Yes, my sister in law went there and she did quite well.
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Gettysburg College is a private four-year liberal arts college of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, founded in 1832, in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, adjacent to the famous battlefield. Its athletic teams are nicknamed the Bullets. Gettysburg College has an enrollment of slightly over 2,500 students, the majority of whom come from Pennsylvania and nearby states.
The college is the home of The Gettysburg Review, a highly respected literary magazine.
Gettysburg College was founded in 1832 as a sister institution for the Lutheran Theological Seminary. Both owe their inception to Thaddeus Stevens, a Radical Republican and abolitionist. The college's original name was Pennsylvania College, and was founded by Samuel Simon Schmucker.
The college is located on a 200 acre (800,000 m²) campus adjacent to the Gettysburg National Military Park. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, is 36 miles (60 km) from Harrisburg, 55 miles (80 km) from Baltimore, 80 miles (130 km) from Washington, D.C., 117 miles (190 km) from Philadelphia, and 212 miles (340 km) from New York City, and 425 miles (680 km) from Boston.
Approximately 96% of students live on campus in more than 40 residence halls, which include Theme Housing and the First-Year Residential College Program.
[edit] Academic Facilities
Musselman Library
4 November 2001
Library
Musselman Library houses the college collection of books, journals, videos, sound recordings, online publications, rare books, and manuscripts. An online catalog, Muscat, provides a gateway to all library materials and is accessible through any computer terminal connected to the college network. In addition, the building contains a media theatre, computer lab, and media production center. Musselman Library is open around the clock when classes are in session. The library operates 24 hours a day on weekdays and selected hours during the weekends. And in order to help facilitate late night studying, the library provides free coffee and hot chocolate at midnight to students bringing their own mugs.
Technology
Full network capabilities in all campus buildings and each residence hall room. Students have access to more than 1,300 computers and a complex system of workstations and laboratories. Wireless connectivity is available across campus and in a majority of residence halls.
[edit] Organization
As an independent institution, the college operates under a charter granted in 1832 by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The College is governed by a 39-member board of trustees comprising leaders from a range of professions and walks of life. Thirty of the College’s trustees are graduates of Gettysburg.
On the student level, adjudication of academic disputes takes place through an Honor Commission, which holds hearings in which students are given a chance to have their say on charges brought against them.
The Academic Honor Code has been in effect since 1957, and recently has been updated to fit better with today's technology.
[edit] Academic Programs
Majors
Anthropology, Art History, Art Studio, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biology, Chemistry, Classical Studies, Computer Science, Economics, English, Environmental Studies, French, German, Globalization Studies, Greek, Health and Exercise Sciences, History, Japanese Studies, Latin, Management, Mathematics, Music, Music Education, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Religion, Sociology, Spanish, Spanish & Latin American Studies, Theatre, Women’s Studies
Special Interest Programs (Minors)
African American Studies, American Studies, Asian Studies, Civil War Era Studies, Comparative Literature, East Asian Studies, Education (elementary and secondary, with certification), Global/Area Studies, International Affairs Concentration, Law, Ethics, and Society, Neuroscience, Writing, Film Studies
[edit] Greek Organizations
Fraternities: Alpha Chi Rho (AXP), Alpha Tau Omega (ATO), Lambda Chi Alpha (Lambda Chi), Phi Delta Theta (Phi Delt), Phi Gamma Delta (FIJI), Phi Kappa Psi (Phi Psi), Phi Sigma Kappa (Phi Sig), Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE), Sigma Nu (Sig Nu), Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE)
Sororities: Alpha Delta Pi (ADPi), Chi Omega (Chi O), Delta Gamma (DG), Gamma Phi Beta (Gamma Phi), Sigma Sigma Sigma (Tri Sig), Sigma Gamma Rho (SGRho)
Service Fraternity: Alpha Phi Omega
Music Sorority: Sigma Alpha Iota (SAI)
Past Greek Organizations on Campus: Alpha Xi Delta, Chi Phi, Kappa Delta Rho,Rho Beta (local), Sigma Kappa, Sigma Chi, Theta Chi
[edit] Students and Faculty
Nearly 2,500 students (approximately one-half men and one-half women), representing 40 states and 35 foreign countries attend the college.
The college employs 180 full-time faculty, with 95% of the permanent faculty holding a doctorate or highest earned degree in their fields. The faculty includes noted Lincoln scholar Gabor S. Boritt, and the first double-Lincoln Prize lauereate, Allen Carl Guelzo, who directs the Civil War Era Studies program. The student/faculty ratio is 11:1, with an average class size of 18 students. The college hosts one of only 19 chapters of Phi Beta Kappa in Pennsylvania.
[edit] Athletics
Gettysburg College competes in NCAA Division III within the Centennial Conference. Twenty-five percent of Gettysburg's students participate in extensive intercollegiate programs comprising twelve sports for men and twelve sports for women.
[edit] "Loyalty"--the College Fight Song
Gettysburg College campus
4 November 2001
Fair Gettysburg our Alma Mater, hear us praise thy name.
We'll ever lend our hearts and hands to help increase thy fame.
The honor of old Gettysburg calls forth our LOYALTY,
So cheer (Ra Ra!) our G-Burg Bullets on and fight for victory!
However, another rendition exists with a few differences:
Hail Gettysburg our Alma Mater, help us praise thy name.
We'll ever lend our hearts and hands to help increase thy fame.
The honor of old Gettysburg calls forth our LOYALTY,
So cheer (Ra Ra!) our G-Burg Bullets on to fight for victory!
This second version is used by the current Gettysburg Bullet Marching Band, which performs a drum corps-style fieldshow at each home football game. The band, known as "The Pride of the Centennial Conference," began using these lyrics in the fall of 2002 after finding them in a "G-Book" from the 1960s. ("G-Books" were pocket-sized handbooks given to incoming freshmen to acquaint them with college traditions.) By tradition, the band plays the fight song three consecutive times whenever a touchdown or field goal is scored by Gettysburg. The first is just a straight playing. In the second, only the drummers play their parts while the rest of the band and color guard sing the lyrics. The third time through, the entire band resumes and gradually speeds up the tempo until it is twice as fast (and sometimes faster) than at the beginning.
[edit] Notable Alumni
Carol Bellamy, former New York City Council President and former executive director, UNICEF
J. Michael Bishop, 1989 Nobel Laureate in Medicine for cancer research
Rev. David Bittle, first president of Roanoke College, the nation's second oldest Lutheran college after Gettysburg
Nathaniel N. Craley, Jr., former U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1965-1967)
Fred F. Fielding, current (2007-present) and former (1981-1986) Counsel to the President, former deputy to the White House counsel (1970-1972), member of 9/11 Commission
Bruce S. Gordon, current head of the NAACP
David Hartman, first blind person to graduate from medical school in the United States [2]
Herman Haupt, American Civil War general who ran the Union military railroad system
Carson Kressley, fashion consultant, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
George M. Leader, former Governor of Pennsylvania (1955-1959)
Ron Paul, U.S. Congressman from Texas, 1988 Libertarian Party Presidential nominee
Jeffrey Piccola, Pennsylvania State Senator, former State Senate Majority Whip (2001-2007)
Eddie Plank, Baseball Hall of Fame, pitcher
Keller E. Rockey, Lieutenant General, United States Marine Corps, commander of the Fifth Marine Division during the Battle of Iwo Jima
Jerry Spinelli, author, winner of the Newbery Medal for Maniac Magee
F. William Sunderman, Physician, Editor, Musician, and Inventor. Medical Director for the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, N.M. [3]
Charles Willoughby, Chief of Intelligence on General Douglas MacArthur's staff during World War II, member of Military Intelligence Hall of Fame
George Winter, former Major League Baseball player
[edit] Civil War History activities
Due to its close relationship to a crucial battle in the American Civil War, Gettysburg College hosts a number of activities and awards:
In 1982, professor and historian Gabor Boritt founded the Civil War Institute, which hosts annual seminars and tours on Civil War themes. Scholarships are granted to high school students and history teachers to attend the week-long summer event.
Since 1998, the Gettysburg Semester, a semester-long immersion in Civil War academic study has been offered.
Gettysburg College students may elect to pursue a unique interdisciplinary minor in Civil War Era Studies. Requirements include a general introduction course about the Civil War and a capstone senior-level seminar. Students must also select four classes of at least two disciplines. Some of the classes offered include (but are not limited to): military history, Economics of the American South, Civil War Literature, films about the Civil War, and Gender Ideology in the Civil War.
The Lincoln Prize has been awarded annually since 1991 for the best non-fiction historical work of the year on the Civil War.
Starting in 2005, the Michael Shaara Prize has been awarded for excellence in Civil War fiction. (Shaara was the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about the Battle of Gettysburg, The Killer Angels.)
[edit] Trivia
Gettysburg College changed its name from Pennsylvania College to Gettysburg College following the Battle of Gettysburg. This was done to capitalize on the town of Gettysburg's new-found national celebrity.
Seven years after Gettysburg College was first founded, it established a medical school, which was located in Philadelphia. The college was forced to close the medical school in 1861, when southern students withdrew, leaving it without adequate revenue.
Partly due to the role the college played during the Battle of Gettysburg, numerous legends about haunted buildings exist. One building, Pennsylvania Hall, was on an episode of Unsolved Mysteries and is featured on the Ghosts of Gettysburg tour for this reason. Other buildings also have been featured in documentaries shown on The History Channel and other outlets.
One of the most famous of these spurious "ghost stories" is that of "Blue Boy". This is supposedly the ghost of a young boy who froze to death on a window ledge. This story, in fact, is the product of a Gettysburg College Creative Writing course, and not a local folktale at all.
Among the other tales is that of "The General," a Civil War era officer who appears on Kline Stage in Brua Hall (the former chapel). This tale, however, is also fictitious, created by theatre faculty to boost attendance at performances.
The college dining center is still referred to by students and faculty as Servo, after a now defunct 1980's food service company, Servomation.
Stine Lake, a location on the Gettysburg College campus, is not a lake, but rather a quad located outside the library. Historically, due to Gettysburg's wet climate and drainage issues, the area would be prone to accumulating water, creating a large, muddy "lake" of sorts. Today, however, Stine Lake does not flood, but the name has stuck, to the confusion of first-year students.
2007-03-06 11:42:15
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answer #1
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answered by Carlene W 5
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