Cannabis Ruderalis

Content deleted Content added
130.113.29.29 (talk)
No edit summary
Parihav (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 31: Line 31:


During and immediately after the [[Second World War]], McMaster experienced an explosion of growth in scientific research and student enrollment under H.G. Thode. This placed a strain on the finances of what was still a denominational Baptist institution. Consequently, in 1957, the [[McMaster Divinity College]] was incorporated to continue the university's religious traditions while the university itself became a secular public institution.
During and immediately after the [[Second World War]], McMaster experienced an explosion of growth in scientific research and student enrollment under H.G. Thode. This placed a strain on the finances of what was still a denominational Baptist institution. Consequently, in 1957, the [[McMaster Divinity College]] was incorporated to continue the university's religious traditions while the university itself became a secular public institution.

McMaster is the only university in Ontario to have a Nuclear Reactor on its Campus, which was built in the 1960s. El Shukrijumah, an Al Qaida terrorist, was apparently suspected to have enrolled as a student to inspect the facility's capability of producing a dirty bomb.


[[Image:00_00006_1a.jpg|frame|right|University Hall, McMaster University]]
[[Image:00_00006_1a.jpg|frame|right|University Hall, McMaster University]]

Revision as of 04:51, 21 February 2005

McMaster University is a medium-sized research-intensive university located in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, with an enrollment of 16,771 full-time and 3,599 part-time students (as of 2004).

Template:Infobox University2


McMaster, or Mac, is comprised of six faculties: science, health sciences, engineering, humanities, social sciences, and business. The campus is located on 300 acres (1.2 km&sup2) of land in the residential neighbourhood of Westdale adjacent to Hamilton's Royal Botanical Gardens.

History

Senator William McMaster, the first president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, founded the university bearing his name in 1887. It was sponsored by the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec as a sectarian undergraduate institution for its clergy and adherents. It began operating three years later and graduated its first students in 1894.

The university was originally located in Toronto and nearly became federated with the University of Toronto like Victoria College and Trinity College did. Local boosters in Hamilton offered large donations of money and land to McMaster to relocate rather than federate, and the move was accomplished in 1930. University Hall, one of the original campus buildings, includes a statue of Senator McMaster and his contribution to the university.

During and immediately after the Second World War, McMaster experienced an explosion of growth in scientific research and student enrollment under H.G. Thode. This placed a strain on the finances of what was still a denominational Baptist institution. Consequently, in 1957, the McMaster Divinity College was incorporated to continue the university's religious traditions while the university itself became a secular public institution.

McMaster is the only university in Ontario to have a Nuclear Reactor on its Campus, which was built in the 1960s. El Shukrijumah, an Al Qaida terrorist, was apparently suspected to have enrolled as a student to inspect the facility's capability of producing a dirty bomb.

File:00 00006 1a.jpg
University Hall, McMaster University
File:00 00007 2a.jpg
Hamilton Hall, McMaster University

Academics

In recent years, McMaster been particularly renowned for its academic strengths, most notably in the field of health sciences. The university has been named Canada's most innovative "medical-doctoral" university eight times in the past 11 years by Maclean's magazine in its annual ranking of Canadian universities.

Its Mills Memorial Library (one of several on campus) houses the papers of Bertrand Russell among others. The McMaster Museum of Art houses six thousand works of art, including those bequeathed by Herman Levy.

McMaster has had an atomic reactor since 1959 for nuclear science and engineering research. Separately, the natural sciences have had a planetarium since 1949 and engineering boasts the Communications Research Laboratory.

The university's health sciences reputation started with the foundation of its medical school -- with non-traditional small-group problem-based learning tutorials since adopted by other programs -- in the 1960s. However, it quickly grew with programs in occupational therapy, physical therapy, midwifery, and other allied fields.

A recent $105 million (CDN) donation to its medical program from billionaire Michael G. DeGroote means that it may soon have one of the top two or three medical schools in the nation. He is also a benefactor to McMaster's business school (which also bears his name), the Michael DeGroote Centre for Learning and Discovery (MDCL), and the Student Centre.

Sports

Most of its sports teams in Canadian Interuniversity Sport, including football, hockey and soccer are named the McMaster Marauders. The university's colours have been maroon and grey since 1912. Various teams are frequent Ontario champions in collegiate sports.

The sole or major exception for collegiate sports are the mischieviously named water polo team, the McMaster Bators. Despite the team's risqué name, years often go by before they experience defeat.

Intramural sports are encouraged and widely participated in at Ivor Wynne Centre. Unorganized sports include ad hoc cricket games in front of the science and engineering buildings and formerly cafeteria tray tobogganing.

Student life

Full-time undergraduate students belong to the McMaster Students Union, which operates pubs and publishes a broadsheet newspaper called The Silhouette. It also funds scores of other clubs, associations and societies organized by academic department, ethnic origin or extracurricular interest.

Other student groups on campus include the McMaster Association of Part-time Students and the Graduate Students Association.

External links

Leave a Reply