Thank you for supporting the Donald Cole Catalyst for Change Scholarship! Your contributions mean so much to University of Mississippi students now and in the future.
While this project has ended, you can still make a gift at https://umfoundation.com/ignite.
We are filled with gratitude to the entire University of Mississippi community for supporting the Donald Cole Catalyst for Change Scholarship with your gifts and your excitement.
Thanks to your amazing efforts, we have already exceeded the goal. We have until midnight tonight to go even farther. If you haven’t had a chance to give yet, now’s your chance! If you have already made a gift, thank you! Please share the good news about the scholarship in Dr. Cole’s name and our opportunity to help students for decades to come. Let’s keep going – $40,000 is within reach!
Thank you for making a difference!
You are a catalyst for change. Thanks to you, as of this moment we have less than $5,000 left to raise in order to meet the goal for the Donald Cole Catalyst for Change Scholarship.
All of you have done so much to help us get there. Now, we ask you to spread the word. Please share ignite.olemiss.edu/doncole on your social media feeds. Please message your friends. Let’s use our influence to support future generations of University of Mississippi students as they learn to lead, just as Dr. Cole does every day.
Thank you! Your gifts mean so much!
Dr. Don Cole served as a respected professor and administrator for 25 years at the University of Mississippi, touching the lives of students, faculty and staff.
James Meredith bravely enrolled as the University of Mississippi's first African-American student in October 1962. When Don Cole arrived on campus as a freshman six years later, further progress was needed. Thankfully, Dr. Cole helped lead the way, as a student, a graduate student, a professor and administrator, and a champion of programs and opportunities serving African- American students, economically disadvantaged students, and indeed, every student enrolled at UM.
As a young campus activist with the Black Student Union, Don Cole and other UM students staged a protest at a Fulton Chapel concert in February 1970. Their modest demands included more opportunities for black students and staff and the hiring of black faculty members. In response, Cole and seven others -- the Ole Miss Eight -- were expelled from the university. Their leadership sparked change at UM. In the years since, nearly all the demands of the students were met by the University.
As director of the Ronald E. McNair Program at the University of Mississippi, Dr. Cole mentored 177 outstanding students through intensive research projects in all fields of study. The program aims to prepare disadvantaged college students for graduate school and prepare them to become future Ph.D.s.
Dr. Cole and his wife, Marcia, who serves as director of internships and community engagement in the UM School of Applied Sciences, raised three children in Oxford. Donald Cole II, Mariah Cole Williams and William Cole, all three of whom attended the University of Mississippi.
For African-American students, the nine fraternities and sororities of the National Pan-Hellenic Council offer a sense of belonging and a shared mission that extends well beyond four years of college. If you give $900 in honor of the Divine 9, you will fund the Don Cole Scholarship for one freshman student for one year. Supporting education is the founding principle of every Greek-letter organization in the NPHC.
"First of all, servants of all, we shall transcend all." Dr. Cole's membership in Alpha Phi Alpha has been an important part of his service to African-American students over the years. From his time as an advisor to the UM chapter while earning his Ph.D. in the 1980s to his current leadership and mentorship, we honor his commitment with a gift that recognizes the year Alpha Phi Alpha was founded at Cornell University.
Fund the Donald Cole Scholarship for one student through all four years of his/her undergraduate pursuits at the University of Mississippi. This deserving student will major in African American Studies and possibly complete a double major as well. As part of their course of study, they will learn the civil rights history of UM, of which Dr. Cole played an integral part.