
The City CollegeThe City College of New York (CCNY) was founded in 1847 as The Free Academy. At the urging of New York City School Board President Townsend Harris, it was established to provide access to higher education for bright young men from working class and immigrant families who could not afford private college. Considered one of the great experiments of the young American democracy, CCNY, now coeducational, remains committed to its original mission over 160 years later.
City College is also one of seven campuses for the William E. Macaulay Honors College. University Scholars are selected for the program based on their high school record, standardized test results, high school English average, an interview and recommendations and receive free tuition, a research stipend and other benefits.
Diverse Student Body CCNY's enrollment of over 15,000 students includes recent high school graduates as well as working adults, immigrants as well as natives, poor as well as middle class. In Fall 2008, 90 foreign languages were spoken on campus, which has been ranked by US News and World Report as one of the most diverse college campuses in the nation. CCNY ranks among the leading schools granting bachelor's degrees to African-Americans. It is also a leader nationally in graduating minority engineers and conferring graduate degrees on minority students. In recent years, the College has been in the top three nationally in the number of its graduates going on to earn doctorates.
World-Class Faculty Behind this success is a faculty committed to academic excellence and research. More than 85% of CCNY professors have earned the highest degrees in their field. The faculty includes winners of Fulbright scholarships, Guggenheim fellowships, MacArthur "Genius" awards, Pulitzer Prizes, Emmy Awards, Grammy Awards and National Book Awards. Nine faculty members hold 12 memberships in the three national scientific academies: The National Academy of Science, The National Academy of Engineering and The Institute of Medicine. Sheldon Weinbaum, CCNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biomedical and Mechanical Engineering, is one of six living Americans elected to all three. In addition to its long history as a great teaching institution, City College is internationally renowned for the research activities of its faculty. The school is a leader in such fields as molecular modeling, transportation infrastructure, nanotechnology, laser optics and AIDS. City has the largest undergraduate research program in the New York metropolitan area, and during 2007-2008 the College's faculty received research grant support totaling more than $45 million.
Notable Alumni
Nine Nobel laureates claim CCNY as their Alma Mater,
the most from any public college in the United States; the most recent
laureate, Robert J. Aumann, Class of 1950, won the 2005 prize in Economics for
his contributions to game theory. The College's distinguished alumni include:
playwright Paddy Chayefsky; U.S. Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter;
lyricist Ira Gershwin; Intel Corporation co-founder and Senior Advisor Dr.
Andrew S. Grove; Pulitzer Prize-winning author Oscar Hijuelos, best-selling
mystery writer Walter Mosley; former Secretary of State Gen. Colin L. Powell;
astronaut Mario Runco, Jr.; polio vaccine pioneer Dr. Jonas E. Salk, and Emmy
Award-winning actor Richard Schiff.
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