Bucknell University
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Bucknell University is a highly competitive private university located along the Susquehanna River in the rolling countryside of Central Pennsylvania in the town of Lewisburg, 60 miles (97 km) north of Harrisburg. It is known for having one of the most beautiful campuses in the nation and a reputation for its rigorous academic programs (especially strong in engineering and the life sciences). Student athletes compete in 27 NCAA sports.
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Brief history
The university was founded under the name of the University at Lewisburg in 1846 as a private Baptist university. Bucknell University later shed its Baptist roots and was renamed for its benefactor, William Bucknell, a Philadelphian who bolstered the university during the post-Civil War recession.
Bucknell University has a historical link with Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, Northeastern Pennsylvania. Wilkes University was founded in 1933 as a satellite campus of Bucknell University, and became an independent institution in 1940, naming itself Wilkes College, after English colonial politician John Wilkes. Wilkes University received university status in 1990. During a ceremony to celebrate this designation, dignitaries from Bucknell University attended a gala event at the Arnaud C. Marts Conference Center on the Wilkes University campus to celebrate this historic event and pay tribute to both institutions history.
Academics
Bucknell is a competitive university with its Class of 2009 undergraduate acceptance rate of 32.7% [1]. It is ranked among the best liberal-arts colleges in the USA by U.S. News and World Report (Ranked #27 as of 2006). The student-faculty ratio is 11:1 [2].
Primarily an undergraduate institution, Bucknell offers 53 majors and 64 minors. Majors include management, biology, chemistry, education, art history, English, animal behavior, Caribbean studies, economics, and various foreign languages. Students can also design their own majors [3].
The school's engineering program (with majors in electrical, chemical, computer science, mechanical, civil, and recently established bio-medical engineering) is particularly strong. Among American schools that do not offer a Ph.D. in engineering, Bucknell ranks No. 8. [4]
Bucknell ranks among the top universities in the number of students from liberal arts colleges that go on to gain their Ph.D's, and is No. 3 on the All-Time List (CoSida) for Producing Academic All Americans. It also ranks in the Top 100 for schools that produce America's top business leaders.
More than 40 percent of Bucknell students study abroad [5].
Athletics
Bucknell University is a member of the Patriot League for Division 1 sports, Division 1-AA in football. It ranks among the top universities for NCAA Division 1 in athletic graduation rates (No. 1 three times in the last 10 years).
Bucknell won the first Orange Bowl (26-0 over the University of Miami on January 1, 1935). It is also the alma mater of the legendary baseball hero Christy Mathewson who requested burial in a cemetery adjoining Bucknell's campus.
In 2005, Bucknell went to the NCAA men's basketball tournament and became the first Patriot League team to win an NCAA tournament game, in a surprising and intense upset of Kansas (64-63). They lost to Wisconsin in the following round.
In 2006, the Bison continued their success with high-profile victories at Syracuse, then ranked 19th, and DePaul, a sequence that saw the Bison nearly enter the Associated Press's top-25 rankings. However, those wins were followed by high-profile losses against Villanova, then ranked fourth in the nation, and at Duke, then ranked first. Patriot League play began after the Duke loss, and the Bison did not lose a league game in 2006. The team was ranked 24th in the nation in both the Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today college basketball polls for the week of February 13. This was the Bucknell program's first national ranking, and the first time since the league's creation in 1990 that any Patriot League men's basketball team has been ranked. They finished the regular season unranked in either poll, but received the most votes amongst unranked teams in both.
The team was seeded ninth in the Oakland bracket for the 2006 NCAA tournament, and defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks in the first round (59-55). The Bison were defeated by Memphis in the second round, losing by a score of 72-56.
Bucknell has a strong Ultimate program. The men's team, the Mudsharks, was formed in 1975, making it arguably the longest running team name in college Ultimate. The women's team is known as the Peace Frogs and has also been a team since the late 70s.
Student life
First-year undergraduates are required to live on campus. The school guarantees on-campus housing for all four years, but many students choose to live off campus after their first year. All on-campus students must purchase a campus meal plan.
Because of its rural location and lack of nearby large cities, Bucknell may seem fairly isolated. However, more than 130 student organizations, a historical downtown movie theater, and year-end formal ball provide students with a wide array of activities.
The university also has a lively Greek community. Students cannot rush until their sophomore year, but approximately 50 percent of eligible students join the school's 12 fraternities and 7 sororities.
Bucknell University's student newspaper is The Bucknellian, which is printed weekly. Its radio station is 90.5 WVBU.
Notable alumni
- Ted Ammon, New York financier
- Karl Amylon, chief administrative officer of Ketchikan, AK
- Rob Andrews, U.S. representative
- Ron Baron, Founder and CEO of Baron Funds.
- Neal Blaisdell, former mayor of Honolulu
- Susan Crawford, chief judge of U.S. Court of Military Appeals
- Jane Elfers, president and CEO of Lord & Taylor
- Edward Herrmann, actor
- Clarke Hinkle, National Football League fullback and Hall of Fame inductee
- Sam Bidleman, Finalist, 2002 Pennsylvania Teacher of the Year; President of the Pennsylvania School Press Association
- Kenneth Langone, Home Depot co-founder
- Evan Coyne Maloney, webmaster/documentary filmmaker
- Christy Mathewson, Major League Baseball pitcher
- John McPherson, "Close to Home" cartoonist
- Christian Miller, noted librarian
- Les Moonves, president and CEO of CBS Television
- George Needham, Founder and CEO of Needham & Company
- Philip Roth, award-winning novelist
- Jay Wright, head coach of the Villanova University basketball team
- Greg Schiano, head coach of the Rutgers University football team
- S. Mark Csontos, Engineer Vanderweil Engineers, LLP Engineering Firm