CORNELL COLLEGE


:''This article is about the liberal arts college in Mount Vernon, Iowa. For the unaffiliated Ivy League university in Ithaca, New York, see Cornell University.
'Cornell College' is a 1,200-student liberal arts college in Mount Vernon, Iowa. Originally called the Iowa Conference Seminary, the school was founded in 1853 by Reverend George Bryant Bowman. Two years later, in 1855, the name was changed to Cornell College, in honor of iron tycoon William Wesley Cornell, who was a distant relative of Ezra Cornell (founder of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York).

Contents
Overview
Athletics
Academic Statistics
Student Statistics
Notable alumni
Notable faculty
Notable staff
Lecturers, speakers, and performers
External links
References

Overview


Cornell students study ''one course at a time'' (abbreviated to "OCAAT" or "the block plan"). Since 1978, school years have been divided into nine "blocks" of three-and-a-half weeks each (each followed by a four-day "block break" to round out to four weeks), during which students are enrolled in a single class; what would normally be covered in a full semester's worth of class at a typical university is covered in just seventeen-and-one-half Cornell class days. Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Colorado; Quest University in Garibaldi Highlands, BC, Canada; Tusculum College in Tusculum, Tennessee; and The University of Montana - Western are the only other colleges operating under this academic calendar.
From the very beginning, Cornell has accepted women into all degree programs. In 1858, Cornell was the first college west of the Mississippi to grant a baccalaureate degree to a woman. Mary Fellows, a member of the first graduating class from Cornell College, received a bachelor's degree in mathematics. In 1871, Harriette J. Cooke became the first female college professor in the United States to become a full professor with a salary equal to that of her male colleagues.
Cornell College is listed as one of the Princeton Review's Best 357 Colleges and in Loren Pope's, ''Colleges That Change Lives''.
'King Chapel, Cornell College'

Athletics


Cornell College fields 19 intercollegiate athletic teams, all of which compete in NCAA Division III sports. It is a member of the Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
Cornell has achieved its greatest success in wrestling. Cornell wrestlers have won eight individual national titles, and in 1947, the wrestling team won the NCAA Division I and AAU national championships. Thirty Cornell wrestlers have been named All-Americans, and seven have been elected to the National Wrestling Hall of Fame.
Twenty-five Cornell students have earned NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships, awarded annually to students in their final year of eligibility who excel both athletically and academically. Cornell ranks tenth among Division III colleges in recipients of this award.
Cornell's football rivalry with Coe College dates to 1891, making it the oldest intercollegiate rivalry west of the Mississippi. Coe currently holds the lead in the series, 60-51-4.
Cornell's mascot is a Ram.

Academic Statistics



★ Average GPA: 3.53

★ Average ACT: 26

★ Student Faculty Ratio: 11:1

★ Most Popular Majors: Economics, English, Psychology

★ Average Class size: 15 students

★ Maximum Class size: 25 students

★ Number of TAs: 0

Student Statistics



★ Enrollment: 1,115

★ Male/Female: 47/53

★ In-state/Out-of-state: 31/69

Notable alumni



Leo Beranek 1936 -- acoustics engineer, co-founder of Bolt, Beranek and Newman

Chris Carney 1981 -- Congressman from Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional district

Mike Conklin 1969 -- feature writer and columnist, ''Chicago Tribune''

James Daly 1941 -- Emmy Award-winning actor[1]

Lester J. Dickinson 1898 -- Congressman and Senator

Lee Alvin DuBridge 1922 -- President of the California Institute of Technology, science advisor to U.S. President Richard Nixon

Donald E. Fehrenbacher 1948 -- winner, Pulitzer Prize for History

Daniel Gerrity 1977 -- Professor of Chemistry at Reed College

Michael J. Graham 1975 -- President of Xavier University

Travis Hauser 2001 -- Actor

Edgar J. Helms 1889 -- founder of Goodwill Industries

Portis Hershey 2002 -- actor

David Hilmers 1972 -- astronaut and medical doctor

Marjorie Holmes 1931 -- author

Steve Rodemer 2003 -- Assistant District Attorney, Colorado Springs CO

Richard Kirkham 1977 -- philosopher

Maryann Mahaffey 1946 -- member of the Detroit City Council

Nancy Price 1946 -- author, ''Sleeping with the Enemy''

Leslie M. Shaw 1874 -- Governor of Iowa, U.S. Secretary of Treasury

William Taylor -- Chairman of the FDIC

Dale O. Thomas 1948 -- wrestler, coach

Walter Thornton 1899 -- Major League Baseball player

Aleta Grillos Trauger 1968 -- Federal judge

John Q. Tufts -- Congressman from Iowa's 2nd Congressional district

Winifred Van Etten 1925 -- Best selling novelist.

Don Weiss 1949 -- Sports writer and NFL executive known as Mr. Super Bowl

Notable faculty



Joseph M. Bachelor -- author

Glenn Cunningham -- Silver Medalist 1500 meters run, 1936 Olympics

Robert Dana -- Poet Laureate of Iowa

Charles Wesley Flint, President (1915-1922), Methodist bishop

Bruce Frohnen -- academic

Jim Leach -- former Republican congressman, taught as a visiting professor.

David Loebsack -- Congressman from Iowa's 2nd District

Lisa Stone -- Head Coach, University of Wisconsin Women's Basketball

Notable staff



Matt Hoover -- Second season winner of NBC's "The Biggest Loser"

Lecturers, speakers, and performers


Despite Cornell's small size and location in a small town, many nationally and internationally prominent speakers and performers have visited Cornell, including the following:

Dinesh D'Souza (2007)
Robert Solow (2006)
Sarah Weddington (2006)
Fareed Zakaria (2005)
Bob Woodward (2004)
Dennis Kucinich (2004)
Howard Dean (2003)
Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore (2002)
Art Alexakis (2002)
Sir Mix A Lot (2000)
Gloria Steinem (1999)
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia (1999)
Ravi Shankar (1970)

Ralph Nader (1970)
John Denver (1969)
François Mitterrand (1968)
Marilyn Horne (1966)
Milton Friedman (1965)
Martin Luther King Jr. (1962)
The Dave Brubeck Quartet (1957)
Isaac Stern (1949)
Robert Frost (1940)
Marian Anderson (1937)
Frank Lloyd Wright (1934, 1946)
Grant Wood (1933) (Wood's first public lecture)
Amelia Earhart (1933)
Carl Sandburg (annually, 1920-1939)

Former U.S. President William Taft (1916)
Hellen Keller and Anne Sullivan (1916)
Ernestine Schumann-Heink (1912)
William Jennings Bryan (1907)
Chicago Symphony (annually, 1903-1963)
Booker T. Washington (1900)
Susan B. Anthony (1879)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1869)
Fredrick Douglass (1859)

External links



Cornell College web site

A humorous article written by Dee Ann Rexroat '82 about the differences between Cornell College and Cornell University

2002 article about the Cornell-Coe rivalry

References


# The Power of Endowment
# Cornell College at a Glance

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