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University of Massachusetts Dartmouth - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the Massachusetts public university; for the private, Ivy League university, see Dartmouth College.
University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Umass Dartmouth Logo

Established: 1895
Type: Public
Chancellor: Jean MacCormack
President: Jack M. Wilson
Faculty: 520
Undergraduates: 7,626
Postgraduates: 726
Location: Dartmouth, MA, USA
Campus: 710 acres Suburban
Athletics: Official Site
Mascot: Corsair
Website: www.umassd.edu

The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth is a multi-college university, part of the state wide university system of the University of Massachusetts, located in Dartmouth, Massachusetts, not to be confused with Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.

The University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, also known as UMass Dartmouth, has a student body of over 9,000 students, which includes 7,626 undergraduates, 726 graduate students, and 1,407 continuing education students. As of Spring 2008, there are approximately 4,400 students living on campus. It offers more than 61 undergraduate programs of study and 19 graduate programs, and has more than 300 full-time faculty. With an endowment of over $30 million.

UMass Dartmouth specializes in training engineers, health care workers and teachers. The school also proposed to host the University of Massachusetts School of Law, as the trustees of the state's university system voted during 2004 to purchase the nearby Southern New England School of Law, an unaccredited private institution. As of early 2008 this has not taken place, but may in the future.

Since 1992, UMass Dartmouth has sponsored the Cape Cod Community College as an affiliation.

Contents

[edit] History

The UMass Dartmouth campus
The UMass Dartmouth campus

The Dartmouth campus traces its roots to 1895. In that year, the Massachusetts legislature chartered the New Bedford Textile School in New Bedford and the Bradford Durfee Textile School in Fall River.

The New Bedford Textile School was re-named the New Bedford Institute of Textiles and Technology and the Bradford Durfee Textile School was re-named the Bradford Durfee College of Technology.

These were combined in 1962 to create the Southeastern Massachusetts Technological Institute, expanding to become Southeastern Massachusetts University by 1969. SMU was merged into the UMass system and adopted its present name in 1991.

The third school chartered in 1895, the Lowell Textile School, followed a similar path to become Lowell Technological Institute and then, along with Lowell State College, the University of Massachusetts Lowell.

[edit] Little Red Book controversy

In December 2005, the New Bedford newspaper The Standard Times reported that a UMass Dartmouth student was visited by the Department of Homeland Security after requesting a copy of Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung (better known as The Little Red Book) from the university's library's interlibrary loan system.[1] According to history professors Brian Glyn Williams and Robert Pontbriand, the student requested the book to help him complete a paper for Pontbriand's class on fascism and totalitarianism. The student supposedly was later visited by two DHS agents at his New Bedford home after his request for the book.

The incident became famous in the internet media, spawning controversy over whether or not the incident actually happened. Aaron Nicodemus, the reporter who wrote the article, claimed that the incident "is real and factual to the extent [he] reported."[2] However, the American Library Association believed that "...parts of the newspaper story don't add up", continuing the controversy.[3] Additionally, UMass Dartmouth issued a statement saying that it did not participate in violating the student's right to privacy.

The controversy came to a close later that week, as the student who was involved admitted that the incident was a hoax.[4] The confession came after Professor Williams asked the student about the inconsistencies in the article. A few days later, Clyde Barrow, head of the policy studies department, said that the university should punish the student and the two professors involved in the incident, suggesting the student should be punished for a semester.[5] It was later reported in the university's newspaper, The Torch, that the student would not face punishment, though Judicial Affairs is still looking into the situation.[6]

[edit] Academic Departments

Entrance to the Campus Center
Entrance to the Campus Center

[edit] Undergraduate Program

  • College of Arts and Sciences

Biology, Chemistry & Biochemistry, Criminal Justice, Economics, Education, English, Foreign Literature & Languages (excludes Portuguese), History, Humanities & Social Sciences, Mathematics, Medical Laboratory Science, Multidisciplinary Studies, Philosophy, Policy Studies, Political Science, Portuguese, Psychology, Sociology & Anthropology, and Women's Studies

  • Charlton College of Business

Accounting, Finance, Management and Marketing, Decision and Information Sciences (includes Management Information Systems and Operations Management)

  • College of Engineering

Civil & Environmental, Computer & Information Science, Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, and Materials & Textiles

  • College of Nursing

Nursing

  • College of Visual & Performing Arts

Art Education, Art History, Artisanry (Ceramics, Jewelry/Metals, and Textile Design/Fiber Arts), Design (Electronic Imaging, Graphic Design, Illustration, and Photography), FIne Arts (Painting/2D and Sculpture/3D), Music, and Theatre Arts

[edit] Graduate Program

The Claire T. Carney Library at UMass Dartmouth
The Claire T. Carney Library at UMass Dartmouth
  • College of Arts and Sciences

Master of Arts in Professional Writing, Master of Arts in Psychology, Master of Arts in Teaching, Master of Science in Biology, Master of Science in Chemistry, and Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry

  • Charlton College of Business

Master of Business Administration, post-masters certificates

  • College of Engineering

Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering, Master of Science in Biotechnology, Master of Science in Computer Science, Master of Science in Electrical Engineering, Master of Science in Computer Engineering, Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering, Master of Science in Physics, Master of Science in Textile Chemistry and Technology, Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy in Biotechnology, and Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Engineering

  • College of Nursing

Master of Science in Nursing

  • College of Visual & Performing Arts

Master of Art Education, Master of Fine Arts, Master of Fine Arts in Artisanry, and Master of Fine Arts in Visual Design

  • School of Marine Science & Technology

Master of Science in Marine Science & Technology, and Doctor of Philosophy in Marine Science & Technology

[edit] Architecture

Two of the 666s: the benches and the stairs
Two of the 666s: the benches and the stairs

The buildings of the campus were designed by architect Paul Rudolph to distinguish the campus from the outside world yet still provide a social environment. Rudolph made both the exterior and interior of each building of concrete, an essential element of the style known as Brutalism, and he provided the buildings with large windows, giving inhabitants the feeling of being outdoors. The stairs were made relatively narrow, ostensibly in order to slow people down and allow them to appreciate the campus.[citation needed] Atriums also were put in the Group 1 and Group 2 buildings to give people a place to socialize between sections of the halls. (The main academic buildings are known as Groups because the first design concept for the campus had them as groups of individual buildings; the name was retained though the design concept was not.) The main door of each building faces towards the campanile, keeping students within the Academic Life area, where buildings for classes are located. Large mounds of earth also stand between the parking lots, making the lots invisible from within the original Academic Life area (though not from within some recent additions to it, such as the Charlton College of Business building).

Many rumors have spread about Rudolph and his design. One of the most common is that Rudolph was a Satanist, that sets of campus benches adopt a plan that resembles the number 666 (the number of the beast), and that the buildings also adopt the shape of a six. The stairs also are said to be in three groups of six, each stair being six inches high. Some claims also say that there are 666 stairs in the campanile. Rudolph, however, was not a Satanist, and many of the supposed hexagonal forms actually are octagons.[citation needed]

The columns of the buildings are also believed by some people to support this rumor. Most of the academic buildings are supported by a series of columns. Each column has 18 "ribs" or semi-circular sections that jut out on each side. The presence of 18 ribs is said to relate to the 666 satanist claim; as 18 is 6 + 6 + 6.

Another rumor about the architect claims that Rudolph killed himself by jumping from the top of the campanile shortly after the U-Mass Dartmouth campus had been opened. This too is false; Rudolph died of cancer from asbestos exposure in 1997. Some believe that the flat roofs of the buildings were meant to be used to park flying cars in the future, with the stairs leading to the roofs seen as evidence. In truth, the roofs resemble those of Sarasota High School in Florida, a project that sees considerably less snow than Massachusetts. Flat roofs are a hallmark of Modernist architecture, and the stairs simply provide access to the roofs for conventional maintenance.

Some students also believe that the architecture is designed after the mental institution in the film version of A Clockwork Orange. The similarities are noticeable but coincidental: any two Brutalist buildings may appear similar.

Finally, because a state educational television network originally was planned for the campus, requiring a transmitter or perhaps even underground channels for coaxial cable (which apparently were indicated on the original plans), some believe that the campus contains a walkable network of tunnels.[7]

At the top of the campanile, many different antennas provide different services for the campus. It should be noted that if one looks between the two panels in the campanile, they can see that the campanile can only be climbed when accessed underground. This may seem to lead to an underground tunnel system, but there is an entrance to the campanile a short distance to the east of it.

[edit] Claire T. Carney Library

  • Archives & Special Collections - preserves historical records, publications and graduate theses of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth (University Records) as well as personal and professional papers of faculty, staff, students and selected individuals and organizations from the surrounding communities of southeastern Massach usetts (Manuscript Collections).
  • Robert F. Kennedy Assassination Archives - the world's largest, most complete compilation of materials relating to this event. Established in 1984, the archives contains thousands of copies of government documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act public disclosure process as well as manuscripts, photographs, audiotape interviews, video tapes, news clippings and research notes compiled by journalists and other private citizens who have investigated discrepancies in the case.
  • Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese American Archives - records of fraternal, religious and social organizations; family photographs, scrapbooks and oral histories which illustrate the collective experience of immigration, settlement, and life in the United States; the records of prominent individuals of Portuguese descent; and records of local business and other institutions that either serve or were created by Portuguese-Americans.
  • Paul Rudolph and His Architecture - This web site is a comprehensive reference resource on this famous man and his architecture with an emphasis on SMTI / UMass Dartmouth. It provides a comprehensive bibliography of the works, writings and life of the architect, complete with supporting images, documents and media.

[edit] Student Life

[edit] Student Organizations

Among the many student groups on campus are

  • 20 Cent Fiction
  • Accounting Association
  • Active Minds
  • Advocate. Celebrate. Educate.
  • American Society of Mechanical Engineers
  • Anime Club
  • Asian Student Association
  • Campus Activities Board
  • Campus Design
  • Cape Verdean Student Association
  • Capoeira Club
  • Chinese Student and Scholar Association
  • Christian Fellowship
  • College Democrats
  • College Republicans
  • Concert Tech
  • Economics Club
  • Gaming Society
  • Habitat for Humanity
  • Kekeli Drum and Dance
  • Masspirg
  • Muslim Students Association
  • Philosophy Association
  • Pride Alliance
  • Residence Halls Council
  • Rock Climbing Club
  • Rugby Club
  • Scrimshaw Yearbook
  • Ski and Snowboard Club
  • Social Change Society
  • Society of Manufacturing Engineers
  • Student Senate
  • Students in Free Enterprise
  • Surf Club
  • Temper
  • Theatre Company
  • The Torch (student newspaper)
  • United Latino Society

[edit] Housing

[edit] Freshman Halls

Elmwood Hall (Phase 3A), Maple Ridge Hall (Phase 3B), Chestnut Hall, Roberts Hall

[edit] Sophomore Halls

Oak Glen Hall, Pine Dale Hall,

[edit] Upper Classmen Halls

Willow Hall, Evergreen Hall, Hickory Hall, Birch Hall, Aspen Hall, Ivy Hall, Cedar Dell (West and South)

[edit] "Greek" Life

Fraternities

Sororities

[edit] Honors Societies

 

[edit] Technology

CITS - Computing and Information Technology Services
COIN - Corsair Online Information

[edit] Famous alumni

A map of UMass Dartmouth's campus
A map of UMass Dartmouth's campus

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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