Earlham College
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- For other places with the same name, see Earlham (disambiguation).
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Earlham College |
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| Motto | Engagement with a Changing World |
| Established | 1847 |
| Type | private coeducational |
| Endowment | $384 million[1] |
| President | Douglas C. Bennett |
| Faculty | 93[2] |
| Undergraduates | 1,185[3] |
| Location | Richmond, IN, USA |
| Campus | large town: 800 acres (3.2 km²) |
| Athletics | 16 Division III NCAA teams |
| Colors | maroon and white |
| Nickname | The Hustlin' Quakers[4] |
| Mascot | Mr. Quaker |
| Affiliations | Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) |
| Website | www.earlham.edu |
Earlham College is a national, selective Quaker liberal arts college in Richmond, Indiana. It was founded in 1847 and has approximately 1,200 students. The current president is Douglas C. Bennett. In keeping with Friends' belief in equality, everyone addresses each other at Earlham by his or her first name, without the use of titles such as "doctor" or "professor."
While Earlham is primarily a residential undergraduate college, it does have two graduate programs — the master of arts in teaching and the master of education — which provide a route for teacher licensure to students with liberal arts undergraduate degrees. Additionally, there are two associated institutions located adjacent to the Earlham campus: Earlham School of Religion, a Christian graduate theological school in the Quaker tradition, and Bethany Theological Seminary, an independent Brethren institution offering graduate and non-degree programs.
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Earlham College sits on an 800 acre (3.2 km²) campus, the majority of which is undeveloped forest and meadow. The undeveloped 'back campus' area is criss-crossed by trails for the enjoyment of the student body as well as serving as a readily accessible outdoor classroom. Earlham is nationally recognized for its strong programs in biology, Japanese studies, and peace and global studies. The Earlham Libraries are known for their course-integrated program of information literacy instruction. Notably, Earlham ranks 8th in the nation (out of 1,302 colleges and universities) in its percentage of graduates who go on to receive a Ph.D. in the biological sciences and 26th in the percentage of students going on to Ph.D. programs in all fields. Earlham is known for its "Super Languages" program where a full year of a language is taught intensively for one semester. Earlham recently began offering two semesters of modern Arabic.
Earlham has an extensive outdoor education program which features its own indoor climbing wall. Tucked into Earlham's 'back campus' is a high and low ropes challenge course. Earlham also has a state-of-the-art equestrian center that is student-run.
Earlham ranks high among liberal arts schools of its size with regard to student body diversity. Earlham has sizable black and Jewish populations. International students comprise over 10% of the student body in most years. There are small numbers of Catholics, Unitarian Universalists, Muslims, Buddhists, Evangelical Protestants, United Church of Christ and Bahá'í students, and a large number of students affiliated with mainline Protestant denominations. There are also atheists, agnostics, and non-denominationalists. Between 10 and 20 percent of the student population belongs to the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers).
The faculty at Earlham provide a rigorous curriculum and engage students in collaborative research. The student to faculty ratio is approximately 12:1.
Earlham College has a high number of faculty-led off-campus programs. Almost two-thirds of Earlham students go on a semester-length off-campus program to such destinations as Mexico, Vienna, Martinique, Northern Ireland, Great Britain, France, Germany, Spain, the Southwestern U.S., Japan and Tanzania. In addition, there are a number of shorter off-campus May terms, with destinations both within the U.S. and abroad (Galapagos, Senegal, Menorca, Turkey as recent examples). Earlham has a formal exchange program with Waseda University in Japan, which has existed informally for decades. Each year about a dozen students from each school experience a year of student life at the other university. In addition, Earlham College works with the SICE program in Morioka, Japan, a program in which about twelve to fourteen students teach English in grade schools in Morioka.
Earlham College is a member of the Great Lakes Colleges Association.
Earlham is unique in that it has an entirely student-managed public radio station, WECI 91.5FM.
The Joseph Moore Musem is a natural history museum located on campus and run by students and biology department faculty. The focus is Indiana's natural history. It is open to the public (free of charge) and tours are available upon request.
Earlham College remains the only American institution of tertiary education allowing one to study aardvarks extensively in their native habitat in the Kakamega Forest. [1]
Earlham College is also a member of the North Coast Athletic Conference. While not an outstanding athletic school, Earlham has won championships in men's cross country and has an ultimate team. The athletics teams are known as the Quakers. They originally had been the Fightin' Quakers; although the name was meant tongue-in-cheek, it was changed in the 1980s to the Hustlin' Quakers after the college's board of regents decided that it was inappropriate for Quakers to fight. In the 1990s, the name was changed again to simply Quakers. Among the student body, the chant sometimes sung publicly is
- Fight, Fight, Inner Light!
- Kill, Quakers, Kill!
- Knock 'em Down, Beat 'em Senseless!
- Do It til We Reach Consensus!
Also:
- Fight, Fight, Inner Light!
- Kill, Quakers, Kill!
- Beat 'em, Beat 'em, Knock 'em Senseless!
- Tell Me, Do We Have Consensus?
Earlham has the only student-run Hash House Harriers running group, founded in 1989 and still continuing at present (2007). While only loosely connected with national organizations, the student group maintains weekly runs and has been described by visitors as the "Galapagos of Hashes" for the creativity and development of hashing practices. The Hash run takes place on the "back campus" during all seasons.
Earlham was one of the first colleges in the country to initiate student and faculty led wilderness programs, back in 1970. These programs were designed for incoming first-year and transfer students who received credit for them. The program is divided into the Water August Wilderness and the Mountain August Wilderness and lasts for approximately three weeks; the former canoes in Wabakimi Provincial park in Ontario and the latter hikes in the Uinta Mountains in Utah. Students in the past have taken ice climbing, white water kayaking, rock climbing and canoeing for credit. The program leads backpacking and canoeing trips to places like Big Bend National Park and runs a May Term (a condensed three week term after the spring semester) course which trains students to lead its August Wilderness program. Some of these students go on to lead wilderness courses for Outward Bound and similar organizations after graduation.
A great deal of effort is made at Earlham to stress its emphasis upon reaching consensus on any issue of importance. For example, student organizations are strongly encouraged not to operate according to majority vote or steering committee but instead to adopt Quaker-based consensus governance. This principle supposedly guides the institution as a whole [2].
Therefore, when matters exist for which consensus is not reached among all members of the Earlham community, the lack of consensus, in and of itself, can become an issue. Thus, these matters are known as "non consensus issues."
Earlham's "dry campus" policy is controversial among members of the student body and some faculty members. Drinking is fairly commonplace; some students refer to the campus as "pleasantly moist."
Tension sometimes arises between students and the Quaker Indiana and Western Yearly Meetings over issues of sexuality. Western and, to an even greater degree, Indiana Yearly Meeting tend to be more conservative on issues such as condom distribution, pregnancy, and homosexuality. This tension has been a recurrent feature of Earlham life for decades.
Earlham College only recently developed a progressive pregnancy policy, despite its progressive reputation. Before this there were few explicit guidelines in the event that a student became pregnant. The new policy states that pregnant women may reside in on-campus housing, but are also offered a housing exemption if they so desire.
Until lately the distribution of condoms (and other contraceptive devices) on campus was restricted to health services. Recently prophylactic devices have become available outside the room of each hall's resident assistant.
Other points of contention were political, mostly involving the invitation of conservative speakers to campus. While some students are hostile to these speakers because of their political views, other students enjoy the chance to hear speakers with divergent points of view.
In late March 2005, William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard, was hit in the face with an ice cream pie by a student during a lecture he gave on campus [3]. This event made national and international news and was carried by many leading news outlets. Many students and faculty at the lecture showed strong disapproval of the act and applauded when Kristol resumed his talk.
Other conservative (and libertarian) speakers who have been invited to Earlham in the past such as former U.S. President Richard Nixon (then a freshman Congressman), Indiana Republican Senator Richard Lugar, Christina Hoff Sommers, Michelle Easton, Alan Dowtey, Kay Hiemenowitz, Ward Connerly, Andrew Sullivan and Stanley Kurtz received warm receptions despite their difference in opinion with many students and faculty. Famed columnist and right-wing political pundit Ann Coulter's visit to Earlham in November 2001 was much more provocative, however.
While there have been some notable exceptions, the majority of speakers invited to Earlham reflect left-leaning viewpoints. A short list of left-leaning personalities visiting campus in recent years include (in no particular order) Cornel West, Bell Hooks, Rashid Khalidi, Frances Moore Lappé, Gerry Adams, Hanan Ashrawi, Ralph Nader, Jackson Katz, Angela Davis, Anthony Romero, Leslie Feinberg, Adam Shapiro, Malik Shabazz, Dianne Nash, George Lakoff, Victoria Jackson Gray Adams, Michael Shellenberger, Howard Zinn, Nikki Giovanni, Ali Abunimah, Helena Cobban and Margaret Cho.
In addition, Earlham has hosted a wide variety of well-known entertainers including Aretha Franklin, Bill Cosby, Sinbad, The Indigo Girls, David Sedaris, Wesley Willis, Second City, The San Francisco Mime Troupe, and Matisyahu.
- W.C Alee-Dean in the colleges, University of Chicago, Chairman of the zoology department, University of Florida, elected to the National Academy of Sciences
- Carl W. Ackerman-- former head of Columbia University Journalism School.
- John S. Allen-- the founding president of the University of South Florida.
- C. Ernest Beane - General Counsel for MWABank. Also on its board of directors.
- R.T Bonnin- Granddaughter of Sitting Bull, former president of National Council of Indian Americans.
- Howard Boyer - former editor at Harvard University Press who published the work of prominent scientists like Stephen Jay Gould, Edward O. Wilson and Ernst Mayr.
- Richard Butler- former executive director of Church World Service.
- Justin Cannon - Founder of an Online Website for Gay Christian Singles.
- Joseph John Copeland - former president of City College of New York
- Joseph M. Dixon, Former Governor of Montana.
- John Porter East- former U.S. Senator for North Carolina.
- Jim Fowler, star of Wild Kingdom.
- Amos Glick - Collective Member, San Francisco Mime Troupe.
- Thomas Gottschalk - General Motors, Executive Vice President.
- John S Gottschalk-- Former director of US Fish and Wildlife Service.
- Tim Grimm - Played FBI Agent Dan Murray in the movie "Clear and Present Danger."
- Caswell Grave- Former head of Zoology Department at Johns Hopkins University and president of the American Society of Zoologists
- Rana K. Gupta - Director at Navigator Technology Ventures (NTV), an affiliate of Draper Laboratory. Started two companies: IndoSine U.S. Link Ltd and International Solutions.
- Hiram Elwood Hadley - Former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Washington.
- Michael C. Hall - Actor on HBO's Six Feet Under and current star of Showtime's Dexter.
- Sarah Katherine Hampton--Features photo editor for the New York Post.
- C. William Heywood - Former Dean, Cornell College (Iowa).
- Robert M. Hirsch, Chief Hydrologist and head of water science for the United States Geological Survey.
- Thomas J. Hochstettler - President, Lewis & Clark College.
- Deborah Hull - Former CEO of MedCases, Inc. and Ovid Technologies.
- Mary I. Hussey- Semitic text authority. First women to teach at American Society for Oriental Research in Jerusalem.
C. Francis Jenkins- inventor, showed movies in 1892.
- Walter Jessup - Former head of the Carnegie Corporation
- Bernard Knollenberg- former head of Yale University library.
- O.O Kuhn-Radio figure. Started career at Richmond Palladium-Item
- Frances Moore Lappé - author of three-million-copy bestseller: Diet For a Small Planet.
- John Loose - Corning, CEO [4].
- James S. Malek - Provost, Ithaca College.
- Howard Marmon- Former president of American Society of Automotive Engineers.
- Jana Matthews - Boulder Quantum Ventures, CEO [5].
- Steve Miller - Former Associated Press bureau chief in Germany.
- Mark B. Myers - Xerox Corporation, Senior Vice President (1992-2000). Senior Fellow, Wharton Business School.
- Richard K. Nakamura - Deputy Director, National Institute of Mental Health.
- Joe O'Connell - Leader of rock group Elephant Micah
- Larry Overman - Organic Chemist. Member of the National Academy of Sciences.
- Steve Paulson - Radio Producer, Peabody Award winner.
- Polly Penhale - U.S. Environmental Officer for Antarctica, U.S. National Science Foundation Office of Polar Programs.
- Robert Quine - named by Rolling Stone as one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.
- David Rasmussen - Dean, College of Social Sciences, Florida State University.
- Marc Reisner - Author of Cadillac Desert "a seminal work about the environmental cost of Western water projects." - NY Times obituary.
- Willard A. Roberts- Helped develop fluorescent and black light for GE.
- Olive Rush - Artist
- Andrea Seabrook - Congressional reporter for National Public Radio.
- Stephen Schutt - President, Lake Forest College.
- William E. Simkin-- helped prevent national strikes and resolved thousands of labor disputes as the Federal Government's chief labor mediator and as a leading private arbitrator.
- Lisa Margaret Smith - United States magistrate judge for the Southern District of New York.
- Wendell Meredith Stanley - American biochemist. He shared a 1946 Nobel Prize for discovering methods of producing pure enzymes and virus proteins.
- David C. Stump, M.D. - Human Genome Sciences, Executive Vice President.
- Edwin Way Teale - naturalist writer, won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction in 1966. Elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Staff Writer at Popular Science.
- Frederick Van Nuys, U.S. Senator from Indiana 1932-1944.
- Amy Walters - Producer, National Public Radio.
- Zack Warren - Ran the Boston Marathon while juggling in 2 hours, fifty-eight minutes. [6].
- M.S Wildman- Former head of Stanford Economics department.
- Robert Wissler - biochemist, discovered the damaging effects of smoking and cholesterol on the vascular system.
- Kenneth Wollack - President of the National Democratic Institute [7].
- Donald N. Wood - Author of multiple books, including The Unraveling of the West: The Rise of Postmodernism and the Decline of Democracy.
- Stanley T. Wray- awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross of the Royal Air Force.
- Harry N. Wright - former president of City College of New York
- Landrum Bolling - former president, Current Director at Large of Mercy Corps. Back channel between Yasir Arafat and Jimmy Carter.
- Wayne C. Booth - (former) Professor of English- Literary Critic; author of The Rhetoric of Fiction and The Company We Keep.
- John Elwood Bundy, impressionist painter.
- Ferit Guven - Associate Professor of Philosophy. The author of Madness and Death in Philosophy.
- Del Harris, former Earlham basketball coach; current NBA coach.
- Marcelo Hoffman- Resident Foucault expert and incisive political philosopher
- John Hunt - (former) Professor of English, Faulkner Scholar.
- Caroline Higgins - Professor of Peace and Global Studies and History, listed in The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America by David Horowitz.
- John Iverson - Professor of Biology. Turtle Expert. [8].
- Paul Lacey - Professor Emeritus of English. Literary executor to the late poet Denise Levertov. Presiding Clerk of the American Friends Service Committee (since 2005).
- JoAnn Martin - Professor of Anthropology, The author of Tepoztlan and the Transformation of the Mexican State.
- Dale Edwin Noyd — decorated fighter pilot and Air Force captain who became a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War.
- Peter Suber - Research Professor of Philosophy, creator of the game Nomic, and a leader in the open access movement.
- Jackson Holbrook Bailey - Asian studies educator.
- Robert L. Kelley- Former president, made Chevelier of the Legion of Honor by the French government.
- Earlham College - official website
- Ealrham College, Where the Nuts Control the Squirrels - Extra-official website
- Earlham Student Film Guild Website
- Earlham College - official athletics website
- Earlham College - campus map
- Earlham LiveJournal Community
- http//www.usatoday.com/news/education/2006-11-13-performance-measures_x.htm
- [9]
- Joseph Moore Musem
| Great Lakes Colleges Association |
|---|
| Albion • Antioch • Denison • DePauw • Earlham • Hope • Kalamazoo • Kenyon • Oberlin • Ohio Wesleyan • Wooster |
- 1 endowment America's Best Colleges 2006. U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved on January 15, 2006.
- 2 full-time instructional faculty Earlham Facts > Fast Facts > Faculty > Full-time. Earlham College. Retrieved on January 15, 2006.
- 3 enrollment Earlham Facts > Fast Facts > Enrollment. Earlham College. Retrieved on January 15, 2006.
- 4 athletics_moniker Earlham Style Guide > Sports Style. Earlham College. Retrieved on January 15, 2006.
| North Coast Athletic Conference |
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| Allegheny • Denison • Earlham • Hiram • Kenyon • Oberlin • Ohio Wesleyan • Wabash • Wittenberg • Wooster |
