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    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, or MIT, is a private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. MIT is organized into five schools and one college, containing 34 academic departments and 53 interdisciplinary laboratories, centers and programs.
    As of 2006, MIT's endowment stands at $8.4 billion, sixth-largest in the US.
    Founded in 1861 in response to the increasing industrialization of America, MIT's mission and culture continue to emphasize teaching and research grounded in practical applications of science and technology. As a
    federally funded research and development center in World War II, MIT scientists developed defense-related technologies that would later become integral to computers, radar, and inertial guidance. After the war, MIT continuted to have a high profile throughout the Space Race and Cold War and its reputation expanded beyond its core competencies in science and engineering into economics, linguistics, management, and other social sciences as well. MIT graduates and faculty are also noted for their entrepreneurial spirit: a 1997 report by MIT claimed that the aggregated revenues produced by the 4,000 companies founded by MIT and its graduates would make it the twenty-fourth largest economy in the world.


        Massachusetts Institute of Technology
            History
                Initial years and vision
                Expansion
                Challenges and controversies
                Initiatives
            Organization
            Academics
                Student body
                Classes
                    Numbering
                Undergraduate requirements
                Collaborations
                Rankings
            Faculty and research
                UROP
                MIT labs and groups
            Noted alumni
            Culture and student life
                Activities
                Athletics
                Housing
                Hacking
                Brass Rat
            Campus
                Architecture
                Naming and pronunciation
                Recent building efforts
            Further reading
                Publications
                Maps
    NameMassachusetts Institute of Technology
    image
    MottoMens et Manus (Mind and Hand)
    Established1861, Opened 1865
    TypePrivate university
    PresidentSusan Hockfield
    ProvostL. Rafael Reif
    CityCambridge, Massachusetts
    StateMassachusetts
    CountryUnited States
    Undergrad4,066
    Postgrad6,140
    Faculty992
    Campusurban area
    Free LabelAthletics
    FreeAthletics
    Websitehttp://mit.edu mit.edu
    Colorshttp://web.mit.edu/graphicidentity/symbols/co...
    Endowment$8.4 billion USD

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    History
    Main article: History of MIT


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    Initial years and vision





    In 1861, The Commonwealth of Massachusetts approved a charter for the incorporation of the "Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Boston Society of Natural History" submitted by William Barton Rogers, a natural scientist. Rogers sought to establish a new form of higher education to address the challenges posed by rapid advances in science and technology in the mid-19th century that classic institutions were ill-prepared to deal with.
    The Rogers Plan, as it came to be known, was rooted in three principles: the educational value of useful knowledge, the necessity of “learning by doing,” and integrating a professional and liberal arts education at the undergraduate level.
    MIT was a pioneer in the use of laboratory instruction. Because open conflict in the Civil War broke out only a few months later, MIT's first classes were held in rented space at the Mercantile Building in downtown Boston in 1865.

    Construction of the first MIT building was completed in Boston's Back Bay in 1866 and would be known as "Boston Tech." For the next half-century, the science and engineering curriculum drifted away from Rogers' ideal became more focused on more vocational concerns to the detriment of more theoretical programs. Proposals to merge MIT with "the school up the river" began as early as 1869 but other proposals in 1900 and 1914 were ultimately canceled.


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    Expansion





    The attempted mergers occurred in parallel with MITs continued expansion beyond the classroom and laboratory space permitted by its building in Boston. President Richard Maclaurin sought to move the campus to a new location when he took office in 1909. An anonymous donor, later revealed to be George Eastman, donated the funds to buy a mile-long tract of swamp and industrial land along the Cambridge side of the Charles River. By 1916, MIT moved into its handsome new neoclassical campus and occupies the same site to this date. The new campus fomented some changes in the stagnating undergraduate curriculum, but President Karl Taylor Compton and Vice-President (effectively Provost) Vannevar Bush in the 1930s drastically reformed the curriculae by re-emphasizing the importance of "pure" sciences like physics and chemistry and reducing the work required in shops and drafting. Despite the difficulties of the Great Depression, the reforms "renewed confidence in the ability of the Institute to develop leadership in science as well as in engineering."
    More fortuitously, they also cemented MIT's academic reputation on the eve of World War Two by attracting scientists and researchers who would later make significant contributions in the Radiation Laboratory, Instrumentation Laboratory, and other defense-related research programs.

    MIT was drastically changed by its involvement in military research during World War Two. Bush was appointed head of the enormous Office of Scientific Research and Development. Government-sponsored research had contributed to a fantastic growth in the size of the Institute's research staff and physical plant as well as a shifting the educational focus away from undergraduates to graduate studies.
    As the Cold War and Space Race intensified and concerns about the technology gap between the U.S. and the Soviet Union grew more pervasive throughout the 1950s and 1960s, MIT's involvement in the military-industrial complex was a source of pride on campus. However, by the late 1960s and early 1970s, intense protests by student and faculty activists against this research required that the MIT administration spin these laboratories off into what would become the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Lincoln Laboratory. The extent of these protests is reflected by the fact that MIT had more names on "President Nixon's enemies list" than any other single organization, among them its president Jerome Wiesner and professor Noam Chomsky. Memos revealed during Watergate indicated that Nixon had ordered MIT's federal subsidy cut "in view of Wiesner's anti-defense bias."


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    Challenges and controversies
    MIT has been nominally coeducational since admitting Ellen Swallow Richards in 1870. Female students, however, remained a tiny minority (numbered in dozens) prior to the completion of the first women's dormitory, McCormick Hall, in 1964. Richards also became the first female member of MIT's faculty, specializing in sanitary chemistry. In 1998, MIT became the first major research university to acknowledge the existence of a systematic bias against female faculty in its School of Science and supported efforts toward corrective measures; a 2003 MIT news release cites various numbers suggesting that the status of women improved during the latter years of his tenure.
    In August 2004, Susan Hockfield, a molecular neurobiologist, was appointed as MIT's first female president. She took office as the Institute's 16th president on December 6, 2004. In 2006, Professor Susumu Tonegawa was accused of intimidating a promising female faculty candidate and several of his colleagues have called for an investigation.

    In 1986, Professor David Baltimore, a Nobel Laureate became embroiled in an investigation of research misconduct that lead to a Congressional investigation. Also in the mid-1980s, the dismissal of David F. Noble, a historian of technology, became a cause celebre about the extent to which academics are granted "freedom of speech" after he published several books and papers critical of MIT's reliance upon corporations and the military.
    In 2000, Professor Ted Postol accused the MIT administration of attempting to whitewash potential research misconduct at the Lincoln Lab facility with regard to a ballistic missile defense test, though a final investigation into the matter has not been completed.

    In the late 1990s and early 2000s, a number of student deaths resulted in considerable media attention to MIT's culture and student life. After the alcohol-related death of Scott Krueger in September 1997 as a new member at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, MIT began requiring all freshmen to live in the dormitory system. The 2000 suicide of MIT undergraduate Elizabeth Shin drew attention to suicides at MIT and created a controversy over whether MIT had an unusually high suicide rate.
    In late 2001 a task force's recommended improvements in student mental health services
    were implemented, including expanding staff and operating hours at the mental health center. These and later cases were significant as well because they sought to prove negligence and liability of administrators as they would be responsible for students in loco parentis.

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    Initiatives
    Many members of the MIT community are involved with free software like Richard Stallman and Hal Abelson. The MIT student newspaper, The MIT Tech, was the first newspaper on the WWW. In 2001, MIT announced that it planned to put many of its course materials online as part of its OpenCourseWare project. Similarly, Nicholas Negroponte of the MIT Media Lab is the head of the One Laptop per Child initiative. President Hockfield launched an Energy Research Council to investigate how MIT can respond to the interdisciplinary challenges of increasing global energy consumption.

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    Organization
    MIT is governed by a 78-member board of trustees known as the MIT Corporation which approve the budget, degrees, and faculty appointments as well as electing the President. MIT's endowment and other financial assets are managed by a subsidiary MIT Investment Management Company (MITIMCo). MIT is organized into five schools and one college which contain thirty-four academic departments. The chair of each department reports to the dean of the school, who in turn reports to the Provost under the President. However, faculty committees assert substantial control over many areas of MIT's curriculum, research, student life, and administrative affairs.

    MIT was once characterized by James R. Killian as "a university polarized around science, engineering, and the arts." MIT has no school of law or medicine, although the HST program does offer an MD-PhD program with the Harvard Medical School.

    Each department is listed with its MIT course number, where applicable.



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    Academics

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    Student body
    MIT enrolls more graduate students, (approximately 6,000 annually) than undergraduates (approximately 4,000). In 2006, Women constituted 43 percent of all undergraduates and 29 percent of graduate students. The same year, MIT students represented all 50 states, the District of Columbia, five U.S. Territories, and 110 foreign countries. African-Americans makes up 5.8% and 1.9% of the undergraduate and graduate student bodies respectively, Asian Americans 26.5% and 11.5%, Hispanics 11.3% and 2.9%, and Native Americans 1.5% and 0.3% respectively.
    International students comprised 9% of undergraduates and 40% of graduate students.

    The admissions rate for freshmen in 2006 was 12.7% with over 66% of admitted freshmen choosing to enroll. 97% of freshmen were in the top tenth of their high school class and 75% scored above a 1430 on the SAT; the average score on the new SAT was 2283 (out of the perfect 2400). 42% of the MIT Class of 2010 were valedictorians in their high school. Although graduate admissions are less centralized, they are similarly selective: 22% of 15,007 applications were admitted with 61% of admitted students enrolling.

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    Classes
    Getting an education at MIT has been characterized as "drinking from a fire hose." Although the perceived pressure is high, the failure rate and freshmen retention rate at MIT are similar to schools of similar caliber.
    Some of the pressure for first-year undergraduates is lessened by the existence of the "no-record" grading system. In the first (fall) term, freshmen transcripts only report if a class was passed while no external record exists if a class was not passed. In the second (spring) term, passing grades (ABC) appear on the transcript while non-passing grades are again rendered "no-record."

    Most classes rely upon a combination of faculty-led lectures, recitations, weekly problem sets (p-sets), and tests to teach material, although alternative curriculae like the Experimental Study Group do exist. Over time, students compile "bibles," collections of problem set and examination questions and answers used as references for later students. In 1970, the then-Dean of Institute Relations, Benson R. Snyder, published The Hidden Curriculum, arguing that unwritten regulations, like the implicit curriculae of the bibles, are often counterproductive; they fool professors into believing that their teaching is effective and students into believing they have learned the material.

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    Numbering
    In a practice that confounds most outsiders, nearly all MIT students refer to both their majors and classes using numbers alone. Majors are numbered with Roman numerals in the approximate order of when the department was founded; for example, Civil and Environmental Engineering is Course I, while Nuclear Science & Engineering is Course XXII. Students majoring in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, the most popular department, collectively identify themselves as "Course 6." Unlike many U.S. universities, students use a combination of the department's course number and the number assigned to the class number to identify their subjects; the course which many universities would designate as "Physics 101" is, at MIT, "8.01." For brevity, course number designations are pronounced without the decimal point and by replacing "oh" for zero (unless zero is the last number). Thus, "8.01" is pronounced eight oh one, "6.001" is pronounced six double oh one, and "7.20" would be pronounced seven twenty.

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    Undergraduate requirements





    MIT has an extensive core curriculum required of all undergraduates called the General Institute Requirements, or GIRs. The science requirement, generally completed during freshman year as a prerequisite for many introductory science and engineering classes, comprises two semesters of physics classes covering kinematics and E&M, two semesters of math covering single variable calculus and multivariable calculus, one semester of chemistry, and one semester of biology. Undergraduates are required to take a laboratory class in their major, eight Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (HASS) classes (at least three in a concentration and another four unrelated subjects), and non-varsity athletes must also take four physical education classes.

    In May 2006 a faculty task force recommended that the current GIR system be modified on several counts. While the required two semesters of math and first semester of physics would remain, the science core would be replaced by a "Science-Math-Engineering" core that would allow students to pick five classes from six categories of math, physics, chemistry, life sciences, computation, and engineering, and a "project-based freshman experience." The Institute lab requirement would also be dropped and the HASS requirement would include addressing a "big idea."


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    Collaborations




    MIT has close ties with many institutions throughout the Boston area as well as internationally.


    MIT has both a friendly rivalry with Harvard University as well as a substantial number of research collaborations such as the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Broad Institute, Center for Ultracold Atoms, and Harvard-MIT Data Center. In addition, students at the two schools can cross-register without any additional fees, for credits toward their own school's degrees. The relationship and proximity between the two institutions is remarkable, considering they are often regarded as the world's top two universities.

    Boston University lies between MIT and Harvard on the Boston-side of Charles River and collaborates with both on the Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology. MIT has an extensive cross-registration program Wellesley College and an undergraduate exchange program with the University of Cambridge known as the Cambridge-MIT Institute. MIT also has limited cross-registration programs with BU, Brandeis University, Tufts University, and Massachusetts College of Art.

    MIT maintains substantial research and faculty ties with independent research organizations in the Boston-area like the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

    Through the Singapore-MIT Alliance, MIT-Zargoza International Logistics Program, and MISTI programs, MIT supports international science and engineering education as well as collaborating with international universities like Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur and the Malaysia University of Science and Technology.

    MIT publishes the mass-market magazine Technology Review through a subsidiary company as well as a special edition which also serves as the Institute's official alumni magazine.

    MIT students, faculty, and staff are also involved in over 50 educational outreach programs through the MIT Museum, Edgerton Center, and MIT Public Service Center.


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    Rankings

    MIT is ranked
      2 overall among the world's top 200 universities by The Times Higher Education Supplement (2005/2004)
        1 worldwide in technology and engineering, and
          2 in science. The National Research Council, in a 1995 study ranking research universities in the US, ranked MIT
            1 in "reputation" and
              4 in "citations and faculty awards." The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance has identified MIT as one of the Top 5 national research universities since it began ranking in 2000.

    MIT's graduate programs in chemistry, computer science, economics, engineering, mathematics, and physics were all ranked

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    Faculty and research





    Main article: List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology people


    MIT has 992 faculty members, of which 181 are women, and 138 are minorities. These faculty are responsible for lecturing classes, advising both graduate and undergraduate students, sitting on various academic committees, as well as conducting original research. Many faculty members also have founded companies, served as scientific advisors, or sat on the Board of Directors at major corporations. As of October 3, 2006, 63 current or former members of the MIT community have won the Nobel Prize, 16 of them in the last six years. Sixty-four current faculty and staff members belong to the National Academy of Engineering, 61 to the National Academy of Sciences, 22 to the Institute of Medicine, and 118 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. There are 31 National Medal of Science recipients, 80 Guggenheim Fellows, 6 Fulbright Scholars, and 19 MacArthur Fellows among current MIT faculty and staff. Institute Professor is the title awarded to faculty who have made extraordinary contributions to their field and the MIT community.

    For fiscal year 2006, MIT spent $587.5 million on on-campus research. The federal government was the largest source of sponsored research, with the Department of Health and Human Services granting $180.6 million, Department of Defense $86 million, Department of Energy $69.9 million, National Science Foundation $66.7 million, and NASA $32.1 million. MIT employs approximately 3,500 researchers in addition to faculty, as well as supporting 2,500 graduate students through research assistantships. In 2005-2006, MIT faculty and researchers disclosed 523 inventions, filed 321 patent applications, received 121 patents, and earned $42.3 million in royalties.


    In electronics, magnetic core memory, radar, single electron transistors, thin film superconductors, and inertial guidance controls were invented or substantially developed by MIT researchers. Harold Eugene Edgerton was a pioneer in high speed photography. Claude E. Shannon developed much of modern information theory and digital circuit design theory.


    In computer science, Norbert Wiener, Gerald Sussman, Marvin Minsky, and Joseph Weizenbaum all made fundamental contributions to cybernetics, artificial intelligence, and computer languages. Ronald Rivest created the first workable public key cryptographic system in 1977. Richard Stallman founded the GNU Project and Free Software Foundation at CSAIL. Tim Berners Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web established the W3C at MIT in 1996.

    In physics, Jerome Friedman, Henry Kendall, Samuel Ting, Min Chen demonstrated the existence of several species of quarks in the 1970s. Alan Guth published the first physical model for the Big Bang in 1982. Nobel Laureate Wolfgang Ketterle created an atomic laser demonstrating the existence of Bose-Einstein condensates in 1995. Nobel Laureate Frank Wilczek discovered asymptotic freedom.

    In biology, David Baltimore discovered reverse transcriptase in 1970. Har Gobind Khorana, Phillip A. Sharp, Susumu Tonegawa, and Robert Weinberg made fundamental advances in synthesizing genes and understanding their structure throughout the 1970s and 80s. In 1993, Robert Horvitz and David Housman, discovered the genetic bases for Lou Gehrig's disease and Huntington's disease respectively. Eric Lander was one of the principal leaders of the Human Genome Project. Penicillin and Vitamin A were first synthesized at MIT. Julius Rebek created the first self-replicating synthetic molecule.

    In economics and management, Jay W. Forrester is considered the father of system dynamics. Franco Modigliani, Robert Merton, Myron Scholes have been recognized for their contributions to finance theory. Robert Solow and Paul Samuelson were also recognized with Nobel Prizes for their contributions to macroeconomics.


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    UROP
    In 1969, MIT began the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) to enable undergraduates to collaborate directly with faculty members and researchers. The program, founded by Margaret MacVicar, builds upon the MIT philosophy of "learning by doing." Students obtain research projects, colloquially called "UROPs," through postings on the UROP website or by contacting faculty members directly. Over 2,800 undergraduates, 70% of the student body, particpate every year for academic credit, pay, or on a volunteer basis. Students often become published, file patent applications, and launch start-up companies based upon their experience in UROPs.

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    MIT labs and groups
    MIT also has many laboratories, centers and programs which cut across disparate disciplines. In addition to those previously mentioned like the Radiation Lab and Lincoln Laboratory, some of the largest are:
      George R. Wallace Astrophysical Observatory

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    Noted alumni
    Main article: List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology people: Notable alumni



    Distinguished alumni currently in American politics and public service include Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke (Ph.D XIV '79), New Hampshire junior Senator John E. Sununu (MS II '87), MA-1 Representative John Olver (Ph.D V '61), CA-13 Representative Pete Stark (BS IX '53).

    MIT alumni formerly in the American public service include Secretary of Defense Les Aspin (Ph.D XIV '66), former Director of the CIA John M. Deutch (Ph.D V '66), U.S. Air Force General Jimmy Doolittle (Sc.D XVI '25), former U.S. Secretary of State George Schultz (Ph.D XIV '49), former Governor of Massachusetts Francis Sargent (BS IV '39), former senator and Governor of New Hampshire John H. Sununu (Ph.D II '66). The U.S. Libertarian Party was founded by David Nolan (BS XVII '65) in 1971.

    MIT alumni in international politics include U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan (MS XV '72), Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Chalabi (BS XVIII '65), former Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu (MS XV '76), former President of Colombia Virgilio Barco (BS I '58), former Costa Rican president José Figueres Ferrer (BS I '28), and Canadian "Minister of Everything" Clarence Howe (BS '07).


    Notable MIT entrpreneurs include Bose founder Amar Bose (Sc.D VI '56), Raytheon founder Vannevar Bush (Sc.D VI '16); Teradyne co-founders Nick DeWolf (BS VI '48) and Alex d'Arbeloff (BS XV '49); McDonnell Douglas co-founders James McDonnell (MS XVI '25) and Donald Douglas (BS II '14); Texas Instruments co-founder Cecil H. Green (MS VI '24); Hewlett-Packard co-founder William R. Hewlett (MS VI '36); Qualcomm co-founders Irwin M. Jacobs (Sc.D '59 VI) and Andrew Viterbi (MS VI '57); Koch Industries co-founders Charles Koch (MS II '58) and David Koch (MS '63 X); 3Com founder Robert Metcalfe (BS VI & XV '69); Intel co-founder Robert Noyce (Ph.D VIII '53); Digital Equipment Corporation founder Ken Olsen (MS VI '52); Rockwell International founder Willard Rockwell (BS VI '08); Teledyne founder Henry Singleton (Sc.D VI '50); Genentech founder Robert A. Swanson (MS XV '70); and Tyco International founder Martin Weinstein (Sc.D III '61).

    MIT alumni who have lead prominent corporations include former CEO/Chairman of General Motors Alfred P. Sloan '85; former CEO of Hewlett-Packard Carly Fiorina (MS XV '89); former chairman and CEO of Ford Motor Company William Clay Ford, Jr (MS XV '84); New York Stock Exchange Chairman John S. Reed (MS XV '65) and CEO John Thain (BS VI '77).


    MIT alumni have also lead other educational institutes including former President of Harvard University Lawrence H. Summers (BS XIV '75), President of Johns Hopkins University William R. Brody (MS VI '66), President of Carnegie Mellon University Jared Cohon (Ph.D I '73), President of Tufts University Lawrence S. Bacow (BS XIV '72), President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Shirley Ann Jackson (Ph.D VIII '73), President of Purdue University Martin C. Jischke (Ph.D XVI '68), Dean of the London Business School Laura D'Andrea Tyson (Ph.D XIV '74). Former MIT Provost, Robert A. Brown is now President of Boston University.

    More than one-third of the United States' manned spaceflights, more than any university excluding the United States military academies, have included MIT-educated astronauts like Buzz Aldrin (Sc.D SVI '63). Twenty-seven MIT alumni have won the Nobel prize.

    Car and Driver editor-in-chief Csaba Csere (BS II '75) and Car Talk hosts Tom Magliozzi (BS XIV '58) and Ray Magliozzi (BS XXI '72) (Click and Clack) are MIT alumni. Katharine McCormick was a famous suffragette and funded research into the birth control pill. Tom Scholz (BS II '69) founded Boston (band). The architects for the US Supreme Court (Cass Gilbert '80), Rockefeller Center (Raymond Hood '03), and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (I.M. Pei '40) graduated from MIT. Actors James Woods, Will Smith, and Ashton Kutcher were all accepted to MIT but either did not enroll or dropped out.

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    Culture and student life
    MIT has never awarded an honorary degree; the only way to receive an MIT diploma is to earn it.
    In addition, it does not award athletic scholarships, ad eundem degrees, or Latin honors upon graduation — the philosophy is that the honor is in being an MIT graduate. It does, on rare occasions, award honorary professorships; Winston Churchill was so honored in 1949 and Salman Rushdie in 1993.
    MIT faculty and students pride themselves on pure intellectual ability and achievement, and MIT professors often say that they grade with "all the letters of the alphabet." Due to these academic pressures, MIT culture is characterized by a love-hate relationship. The school's informal motto is the initialism IHTFP
    ("I hate this fucking place," jocularly euphemized as "I have truly found paradise," "Institute has the finest professors," etc.).

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    Activities






    MIT has over 380 recognized student activity groups, including a campus radio station, student-run ambulance, publications (''The Tech'',''Counterpoint'', ''VooDoo''), performance groups (MIT Symphony Orchestra, Musical Theater Guild, DanceTroupe) cultural and religious groups, honor societies (Pi Tau Sigma, Eta Kappa Nu), and club sport teams. The MIT Science Fiction Society claims to have the "world's largest open-shelf collection of science fiction" in English. The Lecture Series Committee (LSC) has weekly screenings of popular films as well as lectures by prominent speakers. The annual MIT Entrepreneurship Competition has supported the creation of at least 60 companies worth $10.5 billion since it started in 1990.

    MIT's Independent Activities Period is a four-week long "term" offering hundreds of optional classes, lectures, demonstrations, and other activities throughout the month of January between the Fall and Spring terms. Some of the most popular recurring IAP activities are the 6.270, 6.370, Maslab competitions, the annual "mystery hunt", and Charm School. Despite the harsh New England winters, severe weather has only forced MIT to cancel classes or close the campus three times in recent memory: the Blizzard of 1978, Blizzard of 2003, and Blizzard of 2005.


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    Athletics

    MIT has a student athletics program offering 41 varsity-level sports.
    They participate in the NCAA's Division III, the New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference, the New England Football Conference, and NCAA's Division I and Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges (EARC) for crew. They fielded several dominant intercollegiate Tiddlywinks teams through 1980, winning national and world championships.
    MIT teams have won or placed highly in national championships in pistol, track and field, swimming and diving, cross country, crew, fencing, and water polo.

    The Institute's sports teams are called the Engineers, their mascot since 1914 being a beaver, "nature's engineer." Lester Gardner, a member of the Class of 1898, provided the following justification: "The beaver not only typifies the Tech, but his habits are particularly our own. The beaver is noted for his engineering and mechanical skills and habits of industry. His habits are nocturnal. He does his best work in the dark."

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    Housing

    MIT guarantees four-year dormitory housing for all undergraduates , and provides live-in graduate student tutors and faculty housemasters who have the dual role of both helping students and monitoring them for medical or mental health problems. Students are permitted to select their dorm and floor upon arrival on campus, and as a result diverse communities arise in living groups. Although many dorms contain a wide range of living options, the dorms on and east of Massachusetts Avenue are stereotypically more involved in countercultural activities.

    A substantial number of undergraduates are affiliated with one of MIT's 35 fraternities, sororities, and independent living groups (FSILGs). Most FSILGs are located across the river in the Back Bay owing to MIT's historic location there. Since 2002, all freshmen are required to live in the dormitory system for the first year before moving into an FSILG.

    MIT has six graduate student dormitories, which house about one-third of the graduate student population. New incoming graduate students are given the highest priority for this housing.



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    Hacking


    Many of the values of the Institute have influenced the hacker ethic. At MIT, however, the term "hack" has multiple meanings. "To hack" can mean to physically explore areas (often on-campus, but also off) that are generally off-limits such as rooftops and steam tunnels. "Hack" as a noun also means an elaborate practical joke, and not just a clever technical feat. The term "hacker" and much of hacker culture originated at MIT, starting with the TMRC and MIT AI Lab in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Resident hackers have included Richard Stallman and professors Gerald Jay Sussman and Tom Knight. MIT and Caltech students have recently become involve in a cross-country "hacking war," the latest installment involving the theft of Caltech's cannon.

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    Brass Rat


    Many MIT students and graduates wear an MIT class ring, which is large, heavy, distinctive, and recognizable from a distance. Originally created in 1929, the ring's official name is the "Standard Technology Ring," but its colloquial name is far more well known—the "Brass Rat." The undergraduate ring design varies slightly from year to year to reflect the unique character of the MIT experience for that class but always features a three-piece design, with the MIT seal and the class year each appearing on a separate shank, flanking a large rectangular bezel bearing an image of a beaver. To show that one has graduated from the Insitute, one wears the ring so that the beaver's feet point to the tips of one's fingers, and the wearer looks back on MIT via the Cambridge skyline; those who have not graduated wear the ring so the beaver's feet point toward the wearer's wrist, and the wearer looks away from MIT via the Boston skyline.

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    Campus







    MIT's main Cambridge campus spans approximately a mile of the Charles River front. The campus is divided roughly in half by Massachusetts Avenue, with most academic buildings to the east and most dormitories and student life facilities to the west. Essentially all classes are held on main campus, although MIT owns or leases a number of research facilities throughout Cambridge and the greater Boston area.

    The bridge closest to MIT is the Harvard Bridge, which is marked off in the fanciful unit – the Smoot. The Kendall MBTA Red Line station is located on the far northeastern edge of the campus. The neighborhood of MIT is a mixture of high tech companies combined with residential neighborhoods of Cambridge (see Kendall Square).

    Somewhat controversially, MIT operates a highly visible nuclear reactor on campus. Other notable campus facilities include a pressurized wind tunnel, a towing tank for testing ship and ocean structure designs, and a low-emission cogeneration plant that provides most of the campus electricity and heating requirements.


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    Architecture





    MIT's campus is noted for its progressive, if inconsistent, architecture; many buildings exemplify neoclassical, brutalist, and deconstructivist styles. Princeton Review includes MIT in a list of twenty schools whose campuses are "tiny, unsightly, or both." Many are connected above ground as well as through an extensive network of underground tunnels, providing protection from the Cambridge weather.


    The first buildings constructed on the Cambridge campus are known officially as the Maclaurin buildings, completed in 1916, after Institute president Richard Maclaurin who oversaw their construction. Designed by William Welles Bosworth based on plans developed by wealthy alumnus and hydraulic engineer John Ripley Freeman, these imposing buildings surround Killian Court on three sides. On the north side of Killian Court is the Infinite Corridor, which serves as something of a main artery for the campus, connecting east campus with west campus. The Infinite Corridor runs through two domes: the Great Dome, which is featured in most publicity shots, and the lesser dome (surmounting what is known as "Lobby 7" after its building number), which opens into Massachusetts Avenue, and which is the entrance most often used as well as the official address of the entire Institute. The friezes of these buildings are carved in large Roman letters with the names of Aristotle, Newton, Franklin, Pasteur, Lavoisier, Faraday, Archimedes, da Vinci, Darwin, and Copernicus; each of these names is surmounted by a cluster of appropriately related names in smaller letters.


    A few other buildings are architecturally significant, including Baker House (the dormitory designed by Alvar Aalto) and Eero Saarinen's Kresge Auditorium and MIT Chapel. I. M. Pei '40 designed a number of MIT buildings constructed in this period, including the Green Building (Building 54), headquarters of the Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Science Department and the tallest building on campus; the Dreyfus Building (Building 18), the Chemistry Department; the Landau Building (Building 66), the Chemical Engineering Department; the Weisner Building (Building E15), the Media Laboratory, whose tiled exterior was designed by Kenneth Noland; and the master plan for the southast corner of the central campus.


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    Naming and pronunciation
    MIT buildings all have a number (or a number and a letter) designation and most have a name as well. Typically, academic and office buildings are referred to only by number while residence halls are referred to by name. Rooms on campus are referred to by building number designation, followed by a dash, followed by the floor in the building on which the room resides, followed by the room number on that floor. Thus, the classroom "10-250" (pronounced "ten two fifty") is actually room "50" on the second floor of building 10. The organization of building numbers on campus may appear random, but there is some order to it and it is believed to roughly correspond to the order in which the buildings were built and their location relative (north, west, and east) to the original, center cluster of Maclaurin buildings.

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    Recent building efforts
    A major building effort has been underway for several years in the wake of a $2 billion development campaign. Simmons Hall (designed by Steven Holl), built in response to the freshmen-on-campus Krueger settlement stipulation, opened in 2002. The Zesiger sports and fitness center, featuring an olympic-class swimming pool, also opened in 2002. Building 46 (designed by Charles Correa) which houses the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, the Department of Brain and Cognitive Science, and the McGovern Institute for Brain Research opened in November 2005. The Broad Institute opened its new headquarters in May 2006.

    The Frank Gehry-designed Stata Center opened in March, 2004. The building of the Stata Center necessitated the removal of the much-beloved Building 20 in 1998. Building 20 was erected hastily during World War II as a temporary building that housed the historic Radiation Laboratory. Over the course of fifty-five years, its "temporary" nature allowed research groups to have more space, and to make more creative use of that space, than was possible in more respectable buildings. Professor Jerome Y. Lettvin once quipped, "You might regard it as the womb of the Institute. It is kind of messy, but by God it is procreative!"

    For an overview of the various sculptures and art-related installations at MIT, see MIT artwork.

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    Further reading
    See the bibliography maintained by MIT's Institute Archives & Special Collections


      Stuart W. Leslie, The Cold War and American Science: The Military-Industrial-Academic Complex at MIT and Stanford, Columbia University Press 1994. ISBN 0-231-07959-1

      Benson R. Snyder, The Hidden Curriculum, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1973. ISBN 0-262-69043-8

      T. F. Peterson, Nightwork: A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass. 2003. ISBN 0-262-66137-3

      Julius A. Stratton and Loretta H. Mannix, Mind and Hand: The Birth of MIT, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass. 2005. ISBN 0-262-19524-0

      Samuel C. Prescott, When M.I.T. Was "Boston Tech," 1861-1916. Cambridge, Mass.: Technology Press, 1954. ASIN B0007DWQ0M

      Mark Jarzombek, Designing MIT: Bosworth's New Tech, Boston, Mass.: Northeastern University Press, 2004. ISBN 1-555-53619-0

      O. Robert Simha, MIT Campus Planning, 1960-2000: An Annotated Chronology, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, July 2003. ISBN 0-262-69294-5

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    Publications
      The Tech, student newspaper, the world's first newspaper on the web

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