Eastern Nazarene College
Seal of the Eastern Nazarene
College
|
Former names
|
Pentecostal
Collegiate
Institute (1900-1918)[1] |
Motto |
Via, Veritas,
Vita |
Motto
in English
|
"The Way, the Truth,
and the Life" |
Type |
Private |
Established |
September 25, 1900 (PCI)
June 14, 1918 (ENC) |
Affiliation |
Nazarene |
Endowment |
US $11,015,937 |
Provost |
Timothy T. Wooster |
Students |
1,075 |
Undergraduates |
927 |
Postgraduates |
148 |
Location |
Quincy, Massachusetts, US
42°16'15.5634?N 71°0'42.8076?W? / ?42.270989833°N
71.011891000°W? /
42.270989833;
-71.011891000Coordinates:
42°16'15.5634?N 71°0'42.8076?W? / ?42.270989833°N
71.011891000°W? /
42.270989833;
-71.011891000 |
Campus |
Urban/Suburban
27 acres
(109,265.1 m2) |
Colors |
Red &
White
|
Athletics |
ECAC, NCAA
(CCC) |
Nickname |
Lions |
Affiliations |
AACU,
CCCU,
CIC,
NAICU,
NEASC |
Sports |
Baseball, Basketball,
Cross-Country, Soccer,
Softball, Tennis,
Volleyball |
Website |
www.enc.edu |
 |
The College Crest
|
The Eastern Nazarene College (ENC) is a private, coeducational college of the
liberal arts and sciences in Quincy, Massachusetts, near Boston, in the New
England region of the United States. It is known for its religious affiliation, liberal arts core curriculum, and its science and
religion education. Its academic programs are primarily
undergraduate, with
some professional graduate education offered.
The residential campus, in
Wollaston Park near
Quincy Bay, is served by the Wollaston MBTA
station, and was once the summer home of Boston
mayor Josiah Quincy, Jr.
Established as a holiness college in
Saratoga Springs, New York, in
1900, it was relocated to Massachusetts in 1919.
History
New York
On September 25, 1900, several come-outer Methodist clergy and
laymen affiliated with the 19th-century Holiness movement opened a co-educational collegiate institute at the Garden
View House in Saratoga Springs, New
York.[2]
In a time when pentecostal did not hold the same meaning as
it does today, but rather served as a synonym for
holiness,[3][4]
it was named the Pentecostal
Collegiate Institute (PCI) and established for the purpose of
providing liberal education and ministry training in a preparatory
academy, four-year college, and theological seminary.[5]
PCI operated under the auspices of the Association of Pentecostal
Churches of America (APCA), a loose association of Wesleyan-holiness churches[6]
from eastern Canada
down to the Middle Atlantic, and its own board of education,[7]
with Lyman C. Pettit as its first president. PCI
was also accredited by the New York State
Education Department's Board of Regents of the University of the State
of New York[8]
and was given state funding because a public school did not exist
there at the time.[5]
In 1901, the institute changed locations in Saratoga Springs, from
the Garden View House to the former Kenmore Hotel.[9]
Rhode
Island
The plans for a liberal arts college were delayed,
however.[7][10]
There was a falling out between Pettit and the APCA, and the school
re-opened on September 16, 1902, in North Scituate,
Rhode Island,[11]
without a post-secondary curriculum.[12]
Having been the originator of the idea for establishing PCI and
having already surveyed the Rhode Island location,[13]
Fred A. Hillery had purchased the North
Scituate campus on behalf of the association.[14]
Its Greek Revival buildings were originally
designed for the Smithville Seminary in 1839 by Russell Warren, the leading Greek
Revival architect in New
England in the 19th century,[15]
but had been unused since the Lapham Institute closed in 1876.
Attendance became multi-denominational after the move, only
one-quarter to one-third of the student body being affiliated with
the school's supporting denomination during any given academic
year.[16]
In 1907, the APCA merged with the Church of the Nazarene,[17]
and PCI became one of the first three schools chosen to be
officially affiliated with the Nazarenes in 1908.[18]
In 1917, it was decided to re-establish the liberal arts
college,[19]
and on June 14, 1918, the Eastern Nazarene College was chartered
with degree-granting authority in the state of
Rhode Island,[20][21]
while secondary education would remain as the
Eastern Nazarene Academy.[22]
Choosing a new name, however, would be difficult: the school was
now a liberal arts college and a Nazarene institution. Candidates
included: "Northeastern Nazarene College", "Bresee Memorial College", "Nazarene College of the
Northeast", and "Nazarene College
and Bresee Theological Institute". General
Superintendent John W. Goodwin can be credited with the
chosen name, as he wrote to Hiram F. Reynolds, also a general
superintendent and a long-time supporter of the school: "I know you
will do your best for our New England College. I should be glad if
they would change the name to the Eastern Nazarene College, or
something like that. It would seem we must have a school there,
although it moves along hard and slow."[20]
Massachusetts
In 1919, the college moved to its current location in the
Wollaston Park area
of Quincy, Massachusetts. The founders
wanted the new college to be located near either Harvard or Yale, for its graduates to attend graduate school at one or the other; Quincy
won out over New Haven, Connecticut because the
educational standards were known to be higher in Massachusetts[23]
and because president-elect Fred J. Shields would only accept the
position if the college were to be located near Boston.[24]
At the time of its purchase, the 12-acre
(49,000 m2) property consisted of the Josiah Quincy
Mansion (1848), built by Josiah Quincy,
Jr.[25]
where Angell Hall now stands, a classroom building called the
Manchester (1896), the stables (1848) on the site where Memorial
Hall was built in 1948, and the Canterbury (1901), which is now
Canterbury Hall. From the captain's walk of the mansion, Wollaston Bay was clearly
visible down to the "ships entering and leaving the port of
Boston."[26]
The former Rhode Island campus was purchased in 1920 by William S.
Holland, who moved his Watchman Institute there in 1923.
The trustees of the college were incorporated by the state in
1920,[27]
by which time its liberal arts identity had been "quite
firmly established,"[18]
but it took another decade to gain Bachelor of Arts degree-granting power from
the commonwealth.[28]
President Floyd W. Nease appealed directly to the
General
Court of Massachusetts, and defended his petition before the
Joint Committee on Education and the House and Senate on January
28, 1930, calling on financial records, campus improvement plans,
and prominent community leaders; the bill passed in both houses and
was signed by Governor Frank G. Allen on March 12, 1930.[29]
The news reached the college the following afternoon.[30]
The next year under President R. Wayne Gardner, the trustees
made a statement reaffirming that the college would remain
"distinctly interdenominational
and cosmopolitan in service."[31]
The college seal, designed by alumnus Harold G. Gardner and
incorporating the college motto,
Via, Veritas,
Vita, was adopted by the trustees on the recommendation of
the president and the student body in 1932,[32]
along with a college banner to display the emblems of
Verbum, Lux, Spiritus, Crux.[24]
The college had been chartered in 1918 with a school of music,[20][21]
President Gardner secured certification for the college as a
teacher-training institution with the Massachusetts
Department of Education in 1933,[33]
and the college would institute a graduate program in theology starting in 1938,[34]
thus becoming one of only two Nazarene schools to offer anything
beyond a Bachelor of Arts before 1945.[24]
Evolutionary biology was taught in the
classroom at least as early as 1937,[35]
and on May 8, 1941, Governor Leverett Saltonstall approved Eastern
Nazarene to grant Bachelor of Science degrees.[34]
ENC also had a cooperative degree program in engineering with
Northeastern University by
1943.[36]
College seal on the main campus gate, a gift of the class of
1938
Under President Gideon B. Williamson on December 3,
1943, the Eastern Nazarene College gained accreditation from the New
England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools,[37]
and became the second Nazarene college to ever gain institutional
accreditation.[38]
ENC was also admitted to the Association of American
Colleges in 1944,[37]
and an affiliation with Quincy City Hospital
for nurses' training began in that same year.[36]
Eastern Nazarene was soon dubbed "Our Quincy's College" by the
Quincy Patriot Ledger[39]
and has since maintained good town and gown relations with the city.[40]
The Eastern Nazarene Academy would close after 1955,[22]
and starting in 1956, professors Timothy L. Smith and Charles W. Akers began to establish a
community college for the city of
Quincy.[41]
In 1964, the graduate course in theology was discontinued and
replaced with a master's degree program in religion.[42]
The college archives were created in 1963 and the first history of
the college, spanning from 1900 to 1950, was published by
James R. Cameron in 1968.[43]
Under President Irwin in 1977, plans were made to relocate the
college to a 125-acre (510,000 m2) parcel of land
in Newtown Square,
Pennsylvania, by purchasing the faltering Charles E. Ellis
School for Girls.[44]
The proposed move was unpopular among students and members of the
Quincy community, even Governor Michael Dukakis urged to administration to
reconsider, but the relocation never took place because the college
was outbid for the land by a corporation that wanted to establish
an industrial park there.[45][46]
In 1981, graduate degree offerings were
expanded,[42]
and an accelerated program for working adults was started in
1990.[47]
In 1991, a report issued by the Association of Independent Colleges
and Universities in Massachusetts (AICUM)[48]
determined that the college contributed nearly $10 million to the
local economy and brought in an estimated $7 million from outside
the state.[49]
In 1992, President Kent Hill approved a policy to only hire
Christian professors at the college, a move
that stirred controversy in the media but was meant for the hiring
of new faculty rather than the dismissal of then-current faculty,
and was deemed by the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) to be reasonable according to civil rights laws.[50]
A second history of the college, spanning from 1950 to 2000, was
started in 1993.[43]
Front entrance to the Adams Executive Center in Quincy
In 1995, the college tried relocating once more, this time by
purchasing the former 56-acre (230,000 m2) campus
of the Boston School for the Deaf in Randolph, Massachusetts, from the
Sisters of St. Joseph, but the deal
fell through despite support from the town selectmen.[51]
Instead, the college began to expand at other locations in Quincy,
buying a piece of land along Hancock Street later that
year,[52]
and the year after that purchasing an adjoining parcel along Old
Colony Avenue, which had once been home to a Howard Johnson's candy factory and executive
offices.[53]
In 1997, the college extended beyond the metro Boston area for the
first time when it started a learning annex in central
Massachusetts to serve as part of its adult studies
division.[54]
The Old Colony Campus (OCC), as the new site on Old Colony Avenue
had come to be named, was renovated and expanded into the Adams
Executive Center.[55]
The Cecil R. Paul Center for Business was founded
at the Old Colony location in 1999, and the James R. Cameron Center for History, Law,
& Government was added in 2005.[56]
In 2001, just before the end of his second term, then-president
Kent R. Hill was appointed the new Global
Health Administrator for USAID.[57]
In 2008, ENC established satellite campuses in Boston,
Brockton, Fall River, and Swansea, Massachusetts.[58][59]
In 2010, Eastern Nazarene College was ranked in the top tier for
northern U.S. regional colleges in U.S. News & World Report's
Best Colleges report.[60]
It was also ranked 28th overall (specifically 25th in number of
graduates going on to earn PhDs and 11th in number of alumni serving in the
Peace Corps, relative to college size) by
the Washington Monthly College Guide for
baccalaureate colleges nationally in
2010.[61]
Campus
Wollaston
Park
The college campus is home to the Babcock Arboretum
The 21-acre (85,000 m2) main campus[62]
of the Eastern Nazarene College is situated in the Wollaston Park
neighborhood of Quincy, Massachusetts. The Wollaston
Park campus is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) southeast from the
Boston city line and 6 miles (9.7 km) south of
downtown Boston,[63]
just over 1 mile (1.6 km) north of Quincy Center, 0.5 miles (0.80 km)
northeast of the Wollaston T
station,[64]
and 0.25 miles (0.40 km) southwest from Wollaston Beach. ENC purchased the Wollaston
Park property, then a 12-acre (49,000 m2) parcel,
from the former Quincy Mansion School for Girls for $50,000 in
1919,[23]
and has added to it over the years. The Mount Wollaston land
belonging to the Quincy family had been broken up into
prestigious building lots and named Wollaston Park during in the
late 19th century, to become one of Boston's first commuter neighborhoods,[65]
and the area remains primarily residential. The campus is also a registered
arboretum, named the Babcock Arboretum after
Vernor J. Babcock and dedicated in 1993.[65]
The alma
mater, set to the tune of "Annie Lisle" with lyrics written by former
president Edward S. Mann, not only refers to Quincy Bay but also
the existence of the elm trees for
which Elm Avenue was named,[66]
all of which died with the onset of Dutch elm disease in the early to mid-20th
century. The college has historically maintained good town and gown relations with the Quincy
community,[40]
and the campus has been home to the Anglican Parish of Saint
George, established by the Anglican Mission in America, since
2009.[67]
The Quincy Mansion (1848) purchased by the college
in 1919 was demolished in 1969. Its chandeliers were sold for food during the
Great Depression.[24]
It was once part of the Quincy family homestead along with the
Dorothy Quincy House
and the Josiah Quincy House, on a 200-acre
(0.81 km2) parcel of land known as the "Lower
Farm". The mansion itself was situated on the land where Angell
Hall now stands, and was the summer home of Josiah Quincy, Jr.,
then mayor of Boston. It was three stories and white, in Georgian architecture, with
marble fireplaces in most of the rooms and large French windows on the first
floor that "opened upon either little balconies or broad piazzas."[26]
Elm Avenue had been the avenue, or driveway, for the two mansions
on the property.[65]
The first of the two, the Josiah Quincy House (1770), still stands
on Muirhead Street.
Gardner Hall (1930), the main college administration building
Both Gardner Hall (1930), originally named the Fowler Memorial
Administration Building after Charles
J. Fowler, and the original Floyd W. Nease Library (1953), now
the Bower-Grimshaw Center for Institutional Advancement, were
designed by Wesley Angell. Gardner Hall was designed in the
Classical or Colonial Revival mode. Gardner
is brick, three stories on a high granite basement, and capped by a
parapet balustraded in the center. Corners are
articulated with brick quoins. The
fenestration is symmetric with double sash windows at regular
intervals, trimmed in white, topped with flared brick lintels and a white keystone. It also features a
two-story balustraded Doric portico
of fluted cast stone columns.
The portico is the backdrop for commencement ceremonies. The main
entrance, at the end of wide stairs, is pilastered and topped with
a bracketed entablature, which frames an arched glass opening. The
side elevations have projecting stair towers, which indicate the
site of a central hall running the length of the building.
Originally rectangular in form, the 1953 addition of the then-Nease
Library in the rear gave it a T-configuration.[68]
Memorial Hall (1948), for those who served and died in World War
II
Memorial Hall (1948) holds the distinction of the only building
on campus, other than the pre-existing Canterbury Hall (1901), not
to be named for any one individual. Rather, it was built as a
memorial to those who had served in the Second World War. Over two hundred
alumni had served, and six students had given their lives.[69]
Old Colony and other
locations
The 6-acre (24,000 m2) Old Colony Campus (OCC),
named for its location on Old Colony Avenue in Quincy, has two
buildings. The 180 building is the Adams Executive Center, which
houses the business department in the Cecil R. Paul Center for
Business, established in 1999.[56]
The building at 162 Old Colony houses the college archives and
offices for the history department as part of the James R. Cameron
Center for History, Law, and Government, established in 2005, as
well as separate offices for mathematics, and physics and
engineering departments, and the Campus Kinder Haus (CKH), an early
childhood education center.[70]
CKH was founded in 1979 and moved to the Old Colony Campus in
2000.[71]
The college also owns adjacent undeveloped land between Old Colony
and Hancock Street in Quincy, at the Southern Artery,[72]
that has been rezoned by the city several times,[73]
and Quincy officials announced in 2009 they might take it by
eminent domain for the construction of a
new middle school.[74]
In addition to its campuses in Quincy, the college established a
learning annex called the Auburn Learning Center in Auburn, Massachusetts, in 1997 to
function as part of the Leadership Education for Adults
Division,[54]
and added satellite campuses in Boston,
Brockton, Fall River, and Swansea, Massachusetts, in 2008.[58][59]
Organization
The Wollaston Church of the Nazarene seen from the college campus
in Wollaston Park
Religious
affiliation
Higher education is, historically, one of
the Nazarenes' most important emphases, and the Nazarenes provide
their colleges with "students, administrative and faculty
leadership, and financial and spiritual support.... the college,
while not a local congregation, is an integral part of the church;
it is an expression of the church."[75]
Founded under the auspices of the Association of
Pentecostal Churches of America, ENC was one of the first three
schools officially chosen to be Nazarene institution in
1915,[18]
making it the oldest continuously operating educational institution
affiliated with the Nazarenes. As one of eight Nazarene liberal arts colleges[76]
in the United States,[77]
the college receives financial backing equivalent to a $40 million
endowment from its constituent
churches.[78]
Eastern Nazarene is also bound by a gentlemen's agreement not to actively
recruit outside its respective educational region,[79]
which extends southwest from Maine as far
as Pennsylvania and Virginia in the United States[80][81]
and provides trustees
for the college.[82]
The institution is otherwise largely independent, having been
multi-denominational since 1902,[16]
and tuition-driven, with an
actual endowment of only US $11,015,937.[83]
The president and trustees of the college determined in 1931, one
year after gaining its charter to grant degrees in Massachusetts,
that it is part of the college's mission to be "distinctly
interdenominational
and cosmopolitan in service."[31]
Students are not required to profess any religion, but faculty members are required to be
Christians.[84]
Academic
associations
The now-defunct secondary school, the Pentecostal Collegiate
Institute, was accredited by the New York State
Education Department's Board of Regents of the University of the State
of New York upon its founding in 1900.[8]
When it was first chartered in 1918, the Eastern Nazarene College
was granted the authority to grant baccalaureate degrees in
Rhode Island,[21]
and was later chartered with that same authority in Massachusetts in 1930.[30]
Teacher education was recognized by the
Department of Education of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1933[33]
and is also approved by the National Association of State Directors
of Teacher Education and Certification and the Massachusetts Board
of Higher Education, as well as benefitting from the Interstate
Certification Compact for all teacher education programs, which
allows graduates to teach in 44 states and the District of
Columbia.[85][86]
ENC gained institutional accreditation from
the Commission on Institutions of Higher Education of the
New England
Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC)[87]
in 1943,[88]
and the social work program has been accredited by the
Council on Social Work
Education since 1979.[89]
Eastern Nazarene joined the Association of American
Colleges in 1944,[37]
has been a member of the Council for
Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU) since 1982,[90]
and is also a member of both the Council of Independent
Colleges (CIC)[91]
and the National
Association of Independent Colleges and Universities
(NAICU).[92]
Academics
Munro Hall (1926), the first building erected by the college in
Massachusetts
According to some of the college's earliest and most influential
figures, the Eastern Nazarene College has always existed with the
idea in mind that one can be a Christian and an intellectual scholar: Bertha Munro, the first dean of the college and a Boston University, Radcliffe, and Harvard alumna, is often quoted as having said that "there is
no conflict between the best in education and the best in Christian
faith"[93]
and former history professor Timothy L. Smith, a University of Virginia and Harvard
alumnus who began his career at ENC, is widely
considered the first evangelical
Christian to gain academic prominence,[94]
while ENC alumnus and physicist Karl Giberson has worked to address the
Creation-Evolution controversy
and was Executive Vice President of the BioLogos Foundation
until May 2011.[95]
Though it makes no religious requirements of its students, Eastern
Nazarene has required that its faculty members be Christian since
1993.[84]
The school currently has three college divisions: the Traditional
Undergraduate Division, the Adult Studies Division (often called
the Leadership Education for Adults Division, or LEAD), and the
Graduate Division.[91]
There were 1,075 students enrolled at the college in 2007, 927 of
whom were undergraduate and 148 of whom were
graduate students.[96]
Admission is selective[97]
on a rolling deadline and the 2007 acceptance
rate for students who applied to the college was 61.7
percent.[83]
Traditional Undergraduate
division
Most degree offerings at Eastern Nazarene are baccalaureate degrees. In the
Traditional Undergraduate Division, the college offers associate's and
bachelor's (Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science) liberal arts degrees in 50
majors, with 57
minors and 6
pre-professional programs for a combined total of 80 programs of
study, including dual degree programs with Northeastern University and the
Massachusetts
College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences leading to the
doctor of
pharmacy.[91]
In addition to co-operative programs and internship opportunities
around Boston, Eastern Nazarene provides a number of
intercollegiate and off-campus programs at 56 Nazarene institutions of higher education around the world. Students
may also participate in the "Best Semester"[98]
study abroad program, and ENC offers an additional semester-long
program in Romania.[42]
The college uses a "4-1-4 system"[83]
for its academic year: there are two full semesters in the Fall and
Spring, each roughly four months long, and a one-month term in May
known as "May Term".
Eastern Nazarene emphasizes a blend of faith and other pursuits,
from biology[99]
to business,[100]
and has won the John Templeton award for science-and-religion
education.[101]
The undergraduate curriculum at Eastern Nazarene was developed in
1919 by the first dean of the college, Bertha Munro, and originally
modeled after the curricula at Radcliffe College and Boston University.[24]
A revision that introduced the Cultural Perspectives core sequence
is very distinctive and comprises a series of interdisciplinary
courses on Western culture that encourages students to ponder the
"tensions and possibilities" in the relationships between the
Christian faith and societal values.[42]
The traditional undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio at Eastern
Nazarene is 11:1,[83]
and graduates on average have a 94 percent acceptance rate into
medical school as well as a 100 percent
acceptance rate into law
school.[102]
Graduate Division and LEAD
College name and shield on the side of the Cecil R. Paul Center for
Business at the Old Colony Campus
In addition to traditional undergraduate education, the college
offers continuing education for working adults
through the Leadership Education for Adults Division (LEAD).
Accelerated programs have been in place since 1990,[47]
and now include bachelor's degree completion
(Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees) and associate's
degrees (the associate of arts
degree) as well as certificates in paralegal studies (CPS) and human resource management
(CHRM).[103]
The college also maintains 2+2 programs[104]
and articulation agreements with
junior colleges in the surrounding
geographical area, like the agreements with Bristol, Massasoit, and Roxbury Community
Colleges.[58][59]
Most LEAD classes are held at the Old Colony Campus or at one of
the four satellite campuses for reasons of
transportation and accessibility, such as parking space, which is
limited at the main campus, and access to public
transportation via the Wollaston T
Station, located on Beale Street where it intersects with Old
Colony Avenue.
Graduate offerings
from the Graduate Division are primarily master's degrees
(master of science and
master of
education).[103]
Eastern Nazarene first offered graduate work in theology in
1938,[34]
then replaced it with a master's degree in religion in 1964, and
added master's degrees in business, education, and psychology in
1981.[42]
Student
life
The Mann Student Center, named for Edward S. Mann
In 2006, students from 21 countries and 31 U.S. states attended Eastern Nazarene.[105]
ENC is 24 percent ethnically diverse,[106]
the highest diversity rate among the eight Nazarene liberal arts
colleges,[107]
and black student enrollment rose from 4.9 to
15 percent between 1997 and 2007.[108]
Eastern Nazarene has always been co-educational, and most of the
traditional undergraduate population lives on campus.[109]
Undergraduate students at ENC are typically affiliated with
approximately 30 different Christian denominations (the largest
representations being Nazarene, Baptist, Catholic, and
non-denominational), while 35
percent of the student population had no reported denominational or
religious affiliation.[84][105]
No student is required to be Christian to attend the Eastern Nazarene
College,[84]
but each traditional undergraduate student, upon registering,
agrees to what is called a Lifestyle Covenant: to, among other things, "abstain
from the use of illegal drugs, alcohol and tobacco, and to avoid
attendance at bars, clubs, or other activities or places of
entertainment that promote themes of inappropriate sexuality,
violence, profanity, pornography or activities demeaning to human
life."[110]
The Student Handbook also specifies that "No person shall engage in
sexual acts with anyone other than a spouse."[111]
While some guidelines might appear to be "relics from
another era," according to the Boston Globe,[112]
the Globe has also noted that other prominent Christian
colleges uphold these ideals,[113]
and that Eastern Nazarene is known for being a progressive
"trendsetter"[107]
with a "slightly more liberal bent" than its peers.[112]
The John Templeton Foundation has also
cited Eastern Nazarene College as an institution that builds
character,[114]
and the Quincy Patriot Ledger has said that the
school's "deep religious roots make for a quiet campus and good
neighbors."[40]
The stained glass windows of Angell Chapel in Angell Hall
There are no fraternities or sororities on campus, but there are Greek
"societies". Until 2002, there were four societies based on
intramural sports competition, which included the "Kappa
Cougars", the "Sigma
Stallions", and the "Zeta
Warriors". New societies were formed in 2007 and originally
numbered eight but were reduced to four again in 2008. These
societies are not currently active.
There has been an Honors Scholar Society since 1936,[115]
and there are various national honors societies (Phi Alpha Theta for history majors,
Phi Delta Lambda for Nazarene scholars,[116]
Psi Chi for psychology majors, etc.).
Students participate in the Student
Government Association (SGA), Class Council, Students for
Social Justice,[117]
academic clubs (Beta
Phi Mu Shrader Club, Biology Club, History Club, etc.), and
club sports. The student-run newspaper is "The Veritas News" (formerly the
Campus Camera), since 1933 and regularly published since 1936, and
the student-developed yearbook has been the Nautilus since
1922.[118]
There are vocal and instrumental ensembles, including the A Cappella Choir,[119]
which was formed in 1938,[115]
and Chamber Singers, Gospel Choir, Symphonic Winds, and Jazz Band,
among several others. The college also has a student theatre organization.[120][121]
There exist both campus-oriented and community-oriented ministries
like as "Open Hand, Open Heart", which ministers to the homeless of
Boston by providing food, clothing, and blankets.[122]
In addition to its study abroad programs, ENC also provides
missions opportunities through a program known as "Fusion".[123]
Locally, environmental management students have been involved in
community cleanup programs[117][124]
and archaeological investigations around
Quincy.[125]
The ENC Lions athletic logo
Athletics
Intramural sports take
place year-round and change from season to season based on student
interest (past sports have included lacrosse, field hockey, and a very successful men's
volleyball club).[126]
These and other campus sports, such as J-Term basketball, men's
wrestling, men's football, powder puff
football, and indoor soccer, are organized by the Student
Government Association's (SGA) Rec. Life director.[127]
Intercollegiate athletics at ENC first began in 1959 with wins
over Gordon, Curry, and Barrington Colleges in baseball.[128]
Varsity sports are National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III,
Commonwealth Coast Conference
(CCC),[129]
and New England Collegiate
Conference (NECC). Along with NNU, ENC is one of only two
Nazarene colleges to compete in the NCAA. Men's varsity sports
include baseball, basketball, cross-country, golf,
soccer, tennis,
track and field, and volleyball. Women's sports include basketball,
cross-country, soccer, softball, tennis, track and field, and volleyball.
When NAIA-affiliated,[130]
Eastern Nazarene regularly won the basketball tournament hosted by
The
King's College at Briarcliff Manor, New
York.[131]
The college also won the ECAC Division III Championship in
1996[132]
and went to the NCAA Division III Sweet 16 in
2000.[133][134]
Eastern Nazarene's athletic nickname is "Lions".[135]
From 1959 until 2009, the athletic moniker was "Crusaders".[128]
The college colors are red and
white.[136]
Bradley Field is named in honor of Carroll Bradley, one-time
professional baseball player and the
first athletic director at Eastern
Nazarene,[128]
and the LaHue Physical Education Center at ENC also serves as a
clinical
site for Northeastern University.[137]
Shields Hall, the residence hall for male freshmen
Residential
life
Students live in single-sex residence halls with visitation hours
throughout the week. There are three female dormitories (Spangenberg Hall, Williamson
Hall, and Munro Hall) and two male dormitories (Memorial Hall and
Shields Hall). Young Hall provides apartments for staff and married students, in
addition to suites for upperclassman females and males.
Each dormitory houses a common area, known as a parlor, where
students of both sexes are welcome. Student use these parlors for
social events and study groups during the week.
There is a poke-stop in the library.
The Mann Student Center houses The Commons for sit-down meals
cafeteria-style, as well as The Dugout for
meals in a café-type atmosphere. The latter is a popular
location for social gathering, as is the adjacent "Colonel's Coffee
House", which, ironically, is not a place where coffee is served. Coffee is served at "Hebrews" where
students can purchase products made using Starbucks brands coffee.
Chapel services for undergraduate students, which are
40 minutes long,[138]
are offered on Wednesdays and Fridays.[139]
Attendance for most chapels is required for most
undergraduates.[140]
The services take place in the Wollaston Church of the Nazarene,
located on the corner of East Elm Avenue and Wendell Avenue,
adjacent to the campus of the college.
Notable
persons
Notable
alumni
Samuel Young,
Edward S. Mann, and Stephen W. Nease were all ENC alumni and
presidents of Eastern Nazarene College. Russell V. DeLong served two
non-consecutive terms as president of Northwest Nazarene
College in Nampa, Idaho, and also served as president of
Pasadena College. John E. Riley, Kenneth H. Pearsall, and A. Gordon Wetmore also served as presidents
of NNC. Stephen Nease and Gordon Wetmore later served as presidents
of the Nazarene Theological Seminary
in Kansas City, Missouri. Stephen Nease
was also the president of Bethany Nazarene
College in Bethany, Oklahoma and the founding
president of Mount Vernon
Nazarene College in Mount Vernon, Ohio. William Henry Houghton was the fourth
president of the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, Illinois, and Charles W. Akers was the first president of
Quincy Junior
College (QJC) in Quincy, Massachusetts. Alumnus Donald
Young, Samuel Young's son,[141]
would also become a president of Quincy College.[142][143]
Lawrence Yerdon is the president of the Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He
also served 1986-2004 as president of the Hancock Shaker Village in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and was
director of the Quincy Historical Society
1976-1986.[144]
Alumnus Edward Thomas Dell, Jr. was a published author, the editor
of The Episcopalian from 1968 to 1973, and founder of two
magazines, and he kept a running correspondence with C. S. Lewis, which is now archived in the
Bodleian Library and at Wheaton College.[145]
Ralph Earle, Jr. served on the
Committee on Bible Translation for the New International Version of the
Bible.
John S. Rigden is an alumnus and physicist.
Eldon C. Hall was the lead design
engineer of the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) at
MIT. Carl Crouthamel earned his doctorate at the University of Chicago after graduating
from ENC, is known for his work with Enrico Fermi on the U.S. project that produced
the first atomic bomb, started the first program to
build a gamma ray lens for use in astronomy, and
has worked for the Argonne National
Laboratory.[146]
Floyd Nease, Stephen's son and
Floyd's grandson, is the Democratic Party
Majority Leader for the Vermont House of
Representatives. James Sheets, former six-term Quincy mayor, is
an Eastern Nazarene College graduate.[147]
David Bergers serves as the current Director for the Boston
Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and attended Yale Law School after completing his
undergraduate education at ENC.[148][149]
Richard R. Schubert, another ENC alumnus and graduate of Yale
Law School, was the founding president of the Points of
Light Foundation, former president and vice chairman of the
Bethlehem Steel
Corporation, general counsel and deputy secretary for the
U.S. Department of
Labor, and president and chief executive officer (CEO) of the
American Red Cross.[150][151]
Neil Nicoll is the current President & CEO of the YMCA.[152][153]
Jim Tabor is Vice President for Operations at AirTran Airways.[154]
Harold Palmer was president of Atco Records,[155]
a division of Atlantic Records that produced albums by
The Beatles and AC/DC.
Samuel Jean,[156]
graduated from Eastern Nazarene in 1992 with a bachelor's degree in
history[157]
before graduating from Boston University School of
Law in 1995 and is the founder of CityView Artist
Management.[158]
Esther R. Sanger, noted social worker,
preacher, and founder of the Quincy Crisis Center and the
Mary-Martha Learning Center, attended the Eastern Nazarene
preparatory academy and earned a B.A. in social work and an M.A. in
family counseling at ENC.[159]
Donald Yerxa, Director of The Historical Society (THS) at Boston
University
Notable
faculty
Chemistry professor Lowell Hall is the creator of "Molconn",
which Pfizer uses to test drug potency,[160]
and is emeritus program chairman of the Boston Area Group for
Informatics and Modeling.[161]
History professor Randall J. Stephens is editor of both the
Journal of Southern Religion and Historically
Speaking, which is produced at Boston University and published
by the Johns Hopkins University. Donald A. Yerxa is director of The Historical
Society (THS) at Boston University. He and fellow history
professor James R. Cameron both studied under
Charles W. Akers and Timothy L. Smith.
Former faculty members of note include physicist John S. Rigden, historian and community
college president Charles W. Akers, biblical scholar
Ralph Earle, Jr., historian Timothy L. Smith, theologian Thomas Jay Oord, inspector general and
Massachusetts representative Robert A. Cerasoli, historian and seminary
president Hugh C. Benner, and Olive Winchester. Presidents of the college
who were first faculty members include Fred J. Shields in psychology, Floyd W. Nease in theology, R. Wayne Gardner in mathematics, Samuel Young in
theology, Edward S. Mann in mathematics, and Cecil R. Paul in psychology.
Notes and
references
-
^
American universities and colleges: a dictionary of name
changes by Alice H. Songe. Rowman & Littlefield (1978), p.
62
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 17.
-
^
"Birth of a Church" (PDF).
Church of the Nazarene. Archived from
the original (PDF) on May
9, 2010. Retrieved July 24, 2009.
-
^
"History of the Church of the Nazarene". Archived from
the original on 2008-01-13.
Retrieved 2008-07-10.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 20–21.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 27.
- ^
a
b Ingersol, Stan.
"Why These Schools? Historical Perspectives on Nazarene Higher
Education" (PDF). Archived
from
the original (PDF)
on 2008-06-24. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
- ^
a
b Smith, Timothy L. (1962). Called
Unto Holiness (PDF).
Kansas City: Nazarene Publishing House.
-
^
"Saratoga Hotel Sold" (PDF). The New York Times. September 17,
1901. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. pp. 28–29,
33.
-
^
Scituate, Rhode Island. Arcadia Publishing. 1998. p. 127.
ISBN 0-7385-6419-2.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 33–36.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 32–33.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 34.
Originally "built and equipped for $78,000," Hillery bought it for
$4,500 and negotiated a mortgage for $3,000.
-
^ Beth L. Savage and Carol D. Shull (1995).
African American Historic Places. John Wiley and Sons.
p. 422. ISBN 978-0-471-14345-1.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. pp. 46, 53, 61,
175.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 52.
- ^
a
b
c Raser, Harold E.
(1996). Thomas C. Hunt; James C. Carper, eds.
Religious Higher Education in the United States. Taylor
& Francis. p. 547. ISBN 0-8153-1636-4.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 125–126.
- ^
a
b
c Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 130.
- ^
a
b
c Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 137.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (2000). The Spirit
Makes the Difference: The History of Eastern Nazarene College, Part
II, 1950-2000. Quincy, Massachusetts: ENC Press.
p. 57.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 146–147.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e Munro, Bertha (1970).
The
Years Teach, an Autobiography: Remembrances to Bless
(PDF). Kansas City: Beacon Hill
Press.
-
^ Pepe, William J.; Elaine A. Pepe (2008).
Postcard History Series: Quincy. Arcadia Publishing.
p. 72. ISBN 978-0-7385-5539-3.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 147.
-
^ Hood, William Ross (1922). State Laws
Relating to Education Enacted in 1920 and 1921. District of
Columbia: Department of the Interior: Bureau of Education.
p. 224.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 163.
Before 1930, an arrangement was made with Northwest Nazarene
College for students to receive degrees from that institution
instead.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House.
pp. 194–195.
- ^
a
b "Gov. Allen Signs
Nazarene College Degree Grant Bill". The Patriot Ledger. March 14,
1930.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 263.
-
^ In large part from
Jesus' words, "I am the way and the truth and the
life...." from
John 14:6, as well as the statement from natural science professor Jesse B. Mowry
(with master's degree from Brown University and a doctor of science
degree from Norwich University) that, "Yea, the Truth
points the Way and the Life, and these three determine man's
destiny!" Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. pp. 38,
220.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. pp. 248,
401.
- ^
a
b
c Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 333.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 318.
- ^
a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 330.
- ^
a
b
c Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 293.
-
^ Purkiser, Westlake Taylor (1983). Called
Unto Holiness, Vol. 2 (PDF). Kansas City: Nazarene Publishing
House. The
first was the Northwest Nazarene
College in Idaho, which
was accredited as a four-year school in 1937, while ENC alumnus
Russell V. DeLong was president
there.
-
^ "Our Quincy's College". The Patriot Ledger. October 5, 1948.
pp. 1, 4.
- ^
a
b
c "Editorial: Quincy
home to more collegians". Patriot Ledger. August 23,
1996.
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^
"History Department". Eastern Nazarene College. Archived from
the original on
February 2, 2009. Retrieved
August 4,
2009.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e Balmer, Randall
Herbert (2004).
Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism. Baylor University Press.
p. 224. ISBN 978-1-932792-04-1.
- ^
a
b Davis, Joy (December
5, 2000). "Second volume added to Eastern Nazarene history".
The Patriot Ledger.
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^ "Eastern Nazarene College Leaving Massachusetts for
Pennsylvania". The New York Times. March 20, 1977.
p. 5.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (2000). The Spirit
Makes the Difference: The History of Eastern Nazarene College, Part
II, 1950-2000. Quincy, Massachusetts: ENC Press.
p. 283.
-
^ Ferguson, Gailynne M. (March 30, 1999).
"History of the Ellis School". EllisAlum.org. Archived from
the original on
December 3, 2009. Retrieved
July 24,
2009.
- ^
a
b Salter, Sue (Summer
1997).
"From the Chair" (PDF).
News Vol. 7 No. 2. Consortium for the Advancement of Adult
Higher Education. Archived from the
original (PDF) on
2011-07-25. Retrieved
2009-05-29.
-
^ "Association of Independent Colleges
and Universities in Massachusetts (AICUM)". Retrieved 2009-05-29.
-
^ "ENC Boosts Local Economy By Nearly $10 Million".
The Quincy
Sun. October 31, 1991. p. 33.
-
^ Coakley, Tom (April 27, 1993). "Faculty shift ahead
at Christian college". Boston Globe. http://www.proquest.com/.
-
^ Markoe, Lauren (January 4, 1995). "College bids for
Randolph campus". The Patriot Ledger.
-
^ April, Carolyn (July 27, 1995). "Eastern Nazarene
buying motel site". The Patriot Ledger.
-
^ Davis, Maia (August 20, 1996). "Expansion plans
move ahead: ENC to buy former Quincy factory". The Patriot Ledger.
- ^
a
b Salter, Sue (Summer
1997).
"New Learning Center Launched at ENC" (PDF). News Vol. 7 No. 2. Consortium
for the Advancement of Adult Higher Education. Archived from
the
original (PDF) on
2011-07-25. Retrieved
2009-05-29.
-
^ Givens, Ann (October 1, 1998). "Eastern Nazarene
College is expanding 2 Wollaston buildings undergoing renovation".
The Patriot Ledger.
- ^
a
b
"Photo tour: Cecil R. Paul Center for Business". Retrieved 2009-03-07.
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^ Davis, Joy (August 7, 2001). "Christians-only
policy not for U.S. agency; Ex-ENC president will eschew practice
at Quincy college". The Patriot Ledger.
p. 7.
- ^
a
b
c
"ENC's Adult and Graduate Studies Program expands into satellite
locations around the state". Nazarene Communications Network.
December 18, 2008.
- ^
a
b
c Hatch, Steve (January
25, 2009).
"Brockton: Extending Education". Boston Globe. Boston.com. Retrieved July
23, 2009.
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^
USNews and World Report Guide to Best Colleges: Eastern Nazarene
College
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^
Washington Monthly College Guide: Baccalaureate college rankings
2010
Archived 2011-05-14 at the Wayback Machine.
-
^ Campus
map (Map). Retrieved
2008-07-10.
-
^ "Eastern Nazarene College:
About". Retrieved
2009-05-19.
-
^
"Wollaston MBTA Station (with Google map)". Retrieved 2008-07-10.
- ^
a
b
c Information provided by the Eastern Nazarene
College, History of the
Babcock Arboretum, published in 2003, written by Gerry Wood,
founder. Found in the Nease Library, Reference Section.
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^ "Alumni Relations at
Eastern Nazarene College".
Retrieved 2008-12-30.
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^ "New Anglican Church". The Patriot Ledger. February 28,
2009.
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^ "Historical and
architectural significance of the campus of Eastern Nazarene
College". Retrieved
2008-07-10.
-
^ Cameron, James R. (2000). The Spirit
Makes the Difference: The History of Eastern Nazarene College, Part
II, 1950-2000. Quincy, Massachusetts: ENC Press.
p. 11.
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^ "Photo tour: Campus
Kinder Haus". Retrieved
2009-01-03.
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^ Davis, Joy (September 26, 2000). "Kinder Haus
finally at home". The Patriot Ledger.
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^ "Rezoning of parcel debated; Property value would
drop, says Eastern Nazarene". Patriot Ledger. September 24,
2002.
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^ "City council rezones college land; Officials at
ENC opposed the move". Patriot Ledger. October 9,
2002.
-
^ Encarnacao, Jack (July 9, 2009).
"Quincy looking to take inn, other properties to create site for
new middle school". Patriot Ledger. PatriotLedger.com.
Archived from
the original on August 5, 2009. Retrieved July
23, 2009.
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^
Manual of the History, Doctrine, Government, and Ritual of the
Church of the Nazarene (PDF). Kansas City: Nazarene Publishing
House. 2005. p. 170. Archived from the
original (PDF) on
2013-03-02.
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^ J. Matthew, Price.
"Liberal Arts and the Priorities of Nazarene Higher Education"
(PDF). Archived from
the original (PDF)
on 2008-06-27. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
Nazarene higher education is based on the liberal arts college model. While
ENC is the only Nazarene institution to retain the "college"
moniker, no Nazarene schools fit the
standard national definition[permanent dead
link] of a "research university".
Furthermore, the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts Board of Higher Education holds
a "two
doctorate" standard.
-
^
"US Educational Regions" (PDF). Archived from the
original (PDF) on
2011-09-29. Retrieved
2008-07-10. ENC
and NNU are the only Nazarene
schools to remain true to their regional names.
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^ Jaschik, Scott; Kate Maternowski (May 11, 2009).
"Show me the
money". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
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^ Guidelines and
Handbook for Educational Institutions of the Church of the
Nazarene (PDF). Church
of the Nazarene International Board of Education. 1997.
p. 14.
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^ "Eastern
USA Region" (PDF).
Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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^ When first
established on June 10, 1918, this region also included Ohio, West
Virginia, maritime Canada, and the British Isles.
Manual of the History, Doctrine, Government, and Ritual of the
Church of the Nazarene (PDF). Kansas City: Nazarene Publishing
House. 1919. [permanent dead
link]
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^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 131.
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a
b
c
d "Eastern
Nazarene College". Guide to Best Colleges. U.S. News and
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a
b
c
d Davis, Joy (March 25,
2000). "Faith in God a must for faculty of religious colleges".
The Patriot Ledger.
p. 24.
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^
"UMass Teacher Education RE: Interstate Certification Compact".
Archived from the original on
2008-06-19. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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^
"Eastern Nazarene College Catalogue 2007-2008, p. 9"
(PDF). Archived from the
original (PDF) on
2008-06-27. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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^
"NEASC Accreditation Roster". Archived from the original on
2008-03-15. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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^
"Details from NEASC".
Retrieved 2008-07-10. [permanent dead
link]
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^
"CSWE 2006 Directory of Accredited Programs". Retrieved 2008-07-10. [dead
link]
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^ CCCU member
details: Eastern Nazarene College
Archived 2008-10-24 at Archive.is
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a
b
c
"Eastern Nazarene College 2008-2009 Undergraduate Catalog"
(PDF). Retrieved 2008-03-08.
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^
"NAICU Members — E". Archived from the original
on 2015-11-09. Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 317.
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^
"Historian Smith, 72, Dies". Obituaries. Christianity
Today. 7 April 1997. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
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^
"Karl Giberson Moves On to Create More Time for Writing".
The BioLogos Forum. BioLogos.org. Retrieved 2011-10-25.
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^ "Search for Schools, Colleges,
and Libraries". U.S. Department of Education National Center
for Education Statistics.
Retrieved 2009-04-14.
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^
"Eastern Nazarene College". Carnegie Classification.
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
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^ "Best Semester". Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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^ Lambert, Lane (March 5, 2008). "Making room for God
and evolution; Nazarene prof says they're not mutually exclusive".
The Patriot Ledger.
p. 1.
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^ Lambert, Lane (November 15, 2006). "Speaker
preaches faith in the office; Former investment banker says
companies should embrace the Lord's work". The Patriot Ledger.
p. 10.
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^ "Professors honored for science-religion course
Eastern Nazarene program explores common ground". Patriot Ledger. August
24, 1996.
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^ "Eastern Nazarene
College History". Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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a
b
"Adult and Graduate Programs". Archived from the original on
2007-07-14. Retrieved
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^ "2+2 BAM
Programs". Retrieved
2008-07-10.
- ^
a
b Eastern Nazarene College, Office of the Registrar:
617-745-3877/registrar@enc.edu
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^ "ENC Named One
of "America's Best Colleges"" (Press release). Eastern
Nazarene College. February 5, 2007. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
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a
b Johnson, Carolyn Y.
(July 31, 2005).
"A calling to educate: New head of Christian college aims to train
'people of value'".
Boston Globe. Boston.com. Retrieved July
23, 2009.
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^ Redden, Elizabeth (August 15, 2008). "Christian
Colleges Grow More Diverse". InsideHigherEd.com.
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^ "ENC Student
Handbook (p. 27)" (PDF). Retrieved
2009-06-11.
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^ "Eastern Nazarene
College Application for Undergraduate Admission". Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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^ "ENC Student
Handbook (11.2, p. 51)" (PDF). Retrieved
2009-06-11.
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a
b Johnson, Carolyn Y.
(July 31, 2005).
"School's religious focus remains as rules evolve".
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23, 2009.
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^ MacQuarrie, Brian (November 14, 2005).
"On Christian campus, an all-embracing framework: College in
Illinois shows value trend". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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^ Jackson, Derrick Z. (May 16, 2007).
"Degrees of individuality". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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a
b Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
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^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 309.
Organized in 1940 at the Nazarene General
Assembly.
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a
b Kim, Eunice (April 8,
2006). "ENC students to clean up park in North Weymouth".
The Patriot Ledger.
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^ Cameron, James R. (1968). Eastern
Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950. Kansas
City: Nazarene Publishing House. p. 158.
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^ "ENC A Cappella
Choir". Retrieved
2008-07-10.
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^
"Quincy Arts Alive". Archived from the original
on 2008-07-04. Retrieved
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^ "Local
College Alumna Nominated" (Press release). Eastern Nazarene
College. February 15, 2008.
Retrieved 2008-07-10. "IRNE
Award Nominees 2007". Archived from
the original on 2008-06-14.
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^ Van Sack, Jessica (January 9, 2006).
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^ "Fusion". Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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^ Knox, Robert (January 29, 2009).
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Boston.com. Retrieved
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^ "A walk in the swamp". Boston Globe. July 5,
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