$5.2 Million Emera Astronomy Center Benefits from $3.2 Million Anonymous Gift

People donate to the Foundation for various reasons and most are recognized publicly for their generosity. However, donors sometimes choose to remain in the background and watch their legacy at work from afar. Anonymity is very possible when working with the University of Maine Foundation. In fact, this is the case of the anonymous donors for the new Emera Astronomy Center at UMaine, the donors decided to step aside from the opportunity to name the center. It is somewhat fitting that the largest donor for the new UMaine astronomy center remains a very important, yet unknown entity somewhere in the shining stars.

The new Emera Astronomy Center will feature a planetarium dome 33 feet in diameter — the largest in the state — equipped with a state-of-the-art Definiti projection system. The new observatory’s 20-inch digital PlaneWave CDK20 telescope also will be the largest in Maine.

The center will include innovative exterior lighting designed to help preserve the dark-sky critical to enhanced stargazing. The center will be heated with geothermal heat pumps — the first building at UMaine to benefit from this energy efficient technology.

The Emera Astronomy Center will enhance UMaine’s role in outreach to K–12 students and promotion of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education. The planetarium and observatory will complement the many other efforts at UMaine to attract students to scientific disciplines by inspiring children — and all those who are children at heart — about the science of astronomy.

The state-of-the art facility is expected to open in fall 2014.

Maine High Schools Award University of Maine Foundation Scholarships

June is high school graduation season and a time when many scholarships are awarded. The University of Maine Foundation stewards several scholarship funds designated to specific Maine high schools for students who will be attending the University of Maine. One example is the Ruth M. Crosby Scholarship that is awarded each year at Hermon High School.

This year principal Brian Walsh presented the scholarship to Joshua Wilson and Alivia Brown.

The Ruth M. Crosby Scholarship Fund was established in 2000 by Howard A. Crosby, a member of the University of Maine class of 1943, in honor of his wife, Ruth M. Crosby.

Howard served as a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Maine in Orono, retiring as a professor emeritus after 34 years in 1980. Howard and Ruth lived in Hermon for over 55 years, where they raised their family, ran a summer tourist business known as Hermon Motor Court and founded Crosby Gardens and Arboretum, now known as Ecotat.

Learn more about establishing a named scholarship, contact the University of Maine Foundation.