central michigan university
Central Michigan University
|
| Established |
1892 |
| Type |
Public university |
| President |
Michael Rao |
| Faculty |
644 |
| Students |
27,836 |
| Undergraduates |
19,834 |
| Postgraduates |
8,002 |
| Location |
Mount Pleasant, MI, United States |
| Colors |
Maroon and Gold |
| Nickname |
Chippewas |
| Website |
http://www.cmich.edu/ |
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Central Michigan University (also known as CMU) is a state university located in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. Nearly 28,000 students are enrolled, of which approximately 20,000 are undergraduates. CMU offers students their choice of 27 degrees through eight academic divisions.
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Contents
- 1 Academics
- 2 Athletics
- 3 History
- 4 Notable Alumni
- 5 Residence Life
- 6 Media
- 7 Songs of CMU
- 7.1 The Fighting Chippewa (Primary Fight Song)
- 7.2 Hail To The Chippewa (Secondary Fight Song)
- 7.3 CMU Alma Mater
- 8 Greek Life
- 9 The CMU Promise
- 10 See also
- 11 External links
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Academics
Central Michigan University offers programs and degrees at the bachelor's, master's, specialist's and doctoral levels. Undergraduate students can select from more than 3,000 classes in 150 programs, and graduate students have the choice of more than 60 programs. The university offers degrees in 25 areas.
CMU has eight academic divisions:
- The College of Business Administration
- The College of Communication and Fine Arts
- The College of Education and Human Services
- The Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow College of Health Professions
- The College of Humanities and Social and Behavioral Sciences
- The College of Science and Technology
- The College of Graduate Studies
- ProfEd
Academic work on campus is supported by the recently renovated Charles V. Park Library which holds one million books and can seat up to 2,655 patrons at a time.
For many years CMU has offered an MBA program for selected employees of the Defense Contract Audit Agency.
Athletics
The CMU Chippewas logo, current as of 2003.
The school's athletics programs are affiliated with the NCAA and compete in the Mid-American Conference. The school colors are maroon and gold, and the school, and its students and alumni are referred to as Chippewas which is sometimes shortened to Chips. This nickname is used with consent of the nearby Saginaw Chippewa Tribe, who has a positive relationship with the university. The university was placed on the NCAA's list of schools with "hostile and abusive" nicknames in August 2005, but appealed the decision, with the support of the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe. On September 2, 2005 the university announced that their appeal of the decision had been upheld.
The school athletics logo has changed over time, once featuring an Indian spear, but is now a stylized block letter "C". Within the university this logo is often referred to as the "flying C" or the "running C" (and derisively as the "flaming C"), although it is actually called the "action C". The current version of the athletic trademark was first used in 1997. The "flying C" logo was designed by an IET Department undergraduate student in 1995.
CMU's football team won the second NCAA Division II national championship in 1974 by defeating the University of Delaware 54 to 14. The team was voted national champion in the Associated Press College Division poll. The Chips have also been national runner-up twice. In 1958 the men's swimming and diving team was runner-up to North Central College at the second annual NAIA national meet, which was held in Muncie, Ind. Central's baseball team was NCAA Division II runner-up in 1971, having lost to Florida Southern College 4 to 0 in the championship game.
History
Wanting teachers in the state to be better trained, officials opened the Central Michigan Normal School on September 13, 1892. 31 students met in one building that day.
The school was renamed the Central State Teacher's College in 1927. In 1941, it became the Central Michigan College of Education, and then the Central Michigan College in 1955 before getting the present name in 1959.
Notable Alumni
- Peter Schoomaker, 35th Chief of Staff of the United States Army.
- Canyon Adams
- David Tibergien, Democrat Candidate for State Senate and political consultant.
- Phil Baroni, UFC professional fighter
- Danelle Gay, Miss Michigan USA 2006
- Dick Enberg, CBS sports commentator
- Jeff Daniels, actor
- Chris Kaman, NBA player Currently with the Los Angeles Clippers
- Dan Majerle, former NBA player, primarily for the Phoenix Suns
- Larry Joe Campbell, actor
- Carter Oosterhouse, actor
- Jim Myers, professional wrestler known by his ring name, George "The Animal" Steele
- Terry O'Quinn - Actor with numerous roles including Locke in Lost (TV series).
- Dan Roundfield - former NBA player, primarily with the Atlanta Hawks
- Gary Hogeboom - former NFL quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys
- Tom Tresh - 1962 American League Rookie-of-the-Year, shortstop, primarily with the New York Yankees.
- Amy Roloff - Reality TV Star of Little People, Big World
Residence Life
Central Michigan University is home to 20 on-campus residence halls, arranged in four districts throughout the campus. In 2006-07, the 21st and 22nd residence halls on campus will open in what is currently the East complex.
- North Residence Halls: Larzelere, Trout, Calkins, Robinson, Barnes
- South Residence Halls: Beddow, Merrill, Thorpe, Sweeney
- East Residence Halls: Saxe, Herrig, Woldt, Emmons, plus Celani and Fabiano added in 2006
- The Towers: Carey, Cobb, Troutman and Wheeler ("The Original Towers"), Campbell, Kesseler, Kulhavi ("The New Towers")
All residence halls except for the Towers, Barnes Hall, and Robinson Hall are two-bedroom suites designed for 4 or 5 persons. The Original Towers, nine-story high-rise residence halls designed primarily for freshmen, feature one-bedroom suites. The New Towers, as well as Fabiano and Celani, are designed primarily for upperclassmen, and are four-bedroom suites. Freshmen are not allowed to live in those halls. Robinson Hall and the old section of Barnes are the only residence halls designed for double occupancy. Residents of both the New Towers and Robinson Hall pay an additional charge over the standard room and board rate.
Each district is connected to one of four Residential Restaurants. Only Barnes Hall, the oldest residence hall at CMU, is not directly connected to a residential restaurant. The older section of Barnes Hall is also the only part of any residence hall on campus that has community bathrooms.
Some residence halls are designated as official Residential Colleges, associated with a particular academic department, allowing students who choose to live there opportunities for study and collaboration with other students from similar programs.
- Carey Hall-Business
- Herrig Hall-Music
- Emmons Hall-Health Professions
- Woldt Hall-Science and Technology
- Calkins Hall-Education
- Larzelere and Trout Halls-Honors Program
- Barnes Hall-Leadership Institute
Barnes Hall is also the traditional home of many of CMU's international students because it is the only hall that remains open during university breaks.
CMU offers both co-ed and single-gender residence halls. Beddow and Sweeney Halls are for females only, Merrill and Thorpe Halls for males only. Since the Fall 2005 semester, Calkins Hall, home of the Education residential college, is co-educational, after a long history of being females only. The other residence halls are either co-ed by floor or by room.
Construction began on two more buildings, colloquially known as the "Woldt Towers," near the East Quad in the spring of 2005. The buildings will be somewhat similar in design to the New Towers, opened in 2003. On December 1, 2005, one of the buildings was named The Ben and Marion Celani Residence hall to recognize the generosity of Detroit area businessman Thomas Celani and his wife Vicki. On April 20, 2006, the remaining building was named the Fabiano Family Residence Hall, recognizing their contribution to the school. John S. Fabiano served on the board of trustees 1999-2004, and also owns the Fabiano Brothers Inc, an alcohol distribution company.
Media
The campus newspaper is Central Michigan Life. There is also a college radio station run by students, FM 91.5 WMHW, as well as the student-run college TV station MHTV. In 2005, a student-operated music label called Moore Media Records (MMR) was established.
In addition, the university owns and operates WCMU-TV, the region's PBS station, and WCMU-FM, the NPR affiliate. Both stations serve most of Northern Michigan, including the eastern Upper Peninsula, through a network of repeater stations.
Also established in 2003 is White Pine Music, the recording label of the CMU School of Music.
Songs of CMU
The Fighting Chippewa (Primary Fight Song)
Fight, Central, down the field,
Fight for victory!
Fight, fellows, never yield,
We're with you, oh varsity!
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Onward with banners bold, to our colors we'll be true
Fight for maroon and gold!
Down the field for CMU!
Varsity!
Rah! Rah!
Victory!
Rah! Rah!
Chippewas, we're proud of our nickname!
Hear our song!
Loud and strong!
Central is going to win this game!
Come on and...
(Repeat first stanza)
by Howard 'Howdy' Loomis, Class of '35
Hail To The Chippewa (Secondary Fight Song)
Hail to the Chippewa
All hail to the Chippewa!
Those valiant men who wear maroon and gold
Will fight, fight, fight, our honor to uphold!
Hail to the Chippewa
All hail to the Chippewa!
We salute you warriors brave and true,
Win or lose, we're proud of you!
by Norman C. Dietz
CMU Alma Mater
Alma mater, hear us now
Ever more we praise thee
Hear us pledge our sacred vow
Ever to defend thee
Mighty mother, queen of earth eternal,
Precious emblem of our life supreme,
Ever symbolizing truth and knowledge,
In glorified esteem.
(Repeat first stanza)
by Ruth Mavis, Class of '27
lyrics from CMU Athletics Website
Greek Life
Social fraternaties on CMU's campus are Sigma Chi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Chi Rho, Phi Sigma Phi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa Tau, Sigma Pi, Delta Chi, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Kappa Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Tau Gamma, Alpha Sigma Phi, and Sigma Lambda Beta. Social Sororities are Alpha Sigma Alpha, Delta Phi Epsilon, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Phi Sigma Sigma, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Gamma Delta, Sigma Kappa, Phi Mu, Delta Zeta, Alpha Sigma Tau, and Alpha Chi Omega.
The CMU Promise
In July 2005, CMU made state headlines by offering the "CMU Promise," a program that raised tuition rates by nineteen percent for incoming freshmen, but guaranteed these rates would be frozen for "up to" the next five years. The program was implemented as a response to shrinking state funding streams. Modeled after a program at Western Illinois University, the tuition guarantee is the first of its kind in Michigan. The university kept its commitment to the promise in 2006, as tuition rates for all undergraduate students between their second and fifth years were kept constant. However, tuition rates for incoming freshmen increased by nearly 18% to an in-state figure of $251 per credit hour, a rate that will remain constant until summer of 2011.
Central Michigan Life Report; July 13, 2006: http://www.cm-life.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2006/07/13/44b6c63ba916c
See also
- Central Michigan Chippewas football
External links
- Official website
- CMU Athletics website
- Central Michigan Life, CMU's campus newspaper (published three times weekly August-May, weekly during the summer)
- Central Michigan University Public Broadcasting
- USNews College Review
- Selectivity, enrollment, pricing and attendance stats
- The CentralWord (TCW) CMU's Student Message Board
- University Libraries
- White Pine Music, the recording label of the School of Music of Central Michigan University
| Mid-American Conference |
EAST: Akron • Bowling Green • Buffalo • Kent State • Miami • Ohio • Temple (football only)
WEST: Ball State • Central Michigan • Eastern Michigan • Northern Illinois • Toledo • Western Michigan |
| Public universities in Michigan |
| Central Michigan • Eastern Michigan • Ferris State • Grand Valley State • Lake Superior State • Michigan State • Michigan Tech • Northern Michigan • Oakland • Saginaw Valley State • U-M Ann Arbor • U-M Dearborn • U-M Flint • Wayne State • Western Michigan |
Categories: Mid-American Conference | Public universities in Michigan | Educational institutions established in 1892 | Central Michigan University | Isabella County, Michigan | Universities and colleges in Michigan |