|
Birth DePauw University Birth, Marriage, Death in the UK DePauw University
- DePauw University
- DePauw University
- DePauw University

DePauw University consists of 36 major buildings spread out over a 695 acre (2.7 km²) campus that includes a 520 acre (2.06 km²) nature park, and is located approximately 45 miles (72 km) to the west of Indianapolis, Indiana. There are 11 residence halls, 4 theme houses, and 31 University-owned houses and apartments spread throughout the campus. The oldest building on campus, East College, was built in 1877 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. DePauw also owns McKim Observatory.
-
Main article: DePauw University Greek organizations
DePauw University was ranked #1 in "major fraternity and sorority scene" by the Princeton Review in its 2008 guide. In 2009, U.S. News & World Report ranked DePauw as fourth in the nation for highest percentage of fraternity members (75 percent)[8].
The Greek community consists of fourteen national social fraternities (eleven of which have houses on campus) and ten sororities (six of which have houses on campus). DePauw has an extensive and substantial Greek history, with both Kappa Alpha Theta, the first national fraternity for women, and Alpha Chi Omega being founded at the school. Furthermore, the Delta Chapter of Beta Theta Pi is the longest continuously-running Greek organization in North America while the Lambda Chapter is the longest continuing chapter of Phi Gamma Delta as well as the second longest continuously-running Greek organization.
Fraternities
- Alpha Phi Alpha
- Alpha Tau Omega
- Beta Theta Pi
- Delta Chi
- Delta Tau Delta
- Delta Upsilon
- Kappa Alpha Psi
- Phi Beta Sigma
- Phi Delta Theta
- Phi Gamma Delta
- Phi Kappa Psi
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon
- Sigma Chi
- Sigma Nu
Sororities
- Alpha Chi Omega
- Alpha Kappa Alpha
- Alpha Phi
- Delta Gamma
- Delta Sigma Theta
- Omega Phi Beta
- Kappa Alpha Theta
- Kappa Kappa Gamma
- Pi Beta Phi
- Psi Lambda Xi
Formal IFC and Panhel recruitment for men and women is held early second semester. Membership intake for National Pan-Hellenic Council organizations (historically black Greek-lettered organizations) usually occurs in the fall and/or the spring. First-year students are not permitted onto fraternity property for a period of time at the beginning of each school year. First-year female students are not permitted onto sorority property until recruitment begins.
Greek-letter organizations that formerly maintained chapters on DePauw's campus include the fraternities Delta Kappa Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha, and the sororities Delta Zeta, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi and Alpha Gamma Delta.
-
Main article: Delta Zeta#DePauw University controversy
In 2006, the Delta Zeta sorority was reorganized after the national organization conducted a membership review, reducing 23 of the 35 current members (including the chapter president) to alumna status and giving them six weeks to vacate the sorority house. Of the 12 remaining members, 6 chose to take alumna status. There were also three girls who were off-campus that were never granted a membership review and 4 who left early because they did not like the tone of the meeting in September. Although the explanation given by Delta Zeta Nationals was that the decisions were based on commitment, the evicted members hold that they were forced to take alumna status because of their less than popular image on campus. Delta Zeta Nationals contends that the women could have challenged their alumna status recommendation, while the girls hold that they were explicitly told by Nationals representatives that the decision was final and they would be deactivated if they were to challenge anything.[9] On Monday, March 12, 2007, DePauw President Robert G. Bottoms announced that the University was beginning the process of severing ties with Delta Zeta's national organization, effective at the end of the 2006-7 academic year. Bottoms was quoted as saying, "I came to the conclusion that our approaches to these issues are just incompatible."[10]
The DePauw Tigers compete in the NCAA Division III Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC). Every year since 1890, DePauw University has competed in American football against its rival Wabash College in what has become the Monon Bell Classic. The traveling trophy, a 300-pound train bell from the Monon Railroad, made its debut in the rivalry in 1932. The DePauw-Wabash series is one of the nation's oldest college football rivalries[citation needed].
In 1933, the DePauw Tigers accomplished a feat that has only been equaled once in modern history. The football team finished the season 7-0-0. This team, coached by Ray "Gaumey" Neal, outscored their opponents 136-0, making them unbeaten, untied, and un-scored-upon. (Texas A&M did this in 1917 and 1919) Coach Neal nearly duplicated this feat in 1943, finishing the season 5-0-1 and outscoring opponents 206-6. The only points surrendered that season were in a 39-6 victory over Indiana State and the only non-win was a 0-0 tie against Oberlin.
DePauw has been a member of the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference since 1997 and has won numerous conference championships, most notably in women's basketball, where the school is a Division III power. DePauw's program has also won the conference's overall "President's Trophy" three times in that span, the only school besides Trinity to do so. This includes back-to-back President's Trophies in 2005-2006 and 2006-2007. In 2007, the Tigers defeated Washington University in St. Louis to win the Division III title in women's basketball. The women's softball team won the regional title, advancing to the Division III College World Series for the first time in school history.
DePauw University's women's golf program is the best of any NCAA Division III college in the nation for students seeking a "balanced" experience, according to Golf Digest's third annual College Golf Guide, which appears in the September 2007 issue.
The DePauw University women's basketball team won the Division III National Championship for the 2006-07 year. They defeated Washington University in Springfield, MA to win the first team national championship in the school's history.
Over the years, DePauw has sent several players to the NFL, including Dave Finzer '82, a punter for the Chicago Bears and Seattle Seahawks, and Greg Werner '89, a tight end for the New York Jets.
Endowed by a gift from Timothy H. and Sharon (Williams) Ubben, both 1958 graduates of DePauw, the speakers' series "brings the world to Greencastle." Presented free of charge and open to all, Ubben Lecturers have included Tony Blair, Mikhail Gorbachev, Spike Lee, Margaret Thatcher, Paul Bremer, Ralph Nader, Willy Brandt, Robert Gates, Mike Krzyzewski, Harry Belafonte, Willy Brandt, Gen. Colin Powell, Eric Schlosser, PostSecret founder Frank Warren, John Major, Benazir Bhutto, Ross Perot, Shimon Peres, Sister Helen Prejean, Elie Wiesel, Julian Bond, Peyton Manning, Naomi Wolf, Gen. Wesley Clark, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Ben and Jerry, Bob Woodward, Jim Lovell, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Paul Volcker, David McCullough, Barbara Bush, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Ken Burns, Paul Rusesabagina (the real-life hero of Hotel Rwanda), William Bennett, Alan Simpson, biologist E.O. Wilson, and author Mitch Albom.
- See also: Monon Bell Classic
Voted "Indiana's Best College Sports Rivalry" by viewers of ESPN in 2005, DePauw University and Wabash College play each November -- in the last regular season football game of the year for both teams -- for the right to keep or reclaim the Monon Bell. The two teams first met in 1890. In 1932, the Monon Railroad donated its approximately 300-pound locomotive bell to be offered as the prize to the winning team each year. The series is as close as a historic rivalry can be: Wabash leads the all-time series 53-52-9; since the Monon Bell was introduced, DePauw has a 35-34-6 edge. The game routinely sells out (up to 11,000 seats, depending upon the venue and seating arrangement) and has been televised by ABC, ESPN2, and HDNet (where it will appear for the next three years, 2007-2010). Each year, alumni from both schools gather at more than 50 locations around the United States for telecast parties, and a commemorative DVD (including historic clips known as "Monon Memories") is produced. The most recent Monon Bell game, played on November 10, 2007, concluded with a last-second, 47-yard (43 m) field goal resulting in a DePauw victory.
In 1999, GQ listed the Monon Bell game as reason #3 on its "50 Reasons Why College Football is Better Than Pro Football" list.
Since 1919, the Rector Scholar Program has recognized DePauw students of exceptional scholarship and character. To be named a Rector Scholar is to join a prestigious tradition more than 4,000 graduates strong. Rector Scholarships are offered to the top academic applicants offered admission to DePauw. A limited number of full tuition Presidential Rector Scholarships are available.
A historic structure located at the center of campus, East College is known to many as the architectural symbol of DePauw's tradition of excellence and learning. The cornerstone for the building was laid on October 20, 1871. The building hosted commencement exercises in June 1874, and in September 1875 all college classes were moved to the building, according to the book, DePauw Through the Years. But work on East College continued until 1882, when the building's basement was completed. East College was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
Birth certificate Society of Professional Journalists
On May 6, 1909, Sigma Delta Chi was founded by a group of DePauw University student journalists. The organization officially changed its name to the Society of Professional Journalists in 1988. Today it is the nation's most broad-based journalism organization, encouraging the free practice of journalism and stimulating high standards of ethical behavior. SPJ promotes the free flow of information vital to a well-informed citizenry; works to inspire and educate the next generation of journalists; and protects First Amendment guarantees of freedom of speech and press.
DePauw's strong tradition of graduating leaders in the field of journalism continues. Alumni include: "business journalist of the century" Bernard Kilgore and his Wall Street Journal colleague Kenneth C. Hogate; Eugene C. Pulliam and Eugene S. Pulliam of the Indianapolis Star and Central Newspapers chain; Donald Maxwell, former editor of the Chicago Tribune; WCVB-TV/Boston news anchor Heather Unruh; Robert Giles, curator of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University and former editor of the Detroit News; John McWethy, ABC News national security correspondent; James B. Stewart, Pulitzer Prize-winning former front page editor of the Wall Street Journal, best-selling author, and currently editor-at-large of SmartMoney magazine; Aaron Lucchetti, staff reporter for the Wall Street Journal; Stephen F. Hayes, senior writer at the Weekly Standard and author of "Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President"; Meg Kissinger, a reporter for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; and Bret Baier, White House correspondent for FOX News.

The DePauw University School of Music, founded in 1884, is one of the oldest in America. The School of Music is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music and it offers various areas of study, including: Woodwinds, Brass, Percussion, Piano/Organ, Strings, Voice, Music Education, and Jazz Studies.
It presents regular recitals by students and faculty and concerts by visiting artists, most of which are free and open to the public.
A variety of courses and music lessons are made available to students in the College of Liberal Arts.
DePauw students also organize concerts for the campus community. Performers in recent years have included Dave Matthews, Train, The Black Eyed Peas, Ben Folds, Rufus Wainwright, and Guster. Past guests have included Billy Joel, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, The Carpenters, America, and Harry Chapin.
Marvin's is a small restaurant serving mainly American food such as hamburgers and fries. While not part of DePauw's campus dining options, Marvin's is an important part of student culture, employing students and remaining open later than most restaurants in Greencastle. The garlic cheeseburger (commonly referred to by its acronym, GCB) is considered its specialty. The popularity of Marvin's extended outside the Greencastle community after an obscure reference was made to the restaurant on the television show Joan of Arcadia.
Boulder next to East College
The Boulder Run has become a tradition at DePauw University. Students, streaking from their respective residences, run to and from the Columbia Boulder, located in the center of the campus near the East College building. Students today perform the Boulder Run for a variety of reasons, though it was originally performed on the day or night of the first snowfall on campus by Phi Kappa Psi, the Greek house nearest the boulder. This tradition was mentioned in Playboy magazine's September 1972 issue. The DePauw police are usually tolerant of the tradition, but students have been ticketed when caught.
Held in late April every year, DePauw's Little 5 bike race has been a campus tradition since the first race in 1956. The first race was sponsored by Union Board as a fund raiser for the American Cancer Fund. Fourteen teams of male riders from various living units competed. The race has changed some since 1956. Today, there are men's and women's races, and the race has been moved from the streets around East College to the track at Blackstock Stadium.
It is not unusual to see students playing a game of Campus Golf when the weather is nice. The game of campus golf requires a golf club and a tennis ball. Players attempt to hit their golf ball against various targets on campus within a number of strokes. The game is similar to frisbee golf, where players attempt to hit targets ranging from trees to buildings with a frisbee.
While playing campus golf, students often wear traditional golf attire, including plaid pants, shirts and sweaters. Many living units have established "courses" which are played by residents.
The original Campus Golf course was unofficially designated by Ryan Etter '05 and Joe Wallace '05.[11] However, due to recent construction on the DePauw Performing Arts Center and elimination of Bowman Pond, the original course is unplayable in its entirety. The 18 Holes are now primarily dictated according to local Greek house or living unit tradition.
- Karen Koning AbuZayd - Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency; former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- Joseph P. Allen - NASA Space Shuttle Astronaut
- Jim Alling - former president of Starbucks Coffee International
- Robert Apatoff - president of FTD
- Bret Baier - FOX News chief White House correspondent
- Joseph W. Barr - Secretary of the Treasury (1968-69), FDIC Chairman
- Buzzie Bavasi - former general manager of baseball's Los Angeles Dodgers, California Angels and San Diego Padres
- Charles A. Beard - Famous author and one of the most influential American historians of the early 20th century; husband of Mary Ritter Beard, one of four founders of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority
- Mary Ritter Beard - Noted U.S. historian and leader in the women's suffrage movement; one of four founders of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority
- Albert Beveridge - U.S. Senator (IN)
- Brad Brownell - head men's basketball coach at Wright State University
- Pamela Coburn - soprano, winner of Metropolitan Opera National Competition
- Timothy Collins - Founder of Ripplewood Holdings
- Tom Colten - Louisiana Republican politician, mayor, and transportation secretary
- Gretchen Cryer - writer, actress, and lyricist
- Cathy Day - author of The Circus in Winter
- Anna Elizabeth Dickinson - Influential abolitionist and suffragist who was the first woman to speak before the United States Congress
- Lee E. Dirks - Founder and Chairman of Dirks, Van Essen & Murray, the leading merger-and-acquisition firm in the U.S. newspaper industry
- Joseph Flummerfelt - noted conductor of Westminster Choir College
- Nancy Ford - composer
- Bob Franks - former U.S. Congressman
- Ford Frick - Major League Baseball Commissioner (1951-65)
- Hillary A. Gobin - theologian, educator, college president
- James P. Goodrich - Governor of Indiana (1917-21)
- Judson Green - CEO of NAVTEQ; board member of DreamWorks Animation and Harley-Davidson
- Rob Harrell - creator of cartoon "Big Top"
- Lee Hamilton - co-chair of the Iraq Study Group, vice chair of the 9/11 Commission, and retired United States Representative
- Thomas H. Hamilton, former President of the State University of New York and the University of Hawaii
- Bill Hayes - actor, TV's Days of our Lives
- Stephen F. Hayes - senior writer for the Weekly Standard and author of "Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President"
- Angie Hicks - founder of Angie's List
- Kenneth C. Hogate - Dow Jones President (1931-45) Barron's Publisher (1931-45)The Wall Street Journal General Manager (1928-45)
- Steve Hollar - Co-star of the basketball movie "Hoosiers"
- R. David Hoover - Chairman, President, CEO of Ball Corporation
- Jimmy Ibbotson - longtime member of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
- Barbara Lethem Ibrahim - Founding Director of the Center for Philanthropy and Civic Engagement, American University in Cairo, previously Population Council Regional Director for West Asia and North Africa, Egypt, and wife of Saad Eddin Ibrahim
- John Jakes - novelist
- Vernon Jordan Jr. - noted broker and executive, former president of the National Urban League, personal friend and advisor to Bill Clinton
- Percy Julian - research chemist of international renown and a pioneer in the chemical synthesis of medicinal drugs
- Sue Keller - ragtime pianist, composer and arranger
- Bernard Kilgore - former editor of the Wall Street Journal who turned the publication into one of national significance
- Barbara Kingsolver - contemporary fiction writer, founder of Bellwether Prize for "literature of social change"
- Greg Lippert - president and CEO of Mazzio's Corporation
- Andrew Madsen - President of Darden Restaurants, which includes the Olive Garden chain
- David McMillin - Singer-Songwriter
- John McWethy - former ABC News correspondent
- Julie McWhirter - voice actress best known for her work in Hanna-Barbera cartoons, such as Jeannie, Drak Pack and The Smurfs
- Mary Meeker - Internet equity research analyst at Morgan Stanley dubbed "Queen of the Net"
- Jeffrey T. Mezger - President, CEO of KB Home
- Major Reuben Webster Millsaps - Founder of Millsaps College in Mississippi
- Ferid Murad - 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Jay Holcomb Neff - Publisher and Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri
- Richard Peck - Newbery Medal-winning author
- Howard C. Petersen - government official
- Loren Pope - nationally acclaimed authority on colleges; authored "Looking Beyond the Ivy League" and "Colleges that Change Lives"
- Eugene C. Pulliam - noted newspaper publisher
- Dan Quayle - 44th Vice President of the United States under George H. W. Bush
- James C. Quayle - noted newspaper publisher
- Steven Rales - Chairman of Danaher Corporation; #117 on Forbe's list of billionaires in 2006
- Bill Rasmussen - founder of ESPN
- Scott Rasmussen - Co-founder of ESPN and founder of Rasmussen Reports
- Al Ries - author and marketing expert
- Jan Risi - co-founder and CEO of the Independent Purchasing Cooperative for Subway restaurants
- Mark Rolfing - NBC golf analyst
- Steve Sanger - former president and CEO of General Mills
- Howard C. Sheperd, Sr. - Former president of the National City Bank of New York, now Citibank
- General David M. Shoup, Medal of Honor Recipient (WWII), Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps
- Theodore "Tim" Solso - CEO of Cummins
- Martha Steele-Robes - Dow Jones director
- Brad Stevens - head men's basketball coach, Butler University
- James B. Stewart - Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Blood Sport, DisneyWar and other titles
- Jeri Kehn - Wife of former Tennessee Senator, actor, and 2008 Presidential Nominee Fred Thompson
- Dick Tomey - college football coach
- Kathy Vrabeck - president of EA Casual Games
- Stuart Morton - Space Cowboy
- Alex Vraciu - flying ace in World War II
- James E. Watson - U.S. Senator (IN) (Majority Leader 1929-33)
- Pharez Whitted - Jazz trumpeter, composer, and producer
- Andy Isch - Chemist, pretty good dancer, humanitarian, on the way to becoming really buff
- Carl N. Mehlhope - Marathon runner, publisher of STACK magazine
- Megan Sullivan Mehlhope Singer, stage and television actress
- William Arthur Rosche Science Professor,
- Official Web site
- Admission information
- DePauw Nature Park Web site
- Roster of Ubben Lecturers
- Tiger Pep Band at DePauw University
- ^ "NCAA Member Schools Sorted By State: All Divisions". NCAA. Retrieved on 2006-01-24.
- ^ "DePauw's Tyler the Tiger performs at the Indianapolis Ice". Tiger Pep Band at DePauw University. Retrieved on 2007-03-10.
- ^ USNews.com: America's Best Colleges 2008: Liberal Arts Colleges: Top Schools
- ^ How to Choose a College - Forbes.com
- ^ Americans Studying Abroad
- ^ Intel Survey Ranks DePauw America's Top Liberal Arts College for Access to Wireless Technology
- ^ The Princeton Review (August 12, 2007). "DePauw University's Best 366 College Rankings", The Princeton Review. Retrieved on 5 October 2007.
- ^ http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/college/most-frats
- ^ Sam Dillon (February 25, 2007). "Sorority Evictions Raise Issue of Looks and Bias", The New York Times. Retrieved on 25 February 2007.
- ^ KEITH ROBINSON - AP (March 12, 2007). "DePauw Cuts Ties With Troubled Sorority", The Manchester Guardian. Retrieved on 12 March 2007.
- ^ Mike B. Knight and Andrew Cole, "Campus Courses Defined". The DePauw. Volume 98, Issue 35. March 15, 2005.
|
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference |
|
|
Austin College • Birmingham-Southern College • Centre College • Colorado College • DePauw University • Hendrix College • Millsaps College • Oglethorpe University • Rhodes College • Sewanee (University of the South) • Southwestern University • Trinity University
|
|
|
Great Lakes Colleges Association |
|
|
Albion • Antioch • Denison • DePauw • Earlham • Hope • Kalamazoo • Kenyon • Oberlin • Ohio Wesleyan • Wabash • Wooster
|
|
|
International Association of Methodist-related Schools, Colleges, and Universities |
|
Adrian • Alaska Pacific • Albion • Albright • Allegheny • American • Andrew • Baker • Baldwin-Wallace • Bennett • Bethune-Cookman • Birmingham-Southern • Boston University • Brevard • Centenary (Louisiana) • Centenary (New Jersey) • Central Methodist • Claflin • Clark Atlanta • Columbia College (South Carolina) • Cornell College • Dakota Wesleyan • Denver • DePauw • Dickinson College • Dillard • Drew • Duke • Emory • Emory & Henry • Evansville • Ferrum • Florida Southern • Green Mountain • Greensboro • Hamline • Hendrix • High Point • Hiwassee • Huntingdon • Huston-Tillotson • Illinois Wesleyan • Indianapolis • Iowa Wesleyan • Kansas Wesleyan • Kendall • Kentucky Wesleyan • LaGrange • Lambuth • Lebanon Valley • Lindsey Wilson • Lon Morris • Louisburg • Lycoming • MacMurray • Martin Methodist • McKendree • McMurry • Meharry Medical • Methodist • Millsaps • Morningside • Mount Union • Nebraska Methodist • Nebraska Wesleyan • North Carolina Wesleyan • North Central • Northwestern University • Ohio Northern • Ohio Wesleyan • Oklahoma City • Otterbein • Oxford of Emory • Pacific • Paine • Pfeiffer • Puget Sound • Philander Smith • Randolph • Randolph-Macon • Reinhardt • Rocky Mountain • Rust • Shenandoah • Simpson College • Southern Methodist • Southwestern College (Kansas) • Southwestern University • Spartanburg Methodist • Syracuse • Tennessee Wesleyan • Texas Wesleyan • Union (Kentucky) • Virginia Wesleyan • Wesley College (Delaware) • Wesleyan College • West Virginia Wesleyan • Wiley • Willamette • Wofford • Young Harris
|
|
|
Annapolis Group |
|
Chair: Katherine Haley Will, President, Gettysburg College
Agnes Scott • Albion • Albright • Allegheny • Alma • Amherst • Augustana (Illinois) • Austin • Bard • Barnard • Bates • Bennington • Berea • Birmingham-Southern • Bowdoin • Bryn Mawr • Bucknell • Carleton • Centre • Chatham • Claremont McKenna • Coe • Colby • Colgate • College of Saint Benedict • Colorado College • Connecticut College • Cornell College • Davidson • Denison • DePauw • Dickinson • Drew • Earlham • Eckerd • Franklin & Marshall • Furman • Gettysburg • Gordon (Massachusetts) • Goucher • Grinnell • Gustavus Adolphus • Hamilton • Hampden-Sydney • Hampshire • Harvey Mudd • Haverford • Hendrix • Hiram • Hobart & William Smith • Hollins • Holy Cross • Hope • Illinois Wesleyan • Juniata • Kalamazoo • Kenyon • Knox (Illinois) • Lafayette • Lake Forest • Lawrence • Lewis & Clark • Luther • Macalester • Manhattan • McDaniel • Middlebury • Millsaps • Monmouth • Moravian • Morehouse • Mount Holyoke • Muhlenberg • Nebraska Wesleyan • Oberlin • Occidental • Oglethorpe • Ohio Wesleyan • Pitzer • Pomona • Presbyterian • Puget Sound • Randolph-Macon • Randolph • Reed • Rhodes • Ripon • Rollins • St. John's College • St. John's University • St. Lawrence • St. Olaf • Salem • Sarah Lawrence • Scripps • Sewanee • Skidmore • Smith • Southwestern • Spelman • Swarthmore • Sweet Briar • Transylvania • Trinity College (Connecticut) • Trinity University (Texas) • Union • Ursinus • Vassar • Wabash • Washington College • Washington & Jefferson • Washington & Lee • Wellesley • Wesleyan College • Wesleyan University • Westmont • Wheaton (Massachusetts) • Whitman • Whittier • Willamette • William Jewell • Williams • Wittenberg • Wooster
|
|
|