Hutton Honors College
— Honors College named for Philanthropist Edward L. Hutton
Honors College Now Hutton Honors College
In 2003, Hutton gave $9 million to IU to establish an endowment for the International Experiences Program. IU subsequently named the program for him. The university is matching the interest income from his gift in accordance with an initiative that provides matching funds for new gifts of scholarships and fellowships for the IU Bloomington campus.
On behalf of students, faculty and staff in the Hutton Honors College, Dean Karen Hanson extended appreciation for his generous support.
After his Army service, Hutton moved to New York, continuing to work in international trade. In 1951, he joined W.R. Grace & Co., where he became a senior officer and director. Returning to the Midwest in the 1970s, Hutton became president, chief executive officer and eventually chairman of Chemed and Omnicare, which is the leading firm in the United States supplying pharmaceuticals to nursing home patients. The beneficiary of an IU scholarship and of mentoring from caring faculty members, Hutton has been generous in funding other student scholarships and endowed faculty professorships at IU through the IU Foundation. He also chaired the IU Foundation's volunteer fund-raising committee that raised $23 million for the Herman B Wells Scholars Program in the 1980s. Hutton received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from IU in 1992 and the IU Foundation's Herman B Wells Visionary award in 2002. The Hutton Honors College recruits diverse, talented and highly motivated students. It 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 Edward L. Hutton International Experiences Program was started in 2000 as a pilot project of the Honors College, and has been part of the Honors College Undergraduate Grant Program since it began. The program assists with costs for travel and living expenses for IU Bloomington students so they can study abroad or get involved in service projects and internships outside the United States. It is a year-round program. Since its inception, nearly 1,000 students have benefited from the program. IU plans to enable 600 students annually to incorporate international experiences into their academic programs |


"Ed
Hutton has added new
meaning to
President Herman Wells' statement that
the campus of Indiana University is not just in Bloomington, not just in
Indiana or in the United States, but extends around the globe," said IU
President Adam W. Herbert. "He has helped our students become citizens of
the world, and for that he has our enduring gratitude."
