The University
The University of Minnesota is one of
America's major research universities. It regularly ranks among the top ten
in the United States in receipt of federal grants for research and
development, and its Graduate School was recently ranked among the six best
in American public universities.
Established in 1869, the University of Minnesota is a land-grant institution
that comprises a network of five campuses throughout the state -- in the Twin
Cities (Minneapolis and St. Paul campuses), Duluth, Morris, and Crookston --
and numerous research stations.
The
Twin Cities campus, by far the largest in the University system, is really
two campuses -- one in Minneapolis and one in St. Paul.
The Minneapolis campus is
further divided by the Mississippi River into East and West bank, each with a
distinctive character. On the East Bank are the more traditional, older
buildings and grassy, tree-lined central mall, the School of Nursing,
the Institute of Technology the health sciences complex and the biomedical
library. The West Bank features newer University buildings, housing the Law
School, the School of Music, and the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public
Affairs. Also on the West Bank are the main library, the School of
Management, and the studio arts and theater buildings.
The St. Paul campus is
situated in a pleasant residential neighborhood. Located here are the
Colleges of Agriculture, Biological Sciences, Forestry, Home Economics, and
Veterinary Medicine. Much of the University's married student housing is
located near the St. Paul campus.
Regular Campus Connector buses run
between the Minneapolis and St. Paul campuses. Both the Minneapolis and St.
Paul campuses have athletic
facilities open to students for indoor and outdoor sports -- swimming,
tennis, golf, softball, soccer, basketball, handball and squash. The
University golf course is adjacent to the St. Paul campus.
The
Academic Health Center
Founding legislation for the University of Minnesota medicine and science among
five original academic disciplines. Over the past century and a half,
medicine and science evolved into the Academic
Health Center, one of the most comprehensive health education and
research centers in the United States.
It
is comprised of seven schools and colleges of medicine, public
health, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, and veterinary medicine as well as allied
health programs in physical therapy;
occupational therapy, medical
technology, health information science,
and mortuary science, and
interdisciplinary efforts, such as the Cancer
Center and the Biomedical Engineering
Institute.
The schools of the Academic Health Center educate 70 percent of Minnesota's
health care professionals. Each year, 5,000 students are enrolled in
professional and graduate programs.
The
Twin Cities
Minneapolis and St. Paul -- known as the Twin
Cities -- are growing centers of commerce and industry with major
corporate headquarters in electronics, computers, food processing and
milling, retailing, medicine, transportation, and forest products industries.
The
Twin Cities offer numerous entertainment and cultural activities. In
Minneapolis, the nationally renowned Guthrie
Theater presents classics, musicals, drama, and comedy. The theater
district near the University's Minneapolis campus alone boasts seven
theaters, four of them on campus. Moviegoers can find much variety -- from
current to classic to foreign films. Musical activity flourishes, led by the Minnesota Orchestra, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the Minnesota Opera Company. The Walker Art Center and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts house
enjoyable collections and attract many of the nation's finest exhibitions.
Other metropolitan highlights include touring Broadway musicals, high-quality
local and national dance performances, the Science
Museum of Minnesota (with its Omnitheater), historic Fort Snelling, the Minnesota Zoo, and the Mall of America.
For major league sports fans, Minnesota teams include the Twins (baseball), Vikings (football), Timberwolves (basketball), and
the Wild (hockey) plus Big Ten intercollegiate competition.
Minnesota
Sharing
its northern border with Canada, Minnesota
is a patchwork of lakes andrivers, forests and croplands. Minnesota's
varied terrain ranges from rich prairie farmland in the south to rugged
forests in the north. There are some 900 lakes, 500 parks, and three great
rivers -- the Mississippi, the Minnesota, and the St. Croix -- in the
eight-county metropolitan area. Popular diversions from study and research in
the summer include swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, hiking, and
cycling. Winter offers cross-country skiing, skating, ice fishing,
snowshoeing, and winter camping.
Minnesota's
changes of seasons are enjoyed by natives and newcomers alike. Summer is warm
and pleasant with lots of sunshine; autumn is cool and breathtakingly
colorful; winter brings a beautiful white crispness; spring returns with mild
temperatures and welcome green landscapes.