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Hutton Honors College : ウィキペディア英語版
Hutton Honors College

The Hutton Honors College (or simply Hutton or HHC) is the honors program of Indiana University. The college was founded as the University Honors Division in 1966 with Warner Chapman as its director. It was renamed the Hutton Honors College in the fall of 2004 in honor of IU alumnus Edward Hutton. The college offers a range of small, challenging courses along with a variety of extracurricular and service programs. These opportunities, which include a close working relationship with some of IU's top faculty, affirm IU's commitment to providing students with both the intimacy of a small college and the breadth of a large research institution. The Hutton Honors College recruits diverse, talented, and highly-motivated students whose presence on campus serves to enhance the education of all undergraduates. By offering a range of small, challenging courses along with a variety of extracurricular and service programs, it strives to ensure an enriched academic and social experience for its students and to create an environment that fosters active, innovative learning.
==HHC Achievements==
Hutton Honors College graduates have found success in many arenas. Scholars have received fellowships and scholarships from various organizations including Beinecke, Churchill, Fulbright, Gates, Goldwater, Marshall, Mellon, Mitchell, Rhodes, Soros, Truman and Udall.
Those seeking graduate school have been accepted to Brown, California at Berkeley, Cambridge, Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, Duke, Harvard, Indiana, Johns Hopkins, Juilliard, London School of Economics, Northwestern, Oxford, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Sorbonne, Stanford, Tufts, UCLA and Yale.
Graduates have worked with public and nonprofit sector employers including Americorps, Department of Defense, Department of State, Peace Corps and Teach for America.
Honors College alumni work for many corporate employers such as Abbott Laboratories, Citibank, Eli Lilly and Company, Hallmark, IBM, JP Morgan, KPMG, Lucent, P&G and Smith Barney.
==Timeline==

*May 1965: The IU Board of Trustees approves “in principle” the establishment of an Honors Division.
*1966: The University Honors Division, with Warner Chapman as its director, is established as a unit within the Office for Undergraduate Development. Within a few years, the Honors Division begins to report to the chancellor of the campus. The “first home” of the University Honors Division is Professor Chapman’s office, Kirkwood Hall 113.
*1973-1986: The University Honors Division is housed in the Student Building.
*1984-85: Julia Conaway Bondanella, associate director of the University Honors Division, serves as acting director. Professor Bondanella serves as associate director of the University Honors Division from 1983 to 2000 and associate dean of the IU Honors College 2000-01. She was also elected president of the National Collegiate Honors Council from 1993-94.
*Fall 1985: James S. Ackerman, professor of religious studies and former chair of that department, becomes director of the University Honors Division. The first Honors Division merit scholarship recipients matriculate.
*Spring 1986: The University Honors Division moves into Haskett House, 324 N. Jordan Ave. A converted garage in Haskett called the Brown County Room serves in the coming years as space to welcome students, faculty, and distinguished campus visitors for extracurricular events.
*Early 1990s: The University Honors Division offers its students the opportunity to earn an Honors Notation in recognition of the completion of honors-level coursework in several departments.
*Spring 1993: The University Honors Division is given the use of Moody House, 326 N. Jordan Ave., for its advising staff; the offices of other HD administrators remain in 324 N. Jordan Ave.
*August 1993: James Ackerman retires; Lewis H. Miller Jr., professor of English and co-founder of the Liberal Arts and Management Program, becomes director of the University Honors Division.
*1999: The University Honors Division establishes an Honors Residential Community in Forest Quadrangle.
*2000: The University Honors Division becomes the Honors College and Lewis Miller is named dean.
*Summer 2002: Edward Gubar, the Honors College director of publications and of grants and a faculty member in the HC and the IU School of Journalism, serves as acting dean.
*August 2002: Karen Hanson, chair of the Department of Philosophy and the Rudy Professor of Philosophy, is named dean of the Honors College.
*Late Fall 2004: The Honors College is named the Hutton Honors College, in honor of IU alumnus, business leader, and philanthropist Edward L. Hutton.
*August 2007: Jean Robinson, professor of political science, serves as interim dean.
*July 2008: Matthew Auer is named dean of the HHC.
*January 2008: The new Hutton Honors College building opens, made possible by the generosity of Edward L. Hutton.

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