Lewis & Clark College
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| Lewis & Clark College | |
|---|---|
| Image:Lewis and clark college seal.gif | |
| Motto: | Explorare, Discere, Sociare (to explore, to learn, to work together) |
| Established | 1867 |
| Type: | Private |
| Endowment: | $224.5 million [1] |
| President: | Thomas J. Hochstettler |
| Staff: | 745 (All three schools) |
| Undergraduates: | 1,964 (fall 2005) |
| Postgraduates: | 1,469 (fall 2005) |
| Location | Portland, OR, USA |
| Campus: | Suburban, 137 acres |
| Mascot: | Pioneers |
| Website: | www.lclark.edu |
Lewis & Clark College is a private, independent, liberal arts college in Portland, Oregon, United States. It was founded as the Albany Collegiate Institute in 1867 in the town of Albany, 65 miles south of Portland by Willamette Valley Presbyterian pioneers, and relocated to Portland in 1938. The College has been coeducational since the first class, which graduated in 1873.
In 1942 the College trustees acquired the Lloyd Frank (of the historic Portland department store Meier & Frank) “Fir Acres” estate in Southwest Portland, and adopted the name Lewis & Clark College as a “symbol of the pioneering spirit that had made and maintained the College.” Today, the three schools of the College and their supporting offices occupy a campus of 137 acres (554,000 m²), centered on the Frank estate on Palatine Hill in the Collins View neighborhood of Southwest Portland.
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[edit] History
The college was founded as the Albany Academy in Albany, Oregon, with incorporation in 1858.[1] In 1866, the school name was changed to Albany Collegiate Institution, and the next year the Presbyterian church founded Albany College.[1] The early school’s campus of seven acres in Albany was situated on land donated by the Monteith family. In 1892, the original school building was enlarged, and in 1925 the school re-located south of Albany where it remained until 1937.[1] A junior college was established in 1934 in Portland, with the entire school moving to Portland in 1939.[1] In 1942, the school name was changed to Lewis & Clark College and the current campus was purchased.[1]
[edit] Academics
The three schools of the College include the College of Arts and Sciences, the Law School, and the Graduate School of Education and Counseling.
CAS departments include Art, East Asian Studies, English, Foreign Languages and Literatures (French, Chinese, German, Greek, Spanish, Latin, Russian, and Japanese), History, Music, Philosophy, Religious Studies, Theatre, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science & Mathematics, Environmental Studies, Physics, Communication, Economics, Classical Studies, Gender Studies, International Affairs, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology and Anthropology, and Academic English Studies.
Lewis & Clark has nationally-regarded programs in Biology, International Affairs, Psychology and Environmental Studies, and several Political Science students have recently received prestigious awards in that field.[citation needed] A surprising number of classical musicians have emerged from the college, considering its size, and several music areas are returning to a prominence the music department once enjoyed, most notably the piano performance area. The college has held two worldwide symphonic festivals in the past five years with professional-level performances in Dublin and the Greek islands.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Earl Blumenauer ('70, JD '76), US Representative[2]
- Ever Carradine ('96), actress[3]
- Serena Cruz ('89), Multnomah County Commissioner[4]
- Genevieve Gorder ('96), television personality[5]
- Percy R. Kelly (1887 from Albany College), Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court
- Monica Lewinsky ('95), White House intern[6]
- Ronald A. Marks ('78), former CIA official[7]
- Myah Moore ('03), Miss Oregon USA 2003[8]
- Markie Post ('75), actress
- Doug Tunnel ('72), Former CBS news correspondent and current owner of BrickHouse Winery
- Pete Ward ('62), Major League Baseball player[9]
- Gísli Þór Reynisson ('89), Wealthy Financier, Owner of Nordic Partners
[edit] Notable faculty, staff, and trustees
- Stephen Dow Beckham, historian[10]
- Greta Binford, biologist[11]
- John F. Callahan, Morgan S. Odell Professor of Humanities and literary executor of Ralph Ellison's estate
- Robert B. Pamplin, Jr., entrepreneur, philanthropist, trustee[12]
- Vern Rutsala, poet[13]
- Anthony Swofford, former adjunct professor of humanities, author of the book Jarhead[14]
- Kim Stafford, writer[15]
- William Stafford, poet[16]
- Mary Szybist, poet[17]
- Nellie Tholen - Internationally noted Piano Pedagogist, teacher of several world-competition prizewinners and a generation of leading teachers.
- Reinhard Pauly - Globally published musicologist and violist, particularly known for famous texts on the Classical Period, 19th century opera and numerous others, most of which have been translated into numerous languages and are still in use after several decades.
- Michael Mooney - President of the College for 14 years until his resignation in 2003 after reports surfaced in the media of a $10.5 million loss from an investment made outside full knowledge of the board of trustees. http://www.wweek.com/story.php?story=4029
[edit] Rankings
Lewis & Clark will not participate this year (2007) in completing the reputation survey that U.S. News & World Report conducts as part of its annual ranking of liberal arts colleges. The college adds its voice to those of a growing number of the country’s elite liberal arts colleges in seeking to pressure U.S. News into making its ranking process more objective and statistically reliable.
[edit] Housing
All students are required to live on campus for the first two years. Residence complexes include SOA (Stewart-Odell-Akin), Forest, Hartzfeld, Platt-Howard, and Copeland. Residence halls open to all students are Stewart, Odell, Akin, Copeland, Platt West, Platt East, Howard, and the Forest Buildings (Ponderosa, Spruce, Juniper (women only), Manzanita, and Alder. Several of the student residence halls have themes. Stewart is "Substance Free/Wellness", providing a home for those who wish to live in a drug and alcohol-free environment. Akin is known as the "Multicultural Dorm", hosting a handful students from outside of the United States as well as many U.S. students interested in international cultures. Platt-Howard, home of the Platteau student-run arts center, hosts the "Visual and Performing Arts" (or VAPA) and "Outdoor Pursuits Floor". Hartzfeld is an extended quiet-hours community; it requires sophomore standing or higher to live in. East Hall, Roberts Hall and West Hall are a series of on-campus apartments completed in 2003 and require junior class standing or higher to live in.
[edit] Transportation
The college operates shuttle buses between campus and downtown Portland. The most notable of these shuttles travels between the college and Pioneer Square (called the Pio Express, or colloquially The Raz). TriMet line 39 also operates between the college and the Burlingame transit center, where students can transfer to buses to downtown Portland.
First year students are not permitted to have cars on campus, though sophomores, juniors and seniors are allowed to pay for a parking permit. Different permits exist for residential, commuting, and carpool students. Parking spaces are at a premium on this residential campus, leading to expensive semester or year-long permits.
[edit] Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The school originally had The Pirates as its mascot, but changed it to The Pioneers in 1946.
- In 1963, the school bestowed an honorary doctorate upon novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand.
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c d e Corning, Howard M. Dictionary of Oregon History. Binfords & Mort Publishing, 1956.
- ^ http://www.congress.org/congressorg/bio/?id=494
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/alumni/carradine.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/alumni/cruz.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/chron/class1990sw04.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/~piolog/archive/980123/home.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/alumni/marks_ronald.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/cgi-bin/shownews.cgi?1040071740.2
- ^ http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/players/41403/
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/faculty/beckham/
- ^ http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/03/05/070305fa_fact_bilger
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/trustees/
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/~archives/specialcollections/rutsalapoetry.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/connect/publications.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/~krs/
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/~lotl/volume5issue5/stafford.html
- ^ http://www.lclark.edu/dept/english/creative.html
[edit] References
- Lewis & Clark College (2005). "Academics". Retrieved July 26, 2005.
- Princeton Review (2006). [2]
[edit] External links
- Lewis and Clark College
- Graduate School of Education and Counseling
- Lewis and Clark College Alumni
- KLC Radio - Lewis and Clark's radio station
- The Pioneer Log - Lewis & Clark's weekly newspaper
- Associated Students of Lewis & Clark College - Student Government
- Lewis & Clark College Common Data Set Lots of information about the college, all in standardized form.
Northwest Conference |
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| Current members:George Fox • Lewis & Clark • Linfield • Menlo(football only) • Pacific • Pacific Lutheran • Puget Sound • Whitman • Whitworth • Willamette Founding members: College of Idaho • Linfield • Pacific • Puget Sound • Whitman • Willamette Former members: College of Idaho • Seattle University |
Northwest Collegiate Rowing Conference |
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| Humboldt State • Lewis & Clark • Pacific Lutheran • Puget Sound • Seattle Pacific • Western Washington • Willamette |

