From Conservapedia | Emory University | |
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| City: | Atlanta, Georgia |
| Type: | Private |
| Sports: | baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball[1] |
| Colors: | blue, gold |
| Mascot: | Swoop (Eagles) |
| Degrees: | Associate, Bachelor's, Master's, Doctoral[2] |
| Endowment: | $5.4 billion[3] |
| Website: | http://www.emory.edu/ |
Emory University is a prestigious private university founded in 1836 and now located in Atlanta, Georgia. The school is named after John Emory, a Methodist pastor who inspired by his broad vision for an American education that would mold character as well as mind.[4]
Emory made the transition from a regional Methodist college to a major national research university after 1980 thanks to a combination of external trends and circumstances and internal decisions and strategies. The growth of Atlanta's population and wealth helped end a legacy of poverty and lack of research scientists that had hindered the development of research and graduate programs in Southern universities. The Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Corporation and its owners provided endowments throughout the 20th century that provided significant financial support to the university, although a $105 million Candler bequest in 1979 got the most attention. In addition to the advantage of a key benefactor, Emory had a succession of university presidents committed to making it one of the nation's leading research facilities. Finally, a policy of moderate expansion and careful fiscal management sustained it through an uneven course from the 1950s through the 1990s - although it did not achieve national research status until the late 1980s and 1990s.[5]
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