LAKE FOREST COLLEGE


'Lake Forest College', founded in 1857, is a liberal arts college located in Lake Forest, Illinois. The college has over 1,300 students of whom about 40% come from the state of Illinois. The remainder of the students come from all over the United States and world as 46 other states and 47 additional countries are represented in the student body. The college is referred to as "Chicago's National Liberal Arts College" due to its location 30 miles north of Chicago. The college was initially known as 'Lake Forest University' until the 1900s. [1]
Lake Forest College is located at 555 North Sheridan Road, Lake Forest, IL 60045. U.S.A.

Contents
National rankings
History
Lake Forest Academy
Presidents
Faculty
Student Life
Publications
Greek Life
Sororities
Fraternities
Notable alumni
External links
Additional readings

National rankings



★ As of 2007, Lake Forest College is a member of The Princeton Review's 361 Best Colleges, appears on the lists of Best Midwestern Colleges and the Best Value Colleges, and ranks 6th in the country for Students Happy with Financial Aid [2]

★ Lake Forest College was ranked as 95th in a list of the top liberal arts colleges in the country by US News & World Report for its America's Best Colleges 2007 Edition. [3]

History


Lake Forest was founded in 1857 by Reverend Robert W. Patterson as a Presbyterian (though it now maintains no religious affiliation) alternative to the Methodist Northwestern University in Evanston. After stopping the train heading north from Chicago, Patterson and fellow Presbyterians decided to establish a town and university upon the highest bluff overlooking Lake Michigan. (The area directly north of present-day Lake Forest is, coincidentally, Lake Bluff.) After hiring St. Louis architect Almerin Hotchkiss, the town of Lake Forest was laid out, with Hotchkiss using as guidelines the ravines and forest to create a layout that seemed consistent with the natural boundaries and paths. Although this had an endearing intial effect, this led to a lack of roads leading into and out of the town, which later encouraged isolationism. [4]
Young Hall, the tallest building in the city of Lake Forest, houses most of the humanities departments on campus

Lake Forest Academy

The first step toward a university was Lake Forest Academy, a school for boys housed on what is now the College's South Campus.

Presidents



Reverend Daniel Gregory, 1878-1886

Reverend William C. Roberts, 1886-1892

Dr. John M. Coulter, 1893-1896

Reverend James Gore King McClure, 1897-

Ernest Johnson, 1942-1959

William Graham Cole, 1960-1970

Eugene Hotchkiss III, 1970-1993

David Spadafora, 1993-2001

Stephen D. Schutt, 2001-present

Faculty


With a student-to-professor ratio of 12:1, Lake Forest offers opportunities for close association with professors. Unlike other colleges, Lake Forest may boast that no classes are taught by Teaching Assistants. 98 percent of the faculty hold a doctorate or equivalent degree. At the end of every semester, students fill out questionnaires surveying their professors' abilities. The surveys are then returned to the Dean of the Faculty to determine, among other things, tenure.
Notable professors include:

Robert Archambeau

Michael Ebner

Richard Fisher

Carol Gayle

David George

Kent Grote

Charles Hayford

Janet McCracken

Ronald Miller

Ann Roberts

Ahmad Sadri

Davis Schneiderman

Stephen D. Schutt

W. Rand Smith

David Spadafora

Ghada Talhami

Carolyn Tuttle

Student Life


Publications

There are four regular publications on campus:

The Stentor, the official student-run weekly newspaper, which also publishes The Chive

Tusitala, a yearly literary magazine

Collage, which features works primarily written in foreign languages

Eukaryon, an award-winning scientific journal
Greek Life

Sororities


★ There are currently four NPC sororities, Alpha Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, and Kappa Alpha Theta, and one traditionally Black sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha.
Fraternities


★ With the official removal of Delta Kappa Epsilon in May of 2007, there is only one official fraternity on campus, Delta Chi, although there still exist members of DKE, Kappa Sigma, which has its charter taken in 2006, and Phi Pi Epsilon, a local fraternity that was asked to cease actions in 2006.

Notable alumni



Marsha E. Barnes, Diplomat, former U.S. Ambassador to Suriname

Nate Berkus, interior designer and decorator

Blair Butler, G4 host, comedy writer

Jacqueline Carey, bestselling fantasy author

Allan Carr, producer of the movie Grease

Andrea Day, reporter at WNYW-FOX 5 New York

James C. Foster, chairman and chief executive officer of Charles River Laboratories, Inc.

Susan Garrett, Illinois State Senator 29th District

Steve Goodman, folk singer

Ed Janus, independent audio producer, interviewer, and journalist

Philip Klinkner, political scientist

Michael Lane, Maritime Judge

Peg Lautenschlager, former Attorney General of Wisconsin

Colin McComb, game designer

Trevor Kampmann, artist, producer for Cat Power, theme music for CNN's Anderson Cooper 360

Blaise A. F. Mibeck, Research Scientist

Lloyd John Ogilvie, former United States Senate Chaplain

Nicholas J. Pritzker, Chairman of the Board and CEO of the Hyatt Development Corporation

Penelope Rosemont, Surrealist artist and writer

James Edward Stewart III, Test Pilot

Casey Urlacher, Professional Football player

Gerald Vizenor, Native American writer, activist, academic and literary critic, began his teaching career at Lake Forest

Richard Widmark, popular post-WWII era actor

External links



Lake Forest College web site.

Additional readings



★ Ebner, Michael H. "North Shore Town and Gown," ''Chicago History'', Summer 2007, pp.4-29

★ Schultze, Franz, Rosemary Cowler & Arthur H. Miller. ''Thirty Miles North: A History of Lake Forest College, Its Town, and Its City of Chicago''. Lake Forest College, 2000, ISBN=0963818961

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