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Funding
Opportunities
Naming Opportunities
Tahlequah and Muskogee
Naming Opportunities Broken Arrow
Centennial Plaza
Convocation Center
Memorial Benches
Naming
Opportunities Tahlequah and Muskogee
This is hallowed ground for education in Oklahoma.
It's been a long and storied journey for Oklahoma's
oldest institution of higher education. From its early foundations
as a Normal School on the site of the Cherokee National Female
Seminary to its current position as a leading regional university,
Northeastern State University continues to chart a course for
learning in Oklahoma.
With the state's purchase of the Cherokee Female
National Seminary and 40 acres of land, Northeastern became a
reality, offering four years of college-level study to the people
of Tahlequah, northeastern Oklahoma and beyond. The newly created
institution opened its doors with 215 students, 21 faculty and
staff, and a $70,000 two-year operating budget. Some 100 years
later, the university serves nearly 9,000 students on three campuses
(Tahlequah, Muskogee, Broken Arrow), resulting in a statewide
economic impact that exceeds $500 million.
Join us for our second century.
Few institutions thrive on history alone; it takes renewed commitment
and support to continue the mission at hand. As Northeastern
enters its second century, we look to additional funding sources
to ensure the next 100 years are as fruitful as the last. Opportunities
are available to memorialize your support through a one-time
gift that grants you naming rights for the NSU building, area
or classroom of your choice.
Endowed/Naming Funds
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College
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$5,000,000
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Buildings
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$2,500,000
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Department Area
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$1,000,000
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Field/Court
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$500,000
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Lab/Performance Area
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$100,000
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Classroom
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$25,000
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Endowed Scholarship
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$25,000
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Office
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$15,000 - $25,000
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Endowed Award or Prize
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$10,000
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Memorial Bench
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$1,500
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These are recommended contribution amounts. We
welcome the opportunity to visit with you about any naming rights,
contributions and/or gifts to NSU.
State of Oklahoma Matching Funds
The State of Oklahoma provides matching funds for your
endowment donation in any of these qualified categories:
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Endowed Lectureship
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$25,000 - $124,999
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Endowed Professorship
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$125,000 - $249-999
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Endowed Chair
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$250,000 - $500,000
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Naming
Opportunities Broken Arrow
Higher education is serious business in Broken
Arrow.
One of the fastest growing cities in Oklahoma, Broken
Arrow is home to Northeastern State University-Broken Arrow.
On December 8, 1998, voters invested $16 million for Phase I
construction, launching the campus into existence with whole-hearted
support.
Thanks to their generosity, NSU-BA opened its doors
in 2001, offering residents of the Greater Tulsa Metropolitan
Area access to many of its nearly 100 degree programs. Residents
extended their commitment just two years later with their approval
of $26 million for Phase II construction. Money from the Vision
2025 package brings the total taxpayer-approved investment in
NSU-BA to $42 million in the past eight years.
The future has never been brighter for NSU-BA.
Science, library and classroom facilities, which were completed
in 2007, have expanded total potential capacity from 3,500
to 8,000 and provide the means for increased economic growth
for the Greater Tulsa Metropolitan Area through a well-educated
workforce.
Naming opportunities cement your commitment.
This tremendous educational facility seeks additional resources
to continue and enhance its leadership presence. Opportunities
are available to memorialize your vote
of confidence and support through a one-time gift that grants
you naming rights to an NSU-BA building, area or classroom of
your choice.
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Building A: Administration, Enrollment
Management, Banquet Services
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$2,500,000
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Building B: Business and Technology
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$2,000,000
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Building C: Education
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$2,000,000
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Building D: Science and Health Professions
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$2,000,000
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Building E: Library
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$2,000,000
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Building G: Liberal Arts
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$2,000,000
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Lecture Hall/Auditorium
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$1,000,000
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Banquet Hall/Ballroom/p>
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$750,000
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Clock Tower
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$500,000
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Library Plaza and Fountain Area
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$250,000
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Building A Fountain and Garden Area
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$250,000
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Lab Spaces
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$50,000
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Classrooms
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$25,000
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Offices
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$15,000 and up
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These are recommended contribution amounts. We
welcome the opportunity to visit with you about any naming rights,
contributions and/or gifts to NSU-BA.
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Convocation
Center
Partner for the second century
At Northeastern State University, we are entering our second
century with a renewed interest in building healthy futures for
our students, the next generation leaders. In a society where
the broad definition of sustainability extends to include a healthy
mind and body, we are challenged to provide the types of facilities
that allows students to pursue their personal health initiatives
as they fulfill their educational goals on the NSU campus.
As society looks for ways to address the challenges
of rising health care costs due to increasing rates of obesity
and related health issues, higher education institutions must
provide for the education and development of the whole person.
We know that by developing a strong mind and healthy body, our
students will be better prepared for a productive life of civic
engagement and service to their community.
To address community health issues among our
student population, NSU has identified a multi-purpose Convocation
and Wellness Center as a significant need on the Tahlequah campus.
We propose this addition with the goal of better serving our
current students and continuing to attract outstanding students.
As a convocation center, this new facility will enhance our ability
to offer outstanding and inspirational social and cultural opportunities,
and provide a resource for tourism and economic development.
This will allow NSU to provide outstanding educational and cultural
opportunities to all students and the community, while developing
a campus environment that embraces and promotes the significant
impact Northeastern has on the region and the economy.
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The proposed convocation and wellness
center reinforces the vision of our Cherokee founders, who established
the Cherokee National Male and Female Seminaries in 1846 to educate
young people who would become contributing members of society.
Today, Northeastern continues to educate the largest number of
American Indian students among four-year institutions in the United
States.
Site plan
The addition of the Northeastern Convocation and Wellness
Center builds a basis to raise additional support, broaden our
scope and develop relationships that expand the reach of our
programs and offerings. The design of the facility mirrors the
architectural marvel that was the Cherokee National Male Seminary,
which was originally built in Park Hill in 1846 and was destroyed
by fire in 1910. While the Cherokee National Female Seminary,
similarly destroyed, was rebuilt and is today's Seminary Hall,
the Male Seminary remains a memory. Through its re-creation,
we can provide outstanding educational and cultural opportunities
to all students and the community while developing a campus environment
that embraces our cultural heritage.
Benefits
The Northeastern Convocation and Wellness Center will:
- Expand cultural tourism opportunities in Northeastern
Oklahoma
- Promote a healthier community
- Increase University recruitment and retention
efforts
- Ensure a solid basis for future growth in
Tahlequah and the surrounding areas
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Memorial Benches
Creating a more user-friendly, comfortable
environment is the inspiration behind the Northeastern
State University Foundation's Memorial Bench Program.
The goal is to place handsome, practical park
benches that complement the campus' landscaping and traffic patterns,
and offer visitors, as well as students, faculty, and staff,
the opportunity to relax and enjoy the beauty that surrounds
them.
These six-foot benches sport classic proportions
and are made of steel with a special coating that will allow
the bench to stand the test of time. They are exceptionally durable
and weather resistant.
Through the generosity of friends and alumni
of NSU, the first benches made possible through the Memorial
Bench Program were placed on campus during the Spring of 2002.
Each bench includes a bronze NSU Seal in the
center of the back, and a copper nameplate honoring the donor
or the individual in whose memory the bench is endowed is secured
above the seal.
To endow a bench requires a tax deductible contribution
of only $1,500. For more information, please contact the NSU
Foundation at 800-722-9614, ext. 4200.
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