Macklin, whose $1.26 million gift this
year to Montgomery College helped to found the College’s newly launched
Macklin Business Institute, are being recognized as a 1999 Benefactor
of the Year by the American Association of Community College’s Council
for Resource Development.
Selected from hundreds of nominees
at the more than 1,200 two-year colleges across the nation, the
Macklins are among 10 regional benefactors behind honored by the
Council this year. They will each receive their award at the Gala
Benefactor Awards Banquet on Friday, November 5 at the Hyatt Regency
Washington on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C. The event will also
feature the presentation of a special Outstanding Benefactor Award
to actor/comedian Tom Arnold, a graduate and major supporter of
Indian Hills Community College in Ottumwa, Indiana.
Gordon and Marilyn Macklin and the
other 1999 benefactor honorees are being recognized “for showing
our students the path to their future, guiding our institutions
with strength and vision, and sharing a spirit of giving that leads
us into the next century,” according to Kathleen Guy, 1999 CRD President.
She added that each of the recipients “demonstrate the partnership
that community colleges have with corporate America, but also the
grass roots support from individuals and communities who know first-hand
the importance of community colleges in education and training.”
“We are extremely proud that two of
Montgomery College’s true heroes – indeed, two of our community’s
true heroes – are being recognized with this very deserving and
prestigious honor,” said Dr. Charlene R. Nunley, President of Montgomery
College. “Their most generous contribution to our institution speaks
volumes about their commitment to serving and giving back to our
community, and to their recognition of the important role that community
colleges play in the development of our students and the community,
as a whole.”
A Bethesda, Maryland resident, Gordon
Macklin is the former president of the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc., which formerly owned the NASDAQ stock exchange. He
is currently on the board of MCI WorldCom, as well as dozens of
other major corporations and non-profit organizations.
Montgomery College significantly improves
the quality of the workforce here and has the opportunity to do
more,” said Macklin earlier this year, in announcing his donation.
“It attracts industry, jobs, and greater prosperity. As citizens,
we have an opportunity to help our community grow and prosper."
Because his daughter and her husband also graduated from MC, he
mused, “In addition to being a great investment, Montgomery College
is also a great place to find a son-in-law.”
The Macklins’ donation helped to establish
the Macklin Business Institute, which provides a rigorous business
honors program for selected sophomore-level students. Each participating
student receives a scholarship, participates in a business internship
and is teamed with a faculty and corporate mentor. The program is
currently in its first semester of operation, with an initial class
of 10 students. Participating students will have the opportunity
to transfer to top business schools.
"The focused programs of the Macklin
Business Institute are designed to provide students with the skills,
values, and experiences that are essential in the rapidly changing,
high-technology world of business today," said Jeffrey Schwartz,
director of the Institute.
At the time it was presented, the Macklins’
gift represented the largest gift ever given by an individual donor
to a Maryland community college. Shortly after it was received,
Montgomery College was also the beneficiary of a $1.3 million gift
from northern Virginia computer systems engineer and investor Paul
Peck, whose contribution helped to found the recently dedicated
Paul Peck Humanities Institute.
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