| Name | Title | Contact Details |
|---|---|---|
Irving Bruckstein |
Chief Information Officer | Profile |
A better tomorrow Will all the social, economic and technological changes occurring make a better world? This is the challenge facing us today: how to harness these forces for good. At Roanoke College we believe good will prevail, if more people are encouraged to find and live their passions. Those who live what they love make the world a better place. They care. They get involved. They find new ways to do things. Their energy and determination inspire us all to care, to strive, to fight for what we love. At Roanoke, we believe more passionate lives will make a better tomorrow. Many colleges talk about finding passion; we believe that`s only half the battle. Institutions of higher education need to help their students—and their alumni—live their passions. Our goal is to help all Roanoke students find and live what they love, and for our success to be a beacon to other schools. Imagine how much better the world will be with millions of passionate people working hard for positive change.
The Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine is a public medical school at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University located in Roanoke, in the U.S. state of Virginia. The medical school is associated with a university-level research institute called the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC.
Salem Bible College is a Salem, OR-based company in the Education sector.
Challenger Learning Center of Northwest is a Hammond, IN-based company in the Education sector.
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health traces its roots to public health activism at the beginning of the last century, a time of energetic social reform. The School began as the Harvard-MIT School of Health Officers, founded in 1913 as the first professional training program of public health in America. The partnership offered courses in preventive medicine at Harvard Medical School, sanitary engineering at Harvard University and allied subjects at MIT.