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Colby College, founded in 1813, is an American private liberal arts college located on Mayflower Hill in Waterville, Maine. Colby is the 12th-oldest independent liberal arts college in the United States. Approximately 1,800 students from more than 60 countries are enrolled annually; the college offers 52 major fields of study and 32 minors, and emphasizes project-based learning[4]. Volunteer programs and service-learning take many students into the surrounding community. More than two thirds of Colby students participate in study-abroad programs. Together with Bates College and Bowdoin College, Colby is one of three highly selective liberal arts colleges in Maine. Colby College competes in the NESCAC league and is considered to be among what are known as the "Little Ivies." In 2008, Colby was ranked the 15th best liberal arts college by both Forbes and Kiplingers and 22nd in the U.S. News & World Report rankings. Colby was named one of the "25 New Elite Ivies" by the Kaplan College Guide. Although one of the oldest liberal arts colleges in the nation, Colby recently completed several major building projects, including the Diamond Building, opened in 2007 for social sciences and interdisciplinary studies. Diamond houses academic departments and the Goldfarb Center for Public Affairs and Civic Engagement.
[edit] HistoryThe original name of the college, as chartered by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1813, was the Maine Literary and Theological Institution. After Maine separated from Massachusetts, the Maine legislature conferred upon the school the right to grant degrees. Soon afterwards, in 1821, the college was renamed Waterville College. During the Civil War, the school was on the verge of closing due to many students leaving to fight the war. Gardner Colby, a Boston merchant and Maine native gave a large donation that allowed the college to remain open. The college was renamed Colby College in gratitude[5]. In 1871 Colby College was the first all-male college in New England to accept female students. One of the buildings is named after the first woman to attend, Mary Low, who was the valedictorian of the Class of 1875[5]. The original campus was located close to the center of Waterville, but the college outgrew it. In the 1930s, in an effort to keep Colby from relocating to a different community, the city of Waterville deeded 600 acres (2.4 km2) on Mayflower Hill, near the outskirts of the city, to the college. Despite the Georgian Revival architecture and 19th-century look of the present-day campus, the Mayflower Hill campus was all developed since 1930.[5]. [edit] AcademicsStudents choose from courses in 52 major fields and have wide flexibility in designing independent study programs, electing special majors, and participating in internships and study-abroad programs[6]. Major options include: African-American Studies, American Studies, Anthropology, Art, Biology, Chemistry, five options in Classics, Computer Science, East Asian Studies, Economics, Economics-Mathematics, English, Environmental Studies (Policy), Environmental Studies (Science), French Studies, Geology, Geoscience, German Studies, Government, History, International Studies, Latin American Studies, Mathematics, Mathematical Sciences, Music, Philosophy, Physics, Psychology, Religious Studies, Russian Language and Culture, Science, Technology, and Society, Sociology, Spanish, Theater and Dance, and Women's Gender and Sexuality Studies[7]. [edit] LibrariesColby’s libraries—Miller Library, the Bixler Art and Music Library, and the Olin Science Library—have a collection of more than 900,000 books, journals, microfilms, music scores, sound recordings, videos/DVDs, and manuscripts. They provide access to more than 100 electronic databases and more than 47,500 electronic journals. Computer labs, wireless networks, laptops, study areas, and a listening center are available for student use[8].[9] Miller Library stands at the center of campus and houses the humanities and social science collections, the College archives, and Special Collections[10]. Miller also contains a computer cluster and study areas that are open around the clock, and is equipped with wireless Internet access. The Art and Music Library, in the Bixler Art and Music Center, maintains a collection of art and music books, journals, sound recordings, music scores, a computer lab/listening center, and study spaces. Internet ports and wireless access are provided. The Science Library, in the F.W. Olin Science Center, houses books, journals, videos, and topographic maps that support programs in the natural sciences, computer science, and mathematics[8]. An open-stack system allows access to the collection with the online catalog and electronic indexes and Internet files are available on library workstations and computers campus-wide. The collection supports all curriculum areas and contains more than 600 currently received print journals, more than 47,000 electronic journals, and domestic and international daily newspapers. The Colby libraries are a repository for U.S. government and Maine state documents[11]. As a member of both the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin consortium of libraries and MaineCat[12], Colby provides access to a merged catalog of more than eight million items with daily courier service from libraries in Maine. Another consortium, NExpress, comprising Colby, Bates, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Northeastern, Wellesley, and Williams, provides additional access to research materials. Twelve professional librarians provide research assistance to students, faculty, and outside researchers.[13] Instruction in the use of the library and its research materials is offered throughout the curriculum, from an introduction in beginning English classes to in-depth subject searching using sophisticated tools in upper-level classes. [edit] Special CollectionsMiller Library’s special collections of first editions and manuscripts have achieved international recognition. The Edwin Arlington Robinson Memorial Room, named for the Pulitzer Prize-winning Maine poet, contains his books, manuscripts, letters, and memorabilia. Colby’s Thomas Hardy Collection is one of the most extensive in the country. Other authors represented in the Robinson Room include A.E. Housman, Sarah Orne Jewett, Kenneth Roberts, Henry James, Willa Cather, John Masefield, William Dean Howells, Wesley McNair, and Thomas Mann[10]. The John and Catherine Healy Memorial Room contains the James Augustine Healy Collection of Modern Irish Literature, with inscribed copies, manuscripts, and holograph letters of William Butler Yeats, Sean O’Casey, James Joyce, George Bernard Shaw, and others. The Healy Collection has 7,000 primary and critical sources representing the Irish Literary Renaissance, 1880-1940. The Alfred King Chapman Room houses the College archives, which hold more than 4,000 manuscript files pertaining to Colby alumni, faculty, and staff dating from 1813 to the present. The archives include an extensive collection of books by Colby graduates and faculty members[10]. [edit] Student bodyToday Colby’s 1,800-plus students, evenly divided between men and women, come from virtually every state and more than 60 countries. In 2005, Colby was presented the Senator Paul Simon Award for Campus Internationalization. Students have also participated in humanitarian projects to reduce the malaria problem in the Republic of Sierra Leone.[14] Colby students are listed as 62-percent white, 18-percent unknown race, 14.5-percent ALANA (Asian American, Latino/a, African American, Native American), and 5.3-percent international (2009-10).[15] Alumni, now numbering more than 25,000, are represented in all 50 states and 75 foreign countries[16]. Alumni remain engaged with the College through alumni programs, affinity groups, and a directory and related services online, all offered by the Office of Alumni Relations. [edit] Student life on campus
In 2003 the college created a Student Programming Board (SPB) to produce social events on campus. This student-run organization sponsors multiple programs every week ranging from dances to special lectures to bingo nights to large-scale live performances. In the past, SPB has brought such acts as Jurassic 5, Citizen Cope, Blackalicious, Ben Folds, Ben Kweller, OK Go, Dane Cook, Talib Kweli, Matisyahu, State Radio, Lupe Fiasco, Blue Scholars, Guster, Common, Mates of State, CAKE, and Naughty By Nature. In addition to SPBs programming, clubs on campus often put on all-school events. In 2004 and 2005 Colby received press for a Student Government program offering beer and wine to of-age students in a dining hall[17]. For a nominal cost, students may consume up to two beverages during their meal on specific Beer and Wine nights held periodically throughout the year. Colby's student newspaper, The Colby Echo, has been published since 1877. The paper distributes 1,600 papers weekly in academic buildings, dining halls and throughout Waterville and publishes online at http://www.colby.edu/echo. Colby's radio station, WMHB 89.7 FM, has been on air since March 1949. WMHB broadcasts new and diverse programming to central Maine and around the world. Colby also has a vibrant a cappella scene. There are six groups on campus: The Blue Lights (Men), The Colby Eight (Men), The Megalomaniacs (Co-ed), The Sirens (Female), The Colbyettes (Female), and EVE (Female). [edit] Colby College Museum of ArtThe Colby College Museum of Art Colby museum, one of the largest art museums in Maine, has a number of collections covering a variety of different styles of paintings, sculpture, and other media. Its collection is particularly strong in American art. The museum is notable for an entire wing dedicated to works by American painter Alex Katz. It has major outdoor sculptures by Richard Serra and Sol LeWitt. The Colby museum plans to open an expansion in 2013 to display works from the Lunder Collection, promised to Colby in 2007. Admission is free. [edit] Colby Outdoor Orientation Trips (COOT)In 1975 Colby instituted its first outdoor orientation trip. From 15 first-year students, two upperclassmen and a professor on the first trip, the program has grown to include all members of incoming classes participating in a COOT (Colby Outdoor Orientation Trip). The program, which has been expanded to include on-campus orientation and is called COOT2, now offers 52 trips in the fall semester and an ICED COOT program for those students who spend the first semester of their freshman year abroad. Destinations for fall trips include hiking trips at Acadia National Park, Mount Katahdin, and other locations around Maine; canoe trips on the Kennebec and Moose Rivers, along with other trips around the state. The various trips are designed to appeal to incoming students with a variety of interests and fitness levels[18]. The primary goals of COOT are to ease new students' transition into college and to introduce them to the Maine's cultural and natural resources. COOT leaders are chosen from upperclass students and are expected to help the students both during and after the trip with the adjustment to campus life[18]. [edit] Greek SystemThe national Sigma Kappa sorority was founded at Colby in 1874 by the college's first five female students[19]. In 1984, following an investigation of campus life commissioned by the Board of Trustees, a decision was made to withdraw recognition from Colby’s Greek system as it was seen to be "exclusionary by nature"[20]. The day that fraternity and sorority decision was announced happened to fall on a Sunday and was known as "Bloody Sunday" by many on the campus at the time.[21].[specify] [edit] Environmental PracticesIn the Fall of 2009, Colby launched Green Colby[22] to highlight Colby's environmental policies (carbon footprint, conservation, student involvement etc.) [23]. In this vein, the school has signed a number of official agreements to reduce its environmental impact, including the Governor’s Carbon Challenge and the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment.[24] [25] [26] All of the school's electricity comes from renewable sources[27] —hydro and biomass—with 10 percent of campus electricity provided by an on-campus cogeneration turbine.[24][specify] The college has stated that all new buildings will comply with a minimum LEED silver standard, and renovated buildings will also include green features.[24] The dining halls make an effort to purchase local and organic foods, and the elimination of trays has saved 79,000 gallons of water and 50 tons of food waste annually.[24][specify] Colby also has an ambitious composting program, which processes more than 100 tons of food and yard waste annually.[24] On the College Sustainability Report Card 2009 Colby earned a B; Colby's grade was brought down by its lack of endowment transparency and shareholder engagement.[28] Colby has an Integrated Pest Management plan to regulate the use of pesticides, but this plan does not include a list of the chemicals used on turf, trees, or buildings.[29] There is very strong concern, expressed at the student government level, about the college's regular use of pesticides and herbicides to rid the campus of weeds.[30] Colby's own Environmental Studies Professors argue that these practices are detrimental to the health of people who come into contact with them.[31][32] Specifically, these pesticides and herbicides have been shown to damage reproductive systems in both female and male adults.[33] [edit] Alma MaterColby's Alma Mater is "Hail, Colby, Hail". The lyrics to the song were written by Karl R. Kennison from the class of 1906 and it is sung to the tune of "O Canada". In 1979, the second line was changed from "thy sons" to "thy people far and near."[34]
[edit] Historical timeline
[edit] Notable alumniSee also: List of Colby College people Many notable individuals have been affiliated with Colby College, including: TV personality Billy Bush (1994), Civil War General Benjamin F. Butler (1838), major league pitcher Colby Jack Coombs (1906), investment banker and president of Barclays Robert Diamond (1973), historian Doris Kearns Goodwin (1964), ABC News anchor Dan Harris (1993), chair of the National Endowment for the Arts Rocco Landesman (1969), abolitionist Elijah P. Lovejoy (1826), crime novelist Robert B. Parker (1954), novelist Annie Proulx (1957). [edit] EndowmentColby College had an endowment of US$ 452,990,000 as of June 30, 2009.[36] [edit] Points of interest
[edit] Colby in popular culture
[edit] References
[edit] Further reading
[edit] External links
Coordinates: 44°33′51″N 69°39′47″W / 44.56417°N 69.66306°W Categories: Universities and colleges in Maine | Liberal arts colleges | New England Small College Athletic Conference | Posse schools | Colby College | Educational institutions established in 1813 | National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities | New England Association of Schools and Colleges | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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