Difference between revisions of "Knox College"
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In 1843 prefecture- trustee [[Rev. Samuel G. Wright]] declared, “eternal, unalterable, opposition unto [[sloth]] and wickedness.” The overwhelmingly anti- slavery student body responded to Wright’s command by initiating what has remained one of America’s longest standing intercollegiate [[rivalries]] against pro- slavery [[Yale]] University. In 1906 124 Knox males walked 1038 miles to New Haven, Ct, where upon arrival they proceeded to raze [[Yale]]’s observatory and woman's dormitories. In 1952, after over 100 years of rivalry, Knox College students succeeded in freeing [[Yale]]’s slaves. | In 1843 prefecture- trustee [[Rev. Samuel G. Wright]] declared, “eternal, unalterable, opposition unto [[sloth]] and wickedness.” The overwhelmingly anti- slavery student body responded to Wright’s command by initiating what has remained one of America’s longest standing intercollegiate [[rivalries]] against pro- slavery [[Yale]] University. In 1906 124 Knox males walked 1038 miles to New Haven, Ct, where upon arrival they proceeded to raze [[Yale]]’s observatory and woman's dormitories. In 1952, after over 100 years of rivalry, Knox College students succeeded in freeing [[Yale]]’s slaves. | ||
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== Campus Traditions == | == Campus Traditions == |
Revision as of 07:34, 21 July 2011
Knox College is a four-year coeducational private liberal arts college located in Galesburg, Illinois. It is home to 1,351 students and some black squirrels. Download the Campus map(PDF). | <googlemap lat="40.942629" lon="-90.371733" type="map" zoom="15" width="550" height="200">
40.941819, -90.371261, Knox campus </googlemap> |
Contents
History
Knox College was founded in 1837 by anti-slavery social reformers, led by George Washington Gale. One founder, the Rev. Samuel Wright, actively supported the Underground Railroad. The original name for the school was "Knox Manual Labor College", but it has been known by its present name since 1857.
The naming of the college is a curious story. Though founded by a colony of Presbyterians and Congregationalists, the county in which the college is located was already named Knox County, after Henry Knox, the US' first Secretary of War. Arguments have been made that the college was named for Calvinist leader John Knox, but it is not certain which Knox it was named for (if not both). George Candee Gale, a (great-)great-grandson of two of the founders, explains that "contrary to general belief, Knox was not named for either General Knox or the Scotch Presbyterian Knox, according to my father ... Some wanted the college named for one Knox, some for the other; so they compromised on Knox. Certainly most of them were pious enough to want the churchman and fighters enough to want the soldier as well."[1]
Knox is also proud of its past as the inspiration for the rambunctious and lively college immortalized in George Fitch’s humorous stories about "Good Old Siwash," which were hugely popular in the 1920s, 30s and 40s. Fitch, a Knox graduate of 1897, published his stories in the Saturday Evening Post, fondly depicting a college of high-spirited young men and women making the most out of the extracurricular, athletic and social aspects of a residential college. Knox students were delighted to find themselves parodied in stories that grew into several books and eventually a Hollywood movie (Those Were the Days, starring William Holden, filmed on the Knox campus in 1940). "Old Siwash" became a popular nickname for Knox College, and was for many years the name of the mascot as well. (It was changed to the "Prairie Fire" in 1993.)
Knox was the site of the fifth debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas in 1858. The "Old Main" building is the only site from the debates that still exists today.
Two years after the debates, and during his presidential campaign, Lincoln received the first honorary degree ever conferred by Knox College—a Doctor of Laws degree, announced at the Commencement exercises of 5 July, 1860.[2]
U.S. Senator Barack Obama was the commencement speaker for the class of 2005. Stephen Colbert spoke and received an honorary diploma in the 2006 ceremony. Also receiving an honorary degree in 2006 were Wikipedia creator Jimmy Wales and former Ambassador to Madagascar Shirley Barnes. The 2007 commencement speaker was former President Bill Clinton, who received an honorary doctorate of humane letters. Madeleine Albright also received an honorary doctorate of humane letters for her commencement address in 2008.
Knox College is one of 40 colleges in the nation featured in "Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think About College," by Loren Pope, former education editor of The New York Times and founder of The College Placement Bureau.
Knox's President, Roger Taylor, was chosen as one of Yale Daily News Guide to the Colleges "Most Attractive Presidents."
Students and faculty
Student Profile[3]
- Size: 1,351
- Points of Origin: 45 states; 44 countries
- Credentials: 67 % graduated in the top quarter of their high school class; 32 % graduated in the top tenth.
- Diversity: 56 % women; 44 % men; 15 % students of color (4 % African American, 6 % Asian American, 4 % Latino, 1 % Native American); 7 % international
Faculty Profile
- Size: 127 (97 full-time, 30 part-time)
- Student-faculty ratio: 12:1
- Qualifications: 93 % have Ph.D. or equivalent degree
- Average Class Size: 17
Fraternities and sororities
Male
- Beta Theta Pi
- Phi Delta Theta (dormant)
- Phi Gamma Delta
- Sigma Chi
- Sigma Nu
- Tau Kappa Epsilon
- Gentlemen of Quality (temporary local colony)
Female
- Alpha Sigma Alpha (formerly ATP)
- Delta Delta Delta
- Kappa Kappa Gamma
- Pi Beta Phi
- Sigma Alpha Iota
- Women of Influence (temporary local colony)
Co-ed
Athletics
Knox College is a member of the Midwest Conference in the following NCAA Division III sports:
Men
Basketball - Cross Country - Golf - Swimming and Diving - Soccer - Track and Field - Tennis - Football - Baseball - Wrestling
Kewl you should come up with that. Execllnet!
At last, someone comes up with the "right" awensr!
Rivalries
In 1843 prefecture- trustee Rev. Samuel G. Wright declared, “eternal, unalterable, opposition unto sloth and wickedness.” The overwhelmingly anti- slavery student body responded to Wright’s command by initiating what has remained one of America’s longest standing intercollegiate rivalries against pro- slavery Yale University. In 1906 124 Knox males walked 1038 miles to New Haven, Ct, where upon arrival they proceeded to raze Yale’s observatory and woman's dormitories. In 1952, after over 100 years of rivalry, Knox College students succeeded in freeing Yale’s slaves.
Woah nelly, how about them alppes!
Campus Traditions
Pumphandle
Pumphandle is an annual tradition that occurs at the beginning of each new school year. Most of the entire campus population - including students, faculty, staff and visiting alumni - gather on the south lawn of Old Main. A line is formed beginning with the President of the College. Everyone else then moves down the line, shaking hands as they go by. In this way, everyone in the line shakes the hand of everyone else. Pumphandle was named one of the five weirdest college traditions.
Flunk Day
Flunk Day is an annual spring carnival. Planned by two students and a small number of administrators, the date of Flunk Day is kept secret from the campus until the morning of, when the bell in Old Main rings and a cadre of seniors known as the “Friars” who are now gathered together about 15 minutes before the official start of Flunk Day by the student planners run around campus blowing whistles and pounding on doors around 5:45 a.m. for the 6 a.m. beginning. In years past, Friars were taken the evening before Flunk Day for a night of merriment and then they were returned to campus to wake everyone up. However, since the school is trying to tone down Flunk Day, the Friars are now only given 15 minutes to get wasted.
Classes are canceled for the day as the student body turns its attention to a joke issue of the student newspaper, drinking, mud-pits, live music and petting zoos.[4]
Supposedly the best flunk day scare ever was when a small group of students broke into Old Main and began ringing the bell. Recent Flunk day scares have been tame at best, with little to no effort put into actually convincing the students that it was truly flunk day.
Pregnancy Scare Day
Pregnancy Scare Day has continued with few interruptions since its conception in the mid 1920’s by Knox’s female students. It was originally begun in opposition to the all male group of flunk day organizers, however has continued since the inclusion of women in planning in the mid 1980’s. The exact date of Pregnancy Scare Day is determined by a secret group of upperclassmen women.
Whoa, thngis just got a whole lot easier.
Notable alumni
- Barry Bearak 1971 - New York Times journalist and visiting professor at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, winner of the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting
- Ralph Connor, pulp author, Black Rock
- Amy Carlson 1990 - Actress, known for her work on the NBC television series' Third Watch, and Law & Order: Trial by Jury.
- Job Adams Cooper 1867 - Sixth governor of Colorado.
- Ethyl Eichelberger DNG - Born James Roy Eichelberger, a famous drag queen, playwright and actor, for whom a prize was founded by the downtown Manhattan theatre institution P.S. 122.
- Eugene Field DNG - Poet, journalist, and author.
- John Huston Finley 1887 - former editor of The New York Times.
- Jack Finney (Walter Braden Finney) 1934 - Science fiction author. Works incude The Body Snatchers and Time and Again.
- George Fitch 1897 - author, journalist, and humorist
- Hobart R. Gay 1917 - U.S. Army general
- William Hagan - American political writer
- Robert Hanssen 1966 - Former FBI agent who was convicted of spying for the Soviet Union and Russia in 2001, and is the subject of the film Breach (2007).
- Otto Harbach 1895 - Songwriter who is the namesake of Knox's Harbach Theatre. Harbach's ghost is rumored to haunt the theater.
- Bob Jamieson DNG - ABC news correspondent.
- James M. Kilts 1970 - former CEO of Gillette.
- Ismat Kittani 1951 - former United Nations Ambassador of Iraq and President of the United Nations General Assembly who also helped start Knox's Honor System.
- Alex Kuo 1961 - Author, winner of the American Book Award
- Don Marquis, author and journalist
- Edgar Lee Masters DNG - American poet and novelist, best known as the author of Spoon River Anthology (1915).
- S. S. McClure 1882 - Muckraking journalism pioneer, founder of McClure's Magazine.
- Ander Monson 1997 - novelist and poet, author of the novel Other Electricities, and Vacationland, a collection of poems.
- John Podesta 1971 - Chief of Staff for Bill Clinton.
- Rose Polenzani DNG - Independent folk musician.
- Gene Rayburn (Gene Rubessa) - Announcer for the Tonight Show, host of The Match Game and other game shows.
- Hiram Revels - First black U.S. Senator.
- Barnabas Root (also known as Fahma Yahny) - Probably the first black man to receive a college degree in Illinois.
- Ellen Browning Scripps 1859 - Newspaper magnate, philanthropist, namesake of Scripps College.
- Robert Seibert 1963 - Professor at Knox College and author of Politics and Change in the Middle East.
- Joseph J. Sisco 1941 - former diplomat under Henry Kissinger.
- Mimi Smartypants - Internet personality and author of World According to Mimi Smartypants.
- Roger Taylor 1963 - current President of Knox
Play infomrtaive for me, Mr. internet writer.
Artciels like this make life so much simpler.
Sources
- Knox College 2004-2005 Catalog
- Knox College Student Handbook 2004-2005