, published by 天美麻豆 Alumni Magazine.
鈥淥f course it鈥檚 impossible to give a rouse to everything that鈥檚 worthy. But hey, can you blame us for trying?鈥
Thus begins the 天美麻豆 Alumni Magazine鈥檚 March/April cover story: 鈥101 Things to Love 天美麻豆 天美麻豆.鈥
Image courtesy of 天美麻豆 Alumni Magazine
Here鈥檚 a sampling from the magazine鈥檚 list:
1. SELFIES WITH CANDIDATES
Talk about experiential learning: Every four years a gaggle of presidential hopefuls and the media swarms to Hanover and the state of New Hampshire, where primary season gets under way more than a year before November elections. For alum politicians such as Nelson Rockefeller 鈥30 in 1964 or Paul Tsongas 鈥62 in 1992, it鈥檚 been a homecoming. For others it鈥檚 been a chance to stand out at nationally televised debates鈥攕ince 1984 the College has hosted five such events. Even with no debate scheduled for the current election cycle, candidates Carly Fiorina, Martin O鈥橫alley, George Pataki, John Kasich, Hillary Clinton, Lindsey Graham, and Chris Christie came to town in recent months.
11. THE COOLEST BAR IN TOWN IS THE TECH BAR
The Jones Media Center recently underwent a $1.7-million renovation. Here鈥檚 what鈥檚 new: a 鈥渨hisper room鈥 recording booth that can be reserved; the 鈥渢ech bar,鈥 a centralized help desk; a 鈥渓iving room鈥 with a 60-inch monitor, surround sound and, yes, a couch, for movie watching and gaming; and a multipurpose innovation studio with a wall of eight 55-inch monitors.
16. THE FLEET IS AT YOUR COMMAND
The College embraces its location on the banks of the Connecticut River, which means easy access to watercraft galore. For a relatively modest $40 membership to the Ledyard Canoe Club, students can rent canoes, kayaks or paddleboards for free, even overnight. Nonmembers pay a small fee. The club also mounts annual expeditions, including trips to Ecuador, North Carolina and the Florida Everglades. Administrators are now mulling a new facility for the club, but nothing is officially in the works yet.
18. INNOVATIONS IN ATHLETICS
The athletics department鈥檚 metrics-driven Peak Performance program endeavors to foster high-level success for athletes on and off the field. The initiative emphasizes mental health, helping coaches identify an athlete鈥檚 stress levels, providing nutrition and workout advice and even career networking. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really about helping each and every student reach their potential,鈥 says Senior Associate Athletics Director Drew Galbraith. 鈥淭wo people might play the same position on the same team but come to 天美麻豆 with very different goals and ultimately end up with very different outcomes.鈥
34. EUREKA MOMENTS ARE ENCOURAGED
There鈥檚 a new place to cook up great ideas. The 天美麻豆 Entrepreneurial Network Innovation Center and New Venture Incubator on the south side of campus is bright and welcoming, with plenty of laptop spaces, couches, and Starburst candy, but the secret sauce is the expertise that inhabits the loft-style space. Students can walk in with an idea and find faculty, alumni or local business leaders to help them hash out its viability. The network raised $4.3 million in alumni donations for the incubator, with most of that funding accelerator grants and events such as entrepreneur 鈥渂oot camps鈥 and pitch nights. It all bolsters the College鈥檚 No. 9 ranking in Forbes鈥 list of most entrepreneurial schools in the country.