Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Creativity & Innovation Leadership Change

Dear CC Community,

It is with gratitude and appreciation that I am letting our community know that Dez Stone Menendez ’00 has resigned her position as director of innovation to pursue other interests. Over the past six and half years, Dez created and implemented a vision for creativity and innovation at Colorado College that has been impactful and she and her team have expanded the parameters of innovation programs within higher education.

In keeping with CC’s history of challenging educational norms, Dez designed Creativity & Innovation at CC to take a more radical, unique, and holistic approach to innovation than many of our peer institutions. Rather than building a stand-alone program, Dez implemented a broader, integrated vision to design new and creative programs.

Creativity and innovation have been sewn into the fabric of Colorado College since our founding in 1874 and will continue to be a connective tissue through all that we do. Please join me in thanking Dez for pushing us forward and wishing her good luck on her next adventure.

Sincerely,

L. Song Richardson

President

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Around the Block – Exciting Things Afoot

Presenting: “Mike on the Mic,” a podcast series featuring Mike Edmonds

ID: bald, smiling black man wearing glasses in a button down shirt and blue plaid blazer, with the Mike on the Mike logo, which includes a microphone and gold box
This week, CC launched Mike on the Mic, a podcast series featuring Mike Edmonds, senior vice president, in the months leading up to his retirement after 30 years of service at CC. Edmonds hosts faculty members and local leaders for conversations about topics that matter. 

In the first episode of Mike on the Mic, Edmonds is joined by Margaret Sabin and David Steinbruner – two pillars of healthcare in Colorado Springs – for a conversation about mental health and its effects on our college community. Sabin is the past president of Children’s Hospital Colorado Springs and former president and CEO of Penrose Hospital. Steinbruner is the chief medical officer at UCHealth Memorial Hospital and an emergency room physician.

Over three decades of service to Colorado College, Edmonds changed the landscape of CC and illustrated the power of inclusive leadership. As acting co-president with Robert Moore from July 2020-June 2021, he was the first Black leader in CC history to serve as president. He was dean of students/vice president for Student Life from 1991-2020, and currently serves as senior vice president. Edmonds served and mentored countless students through his many years leading Student Life, holding especially strong relationships with varsity student-athletes and teams.

A decorated public speaker, Edmonds has been a coach and mentor with CC’s speech and debate team and used his communications expertise as a community change agent, serving on many boards of directors throughout Colorado Springs. Above all, Edmonds has demonstrated steadfast care and concern for students as his guiding principle and made an indelible impact on the CC community.

Black History Month

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Cornel West
Cornel West is a social justice advocate and an elite scholar of African American studies. West’s written contributions to academia have and continue to inspire conversations about race and injustice, lighting a path for other brilliant activist scholars to follow. His passion and vocalism add value to higher education and is an example of how one voice can mobilize revolutionary change, evoke new meaning, and spark awareness about racial issues plaguing society today. 
This Black History Month, we highlight West and his contributions: reminding us that our words have power, whether written or communicated; and to take time to reflect on how we choose to use our words and how our contributions will forever impact history.
Take a look at the Black History Month event and resource page for more opportunities to learn, and for more information regarding happenings on campus and around town.

“In The Heights” Opens at the Fine Arts Center March 3

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From the creator and star of “Hamilton” comes Lin-Manuel Miranda’s first Tony Award-winning musical, a love-letter to the community in upper Manhattan where he still lives. “In The Heights” tells the universal story of a vibrant community in New York’s Washington Heights neighborhood – a place where the coffee from the corner bodega is light and sweet, the windows are always open, and the breeze carries the rhythm of three generations of music. It’s a community on the brink of change, full of hopes, dreams, and pressures, where the biggest struggles can be deciding which traditions you take with you, and which ones you leave behind.

Directed by Elise Santora, who won the Henry Award for outstanding actress for her work on stage at the FAC in “Anna in the Tropics,” and choreographed by Julio Agustin, “In The Heights” boasts a production team and cast comprised of people of color. “These stories are everyone’s stories,” said Santora. “It’s parents trying to put their child through college; it’s an independent, fierce woman fighting for her business. It’s about created family, a better life, and what home really looks like. I want the audience to be soaked in that community feeling.”

Student Rush Tickets

Students can purchase tickets the day of the performance at the FAC front desk for $15 (Students receive a free rush ticket one hour before the performance). Tickets subject to availability, and must be purchased in person with a CC Gold Card.

CC Staff & Faculty

CC staff and faculty can purchase tickets the day of the performance at the FAC front desk for $25. Tickets subject to availability, and must be purchased in person with a CC Gold Card.

State of the Rockies 2023 Poll Shows Widespread Support for Conservation 

ID: two white backpackers standing on a hill looking off into a valley
By Alexa Gromko

Colorado College’s 13th annual State of the Rockies Project Conservation in the West Poll shows strong support for conservation policies among Westerners despite inflation, drought, water shortages, and overcrowding.

The poll, which surveyed the views of voters in eight Mountain West states, including Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, New Mexico, Montana, Nevada, Idaho, and Arizona, found that the majority (70 to 90 percent) support conservation goals like protecting wildlife habitats and migration routes, ensuring healthier forests, preventing light pollution that blocks out stars, and safeguarding drinking water.

The poll surveyed at least 400 registered voters in each of eight Western states for a total of 3,413-voter sample, which included an over-sample of Black and Native American voters. The survey was conducted between January 5-22, 2023, and the effective margin of error is +2.4%. The full survey and individual state surveys are available on the State of the Rockies webpage.

Charlie Blumenstein Internship

ID: info graphic in gold with a photo of a rivr through the trees, and the words
The Charlie Blumenstein Stewardship Assistant position allows one Colorado College student to spend a summer dedicated to water and wildlife conservation.
The selected intern will spend the summer at The Nature Conservancy’s (TNC) Carpenter Ranch in Hayden, Colorado (near Steamboat, Colorado). This experience offers the opportunity to engage with visitors, work alongside the ranch manager in maintaining the property, and gain a better understanding of how Carpenter Ranch supports researchers, Colorado water rights, and much more. 
Deadline for submission is March 17, so make sure to apply now! Posting and application details can be found in Handshake. Once posted, all applications must be completed on The Nature Conservancy’s Careers page (search “Blumenstein”). Contact the Career Center with questions.

Sociology and Film Departments Collaborate to Screen “Framing Agnes”

ID: movie poster for Framing Agnes
By Grace C. Smith

Cayce Hughes, assistant professor of sociology, hosted trans filmmaker Chase Joynt and sociologist Kristen Schilt to screen their film “Framing Agnes,” at Cornerstone Arts Center on Dec. 12. The film, which had premiered at Sundance this past year, is about a woman named Agnes, who approached the UCLA Medical Center in the late 1950s seeking sex-reassignment surgery, and how this event would go on to define the medical and social scientific understanding of transgender people well into the 1990s.

For Hughes, the master class and film had powerful ties. “We focused on the social construction of deviance and the ways that power shapes this process. ‘Framing Agnes’ is a window into the ways that powerful institutions, including medicine and social science, play a role in constructing categories around transgender identity that affect trans lives in profound ways. At the same time, the film centers trans folks’ responses and resistance to these mechanisms of social control, highlighting their agency in the face of constraint. That tension and interplay between individuals and institutions is at the heart of sociological inquiry, so I think the film checks so many relevant boxes.”

As students wrapped up the class and watched the film, Hughes shared, “I hope students are inspired by the possibilities of trans-disciplinary (pun intended) collaboration. One of the most exciting things about learning in a liberal arts setting like CC is the opportunity to be exposed to different ways of approaching a topic or question, to learn different methodological and theoretical approaches, and to explore how different disciplines challenge and complement one another.”

Photo of the Week

Nate Watson ’26 working at a WSO Priddy Experience with Habitat for Humanity  in Woodland Park on Jan. 26. 
Photo by Lonnie Timmons III 
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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

ADEI Updates and More!

ADEI Updates! Read All About It! 

Black History is American History

Virtual Event ✊🏾

Ernest Crim III is a Black History Application Specialist who uses Black History to empower and educate families and train educators on how to best reach their students in a culturally compliant manner. Mr. Crim is a former high school educator of 12 years, who now teaches Black History to the world through social media with a reach of nearly 500,000. Additionally, he is the CEO of Crim’s Cultural Consulting LLC, an international speaker, an author of two bestsellers and a passionate progressive education activist, who has been featured on PBS, CBS, NBC & Newsweek amongst various other outlets. To Ernest, his purpose is to creatively strategize how we can use our glorious past to create a better future, entrenched in equitable practices. 

Mr. Crim will facilitate an engaging VIRTUAL conversation on February 28th at 3:30 PM MST. The conversation will focus on past and present-day occurrences that show how Black History is repeating itself. Topics include affirmative action, policing, black history bands, and more. Mr. Crim will provide a vivid account using his own lived experience to provide a captivating and insightful dialogue that illuminates how Black History is, in fact, American History! 

Register NOW by clicking the button below!

 

Zoom Registration

Introducing: The ACE (antiracism community engagement) Grant
Check it out!


The ADEI leadership team recognizes the need to support and promote educational opportunities outside of the team’s current capacity. There are many programs, activities, and events that embody antiracism, diversity, equity, and inclusion (ADEI) that are of professional development value. Department budget constraints should not deprive those interested in furthering our mission and personal growth, so we have decided to introduce an ADEI grant program to help support and offset some of the financial costs associated with participating, attending, or creating ADEI programming.  

The process is simple. Complete the attached form describing your funding needs and purpose at least three weeks before the due date of the activity. The ADEI leadership team will then review your request evaluating alignment with the four pillars (courageous conversations & bold action, thriving communities, student, transformations, and elevating CC’s profile)—using an antiracist lens, promoting mental wellness, and making things sustainable. You will be notified via email within one week about the status of your award. The grant will run until all funds have been exhausted, at which time we will notify the campus of the acceptance period ending. Our goal is to make the ACE grant an annual opportunity for staff, faculty, and students alike to get involved and stay engaged, furthering our commitment for as long as funds allow. To complete your application use the button below.

ACE Grant Form

Connect with Diverse Minds Across CC

We are looking to check the temperature about a couple of unique opportunities and ways to engage the CC community in conversations about ADEI-related topics. We encourage you to take 5 minutes and complete this interest survey to offer insight into how we can best support professional development by mobilizing innovative strategies across our institution.

Click Here to Complete Survey

ADEI Consulting Form

Looking for customized support and/or collaborative resources…fill out our ADEI Consulting Request Form!

ADEI Consulting Request Form

Introducing the ADEI Stewardship Certificate!

Investing in Knowledge.  Building Skills.  Changing Attitudes.

Overseen by the ADEI Leadership Team, and signed by the College President, the ADEI Stewardship Certificate celebrates your commitment to continuous learning and unlearning practices that foster a deeper understanding of antiracism, diversity, equity, and inclusion.

A series of events designated as ADEI Stewardship eligible throughout the school year will be presented.  These events include but are not limited to The Dismantling Hate Series, The Antiracist Book Club, Butler Center Workshops, Crown Center Development Series and others. Sign in at any six designated events to begin working on yours today.

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