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Cedar Crest College's President, Dorothy Gulbenkian Blaney, Dies

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  • Cedar Crest College's President, Dorothy Gulbenkian Blaney, Dies

    Cedar Crest College's President, Dorothy Gulbenkian Blaney, Dies
    By Melanie Hughes and Genevieve Marshall Of The Morning Call

    http://www.mcall.com/news/local/all-a1_5blan eyjul11,0,6598481.story?coll=all
    -newslocal-hed

    J uly 11, 2006

    Dorothy Gulbenkian Blaney, who for 17 years as president of Cedar Crest
    College championed the cause of elevating the education of women to
    the same rigorous academic achievement once reserved only for men,
    died about 5 p.m. Monday in her home on campus, a college spokesman
    said. She was 65.

    Blaney, who took over the Allentown women's college in 1989 when it
    was struggling and gave it new stature and renewed vigor, had been
    battling cervical cancer for two years.

    Michael Traupman, director of college relations, and Blaney's husband,
    Joseph, said the family and college will issue a statement about her
    death today.

    "She was a courageous woman, a visionary leader who accomplished a
    tremendous amount for the college she loved so much," Muhlenberg
    College President Randy Helm said. "I will miss her deeply as
    a friend."

    During Blaney's tenure, the college's enrollment doubled from 700
    to more than 1,400 students, the number of honor students rose 35
    percent, and the endowment grew fourfold, with annual giving rising
    from $1.2 million to $5.7 million. This year's goal is $3.5 million.

    Since the early 1990s, Cedar Crest has consistently ranked in the
    top 15 liberal arts colleges in the Northeast in the U.S. News &
    World Report annual listing.

    For almost all her career at the 139-year-old school, she contributed
    opinion columns to The Morning Call, writing on women's and local
    issues. When Playboy magazine sought Cedar Crest students for a
    pictorial on the women of women's colleges in 1990, she wrote that
    Cedar Crest's women are more likely to be leaders than centerfolds.

    In the past year, many of Blaney's columns focused on cancer.

    "She was a dynamic woman, a superb president, and she put up a valiant
    battle with cancer," said David V. Voellinger, who is on the executive
    committee of the college's Board of Associates. "It's quite a loss
    for Cedar Crest."

    Blaney had dreamed of changing the world since growing up in
    Plainfield, N.J., reading Shakespeare or Dickens aloud on the porch
    with her family as a 6-year-old.

    After graduating from the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, she completed
    her bachelor's degree with high honors in comparative literature at
    Cornell University, where two teachers persuaded her to pursue her goal
    as a teacher. She later completed her doctorate in English literature
    at the State University of New York, studied at the University of
    California at Berkeley and taught at Webster College in Geneva,
    Switzerland.

    During the ceremony that made her Cedar Crest's 11th president, she
    told the crowd to "transform knowledge into wisdom and wisdom into
    action. We need to expand our minds to embrace the diversity of other
    cultures and the ideas of the world."

    One of her goals was to more aggressively recruit students from
    other countries and have the college become known as a place for
    women throughout the world.

    On Monday night, Blaney's office inside the administration and
    admissions building, Blaney Hall, was empty, as were most of the
    offices in the building.

    College security had blocked off an area of parking spaces in front
    of Moore Hall, preparing for a possible gathering of mourners. Signs
    posted on orange cones in front of the spaces read: "Reserved for
    president's family and friends."

    Traupman said Provost Carol Pulham issued a brief statement via
    e-mail about Blaney's death to students and staff. Pulham will assume
    all presidential duties as outlined in the college charter until a
    replacement is named.

    Blaney was chairwoman of the Women's Sports Foundation, which was
    founded by tennis star Billie Jean King and promotes girls and women
    in sports and fitness.

    Blaney was diagnosed with cancer in June 2004. She announced in a
    Morning Call column three months ago that her outlook on the disease
    had taken on new meaning, moving from teariness to triumph, celebrating
    the army of people helping to care for her and the spirit of Lance
    Armstrong and others like him.

    Tom Tenges, president of the Lehigh Valley Association of Independent
    Colleges, said, "I knew she was slipping quickly, but it's been many
    months since I've last seen her. ... Dorothy is someone I had a high
    regard for. She was a supporter and believer in our consortium. Her
    strength came in finding a valuable focus for Cedar Crest College.

    "She made the natural science a very strong, important part of the
    curriculum. She was a great conversationalist and had a vast knowledge
    of many things beyond education."

    Helm, the Muhlenberg president, said, "I'm very, very grief stricken
    to hear about her passing, though it's not unexpected. ... We often
    got together and shared our dreams and frustrations. I'm really just
    flattened by this. I've been expecting to hear this for some time,
    but it doesn't make it any easier.

    "She was someone I could turn to for advice and comfort," Helm
    said. "She made health a theme for the campus. She was such a
    passionate believer in its mission. My heart goes out to her family
    and the school. They're a wonderful school and wonderful neighbors."
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