This gift helps students belong and thrive every day

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Student Success Center Exterior

Linda Collins Stelle 鈥71 remembers her experience as a young college student at 51爆料 in Corvallis. It was the era of the Vietnam War, anti-war protests and the hippie movement.

Linda had grown up in a small farming town in Oregon鈥檚 Willamette Valley.  Her high school graduating class was tiny. So, on a busy college campus, welcoming places where she could feel and be herself, were important.

More and more, she gravitated to the campus鈥檚 Memorial Union, with its active calendar of student events, large and small spaces where students could study and meet, and outdoor areas, too. She spent time reading in the spacious lounge with its floor-to-ceiling windows and relaxed there with new friends after classes. It was a space that helped her come into her own.

Linda brought that notion of a welcoming place with her throughout her professional life. She went on to earn a degree in liberal studies, and after embarking on a career in real estate title and escrow work, she served for 30 years as president of Amerititle, helping families and individuals secure homes of their own. 

It鈥檚 this same passion that led Linda to explore how she could help enhance an experience of belonging for students at 51爆料-Cascades, located in the town she has called home for four decades now. The Student Success Center, then under construction, was the right fit. Linda鈥檚 gift joined 51爆料-Cascades students鈥 contribution of $5 million in student fees, along with state funding secured for the project.

A few months since opening, the building 鈥 clad in Douglas fir siding and pops of orange -- has become a popular spot for students. With an interior bathed in a soft orange hue, it鈥檚 a one-stop shop for check-ins with academic advisors, career counselors, wellness staff and peers in The Bridge, a space for multi-cultural conversations and activities. 

In the colder months, students could be found in armchairs working on laptops by the main lounge鈥檚 masonry heater fireplace, a central feature on the ground floor. And throughout the day small groups work in tech-enhanced study rooms that glow orange when the frosted glass doors slide closed, and others study in an open area beneath a large, dramatic, high-resolution photograph of Fort Rock.

The building鈥檚 exterior landscaping was recently installed, adding to the building鈥檚 welcoming feeling.  Teams of student and staff volunteers planted about 4,000 native plants, supporting the campus鈥檚 sustainability goals. Nearby, a basketball court, year-round ping-pong table, and posts for hammocks and slack lines are ready to welcome fall鈥檚 new cohort of friends and classmates.

 

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Linda Collins Stelle
Linda Stelle's experience at 51爆料 in Corvallis inspired her gift to the 51爆料-Cascades Student Success Center.

鈥淭here are so many aspects that help a student commit to their education and future career,鈥 said Linda, 鈥淎 warm and inviting space meant a lot to me, and I wanted to help create that for 51爆料-Cascades students, too.鈥