Mills College

From Free net encyclopedia

{{Infobox_University |motto = |name = Mills College |image = |established = Seminary, 1852; College, 1865 |type = Private |president= Janet L. Holmgren |city = Oakland |state = California |country = USA |campus = |undergrad = |postgrad = |postgrad_label = |staff= |mascot = |free_label = |free = |website= mills.edu |}}

Mills College is a private women's liberal arts college located in Oakland, California, USA. It has played an important role in modern American music through its post-graduate program in experimental music, and is highly regarded for its English and Education departments.

Contents

Enrollment and academics

In fall 2005, a record number of students applied and were admitted to the college which increased graduate and undergraduate enrollment. Undergraduate students currently make up about 65% of the students on-campus. The undergraduate program is all women, and the graduate program is open to both men and women.

Mills was the first women's college to offer a degree in computer science, beginning in 1974. It has recently added a new professional business school and is in the process of a feasibility study for a new law school. In 2004, Mills began offering a Masters of Business Administration degree.

Mills College's post-graduate program is co-educational, and is noted for being at the forefront of experimental music study and composition. Well-known composer Luciano Berio was on the music faculty of Mills in 1962-1964, and Pauline Oliveros was the first director of The Tape Music Center (1966-1967), where she composed her electronic works Alien Bog and Beautiful Soop. Morton Subotnick received his master's degree from Mills, studying composition with Leon Kirchner and Darius Milhaud. Laurie Anderson, Dave Brubeck, and Steve Reich attended the program, as well as the famous synthesizer designer Donald Buchla. Terry Riley taught at Mills starting in the early 1970s. Avant-garde jazz pioneer Anthony Braxton has taught at Mills on an intermittent basis since the 1970s.

Campus

The campus, which is an astounding 135 acres in the middle of Oakland, also includes the historic Campanile (1904), designed by Julia Morgan of Hearst Castle fame, and is the first concrete reinforced structure west of the Mississippi. Architects of the time laughed at Morgan and told her it would not last the next bay-area earthquake, but it stood tall through the 1906 and the 1989 Loma-Preita earthquake without a crack or scratch. The only thing that has been repaired on the clocktower is the clock mechanism itself.

Also housed on campus is a laboratory school, an EF (International Students for learning English, independent of the college) location, an all-girls middle school (also independent of the college), a greek theater, and many other attractions. Its main route of entry, Richards Road, is included in The 100 Most Beautiful Streets of America.

History

Mills was founded as the Young Ladies Seminary at Benicia in 1852. In 1865, missionaries Cyrus and Susan Tolman Mills purchased the seminary, and in 1871 they relocated it to a new campus in the East Bay foothills in Oakland, into a long, four-story building with a high central observatory--now known as Mills Hall. The mansarded structure, which provided homes for faculty and students as well as classrooms and dining halls, long was considered the most beautiful educational building in the state, and is now a California Historical Landmark (#849) and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places (NPS-71000132). Originally, Mills Hall encompassed the entire college, including the dormitories, classrooms, mess hall, restrooms, administration, and admissions. In 1889, Mills became the first college to grant Bachelor of Arts degrees to women west of the Mississippi River. In 1921, Mills granted its first master's degrees.

In 1989, Mills Hall was devastated by the Loma Prieta earthquake, and was then renovated and reopened in 1994.

In 1990, trustees announced a plan to open Mills' undergraduate programs to men. Students mounted a vigorous protest in defense of its 138-year history as a women's college, attracting national news coverage and support from women's colleges across the United States. Later that same year, the trustees reversed their position and "reaffirmed Mills' commitment" to remain a single-sex undergraduate institution.

Presidents

Notable faculty, past and present

Notable alumnae and alumni

Points of interest

References

  • Horowitz, Helen Lefkowitz. Alma Mater: Design and Experience in the Women's Colleges from Their Nineteenth-Century Beginnings to the 1930s. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1993 (2nd edition).

External links

Template:California Pacific Conference