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F O R  I M M E D I A T E  R E L E A S E
Contact: Barbara Nitzberg (914) 654-5285

THE COLLEGE OF NEW ROCHELLE ANNOUNCES
GRANT FOR UNIFEM STUDENT CHAPTER AT CNR

NEW ROCHELLE, NY, February 2, 2006 – The College of New Rochelle (CNR) School of Arts & Sciences (SAS) announced that it has secured a $2,000 grant for its UNIFEM Student Chapter, from the Blessings Fund of the Dominican Sisters of St. Mary of the Springs. UNIFEM (United Nations Development Fund for Women) is the women's fund at the UN.  It provides financial and technical assistance to innovative programs and strategies to foster women’s empowerment and gender equality.  The grant will cover transportation and lunch expenses for six interns to work at non-governmental organizations (NGOs) such as UNICEF-USA, Human Rights Watch, UNIFEM New York, Human Rights First, Dominicans at the UN, and Safe Horizon.

 “NGOs such as UNIFEM are leading global efforts to address the needs of women,” said Dr. Anne McKernan, Associate Professor of History at CNR and Director of the College’s International Studies Program. “This grant will help make it possible for CNR students to volunteer their time and energy to mission-driven organizations such as UNIFEM that are committed to helping women. CNR’s heritage as the first Catholic college for women in New York State makes this a particularly important initiative for us.”

CNR’s project seeks to provide outstanding undergraduate female students with:

  • Knowledge of contemporary issues related to gender and social justice

  • The opportunity to apply theoretical course work to practical advocacy work

  • An affective experience that fosters a sense of empowerment as agents of change and strengthens leadership skills

  • A network of practitioners who can help shape their futures, professionally and as citizens of the world community

UNIFEM was created in 1976 by a UN General Assembly Resolution, following a call from women's organizations attending the 1975 UN First World Conference on Women in Mexico City.  It has worked to help improve the living standards of women in developing countries and to address their concerns. CNR alumna Margaret Snyder SAS 50 was chosen its Founding Director.  

Placing the advancement of women's human rights at the center of all of its efforts, UNIFEM focuses its activities on four strategic areas: (1) reducing feminized poverty, (2) ending violence against women, (3) reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS among women and girls, and (4) achieving gender equality in democratic governance in times of peace as well as war.

In addition to Ms. Snyder, a number of CNR’s alumnae have gone on to careers in international advocacy work, including:

Kathleen Cravero Kristoffersson SAS 76
Director of the Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery for the UN Development Programme

Meg Gardinier Lawder SAS ’81
Managing Director of Education and Community Partnerships at the U.S. Fund for UNICEF

Losira Okelo SAS 96
Program Director of iEARN (International Education and Resource Network), a non-profit organization that empowers young people to engage in online collaborative educational projects with their peers across the globe

Jacqueline Maxwell  SAS 50
Former UN Liaison for the International YMCA

The School of Arts & Sciences, established in 1904, continues its tradition of enrolling only women. It offers undergraduate degrees in all traditional disciplines of liberal arts and sciences and a number of professional fields. A core curriculum is required, and dual-degree programs, interdisciplinary studies, independent-study options and flexible honors programs are also offered.  SAS alumnae include: Wen Chen, scientific editor of Neuron magazine; Mary O’Connor Donohue, lieutenant governor of the State of New York; Mercedes Ruehl, Academy- and Tony-Award winning actress; Anne Marie Sweeney, Co-chair, Disney Media Networks Unit and President, Disney-ABC Television Group; and Aulana Pharis Peters, the first African-American woman to serve as an SEC Commissioner.

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The first Catholic college for women in New York State, The College of New Rochelle was founded in 1904 by the Ursuline Order. Today, it comprises the all-women School of Arts & Sciences, and three schools which admit women and men: the School of New Resources (for adult learners), the School of Nursing and the Graduate School.  The main campus of the College is located in lower Westchester County, 16 miles north of New York City.  The College maintains five other campus locations in New York City. Visit the College’s website at www.cnr.edu

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