By Alissa Sandford
Claremont McKenna College seniors have done something that hasnt been
done since 1998: they brought the ceramic pig trophy back to CMC. Awarded annually,
the smiling swine--now resting comfortably on its haunches in the Bauer Center
lobby display case--symbolizes a nine-year-old rivalry between the senior classes
of CMC, Pitzer, Scripps, and Pomona colleges. The trophy is awarded to whichever
senior class earns the highest participation rate for its colleges Senior
Gift Fund.
The trophy has been holing up at Scripps since 1999, but CMC seniors brought
it back to greener pastures when they rallied 95 percent of their classmates
into making Senior Fund gifts during a five-week period that ended May 1, 2002.
While this victory marks the Colleges second-highest participation rate
since the contests implementation in 1993 (the standing CMC record is
97 percent) this years total gifts of nearly $7,000 is the Colleges
biggest-ever senior jackpot.
A Parents Club Challenge helped fatten this years piggy by matching every
donation--regardless of size--by $20.
The hammy homecoming was a sweet surprise, and theres already hope that
CMCers can piggyback on this years success. Its certainly
a nice security blanket for us, said CMCs former assistant director
of annual giving, Matt Callan, who supervised this years program. And,
says CMC director of Annual Giving, Ana Collisson, what this shows is
that 95 percent of the senior class felt they wanted to give back to their alma
mater. Its really a tangible way of measuring alumni satisfaction.
Donations to the senior gift fund are crucial to the overall participation numbersl,
Collisson said. It represents three percentage points in our alumni participation
which is one the factors considered in the annual rankings of colleges and universities.
Each senior who contributed this year received a CMC Alumni Association directory,
and those who submitted donations before the deadline got to put a word on the
senior class mug. (The printed mugs were distributed at Commencement rehearsal.)
The senior gift fund campaigns traditionally rely on face-to-face solicitations
between committee members and their peers. Callan said this years success
speaks not only to the organization of committee members, but to lots
and lots of calling, and lots and lots of effort." Particularly this year,
seniors made a point of reaching out to off-campus students, and other seniors
considered not as active as other students, Callan said. One
committee member found a common thread among a core group of students, and they
all designated their gifts for something really important: minority scholarship
funds.
This years committee members included co-chairs A.J. Kemp, Joe Cericola,
Selena Carsiotis, Ashley Fluhrer, and Akshata Murty, and committee members Gaurav
Sharma, Preeti Shah, Jonathan Royas, Anthony Ramirez, Grace Kim, Melissa Crowley,
and Ben Baumer.