Harvey Mudd College

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harvey Mudd College

HMC Seal

Established 1955
Type Private
Endowment US$229 million
President Maria Klawe
Faculty 83
Undergraduates 746
Location Claremont, CA, USA
Campus Suburban, 38 acres (0.15 km²)
Mascot Wally the Wart (unofficial)[1]
Website www.hmc.edu

Harvey Mudd College is a highly selective, private college of science, engineering, and mathematics, located in Claremont, California. It is one of the institutions of the contiguous Claremont Colleges. The school is known informally as Harvey Mudd (and to some as simply Mudd).

The college is named after Harvey Seeley Mudd, one of the initial investors in the Cyprus Mines Corporation. Although involved in the planning of the new institution, Mudd died before it opened. Harvey Mudd College was funded by Mudd's friends and family, and named in his honor.[2]

Contents

[edit] Academics

Harvey Mudd College entrance on Dartmouth Ave
Harvey Mudd College entrance on Dartmouth Ave

Harvey Mudd College's mission is to educate scientists, engineers, and mathematicians well-versed in the social sciences and humanities so that they better understand the impact of their work on society. The college offers four-year degrees in chemistry, mathematics, physics, computer science, biology, and engineering, as well as interdisciplinary degrees in mathematical biology, and a joint major in either computer science and mathematics, or biology and chemistry. Students may also elect to complete an Independent Program of Study (IPS) made up of courses of their own choosing. Usually between two and five students graduate with an IPS degree each year. Finally, one may choose an off-campus major offered by any of the other Claremont Colleges, provided one also completes a minor in one of the technical fields that Harvey Mudd offers as a major.

Because of its mission statement, Harvey Mudd places an unusually strong emphasis on general science education outside one's major, with a full one-third of courses in this area, known as the "common core." Students are required to take another one-third of their courses in the humanities, keeping with the school's tradition of science with a conscience. The final one-third comprises courses in the student's major. The integration of research and education is an important component of the educational experience at Harvey Mudd; upon graduation, every student has had some kind of research experience, in the form of a senior thesis or a Clinic Program experience. The undergraduate focus of HMC means that, unlike many other science and engineering institutions, undergraduates at HMC get unique access to research positions over the summer and during the school year.

A unique aspect of an HMC education is the Clinic Program, in which teams of students work for a year on a project supplied by a company, make regular reports to the company, and, at the end of the year, deliver a product. There are Clinic projects in engineering, computer science, mathematics, physics, and other majors. This kind of real-world experience gives students a first-hand look at a particular industry, and gives the company an inexpensive team of four students, many of whom they recruit after graduation.

[edit] Reputation

The median entering SAT score is 780 (out of 800) in mathematics, 740 in critical reading, and 730 in writing. [3] A third of the student body are National Merit Scholars, and about 40 percent of graduates go on to earn a Ph.D. — the highest rate of any college or university in the nation.[4][5]

As of 2006, it is ranked 14th among liberal arts colleges in the United States[6] and tied with Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology as the best undergraduate engineering program at a school whose highest degree is a bachelor's or master's[7] by U.S. News & World Report. In 2006, Harvey Mudd was also named one of the "new Ivy leagues" by Kaplan and Newsweek.[8], while the mathematics department won the first American Mathematical Society Award for Exemplary Program [9]

Harvey Mudd College had held out as the last four-year college or university in the U.S. to accept only SAT and not ACT test scores in its admissions process,[10] but announced that it would begin accepting ACT scores starting in August 2007.[11]

[edit] Student life

[edit] Harvey Mudd College dormitories

View of central campus, looking out of the Norman F. Sprague Memorial Library.
View of central campus, looking out of the Norman F. Sprague Memorial Library.

The official names for the dormitories are (listed in order of construction):[12]

  • Mildred E. Mudd Hall ("East Dorm")
  • West Hall ("West")
  • North Hall ("North")
  • Marks Residence Hall ("South")
  • J. L. Atwood Residence Hall ("Atwood")
  • Case Residence Hall ("Case")
  • Ronald and Maxine Linde Residence Hall ("Linde")
  • Frederick and Susan Sontag Residence Hall ("Sontag")

Atwood and Case were occasionally referred to as New Dorm and New Dorm II up until the addition of Linde and Sontag; Mildred E. Mudd Hall and Marks Hall are almost invariably referred to as East and South.

When Case was being built some students decided as a prank to move all of the survey stakes in one direction.[13] They did such a precise job that the construction crew didn't notice until after they had laid the foundation, but California earthquake law forced them to reinspect the new location at some significant expense.[citation needed] Furthermore, the plumbing has never worked quite right. Case is also very occasionally known as Seventh dorm (despite being the sixth dorm built) or as the Pink Dorm due to the fact that the cinder blocks used in its construction are rather shrimp-colored.

It is notable that South Dorm is in the northwest corner of the quad. "East" was the first dorm, but it wasn't until West was built to the west of it that it was actually referred to as East. Then North was built, directly north of East. When the fourth dorm (Marks) was built, there was one corner of the quad available (the northwest) and one directional name (South) left.[14] It got both, and to this day South is more 'north' on the compass than North dorm is.

The fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth dorms are Atwood, Case, Linde, and Sontag, respectively. They were collectively referred to as "the Colonies" by some students, a reference to the fact that they are newer and are at the far end of the campus, a full two blocks away from the academic buildings; these dorms are now more commonly referred to as "the Outer Dorms." The college purchased an apartment building adjacent to the newer dorms to house additional students, but it was demolished to make room for the newest dorm, Sontag.

Since students from all four classes can live in each of the dormitories, several of the dorms have accumulated long-standing traditions and even 'personalities'.[15] Two examples of these traditions are the parties Long Tall Glasses (a formal affair thrown by North) and TQ Nite (a tequila-centered party thrown by West). However, the personalities of the dorms morph over time as Mudd alumni are apt to find out upon visiting their alma mater years after they've graduated.

[edit] Athletics

Athletics teams from Claremont McKenna College, Harvey Mudd College, and Scripps College compete as one team. Male athletic teams are called the Stags, and women's teams are called the Athenas. The teams participate in the NCAA's Division III and in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.

[edit] The HMC honor code

HMC students developed, live by and self-enforce an Honor Code. The Honor Code states:

Each member of ASHMC [Associated Students of Harvey Mudd College] is responsible for maintaining his or her integrity and the integrity of the college community in all academic matters and in all affairs concerning the community.

The Honor Code is so well followed that the college entrusts the students to 24-hour per day access to all buildings including labs and timed take-home closed-book exams. (See external links below for more information.)

[edit] Architecture

The Norman F. Sprague Memorial Library
The Norman F. Sprague Memorial Library

The original buildings of campus were designed by Edward Durell Stone. Most are covered with thousands of square concrete features, called "warts" by the students, which would be perfectly suited to buildering except that, while some are set into the wall, others are simply glued on. In addition, these warts have the unusual usefulness of being great 'shelves' for unicycles and skateboards. One can walk towards Galileo Hall and see the warts (especially those near the entrances of buildings) being used as racks for unicycles and skateboards. Interestingly enough, the unofficial mascot of Harvey Mudd (featured on many college handbooks and other publications) is one of these concrete blocks with a face, arms, and legs, named "Wally the Wart."

Most of the computer labs and many classrooms are located in the basements (called the Libra Complex) of the concrete-block buildings. All of the buildings that make up the Libra Complex are interconnected via a series of underground tunnels, enabling convenient inter-building access (such as during times of rainy weather or by people averse to sunlight).

[edit] Transportation on campus

In the early 1970s the first unicycles appeared on campus. By 1972 there were four of them. The notion caught on, and for a time there were dozens on campus. For many students it was a "rite of passage" to learn to ride. The unicycling club, known as Gonzo Unicycle Madness, was formed and to this day organizes an annual eight mile plus ride (each way) known as "The Foster's Run," to "The Donut Man" donut shop in Glendora (originally known as "Foster's Donuts" hence the name of the event) for strawberry donuts. Upon return to the campus, the ritual of the "shakedown" takes place (dismounting and then repeatedly jumping up and down in the dormitory courtyard); a necessary procedure after a unicycle ride of nearly twenty miles, especially for those riders of the masculine gender. At irregular intervals club members also meet to play unicycle hockey. In the early 1990s though the ridership of unicycles waned at the college. Currently there is a very small number of Mudders who continue to ride unicycles. However, despite this drop in popularity, unicycling continues to be an integral part of the Mudd mythos.

Other than walking, the leading form of transportation among Mudders is skateboarding. Because the paths of Mudd are smooth and the route to the academic building on one side of campus from the dorms is so straightforward, skateboarding to class is very popular—and Mudders as a whole skate more than the students of any of the nearby Claremont Colleges.

[edit] Pranks

Galileo Hall and Hixon Courtyard
Galileo Hall and Hixon Courtyard

Pranks at Harvey Mudd are known for being clever, amusing, technically precise, and reversible (by policy, pranksters must leave contact information, and reverse the prank within 24 hours if told to do so).

  • One student returned from a long weekend away to discover his room filled from floor to ceiling with inflated plastic garbage bags. The pranksters had used high-powered fans to inflate them.
  • In 1993, the new Dean of Faculty discovered that some Mudders had moved everything in his office to the other side of campus, inside the lounge of the newly opened Linde Dorm. Everything in his office was perfectly organized and functional—even his telephone and Internet connection worked. The Dean and his staff spent the day working in Linde, and students moved his office back that night. (This prank was also featured in the film Toy Soldiers.)
  • Students took sod left over from the construction of Linde Dorm and (after laying down plastic sheeting) placed it inside the office of the Dean of Students, returning all furniture to its original location. The dean worked on grass carpet for a day.
  • Another prank involved removing everything from a student's room, lining the walls with plastic, filling it two feet deep with water, and adding about 200 goldfish.
  • One Harvey Mudd student returned from a trip to find that his bed had been converted into a steamboat, with steam stacks filled with dry ice for added effect.
  • After expressing his hatred for spikey balls -- the liquidambar seed pods that caused him to fall off of his skateboard -- a Harvey Mudd student found his room filled with the little spikey things. They were in his drawers, in his pants' pockets, in his guitar case, and were even rigged to fall on his head when he opened the door.
  • While a West Dorm student was out of town, students unbolted his room's outer wall from the cinder blocks and parked his car inside the room, then reattached the wall. Then they had Campus Security give him a parking ticket.

[edit] Rivalry with Caltech

There is a long-standing rivalry between Harvey Mudd and the nearby Caltech, although this rivalry is basically unacknowledged by Caltech. For example, in one prank, students from Mudd stole a memorial cannon from Fleming House at Caltech (originally from the National Guard) by dressing as maintenance people and carting it off on a flatbed truck for "cleaning."[16] Harvey Mudd eventually returned the cannon after the Caltech President threatened to take legal action. (In 2006, MIT replicated the prank and moved the same cannon to their campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[17])

Another Mudd prank involved slight modifications to a freeway sign. By placing parentheses around "Pasadena City College", an institution much less prestigious than Caltech, Mudd students changed the sign to read:

California Institute of Technology

(Pasadena City College)

Next Exit

[edit] Notable alumni

See also: :Category:Harvey Mudd College alumni

[edit] Trivia

[edit] References

  1. ^ Who is Wally Mudd?. Harvey Mudd College, Admissions Department.
  2. ^ History of Harvey Mudd College. Harvey Mudd College. Retrieved on August 22, 2006.
  3. ^ Just a few numbers.... Harvey Mudd College, Admissions Department.
  4. ^ Choosing a College: Liberal Arts Colleges.
  5. ^ Introduction to HMC Mathematics. Harvey Mudd College, Math Department.
  6. ^ "America's Best Colleges 2007: Liberal Arts", U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved on August 31, 2006.
  7. ^ "America's Best Colleges 2007: Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs (At schools whose highest degree is a bachelor's or master's)", U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved on August 31, 2006.
  8. ^ Barbara Kantrowitz and Karen Springen. "25 New Ivies", Newsweek, 2006-08-28. Retrieved on December 13, 2006.
  9. ^ (April 2006) "Harvey Mudd Mathematics Department Garners AMS Award". Notices of the American Mathematical Society 53 (4). 
  10. ^ "Can the ACT take down the SAT?", Newsweek. Retrieved on December 5, 2006.
  11. ^ Harvey Mudd College Begins Accepting ACT Scores for Admission. Harvey Mudd College (January 25, 2007).
  12. ^ Campus map. Harvey Mudd College.
  13. ^ Stephanie L. Graham. "A Treasured Friendship", Harvey Mudd College Bulletin, Winter 2005. Retrieved on December 13, 2006.
  14. ^ "Mysteries of Mudd", Harvey Mudd College Bulletin, Winter 2005. Retrieved on December 13, 2006.
  15. ^ Nisha Gottfredson. "Thy Name is Mudd: The hidden Mudder mythos-- it's more than you think.", Claremont Student, March 2004. Retrieved on December 13, 2006.
  16. ^ Caltech Cannon Heist Memorial Page.
  17. ^ Howe & Ser Moving Co.. Retrieved on April 16, 2006.
  18. ^ 1996-97 21st Annual ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest Final Report (1992-03-02).
  19. ^ "American universities fall way behind in programming: Weakest result for U.S. in 29-year history of international technology competition", San Francisco Chronicle, 2005-04-09.

[edit] External links